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LZ 127 Graf Zeppelin

LZ 127 Graf Zeppelin (Deutsches Luftschiff Zeppelin 127) was a German passenger-carrying hydrogen-filled rigid airship that flew from 1928 to 1937. It offered the first commercial transatlantic passenger flight service. The ship was named after the German airship pioneer Ferdinand von Zeppelin, a count (Graf) in the German nobility. It was conceived and operated by Hugo Eckener, the chairman of Luftschiffbau Zeppelin.

LZ 127 Graf Zeppelin
Role Commercial passenger airship
National origin Germany
Manufacturer Luftschiffbau Zeppelin
Designer Ludwig Dürr
First flight 18 September 1928
Introduction 11 October 1928
Retired 18 June 1937
Status Scrapped March 1940
Career
Construction number LZ 127
Registration D-LZ 127
Radio code DENNE[1]
Owners and operators Deutsche Luftschiffahrts-Aktiengesellschaft; from 1935, Deutsche Zeppelin Reederei
Flights 590
Total hours 17,177
Total distance 1.7 million km (1.06 million miles)

Graf Zeppelin made 590 flights totalling almost 1.7 million kilometres (over 1 million miles). It was operated by a crew of 36, and could carry 24 passengers. It was the longest and largest airship in the world when it was built. It made the first circumnavigation of the world by airship, and the first nonstop crossing of the Pacific Ocean by air; its range was enhanced by its use of Blau gas as a fuel. It was built using funds raised by public subscription and from the German government, and its operating costs were offset by the sale of special postage stamps to collectors, the support of the newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst, and cargo and passenger receipts.

After several long flights between 1928 and 1932, including one to the Arctic, Graf Zeppelin provided a commercial passenger and mail service between Germany and Brazil for five years. When the Nazi Party came to power, they used it as a propaganda tool. It was withdrawn from service after the Hindenburg disaster in 1937, and scrapped for military aircraft production in 1940.

Background Edit

The first successful flight of a rigid airship, Ferdinand von Zeppelin's LZ1, was in Germany in 1900.[2] Between 1910 and 1914, Deutsche Luftschiffahrts-Aktiengesellschaft (DELAG) transported thousands of passengers by airship.[3][4] During World War I, Germany used airships to bomb London and other strategic targets.[5] In 1917, the German LZ 104 (L 59) was the first airship to make an intercontinental flight, from Jambol in Bulgaria to Khartoum and back, a nonstop journey of 6,800 kilometres (4,200 mi; 3,700 nmi).[6][7][nb 1]

During and just after the war, Britain and the United States built airships, and France and Italy experimented with confiscated German ones. In July 1919 the British R34 flew from East Fortune in Scotland to New York and back.[8][nb 2] Luftschiffbau Zeppelin delivered LZ 126 to the US Navy as a war reparation in October 1924. The company chairman Hugo Eckener commanded the delivery flight, and the ship was commissioned as the USS Los Angeles (ZR-3).[10][11]

The Treaty of Versailles had placed limits on German aviation; in 1925, when the Allies relaxed the restrictions, Eckener saw the chance to start an intercontinental air passenger service,[12] and began lobbying the government for funds and permission to build a new civil airship.[13] Public subscription raised 2.5 million ℛ︁ℳ︁ (the equivalent of US$600,000 at the time,[14] or $10 million in 2018 dollars[15]), and the government granted over 1 million ℛ︁ℳ︁ ($4 million).[16][17]

Design and operation Edit

 
Construction of Graf Zeppelin in Friedrichshafen: the keel and axial gangways are highlighted green with main rings in red; two people are shown in yellow

The LZ 127 was designed by Ludwig Dürr[18][19] as a "stretched" version of the zeppelin LZ 126 rechristened the USS Los Angeles).[20] It was intended from the beginning as a technology demonstrator for the more capable airships that would follow.[21] It was built between 1926 and September 1928 at the Luftschiffbau Zeppelin works in Friedrichshafen, on Lake Constance, Germany, which became its home port for nearly all of its flights. Its duralumin frame was made of eighteen 28-sided structural polygons joined lengthwise with 16 km (10 mi) of girders and braced with steel wire. The outer cover was of thick cotton, painted with aircraft dope containing aluminium to reduce solar heating, then sandpapered smooth. The gas cells were also cotton, lined with goldbeater's skins, and protected from damage by a layer containing 27 km (17 mi) of ramie fibre.[20][22]

Graf Zeppelin was 236.6 m (776 ft) long and had a total gas volume of 105,000 m3 (3,700,000 cu ft), of which 75,000 m3 (2,600,000 cu ft) was hydrogen carried in 17 lifting gas cells (Traggaszelle), and 30,000 m3 (1,100,000 cu ft) was Blau gas in 12 fuel gas cells (Kraftgaszelle).[nb 3] The Graf Zeppelin was built to be the largest possible airship that could fit into the company's construction hangar,[27][28] with only 46 cm (18 in) between the top of the finished vessel and the hangar roof.[29] It was the longest and most voluminous airship when built,[26][30][nb 4] but it was too slender for optimum aerodynamic efficiency,[31][32] and there were worries that the shape would compromise its strength.[33]

Graf Zeppelin was powered by five Maybach VL II 12-cylinder 410 kW (550 hp) engines, each of 33.251 L (2,029.1 cu in) capacity, mounted in individual streamlined nacelles[nb 5] arranged so that each was in an undisturbed airflow.[35] The engines were reversible,[36] and were monitored by crew members who accessed them during flight via open ladders.[32] The two-bladed wooden pusher propellers were 3.4 m (11 ft) in diameter,[37] and were later upgraded to four-bladed units.[32] On longer flights, the Graf Zeppelin often flew with one engine shut down to conserve fuel.[38]

Graf Zeppelin was the only rigid airship to burn Blau gas;[39][40] the engines were started on petrol[nb 6] and could then switch fuel.[24] A liquid-fuelled airship loses weight as it burns fuel, requiring the release of lifting gas, or the capture of water from exhaust gas or rainfall, to avoid the vessel climbing. Blau gas was only slightly heavier than air, so burning it had little effect on buoyancy.[42][43] On a typical transatlantic journey, the Graf Zeppelin used Blau gas 90% of the time, only burning petrol if the ship was too heavy, and used ten times less hydrogen per day than the smaller zeppelin L 59 did on its Khartoum flight in 1917.[44][nb 7]

Graf Zeppelin typically carried 3,500 kg (7,700 lb) of ballast water and 650 kg (1,430 lb) of spare parts, including an extra propeller.[45] Calcium chloride was added to the ballast water to prevent freezing. The ship retained grey water from the sinks for use as additional ballast.[46] Both fresh and waste water could be moved forward and aft to control trim.[47]

 
One of the engine nacelles, preserved in Zeppelin Museum Friedrichshafen

The airship usually took off vertically using static lift (buoyancy), then started the engines in the air, adding aerodynamic lift.[48] Normal cruising altitude was 200 m (650 ft); it climbed if necessary to cross high ground or poor weather, and often descended in stormy weather.[49] To measure the wind speed over the sea, and calculate drift, floating pyrotechnic flares were dropped.[50]

When preparing to land, the crew advised the ground either by radio or signal flag. Ground crew lit a smoky fire to help the airshipmen judge wind speed and direction. The airship slowed, then adjusted buoyancy to neutral by valving off hydrogen or dropping ballast. Echo sounding with the report from an 11-mm blank round was used to measure altitude accurately.[51][52][nb 8] The ship flew in with its nose trimmed slightly down, made its final approach into the wind descending at 30 m (100 ft) per minute, then used reverse thrust to stop over the landing flag, where it dropped ropes to the ground. Landing in rough weather required a faster approach.[54][55] Up to 300 people manhandled the airship into a hangar or secured it by the nose to a mooring mast.[56][57]

Graf Zeppelin's top airspeed was 128 km/h (36 m/s; 80 mph; 69 kn) at 1,980 kW (2,650 hp); it cruised at 117 km/h (33 m/s; 73 mph; 63 kn), at 1,600 kW (2,150 hp). It had a total lift capacity of 87,000 kg (192,000 lb) with a usable payload of 15,000 kg (33,000 lb) on a 10,000 km (6,200 mi; 5,400 nmi) flight.[28] It was slightly unstable in yaw,[58] and to make it easier to fly, had an automatic pilot which stabilised it in that axis.[53] Pitch was controlled manually by an elevatorman who tried to limit the angle to 5° up or down, so as not to upset the bottles of wine which accompanied the elaborate food served on board.[59] Operating the elevators was so demanding and strenuous that an elevatorman's shift was only four hours, reduced to two in rough weather.[59]

Layout Edit

 
Gondola deck plan

The operational spaces, common areas, and passenger cabins were built into a gondola structure in the forward part of the airship's ventral surface, with the flight deck well forward in a "chin" position.[60] The gondola was 30 metres (98 ft) long and 6 metres (20 ft) wide;[61] its streamlined design reflected contemporary aesthetics,[62][63] minimised overall height, and reduced drag.[39] Behind the flight deck was the map room, with two large hatches to allow the command crew to communicate with the navigators, who could take readings with a sextant through the two large windows.[32] There was also a radio room and a galley with a double electric oven and hot plates.[64]

 
Theo Matejko's drawing of the crew accommodation on the keel corridor from the first transatlantic flight

The galley staff served three hot meals a day in the main dining and sitting room, which was 5 metres (16 ft) square.[65] It had four large arched windows, wooden inlays, and Art Deco-upholstered furniture.[63][66] Between meals, the passengers could socialise and look at the scenery. On the round-the-world flight, there was dancing to a phonograph, fine wine, and Ernst Lehmann, one of the officers, played the accordion.[67] A corridor led to ten passenger cabins capable of sleeping 24, a pair of washrooms, and dual chemical toilets.[46] The passenger cabins were set by day with a sofa, which converted at night into two beds.[68] The cabins were often cold, and on some sectors passengers wore furs and huddled under blankets to stay warm.[69] There was a noticeable smell from the Blau gas, especially when the ship was stationary.[70][71]

A ladder from the map room led up to the keel corridor inside the hull, and accommodation for the 36 crewmen. Officers' quarters were towards the nose;[72] behind them were the baggage store, the crew mess room, and the quarters for the ordinary crew, who slept in wire-frame beds with fabric screens.[51] Also along this corridor were petrol, oil and water tanks, and stowage for cargo and spare parts. Branches from the keel corridor led to the five engine nacelles, and there were ladders up to the axial corridor, just below the ship's main axis, which gave access to all the gas cells.[73]

Electrical and communications systems Edit

 
Many people were needed to hold down the airship. The ram air turbine electric generator is just under the radio room window.

The main generating plant was in a separate compartment mostly inside the hull. Two 8.9 kW (12 hp) Wanderer car engines adapted to burn Blau gas, only one of which operated at a time, drove two Siemens & Halske dynamos each. One dynamo on each engine powered the oven and hotplates, and one the lighting and gyrocompass. Cooling water from these engines heated radiators inside the passenger lounge.[74] Two ram air turbines attached to the main gondola on swinging arms provided electrical power for the radio room, internal lighting, and the galley. Batteries could power essential services like radios for half an hour,[75][76] and there were small petrol generators for emergency power.[76]

Three radio operators used a one-kilowatt vacuum tube transmitter (about 140 W antenna power) to send telegrams over the low frequency (500–3,000 m) bands.[75] A 70 W antenna power emergency transmitter carried telegraph and radio telephone signals over 300–1,300 m wavelength bands.[68][75] The main aerial consisted of two lead-weighted 120-metre (390 ft)-long wires deployed by electric motor or hand crank; the emergency aerial was a 40-metre (130 ft) wire stretched from a ring on the hull.[75] Three six-tube receivers served the wavelengths from 120 to 1,200 m (medium frequency), 400 to 4,000 m (low frequency) and 3,000 to 25,000 m (overlapping low frequency and very low frequency).[75] The radio room also had a shortwave receiver for 10 to 280 m (high frequency).[75]

A radio direction finder used a loop antenna to determine the airship's bearing from any two land radio stations or ships with known positions.[68] During the first transatlantic flight in 1928, the radio room sent 484 private telegrams and 160 press telegrams.[75]

Operational history Edit

 
1934 South America timetable

The LZ 127 was christened Graf Zeppelin by Countess Brandenstein-Zeppelin on 8 July 1928, after her father Ferdinand von Zeppelin, the founder of the company, on the 90th anniversary of his birth.[77][78] During most of its career, it was operated by Luftschiffbau Zeppelin's commercial flight arm, DELAG, in conjunction with the Hamburg-American Line (HAPAG); for its final two years it flew for the Deutsche Zeppelin Reederei (DZR).

