Should Airships Make A Comeback?

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  • čas přidán 30. 08. 2023
  • Will we see a new generation of airships roaming our skies? Head to www.odoo.com/r/veritasium to start building your own website for free.
    If you’re looking for a molecular modeling kit, try Snatoms - a kit I invented where the atoms snap together magnetically - ve42.co/SnatomsV
    ▀▀▀
    Thank you to Eli Dourado for letting us explore the argument he describes in his article: ve42.co/Dourado
    A huge thank you to Dan Grossman and Nick Allman for their time, help, and expertise.
    Also a massive thank you to those who helped us understand the world of modern airships, and provided valuable feedback - Prof. Barry Prentice, Gennadiy Verba, Prof.
    Christoph Pflaum, Heather Roszczyk, Dr. Casey Handmer, Richard Van Trueren, & Thibault Proux.
    We are also grateful for the collaboration of the companies who are working hard to make this comeback happen - Atlas LTA, Buoyant Aircraft Systems International, Hybrid Air Vehicles, LTA Research, & Flying Whales.
    ▀▀▀
    References:
    How Airships Could Overcome a Century of Failure, Bloomberg Originals via CZcams - ve42.co/AirshipsCoF
    Why the Airship May Be the Future of Air Travel, Undecided with Matt Ferrell via CZcams - ve42.co/FutureAirships
    Airship, Wikipedia - ve42.co/AirshipWiki
    Handmer, C. (2020). A quick note on airships. Casey Handmer’s Blog - ve42.co/Handmer2020
    UNCTAD (2020). Review of Maritime Transport 2020 - ve42.co/RMT2020
    National Transportation Research Center (2023). Freight Analysis Framework Version 5 (FAF5) - ve42.co/FAF5
    Hybrid Air Vehicles (2023). HAV - ve42.co/HAV
    LTA Research (2023). Lighter Than Air (LTA) Research - ve42.co/LTAResearch
    OceanSkyCruises (2023). North Pole Expedition - OceanSkyCruises - ve42.co/NPExpedition
    Flying Whales (2023). Flying Whales - ve42.co/FlyingWhales
    Buoyant Aircraft Systems International (2023). BASI - ve42.co/BASI
    Atlas LTA (2023). Atlas Electric Airships | Atlas LTA Airships - ve42.co/AtlasLTA
    Prentice, B. (2021). Hydrogen gas-fuelled airships could spur development in remote communities. The Conversation - ve42.co/HydrogenAirships
    Grossman, D. (2009). The Hindenburg Disaster. Airships - ve42.co/Hindenburg1
    Hindenburg Disaster, Wikipedia - ve42.co/HindenburgWiki
    What happened to the Hindenburg?, Jared Owen via CZcams - ve42.co/Owen2019
    National Museum of the U.S. Navy. USS Akron (ZRS-4) - ve42.co/USSAkron
    USS Akron, Wikipedia - ve42.co/USSAkronWiki
    ▀▀▀
    Special thanks to our Patreon supporters:
    Adam Foreman, Amadeo Bee, Anton Ragin, Balkrishna Heroor, Benedikt Heinen, Bernard McGee, Bill Linder, Burt Humburg, Dave Kircher, Diffbot, Evgeny Skvortsov, Gnare, Jesse Brandsoy, John H. Austin, Jr., john kiehl, Josh Hibschman, Juan Benet, KeyWestr, Lee Redden, Marinus Kuivenhoven, Mario Bottion, MaxPal, Meekay, meg noah, Michael Krugman, Orlando Bassotto, Paul Peijzel, Richard Sundvall, Sam Lutfi, Stephen Wilcox, Tj Steyn, TTST, Ubiquity Ventures
    ▀▀▀
    Written by Casper Mebius & Derek Muller
    Directed by Casper Mebius
    Edited by Jack Saxon
    Filmed by Derek Muller, Jamie MacLeod, Han Evans, & Raquel Nuno
    Animation by Mike Radjabov & Fabio Albertelli
    Additional video/photos supplied by Getty Images, Pond5, & Envato Elements
    Music from Epidemic Sound & Pond5
    Produced by Casper Mebius, Derek Muller, & Han Evans
    More footage & photos from:
    Thermite Rail Welding video by dulevoz via CZcams - • Rails thermite welding...
    O’Rourke, T. (2016). Chronicle Covers: When the Hindenburg burst into flames. San Francisco Chronicle - ve42.co/Hindenburg2
    Wind turbine blade transport video by DOLL Fahrzeugbau via CZcams - • DOLL Wind Blade Transp...
    Wind turbine blade transport through mountains video by CGTN via CZcams - • How are wind turbine b...
    Former Airship Hangar by Stefan Kühn - ve42.co/Aerium

Komentáře • 10K

  • @veritasium
    @veritasium  Před 8 měsíci +6659

    We posted this video yesterday, but took it down soon after when we noticed an error. Here’s take 2 - thank you for watching!

  • @woodymcsackschwei5619
    @woodymcsackschwei5619 Před 8 měsíci +13510

    The number one reason why air ship should make a comeback is because they look awesome

    • @Argoon1981
      @Argoon1981 Před 8 měsíci +99

      IMO that shouldn't never ever be a number one reason, for anything, specially more for something that has the potencial to kill people in hair and the ground in case of accident.

    • @Doomsday499
      @Doomsday499 Před 8 měsíci +888

      @@Argoon1981 I think it was a joke

    • @bosssnurp5912
      @bosssnurp5912 Před 8 měsíci +55

      You look awesome 🤩

    • @itchylol742
      @itchylol742 Před 8 měsíci +83

      wtf you have the same profile picture as me

    • @CheapSushi
      @CheapSushi Před 8 měsíci +107

      The cool factor reigns supreme!

  • @alext6933
    @alext6933 Před 8 měsíci +895

    "Hydrogen is really cheap, but it will kill you"
    I think we all know what gas these companies will be using.

    • @GOOD_FARMER
      @GOOD_FARMER Před 8 měsíci +134

      We never underestimate the power of "CHEAP" word

    • @timvermeulen4024
      @timvermeulen4024 Před 8 měsíci +71

      It doesn't seem to be a matter of saving a little bit of money, though. There is no viable alternative.

    • @alext6933
      @alext6933 Před 8 měsíci +28

      @@timvermeulen4024 yeah it was more of a joke, but we still know even if it was a question it would have gone a certain way

    • @CoolXo1
      @CoolXo1 Před 8 měsíci +12

      I Have an idea I don't know if this would work. but why not make Vacuum in the gas cells but you would have to make it strong enough to handle the Pressure why not do that? I mean A vaccum is way lighter than helium etc and its basically free and it can change the pressure as well. Or am I just to dum.

    • @MusikCassette
      @MusikCassette Před 8 měsíci +38

      well cheap translates to scalable.
      Helium is not just to expansive it is also to valuable to be used in masses for this application. And it is nonrenewable. So for scaling it up for an actual industry is not really an option.

  • @philipthecow
    @philipthecow Před 4 měsíci +230

    For the buoyancy problem mentioned at 15:00 there are several simple solutions:
    * If you use hydrogen just use it to power something with a hydrogen fuel cell (creates water)
    * If you use helium just vent the helium into a storage tank on the ground that's weighed down so it doesn't float away.

    • @lysandroabelcher2592
      @lysandroabelcher2592 Před 4 měsíci +12

      Same same as I said. And it must have been thought by them, even if they didn't talked about it here in this video.

    • @jaspermooren5883
      @jaspermooren5883 Před 3 měsíci +52

      For helium this partly works, but you still have the significant problem that you would need to have these helium facilities at places to land, which is in direct opposition to the whole benefit of airships that you don't need extensive infrastructure at the place you are landing. It's simply way easier to just balast the ship. For hydrogen, building fuel cells that can turn these very high amounts of hydrogen into electricity in a feasable amount of time, is basically equivalent to building a powerplant on board. And that obviously defeats the purpose of the airship as well, in addition to somehow needing to store that energy or connect it to the powergrid, which again uses a lot of infrastructure (you can't just connect these amounts of energy to the grid directly, you'd need a powerstation to do that or the grid will overload and basically fry your computer at home if you happen to live close to offloading). Hydrogen is also quite inefficient to make electrically, so you'd also waste a ton of energy turning electricity into hydrogen and back again all the time. At that point you might as well just use a plane. And that's not even talking about the safety concern mentioned in the video with constantly on and offloading hydrogen in an airship.
      So yeah if you think about it shortly it might make sense, but if you think about it a bit longer, you'd soon realise that just adding balast is a far easier way to deal with the problem.

    • @PherPhur
      @PherPhur Před 3 měsíci +6

      All we need to do is keep up with global warming and then maybe Nitrogen will be a viable cheap alternative to the 2 of those.

    • @PherPhur
      @PherPhur Před 3 měsíci +7

      All jokes aside, I think the major hurdle in creating an effective airship used for transportation will be figuring out how to make a large and light structure that can hold a vacuum without collapsing.

    • @jaspermooren5883
      @jaspermooren5883 Před 3 měsíci +7

      @@PherPhur yeah low pressure (you don't even need a vacuum really) is kinda the holy grail, except that atmospheric pressure is an insane amount of pressure, so all the vacuum chambers we've ever built are way to heavy to lift off the ground. So you need at least some lighter than air gas to reduce the pressure differential. Even if you don't make it perfectly airtight and just 0,1 atmosphere, that is still 0,9 atmospheres of pressure on the construction. Without some kind of ultra light and ultra strong material, that just isn't feasible. Any steel construction would either collapse in on itself or be so heavy it never lifts off the ground.

  • @SoulTouchMusic93
    @SoulTouchMusic93 Před 5 měsíci +329

    as a trucker it's not just the sweetspot for transportation, but also it's easy to get it into places. you can get close to anywhere in a truck and they're very flexible when it comes to what load you're transporting.

    • @jaspermooren5883
      @jaspermooren5883 Před 3 měsíci +35

      Yeah I was suprised that wasn't mentioned in the video. It seems to be by far the most important reason trucks are used to so much. Practically everything has road access. Only a small amount of industries have direct water or rail access and direct access to an airport is basically non existant. Practically all air cargo from planes end up in trucks to get to their actual destination. The main reason to use a truck is because it is literally the only option. If there are more options it seems like it usually isn't used.

    • @ritzkola2302
      @ritzkola2302 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I would love to see a tax credit for truck drivers and sharecroppers and herders. Positions like that in this country.

    • @vinda9815
      @vinda9815 Před 2 měsíci +6

      Truck propaganda!

    • @xanthoptica
      @xanthoptica Před měsícem +1

      That's true...for loads that are on the same road network. But you still have all the time and expense of intermodal exchange, for containers. You can't drive across an ocean, or across the isthmus of Panama...but you could fly an airship. You can get an airship even more places than a truck, and wouldn't have to unload it until you got to your destination. Even on land, that could be faster and much easier if not limited to road networks (like the turbine blade example).

    • @arturoledreamo9535
      @arturoledreamo9535 Před měsícem +4

      This is mainly an infrastructure point more than a a truck vs other stuff point. Trains can (and should, and do in other countries) be much more widespread when it comes to delivering goods throughout cities, we just don't use them.

  • @tartansauce4879
    @tartansauce4879 Před 8 měsíci +961

    I actually wrote my senior thesis many years ago about how airships occupy a nice place economically for shipping. I keep waiting for them to make a comeback.

    • @magnusamann6806
      @magnusamann6806 Před 8 měsíci +14

      That sounds interesting! Is it possible for you to send that thesis to me as pdf?

    • @Gremlin23
      @Gremlin23 Před 8 měsíci +15

      Economics only, or was it on the engineering as well? I'm curious as to the viability of using hot air as a lifting gas.

    • @tyruskarmesin5418
      @tyruskarmesin5418 Před 8 měsíci +17

      @@Gremlin23I would think that it would only be slightly lighter than the air outside, and you would need to use a lot of energy to keep it hot.

    • @tokarak
      @tokarak Před 8 měsíci +42

      Or - hear me out - you could heat the hydrogen!

    • @nadademamaditas
      @nadademamaditas Před 8 měsíci +4

      The airlander is thicc

  • @bernarrcoletta7419
    @bernarrcoletta7419 Před 8 měsíci +638

    It’s amazing how airships are the technology that won’t die. A friend of mine graduated from college back in the 80s and went to work for a company doing research into LTA aircraft for the Navy. Also, back in the late 80s, Dean Ing wrote a sci-fi book called “The Big Lifters”, where he built a whole multi-modal transportation system around hybrid airships.

    • @ashleyroach5985
      @ashleyroach5985 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Niceee

    • @zebragoboom
      @zebragoboom Před 7 měsíci +39

      won't die? I'd say calling it alive is a stretch, there are more astronauts than blimp pilots haha

    • @0truckmafk
      @0truckmafk Před 7 měsíci +3

      SpaceX will be the new market disrupter in terms of shipping good with his Starship rockets from China to NY in just 40 minutes.

    • @Labyrinth6000
      @Labyrinth6000 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Readings me of the fictional book I read when I was young - Airbourne. Themed around a giant airship.

