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Dornier Do J Wal

The Dornier Do J Wal ("whale") is a twin-engine German flying boat of the 1920s designed by Dornier Flugzeugwerke. The Do J was designated the Do 16 by the Reich Air Ministry (RLM) under its aircraft designation system of 1933.

Do J Wal
A Spanish Dornier Do J "Plus Ultra" in Luján Museum in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Role Flying boat
Manufacturer Dornier Flugzeugwerke
First flight 6 November 1922
Introduction 1923
Retired 1950
Primary user Spain
Number built >250

Design and development

The Do J had a high-mounted strut-braced parasol wing with two piston engines mounted in tandem in a central nacelle above the wing; one engine drove a tractor and the other drove a pusher propeller. The hull made use of Claudius Dornier's patented sponsons on the hull's sides, first pioneered with the earlier, Dornier-designed Zeppelin-Lindau Rs.IV flying boat late in World War I.[1][2] The Do J made its maiden flight on 6 November 1922. The flight, as well as most production until 1932, took place in Italy because of the restrictions on aviation in Germany after World War I under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles. Dornier began to produce the Wal in Germany in 1931; production went on until 1936.

In the military version (Militärwal in German),[3] a crew of two to four rode in an open cockpit near the nose of the hull. There was one machine gun position in the bow in front of the cockpit and one or two amidships. Beginning with Spain, military versions were delivered to Argentina, Chile and the Netherlands for use in their colonies; examples were also sent to Yugoslavia, the Soviet Union and to the end of production Italy and Germany. The main military users, Spain and the Netherlands, manufactured their own versions under licence. Several countries, notably Italy, Norway, Portugal, Uruguay and Germany, employed the Wal for military tasks.

The civil version (Kabinenwal or Verkehrswal) [3] had a cabin in the nose, offering space for up to 12 passengers, while the open cockpit was moved further aft. Main users of this version were Germany, Italy, Brazil and Colombia.

The Do J was first powered by two 265 kW (355 hp) Rolls-Royce Eagle IX engines. Later versions used nearly every available engine on the market from makers like Hispano-Suiza, Napier & Son, Lorraine-Dietrich, BMW, and even the US-built Liberty V-12 engine. The 10 to-Wal used by Deutsche Lufthansa for their mail service across the South Atlantic from 1934 to 1938 had a range of 3,600 km (2,200 mi), and a ceiling of 3,500 m (11,480 ft).

Over 250 Wals were built by CMASA and Piaggio in Italy, CASA in Spain, Kawasaki in Japan, Aviolanda in the Netherlands and Dornier in Germany.

Numerous airlines operated Wals on scheduled passenger and mail services with great success. The source Robert L. Gandt, in 1991,[4] (pages 47–48) lists the following carriers: SANA and Aero Espresso of Italy; Aero Lloyd and Deutsche Luft Hansa of Germany; SCADTA of Colombia; Syndicato Condor of Brazil; Nihon Koku Yuso Kaisha of Japan. According to Nicolaou, 1996 [5] the Dornier Wal was "easily the greatest commercial success in the history of marine aviation".

The Colombian Air Force used Wals in the Colombia–Peru War in 1932–1933.

 
N-24 landed on the ice at New Ålesund
 
Amundsen's Dornier Do J flying over the Oslofjord, 1925
 
A Wal at Slite, Gotland, on the Danzig-Stockholm route in 1925

The Dornier Do 18 was a completely updated successor to the Wal but shared little more than the general configuration.

Pioneering flights

The Norwegian polar explorer Roald Amundsen accompanied by Lincoln Ellsworth, pilot Hjalmar Riiser-Larsen, and three other team members used two Dornier seaplanes in his unsuccessful attempt to reach the North Pole in 1925. His two aircraft, N-24 and N-25, landed at 87° 44' north. It was the northernmost latitude reached by any aircraft up to that time. The planes landed a few miles apart without radio contact, yet the crews managed to reunite. One of the aircraft, the N-24, was damaged. Amundsen and his crew worked for over three weeks to prepare an airstrip to take off from the ice. They shoveled 600 tons of ice while consuming only one pound (454 g) of daily food rations. In the end, six crew members were packed into the N-25. Riiser-Larsen took off, and they barely became airborne over the cracking ice. They returned triumphantly after widely being presumed dead.

