USS Los Angeles (ZR-3): Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|United States naval airship}} |
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{{other ships|USS Los Angeles}} |
{{other ships|USS Los Angeles}} |
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{{DISPLAYTITLE:USS ''Los Angeles'' (ZR-3)}} |
{{DISPLAYTITLE:USS ''Los Angeles'' (ZR-3)}} |
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{{Infobox aircraft |
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|name = USS ''Los Angeles'' (ZR-3) |
|name = USS ''Los Angeles'' (ZR-3) |
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|image = File:ZR3 USS Los Angeles an Kriegsschiff.jpg |
|image = File:ZR3 USS Los Angeles an Kriegsschiff.jpg |
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|caption = ''Los Angeles'' |
|caption = ''Los Angeles'' at the [[mooring mast]] on the tender {{USS|Patoka|AO-9|6}} |
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|alt = USS Los Angeles (ZR-3) |
|alt = USS Los Angeles (ZR-3) |
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}}{{Infobox aircraft career |
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|type = |
|type = |
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|manufacturer = [[Luftschiffbau Zeppelin]], [[Friedrichshafen]] |
|manufacturer = [[Luftschiffbau Zeppelin]], [[Friedrichshafen]] |
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|construction_number = LZ-126 |
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|construction_date = July 1922 (Commenced)<br>August 1924 (Launched) |
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|civil_registration = <!-- any civil registrations carried by this aircraft --> |
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|military_serial = ZR-3 |
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|radio_code = <!-- military radio codes where this is a commonly-used way of identifying this aircraft (eg. US, British, and German military aircraft of WWII --> |
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|first_flight = |
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|last_flight = |
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|owners = <!-- owners or operators, whether private individuals, companies, or military services --> |
|owners = <!-- owners or operators, whether private individuals, companies, or military services --> |
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|in_service = 25 November 1924 (Commissioned)<br>30 June 1932 (Decommissioned)<br>24 October 1939 (Struck from Naval Register) |
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|flights = <!-- number of flights made by this aircraft, usually only relevant for an aircraft no longer flying --> |
|flights = <!-- number of flights made by this aircraft, usually only relevant for an aircraft no longer flying --> |
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|total_hours = <!-- total number of hours flown by this aircraft, usually only relevant for an aircraft no longer flying --> |
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|total_distance = <!-- total distance flown by this aircraft, usually only relevant for an aircraft no longer flying --> |
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|aircraft_carried = <!-- type of aircraft carried, usually only for mothership aircraft --> |
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|fate = Broken up for scrap in 1939 |
|fate = Broken up for scrap in 1939 |
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|preservation = <!-- where this aircraft is currently preserved (if it is) --> |
|preservation = <!-- where this aircraft is currently preserved (if it is) --> |
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}}{{Infobox ship characteristics |
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|Hide header= |
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|Header caption=(as built) |
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|Ship class=''Los Angeles'' class rigid airship |
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|Ship displacement={{convert|2,764,460|cufoot|m3|1|abbr=on}} |
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|Ship length={{convert|658|ft|4|in|m|1|abbr=on}} |
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|Ship beam={{convert|90|ft|8|in|m|1|abbr=on}} (hull diameter) |
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|Ship draft={{convert|104|ft|5|in|m|1|abbr=on}} (height) |
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|Ship power=400hp per engine |
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|Ship propulsion=*Five [[Maybach VL I]] 12-cyl water-cooled V-12 engines |
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*Two-bladed fixed-pitch, rotable wooden propellers |
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|Ship speed=*{{convert|48|kn|lk=in}} (cruising) |
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*{{convert|65|kn|lk=in}} (maximum) |