    • @GeorgeMonet
      @GeorgeMonet Před 7 měsíci +21

      @@0truckmafk That will never be financially viable and the huge amount of resources consumed in a world where we need to reduce consumption makes shipping goods inefficiently via rockets just to save time a total nonstarter.

  • @flohi.9515
    @flohi.9515 Před 5 měsíci +117

    There allready was a company in 1996 that tried it this. Problem was it got bankrupt pretty fast. It was Called Cargolifter and was a german company. They had allready build a hangar for assembly. It was and still is the biggest non supported building in the world. Today it has a big climatised water park called Tropical Islands in it. The projekt was too big for the time and had too little funding, but I was impressed by the design and versatility. They hold still a variety of patents, that solved a lot of problems.

    • @PeterBirett
      @PeterBirett Před 2 měsíci +8

      Cargolifter could support the building of wind power plant, transporting the wings and column in one piece, without disassembling all the obstacles along the road, avoid bridges.
      But 2015 the German government killed the financial support of wind power projects. Although cargolifter was bankrupt 2002, that wind power and the electric grid network (mast and transformer) is missing this potential transportation facility.

    • @B.Ies_T.Nduhey
      @B.Ies_T.Nduhey Před 2 měsíci +2

      Germany did a lot of bad things following 2012...
      ​@@PeterBirett

    • @erikaarnold4780
      @erikaarnold4780 Před 2 měsíci +5

      I LOVE threads like this in video comments. Endless, cool-ass information for greedy nerds like me🤓 Thanks!

    • @Mann_mit_Kaffee
      @Mann_mit_Kaffee Před měsícem +2

      yep you can see tropical island at 17:00

    • @Human_01
      @Human_01 Před 19 dny

      BLIMP-TRANSPORT/AIRSHIP-TRANSPORTATION/AIRSHIP-HELICOPTER-DRONE-CARRIERS/AIRSHIP-DRONE-CARRIER/RESOLVED-AIRSHIP-TRANSPORTATION-STABILITY-RESOLUTION/HEXAGON-AIRSHIP/HEXAGON-BUOYANCY-PLACEMENT-AIRSHIP/HEXAGON-UMBRELLA-SHAPED-WEIGHT-SUPPORT/HEXAGON-WEIGHT-DISPLACEMENT-MECHANISM/[HEXAGON-DOME-SHAPED-AIRSHIP/HEXAGON-FORMATION-WEIGHT-DISTRIBUTION-MECHANISMS/HEXAGON-AIRSHIP-CARRIER-AI-AUTOMATED-BUOYANCY-MECHANISM
      Conventional airship cargo-carriers experience instability issues when loading and offloading cargo. The instability in buoyancy (levels); created by the fluctuating mass of the cargo, as well as unstable air-currents (especially at higher altitude), makes conventional designs for airship cargo-carriers inefficient, unstable and potentially unsafe... when compared to alternative modes of cargo transportation vessels, e.g. conventional cargo-ships that travel via a body of water/sea.
      When all is said and done... I have come to realize that the technology should be paired with 'vertical', cargo-transport carries, i.e. [droned] helicopters. Helicopter technology should be incorporated with Ai; so that the drones will be outfitted with cargo (of specific weight/mass). With their proven prowess in vertical takeoff, they will be utilized to safely mount cargo on a giant airship (said cargo will [obviously] need to be spaced/tired-down and stationed relative to each other. Inspiration from the hexagon shape should aid the intended 'fair and even [weight] distribution' of mass, across the storage site within the airship). Like an orchestra, when coordinated, the swarms of vertical [helicopter] drones (coordinated & assisted Ai; will take the shape and form of a 'helicopter', for its vertical functionality... they will double and function as integral, and additional transportation-carriers) will 'double and function' as 'construction-pulleys'; in their purpose in safely and relatively steadily mounting cargo onto the large storage site (that will be situated on top of the airship. I envision a small, but functional runway built on the surface of the airship. It is in this additional, supportive function that the airship will resemble an "aircraft carrier, battle ship"). New and emerging technologies will facilitate this mode if cargo transportation.
      NOTE: When all is said and done... When we take a step back, and observe the construct in action, its coordinated functionalities and mechanisms will resemble the (relationship and transport mechanism) 'worker-bees and their beehive'. Through further research and development of the quantum mechanics; that is at play, and is responsible for buoyancy (its essence is [efficient] mass/weight-distribution within a [specified] medium volume)... It will be possible to reroute/engineer buoyancy (how lighter than air gas behave), i.e. how mass is distributed within a specified [enclosed] medium-volume/volume of a specified medium.
      REMEMBER: that buoyancy takes the path with the least resistance. Point is, if you can manipulate/[quantum] engineer how lighter-than-air gases behave, you will have an easier time using Ai to coordinate their behaviour (with greater efficiency and precision, e.g. making lighter-than-air gases even lighter; manipulating their mass at the quantum scale). Were such endeavours researched, developed and refined to an art, then what we will be left with are the components to anti-gravity technology and [quantum] know-how.
      NOTE: There was a successful scientific experiment; where Rubidium was used to give additional mass to the photon. This resulted in slowing down the photo. The experiment supported the feasibility of hard-light technology. The essence of the experiment was that the mass of subatomic particles could be altered/manipulated to bare desirable outcomes. That research should have been concocted with quantum mechanics in mind. Engineering at the quantum scale is exciting and bares monumental possibilities.
      /Close.

  • @baconberries8097
    @baconberries8097 Před 5 měsíci +54

    Personally, i believe the tourism aspect has much more potential than any other usage. After all, in their hayday, airships were competing with ocean liners. One thing they severely lacked were showers however, so they'd better have a solution for that lol

    • @timotheatae
      @timotheatae Před 2 měsíci +4

      Modern day planes can have showers, so that shouldn't be a problem nowadays!

    • @johnogrady2418
      @johnogrady2418 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Drive it through a cloud and deploy the water-catcher mesh...

    • @ThomasLee123
      @ThomasLee123 Před měsícem

      Kaboom!
      Hindenburg!

    • @marsmotion
      @marsmotion Před měsícem

      sonic shower...

  • @avasam06
    @avasam06 Před 8 měsíci +3525

    I'd love to explore the challenges to anchoring the airship and pulling it down as opposed to trying to constantly push it down with propellers.

    • @assarlannerborn9342
      @assarlannerborn9342 Před 8 měsíci +546

      Maybe, but would that not take away one of it’s strengths: to be able to land anywhere with minimal infrastructure?

    • @sophivorus
      @sophivorus Před 8 měsíci +217

      Also, it may work if you re-load the airship right after, but what if you need to move or even return home with the airship unloaded?

    • @cgriesemer
      @cgriesemer Před 8 měsíci +30

      This was my exact thought as well

    • @NickCombs
      @NickCombs Před 8 měsíci +427

      ​@@assarlannerborn9342 True, but a few cable winches still sound fairly minimal when compared to road, rail, and even runways.

    • @styleisaweapon
      @styleisaweapon Před 8 měsíci +67

      should be able to dynamically adjust buoyancy with some pumps and pressure tanks.

  • @drgeoffangel5422
    @drgeoffangel5422 Před 3 měsíci +21

    Helium filled airships are no problem, but the biggest problem with them, is control. Many years ago at Hatfield , a British Airways Airship landed on a small strip of land. From there about 8 passengers got out, as it was their destination. I was just one of about 30 strong lads on the ground holding onto the main rope in the front of the airship, and we struggled to keep her on the ground. Obviously as the airship emptied her cargo( passengers), the aluminium gondola became lighter. The lift being constant, it wanted to lift up. It was a calm virtually no breeze summer afternoon, and we /the captain too, had a great deal of problems keeping the airship from just lifting off the ground. Once some more passengers filled it, it became easier to control. Then when it needed to take off again, it used to ducted fan engines acting downwards to help her lift off the ground.
    Now this was a calm balmy summers day, and I was amazed at the lifting power of this airship, and thus also the difficulty trying to control it, if the wind picks up , even a bit.
    Thus although they can lift and fly serenely and probably with less noise and pollution than a plane or helicopter, You are even more at the mercy of the wind, than a plane or helicopter. Providing your journey is not against the wind, once up in the air, it wont cost you much in fuel! Should they be brought back, that depends if they can solve the endemic control problems just highlighted here!

    • @azure9809
      @azure9809 Před 2 měsíci +3

      I imagine modern airships would need to have mechanical means of being weighed down or releasing and gaining levels of gas without waste when landing and taking off.
      Maybe there could be some clamps that rise up into the air to grip onto the airship and slowly pull it down pneumatically. I imagine we could also have more and better propellers to hopefully stabilize the airship in choppy weather.
      I must admit though, I have a hard time seeing an airship being able to operate properly in any kind of storm. I could just be lacking imagination on the subject.

    • @itchytastyurr
      @itchytastyurr Před 2 měsíci +4

      why wouldn't there be an anchor to guarantee secure tethering instead of a bunch of blokes? assuming its a planned stop, a hook drilled into the ground aught to be waiting there.

    • @johnogrady2418
      @johnogrady2418 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Maybe it stabilizes if it's pointed in the right direction and a computer could do that?

  • @stephenirvin8556
    @stephenirvin8556 Před 4 měsíci +17

    I've liked blimps and airships since I could remember and I really hope to see one that is as big or bigger than the Hindenburg. I believe that airships are way, WAY ahead of their time, and as such so were the problems they faced. But now technology and the knowledge of physics and old materials being used in new ways combined with new materials being tested, I really think we are catching up to that age where airships will be recognized as a safe reliable craft for all kinds of purposes. Also lets not forget that our understanding of the weather is vastly better than what it was almost 100 years ago! Im excited to see what develops.

  • @JohnTaylor-gy4np
    @JohnTaylor-gy4np Před 8 měsíci +218

    As an airship engineer with blimp operations experience going back 40 years, I thank you for making a video rhat actually explains the concepts, benefits and challenges correctly, and in a way that the general public would understand. Most videos about the future of airships are filled with fantasy and error.

    • @dianapennepacker6854
      @dianapennepacker6854 Před 8 měsíci +6

      Would it be possible to make a thermal airship using solar energy for lift by using electrical heaters and propulsion? Obviously have a back up gas system in place.
      Maybe enough to have a small apartment in it?
      If I was filthy rich screw a yacht! I'd take the airship if I could do that. However I don't like the idea if using helium specifically since it leaks, and is non renewable.

    • @justinankar
      @justinankar Před 8 měsíci +3

      @@dianapennepacker6854 It seems thermal airships have 30% less lift for the volume, in addition if there is a heating failure you're going down and constantly heating uses energy. So the extra weight of solar, plus heating, probably going to be terrible for cargo uses.

    • @nocare
      @nocare Před 8 měsíci +5

      ​@@dianapennepacker6854 not practical for 2 main reasons.
      First and most importantly hot air has 35-40% the total lifting power of hydrogen/helium. So you hit a point where structural weight exceeds lifting capacity increase with size much sooner.
      Second because the envelope needs to be very lightweight it is also very thing and a poor thermal insulator. So hot air-craft loose a huge amount of energy and are very inefficient. Meaning that even a perfect theoretical max solar panel would be unable to gather energy faster than its consumed.
      Also there is the extra problems like panels would have to be integrated into the skin but they hate heat so they need insulation from the heated envelopes but that adds weight and structural problems ect ect.
      Not saying its impossible would need to do actual engineering for that but the plausibility is low.
      Kind of like solar powered planes. Yeah you can do it but one capable of carrying 2 people is the wingspan of a 747 and a strong breeze can cause severe damage.

    • @user-cy9jr9gt2f
      @user-cy9jr9gt2f Před 8 měsíci +2

      Nice to have an expert in the comments. Would an mixture of nitrogen hydrogen and water vapour be a suitable lifting gas?
      Below 14% hydrogen it would not be flammable as far as I know. If there would be enough lift it would be suitable for human transport and other safety critical stuff. For anything else would just use unmanned hydrogen drones.

    • @user-cy9jr9gt2f
      @user-cy9jr9gt2f Před 8 měsíci

      Water vapour only to 80% humidity because it’s lighter than air

  • @jessy1982
    @jessy1982 Před 4 měsíci +10

    This made me excited for the future.
    I hope even if they can't make giant cargo airships yet, they can manage smaller ones, which can then teach how to scale up through practice.

  • @ledrid6956
    @ledrid6956 Před 5 měsíci +14

    Can't wait to see a massive football in the sky that says "play raid shadowlegends now!" on the side.

  • @bassemb
    @bassemb Před 7 měsíci +825

    Airships have been trying to make a comeback for decades. In 2007, I myself was involved in an airship startup. We wanted to build a 500 meter long rigid body airship for cargo. Then after market analysis we settled on smaller ships to serve as sky cranes and tourism airships. The same ideas mentioned in this video. We even spent a lot of time on the buoyancy gas compression problem. Back then, we were looking at competitors such as the SkyCat (which is still to this day, "proposed"). It's interesting to see, in 2023, how the revival of airships is still in the planning stages. Even more interesting when you consider that they did have their heyday once. So it's not like it's a purely theoretical idea.

