Old Airlift Vehicle Concept Made New 291
starexplorer writes "LiveScience is reporting on an early conceptual design of The Walrus the DOD's new planned 'very large airlift vehicle'." Could the concept of a 'war-balloon' really be gaining favor again?
At Last!!! (Score:5, Funny)
I've been a huge fan of airships after reading up on them, but this thing will positively scream "TARGET" (not the chain store) to every radical nut with a shoulder launch missile. It will also move rather slowly.
Perhaps a good choice for moving materiel between safe locations, but not something you'd fly over the Middle East any time soon.
Re:At Last!!! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:At Last!!! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:At Last!!! (Score:5, Interesting)
On the subject of missiles: I wonder how effective traditional homing mechanisms would be on a craft like this, with its potential for unusual engine positionings, visual profile, and probably an odd, disproportionate radar signature. Given its great size and slow speed, if they had effective countermeasures on it it might almost be worth painting it in Dazzle [gotouring.com] camouflage.
Re:At Last!!! (Score:4, Interesting)
Well, presumably radar guided missles will home in on the cargo area, which may or may not be what you'd want. But IR missles will probably pick out one of the engines. If you lose an engine you probably wouldn't crash, but you might not be able to land either, since landing airships requires vectored thrust. This could be worse than crashing, depending on how sensitive your cargo is and which way the wind is blowing.
That said, I like the concept. DoD spends huge amounts of money for routine air transport, and this could save big bucks by filling the niche between sea and air freight. Airships are much, much cheaper to operate than C-130s. The key would be to make sure they didn't accidentally become mission critical systems during wartime.
Re:At Last!!! (Score:2, Interesting)
as far as I know (which is'nt too far) that balloon was a single large balloon, if it was made up of multiple cells it would last even longer. And you could allways try coating it in kevlar or some other resilient skin as Rei suggested.
It's got gob loads of lifting power, so a little extra weight on armour and countermeasures would be ok.
How about a nice focused solar beam (Score:2)
For those of us with a large budget, a nice high powered laser will also do the trick. I might see some of them around the US cost but I don't imagine they'll be launching them in Iraq or Afghanistan too soon.
To fund the project they could just sell the advertisement space on it.
Re:At Last!!! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:At Last!!! (Score:5, Funny)
Heavy lift aircraft don't usually do combat drops (Score:5, Insightful)
What it does offer is many possiblities for not just military operations. If these things pan out in efficiency you can bet UPS and FED Ex would want them. Let alone the possibilities of flying cruise ships!
FWIW, anything is a target for a terrorist, though preference is giving to things that don't shoot back.
Re:Heavy lift aircraft don't usually do combat dro (Score:3, Interesting)
In the article they mention making landings near combat zones on unimproved landing fields.
What it does offer is many possiblities for not just military operations. If these things pan out in efficiency you can bet UPS and FED Ex would want them. Let alone the possibilities of flying cruise ships!
Oh,
Re:Heavy lift aircraft don't usually do combat dro (Score:3, Interesting)
FWIW, anything is a target for a terrorist, though preference is giving to things that don't shoot back.
Sure, but what is this thing supposed to shoot back with? This looks like the Glider fiasco of WW II all over again.
Something big enough could probably mount some cannons, rockets, or missiles. They could be mounted pod-style, like on attack helicopters, or internally, like warships or the F-22 Raptor.Re:Heavy lift aircraft don't usually do combat dro (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Heavy lift aircraft don't usually do combat dro (Score:4, Interesting)
It's not like it hasn't been tried before. I remember seeing film where a propeller driven biplane was launched and retrieved from the bottom of an airship. I also saw concept drawings of an airstrip atop a Zeppelin type craft. This is not a new idea.
A fully loaded F-22 weighs about 40 tons, that means the craft could lift 12 planes.
Re:Heavy lift aircraft don't usually do combat dro (Score:2)
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade?
Re:At Last!!! (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:At Last!!! (Score:3, Interesting)
Nevertheless, you can still build airships without helium. See http://www.flyingkettle.com/outline.htm [flyingkettle.com] . Steam airships have some potential advantages such as being able to make more lift gas on their own, and can reduce lift by venting without losing a huge amount of valuable gas. The envelope can also act as the condenser for steam engines, thus making such engines light enough for use in the air.
Re:At Last!!! (Score:2)
but realisticly: flying at night, they'd be deadly silent and all but invisible to everything but radar (unless they flew low enough?). I guess you trade speed, armor and agility for stealth.
Re:At Last!!! (Score:2, Funny)
Around here we just call them "arrows."