 
Reconstructed Dornier Wal N25 in the Dornier Museum Friedrichshafen

On 18 August 1930, Wolfgang von Gronau started on a transatlantic flight in the same Dornier Wal (D-1422) Amundsen had flown, establishing the northern air route over the Atlantic, flying from Sylt (Germany)-Iceland-Greenland-Labrador-New York 4,670 mi (7,520 km)) in 47 flight hours. In 1932 von Gronau flew a Dornier Wal (D-2053) called the "Grönland Wal" (Greenland Whale) on a round-the-world flight.

In 1926 the captain Ramón Franco became a national Spanish hero when he piloted the Plus Ultra on a trans-Atlantic flight, following the route made by the Portuguese aviators Sacadura Cabral and Gago Coutinho in the first flight across the South Atlantic in 1922. His co-pilot was Julio Ruiz de Alda Miqueleiz; the other crew members were Teniente de Navio (Navy Lieutenant) Juan Manuel Duran and the mechanic Pablo Rada. The Plus Ultra departed from Palos de la Frontera, in the Province of Huelva, Spain, on 22 January and arrived in Buenos Aires, Argentina, on 26 January. It stopped over at Gran Canaria, Cape Verde, Pernambuco, Rio de Janeiro and Montevideo. The 10,270 km journey was completed in 59 hours and 39 minutes.

The event appeared in most major newspapers worldwide, although some of them underlined the fact that the airplane itself, plus the technical expertise were foreign. Throughout the Spanish-speaking world, the Spanish aviators were wildly acclaimed, particularly in Argentina and Spain where thousands gathered at Plaza de Colón in Madrid.

In 1929 Franco attempted another trans-Atlantic flight, this time crashing the airplane in the sea near the Azores. The crew was rescued days later by the aircraft carrier HMS Eagle of the British Royal Navy.

The Portuguese military aviator major Sarmento de Beires and his crew (captain Jorge de Castilho as navigator and lieutenant Manuel Gouveia as flight engineer) made the first aerial crossing of the Atlantic Ocean by night in a Dornier J named Argos. The crossing was made on the night of the 16 to 17 March 1927, from the Bijagós Archipelago in Portuguese Guinea to Fernando de Noronha island in Brazil.

Two Dornier Wals (D-ALOX Passat and D-AKER Boreas) also played an important role in the Third German Antarctic Expedition of 1939.

South Atlantic air mail

 
A Luft Hansa Dornier Do J II f Bos, registered D-AFAR and named Samum in Bathurst (1938)

The biggest and last versions of the Wal, the eight and ten tonne variants (both versions also known as Katapultwal [3] ), were operated by Lufthansa on their South Atlantic airmail service from Stuttgart, Germany to Natal, Brazil.[6] On route proving flights in 1933, and a scheduled service beginning in February 1934, Wals flew the trans-ocean stage of the route, between Bathurst, the Gambia in West Africa and Fernando de Noronha, an island group off South America. At first, there was a refueling stop in mid-ocean. The flying boat would land on the open sea, near a converted merchant ship. This vessel was equipped with a "towed sail" onto which the aircraft taxied. From there it was winched aboard by a crane, refueled, and then launched by catapult back into the air. However, landing on the big ocean swells tended to damage the hull of the flying boats, especially the smaller 8-tonne Wal. From September 1934 a second merchantman was available, so that Lufthansa now had a support ship at each end of the trans-ocean stage, providing radio navigation signals and catapult launchings. When they did not have to take off from the water under their own power, the flying boats could carry more fuel. Once the incoming mail from Europe had arrived in West Africa (also by Wal from the Canary Islands), the support ship would steam out to sea in the direction of South America for 36 hours before using its catapult to launch the airplane. On the return trip a Wal would fly the stage from Natal to Fernando de Noronha, and then be carried out to sea overnight. The same airplane was then catapulted off to fly to West Africa the following morning, i.e., after twelve hours travel on the ship. From April 1935 the ships no longer carried the flying boats out to sea. The Wal was launched offshore, and flew the entire distance across the ocean. This cut the time it took for mail to get from Germany to Brazil from four days down to three.

The first ship converted to a mid-Atlantic refueling stop was the SS Westfalen, a freight and passenger liner that became out-dated for carrying mail and passengers shortly after World War I due to its small size and low cruising speed. The second vessel was the MS Schwabenland. In 1936 a new support ship went into service, the MS Ostmark, which Lufthansa had purpose-built as a seaplane tender.

