|
|
Home
» Business
» General
Business »

Article published Sunday, June 19,
2005
Reaching for an airship
revival 2
Ohioans envision `roadless trucking'
The
tail of the prototype Dynalifter juts out from a
canvas hangar on an airstrip in Stark County.
( SPECIAL TO
THE BLADE/SCOTT R. GALVIN )
| By JON
CHAVEZ BLADE BUSINESS
WRITER
ALLIANCE,
Ohio - Sometimes, the brightest innovations come
from the most unlikely of places.
When
Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs launched their Apple
personal computer in 1977, no one imagined a
computer revolution would begin in Mr. Wozniak's
garage.
Similarly, if Robert Rist and Brian
Martin one day achieve such fame, they can trace
their idea to change the transportation industry
by reviving airships back to the outskirts of this
Stark County town and a canvas quonset-like hangar
at a tiny grass airfield.
Inside their
gravel-floor workshop at Barber Airport, the
headquarters for their tiny Ohio Airships Inc.,
the two men are close to finishing a 119-foot-long
prototype airship they call a Dynalifter.
They believe its unique design -
half-dirigible, half-plane - will make it the
backbone of a global low-cost transport system
that can reach areas where roads don't exist,
ships can't reach, and other methods of hauling
goods are hideously expensive.
"The
Dynalifters aren't going to compete with the
trucking industry. But we like to think of it as
roadless trucking," said Mr. Martin, 32, a former
computer database programmer who lives in
Alliance.
They envision the Dynalifter as
having unlimited commercial, industrial, and
military applications, if it can get aloft and
prove its viability.
That test won't occur
until at least August, when they plan to circle
the airship around Barber Airport. But Mr. Martin
and Mr. Rist, 44, who grew up in Pemberville but
now lives in Mantua, Ohio, are almost giddy at the
progress their pipe dream has achieved since 1999.
That's when the men, staff workers at
nearby Mount Union College, hatched their
plan.
Mr. Rist came up with the idea while
building a model airship for his son and pitched
the idea to Mr. Martin. "The best business
decision I ever made was not to laugh on the spot
at his idea," Mr. Martin said. Now nearly 80
percent complete and using about 100 people to
help build it, their 2,200-pound prototype
Dynalifter Patroller will end up costing about
$500,000 to develop and build.
It is the
first of a fleet of four planned sizes of
airships. Computer simulations and wind-tunnel
tests at Ohio State University have shown they
should fly successfully.
What makes the
design unique is that, like a blimp, the craft
uses helium to achieve 50 percent of its lift. The
remaining lift will be from four wings and
propellers.
Inside the pickle-shaped
prototype, which Mr. Rist unofficially dubbed the
Walrus, is an aluminum spine running its length
and two patented towerlike structures that support
the spine, wings, gas-powered engines, cockpit,
and landing gear, and provide the craft with
additional strength and stability.
Helium
will be stored in four bags that use a third of
the craft's interior. A two-person cockpit, which
is the payload, is attached to the bottom. Larger
Dynalifters will have interior holds for cargo
containers.
But it is neither blimp nor
dirigible. A blimp is a non-rigid gasbag with
engines and a gondola attached. A dirigible has a
rigid frame and skin. It carries gasbags inside it
to provide lift.
The Dynalifter has a
rigid shape and gasbags but will achieve lift like
an ultralight craft or a Piper Cub airplane, and
can take off and land in short distances - 4,000
feet - without ground crews used by blimps and
dirigibles.
Bob
Rist, foreground, and Brian Martin remove the
scaffolding that had supported the Dynalifter
before the wheel assembly was attached.
( SPECIAL TO
THE BLADE/SCOTT R. GALVIN )
|
The
prototype is designed to lift just two people, but
a planned 990-foot heavy-freighter could carry 160
tons of payload and travel at 100 miles per hour.
A Boeing 747 cargo ship can haul 124 tons and
travel about 565 mph.
If the prototype
proves feasible, copies could be built by an
aircraft manufacturer for about $100,000 in less
than a year, the two men said. One manufacturer
told them their largest 990-foot model would cost
$100 million.
Whether the project is
feasible is debatable.
