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Detroit ZMC-2

The ZMC-2 (Zeppelin Metal Clad 200,000 cubic foot capacity)[1] was the only successfully operated metal-skinned airship ever built.[2] Constructed at Naval Air Station Grosse Ile by The Aircraft Development Corporation of Detroit,[1] the ZMC-2 was operated by the U.S. Navy at Lakehurst, New Jersey from 1929 until its scrapping in 1941. While at Lakehurst it completed 752 flights, and logged 2265 hours of flight time.[3]

ZMC-2
Role Metal-clad airship
National origin United States
Manufacturer Detroit Aircraft Corporation
First flight August 19, 1929
Retired 1941
Status Scrapped
Primary user U.S. Navy
Produced 1926–29
Number built 1
General characteristics (as built)
Displacement200,100 cu ft (5,666.2 m3)
Length148 ft 11 in (45.4 m)
Beam53 ft 2 in (16.2 m) (hull diameter)
Draft64 ft 6 in (19.7 m) (height)
Installed power220hp per engine
Propulsion2x Wright J-5 Whirlwind 9-cyl. air-cooled radial engines
Speed60 knots (110 km/h; 69 mph)
Range587 nmi (1,087 km; 676 mi)
Complement3
ArmamentNone

Development edit

The ZMC-2 was built in Grosse Ile, Michigan by the Aircraft Development Corporation, a division of Detroit Aircraft Corporation, on a site shared with, and later acquired by Naval Air Station Grosse Ile.[1] The ZMC-2 was the brainchild of Ralph Hazlett Upson, a balloonist and engineer who had previously won the Gordon Bennett Cup for balloon racing in Europe, bringing the cup to the United States for the first time.[4] Upson teamed up with Carl B. Fritsche of Detroit and together they formed the Detroit Aircraft Corporation, with backing from Henry Ford and Edsel Ford, as well as Charles Kettering of General Motors, Alex Dow, president of Detroit Edison, and William B. Stout, a local industrialist.[1] Chief of hull design was the young Czech-American designer Vladimir Pavlecka.[5][better source needed]

The airship was constructed in a special hangar built in 1925 for the construction of the ZMC-2, and expandable for the construction of much larger metal-clad airships the company envisioned would be produced later.[1] The hangar was 120 feet (37 m) tall, with a floor that measured 120 by 180 feet (37 by 55 m).[3] It remained the largest structure on the Naval Air Station property until 1960, when it was dismantled and the roof reused in the construction of a bowling alley in nearby Trenton, Michigan.[6]

The ZMC-2 was nicknamed the "Tin Bubble" and was also sometimes called a "tinship". The skin was not tin but Alclad. The airship was roughly teardrop shaped and had eight small stabilizer fins, four of which had rudders. It was held together with over 3.5 million rivets,[7] which were applied by an innovative sewing machine-like device which produced airtight seams.[1]

The ZMC-2 was 52 feet (16 m) in diameter and 150 feet (46 m) feet long.[1] The control car was 24 feet (7.3 m) feet long by 6 feet (1.8 m) feet wide.[1] It contained three fuel tanks to give a maximum cruising range of about 600 miles (970 km).[4] The ZMC-2 was powered by two Wright Whirlwind J5 engines of 200 horsepower (150 kW) each, carried on outriggers and mounted in a tractor arrangement, rather than the pusher position usually employed on blimps.[1] At first the landing gear was an unusual hollow steel ball about the size and shape of an American football, mounted on a tripod attached to the car.[1] This was done to create a shape with less drag in order to guarantee the Navy's requirement of a 62 miles per hour (100 km/h) top speed. Later, after the ZMC-2 had attained this speed with ease, the ball was replaced with a conventional swivelling soft tire.[1]

The crew consisted of a pilot, copilot and flight engineer-navigator, with space for one or two additional passengers.