Passengers paid premium fares to fly on the Graf Zeppelin (1,500 ℛ︁ℳ︁ from Germany to Rio de Janeiro in 1934, equal to $590 then,[79] or $13,000 in 2018 dollars[15]), and fees collected for valuable freight and air mail also provided income. On the first transatlantic flight, Graf Zeppelin carried 66,000 postcards and covers.[80]

Eckener had earned his doctorate in Psychology at Leipzig University under Wilhelm Wundt,[81] and could use his knowledge of mass psychology to the benefit of the Graf Zeppelin.[82] He identified safety as the most important factor in the ship's public acceptance, and was ruthless in pursuit of this.[83] He took complete responsibility for the ship, from technical matters, to finance, to arranging where it would fly next on its years-long public relations campaign, in which he promoted "zeppelin fever".[84][85] On one of the Brazil trips British Pathé News filmed on board.[86] Eckener cultivated the press, and was gratified when the British journalist Lady Grace Drummond-Hay wrote, and millions read, that:

The Graf Zeppelin is a ship with a soul. You have only to fly in it to know that it's a living, vibrant, sensitive and magnificent thing.[87]

Graf Zeppelin was greeted by large crowds on most of its early voyages. There were 100,000 at Moscow and possibly 250,000 at Tokyo to see it.[88][89] At Stockholm, spectators launched firework rockets around it, and on the return flight from Moscow it was punctured by rifle shots near the Soviet Union-Lithuania border.[90] On one visit to Rio de Janeiro people released hundreds of small toy petrol-burning hot air balloons near the flammable craft.[91] The airship captured the public imagination and was used extensively in advertising.[92] On visits to England, it photographed Royal Air Force bases, the Blackburn aircraft factory in Yorkshire, and the Portsmouth naval dockyard; it is likely that this was espionage at the behest of the German government.[93]

Proving flights Edit

During 1928, there were six proving flights. On the fourth one, Blau gas was used for the first time. Graf Zeppelin carried Oskar von Miller, head of the Deutsches Museum; Charles E. Rosendahl, commander of USS Los Angeles; and the British airshipmen Ralph Sleigh Booth and George Herbert Scott. It flew from Friedrichshafen to Ulm, via Cologne and across the Netherlands to Lowestoft in England, then home via Bremen, Hamburg, Berlin, Leipzig and Dresden, a total of 3,140 kilometres (1,950 mi; 1,700 nmi) in 34 hours and 30 minutes.[94] On the fifth flight, Eckener caused a minor controversy by flying close to Huis Doorn in the Netherlands, which some interpreted as a gesture of support for the former Kaiser Wilhelm II who was living in exile there.[95][96]

First intercontinental flight (1928) Edit

 
A piece of the damaged fabric removed from Graf Zeppelin in October 1928

In October 1928, Graf Zeppelin made its first intercontinental trip, to Lakehurst Naval Air Station, New Jersey, US, with Eckener in command and Lehmann as first officer.[nb 9] Rosendahl and Drummond-Hay flew the outward leg.[98][80] Ludwig Dettmann and Theo Matejko made an artistic record of the flight.[99]

On the third day of the flight, a large section of the fabric covering of the port tail fin was damaged while passing through a mid-ocean squall line,[100] and volunteer riggers (including Eckener's son, Knut) climbed outside the airship and made repairs to the torn fabric. Eckener directed Rosendahl to make a distress call; when this was received, and nothing else was heard from the airship, many believed it was lost.[101] After the ship arrived safely, there was some annoyance from the Lakehurst personnel that the Zeppelin had not answered repeated calls for its position and estimated arrival time. Eckener explained that because the airship was forced to fly at a reduced speed due to the damaged fin, the wind-driven generator could not generate enough power to send messages.[102] The 9,926 km (6,168 mi; 5,360 nmi) crossing, the longest non-stop flight at the time, had taken 111 hours 44 minutes.[103]

Clara Adams became the first female paying passenger to fly transatlantic on the return flight.[104] The ship endured an overnight gale that blew it backwards in the air and 320 km (200 mi; 170 nmi) off course, to the coast of Newfoundland.[105] A stowaway boarded at Lakehurst and was discovered in the mail room mid-voyage.[106][107] The airship returned home and on 6 November flew to Berlin Staaken, where it was met by the German president, Paul von Hindenburg.[108]

Mediterranean flights (1929) Edit

 
Graf Zeppelin over Jerusalem on 26 March 1929.

Graf Zeppelin visited Palestine in late March 1929. At Rome it sent greetings to Benito Mussolini and King Victor Emmanuel III. It entered Palestine, flew over Tel Aviv and Jerusalem, and descended to near the surface of the Dead Sea, 430 m (1,400 ft) below sea level. The ship delivered 16,000 letters in mail drops at Jaffa, Athens, Budapest and Vienna.[109] The Egyptian government (under pressure from Britain) refused it permission to enter their airspace.[110] The second Mediterranean cruise flew over France, Spain, Portugal and Tangier,[111] then returned home via Cannes and Lyon on 23–25 April.[112][113]

Forced landing in France (1929) Edit

 
Emergency landing in France, May 1929

On 16 May 1929, on the first night of its second trip to the US, Graf Zeppelin lost four of its engines.[114] With Eckener struggling for a suitable place to force-land, the French Air Ministry allowed him to land at Cuers-Pierrefeu, near Toulon.[115] Barely able to control the ship, Eckener made an emergency landing.[116] The incident, and the forced comradeship it engendered, softened France's attitude to Germany and its airships slightly.[117] The incident was caused by adjustments that had been made by the chief engineer to the four engines that failed.[118][119]

On 4 August, the airship made it to Lakehurst on the second attempt. Aboard was Susie, an eastern gorilla who had been captured near Lake Kivu in the Belgian Congo and sold by her German owner to an American dealer.[120][121]

Round-the-world flight (1929) Edit

 
Graf Zeppelin and USS Los Angeles in the airship hangar at NAS Lakehurst, August 1929
 
Drummond-Hay on board the Graf Zeppelin, August 1929

The American newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst's media empire paid half the cost of the project to fly Graf Zeppelin around the world,[122] with four staff on the flight; Lady Hay Drummond-Hay, Karl von Wiegand, the Australian explorer Hubert Wilkins, and the cameraman Robert Hartmann. Drummond-Hay became the first woman to circumnavigate the world by air.[123][nb 10] Hearst stipulated that the flight in August 1929 officially start and finish at Lakehurst.[125][126] Round-the-world tickets were sold for almost $3000 (equivalent to $51,000 in 2022[15]), but most participants had their costs paid for them.[127] The flight's expenses were offset by the carriage of souvenir mail between Lakehurst, Friedrichshafen, Tokyo, and Los Angeles.[122] A US franked letter flown on the whole trip from Lakehurst to Lakehurst required $3.55 (equivalent to $61 in 2022[15]) in postage.

Graf Zeppelin set off from Lakehurst on 8 August, heading eastwards.[128] The ship refuelled at Friedrichshafen, then continued across Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union to Tokyo. After five days at a former German airship shed that had been removed from Jüterbog and rebuilt at Kasumigaura Naval Air Station,[129][130] Graf Zeppelin continued across the Pacific to California. Eckener delayed crossing the coast at San Francisco's Golden Gate so as to come in near sunset for aesthetic effect.[131][132] The ship landed at Mines Field in Los Angeles, completing the first ever nonstop flight across the Pacific Ocean.[133][134] The takeoff from Los Angeles was difficult because of high temperatures and an inversion layer. To lighten the ship, six crew and some cargo were sent on to Lakehurst by aeroplane.[135] The airship suffered minor damage from a tail strike and barely cleared electricity cables at the edge of the field.[32][136] The Graf Zeppelin arrived back at Lakehurst from the west on the morning of 29 August, three weeks after it had departed to the east.

Flying time for the four Lakehurst to Lakehurst legs was 12 days, 12 hours, and 13 minutes; the entire circumnavigation (including stops) took 21 days, 5 hours, and 31 minutes to cover 33,234 km (20,651 mi; 17,945 nmi).[132][137] It was the fastest circumnavigation of the globe at the time.[138]

Eckener became the tenth recipient and the third aviator to be awarded the Gold Medal of the National Geographic Society, which he received on 27 March 1930 at the Washington Auditorium.[139] Before returning to Germany, Eckener met President Herbert Hoover, and successfully lobbied the US Postmaster General for a special three-stamp issue (C-13, 14 & 15) for mail to be carried on the Europe-Pan American flight due to leave Germany in mid-May.[140][141] Germany issued a commemorative coin celebrating the circumnavigation.[126]

Europe-Pan American flight (1930) Edit

 
$2.60 Europe-Pan American issue (C-15), 24 April 1930

On 26 April 1930, Graf Zeppelin flew low over the FA Cup Final at Wembley Stadium in England, dipping in salute to King George V, then briefly moored alongside the larger R100 at Cardington.[55] On 18 May, it left on a triangular flight between Spain, Brazil, and the US, carrying 38 passengers, many of them in crew accommodation.[135] The ship arrived at Recife (Pernambuco) in Brazil, docking at Campo do Jiquiá on 22 May, where 300 soldiers helped land it.[142][143] It then flew to Rio de Janeiro, where there was no post to tether to, so it was held down by the landing party for the two hours of the visit.[142][144]

It flew north, via Recife, to Lakehurst; a storm damaged the rear engine nacelle, which had to be repaired in the hangar at Lakehurst. During ground handling of the airship there, it suddenly lifted, causing serious injury to one of the US Marines who was assisting.[145] A few hours from home, when the Graf Zeppelin flew through a heavy hailstorm over the Saône, the envelope was damaged and the ship lost lift. Eckener ordered full power and flew the ship out of trouble, but it came within 200 feet of hitting the ground.[146][147]

The Europe-Pan American flight was largely funded by the sale of special stamps issued by Spain, Brazil, and the US for franking mail carried on the trip. The US issued stamps in three denominations: 65¢, $1.30, and $2.60, all on 19 April 1930.[148]

Middle East flight (1931) Edit

The second flight to the Middle East took place in 1931, beginning on 9 April. Graf Zeppelin crossed the Mediterranean to Benghazi in Libya, then flew via Alexandria, to Cairo in Egypt, where it saluted King Fuad at the Qubbah Palace, then visited the Great Pyramid of Giza and hovered 70 feet above the top of the monument.[110] After a brief stop, the ship flew to Palestine where it circled Jerusalem, then returned to Cairo to pick up Eckener, who had stayed for an audience with the King. It returned to Friedrichshafen on 13 April.[110]

Polar flight (1931) Edit

 
USSR franked postcard delivered to the Malygin
 
The Graf Zeppelin and icebreaker Malygin on a Soviet stamp (1931)

The polar flight (Polarfahrt 1931) lasted from 24 to 31 July 1931. The ship rendezvoused with the Soviet icebreaker Malygin, which had the Italian polar explorer Umberto Nobile aboard. It exchanged 120 kg (260 lb) of souvenir mail with the airship, which Eckener landed on the Arctic Ocean.[149] Fifty thousand cards and letters, weighing 300 kg (660 lb), were flown. The costs of the expedition were met largely by the sale of special postage stamps issued by Germany and the Soviet Union to frank the mail carried on the flight.[150][151]

The writer Arthur Koestler was one of two journalists on board, along with a multinational team of scientists led by the Soviet Professor Samoilowich, who measured the Earth's magnetic field, and a Soviet radio operator.[152][153] The expedition photographed and mapped Franz Josef Land accurately for the first time, and came within 910 kilometres (570 mi; 490 nmi) of the North Pole.[154] It deployed three early radiosondes over the Arctic to collect meteorological data from the upper atmosphere.[155]

South American operations (1931–1937) Edit

 
Graf Zeppelin over Rio de Janeiro in 1930

From the beginning, Luftschiffbau Zeppelin had plans to serve South America.[156][157] There was a large community of Germans in Brazil, and existing sea connections were slow and uncomfortable.[158] Graf Zeppelin could transport passengers over long distances in the same luxury as an ocean liner, and almost as quickly as contemporary airliners.[159]

