A guest post by Alexey Belokrys.
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On 29 August 1930, near Moscow, one of the earliest Soviet airships “Komsomolskaya Pravda” (Комсомольская Правда) took off for her maiden flight. After a one-hour flight over Moscow she successfully landed.
For the decade of the 1920s the Soviet state refrained from building airships. Neither the Red Army neither the Soviet Navy wished to order an airship for military purpose, nor was there interest by any civilian agency. Komsomolskaya Pravda was built by volunteers with private donations; some 12,000 Soviet rubles were raised from Soviet and foreign donors to fund the construction. This was roughly equivalent to 6,000 U.S. dollars.
Key facts about Komsomol’skaya Pravda
“Komsomol’skaya Pravda” — literally “Komsomol Truth” — was an official countrywide newspaper of Komsomol, the All-Union Leninist Young Communist League. The airship was named after the newspaper as its editorial board was a fundraiser for her construction and the majority of donations were received from the Komsomol members.
Komsomol’skaya Pravda was a simple non-rigid airship with a volume of 2500 cubic meters of hydrogen and a length of 46 meters. The ship carried one 185 hp BMW aircraft engine. The envelope was made of the fabric remained after old Russian WWI observation balloons of the Parseval type, and a metal open car was rope-hanged beneath the envelope.
As there were no airship hangars around Moscow at the time, the Komsomolskaya Pravda’s units were fabricated in a former church building. The entire airship was finally assembled and filled with gas outdoor in a natural trough. The same place was used as a mooring in 1930″“1931.
Komsomolskaya Pravda was used as a training airship by aeronautics students as well as for propaganda flights. During 1930″“1931, Komsomolskaya Pravda made 55 flights and covered 3555 km. She was sent for total reconstruction because of deterioration in 1932.
Though unsophisticated, Komsomolskaya Pravda made a great impression on the Soviet people. Her successful operation was a valid argument for the authorities to eventually launch a state-run airship program.
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Alexey can be reached at [email protected].




Hello,
Thank you for your interesting history lesson about a subject that is little-known in US.
In 1975, Mom ordered Robert Jackson’s book “Airships in Peace and War” for me. It contains a photograph of a man-powered dirigible built by Danilewsky in the 1890s. The three experimental aerostats he built, named Embryo, Orichka, and Pilstrem (Thank you Rosebud’s Early Airships photos) are the three earliest Russian airships I have found so far.
Several years ago, I encountered a website called “Dolgoprud” that features rare and interesting photos and information about Russian airships beginning with the 1908 “Uchebniy” / “Ouchebny” flight training airship and continuing through the 1930s including two that date from the early 1920s: the “VI Oktyabr” and “Moskovski Khimik-rezinshik.”
I would like to know more information about two subjects that have been in the back of my mind for over forty years. In spring 1977, I got the book “Jane’s Book of Airships” in which authors Lord Ventry and Eugene Kolesnik stated that the Russians built about 50 scout airships in the 1940s. There is a large but shadowy photo of what resembles the nose of a US Navy K- class blimp in a hangar. Also, in the same book is a photo of a small airship similar to one of those WWII US Army motorized observation balloons, except that it has but three small control surfaces, and with “G-OI” written on the side. The caption states that it appears to be moored to a forestry tower. Now, “G” is not a letter used in the Cyrillic alphabet so I’m not certain if this is a Russian airship at all. I cannot find any other photos of this small airship.
Thanks, Tony
Just as I thought I was about to quit posting, I came across this video of this UFO like Russia airship:
http://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=Soviet+airships&FORM=HDRSC3#view=detail&mid=85C868B8E3BBFFA126F985C868B8E3BBFFA126F9
More on Russian Airships at this link:
http://englishrussia.com/2012/02/06/about-soviet-airships/
I just came across this article in the Daily Mail. It looks like Russia is working on an airship similar to the Airlander:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3144854/Red-zeppelin-Russia-set-unveil-military-airships-capable-carrying-200-personnel-traveling-105mph-without-need-runway.html
Great photos! Methinks I’ll order that book…