enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Goodyear Blimp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goodyear_Blimp

    The Goodyear Blimp, Today and Yesterday: A complete guide to Goodyear's advertising blimps; Goodyear upgrades from blimps to Zeppelins; Poll: Should Goodyear Still Call Their New Zeppelin NT Airships 'Blimps'? A blimp is a blimp. These aren't. Goodyear-Zeppelin airship dock collection, 1920–1959. Finding guide on the OAC.

  3. Goodyear GZ-20 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goodyear_GZ-20

    The GZ-20 was introduced as part of a US$4 million expansion program by Goodyear in 1968 that included the construction of a new GZ-19 Florida-based airship (Mayflower N1A), replacement of the California-based GZ-19 with a GZ-20 (Columbia N3A), adding a third airship to the fleet (GZ-20 America N10A) and constructing a new airship base at Spring, Texas as home to the new blimp.

  4. List of current airships in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_current_airships...

    The Spirit of Goodyear, one of the iconic Goodyear Blimps. This is a list of airships with a current unexpired Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) [1] registration.. In 2021, Reader's Digest said that "consensus is that there are about 25 blimps still in existence and only about half of them are still in use for advertising purposes". [2]

  5. Why was the Goodyear Blimp in the Fayetteville skies this ...

    www.aol.com/entertainment/why-goodyear-blimp...

    The blimp, Wingfoot One, was on the ground outside the Fayetteville Goodyear plant on Monday morning. Skip to main content. Sign in. Mail. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800 ...

  6. Loral GZ-22 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loral_GZ-22

    The Loral GZ-22 (also known as the Goodyear GZ-22) was a class of non-rigid airship, or blimp first flown in 1989 and operated by Goodyear as its flagship promotional aircraft, with civil registration N4A and christened Spirit of Akron. This was the only airship of this class ever built. [1]

  7. The blimp is back – and this time, it’s tiny - AOL

    www.aol.com/blimp-back-time-tiny-074942245.html

    Cloudline's airships are 18.2 meters (60 feet) long and 5.2 meters (17 feet) wide when fully assembled, with a small net weight once inflated, allowing for easy lift.

  8. K-class blimp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/K-class_blimp

    The K-class blimp was a class of blimps (non-rigid airship) built by the Goodyear Aircraft Company of Akron, Ohio, for the United States Navy.These blimps were powered by two Pratt & Whitney Wasp nine-cylinder radial air-cooled engines, each mounted on twin-strut outriggers, one per side of the control car that hung under the envelope.

  9. L-class blimp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L-class_blimp

    The last lot of L-Class airships were ordered from Goodyear under a contract of February 24, 1943. This was a lot of ten airships designated L-13 through L-22. All the blimps were delivered by the end of 1943. As training airships these blimps operated mainly from the two major lighter-than-air bases, Lakehurst and Moffett Field. While too ...