John Sullivan, a
professor of aeronautics at Purdue University, is
familiar with the Dynalifter concept and calls it
promising. For the last year, he has done research
on high-altitude airships for the U.S. Air
Force.
"Does [the Dynalifter] make sense?
At this stage I think it needs some more study,"
he said. "With new materials and techniques now
available, there is a real case for developing
this.
"For certain missions, their concept
can make sense."
But Mark Ardema, a
mechanical engineering professor at the University
of Santa Clara in California, said, "Frankly,
hybrids are not a good idea.
"They are
attempts to combine the worst aspects of airships
and airplanes. What you get is all the low speed
of airships and inefficiencies of loaded
structures like airplanes. We did a lot of studies
on that in the '70s."
The professor, who
led NASA's modern airship program from 1974 to
1980, said good ideas didn't get funded and bad
ideas that garnered heavy investment. However, he
said, the best role for an airship, whether hybrid
or not, is as a heavy lifter, not long
hauler.
That's because the airships are
slow, and transportation is time driven, he
explained.
But Mr. Rist and Mr. Martin
said they do not plan to compete with cargo
airplanes but would have an advantage in going to
places that cannot accommodate large
airplanes.
Barry Prentice, a professor of
transportation at the University of Manitoba in
Winnipeg, said a Dynalifter system would be ideal
in Canada.
He organized an annual
conference in Canada to promote an airship
industry revival to open up Canada's northern
territories to commerce.
"For airships,
their time has come, is how I would put it," he
said. Breakthroughs in lightweight materials,
avionics, and hydraulics as well as sophisticated
radar make it feasible to build advanced airships,
he added.
Mr. Prentice said a large
Dynalifter easily could land and take off in
northern Canada. "You have a storehouse of base
metals and gold and diamonds and oil in the
north," he said. "The trouble is you can't get to
it right now."
For now, the aerospace
industry isn't taking the two men seriously. That
means no one is trying to beat them to the
marketplace, but it makes it harder to raise
needed money to proceed.
So far, money has
come from the two, their families and friends, and
a few investors. The two say their business plan
has allowed them to secure all the private cash
needed to finish their prototype.
They have
a business plan which calls for their prototype,
if successful, to recoup its costs through flying
advertisements. Several companies have said they
are willing to pay to fly their name over sporting
or other events, the men said.
That income
could lead to franchising or development of the
craft's intended purpose: a bigger airship to haul
freight. Mr. Rist said the crafts could move
between airport hubs and company warehouses.
Their concept might seem like science
fiction to some, but the timing is good.
Mr. Prentice and others said there is a
movement afoot to revive airships, for uses
including security surveillance and cargo
hauling.
The U.S. Defense Department has
said it wants aerospace companies to make
proposals to build airships that could transport a
complete combat unit from its fort to the
battlefield, and in another proposal it has said
it would like to recruit supply chain and airship
companies to help create a public-private
manufacturing base, similar to that in the
aircraft industry, and build commercial airships
that the government could use when it needs them.
Until three years ago, it appeared that
Germany would be the first to market a
heavy-lifting semi-rigid airship. But the
multimillion-dollar program hit financial
difficulty and was halted in 2002.
The
German craft, known as the CargoLifter, had a
market, Mr. Martin said, and since the Sept. 11,
2001, terror attacks, the U.S. Department of
Homeland Security and other state and local law
enforcement agencies have expressed interest in
affordable aircraft surveillance activities.
Airships have been identified as ideal
because of low operating costs and the ability to
stay aloft for long periods.
Neither Mr.
Rist or Mr. Martin have aeronautical backgrounds.
They hired Daniel Raymer, formerly of Lockheed
Martin, to design their craft based on their
sketches.
Said Mr. Prentice, of Winnipeg:
"What needs to happen is for them to fly this
thing and see how it's going to perform."
Contact Jon Chavez at:
jchavez@theblade.com or 419-724-6128.
|
| |
|
| |
| |
 |
© 2005 The Blade. By using this
service, you accept the terms of our privacy
statement and our visitor
agreement. Please read them. The Toledo Blade Company,
541 N. Superior St., Toledo, OH 43660 , (419) 724-6000 To
contact a specific department or
an individual person, click
here. The Toledo Times
® | | |