Graf Zeppelin made three trips to Brazil in 1931[160] and nine in 1932.[161] The route to Brazil meant flying down the Rhône valley in France, a cause of great sensitivity between the wars. The French government, concerned about espionage, restricted it to a 12 nmi (22 km; 14 mi)-wide corridor in 1934. Graf Zeppelin was too small and slow for the stormy North Atlantic route,[162][163] but because of the Blau gas fuel, could carry out the longer South Atlantic service.[44] On 2 July 1932 it flew a 24-hour tour of Britain.[105]

 
Food and drinks service on board was of a high standard.[59][164]

While returning from Brazil in October 1933, Graf Zeppelin stopped at NAS Opa Locka in Miami, Florida, and then Akron, Ohio, where it moored at the Goodyear Zeppelin airdock.[165] The airship then appeared at the Century of Progress World's Fair in Chicago.[166] It displayed swastika markings on the left side of the fins, as the Nazi Party had taken power in January. Eckener circled the fair clockwise so that the swastikas would not be seen by the spectators.[153][167] The United States Post Office Department issued a special 50-cent airmail stamp (C-18) for the visit, which was the fifth and final one the ship made to the US.[168]

 
German "First 1934 South America Flight" cover

The airship's cotton envelope absorbed moisture from the air in humid tropical conditions. When the relative humidity reached 90%, the ship's weight rose by almost 1,800 kilograms (4,000 lb).[169] Exposure to tropical downpours could greatly add to this, but when under way the ship had enough reserve power to generate dynamic lift to compensate.[170] In April 1935 it made a rough forced landing at Recife after it was caught in a rainstorm at low speed on the approach to land and the added weight of several tons of water caused it to sink to the ground. The lower rudder was lost, the outer envelope was ripped in several places, and a petrol tank was punctured by a palm tree.[91][171]

 
Graf Zeppelin flying near the Barolo Palace in Buenos Aires (1934)

In late 1935 Graf Zeppelin operated a temporary postal shuttle service between Recife and Bathurst, in the British African colony of the Gambia. On 24 November, during the second trip, the crew learned of an insurrection in Brazil, and there was some doubt whether it would be possible to return to Recife. Graf Zeppelin delivered its mail to Maceió, then loitered off the coast for three days until it was safe to land, after a flight of 118 hours and 40 minutes.[172]

 
Airship hangar near Rio de Janeiro

Brazil built a hangar for airships at Bartolomeu de Gusmão Airport, near Rio de Janeiro, at a cost of $1 million (equivalent to $21 million in 2018 [15]). Brazil charged the DZR $2000 ($42,000[15]) per landing, and had agreed that German airships would land there 20 times per year, to pay off the cost.[173] The hangar was constructed in Germany and the parts were transported and assembled on site. It was finished in late 1936,[174] and was used four times by Graf Zeppelin and five by Hindenburg.[175] It now houses units of the Brazilian Air Force.[174]

Graf Zeppelin made 64 round trips to Brazil, on the first regular intercontinental commercial air passenger service,[176] and it continued until the loss of the Hindenburg in May 1937.[175]

Propaganda (1936) Edit

Eckener was outspoken about his dislike of the Nazi Party, and was warned about it by Rudolf Diels, the head of the Gestapo.[177][178] When the Nazis gained power in 1933, Joseph Goebbels (Reich Minister of Propaganda) and Hermann Göring (Commander-in-chief of the Luftwaffe) sidelined Eckener by putting the more sympathetic Lehmann in charge of a new airline, Deutsche Zeppelin Reederei (DZR), which operated German airships.[179]

On 7 March 1936, in violation of the Treaty of Versailles and the Locarno Treaties, German troops reoccupied the Rhineland. Hitler called a plebiscite for 29 March to retrospectively approve the reoccupation, and adopt a list of exclusively Nazi candidates to sit in the new Reichstag. Goebbels commandeered Graf Zeppelin and the newly launched Hindenburg for the Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda.[180] The airships flew in tandem around Germany before the vote, with a joint departure from Löwenthal on the morning of 26 March.[181] They toured the country for four days and three nights, dropping propaganda leaflets, playing martial music and slogans from large loudspeakers, and broadcasting political speeches from a makeshift radio studio on Hindenburg.[182]

Retirement and aftermath Edit

 
Flying over Germany, late career

The crew heard of the Hindenburg disaster by radio on 6 May 1937 while in the air, returning from Brazil to Germany; they delayed telling the passengers until after landing on 8 May so as not to alarm them.[183][184] The disaster, in which Lehmann and 35 others were killed, destroyed public faith in the safety of hydrogen-filled airships, making continued passenger operations impossible unless they could convert to non-flammable helium. Hindenburg had originally been planned to use helium,[185][186] but almost all of the world's supply was controlled by the US, and its export had been tightly restricted by the Helium Act of 1925.[187]

Graf Zeppelin was permanently withdrawn from service shortly after the disaster.[188][189] On 18 June, its 590th and last flight took it to Frankfurt am Main, where it was deflated and exhibited to visitors in its hangar.[178][190] President Roosevelt supported exporting enough helium for the Hindenburg-class LZ 130 Graf Zeppelin II to resume commercial transatlantic passenger service by 1939,[191] but by early 1938, the opposition of Interior Secretary Harold Ickes, who was concerned that Germany was likely to use the airship in war, made that impossible.[192][193] On 11 May 1938, Roosevelt's press secretary announced that the US would not sell helium to Germany. Eckener, who had unsuccessfully intervened, responded that it would be "the death sentence for commercial lighter-than-air craft."[192][193] Graf Zeppelin II made 30 test, promotional, propaganda and military surveillance flights around Europe using hydrogen between September 1938 and August 1939; it never entered commercial passenger service. On 4 March 1940, Göring ordered Graf Zeppelin and Graf Zeppelin II to be scrapped, and their airframes to be melted down for the German military aircraft industry.[194]

During its career, Graf Zeppelin had flown almost 1.7 million km (1,053,391 miles), the first aircraft to fly over a million miles. It made 144 oceanic crossings (143 across the Atlantic, and one of the Pacific), carried 13,110 passengers and 106,700 kg (235,300 lb) of mail and freight.[195] It flew for 17,177 hours (717 days, or nearly two years),[72] without injuring a passenger or crewman.[196] It has been called "the world's most successful airship",[78][197] but it was not a commercial success; it had been hoped that the Hindenburg-class airships that followed would have the capacity and speed to make money on the popular North Atlantic route.[198] Graf Zeppelin's achievements showed that this was technically possible.[78]

By the time the two Graf Zeppelins were recycled, they were the last rigid airships in the world,[199] and heavier-than-air long-distance passenger transport, using aircraft like the Focke-Wulf Condor and the Boeing 307 Stratoliner, was already in its ascendancy.[200] Aeroplanes were faster, less labour-intensive and safer;[201][202] by 1958 they developed into passenger jets like the Boeing 707 which could cross the Atlantic reliably in a few hours. By 2017 annual air passenger journeys had surpassed 4 billion.[203]

Modern airships like the Zeppelin NT use semi-rigid designs, and are lifted by helium on their mainly sight-seeing duties.[204]

Specifications Edit

 
Internal components and gas cell locations shown schematically, excluding passenger and engine gondolas

Data from [205]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 36
  • Capacity: 20 passengers / Typical disposable load 19,900 kg (43,900 lb)
  • Length: 236.6 m (776 ft 3 in)
  • Diameter: 30.5 m (100 ft 1 in) maximum
  • Fineness ratio: 7.25
  • Height: 33.5 m (109 ft 11 in)
  • Volume: 75,000 m3 (2,600,000 cu ft) hydrogen + 30,000 m3 (1,100,000 cu ft) Blau gas capacity
  • Number of gas cells: 16
  • Empty weight: 67,100 kg (147,930 lb)
  • Fuel capacity: 8,000 kg (18,000 lb) petrol + 30,000 m3 (1,100,000 cu ft) Blau gas
  • Useful lift: 87,000 kg (192,000 lb) typical gross lift
  • Powerplant: 5 × Maybach VL II V-12 water-cooled reversible piston engines, 410 kW (550 hp) each
  • Propellers: 2, later 4-bladed propellers

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 128.16 km/h (79.63 mph, 69.20 kn)
  • Range: 10,000 km (6,200 mi, 5,400 nmi) at 117 km/h (73 mph; 63 kn)

See also Edit

References Edit

Notes

  1. ^ L 59 was tasked to deliver supplies to German forces fighting in East Africa. The mission was cancelled, and it returned to Jamboli.[6][7]
  2. ^ In 1921 Britain's Imperial Airship Scheme aimed to connect the British Empire using passenger airships.[9]
  3. ^ Blau gas was a mixture of saturated and unsaturated hydrocarbons and hydrogen, produced by pyrolysis of fuel oil.[23] It was about 1.05 times as heavy as air,[24] and could be substituted with a mixture of propane and hydrogen.[25][26]
  4. ^ Its volume record was beaten by the British airship R101 in October 1929, and its length by USS Akron in 1931.
  5. ^ One of the nacelles is preserved and displayed at Zeppelin Museum Friedrichshafen.[34]
  6. ^ The liquid fuel used was a blend of commercial petrol and benzole.[41]
  7. ^ The amount of Blau gas the airship carried could power it for 100 hours; if the ship had had all-hydrogen gas cells and the extra lift had been used to carry petrol, it could have run for only 67.[20]
  8. ^ This was later replaced by a device using compressed air to produce a burst of ultrasound, which was less disturbing for the passengers.[53]
  9. ^ Lehmann commanded most of Graf Zeppelin's flights, 272 to Eckener's 133. Four other captains commanded a total of 100 flights.[97]
  10. ^ A semidocumentary film titled Farewell was released in 2009 which featured much of Hartmann's newsreel footage of her. The film was later aired on BBC under the title Around The World by Zeppelin.[124]

