EOMST unmanned blimps

EOMST unmanned blimps are Chinese UAVs developed by Shandong [1] in Zoucheng, intended for various applications such as aerial survey, advertisement and law enforcement applications. These unmanned blimps are often named after their respective lengths. For example: if a blimp is 11 meters long, then it is named Type 1100, because 11 meters is equal to 1100 millimeters.

Unmanned blimps

EOMST unmanned blimps are blimps with a single gasoline-powered engine or twin gasoline-powered engines with various configurations.[2]

Type Length (m) Width (m)[2] Volume (m3)[2] Remote control radius (km) Remote control station Power plant Max wind scale allowed for operation
900B[2] 9 2.2 20 1.5 Futaba 6 channel 26 cc gasoline engine x 2 (1 forward, 1 aft) 4
1100A[2] 11 2.5 27 1.5 Futaba 6 channel Komatsu 62 cc gasoline engine x 1 5
1100B[2] 11 2.5 27 1.5 Futaba 6 channel Komatsu 38 cc gasoline engine x 2 (1 forward, 1 aft) 5
1200B[2] 12 3 36 1.5 Futaba 6 channel Komatsu 45 cc gasoline engine x 2 (1 forward, 1 aft) 5
1200C[2] 12 3 36 1.5 Futaba 9 channel Komatsu 45 cc gasoline engine x 2 with twin ducted fans 5
1300B[2] 13 3.2 56 1.5 Futaba 6 channel Komatsu 62 cc gasoline engine x 2 (1 forward, 1 aft) 6
1300C[2] 13 3.2 56 1.5 Futaba 6 channel Komatsu 62 cc gasoline x 2 with twin ducted fans 6
1500B[2] 15 3.6 90 1.5 Futaba 6 channel Komatsu 75 cc gasoline engine x 2 (1 forward, 1 aft) 6

ZCHM1/11

ZCHM1/11 is an unmanned blimp developed by EOMST main for aerial advertisement, and it has a length of 12.5 meter.[3]

YC23

YC23 is another unmanned blimp developed by EOMST main for aerial advertisement, and it is the smaller cousin of larger ZCHM1/11.[4]

Police unmanned blimp

EOMST has developed an unmanned blimp specially tailored to law enforcement need, and a single police unmanned blimp can perform all the tasks performed by twenty-five officers on foot patrol and twenty-five squad cars.[5] Police unmanned blimp has an operational radius of 80 – 120 km, and has been in service since 2006. The complete name is Aerial Robotic Police Blimp (Kong-zhong Ji-Qi-Ren Jing-yong Fei-ting, 空中机器人警用飞艇).[6]

gollark: I try to write all languages as if I'm writing fairly bad Haskell.
gollark: How elegant*.
gollark: Yes, that was one possibility but would also be quite limiting.
gollark: I have devised a possible solution:- do the virtual channel thing- when a Discord channel is added to a virtual channel, it checks which ones are already connected- these are added to a lookup table of some sort for inter-VC bridging - all the channels which are currently causing inter-VC bridging are stored- when a message is somethinged on a virtual channel, it is bridged based on the lookup table- when a virtual channel is unlinked from a real channel it removes it from the lookup table- when the lookup table entry for the inter-virtual-channel link contains 0 items, bridging stops
gollark: I have stuff in place for this anyway. I just want a nicer solution.

See also

List of unmanned aerial vehicles of the People's Republic of China

References

  1. Easy Operation Models Science and Technology Co., Ltd. (EOMST, 山东易操航模科技有限公司)
  2. "Unmanned blimps". Retrieved 2012-01-17.
  3. "ZCHM1/11". Archived from the original on 2013-10-02. Retrieved 2013-09-30.
  4. "YC23". Archived from the original on 2013-10-02. Retrieved 2013-09-30.
  5. "Police nmanned blimp". Archived from the original on 2013-10-02. Retrieved 2013-09-30.
  6. "Aerial robotic police blimp". Archived from the original on 2013-10-02. Retrieved 2013-09-30.
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