Back from the dead: The legendary Junkers F13 flies again
By Miquel Ros, for CNN
Updated 0635 GMT (1435 HKT) January 13, 2016
The Junkers F13 – The pioneering Junkers F13 was
designed in 1919 by German aviation entrepreneur and businessman Hugo Junkers.
In the era of fabric-and-wood biplanes and triplanes, it was the first
all-metal transport aircraft.
Soon to fly again – Luggagemakers RIMOWA and airline
Ju-Air have teamed up to build a brand new Junkers F13, which will take its
maiden flight in March 2016.
Using original blueprints – There are only five F13
aircraft in museums around the world, none of them airworthy. So the new F13 is
an exact replica built from scratch, using old blueprints.
(CNN)In the spring of
2016 one of the most revolutionary aircraft in aviation history will take to
the skies for the first time in more than 60 years.
The Junkers F13 was the world's first all-metal transport aircraft,
designed just after World War I by German aviation entrepreneur and businessman
Hugo Junkers.
Using the ground-breaking aluminum alloy Duralumin, the F13's low-wing
monoplane cantilever design and metal fuselage turned heads in 1919, the era of
fabric-and-wood biplanes and triplanes.
Its sleek style anticipated the lines of the modern airliner.
Heated passenger cabin
The F13 featured another innovation that made it a favorite among
airlines all around the world: an enclosed heated passenger cabin that held up
to four passengers in relative comfort -- for the standards of the time, at
least.
The pilots had to make do with an open cockpit -- normal procedure at
the time -- since they relied entirely on visual navigation to get to their
destination.
The F13 was so popular that, despite the abundance of cheap former
military aircraft in the years immediately after the war, Junkers carved a
significant market share for its new model in the burgeoning airline industry.
By the mid-1920s no less than 40% of commercial air routes globally
were serviced by F13s.
Hugo Junkers even created his own airline, Junkers Luftverkehr, that
would later merge into German flag carrier Lufthansa, in order to promote and
sell the F13.
Return of the F13
The new-look
Junkers F13. The original production run saw 322 F13s built between 1919 and
1932.
The last commercial F13 retired in Brazil in 1951.
Now the vintage plane is back, thanks to a collaboration between
Cologne-based luxury luggage-makers RIMOWA and Swiss airline company Ju-Air.
Like Junkers, RIMOWA were pioneers in the use of Duralumin, and their
products still feature a signature corrugated outer shell, reminiscent of the
airliners of the 1920s and 1930s.
The idea of bringing this marvel of early aircraft manufacturing back
to the skies came up in 2009 when Germany's Association of Friends of
Historical Aircraft (Verein der Freunde historischer Luftfahrzeuge)
was forced to ground its historic Ju52 airplane.
The build
The Junkers F13 was suggested as a replacement. However, making a 1919
aircraft airborne again is no easy feat.
There are only five F13 aircraft left in museums around the world, none
of them airworthy.
So the team decided to build an exact replica of the F13 from scratch,
using old blueprints.
It took four years of research before construction could even start.
Finding specialists
Not only were the blueprints incomplete, they needed to find skilled
talent and to assemble a group of highly specialized companies that could take
care of building the airframe, restoring and maintaining the power plant, and
the engineering.
The Swiss and German aviation communities and several European and
American museums all piled in to help with the project.
In a technical facility in Oberndorf, at the edge of Germany's Black
Forest, a team under the direction of Dominik Kaelin, of Kaelin
AeroTechnologies, devoted more than 9,000 hours of work to hand build the
airframe and wings.
This time the F13 has brakes
The Junkers F13
was one of the first airplanes to have a heated cabin.
The new F13 is made of corrugated Duralumin, just like the original.
The only concessions to modern aircraft-building techniques have been
those needed to secure a modern airworthiness certificate, such as adding
brakes and a tail wheel.
Dieter Morszeck, Rimowa's CEO and the driving force behind the project,
says finding a suitable engine was another major challenge.
"The early series of the Junkers F13 was powered by in-row
engines, which are a rare find these days.
"Later versions of the F13 were outfitted with radial engines;
therefore we opted to power the reproduction with a Pratt & Whitney R-985
engine".
Once finished, the airframe was transported in a container 140
kilometers south to its new home in Duebendorf, Switzerland.
Maiden flight
This is where it received its finishing touches and it's from here that
local operator Ju-Air is going to operate sightseeing tours.
The schedule, frequency and route of these flights is still being
worked out, but F13 flights are already available for pre-order through rimowa-f13.com.
The maiden flight will take place in March this year.
For extra bragging rights, the Junkers F13 is older than any airline
currently in operation anywhere in the world. It debuted in June 1919,
pre-dating the founding of airlines KLM and Avianca by a few months.
At a time when travelers long for the glamor that was once associated
with air travel, and airlines are bringing their historical liveries back to
the skies, it's the ultimate treat for fans of retro flying.
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