List of Parseval airships explained

The Parsevals were 22 airships built between 1909 and 1919 by the Luft-Fahrzeug-Gesellschaft (LFG) following the design of August von Parseval. In the 1920s and 1930s, three more airships were built following the Parseval-Naatz (PN) design.

As with the rival Zeppelins, the airships were, in both English and German, referred to by the name of the inventor. (In German, the nouns were masculine, that is, "der Parseval", "der Zeppelin".)

In contrast to the Zeppelins, the Parsevals were non-rigid or semi-rigid airships, with little or no stiffening structure inside the fabric envelope. The Zeppelins had a rigid internal framework made of duralumin. Both types relied on hydrogen gas to provide lift.

Experimental airship

The Versuchsluftschiff (meaning experimental airship) was Parseval's first model. It was rebuilt several times.

PL 1

PL 2 / P.I

PL 3 / P.II

PL 4 - M I

PL 5

PL 6

PL 7 Grif

PL 8 Ersatz P.II

PL 9

PL 10 Sportsluftschiff

PL 11 - P.III

PL 12 Charlotte

PL 13 Yuhi

January 22 is the memorial day of "skyship" in Japan.

PL 14 Burewestnik

PL 15 - M 3

PL 16 - P.IV

PL 17

PL 18 - No.4

PL 19

PL 20 - PL 24

PL 20-24 were not built.

PL 25

See: Parseval PL25PL 25 was a military airship made in 1914/1915. It was the last single-gondola Parseval airship. It made its first flight on 1915-02-25, entered Navy service until 1916, after 95 flights.

PL 26

PL 26 was a semirigid airship whose maiden flight was on 1915-10-26, but it had an accident upon landing and was destroyed in a fire, with no casualties.

PL 27

PL27's maiden flight was on 1917-03-08. The major difference from its predecessor PL 26 was the specification of the gondola. Because it no longer met increased military requirements, it was not put to military service but instead converted to a passenger airship in 1919. The Treaty of Versailles resulted in its dismantlement in 1920.

Parseval-Naatz PN 28

Parseval-Naatz PN 29 Sidenhuset

On 1930-05-21 PN 29 acquired the Swedish call-sign "SE-ACG Sidenhuset", after the then well-known ladies boutique from Stockholm. The word "Sidenhuset" was displayed in large letters on its hull.[5] The owner was "AB Luftskeppsreklam i Stockholm" (Airship Advertising Co).

Sidenhuset's task was to make advertising flights over the 1930 Stockholm Exhibition (Stockholmsutställningen). The airship was damaged by wind due to its being parked outside. The manufacturer arrived and it was decided to fly the ship back to Germany for repairs. During the fight it crashed into the Baltic Sea, south of the island of Öland, on 1930-06-04. The airship sank, but with no casualties.[5]

Parseval - Naatz PN 30 Odol

PN 30 flew under the callsign Odol as an advertising and research airship.

See also

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://dolgoprud.org/album/06_00e.htm Dirigibles of Imperial Russia (up to 1917 year)
  2. Brochure of the Luftfahrzeug-GmbH, page 12, circa 1910
  3. Brochure of the Luftfahrzeug-GmbH, page 14
  4. Web site: Story of Turkish Aviation . Atlı . Altay . 2008 . Parseval PL-9 was sent aloft in Yeşilköy on 23 July 1913. A crew of German and Turkish officers and engineers manned the balloon, which managed to reach an altitude of 300 meters. . 19 August 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120512225046/http://www.turkeyswar.com/aviation/aviation.htm . 12 May 2012 .
  5. Seve Ungermark, Airships: Misconceptions and Myths First Part of Three, 2005-02-09. Retrieved 2008-06-11.