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Dornier Do 24

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The Dornier Do 24 is a 1930s German three-engine flying boat designed by the Dornier Flugzeugwerke for maritime patrol and search-and-rescue. According to Dornier records, some 12,000 people were rescued by Do 24s during its flying career. A total of 279 were built between several factories from 1937-1945.

Design and development

The Dornier Do 24 was designed to meet a Dutch navy requirement for a replacement of the Dornier Wals being used in the Dutch East Indies. It was an all-metal monoplane with a broad-beamed hull and stabilising sponsons. The aircraft was powered by three wing-mounted radial engines. The first two aircraft built were fitted with 447 kW (600 hp) Junkers Jumo 205C diesel engines. The next two had 652 kW (875 hp) Wright R-1820-F52 Cyclones, this was to meet a Dutch requirement to use the same engines as the Martin 139. The third aircraft (with Cyclone engines) was the first to fly on 3 July 1937. Six Dutch aircraft (designated Do 24K-1) were built in Germany, followed by a further aircraft built under licence by Aviolanda in the Netherlands (designated Do 24K-2).

Only 25 aircraft had been built on the Aviolanda assembly line before the German occupation. The Luftwaffe were interested in the completed and partially completed aircraft. The Dutch production line continued to produce aircraft under German control. 11 airframes were completed with Dutch-bought Wright Cyclone engines, but later models used the BMW Bramo 323R-2. A further 159 Do 24s were built in Holland during the occupation, most under the designation Do 24T-1.

Another production line for the Do 24 was established in Sartrouville, France, during the German occupation. This line was operated by SNCA and was able to produce another 48 Do 24s. After the liberation, this facility produced a further 40 Do 24s, which served in the French Navy until 1952.

Operation history

File:Dornier Do 24N Romania 1941.jpg
A Luftwaffe Do 24 in Romania, 1941

37 Dutch- and German-built Do 24s had been sent to the East Indies by the time of the German occupation of the Netherlands in June 1940. Until the outbreak of war, these aircraft would have flown the tri-color Roundel. Later, to avoid confusion with British or French roundels, Dutch aircraft flew a black-bordered orange triangle insignia. After the Japanese invasion, six surviving Do 24s were transferred to the Royal Australian Air Force in February 1942. They served in RAAF through most of 1944 as transports in New Guinea, making the Do 24 one of the few aircraft serving operationally on both sides during World War II.

During the war, a German Do 24 made a forced landing in neutral Sweden, was impounded and paid for, and remained in Swedish service until 1952.

In 1944, 12 Dutch-built Do 24s were delivered to Spain with the understanding that they would assist downed airmen of both sides. After the war, a few French-built Do 24s also found their way to Spain. Spanish Do 24s were operational at least until 1967, and possibly later. In 1971, one of the last flying Spanish Do 24s was returned to the Dornier facility on Lake Constance for permanent display.

Variants

File:Dornier Do 24 ATT vl 2.jpg
The restored and re-engined Do-24 ATT
Do 24K-1
Swiss production & Dutch license production aircraft, 36 built.
Do 24K-2
Dutch licence production powered by three 746 kW (1,000 hp) Wright R-1820-G102 engines. 1 built.
Do 24N-1
Dutch-built Do 24K-2s completed for Luftwaffe for air-sea rescue powered by three 746 kW (1,000 hp) Wright R-1820-G102 engines, 11 conversions.
Do 24T-1
French production, 48 built
Do 24T-1
Dutch production for the Lutwaffe powered by three BMW Bramo 323R-2 engines, 159 built (including T-2 and T-3).
Do 24T-2
Do 24T-1 with minor changes.
Do 24T-3
Do 24T-1 with minor changes.
Do 24 ATT
Post-war restoration with three Pratt & Whitney Canada PT6A-45 turboprop engines, one built.
Do 318
One Do 24T modified in 1944 with a boundary-layer control system.

Operators

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Template:Country data Spain Spanish State
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Survivors

File:Dornier Do 24 on Display.jpg
Dornier Do 24 on Display

Four complete aircraft survive:

  • In February 2004, a restored and re-engined aircraft, the Do-24 ATT, began flying around the world on a UNICEF mission to assist children in the Philippines. The Do-24 ATT is piloted by Iren Dornier, the grandson of Dornier founder Claudius Dornier. Upon completion of the work with UNICEF, it will be run as a special charter airliner by South East Asian Airlines. [1]
  • A Do 24T-3 is on is on display at the Dutch Air Force Museum, Soesterberg, The Netherlands painted to represent an aircraft of the Marine Luchtvaartdienst - Dutch Naval Air Force. The restorers did very good work on it, it theoretically could be made airworthy within one week.
  • A Do 24T-3 is on display at the Flugwerft Schleißheim branch of the Deutsches Museum in Oberschleißheim.
  • A Do 24T-3 is on display at the Museo del Aire, Cuatro Vientos, Madrid, Spain.
File:Dornier Do 24 Rumpf.jpg
Dornier Do 24 forward fuselage remnant with stubwing on display Technikmuseum Speyer, recovered from Lake Muritz.

Specifications (Do 24)

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See also

Designation sequence
Do 20 - Do 22 - Do 23 - Do 24 - L 25 - Do 26 - Kl 26 Related lists

References

External links

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It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Dornier Do 24".