Sunday, March 7, 2010

Airships & Zeppelins

Continuing the History of Aviation through Philately...

For various reasons I was not able to update my blog for the last 4 months.  But I'm back.  My apologies to all who have been following my blog.  I hope to update regularly so keep visiting to read the fascinating history of Aviation as narrated through Philately.


The quest for controlled flight filled the imagination of inventors through the centuries.  Early balloons were not truly navigable so there were constant experiments to improve maneuverability of balloons.  Some of these included elongating the balloon's shape and, using a powered screw to push it through the air.  And thus balloons slowly developed into airships or drigibles from the French (diriger  to direct plus -ible), meaning "directable" or steerable.     This was another milestone in conquering the air.

The first airships were called dirigible balloons. Over time, the word balloon was dropped from the phrase. In modern usage, balloon refers to any buoyant aircraft that generally relies on wind currents for horizontal movement, and usually has a mechanism to control vertical movement.


The main types of airship are non-rigid (or blimps), semi-rigid and rigid. All these are navigable airships capable of being directed, steered and propelled through the air using rudders and propellers or other thrust.  Unlike other aerodynamic aircraft such as fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters, which produce lift by moving a wing, or airfoil, through the air, aerostatic aircraft, such as airships and hot air balloons, stay aloft by filling a large cavity, such as a balloon, with a lifting gas.

Credit for the construction of the first navigable full-sized airship goes to French engineer, Henri Giffard, who, in 1852, attached a small, steam-powered engine to a huge propeller and chugged through the air for seventeen miles at a top speed of five miles per hour.


Henri Giffard and his airship shown on a Cuban stamp of 2000.

 
A non-rigid airship comprises of a gas-filled container and a car with a motor and propeller suspended beneath.
Semi-rigid airships are slightly larger and have some form of internal support such as a fixed keel. Rigid airships with full skeletons, such as the huge Zeppelin transoceanic models, all but disappeared after several high-profile catastrophic accidents during the mid-20th century.

In 1872 Stanislas Charles Henri Dupuy de Lôme (15 October 1816 – 1 February 1885), a French naval architect launched a large limited navigable balloon. 


 The Dupuy de Lôme airship was 36 meters in length, 14.84 meters in diameter, 29 meters wide, and had a total volume of 3,454 cubic meters. It was powered by a 2 horsepower (1.5 kW) engine, providing a speed of between 9 to 11 km/h. The basket under the balloon could carry eight, several operating the balloon and others observing. She was the first operational airship, and was employed during the last days of the Franco-Prussian war. 
Airships were the first aircraft to enable controlled, powered flight, and were widely used before the 1940s, but their use decreased over time as the capabilities of airplanes far surpassed those of airships besides the safety of airships was also questioned.

Airships are still used today in certain niche applications, such as advertising, tourism, camera  platforms for sporting events, and aerial observation platforms, where the ability to hover in one place for an extended period of time outweighs the need for speed and maneuverability.

Another airship pioneer was Paul Haenlein (17 October 1835 in Cologne — 27 January 1905 in Mainz) was a German engineer and flight pioneer. He flew in a semi-rigid-frame dirigible with an internal combustion engine running on the coal gas used to inflate the envelope over Vienna, the first use of such an engine to power an aircraft in 1872.

 
Stamp issued by St. Thome & Principe showing The Paul Haenlein airship.




Other pioneers were Albert & Gaston Tissandier French brothers. Gaston was a French chemist, meteorologist, aviator and editor. Adventurer could be added to the list of his titles, as he managed to escape besieged Paris by balloon in September 1870.  In 1883, Tissandier fitted a 1.5 hp  Siemens electric motor to an airship, thus creating the first electric-powered flight.

Stamp issued by Liberia showing theTissandier airship.



Brothers Albert & Gaston Tissandier depicted with their airship on a Cuban stamps issued in 2000
 
   
The first fully controllable free-flight was made in a French Army airship, La France, by Charles Renard and Arthur Constantin Krebs in 1884. The 170 ft (52 m) long, 66,000 cu ft (1,900 m3) airship covered 8 km (5.0 mi) in 23 minutes with the aid of an 8.5 hp (6.3 kW) electric motor,and a 435 kilograms (960 lb) battery. In 1884 and 1885, it made seven flights. This was probably the first controlled, sustained flight by a lighter-than-air craft.

