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  • There is no one who will not look up at a blimp in the sky.

  • I don't think you could find a single person who wouldn't look up to see a blimp.

  • When was the last time you saw a blimp?

  • There's something about airships that are just sort of magical.

  • Like any kid who has gone to a grocery store and gotten a helium balloon realizes that this is like a magical quality.

  • So, an airship is this same thing on a ridiculous scale.

  • Blimps were once at the forefront of aviation innovation.

  • It looks like a scene from 1992.

  • Now airships are often used for advertising or aerial broadcasting or even for military purposes, but actually,

  • there could be a whole new future of transportation and shipping with airships at the center.

  • What we're building is a segment of the transport industry that doesn't exist, that has never existed.

  • It's probably been a while since you last saw an airship in the U.S.

  • So what's up with blimps?

  • An airship and a dirigible mean the same thing, there's steerable aircraft, usually filled with a gas like helium,

  • which makes them lighter-than-air.

  • It's a lot like flying a boat, really.

  • It gives you the sensation of boat on the water.

  • A lot of people think it's a balloon with engines on it.

  • And how hard could it be? But it's probably one of the most difficult things I've ever learned to fly.

  • There are different types of airships, those with a spine-likestructure, semi-rigid or rigid, and those without

  • nonrigid airships. So a blimp has its shape in the same way a balloon has its shape because the pressure of the gas

  • inside is expanding and creates that shape.

  • If a blimp were to deflate, it would lose its shape.

  • A rigid airship has a rigid framework.

  • In the early 1900s, airplanes were still flimsy and wooden and really couldn't carry much.

  • Then airplanes quickly innovated past airships.

  • There are also some big accidents like the Hindenburg.

  • There's a limit to what an airship can do.

  • And to be honest, Hindenburg probably reached that limit that that was the best thing airship could ever do.

  • The world had never seen an aircraft as large as the silver dirigible, the famous Hindenburg.

  • Now, it was already obsolete by the time it first flew.

  • In almost no time at all, the passengers looked down to see the east coast of America gliding by beneath them.

  • Hindenburg made 62 successful flights before it crashed in.

  • Hindenburg was a successful transatlantic airliner.

  • It's the greatest adventure you can have in modern days.

  • Through 1936.

  • I enjoyed the trip tremendously.

  • It was a real revelation.

  • Right? No airship really practically could ever fly faster, couldn't really fly farther, couldn't really carry more

  • people. She will carry 50 passengers, a crew of 40 and 30,000pounds of mail.

  • It was 804-feet-long, making it the largest aircraft ever built.

  • Everybody talks about the Hindenburg crash being the end of the airship.

  • All it did was speed up the end a little bit.

  • The Hindenburg's seven million cubic feet of hydrogen gas had ignited.

  • Airships would have been over anyway because they simply couldn't compete with heavier-than-aircraft.

  • Thus ended the age of the dirigible.

  • Now, there are only 39 registered airships in the United States and at least three of those are the iconic Goodyear

  • blimps flying now.

  • Goodyear has at least four others that are registered but are not being used.

  • And of the more than 425,000 commercial pilots in the United States as of 2019, just 124 of them

  • have a rating to fly an airship.

  • Then of those few, just 13 fly with Goodyear.

  • Goodyear was founded in 1898 during the American Industrial Revolution.

  • Well, the blimp and Goodyear are kind of synonymous.

  • Since 1925, we've had a public relations aircraft flying in some form or fashion.

  • I'll tow you and your team of surfboard riders behind the airship.

  • Gee, I'd love to try that. We were involved in the rubber and fabric business in the early 1900s.

  • That fabric was used to make the balloon part of the blimp.

  • By 1917, Goodyear was flying its blimps and making blimps for the U.S.

  • Navy. And many people are surprised that the United States had a fleet of rigid airships.

  • They were operated by our Navy and they were designed as flying aircraft carriers.

  • Under side of Navy Dirigible, Los Angeles, glider prepares for free flight.

  • These giant airships would fly through the air and they had small, heavier-than-air fighter and observation planes that

  • they carried in the same way that an aircraft carrier ship floats on the sea and launches and recoveries airplanes.

