KEEPING ENGINES CLEAR OF THE INFLAMMABLE HYDROGEN
As hydrogen is a very inflammable gas, it is extremely dangerous to have an internal-combustion engine operating very near the gas-bags. In the super-Zeppelins the engines were placed in four cars suspended from the balloon. There was one of these cars forward, and one at the stern, while near the center were two cars side by side. In the rear car there were two engines, either of which could be used to drive the propeller. By means of large steering rudders and horizontal rudders, the machine could be forced to dive or rise or turn in either direction laterally. The pilot of the Zeppelin had an elaborate operating-compartment from which he could control the rudders, and he also had control of the valves in the ballonets so that by the touch of a button he could regulate the pressure of gas in any part of the dirigible. There were nineteen men in the crew of the Zeppelin—two in the operating-compartment, and two in each of the cars containing engines, except for the one at the stern in which there were three men. The other men were placed in what was known as the "cat walk" or passageway running inside the framework under the gas-bags. These men were given various tasks and were supposed to get as much sleep as they could, so as to be ready to replace the other men at need.
The engine cars at each side of the balloon were known as power eggs because of their general egg shape. At the center of the Zeppelin the bombs were stored, and there were electro-magnetic releasing-devices operated from the pilot's room by which the pilot could drop the bombs whenever he chose. The Zeppelin also carried machine-guns to fight off airplanes. Gasolene was stored in tanks which were placed in various parts of the machine, any one of which could feed one or all of the engines, and they were so arranged that they could be thrown overboard when the gasolene was used up, so as to lighten the load of the Zeppelin. Water ballast was used instead of sand, and alcohol was mixed with the water to keep it from freezing. The machine which came down in French territory and was captured before it could be destroyed by the pilot, found itself unable to rise because in the intense cold of the upper air the water ballast had frozen, and it could not be let out to lighten the load of the Zeppelin.
Photograph from Kadel & Herbert
The Curious Tail of a Kite Balloon
British Official Photograph from Kadel & Herbert
Observers in the Basket of an Observation-Balloon