Giant Firefighting Blimp 50
bgood writes: "MSNBC has an article about a California firm's plans for building a firefighting airship. Wetzone Engineering is working on a prototype and hopes to have a production craft in use within three years." Looks like a great way to water the lawn, too.
Convection??? (Score:1)
Re:Convection??? (Score:1)
Re:Convection??? (Score:1)
A slight problem... (Score:2, Troll)
Hello! Helium! (Score:2)
Rocket Fuel (Score:2)
urban legend? (Score:2)
Re:urban legend? (Score:2)
(BTW, an interesting story about the effects of mixing reactive chemicals in paint layers can be found in Martin Cruz Smith's novel "Red Square")
Re:urban legend? (Score:3, Interesting)
The paint was mostly powdered aluminum, used because it allowed the zeppelin to be shiny and visible from a distance. The hydrogen was used up quickly, whereas the aluminum kept burning.
The link above says that they didn't know that powdered metals burned. This isn't quite correct. A researcher found a single memo tucked deep into the Nazi archives that acknowledged that the paint could burn. It was buried for presumably political reasons.
Re:urban legend? (Score:1)
Don Middendorf
All I can say, is, (Score:2)
First Pick! (Nitpick that is.) (Score:3, Informative)
But...hot air... (Score:2)
Updraft (Score:1)
Re:Updraft (Score:1)
Why this love with airships? (Score:2)
Re:Why this love with airships? (Score:3, Informative)
Because they can stay longer than fixed-wing and have more room and carrying capacity than helicopters, they can mount water cannon allowing for more directed targeting.
As for your assertion on the reliability of the technology, aircraft technology in general was very undeveloped then, and several countries (and even companies) around the world use airships that have been around for a very long time with a very high safety record.
Re:Why this love with airships? (Score:1)
spending three days to get across the ocean
to Berlin on a blimp is in my mind better than having to fly through Chicago O'Hare and Frankfurt am Main.
Not True :Re:Why this love with airships? (Score:3, Interesting)
the hindenburge II
and the
Graf Zeppelin
was scraped for its aluminum during world war 2 and the never crashed. The Graf Zeppelin few longer and farther than any other zeppelin in history even in dangerous places like the arctic
Re:Not True :Re:Why this love with airships? (Score:1)
Well, you could make a iron blimp (Score:1)
1) Get a Large Nickle/Ferrous Asteroid
2) Make a *really* big hollow sphere out of the mined products. Better make it nice and accurate to avoid stress issues
3) Make it vacuumtite
4) Get it LEO with reaction jets and begin re-entry
5) Slowly let air into the sphere to provide a small amount of degree of the rate of descent vs the outside atmosphere density
Sure, it's made of iron, but a big sphere enclosing a vacuum is a lot lighter as a whole, so it will float.
Truth is as strange as fiction (Score:1)
All Tomorrow's Parties by William Gibson is a pretty good book, and contains an appearance by a firefighting / water-carrying airship.
And the best part is... (Score:2)
Total Load, Accessability, and the Heat Issue... (Score:2, Interesting)
Even if you could get enough water in the holding tank of the blimp, who's to say that you could easily fill it? From what I've heard and seen about blimps, they aren't the fastest or most manuverable things floating around the sky. In my eyes, the only way they could be effective in fighting fires would be if the fire was VERY close to a river or lake.
Lastly (bringing the structure of the blimp back into view), if a blimp is highly flamable, and all Blimps built in the 1930s or earlier crashed and burned (as one poster stated earlier), where is the sense in using a blimp to fight the very thing that caused its demise? Ok, ok, I know the materials that make up the structure of the blimp have changed (from wood and canvas to probably steel and a plastic covering), but that still doesn't mean it is immune to fire: the very thing it'd be floating over. Now while it probably wouldn't come into contact with the flame, you have to remember that all of the heat being put off by the fire would be rising rapidly right upto the blimp. Not safe at all in my eyes.
Just a few things to think about.
Bad Programming (Score:1)
Californian Blimp makers fill balloon with Hydrogen instead of Helium. It is believed the mistake was due to a programming error.
mmm... Hydrogen firefighting balloon
Problems (Score:2)
Related to this issue is how manoeuverable this baby is in windy conditions at low altitudes. Fires happen on windy days, and if this baby can't manoeuver into position quickly and safely on a windy day it's going to be useless.
Their aerial reloading scheme sounds ridiculous. Whilst I have no doubt it can be made to work, technically, it makes no sense to have aircraft that could be dumping water directly on the fire refilling this beastie. The only systems that make sense are either a) hover and suck water out of a lake or river, or b) land and reload.
