Siebel Fh 104

The Siebel Fh 104 " Hallore " was a civilian passenger aircraft by the aircraft manufacturer aircraft hall (later Siebel Flugzeugwerke ).

History

The pattern was designed as a pure touring aircraft in 1936 under the leadership of Friedrich Fecher ( 1904-1986 ). It was initially the name of the terminal 104, because the development in the Halle factory was started by Hanns Klemm. Since clamp on the instructions of the Reich Air Ministry (RLM) had to give the aircraft factory in Halle with the design department in December 1937 to Frederick Siebel ( Siebel → Aircraft ), the type was later renamed Siebel Fh 104. The first flight of the prototype with the registration D - IEHR led chief pilot Wolfgang Ziese by on February 25, 1937. In August 1937 the sample approval was granted by the RLM. The aircraft was a cantilever low- wing monoplane of mixed construction (metal fuselage and wings made ​​of wood) with retractable spur wheel chassis. The pilot and the maximum four passengers sat in an enclosed cabin. The built in series from 1937 machine was one of the most popular twin-engine jet aircraft that was also used by sizes of the former regime as the generals Udet or Kesselring. Furthermore, in 1938 and 1939 successfully completed with the various aircraft flight competitions such as the Europe - round course and the international air race in Frankfurt am Main. By the time production ended in March 1941 about 50 aircraft were built.

Specifications

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