WEDNESDAY  APRIL 7, 2004
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Military eyeing Mantua aircraft
Marly Kosinski
By Marly Kosinski

Record-Courier business editor

MANTUA - A local business may be on the fast track to having its patented aircraft fly the friendly skies.

Ohio Airships, Inc. was founded in 1999 by Robert Rist and Brian Martin after the pair came up with an idea for a new “hybrid” aircraft that is part airplane and part airship. The result is the Dynalifter, an aircraft that features a cable stay bridge construction interior that allows for concentrated loading, while decreasing structural weight.

Martin and Rist came up with a prototype and then did a patent search to make sure that no one else had patented their idea. They received a U.S. patent in 2001, commissioned an engineered design study in 2002 and sent their idea for a computational fluid dynamics analysis in 2003.

Although the process has been moving along the last several years, Martin said he and Rist have met resistance along the way.

“We have had objections to this project at every stage,” Martin said. “Experts in engineering and aerodynamics have said from day one that we would never get to the next stage of development. Yet here we are.”

Currently, Ohio Airships has received a quote to build the 700-foot model of the Dynalifter. That quote was the result of the designed engineer study performed by Dr. Daniel P. Raymer, director of advanced design for Lockheed-Martin in California.

“We gave him the design sketches, our requirements and our patented design and his study gave our project the green light to proceed,” Rist said.

Rist and Martin see three uses for their idea. The first is a Dynalifter patroller that a local corporation would purchase for advertising and law enforcement could use for searches and patroling air space.

The second use is a Dynalifter Freighter that could transport parcels and freight overseas more efficiently and at a lower cost.

He said because Ohio Airships would be able to ship goods more cheaply, manufacturers would be more likely to locate in Ohio - an added benefit of the technology.

The third use is for the military and the Dynalifter currently is being considered for a military contract. Martin said he and Rist have been talking to high-level officials at the Pentagon about their concept for several years and just recently, the military has started talking about using hybrid technology.

Ohio Airships will be competing April 15 at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency Industry Day in Arlington, Va. DARPA is the central research and development organization for the U.S. Department of Defense.

Martin said because military usage is just one aspect of the Dynalifter, the project will move forward even if Ohio Airships is not chosen to build a hybrid craft for the military.

“It won’t be the end of the project if we don’t get a contract, but winning would help fast track the Dynalifter so we could move along in other areas,” Martin said.

Major portions of the Dynalifter assembly process have been done by local companies, including Design Fabrication and Jim Fedor of Ground Effects, both in Mantua, and Quick Service Welding of Kent.

“Winning this contract would bring a lot of recognition to Ohio, especially Portage County,” Rist said.

For more information on Ohio Airships, call (866) 568-0652 or visit the Web site at www.dynalifter.com.

Ð

E-mail:

mkosinski@recordpub.net

Phone: (330) 296-9657

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