DirecTV blimp

The DirecTV blimp launched in October 2007 at the MLB World Series in Boston and has been seen all over the United States since its inception. The blimp flies mainly over live sporting events but has also been seen at other entertainment and charitable venues. This second generation A-170LS Video Lightsign Lightship features the state of the art video screen that displays full color video images day or night. This lightsign, the only one of its kind in the world, is used to display messaging and advertising for DIRECTV. The blimp has been recently spotted on Twitter as followers track the journeys of the blimp from one event to another. The airship is owned and operated by an advertising company based in Florida with its airship division located in Orlando, FL.[1] The DIRECTV blimp was one of the 3 airships that took part in a blimp race held over New York City on July 4, 2011.

DirecTV Blimp in NC. 2011
DirecTV Blimp over NYC. 2011
DirecTV Blimp and ground operation. NC 2011. by AJ

About the airship

The A-170LS Lightsign Lightship is a relatively new product for Lightships and enables a client to take advantage of 21st century technology to interact with its customers and activate any promotional campaign by the ability to change the message almost instantly.[2] Manufactured mostly by American Blimp Corporation, the airship has a length of 178 ft (54 m) and a width of 46 ft (14 m) with a volume of 170,000 cubic feet (4,800 m3) of helium. The term Lightship comes from the internal illumination system which gives the advertiser of the airship a new reason to fly at night time.[2]

The Airship's envelope and ballonet were designed and manufactured by ILC Dover. A manufacturer of flexible materials and softgoods based out of Frederick, Delaware The length of the cabin or gondola is 11.4 ft (3.5 m) with a width of 5 ft (1.5 m) The airship is also designed to carry a maximum of 8 passengers plus the pilot[2] The desired cruising speed can vary but it is generally around 32 mph (51 km/h)with a maximum speed of 48 mph (77 km/h) when favorable winds are present. The engines of this airship are from manufacturer Lycoming Engines with twin Lycoming IO 360, rated 180 HP with constant speed variable pitch reversible propellers In order to make all the different part of the puzzle come together, the airship needs a crew of at least 14 members which includes 2 pilots, 2 crew chiefs, mechanics, video lightsign operator and additional ground team.[2]

Camera

Camera capabilities: Gyro-stabilized camera mounting capabilities, providing an excellent platform for high-definition TV/video filming. The fully Hi-Definition ultra high performance camera is gyroscopically stabilized and mounted to the front of the airship when it is providing the aerial shots for the network television. This camera is linked to a control panel that is controlled by a camera operator who sits in the cockpit behind the pilot's chair. During each event, the camera operator and pilot work together with the show director to provide the requested shot. The camera lens can magnify what is on the ground 72 times with great definition. Camera services for the airship are provided by Flying Pictures, an aerial video company based in the United Kingdom.[3] The signal form the camera is transmitted via microwave downlink, which is received on site by a microwave technician with a receiving antenna array. This receiving antenna array is hard-wired into the network's production facilities, which then use the aerial camera just as they would use any other camera.[4]

Video screen

The airship's unique light sign makes this blimp the only one of its kind. With 33,600 pixels and 235,200 LEDs, the screen can be seen day or night giving the people on the ground the opportunity to see the sponsor's advertisements. at 70 ft (21 m) by 30 ft (9.1 m) the full color video sign is capable of displaying full motion and color TV quality video day or night. The LED screen also has the capability of displaying live video action, concerts, highlights, scoreboards and interviews according to DIRECTV's website. The video screen has been part of marriage proposals, birthday announcements and network commentators play by play action calling.[2]

gollark: I can do about four views/second, which should probably be enough since this stuff is generally capped by UVs.
gollark: I still can't access AoND myself.
gollark: Is the ND AR thing up?
gollark: Maybe AR-only ones turn out better? Who knows.
gollark: That would explain the lack of UVs.

References

  1. "AirSign Inc".
  2. "Products >> A-170LS Video Lightsign Ligthship". Lightships. Retrieved 2012-02-13.
  3. "Broadcast blimps". Flyingpictures.com. Archived from the original on 2012-02-08. Retrieved 2012-02-13.
  4. "American Blimp Corporation Home Page". Americanblimp.com. Archived from the original on 2012-02-08. Retrieved 2012-02-13.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.