Wals made over 300 crossings of the South Atlantic in regular mail service (Gandt, 1991, pages 47–48).[4] The 8-tonne Wal was not a success, only two being built. The six 10-tonne Wals flew the South Atlantic from 1934 until late 1938, although aircraft of more recent design began replacing them from 1937.

From 1925 the French airline Compagnie Générale Aéropostale operated an airmail service on much the same route, from France to Brazil. The mail was flown only as far as Dakar in Senegal, West Africa, and then shipped across the South Atlantic to Natal aboard converted destroyers. The ocean crossing alone took five days, the whole trip eight days. From 1930 Aéropostale began trying to make the ocean crossing by air, but kept losing planes and crews and suffered from a lack of political support. Air France, of which Aéropostale had become a part, only began operating an all air service between Europe and South America in January 1936,[7] nearly two years after Lufthansa. That the Germans had succeeded in establishing the world's first regular intercontinental airline service before their competition was due, in no small part, to the sturdy and seaworthy Wal and its reliable BMW engines.

(This section is based on "Graue & Duggan",[8] Gandt[4] and Nicolaou.[5])

Variants

Data from:[9]

Do J Kas Wal
2x Hispano-Suiza engines. Transport and military flying boat.
Do J Wal
2x Rolls-Royce Eagle IX engines. Transport and military flying boat. Exported to Argentina, Chile and the Soviet Union.
Do J Wal
2x Rolls-Royce Kestrel engines. Transport and military flying boat. Exported to Yugoslavia.
Do J Wal
2x Lorraine-Dietrich engines. Transport and military flying boat. Used in the Netherlands East Indies
Do J Wal
2x Renault engines
Do J Wal
2x Farman 12Wer engines.
Do J Wal
2x Napier Lion V engines
Do J Wal
2x Rolls-Royce Eagle engines. Passenger carrying flying boat.
Do J Wal
2x Isotta-Fraschini Asso
Do J Wal
2x Fiat A.22 R engines.
Do J Gas Wal
2x Gnôme-Rhöne Jupiter engines.
Do J Bas Wal
2x BMW VI engines
Do J II Wal
2x BMW VI engines
Do J II Wal
2x Siemens Jupiter engines
Do J II Bas Wal
2x BMW VI engines. Passenger carrying flying boat.
Do J IIa Bos Wal
2x BMW VI engines. Post carrying flying boat.
Do J IIaK Bos Wal
2x BMW VI engines. Used for catapult-launched Atlantic crossings.
Do J IIb Bos Wal
2x BMW VIIa engines. "Grönland"-Wal.
Do J II Ses Wal
2x Siemens Sh 20 engines. Wal
Do J IId Bis Wal
2x BMW VI engines.
Do J IId Bis Wal
2x Curtiss Conqueror To Colombia
Do J II 16a Bis Wal
2x BMW VI engines. – Dornier Do 16
Do J IId Wal
2x BMW VI engines. – Militär-Wal
Do J IIe 16 Bos Wal
2x BMW VI engines
Do J IIf Bos Wal
2x BMW VI U engines
Do O Wal
"Atlantico" c/n 34 and "Pacifico" c/n 35 built by CMASA in Italy. Used for an expedition to South America in 1924. Shipped to and assembled on the island of Curaçao. Sold to Sindicato Condor and later to Varig. Still in use, 1936.
Do 16
re-designation of J II military Wal aircraft

Operators

  Argentina
  Brazil
  Chile
  Colombia
  Denmark
  Germany
  Italy
  Japan
  Netherlands
  Norway
  Portugal
  Soviet Union
  Spain
  Spanish State
  Switzerland
  Kingdom of Yugoslavia

Aircraft on display

Accidents and incidents

  • 3 December 1928: a Syndicato Condor Dornier Wal registration P-BACA, crashed in Guanabara Bay while attempting to avoid a collision with another aircraft of the same company, during a celebratory flight upon the arrival of Alberto Santos Dumont in Rio de Janeiro. Ten passengers and four crew members died. This was the first accident with an aircraft registered in Brazil that had victims other than the crew and that received wide media coverage.[10][11]
  • 11 September 1931: a Syndicato Condor Dornier Wal registration P-BALA, while taking-off from Potengi river in Natal, collided with a boat. Three crew members died.[10][12]

