Dirigibles or airships are powered, steerable aircraft using lighter-than-air gas to get their lift. Rigid (or semi-rigid) airships have some kind of internal structure to make their shape. Blimps don’t.
If you looked at the article, you’ll probably enjoy this book.
The only fantasy element in the story is that people with a Napoleonic level of technology has access to unlimited supplies of helium.
You can tell that the author had a great time figuring out the specifics of the craft.
https://bookshop.org/p/books/the-guns-above-robyn-bennis/90734a18a40dfd82?ean=9780765388773&next=t
Thanks for the recommendation. Listening now
Enjoy
Bill Hammack, the engineer guy, has a book about Britain’s last airship.
Looks interesting.
And if you cross a gerbil with a dirigible, you get a dirigiberbil
I don’t know if this is true but i once read that when classifying lighter-than-air ships they broke them down into two categories. A rigid and B limp and that’s where the name blimp comes from.
Not sure if joke or real, but it’s my head-canon now
Midnight, catching up on dirigible gossip in the fediverse comments
Bring back zeppelins
Zeppelins are a brand name. They are rigid air ships built by the Zeppelin company.
Not really, it’s become generic a long time ago, like bandaid.