KFG
Re:At Last!!! (Score:2)
It's too big to be taken out. (Score:3, Informative)
1) bullet holes are no problem. Airships like the goodyear blimp get shot at regularly by rednecks and the compartmentalization keeps them afloat.
2) This thing should be able to carry a fairly advanced array of anti-missile weaponry and decoys. Combined with a low radar and heat signature, it's not as good a target as one might think. It should even have enough lifting capacity that they can throw in some anti-missile gatling guns like the ones they use on cruisers and aircraf
Re:It's too big to be taken out. (Score:2)
Re:It's too big to be taken out. (Score:2)
Well, that was the hope, but the planes carried were not called "peashooters" for no reason. They were basically about the size of a Pitts Special biplane, with one or maybe two
Later on in the 50's, the techniques were revisited with the hopes of making a little jet-powered fighter that could be
Haha I'll be Rich!! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Haha I'll be Rich!! (Score:2, Funny)
Protection Methods??? (Score:4, Insightful)
Based on the size of this warship, not to mention the slowness of it, am sure that it can't just easily outrun a fighter jet sent to destroy it, or be able to perform evasive manuevers...
I can imagine that it will be escorted by a fighter division, not to mention have some high-tech anti-missle weapons and the like, yet I can see an air to air missle easily bypassing those protections and bringing down a TON of hardware with it... major catastrophe...
Anyone have any ideas what sort of protection methods will be used to protect this massive warship, as well as if this will be used for strictly hardware transport, or troop transportation as well?
We shall find out shortly it seems...
Re:Protection Methods??? (Score:5, Insightful)
As long as you don't coat it in rocket fuel of course...
Re:Protection Methods??? (Score:2)
Re:Protection Methods??? (Score:2)
Re:Protection Methods??? (Score:4, Informative)
Myth [colorado.edu].
Re:Protection Methods??? (Score:2)
SRB fuel *CAN* burn explosively. Witness the aerial footage of the SRB fuel plant burning, and then conflagrating rather quickly and abruptly...
SRB fuel might have a slow burn rate, but it does make a lot of gas, and if you contain it and leave it only one way out (as you would in a rocket motor), it does have some force. Plus, you have to remember that the area burning in the SRB is essentially the length of the SRB
Re:Protection Methods??? (Score:2)
Not much of a different rate than the hydrogen-air would alone. Solid rocket propellants have their own oxidizer, so the only difference in SRB propellant combustion rates would be temperature; there's no way the temperature increase would accelerate it to a remotely relevant speed compared to the rate of the hydrogen wavefront.
footage of the SRB fuel plant burning, and then conflagrating rather quickly
I assume you'r
Re:Protection Methods??? (Score:2)
Sorry, but that doesn't sound like a peer-reviewed journal to me. How do I know this has any more credibility than the original study by Addison Bain and Richard Van Treuren?
Re:Protection Methods??? (Score:2)
BS Physics: Caltech
PhD Physics: Duke University
7 years in Space Physics Research at Lockheed Missile and Space Co.
26 years at Rice University as Professor of Space Physics and Astronomy (includes 15 years as Dept. Chair)
4 years at NASA Marshall Space Flight Center as Director of Space Science Laboratory
Presently, Sr. Scientist at University of Arizona, Lunar and Pl
no seriously... (Score:2)
Perhaps as high as 3% of the time? Does that really qualify as all the time?
Not sure what the hyperbole was for, or how this can get +5 insightful for implying that at least half (if not most) if blimps that go up are fired upon.
Re:Protection Methods??? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm surprised those blimps are fired upon...but then again, we Americans are a little stupid.
Re:Protection Methods??? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Protection Methods??? (Score:2)
Re:Protection Methods??? (Score:2, Funny)
"Bogey's airspeed not sufficient for intercept. Suggest we get out and walk."
Re:Protection Methods??? (Score:2)
Re:Protection Methods??? (Score:2)
You said it yourself...... (Score:5, Insightful)
Even the most modern, lumbering Aircraft Carrier is a big target for waiting submarines / strike aircraft so you protect it.
You protect these things according to their strategic value. ie: The Aircraft carrier is strategically valuable so you give it a Frigate / Destroyer screen along with air-cover.
In the case of the huge HTA cargo carrier, you likewise protect it with fighters, refuellers etc and because it can carry huge ammounts, perhaps give it it's own air to air missile system.
Given it's size / lifting capability, perhaps these warships could also carry a Phallanx / Goalkeeper type system.