    • @McSlobo
      @McSlobo Před 7 měsíci +20

      I've been playing with this idea about sky trains, i.e. a chain of airships linked together so that it's built of multiple sections and linked so that drag is minimized. What do you think would be the biggest problem with that, aside of maybe side wind which would likely be hard? They could be gigantic, but on the other hand, smaller ones could be used on low altitude and they could be perhaps pulled / powered using a some sort of cable system on ground, but that's a bit different concept altogether.

    • @BQvler
      @BQvler Před 7 měsíci +10

      This is very interesting - would you be able to share the reasons why you moved away from the idea of using them for cargo? Concerns that come to mind would be; the fear of the industries inability to adapt / get on board with such an idea, or backlash from citizens not wanting their sky obstructed by large cargo airships - but that's just me guessing, I'm quite interested in what you gathered during your research!

    • @TheMrPeteChannel
      @TheMrPeteChannel Před 7 měsíci +19

      Well one thing is they need to use Hydrogen. The world is running out of helium.

    • @Solotocius
      @Solotocius Před 7 měsíci +8

      I mean... AI was also being worked on ever since the invention of computers, right? And considering that legitimate attempts at making AI has only caught up like last year, the same can and may happen with airships soon (or at least I hope so).

    • @jimmcneal5292
      @jimmcneal5292 Před 7 měsíci +6

      Did you consider an idea of just using metal chains to fixate it after it landed?

  • @Jia-ys9vq
    @Jia-ys9vq Před 8 měsíci +749

    I think one upside of having airships back is that they look cool as hell

    • @barongerhardt
      @barongerhardt Před 8 měsíci +47

      They are only cool because they are rare. If the low height skis were flooded with them around every major population center, people would hate them as much as they hate living too close to a major airport.

    • @jadegecko
      @jadegecko Před 8 měsíci +4

      Given your KSP profile picture, have you used the mod Hooligan Labs airships? It's like my only 'must have' mod at this point

    • @NHCH
      @NHCH Před 8 měsíci +62

      ​@@barongerhardtplanes aren't rare and they are cool as hell as well 😅

    • @barongerhardt
      @barongerhardt Před 8 měsíci +19

      @@NHCH I'm a pilot, I like planes. I hear far more complain about them, than those pointing out, "look a plane." Most don't care, unless they live close to an airport.
      These things will be far lower and larger than planes. The one saving grace will be if they don't make much sound, but if their engines cause a constant hum or whine in busy spaces they will be hated.
      Helicopters are super cool, but you don't want on hovering over your house/place of work.

    • @funky555
      @funky555 Před 8 měsíci +7

      ​@@barongerhardtNah. planes suck because theyr eloud

  • @seniorchicken7461
    @seniorchicken7461 Před 4 měsíci +1

    This was absolutely perfect. I was able to design and visualize the creature i was trying make for the longest time. Now i just need to learn to draw it with sense

  • @doublintucksveto5321
    @doublintucksveto5321 Před měsícem +3

    If these things actually get built, I am going to sit outside of an airfield in a lawn chair with a big old bowl of popcorn and watch the show. Seeing something that big fly sounds like the coolest thing ever.

  • @Arcadelt12
    @Arcadelt12 Před 7 měsíci +1006

    The collective horror at the Hindenburg almost can't be overstated. Airships reached a glorious pinnacle in the 20s and 30s, and the Hindenburg was the best of them. A true marvel of the world. Its fiery and dramatic destruction created such a powerful stigma that we still haven't recovered from it. That single event changed the course of aviation history, but it probably would have happened at some point.

    • @achimdemus-holzhaeuser1233
      @achimdemus-holzhaeuser1233 Před 7 měsíci +101

      The Titanic of Airships so to say. .. sadly we still have Luxury Cruisers :)

    • @Arcadelt12
      @Arcadelt12 Před 7 měsíci +104

      @@achimdemus-holzhaeuser1233 it would be the Titanic of airships if the Titanic was one of the first ships ever constructed. Hindenburg had the additional burden of being new technology, whereas the Titanic was mostly a large version of pre-existing tech

    • @RichardAlaskanforaPassing
      @RichardAlaskanforaPassing Před 7 měsíci +91

      It's weird how one airship crashed destroyed an entire niche that lasted for almost ages (balloons have been around for hundreds of years) but airplanes crash all the time and people accept it.

    • @Arcadelt12
      @Arcadelt12 Před 7 měsíci +62

      @@RichardAlaskanforaPassing this is true, but never before had such a fiery and destructive vehicular catastrophe been captured on film for the world to see

    • @markiobook8639
      @markiobook8639 Před 6 měsíci +39

      The issue was not so much of it being a horror Hindenburg had flown over 300,000 km without fault. Consider how many civilian aircraft had crashed and burned before reaonably reliable tri-motors and the DC3 came on the scene. Far more fatalities.
      The issue was that in the late 1920's and early 1930's competitors for duralinium- the Zeppelin works Aluminium alloy- was now in demand by the new far more rigid, more reliable, faster and cheaper metal skinned aluminium monoplanes. One Zeppelin used far more aluminium than several aircraft that could carry equal load, further and faster. This is what truly killed the airship- and remember the massive size of the airship makes it extremely vulnerable to wind, to currents, updrafts and down drafts- so in some cases lift without thrust is self defeating. As we massively improved thrust, and lowered drag- we got massive payoffs in lift.

  • @cheeseisgreat24
    @cheeseisgreat24 Před 8 měsíci +476

    One thing I always thought airships could be used for was SAR operations in regions where people get lost during normal weather, the thing can loiter over their last known location and send out camera drones to increase its effective search area, and if they’re conscious enough to signal, it’s impossible to not notice the massive dirigible in the sky and know where to direct their signal.

    • @user-mc5oh2pl7t
      @user-mc5oh2pl7t Před 8 měsíci +57

      Well, US tried to use airships for early warning.
      As it turns out, while airships CAN stay in the air virtually for free, in order to stay in one spot you need to spend fuel to resist the winds. Also, if weather becomes too bad and winds becoming too strong, you need to land. So, on practice is very hard to exploit their long loitering time.

    • @boulderbash19700209
      @boulderbash19700209 Před 8 měsíci +17

      Fire the flare toward the airship. It exploded. 😅

    • @seanhoude
      @seanhoude Před 8 měsíci +3

      ​@@user-mc5oh2pl7tWhy not just tether it to the ground, then?

    • @Brauljo
      @Brauljo Před 8 měsíci +15

      @@seanhoude It may be difficult to establish an improvised anchor, it may not be as straightforward as with sea ships.

    • @seanhoude
      @seanhoude Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@Brauljo Perhaps, but I'm thinking less improvised and more like a mooring.

  • @gustavocaetano7743
    @gustavocaetano7743 Před měsícem +2

    I want them to come back just because they look so fun and whimsical I love it

  • @nathantagg2691
    @nathantagg2691 Před 4 měsíci +1

    HELL YEAH! I LOVE the idea of big ol' blimps floating all over the place. Also think of how fun it would be to drive verses a truck

  • @spraybottlejim232
    @spraybottlejim232 Před 6 měsíci +498

    Man I don't know about the actual viability of airships, but it just seems so cool to me to be like on the crew of an airship. I don't know why but the idea just excites me so much. It kinda makes me wonder if this is how people felt when air travel was entirely new, it just seems like a new frontier.

    • @Scarl3t03
      @Scarl3t03 Před 6 měsíci +18

      Man i feel the same. It would be like the living when the first ship of the line were built, or during the early biplane era were planes were like small minivan of the skies, delivering all kind of stuff. A whole new frontier without the inhumane buerocracy or training required.
      It also feel extremely romantic, slowly soaring the skies, in a ship like control room, while you see the world from above

    • @hitmanRazo
      @hitmanRazo Před 5 měsíci +1

      Have you explore cruise travel! Not the same as being in the air but easily majestic and humbling on new frontiers

    • @gabrielabreu2425
      @gabrielabreu2425 Před 5 měsíci +8

      Just imagine how quiet it would be, especially when staying still.

    • @mechadoggy
      @mechadoggy Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@hitmanRazoSo airships can basically be like luxury cruise travel with lots of amenities except in the air instead of on the sea.

  • @Chris-ok4zo
    @Chris-ok4zo Před 8 měsíci +1117

    There's something so retro/steampunk yet so sci-fi about a world where these things reign supreme. Hope I get to see these in the sky one day.
    Edit: Peeps in comments keep mentioning "solarpunk" fitting these things more. I didn't know that was a thing or a word that existed, but now I do. Thanks.

    • @bosssnurp5912
      @bosssnurp5912 Před 8 měsíci +12

      Blimp is a funny word haha

    • @GM-xk1nw
      @GM-xk1nw Před 8 měsíci

      in America people will shoot them

    • @MagikarpMan
      @MagikarpMan Před 8 měsíci +1

      U can still see them every now and then

    • @singamajigy
      @singamajigy Před 8 měsíci +27

      It’s solar punk! We can have a beautiful future.

    • @NowayJose14
      @NowayJose14 Před 8 měsíci +8

      I was gonna say, sounds like solarpunk to me!

  • @matthewh8005
    @matthewh8005 Před 6 měsíci +302

    I would kill for airships to become a way of holiday. Imagine spending two weeks flying over the Australian Outback, watching the sunset over the red desert from up high in the sky. It would be amazing!

    • @ianmiller6040
      @ianmiller6040 Před 5 měsíci +40

      That would be a definite market for them. Turn them basically into flying cruise ships, with onboard amenities, restaurants, shops, and of course floor-to-ceiling windows everywhere. Then chart a two-week cruise around the skies of the Alaskan wilderness and you're suddenly making bank. When you can take your cruise ship *anywhere* on land OR water, the sky (pun) is truly the limit. I would sail on them whenever I could.

    • @ChrisTheDuck20
      @ChrisTheDuck20 Před 3 měsíci +11

      ​@@ianmiller6040right? They would likely be more expensive than a cruise thanks to them having to be smaller, BUT imagine them getting to go anywhere? I wonder what a world cruise on one of them would look like

    • @eltaxistaaaa
      @eltaxistaaaa Před 3 měsíci +4

      That sounds awesome!

    • @Ox_Eye
      @Ox_Eye Před 3 měsíci +2

      I mean there are billionaires in this world... Get on their will and ill leave the rest to u

    • @mikk.t.7824
      @mikk.t.7824 Před 3 měsíci

      It would be very sea sickening

  • @bearlogg7974
    @bearlogg7974 Před 2 měsíci +4

    Comparing Hindenburg to a modern zeppelin would be like comparing Chernobyl to a modern nuclear power plant

  • @Penfold497
    @Penfold497 Před 3 měsíci +1

    My home town has a combination blimpport-commuter submarine dock, and we love it

  • @bryancardenas364
    @bryancardenas364 Před 7 měsíci +445

    I love the fact that the startup chose the name "Flying Whales", which is the title of a Gojira song (that address environmental issues) released seven years before their founding. Plus, considering that both the startup and the band are French, I don't think it's a coincidence.

    • @SmaugTheTerrible
      @SmaugTheTerrible Před 7 měsíci +43

      WATER OF CHAOS HAVE INVADED ALL SPACE
      THE FLOOD ON EARTH AGAIN, I HAVE TO FIND THE WHALES

    • @cumbob
      @cumbob Před 7 měsíci +9

      I was just thinking about this lol they probably will never comment on it but could very well be

    • @flawless7019
      @flawless7019 Před 7 měsíci +12

      Probably my all time favourite song. The guitar is impeccable and gave me goosebumps the first time I listened to it. Literally stopped whatever I was doing and focused on the experience knowing I’ll never be able to top it.

    • @Vinniewashere
      @Vinniewashere Před 7 měsíci

      go see them live @@flawless7019

    • @JetLunatik
      @JetLunatik Před 7 měsíci +7

      Yeah... knowing that they plan to use it to cut down inaccessible forests makes me say that maybe they only liked the title of the song and not the environmental subtext...

  • @heron6462
    @heron6462 Před 7 měsíci +74

    As an occasional hot-air balloonist I'm naturally drawn to airships; however, the proposed cruising speed of 90 km/h could easily be counteracted by high wind speeds. Airships would have to navigate around storms and fight against side winds that would considerable lengthen their flight paths and increase fuel costs. High or turbulent winds at arrival ports would also cause delays or make landing difficult.

    • @helvettefaensatan
      @helvettefaensatan Před 3 měsíci +6

      I'm surprised by the idea that airships should be viable option if other infrastructure is devastated. If wind has destroyed buildings, where have the airships gone?

    • @xanthoptica
      @xanthoptica Před měsícem +1

      @@helvettefaensatan They wait until the storm has passed? For a hurricane, that's a day or so.

  • @nathan1507
    @nathan1507 Před 3 měsíci +7

    This is one of the few instances where "just make it bigger bro" is a solid argument

  • @Doc-Holliday1851
    @Doc-Holliday1851 Před 2 měsíci +2

    I think we have a fascination with air ships because deep down we all just want to live in a Ghibli movie.

  • @rjmacreadyoutpost3121
    @rjmacreadyoutpost3121 Před 7 měsíci +571

    I learned something about airships in the US when I lived near a Goodyear Blimp hanger and spoke with one of the tenders. Apparently, quite a few people take pot shots at blimps with firearms. While unlikely to significantly damage a rigid airship, it does pose a potential danger to passengers.

