BRITISH AIRSHIPS BUILT BY PRIVATE FIRMS
It has been shown in the previous
chapter that the development of the airship had been
practically neglected in England prior to the twentieth
century. Ballooning had been carried out both
as a form of sport and also by the showman as a Saturday
afternoon’s sensational entertainment, with
a parachute descent as the piece de resistance.
The experiments in adapting the balloon into the dirigible
had, however, been left to the pioneers on the Continent.
PARTRIDGE’S AIRSHIP
It appears that in the nineteenth
century only one airship was constructed in this country,
which proved to be capable of ascending into the air
and being propelled by its own machinery. This
airship made its appearance in the year 1848, and
was built to the designs of a man named Partridge.
Very little information is available concerning this
ship. The envelope was cylindrical in shape,
tapering at each end, and was composed of a light
rigid framework covered with fabric. The envelope
itself was covered with a light wire net, from which
the car was suspended. The envelope contained
a single ballonet for regulating the pressure of the
gas. Planes, which in design more nearly resembled
sails, were used for steering purposes. In the
car, at the after end, were fitted three propellers
which were driven by compressed air.
Several trips of short duration were
carried out in this airship, but steering was never
successfully accomplished owing to difficulties encountered
with the planes, and, except in weather of the calmest
description, she may be said to have been practically
uncontrollable.
HUGH BELL’S AIRSHIP
In the same year, 1848, Bell’s
airship was constructed. The envelope of this
ship was also cylindrical in shape, tapering at each
end to a point, the length of which was 56 feet and
the diameter 21 feet 4 inches. A keel composed
of metal tubes was attached to the underside of the
envelope from which the car was suspended. On
either side of the car screw propellers were fitted
to be worked by hand. A rudder was attached
behind the car. It was arranged that trials should
be carried out in the Vauxhall Gardens in London,
but these proved fruitless.
BARTON’S AIRSHIP
In the closing years of the nineteenth
century appeared the forerunners of airships as they
are to-day, and interest was aroused in this country
by the performances of the ships designed by Santos-Dumont
and Count Zeppelin. From now onwards we find
various British firms turning their attention to the
conquest of the air.
In 1903 Dr. Barton commenced the construction
of a large non-rigid airship. The envelope was
176 feet long with a height of 43 feet and a capacity
of 235,000 cubic feet; it was cylindrical in shape,
tapering to a point at each end. Beneath the
whole length of the cylindrical portion was suspended
a bamboo framework which served as a car for the crew,
and a housing for the motors supplying the motive
power of the ship. This framework was suspended
from the envelope by means of steel cables.
Installed in the car were two 50 horse-power Buchet
engines which were mounted at the forward and after
ends of the framework. The propellers in themselves
were of singular design, as they consisted of three
pairs of blades mounted one behind the other.
The were situated on each side of the car, two forward
and two aft. The drive also include large friction
clutches, and each engine was under separate control.
To enable the ship to be trimmed horizontally,
water tanks were fitted at either end of the framework,
the water being transferred from one to the other
as was found necessary.
A series of planes was mounted at
intervals along the framework to control the elevation
of the ship.
This ship was completed in 1905 and
was tried at the Alexandra Palace in the July of that
year. She, unfortunately, did not come up to
expectations, owing to the difficulty in controlling
her, and during the trial flight she drifted away
and was destroyed in landing.
WILLOWS N
From the year 1905 until the outbreak
of war Messrs. Willows & Co. were engaged on the construction
of airships of a small type, and considerable success
attended their efforts. Each succeeding ship
was an improvement on its predecessor, and flights
were made which, in their day, created a considerable
amount of interest.
In 1905 their first ship was completed.
This was a very small non-rigid of only 12,500 cubic
feet capacity. The envelope was made of Japanese
silk, cylindrical in shape, with rather blunt conical
ends. A long nacelle or framework, triangular
in section and built up of light steel tubes, was
suspended beneath the envelope by means of diagonally
crossed suspensions.