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|Ship range={{convert|5770|nmi|lk=in|abbr=on}} at {{convert|10|kn}} |
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|Ship complement=40 |
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|Ship armament= |
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|Ship armor= |
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|Ship aircraft= |
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|Ship aircraft facilities= |
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|Ship notes= |
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'''USS ''Los Angeles''''' was a rigid [[airship]], designated '''ZR-3''', which was built in 1923–1924 by the [[Zeppelin |
'''USS ''Los Angeles''''' was a rigid [[airship]], designated '''ZR-3''', which was built in 1923–1924 by the [[Luftschiffbau Zeppelin|Zeppelin company]] in [[Friedrichshafen]], Germany, as [[war reparations]]. She was delivered to the [[United States Navy]] in October 1924 and after being used mainly for experimental work, particularly in the development of the American [[parasite fighter]] program, was decommissioned in 1932. |
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==Design== |
==Design== |
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The second of [[USS Los Angeles|four vessels]] to carry the name '''USS ''Los Angeles''''', the airship was built for the [[United States Navy]] as a replacement for the [[Zeppelin]]s that had been assigned to the United States as war reparations following [[World War I]], and had been sabotaged by their crews in 1919.<ref name=NHH>{{cite web |website=Naval History and Heritage Command|url=http://www.history.navy.mil/download/lta-05.pdf |
The second of [[USS Los Angeles|four vessels]] to carry the name '''USS ''Los Angeles''''', the airship was built for the [[United States Navy]] as a replacement for the [[Zeppelin]]s that had been assigned to the United States as war reparations following [[World War I]], and had been sabotaged by their crews in 1919.<ref name=NHH>{{cite web |website=Naval History and Heritage Command|url=http://www.history.navy.mil/download/lta-05.pdf|url-status=dead|title=Kite Balloons to Airships...the Navy's Lighter-than-Air Experience|access-date=2014-02-25|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140410224455/http://www.history.navy.mil/download/lta-05.pdf|archive-date=2014-04-10}}</ref> |
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Under the terms of the [[Treaty of Versailles]] Luftschiffbau Zeppelin were not permitted to build military airships. In consequence ''Los Angeles'', which had the Zeppelin works number '''LZ 126''', was built as a passenger airship, although the treaty limitation on the permissible volume was waived, it being agreed that a craft of a size equal to the largest Zeppelin constructed during World War I was permissible.<ref name=F_60>{{cite journal|journal=[[Flight International]]|url= |
Under the terms of the [[Treaty of Versailles]] Luftschiffbau Zeppelin were not permitted to build military airships. In consequence ''Los Angeles'', which had the Zeppelin works number '''LZ 126''', was built as a passenger airship, although the treaty limitation on the permissible volume was waived, it being agreed that a craft of a size equal to the largest Zeppelin constructed during World War I was permissible.<ref name=F_60>{{cite journal|journal=[[Flight International]]|url=https://archive.org/details/Flight_International_Magazine_1924-01-31-pdf|title=America's Second Rigid Airship—"ZR 3" |date=31 January 1924 |page=60 }}</ref> |
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The airship's hull had 24-sided transverse ring frames for most of its length, changing to an [[octagon]]al section at the tail surfaces, and the hull had an internal keel which provided an internal walkway and also contained the accommodation for the crew when off duty. For most of the ship's length the main frames were {{convert|32|ft|10|in|m}} apart, with two secondary frames in each bay. Following the precedent set by [[Zeppelin LZ 120 Bodensee|LZ 120 ''Bodensee'']], crew and passenger accommodation was in a compartment near the front of the airship that was integrated into the hull structure. Each of the five [[Maybach VL I]] V12 engines occupied a separate engine car, arranged as four wing cars with the fifth aft on the centerline of the ship. All drove two-bladed [[pusher configuration|pusher]] propellers and were capable of running in reverse. Auxiliary power was provided by wind-driven dynamos.<ref name=F_60/> |
