Stuff You Should Know - Selects: How Blimps Work
Episode Date: January 23, 2021After newsreels captured the Hindenburg erupting in fire in 1937, the promising development of airship aviation was cut short. Today companies and militaries are taking another look at blimps and the ...unique qualities that may revive them. Learn all about it in this classic episode. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hi friends, have you ever flown into blimp? I haven't. It's one of my goals. And on August 28,
2014, I hadn't either. But that's what we talk about and more in the episode,
How Blimps Work, coming up right now. Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart
radio's How Stuff Works. Hey, and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark. There's Charles W.
Chuck Bryant and Jerry's with us. So that makes this stuff you should know. How you doing?
I'm good, man. I'm excited about this one. Oh, are you? Sure. Blimps. Yeah, because they have
like eight names. Blimp, Durgible, Zeppelin, Airship. Yeah. Well, technically LTA, I'm counting that.
Lighter than Airship. Yeah. Which I think is ultimately lighter than Airship, LTA,
is the umbrella term for all of those things, which are slightly different.
Yeah. An LTA and an Airship is all of them. The Durgible is all of them. A Zeppelin is rigid
and a Blimp is non-rigid. Nice. And mostly we just have Blimps these days. Not a lot of rigid
Airships. But would they constitute, yeah, no, but they can be semi-rigid or non-rigid, right?
Yeah. And I think the future, we'll talk about that obviously at the end, but I think some of
those are more of the semi-rigid style. Right. That's very huge. Yeah, but they're made of some
really lightweight, but very strong composite materials. Yeah. Boom. So, Chuck, let's talk
about the history of Blimps because I think when anybody thinks of Blimps, they think Hindenburg.
They think they think the Hindenburg and then maybe concurrently or right after the Goodyear Blimp.
Yeah. Those are the two that really
laid it on the line for Blimptom. Yeah. You want to talk about the early history,
I guess, and then get to the tragedy? Yeah, because there wasn't that much time in between
the two to tell you the truth. Yeah. I mean, it all started, of course, with hot air balloons because
they're not so different. In 1783, a couple of Frenchies, brothers Jacques Etienne and Joseph
Michel, they said they were brothers, but they have different last names. I think
Jacques Etienne is his first and middle name. Oh, okay. That makes sense. God, they all had three
names. They're like serial killers. Montgolfier. They invented the hot air balloon, an unmanned
hot air balloon in 1783, and then later that same year, a French physicist, last name DeRosier,
had the first manned balloon flight, and they were just floating around because that's what
balloons do. You can go up, and then if you're really good, you can come back down, but left and
right, that's up to mother nature. That's right, which is a little scary, although I think these
days, can they steer them at all? We have a great article on this on hot air balloons. No, you're
subject to the winds. What is the god of wind that comes out of the cloud and blows wind?
Yeah. That guy. Yeah. You're subject to his whim. If you're headed towards something,
it's go over it or hit it. Yes. Okay. You remember there was that terrible hot air balloon accident
in, I think, Virginia last year, earlier this year. I didn't hear about that. Yeah, they hit a
power line, I think, and then the basket caught fire, and they had to jump. It was really bad.
Wow. But yeah, you can go up and over, and I imagine- Or I guess under, if it's like a power line.
Yeah, or a tunnel, if you're really good. Wow. Or you're in a cartoon like the Laugh Olympics.
Yeah. That's something they do in there. Totally. But I think if you're really good,
you could probably know where to steer into the wind to maybe use the wind. But no, with the blimp,
the big distinction is, aside from its distinctive shape, is that you can maneuver like a pro.
That's right. And that's what Henry Jafar did in 1852, when he finally someone said,
we should steer these things, and he built the first powered airship. And it was cigar-filled,
like the classic shape that we know and love now. Had a propeller, like they have now,
and a little engine, although it was a steam engine, which they don't use now.
A three horsepower steam engine. Yeah, they're not huge engines still.
Doesn't take a lot, apparently. No, it really doesn't. And those were rigid airships. It's a
metal framework. And in 1900, Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin, that name sounds familiar.
Led Zeppelin. Of Germany. And that's where they got the name, of course. Sure. But I never
understood the LED, the lead. Well, it was, I think someone said as a joke, you guys are going to go
over like a Led Zeppelin. Or they did when they played on the BBC. Was that it? But why take the
A out? Because the same reason you take the A out of Def Leppard. I've never understood that either.
In the same reason you put an Oomla out over Motley Crue. This makes you cool.
You know, different shades. You got to misspell something in your band.
I think I was just looking too deeply into it. It's the problem.
Yeah, LED Zeppelin would be weird. Yeah, but I think like our paradigm would have adjusted.
We would think LED Zeppelin would be weird if we were used to Led Zeppelin with an A.
Or if the Beatles was spelled B-E-E-T-L-E-S. Yeah. Instead of their punny name.
