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FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE-
WHAT HAPPENED TO THE HINDENBERG? DISPELLING A MYTH
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * August 17, 2001* * * * * * * *
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Advocates of hydrogen as a safe, non-polluting, cost-effective alternative
to fossil fuels are frequently confronted by critics who have concerns
about the safety of the widespread use of hydrogen. As recently
as August, 2001, information about a new airship built in Germany
described the lifting element as helium, unlike "dangerous
hydrogen" that had been used to lift dirigibles in the past.
There's no
arguing the fact that all fuels are dangerous; gasoline, natural
gas, and oil, as well as hydrogen, are all flammable. All must be
handled and stored with care and attention to their combustibility.
Hydrogen has been blamed for the disastrous fire that engulfed the
Hindenberg in 1937, killing 35 people and ending the era of the
the dirigible until 2001. But the fact is that the Hindenberg would
have burned even if the inert gas helium, rather than hydrogen,
had been used as the lifting element.
The 813-foot
long, 236 ton airship that burst into flames as it attempted to
dock in Lakehurst, New Jersey on a 150-ft. tower, was ignited by
an electrical discharge from a storm when landing lines grounded
the craft and in effect, turned it into a lightning rod. The skin
of the airship, made from a material containing a flammable aluminum
powder, ignited. The fire then spread to the diesel fuel and the
16 enormous bags filled with 7,200,00 cubic feet of hydrogen.
Because hydrogen
is 15 times lighter than air, once on fire, the hydrogen moved immediately
up and away from the ship and within 60 seconds had burned completely.
The ship burned for 10 hours on the ground, fueled by diesel oil
and other heavier than air components.
Only two people
burned to death as a result of the fire. The 33 other fatalities
were caused by passengers jumping or falling from the craft.
The Hindenberg
disaster received extensive media coverage by crews who were there
to witness the landing of the world's largest airship after a voyage
across the Atlantic Ocean. Even though airships had been operated
successfully and safely
for a number of years before 1937, they were abandoned as a means
of travel after the Hindenberg tragedy.
The myth that
hydrogen is too dangerous for widespread use is one that is difficult
to refute yet the facts indicate that with proper care and handling
hydrogen can be less dangerous than oil, natural gas, or gasoline.
But myths die hard and the public will not be easily convinced.
--Libby James
For more information contact: Hydrogen Now! 1-866-GO-H2-NOW
or website: www.hydrogennow.org, e-mail: info@hydrogennow.org
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