The airship's hull had 24-sided transverse ring frames for most of its length, changing to an [[octagon]]al section at the tail surfaces, and the hull had an internal keel which provided an internal walkway and also contained the accommodation for the crew when off duty. For most of the ship's length the main frames were {{convert|32|ft|10|in|m}} apart, with two secondary frames in each bay. Following the precedent set by [[Zeppelin LZ 120 Bodensee|LZ 120 ''Bodensee'']], crew and passenger accommodation was in a compartment near the front of the airship that was integrated into the hull structure. Each of the five [[Maybach VL I]] V12 engines occupied a separate engine car, arranged as four wing cars with the fifth aft on the centerline of the ship. All drove two-bladed [[pusher configuration|pusher]] propellers and were capable of running in reverse. Auxiliary power was provided by wind-driven dynamos.<ref name=F_60/> |
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==Operational history== |
==Operational history== |
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[[File:ZR-3 USS Lss Angeles Delivery Flight Cover 1924.jpg|thumb|left|Cover carried on the delivery flight from Germany to Lakehurst, New Jersey, 12–15 October 1924]] |
[[File:ZR-3 USS Lss Angeles Delivery Flight Cover 1924.jpg|thumb|left|Cover carried on the delivery flight from Germany to Lakehurst, New Jersey, 12–15 October 1924]] |
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[[File:LZ126 arriving at Lakehurst, NJ.jpg|thumb|left| |
[[File:LZ126 arriving at Lakehurst, NJ.jpg|thumb|left|Zeppelin LZ-126 arriving at Lakehurst, 15 October 1924]] |
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[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 102-00828, Lakehurst, Luftschiffe ZR-3 und ZR-1.jpg|''Los Angeles'' (right) and ''Shenandoah'' moored in Hangar No. 1 in 1924|thumb|left]] |
[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 102-00828, Lakehurst, Luftschiffe ZR-3 und ZR-1.jpg|''Los Angeles'' (right) and ''Shenandoah'' moored in Hangar No. 1 in 1924|thumb|left]] |
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''Los Angeles'' was first flown on 27 August 1924 |
''Los Angeles'' was first flown on 27 August 1924. After completing flight trials, she began the transatlantic delivery flight to the U.S. on 12 October 1924 under the command of [[Hugo Eckener]], arriving at the U.S. Naval Air Station at [[Lakehurst, New Jersey]], after an 81-hour flight of {{convert|4229|nmi|lk=in}}.<ref name=NHH/><ref name="Alt pp. 33–42">Althoff 2004, pp. 33–42.</ref> The airship was commissioned into the [[U.S. Navy]] on 25 November 1924 at [[Naval Support Facility Anacostia]] at [[Washington, D.C.]] with Lieutenant Commander Maurice R. Pierce in command. On her arrival in the United States, her lifting gas was changed from [[hydrogen]] to [[helium]], which reduced payload but improved safety. At the same time the airship was fitted with [[buoyancy compensator (aviation)|equipment to recover water from the exhaust gases]] for use as ballast to compensate for the loss of weight as fuel was consumed, so avoiding the necessity to vent scarce helium to maintain neutral buoyancy.<ref name=NHH/> |
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The airship went on to log a total of 4,398 hours of flight, covering a distance of {{convert|172,400|nmi}}. Long-distance flights included return flights to [[Panama]], [[Costa Rica]] and [[Bermuda]].<ref name=NHH/><ref>{{cite |
The airship went on to log a total of 4,398 hours of flight, covering a distance of {{convert|172,400|nmi}}. Long-distance flights included return flights to [[Panama]], [[Costa Rica]] and [[Bermuda]].<ref name=NHH/><ref>{{cite journal|journal=Liberty Magazine|title=Liners of The Air|first=William A. |last=Moffett |date=1 December 1928|page=21}}</ref> She served as an observatory and experimental platform, as well as a training ship for other airships. |
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On 24 January 1925, U.S. Naval Observatory and U.S. Bureau of Standards gathered a group of astronomers to observe a [[Solar eclipse of January 24, 1925|total solar eclipse]] from the airship over the New York City, with Captain [[Edwin Taylor Pollock]] as a head of the group.<ref>{{cite web |last1=LaFollette |first1=Marcel Chotkowski |title=Science Service, Up Close: Up in the Air for a Solar Eclipse |url=https://siarchives.si.edu/blog/science-service-close-air-solar-eclipse |website=Smithsonian Institution Archives |access-date=9 January 2024 |date=24 January 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Maloney |first1=Wendi A. |title=Looking to the Sky: Solar Eclipse 2017 {{!}} Timeless |url=https://blogs.loc.gov/loc/2017/08/looking-to-the-sky-solar-eclipse-2017/ |website=The Library of Congress |access-date=9 January 2024 |date=21 August 2017}}</ref> They used "two pairs of telescopic cameras", to capture inner and outer portions of Sun's corona, and a spectrograph. The expedition achieved good publicity, but it was not very successful in its observations - the dirigible was not very stable and the photos were blurred.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Aceto |first1=Guy |title=To Catch a Shadow: The Great 1925 Solar Eclipse Aerial Expedition |url=https://www.historynet.com/to-catch-a-shadow-the-great-1925-solar-eclipse-aerial-expedition/ |website=HistoryNet |access-date=9 January 2024 |date=26 January 2022}}</ref> |
