Akron-class airship

Akron-class airship
USS Macon preparing to tie up to the mooring mast at NAS Moffett Field in October 1933
Role Patrol and reconnaissance airship
Manufacturer Goodyear-Zeppelin Corporation,
Springfield Township, Ohio
Primary user United States Navy
Number built 2
General characteristics
TypeRigid Airship
Displacement7,401,260 cu ft (209,580.3 m3)
Length785 ft (239.3 m)
Beam133 ft (40.5 m) (hull diameter)
Draft146 ft 5 in (44.6 m) (height)
Installed power560hp per engine
Propulsion
  • Eight Maybach VL-2 12-cyl water-cooled inline engines
  • Two-bladed fixed-pitch, rotable wooden propellers (Akron)
  • Three-bladed variable-pitch, rotable metal propellers (Macon)
Speed
  • 55 knots (102 km/h; 63 mph) (cruising)
  • 69 knots (128 km/h; 79 mph) (maximum)
Range5,940 nmi (11,000 km; 6,840 mi) at 10 knots (19 km/h; 12 mph)
Complement60
Armament8 x.30-cal machine guns
Aircraft carriedUp to 5
Aviation facilities1 aircraft launch trapeze

The Akron-class airships were a class of two rigid airships constructed for the US Navy in the early 1930s. Designed as scouting and reconnaissance platforms, the intention for their use was to act as "eyes for the fleet", extending the range at which the US Navy's Scouting Force could operate to beyond the horizon. This capability was extended further through the use of the airships as airborne aircraft carriers, with each capable of carrying a small squadron of airplanes that could be used both to increase the airship's scouting range, and to provide self-defense for the airship against other airborne threats.

The two ships were built as a continuation of the US Navy's rigid airship programme that had started just after World War I, and were used to further refine the tactics of the use of such machines in the fleet, predominantly over whether it was the airship that was the scout, with its air group only there for self-defense, or whether the airship was merely the mother ship and the aeroplanes were responsible for carrying out the long-range scouting mission.

Both ships had short careers in the US Navy, as each one crashed into the sea during routine flights less than two years after it was commissioned.