A quick one based on u/Sam-Nales’s comment about combining airship mooring masts with screw conveyors/screw elevators similar to those used by grain silos on my last post over on reddit. I talked it over with the folks on the farming community: https://slrpnk.net/post/3643695 and feel like there’s a definite place for grain and silos in a solarpunk world. This was a quick one, the zoomed out scenes often are.
I’m not sure a mooring mast is entirely necessary here, with the big, recently-reaped fields to land on, but perhaps this farm is using a system compatible to other farms nearby who use more agroforestry, and wouldn’t necessarily like having to clear a patch of empty land just for landing airships
I love it, this is really nice. Thank you!
Thanks!!
Looks like this one’s not as practical as I would like - airships aren’t a great fit for this kind of shipping. Too bad. I’m very pleased with both the mooring mast design and the chance to push some views of solarpunk that aren’t verdant summertime scenes. I try to research the postcards pretty well but read up on the wrong stuff this time - looked in to silos and grain and how they’d fit a solarpunk society, on screw elevators and their limitations, but didn’t think to look at the cargo capacity for airships beyond the fact that some can haul some pretty big stuff
Maybe not for transporting the grain, but I could imagine them being very useful to transport the large machines for harvesting grain as they tend to be quite slow and road access will probably be not as good when most transport is done by means other than cars.
What is the cargo capacity of your average airship?
I’m not sure if there are enough out there for a good average - I think a lot of the existing ones are fairly small blimps used for advertising. But the cargo airship prototype I used for the photobash (Flying Whales’s proposed LCA60T) touts a 96-meter long, 8-meter high and 7-meter wide cargo hold (or 60-tonne payload). Which seemed like a lot, to me, a person who would find a 60 tonnes of grain to be an unreasonable amount. But at the scale our society moves grain, It’s probably not the best vehicle for the job.
I also thought 60 tonnes sounded like a lot, and I suppose it is for an airship. Your sentence about grain movement made me wonder about cargo ship capacities, and it’s crazy. The little ones can hold a total of 28,000 tonnes and the big ones 400,000 tons. Railcars can hold over 100 tons each, while trucks about 50 tons of grain.
With those numbers in mind, maybe your airship illustration isn’t off the mark. They could replace the trucks that transport grain to the mill/rail station.
That’s a really good point! I’m glad
It is conceivable that unlike boats, autonomous airships may not need to be super big - they scale linearly. So a continuous swarm of small, lighter than air evacuated diamond foam devices could come, pick up stuff, and depart for local targets or far away targets via the jet stream. That also removes the need for the tower - they could pick stuff up right from the harvester.
Or, combined with the other idea to move the harvester; grain pirates! The small airship swoops down at night and picks up a some strip worth of grain, and is gone in the morning.
Tractor Jack takes to the skies! I love it.
As a farmer, I think the mooring mast with a loading elevator is quite reasonable. If you have enough grain to transport like this, you’d have open fields, but it would be put in bins at harvest and loaded out as contracts come due.
You wouldn’t auger that far, an elevator is more reasonable. And a typical shipment via ground is 42 tons on a Super-B double trailer unit.
That’s really good to know, thank you! Swapping the elevator in wouldn’t be too much work and it makes sense, I was just estimating height but had to use two different screw conveyors and I wasn’t sure if that made sense. Glad to know the cargo capacity actually matched up.
OK, Lemmy messes up hyperlinks with ampersands, but if you search images for something like “grain elevator leg bin” you’ll see a typical setup for a larger grain operation.
Thanks!
deleted by creator