Aereon Dynairship

Aereon Dynairship
Role Concept lifting body hybrid aircraft
National origin United States of America
Designer William Miller, working on behalf of the Aereon Corporation
Status Conceptual only
Number built None


The Aereon Dynairship is a conceptual large hybrid airship developed by the Aereon Corporation for civilian and military cargo transport.

It is one of Aereon's lifting body airship concepts, where a craft without a conventional "wing" generates lift by itself. It would have also have been filled with rising gas such as hydrogen, making it a truly hybrid craft. This kind of configuration was researched by Aereon during the 1980s. However, a patent was filed in 1969.[1]

Design and development

The Dynairship was to be a very large ship, the conceptual designs showing it to form a large triangle, with small finlets at the back of either end.[1]

The proof-of-concept aircraft for the Dynairship was the Aereon 26. Following the apparent success of this project, Aereon's board voted unanimously to proceed with the Dynairship for civilian and commercial purposes.

Three proposed versions of the Dynairship were put forward:[2]

Original propulsion was stated in the patent to be four externally mounted propellers on the top of the body, with engine nacelles. In the 1991 patent, a glass cockpit can be seen at the front.[3] However, the Aereon corporation state that the design can be either manned or un-manned.[1]

A lack of funding ended the project. According to Aereon, the Department of Defense told Miller in 2003, "You were 30 years ahead of your time"![4]

Navy and Air Force research

When it turned out that building the Dynairship under Aereon at that time was financially impossible, Miller went on to design very similar craft for research in the military field. The job of building a prototype craft was given to Lockheed's L-TAV division, and the resulting craft was named the STOL-340.

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 Aereon Corporation (February 2004). "Ultra-Large Airlifter". Retrieved 24 April 2011.
  2. Miller, pp. 455–6.
  3. Google patents - Patent 5,034,751
  4. Aereon Corporation (February 2004). "Aereon 26". Archived from the original on 17 April 2011. Retrieved 24 April 2011.

References

  • Miller, William McElwee Jr. (January 1975). "The Dynairship" (PDF). In Joseph F. Vittek Jr. ed. Proceedings of the Interagency Workshop on Lighter than Air Vehicles. Cambridge: MIT Flight Transportation Laboratory. pp. 441–455. Retrieved 2010-12-30. 
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