Specifications (Do J Wal RR Eagle engines)

General characteristics

  • Crew: Three
  • Capacity: 8–10 passengers
  • Length: 17.25 m (56 ft 7 in)
  • Wingspan: 22 m (72 ft 2 in)
  • Height: 5.62 m (18 ft 5 in)
  • Wing area: 96 m2 (1,030 sq ft)
  • Empty weight: 3,630 kg (8,003 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 7,000 kg (15,432 lb)
  • Powerplant: 2 × Rolls-Royce Eagle IX V-12 water-cooled piston engines, 265 kW (355 hp) each

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 185 km/h (115 mph, 100 kn)
  • Cruise speed: 145 km/h (90 mph, 78 kn)
  • Range: 800 km (500 mi, 430 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 3,500 m (11,500 ft)
  • Rate of climb: 1.5 m/s (300 ft/min)
  • Time to altitude: 3,000 m (9,843 ft) in 33 minutes

See also

Related lists

References

  1. ^ "The (German) Dornier "Giant Flying-Boat"". flightglobal.com. Flight Global. September 18, 1919. Retrieved March 28, 2017.
  2. ^ "Some Dornier "Milestones" – The Do. Rs. IV, 1917–18". flightglobal.com. Flight Global. December 23, 1920. Retrieved March 28, 2017.
  3. ^ a b c Das Flugzeug im Zeppelin-Konzern und seinen Nachfolgebetrieben, Ernst Wasmuth Verlag Tübingen, Berlin & Zeppelin Museum Friedrichshafen 2006 ISBN 3-8030-3316-0
  4. ^ a b c Gandt, Robert L. China Clipper – The Age of the Great Flying Boats, Naval Institute Press, Annapolis Maryland 1991 ISBN 0-87021-209-5
  5. ^ a b Stéphane Nicolaou. Flying Boats & Seaplanes – A History from 1905, Bay View Books Ltd Bideford Devon 1998 (English translation, originally published in french – copyright ETAI, Paris 1996)
  6. ^ "First Transatlantic air line", February 1933, Popular Science
  7. ^ Harold G. Dick with Douglas H. Robinson "The Golden Age of the Great Passenger Airships" Smithsonian Institution Press Washington D.C 1985 ISBN 1-56098-219-5 Page 166
  8. ^ James W. Graue & John Duggan "Deutsche Lufthansa South Atlantic Airmail Service 1934–1939", Zeppelin Study Group, Ickenham, UK 2000 ISBN 0-9514114-5-4
  9. ^ "Dornier H Falke". Germany. Retrieved 25 February 2012.
  10. ^ a b Pereira, Aldo (1987). Breve história da aviação comercial brasileira (in Portuguese). Rio de Janeiro: Europa Empresa Gráfica e Editora. p. 130.
  11. ^ Germano da Silva, Carlos Ari César (2008). "Destinos trágicos". O rastro da bruxa: história da aviação comercial brasileira no século XX através dos seus acidentes 1928–1996 (in Portuguese) (2 ed.). Porto Alegre: EDIPUCRS. pp. 18–21. ISBN 978-85-7430-760-2.
  12. ^ Germano da Silva, Carlos Ari César (2008). "Destinos trágicos". O rastro da bruxa: história da aviação comercial brasileira no século XX através dos seus acidentes 1928–1996 (in Portuguese) (2 ed.). Porto Alegre: EDIPUCRS. p. 21. ISBN 978-85-7430-760-2.

Further reading

  • Andersson, Lennart (Spring 1994). "Talkback". Air Enthusiast. No. 53. p. 78. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Lopes, Mario Canoniga (Spring 1994). "Talkback". Air Enthusiast. No. 53. pp. 79–80. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • M. Michiel van der Mey: "Dornier Wal a Light coming over the Sea". LoGisma editore, 2016, English, ISBN 978-88-97530-81-7
  • M. Michiel van der Mey: "Dornier Wal Vliegboot". 1986, Dutch, ISBN 90-900144-5-4
  • M. Michiel van der Mey: "Der Einsatz der Heinkel Katapulte". 2002, German
  • Nikolic, Djordie & Ognjevic, Akeksandar M. (2021). Dornier: The Yugoslav Saga 1926-2007. Lublin, Poland: Kagero Publishing. ISBN 978-83-66673-61-8.

