Google co-founder Sergey Brin is about to see an ambitious project get off the ground, according to IEEE Spectrum.
The publication recently learned that Brin’s 124-meter-long airship – apparently the largest aircraft since the ill-fated Hindenburg – has been cleared for its first test flight.
The certificate allows the helium-filled Pathfinder 1 to fly in an area close to San Francisco, though it mustn’t travel higher than 460 meters (1,500 feet).
Powered by 12 electric motors and able to reach speeds of up to 75 mph (120 kph), Pathfinder 1 will initially be attached to a mobile mast for ground testing before conducting about 25 low-level flights.
The airship is intended for humanitarian flights, and transporting cargo and personnel to areas inaccessible by road ...