Citations

  1. ^ Lehmann (1937), p. 24.
  2. ^ Hoyt (1969), pp. 26–27.
  3. ^ Hoyt (1969), p. 37.
  4. ^ Marsh, W Lockwood (3 January 1930). "Twenty-One Years of Airship Progress". Flight: 87–88.
  5. ^ Layman (1996), p. 72.
  6. ^ a b Dick & Robinson (1985), pp. 74–76.
  7. ^ a b Hoyt (1969), pp. 106–107.
  8. ^ "The Transatlantic Voyage of R.34". Flight: 906–912. 10 July 1919.
  9. ^ Duggan & Meyer (2001), pp. 130, 174.
  10. ^ Vaeth (1958), p. 40.
  11. ^ Robinson (1975), pp. 207–213.
  12. ^ Lindley, John M (1978). "Commercial Aviation and the Mastery of Transoceanic Flight". Naval Aviation News. Chief of Naval Operations: 36–37.
  13. ^ Vaeth (1958), pp. 44–45.
  14. ^ "Exchange Rates Between the United States Dollar and Forty-one Currencies". Measuring Worth.
  15. ^ a b c d e f 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved 28 May 2023.
  16. ^ Robinson (1975), p. 261.
  17. ^ "New German Airship – A visit to the works at Friedrichshafen". News. The Times. No. 44851. London. 26 March 1928. col E, p. 8.
  18. ^ Swinfield (2013), p. 218.
  19. ^ Hammack (2016), pp. 216, 221.
  20. ^ a b c Robinson (1975), p. 262.
  21. ^ Lehmann (1937), pp. 253–254.
  22. ^ Vaeth (1958), pp. 47–50.
  23. ^ Hammack (2016), p. 235.
  24. ^ a b Hammack (2016), pp. 231–232.
  25. ^ Vaeth (1958), p. 103.
  26. ^ a b Dick & Robinson (1985), p. 34.
  27. ^ de Syon (2005), p. 128.
  28. ^ a b Lehmann (1937), p. 254.
  29. ^ Lehmann (1937), p. 47.
  30. ^ "Ninety-year anniversary of the longest standing FAI records set by airship pilot Dr Hugo Eckener". www.fai.org. 19 October 2018.
  31. ^ Vaeth (1958), p. 47.
  32. ^ a b c d e Niderost, Eric (19 August 2019). "Globetrotting Leviathan: Graf Zeppelin's amazing voyage". Aviation History (July 1993).
  33. ^ Vaeth (1958), pp. 65–66.
  34. ^ . Zeppelin Museum Friedrichshafen. Archived from the original on 26 April 2014.
  35. ^ Vaeth (1958), pp. 51–52.
  36. ^ "Maybach VL-2, V-12 Engine". National Air and Space Museum. 10 March 2016.
  37. ^ Hammack (2016), p. 225.
  38. ^ Vaeth (1958), pp. 73, 116.
  39. ^ a b Vaeth (1958), p. 51.
  40. ^ Robinson (1975), p. 355.
  41. ^ Hammack (2016), p. 232.
  42. ^ "'Blue' Gas". Naval Institute Proceedings. United States Naval Institute. 54: 1096. 1928.
  43. ^ de Syon (2005), p. 129.
  44. ^ a b Dick & Robinson (1985), p. 76.
  45. ^ Hammack (2016), p. 236.
  46. ^ a b Vaeth (1958), p. 143.
  47. ^ Dick & Robinson (1985), p. 69.
  48. ^ Vaeth (1958), p. 52.
  49. ^ Dick & Robinson (1985), p. 53.
  50. ^ Lehmann (1937), pp. 263–264.
  51. ^ a b Whiting, Oliver K (28 August 1931). "My Flight from Friedrichshafen". Flight: 855.
  52. ^ Vaeth (1958), p. 144.
  53. ^ a b Vaeth (1958), p. 186.
  54. ^ Dick & Robinson (1985), p. 70.
  55. ^ a b "Graf Zeppelin visits England" (PDF). Flight: 474. 2 May 1930.
  56. ^ de Syon (2005), p. 135.
  57. ^ Robinson (1975), p. 263.
  58. ^ Hammack (2016), pp. 230, 238.
  59. ^ a b c Vaeth (1958), p. 187.
  60. ^ Lehmann (1937), p. 252.
  61. ^ Botting (1980), p. 105.
  62. ^ de Syon (2005), pp. 132–133.
  63. ^ a b Votolato (2007), p. 182.
  64. ^ Robinson (1975), p. 210.
  65. ^ Botting (1980), p. 104.
  66. ^ Vaeth (1958), pp. 187–188.
  67. ^ Vaeth (1958), pp. 93–94.
  68. ^ a b c Dick & Robinson (1985), p. 37.
  69. ^ Vaeth (1958), p. 62.
  70. ^ Hammack (2016), p. 219.
  71. ^ Vaeth (1958), pp. 53–54.
  72. ^ a b Ridley-Kitts (2012), p. 287.
  73. ^ Lehmann (1937), p. 256.
  74. ^ Hammack (2016), pp. 232–233.
  75. ^ a b c d e f g "Funkverkehr auf dem Luftschiff LZ 127 Graf Zeppelin". www.seefunknetz.de.
  76. ^ a b Hammack (2016), p. 233.
  77. ^ "The New Zeppelin". News in Brief. The Times. No. 44941. London. 10 July 1928. col B, p. 15.
  78. ^ a b c Brookes (1992), p. 9.
  79. ^ "Exchange Rates Between the United States Dollar and Forty-one Currencies". MeasuringWorth.com. Retrieved 8 August 2014.
  80. ^ a b Lehmann (1937), p. 268.
  81. ^ Meyer (1991), pp. 184, 199.
  82. ^ Meyer (1991), pp. 190–191.
  83. ^ Meyer (1991), p. 233.
  84. ^ Vaeth (1958), pp. 130–131.
  85. ^ Robinson (1975), p. xxxviii.
  86. ^ "Flying Down To Rio – No. 2". www.britishpathe.com. British Pathé.
  87. ^ Vaeth (1958), p. 132.
  88. ^ "Graf Zeppelin Makes First Trip to Moscow: 100,000 Pack October Field to Get View". New York Times. 11 September 1930. p. 5.
  89. ^ Vaeth (1958), pp. 98–99.
  90. ^ Vaeth (1958), p. 133.
  91. ^ a b Vaeth (1958), p. 188.
  92. ^ de Syon (2005), p. 133.
  93. ^ Swinfield (2013), pp. 238, 316.
  94. ^ Lehmann (1937), pp. 264–266.
  95. ^ Vaeth (1958), pp. 54–56.
  96. ^ Robinson (1975), p. 265.
  97. ^ Lehmann (1937), p. 340.
  98. ^ Bradley (1929), p. 146.
  99. ^ Vaeth (1958), p. 9.
  100. ^ "Zeppelin Speeds North of Bermuda and is Expected Here This Afternoon; Damaged Fin is Repaired in the Air". New York Times. 14 October 1928.
  101. ^ Vaeth (1958), pp. 4–18.
  102. ^ "Graf Zeppelin's Atlantic Voyage". Flight: 903. 18 October 1928.
  103. ^ Botting (1980), p. 112.
  104. ^ Lehmann (1937), p. 274.
  105. ^ a b "Visit of the Graf Zeppelin to England". Flight: 624. 8 July 1932.
  106. ^ Vaeth (1958), pp. 62–63.
  107. ^ Shapiro, Laurie Gwen (8 January 2018). "The Stowaway Craze". The New Yorker. ISSN 0028-792X.
  108. ^ Lehmann (1937), pp. 252–254.
  109. ^ "Zeppelin's Flight Over Mediterranean". News. The Times. No. 45160. London. 25 March 1929. col C, p. 12.
  110. ^ a b c McGregor, Alan (July–August 1994). "Contrary Winds: Zeppelins Over the Middle East". Saudi Aramco World. 45 (4). Retrieved 27 October 2019.
  111. ^ "Zeppelin's Flight – Second Mediterranean Cruise". News in Brief. The Times. No. 45185. London. 24 April 1929. col F, p. 15.
  112. ^ Robinson (1975), p. 268.
  113. ^ "Graf Zeppelin". News in Brief. The Times. No. 45187. London. 26 April 1929. col E, p. 16.
  114. ^ Lehmann (1937), pp. 258–261.
  115. ^ Meyer (1991), p. 172.
  116. ^ "Zeppelin Battles Gale to Safety; Reaches Cuers, France, on One Motor; Eckener and Crew Avert Disaster". New York Times. 18 May 1929.
  117. ^ Vaeth (1958), p. 81.
  118. ^ Vaeth (1958), p. 75.
  119. ^ Robinson (1975), p. 269.
  120. ^ Newman (2013), pp. 117–118.
  121. ^ Vaeth (1958), p. 72.
  122. ^ a b Swinfield (2013), p. 236.
  123. ^ "In pictures: Britain's female adventurers". Daily Telegraph. 12 January 2016.
  124. ^ "BBC Four – Around the World by Zeppelin". BBC.
  125. ^ . Time. 9 September 1929. ISSN 0040-781X. Archived from the original on 3 June 2008.
  126. ^ a b de Syon (2005), p. 136.
  127. ^ Swinfield (2013), p. 237.
  128. ^ Astronautics & Aeronautics. American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. 1979. p. 58.
  129. ^ Robinson (1975), p. 270.
  130. ^ Robinson & Keller (1982), p. 120.
  131. ^ Duggan & Meyer (2001), p. 5.
  132. ^ a b Swinfield (2013), p. 238.
  133. ^ "Graf Zeppelin Reaches Pacific Coast; Passes San Francisco, Nearing Goal; Thousands Wait at Los Angeles Field". New York Times. 26 August 1929. p. 1.
  134. ^ Dick & Robinson (1985), p. 39.
  135. ^ a b Robinson (1975), p. 274.
  136. ^ Vaeth (1958), pp. 105–107.
  137. ^ "Graf Zeppelin's World Flight". Flight: 992. 6 September 1929.
  138. ^ "Around the World with the Graf Zeppelin". Modern Mechanics. November 1929. pp. 64–65.
  139. ^ "Aeronautics: Zeppelin Pool". Time. 7 April 1930.
  140. ^ "Eckener Receives Geographic Medal: 5,000 at Capital Witness the Bestowal of World Honor on Zeppelin Commander". New York Times. 28 March 1930. p. 6.
  141. ^ "Hugo Eckener receives a gold medal by the National Geographic Society in Washington DC". www.criticalpast.com.
  142. ^ a b "The Graf Zeppelin". Flight: 576. 30 May 1930.
  143. ^ Vaeth (1958), p. 145.
  144. ^ Robinson (1975), pp. 275–276.
  145. ^ "Progress of the Graf Zeppelin". Flight: 608. 6 June 1930.
  146. ^ Vaeth (1958), pp. 153–154.
  147. ^ Robinson (1975), pp. 276–277.
  148. ^ Vaeth (1958), pp. 138–139.
  149. ^ Vaeth (1958), p. 117.
  150. ^ Robinson (1975), p. 277.
  151. ^ Swinfield (2013), p. 307.
  152. ^ Vaeth (1958), p. 113.
  153. ^ a b Dick & Robinson (1985), p. 40.
  154. ^ Vaeth (1958), p. 119.
  155. ^ Vaeth (1958), pp. 120–121.
  156. ^ "New Zeppelin's Flight Postponed. Airship Service To South America". News. The Times. No. 45000. London. 17 September 1928. col C, p. 11.
  157. ^ Meyer (1991), p. 125.
  158. ^ Vaeth (1958), p. 139.
  159. ^ Botting (1980), p. 96.
  160. ^ "Some Graf Zeppelin Statistics". Flight: 1095. 17 November 1932.
  161. ^ "Graf Zeppelin's Last Trip for the Season". Flight: 1132. 3 November 1932.
  162. ^ Dick & Robinson (1985), p. 83.
  163. ^ Lehmann (1937), pp. 291–292.
  164. ^ Votolato (2007), p. 184.
  165. ^ Meyer (1991), p. 97.
  166. ^ Lehmann (1937), p. 305.
  167. ^ Hancock (2017), pp. 104–105.
  168. ^ Vaeth (1958), p. 154.
  169. ^ Dick & Robinson (1985), pp. 70–71.
  170. ^ Dick & Robinson (1985), p. 77.
  171. ^ Dick & Robinson (1985), p. 57.
  172. ^ Robinson (1975), p. 281.
  173. ^ Vaeth (1958), p. 189.
  174. ^ a b Watts, Jonathan (27 November 2016). "Dead zeppelins: Brazilian gravesite is airships' stairway to heaven". The Guardian. Retrieved 26 October 2019.
  175. ^ a b Brooks (1992), p. 167.
  176. ^ Dick & Robinson (1985), p. 41.
  177. ^ Vaeth (1958), pp. 158–163.
  178. ^ a b Swinfield (2013), p. 240.
  179. ^ Lehmann (1937), p. 350.
  180. ^ "Propaganda 'attack' made by Zeppelins". New York Times. 29 March 1930.
  181. ^ "Two Reich Zeppelins on Election Tour". New York Times. 27 March 1936.
  182. ^ Lehmann (1937), pp. 326–332.
  183. ^ Vaeth (1958), pp. 196–198.
  184. ^ Robinson (1975), p. 294.
  185. ^ Robinson (1975), p. 284.
  186. ^ Smith, G Geoffrey (3 October 1935). "LZ 129 Nearing Completion". Flight: 352–354.
  187. ^ Krock, Arthur (12 May 1937). "In Washington: A Star Witness on Our Helium Export Policy". New York Times. p. 22.
  188. ^ Vaeth (1958), p. 202.
  189. ^ Brookes (1992), p. 18.
  190. ^ de Syon (2005), p. 201.
  191. ^ "President Backs Export of Helium: Sends to Congress Report by Cabinet Committee Advising Sale for Airship Lines". New York Times. 26 May 1937. p. 2.
  192. ^ a b "Ickes Stand Halts Helium Gas Sale: His Opposition, Under Law, Prevents Roosevelt Action to Aid Dirigible". New York Times. 12 May 1938. p. 9.
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  194. ^ Bauer & Duggan (1998), pp. 173, 189–195.
  195. ^ Brewer (1991), p. 2.
  196. ^ Hancock (2017), pp. 102–103.
  197. ^ Swinfield (2013), p. 358.
  198. ^ Hoyt (1969), p. 121.
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Bibliography

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  • Brookes, Andrew (1992). Disaster in the Air. Shepperton, UK: Ian Allan. ISBN 978-0-7110-2037-5.
  • Brooks, Peter W (1992). Zeppelin: rigid airships, 1893–1940. Washington DC, US: Smithsonian Institution Press. ISBN 978-1-56098-228-9.
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  • Robinson, Douglas H (1975). Giants in the sky: a history of the rigid airship. Seattle, Washington, US: University of Washington Press. ISBN 978-0-295-95249-9. OL 5291361M.
  • Robinson, Douglas H; Keller, Charles (1982). Up Ship!: A History of the U.S. Navy's Rigid Airships 1919–1935. Annapolis, Maryland, US: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-0-87021-738-8.
  • Swinfield, John (2013). Airship: Design, Development and Disaster. London, UK: Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84486-209-2.
  • de Syon, Gillaume (2005). Zeppelin!: Germany and the airship, 1900–1939. Baltimore, Maryland, US: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-6734-7.
  • Vaeth, J Gordon (1958). Graf Zeppelin: The Adventures of an Aerial Globetrotter. New York City, US: Harper & Brothers. OL 4113768W.
  • Ventry, Lord; Kolesnik, Eugene M (1982). Airship saga: the history of airships seen through the eyes of the men who designed, built, and flew them. Poole, UK: Blandford Press. ISBN 978-0-7137-1001-4.
  • Votolato, Gregory (2007). Transport Design: A Travel History. London, UK: Reaktion Books. ISBN 9781861894786.