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On 25 August 1927, while ''Los Angeles'' was tethered at the Lakehurst [[mooring mast|high mast]], a gust of wind caught her tail and lifted it into colder, denser air that was just above the airship. This caused the tail to lift higher. The crew on board tried to compensate by climbing up the [[keel]] toward the rising tail, but could not stop the ship from reaching an angle of 85 degrees, before it descended. The ship suffered only slight damage and was able to fly the next day. |
On 25 August 1927, while ''Los Angeles'' was tethered at the Lakehurst [[mooring mast|high mast]], a gust of wind caught her tail and lifted it into colder, denser air that was just above the airship. This caused the tail to lift higher. The crew on board tried to compensate by climbing up the [[keel]] toward the rising tail, but could not stop the ship from reaching an angle of 85 degrees, before it descended. The ship suffered only slight damage and was able to fly the next day. |
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In 1929, ''Los Angeles'' was used to test the [[Parasite aircraft|trapeze system]] developed by the |
In 1929, ''Los Angeles'' was used to test the [[Parasite aircraft|trapeze system]] developed by the U.S. Navy to launch and recover fixed wing aircraft from rigid airships. The tests were a success and the later purpose-built {{sclass|Akron|airship|2}}s were fitted with this system.<ref name=NHH/> The temporary system was removed from ''Los Angeles'', which never carried any aircraft on operational flights.<ref>{{cite magazine |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UigDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA51 |title=Big Changes Give Giants Of The Air Far Wider Range |magazine=Popular Science Monthly |publisher=Popular Science Publishing Company |location=New York |volume=117 |number=3 |date=September 1930 |page=51}}</ref> On 31 January 1930, ''Los Angeles'' also tested the launching of a glider over Lakehurst, New Jersey.<ref>{{cite news |agency=Associated Press |title=Glider Lands From Airship |work=The San Bernardino Daily Sun |location=San Bernardino, California |date=1 February 1930 |volume=65 |page=1}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TuQDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA528 |title=Dirigible Launches Glider |magazine=Popular Mechanics |date=April 1930 |publisher=Popular Mechanics Company |location=Chicago, Illinois |volume=53 |number=4 |page=80}}</ref> |
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On 25 May 1932, ''Los Angeles'' participated in a demonstration of [[photophone]] technology. Floating over the [[General Electric]] plant in [[Schenectady, New York]], the crew of the ship engaged in an on-air conversation with a [[WGY (AM)|WGY]] radio announcer using a beam of light.<ref>Hart 1992, pp. 42–43.</ref> |
On 25 May 1932, ''Los Angeles'' participated in a demonstration of [[photophone]] technology. Floating over the [[General Electric]] plant in [[Schenectady, New York]], the crew of the ship engaged in an on-air conversation with a [[WGY (AM)|WGY]] radio announcer using a beam of light.<ref>Hart 1992, pp. 42–43.</ref> |
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As the terms under which the Allies permitted the United States to have ''Los Angeles'' restricted |
As the terms under which the Allies permitted the United States to have ''Los Angeles'' restricted her use to commercial and experimental purposes only, when the U.S. Navy wanted to use the airship in a [[fleet problem]] in 1931 permission had to be obtained from the Allied Control Commission.<ref>{{cite news |title=Allies Permit the Navy to Use The Los Angeles in War Game. |newspaper=The New York Times |date=8 January 1931}}</ref> ''Los Angeles'' took part in Fleet Problems XII (1931) and XIII (1932), although as was the case with all U.S. Navy rigid airships, demonstrated no particular benefit to the fleet.<ref>Behrends, Werner ''The Great Airships of Count Zeppelin'' (2015) Raleigh, NC: Lulu.com, p. 102</ref> |
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''Los Angeles'' was decommissioned in 1932 as an economy measure, but was recommissioned after the crash of {{USS|Akron}} in April 1933. She flew for a few more years and then retired to her Lakehurst hangar where she remained until 1939, when the airship was struck off the Navy list and was dismantled in her hangar. ''Los Angeles'' was the Navy's longest |
''Los Angeles'' was decommissioned in 1932 as an economy measure, but was recommissioned after the crash of {{USS|Akron}} in April 1933. She flew for a few more years and then retired to her Lakehurst hangar where she remained until 1939, when the airship was struck off the Navy list and was dismantled in her hangar. ''Los Angeles'' was the Navy's longest-serving rigid airship. Unlike {{USS|Shenandoah|ZR-1|2}}, [[R38]], ''[[USS Akron|Akron]]'', and {{USS|Macon|ZRS-5|2}}, the German-built ''Los Angeles'' was the only Navy rigid airship which did not meet a disastrous end. |
