New Aircraft is Part Blimp and Part Airplane 484
An anonymous reader writes "Canton Rep has an interesting article on Ohio entrepreneurs who hope to get their business 'off the ground'. Brian Martin and Robert Rist think they are close to testing a prototype of their patented Dynalifter hybrid. They announced last week that their airship -- part blimp and part airplane -- has been completed, and they hope to conduct a test flight this spring. Martin and Rist hope the Dynalifter will help bring in a new transportation era. They see it as a way to move materials at a lower cost than jets and at a higher speed than ships. From the article: 'They think it could be used in emergency situations, such as Hurricane Katrina, to transport supplies. It might have military uses, such as delivering equipment and supplies to sites that might not be easily reachable.'"
Just a Blimp? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Just a Blimp? (Score:3, Interesting)
Also it would have limited hovering capabilities not quite up to that of a helecoptor or true blimp...
Re:Just a Blimp? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Just a Blimp? (Score:2, Interesting)
mode 1) {when you're high enough}Take the gas in the bag and compress it into internal cylinders so that you loose lift - then glide as above.
mode 2) {when you're too low} Release gas from cylinders into bag providing lift.
Or is that what you're describing above?
I also wonder if waste heat from the engines is used to warm the gas to provide extra lift?
Re:Just a Blimp? (Score:5, Interesting)
The main innovation in the Ohio Airships design is in the novel rigid internal structure which uses a keel beam supported by stays (cables) from a tower in the manner of a suspension bridge. This should allow greater loads relative to the airframe mass, including positive or negative loads from the wings.
*Steam is potentially the most economical lift gas since it gives 60% of helium lift or 200% of hot air lift, is essentially free if generated as a by-product of a steam engine, and the airship envelope acts as a condenser for the engine, reducing weight. This makes both the lift gas and propulsion much more efficiently produced than helium bags or IC engines See www.flyingkettle.com for more details.
Re:Just a Blimp? (Score:4, Informative)
There's a lot more info to be found regarding the Dynalifter technology here [ohio-airships.com].
Re:Just a Blimp? (Score:3, Insightful)
However, the concept summary notes that it is designed to take crosswinds of up to 30 knots when unloaded. I'm wondering if that's
Re:Just a Blimp? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Just a Blimp? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Just a Blimp? (Score:4, Informative)
Of course, that's all what the brochure says. We'll have to wait to see how it performs in the real world.
SPECIFICATIONS (Score:5, Informative)
1) The concept of a hybrid airship is older than the "Pumpkin Seed". Some of the earliest work was performed by Howard Hughes with his "Mega Lifter" concept. The Dynalifter has several unique twists, most significant of which is its use of "stayed-bridge" architectural concepts that will allow large point load masses.
2) The Dynalifter is not a blimp: it is a hybrid airship. Approximately 48% of its lift is aerostatic (helium) and 52% is aerodynamic. As a result, it takes off and lands like a normal airplane. The heavy freighter design uses 8 engines for take off (3 on each wing, one on each canard wing) and cruises with 2-4 engines engaged.
3) Its cruising speed is 90 knots (max speed is 120 knots) in the current heavy freighter design.
4) It can carry a payload of 320,000 pounds in a detachable cargo bay measuring 150x40x15 feet (volume of 90,000 cubic feet).
5) Range is 3200 nm with a full payload.
6) Aircraft size is 990x168x21 feet.
7) There are many, many possibilities for this airship: both commercial and military.
Please mod this up if you find this informative. Thanks.
-- from someone who knows a lot more than the Canton reporter
Re:SPECIFICATIONS (Score:3, Informative)
3200 nm, that not far, ... let's see a human hair is about 50,000 nanometers thick ...
Oh, you must mean Nautical miles :-)
So almost 6000 km, not bad.
Re:SPECIFICATIONS (Score:3, Informative)
And in case you're wondering
90 knots works out to 278400 furlongs/fortnight.
This thing really moves out!
MORE SPECIFICATIONS (Score:5, Informative)
2) nm refers to Nautical Miles. So the Dynalifter has a range of ~6000 kilometers.
3) This is not the DARPA Walrus program. The Walrus program is currently only doing paper engineering trade studies, and its objective is to design a larger (500 ton payload) aircraft for delivery in 2015 with an enormous R&D budget. The Walrus is an expensive paper vision; Dynalifter is currently buildable with off-the-shelf parts for a fraction of the cost.