Assembly edit

The ZMC-2 was constructed out of Alclad, corrosion resistant aluminium sheet formed from high-purity aluminium surface layers metallurgically bonded to high strength aluminium alloy core material.[1] The result was about as strong as carbon or mild steel.[1][clarification needed] The downside was that Alclad was thicker than sheet aluminum, making the ship several hundred pounds heavier than originally envisioned.[1] The aircraft was already under construction, and over 20 feet of the nose completed using duraluminum when the decision was made to switch to Alclad.[1] The reason for the switch was that duraluminum is highly susceptible to corrosion, particularly in a salt water environment, the exact sort of environment a Navy blimp operates in.[1] The ZMC-2 was the first aircraft constructed from Alclad in the US, and no previous experience could be drawn upon for its handling.[1]

To assemble the ZMC-2 a skin-riveting machine was developed by the Aviation Tool Co., a division of the Detroit Aircraft Corporation.[1] The device was invented by Edward J. Hill, who had come to work on the ZMC-2 after leaving the Naval Aircraft Factory in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[1] The machine consisted of an aluminum casting, weighing about 100 pounds, and was supported on springs from a framework that ran on concentric circular rails set into the floor of the hangar. There were two sets of circular rails, one at each end of the building. Three riveting machines were made, one for each set of tracks, and one for reserve when repairs might be needed. The reason for two sets of tracks was that the hull was built in two sections, front and rear. Each end started from a circular plate suspended from the hangar roof by a cable and free to rotate as each 18-inch (46 cm) wide strip Alclad was added. In this manner, each end of the ship slowly grew as succeeding rows were added, looking like a bulls eye at first and later like a huge inverted teacup.[1] Both sections were under construction continuously 24 hours a day, seven days a week, once the hull was started.

The riveting machine fed three small aluminum wires from large spools to make a seam about a quarter inch wide composed of three rivets, one above the other in a staggered pattern.[1] In theory the machine could sew about 50 feet of seam in an hour, but in practice about 10 or more feet was the average.[1] The sheets of Alclad used were eight to nine thousandths of an inch thick.[1] As the each section of the hull grew internal annular rings were added at appropriate distances to give stiffness and reinforcement to the hull skin.[1] In addition, lightweight longitudinal channels were added between the circular rings, giving the internal structure the appearance of a huge bird cage.[1]

The helium gas was contained by the hull only, no fabric was used to contain the helium.[1] Inside the hull were two large airbag cells, called ballonets, made of rubberized fabric and containing air.[1] These cells could be expanded or contracted to control pressure as the helium expanded or contracted with the heating or cooling of the atmosphere or to adapt to changes of atmospheric pressure with altitude, and to control fore and aft trim.[1] In operation the ZMC-2 was susceptible to heating and cooling effects of the sun causing it to pop and buckle in the evenings if pressure from blowers was not applied.[8] During its service life the ZMC-2 was found to have a gas diffusion rate much lower than that of fabric-hulled blimps, meaning that a much longer time would pass before additional helium needed to be added.[1]

As the airship neared completion a decision had to be made on how best to fill it with helium. Once the two halves were completed they were suspended horizontally from cables attached to the hangar ceiling, and the two halves were joined with a final array of rivets.[9] Since helium mixes freely with air and is hard to separate from it, it was impractical to pump helium directly into the airship until the air was removed. It was decided that the airship would first be filled with carbon dioxide (CO2), a heavy gas that mixes less freely with helium and which is easier to separate from helium. Once filled with CO2 the helium could be pumped in under pressure from valves at the top of the chamber, forcing the CO2 out through valves located on the bottom, and then recovering any helium that did mix with it.[9] Only a few weeks before this procedure was to begin a bright young engineer noted that once filled with CO2 the ZMC-2 would be many thousands of pounds heavier than when filled with air. The rest of the airship's assembly had to be postponed for several weeks while additional reinforcing panels and stronger connectors were attached in order to support the increased weight of the CO2 filled airship.[9]

Operations edit

The airship was first flown on August 19, 1929, and transferred to Lakehurst, New Jersey in October 1929.[10] The airship was nicknamed "the Tin Blimp". Its first Navy skipper was Red Dugan, who expressed reluctance at operating the airship, believing it unsafe.[11] Dugan's concerns were proven wrong, though he later lost his life in the crash of another airship, Akron.[11]

It was considered very successful as a sub-scale test vehicle, but the company that built it did not weather the Great Depression well, and by the time a successor might have been built, there was little interest in pursuing it. In the year before the Depression, the U.S. Army was seeking funding for an airship based on the ZMC-2, that would have been larger than the German Graf Zeppelin, and powered by eight engines of 600–800 hp (450–600 kW; 610–810 PS)}. The U.S. Army planned to use it as a tender for air-launched aircraft, similar to plans the U.S. Navy had for future dirigibles. The $4.5 million need for construction was never approved by Congress.[12]

