Scenarios about 'airships'
Lighter-than-air aircraft that use gas (typically hydrogen or helium) for buoyancy, popular from the late 19th century through the 1930s. Airships revolutionized long-distance air travel before being largely supplanted by conventional aircraft, with the 1937 Hindenburg disaster marking a turning point in their commercial viability. In alternate history scenarios, they often represent divergent technological paths where airship development continued as a mainstream form of transportation.
What If The Hindenburg Never Crashed?
Exploring the alternate timeline where the LZ 129 Hindenburg disaster never occurred in 1937, potentially allowing airship travel to remain a viable transportation alternative throughout the 20th century.
What If The Hindenburg Never Crashed?
Exploring how aviation history, airship technology, and global transportation might have evolved if the famous Hindenburg disaster of 1937 had never occurred.