Impressive, though as predicted moisture was a massive issue, I didn't know that the german army ran it's own airship programme and with the Navy refusing the wooden ships for the moisture reason that would explain why I have not heard of them. The Geodesic construction is most logical and spreads the loads much better than the ring and runner designs on the standard zeppelin.
I wish the wikipedia entry was more specific about where the cut off point between wood and metal framing is thought looking at the listed ship lengths it is probably somewhere in the 600' range which is about twice what my previous readings on wood structures suggeted was possible.
What does come through clearly though is how susceptable to the environment airships were with most of the ships written off in accidents.
Having built a frame we now need to fill it. w. At least they don't need anything beyond thier tech base for the gas bags and no rubber either if they go the cowguts and glue route. As for filling the bags in our world hydrolysis came first in 1895 but for safehold this is not viable for the obvious reasons.
This leaves us with steam reforming and the earlier steam iron process wich is probably more doable with safehold tech
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/ar ... 5399004589 though how they would discover this given the non-existiant state of chemical theory is going to be interesting. I suspect the projected 20+ year gap in the books will be partially used to back fill a lot of scientific and industrial knowledge that has been bypassed in the main narrative.