4) The Dynalifter does not use a ballast system, since it does not need to. The helium offsets only the weight of the unfueled empty aircraft.
5) I post as AC since I've never bothered to get a
Please mod this up if you find it helpful. Thanks.
Re:Just a Blimp? (Score:3, Insightful)
The chief advantages over a blimp are operational. First, it can be landed without having to provide a ground crew, and doesn't require mooring against crosswinds. Second, since there is no danger of it floating away, it can offload massive cargos without having to take on ballast. Third, since the ship is heavier than air it never becom
Re:Have they solved the ballast issue yet? (Score:2)
Re:Have they solved the ballast issue yet? (Score:3, Interesting)
To add one more problem to the list: Aircraft using buoyancy don't scale down well. It's hard to get started in the buoyant craft business on a small scale. When I was a kid, I so desperately wanted to build a scale zeppelin that I could fly. I was crushed to discover that it took roughly 1 cubic meter of helium to lift 1 kg (at 1 g).
The blimp's revival? (Score:3, Interesting)
I wonder how long it will take other formerly taboo technology to come around... I'm not all that afraid to have a nuclear reactor in my backyard(My neighbors would disagree)
Hindenburg was flashy, not bad. (Score:5, Informative)
It's remembered because it's one of the first spectacular disasters caught on film.
Re:Hindenburg was flashy, not bad. (Score:4, Insightful)
Hydrogen burns with a pale blue flame. All of the exciting footage showed lots of bright yellow flame from... the burning of the envelope.
It does give a little more lift, but as we all know, it burns.
Two points. First, hydrogen gives twice the lift of helium. A 100% bonus for the same sized envelope. Second, it only burns in the presence of oxygen (or another gaseous oxidizer). If the envelope is made from a nonflammable membrane impermeable to oxygen (any membrane decent at retaining hydrogen is completely impermeable to oxygen), explosions and dramatic flames become vanishingly unlikely.
The Hindenberg had problems, to be sure. IMHO, however, the use of hydrogen wasn't one of them.
Regards,
Ross
Re:Hindenburg was flashy, not bad. (Score:4, Interesting)
Air and Space magazine did an article on airships a long time ago. They had an ancedote about a goodyear blimp being shot with a rifle while it was flying. They said that atmospheric air would actually flow into the blimp because it is less dense. While I'm sure it depends on the geometry of the specific situation, I would not want atmospheric air to enter my hydrogen lifted airship/blimp. The bullet holes were small enough that it didn't affect the flight of the blimp.
That said, The US still had a strangle hold on helium at the time. The only way that helium is produced on earth is through radioactive decay. It is recovered from natural gas that is under Texas. I'm sure it occurs elsewhere in the same way, but the US has a lot of it.
Fuel savings? (Score:3, Interesting)
Looking at a couple other aircraft:
Boeing 747
Weight Empty: 361,600 lbs
Maximum Take-Off Weight: 825,600 lbs
Empty Weight ~= 43% of maximum take-off weight
C-5 Galaxy cargo plane
Weight Empty: 374,000
Maximum Take-Of
Re:The blimp's revival? (Score:3, Interesting)
Not only are blimps impervious to BB guns, but bullets as well. It takes a long time to deflate out a small hole. In addition, militaries use lots of non-combat vehicles, so lack of suitability for combat does not disqualify military interest.
NYUD mirror link (Score:2, Informative)
I want to believe! (Score:2, Insightful)
Better link/picture - mostly a blimp (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.ohio-airships.com/Old/Default.htm [ohio-airships.com]
Re:Better link/picture - mostly a blimp (Score:2)
Hope it is sturdier than it looks...by a lot
It's a faster blimp, although prototype seems to be missing alot of wings and engines....
Call me on the next prototype please.
Re:Better link/picture - mostly a blimp (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Better link/picture - mostly a blimp (Score:3, Informative)
Patent Infringement Potential? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Patent Infringement Potential? (Score:3, Interesting)
OBLIG MP Ref (Score:3, Funny)
Deforming body (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Deforming body (Score:5, Insightful)
A rigid airframe is much simpler, cheaper, easier, and sturdier.
