Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
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August 1975 | Volume 26, Issue 5
Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
August 1975 | Volume 26, Issue 5
The Providence that looks out for small children and inebriates must certainly have a protective concern for free-balloon pilots. And indeed I suppose that is appropriate, since the pilot or passenger in a free balloon is almost as helpless against the assaults of the elements as the smallest tot or the most supine wine-bibber.
I spent World War II as a lighterthan-air pilot—a chauffeur of those large, nonrigid aircraft usually called blimps, which we affectionately referred to as “large silver birds” and which the less sympathetic derided as “sausages.” The training of a lighterthan-air pilot is somewhat similar to the flight training of a heavier-thanair pilot. It takes about the same length of time, and since many functions and even flight characteristics of these two types of flying machines are similar, a large part of the training syllabus is almost identical: aerology, for example, or navigation, or power plants. Lighterthan-air training, however, had one unique element in its program—the mastery of the free balloon.
The science of free ballooning, or aerostatics, has a very practical value in operating the power-driven blimps. Although a blimp is usually “heavy” in that the total weight of its body, fuselage, crew, fuel, and armament is greater than the lift from the gas that fills it, and although it usually becomes and remains airborne through the thrust of its engines and the airfoil characteristics of its “envelope” and fins, yet this heaviness is only relative; it is slight compared to that of conventional heavier-than-air craft. In this lies the peculiar military advantage of the blimp. It can cruise at a much slower speed for use with convoys, it can hover over a given spot for careful observation or for searching out submerged submarines, and in the event of a power failure it can be quickly ballasted to a state of equilibrium and thus float with the wind until the trouble is remedied. When a blimp is in this condition, it becomes, for all practical purposes, a free balloon. For this reason the mechanics of free ballooning were a required part of the flight training I took at Lakehurst, New Jersey, the original lighter-thanair base in the country.
During the summer of 1941, when I was a cadet at Lakehurst, l made several free-balloon flights. These were always gala occasions for us. The only thing that can compare with free ballooning as a sport, I am told by friends who know them both, is skiing. The flights were usually scheduled in the afternoon after a morning of classes and on days when the weather was agreeable, without the threat of thunderstorms. The principal reason for scheduling them in the afternoon was to catch the usual afternoon offshore breeze, since of course we had to go inland, not out to sea.
The first flight I had was an ideal one. We gathered about three o’clock down at the balloon hangar