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Transportation Businesses

Zeppelins Over California 201

It seems that Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow may not have been completely off the mark. According to Venture Beat, Airship Ventures has raised capital sufficient to build their first Zeppelin NT (Microsoft Windows reference purely coincidental). The airship will offer rides for up to 12 passengers out of the old Navy Blimp hangars at Moffett Field in Silicon Valley. Airship Ventures notes that airships are already flying safely in Japan and Germany, so now the US will have its chance. Rides will cost from $250 to $500 per person. Esther Dyson is one of the investors.
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Zeppelins Over California

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  • Bang? (Score:3, Funny)

    by mrbluze ( 1034940 ) on Sunday May 11, 2008 @04:56AM (#23367694) Journal

    Rides will cost from $250 to $500 per person. Esther Dyson is one of the investors.
    Or, for a hydrogen filled Zeppelin, they are offering the discounted, insurance free rate of $50 per person, one way.
    • Re:Bang? (Score:5, Funny)

      by mrbluze ( 1034940 ) on Sunday May 11, 2008 @05:03AM (#23367706) Journal

      Or, for a hydrogen filled Zeppelin, they are offering the discounted, insurance free rate of $50 per person, one way.
      Any person having a bad outcome in the said NT Zeppelin will be met with the BSOD (Blue Sky of Death).
      • Any person having a bad outcome in the said NT Zeppelin will be met with the BSOD (Blue Sky of Death).

        Better than meeting the GGOD --- the Green Ground Of Death...

    • Just in time for the next Indiana Jones movie. I wonder what tickets cost if you leave the Zeppelin via a bi-wing plane.
      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        "No tickets." Anyway, it's a moot point because that feature's being delayed until Zeppelin NT 5.0, which I hear may be renamed Zeppelin 2010.
    • Re:Bang? (Score:4, Funny)

      by h4rm0ny ( 722443 ) on Sunday May 11, 2008 @05:32AM (#23367768) Journal

      "Passengers will PLEASE observe the no smoking sign"
    • Re:Bang? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Teancum ( 67324 ) <robert_horning&netzero,net> on Sunday May 11, 2008 @08:20AM (#23368258) Homepage Journal
      As much as I get the joke, hydrogen as a lifting gas for airships is something whose danger is by far and away overblown. Germany used airships extensively using hydrogen... and it was the fact that they used what was effectively rocket fuel for the ship hull that did in airships like the Hindenburg, not the hydrogen gas.

      Assuming that these airships are going to use some petrochemical substance like gasoline or JP-5 (military-grade jet fuel) to power its engines, I would be by far and away more concerned about some problem with the fuel system blowing up than the hydrogen.

      As for why a 1930's technology isn't being used in the 21st century more extensively, there are a bunch of factors in that equation... including some irrational fear of hydrogen that makes it the target of lame jokes like this one.
      • by Anonymous Coward
        Hydrogen is probably a net safety gain.

        Rigid airships had a terrible safety record. They were large fragile ships, and even moderately bad weather could rip them apart, and did. Sometimes their massive cross sections caught the wind and tore them loose from their moorings.

        Traveling on a 20th century zeppelin was like trusting your life to a soap bubble on a breezy day. Fire was a concern, but not the greatest danger.

        Think of all the houses that are heated by gas; every year a house or two blows up -- u
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by RubberDuckie ( 53329 )
        Actually, Mythbusters did a story on this myth. While there was thermite in the paint on the Hindenberg, it did not have a major effect on the disaster. The myth was busted.
    • Or, for a hydrogen filled Zeppelin, they are offering the discounted, insurance free rate of $50 per person, one way.
      That was in very bad taste. Don't you think it's a little too soon for jokes like that?
    • by RKBA ( 622932 )
      Don't you mean "Or, for a hydrogen filled Zeppelin, they are offering the discounted, insurance free rate of $50 per person, half way."?
  • 1985 Sydney (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Harry8 ( 664596 ) on Sunday May 11, 2008 @05:24AM (#23367746)
    Failed Australian Entrepreneur Alan Bond had blimps used for joy rides in the 80s in Sydney. They were pretty noisy and slow. I think they got taken to the US and had goodyear painted on the side and hung out around sporting events as they were worth more as event billboards than joyride vessels. I wonder how this is different, IF it is different...
    • Re:1985 Sydney (Score:5, Informative)

      by BeeRockxs ( 782462 ) on Sunday May 11, 2008 @06:24AM (#23367892)
      They're not blimps, so the engines are not attached to the person-carrying cabin, but to the hull. So they're not noisy for the passengers.
    • Re:1985 Sydney (Score:4, Interesting)

      by steevc ( 54110 ) on Sunday May 11, 2008 @06:27AM (#23367906) Homepage Journal
      I have memories of a Goodyear airship flying over my school back in the early 70s.