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[[File:USS Los Angeles (ZR-3) 6a32983u original.jpg|frameless|1100x1100px]] |
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==Gallery== |
==Gallery== |
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<gallery widths=" |
<gallery widths="200" heights="200"> |
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File:Berlin 1924 - ZR III (1).jpg| |
File:Berlin 1924 - ZR III (1).jpg| LZ 126 over Berlin, 1924 |
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File:LosAngeles Panama 1929 1.jpg|USS ''Los Angeles'' in Panama, 1929 |
File:LosAngeles Panama 1929 1.jpg|USS ''Los Angeles'' in Panama, 1929 |
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File:Interior passengers cabin of the airship Los Angeles.jpg|Passenger cabin of the airship, 1924 |
File:Interior passengers cabin of the airship Los Angeles.jpg|Passenger cabin of the airship, 1924 |
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File:Zr3nearvertical.jpg|USS ''Los Angeles'' lofted nearly vertical |
File:Zr3nearvertical.jpg|USS ''Los Angeles'' lofted nearly vertical during the weather-related docking-mast mishap in August, 1927. |
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File:Prüfling glider attached to USS Los Angeles.jpg|An [[RRG Prüfling]] glider attached to USS ''Los Angeles'' for carriage and drop tests. |
File:Prüfling glider attached to USS Los Angeles.jpg|An [[RRG Prüfling]] glider attached to USS ''Los Angeles'' for carriage and drop tests. |
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File:ZR-3 on USS Saratoga.jpg|USS ''Los Angeles'' anchored to USS |
File:ZR-3 on USS Saratoga.jpg|USS ''Los Angeles'' anchored to {{USS|Saratoga|CV-3}}. |
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File:Uss los angeles airship over Manhattan.jpg|USS ''Los Angeles'' over Manhattan, New York, 1930 |
File:Uss los angeles airship over Manhattan.jpg|USS ''Los Angeles'' over Manhattan, New York, 1930 |
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File:LosAngeles Panama 1929 2.jpg|USS ''Los Angeles'' in Panama 1929 |
File:LosAngeles Panama 1929 2.jpg|USS ''Los Angeles'' in Panama 1929 |
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File:USS Los Angeles ZR-3 (15323626075) (cropped).jpg|USS ''Los Angeles'' in flight |
File:USS Los Angeles ZR-3 (15323626075) (cropped).jpg|USS ''Los Angeles'' in flight |
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File:USS Los Angeles (ZR-3), USS Patoka (AO-9) and USS Lexington (CV-2) off Panama in 1931.jpg|USS ''Los Angeles'' |
File:USS Los Angeles (ZR-3), USS Patoka (AO-9) and USS Lexington (CV-2) off Panama in 1931.jpg|USS ''Los Angeles'', {{USS|Patoka|AO-9|6}} and {{USS|Lexington|CV-2|6}} off Panama City, Panama, about 1931 |
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File:US Capitol on 25 November 1924 with the USS Los Angeles ZR-3 26474u (cropped).tiff|USS ''Los Angeles'' flies |
File:US Capitol on 25 November 1924 with the USS Los Angeles ZR-3 26474u (cropped).tiff|USS ''Los Angeles'' flies past the [[U.S. Capitol]] |
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File:USS Los Angeles (ZR-3) 6a32983u original.jpg|USS ''Los Angeles'' enters storage hangar for the first time at Naval Air Station, Lakehurst, New Jersey, in 1924 |
File:USS Los Angeles (ZR-3) 6a32983u original.jpg|USS ''Los Angeles'' enters storage hangar for the first time at Naval Air Station, Lakehurst, New Jersey, in 1924 |
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File:Z.R. 3 in Amerika - Sonderblatt - Sondermeldung zum Rundfunkempfang - Dresdner Anzeiger - 15. Oktober 1924 - 10 Uhr 30 vormittags - Bild 001.jpg|Z.R. 3 in America - Special sheet of the Dresdner Anzeiger |
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</gallery> |
</gallery> |
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==Notes== |
==Notes== |
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{{ |
{{Reflist}} |
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==Bibliography== |
==Bibliography== |
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{{Refbegin}} |
{{Refbegin}} |
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* Althoff, William F. ''Sky Ships''. New York: Orion Books, 1990. {{ISBN|0-517-56904-3}}. |
* Althoff, William F. ''Sky Ships''. New York: Orion Books, 1990. {{ISBN|0-517-56904-3}}. |
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* Althoff, William F. [https://books.google. |
* Althoff, William F. [https://books.google.com/books?id=Tsur8_aYdlwC&pg=PA34 ''USS Los Angeles: The Navy's Venerable Airship and Aviation Technology.''] Dulles, Virginia: Brassey's, 2004. {{ISBN|1-57488-620-7}}. |
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* Hart, Larry. ''Pictures From the Past: A Schenectady Album.'' Schenectady, New York: Old Dorp Books, 1992. {{ISBN|978-0-932035-13-4}}. |
* Hart, Larry. ''Pictures From the Past: A Schenectady Album.'' Schenectady, New York: Old Dorp Books, 1992. {{ISBN|978-0-932035-13-4}}. |