Cuban stamp issued in 2000 showing Charles Renard & Arthur Krebs and their Airship


The first flyable rigid airship was created by David Schwarz (December 20, 1852,– January 13, 1897,  a Jewish Hungarian  aviation  pioneer. It was also the first airship with an external hull made entirely of metal.  He began construction late 1892, with industrialist Carl Berg supplying the aluminum and necessary funding.However, his first airship built in late 1892 exploded while the gas was being filled.  

Construction on his next airship started in 1895. The pieces were produced in Carl Berg's Eveking Westphalia factory and under the direction of Schwarz, assembled in Berlin.  A gondola, also of aluminum, was fixed to the framework. Attached to the gondola was a 12 horsepower (8.9 kW) Daimler engine that drove aluminum propellers. One of the propellers was used to steer the craft. The airship was first filled with gas on 1896-10-09 and tested, but the results were not satisfactory because the hydrogen gas was not of the required quality and did not provide sufficient lift. Gas with that quality could not be produced until 1897-01-13, the day of Schwarz's death.


The airship was tested with partial success at Tempelhof near Berlin, Germany, on November 3, 1897 when it lifted off at 15:00 At about 130 metre altitude the driving belt slipped off the left propeller, causing partial loss of steering, the ship "turned broadside to the wind, and the forward tether broke free. As the ship drifted up to 510 metres the belt slipped off the right propeller, thus losing all steering. The pilot then opened the newly fitted gas release valve and landed safely, but the ship turned over and collapsed.

Stamp issued by hungary in 1967 showing David's Schwarz's Airship

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Happy Christmas


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Where did the year go? Suddenly we realize that 2009 which started in January is on its back with a blink of an eye! And it is December & Christmas season again -  
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May  the spirit of Christmas which is peace, the gladness of Christmas

which is hope, and the heart of Christmas which is love be with you and

your loved ones.


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Monday, October 19, 2009

Stamps of earlier posts



My collection is spread over a large number of albums, sheets, packets, display cards etc and I have been trying to get the material into some order and scan for uploading on future blogs.  I found that I have several stamps of previous posts.  So here are some of the scans.


Souvenir sheets issued  to commemorate 75th Anniversary of the first powered flight by the Wright Brothers.






Gabon


Ghana

 

Togo

 

se-tenant pair of stamps  issued by the US

 
Stamp showing Bleriot & his plane issued by Romania in the Aviation history set in 1978

 


Republic of Equatorial Guinea 
 

Otto Lilienthal Stamps

Czechoslovakia - part of a set issued in 1977 to promote PRAGA 78
 
Part of the Romania History of Aviation issue of 1978

 

Part of the Zaire issue to commemorate 75th anniversary of powered flight.
Stamp also shows Leonardo da Vinci and his sketches for flying vessels

 


 



Upper Volta


Zaire's issue to commemorate conquest of Air shows the Wright Flyer and 
Santos-Dumont's bis-14

 

Monday, October 5, 2009

Pioneers of Aviation 1900-10

During the years 1900 - 1910 a number of inventors made or claimed to have made short flights.

One of those who missed the record books was Jacob Christian Ellehammer, as Danish engineer and inventor, whose kite like bi-plane flew a distance of 137 feet at a height of about 20 ins off the ground at Lindholm Island in September, 1906.  The 'flight' was most probably a series of hopping glides, but had it been officially witnessed and recorded, Ellehammer may well have been the first to fly an aeroplane in Europe.  That distinction was won by Santos-Dumont a month later!

Stamp issued  by Denmark in 1956 to mark the 50th anniversary of J.C. Ellehammer's flight.


Ellehammer's later inventions included a successful triplane and helicopter. His helicopter was a coaxial machine. A famous photo shows it hovering in 1914, though there is no evidence that it was successful in achieving translational flight.