    • @wanjanechtangroeger
      @wanjanechtangroeger Před 7 měsíci +404

      Sounds like a problem very specific to the US :D

    • @karabenomar
      @karabenomar Před 6 měsíci +366

      @@wanjanechtangroeger It does, indeed. A solution to this U.S.-specific problem might be just as U.S.-specific: Equip the blimp with weapons to shoot back. I'm thinking minigun here but I'm sure you agree we need extensive tests to find out what the best defense option against belligerent civilians is.

    • @markiobook8639
      @markiobook8639 Před 6 měsíci +45

      I would argue that's far more an American issue than for any other country, especially Europe, most of Asia and China.

    • @wanjanechtangroeger
      @wanjanechtangroeger Před 6 měsíci +27

      @@karabenomar Probably makes sense in the eyes of many US citizens :D

    • @AliothAncalagon
      @AliothAncalagon Před 6 měsíci +25

      Maybe large, long distance airships would fly high enough to dodge this problem altogether.

  • @azathoth3700
    @azathoth3700 Před 8 měsíci +214

    I'm loving that we're seeing a return to technologies we'd abandoned in the past with an eye to making them safer and more efficient. Airships are one such technology, but so is wind power for ocean-going vessels! There's at least one company with a test cargo ship undergoing sea-trials using modern "sails" to use the wind as power.

    • @InXLsisDeo
      @InXLsisDeo Před 8 měsíci +16

      Cargos can also carry hundreds of times more freight than any existing or future aeroplane. Because ultimately, a boat works like a balloon, thanks to Archimedes' push, except it's water instead of air that supports the weight.

    • @krishm7812
      @krishm7812 Před 8 měsíci

      @@yyy-875 the company was doing a hybrid system from the start, to reduce fuel consumption

  • @13loodydove46
    @13loodydove46 Před 3 měsíci +3

    If you were going to make sky ships for shipping and what not, I would think you'd need a port for it. I'm thinking a dock like structure where the air ship moves into its space and is locked into place before unloading. The dock would have to be off the ground, allowing easy access to the air ship when not grounded, ease of unloading, and a locking point to stabilize the air ship in place. I keep thinking of balloons of ropes from the Thanksgiving day parade.

  • @dwbrannon
    @dwbrannon Před 13 dny +1

    Another point, if you use hydrogen as a lifting gas, your ship can be equipped with an oxygen extractor and fuel cells and you have an essentially unlimited amount of fuel. Such an airship would be entirely electric and produce only water as exhaust. Your fuel would not only weigh nothing but would actually provide you with lift. Green and efficient!

  • @RustyDust101
    @RustyDust101 Před 8 měsíci +409

    All I have to say is: "Cargo-Lifter" from Germany in the 90's.
    In its huge hangar south of Berlin was supposed to be built exactly this: a massive cargo-carrying rigid airship.
    The company failed after millions had been spent on the development without getting anywhere.
    The hangar was later transformed into the a tourist attraction by transforming it into the largest enclosed water park in the world.

    • @Tynted
      @Tynted Před 8 měsíci +62

      Ehh, just because something wasn't feasible 30 years ago doesn't mean it's doomed to fail in future innovation attempts. VR headsets and games are a good example - manufacturing capabilities have changed significantly in 30-40 years. Not to say it's definitely gonna work this time, but eventually these airships will very likely be feasible in some capacity after enough technological advancement.

    • @jordannoell4222
      @jordannoell4222 Před 8 měsíci +23

      ​​@@TyntedVR isn't the best example as it still is an extremely niche market for users with both the money, and living space for a vr setup. Not to mention the physical limitations of the medium when it comes to handling motion sickness. The manufacturing and engineering advances still haven't made it a mass market product, much like airships currently.

    • @Tynted
      @Tynted Před 8 měsíci

      What? VR is not a prohibitively expensive hobby to get into even now. You can get a Quest 2 for $300 and it provides an acceptable experience. Motion sickness is something that people have been shown to get used to the more they use VR, myself included. I would argue the lack of adoption for the Quest has more to do with Facebook being a generally awful company and locking those devices down to their terrible ecosystem.
      Beyond that, have you used a Valve Index? The hand tracking on that is phenomenal and the weight of the device on your head is already at an acceptable amount as it is. It is an *extremely* immersive experience that is not too far from making it to the vast majority of consumers. Given more time for ludicrously efficient chips similar to Apple's M1 to make it into headsets, it is absolutely only a matter of time before the cables go away entirely while keeping good enough battery life and excellent hand/eye tracking. The requirement of base/tracking stations is probably going to go away at some point, too, although I have no idea how far away that is. Once that point is reached, living space won't matter that much anymore as you'll be able to go outside or into your basement to have enough space for VR. Laptop CPU's and GPU's are already good enough to drive many of the games people will want to play in VR, so there won't be much cost associated with computing power.
      Also, take a look at Apple's AR headset they're working on and how phenomenally well their eye and hand tracking technology works - the fully wireless immersive experience is coming. VR is already a feasible market that is here to stay for many years to come, and it is likely to become much larger within a decade or two.
      30 years ago, this seemed *worlds* away from what was possible at the time, much like airships still seem improbable if not impossible now.
      I see no reason why airships will not be a similar situation. The physics already allows them to exist. At some point, our engineering capabilities are going to make them feasible, if only for a niche market for a time. @@jordannoell4222

    • @zandrew8648
      @zandrew8648 Před 8 měsíci +7

      Something that is niche for consumers is not necessarily niche for large companies willing to spend millions/billions on one project/project item.
      Companies in this sense do not need accommodations for motion sickness, for instance.

    • @madeintexas3d442
      @madeintexas3d442 Před 8 měsíci +4

      There was an awesome Tom Scott video on this.

  • @Rav3nclaw43
    @Rav3nclaw43 Před 8 měsíci +176

    I would be so stoked for airships to become a thing. Used to be obsessed with them as a kid. Read many sci-fi books about airships in my youth

    • @Labyrinth6000
      @Labyrinth6000 Před 7 měsíci +3

      Would the book Airbourne be one of them? 🙂

    • @Everthus4
      @Everthus4 Před 7 měsíci +3

      yeah, there are 100 years old post cards, from 19xx, how people imagined future. Lots of airships. Really lots. I think Hindenburg end airship era too soon.

    • @oadka
      @oadka Před 7 měsíci

      could you list some? i would like to read a few too.

    • @GuinessOriginal
      @GuinessOriginal Před 7 měsíci

      Did you read the big lifters?

    • @ryanledoux366
      @ryanledoux366 Před 7 měsíci

      @@oadka the series Airborn by Kenneth Oppel is amazing, highly recommend

  • @shiro214okane
    @shiro214okane Před 2 měsíci

    13:07 we already have that resolve *points at drones* with automatic stabilizers just input the physics and let it do the automated calculations and adjustments.
    ofc you'll need computers, sensors and propellers to do the counter act balancing, making it strong enough to counter high winds and storm.
    you can also put solar panels at the top and side of the rigid airship, for sustainability of the electronics.

  • @KaneCold
    @KaneCold Před 3 měsíci +1

    I really love this topic and would like to see some viable implementation of airship and buoyancy based cargo transport in the air.
    @2:10 one point missing why trucks just skyrocket in the transportation business is how easy the free market can scale its portion. One truck is faster to build and bought than, ship, train, or plane and even a single person can buy it and start to partake in the business.
    Also the cost for necessary infrastructure is unproportionate paid by trucks. Cargo Stations for Trains, Ports and Airports for Ships and Planes are carried mostly by the involved transportation business. But streets and highways are more accessibly build for public interest. Of course, there are tolls for trucks too but the upfront investment and planing is handled by others parties and because of the huge interconnection opens way more options in its utility.
    What I don't feel right is the comparison of airships to trucks. As the name already suggests its physical and economy, compassion would be better done to ships. This technology can't turn into trucks in this sense. It's more likely that some sort of drone technology or just helicopter would fit that role.
    But I do like the later half that tries to touch on the handling of weight exchange and air currents, and the missing know-how and investment to build large enough air ships to be viable. This is even more problematic as the really short history of airships is dominated by a single(?) horrible event. Which makes it even harder to gather the necessary funds to improve the technology.
    I feel like the last mention of the debate about hydrogen to helium is a bit short. It's a pretty bias old discussion that nobody wants to take again because it's already defined by older generations because of one accident. It's not good because people got scared. This could have been a bit more detailed, I think. For most transportation technics mentioned here had their fair share of scare, and I'm pretty sure that most were pushed through with the intent to improve on it. Also I feel the danger of hydrogen is blown out of proportion because of the quite flashy visual effect (that is definitely horrible to experience). But being rocket along a rail via train and having an accident can easily be as messy as crashing with a plane full of kerosene.
    One social economy aspect I also like to throw in into this discussion is the "need for speed" that comes with air transport via planes. Planes as we use them today are working by principles that are viable for military purpose, not civil intention. For a military implementation, you want to have the upper hand in speed and striking capabilities, even if this means sort of higher upkeep. In the same regards, slow, big objects in the sky with weak armor are easy targets for the enemy.
    Yet on the other way around, for a civil implementation of transport, reducing the cost and necessary power to move cargo is more important and speed becomes slightly behind. Ships use their bouncy, trains the reduced friction and trucks ... well trucks work because it's easy to scale up and have more access.
    While speed in economy is as important as in war, I think the excessive use of planes cements this war like thinking of Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger.

  • @RockSolomon
    @RockSolomon Před 7 měsíci +176

    In the 1920s, they had air ships that were longer than the titanic and could catch airplanes in mid air and launch them… after a century of technological improvements, I think this idea is worth revisiting.

    • @zwenkwiel816
      @zwenkwiel816 Před 7 měsíci +24

      yes, we could finally do crimson skies for real!

    • @fabianlaibin6956
      @fabianlaibin6956 Před 7 měsíci +6

      @@zwenkwiel816woo yeah air piracy

    • @davidvincent380
      @davidvincent380 Před 7 měsíci +3

      @@zwenkwiel816 it baffles me than that gem has never been remade or copied

    • @VaxzaLimeIsCool
      @VaxzaLimeIsCool Před 7 měsíci +3

      Omg floating cities🤯

    • @hmcm596
      @hmcm596 Před 7 měsíci

      The Hindenburg could do it. it more technology we can do it

  • @vivienclogger
    @vivienclogger Před 8 měsíci +147

    I've been following for some time the rise and fall (literally) of Airlander - the UKs most recent attempt to get airships up and running again - and it isn't as easy as it sounds. The use of helium rather than hydrogen means it's not as efficient as the old pre war airships and even modern designs still limit their efficiency. More importantly, as you noted, helium is in short supply and I don't see how you'd source that limited supply without the unexpected demand dramatically increasing the price. Airlander has decided to focus on a very exclusive market to try and claw back the millions that investors (including Iron Maiden lead singer Bruce Dickinson) have made over the years. And as someone who used to have blimps fly over my head as a child (I lived near the Cardington Sheds) they struggle in even light winds. As a regular and reliable means of transporting large quantities of cargo over vast distances - especially as the climate becomes even more aggressive - I just can't see it happening.
    Btw: Those great big 'sheds' seen in the Airlander video are in Cardington, housed the original R100/R101 series and was briefly the home of the Airlander. They're expensive to maintain and are now owned by Warner Brothers - I believe that one even appears in the background at the start of The Dark Knight Rises.

    • @TelevisionParents
      @TelevisionParents Před 8 měsíci +5

      This was a great read, thx for sharing!

    • @richardde5201
      @richardde5201 Před 8 měsíci +8

      Yep, I remember reading in aeronautics trade publications that my dad would get like 30 years ago that airships are the next big thing. Then it fizzled out. Then again about 15 years ago it blew up again and all these "futuristic" designs were all over and again fizzled out. I feel like by this time if it was a good idea it would have happened by now.

    • @CoffeeD_1
      @CoffeeD_1 Před 8 měsíci +3

      8% lift difference, while it is an issue that needs to be solved later, doesn't seem like it would affect the early development of large airships too much. The cargo market is so large that I feel like there will be enough interest to sustain a rather long unprofitable periods while development continues. The wind issue seems like the largest problem.
      Btw, I don't think hydrogen is as big of a problem as it was. newer structural materials, and especially new propulsion methods such as hydrogen fuel cells can be managed very easily to make fires close to impossible, especially when you specifically design them around fire safety. Also since it is cargo ships, most people probably care a lot less if one goes down every few years.

    • @nicstroud
      @nicstroud Před 8 měsíci +1

      I hope they fail. I don't mean that in a malicious way, hoping people lose all their money, I just don't like the business model.
      Helium is a finite resource which is very important for science. The idea of filling an airship with it, just so some rich twats can have a floating, safari wine bar, seems like unnecessary, wasteful decadence.
      Putting wind turbines in remote, hard to access locations, so they can more efficiently develop green energy seems like a better use of this scarce resource.

