The helium-filled airship, assembled at an Akron-area hangar and unveiled there yesterday, is bigger, quicker and more maneuverable than earlier models, Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co said.
The 246-foot (75-meter) airship fits 12 passengers and has a semi-rigid internal skeleton, a feature that wasn't present in earlier models and raises questions about whether it is truly a blimp, though the company still refers to it as such.
The structure is covered by a silver, balloon-like body emblazoned with Goodyear's yellow logo on a blue background. It can travel at up to 73 mph (117 kph) and has custom computer-controlled avionics, an upgrade from the manual flight system used by the blimp pilots since the 1920s, the company said. It plans to build two more.
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