External links Edit

  • British Pathe video clips
  • San Diego Air & Space Museum: Henry Cord Meyer Collection, Flickr

graf, zeppelin, this, article, about, first, graf, zeppelin, other, uses, graf, zeppelin, disambiguation, deutsches, luftschiff, zeppelin, german, passenger, carrying, hydrogen, filled, rigid, airship, that, flew, from, 1928, 1937, offered, first, commercial, . This article is about the first Graf Zeppelin For other uses see Graf Zeppelin disambiguation LZ 127 Graf Zeppelin Deutsches Luftschiff Zeppelin 127 was a German passenger carrying hydrogen filled rigid airship that flew from 1928 to 1937 It offered the first commercial transatlantic passenger flight service The ship was named after the German airship pioneer Ferdinand von Zeppelin a count Graf in the German nobility It was conceived and operated by Hugo Eckener the chairman of Luftschiffbau Zeppelin LZ 127 Graf ZeppelinRole Commercial passenger airshipNational origin GermanyManufacturer Luftschiffbau ZeppelinDesigner Ludwig DurrFirst flight 18 September 1928Introduction 11 October 1928Retired 18 June 1937Status Scrapped March 1940CareerConstruction number LZ 127Registration D LZ 127Radio code DENNE 1 Owners and operators Deutsche Luftschiffahrts Aktiengesellschaft from 1935 Deutsche Zeppelin ReedereiFlights 590Total hours 17 177Total distance 1 7 million km 1 06 million miles Graf Zeppelin made 590 flights totalling almost 1 7 million kilometres over 1 million miles It was operated by a crew of 36 and could carry 24 passengers It was the longest and largest airship in the world when it was built It made the first circumnavigation of the world by airship and the first nonstop crossing of the Pacific Ocean by air its range was enhanced by its use of Blau gas as a fuel It was built using funds raised by public subscription and from the German government and its operating costs were offset by the sale of special postage stamps to collectors the support of the newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst and cargo and passenger receipts After several long flights between 1928 and 1932 including one to the Arctic Graf Zeppelin provided a commercial passenger and mail service between Germany and Brazil for five years When the Nazi Party came to power they used it as a propaganda tool It was withdrawn from service after the Hindenburg disaster in 1937 and scrapped for military aircraft production in 1940 Contents 1 Background 2 Design and operation 2 1 Layout 2 2 Electrical and communications systems 3 Operational history 3 1 Proving flights 3 2 First intercontinental flight 1928 3 3 Mediterranean flights 1929 3 4 Forced landing in France 1929 3 5 Round the world flight 1929 3 6 Europe Pan American flight 1930 3 7 Middle East flight 1931 3 8 Polar flight 1931 3 9 South American operations 1931 1937 3 10 Propaganda 1936 4 Retirement and aftermath 5 Specifications 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksBackground EditThe first successful flight of a rigid airship Ferdinand von Zeppelin s LZ1 was in Germany in 1900 2 Between 1910 and 1914 Deutsche Luftschiffahrts Aktiengesellschaft DELAG transported thousands of passengers by airship 3 4 During World War I Germany used airships to bomb London and other strategic targets 5 In 1917 the German LZ 104 L 59 was the first airship to make an intercontinental flight from Jambol in Bulgaria to Khartoum and back a nonstop journey of 6 800 kilometres 4 200 mi 3 700 nmi 6 7 nb 1 During and just after the war Britain and the United States built airships and France and Italy experimented with confiscated German ones In July 1919 the British R34 flew from East Fortune in Scotland to New York and back 8 nb 2 Luftschiffbau Zeppelin delivered LZ 126 to the US Navy as a war reparation in October 1924 The company chairman Hugo Eckener commanded the delivery flight and the ship was commissioned as the USS Los Angeles ZR 3 10 11 The Treaty of Versailles had placed limits on German aviation in 1925 when the Allies relaxed the restrictions Eckener saw the chance to start an intercontinental air passenger service 12 and began lobbying the government for funds and permission to build a new civil airship 13 Public subscription raised 2 5 million ℛ ℳ the equivalent of US 600 000 at the time 14 or 10 million in 2018 dollars 15 and the government granted over 1 million ℛ ℳ 4 million 16 17 Design and operation Edit nbsp Construction of Graf Zeppelin in Friedrichshafen the keel and axial gangways are highlighted green with main rings in red two people are shown in yellowThe LZ 127 was designed by Ludwig Durr 18 19 as a stretched version of the zeppelin LZ 126 rechristened the USS Los Angeles 20 It was intended from the beginning as a technology demonstrator for the more capable airships that would follow 21 It was built between 1926 and September 1928 at the Luftschiffbau Zeppelin works in Friedrichshafen on Lake Constance Germany which became its home port for nearly all of its flights Its duralumin frame was made of eighteen 28 sided structural polygons joined lengthwise with 16 km 10 mi of girders and braced with steel wire The outer cover was of thick cotton painted with aircraft dope containing aluminium to reduce solar heating then sandpapered smooth The gas cells were also cotton lined with goldbeater s skins and protected from damage by a layer containing 27 km 17 mi of ramie fibre 20 22 Graf Zeppelin was 236 6 m 776 ft long and had a total gas volume of 105 000 m3 3 700 000 cu ft of which 75 000 m3 2 600 000 cu ft was hydrogen carried in 17 lifting gas cells Traggaszelle and 30 000 m3 1 100 000 cu ft was Blau gas in 12 fuel gas cells Kraftgaszelle nb 3 The Graf Zeppelin was built to be the largest possible airship that could fit into the company s construction hangar 27 28 with only 46 cm 18 in between the top of the finished vessel and the hangar roof 29 It was the longest and most voluminous airship when built 26 30 nb 4 but it was too slender for optimum aerodynamic efficiency 31 32 and there were worries that the shape would compromise its strength 33 Graf Zeppelin was powered by five Maybach VL II 12 cylinder 410 kW 550 hp engines each of 33 251 L 2 029 1 cu in capacity mounted in individual streamlined nacelles nb 5 arranged so that each was in an undisturbed airflow 35 The engines were reversible 36 and were monitored by crew members who accessed them during flight via open ladders 32 The two bladed wooden pusher propellers were 3 4 m 11 ft in diameter 37 and were later upgraded to four bladed units 32 On longer flights the Graf Zeppelin often flew with one engine shut down to conserve fuel 38 Graf Zeppelin was the only rigid airship to burn Blau gas 39 40 the engines were started on petrol nb 6 and could then switch fuel 24 A liquid fuelled airship loses weight as it burns fuel requiring the release of lifting gas or the capture of water from exhaust gas or rainfall to avoid the vessel climbing Blau gas was only slightly heavier than air so burning it had little effect on buoyancy 42 43 On a typical transatlantic journey the Graf Zeppelin used Blau gas 90 of the time only burning petrol if the ship was too heavy and used ten times less hydrogen per day than the smaller zeppelin L 59 did on its Khartoum flight in 1917 44 nb 7 Graf Zeppelin typically carried 3 500 kg 7 700 lb of ballast water and 650 kg 1 430 lb of spare parts including an extra propeller 45 Calcium chloride was added to the ballast water to prevent freezing The ship retained grey water from the sinks for use as additional ballast 46 Both fresh and waste water could be moved forward and aft to control trim 47 nbsp One of the engine nacelles preserved in Zeppelin Museum FriedrichshafenThe airship usually took off vertically using static lift buoyancy then started the engines in the air adding aerodynamic lift 48 Normal cruising altitude was 200 m 650 ft it climbed if necessary to cross high ground or poor weather and often descended in stormy weather 49 To measure the wind speed over the sea and calculate drift floating pyrotechnic flares were dropped 50 When preparing to land the crew advised the ground either by radio or signal flag Ground crew lit a smoky fire to help the airshipmen judge wind speed and direction The airship slowed then adjusted buoyancy to neutral by valving off hydrogen or dropping ballast Echo sounding with the report from an 11 mm blank round was used to measure altitude accurately 51 52 nb 8 The ship flew in with its nose trimmed slightly down made its final approach into the wind descending at 30 m 100 ft per minute then used reverse thrust to stop over the landing flag where it dropped ropes to the ground Landing in rough weather required a faster approach 54 55 Up to 300 people manhandled the airship into a hangar or secured it by the nose to a mooring mast 56 57 Graf Zeppelin s top airspeed was 128 km h 36 m s 80 mph 69 kn at 1 980 kW 2 650 hp it cruised at 117 km h 33 m s 73 mph 63 kn at 1 600 kW 2 150 hp It had a total lift capacity of 87 000 kg 192 000 lb with a usable payload of 15 000 kg 33 000 lb on a 10 000 km 6 200 mi 5 400 nmi flight 28 It was slightly unstable in yaw 58 and to make it easier to fly had an automatic pilot which stabilised it in that axis 53 Pitch was controlled manually by an elevatorman who tried to limit the angle to 5 up or down so as not to upset the bottles of wine which accompanied the elaborate food served on board 59 Operating the elevators was so demanding and strenuous that an elevatorman s shift was only four hours reduced to two in rough weather 59 Layout Edit nbsp Gondola deck planThe operational spaces common areas and passenger cabins were built into a gondola structure in the forward part of the airship s ventral surface with the flight deck well forward in a chin position 60 The gondola was 30 metres 98 ft long and 6 metres 20 ft wide 61 its streamlined design reflected contemporary aesthetics 62 63 minimised overall height and reduced drag 39 Behind the flight deck was the map room with two large hatches to allow the command crew to communicate with the navigators who could take readings with a sextant through the two large windows 32 There was also a radio room and a galley with a double electric oven and hot plates 64 nbsp Theo Matejko s drawing of the crew accommodation on the keel corridor from the first transatlantic flightThe galley staff served three hot meals a day in the main dining and sitting room which was 5 metres 16 ft square 65 It had four large arched windows wooden inlays and Art Deco upholstered furniture 63 66 Between meals the passengers could socialise and look at the scenery On the round the world flight there was dancing to a phonograph fine wine and Ernst Lehmann one of the officers played the accordion 67 A corridor led to ten passenger cabins capable of sleeping 24 a pair of washrooms and dual chemical toilets 46 The passenger cabins were set by day with a sofa which converted at night into two beds 68 The cabins were often cold and on some sectors passengers wore furs and huddled under blankets to stay warm 69 There was a noticeable smell from the Blau gas especially when the ship was stationary 70 71 A ladder from the map room led up to the keel corridor inside the hull and accommodation for the 36 crewmen Officers quarters were towards the nose 72 behind them were the baggage store the crew mess room and the quarters for the ordinary crew who slept in wire frame beds with fabric screens 51 Also along this corridor were petrol oil and water tanks and stowage for cargo and spare parts Branches from the keel corridor led to the five engine nacelles and there were ladders up to the axial corridor just below the ship s main axis which gave access to all the gas cells 73 Electrical and communications systems Edit nbsp Many people were needed to hold down the airship The ram air turbine electric generator is just under the radio room window The main generating plant was in a separate compartment mostly inside the hull Two 8 9 kW 12 hp Wanderer car engines adapted to burn Blau gas only one of which operated at a time drove two