"I realized that I put a little
dot in the line of aviation history. A little dot for something that has
never been demonstrated before, now it's feasible," said flight control engineer Munir Jojo-Verge.
The airship is undergoing testing this month at Marine Corps Air Station
in Tustin, and must go through several more rounds of flight testing
before it could be used in a disaster zone or anywhere else. The first
major flight test took place Jan. 3.
The biggest challenge for engineers is making sure the airship will
be able to withstand high winds and other extreme weather conditions,
Jojo-Verge said.
Worldwide Aeros,
the company that developed the aircraft, said it also must secure more
funding for the next round of flight testing, but is hopeful the Defense
Department and others will step in again as investors.
The company says the cargo
airship's potential to carry more cargo more efficiently than ever
before would provide the U.S. military with an advantage on the
battlefield and greater capacity to save more lives during natural
disasters.
The lighter-than-air vehicle is
not a blimp or a zeppelin because it has a rigid structure made out of
ultra-light carbon fiber and aluminum underneath its high-tech Mylar
skin. Inside, balloons hold the helium that gives the vehicle lift.
Unlike hydrogen, the gas used in the Hindenburg airship that crashed in
1937, helium is not flammable.
The airship functions like a
submarine, releasing air to rise and taking in air to descend, said
Aeros mechanical engineer Tim Kenny. It can take off vertically, like a
helicopter, then change its buoyancy to become heavier than air for
landing and unloading.
"It allows the vehicle to set
down on the ground. And then when we want to become lighter than air, we
release that air and then the vehicle floats and we can allow it to
take off," Kenny said.
The project has set abuzz the old
hangars at the Marine Corps Air Station in Tustin. The structures were
built to hold blimps during World War II. Now workers zip around in
cherry-pickers, and the airship's silvery surface shines against the
warm tones of the aging wood of the walls.
"You could take this vehicle and
go to destinations that have been destroyed, where there's no ports, no
runways, stuff like that. This vehicle could go in there, offload the
cargo even if there's no infrastructure, no landing site for it to land
on, this vehicle can unload its whole payload," said Kenny.
Next, Aeros wants to build a full-size 450-foot-long vehicle that can carry 66 tons of payload.
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