"More blimpy"? (Score:3, Interesting)
Could it be used for passengers? (Score:2)
Re:Could it be used for passengers? (Score:2)
And cheap?
Cheap, comfortable, fuel efficent. Pick 2.
-everphilski-
Re:Could it be used for passengers? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Could it be used for passengers? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Could it be used for passengers? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Could it be used for passengers? (Score:3, Interesting)
It's also possible to book one-way trips on most cruise ships, though that's certainly not going to be cheap.
Re:Could it be used for passengers? (Score:4, Interesting)
I've never understood the irrational annoyance that people get when someone in front of them reclines their seat - who fucking cares? Just recline your seat too, then you're back where you started, and a little more comfortable to boot.
I've flown long flights (at least 12 hours on a single hop) for 24 years, and been over six feet tall for the last 9 of them, and I've never had ANY knee damage, not to mention irreversible knee damage.
Get real.
Re:Could it be used for passengers? (Score:3, Insightful)
Military use? Unlikely (Score:2)
I know that was just marketing speak, but still, military use is the one thing I do not see happening for this flying thing. It's big, it's slow, it's target practice for the other side. As for getting stuff to 'not easily reachable' places... well, such as? Specifically, where could a blimp get to more easily than a helicopter?
Re:Military use? Unlikely (Score:2)
-everphilski-
Re:Military use? Unlikely (Score:3, Interesting)
Some military use is likely.
I could see these used as high altitude portable communication platforms near hot spots. I could see a fleet of UAVs being controlled from one of these. And these would fit the traditional blimp role of coastal surveillance very nicely.
Wish the web site wasn't slashdotted.
I would think a heavier than air blimp would be easier to land.
I have the impression from the few pics and diagrams I've seen that the blimp has a lifting body shape and the "wings" are primarily control
Re:Military use? Unlikely (Score:2)
Re:Military use? Unlikely (Score:2)
Re:Military use? Unlikely (Score:3, Interesting)
They can fly higher and longer than helicopters.
But in general, the perfect use for airships is AWACS. They don't have to come down to refuel periodically (they'll need food more often than they'll need fuel), so that's one less major hassle for an aircraft carrier crew to deal with.
It would also work well for similar work over land, and might work well as an anti-balistic missile laser platform.
Re:Military use? Unlikely (Score:5, Informative)
Right now (Score:2)
Right now his boss is burning up his pager/cellphone.
I really would have liked to RTFA, but seeing as how the
From teh write up, it is supposed to deliver aid/supplies to places that don't allow for easy access by conventional means. Hrmmm seeing as how there is no where in the world this thing can go that a conventional helicopter or plane can't, well the plane can't land, but that's what cargo parach
Re:Right now (Score:2)
Re:Right now (Score:2)
I hope their new blimp... (Score:2)
Pop! ssssss... Crash! (Score:2)
Why is it that inventions always have to have some military/security use in order to be deemed cost-effective or useful? That being said
Re:Pop! ssssss... Crash! (Score:4, Informative)
Because that's a good way to get the government to pay part of your R&D costs.
I also wonder what would happen if someone shoots at it repeatedly? Would it just pop and fall to the Earth? It must be moving slowly, making it an easy target
Of course...no one in the entire development stream ever thought of an airmachine, at least partially for military use, ever getting shot at.
Not once. They will thank you for reminding them of that possibility. Now they'll have to change the entire design.
The potential for transporting goods seems like its best use, although I don't think the trucking industry/lobby is going to like it very much.
Too bad. Either they can a) suck it up and adapt, or b) build a fleet of their own and compete.
Re:Pop! ssssss... Crash! (Score:2)
Because the defense industry spends four and a half fuck-tons of money, so they fund a lot of this stuff.
I can't get to the article... (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.defenseindustrydaily.com/2005/10/us-cb
Re:I can't get to the article... (Score:2)
Finally (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Finally (Score:3, Funny)
Here's a name for it.... (Score:2, Funny)
Too obscure? (Score:5, Funny)
The Deltoid Pumpkin Seed (Score:3, Interesting)
Obligatory Final Fantasy Airship Reference (Score:2)
Hindenburg (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hindenburg (Score:4, Insightful)
If you want it there fast, or if it's really lightweight/small, you ship by truck or air.