Siemens amp Halske dynamos each One dynamo on each engine powered the oven and hotplates and one the lighting and gyrocompass Cooling water from these engines heated radiators inside the passenger lounge 74 Two ram air turbines attached to the main gondola on swinging arms provided electrical power for the radio room internal lighting and the galley Batteries could power essential services like radios for half an hour 75 76 and there were small petrol generators for emergency power 76 Three radio operators used a one kilowatt vacuum tube transmitter about 140 W antenna power to send telegrams over the low frequency 500 3 000 m bands 75 A 70 W antenna power emergency transmitter carried telegraph and radio telephone signals over 300 1 300 m wavelength bands 68 75 The main aerial consisted of two lead weighted 120 metre 390 ft long wires deployed by electric motor or hand crank the emergency aerial was a 40 metre 130 ft wire stretched from a ring on the hull 75 Three six tube receivers served the wavelengths from 120 to 1 200 m medium frequency 400 to 4 000 m low frequency and 3 000 to 25 000 m overlapping low frequency and very low frequency 75 The radio room also had a shortwave receiver for 10 to 280 m high frequency 75 A radio direction finder used a loop antenna to determine the airship s bearing from any two land radio stations or ships with known positions 68 During the first transatlantic flight in 1928 the radio room sent 484 private telegrams and 160 press telegrams 75 Operational history EditMain article LZ 127 Graf Zeppelin operational history nbsp 1934 South America timetableThe LZ 127 was christened Graf Zeppelin by Countess Brandenstein Zeppelin on 8 July 1928 after her father Ferdinand von Zeppelin the founder of the company on the 90th anniversary of his birth 77 78 During most of its career it was operated by Luftschiffbau Zeppelin s commercial flight arm DELAG in conjunction with the Hamburg American Line HAPAG for its final two years it flew for the Deutsche Zeppelin Reederei DZR Passengers paid premium fares to fly on the Graf Zeppelin 1 500 ℛ ℳ from Germany to Rio de Janeiro in 1934 equal to 590 then 79 or 13 000 in 2018 dollars 15 and fees collected for valuable freight and air mail also provided income On the first transatlantic flight Graf Zeppelin carried 66 000 postcards and covers 80 Eckener had earned his doctorate in Psychology at Leipzig University under Wilhelm Wundt 81 and could use his knowledge of mass psychology to the benefit of the Graf Zeppelin 82 He identified safety as the most important factor in the ship s public acceptance and was ruthless in pursuit of this 83 He took complete responsibility for the ship from technical matters to finance to arranging where it would fly next on its years long public relations campaign in which he promoted zeppelin fever 84 85 On one of the Brazil trips British Pathe News filmed on board 86 Eckener cultivated the press and was gratified when the British journalist Lady Grace Drummond Hay wrote and millions read that The Graf Zeppelin is a ship with a soul You have only to fly in it to know that it s a living vibrant sensitive and magnificent thing 87 Graf Zeppelin was greeted by large crowds on most of its early voyages There were 100 000 at Moscow and possibly 250 000 at Tokyo to see it 88 89 At Stockholm spectators launched firework rockets around it and on the return flight from Moscow it was punctured by rifle shots near the Soviet Union Lithuania border 90 On one visit to Rio de Janeiro people released hundreds of small toy petrol burning hot air balloons near the flammable craft 91 The airship captured the public imagination and was used extensively in advertising 92 On visits to England it photographed Royal Air Force bases the Blackburn aircraft factory in Yorkshire and the Portsmouth naval dockyard it is likely that this was espionage at the behest of the German government 93 Proving flights Edit During 1928 there were six proving flights On the fourth one Blau gas was used for the first time Graf Zeppelin carried Oskar von Miller head of the Deutsches Museum Charles E Rosendahl commander of USS Los Angeles and the British airshipmen Ralph Sleigh Booth and George Herbert Scott It flew from Friedrichshafen to Ulm via Cologne and across the Netherlands to Lowestoft in England then home via Bremen Hamburg Berlin Leipzig and Dresden a total of 3 140 kilometres 1 950 mi 1 700 nmi in 34 hours and 30 minutes 94 On the fifth flight Eckener caused a minor controversy by flying close to Huis Doorn in the Netherlands which some interpreted as a gesture of support for the former Kaiser Wilhelm II who was living in exile there 95 96 First intercontinental flight 1928 Edit nbsp A piece of the damaged fabric removed from Graf Zeppelin in October 1928In October 1928 Graf Zeppelin made its first intercontinental trip to Lakehurst Naval Air Station New Jersey US with Eckener in command and Lehmann as first officer nb 9 Rosendahl and Drummond Hay flew the outward leg 98 80 Ludwig Dettmann and Theo Matejko made an artistic record of the flight 99 On the third day of the flight a large section of the fabric covering of the port tail fin was damaged while passing through a mid ocean squall line 100 and volunteer riggers including Eckener s son Knut climbed outside the airship and made repairs to the torn fabric Eckener directed Rosendahl to make a distress call when this was received and nothing else was heard from the airship many believed it was lost 101 After the ship arrived safely there was some annoyance from the Lakehurst personnel that the Zeppelin had not answered repeated calls for its position and estimated arrival time Eckener explained that because the airship was forced to fly at a reduced speed due to the damaged fin the wind driven generator could not generate enough power to send messages 102 The 9 926 km 6 168 mi 5 360 nmi crossing the longest non stop flight at the time had taken 111 hours 44 minutes 103 Clara Adams became the first female paying passenger to fly transatlantic on the return flight 104 The ship endured an overnight gale that blew it backwards in the air and 320 km 200 mi 170 nmi off course to the coast of Newfoundland 105 A stowaway boarded at Lakehurst and was discovered in the mail room mid voyage 106 107 The airship returned home and on 6 November flew to Berlin Staaken where it was met by the German president Paul von Hindenburg 108 Mediterranean flights 1929 Edit nbsp Graf Zeppelin over Jerusalem on 26 March 1929 Graf Zeppelin visited Palestine in late March 1929 At Rome it sent greetings to Benito Mussolini and King Victor Emmanuel III It entered Palestine flew over Tel Aviv and Jerusalem and descended to near the surface of the Dead Sea 430 m 1 400 ft below sea level The ship delivered 16 000 letters in mail drops at Jaffa Athens Budapest and Vienna 109 The Egyptian government under pressure from Britain refused it permission to enter their airspace 110 The second Mediterranean cruise flew over France Spain Portugal and Tangier 111 then returned home via Cannes and Lyon on 23 25 April 112 113 Forced landing in France 1929 Edit nbsp Emergency landing in France May 1929On 16 May 1929 on the first night of its second trip to the US Graf Zeppelin lost four of its engines 114 With Eckener struggling for a suitable place to force land the French Air Ministry allowed him to land at Cuers Pierrefeu near Toulon 115 Barely able to control the ship Eckener made an emergency landing 116 The incident and the forced comradeship it engendered softened France s attitude to Germany and its airships slightly 117 The incident was caused by adjustments that had been made by the chief engineer to the four engines that failed 118 119 On 4 August the airship made it to Lakehurst on the second attempt Aboard was Susie an eastern gorilla who had been captured near Lake Kivu in the Belgian Congo and sold by her German owner to an American dealer 120 121 Round the world flight 1929 Edit nbsp Graf Zeppelin and USS Los Angeles in the airship hangar at NAS Lakehurst August 1929 nbsp Drummond Hay on board the Graf Zeppelin August 1929The American newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst s media empire paid half the cost of the project to fly Graf Zeppelin around the world 122 with four staff on the flight Lady Hay Drummond Hay Karl von Wiegand the Australian explorer Hubert Wilkins and the cameraman Robert Hartmann Drummond Hay became the first woman to circumnavigate the world by air 123 nb 10 Hearst stipulated that the flight in August 1929 officially start and finish at Lakehurst 125 126 Round the world tickets were sold for almost 3000 equivalent to 51 000 in 2022 15 but most participants had their costs paid for them 127 The flight s expenses were offset by the carriage of souvenir mail between Lakehurst Friedrichshafen Tokyo and Los Angeles 122 A US franked letter flown on the whole trip from Lakehurst to Lakehurst required 3 55 equivalent to 61 in 2022 15 in postage Graf Zeppelin set off from Lakehurst on 8 August heading eastwards 128 The ship refuelled at Friedrichshafen then continued across Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union to Tokyo After five days at a former German airship shed that had been removed from Juterbog and rebuilt at Kasumigaura Naval Air Station 129 130 Graf Zeppelin continued across the Pacific to California Eckener delayed crossing the coast at San Francisco s Golden Gate so as to come in near sunset for aesthetic effect 131 132 The ship landed at Mines Field in Los Angeles completing the first ever nonstop flight across the Pacific Ocean 133 134 The takeoff from Los Angeles was difficult because of high temperatures and an inversion layer To lighten the ship six crew and some cargo were sent on to Lakehurst by aeroplane 135 The airship suffered minor damage from a tail strike and barely cleared electricity cables at the edge of the field 32 136 The Graf Zeppelin arrived back at Lakehurst from the west on the morning of 29 August three weeks after it had departed to the east Flying time for the four Lakehurst to Lakehurst legs was 12 days 12 hours and 13 minutes the entire circumnavigation including stops took 21 days 5 hours and 31 minutes to cover 33 234 km 20 651 mi 17 945 nmi 132 137 It was the fastest circumnavigation of the globe at the time 138 Eckener became the tenth recipient and the third aviator to be awarded the Gold Medal of the National Geographic Society which he received on 27 March 1930 at the Washington Auditorium 139 Before returning to Germany Eckener met President Herbert Hoover and successfully lobbied the US Postmaster General for a special three stamp issue C 13 14 amp 15 for mail to be carried on the Europe Pan American flight due to leave Germany in mid May 140 141 Germany issued a commemorative coin celebrating the circumnavigation 126 Europe Pan American flight 1930 Edit nbsp 2 60 Europe Pan American issue C 15 24 April 1930On 26 April 1930 Graf Zeppelin flew low over the FA Cup Final at Wembley Stadium in England dipping in salute to King George V then briefly moored alongside the larger R100 at Cardington 55 On 18 May it left on a triangular flight between Spain Brazil and the US carrying 38 passengers many of them in crew accommodation 135 The ship arrived at Recife Pernambuco in Brazil docking at Campo do Jiquia on 22 May where 300 soldiers helped land it 142 143 It then flew to Rio de Janeiro where there was no post to tether to so it was held down by the landing party for the two hours of the visit 142 144 It flew north via Recife to Lakehurst a storm damaged the rear engine nacelle which had to be repaired in the hangar at Lakehurst During ground handling of the airship there it suddenly lifted causing serious injury to one of the US Marines who was assisting 145 A few hours from home when the Graf Zeppelin flew through a heavy hailstorm over the Saone the envelope was damaged and the ship lost lift Eckener ordered full power and flew the ship out of trouble but it came within 200 feet of hitting the ground 146 147 The Europe Pan American