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  2. Rigid airship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rigid_airship

    Construction of USS Shenandoah, 1923, showing the framework of a rigid airship. A rigid airship is a type of airship (or dirigible) in which the envelope is supported by an internal framework rather than by being kept in shape by the pressure of the lifting gas within the envelope, as in blimps (also called pressure airships) and semi-rigid airships.

  3. Airship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airship

    A rigid airship has a rigid framework covered by an outer skin or envelope. The interior contains one or more gasbags, cells or balloons to provide lift. Rigid airships are typically unpressurised and can be made to virtually any size. Most, but not all, of the German Zeppelin airships have been of this type.

  4. Henri Giffard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henri_Giffard

    Giffard was born in Paris in 1825. He invented the injector and the Giffard dirigible, an airship powered with a steam engine and weighing over 180 kilograms (400 lb). It was the world's first passenger-carrying airship (then known as a dirigible, from French). [2]

  5. Giffard dirigible - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giffard_dirigible

    The Giffard dirigible or Giffard airship was an airship built in France in 1852 by Henri Giffard, it was the first powered and steerable airship to fly. The craft featured an elongated hydrogen -filled envelope that tapered to a point at each end.

  6. Zeppelin LZ 1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeppelin_LZ_1

    The Zeppelin LZ 1 was the first successful experimental rigid airship. It was first flown from a floating hangar on Lake Constance, near Friedrichshafen in southern Germany, on 2 July 1900. [1] "LZ" stood for Luftschiff Zeppelin, or "Airship Zeppelin".

  7. USS Shenandoah (ZR-1) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Shenandoah_(ZR-1)

    USS Shenandoah was the first of four United States Navy rigid airships. It was constructed during 1922–1923 at Lakehurst Naval Air Station, and first flew in September 1923. It developed the U.S. Navy's experience with rigid airships and made the first crossing of North America by airship.

  8. Konstantin Tsiolkovsky - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Konstantin_Tsiolkovsky

    The first printed work on the airship was "A Controllable Metallic Balloon" (1892), in which he gave the scientific and technical rationale for the design of an airship with a metal sheath. Tsiolkovsky was not supported on the airship project, and the author was refused a grant to build the model.

  9. Joseph Spiess - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Spiess

    Joseph Spiess (10 September 1838 [1] – 31 March 1917 [2]) was a French engineer who filed a patent for a rigid airship in 1873, the year before Ferdinand von Zeppelin first outlined his own design. However, Spiess's machine was not actually constructed until 1913, and was the first and only French rigid airship.