1914 photo of Ellehammer's coaxial helicopter hovering

 

Monday, September 28, 2009

Pioneer of Aviation: Otto Lilienthal

For various reasons I have not been able to  post  for some time.  Best of intentions seem to go awry.  

Continuing the saga of the pioneers of aviation...........

The flying bug bit quite a few in Europe who experimented in different ways to fly.  One of the early steps was gliding.


One of the most successful of the of the nineteenth century 'bird-men' was Otto Lilienthal,  a German who made determined efforts to fly with wings.  He studied the flight of birds and published his theories and conclusions in his famous  book Birdflight .


He was the first person to make repeated successful gliding flights and came to be known as the Glider King.  Newspapers and magazines in many countries published photographs of Lilienthal gliding, favorably influencing public and scientific opinion about the possibility of flying machines becoming practical reality after ages of idle fantasy and unscientific tinkering.


 Lilienthal 's greatest contribution was the development of heavier-than-air flight. He madeover 2000 glides experimenting with various forms of winged craft.  His glides were  from an artificial hill he built near Berlin, and also from natural hills, especially in the Rhinow region. Lilienthal succeeded in making sustained flights of upto 700 to 800 feet from hilltops.  He was the first to make use of cambered wings and virtually the first to use wings with positive results.   


As an inventor Lilienthal had invented a small engine, the "Otto" motor and might have well been the first to fly a powered aircraft.   Unfortunately, his career was cut short on 9th August, 1896

 when he fell from a height of 56 feet.his injuries proved fatal and he passed away the next day.




Stamp issued by Germany in 1934 with his picture and his gliding attempt in the background..







His achievements inspired the Wright Brothers to become the pioneers of powered flight.  They  credited him as a major inspiration for their decision to pursue manned flight. However, they abandoned his aeronautical data after two seasons of gliding and began using their own wind tunnel data

  A stamp issued by Germany in 1978.


 Special postmark for the stamp issue.




Hungarian stamp showing Otto Lilienthal in the background

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Alberto Santos-Dumont

One of the pioneers who made France the centre of the aviation world in the early 20th century, was Alberto Santos-Dumont, who was a Brazilian. He was an aeronaut who built balloons and dirigible airships and thence moved to heavier-than-air aircraft. He designed and built an aircraft he named 14-Bis - French word for 'again' or 'encore' as it was built after his 14th airship.

Photograph of the first flight
Alberto Santos-Dumont flew into the records book on 23rd October, 1906 when he flew his 14-bis plane at Bagatelle, near Paris, for over 200 feet at an altitude of about 10 feet. This was the first officially recognized heavier-than-air flight in Europe and earned him the first of the aviation prizes, 3,000 francs for a 25-meter-or-greater flight.

Alberto Santos-Dumont was born on July 20, 1873 and died on July 23, 1932



On 12th November, 1906 Santos-Dumont flew 700 feet at an altitude of almost 13 feet thus qualifying for the second aviation prize offered for heavier-than-air-aircraft, 1,000 francs for a flight of 100 meters or more.

Brazilian stamp issued in 1929 shows the 14-bis and the date of 12 November 1906.








Set of 4 stamps issued by Brazil on the 50th anniversary of Alberto Santos Dumont's 14-bis

Stamps issued by Uruguay for the 50th Anniversary of Santos-Dumont's 1906 flight

First in the Air, first on the Moon. Brazil marked the Moon Landing in 1969 with this stamp showing Santos-Dumont's aviation achievement vis a vis the
Landing on the Moon







Wallis & Futuna Islands issued this stamp to mark the birth centenary of Santos-Dumont. The stamp shows his airship also the 14-bis.



French stamp issed to mark Santos-Dumont's birth centenary shows the progress of his aviation exploits from Balloons to Airships to dirigibles to heavier-than-air aircraft.







This stamp issued by SanMarino shows the Demoiselle monoplane, the last plane Santos-Dumont designed. He used this as his personal transportation. It could attain speed of over 100 km/hr






Stamps issued by Brazil to commemorate Santos-Dumont birth centenary

14-bis on an old postcard

Wright Flyer II


Some stamps depicting the Wright Flyers