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Encyclopedia > Weserflug

Weser Flugzeugbau GmbH, known as Weserflug, was the fourth largest aircraft manufacturer in World War II Germany.


The company was founded in 1934 as a subsidiary of the ship and machine company Deutschen Schiff-und Maschinenbau AG (DESCHIMAG). It began production that year at Berlin Tempelhof, and in Bremen.


In 1935, Dr. Adolf Rohrbach became technical director of a new Weserflug factory at Lemwerder, near Bremen, which opened in 1936. He had been working on ideas for VTOL (Vertical TakeOff and Landing) aircraft since 1933, and now developed them further.


Dipl.-Ing. Simon in 1938 developed a VTOL plane christened the P1003/1. It had 4m diameter propellors that swivelled between horizontal and vertical, and could fly up to 650 Km/h. The 1989 Boeing V-22 Osprey aircraft uses essentially the same concept. It requires very complex gearing to tilt the wings without varying the power to the propellers.


During World War II Weserflug had another factory in Poland, at Liegnitz. It built Ju 188 and Ju 388 bombers, one of which survives in the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, DC.


Perhaps foreseeing the end of the war, the management of Weserflug transferred in 1944 from Berlin to Hoykenkamp, 15km west of Bremen. It took over buildings previously used by Focke Achgelis.


During 1940-5, Weserflug built 5215 Junkers Ju 87 Stuka planes at Tempelhof. This plant also constructed Fw 190 fighters. Forced labour was used; on 20th April 1944 2,103 of the 4,151 Tempelhof workers were foreign forced labourers.


Ju 86 aircraft were manufactured at Lemwerder.


At the end of the war, all aircraft production in Germany halted for several years. In 1948 a trustee, Horst Janson, was appointed to collect the assets of Weser AG, to which Weserflug belonged. He was responsible for some postwar reindustrialisation in Bremen, such as reactivating the shipbuilding industry, and joined the board of Weser AG. Production of motorised aircraft was forbidden in Germany from 1945 until 1955. In the 1950's the Hoykenkamp area was used for small businesses.


In 1960, while retaining his other commitments to the reindustrialisation of Bremen, Janson became chairman of Weser AG. In 1961, Weserflug joined forces with Focke Wulf - also of Bremen - and Hamburger Flugzeugbau in the Entwicklungsring Nord (ERNO) to develop rockets. Focke Wulf and Weserflug formally merged in 1964, becoming Vereinigte Flugtechnische Werke (VFW). Janson retired as chairman of Weser AG in 1969.


Related book

F.-Herbert Wenz: Flughafen Tempelhof. Chronik des Berliner Werkes der "Weser" Flugzeugbau GmbH Bremen. Bau der Kriegsflugzeuge Ju 87-Stuka und Fw 190 1939-1945. Lemwerder (Stedinger Verlag) 2000. ISBN 3927697249. 159 pages.

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  Results from FactBites:
 
Weser Flugzeugbau GmbH - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (434 words)
In 1935, Dr. Adolf Rohrbach became technical director of a new Weserflug factory at Lemwerder, near Bremen, which opened in 1936.
Perhaps foreseeing the end of the war, the management of Weserflug transferred in 1944 from Berlin to Hoykenkamp, 15km west of Bremen.
In 1948 a trustee, Horst Janson, was appointed to collect the assets of Weser AG, to which Weserflug belonged.
Entwicklungsring Nord - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (373 words)
The Entwicklungsring Nord (Northern development circle) was a 1961 joint venture of Bremen-based Weserflug and Focke-Wulf with Hamburger Flugzeugbau to develop parts for rockets.
After Weserflug and Focke Wulf formally merged into Vereinigte Flugtechnische Werke (VFW) in 1964, the machine was redesignated VFW-614.
The draft design was amended to a STOL 40-44 passenger jet with overwing engines, for easier operation from unprepared runways.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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