      Airship Industries operated from the old Cardington Airship hangers in the 80s. They did trips over London

      http://www.aht.ndirect.co.uk/airships/ss500/index.html [ndirect.co.uk]

      One morning I drove past to see one spread over the airfield after they could not get it in before a storm.
      • There has been a blimp operating in Melbourne for a couple of years. They do ambush marketing (is that the word?) at the football, cricket, commonwealth games, etc.

        The theory is that air traffic regulations don't prevent them circulating around the MCG for three hours at a time, and this works to a point.

        One day we had a lot of wind and the blimp got blown out over Port Philip bay with a TV crew on board. The news that day had a great show of these people being tossed around as if they were inside a clo
      • by mikael ( 484 )
        Orange mobile have a large blimp that they fly around major sports events in the UK. Rather obviously, the blimp is orange in color and has the word "Orange" written on the side.
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by jd ( 1658 )
        Talking of Cardington, the R100 and R101 used a superior design to the Zepplins. The R101's chief problem was corner-cutting and beaurocracy, which led to the infamous crash. Mind you, 6 survived, which isn't bad going for plunging to the ground from a few thousand feet, having a hydrogen gas bag explode and then having a largely aluminium frame ignite. More would have survived if better materials for the frame had existed - witnesses reported that most had survived the crash landing and died in the subsequ
      • I too have memories of a Goodyear blimp flying over my school in the seventies. The weird thing was I was sitting in my college room having just finished Michael Moorcock's "Warlord of the Air" a SF novel about an alternate world where airships predominate. I got up and looked out of my window and there was an airship flying past not nore than a few hundred metres away.

        I thought was I hallucinating, I looked again and I could see it dumping water ballast, it seemed pretty real. I then recognized it as th

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Deadstick ( 535032 )
      Goodyear has been operating blimps since 1925 for aerial advertising and filming. The three operating in the States were all built by Goodyear. There are four overseas, including one in Australia that was used to film the Sydney Olympics. That one might have been purchased locally, but I doubt it; Goodyear is quite proud of the blimps it's been making all these years.

      Goodyear has never made a serious business of selling blimp rides, although lease arrangements in certain venues sometimes force them to offe

    • Re:1985 Sydney (Score:4, Informative)

      by Dr. Zim ( 21278 ) on Sunday May 11, 2008 @10:26AM (#23368932) Homepage
      Wrong. Goodyear has built it's own airship since before you were a gleam in daddy's eye. They developed their own designs in house and would have sneered at any outside tech. A quick trip to google can provide the Goodyear legacy far better than I can, if you're still interested. The ships you're talking about in Australia, at least from all photos I've seen of commercial ships there, were Airship Industries Skyship 500's and 600's.

      I worked as a nightsign technician on Airship Shamu for a few years, as well as on Bud One, Gulf Oil's WDL ship, and the Met Life blimp before they made the switch to the lightships. The only serious manufacturers in the industry during the 80's were Goodyear, Aiship Industries (A British firm) and WDL, a german company that made a rugged ship that was more like a flying VW in it's simplicity. It wasn't until the 90's that the Lightships came into popularity because of their smaller size (cheaper operating costs).

      Advertising has always been what paid the bills for commercial blimps, passenger service is break even at best. Smaller projects, like the 80' ship I helped build for the Florida Institute of Oceanography were always used as research platforms or surveillance, and typically could not carry passengers due to insufficient lift and FAA Experimental ratings.
  • aerial photography (Score:5, Interesting)

    by ianare ( 1132971 ) on Sunday May 11, 2008 @05:39AM (#23367790)
    I would love to go on one of those flights with some nice photography equipment. You really couldn't ask for a better platform for aerial photography: slow, stable, and not too high. The fact that the city and the surrounding area are beautiful doesn't hurt either!
    IF they actually build it (we've been hearing about the return of dirigibles to the US for years now) I would go for a ride next time I'm around San Fran.
    • Coming soon. A new perspective from google street view.

      Hey! didn't they have that on Blade Runner?
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      slow, stable, and not too high.