flight was largely funded by the sale of special stamps issued by Spain Brazil and the US for franking mail carried on the trip The US issued stamps in three denominations 65 1 30 and 2 60 all on 19 April 1930 148 Middle East flight 1931 Edit The second flight to the Middle East took place in 1931 beginning on 9 April Graf Zeppelin crossed the Mediterranean to Benghazi in Libya then flew via Alexandria to Cairo in Egypt where it saluted King Fuad at the Qubbah Palace then visited the Great Pyramid of Giza and hovered 70 feet above the top of the monument 110 After a brief stop the ship flew to Palestine where it circled Jerusalem then returned to Cairo to pick up Eckener who had stayed for an audience with the King It returned to Friedrichshafen on 13 April 110 Polar flight 1931 Edit nbsp USSR franked postcard delivered to the Malygin nbsp The Graf Zeppelin and icebreaker Malygin on a Soviet stamp 1931 The polar flight Polarfahrt 1931 lasted from 24 to 31 July 1931 The ship rendezvoused with the Soviet icebreaker Malygin which had the Italian polar explorer Umberto Nobile aboard It exchanged 120 kg 260 lb of souvenir mail with the airship which Eckener landed on the Arctic Ocean 149 Fifty thousand cards and letters weighing 300 kg 660 lb were flown The costs of the expedition were met largely by the sale of special postage stamps issued by Germany and the Soviet Union to frank the mail carried on the flight 150 151 The writer Arthur Koestler was one of two journalists on board along with a multinational team of scientists led by the Soviet Professor Samoilowich who measured the Earth s magnetic field and a Soviet radio operator 152 153 The expedition photographed and mapped Franz Josef Land accurately for the first time and came within 910 kilometres 570 mi 490 nmi of the North Pole 154 It deployed three early radiosondes over the Arctic to collect meteorological data from the upper atmosphere 155 South American operations 1931 1937 Edit nbsp Graf Zeppelin over Rio de Janeiro in 1930From the beginning Luftschiffbau Zeppelin had plans to serve South America 156 157 There was a large community of Germans in Brazil and existing sea connections were slow and uncomfortable 158 Graf Zeppelin could transport passengers over long distances in the same luxury as an ocean liner and almost as quickly as contemporary airliners 159 Graf Zeppelin made three trips to Brazil in 1931 160 and nine in 1932 161 The route to Brazil meant flying down the Rhone valley in France a cause of great sensitivity between the wars The French government concerned about espionage restricted it to a 12 nmi 22 km 14 mi wide corridor in 1934 Graf Zeppelin was too small and slow for the stormy North Atlantic route 162 163 but because of the Blau gas fuel could carry out the longer South Atlantic service 44 On 2 July 1932 it flew a 24 hour tour of Britain 105 nbsp Food and drinks service on board was of a high standard 59 164 While returning from Brazil in October 1933 Graf Zeppelin stopped at NAS Opa Locka in Miami Florida and then Akron Ohio where it moored at the Goodyear Zeppelin airdock 165 The airship then appeared at the Century of Progress World s Fair in Chicago 166 It displayed swastika markings on the left side of the fins as the Nazi Party had taken power in January Eckener circled the fair clockwise so that the swastikas would not be seen by the spectators 153 167 The United States Post Office Department issued a special 50 cent airmail stamp C 18 for the visit which was the fifth and final one the ship made to the US 168 nbsp German First 1934 South America Flight coverThe airship s cotton envelope absorbed moisture from the air in humid tropical conditions When the relative humidity reached 90 the ship s weight rose by almost 1 800 kilograms 4 000 lb 169 Exposure to tropical downpours could greatly add to this but when under way the ship had enough reserve power to generate dynamic lift to compensate 170 In April 1935 it made a rough forced landing at Recife after it was caught in a rainstorm at low speed on the approach to land and the added weight of several tons of water caused it to sink to the ground The lower rudder was lost the outer envelope was ripped in several places and a petrol tank was punctured by a palm tree 91 171 nbsp Graf Zeppelin flying near the Barolo Palace in Buenos Aires 1934 In late 1935 Graf Zeppelin operated a temporary postal shuttle service between Recife and Bathurst in the British African colony of the Gambia On 24 November during the second trip the crew learned of an insurrection in Brazil and there was some doubt whether it would be possible to return to Recife Graf Zeppelin delivered its mail to Maceio then loitered off the coast for three days until it was safe to land after a flight of 118 hours and 40 minutes 172 nbsp Airship hangar near Rio de JaneiroBrazil built a hangar for airships at Bartolomeu de Gusmao Airport near Rio de Janeiro at a cost of 1 million equivalent to 21 million in 2018 15 Brazil charged the DZR 2000 42 000 15 per landing and had agreed that German airships would land there 20 times per year to pay off the cost 173 The hangar was constructed in Germany and the parts were transported and assembled on site It was finished in late 1936 174 and was used four times by Graf Zeppelin and five by Hindenburg 175 It now houses units of the Brazilian Air Force 174 Graf Zeppelin made 64 round trips to Brazil on the first regular intercontinental commercial air passenger service 176 and it continued until the loss of the Hindenburg in May 1937 175 Propaganda 1936 Edit Eckener was outspoken about his dislike of the Nazi Party and was warned about it by Rudolf Diels the head of the Gestapo 177 178 When the Nazis gained power in 1933 Joseph Goebbels Reich Minister of Propaganda and Hermann Goring Commander in chief of the Luftwaffe sidelined Eckener by putting the more sympathetic Lehmann in charge of a new airline Deutsche Zeppelin Reederei DZR which operated German airships 179 On 7 March 1936 in violation of the Treaty of Versailles and the Locarno Treaties German troops reoccupied the Rhineland Hitler called a plebiscite for 29 March to retrospectively approve the reoccupation and adopt a list of exclusively Nazi candidates to sit in the new Reichstag Goebbels commandeered Graf Zeppelin and the newly launched Hindenburg for the Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda 180 The airships flew in tandem around Germany before the vote with a joint departure from Lowenthal on the morning of 26 March 181 They toured the country for four days and three nights dropping propaganda leaflets playing martial music and slogans from large loudspeakers and broadcasting political speeches from a makeshift radio studio on Hindenburg 182 Retirement and aftermath Edit nbsp Flying over Germany late careerThe crew heard of the Hindenburg disaster by radio on 6 May 1937 while in the air returning from Brazil to Germany they delayed telling the passengers until after landing on 8 May so as not to alarm them 183 184 The disaster in which Lehmann and 35 others were killed destroyed public faith in the safety of hydrogen filled airships making continued passenger operations impossible unless they could convert to non flammable helium Hindenburg had originally been planned to use helium 185 186 but almost all of the world s supply was controlled by the US and its export had been tightly restricted by the Helium Act of 1925 187 Graf Zeppelin was permanently withdrawn from service shortly after the disaster 188 189 On 18 June its 590th and last flight took it to Frankfurt am Main where it was deflated and exhibited to visitors in its hangar 178 190 President Roosevelt supported exporting enough helium for the Hindenburg class LZ 130 Graf Zeppelin II to resume commercial transatlantic passenger service by 1939 191 but by early 1938 the opposition of Interior Secretary Harold Ickes who was concerned that Germany was likely to use the airship in war made that impossible 192 193 On 11 May 1938 Roosevelt s press secretary announced that the US would not sell helium to Germany Eckener who had unsuccessfully intervened responded that it would be the death sentence for commercial lighter than air craft 192 193 Graf Zeppelin II made 30 test promotional propaganda and military surveillance flights around Europe using hydrogen between September 1938 and August 1939 it never entered commercial passenger service On 4 March 1940 Goring ordered Graf Zeppelin and Graf Zeppelin II to be scrapped and their airframes to be melted down for the German military aircraft industry 194 During its career Graf Zeppelin had flown almost 1 7 million km 1 053 391 miles the first aircraft to fly over a million miles It made 144 oceanic crossings 143 across the Atlantic and one of the Pacific carried 13 110 passengers and 106 700 kg 235 300 lb of mail and freight 195 It flew for 17 177 hours 717 days or nearly two years 72 without injuring a passenger or crewman 196 It has been called the world s most successful airship 78 197 but it was not a commercial success it had been hoped that the Hindenburg class airships that followed would have the capacity and speed to make money on the popular North Atlantic route 198 Graf Zeppelin s achievements showed that this was technically possible 78 By the time the two Graf Zeppelins were recycled they were the last rigid airships in the world 199 and heavier than air long distance passenger transport using aircraft like the Focke Wulf Condor and the Boeing 307 Stratoliner was already in its ascendancy 200 Aeroplanes were faster less labour intensive and safer 201 202 by 1958 they developed into passenger jets like the Boeing 707 which could cross the Atlantic reliably in a few hours By 2017 annual air passenger journeys had surpassed 4 billion 203 Modern airships like the Zeppelin NT use semi rigid designs and are lifted by helium on their mainly sight seeing duties 204 Specifications Edit nbsp Internal components and gas cell locations shown schematically excluding passenger and engine gondolasData from 205 General characteristicsCrew 36 Capacity 20 passengers Typical disposable load 19 900 kg 43 900 lb Length 236 6 m 776 ft 3 in Diameter 30 5 m 100 ft 1 in maximum Fineness ratio 7 25 Height 33 5 m 109 ft 11 in Volume 75 000 m3 2 600 000 cu ft hydrogen 30 000 m3 1 100 000 cu ft Blau gas capacity Number of gas cells 16 Empty weight 67 100 kg 147 930 lb Fuel capacity 8 000 kg 18 000 lb petrol 30 000 m3 1 100 000 cu ft Blau gas Useful lift 87 000 kg 192 000 lb typical gross lift Powerplant 5 Maybach VL II V 12 water cooled reversible piston engines 410 kW 550 hp each Propellers 2 later 4 bladed propellersPerformance Maximum speed 128 16 km h 79 63 mph 69 20 kn Range 10 000 km 6 200 mi 5 400 nmi at 117 km h 73 mph 63 kn See also EditList of ZeppelinsReferences EditNotes L 59 was tasked to deliver supplies to German forces fighting in East Africa The mission was cancelled and it returned to Jamboli 6 7 In 1921 Britain s Imperial Airship Scheme aimed to connect the British Empire using passenger airships 9 Blau gas was a mixture of saturated and unsaturated hydrocarbons and hydrogen produced by pyrolysis of fuel oil 23 It was about 1 05 times as heavy as air 24 and could be substituted with a mixture of propane and hydrogen 25 26 Its volume record was beaten by the British airship R101 in October 1929 and its length by USS Akron in 1931 One of the nacelles is preserved and displayed at Zeppelin Museum Friedrichshafen 34 The liquid fuel used was a blend of commercial petrol and benzole 41 The amount of Blau gas the airship carried could power it for 100 hours if the ship had had all hydrogen gas cells and the extra lift had been used to carry petrol it could have run for only 67 20 This was later replaced by a device using compressed air to produce a burst of ultrasound which was less disturbing for the passengers 53 Lehmann commanded most of Graf Zeppelin s flights 272 to Eckener s 133 Four other captains commanded a total of 100 flights 97 A semidocumentary film titled Farewell was released in 2009 which