Very punny. All right. Boy, we get sidetracked so easy with music stuff.
No, really. Zeppelin was, I think people saw that coming before they pressed play.
That's true. So that was the rigid airship, the first one. And those have a metal framework.
And it had tail fins and rudders, had combustion engines, and could cruise at about 1,300 feet
with up to five people. Yes. Not bad. You could bring the whole family,
as long as you encounter, as long as you totaled no more than five.
Yeah, as long as you paid off the captain. Well, then you just have to be a family of four.
That's right. Because the captain's got to sit somewhere, right?
Yeah, they got their little captain's chair. So everything was going quite swimmingly.
Actually, around the turn of the 20th century, it was just widely assumed that
that we would have a future where blimps, zeppelins were just a regular feature of the sky.
Well, they were. Up until the Hindenburg went down, there were more than 2,000 flights,
carried tens of thousands of passengers over a million miles. That was air travel.
We should say ultra-wealthy passengers at the time.
The Hindenburg in particular was high class. It was the pride of Nazi Germany.
Yeah. And it was on its maiden voyage, wasn't it? It was almost called the Hitler, by the way.
Was it really? Yeah, but Hitler's like, I don't want my name on that thing.
Really? Yeah, not that he foretold the future. He just didn't, I don't know,
he just didn't want his name after an airship. He didn't believe Freud's idea that sometimes a
cigar is just a cigar. Yeah, or a cigar-shaped airship is just a cigar-shaped airship.
And it crashed and burned too. So he was probably pretty stoked that he didn't have his name on it.
Yeah. He very famously went, whew, when he heard the news. Exactly.
So we should probably stop making light of this nearly 80-year-old tragedy,
because people did die, you know? Yeah. I mean, should we tell the story? Let's.
All right. Well, it took off on May 3rd, 1937, had 36 passengers and 61
officers and crew members and trainees. Left Frankfurt at about 7.15, and then crossed out
over the Atlantic at about 2 a.m. the next day. It's not super fast travel. It was compared to
the ship travel at the time. It was about, it took about half the time to cross the Atlantic,
as it did in a boat. Yeah, but compared to what we're used to. Oh, yeah. It was leisurely.
Right. And apparently, after reading more about the Hindenburg, it's not as,
and I guess ship travel is sort of the same way. Like, we're going to get there when we get there.
Like, we're heading, we're trying to get there then, but you never know what's going to happen.
Right. That's why they called them the leisure class. That's right. It followed a northern
track across the ocean, eventually crossed into North America over the coast of Newfoundland,
and arrived in Lake Hurst, New Jersey about 12 hours late. And Germans, they're always late.
Mia. They're famous for it. And basically arrived there at the Naval Air Station, and because of
poor weather, the captain and the commanding officer on the ground said, you know what,
the weather's not so great. Let's wait a little bit, because they can fly around forever in those
things. Right. And he said, all right, well, the Jersey Shore is nice. Let's just go fly
above that and tell everyone to look around and look at all those old-timey bathing suits on
everybody. They're up to the ankles and water. By 6 p.m., conditions had improved,
and at 6.12, he sent a message saying it's suitable for landing, recommended landing now.
At about 7.08, he finally pulled the blimp in. It was a bit of a dodgy approach, but he eventually,
you know, got it down toward the ground pretty, you know, skillfully.
Which, as we'll see, is not as easy as you'd think, even though it sounds easy. It's not in
practice. No. They dropped the landing lines, and then things went south, like really fast.
Yeah. It was filled with hydrogen, which is the lightest element, right?
Yeah. And it's also probably the most flammable, or one of them.
Yes, and flammable was a big error at the time. A lot of blimps had caught on fire. This is not
the first accident. And there was, you know, people testified afterward, because not everyone
died. We'll get to the numbers here at the end of the story. But there was testimony that
it appeared as if gas was pushing against the cover. Maybe it escaped from a gas cell.
At 7.25, the first visible flames appeared, and it varies, but most witnesses say that the first
flames were either at the top of the hull, forward of the vertical fin, or between the rear port engine
and the port fin. And they described it as a mushroom-shaped flower, and it pretty much engulfed
the tail, like, right away. And it was able to remain steady for a little while, like people
could start jumping out at this point. Well, those are the people who died, correct?
No. That's what I always heard, or that's what I have heard, is that the people who stayed in the
gondola lived, and the people who jumped were the ones that died, because the flames,
because hydrogen is light, they were burning upward.
Well, it says here, basically, it was all dependent on where you were. If you were close to a means
of exit, you generally survived. If you were deep inside the ship, like in the power room,
along the keel, or in the smoking room, they had a smoking room in the Hindenburg.
I'm surprised it wasn't all smoking. With a big blimp full of hydrogen?