The ZMC-2 was operated with a zero internal pressure at speeds up to 20 miles per hour (32 km/h), sufficient for it to be considered a 'rigid' airship.[13] With its low fineness ratio of 2.83, the ZMC-2 was difficult to fly.[14] By 1936, the airship had travelled over 80,000 miles (130,000 km)[clarification needed] with little sign of corrosion. In its lifetime the ZMC-2 logged 752 flights and 2265 hours of flight time.[15] In its final years its use had dropped significantly. Between December 1938 and April 1941 it only logged five hours of flight time.

Considered by the Navy as too small for anti-submarine patrols, the aging ZMC-2 was decommissioned and scrapped in 1941 after nearly 12 years of service.

Operators edit

USA

Specifications (ZMC-2) edit

General characteristics

  • Crew: 2
  • Capacity: 750 lb (340 kg) payload
  • Length: 148 ft 11 in (45.4 m)
  • Diameter: 53 ft 2 in (16.2 m)
  • Height: 64 ft 6 in (19.66 m)
  • Volume: 200,100 cu ft (5,667 m3)
  • Useful lift: 12,868 lb (5,837 kg)
  • Powerplant: 2 × Wright J-5 Whirlwind 9-cyl. air-cooled radial piston engines, 220 hp (160 kW) each

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 70 mph (112 km/h, 60 kn)
  • Range: 675 mi (1,087 km, 587 nmi)

ZMC-2 in popular culture edit

The ZMC-2 plays a key role in the Clive Cussler novel Cyclops (1986) in which it is fictionally saved from scrapping and renamed Prosperteer.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Morrow, Walker C. and Carl B. Fritsche. The Metalclad Airship ZMC-2. 1967.
  2. ^ The 1897 airship of David Schwarz was the first airship that was metal-skinned, although Schwarz's ship had an internal framework rather than a monocoque design.
  3. ^ a b Outlaw 2004, p. 7
  4. ^ a b Morrow and Fritsche 1987
  5. ^ "[Article]". The AOPA Pilot: Voice of General Aviation. AOPA (Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association). 24 (2): 53. 1981. Retrieved 17 January 2021.
  6. ^ Melton 1970
  7. ^ Sullivan 1988
  8. ^ Althoff 2003
  9. ^ a b c Morrow and Fritsche 1967, p. vi
  10. ^ Pace, Montgomery, and Zitarosa 2003
  11. ^ a b Morrow and Fritsche 1967, p. v.
  12. ^ "Metal Covered Airship To Carry Twenty Tons" 1931 , p. 552.
  13. ^ Van Treuren 2007, p. 90
  14. ^ Robinson, Douglas H. Giants in the Sky: A History of the Rigid Airship (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1979), p. 225.
  15. ^ Vaeth 2005, p. 69

References edit

  • Althoff, William F. (2003). USS Los Angeles: The Navy's Venerable Airship and Aviation Technology. Dulles, Virginia: Potomac Books.
  • "Metal Covered Airship To Carry Twenty Tons". Popular Mechanics. 55 (4): 552. April 1931. Retrieved 4 May 2011.
  • Melton USNR, Lt. Comdr. Dick. (1970). The Forty Year Hitch. Wyandotte, Michigan: Publishers Consulting Services.
  • Morrow, Walker C.; Carl B. Fritsche (1967). The Metalclad Airship ZMC-2. Grosse Ile: W.C. Morrow.
  • Outlaw, Stanley; Hal Neubauer; Marcia Neubauer; Dwanda Outlawand (2004). A Pictorial History of Naval Air Station Grosse Ile, Michigan 1927 to 1969 Second edition. Charleston: University of South Carolina Press.
  • Pace, Kevin; Ronald Montgomery; Rick Zitarosa (2003). Naval Air Station, Lakehurst. Charleston: Arcadia.
  • Sullivan, George (1988). Famous Blimps and Airships. New York: Dodd, Mead & Co.
  • Vaeth, Joseph Gordon (2005). They Sailed the Skies: U.S. Navy Balloons And the Airship Program. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press.
  • Van Treuren, Richard G. (Spring 2007). "Making it Happen: Captain C.V.S. Knox and Aeronautical Evolution". Foundation. 28 (1): 89–98.

