Junkers F.13

Junkers F.13

PaísAlemania
PapelTransporte de pasajeros pequeños
Primer vuelo25 de junio de 1919
Construido322

el Junkers F.13 (también conocido como el F 13) fue el primer avión de transporte totalmente metálico del mundo, desarrollado en Alemania al final de la Primera Guerra Mundial. Era un monoplano avanzado de ala voladizo, con alojamiento cerrado para cuatro pasajeros. Se vendieron más de 300. Estuvo en producción durante trece años y en servicio comercial durante casi veinte.

Fuente: Junkers F.13 en Wikipedia

Junkers F.13 Caminan
FotógrafoMeindert de Vreeze
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Fotos22
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Ver también:

Segunda Guerra Mundial: La historia visual definitiva de la guerra relámpago a la bomba atómica (DK Definitive Visual Histories) - Amazon Segunda Guerra Mundial Mapa por Mapa (DK History Mapa por Mapa) - Amazon


A Revolution in Civil Aviation

el Junkers F.13 was a landmark in aviation history. Developed immediately after WWI by Hugo Junkers, it was the first aircraft designed specifically as a commercial passenger plane rather than a converted bomber. While other 1919-era planes were made of wood and fabric, the F.13 was built entirely of duralumin. Its cantilever wing design—meaning it had no drag-inducing external struts or wires—set the template for every modern airliner flying today.

Attribute Technical Specification (F.13ge)
Papel Civil Passenger / Transport Aircraft
Equipo 2 (Open cockpit)
Capacidad 4 Passengers (Enclosed cabin)
First Flight June 25, 1919
Planta motriz 1 × BMW IV 6-cylinder water-cooled inline
Horsepower 250 hp (186 kW)
Velocidad máxima 106 mph (170 km/h)
gama 870 miles (1,400 km)

Corrugated Strength & Comfort

  • Corrugated Duralumin Skin: The F.13’s most famous feature is its “washboard” skin. The corrugation provided immense structural rigidity without adding significant weight, making the aircraft incredibly durable in harsh environments from the Arctic to the Tropics.
  • The Cantilever Wing: Unlike biplanes of the era, the F.13’s wing was internally braced. This “clean” wing allowed for much higher efficiency and speed, a direct result of Hugo Junkers’ pioneering research into aerodynamics.
  • Luxury for Passengers, Elements for Pilots: In a strange twist of 1920s logic, the passengers sat in a heated, upholstered, and enclosed cabin with large windows. Meanwhile, the pilots sat in an open-air cockpit just behind the engine, exposed to the wind and rain.
  • Modular Landing Gear: The F.13 was designed to be versatile. It could be fitted with standard wheels, large wooden skis for snow, or twin duralumin floats for water operations.

A Global Legacy

  • Founding of Airlines: The F.13 was the primary aircraft used to establish many of the world’s early airlines, including Lufthansa (Germany), SCADTA (Colombia), and Ad Astra Aero (Switzerland).
  • Longevity: Over 300 F.13s were built. Because of their metal construction, they outlasted their wooden competitors by decades, with some remaining in commercial service well into the late 1940s.
  • The American Connection: John Larsen imported F.13s to the US as the “JL-6.” One of these was used by the US Post Office to pioneer transcontinental airmail routes.
  • Modern Rebirth: The design is so legendary that a Swiss team (RIMOWA) built a 1:1 flying replica of the F.13 in 2016, using the original drawings to bring the “Annelise” back to the skies.

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