Z2
The latest in sightseeing tours, brought to you by Count Ferdinand Von Zeppelin.
- By Marshall Lumsden
- Air & Space magazine, March 2011
(Page 3 of 4)
Even with three engines, the zeppelin NT is remarkably stingy with fuel. At cruise speed, it uses about 15 gallons an hour, only a little more than the single-engine Arrow.
Every morning before the first flight, a crew chief brings a large aluminum suitcase filled with electronic sensors to the airship and, standing outside the envelope, hooks it up to through-hull connectors. The device reads and records the air volume in the ballonets; the temperature, pressure, purity, and dew point of the helium; and the temperature and dew point of the outside air. It then comes up with an equation describing the buoyancy of the airship. That measure is e-mailed to the pilot, who can then decide, given the load factors of the mission, whether to add helium. The same data is available during flight on a display in the instrument panel.
"I can use the information to do my weight and balance and preflight activity, which is computerized," says Jim Dexter, Eureka’s director of flight operations. "Then it helps me to manage my trim, where I need to put my fuel."
Dexter came to Airship Ventures with 27 years of commercial lighter-than-air experience, all in blimps. Compared with airplanes, Dexter says, blimps, which have no internal framework, "are much harder to manage and operate. The zeppelin, because of its high degree of maneuverability, is a joy to fly. The pilot has direct control throughout the entire operation, from launch to recovery."
Kate Board, presently the only woman zeppelin pilot in the world, observes: "Flying by feel in a blimp, you have wheels and pedals and you’re kicking it around the sky, really. It is very physically demanding. The zeppelin is more mentally demanding to fly."
A takeoff demonstrates the degree of control the pilot enjoys. The airship backs slowly away from the mast by reversing the pitch of the side engine propellers. "Once we get our clearance," says Dexter, "we swivel the main engines up." At this point, each side joystick is controlling the prop pitch and engine vector. The airship ascends vertically. Once clear of ground obstacles, the engines are swiveled to level-flight position, and the joystick input goes directly to the control surfaces on the fins—"barn doors," Dexter calls them.
Strictly speaking, the zeppelin is not lighter than air. "We’re normally operating about 380 kilos [838 pounds] heavy," he says. "As we vector the engines up for landing, we lose aerodynamic lift over the bag, so we start to descend. That’s the ideal configuration for the ship to bring itself down." In a pinch, descent can also be controlled by releasing water ballast, helium, or both.
One day Dexter invited me to sit in the right seat on a flight out of Long Beach airport in southern California. As we cruised at 1,000 feet over the Pacific a half-mile off the breakwater, I told him that one of the things that impressed me was the way he could turn the ship on its vertical axis. He smoothly vectored the engines up to hover and, using the thrust of the aft engine’s side prop, began a long gentle turn to the right. It’s a maneuver the pilots often use for sightseeing passengers who want to linger over a certain patch of landscape—say, their own neighborhood.
The large sloping picture windows give spectacular 180-degree views. Almost directly below, a large pod of dolphins in a feeding spree churned the ocean to white froth.
The roomy gondola (equipped with a head) carries 12 passengers plus two crew members. Sightseers are encouraged to walk around and even stick their heads out of ports in the forward windows in the mild slipstream. The most common description: "Like riding on a cloud."
Janice Martinson, guest services representative, acts as combination tour guide and flight attendant. "We’ve had people who just wanted the experience of floating, people who want to fly over their house," she says. "We’ve had people celebrating birthdays and anniversaries, and some chartered the entire ship for their party. We’ve had people propose. One couple got married aboard while we circled near the Golden Gate Bridge."
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Comments (2)
This is all awesome, and I for one fully endorse an airship renaissance. However I feel it's wrong to perpetuate the dangers of hydrogen over and over. Other than the Hindenburg (which was covered in a mix of thermite, gun powder, and a solvent not that different than rocket fuel), there were no accidents involving hydrogen outside of wartime. And I'm sure after you read this of ingredients in the Hindenburg paint, you can see that that horrible tragedy wasn't the fault of hydrogen. Hydrogen isn't especially easy to ignite. And we have superior materials technologies available to use it safely, reliably, and cheaply as an easily renewable resource.
Posted by rhY on April 4,2011 | 05:20 AM
I have been in love with airships since childhood. Its so wonderful to hear that they do have a viable place, are economically feasible, and are technologically safe. This is such a great article. I've known for years that they will make a comeback....it only takes safe technology and care in flying these craft. Where do I sign up for a flight??
Posted by Michael on April 7,2012 | 05:38 PM