
 Originally Posted by 
3toes
					 
				 
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Built 100 years ago, it dominates the skyline around here (along with its neighbour Cardington number two shed) and it is bristling with history. This is where they built the ill-fated airship, R101, back in the 1920s.
That behemoth was twice as long as the hybrid air vehicle, had a beautiful dining room and lounge on board, and was meant to herald the future of flight, right up until the moment it was devoured by fire after a crash in France in 1930.
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 It should be noted that the crash of the R101 had nothing to do with the fact that it used hydrogen.  It crashed in bad weather on a flight that was only carried out at all because of political pressure, flying on a certificate of airworthiness that was only issued because of political pressure, and ignoring weather forecasts because of political pressure. And it crashed because it had insufficient margin of lift to carry the load of water absorbed in the skin, which had deteriorated during the time that it was being lengthened from the original design because it could not fly. It was overweight, over budget and over deadline - but the flight (carrying a new Viceroy to India) was a political necessity for the government that built it. 
The R100 (also using hydrogen), built by Vickers at the same time, was completed on budget and on time, and completed a two way north Atlantic crossing without significant incident before the R101 flew.
As a result of the R101 disaster the British dropped airships altogether, and the R100 was scrapped.
John
				
			 
			
		 
			
				
			
			
				John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
			
			
		 
	
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