External links edit

  • Lakehurst: International Airport (a picture of the ZMC-2 is near the bottom of the page)
  • ZMC-2 in hangar, under the nose of the Hindenburg
  • This has a short history of the ZMC-2 along with pictures of construction and flights of the ZMC-2

detroit, zeppelin, metal, clad, cubic, foot, capacity, only, successfully, operated, metal, skinned, airship, ever, built, constructed, naval, station, grosse, aircraft, development, corporation, detroit, operated, navy, lakehurst, jersey, from, 1929, until, s. The ZMC 2 Zeppelin Metal Clad 200 000 cubic foot capacity 1 was the only successfully operated metal skinned airship ever built 2 Constructed at Naval Air Station Grosse Ile by The Aircraft Development Corporation of Detroit 1 the ZMC 2 was operated by the U S Navy at Lakehurst New Jersey from 1929 until its scrapping in 1941 While at Lakehurst it completed 752 flights and logged 2265 hours of flight time 3 ZMC 2Role Metal clad airshipNational origin United StatesManufacturer Detroit Aircraft CorporationFirst flight August 19 1929Retired 1941Status ScrappedPrimary user U S NavyProduced 1926 29Number built 1General characteristics as built Displacement200 100 cu ft 5 666 2 m3 Length148 ft 11 in 45 4 m Beam53 ft 2 in 16 2 m hull diameter Draft64 ft 6 in 19 7 m height Installed power220hp per enginePropulsion2x Wright J 5 Whirlwind 9 cyl air cooled radial enginesSpeed60 knots 110 km h 69 mph Range587 nmi 1 087 km 676 mi Complement3ArmamentNone Contents 1 Development 2 Assembly 3 Operations 4 Operators 5 Specifications ZMC 2 6 ZMC 2 in popular culture 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksDevelopment editThe ZMC 2 was built in Grosse Ile Michigan by the Aircraft Development Corporation a division of Detroit Aircraft Corporation on a site shared with and later acquired by Naval Air Station Grosse Ile 1 The ZMC 2 was the brainchild of Ralph Hazlett Upson a balloonist and engineer who had previously won the Gordon Bennett Cup for balloon racing in Europe bringing the cup to the United States for the first time 4 Upson teamed up with Carl B Fritsche of Detroit and together they formed the Detroit Aircraft Corporation with backing from Henry Ford and Edsel Ford as well as Charles Kettering of General Motors Alex Dow president of Detroit Edison and William B Stout a local industrialist 1 Chief of hull design was the young Czech American designer Vladimir Pavlecka 5 better source needed The airship was constructed in a special hangar built in 1925 for the construction of the ZMC 2 and expandable for the construction of much larger metal clad airships the company envisioned would be produced later 1 The hangar was 120 feet 37 m tall with a floor that measured 120 by 180 feet 37 by 55 m 3 It remained the largest structure on the Naval Air Station property until 1960 when it was dismantled and the roof reused in the construction of a bowling alley in nearby Trenton Michigan 6 The ZMC 2 was nicknamed the Tin Bubble and was also sometimes called a tinship The skin was not tin but Alclad The airship was roughly teardrop shaped and had eight small stabilizer fins four of which had rudders It was held together with over 3 5 million rivets 7 which were applied by an innovative sewing machine like device which produced airtight seams 1 The ZMC 2 was 52 feet 16 m in diameter and 150 feet 46 m feet long 1 The control car was 24 feet 7 3 m feet long by 6 feet 1 8 m feet wide 1 It contained three fuel tanks to give a maximum cruising range of about 600 miles 970 km 4 The ZMC 2 was powered by two Wright Whirlwind J5 engines of 200 horsepower 150 kW each carried on outriggers and mounted in a tractor arrangement rather than the pusher position usually employed on blimps 1 At first the landing gear was an unusual hollow steel ball about the size and shape of an American football mounted on a tripod attached to the car 1 This was done to create a shape with less drag in order to guarantee the Navy s requirement of a 62 miles per hour 100 km h top speed Later after the ZMC 2 had attained this speed with ease the ball was replaced with a conventional swivelling soft tire 1 The crew consisted of a pilot copilot and flight engineer navigator with space for one or two additional passengers Assembly editThe ZMC 2 was constructed out of Alclad corrosion resistant aluminium sheet formed from high purity aluminium surface layers metallurgically bonded to high strength aluminium alloy core material 1 The result was about as strong as carbon or mild steel 1 clarification needed The downside was that Alclad