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Junkers W 34

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Junkers W 34
Canadian Airways CF-ARI
Type Transport
Manufacturer Junkers

Junkers W 34 was a German-built, single-engine, passenger- and transport aircraft, developed by Junkers in the 1920s and was taken into service in 1926. The passenger version could take a pilot and five passengers. The aircraft was developed from the Junkers W 33. Further development of the aircraft led to the Junkers Ju 46.

One Junkers W 34 be/b3e managed to break the then current altitude record on May 26, 1929 when it reached the altitude of 12,739 meters (41,402 feet). That aircraft carried the markings D-1119 and it was equipped with a Bristol Jupiter VII engine. The airplane was flown by Friedrich W. Neuenhofen.

The Junkers W 34 was manufactured in many different versions. The total production numbers for the civil market were around 1,000, a further 2,024 "hi"'s and "hau"'s were built on license for the RLM and Luftwaffe. The unit price was between RM 65,000 and 70,400.

On January 31 1944, the Luftwaffe still had 618 W 34 hi's and 516 W 34 hau's in service, the majority were used by flight schools.

The Junkers K.43, nicknamed the "Bush Bomber", was used extensively during the Chaco War (19321935) fought between Bolivia and Paraguay. See external links.

Production

W 34 hi
Junkers (105 aircraft built), Henschel (430), ATG (94), Dornier Wismar (58), HFB (69) and Weser (221).
W 34 hau
Henschel (329), Arado Brandenburg (205), ATG (105), Dornier Wismar (93), HFB (192) and MIAG Braunschweig (73).

Versions

File:Junkers W 34 hi.JPG
En W 34 hi, at E-Stelle Rechlin
W 34 a
331 kW Gnôme-Rhône engine, speed: 190 km/h, wingspan: 17.75 m and length 11.10 m
W 34 be
375 kW Gnôme-Rhône engine, speed: 230 km/h, wingspan: 17.75 m, length: 10.70 m
W 34 be/b3e
441 kW Bristol Jupiter VII engine and was used for attempts to try breaking the world altitude record
W 34 ci
405 kW Pratt & Whitney Hornet engine, speed: 245 km/h, equipped with cabin windows
W 34 di
like the W 34 ci, the engine was licenseproduced by BMW.
W 34 f
331 kW Gnôme-Rhône engine, speed: 190 km/h, wingspan: 18,48 m and length 11,10 m, enclosed cockpit, ailerons were lengthened and the export version had a cargo door
W 34 f
experimental aircraft with floats
W 34 fa
passenger aircraft for export
W 34 fä
export aircraft
W 34 fo
export aircraft with a Pratt & Whitney R-1340 engine
W 34 fy
Armstrong-Siddeley Panther engine
W 34 fao
397 kW Siemens Sh 20 engine, only one was produced for tests with autopilot
W 34 fei
441 kW Siemens Sh 20 U engine, only one was produced as a maritime test aircraft
W 34 fg
Armstrong-Siddeley Jaguar Major engine
W 34 fue
Pratt & Whitney Hornet engine, later rebuilt as a maritime aircraft.
W 34 fi
405 kW Hornet engine that wither was manufactured by Pratt & Whitney or license made by BMW, wingspan: 18,48 m, length: 10,27 m, speed: 260 km/h. The aircraft had an enclosed cockpit and low pressure tires.
W 34 gi
405kW BMW Hornet, only one machine was produced in 1933 for tests
W 34 hi
485 kW BMW 132A/E, the aircraft could take 6 passengers and was equipped with improved radio- and direction finders. This version was mostly used by Luftwaffe to train pilots and radio operators.
W 34 hau
similar as hi, but it had a 526kW Bramo 322 H engine. The type was mostly used by Luftwaffe to train its pilots and radio operatorsradiooperatörer.
K 43
was the military version of the Junkers W 34 and it was available in many of the above mentioned versions.

Users

Template:BOL
Template:CAN
Template:China as ROC
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Template:FIN
Template:Country data Germany
Template:NOR
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  • Aeronáutica Militar (Army Military Aviation): W 34L
  • Aviação Naval (Naval Aviation): K 43W
Template:Country data Spain Spain
Template:SWE
Template:Country data South Africa

Specifications

Template:Aircraft specification

Notes

External links

Commons-logo.svg
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

History of Bolivian Junkers K.43's use during fighting over the Gran Chaco area.

Template:RLM aircraft designations

cs:Junkers W 34 de:Junkers W 34 it:Junkers W 34 fi:Junkers W 34 sv:Junkers W 34

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Junkers W 34".