      I rode "Bud One" a 15+ years ago. It is slow and we stayed low but I would not describe it as stable. It was summer time in Central Florida and while there was no real wind, the air ship pitched constantly due to up currents from sun heated roads and down currents over ponds and lakes.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by jeti ( 105266 )
      The Zeppelin NT is not new. The first one was completed in 1997. Three of these Zeppelins exist and they've transported over 50.000 passengers. The only thing new is that they plan to build one in the US. It is normally built in Friedrichshafen, Germany.
    • by hughk ( 248126 )
      In the old Zeppelins, airspeeds were slow enough that windows opened, great for photography. I know that the pilot has opening side windows but I doubt that liability rules allow the windows to be unlocked for passengers unless it is a specialised hire.
    • by syousef ( 465911 )
      Right now you can take a hot air baloon ride. If you're looking to do any pro aerial photography, you might still want a Gyro stabilized camera mount of some sort. They're expensive equipment but I hear you can rent them. On the other hand if you're an amateur the baloon ride is going to set you back enough bucks. Take a camera with built in image stabilization and it should be good enough.
  • by H.Dersch ( 901499 ) on Sunday May 11, 2008 @06:00AM (#23367848)
    The Zeppelin NT is purchased from "ZLT Zeppelin Luftschifftechnik GmbH" and the 4th they are building, see this link [lifepr.de] (german)
  • by boombasticman ( 1232962 ) on Sunday May 11, 2008 @06:03AM (#23367856) Journal
    and want to flood the silicon valley to push the prices of computer chips.
  • by AndGodSed ( 968378 ) on Sunday May 11, 2008 @06:09AM (#23367864) Homepage Journal
    ... it has been reported that a farmer has modified his cessna cropduster with machine guns. Something about "German Invasion"...
  • by Nate Fox ( 1271 ) on Sunday May 11, 2008 @06:15AM (#23367872)
    so instead of the gangsters in oakland shooting their guns in the air for fun, they'll have a target. and fourth of july will come early if one of em hits it!
    • The obvious remedy to this would be to make the lights of the blimp read "Ice Cube's a pimp".
    • Re:oh thats smart (Score:5, Informative)

      by Deadstick ( 535032 ) on Sunday May 11, 2008 @10:16AM (#23368858)
      The Goodyear Blimps pick up bullet holes once in a while. No, they don't fly around in circles going PPPHHHFFFFFFFFTTT!!! because the gas pressure is quite low; the support crews notice it when the rate at which they're replenishing helium goes up slightly.

      rj

  • by ThreeGigs ( 239452 ) on Sunday May 11, 2008 @06:28AM (#23367912)
    Remember this?:
    http://science.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/01/14/0219246 [slashdot.org]

    I hope they included the increasing price and decreasing availability of helium in their business plan. No wonder it's $250+ per flight.
    • Probably it doesn't consume that much helium. Traditional rigid airships often had to vent lifting gas to keep the pressure differential within limits as the airship heated or climbed; then they had to drop ballast when they returned to low altitude or entered cold weather. The Zeppelin NT (a ten year old design, BTW) is a semi-rigid airship with an internal air-filled ballonet to maintain constant pressure, like a blimp. Also, it relies for only 90% of its lifting capability on the gas, the rest being sup

    • by Dr. Zim ( 21278 ) on Sunday May 11, 2008 @10:38AM (#23369006) Homepage
      Helium is a HUGE expense when you're filling the ship from the start, but in normal operation, even the big boys only use a few bottles a week and that's from accidental valvings and impurities that leak in from the ballonets.

      On Shamu, we'd shoot gas any time the purity dropped below a certain level, and when in the hanger (the big one at Weeksville, NC tha burned down a few years back), we'd hook up to a purifier truck... a huge contraption that used extremely high pressure to filter the gas.

      The largest single ongoing expense for our Airship Shamu operation was personnel. A big ship needs two dozen men, ranging from pilots and mechanics to ground crew. Those need to be housed and transported for traveling operations such as most of those in the aerial advertising biz. Fuel was up there, too, but in pure gallons per hour, it's very hard to beat an airship for fuel economy.

      The smaller ships of today have evolved and survived largely because they need less crew and are cheaper to operate on an ongoing basis. Not so much over the cost of helium.
  • of a blimp over the Golden Gate bridge reminds me of "A View to Kill" James Bond 007 the last part of the movie...
  • by distantbody ( 852269 ) on Sunday May 11, 2008 @07:17AM (#23368044) Journal
    ...Who knows if there's any significant air transport market for airships to fill in this day-and-age, but I thinks it's interesting to speculate whether fixed-wing aircraft would be the dominant air transport technology that it is today had the Hindenburg not gone down. OTOH maybe airships would have been killed of by fixed-wings regardless.

    ==C:\WINDOWS\system32\lusrmgr.exe==
    • by vertinox ( 846076 ) on Sunday May 11, 2008 @08:42AM (#23368358)
      Depends what happens to fuel costs.

      In theory, an airship ability to move 1,000lbs of cargo is the same as carrying 10,000lbs of cargo due to fact its altitude is simply stabilized in the air by how much ballast and helium. Yes there is still the cost of the fueled into the momentum of the airship which is still offset by mass, headwinds, and of course aerodynamics.