  • The U.S. Navy used airships to oversee American waters during World War Two.

  • We're seeing a great loss of surface ships on the ocean.

  • And when they started the program in the blimps were escorting the ships across the ocean.

  • So greatly improved our military program at the time with the technology that they had.

  • And Goodyear continued to build its own airships, post-World War Two, for basically PR and marketing reasons

  • like we still do today.

  • And we had basically the same model from about mid to late 1960s all the way through 2016.

  • So now the Goodyear blimps technically aren't blimps anymore.

  • As of 2014, Goodyear's airships are semi-rigid aircraft and made in partnership with Zeppelin.

  • Now, they're more maneuverable, have three engines and they're larger than the old models.

  • One of Goodyear's main airship functions now is aerial broadcasting.

  • We have partnerships with a handful of particular networks.

  • They're involved in different kinds of sports.

  • So golf, a little bit of NFL stuff, NBA, NASCAR obviously with Goodyear both on the track with our tires and in the

  • air with our blimps. So, when we're in that small town in Kentucky that we haven't been to in 20 years, the whole town

  • will come out in. The fences are just lined when we get there.

  • And that's part of the rarity, I guess.

  • The inconsistency that we have because there are so few of us, is really almost our, you know, one of our greatest

  • assets Blimps are still used for advertising, but there aremore cost-effective ways for companies to get their

  • message out. We're in online digital world now.

  • And if you want to get a message to people efficiently and effectively, does it make sense to hire a blimp to fly

  • around or does it make sense to just do online advertising?

  • It's expensive to fly a plane, in part because helium is so expensive.

  • In fact, CNBC did a whole other video about why.

  • Helium might be incredibly abundant in the universe, but it's rare on Earth.

  • You have to find it. You have to refine it, you can't create it.

  • And so it is expensive.

  • Another lifting gas, hydrogen, is more dangerous to use because it's more flammable.

  • But despite this, some companies are working on bringing airships into the future.

  • There are a number of airship projects around the world currently going on.

  • Lockheed has an airship project going on, right?

  • They actually flew a prototype in 2006.

  • There's a company in Great Britain called Hybrid Air Vehicles.

  • Prepared for liftoff.

  • The company hoping to sell airships made in Britain to the rest of the world.

  • That flew a small airship, Airlander 10, which was basically a airship that had been built for the American military.

  • They're currently working on developing a larger, more practical airship.

  • There's a company called Flying Whales.

  • Flying Whales is a French company that is developing the biggest airship in the world, the biggest aircraft in the

  • world. All related to their ability to deliver cargo and to deliver cargo to inaccessible places.

  • The goal is to develop a solution that will propose to load and unload up to 60 tons of cargo and transport this

  • cargo without any transport infrastructure, meaning that we will never need to land to load and unload.

  • Without needing to layout a new railroad or construct a new airport in these hard to reach areas, it makes the cost of

  • shipping a lot less.

  • But Flying Whales doesn't have an airship built just yet, and figuring out how to best balance the airship with the

  • cargo load remains tricky.

  • What happens when it drops that heavy thing or leaves it on the ground?

  • Delivers it right?

  • Is it going to shoot up? Boom, right.

  • It's always a matter of of equilibrium.

  • We use a lot of digital simulation to work on this.

  • The idea is that as the airship drops tons of cargo, it'll be picking up an equal amount of weight, whether that be in

  • water or construction material to offset the loss of the load.

  • And it'll take hundreds of millions of dollars to ultimately manufacture the airship.

  • Today we already have some big investors.

  • Like the government of Quebec and the Aviation Industry Corporation of China and more.

  • Flying whales plans to build its first factory at the end of 2021 to start building its airship.

  • Then it plans to fly in 2023.

  • After it undergoes rigorous testing and standards, flying Wale's plans to enter the commercial space in 2025.

  • It's something that will bridge the whole global economy and the global society to regions that are today may be a bit

  • remote and disconnected without impacting too much the environment.

  • It is quite iconic for the future of transport.

  • We all have to think of the impact we have on the environment.

  • That's, that's a fact.

There is no one who will not look up at a blimp in the sky.

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