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I spent a bit of time working in the old blimp hangars (looks identical to the ones depicted in the OP) at Tustin, CA.
Quite a few movie scenes and commercials filmed there. Back to the Future, for one. http://www.placesearth.com/usa/california/orange/tustin_air/tustin_air.shtml |
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Slufstuff here's a link for the Moffett Field in California for more WWII blimps. There's 3 main picture folders that opens to several pages. Enjoy.
http://www.moffettfieldmuseum.org/photos/index.php Hopefully I'll have the chance to visit the museum when my family and I come up to San Francisco. |
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In that first photo, the ramp there is now the driving course at FLETC. That hanger was taken down sometime after 97.
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Quoted: http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/images/h77000/h77425.jpg They were tiny compared to the Akron and the Macon, which were the rigid airships that those giant hangers were built to house. The hangars were big enough just for ONE of those monsters, plus a little more. CJ Wow, I've worked over there, too. Right across the I-5 from Miramar. No idea that they had a blimp anything over there, though. |
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Quoted:
Slufstuff here's a link for the Moffett Field in California for more WWII blimps. There's 3 main picture folders that opens to several pages. Enjoy. http://www.moffettfieldmuseum.org/photos/index.php Hopefully I'll have the chance to visit the museum when my family and I come up to San Francisco. Thanks for the link, very interesting pictures! |
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I wonder what has been going on with diridgables lately. Would be pretty neat to see massive cargo carriers made with modern materials and know-how. Helium, though, not hydrogen.
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They always seemed to me like a good idea for sub defense in coastal waters at least during calm weather. They can hang there for hours, have a great vantage point and can easily drop ordnance on top of any surfacing sub. Of course, they're a damn big target too.
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Some company in Europe was looking at Airships for heavy-lift to remote areas - oil exploration, mining, building refineries and pipelines. Things where you need heavy equipment in a remote location but it's not economical to construct airports or rail lines just for one project.
I think it died when oil prices fell. |
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Quoted:
I wonder what has been going on with diridgables lately. Would be pretty neat to see massive cargo carriers made with modern materials and know-how. Helium, though, not hydrogen. There have been a few efforts for a resurgence over the past decade, but nothing's really stuck yet. The military was at one point looking into lighter than air cargo movers - effectively a hybrid blimp/helicopter. Logic being that if the lighter-than-air component is lifting the weight of the airframe, then the vast majority of the power being generated goes directly towards moving the cargo. As to helium, even the German Zeppelins were intended to use helium when designed - problem was the only source for helium at the time was in the US, and we weren't supplying the Germans with it for political reasons. |
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Quoted:
I wonder what has been going on with diridgables lately. Would be pretty neat to see massive cargo carriers made with modern materials and know-how. Helium, though, not hydrogen. Yep-carbon composite frames and advanced polymer skins and air bladders could make them worth a try again. |
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Quoted:
http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/images/h77000/h77425.jpg They were tiny compared to the Akron and the Macon, which were the rigid airships that those giant hangers were built to house. The hangars were big enough just for ONE of those monsters, plus a little more. CJ Hell, the Akron launched parasite fighters, and that's fucking awesome. |
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Quoted: Quoted: http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/images/h77000/h77425.jpg They were tiny compared to the Akron and the Macon, which were the rigid airships that those giant hangers were built to house. The hangars were big enough just for ONE of those monsters, plus a little more. CJ Hell, the Akron launched parasite fighters, and that's fucking awesome. Christmas in July.... Dad was stationed at NAS Moffett in 1958 (VF-124 Hydraulicsman 2nd class). The NAS command issued a 25th Anniversary yearbook that year: Next Installment: 1935, The Army takes over Moffett Field... |
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I used to see those as a kid living in Coronado CA, and maybe around NAS Millington TN. Also used to see a lot of aircraft constantly overhead that are now just museum pieces, if any of them were preserved at all. Few examples of the planes I saw daily are still flying, mostly AD Skyraiders and T-28 Trojans.
I love the smell of prop planes in the morning. That gasoline smell. It smells of...............victory. |
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I grew up living right next door to Moffet and it was very sad to see the change in the city of Mountain View going from a really conservative orchard/military community to the cesspool of ganstas and illegals it is today.