was thicker than sheet aluminum making the ship several hundred pounds heavier than originally envisioned 1 The aircraft was already under construction and over 20 feet of the nose completed using duraluminum when the decision was made to switch to Alclad 1 The reason for the switch was that duraluminum is highly susceptible to corrosion particularly in a salt water environment the exact sort of environment a Navy blimp operates in 1 The ZMC 2 was the first aircraft constructed from Alclad in the US and no previous experience could be drawn upon for its handling 1 To assemble the ZMC 2 a skin riveting machine was developed by the Aviation Tool Co a division of the Detroit Aircraft Corporation 1 The device was invented by Edward J Hill who had come to work on the ZMC 2 after leaving the Naval Aircraft Factory in Philadelphia Pennsylvania 1 The machine consisted of an aluminum casting weighing about 100 pounds and was supported on springs from a framework that ran on concentric circular rails set into the floor of the hangar There were two sets of circular rails one at each end of the building Three riveting machines were made one for each set of tracks and one for reserve when repairs might be needed The reason for two sets of tracks was that the hull was built in two sections front and rear Each end started from a circular plate suspended from the hangar roof by a cable and free to rotate as each 18 inch 46 cm wide strip Alclad was added In this manner each end of the ship slowly grew as succeeding rows were added looking like a bulls eye at first and later like a huge inverted teacup 1 Both sections were under construction continuously 24 hours a day seven days a week once the hull was started The riveting machine fed three small aluminum wires from large spools to make a seam about a quarter inch wide composed of three rivets one above the other in a staggered pattern 1 In theory the machine could sew about 50 feet of seam in an hour but in practice about 10 or more feet was the average 1 The sheets of Alclad used were eight to nine thousandths of an inch thick 1 As the each section of the hull grew internal annular rings were added at appropriate distances to give stiffness and reinforcement to the hull skin 1 In addition lightweight longitudinal channels were added between the circular rings giving the internal structure the appearance of a huge bird cage 1 The helium gas was contained by the hull only no fabric was used to contain the helium 1 Inside the hull were two large airbag cells called ballonets made of rubberized fabric and containing air 1 These cells could be expanded or contracted to control pressure as the helium expanded or contracted with the heating or cooling of the atmosphere or to adapt to changes of atmospheric pressure with altitude and to control fore and aft trim 1 In operation the ZMC 2 was susceptible to heating and cooling effects of the sun causing it to pop and buckle in the evenings if pressure from blowers was not applied 8 During its service life the ZMC 2 was found to have a gas diffusion rate much lower than that of fabric hulled blimps meaning that a much longer time would pass before additional helium needed to be added 1 As the airship neared completion a decision had to be made on how best to fill it with helium Once the two halves were completed they were suspended horizontally from cables attached to the hangar ceiling and the two halves were joined with a final array of rivets 9 Since helium mixes freely with air and is hard to separate from it it was impractical to pump helium directly into the airship until the air was removed It was decided that the airship would first be filled with carbon dioxide CO2 a heavy gas that mixes less freely with helium and which is easier to separate from helium Once filled with CO2 the helium could be pumped in under pressure from valves at the top of the chamber forcing the CO2 out through valves located on the bottom and then recovering any helium that did mix with it 9 Only a few weeks before this procedure was to begin a bright young engineer noted that once filled with CO2 the ZMC 2 would be many thousands of pounds heavier than when filled with air The rest of the airship s assembly had to be postponed for several weeks while additional reinforcing panels and stronger connectors were attached in order to support the increased weight of the CO2 filled airship 9 Operations editThe airship was first flown on August 19 1929 and transferred to Lakehurst New Jersey in October 1929 10 The airship was nicknamed the Tin Blimp Its