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* [[John Provan|Provan, John]]. ''LZ-127 "Graf Zeppelin": The story of an Airship, vol. 1 & vol. 2'' (Amazon Kindle ebook). Pueblo, Colorado: Luftschiff Zeppelin Collection, 2011. |
* [[John Provan|Provan, John]]. ''LZ-127 "Graf Zeppelin": The story of an Airship, vol. 1 & vol. 2'' (Amazon Kindle ebook). Pueblo, Colorado: Luftschiff Zeppelin Collection, 2011. |
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* [http://www.ezep.de/index.html eZEP.de] – a dedicated web portal for Zeppelin mail and airship memorabilia |
* [http://www.ezep.de/index.html eZEP.de] – a dedicated web portal for Zeppelin mail and airship memorabilia |
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* [http://www.ezep.de/zsg/zsg.html Zeppelin Study Group] – a research group for airship memorabilia and Zeppelin mail |
* [http://www.ezep.de/zsg/zsg.html Zeppelin Study Group] – a research group for airship memorabilia and Zeppelin mail |
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* [ |
* [https://www.nlhs.com/uss-los-angeles-zr-3/ USS ''Los Angeles'' (ZR-3)] – page at Navy Lakehurst Historical Society |
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/20051228084056/http://www.nlhs.com/images/la-album/la18.jpg Picture of the 25 August 1927 nose stand] |
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20051228084056/http://www.nlhs.com/images/la-album/la18.jpg Picture of the 25 August 1927 nose stand] |
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* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/l8/los_angeles-i.htm DANFS article on ''Los Angeles'' (ZR-3)] |
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/l8/los_angeles-i.htm DANFS article on ''Los Angeles'' (ZR-3)] |
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* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZFc3oZ6Rh7w 1925 eclipse footage shot from ship] |
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZFc3oZ6Rh7w 1925 eclipse footage shot from ship] |
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* [https://books.google.com/books?id=zigDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA71 "Queen of Dirigibles Ready for U.S."] May 1924, ''Popular Science Monthly''{{snd}} excellent drawing showing size comparison between earlier dirigibles and battleships |
* [https://books.google.com/books?id=zigDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA71 "Queen of Dirigibles Ready for U.S."] May 1924, ''Popular Science Monthly''{{snd}} excellent drawing showing size comparison between earlier dirigibles and battleships |
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* [https://books.google.com/books?id=HCoDAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA40 "Flying with an Airship Captain"] Mar 1930, ''Popular Science Monthly''{{snd}} Article detailing the operation of Los Angeles |
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{{Los Angeles class airship}} |
{{Los Angeles class airship}} |
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{{USN rigid airships}} |
{{USN rigid airships}} |
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{{LZ Navbox}} |
{{LZ Navbox}} |
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{{Authority control}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Uss Los Angeles (Zr-3)}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:Uss Los Angeles (Zr-3)}} |
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[[Category:Rigid airships of the United States Navy|Los Angeles (ZR-3)]] |
[[Category:Rigid airships of the United States Navy|Los Angeles (ZR-3)]] |
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[[Category:1920s United States military trainer aircraft]] |
[[Category:1920s United States military trainer aircraft]] |
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[[Category:United States Navy California-related ships|Los Angeles (ZR-3)]] |
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[[Category:Zeppelins]] |
[[Category:Zeppelins]] |
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[[Category:Aircraft first flown in 1924]] |
Latest revision as of 01:51, 20 October 2024
USS Los Angeles (ZR-3) | |
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General information | |
Manufacturer | Luftschiffbau Zeppelin, Friedrichshafen |
Construction number | LZ-126 |
Serial | ZR-3 |
History | |
Manufactured | July 1922 (Commenced) August 1924 (Launched) |
In service | 25 November 1924 (Commissioned) 30 June 1932 (Decommissioned) 24 October 1939 (Struck from Naval Register) |
Fate | Broken up for scrap in 1939 |
USS Los Angeles was a rigid airship, designated ZR-3, which was built in 1923–1924 by the Zeppelin company in Friedrichshafen, Germany, as war reparations. She was delivered to the United States Navy in October 1924 and after being used mainly for experimental work, particularly in the development of the American parasite fighter program, was decommissioned in 1932.