A 7 horse-power Peugeot engine was
fitted at the after end of the nacelle which drove
a 10-feet diameter propeller. In front were a
pair of swivelling tractor screws for steering the
ship in the vertical and horizontal plane. No
elevators or rudders were fixed to the ship.
WILLOWS N
The second ship was practically a
semi-rigid. The envelope was over twice the
capacity of the earlier ship, being of 29,000 cubic
feet capacity. This envelope was attached to
a keel of bamboo and steel, from which was suspended
by steel cables a small car. At the after end
of the keel was mounted a small rudder for the horizontal
steering. For steering in the vertical plane
two propellers were mounted on each side of the car,
swivelling to give an upward or downward thrust.
A 30 horse-power J.A.P. engine was fitted in this
case. Several successful flights were carried
out by this ship, of which the most noteworthy was
from Cardiff to London.
WILLOWS N
N, having been rebuilt and both
enlarged and improved, became known as N.
The capacity of the envelope, which was composed of
rubber and cotton, was increased to 32,000 cubic feet,
and contained two ballonets. The gross lift
amounted to about half a ton. As before, a 30
horse-power J.A.P. engine was installed, driving the
swivelling propellers. These propellers were
two-bladed with a diameter of 61 feet. The maximum
speed was supposed to be 25 miles per hour, but it
is questionable if this was ever attained.
This ship flew from London to Paris,
and was the first British-built airship to fly across
the Channel.
WILLOWS N
The fourth ship constructed by this
firm was completed in 1912, and was slightly smaller
than the two preceding ships. The capacity of
the envelope in this instance was reduced to 24,000
cubic feet, but was a much better shape, having a
diameter of 20 feet, which was gradually tapered towards
the stern. A different material was also used,
varnished silk being tried as an experiment. The
envelope was attached to a keel on which was mounted
the engine, a 35 horse-power Anzani, driving two swivelling
four-bladed propellers. From the keel was suspended
a torpedo-shaped boat car in which a crew of two was
accommodated. Originally a vertical fin and rudder
were mounted at the stern end of the keel, but these
were later replaced by fins on the stern of the envelope.
This ship was purchased by the naval
authorities, and after purchase was more or less reconstructed,
but carried out little flying. At the outbreak
of war she was lying deflated in the shed at Farnborough.
As will be seen later, this was the envelope which
was rigged to the original experimental S.S. airship
in the early days of 1915, and is for this reason,
if for no other, particularly interesting.
WILLOWS N
This ship was of similar design, but
of greater capacity. The envelope, which was
composed of rubber-proofed fabric, gave a volume of
50,000 cubic feet, and contained two ballonets.
A 60 horsepower engine drove two swivelling propellers
at an estimated speed of 38 miles per hour.
She was constructed at Hendon, from where she made
several short trips.
MARSHALL FOX’S AIRSHIP
In the early days of the war an airship
was constructed by Mr. Marshall Fox which is worthy
of mention, although it never flew. It was claimed
that this ship was a rigid airship, although from its
construction it could only be looked upon as a non-rigid
ship, having a wooden net-work around its envelope.
The hull was composed of wooden transverse frames
forming a polygon of sixteen sides, with radial wiring
fitted to each transverse frame. The longitudinal
members were spiral in form and were built up of three-ply
lathes. A keel of similar construction ran along
the under side of the hull which carried the control
position and compartments for two Green engines, one
of 40 horse-power, the other of 80 horse-power, together
with the petrol, bombs, etc.
In the hull were fitted fourteen gasbags
giving a total capacity of 100,000 cubic feet.
The propeller drive was obtained by means of a wire
rope. The gross lift of the ship was 4,276 lb.,
and the weight of the structure, complete with engines,
exceeded this.
It became apparent that the ship could
never fly, and work was suspended. She was afterwards
used for carrying out certain experiments and at a
later date was broken up.
Apart from the various airships built
under contract for the Government there do not appear
to be any other ships built by private firms which
were completed and actually flew. It is impossible
to view this lack of enterprise with any other feelings
than those of regret, and it was entirely due to this
want of foresight that Great Britain entered upon
the World War worse equipped, as regards airships,
than the Central Empires or any of the greater Allied
Powers.