Oh, yeah. I hadn't thought about it. It was not a good idea. They had, apparently,
a double airlocked door, one electric lighter, and you were allowed to smoke as long as you
put it out before you left. And so, like I said, if you were in the smoking room on B-deck,
you were in big trouble. If you were one of the nine men closest to the front of the ship,
you definitely didn't survive. Really? Yeah. So, out of the 97 people on board, 62 survived.
I think when you see the footage, I mean, you can watch it on YouTube. It looks like,
how in the world could anyone survive it? Because it goes, I mean, it's fully burned
in less than a minute and on the ground. Yeah, it went up fast. But 62 did survive.
13 of the 36 passengers and 22 of the 61 crew. And they're still two guys alive today.
Yeah, wow. I still checked. As of two years ago. But they don't like to talk about it.
I can imagine. Yeah, there's one. Pretty traumatic experience.
They're both named Werner, Werner Franz and Werner Donner.
The two Werners. One was a little cabin boy and one was a passenger with his family.
And they were contacted for, like, the ceremony. I guess you don't call it an
anniversary, I guess. Memorial? Yeah, it's an anniversary.
Yeah, it just sounds like a party, you know. But they said, no, we're not coming. We don't
like to talk about it. Yeah. So, it's been a long-standing mystery exactly what happened.
I found an article in the UK Independent from 2013, about a study from that year,
that found, they said, they figured it out. They built, like, scale models of the Hindenburg,
which was like two and a half football fields long, by the way. Yeah. They were building
scale models that were, like, 60 feet long. So, good size ones. And they tried to blow them up
because there was a rumor that it was sabotage. Right. You know, that everybody hated the Nazis
even then. And they tried all manner of stuff. And what they finally figured out was that
probably what happened was from being in that stormy weather, that exterior, the envelope of the
blimp became electrified. Oh, yeah. And when the ground crew ran up and grabbed the cables,
they completed the current from the blimp to the ground, which caused a spark,
which actually ignited a hydrogen leak. That fire caused the explosion. That must have been
the gas pushing out. Yeah. Yeah, one thing they say it definitely isn't, which they long thought
it was, was the actual fabric was, like, painted in this flammable stuff. Right. And that's not
true. It was the standard fabric. Oh, okay. It was just a big balloon fill of hydrogen.
Yeah. And some sort of spark. Yeah. So, when that happened, the future of blimps were just
pretty much, like, that was it for blimps. That wasn't the immediate end, but as far as, like,
commercial blimp travel, that's tough for an industry to get over. So, it kind of fell
to the wayside, although they did continue on in a couple of forms. Up until the 60s,
the U.S. government, especially the Navy, maintained blimps. One of the, I think,
I guess the Air Force, I don't know if it was the Navy, but one of the branches of the U.S.
military used blimps as giant aircraft carriers of the air, not the sea, the air, which is pretty
awesome. And apparently they had them, so you could connect, like, a light plane to what's
called, like, a trapeze mechanism coming out of the bottom of the blimp, so you just, like,
hook your plane on, climb up and say, hey, guys, where are we going? Or you can take off from
there, too. What? Yes. How do you take off? You just drop? I think you just release the
hook from the trapeze and start a free fall, and then you just go, off into the distance
and go, thanks for the ride, lady. That sounds really weird. And they had even bigger plans
that were never realized, because the Navy scrapped the program in, I think, 1962 to have,
like, a landing strip on top of the blimp, so you could have just, like, planes take off and land
and then be stored, like, in the blimp, which would have been pretty awesome. Well, cargo
airships are the wave of the future, perhaps, so we'll see. Yeah. So, but that was the military
was involved in blimps for most of the first half of the 20th century, and then our friends at
Goodyear came up with a blimp that has really served them well. Like, they were making blimps
for the military, and then they started using them for commercial purposes, and
everybody knows about Goodyear thanks to those blimps. Yeah, and they're going to figure in
here, of course, because you can't talk about blimps a lot without a ton of buzz marketing
for Goodyear. Yeah. But, you know, that's where they make their name. In fact, my in-laws almost
wrote on the one based out of Akron, because that's where they're from, and they think he was going
to put in a bid on a, like, an auction bid to win a trip, and I think it never happened.
The trip never happened? I think he either lost the bid. I'll have to ask him, but I don't think
they ever wrote on the blimp. Okay. I was going to say, if the trip never happened, that doesn't
sound like the Goodyear I know. No, no. They're very, they're like the Germans. So they've got,
there's three Goodyear blimps, actually. There's one in, I believe, Texas. There's one in California.
