Afternoon all,
Well, time to show the latest WIP and an update to the stupid gun.
Firstly, the WIP:
This is basically a scaled
Akron - a careful examination of the frame size and spacing will reveal an approximately 110%
Akron although the envelope, cockpit, elevators and the hull line markings are my own. Is a credit for CanisD / "D. Briedis" (whom I've not had the opportunity to talk to, I think) required?
I picked 110% because I'd thought that with the passage of a few years, particularly given the leaps and bounds in aerodynamic engineering, a 10% increase in size was feasible, at least.
A few details on this airship:
Length: 254m / 833ft
Diameter: 43m / 141 ft
Height: 49.5m / 161.5ft
Beam (as defined by elevator edges): 49.5m / 161.5ft
Cargo capacity: 72 tons (this is the same as the
Akron, because...)
He carriage: 202,400 cubic metre / 7,147,700 cu.ft. + 6,450 cubic metres @ 150-300kPa / 227,800 cu.ft. @ 22-44 psi buoyancy compensation in low-pressure annular tanks A-J
The buoyancy compensation can accommodate approximately 10,000 kilos variance from "empty" to full - the tanks don't entirely empty and assist with frame stiffness - the annular tanks are located immediately fore-and-aft of the five frames mounting the engines - while emptying the buoyancy reserve into the lift cells requires no power, running the compressor to take He from the lift cells and force it into the buoyancy comp tanks requires that the propeller is de-clutched and the compressor clutched in. As
Akron and
Macon this airship also mounts (will mount
) condensers on the engine exhaust to collect water ballast, partly to stop having to run the compressors so frequently.
The propellers (and compressors) are powered by 10 x
Modula 9 engines, giving the airship a high, if fuel-inefficient top speed of 90kn. As the airship design forces the propellers to be on the same level and in each other's wash, counter-rotating props have been fitted in an attempt to reduce interference, though these were eventually removed as an unnecessary complication given the mediocre performance benefits.
In addition to cargo lift (though the cargo lift, for all intents and purposes, is closer to the 10,000kg that the ship can compensate for than the raw 72,000kg raw lift number, unless ballast loading \ unloading can be arranged in advance) this class of airship is used as a flying aircraft carrier, hosting 5 parasite fighters (the FAA fighter is just for scale), themselves armed with 4 x 20mm and capable of fairly high speeds courtesy of their own
Modula 9-2 engines developing around 1,800kW, and also as a radar picket, mounting a generator and two modified
Freya radar sets on the lower hull, the radar picket acting as an AWACS and directing the parasite fighters launched by companion airships to intercept. The few remaining cargo variants had by 1942 (most had by this point been converted to either
Zeppelin Flugzeugträger or
Zeppelin Freya variants) mostly been tasked with outsize cargo, although successful trials at transporting light armoured vehicles were not progressed once survivability of the airframes was factored into the assessment.
Stuff to do is wheels and glass on the lower fin for landing gear and lookout station (note that the fin is supported at the leading edge by a frame, unlike
Macon - that's one of the "lessons learned" in this AU by this point), those hull lines, which I am
not looking forward to (the envelope took ages to get looking right and I'm still not entirely happy with it), which will in turn define the condensers and shading, the parasite fighter in SB and FD scales.
Oh, also, gun, with labels. I think it's better (but still has issues) and hopefully this shows how I was thinking to manage feeding this awful gun:
The drum's not actually counter-rotating as Thiel suggested but rotates along a parallel axis as this has a greater overlap in which to ram the shell into the breech. Two rammers for the actual Gatling gun, as I thought a) "the whole point about Gatling guns is to spread out the loading process" and b) given the rate of fire, having a single rammer do that was pushing it a bit, I'd thought. The second rammer is almost invisible behind the frame supporting the lower rammer, but there are a couple of pixels for it there.
EDIT: As per discussion with Thiel, have removed the "Double
Hindenberg" refuelling method.
Regards,
Adam