featured much of Hartmann s newsreel footage of her The film was later aired on BBC under the title Around The World by Zeppelin 124 Citations Lehmann 1937 p 24 Hoyt 1969 pp 26 27 Hoyt 1969 p 37 Marsh W Lockwood 3 January 1930 Twenty One Years of Airship Progress Flight 87 88 Layman 1996 p 72 a b Dick amp Robinson 1985 pp 74 76 a b Hoyt 1969 pp 106 107 The Transatlantic Voyage of R 34 Flight 906 912 10 July 1919 Duggan amp Meyer 2001 pp 130 174 Vaeth 1958 p 40 Robinson 1975 pp 207 213 Lindley John M 1978 Commercial Aviation and the Mastery of Transoceanic Flight Naval Aviation News Chief of Naval Operations 36 37 Vaeth 1958 pp 44 45 Exchange Rates Between the United States Dollar and Forty one Currencies Measuring Worth a b c d e f 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved 28 May 2023 Robinson 1975 p 261 New German Airship A visit to the works at Friedrichshafen News The Times No 44851 London 26 March 1928 col E p 8 Swinfield 2013 p 218 Hammack 2016 pp 216 221 a b c Robinson 1975 p 262 Lehmann 1937 pp 253 254 Vaeth 1958 pp 47 50 Hammack 2016 p 235 a b Hammack 2016 pp 231 232 Vaeth 1958 p 103 a b Dick amp Robinson 1985 p 34 de Syon 2005 p 128 a b Lehmann 1937 p 254 Lehmann 1937 p 47 Ninety year anniversary of the longest standing FAI records set by airship pilot Dr Hugo Eckener www fai org 19 October 2018 Vaeth 1958 p 47 a b c d e Niderost Eric 19 August 2019 Globetrotting Leviathan Graf Zeppelin s amazing voyage Aviation History July 1993 Vaeth 1958 pp 65 66 Zeppelin Museum The Museum The Collections Technology Collection Engine nacelle of the LZ 127 Graf Zeppelin Zeppelin Museum Friedrichshafen Archived from the original on 26 April 2014 Vaeth 1958 pp 51 52 Maybach VL 2 V 12 Engine National Air and Space Museum 10 March 2016 Hammack 2016 p 225 Vaeth 1958 pp 73 116 a b Vaeth 1958 p 51 Robinson 1975 p 355 Hammack 2016 p 232 Blue Gas Naval Institute Proceedings United States Naval Institute 54 1096 1928 de Syon 2005 p 129 a b Dick amp Robinson 1985 p 76 Hammack 2016 p 236 a b Vaeth 1958 p 143 Dick amp Robinson 1985 p 69 Vaeth 1958 p 52 Dick amp Robinson 1985 p 53 Lehmann 1937 pp 263 264 a b Whiting Oliver K 28 August 1931 My Flight from Friedrichshafen Flight 855 Vaeth 1958 p 144 a b Vaeth 1958 p 186 Dick amp Robinson 1985 p 70 a b Graf Zeppelin visits England PDF Flight 474 2 May 1930 de Syon 2005 p 135 Robinson 1975 p 263 Hammack 2016 pp 230 238 a b c Vaeth 1958 p 187 Lehmann 1937 p 252 Botting 1980 p 105 de Syon 2005 pp 132 133 a b Votolato 2007 p 182 Robinson 1975 p 210 Botting 1980 p 104 Vaeth 1958 pp 187 188 Vaeth 1958 pp 93 94 a b c Dick amp Robinson 1985 p 37 Vaeth 1958 p 62 Hammack 2016 p 219 Vaeth 1958 pp 53 54 a b Ridley Kitts 2012 p 287 Lehmann 1937 p 256 Hammack 2016 pp 232 233 a b c d e f g Funkverkehr auf dem Luftschiff LZ 127 Graf Zeppelin www seefunknetz de a b Hammack 2016 p 233 The New Zeppelin News in Brief The Times No 44941 London 10 July 1928 col B p 15 a b c Brookes 1992 p 9 Exchange Rates Between the United States Dollar and Forty one Currencies MeasuringWorth com Retrieved 8 August 2014 a b Lehmann 1937 p 268 Meyer 1991 pp 184 199 Meyer 1991 pp 190 191 Meyer 1991 p 233 Vaeth 1958 pp 130 131 Robinson 1975 p xxxviii Flying Down To Rio No 2 www britishpathe com British Pathe Vaeth 1958 p 132 Graf Zeppelin Makes First Trip to Moscow 100 000 Pack October Field to Get View New York Times 11 September 1930 p 5 Vaeth 1958 pp 98 99 Vaeth 1958 p 133 a b Vaeth 1958 p 188 de Syon 2005 p 133 Swinfield 2013 pp 238 316 Lehmann 1937 pp 264 266 Vaeth 1958 pp 54 56 Robinson 1975 p 265 Lehmann 1937 p 340 Bradley 1929 p 146 Vaeth 1958 p 9 Zeppelin Speeds North of Bermuda and is Expected Here This Afternoon Damaged Fin is Repaired in the Air New York Times 14 October 1928 Vaeth 1958 pp 4 18 Graf Zeppelin s Atlantic Voyage Flight 903 18 October 1928 Botting 1980 p 112 Lehmann 1937 p 274 a b Visit of the Graf Zeppelin to England Flight 624 8 July 1932 Vaeth 1958 pp 62 63 Shapiro Laurie Gwen 8 January 2018 The Stowaway Craze The New Yorker ISSN 0028 792X Lehmann 1937 pp 252 254 Zeppelin s Flight Over Mediterranean News The Times No 45160 London 25 March 1929 col C p 12 a b c McGregor Alan July August 1994 Contrary Winds Zeppelins Over the Middle East Saudi Aramco World 45 4 Retrieved 27 October 2019 Zeppelin s Flight Second Mediterranean Cruise News in Brief The Times No 45185 London 24 April 1929 col F p 15 Robinson 1975 p 268 Graf Zeppelin News in Brief The Times No 45187 London 26 April 1929 col E p 16 Lehmann 1937 pp 258 261 Meyer 1991 p 172 Zeppelin Battles Gale to Safety Reaches Cuers France on One Motor Eckener and Crew Avert Disaster New York Times 18 May 1929 Vaeth 1958 p 81 Vaeth 1958 p 75 Robinson 1975 p 269 Newman 2013 pp 117 118 Vaeth 1958 p 72 a b Swinfield 2013 p 236 In pictures Britain s female adventurers Daily Telegraph 12 January 2016 BBC Four Around the World by Zeppelin BBC Aeronautics Los Angeles to Lakehurst Time 9 September 1929 ISSN 0040 781X Archived from the original on 3 June 2008 a b de Syon 2005 p 136 Swinfield 2013 p 237 Astronautics amp Aeronautics American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics 1979 p 58 Robinson 1975 p 270 Robinson amp Keller 1982 p 120 Duggan amp Meyer 2001 p 5 a b Swinfield 2013 p 238 Graf Zeppelin Reaches Pacific Coast Passes San Francisco Nearing Goal Thousands Wait at Los Angeles Field New York Times 26 August 1929 p 1 Dick amp Robinson 1985 p 39 a b Robinson 1975 p 274 Vaeth 1958 pp 105 107 Graf Zeppelin s World Flight Flight 992 6 September 1929 Around the World with the Graf Zeppelin Modern Mechanics November 1929 pp 64 65 Aeronautics Zeppelin Pool Time 7 April 1930 Eckener Receives Geographic Medal 5 000 at Capital Witness the Bestowal of World Honor on Zeppelin Commander New York Times 28 March 1930 p 6 Hugo Eckener receives a gold medal by the National Geographic Society in Washington DC www criticalpast com a b The Graf Zeppelin Flight 576 30 May 1930 Vaeth 1958 p 145 Robinson 1975 pp 275 276 Progress of the Graf Zeppelin Flight 608 6 June 1930 Vaeth 1958 pp 153 154 Robinson 1975 pp 276 277 Vaeth 1958 pp 138 139 Vaeth 1958 p 117 Robinson 1975 p 277 Swinfield 2013 p 307 Vaeth 1958 p 113 a b Dick amp Robinson 1985 p 40 Vaeth 1958 p 119 Vaeth 1958 pp 120 121 New Zeppelin s Flight Postponed Airship Service To South America News The Times No 45000 London 17 September 1928 col C p 11 Meyer 1991 p 125 Vaeth 1958 p 139 Botting 1980 p 96 Some Graf Zeppelin Statistics Flight 1095 17 November 1932 Graf Zeppelin s Last Trip for the Season Flight 1132 3 November 1932 Dick amp Robinson 1985 p 83 Lehmann 1937 pp 291 292 Votolato 2007 p 184 Meyer 1991 p 97 Lehmann 1937 p 305 Hancock 2017 pp 104 105 Vaeth 1958 p 154 Dick amp Robinson 1985 pp 70 71 Dick amp Robinson 1985 p 77 Dick amp Robinson 1985 p 57 Robinson 1975 p 281 Vaeth 1958 p 189 a b Watts Jonathan 27 November 2016 Dead zeppelins Brazilian gravesite is airships stairway to heaven The Guardian Retrieved 26 October 2019 a b Brooks 1992 p 167 Dick amp Robinson 1985 p 41 Vaeth 1958 pp 158 163 a b Swinfield 2013 p 240 Lehmann 1937 p 350 Propaganda attack made by Zeppelins New York Times 29 March 1930 Two Reich Zeppelins on Election Tour New York Times 27 March 1936 Lehmann 1937 pp 326 332 Vaeth 1958 pp 196 198 Robinson 1975 p 294 Robinson 1975 p 284 Smith G Geoffrey 3 October 1935 LZ 129 Nearing Completion Flight 352 354 Krock Arthur 12 May 1937 In Washington A Star Witness on Our Helium Export Policy New York Times p 22 Vaeth 1958 p 202 Brookes 1992 p 18 de Syon 2005 p 201 President Backs Export of Helium Sends to Congress Report by Cabinet Committee Advising Sale for Airship Lines New York Times 26 May 1937 p 2 a b Ickes Stand Halts Helium Gas Sale His Opposition Under Law Prevents Roosevelt Action to Aid Dirigible New York Times 12 May 1938 p 9 a b Robinson 1975 p 295 Bauer amp Duggan 1998 pp 173 189 195 Brewer 1991 p 2 Hancock 2017 pp 102 103 Swinfield 2013 p 358 Hoyt 1969 p 121 Robinson 1975 p 246 de Syon 2005 pp 201 202 Robinson 1975 p 324 Brookes 1992 p 23 Traveler Numbers Reach New Heights www iata org IATA Retrieved 4 November 2019 Mueller Joseph B Michael A Paluszek Yiyuan Zhao 2004 Development of an aerodynamic model and control law design for a high altitude airship PDF American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics p 2 Archived PDF from the original on 11 November 2011 Brooks 1992 pp 163 168 Bibliography Bauer Manfred Duggan John 1998 LZ 130 Graf Zeppelin und das Ende der Verkehrsluftschiffahrt First ed Friedrichshafen Germany Zeppelin Museum ISBN 978 3 926162 79 3 Botting Douglas 2001 Dr Eckener s Dream Machine The Historic Saga of the Round the world Zeppelin New York US HarperCollins ISBN 0 0065 3225 X Botting Douglas 1980 The giant airships Alexandria Virginia US Time Life Books ISBN 0 8094 3271 4 Bradley Samuel S ed 1929 Aircraft Yearbook 1929 New York City US Aeronautical Chamber of Commerce of America Brewer G Daniel 1991 Hydrogen aircraft technology Boca Raton Florida US CRC Press ISBN 978 0 8493 5838 8 Brookes Andrew 1992 Disaster in the Air Shepperton UK Ian Allan ISBN 978 0 7110 2037 5 Brooks Peter W 1992 Zeppelin rigid airships 1893 1940 Washington DC US Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN 978 1 56098 228 9 Dick Harold G Robinson Douglas H 1985 The golden age of the great passenger airships Graf Zeppelin amp Hindenburg Washington DC US Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN 978 1 56098 219 7 Duggan J Meyer H Cord 2001 Airships in International Affairs 1890 1940 London UK Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 349 41234 1 Hammack Bill 2016 Fatal Flight The True Story of Britain s Last Great Airship PDF Articulate Noise Books ISBN 978 1 945441 03 5 Hancock Peter 2017 Transports of Delight How Technology Materializes Human Imagination New York City US Springer ISBN 978 3 319 55247 7 Hoyt Edwin Palmer 1969 The Zeppelins New York City US Lothrop Lee amp Shepard Layman R D 1996 Naval aviation in the First World War Annapolis Maryland US Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 55750 617 7 Lehmann Ernst 1937 Zeppelin The Story of Lighter than air Craft London UK Longmans Green and Co ISBN 978 1 78155 012 0 OL 25072641M Meyer Henry Cord 1991 Airshipmen businessmen and politics 1890 1940 Washington DC US Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN 978 1 56098 031 5 OL 1864423M Newman James L 2013 Encountering gorillas a chronicle of discovery exploitation understanding and survival Lanham Maryland US Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4422 1957 1 Ridley Kitts Daniel George 2012 Military Naval and Civil Airships Since 1783 Cheltenham UK The History Press Ltd ISBN 978 0752464718 Robinson Douglas H 1975 Giants in the sky a history of the rigid airship Seattle Washington US University of Washington Press ISBN 978 0 295 95249 9 OL 5291361M Robinson Douglas H Keller Charles 1982 Up Ship A History of the U S Navy s Rigid Airships 1919 1935 Annapolis Maryland US Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 0 87021 738 8 Swinfield John 2013 Airship Design Development and Disaster London UK Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 84486 209 2 de Syon Gillaume 2005 Zeppelin Germany and the airship 1900 1939 Baltimore Maryland US Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 6734 7 Vaeth J Gordon 1958 Graf Zeppelin The Adventures of an Aerial Globetrotter New York City US Harper amp Brothers OL 4113768W Ventry Lord Kolesnik Eugene M 1982 Airship saga the history of airships seen through the eyes of the men who designed built and flew them Poole UK Blandford Press ISBN 978 0 7137 1001 4 Votolato Gregory 2007 Transport Design A Travel History London UK Reaktion Books ISBN 9781861894786 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to LZ 127 Graf Zeppelin British Pathe video clips San Diego Air amp Space Museum Henry Cord Meyer Collection Flickr Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title LZ 127 Graf Zeppelin amp oldid 1168517023, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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