There's one in Ohio, or is it Florida? California and Ohio is what it is. I'm sorry. The spirit
of Goodyear, the spirit of America, the spirit of innovation, and Chuck, about the time this episode
comes out, Robin Roberts, the TV personality, is going to be christening the newest member
of the fleet, the Wingfoot One. Nice. So they're going to have four? Yeah, because there's a lot
of sporting events. There sure are. And you can't watch a big sporting event without hearing the
words aerial coverage provided by Goodyear. Yeah. And those shots, man, they're pretty great. They
really are. They haven't been around forever. It was, I think, an orange bowl in Miami where the
first one was broadcast in, what, like the 60s maybe? I don't know. Something like that. And it
changed America. Yeah. Well, it certainly gives them a lot of press and saves, well, I don't know
about saves of money. Haven't seen their balance sheet, but it's, they don't have to spend money
on that 32nd spot. They still do to tie into the blimp. Right. But it's great advertising for them.
Yeah. They also were good sports in a movie called Black Sunday. Did you ever see that movie?
No, of course. I never saw it. But apparently, they provided some of the footage for the movie
and let their blimps be used and let their name be used even. Like it wasn't like the
good wire blimp, you know, they didn't try to have to change it just enough. They used Goodyear,
which made the whole thing even more terrifying and realistic. Yeah. They wanted to kill everyone
at the Super Bowl. That was the plot. Right. With a blimp. Right. That shot darts. Yeah.
Which is weird. But it was written by the guy who wrote Silence of the Lambs. Oh, yeah. He's a good
writer. Have you ever read any of his books? Oh, he was the book writer? Yeah. Oh, no, I didn't know
that. Yeah. No, I haven't read any of Silence of the Lambs. He does very good research. Interesting
guy. Nice. Anyway, so Goodyear in the military after the Hindenburg, that was the two cases of
blimps. But like you said, there is potentially a future for blimps, which we'll talk about.
But first, let's talk about how blimps work in general after these messages.
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You want to know how blimps work, buddy? I do. They're pretty simple.
They are. This was the delight to learn because it was like, oh, I thought there would be just
that little to it. And that's really kind of the case. Right. Yeah. Yeah. There's not like, oh,
and here's where it gets really hard. They're like the pontoon boats of the sky. Yeah. The most
complicated thing on the blimp is probably the gyroscopic camera on the front of it to film
the football stadium. I think you're right. So let's talk about the anatomy of a blimp. You
mentioned the envelope earlier. That is the thing that you're looking at. That is the big
cigar shaped balloon. It's filled nowadays with helium. It is that shape because of aerodynamics,
of course, and they are super lightweight and super strong. Like you were saying, neoprene,
two-ply neoprene polyester generally. Is that what the envelope's made of? Yeah. There's a company
called the ILC Dover Corporation. They make a lot of skins and they use the same
material that they make spacesuits out of for NASA for blimps too. Good enough for Neil Armstrong,
buddy. Yeah. Good enough for my blimp. This is like all about Ohio, this one. Oh, is he Ohio?
Yeah. I had done it. So it was good, dear. No, no, I knew that. So you're in loss. That's right.
The envelopes they hold, and it depends on the blimps for all of these statistics, of course,
but between 67,000 and 250,000 cubic feet of helium, and it's not super. The pressure is
really low inside, 0.07 pounds per square inch. So that's why if you shot a blimp,
it wouldn't like fall. No. It'd just leak very slowly and you just land it and patch it up,
I guess. Yeah, very slowly. Yeah, in 1994, the British Ministry of Defense fired hundreds
of bullets into an airship. Just for fun? Well, no, to see if it could be shot down in battle,
basically. Got you. And it took many hours to deflate and land. Cool. And they don't even
deflate them. They just leave them that way. So their natural structure, well, not natural,
but their original structure prevents them from being shot down. That's one big benefit,
because I was wondering about that. I was like, you're just providing a target for every teenager
with a gun in any country that you've hover a blimp over. Sure. Now I understand. But secondly,
as we'll see, it also has to do with the dynamics of flight, of hovering in the atmosphere. Yeah.
So you got the envelope, and the envelope also has something called nose cone battens,
which is basically like a support structure for the nose, the front of it. Yeah, just a very,
very tip. And it keeps the blimp's front from being mashed in as it moves forward,
which is pretty smart. Yeah, I think I misspoke. The nose cone is on just the very tip, and then
the battens are like the fingers that distribute the stress over the front of the cone. Gotcha.
Okay, so they're like the structure that comes out of the nose, right? Yeah.
And then also on the nose is the mooring hook, because you got to hook a blimp up to something.
Yeah, it's got a little spindle there, and it's got a little wheel under the tail rudder,
and that's basically how it sits. You just tie it down. Yeah. Very simple. Just like a balloon.
That's right. So here's where it gets a little craftier, like 19th century crafty,
but still neat nonetheless. Sure. There's something called ballonettes, right? Yeah.
