just lovin this subject......
AES
often wondered why the Photo of the Air Ship above ur name.....thanks.....
I have a great interest in old engines of all types....pre 1920's......
as for oils it was a black art and I would sugest that each engine would use at least 1x 45 gallon (205ltr) drum of engine oil on the Atlantic flight.....
I had a couple of large stationary engines in the distant past and the cost of oil used was similar to the fuel.....hahaha...great days.....
mine ended up in Holland.....
Hullo clogs. Glad you're enjoying the thread. I may have started it but many others have contributed too. All viewpoints & other info adds to the enjoyment IMO.
Why the "Hindenburg" pic? 2 reasons: 1. It fits with my "new" strap line "Success has many fathers ............ etc. 2. I'm a tour guide at the Zeppelin Museum in Germany, and if there's ONE thing that almost ALL visitors know at the start of my tours is that "Hindenburg" burst into flames at Lakehurst (just outside NY) for "no apparent reason" in May 1937. (Hopefully, by the end of my tours the visitors know a bit more than that)!
ALSO, if you're into rock music, when Jimmy Page started the group "Led Zeppelin" back in to 70's, he chose that pic for the cover of their first album.
Oil? Yes, obviously LOTS of it! And BTW, that remained true well into the piston-engined airliner era too. LOTS of it per trip. I hate to think what the cost of oils was for the highly complex compound, multi row, supercharged radial engines of the 1950's and 60's like the Wrights and Pratts, not to mention the UK's sleeve-valved Bristol "Hercules" and "Centaurus". "Inspector" (Pete) UKW member in Canada used to work on those "big round engines" apparently)
Actually someone has already asked me that Q about airship oils and I'm still trying to find out the proper answer. I'm quite a way away by road from the Zepp Museum and it's archives (and they don't send an airship to pick me up!), so not all that much chance to go delving. I normally only go there when I have tour groups to lead. But I WILL find out!
As a matter of interest, most airships of all nationalities used petrol engines, including many Zeppelins and the British R34, R38, R80 and R100. But the British R101 and the above-mentioned "Hindenburg" both used diesels (The Hindenburg's" engines were DB 603 railway engines converted/lightened - if you're interested. The R101 had Beardmores).
The crash and total destruction of the R101 in 1931 followed by "Hindenburg" in 1937 made a final/total end to commercial airships BTW, though now and again, "modern" versions do raise their heads.
Cheers