You can imagine that it might carry a very light very low powered but very large and so still powerful radar, or radio communication equipment, but that no ordnance of any kind can be carried.
thank you for your info. but even radar or radion equipment would very useful in case of emergency. btw i read from
General characteristics
Crew: ca. 40
Capacity: ca. 50 passengers for LZ 129 (later upgraded to 72), 40 passengers for LZ 130
Length: 244 m (803 ft 10 in)
Diameter: 41.2 m (135 ft 0 in)
Volume: 200,000 m3 (7,100,000 ft3)
Useful lift: 10,000 kg (22,046 lb)
Powerplant: 4 × Daimler-Benz DB 602 16-cylinder diesel, 735 kW (985 hp) each
Performance
Maximum speed: 131 km/h (81 mph)
i guess Useful lift: 10,000 kg (22,046 lb) means higher service ceiling with lower payload ?
Useful lift is a notorious imprecise measure. Do you reckon for a passenger the weight of himself, his clothes and his luggage or do you also add the weight of his accommodation, his part in the weight of the smoking room ( Hindenburg had one )? The weight per passenger was then reckoned to be about 750 kg. That is for 72 passengers 54 ton.
Hindenburg also carried at some time a motor car and a light aircraft, IIRC.
A cubic meter of air has at sea level and standard temperature and pressure a mass of 1.225 kg. Subtract the weight of a cubic meter of lifting gas, hydrogen or helium as appropriate and you have the contribution of a cubic meter of gas volume to the lift of the ship. A similar cubic meter has at 70000ft a mass of 0.070921 kg. (
). That is drastically less. Reducing the payload has a minimal influence on the height an airship can achieve.
I'll put a post in the cul-de-sac thread on Zeppelins.