    • @BrotherCheng
      @BrotherCheng Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@nicstroud Yeah. Helium is also one of the few genuinely non-renewable resource on Earth since it's an element (cannot be made via chemical process), and raw Helium is light enough that it escapes the atmosphere into space so it will never come back to us. We can technically make them via nuclear fusion but you only make a tiny amount from it (not to mention you may need more helium to cool the superconducting magnets anyway). Meanwhile, Helium has a unique role in science and engineering and medicine and I don't think we know of a viable alternative for some of its applications.
      Having mass-deployed airships that use helium seem like a terrible idea to me (not to mention expensive).

  • @apdiversion834
    @apdiversion834 Před měsícem

    so many new materials today, a fantastic idea.

  • @RoteFahneNation
    @RoteFahneNation Před 4 měsíci

    I’ve been saying it for a while. Use em for pedestrian mail. Bus’s & mail trucks of the sky. Small airships that zip around town delivering small and medium packages with drones or lil wenches.
    The hybrid style airship shown would be a decent choice for that.

  • @something2424
    @something2424 Před 7 měsíci +314

    Honestly I think the sail effect is the killer of airships, even relatively gentle updrafts and downdrafts could send your massive hydrogen filled multimillion dollar ship into an uncontrollable flightpath. I think hybrid ships with an airfoil is the way to go but like you covered, that leave cargo behind. What a great video.

    • @DJRonnieG
      @DJRonnieG Před 7 měsíci +12

      Maybe the answer is to never land.... perhaps an ejectable gondola quad-copter could be used?

    • @gmdille
      @gmdille Před 7 měsíci +28

      @@DJRonnieG That'll be $750 billion in R&D for an ejectable gondola quad-copter in 20 years and yeah no that's an engineering nightmare

    • @DJRonnieG
      @DJRonnieG Před 7 měsíci +32

      @gmdille so in other words, it needs a military application to speed things along and the obligatory bottomless pit of funding.

    • @sjsomething4936
      @sjsomething4936 Před 6 měsíci +8

      I suspect the killer to do this at a scale that conceivably replaces some portion of oceangoing container ships is the number of hangars and the associated expense to build them. For luxury civilian travel I could imagine seeing airships taking to the skies again. The point about dirigibles being able to access locations that are remote or otherwise extremely difficult to get to is interesting though. One of the fairly significant differences is that airships don’t suffer from bottlenecks in locations like the Suez or Panama canals. I just hope they don’t use helium, we cannot make more of it and it is a relatively scarce commodity that’s incredibly useful.

    • @bb5979
      @bb5979 Před 5 měsíci +1

      An escape system would be useful if this idea were to be revived

  • @bluesmon54321
    @bluesmon54321 Před 7 měsíci +142

    Two good ways to solve the problem of off-loading cargo causing the airship to shoot upward. 1. Mooring lines could be lowered to tie the ship to the ground long enough to compress the helium to effect the correct buoyancy, or, 2. lower the cargo, as depicted, on lines until the cargo touches the ground, then not releasing the cargo until the compressor compresses enough helium to make the lines lax at which point there's no longer any danger of the ship shooting upward. Then release the cargo and the airship could take off.

    • @babylebron6119
      @babylebron6119 Před 6 měsíci +13

      Sometimes the easiest ways are forgotten

    • @stankygeorge
      @stankygeorge Před 6 měsíci +1

      How about build them to be slightly heaver than air, then use the lifting body concept to compensate for the added weight.

    • @Flooberjobby
      @Flooberjobby Před 6 měsíci +5

      They shouldn't try making it with enough gas volume for lifting the products. They need to make a new container for the products, and use the air ship just a net/holder of the products. Basically fill the containers with the gas needed. No need to worry about the weight loss and raising, or lowering of the ship. If something goes wrong with the product container it can just be dropped with chutes. Makes it safer, and more capable. Plus a simpler solution is always the choice. Not to mention the ship won't technically be changing in weight.

    • @Killerspieler
      @Killerspieler Před 6 měsíci +5

      Tie them down was exactly what I thought!
      You can then even one up that to make it faster and more efficient wherever you drop anything:
      Use the potential energy of the goods you are lowering to spin up a generator feeding power to the compressors for the helium.
      In airship ports you can simply make it faster by providing an additional power line, just for time efficiency.

    • @pretz3lverse
      @pretz3lverse Před 6 měsíci +3

      Would it make sense to add a "hot air balloon" compartment to the Airship? So, when you need to drop something off you cool the compartment of air and then heat it back up?

  • @rexemondaforever2283
    @rexemondaforever2283 Před 5 měsíci

    I really would like to see this done, it just seems so cool!

  • @Jakob.Hamburg
    @Jakob.Hamburg Před měsícem

    I would also like to see more airships in the sky. Once I had a one time job in Berlin to help starting a a small commercial airship that showed some adds. This was cool.

  • @Mercenaryow
    @Mercenaryow Před 8 měsíci +292

    This large Zeppelin hangar with its 360m length that you have shown is located near Berlin. A few years ago, Germany tried to technically implement this dream, but unfortunately failed. In the meantime, this hangar is home to a leisure park called Tropical Island. You can even parachute onto a beach from a platform under the ceiling there. That's how huge the building is :D

    • @georgyekimov4577
      @georgyekimov4577 Před 8 měsíci +4

      well the money got stolen sadly

    • @CrackedPi
      @CrackedPi Před 8 měsíci +6

      @@georgyekimov4577 there was bo other use for this building

    • @christiankrause1594
      @christiankrause1594 Před 8 měsíci +4

      Germany has also a not-by-authorities-approved fast-breeder nuklear power station, which is now "Wunderland Kalkar" (previous 'Kernwasserwunderland'), an
      amusement park.

    • @krux02
      @krux02 Před 8 měsíci +10

      To my knowledge Cargolifter was mostly an investment scam that sold a dream. Tropical Islands isn't a win, it is an attempt to use that hangar for at least something.

    • @Mercenaryow
      @Mercenaryow Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@christiankrause1594 interesting, that's something i didnt know.

  • @nathanthebird4625
    @nathanthebird4625 Před 8 měsíci +61

    I love the idea of seeing airships in the sky. They just seem so much more graceful.

    • @runswithraptors
      @runswithraptors Před 7 měsíci

      It's like a giant whale in the sky 🐳☁️

  • @dragonrag180
    @dragonrag180 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Two possible solution here:
    For cargo applications, what if airship ports had gas tanks to adjust buoyancy. When cargo unloads, gas is simultaneously released into tanks. Loading? Just pump more gas. This way it always maintains a balanced buoyancy.
    No compression or equal cargo weight trade is needed, just pump and release. Only use the compression method and cargo trade for emergency applications when no port is available.
    I’m no scientist but an idea of how this could work is maybe connecting a wide tube on the roof of the airship so when when the valve unlocks, the gas naturally rises and escapes without the need for pumps. Then the engineers could figure out a way to passively bring the gas below ground level and when it’s needed to fill the airship, it gets filled from the bottom and it naturally rises into the airship. That way it reduces cost, energy and the need for compressors.
    Option 2:
    An attachment could be designed to be applied to the roof of the actual cargo containers so the cargo itself has no weight. This will provide a fast loading and unloading without interrupting the airship.
    Then at the port they can use option one on the cargo or compressors on emergency locations.
    Airship could remain helium, while the cargo attachments could be hydrogen.

    • @antoniocampen
      @antoniocampen Před 3 měsíci

      you would still need a compressor, just on the ground. otherwise how are you going to get LTA gas down to the ground? i really like option 2, have a big balloon like thing attached to the containers themselves. it doesnt even need to completely negate the weight, if it can reduce it it already simplifies everything a lot, you could have an onboard compressor with current technology that generates enough ballast on its own. or you can still load ballast, but the amount needed would be lower. maybe a combination depending on the expected operation of the airship.

    • @user-sy5yw2dj3k
      @user-sy5yw2dj3k Před měsícem

      I like the idea of a mixed bag of gasses. Helium fixed and hydrogen to adjust. Water for trim.

  • @reevil402
    @reevil402 Před 2 měsíci +1

    If this is how the future looks, I'm absolutely hyped for it.

  • @Standartt01
    @Standartt01 Před 8 měsíci +174

    Back in highschool, we had an innovation theme in Physics Class. Where I presented Hydrogen Airships, with a twist! Where the hydrogen envelopes would be encased in a nitrogen envelope. Creating a buffer between hydrogen and oxygen, where it is possible to detect it before it becomes dangerous.
    Still often think about it, and this made me think back on it, hydrogen is significantly cheaper than Helium, and it could also be used through a fuel cell essentialy using the same fuel for both lifting gas and electric propellers.

    • @stepheneyles2198
      @stepheneyles2198 Před 8 měsíci +15

      That sounds like a very interesting concept - I hope the companies designing airships take note and see if it's practical!

    • @michaelbuckers
      @michaelbuckers Před 8 měsíci +27

      Hydrogen leaks is just something you have to live with, because it readily leaks even through solid metal - thin polymer film gasbag has no hope of stopping it from escaping. The way you stop hydrogen fires is the same way you stop gasoline fires - by observing fire safety. It can't burn if you don't ignite it.

    • @Standartt01
      @Standartt01 Před 8 měsíci +20

      @@michaelbuckers While true the leaks happen no matter what. The strength in a buffer is that you have a barrier were after the leaks the gas can't burn, and also that the leaks still will travel upwards, and away from were people are. It might even be possible to dispatch the leaks along the way. While it should be safe enough to travel with proper safety precusions, this design might help regaining trust in hydrogen, since it is overly safe.

    • @johndawson6057
      @johndawson6057 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@stepheneyles2198I'm sure they're watxhing this vifeo right now, taking notes

    • @markkalsbeek5883
      @markkalsbeek5883 Před 8 měsíci +3

      ​@@Standartt01cool idea! I think a big challenge will be maintaining the purity of the nitrogen in the buffer, since hydrogen will be diffusing into it. I wonder if the density of the gasses is sufficient that you could use a centrifuge to seperate them continually to maintain buffer purity.

  • @chillsahoy2640
    @chillsahoy2640 Před 8 měsíci +123

    After the first minute or two when you mentioned that it's a slow and big method of travel, my first thought was "Well yeah but the same is true of cruise ships and those are quite popular." People would enjoy a slow journey as long as they have breath-taking views, and ample entertainment/luxury to pass the time when/if the views are not quite so spectacular. Plus being able to make stops along the way, spend a day grounded here or there so people can soak up the local culture before moving on to the next stop.

    • @Dell-ol6hb
      @Dell-ol6hb Před 8 měsíci +12

      True but any leisure/recreational use of these airships will cost many times what a similar experience on a cruise ship would cost since airships can carry way less people and amenities than a cruise ship could, so they’d have to massively increase the price of each ticket to actually make a profit or even just to break even

    • @boulderbash19700209
      @boulderbash19700209 Před 8 měsíci +6

      Airships are several times bigger than cruise ships, with only a fraction of passengers. Hence the 200 thousand ticket price.

    • @2MeterLP
      @2MeterLP Před 8 měsíci +5

      Problem is that luxury (or even decent) beds are quite heavy. Same for anything else that makes a cruise comfortable. Airship liners had absolutely terrible bed even for the upper class to save weight.

    • @DawnDavidson
      @DawnDavidson Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@2MeterLPseems like air beds would be the thing? Some can be might comfy. :)

    • @2MeterLP
      @2MeterLP Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@DawnDavidsonThats pretty clever. I dont think air beds had been invented yet when air ship liners were a thing, but that seems like a great choice for any airships in the future.

  • @rudiwiedemann8173
    @rudiwiedemann8173 Před dnem

    YES! Right after you bring back horse-drawn carriages, Vacuum-tube televisions and typewriters.

  • @rconger24
    @rconger24 Před 3 měsíci +15

    As long as good weather also makes a comeback.

    • @Quincy_Morris
      @Quincy_Morris Před měsícem

      Now that we have radar bad weather can be avoided like we do with ocean ships.

  • @theDEADLIESTwarrior7
    @theDEADLIESTwarrior7 Před 8 měsíci +1108

    Such an interesting concept I'd love to see it happen

    • @CoolXo1
      @CoolXo1 Před 8 měsíci +8

      I Have an idea I don't know if this would work. but why not make Vacuum in the gas cells but you would have to make it strong enough to handle the Pressure why not do that? I mean A vaccum is way lighter than helium etc and its basically free and it can change the pressure as well. Or am I just to dum. And it wont be dangerous if built proper

    • @nisseost1
      @nisseost1 Před 8 měsíci +32

      @@CoolXo1 Because it will absolutely implode. Which is 10 times worse. And it can't have any leaks, which makes it almost impossible to make structurally sound. And lastly, you cannot generate lift with a vacuum, as it needs to have a material strong enough to withhold the atmospheric pressure. And there is no such material.

    • @CoolXo1
      @CoolXo1 Před 8 měsíci

      You do have a very good point but why not make it the same pressure as Hydrogen I mean it still would be lighter than air outside causing it to rise maybe that would work
      @@nisseost1

    • @assarlannerborn9342
      @assarlannerborn9342 Před 8 měsíci

      Having the gas inside would be tremendously useful right? hydrogen would weigh nothing and contribute to the stability of the structure

    • @sirtra
      @sirtra Před 8 měsíci +2

      Get to tha chopper! We got a cargo crate to deliver to Maui.
      No. Send an airship Mr President.