Design
[edit]The second of four vessels to carry the name USS Los Angeles, the airship was built for the United States Navy as a replacement for the Zeppelins that had been assigned to the United States as war reparations following World War I, and had been sabotaged by their crews in 1919.[1] Under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles Luftschiffbau Zeppelin were not permitted to build military airships. In consequence Los Angeles, which had the Zeppelin works number LZ 126, was built as a passenger airship, although the treaty limitation on the permissible volume was waived, it being agreed that a craft of a size equal to the largest Zeppelin constructed during World War I was permissible.[2]
The airship's hull had 24-sided transverse ring frames for most of its length, changing to an octagonal section at the tail surfaces, and the hull had an internal keel which provided an internal walkway and also contained the accommodation for the crew when off duty. For most of the ship's length the main frames were 32 feet 10 inches (10.01 m) apart, with two secondary frames in each bay. Following the precedent set by LZ 120 Bodensee, crew and passenger accommodation was in a compartment near the front of the airship that was integrated into the hull structure. Each of the five Maybach VL I V12 engines occupied a separate engine car, arranged as four wing cars with the fifth aft on the centerline of the ship. All drove two-bladed pusher propellers and were capable of running in reverse. Auxiliary power was provided by wind-driven dynamos.[2]
Operational history
[edit]Los Angeles was first flown on 27 August 1924. After completing flight trials, she began the transatlantic delivery flight to the U.S. on 12 October 1924 under the command of Hugo Eckener, arriving at the U.S. Naval Air Station at Lakehurst, New Jersey, after an 81-hour flight of 4,229 nautical miles (7,832 km; 4,867 mi).[1][3] The airship was commissioned into the U.S. Navy on 25 November 1924 at Naval Support Facility Anacostia at Washington, D.C. with Lieutenant Commander Maurice R. Pierce in command. On her arrival in the United States, her lifting gas was changed from hydrogen to helium, which reduced payload but improved safety. At the same time the airship was fitted with equipment to recover water from the exhaust gases for use as ballast to compensate for the loss of weight as fuel was consumed, so avoiding the necessity to vent scarce helium to maintain neutral buoyancy.[1]
The airship went on to log a total of 4,398 hours of flight, covering a distance of 172,400 nautical miles (319,300 km; 198,400 mi). Long-distance flights included return flights to Panama, Costa Rica and Bermuda.[1][4] She served as an observatory and experimental platform, as well as a training ship for other airships.
On 24 January 1925, U.S. Naval Observatory and U.S. Bureau of Standards gathered a group of astronomers to observe a total solar eclipse from the airship over the New York City, with Captain Edwin Taylor Pollock as a head of the group.[5][6] They used "two pairs of telescopic cameras", to capture inner and outer portions of Sun's corona, and a spectrograph. The expedition achieved good publicity, but it was not very successful in its observations - the dirigible was not very stable and the photos were blurred.[7]
On 25 August 1927, while Los Angeles was tethered at the Lakehurst high mast, a gust of wind caught her tail and lifted it into colder, denser air that was just above the airship. This caused the tail to lift higher. The crew on board tried to compensate by climbing up the keel toward the rising tail, but could not stop the ship from reaching an angle of 85 degrees, before it descended. The ship suffered only slight damage and was able to fly the next day.
In 1929, Los Angeles was used to test the trapeze system developed by the U.S. Navy to launch and recover fixed wing aircraft from rigid airships. The tests were a success and the later purpose-built Akron-class airships were fitted with this system.[1] The temporary system was removed from Los Angeles, which never carried any aircraft on operational flights.[8] On 31 January 1930, Los Angeles also tested the launching of a glider over Lakehurst, New Jersey.[9][10]
On 25 May 1932, Los Angeles participated in a demonstration of photophone technology. Floating over the General Electric plant in Schenectady, New York, the crew of the ship engaged in an on-air conversation with a WGY radio announcer using a beam of light.[11]
As the terms under which the Allies permitted the United States to have Los Angeles restricted her use to commercial and experimental purposes only, when the U.S. Navy wanted to use the airship in a fleet problem in 1931 permission had to be obtained from the Allied Control Commission.[12] Los Angeles took part in Fleet Problems XII (1931) and XIII (1932), although as was the case with all U.S. Navy rigid airships, demonstrated no particular benefit to the fleet.[13]
Los Angeles was decommissioned in 1932 as an economy measure, but was recommissioned after the crash of USS Akron in April 1933. She flew for a few more years and then retired to her Lakehurst hangar where she remained until 1939, when the airship was struck off the Navy list and was dismantled in her hangar. Los Angeles was the Navy's longest-serving rigid airship. Unlike Shenandoah, R38, Akron, and Macon, the German-built Los Angeles was the only Navy rigid airship which did not meet a disastrous end.
