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New Type of Hot Air Blimp 152

An anonymous reader writes to let un know about a story up on the Experimental Aircraft Association site about a new kind of blimp. From the article: "Alberto, whose name pays homage to Brazilian aviation pioneer, Alberto Santos-Dumont, is 102 feet long with a 70-foot diameter and uses hot air rather than helium for lift. Its innovative foldable frame (much like an giant umbrella) creates structural support of its hot-air envelope, and it has a fly-by-wire vectored thrust steering system. Alberto is a hybrid; a hot-air balloon with aluminum ribs that looks more like a blimp, but with a tail propeller that gives it directional control." The home site of the blimp's developers has a timeline, photos, and a video of the blimp in flight.
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New Type of Hot Air Blimp

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  • by fullphaser ( 939696 ) on Monday December 18, 2006 @03:55PM (#17290642) Homepage
    The fact is the booger is huge, there is no excusing this fact. Add this to the whole who the hell has that much space to store a blimp factor and the next who the hell will police the skies (as tickets get much harder to hand over when being able to pull over becomes a non option. The entire article is filled with it issues (namely size and practicality) that would make a helicopter although more expensive millions of times more practical. This is something like why drive your car to work when you can use this perfectly awesome toy wagon with new wheel design.
  • by smooth wombat ( 796938 ) on Monday December 18, 2006 @04:15PM (#17290956) Journal
    I wonder it they'll ever reenable the docking tower at the top of the Empire State Building?


    Having just taken my parents to the Empire State Building in late September, I can tell you that whomever thought of the idea of offloading people across a small platform, at that height, in the wind that was there on the day I went, really, really, REALLY, needs to get themselves on some meds.

    Fortunately, the idea was scrapped [glasssteelandstone.com] (second paragraph) long ago for the very reasons I just mentioned.

All seems condemned in the long run to approximate a state akin to Gaussian noise. -- James Martin

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