And these are basically air bladders that are located within the envelope. Yeah. And you inflate
or deflate them, depending on whether you want the blimp to go up or down. If you want it to go
up, you deflate these ballonettes. You want it to go down, you inflate them. And the reason that
works is because you're inflating these ballonettes with air, and helium, which blimps fly using now,
is lighter than air. So more air means the blimp's heavier, so it goes down. Less air means it's
lighter, so it goes up. Yeah, it's pretty easy. It's sort of like how a submarine operates.
And there's one in the four and one in the aft, so that's how you control your trim. You can just
nose it up or nose it down, filling up or deflating. That's the pitch axis. That's right. Or trim.
Okay. Well, the trim is the levelness. Oh, okay. Yeah. And the axis where the nose and the back
go up and down, that's the trim axis. Or no, the pitch axis. Right? Yeah. Okay. No one can see you
not in agreement. Okay. Chuck, then there's the catenary curtain and the suspension cables,
which I didn't get the catenary curtain, really. I understood the suspension cable is just fine.
It's on the inside, about 30% off-center. And it basically, if you look, it sort of looks like
the, where you attach the basket to the hot air balloon. They all, you know, there's a number
of these lines that run down and all meet at a single point near the gondola. Right. And that's
what you attach the gondola to the blimp using, right? Yeah. So basically, if the blimp envelope
wasn't there, it would sort of look like a hot air balloon. It would have these lines that run up
from the gondola, a.k.a. basket up to the top. So they would be like the vertical lines, whereas
the fattens are the horizontal lines. Yeah. Okay. I understand now. Exactamundo. Then you've got the
really technical stuff, the flight control surfaces. So everything we've just described is
basically balloons and then the structure that gives the balloon its shape, right? Yeah. And then
the flight control surfaces are basically a rudder and elevators. And they're the things that you
can control to make the balloon tilt upward or side to side. That's pretty much it.
But yeah, there's that one rudder on the top and bottom and that controls your yaw. And you do it
with little, if you look at the captain's chair, he's got little, little foot pedals, just like a
clutch pedal you would put in, push in. And on the bottom, very bottom back of the rudder,
there's something called the boost tab. And that's just a little additional
sectioned off piece of the rudder that's also controllable. It's like a little mini rudder.
And it assists with the rudder, I think, to make an even tighter turn. Gotcha. So if you imagine
just the smaller rudder as part of the main rudder, just to give you that extra boost,
I guess, when you need to turn. And then there's two elevators. And they, if you are sitting in
your little captain's chair, imagine a car steering wheel placed vertically, like by your side.
And that's just a wheel that you turn up and turn down. It's really very basic. It sounds like
the Wizard of Oz. It totally is. Behind the curtain, like all the machinies messing with.
And there's steam blowing out. It looks very steam punky when you look at it.
So you steer up or down with that wheel. And that's pretty much it.
I don't know. Don't forget the engines. Oh, well, yeah. I mean, as far as like driving this puppy.
Yeah, the flight control. Yeah. This is what separates it from hot air balloons. Don't forget.
The engines. No, the hot air, the, well, yeah, the engines, but also the flight control services.
But the engines are turboprop engines, right? There's twin ones, which means there's two,
one on each side of the gondola at the rear. And they're pretty cool because they profile
the thing forward. But very cleverly, there's also something called air scoops that are basically
these funnels that face the back of the turboprop. And they catch the vented air out of the props.
And they use those to inflate the balanets. Yeah. That's called prop wash. This is all the lingo
I've learned. That's good stuff. And the engines are just six cylinder engines. Like I said,
that you don't need a ton of power to power these things. And you can go at about 30 to 70.
This says miles per hour, not nuts. So how about that? And 70 is cruising apparently like
30 to 50 is where you want to be. Get this, I did the calculations. So one of the great advantages
blimps have, which is the reason we're even talking about this thing or anybody's talking about
still making blimps, is that they can stay aloft for days, weeks even, which gives them a huge
advantage over airplanes, which have to stop and refuel and stop and refuel. But going 70 miles per
hour, Chuck, a blimp nonstop at that rate could travel the circumference of the earth around the
equator in 14 days. Wow. With that and a fuel. Yeah. Which I think is not very hard. No, they
at 30 knots, the sky ship, which is just one example consumes about eight gallons of fuel per hour.
So apparently during an entire week of operations, it consumes less fuel than a 767 commercial
jet uses to move away from the gate. Wow. So it's super green. Yeah. Which is kind of cool.
You can understand why cargo companies are looking at them too. Yeah. And it runs on
avgas, of course, not just regular old gas. You couldn't pull it up to a gas station like your car
because I think avgas is still leaded or a lot of it is. Oh. And that's the diff.
That's not that green. Yeah, true. But they're not burning much of it.
So let's see. What else is there? The valves, you've got to be able to air in and out. You also
want to be able to air in and out of the envelope itself in case things become too pressurized.