External links

  •   Media related to Dornier Do J Wal at Wikimedia Commons
  • Dornier Wal Documentation Center
  • airwar.ru
  • "Flyers Of The Sea", October 1931, Popular Mechanics
  • "Dornier H Falke". Germany. Retrieved 25 February 2012.
  • Дорније Do J

dornier, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, april, 2008, learn. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Dornier Do J Wal news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Dornier Do J Wal whale is a twin engine German flying boat of the 1920s designed by Dornier Flugzeugwerke The Do J was designated the Do 16 by the Reich Air Ministry RLM under its aircraft designation system of 1933 Do J WalA Spanish Dornier Do J Plus Ultra in Lujan Museum in Buenos Aires Argentina Role Flying boatManufacturer Dornier FlugzeugwerkeFirst flight 6 November 1922Introduction 1923Retired 1950Primary user SpainNumber built gt 250 Contents 1 Design and development 1 1 Pioneering flights 1 2 South Atlantic air mail 2 Variants 3 Operators 4 Aircraft on display 5 Accidents and incidents 6 Specifications Do J Wal RR Eagle engines 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Further reading 9 External linksDesign and development EditThe Do J had a high mounted strut braced parasol wing with two piston engines mounted in tandem in a central nacelle above the wing one engine drove a tractor and the other drove a pusher propeller The hull made use of Claudius Dornier s patented sponsons on the hull s sides first pioneered with the earlier Dornier designed Zeppelin Lindau Rs IV flying boat late in World War I 1 2 The Do J made its maiden flight on 6 November 1922 The flight as well as most production until 1932 took place in Italy because of the restrictions on aviation in Germany after World War I under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles Dornier began to produce the Wal in Germany in 1931 production went on until 1936 In the military version Militarwal in German 3 a crew of two to four rode in an open cockpit near the nose of the hull There was one machine gun position in the bow in front of the cockpit and one or two amidships Beginning with Spain military versions were delivered to Argentina Chile and the Netherlands for use in their colonies examples were also sent to Yugoslavia the Soviet Union and to the end of production Italy and Germany The main military users Spain and the Netherlands manufactured their own versions under licence Several countries notably Italy Norway Portugal Uruguay and Germany employed the Wal for military tasks The civil version Kabinenwal or Verkehrswal 3 had a cabin in the nose offering space for up to 12 passengers while the open cockpit was moved further aft Main users of this version were Germany Italy Brazil and Colombia The Do J was first powered by two 265 kW 355 hp Rolls Royce Eagle IX engines Later versions used nearly every available engine on the market from makers like Hispano Suiza Napier amp Son Lorraine Dietrich BMW and even the US built Liberty V 12 engine The 10 to Wal used by Deutsche Lufthansa for their mail service across the South Atlantic from 1934 to 1938 had a range of 3 600 km 2 200 mi and a ceiling of 3 500 m 11 480 ft Over 250 Wals were built by CMASA and Piaggio in Italy CASA in Spain Kawasaki in Japan Aviolanda in the Netherlands and Dornier in Germany Numerous airlines operated Wals on scheduled passenger and mail services with great success The source Robert L Gandt in 1991 4 pages 47 48 lists the following carriers SANA and Aero Espresso of Italy Aero Lloyd and Deutsche Luft Hansa of Germany SCADTA of Colombia Syndicato Condor of Brazil Nihon Koku Yuso Kaisha of Japan According to Nicolaou 1996 5 the Dornier Wal was easily the greatest commercial success in the history of marine aviation The Colombian Air Force used Wals in the Colombia Peru War in 1932 1933 N 24 landed on the ice at New Alesund Amundsen s Dornier Do J flying over the Oslofjord 1925 A Wal at Slite Gotland on the Danzig Stockholm route in 1925 The Dornier Do 18 was a completely updated successor to the Wal but shared little more than the general configuration Pioneering flights Edit The Norwegian polar explorer Roald Amundsen accompanied by Lincoln Ellsworth pilot Hjalmar Riiser Larsen and three other team members used two Dornier seaplanes in his unsuccessful