  • @priusnv
    @priusnv Před 7 měsíci +178

    A somewhat grim reality is comparing the injury/fatality rates compared to fuel used.
    All the current modes of transport--ships, trains, aircraft, cars--carry huge amounts of highly flammable materials, but we've grown accustomed to that risk.

    • @RhythmnOfThought
      @RhythmnOfThought Před 5 měsíci +7

      Any proper train network is electrified, so no, trains don't carry huge amounts of highly flammable materials. The only exception, of course, is if the cargo contains such materials. In that case, the risk cannot be reduced by the mode of transport anyway.

    • @0redfr0g0
      @0redfr0g0 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@RhythmnOfThoughtThough there have been many rail accidents that have killed more people than the Hindenburg.

    • @RhythmnOfThought
      @RhythmnOfThought Před 5 měsíci +3

      ​@@0redfr0g0 Firstly, your argument does not contradict my statement that trains do not carry flammable fuel.
      Secondly, according to the EU Agency for Railways, train fatalities are at about 0.2 fatalities per MILLION train kilometres. I could not find similar data on airships, but this should still make it clear that trains are overall a very safe method of travelling.

    • @0redfr0g0
      @0redfr0g0 Před 5 měsíci

      @RhythmnOfThought Yes, they are much safer now. But during the same time hydrogen airships were around, 1930-40 trains were very dangerous, and derailments were killing loads of people every year. Also, you are just flat out wrong about trains not using flammable fuel, while "electric" nearly all trains (especially freight trains) actually use an onboard diesel generator to make that electricity. Don't speak so arrogantly to others.

    • @RhythmnOfThought
      @RhythmnOfThought Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@0redfr0g0 ​ Yes, many diesel trains turn their fuel into electricity before using it to move their wheels. There are also diesel-electric (hybrid) trains. However, these types of trains are completely distinct from electric locomotives, which do, in fact, not carry any diesel. It is entirely possible that diesel and hybrid trains are popular in the US, but to claim that "nearly all" trains run on diesel without any evidence is just flat-out wrong. You would not need power lines above train tracks if all trains just got their electricity from diesel.
      Again, I have no idea how that is in the US, but there is more to the world than that single country. That's why I specifically mentioned "proper" and "electrified" train networks in my original comment. Wikipedia also defines electric locomotives as being "powered by electricity from overhead lines, a third rail or on-board energy storage".
      Also, providing statistics for my argument is not arrogant in my book. I did not mean to offend you and did not mean to sound arrogant. I simply wanted to dismantle the notion (which you might not even have intended) that trains today are somehow unsafe.
      Lastly, I completely agree that trains have not always been as safe as they are now. Given your further clarification, what I think you are trying to get at with your comment is something like "Had airships had the same amount of time and resources invested into them as trains, they would be much safer now". I agree that this is an interesting idea.

  • @noahcook6711
    @noahcook6711 Před 2 měsíci

    I've been advocating this for atleast 5 years

  • @OfMoachAndMayhem
    @OfMoachAndMayhem Před 3 měsíci +1

    I have thought much about airships (because of how, you know, they're totally AWESOME) - and AFAIK, the solution to basically all inherent problems in their development has already been arrived at by some field of engineering since their century-old heyday.
    Here are some problem/solution examples:
    -- How to control lift while loading/unloading:
    Make the craft less than neutral in buoyancy, then hold level using large rotors. Not propellers, mind. Think of helicopters, not airplane propellers.
    These can be mounted on tilting nacelles (V22-like) and their lift may be very quickly adjusted by means of collective blade pitch.
    You'd only need them at full power during that moment of instantaneous mass change. As the rotors hold the craft in place, the pumps have time to de/compress lifting gas and restore the craft to a neutral unpowered state. (this isn't a new thing, it's called a "Helistat")
    - bonus: you don't even need motors to tilt these pods, only a brake to lock it at a chosen angle, then using cyclic control of the blades, one may torque the whole nacelle as required.
    -- How to assemble a 500-ish meter long craft (without even larger hangars):
    A recent innovation in civil engineering is the concept of self-assembling structures. It is conceivable that a rigid airship can be built of lightweight (carbon fiber, why not?) lattice sections. Comprised of linked rods and spars, that hinge and interlock into position, unfolding into the fully rigid frame of the ship.
    A very large craft can then be inflated, just like a blimp. As the skin-envelope (with the structural bits loosely attached) assumes the correct shape, the frame linkages are locked together and the craft now has a fully rigid outer hull.
    - bonus: You don't need to fill the craft with actual lifting gas during this stage. Regular Air can be pumped to inflate the skin into, then once the structure around it is locked in and rigid, this can be dumped and the floatation tanks filled with the lighter-than-air element of your choice.
    -- I grew up watching Captain Planet. Can I have my airship all electric?
    An all electric airship has the unique advantage of a surface area possibly larger than other vehicle known to man. Why not cover that big empty (besides advertisement) space with solar panels? There'd be a significant trade-off with weight for perhaps not the best performance benefit. There may be a sweet-spot that pays off though, or if nothing else, a Hydrogen lifter can use its own spare lifting gas in fuel cells for the safety of non-combustion motors.
    -- But, Hydrogen does go Boom, dunnit?
    Thing to remember is: You can't have a fire if you don't let oxygen in. That's actually a lot easier than trying to stop Hydrogen from leaking OUT. Seriously, that's actually the main problem with Element #1 - Being highly flammable is surely inconvenient, but if you can figure out a way to just keep from oozing out between the very atoms of your container, (yup, it does that) chances are, then you got a reasonably safe vessel that isn't too likely to re-enact any infamous newsreels.
    During WW1, the brits had one heck of a hard time actively trying to set German bomber airships ablaze. Despite being filled with Hydrogen, it took hundreds of specially loaded, alternating ball and incendiary rounds fired from a machine-gun, focused on one small patch of the ship in order to get enough gas to vent out, so that it'd mix with air and finally ignite.
    It took them several attempts to pull this off. So it goes to show that "Oh, The Humanity!" isn't so much the default end state for any Hydrogen airship as ppl tend to think.

  • @kperry5000
    @kperry5000 Před 8 měsíci +40

    I wish you talked more about how it would handle flying in storms and windy weather, or against the direction the wind is blowing. Or dealing with punctures.

    • @jonathanquarles3708
      @jonathanquarles3708 Před 8 měsíci +3

      it seems like it could land reasonably slowly if it got punctured. what would cause such a massive puncture that all the helium/hydrogen would immediately escape. also i wonder if they could get rid of the oxygen in the space between the ballasts and the hull that way a puncture wouldn't immediately cause a fire. it would have to just fly around bad weather though 🤷‍♂

    • @Bob.martens
      @Bob.martens Před 8 měsíci +15

      Hoho, don't get so real! This is Veritassium...

    • @Jehty21
      @Jehty21 Před 8 měsíci +11

      Punctures aren't that big of a problem for rigid airships.
      As mentioned in this video they have multiple cells that hold the lifting gas.

    • @RufusTheodoreEsquire-cd3if
      @RufusTheodoreEsquire-cd3if Před 8 měsíci

      Can’t fly on flammable hydrogen gas…yet. All helium.
      I’m curious though how the displacement will work? When you drop a load (😂) how will you replace the weight without ascending.

    • @krishm7812
      @krishm7812 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@Bob.martens if you had watched the video they mentioned that rigid is the most feasible concept for any kind of cargo or even passenger airships...

  • @GetMoGaming
    @GetMoGaming Před 8 měsíci +263

    I remember reading an old short sci-fi story written before planes were flying that had gigantic airships carrying people inside. I think it's the oldest imagined human flight concept.

    • @gmarefan
      @gmarefan Před 8 měsíci +21

      We did also commercialize airships before airplanes.

    • @whyjnot420
      @whyjnot420 Před 8 měsíci +2

      In terms of being practical and/or mass transport/travel, I concur. However in terms of the actual words "oldest imagined human flight concept"... (I shouldn't need to point out that humans took inspiration from nature long before coming up with the idea of big balloons)

    • @Game_Hero
      @Game_Hero Před 8 měsíci +7

      Sorry to crash your party but have you ever heard of "hot air balloons"?

    • @pii-chan8804
      @pii-chan8804 Před 7 měsíci +8

      That moment when you realize a hot air balloon is indeed an airship :P

    • @LordIronfist
      @LordIronfist Před 7 měsíci +1

      Well, we did figure out hot air balloons before planes, right? So it's basically that same concept but several degrees of science further along-i think youre correct, is what I'm saying.
      Other than, maybe, cliff diving, I suppose.

  • @Fuad199rpg
    @Fuad199rpg Před 3 měsíci +1

    I might be wrong but i believe compressing at a slower rate the gases needed for lift is possible with a simple (ish) trick that is actually used by ships already, an anchor, basically you take the load to wherever you need to, anchor and then compress the gas at a somewhat slower rate but currently possible, and just un-anchor once you have the lift stable. And in-before comment saying that anchors cant hold that much weight... let me remind you they are used for cargo ships in the ocean which are WAY more heavy

  • @segercliffhanger
    @segercliffhanger Před měsícem

    Yeah. Looks feasible.
    Great visuals, both self-shot and from stock. Really well done. As always, by the way. The 3D-visuals too, they look great.

  • @BenjayTay
    @BenjayTay Před 8 měsíci +111

    In the beginning, I think a reason why trucks are so vastly popular is because of their flexibility. They don't require airports, waterports or railway stations. They can use the existing road network for transport and require their separate infrastructure like trains... You'd need to use a truck for the last mile anyways when transporting goods by train for example. That's why many companies opt for truck transport end to end as it also simpler to organize and more flexible (train networks are not always open to use, but trains run on schedules; trucks can leave whenever they want).

    • @michaelmvm
      @michaelmvm Před 7 měsíci +29

      they're so popular because of the Jones Act which bans foreign ships from traveling between USA ports. So a ship coming from China can't stop at LA and then move onto Seattle, for example. the cargo has to be dropped off at LA and then trucked to Seattle, with the ship going back to China, usually not at full capacity. it's such a ridiculous hindrance that causes billions of dollars in lost efficiency and who knows how much emissions and traffic from all the trucks on the road.

    • @BenjayTay
      @BenjayTay Před 7 měsíci +5

      ​@@michaelmvm Wow, I'm from Germany and didn't know that. Trucks are still very popular in Germany even though foreign ships are allowed to target multiple Germany ports. We have a lot less shoreline though...

    • @Aereto
      @Aereto Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@BenjayTaythe freight rails can make Germany effective as a logistics middleman

    • @BenjayTay
      @BenjayTay Před 7 měsíci

      @@Aereto Our railway network is at 95% in some regions. I'd love for this to happen but if DB or the government don't find a way to add capacity, it's not going to...

    • @dv9239
      @dv9239 Před 7 měsíci +1

      The biggest advantage is you can always replace the driver in the last minute

  • @samuelcornish8050
    @samuelcornish8050 Před 8 měsíci +215

    I love that airships basically just make a lot of logistic issues a lot easier. Im honestly surprised that large airline companies arent trying to make them and figure out these issues as they are a good shift from planes.

    • @thejustlexa
      @thejustlexa Před 7 měsíci +36

      because it would be very expensive, and could end up failing if they dont figure out the issues fast enough, or well enough. And if that failure happens, the expensive investment doesnt end up paying itself back.

    • @CdFMasterVideo
      @CdFMasterVideo Před 7 měsíci +17

      I am afraid the executives of these companies may not be willing to take great financial risk to change the core of their business...it's not very rewarding on the timescale of a person's time as a decision maker.

    • @GhostScout42
      @GhostScout42 Před 7 měsíci +10

      wind

    • @IAmTheAce5
      @IAmTheAce5 Před 7 měsíci +1

      The expense of helium and the loss of knowledge for airship operations ensures that airlines using airplanes would always be on top.

    • @turun_ambartanen
      @turun_ambartanen Před 7 měsíci +27

      Many of the applications are already covered by helicopters, trains or ships. No landing pad? Use a Heli. Still need to transport lots of stuff? Build the appropriate infrastructure, it'll be paid of quickly with the volume of good you are moving. You either move a lot to populated areas, or little to remote ones. There are very few applications for moving lots of stuff to remote areas. Literally the only one I can think of is extreme disaster relief, which happens rarely and unpredictably. At which point an international call for rescue helicopters and trucks is simply better than keeping a fleet of airships in storage all around the world.
      Also kinda telling that trains are not included in the table at 2:10. They are cheaper than trucks and just as fast, if not faster.