You don't want it to pop. Yeah, that's true. So you've got your air valves for the
bladders inside and they're underneath, two up front, two in the back. And then you have
your helium valve and you can either vent it and you don't have to do this much because you should
have it pretty like the pressure set. But if something does happen, you can either manually
do it or it's set to automatically release. And if you look at the Goodyear blimp, it's sort of in
the Y of year. Wow. It just looks like a little gas cap. You really know your blimps, man. Well,
I mean, I went to the Goodyear site. It's awesome. You can like, there's all sorts of animated GIFs
and, or is it GIFs? I never could remember. I say GIF. Yeah. Graphic interface. Yeah,
but there is a correct way. I just don't know what it is. Well, the guy who created GIF says,
he pronounces it GIF, which kind of throws a wrench in the works, but I disagree with him.
GIF. The Goodyear blimp gondola, which is where we are now, is 22.75 feet long. It is aluminum
on welded steel frame. And that's where everyone rides. Depending on your blimp, it's going to
hold up to, well, it depends on how big the blimp is, but usually you don't see a blimp with more
than 12 passengers or so. Yeah. And it's not even necessarily passengers. The gondola can also be
the place where it holds all of the surveillance equipment too, depending on what you use it for,
or it can also be the massive cargo hold. Yeah. And you've got your communications up there,
your flight surface controls, any nav equipment, propeller controls. That's where all the,
there's not much else to it besides what you got there in the gondola. Yeah. What's funny is,
is I always thought blimps were basically like, you know, you get the blimp in the air and it
takes off and then that's it. But it's, at least with Goodyear, it's kind of like got helicopter
parents almost. Because when the blimp, when you see the blimp, if you look around, you'll also
find a ground crew with a bus, 18-wheeler, and a bunch of vans that follow it everywhere. Because
I guess those things break down. Yeah. And apparently the pilots too, they're FAA certified
and Goodyear pilots also have another training program, but the pilots are even, it's all sort
of everyone is cross-trained, it sounds like, to work on the ground or make repairs. And
yeah, it's like a little self-contained unit. All just traveling around together like a
tornado chasers. Right. Oh, and you talked about the end, you know, if they just took off and
floated around, if the engines did stop, that's exactly what you're doing. You're basically a
hot air balloon at that point. So you lose control of the flight service controls? Yeah. Well, I mean,
if they call it a free balloon. So it's buoyant and it's kept aloft, obviously, but if they lose
all the power, then all you can do is ascend and descend. Because I think I guess the rudders and
the elevators are also powered mechanisms. I got you. It's not just attached to a cable,
attached to a pedal. Attached to a wheel that the guy moves next to. It sounds like it is though.
And as far as weather goes, they compare it to roughly operating is about as similar as a helicopter.
Like we can fly in bad weather, but we try to avoid super bad weather. Yeah, I don't blame them.
Sure. I mean, that's no fun. No. You want to be above the rose ball in like 70 degree weather.
Sure. Yeah. So coming up, we're going to talk about how blimps fly and then also the future of
blimps. And if there is such a thing after this. Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise
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iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts. I'm Mangesh Atikular. And to
be honest, I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment I was born, it's been a part of my life.
In India, it's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're going to get second hand astrology.
And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and
pay attention. Because maybe there is magic in the stars, if you're willing to look for it.
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So Chuck, the way blimps fly is pretty simple and beautiful. I mean, elegant, if you ask me.
Yeah. Yeah. So you have helium, right? Yeah. Which is, they used to use hydrogen.
Helium's slightly heavier than hydrogen, but not that much more. You don't notice a difference,
I would guess. Yeah. I mean, you get why they use hydrogen. They weren't dummies.
Right. It was lighter than air. Sure. The lightest of all the gases, of all the elements,
from what I understand. And when hydrogen blew up, they said, okay, not hydrogen,
what else do we have? And they said, well, helium works. And so they started using helium.
And helium has a lift capacity of 0.70 pounds per square foot, right? Yeah. Which is 1.1
kilograms per square meter, which means it can lift a pretty decent amount of weight for just a
little bit of amount. Sure. And since they're filling these balloons with hundreds of thousands
of cubic feet or cubic meters of helium, they can lift tons and tons of weight. And they do it
by just simple physics. Since helium is lighter than air, as long as the helium has enough lifting
power to lift whatever the envelope and the gondola and all of the mechanisms weigh,
then it will rise more than the air. It will rise into the air. Yeah. It's called positive buoyancy.
Yeah. And what you want as a blimp pilot is neutral buoyancy. So that's why you're going
to control, like we talked about, your air bladders to get that thing where it's, once you've got your
cruising altitude, you just want to be at the same level. Yeah, you want to. And you want to fill it
up by blowing exhaust into your air scoops, which fill up your ballonettes. And the higher you get
into the atmosphere, the less pressure there is, which means the higher up you could float
conceivably. So you want to make sure you get that air in so you don't just float away. And you
achieve, is it negative buoyancy or neutral buoyancy, you said? Yeah, that's what you want.
