LEMV als Cargo-Luftschiffe
Verfasst: Fr, 07.01.2011 12:43
http://www.homelandsecuritynewswire.com ... king-shape
LEMV surveillance airship taking shape
Published 24 December 2010
The persistent-surveillance long-endurance multi-intelligence vehicle (LEMV) is designed to have an endurance when operating unmanned for 21 days at 20,000 ft. carrying a 2,500-lb. payload of sensors and communications equipment; the critical design review was completed at the end of November, final assembly is to begin in February, and first flight is planned for the end of July 2011
Six months after contract award, elements of Northrop Grumman’s long-endurance multi-intelligence vehicle (LEMV) hybrid airship are coming together.
The persistent-surveillance LEMV is designed to have an endurance when operating unmanned for 21 days at 20,000 ft. carrying a 2,500-lb. payload of sensors and communications equipment.
The critical design review was completed at the end of November, final assembly is to begin in February, and first flight is planned for the end of July 2011. “It’s a fast-moving train,” says Alan Metzger, LEMV program manager. Northrop won the $517 million U.S. Army demonstration contract in July. The first airship should be ready for deployment to Afghanistan at the end of 2011 for a military assessment.
...
Northrop has responded to requests for information on heavy-lift airships from U.S. Transportation Command and the Army. Metzger says LEMV is designed so the mission and fuel modules can be removed and replaced with cargo modules.
LEMV’s cargo-carrying potential
Lewis Page notes that an airship’s lifting capacity decreases sharply as its maximum operating altitude increases. An airship’s ceiling is set by its “pressure height” — the altitude at which its helium lifting gas has expanded to fill all available space inside the envelope. In order to have a higher pressure height, less gas must be put into the ship to start with, meaning that it will lift less stuff off the ground.
Things are not quite this simple with the LEMV, which gets extra lift from swiveling propulsion for takeoff and from air flowing over its surface while underway — it is a “hybrid” airship, not a true lighter-than-air vehicle.
Nonetheless, if its owners were happy to accept a lower ceiling than 20,000 feet, it would be possible to put more helium into the ship and so to carry more cargo. All in all, with fuel and sensors removed and extra gas added, the LEMV might be able to carry quite an impressive amount of stuff.
One major problem in using the LEMV for cargo carrying would be that of offloading cargo at locations unable to supply water or other suitable ballast to replace the cargo. A lighter-than-air ship unloading has to take on ballast weighing the same as the cargo lost, or vent off expensive helium: if she does not, she will become uncontrollably buoyant, surge up through pressure height, and lose gas anyway through automatic safety valves.
Things are not quite as bad for the LEMV, which would set down in a heavy condition supported by engine thrust as well as gas. Offloading a big cargo, though, would still probably call for taking on a lot of ballast, which might be hard to arrange at many Afghan bases.
Page writes that the U.S. Army probably will not be using its new airships for cargo operations — not in Afghanistan, anyway. It is still an intriguing option, and the news that potentially useful cargo ships will soon be flying is sure to delight airship fans. Reportedly, various branches of the U.S. military have made enquiries about the LEMV’s cargo-carrying potential.
LEMV surveillance airship taking shape
Published 24 December 2010
The persistent-surveillance long-endurance multi-intelligence vehicle (LEMV) is designed to have an endurance when operating unmanned for 21 days at 20,000 ft. carrying a 2,500-lb. payload of sensors and communications equipment; the critical design review was completed at the end of November, final assembly is to begin in February, and first flight is planned for the end of July 2011
Six months after contract award, elements of Northrop Grumman’s long-endurance multi-intelligence vehicle (LEMV) hybrid airship are coming together.
The persistent-surveillance LEMV is designed to have an endurance when operating unmanned for 21 days at 20,000 ft. carrying a 2,500-lb. payload of sensors and communications equipment.
The critical design review was completed at the end of November, final assembly is to begin in February, and first flight is planned for the end of July 2011. “It’s a fast-moving train,” says Alan Metzger, LEMV program manager. Northrop won the $517 million U.S. Army demonstration contract in July. The first airship should be ready for deployment to Afghanistan at the end of 2011 for a military assessment.
...
Northrop has responded to requests for information on heavy-lift airships from U.S. Transportation Command and the Army. Metzger says LEMV is designed so the mission and fuel modules can be removed and replaced with cargo modules.
LEMV’s cargo-carrying potential
Lewis Page notes that an airship’s lifting capacity decreases sharply as its maximum operating altitude increases. An airship’s ceiling is set by its “pressure height” — the altitude at which its helium lifting gas has expanded to fill all available space inside the envelope. In order to have a higher pressure height, less gas must be put into the ship to start with, meaning that it will lift less stuff off the ground.
Things are not quite this simple with the LEMV, which gets extra lift from swiveling propulsion for takeoff and from air flowing over its surface while underway — it is a “hybrid” airship, not a true lighter-than-air vehicle.
Nonetheless, if its owners were happy to accept a lower ceiling than 20,000 feet, it would be possible to put more helium into the ship and so to carry more cargo. All in all, with fuel and sensors removed and extra gas added, the LEMV might be able to carry quite an impressive amount of stuff.
One major problem in using the LEMV for cargo carrying would be that of offloading cargo at locations unable to supply water or other suitable ballast to replace the cargo. A lighter-than-air ship unloading has to take on ballast weighing the same as the cargo lost, or vent off expensive helium: if she does not, she will become uncontrollably buoyant, surge up through pressure height, and lose gas anyway through automatic safety valves.
Things are not quite as bad for the LEMV, which would set down in a heavy condition supported by engine thrust as well as gas. Offloading a big cargo, though, would still probably call for taking on a lot of ballast, which might be hard to arrange at many Afghan bases.
Page writes that the U.S. Army probably will not be using its new airships for cargo operations — not in Afghanistan, anyway. It is still an intriguing option, and the news that potentially useful cargo ships will soon be flying is sure to delight airship fans. Reportedly, various branches of the U.S. military have made enquiries about the LEMV’s cargo-carrying potential.