Structural and Economic Limits to the Dimensions of Airships (open access)

Structural and Economic Limits to the Dimensions of Airships

"In opposition to the advantage of larger dimensions, there is one disadvantage, namely, the weight of the structure increases more rapidly than the buoyancy. It is not possible, however, to determine a general law. In order to formulate one having the merit of simplicity, we will divide the structure into two parts: one subject to tensile and compressive stresses, varying directly as the ascensional or lifting forces; the other subject to varying stresses of the surface areas" (p. 1).
Date: August 1924
Creator: Crocco, G. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Historical Notes on Aerodynamic Research (open access)

Historical Notes on Aerodynamic Research

"It is obviously interesting to know the names of those who were the first contributors to aeronautical science. Therefore, without claiming to give a complete history, I present in this article a summary list of names in chronological order relating to the history of experiments on the resistance of the air and its application to aeronautics" (p. 1).
Date: August 1924
Creator: Dollfus, Charles
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recent Researches in Airship Construction 1: Forces of Flow on a Moving Airship and the Effect of the Control Surfaces (open access)

Recent Researches in Airship Construction 1: Forces of Flow on a Moving Airship and the Effect of the Control Surfaces

The problems as to how an airship can best be stabilized and steered and to what stresses it is subjected in the air, are so important as to determine in large measure the future development of airships much more than formerly when velocities of 30-35 meters (98-115 feet) per second were not known and the effects of the air flow were not so great.
Date: August 1924
Creator: Naatz, H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recent Researches in Airship Construction 2: Bending Stresses on an Airship in Flight (open access)

Recent Researches in Airship Construction 2: Bending Stresses on an Airship in Flight

The first part of this report shows the differences between commercial and war airships and then goes on to show how some of the problems were solved. Their thorough investigations of these problems finally enabled the Schutte-Lanz Company to construct bulkhead diagrams for determining the buoyancy of airships, by means of which the size of each cell was established. These diagrams were derived from bulkhead diagrams employed in ship designing and are used in a similar manner.
Date: August 1924
Creator: Naatz, H.
System: The UNT Digital Library