Venus Airships / by Brad Guth
On May 5, 7:25 am, "Hagar" wrote:
"BradGuth" wrote in message
...
Being a little hot, buoyant and having 10% less gravity is actually a
darn good thing if you were a Venusian airship, even if limited as to
an oven-wrap or KetaSpire PEEK polyetheretherketone and fiber
reinforced balloon. Such fiber reinforced composites do exist,
although an outer skin of something in basic titanium shouldn’t be
excluded for this rigid airship configuration.
snip drivel
And, pray tell Brad, where would the above ship be manufactured ?
On the surface of Venus, you say? I don't think so. Oh, I see ... you'd
build it on Mars and then have the Acme Intergalactic Airship Towing
Company move it to Venus and insert it into the proper orbit.
Good plan,Brad. Keep up the fine work.
Ed Conrad wants to talk to you .... something about an ossified brain ...
Dear "snip drivel",
Most certainly not in your backyard, or by way of any of your "snip
drivel" certified friends. It seems your profound nayism and lack of
constructive contributions to this or for that matter of most any
topic is equal to none other than whatever DARPA expects of their
brown-nosed minions. As such, your warm and fuzzy services are no
longer needed, especially since you show no honest signs of being the
least bit qualified or even knowing of those qualified in rigid
airship R&D. Did I miss anything?
In other words, you and others of your disinformation spewing kind are
either bogus to start with or totally dumbfounded past the point of no
return, and as such you each need those DARPA instructions as to wipe
your butt or blow your nose, not that you'd know one such brownish
hole from another.
If you had anything on-topic and constructive to say, you'd have said
it.
BTW, of where this rigid and mostly composite airship is created is
immaterial, and of how it gets deployed to Venus and through those
robust acidic clouds is apparently outside your best expertise,
because if you were the least bit human, as such you would have shared
a little something for accomplishing that aspect.
In case you somehow misunderstood the intent of this topic, there's no
required airship orbit, other than aligned for the rather bumpy
reentry of getting this rigid airship down to the initial 50 km,
before descending to its nominal 25 km (+/- 5 km) intended cruising
altitude. Possibly something as halo station-keeping within Venus L2
might be required for the data relay or mission transponder in
addition to whatever's left in orbit upon having released the airship
for its extended expedition of cruising below them thick clouds.
. - Brad Guth
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