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Charles’ passenger balloon

Charles’ passenger balloon.jpg The Great Balloon of NassauThumbnailsLa FlesselleThe Great Balloon of NassauThumbnailsLa FlesselleThe Great Balloon of NassauThumbnailsLa FlesselleThe Great Balloon of NassauThumbnailsLa FlesselleThe Great Balloon of NassauThumbnailsLa FlesselleThe Great Balloon of NassauThumbnailsLa FlesselleThe Great Balloon of NassauThumbnailsLa Flesselle
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This balloon was a truly scientific creation, which advanced aërostation from tottering infancy almost to full prime. The bag was a sphere 27½ feet in diameter made of gores of varnished silk. A net covered the upper half and was fastened to a horizontal hoop girding the middle of the globe, and called the “equator.” From the equator depended ropes which supported, just below the spherical bag, a wicker boat measuring eight feet by four, covered with painted linen and beautifully ornamented. The balloon had at the bottom a silk neck 7 inches in diameter, to admit the gas during inflation, and at the top, a valve which could be opened by means of a cord in the boat to let out gas during a voyage, so as to lower the balloon, or to relieve excessive pressure. In the boat were carried sand ballast to regulate the height of ascension, a barometer to measure the elevation, anchor and rope for landing, a thermometer, notebook, provisions, and all the paraphernalia of a scientific voyage. Barring the fancy boat, this is almost a description of a good modern balloon.

Author
Aërial Navigation
A Popular Treatise on the Growth of Air Craft and on Aëronautical Meteorology
By Albert Francis Zahm
Published in 1911
Available from gutenberg.org
Dimensions
681*1050
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