If you can wait a long time, or if it's really heavy, you ship it by rail/sea/barge.
LTA craft offer the load capacity of air (poor), at the speed of oceanfreight (slow).
What, aside from some very narrow-range applications (heavy lift of non-urgent bulk cargo into rough undeveloped areas) would this be good for?
Re:Hindenburg (Score:3, Interesting)
As a passenger transport taking a dirigible would be awesome, since you could dock it in a city center instead of having to land in the great back of beyond Long Island and deal with either cabs or the silly AirTrain, or (shudder) Newark. You don't have to fly as high as a 747 so you might actually get to see what you're flying over. Sure it takes longer, and if you're a business traveller you'd probably always opt for the 747. But (and I don't know what the economics of what a
Re:Hindenburg (Score:2)
The web page is coming in now... (Score:5, Funny)
Emergnecy uses = very few (Score:2)
Until some idiot shoots at it.
-Adam
Hybrid???? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Hybrid???? (Score:2)
-Rick
Re:Hybrid???? (Score:3, Informative)
Still haven't seen TFA, but the pictures at ohio-airships.com show a craft that appears to be a lifting body.
Who remembers the "Aereon"? (Score:2, Interesting)
Blimp/Airplane AND Web site can't go supersonic (Score:2)
The new incarnation of the "Deltoid Pumpkin Seed" (Score:5, Interesting)
The idea of hybrid lighter than air lifting and an aerodynamic hull has been around for a while. In his 1963 book The Deltoid Pumpkin Seed [johnmcphee.com] essayist and journalist John McPhee covers the story the the Aereon, which was an early avitar of the dynalifter. There was a brief resurgence of interest in this aircraft design during the oil crisis in the 1970s. It now seems to be back once again now that oil has risen in price.
One of the things that those pushing this design may not be mentioning is that increasinly helium is both scarse and a strategic resource. Helium is actually "mined" from underground domes where it has been trapped (I assume formed from radioactive decay). If fleets of airships were helilum based, the price of helium would seen rise to the point where the airships were no longer cost effective. The alternative is hydrogen, but as the Hindenburg demonstrated, hydrogen has its own problems. These issues could be the reason that after over three decades this idea has not caught on.
Re:The new incarnation of the "Deltoid Pumpkin See (Score:5, Interesting)
No, no, no! Hydrogen was not to blame. (Score:5, Informative)
It's a shame that this meme is so widespread in the collective consciouness, because it's very damaging to the airship industry. Hydrogen is a superior lifting gas, it's inexpensive, and there's virtually a limitless supply.
Try to check out an article called "Odorless, Colorless, Blameless" (Air & Space Smithsonian magazine, May 1997, pp14-16) by NASA employee Richard Van Treuren. (Unfortunately this article is no longer available online.) It will convince you that the Hindenburg would have met the same fiery fate, even if it had been filled with helium. The flammable aluminum-based paint that covered the vehicle was to blame.
More curious (Score:2)
I would be particul
Blimp in a hurricane? (Score:3, Insightful)
But seriously, I wonder if they have run the numbers to determine whether this is more efficient than trucking. It doesn't seem impossible when you include the cost of roads, and real estate for roads.
Also, a steady stream of payload-moving craft overhead might even be a workable platform for broadband connectivity. There are already several companies [wired.com] working on using airships as wireless relay platforms, but perhaps the idea would be more economically feasible if the airships are making money in two different ways.
John McPhee wrote about this (Score:5, Interesting)
Cousin Oliver (Score:2)
I mean, I know he eventually turned out to be a physics genius [scifi.com], what with inventing time travel and all, but still... Can you imagine 12 channels of Brady Kids music in coach? *shudder*
cargolifter redux (Score:5, Interesting)
CargoLifter AG based to the South of Berlin in Germany is developing "Lighter-than-Air" systems for logistics and other applications. The Company's first product, the CL 75 AC balloon based system has been in prototype flight test since October 2001.
2002:
For reasons of insolvency the CargoLifter AG Board of Managing Directors today filed an application for the opening of insolvency proceedings on the assets of CargoLifter AG at the Cottbus District Court.
I'm not saying it can't, or shouldn't be done, it makes sense on some levels, i.e. not having to ship your tons of goods via truck->rail->boat->rail->truck, but I remember reading about the operation mentioned above a few years back. It was no garage business, they had a wealthy shipping magnate with a lot of vertical expertise, a slew of aerospace engineers, and a ton of capital.