      Though the main advantage the airship has over the fixed wing is that the fixed wing has to use its engines to keep itself aloft where the airship could turn its engines off at any point and not risk falling out of the sky.

      So it really depends on how much fuel costs for air travel is going to get in the near future. If something like peak oil got really bad, one solution for international shipping could to simply take an airship into the jet streams, turn off the engines, and say just drift until you are close to your destination and then turn the engines back on to get to your exact destination.

      Of course that would make shipping things from Japan to California quite efficient, but shipping to California to Japan would take a bit longer using this method.

      If we do find cheap alternative fuels for fixed winged aircraft I'm sure we'll stick with that, but otherwise airships might be more economically viable.
      • by Sibko ( 1036168 )
        What about the part where an airship could potentially lift 450+ tons of cargo? I'd like to see a plane that could manage that.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Teancum ( 67324 )
      I disagree that the Hindenburg crash was the only reason why airships aren't flying today. What that crash did was to remove the luster and glamor of airships from governments that were earlier subsidizing the airship industry and dumping huge amounts of money into an unproven technology.

      More to the point, the economics of operating airships are such that it is far more expensive in terms of personnel costs, hanger sizes, and economies of scale compared to fixed wing aircraft that airships died out a slow
    • What really killed the airships wasn't the Hindenburg, though that certainly didn't help. It was the weather.

      Airships have a HUGE sail (amount of surface the wind can push against) compared to their weight, and that puts them at the mercy of any sort of significant convective weather. Couple that with the pathetic state of weather forecasting during that period, and you have disasters like those that occurred to the U.S.S. Macon and the U.S.S. Akron. So, launching one of these ships in anything but ridiculo
    • I thinks it's interesting to speculate whether fixed-wing aircraft would be the dominant air transport technology that it is today had the Hindenburg not gone down

      Your public library may have a copy of Airship Wreck by Len Deighton and Arnold Schwartzman, the book, quite simply, a photo album of every documented airship crash. [Holt, paperback, 1978]

      Consider it the short cure for any sentimental attachment to the dirigible.

      The structural integrity of the rigid airship was always a question. It had a ver

  • by Xest ( 935314 )
    "Airship Ventures notes that airships are already flying safely in Japan and Germany"

    I take it they're not taking history into account with this comment ;) ? I'd hate to think Hindenburg was their idea of flying safely!
    • I'd hate to think Hindenburg was their idea of flying safely!
      It flew safely from Germany to New York. The landing was another story though...
  • So is this a rigid dirigible? or just another blimp.

    The Original Zeppelins, right up to the Hindenburg, all had w rigid structure, not just pressurized with air and gas.

    Another use for these airships is advertising, like the Goodyear blimps, only they could use modern Light Emitting Diode signs instead of incandescents. If I had one of those LED Zeppelins, I'd name it Stairway To Heaven.
  • I am a HUGE zeppelin enthusiast. I plan on building zeppelins myself eventually, or now if you have a venture capitalist with some vision.

    Let's be clear: Zeppelins are MUCH safer than airplanes. They float, and are inherently safer by design. Even in the Hindenburg, arguably one of the worst zeppelin disasters in history, over 50% of the people on board survived. Hydrogen is safe, too, the only reason the Hindenburg went down is because it had been damaged by a Nazi party show boat, and was painted in (
    • I've always wondered how competitive zeppelins would be in the bulk shipment business, and how they stack up against ocean vessels. From what little I know about the history of zeppelins, unexpected bad weather used to be a big problem. I imagine the large surface areas zeppelins have are a problem in weather conditions such as wind shear or turbulence. However, considering the advances in weather monitoring and forecasting over the last 90 years, this may now be less of an issue.
      • by Teancum ( 67324 )
        Weather forecasting certainly has improved dramatically since the 1940's when the era of major Zeppelin/airship manufacturing came to an end. So has composite manufacturing and avionics sensors that might actually make a difference from the 1930's technology base.

        I should note here that the USS Los Angeles had one incident where the ship when nearly vertical (nose down) on a mooring stand due to some air density issues. It made for a spectacular photo too! The point here is that your "weather forecasts"
  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_b7J5k3BNtc [youtube.com] A Tokyo Flight By Zeppelin NT
  • Zeppelin NTs [wikipedia.org] have been flying for ages now over various bits of Europe. Saw one over Frankfurt about eight years ago, they were running short sightseeing flights [zeppelinflug.de] (sorry linked article is in German) from a field just outside a nearby town (which had historically been used as a Zeppelin airfield). There are some videos [flightlevel350.com] if you are interested in seeing more. One should be flying in the Munich area in 2009 (there was some hope to get it for Oktoberfest this year, but it didn't work out).

    The article isn't quite

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