Gallery
[edit]-
LZ 126 over Berlin, 1924
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USS Los Angeles in Panama, 1929
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Passenger cabin of the airship, 1924
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USS Los Angeles lofted nearly vertical during the weather-related docking-mast mishap in August, 1927.
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An RRG Prüfling glider attached to USS Los Angeles for carriage and drop tests.
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USS Los Angeles anchored to USS Saratoga (CV-3).
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USS Los Angeles over Manhattan, New York, 1930
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USS Los Angeles in Panama 1929
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USS Los Angeles in flight
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USS Los Angeles, USS Patoka and USS Lexington off Panama City, Panama, about 1931
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USS Los Angeles flies past the U.S. Capitol
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USS Los Angeles enters storage hangar for the first time at Naval Air Station, Lakehurst, New Jersey, in 1924
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Z.R. 3 in America - Special sheet of the Dresdner Anzeiger
Notes
[edit]- ^ a b c d e "Kite Balloons to Airships...the Navy's Lighter-than-Air Experience" (PDF). Naval History and Heritage Command. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-04-10. Retrieved 2014-02-25.
- ^ a b "America's Second Rigid Airship—"ZR 3"". Flight International: 60. 31 January 1924.
- ^ Althoff 2004, pp. 33–42.
- ^ Moffett, William A. (1 December 1928). "Liners of The Air". Liberty Magazine: 21.
- ^ LaFollette, Marcel Chotkowski (24 January 2017). "Science Service, Up Close: Up in the Air for a Solar Eclipse". Smithsonian Institution Archives. Retrieved 9 January 2024.
- ^ Maloney, Wendi A. (21 August 2017). "Looking to the Sky: Solar Eclipse 2017 | Timeless". The Library of Congress. Retrieved 9 January 2024.
- ^ Aceto, Guy (26 January 2022). "To Catch a Shadow: The Great 1925 Solar Eclipse Aerial Expedition". HistoryNet. Retrieved 9 January 2024.
- ^ "Big Changes Give Giants Of The Air Far Wider Range". Popular Science Monthly. Vol. 117, no. 3. New York: Popular Science Publishing Company. September 1930. p. 51.
- ^ "Glider Lands From Airship". The San Bernardino Daily Sun. Vol. 65. San Bernardino, California. Associated Press. 1 February 1930. p. 1.
- ^ "Dirigible Launches Glider". Popular Mechanics. Vol. 53, no. 4. Chicago, Illinois: Popular Mechanics Company. April 1930. p. 80.
- ^ Hart 1992, pp. 42–43.
- ^ "Allies Permit the Navy to Use The Los Angeles in War Game". The New York Times. 8 January 1931.
- ^ Behrends, Werner The Great Airships of Count Zeppelin (2015) Raleigh, NC: Lulu.com, p. 102
Bibliography
[edit]- Althoff, William F. Sky Ships. New York: Orion Books, 1990. ISBN 0-517-56904-3.
- Althoff, William F. USS Los Angeles: The Navy's Venerable Airship and Aviation Technology. Dulles, Virginia: Brassey's, 2004. ISBN 1-57488-620-7.
- Hart, Larry. Pictures From the Past: A Schenectady Album. Schenectady, New York: Old Dorp Books, 1992. ISBN 978-0-932035-13-4.
- Provan, John. LZ-127 "Graf Zeppelin": The story of an Airship, vol. 1 & vol. 2 (Amazon Kindle ebook). Pueblo, Colorado: Luftschiff Zeppelin Collection, 2011.
- Robinson, Douglas H., and Charles L. Keller. "Up Ship!": U.S. Navy Rigid Airships 1919–1935. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1982. ISBN 0-87021-738-0.
External links
[edit]- Photo gallery of USS Los Angeles
- eZEP.de – a dedicated web portal for Zeppelin mail and airship memorabilia
- Zeppelin Study Group – a research group for airship memorabilia and Zeppelin mail
- USS Los Angeles (ZR-3) – page at Navy Lakehurst Historical Society
- Picture of the 25 August 1927 nose stand
- DANFS article on Los Angeles (ZR-3)
- Photo gallery at Naval Historical Center
- 1925 eclipse footage shot from ship
- "Queen of Dirigibles Ready for U.S." May 1924, Popular Science Monthly – excellent drawing showing size comparison between earlier dirigibles and battleships
- "Flying with an Airship Captain" Mar 1930, Popular Science Monthly – Article detailing the operation of Los Angeles