And then when you want to land, you do just the opposite. You fill it up with even more air,
and then you make the blimp heavier than the helium inside can lift. And it just slowly
comes down to the ground. And I mean, that's it. That's how blimps rise and fall. Yeah,
it is pretty simple. And when they're on the ground, they just tie it to that little spindle.
You've got your little wheel under the rear. You got a little tractor to tow it around,
maybe a hanger. And that's the life of a blimp. And like I said, they don't inflate and deflate
these. I'm sure it's a time and an expense. And I think they're running out of helium too,
didn't we learn that? Yeah, do you know much about that? Well, we covered it in the...
Probably the Mars turbine episode. Mars turbine. Yeah, that was it.
Well, I read a really interesting article in I think the New Republic. I can't remember. I found
it online last night. And it's about the helium shortage and why we have a helium shortage. And
apparently the U.S. has had a reserve, a strategic helium reserve since 1925 in a cave in Texas.
And apparently during the Clinton era, the government said, well, let's make some money off
of this, or let's make our money back off of it. So they passed a law that said, start selling the
stuff off Bureau of Land Management. Yeah. But only make enough money off of it to recoup whatever
we've put into it over the years, which is like $1 billion. Yeah. So they started selling it. And
by setting the price artificially, they created an artificial market, because this was like
80, 90% of the world's helium reserves in this cave in Texas. So whatever the BLM was selling it for,
that's how much the market value was. Yeah. But it was artificial. So you had artificially cheap
helium flooding the market, which had a two pronged effect. One, it led to these scarcities that
we're running into now because they just started selling it off in a fire sale, the private industry.
But the other more positive effect it had was that it spurred all of this technological
innovation because nuclear magnetic resonance, the technology behind MRI, superconductivity,
molecular analysis uses helium to super cool magnets to turn them into superconductors,
right? So you need helium for that. So all these industries were using this helium from the Bureau
of Land Management to advance technology by leaps and bounds, which is one of the big reasons
why we are where we are right now, technologically speaking, because of helium. But now we're
starting to run out. There's, I think, 9 billion cubic feet of helium left in the reserve in Texas,
which is about a third of what they had when they started selling it off in the 90s,
which would be fine if we just clamped it down and said, okay, this is a reserve again.
But instead, for some reason, the government just doubled down and issued another decree to the
Bureau of Land Management to keep selling this stuff. Let's just get rid of all of it for no good
reason. I don't understand why. Interesting. It made sense in the 90s, maybe, and it had all these
great effects. But now it's like, okay, we understand that helium is literally irreplaceable,
as the article put it. Once there's no helium, there's no helium. We can't go get it anywhere
else or manufacture it. And we have no technology to recycle it. I wonder what the reason is.
I guess money, private industry, has a lot of interest in it. And there's good interest too,
like using it for MRIs or pharmaceutical research or that kind of stuff.
Or birthday parties. Well, that's the thing. So the med and pharma sectors use 29% of helium
worldwide. Welding uses 17% because they use helium to weld. Party balloons equals 8% of
worldwide helium use. Wow. I have a feeling that party balloons are going to go the way of the
dinosaur very soon if they haven't already. And half of that is the stoner kid who operates the
helium tank. Right. Just talking funny. Yeah. Yeah. So that's the helium shortage. That's the skinny
on it. Wow. So I wonder if there's any other gas they could use for blimps. I don't know.
It seems like a giant waste. Or I wonder if they could do like a hybrid so it's fueled by hot air
like a balloon. I probably wouldn't, I don't know. Yeah. I don't know either. Well, I guess we are at
the future then in the future. And depending on who you ask, the future of airships is either
super exciting and awesome. And when you look at these, they are. Yeah. Or it's not going to be
funded enough to really, there's not a lot of money being pumped into it. Well, the government
was for a little while with the Afghanistan war, the Department of Defense was like, give us new
blimps. We want these things now. And all these companies ran in and were like, here's your blimps.
Here's your blimps. Give us some money. The problem is, is the whole program got scrapped
because nobody could fulfill the enormous orders the DoD was placing for helium. Right.
Well, that makes sense. And the military is interested because they basically could be
a satellite function as a satellite. Yeah. Like a 10,000 foot satellite. Yeah, pretty much.
There are people doing it though. Lockheed Martin has a P791 that is super cool looking.
And it is a tri-hull. If you look at it from the front, it looks sort of like three blimps
squashed together. And it has four big, it looks like feet, these disc shaped cushions
that are apparently for landing. And these are all so cool. There's another one in California
from Worldwide Aeroscorp called the Dragon Dream. And it's different looking. It sort of looks
like a whale shark. Did you see it? Yeah. It's a single hull, I guess, but it's sort of kind of
flattened out. Yeah, it looks like a whale shark. They actually submitted that design to the DoD.