Re:You said it yourself...... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Protection Methods??? (Score:2)
Re:Protection Methods??? (Score:2, Interesting)
Mount a bunch of Aegis Ballistic Missile Defense guns so you have 360 degree line of fire.
Hook them up to buff computer network and program it to create a 1000 foot killing zone around the craft. So if they flip it on in a hostile area anything heading towards it gets turned into a cloud of debris.
And enough already with all the idiots and their "omgz!! it'll blowdz up like the Hindenburg!!".
That's just annoying and ignorant.
Re:Protection Methods??? (Score:2)
This post's grandparent never mentioned ballistic missile defence. Not once. He talked only of defence of the airship itself apparently in reference to air to air and surface to air missiles.
The point he was making was that it should be as easy to defend a large airship as it is for an aegis ship to defend itself.
Re:Protection Methods??? (Score:2)
Re:Protection Methods??? (Score:2)
you keep them out of harms way whenever possible.
Re:Flying aircraft carrier (Score:2)
Spectrum Is Go!
Re:Flying aircraft carrier (Score:2)
Too bad I couldn't have worked in a SHADO reference, though...
Goo Goo Goo Joob! (Score:2, Interesting)
Makes me think of "Warlords of the Air" - a peculiar Moorcock book from the 70's. Had flying dreadnaughts - designed by the Chilean wizard O'Bean.
Warlords of the Air (Score:2)
Commercial Uses Galore (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Commercial Uses Galore (Score:2)
For one, the cycle time for loading that much water will SUCK.
For another, fly one of these babies over a hot spot, where the air is suddenly a lot less dense, and your 500 tons of water suddenly gets a lot of inertia heading down. With the size of the thing, even if they suddenly dropped the water, it might be too late to counteract actively, with its huge moment of inertia (even if it weighs 100 tons empty).
But it would sure fly to
Re:Commercial Uses Galore (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Commercial Uses Galore (Score:3, Informative)
Just dropping a few tons of weight would throw an airship thousands of feet into the air. Everything about weight control
Re:Commercial Uses Galore (Score:2)
DARPA challenge (Score:2)
flying tanks are (Score:2)
This thing's big boat in the air. They just need it to be a boat. In the air.
Thunderbirds are go! (Score:4, Funny)
You are not allowed (Score:2)
Stupid but not that stupid (Score:5, Insightful)
But it won't be that easy. First of all, compartmentation. No doubt the bag will be at least dozens, if not hundreds, of individual compartments. Weight prevents anything equivalent to a ship with thousands of watertight compartments, but there will certainly be enough that bullets won't be much of a danger. The lifting gas won't be under pressure, so it won't start rips that widen the holes. And certainly the gas bag material will have anti-rip threading.
It won't use hydrogen either, no one is that stupid. Helium is the lifting gas of choice.
Shoulder fired missles are not a threat. This thing will fly above them. Their range is only a couple of miles. Full sized missles and full size AAA are a different matter, but again, compartmentation will help, and gas bags probably don't provide much of a radar signature to trigger fuzes, nor does the gas bag itself offer enough resistance to trigger most fuzes; they will probably fly right through and leave behind a few holes, trivial to patch.
Which brings up damage control. I am sure the crew will be able to climb around inside and apply temporary patches.
I think these heavy lift combat balloons are a silly idea. But they aren't nearly as silly as so many quick posts make out.
Re:Stupid but not that stupid (Score:2, Interesting)
Full sized missles and full size AAA are a different matter, but again, compartmentation will help, and gas bags probably don't provide much of a radar signature to trigger fuzes, nor does the gas bag itself offer enough resistance to trigger most fuzes; they will probably fly right through and leave behind a few holes, trivial to patch.
But the cargo inside the ship will indeed be solid and will offer enough resistance!
missile fallacy (Score:2)
As such, they would be just as deadly for an airship, filling it with thousands of little and not so little holes.
Re:missile fallacy (Score:2)
Re:Stupid but not that stupid (Score:2)
You and everyone else who suggested comparmentation as a reason why it won't be so vulnerable probably didn't RTFA. Depending on how much of the lift really is the aerodynamics, a single deflated compartment may very well destroy its lifting capacity.
Regardless, all of us are idiots for think
Re:Stupid but not that stupid (Score:2)
This is an airlift vehicle. It is ment to move large payloads. Generally, that means it's probably going to be landing in the hostile country to drop off those paloads. If one or more hostile folks with shoulder launched missles sneak up near the landing field, it could mean a very rough landing.