Both schemes have their problems - chiefly, how long it takes to descend and climb, which IIRC is really slow compared to other flying machines, and thus increasing the cycle time of the system. For the hover-reload system, you also need to adjust the lift really quickly to compensate for all that mass, which may well be the limiting factor on how fast the system can reload this way. Landing this beast won't be a quick process, either.
Finally, even given the vastly increased water-carrying capacity of this system, just dumping water in the general direction of fires isn't generally how they get put out. The water needs to be directed precisely. If they have to operate at high altitude, I can't see them being able to direct it precisely enough.
All in all, I don't see this idea being particularly useful for firefighting, unless it's a heck of a lot faster than what we generally envisiage airships to be.
Re:Problems (Score:1)
Helicopters are not susceptible to the above problem for obvious reasons, however, they are slower (important when the water source is further away from a fire), they can't carry very much, and they are extremely expensive to operate. That is why you still see water-bombers in use despite the high risks involven in their operation.
A blimp like this would be incredibly useful because the water bombers could then be operated from a safe altitude and their runs could be made very quickly. As for the accuracy altitude, this would not be a problem for the blimp because, as mentioned on the site, rather than just providing general spray coverage to the area, it can have high-pressure water cannons mounted on it. These are only effective from relatively motionless platform which is why they can't be used on planes. As you mentioned, they are used for targeting hotspots identified by ground-based firefighters.
IMHO, if they can overcome the wind problem you mentioned, a single one of the airships could could greatly improve the effectiveness of any aerial firefighting operation.
FWIW, I happen to think that their reforestation plans for post-fire use are complete bullshit. Those have so far had a very low success rate in forestry industry tests. Mostly it seems like a gimmick to entice investors.
More practical than you'd think (Score:4, Interesting)
Flammability: Modern airships use non-flammable helium (the manufacturers don't appear to state what they plan to use in this case). The Hindenberg only burned strongly because of the flammable metals in her skin; the hydrogen vanished, literally, in a flash. Even then, more than half of the passangers and crew survived:
http://www.dwv-info.de/pm/hindbg/hbe.htm
Speed: Airships can manage up to 80 knots
http://www.airship.demon.co.uk/whatis.html
Weight / lift capability: 'just under' 1 million litres of water weighs 'just under' 1 thousand tonnes. Guess what? The air-buoyancy of a helium airship this size is 'just under' 1 thousand tonnes (I won't bore you all with the math).
The only scary thing about this airship is the fact of 1000 tonnes of *anything* flying around overhead (Although a fully laden Boeing 747 has a max take-off weight up to 400 tonnes:7 ).
http://www.aerospaceweb.org/aircraft/jetliner/b74
If it did crash, however, it'd be the world's biggest water baloon.
Hot air (Score:1)
In Germany the company Cargolifter [cargolifter.com] tried to build an simmilar airship - now they are blanc.
Some Problems:
- If they stand in air with 1000000 litres of water, they will rocket upwards after they have deployed all their water. Same problem at refill.
- If they use helium, the airship had to be larger than 300metres. Cargolifter (260metres) shouldt only carry 160tons. If they use hydrogen, they would not get al lizense to fly such a beast.
Maybe it's possible if they spend $1000000000 over 5-10 years of development.
Ok, so do the volunteer firemen (Score:1)
Bibliographies and other Goodies. (Score:1)
Earlier, convection was brought up, with a heat rising, Zeppelin rising scenerio. The whole deal with convection isn't that hotter air will sweep things up with it, but that the hydrogen (or more likely helium) will be cooler than the rising hot air and... the airship will drop, into the flames, like a proverbial rock. Eckener, the famed Zeppelin pilot, when passing over a large desert in his famous trip around the world, had a similiar problem ; The rising hot air threatened to sink him. Truly, this may be the largest hurdle that Yoyodine Airship Co. will need to scramble over.
On a postitive note, not every Zeppelin went up in a ball of flame. Dozens were used to bomb britain in WWI, and the Graf Zeppelin used for the first around the world trip by air, had made 590 flights (144 across the ocean) and spent 17,177 hours (about 2 years) in the air, and no-one had been hurt in it. Only a handful of the rigid-body dirigibles (out of an admitted few), crashed in a horrendous and messy ink-black and halloween orange gout of fiery plasma, so everyone better lay off the airships, alright?
For more information about Eckener and the Zeppelins, take a look at "Dr. Eckeners Dream Machine" by Douglas Botting. Exciting stuff, especially if you have a penchant for airships (as I do). Thanks for watching Reading Rainbow.
-Avery