The problem, IIRC, was that the infrastructure to handle these things (big hangars) are gone, and real estate is too valuable to go around scooping it up near transportation hubs, where they could be integrated into existing systems. I think they went broke, not because the airships were too costly to build, but there weren't any other facilities to land/unload/service the things, and they had to build those too. The problem is easy to spot when you look at their plans [aerospace-technology.com].
Re:cargolifter redux (Score:3, Interesting)
From what I've seen, the payload area on most blimps is probably 1% of the size of the membrane. So, for every box that you wanted to carry, you'd need 100 'boxes' of helium.
Of course those are bogus numbers, but the point is, you have to have to have a shelter for something 100 times bigger than what you want to carry. If you have to build a shelter like that in a remote place, then it's probably going to get a road in the process.
It
Its been said before... (Score:3, Informative)
Dynalift, meet t/space... (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd be interested to see the numbers for cargo tonnage carrying capacity and max altitude of a full size (~1000 ft) freighter craft.
Combine this airship with t/space's air-launched lanyard rocketry, and there is an awesome potential for large tonnage air launched private spacecraft.
http://www.transformspace.com/index.cfm?fuseactio
cost versus speed (Score:4, Funny)
Human psychology is interesting. This sounds great, whereas stating the truth from the other direction - "at a lower speed than jets and a higher cost than ships" - sounds terrible. But I suppose this polarity of viewpoint is present in every comprimise, by the very nature of comprimises.
Re:World War II Taught us: (Score:2, Funny)
Shouldn't it be WW I? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Shouldn't it be WW I? (Score:5, Informative)
s core : -1, RC "humor" (Score:3, Funny)
Re:World War II Taught us: (Score:5, Informative)
Tell that to Goodyear, Fuji Film, Met Life, and the vast number of other companies that operate them. And don't forget to mention it to ESPN, ABC Sports, Fox Sports, and all the other networks who use them for their sports coverage.
As to WWII, the blimp was used very successfully [centennialofflight.gov]. To quote: "The United States was the only power to use airships during World War II, and the airships played a small but important role. The Navy used them for minesweeping, search and rescue, photographic reconnaissance, scouting, escorting convoys, and antisubmarine patrols. Airships accompanied many oceangoing ships, both military and civilian. Of the 89,000 ships escorted by airships during the war, not one was lost to enemy action.
Re:World War II Taught us: (Score:4, Informative)
I think the true meaning to the phrase "Blimps have failed." is that blimps have been replaced by airplanes and helicopters for the things which they were originally designed for. First, I don't see a blimp truly replacing a cargo 747 due to the fact that you can't run a blimp at 600 MPH. Even with engines all over it, they are talking about replacing trucking and not aviation, so they cannot mean moving faster than say 150 MPH.
The reason a blimp can't replace a helicopter is that blimps are much more susceptable to high winds. Any time the winds are too high, the Goodyear blimp stays home, and a helicopter takes its place. The reason for this is simple. wind resistence of a very large sack of bouyant gas is much much larger than a rotating turbine. Now, on clear days with little wind, a blimp would be much much more economical to operate than an airplane or a helicopter.
Ira
Re:World War II Taught us: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:World War II Taught us: (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.jpaerospace.com/ [jpaerospace.com]
Re:How about helicopters? (Score:2)
As it currently stands, supplies have to be shipped towards your target destination by more coventional means that require either a road, a port or a runway in a workable condition, get as close as possible, and then offload everything from the truck/ship/plane and reload it all into a helicopter to move it the last leg of the trip. An airship, on the other hand, could carry supplies cr
Re:A Beowolf cluster of them.... (Score:2)
Re:A Beowolf cluster of them.... (Score:2)
I did...
http://www.ohio-airships.com/Old/Images/Plan%20Pic ture%203d.jpg [ohio-airships.com]
and not the conceptual picture like you linked, but what they've actually got (if that's a conceptual, then that's some damn good CG).
Regardless, fixed wings do not make an airplane. Clearly the fuselage is not a rigid body and the "wings" are more like structs that support the engines and they don't appear to provide any appreciable
Re:It's not part anything (Score:3, Informative)