attempt to reach the North Pole in 1925 His two aircraft N 24 and N 25 landed at 87 44 north It was the northernmost latitude reached by any aircraft up to that time The planes landed a few miles apart without radio contact yet the crews managed to reunite One of the aircraft the N 24 was damaged Amundsen and his crew worked for over three weeks to prepare an airstrip to take off from the ice They shoveled 600 tons of ice while consuming only one pound 454 g of daily food rations In the end six crew members were packed into the N 25 Riiser Larsen took off and they barely became airborne over the cracking ice They returned triumphantly after widely being presumed dead Reconstructed Dornier Wal N25 in the Dornier Museum Friedrichshafen On 18 August 1930 Wolfgang von Gronau started on a transatlantic flight in the same Dornier Wal D 1422 Amundsen had flown establishing the northern air route over the Atlantic flying from Sylt Germany Iceland Greenland Labrador New York 4 670 mi 7 520 km in 47 flight hours In 1932 von Gronau flew a Dornier Wal D 2053 called the Gronland Wal Greenland Whale on a round the world flight In 1926 the captain Ramon Franco became a national Spanish hero when he piloted the Plus Ultra on a trans Atlantic flight following the route made by the Portuguese aviators Sacadura Cabral and Gago Coutinho in the first flight across the South Atlantic in 1922 His co pilot was Julio Ruiz de Alda Miqueleiz the other crew members were Teniente de Navio Navy Lieutenant Juan Manuel Duran and the mechanic Pablo Rada The Plus Ultra departed from Palos de la Frontera in the Province of Huelva Spain on 22 January and arrived in Buenos Aires Argentina on 26 January It stopped over at Gran Canaria Cape Verde Pernambuco Rio de Janeiro and Montevideo The 10 270 km journey was completed in 59 hours and 39 minutes The event appeared in most major newspapers worldwide although some of them underlined the fact that the airplane itself plus the technical expertise were foreign Throughout the Spanish speaking world the Spanish aviators were wildly acclaimed particularly in Argentina and Spain where thousands gathered at Plaza de Colon in Madrid In 1929 Franco attempted another trans Atlantic flight this time crashing the airplane in the sea near the Azores The crew was rescued days later by the aircraft carrier HMS Eagle of the British Royal Navy The Portuguese military aviator major Sarmento de Beires and his crew captain Jorge de Castilho as navigator and lieutenant Manuel Gouveia as flight engineer made the first aerial crossing of the Atlantic Ocean by night in a Dornier J named Argos The crossing was made on the night of the 16 to 17 March 1927 from the Bijagos Archipelago in Portuguese Guinea to Fernando de Noronha island in Brazil Two Dornier Wals D ALOX Passat and D AKER Boreas also played an important role in the Third German Antarctic Expedition of 1939 South Atlantic air mail Edit A Luft Hansa Dornier Do J II f Bos registered D AFAR and named Samum in Bathurst 1938 The biggest and last versions of the Wal the eight and ten tonne variants both versions also known as Katapultwal 3 were operated by Lufthansa on their South Atlantic airmail service from Stuttgart Germany to Natal Brazil 6 On route proving flights in 1933 and a scheduled service beginning in February 1934 Wals flew the trans ocean stage of the route between Bathurst the Gambia in West Africa and Fernando de Noronha an island group off South America At first there was a refueling stop in mid ocean The flying boat would land on the open sea near a converted merchant ship This vessel was equipped with a towed sail onto which the aircraft taxied From there it was winched aboard by a crane refueled and then launched by catapult back into the air However landing on the big ocean swells tended to damage the hull of the flying boats especially the smaller 8 tonne Wal From September 1934 a second merchantman was available so that Lufthansa now had a support ship at each end of the trans ocean stage providing radio navigation signals and catapult launchings When they did not have to take off from the water under their own power the flying boats could carry more fuel Once the incoming mail from Europe had arrived in West Africa also by Wal from the Canary Islands the support ship would steam out to sea in the direction