Zeppelins - "The Future Began 100 Years Ago"
On July 2, 1900, the first Zeppelin airship took its maiden flight over
the Lake Constance near Friedrichshafen. Its creator, Count Ferdinand
von Zeppelin, spent two years and all his resources to build the giant
- 125 m in length and about 12 m in diameter - cigar-shaped airship equipped
with two 14.7 hp Daimler engines. During the construction period, the
Count was very often made fun of, and nobody believed that the mammoth
creature would ever take off the ground.
However it happened, though the
first flight was not very successful. As the LZ1 ("L" - Luft,
the German for "air", "Z" - Zeppelin) was towed out
of its floating hangar and glided marvelously into the sky, something
went wrong and after 18 min of flight it splashed down onto the lake and
was towed back into the hangar for the fixes and improvements. In about
3 months, in October 1900, the LZ1 was ready to fly again. The airship
majestically flew up into the sky, and slowly settled down in the middle
of the lake. Which was called an "air train" during the construction,
gradually turned into a Zeppelin. Until Count von Zeppelin's death, 130
Zeppelins were built under his supervision. 96 of them were used in the
WWI.
By the beginning of the 20th century the aircraft was quite developed,
but this was a very special air ship - it was the first rigid one, having
a skeleton built around the bags of lifting gas. The Count von Zeppelin
had a few reasons for such a radical
design:
- ability of a solid outer shell to allow the airship to
travel at much greater speeds without worrying about the air pressure
against the nose of the airship;
- real possibility to use the airship for military
missions of great duration;
- ability of the aluminum frame to make the airship
strong enough to fly through bad weather conditions without deforming
itself.
All this was a real danger for the non-rigid ships flown at that time.
During the WWI, Friedrichshafen, where more than a third of all German
war planes were produced, became the center of military aviation and arms
industry.
Next pages >
Zeppelins the Bombers >
The Death of the Mighty Hindenburg
> Centenary Celebration
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