  • @MrHangman56
    @MrHangman56 Před měsícem

    i've always been fascinated with rigid airships and other types of these ships for years.
    though even me as an enthusiast, wanting them to make a comeback for the tourist market more so than cargo, i recognize that there's just no chance.
    unless there''s a way to combine making a rigid airship with a hot air balloon, so that way the lift doesn't need to come from a scarce gas like helium, or highly dangerous gas like hydrogen, then there's just no chance for them. but there's no way to consistently heat THAT much air without using a ton of energy. even if you heated all the ribs of the airship you risk the air getting so hot the canvas will burn away.
    however, if you were to make a smaller ship like this, say able to carry 3 or 4 people instead of dozens or hundreds for an air cruise, it MIGHT work having heating elements in the skeleton

  • @xanthoptica
    @xanthoptica Před měsícem

    The "drag as a square of radius, volume as its cube" relationship is also why (oceanic) cargo ships are so big, and getting bigger. Big ships carry more with less drag per ton of cargo.

  • @wingy200
    @wingy200 Před 8 měsíci +97

    If the cargo thing doesn't work out, I'd still like to go to the north pole or the Grand Canyon in one of these. What an adventure that would be! I always thought airships were more elegant than airplanes. I'm rooting for these folks to succeed.

    • @donaldcarey114
      @donaldcarey114 Před 8 měsíci

      If you think the protests due to wind farms being unsightly are loud, just wait till huge airships start to intrude on scenic areas like the Grand Canyon.

    • @williamstrachan
      @williamstrachan Před 8 měsíci +21

      I'm hoping they can get far enough to overtake planes for long distance travel at reasonable cost - If I want to travel 1000 miles I could take a plane, sure, I'll arrive there in a few hours - but I would be happy with the journey taking 2 or 3x as long if I used less fuel and could have a more pleasant journey. Have the journey be part of the holiday, rather than a necessary evil between me and the holiday.

    • @MrToranaGuy
      @MrToranaGuy Před 8 měsíci +5

      @@williamstrachan I reckon you could compare a long distance trip on an airship with a long distance trip on a train, the sort of trip you take a holiday to do, like crossing the USA, crossing Australia or going thru Europe by rail. On an airship, such trips would be breathtaking! Something I look forward to in the future, for sure!

    • @grissee
      @grissee Před 8 měsíci +3

      it can be the combination of luxury yacht + private jet, it can have a lot of amenities, faster than a yacht, yet doesn't pollute the ocean too much (compared to both jet and yacht)

  • @rfarevalo
    @rfarevalo Před 7 měsíci +250

    I rode an airship from Mountain View over San Francisco to the Napa Valley in 2011. Air Ship Ventures purchased a Zeppelin NT built in Germany and based it out of Moffett Field (the federal airbase operated by NASA and leased by Google). The 250 foot long airship named Eureka was the longest in the world at the time. The day long excursion was a beautiful and comfortable site to behold. My ticker cost less than $300! Sadly they went out of business in 2012 and the airship was disassembled and sent back to Germany where she now sits in storage waiting for a new owner. The 4 years she was in the San Francisco Bay were exciting!

    • @jimmysgameclips
      @jimmysgameclips Před 7 měsíci +6

      I think I remember Peter Doctor going on, probably that very one, and it being a big inspiration for the film Up

    • @sachan2526
      @sachan2526 Před 7 měsíci

    • @jeffk464
      @jeffk464 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Oh yeah, I flew on the Good Year blimp in the late 80's in Southern California.

    • @viktor506
      @viktor506 Před 7 měsíci +5

      She does not sit in storage but flies as D-LZNT today. :)

    • @strizen3244
      @strizen3244 Před 7 měsíci +4

      bro rode built in Germany Airship named Erika 💀💀

  • @Articulate99
    @Articulate99 Před 2 měsíci

    Always interesting, thank you.

  • @geophrie8272
    @geophrie8272 Před 4 měsíci

    I love the idea of lossing the need to for large highways in isolated areas and keeping them wild but still allowing small human impacts in those areas

  • @concordez
    @concordez Před 8 měsíci +13

    Seeing that asterisk on the Mriya at 6:44 makes me sad.

  • @Sayne7
    @Sayne7 Před 8 měsíci +142

    I wonder if they could fit each Sky Whale with a Baleen-inspired ballast system.. Fly through clouds to collect moisture in the baleen filters that could line the front of the Dirigible, separate the Hydrogen from the Oxygen to supplement the hydrogen supply, and store or release excess water freely as mist/rain. this would effectively give them a swim-bladder (or flight-bladder?), and even allow them to refuel if they land on water.
    Edit: I also just realized/remembered that Oxygen would also be created/released when separating the hydrogen from the water, and storing/pressurizing oxygen and then releasing it upward (or in other directions with an adjustable system) would be a good and as far as I know, environmentally safe way to add precision to landing maneuvers or speed up descent/ascent when needed.

    • @JeffKrehmer
      @JeffKrehmer Před 8 měsíci +22

      That's creative/imaginative thinking.

    • @redlion145
      @redlion145 Před 8 měsíci +36

      I like the idea of collecting water to use as ballast, and the baleen inspiration from nature is a nice touch. Not sure on the feasibility of splitting water molecules onboard an airship though. There are many methods of achieving electrolysis, but many involve pressure, heat or both.
      But just the idea of carrying ballast water and topping up from itinerant clouds is pretty good on it's own.

    • @Sayne7
      @Sayne7 Před 8 měsíci +17

      @@redlion145 Thanks!
      animals are like the perfect machines of nature, thanks to millions of years of live testing (evolution) so I feel it's helpful to learn how they do what they do best, and apply it to our machines and sciences! (gecko hand/skin suction technology is huge right now)
      I learned that it's actually very easy to convert water into hydrogen, and you are correct it does often involve heat, so this could definitely pose a risk when considering the amount of hydrogen that would be on board. Though I'm sure since the process itself creates hydrogen, there must be a safe way to do it without the hydrogen combusting unintentionally, though I'm not a scientist myself so I wouldn't know unfortunately.
      I'm mostly concerned that the amount of water would be insufficient when converted, as I'm not sure what all the water to hydrogen conversion rates are, and the amount gather-able from atmospheric moisture vs the amount of hydrogen needed for lift may be vastly insufficient for all I know. (imagine taking weeks to gather enough moisture to land lol)

    • @auturgicflosculator2183
      @auturgicflosculator2183 Před 8 měsíci +9

      @@redlion145 There might be enough energy just stored in the frame through static to power the electrolysis, in which case you'd perhaps remove the potential threat of fire such as brought down the Hindenburg...if not, a few patches of solar panels would do.

    • @Sayne7
      @Sayne7 Před 8 měsíci +8

      @@auturgicflosculator2183 That's a very good point!
      The large surface areas of the dirigibles would lend well to solar panels, as well as the near guarantee of nothing blocking out the sun from the panels but clouds here and there and of course, the sun setting.

  • @Rodgerball
    @Rodgerball Před měsícem

    If airships came back I would throw a party, they’re so graceful and beautiful.

  • @feketeroka3272
    @feketeroka3272 Před měsícem

    I've red articles about "airships will back in the future", articles which were 15 and 20 years old.
    And I still haven't seen any airships on the sky.

  • @martinmelhus7324
    @martinmelhus7324 Před 8 měsíci +26

    The problem with the cubed-squared advantage is that the larger the airship gets, the more shearing forces it has to deal with from the atmosphere. A helium balloon is fine with a very thin layer of rubber or mylar, but build a balloon like that on the scale of an airship, and even light gusts of wind will tear it apart. So there's also a cost in going larger, in terms of the support structures necessary to keep the airship in one piece.

    • @bozo5632
      @bozo5632 Před 8 měsíci

      Graphene!

    • @martinmelhus7324
      @martinmelhus7324 Před 8 měsíci

      @@bozo5632 Nice idea, but do you have enough of it to make a balloon? And what about the brittle nature? Hit it just right and it shatters. Catastrophic for flying vehicles.

    • @bozo5632
      @bozo5632 Před 8 měsíci

      @@martinmelhus7324 Depleted Uranium!

    • @martinmelhus7324
      @martinmelhus7324 Před 8 měsíci

      @@bozo5632 Might be good as ballast, but not my cup of tea.

  • @michaeljames5936
    @michaeljames5936 Před 6 měsíci +169

    I've been daydreaming about a return of airships for the past 15 years (off and on; I'm not crazy!) and came up with every single use you have described, About the trees being lifted, I thought it would allow the harvesting of single, valuable trees, say in the Amazon, without having to carve a road in and clear-cut whole areas, just to take one or two trees. Ideally, we'd leave the whole lot alone, but you might be able to partially protect large swathes, by removing the valuable timber, leaving no incentive to cut the rest. TBH though, I don't fancy the sky having one airship for every lorry on our roads today.

    • @Ornithopter470
      @Ornithopter470 Před 5 měsíci +12

      The issue with this is that the logging in the amazon isn't about timber as much as it is clearing land for agriculture. Additionally, "single, valuable trees" aren't going to be viable. Timber for construction relies far to heavily on volume for selective harvesting like that.

    • @pnaychic36
      @pnaychic36 Před 3 měsíci +2

      dude me too!!! lets all collectively dream and manifest airships back!!!!

    • @mechadoggy
      @mechadoggy Před 2 měsíci +2

      “I don’t fancy the sky having one airship for every lorry on our roads today.” Unlike lorries though, airships wouldn’t need to use roads.

    • @B.Ies_T.Nduhey
      @B.Ies_T.Nduhey Před 2 měsíci +2

      ​​@@mechadoggyI wouldn't mind AT ALL 😊

    • @VERIFIED-DEITY
      @VERIFIED-DEITY Před 2 měsíci +2

      Everybody gangsta till the tree pirates pull up in da air ship

  • @MsGeorge50
    @MsGeorge50 Před 3 měsíci +1

    A container ship is expected to transport 220.000 tons. 6:34 The airship only goes up to 500 tons. A single cargo ship does the job of 440 airships.

  • @user-um9sl1kj6u
    @user-um9sl1kj6u Před 2 měsíci

    Air ships would make logging in impossible terrain easier. That’s the biggest issue with logging.
    -Getting there safely
    -transporting the logs safely
    -Giving your people some comfort wherever they go, because let’s face it it’s cold out there, they have chainsaws and logging equipment, they’re gonna need bathrooms, refreshments, communications equipment, and food plus video games and couches for their breaks
    (if you are a CEO, you should do every single job, and be able to enjoy it, or at least make it enjoyable for them- that also includes waste management)

  • @arnonymous431
    @arnonymous431 Před 8 měsíci +68

    Adding also "Train" in your table at 2:07 would have been super interesting to me. I have the feeling that Train also is in that sweet spot your were talking about. But well, since car industry is much stronger in the US (and sadly also around the world) this option is not taking the most amount of tons transported. But thats just an intuition which I would have loved to confirm (or even falsify) with data...

    • @OrganicGreens
      @OrganicGreens Před 8 měsíci +6

      its a logistic issue. loading and unloading trucks is way faster than trains and can be done at the final destination. my dad used to work in shipping produce

    • @Erik-db1xo
      @Erik-db1xo Před 8 měsíci +3

      could not agree more. the only cargo benefits thees 3D renderd visions of airships have over the electric train is the travel over oceans and the minimal infrastucture needed

    • @mynonaamabo1204
      @mynonaamabo1204 Před 8 měsíci

      Same! I found it very confusing as to why it wasn't included.

    • @imjustok9966
      @imjustok9966 Před 8 měsíci

      I looked it up and it seems like train would fall somewhere in 3-5c / ton km. All sources say that train is 3-4x more affordable than trucking. Not sure about the time, but i would guess days? Maybe a week or 2 if our (US) train infrastructure is really that bad?

  • @timno9804
    @timno9804 Před 8 měsíci +19

    For those wondering why the video was reuploaded, Derek just forgot the sponsor segment 😅. That's the "error" in the pinned comment. It wasn't an error with the information presented in the video fortunately.

  • @riothadon3153
    @riothadon3153 Před 21 dnem

    To solve the offloading problem, all they would have to do is build an "airship garage". The garage would be able to completely cover the ship from ground to the top of the vehicle with a slight buffer towards the ceiling of the garage. Then when it's time to offload the cargo, the ship would just hit the ceiling of the garage which is already very close to the vehicle.

  • @infantiltinferno
    @infantiltinferno Před 3 měsíci

    I've been waiting for this since I saw documentaries about future airships as a kid. That was over two decades ago. The logistics of precisely landing or hovering lighter than air vessels with massive surface area still seem insurmountable. Safety is not the issue, airships are like the safest things in the sky. Even the Hindenburg disaster was nothing compared to your average plane crash.

  • @robincourson9996
    @robincourson9996 Před 8 měsíci +122

    One of my close friends tried to start an airship company. In college we built together a small model airship, which unfortunately, was uncontrollable and flew away in the wind. That guy changed his mind and started a balloon company instead 😂
    I also had the chance to meet a senior airship expert (fantastic guy, he was one of the few to practice competitive ballooning - a very selective and skill-based sport, and also former flying whales employee if I remember), and his honest opinion was "airships are an amazing passion, but they have the slightest chance to work"
    Also coincidentally, another friend of mine works at Latitude (a french rocket company) and their plan to carry the rocket to the launchpad in northern Scotland (in the Shetland islands) is to use flying whales airships. Make sense since the transport there is so difficult and the rocket is a large piece 😁

    • @GrimReaperNegi
      @GrimReaperNegi Před 8 měsíci +4

      Are there any flying whales airships out there yet? All I see are CGI videos.

