After trim trials on 23 October 1906 and a tethered engine trial on 27 October,
La Ville de Paris made its first flight on 11 November 1906, piloted by Surcouf and Kapferer, with
Louis Paulhan as mechanic. The flight was marred by problems with the engine, and after crossing the
Forest of Saint-Germain the airship was landed at
Chambourcy after 1 20 m in the air, after which it was deflated and returned by road to Sartrouville. Following this flight it was decided to replace the four-year-old keel structure because of the state of the wood from which it was constructed. A second pair of elevators were added amidships: these were constructed by
Voisin Freres, as was the propeller. The Argus engine was replaced by a
Chenu of the same power. The reconstructed airship was inflated in June 1907 and after a series of tethered trials made its first free flight on 9 August, a short circuit returning to Sartrouville. Several similar successful short flights followed, on the seventh of which
Deutsch de la Meurthe was carried as a passenger. Subsequent flights carried several notable members of the French aviation community including
Ferdinand Ferber and
Ernest Archdeacon Having made 20 flights, it was then deflated and some modifications were made, including the removal of one ballonet and modifications to the control surfaces. Flights were resumed on 14 November, when a flight over central Paris was made. Further flights over Paris, including a visit to the military flying field at
Issy-les-Moulineaux were made in November, including one carrying
Charles Rolls and
Frank Hedges Butler as passengers. Deutsch de la Meurthe then placed the airship at the disposal of the French Army, to replace the
Lebaudy Patrie which had recently been torn from its mooring in a storm and lost, following which some flights were made carrying Army personnel in order to familiarise them with the airship. A longer flight was made on 18 December, when it was flown from Sartrouville to
Lagny and back covering a distance of around and another long flight was made on 24 December from Sartrouville to
Coulommiers and back; the flight lasted 5 hours 10 minutes and covered , setting a new French record for a closed-circuit flight. On 15 January 1908, as usual piloted by Kapferer with Paulhan as mechanic, it was flown from Sartrouville to the French Army establishment at
Verdun, a distance of . The flight took 9hr 38 min, including 1 hr 25 min during which the airship had landed in order to make repairs to the engine. Two more flights were made at Verdun before it was deflated at the end of January. After delivery to the French army it was lengthened to , increasing its capacity to . In its modified form it was first flown on 16 November 1908, when a trial flight was curtailed by the failure of a
pinion in the reduction gearbox. The airship was brought down at the military maneuvering ground at Jardin-Fontaine from its base and had to be walked back to the flying field at Verdun. Repairs were completed by 20 November, and after static engine trials it made seven short flights between 24 November and 2 December. On 7 December it was deflated. It was still in use in 1910, when several flights were made in August during the military maneuvers in
Picardy, during one of which experiments were made with aerial photography. ==Specifications==