Re:Stupid but not that stupid (Score:2)
Also, this aircraft will be (according to TFA) transporting troops and equipment to areas that are relatively safe - those are the sort of are
Re:Stupid but not that stupid (Score:2)
If this thing comes to production, expect weapons capable of easily dropping it to come out shortly afterwards.
RA2... (Score:2, Funny)
Rrriiight.... Cargolifter, anyone ? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Rrriiight.... Cargolifter, anyone ? (Score:3, Insightful)
Regards,
Steve
zzzzOMG! (Score:2)
Of course, the article fails to answer the most important question: can it turn on a dime?
Silly question but . . . . (Score:2)
(Don't shoot me. I'm 22.)
Re:Silly question but . . . . (Score:2)
I Am the Walrus
Beatles, 1967
I am he as you are he as you are me and we are all together.
See how they run like pigs from a gun, see how they fly.
I'm crying.
Sitting on a cornflake, waiting for the van to come.
Corporation tee-shirt, stupid bloody tuesday.
Man, you been a naughty boy, you let your face grow long.
I am the eggman, they are the eggmen.
I am the walrus, goo goo g'joob.
Mister city polic
FedEx tried this once (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.my-tropical-islands.com/index-e.htm [my-tropical-islands.com]
If they armor this ... (Score:2)
Sorry, couldn't resist
Separated at birth? (Score:2)
Kirov reporting! (Score:2)
Airships might be tougher than they look, but I'm still not sure about this one's defenses. Some military transports have rear-mounted cannons in addition to chaffs/flares*, so I guess the Walrus would have at least these. It's still a BUSlowF though, making it an easier target and complicating its escorting.
In any case, this seems to be a very interesting and promising project. It can carry almost twice what an An-225 can, or probably even the An itself. I don't know what the operating cost
So the insurgents can't shoot at it? (Score:2)
Wouldn't it be... (Score:4, Funny)
Great transports based upon last few U.S. wars? (Score:2)
These may make interesting transports based upon the last few wars the U.S. has been in (or created for the hell of it, too!).
Gulf War I & II
These wars both had lengthly start-up cycles with lots of troops, hardware, and materials piled up waiting for deployment. Getting things to and from rear deployment areas would be prime candidates for a ship like this.
Balkans (under Gen. Clark)
Though this was won without U.S. troop involvement on the ground, like the Gulf Wars we had large staging areas
1893? (Score:2)
From Lord Tennyson's Locksley Hall, startedin 1830 and published in 1842:
Now mind you the persona
A few missing variables.. (Score:3, Informative)
They had made some wonderfull airships and were considered to be real plum assignments to have.
Just they underestimated Mother Nature.
Both sides lost at least 4 airships before scrapping their airship fleets to sudden storms, squall lines and even a hurricane.
This Walrus maybe almost impervious to enemy fire and operating in the rear area, but when a sudden storm comes up and the thing aint secured, well.. Break out the torches boys, alot of scrap metal is headed to the recyclers.
Popular Mechanics will have a blimp issue soon (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:seems sort of risky (Score:2)
Re:seems sort of risky (Score:4, Funny)
Re:seems sort of risky (Score:2)
BTW, war balloons were first used in the Anglo South African war of 1898 till 1901. These balloons were used as look-outs by the Brits and were hydrogen filled. The ZAR shot them full of holes, but they always landed softly - hydrogen doesn't burn easily.
On a technical note: In this war, the Brits had balloons and wire line telegraphs, while the ZAR had radios and heliographs (and long range guns and smokeless ammo). Cryptography
insightful?? (Score:2, Interesting)
There was a weather balloon with some kind of expensive equipment aboard it about 5 years ago floating over Canada. Whoever owned it asked the Canadians to shoot it down, so they sent out some F4s or something, and they couldn't do it. They basically said that they
Re:Interesting, but i wonder... (Score:2, Funny)
Paint the bullseye, just make sure there is a safe spot behind it for the bullets to land
Hehe, it would be hard to shoot at it and NOT instinctively aim for the bullseye.
Re:Interesting, but i wonder... (Score:2)
Re:Interesting, but i wonder... (Score:2)
In these days of missile wars, a lumbering air ship is no more or less of a target than any other aircraft.
Re:We do know what happens to dirgibles... (Score:2)
Re:Diff between Rush L and the Hindenburg (Score:2)
Re:Helicopters (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Suprise Suprise. (Score:2)
Re:Nick Fury's flying fortress! (Score:2)
Re:I for one welcome our Big Balloon Overlords (Score:2)
see how they fly (Score:2)
OMG!!1! 50 to 100 f-16's??!!? (Score:2)