of South America for 36 hours before using its catapult to launch the airplane On the return trip a Wal would fly the stage from Natal to Fernando de Noronha and then be carried out to sea overnight The same airplane was then catapulted off to fly to West Africa the following morning i e after twelve hours travel on the ship From April 1935 the ships no longer carried the flying boats out to sea The Wal was launched offshore and flew the entire distance across the ocean This cut the time it took for mail to get from Germany to Brazil from four days down to three The first ship converted to a mid Atlantic refueling stop was the SS Westfalen a freight and passenger liner that became out dated for carrying mail and passengers shortly after World War I due to its small size and low cruising speed The second vessel was the MS Schwabenland In 1936 a new support ship went into service the MS Ostmark which Lufthansa had purpose built as a seaplane tender Wals made over 300 crossings of the South Atlantic in regular mail service Gandt 1991 pages 47 48 4 The 8 tonne Wal was not a success only two being built The six 10 tonne Wals flew the South Atlantic from 1934 until late 1938 although aircraft of more recent design began replacing them from 1937 From 1925 the French airline Compagnie Generale Aeropostale operated an airmail service on much the same route from France to Brazil The mail was flown only as far as Dakar in Senegal West Africa and then shipped across the South Atlantic to Natal aboard converted destroyers The ocean crossing alone took five days the whole trip eight days From 1930 Aeropostale began trying to make the ocean crossing by air but kept losing planes and crews and suffered from a lack of political support Air France of which Aeropostale had become a part only began operating an all air service between Europe and South America in January 1936 7 nearly two years after Lufthansa That the Germans had succeeded in establishing the world s first regular intercontinental airline service before their competition was due in no small part to the sturdy and seaworthy Wal and its reliable BMW engines This section is based on Graue amp Duggan 8 Gandt 4 and Nicolaou 5 Variants EditData from 9 Do J Kas Wal 2x Hispano Suiza engines Transport and military flying boat Do J Wal 2x Rolls Royce Eagle IX engines Transport and military flying boat Exported to Argentina Chile and the Soviet Union Do J Wal 2x Rolls Royce Kestrel engines Transport and military flying boat Exported to Yugoslavia Do J Wal 2x Lorraine Dietrich engines Transport and military flying boat Used in the Netherlands East Indies Do J Wal 2x Renault engines Do J Wal 2x Farman 12Wer engines Do J Wal 2x Napier Lion V engines Do J Wal 2x Rolls Royce Eagle engines Passenger carrying flying boat Do J Wal 2x Isotta Fraschini Asso Do J Wal 2x Fiat A 22 R engines Do J Gas Wal 2x Gnome Rhone Jupiter engines Do J Bas Wal 2x BMW VI engines Do J II Wal 2x BMW VI engines Do J II Wal 2x Siemens Jupiter engines Do J II Bas Wal 2x BMW VI engines Passenger carrying flying boat Do J IIa Bos Wal 2x BMW VI engines Post carrying flying boat Do J IIaK Bos Wal 2x BMW VI engines Used for catapult launched Atlantic crossings Do J IIb Bos Wal 2x BMW VIIa engines Gronland Wal Do J II Ses Wal 2x Siemens Sh 20 engines Wal Do J IId Bis Wal 2x BMW VI engines Do J IId Bis Wal 2x Curtiss Conqueror To Colombia Do J II 16a Bis Wal 2x BMW VI engines Dornier Do 16 Do J IId Wal 2x BMW VI engines Militar Wal Do J IIe 16 Bos Wal 2x BMW VI engines Do J IIf Bos Wal 2x BMW VI U engines Do O Wal Atlantico c n 34 and Pacifico c n 35 built by CMASA in Italy Used for an expedition to South America in 1924 Shipped to and assembled on the island of Curacao Sold to Sindicato Condor and later to Varig Still in use 1936 Do 16 re designation of J II military Wal aircraftOperators Edit ArgentinaArgentine Naval Aviation BrazilVarig Syndicato Condor ChileChilean Air Force Chilean Navy ColombiaSCADTA Colombian Air Force DenmarkRoyal Danish Navy GermanyCondor Syndikat Italy Japan NetherlandsDutch Naval Aviation Service Norway PortugalPortuguese Air Force Soviet UnionSoviet Air Force SpainSpanish Republican Air Force Spanish Republican Navy Spanish StateSpanish Air Force Spanish Navy Switzerland Kingdom of YugoslaviaYugoslav Royal NavyAircraft on display EditPlus Ultra at