    • @robincourson9996
      @robincourson9996 Před 8 měsíci +1

      not yet, they only have some model sized ones I believe. Developing an airship is far from an easy task!

    • @paulpaschulke8636
      @paulpaschulke8636 Před 8 měsíci

      Getting it as a working tool, instead of being 'just' a passionate project, makes me thinking of nuclear fusion...
      The rocket part: Why don't they lift off in France? Being ~2000km closer to the equator (than Shetland) reduces the amount of lift forces / fuel quite a bit.

    • @Jehty21
      @Jehty21 Před 8 měsíci +2

      And what was his reasoning why "they have the slightest chance to work"?
      Your comment is kinda pointless without that....

    • @robincourson9996
      @robincourson9996 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@Jehty21 his honest opinion joins Derek's conclusion but in a more pessimistic approach. They are hard to build, develop and certify, and at the beginning can only compete for a niche market. Also - something not mentioned in Veritasium's video - airship are very hard to operate. One big deal is that there's no way to park an airship outside - you can only plant it on one single end and hope that the wind will not be too strong (and then you have to account for a very large area covered by the radius of the airship) or you have to store it in a big enough hangar. (Attaching multiple ground anchors is usually not feasible due to the immense force the airship would be subjected to in crosswind cases). Very different from aircrafts, which can be stored for relatively long duration on ground, awaiting for a new payload.
      Airship effective groundspeed are also heavily affected by wind, so that could limit the reliability of their time to delivery.

  • @user-et2dx5du7e
    @user-et2dx5du7e Před 8 měsíci +8

    6:50 largest airplane before it was destroyed
    that made me sad, hope they build it again.

  • @user-sb2og6jd6h
    @user-sb2og6jd6h Před měsícem +1

    A cruise ship is big and slow, yet people seem to like those. Have the ability to ride a cruise blimp to places where the ships can't go seems like the ultimate luxury vacation. BTW, trucks transport the vast majority of goods because they can deliver to anywhere, trains require tracks, planes require airports, boats require waterways. Trucks don't even need the road, they can transport cross country.

  • @sasugaainz6824
    @sasugaainz6824 Před měsícem

    One problem I have with a bunch of airships in the sky: they will eventually all be covered in ads. I am confident that it it were possible companies would replace the night sky with massive billboards.

  • @NavyDood21
    @NavyDood21 Před 8 měsíci +1704

    I find it weird that it wasnt brought up how these airships would be grounded constantly for weather. Imagine trying to control a giant balloon in anything other than the most calm skies. They will need a HUGE ground crew with heavy equipment to control. I love the idea, but they would require so much more infrastructure than was being hinted at here.

    • @andrasbiro3007
      @andrasbiro3007 Před 8 měsíci +175

      Not really. The surface area grows with the square of their size, but the mass grows with the cube. So the bigger you go the less you are bothered by the weather. And going big is the idea anyway.

    • @NobleSon32
      @NobleSon32 Před 8 měsíci +151

      They did mention weather constraints around the 14 min mark.

    • @sirtra
      @sirtra Před 8 měsíci

      Weather doesn't exist, climate change and cow farts killed it.

    • @syntheticat-3
      @syntheticat-3 Před 8 měsíci +155

      @@andrasbiro3007 Not necessarily--the buoyancy factor does some interesting things there. However, as a believer in airship tech, I like to remind people that we can predict the weather much more easily and accuratley now than we could back in the airship heyday. Yes, their functionality is a little limited, but nowhere near as much as it was when we couldn't be sure what would happen with weather patterns!

    • @grekiki
      @grekiki Před 8 měsíci +31

      ​@andrasbiro3007 In the air yes. But not on the ground, vehicle mass doesn't magically reduce the wind force. Plus the higher the balloon the higher the wind speeds it sees.

  • @SteichenFamily
    @SteichenFamily Před 8 měsíci +251

    What about the massive twisting loads that could be imparted on it's structure by a nearby thunderstorm and microburst? You can't run away from thunderstorms when the ship is too big to park in a hangar, and to slow to run, so it's going to have to be strong enough to weather the storms.

    • @mrfamous333
      @mrfamous333 Před 8 měsíci

      No airplane is built to withstand the full force of a thunderstorm. Plans are made to either fly around thunderstorms or fly tomorrow.

    • @BenjiShock
      @BenjiShock Před 8 měsíci +37

      I think they are actually quite resilient in rough weather. Most importantly they have to be in the air and not anchored. But yeah you can't really control them in rough weather they just get blown away. But if they don't collide that's not the worst. Maybe you could even use it to your advantage if you are smart about it.

    • @yetanother9127
      @yetanother9127 Před 8 měsíci +19

      There actually were hangars large enough to accommodate airships back in the day. Alas, most of them have been torn down over the years.

    • @descai10
      @descai10 Před 8 měsíci +2

      I imagine they would have to leave the area if a big storm was coming.

    • @mill2712
      @mill2712 Před 8 měsíci +14

      ​@@yetanother9127
      Not to mention necessary is a key factor in invention. If they need hangers that large, they can potentially build hangers that large.

  • @Ma-id1nl
    @Ma-id1nl Před 2 měsíci

    Thank you for using metric units throughout the video.

  • @Aili-kx3kj
    @Aili-kx3kj Před 3 měsíci

    Just imagine a giant hospital airship that carries dozens or hundreds of firefighters, medics and rescued people without the need for going back and forth from fooded area to a safe place

  • @cruros9084
    @cruros9084 Před 8 měsíci +45

    I feel like one of the greatest challenges, even if everything else was accounted for and worked out, would be the weather. Ships can weather storms and planes move fast enough to be able to route around storms, but a giant slow airship would likely get either caught by bad storms or need to consistently ground to avoid them.

    • @michaelschauperl172
      @michaelschauperl172 Před 8 měsíci +5

      Or to fly high above the clouds. And stay up until the weather fits... could probably be weeks somtimes

    • @SpyroNew
      @SpyroNew Před 8 měsíci +3

      I can't help but think of that super tall trashcan building in New York with the strategic gaps to prevent it from falling over during intense winds/storms. May not make sense to put holes in a gigantic balloon though.

    • @Blowfeld20k
      @Blowfeld20k Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@michaelschauperl172
      Above the clouds?? (facepalm)
      Oh, you mean at the altitude where your crew members need pressurized environments and life support systems, which are notoriously heavy.
      Even if this wasn't a big issue with this idea, the fact that many thunderheads can top out at 70,000' functionally means it's not possible to just "fly high" enough to avoid big storms!!!

    • @stephenj4937
      @stephenj4937 Před 8 měsíci +10

      Weather was the downfall of the USS Akron and USS Macon "Flying Aircraft Carriers." They were both destroyed in storms.

    • @Jjames763
      @Jjames763 Před 8 měsíci

      The Navy figured out how to make airships all-weather-capable back in the ‘50s and ‘60s. Look up “Operation Whole Gale.”

  • @KaidoLP
    @KaidoLP Před 7 měsíci +134

    The cargolifter hanger (the largest ever build airship hanger, as seen at 17:00) is now used as a tropical spa. It is located about 50 km south of Berlin and called tropical island.
    The airship company that build it went bankrupt.

    • @elmariachi5133
      @elmariachi5133 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Had to think a moment - you meant 'hangar'. I though 'hanger' was a thing hanging from an airship, which raised the question if still was flying ..

    • @brianfunt2619
      @brianfunt2619 Před 6 měsíci +2

      There was a Tom Scott video about this, wasn't there

    • @Leon_der_Luftige
      @Leon_der_Luftige Před 6 měsíci +16

      It went bancrupt because the company lacked finacial support and the regional government carelessly denied state funds despite all experts openly supporting the company.
      They simply let it die. My guess is the truck lobbyists working hard behind the scenese.

    • @rolfadler8445
      @rolfadler8445 Před 5 měsíci +7

      Cargolifter went bancrupt not only because of lacking financal support. They underestimated the problem of using diesel engines for propusion and dynamic balancing (which momentarily would use more horsepower than propulsion). There is no airworthy - certified - diesel engine of that size. The certification process of - say - an already existing MAN engine would cost a fortune and last for years. But all the planning was focused on diesel engines. The engines use up diesel, so, the airship looses weight. To counter that loss of weight, Cargolifter planned to condense the exhaust gas and keep the water that is also produced when burning diesel. And there would be more water than used up diesel. You could simply spill the surplus water. The Zeppelins of the old days did exactly that trick to cross the Atlantic (exept of using petrol engines - no big difference in that).
      So, Cargolifter changed the planning (far too late in the process) to use already certified turbine engines - like in helicopters. The exhaust gas of such a turbine is much hotter than diesel exhaust coming out of a piston engine. And there is no way to cool ist down sufficiently to condense it. The proposed reach of the CL160 dropped from more than 10.000 km to a some 100 km. With that, investors pulled out,

    • @Leon_der_Luftige
      @Leon_der_Luftige Před 5 měsíci

      @@rolfadler8445 Nothing that couldnt be fixed had they had the backing.

  • @dragonmaster1500
    @dragonmaster1500 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I once read a book series about an alternate history where Airships never really fell off and became one of the most prevalent modes of transportations. It was a neat setting.

    • @blotharkheim
      @blotharkheim Před měsícem

      What book series was that?

    • @dragonmaster1500
      @dragonmaster1500 Před měsícem +1

      @@blotharkheim Airborne, written by Kenneth Oppal.
      I read it back when I was pretty young, and the story is geared towards more of a 'young adult' audience, but I think it still holds up rather well today.

  • @theenchilada5290
    @theenchilada5290 Před 3 měsíci

    I think what the problem is that the things the lift problem could be solve with is compartmentalization. The containers would have their own lift to offset the main lift of the airship, this would also make the boarding and off boarding process easier.

  • @theblueshad0w339
    @theblueshad0w339 Před 8 měsíci +122

    What if you made those gas compartments in the rigid airships modular so that the right amount of them can be pulled down at a port (with a kind of inverted crane) at the same time as the loading-off of cargo? Thus as the weight goes down, lift goes down equally.
    These modular gas compartments can be stored at ports for future airships that are departing and need more lift for the additional weight of the cargo.

    • @tank-eleven
      @tank-eleven Před 8 měsíci +19

      that'd add so much weight and so much logistic complexity

    • @PsRohrbaugh
      @PsRohrbaugh Před 8 měsíci +10

      ​@@tank-elevenThis. Any mechanism that could do this quickly would weigh tons, and doing it light weight (bunch of bolts or something) would take a ton of time.

    • @ShadowJazo
      @ShadowJazo Před 8 měsíci

      Love your idea. That was mine: Would it be possible to take the Helium/Hydrogen out with drones? They come up from the logistic-center and take robust ballons out as the payload of the blimp reduces. On the way up they create lift, when they want to go down, they turn upside down and slowly descend until they can attach the ballons on the ground.

    • @theblueshad0w339
      @theblueshad0w339 Před 8 měsíci +1

      True, it could make it longer to load and unload but it would be far more economical than replacing it with pull-down weight, and could be a realistic solution considering we cannot compress helium yet.
      If the belly of the airship could be openable, you could add the compartments at the same time as the cargo that would sit beneath.
      I wouldn't think you'd need a heavy and clunky system to attach them considering the compartments would actually be the ones lifting the airship's structure. Also, the core structure of the airship being completely rigid, it wouldn't deform

    • @styleisaweapon
      @styleisaweapon Před 8 měsíci +3

      how is this better than gas pumps and pressure tanks to dynamically change buoyancy ?

  • @InsomniacDoggo
    @InsomniacDoggo Před 8 měsíci +153

    I definitely feel like people's fear of airships like this is similar to their fear of nuclear power. They immediately condemn a thing because it failed once, not realizing that we've developed safer ways of doing that thing since those failures.

    • @matteofabbris7877
      @matteofabbris7877 Před 8 měsíci +26

      not considering all the material development we did in 100 years. original airships were cow intestins glued hydrogen balloons, covered with an explosive cotton tissue... now we have plastics and carbon fiber.

    • @BastiatC
      @BastiatC Před 8 měsíci +19

      Also because it's failure are big and novel, rather then routine. Like your typical coal power plant emits more radiation then a fission plant, but people don't care because it's not accidental(?)

    • @JNCressey
      @JNCressey Před 8 měsíci +5

      Nuclear-powered hot-air balloons, when?
      I guess it helps the venting and replacing for adjustable lift. /Shrugs/

    • @Jarheads4Yeshua
      @Jarheads4Yeshua Před 8 měsíci +2

      air cooled nuclear powered hot air ridged airships, good idea for the future!

    • @krux02
      @krux02 Před 8 měsíci

      @@BastiatC Nice straw man argument.

  • @stephendrake8145
    @stephendrake8145 Před 13 dny

    The trouble with airships is weather, they do no deal with it well. If air currents are different at various points in the structure they will stress and distort the airship and this grows exponentially as the size of the airship grows. This is why only relatively small blimps are the only survivors of this concept...

  • @Fiddler1990
    @Fiddler1990 Před 5 měsíci

    Airships are a common sight above the Bodensee / Lake Constance in Germany, and it's awe-inspiring