Skip to content
Scan a barcode
Scan
Paperback When Giants Roamed the Sky: Karl Arnstein and the Rise of Airships from Zeppelin to Goodyear Book

ISBN: 1884836704

ISBN13: 9781884836701

When Giants Roamed the Sky: Karl Arnstein and the Rise of Airships from Zeppelin to Goodyear

Select Format

Select Condition ThriftBooks Help Icon

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$6.39
Save $43.56!
List Price $49.95
Almost Gone, Only 1 Left!

Book Overview

Karl Arnstein's life was defined by the world wars which shattered Europe. But for these cataclysmic events, his life's work might have been far different. From Zeppelin in Germany to Goodyear in Akron, Ohio, Arnstein participated in the design and development of more airships than any other engineer. He could have been a philosopher or mathematician, but a desire to be practical attracted Arnstein to civil engineering. This knowledge spared him from...

Customer Reviews

1 rating

The US Navy's Flying Aircraft Carriers of the 1930s.

Did you know that, during the 1920s, President Franklin D Roosevelt was Vice President of a Company planning to build or fly passenger airships such as the Hindenburg? The book describes the career of the German Zeppelin Engineer, Dr Arnstein, hired by Goodyear to design the US Navy Akron and Macon, 780 ft long flying aircraft carriers, each with 5 Curtis F9C2 fighters inside. The man when to 2 different German Universities simultaneously and got a degree from each in the time most of us get just one degree at one University. You can see the N2Y trainer used with the airships in the National Museum of Naval Aviation at NAS Pensacola, Florida, and the F9C2 at the Smithsonian. The Airships themselves are on the bottom of the ocean. Even today, our ocean-surface Aircraft Carriers operate at maybe 35 knots. The Flying Carriers of the early 1930s operated at 70 knots - twice the speed of delivery of planes where needed. Their plane operations were 100% successful - never a plane lost in mid-air launch or recovery. My father flew US Navy ASW Airships during WW2, and knew of the Akron and Macon - the Macon had been flying just 7 years before he was trained in 1942, and the huge WW2 Blimp hangars still standing, for example at Lakehurst, NJ and Sunnyvale/Mountain-View, CA, were built to handle planned WW2 rigids even bigger than the Macon. When I showed Dad a photo of the Macon's crew, he was astonished to see almost 100 men. Dad's small K-type airships, enthusiastically supported by president FDR, flew with a crew of 10. I wanted to learn more about these airships; the book does a good job. My father had strong opinions about the fate of these airships. The book goes into that in some detail. It looks like military airships may be back. After 45 years with no airships, the US Navy recently (2006) bought an airship and is flying it out of NAS Lakehurst, NJ, as a trainer.
Copyright © 2024 Thriftbooks.com Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information | Cookie Policy | Cookie Preferences | Accessibility Statement
ThriftBooks® and the ThriftBooks® logo are registered trademarks of Thrift Books Global, LLC
GoDaddy Verified and Secured