And when the DoD scrapped the program, they bought their design back because they want to go commercial
like cargo carrier with it. Yeah. Well, they're in trouble though. Because the Dragon died? Well,
it had a roof collapse and a hangar. Yeah. And they don't know if they have the money to even fix
it and then continue. Well, they have another model called the ML866 that it sounds like they're
putting their energy into. It supposedly can carry 250 tons, which is more than twice the cargo
payload of a cargo 777. Wow. Twice. And again, you mentioned how little fuel it takes to power
these things. Yeah. So it'll take a little while for you to get your package, but the company
shipping it isn't going to spend too much money delivering it. I still say if it's a military,
like to use as a cargo plane, I know you can't shoot a hole in it, but what if you launched
a surface to air missile at it? You know, it's still full of helium. That doesn't sound like,
I don't know. Maybe they're so high up there you can't. The fact that we have satellites and drones,
it seems to me like the surveillance uses of blimps are preposterous, especially considering
that we could be using that helium for medical purposes instead. Yeah. I agree. You got anything
else on blimps? We got nothing else. I got one other thing. If you were fascinated by the way
blimps float, I think it's cool for some reason. I did a brain stuff video about,
you can calculate how many balloons it would take, like regular party balloons,
to lift yourself into the sky. And I made a video about it. So go to brainstuffshow.com
and check it out. Nice. And if you want to read this article, you can go to howstuffworks.com,
type in how blimps work, and it will bring it up. And I said howstuffworks, I think.
So that means it's time for listener mail. I'm going to call this sterilizing addicts.
Remember that old one? Did a show on whether or not it's legal to sterilize addicts.
Turns out it is. Yeah. And that's the thing. And this is from someone who had a personal
stake in it. It's long, but I'm going to edit it in my head as I go.
Okay. Hey guys, just recently listened to your podcast on sterilization of addicts.
I had a personal story to share. Until my mother is a fully recovered heroin addict,
and I'm grateful just to be alive. Until I was six, she was only an alcoholic.
However, drug addiction set in fast. My mother, brother, and myself,
along with whatever scumbag boyfriend she had at the time, were constantly on the
run from the police looking for shelter and searching for food. My father is an upper
middle-class blue color worker who always had a sound home environment. When my mother was
sent to prison when I was 10, I was sent to live with my father. Always had food,
a shower, and clean clothes. Was never in fear for being homeless. I lived with my
father for three years until I finally ran away once I regained contact with my mother.
My father, even with his financial support and stability, was never there even though he was
only a few feet away. My mother, even while on drugs, always listened and always cared about
my thoughts and feelings, and that was what was important as a child. My mother eventually
overcame her addictions, cold turkey, because, wow, she could see it was damaging to me and my
brother. She's been clean for 11 years now, and is an amazing mother, an amazing grandmother,
to my nephew. I like to believe that seeing the harder side of life made me appreciate
such things and be more humble and responsible and fearful of what could happen if I slipped
or did not take care of myself. I don't want to be the poster child for children of addicts.
However, I do believe that we are all in control of our own lives,
and that is anonymized as Cornelius Jacobs, the seventh.
Cornelius Jacobs, the seventh.
Yeah, he said, yeah, you can read it, and I said, I'll anonymize it.
Is there some sort of name anonymizer on the internet?
No, he said, please do just make it something awesome like Cornelius Jacobs, the seventh.
That's great. That's a cool PS. I've been secretly wanting Jerry to be the Tyler Durden
of your podcast. I don't know what that even means.
Like made up, but we think she's real, but she's not.
Oh, okay. Are you real, Jerry? Jerry says no.
Nope. That answers that, Cornelius Jacobs, the seventh.
And you read the Roman numerals correctly, Chuck, this time. Good going.
Yeah, nice going.
B-I-I. If you want to get in touch with me and Chuck to tell us any story like Cornelius Jacobs,
the seventh, please do. You can tweet to us at S-Y-S-K podcast.
You can join us on facebook.com slash stuff you should know.
You can send us an email to stuffpodcast.howstuffworks.com.
And as always, go to our cool home on the web, stuffyoushouldknow.com.
Stuff You Should Know is a production of I Heart Radio's How Stuff Works.
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Apple podcasts are wherever you listen to your favorite shows.
About my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say bye-bye-bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the I Heart Radio app,
Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than any of us want to
believe. You can find it in Major League Baseball, International Banks, K-pop groups,
even the White House. But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject,
something completely unbelievable happened to me and my whole view on astrology changed.
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, give me a few minutes because I think your ideas
are about to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive on the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcast,
or wherever you get your podcasts.