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  2. Airship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airship

    The Royal Navy continued development of rigid airships until the end of the war. Eight rigid airships had been completed by the armistice, (No. 9r, four 23 Class, two R23X Class and one R31 Class), although several more were in an advanced state of completion by the war's end. [97] Both France and Italy continued to use airships throughout the war.

  3. List of Zeppelins - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Zeppelins

    Production number Class Tactical numbering First flight Remarks Fate Image LZ 26: N: Z XII 14 December 1914 Z XII made 11 attacks in northern France and at the eastern front, dropping 20,000 kg (44,000 lb) of bombs; by the summer of 1915 Z 12 had dropped around 9,000 kg (20,000 lb) of bombs on the Warsaw to Petrograd trunk railway line between the stations at Malkina and BiaƂystok.

  4. Zeppelin L 30 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeppelin_L_30

    Zeppelin "L 30" seen from the front Right gondola of Zeppelin "L 30". Zeppelin "L 30" (factory number "LZ 62") was the first R-class "Super Zeppelin" of the German Empire.It was the most successful airship of the First World War with 31 reconnaissance flights and 10 bombing runs carrying a total of 23,305 kg of bombs, [1] with the first ones targeting England, and the four final raids ...

  5. Hugo Eckener - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugo_Eckener

    Hugo Eckener (10 August 1868 – 14 August 1954) [1] [2] [3] was the manager of Luftschiffbau Zeppelin during the inter-war years, and also the commander of the famous Graf Zeppelin for most of its record-setting flights, including the first airship flight around the world, making him the most successful airship commander in history.

  6. R23X-class airship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R23X-class_airship

    Battlebags: British Airships of the First World War, 1995 ISBN 0-905778-13-8; Ventry, Lord and Eugene Kolesnik. Jane's Pocket Book 7 - Airship Development, 1976 ISBN 0-356-04656-7; Ventry, Lord and Eugene Kolesnik. Airship saga: The history of airships seen through the eyes of the men who designed, built, and flew them , 1982 ISBN 0-7137-1001-2

  7. Coastal class airship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coastal_class_airship

    The most successful Coastal airship (often described as "the darling of the airship service" during the War) was C-9, operating out of RNAS Mullion in Cornwall. C-9 had one confirmed and three probable "kills" during her long career. She entered service in June 1916 and was struck off on 14 September 1918, after completing 3,720 hours of flying ...

  8. Rigid airship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rigid_airship

    Rigid airships consist of a structural framework usually covered in doped fabric containing a number of gasbags or cells containing a lifting gas. In the majority of airships constructed before the Second World War, highly flammable hydrogen was used for this purpose, resulting in many airships such as the British R101 and the German Hindenburg being lost in catastrophic fires.

  9. List of Schütte-Lanz airships - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Schütte-Lanz_airships

    This is a late war example - probably 1918's S.L.22. Silhouettes demonstrate the relative sizes of six SL airships. SMS Seydlitz with an airship by Zeppelin or Schütte-Lanz. Schütte-Lanz (SL) airships were a series of rigid airships designed and built by the Luftschiffbau Schütte-Lanz company from 1909 until 1917. [1]