They just sold off the last orchard and are devoloping it with Mc Mansions, I am all for free market but the flood of illegals has caused the need for housing to explode in my area. |
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Tag. Airships are just so.....damn cool. Very Metropolis-like, almost like a different, parallel history or something. But they were real!
Was The Macon the one that went down in a storm, and they recently found the wreckage, including some of the biplanes? Or was that another one? |
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They still use one of the hangars in Tustin for blimps on occasion too.
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Quoted:
I wonder what has been going on with diridgables lately. Would be pretty neat to see massive cargo carriers made with modern materials and know-how. Helium, though, not hydrogen. I heard recently that we're running out of helium. Had to pick up a tank of the stuff for a project at work, and the guy selling it said that the US has an 11 year supply left. Anybody know anything about that? |
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I had the opportunity to visit the one in MCAS Tustin. They said when an A-4 flew through it in the early 70's, the pilot was active duty going in and a veteran coming out.
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It's a fact that no convoy guarded by a blimp ever lost a ship to a u-boat.
It's also a fact that one blimp's crew mysteriously disappeared and the unmanned blimp crashed into Daly City, California. Daly City is just south of San Francisco and a bit north of Menlo Park and Sunnydale. |
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There's a really cool air museum in tillamook OR in one of those hangars.
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I've never understood the purpose of those things. They're big, slow moving balloons. The normal sized ones can't carry any cargo, and the ones that are big enough to carry cargo are so enormous that and slow that they make perfect targets.
Seriously, what good is a blimp? |
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I've never understood the purpose of those things. They're big, slow moving balloons. The normal sized ones can't carry any cargo, and the ones that are big enough to carry cargo are so enormous that and slow that they make perfect targets. Seriously, what good is a blimp? They aren't terribly useful for military purposes anymore, as UAV's have taken over the role they occupied, but there are plenty of commercial uses for them. I've always wondered whether they would make good cold weather cargo delivery vehicles; i.e the antarctic, or carrying supplies to high altitudes that helicopters couldn't reach easily like mountain ranges. |
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Quoted: I've never understood the purpose of those things. They're big, slow moving balloons. The normal sized ones can't carry any cargo, and the ones that are big enough to carry cargo are so enormous that and slow that they make perfect targets. Seriously, what good is a blimp? Think of it as an early precursor to the P-3 Orion, as an antisubmarine warfare/antishipping warfare observation platform, with a wickedly long loiter time on station, that was also able to drop ordnance if the occassion permitted. It could sit in a cloud bank, with a gondola car suspended beneath, to observe undetected. In a more modern setting, the border patrol has been using unmanned balloons to hoist sensor arrays over the southern border. No crew, low cost to operate, what could be better? |
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Quoted: It's a fact that no convoy guarded by a blimp ever lost a ship to a u-boat. It's also a fact that one blimp's crew mysteriously disappeared and the unmanned blimp crashed into Daly City, California. Daly City is just south of San Francisco and a bit north of Menlo Park and Sunnydale Sunnyvale. Fixed. |
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Quoted: I've never understood the purpose of those things. They're big, slow moving balloons. The normal sized ones can't carry any cargo, and the ones that are big enough to carry cargo are so enormous that and slow that they make perfect targets. Seriously, what good is a blimp? They were good for killing submarines. They could match speeds and see real good. They weren't in terrible danger of being shot down by subs. One was shot down, but it is not the same as shooting a plane down. A sub shot it down with guns, the blimp floated for hours and all but one of the crew were saved. They were used into the 50's for ASW and patrol. |
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They would launch & recover biplanes with them as well. The blimp could fly at just over the biplane's stall speed. The blimp would drop a hook, and the airplane would fly a metal donut into the hook, then kill his engine; he'd then be hoisted aboard.
Aircraft serving on a blimp would have their landing gear removed to save air resistance; when they returned to base, they'd reattach the gear and fly home while the blimp followed, much as aircraft on a carrier do nowadays. I wonder what has been going on with diridgables lately. Would be pretty neat to see massive cargo carriers made with modern materials and know-how. Helium, though, not hydrogen. There is a hybrid blimp-helicopter design in use by logging companies. The gas bag cancels the weight of the helicopter, so the entire chopper's lift can be used to lift stuff. |
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