Los Angeles Times

HIGH- CONCEPT CARGO HAULER

Lockheed Martin joins race to make long- haul airships to deliver heavy freight and personnel to remote locations

- By Samantha Masunaga

The secretive Skunk Works in Palmdale has over the years spawned such sleek aircraft as the SR- 71 Blackbird spy plane and the F- 117 Nighthawk stealth fighter.

Today, one of the facility’s hangars houses a 120- footlong, 21- foot- tall dirigible that resembles a cloud with three puffs — the prototype of a much larger hybrid airship that Lockheed Martin Corp. has touted as a way to deliver heavy cargo and personnel to remote locations.

When fully built, the LMH- 1 will be a 21 metric ton, 300- footlong and 78- foot- tall airship that is intended to carry truck-size loads to areas that are inaccessib­le to more traditiona­l modes of transporta­tion.

But that grand vision has yet to materializ­e, and airships are a long way from disrupting long- haul transporta­tion.

Lockheed Martin officials couldn’t confirm whether they had any orders yet but said there were more than a dozen

interested buyers.

The LMH- 1 could potentiall­y be used in the oil and gas or mining industries, as well as for humanitari­an relief, said Grant Cool, chief operating officer of Atlantabas­ed Hybrid Enterprise­s LLC, the hybrid airship’s exclusive reseller.

“We are targeting a market that is not really competing with anything else out there,” Cool said. “We are looking for opportunit­ies that don’t really exist right now.”

The full- sized LMH- 1 could have its f irst f light by late 2017, and it is expected to be in commercial service by the end of 2018. A single airship will cost $ 40 million.

Lockheed Martin has said the airship will be able to carry up to 47,000 pounds, 19 passengers and burn less fuel than convention­al aircraft.

The airship will have four fairly small engines and gets about 80% of its lift from helium. An air- cushion landing system, which resembles three round kiddie pools, allows the airship to land on wild terrain such as open water, sand, snow or ice. The air- cushion landing system also allows the dirigible to stick to the ground like a suction cup so that it doesn’t move with the wind, said Bob Boyd, program manager for the Lockheed Martin hybrid airships.

In a mock- up of the LMH- 1’ s 150- foot gondola, which includes the cockpit and cargo bay, 19 passengers sit in rows of two or three immediatel­y behind two pilot chairs. Lockheed Martin off icials said they also plan to have Wi- Fi onboard.

Despite the passenger comforts, Craig Johnston, business director for Lockheed Martin’s Skunk Works facility, emphasized the airship’s focus on cargo. A square- shaped cargo bay in the back of the cockpit was specifical­ly designed with loading in mind.

“This is designed from the ground up to be a cargo vehicle,” he said.

And it won’t be the only one. Boyd said there are plans to make a mediumsize 90- ton hybrid airship in two to three years that could compete with trucking and rail vehicles in remote areas, and eventually an 800- footlong airship weighing 500 tons. He said the market “is interested” in the smaller 21metric- ton airship, but interest increases as the dirigible gets larger and costs get cheaper.

The hybrid airship program is expected to employ about 150 workers in Palmdale, though Johnston said the positions might not necessaril­y be new jobs.

The airship is the result of more than 20 years’ worth of research. In 2006, the company f lew the P- 791, the onethird size prototype currently in the Skunk Works hangar, over its facilities in Palmdale and completed all of its in- f light test objectives.

The biggest challenge for Lockheed Martin and Hybrid Enterprise­s is changing customers’ ideas about transporta­tion, Boyd said.

“It’s just the acceptance of a new way of doing things,” he said. “It’s more from a business perspectiv­e than a technology perspectiv­e. We think it will be a rapidly accepted market.”

The hybrid airship is just the latest entry in the airship market.

In 2014, Montebello-based Worldwide Aeros Corp. christened the Aeros 40D Sky Dragon, a white helium- f illed airship that resembled a smaller version of the Goodyear blimp. The airship was sold to Grupo Toyan, a Mexican company that intended to use it to monitor oil pipelines.

A similar airship was sold to the government of Thailand, which has used it for surveillan­ce.

U. K.- based Hybrid Air Vehicles has also developed a 300- foot- long dirigible. The Airlander 10 is intended to carry cargo and can be used for surveillan­ce missions and holds the distinctio­n of the world’s largest aircraft.

But analysts said the market for such airships is uncertain.

Air cargo numbers have been low for years, and there is a lot of capacity in the air freight business, said Richard Aboulafia, aviation analyst at the Teal Group, an aerospace and defense research firm.

A commercial­ly success- ful airship will likely have to depend on transporti­ng exotic cargo to exotic locations, he said.

“In theory, it sounds like a great idea,” Aboulafia said. “It’s when you get to the details that things get problemati­c. There could be something, some kind of niche — it’s just proved elusive so far.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Al Seib
Los Angeles Times ?? THE LMH- 1 airship is intended to carry truck- size loads to areas that are inaccessib­le to more traditiona­l modes of transporta­tion. Above, a prototype of the airship at a Skunk Works hangar in Palmdale.
Photograph­s by Al Seib Los Angeles Times THE LMH- 1 airship is intended to carry truck- size loads to areas that are inaccessib­le to more traditiona­l modes of transporta­tion. Above, a prototype of the airship at a Skunk Works hangar in Palmdale.
 ??  ?? LOCKHEED MARTIN has said the airship will be able to carry up to 47,000 pounds, 19 passengers and burn less fuel than convention­al aircraft.
LOCKHEED MARTIN has said the airship will be able to carry up to 47,000 pounds, 19 passengers and burn less fuel than convention­al aircraft.
 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? THE FULL- SIZE LMH- 1 is expected to be in commercial service by the end of 2018. A single airship is expected to cost $ 40 million. Above, a prototype of the airship on display at a Skunk Works hangar in Palmdale.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times THE FULL- SIZE LMH- 1 is expected to be in commercial service by the end of 2018. A single airship is expected to cost $ 40 million. Above, a prototype of the airship on display at a Skunk Works hangar in Palmdale.

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