first Navy skipper was Red Dugan who expressed reluctance at operating the airship believing it unsafe 11 Dugan s concerns were proven wrong though he later lost his life in the crash of another airship Akron 11 It was considered very successful as a sub scale test vehicle but the company that built it did not weather the Great Depression well and by the time a successor might have been built there was little interest in pursuing it In the year before the Depression the U S Army was seeking funding for an airship based on the ZMC 2 that would have been larger than the German Graf Zeppelin and powered by eight engines of 600 800 hp 450 600 kW 610 810 PS The U S Army planned to use it as a tender for air launched aircraft similar to plans the U S Navy had for future dirigibles The 4 5 million need for construction was never approved by Congress 12 The ZMC 2 was operated with a zero internal pressure at speeds up to 20 miles per hour 32 km h sufficient for it to be considered a rigid airship 13 With its low fineness ratio of 2 83 the ZMC 2 was difficult to fly 14 By 1936 the airship had travelled over 80 000 miles 130 000 km clarification needed with little sign of corrosion In its lifetime the ZMC 2 logged 752 flights and 2265 hours of flight time 15 In its final years its use had dropped significantly Between December 1938 and April 1941 it only logged five hours of flight time Considered by the Navy as too small for anti submarine patrols the aging ZMC 2 was decommissioned and scrapped in 1941 after nearly 12 years of service Operators editUSAUnited States NavySpecifications ZMC 2 editGeneral characteristics Crew 2 Capacity 750 lb 340 kg payload Length 148 ft 11 in 45 4 m Diameter 53 ft 2 in 16 2 m Height 64 ft 6 in 19 66 m Volume 200 100 cu ft 5 667 m3 Useful lift 12 868 lb 5 837 kg Powerplant 2 Wright J 5 Whirlwind 9 cyl air cooled radial piston engines 220 hp 160 kW eachPerformance Maximum speed 70 mph 112 km h 60 kn Range 675 mi 1 087 km 587 nmi ZMC 2 in popular culture editThe ZMC 2 plays a key role in the Clive Cussler novel Cyclops 1986 in which it is fictionally saved from scrapping and renamed Prosperteer See also editList of airships of the United States Navy David SchwarzNotes edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Morrow Walker C and Carl B Fritsche The Metalclad Airship ZMC 2 1967 The 1897 airship of David Schwarz was the first airship that was metal skinned although Schwarz s ship had an internal framework rather than a monocoque design a b Outlaw 2004 p 7 a b Morrow and Fritsche 1987 Article The AOPA Pilot Voice of General Aviation AOPA Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association 24 2 53 1981 Retrieved 17 January 2021 Melton 1970 Sullivan 1988 Althoff 2003 a b c Morrow and Fritsche 1967 p vi Pace Montgomery and Zitarosa 2003 a b Morrow and Fritsche 1967 p v Metal Covered Airship To Carry Twenty Tons 1931 p 552 Van Treuren 2007 p 90 Robinson Douglas H Giants in the Sky A History of the Rigid Airship Seattle University of Washington Press 1979 p 225 Vaeth 2005 p 69References editAlthoff William F 2003 USS Los Angeles The Navy s Venerable Airship and Aviation Technology Dulles Virginia Potomac Books Metal Covered Airship To Carry Twenty Tons Popular Mechanics 55 4 552 April 1931 Retrieved 4 May 2011 Melton USNR Lt Comdr Dick 1970 The Forty Year Hitch Wyandotte Michigan Publishers Consulting Services Morrow Walker C Carl B Fritsche 1967 The Metalclad Airship ZMC 2 Grosse Ile W C Morrow Outlaw Stanley Hal Neubauer Marcia Neubauer Dwanda Outlawand 2004 A Pictorial History of Naval Air Station Grosse Ile Michigan 1927 to 1969 Second edition Charleston University of South Carolina Press Pace Kevin Ronald Montgomery Rick Zitarosa 2003 Naval Air Station Lakehurst Charleston Arcadia Sullivan George 1988 Famous Blimps and Airships New York Dodd Mead amp Co Vaeth Joseph Gordon 2005 They Sailed the Skies U S Navy Balloons And the Airship Program Annapolis Naval Institute Press Van Treuren Richard G Spring 2007 Making it Happen Captain C V S Knox and Aeronautical Evolution Foundation 28 1 89 98 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to ZMC 2 Lakehurst International Airport a picture of the ZMC 2 is near the bottom of the page ZMC 2 in hangar under the nose of the Hindenburg This has a short history of the ZMC 2 along with pictures of construction and flights of the ZMC 2 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Detroit ZMC 2 amp oldid 1168807179, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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