Lujan Argentina Plus Ultra replica at Museo del Aire de Cuatro Vientos in Madrid Spain Dornier Museum Friedrichshafen at Friedrichshafen airport Germany full scale replica Accidents and incidents Edit3 December 1928 a Syndicato Condor Dornier Wal registration P BACA crashed in Guanabara Bay while attempting to avoid a collision with another aircraft of the same company during a celebratory flight upon the arrival of Alberto Santos Dumont in Rio de Janeiro Ten passengers and four crew members died This was the first accident with an aircraft registered in Brazil that had victims other than the crew and that received wide media coverage 10 11 11 September 1931 a Syndicato Condor Dornier Wal registration P BALA while taking off from Potengi river in Natal collided with a boat Three crew members died 10 12 Specifications Do J Wal RR Eagle engines EditGeneral characteristics Crew Three Capacity 8 10 passengers Length 17 25 m 56 ft 7 in Wingspan 22 m 72 ft 2 in Height 5 62 m 18 ft 5 in Wing area 96 m2 1 030 sq ft Empty weight 3 630 kg 8 003 lb Max takeoff weight 7 000 kg 15 432 lb Powerplant 2 Rolls Royce Eagle IX V 12 water cooled piston engines 265 kW 355 hp eachPerformance Maximum speed 185 km h 115 mph 100 kn Cruise speed 145 km h 90 mph 78 kn Range 800 km 500 mi 430 nmi Service ceiling 3 500 m 11 500 ft Rate of climb 1 5 m s 300 ft min Time to altitude 3 000 m 9 843 ft in 33 minutesSee also EditRelated lists List of aircraft of the Spanish Republican Air Force List of aircraft of World War II List of interwar military aircraft List of flying boats and floatplanesReferences Edit The German Dornier Giant Flying Boat flightglobal com Flight Global September 18 1919 Retrieved March 28 2017 Some Dornier Milestones The Do Rs IV 1917 18 flightglobal com Flight Global December 23 1920 Retrieved March 28 2017 a b c Das Flugzeug im Zeppelin Konzern und seinen Nachfolgebetrieben Ernst Wasmuth Verlag Tubingen Berlin amp Zeppelin Museum Friedrichshafen 2006 ISBN 3 8030 3316 0 a b c Gandt Robert L China Clipper The Age of the Great Flying Boats Naval Institute Press Annapolis Maryland 1991 ISBN 0 87021 209 5 a b Stephane Nicolaou Flying Boats amp Seaplanes A History from 1905 Bay View Books Ltd Bideford Devon 1998 English translation originally published in french copyright ETAI Paris 1996 First Transatlantic air line February 1933 Popular Science Harold G Dick with Douglas H Robinson The Golden Age of the Great Passenger Airships Smithsonian Institution Press Washington D C 1985 ISBN 1 56098 219 5 Page 166 James W Graue amp John Duggan Deutsche Lufthansa South Atlantic Airmail Service 1934 1939 Zeppelin Study Group Ickenham UK 2000 ISBN 0 9514114 5 4 Dornier H Falke Germany Retrieved 25 February 2012 a b Pereira Aldo 1987 Breve historia da aviacao comercial brasileira in Portuguese Rio de Janeiro Europa Empresa Grafica e Editora p 130 Germano da Silva Carlos Ari Cesar 2008 Destinos tragicos O rastro da bruxa historia da aviacao comercial brasileira no seculo XX atraves dos seus acidentes 1928 1996 in Portuguese 2 ed Porto Alegre EDIPUCRS pp 18 21 ISBN 978 85 7430 760 2 Germano da Silva Carlos Ari Cesar 2008 Destinos tragicos O rastro da bruxa historia da aviacao comercial brasileira no seculo XX atraves dos seus acidentes 1928 1996 in Portuguese 2 ed Porto Alegre EDIPUCRS p 21 ISBN 978 85 7430 760 2 Further reading Edit Andersson Lennart Spring 1994 Talkback Air Enthusiast No 53 p 78 ISSN 0143 5450 Lopes Mario Canoniga Spring 1994 Talkback Air Enthusiast No 53 pp 79 80 ISSN 0143 5450 M Michiel van der Mey Dornier Wal a Light coming over the Sea LoGisma editore 2016 English ISBN 978 88 97530 81 7 M Michiel van der Mey Dornier Wal Vliegboot 1986 Dutch ISBN 90 900144 5 4 M Michiel van der Mey Der Einsatz der Heinkel Katapulte 2002 German Nikolic Djordie amp Ognjevic Akeksandar M 2021 Dornier The Yugoslav Saga 1926 2007 Lublin Poland Kagero Publishing ISBN 978 83 66673 61 8 External links Edit Media related to Dornier Do J Wal at Wikimedia Commons Dornier Wal Documentation Center airwar ru Flyers Of The Sea October 1931 Popular Mechanics Dornier H Falke Germany Retrieved 25 February 2012 Dorniјe Do J Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dornier Do J Wal amp oldid 1098917636, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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