fbpx
Wikipedia

VFW-Fokker 614

The VFW-Fokker 614 (also VFW 614) was a twin-engined jetliner designed and constructed by joint Dutch and West German aviation company VFW-Fokker. It is the first jet-powered passenger liner to be developed and produced in West Germany (the East German Baade 152 being the first German jet airliner), as well as the first German-built civil aircraft to have been manufactured for a decade.[2]

VFW 614
Muk Air VFW-614
Role Regional airliner
Manufacturer Fokker VFW
First flight 14 July 1971
Introduction August 1975
Retired 7 December 2012
Status Retired
Primary users German Air Force
Touraine Air Transport
Air Alsace
Cimber Air
Number built 19[1]

The VFW 614 was originally proposed during the early 1960s as the E.614, which was a concept for a 36–40 seat aircraft by a consortium of West German aircraft companies, who were soon re-organised into Vereinigte Flugtechnische Werke (VFW). Originally intended as a Douglas DC-3 replacement, its most distinctive feature was that its engines were mounted in pods on pylons above the wing. The VFW 614 was produced in small numbers during the early- to mid-1970s by VFW-Fokker, a company resulting from a merger between VFW and the Dutch aircraft company Fokker. The program was cancelled in 1977, since anticipated sales and thus production were not achieved.

Development edit

 
Overwing pylon-mounted Rolls-Royce/SNECMA M45H

The VFW 614 was originally proposed in 1961 by the Entwicklungsring Nord (ERNO) group, comprising Focke-Wulf, Hamburger Flugzeugbau (HFB) and Weser as the E.614, a 36–40 seat aircraft powered by a pair of American-built Lycoming PLF1B-2 turbofan engines. During this time, the West German industry underwent a substantial reorganisation, resulting in the establishment of Vereinigte Flugtechnische Werke (VFW), based at Bremen, Germany. Development of what would become the VFW 614 proceeded under the new combined company.[3]

Lycoming ultimately chose to abandon development of the PLF1, which led to development of the type continuing using an alternative powerplant, the Rolls-Royce/SNECMA M45H turbofan engine, in its place.[4] Unlike the PLF1, the M45H was developed specially to power the VFW 614.[5] At the time, it was considered to have been a relatively bold ambition to develop both an entirely new airframe and a new engine in parallel.[4] Throughout development, a major priority placed upon the engines was upon noise reduction, so as to allow the airliner to use small municipal airports without incurring noise abatement restrictions upon its operations.[4]

In 1968, the project was given the go-ahead;[5] at this point, 80 percent of the secured backing for the type originated from the West German Government. During 1970, full-scale production of the VFW 614 was approved, by which time VFW had merged with Dutch aircraft manufacturer Fokker, a move which had the distinction of being Europe's first transnational aircraft company.[4][6] Aerospace publication Flying Magazine accredits Fokker's involvement in the project with several refinements and changes to the emerging design of the VFW 614, which included the discarding of a T-tail in favour of a conventional unit, furnished with a low-set vertical stabilizer and dihedral.[7]

During this time, Fokker sought to broaden its financial basis and determined that the VFW 614 had promise; as such, the company intended to market the type through Fokker's established civil sales unit and support infrastructure; however, the union has been regarded by some commentators as having been an 'unhappy arrangement' and had only lasted for only ten years before its dissolution.[2] In addition, several risk sharing agreements had been concluded with other aviation companies, including Siebel Flugzeugwerke ATG (SEAT) in Germany, Fairey and SABCA in Belgium and Shorts in the United Kingdom. Final assembly of the aircraft was to be performed at VFW's Bremen facility.[citation needed]

Development of the aircraft had been heavily influenced by the pre-war American piston-engine Douglas DC-3 passenger aircraft.[4] During late 1971, it was reported that the company had anticipated overall sales of the VFW 614 airliner to reach between 300 and 400 units, which was to have included its use by various American operators.[8]

On 14 July 1971, the first of three prototypes performed its maiden flight.[9] The first flight of the aircraft was also the first time that the engine had been airborne, having not been previously flown on a test-bed.[4] To speed up flight testing, the first and second prototypes, which were reportedly almost identical, were dispatched to Spain for three months of comprehensive trials to evaluate their performance under 'hot and high' conditions.[10] Shortly after the accumulation of 800 flying hours, the design was frozen for production and manufacturing activity commenced on the first ten production airliners.[4]

Development of the aircraft was protracted and orders slow to materialise, despite a strong marketing campaign. The situation was not helped by Rolls-Royce's bankruptcy in 1971 which threatened the supply of engines.[11] According to aircraft publication Flight International, by 1974 the performance guarantees on both the thrust and fuel consumption of the M45H had been fulfilled.[4]

On 1 February 1972, the programme was damaged by the loss of the first prototype, which was attributed to an instance of elevator flutter;[12] which played a role in further diminishing the order situation. By late 1974, orders had been placed for the long-lead items to complete an anticipated 30 production VFW-614s, along with sufficient critical items to build up to 50 airliners.[4] By February 1975, only ten aircraft had been ordered. During April 1975, the first production VFW 614 made its first flight; it was delivered to Denmark's Cimber Air four months later.[12]

Design edit

 
VFW 614 inflight from above

The VFW-Fokker 614 was a twin-engined short haul regional airliner; it was developed as in part to serve as a replacement for the popular propeller-driven pre-war Douglas DC-3.[7][4] The 614 was the first passenger jetliner to be developed by West Germany, and featured an unconventional engine configuration. In its era, the aircraft was one of the smallest and slowest airliners to have been produced.[13] The VFW 614 was powered by a pair of Rolls-Royce/SNECMA M45H turbofan engines. This powerplant, being relatively quiet and smokeless, had been specially developed to power the airliner.[14] For further internal noise reduction, soundproofing was present within the cabin.[15]

These engines were installed on the airliner in an unconventional manner, having been mounted above the wings upon pylons at a mid-wing position.[14] This arrangement had several advantages, such as avoiding the structural weight penalties imposed by rear-mounted engines and the potential ingestion risks present when engines were mounted beneath the wings.[8] The engine configuration allowed the adoption of a short, sturdy undercarriage, which was specially suited to performing operations from austere or otherwise poorly-prepared runways.[1] The position of the engine over the wing, compared to under-wing, also shielded people on the ground from intake noise during flyovers; this shielding effect is also present for aft-mounted engines.[16]

In conjunction with the above-wing engine installation, an unswept wing outfitted with a continuous trailing edge flap was adopted; this possessed no unfavourable interaction with the engine flow.[8] The continuous flap gave excellent low speed performance, however, during high speed travel, interference between the wing and pylon flow fields resulted in flow separation, which in turn limited the cruise speed to M0.65.[17] A recent aircraft, the HondaJet, which also featured an over-wing engine installation, used a high speed natural laminar flow airfoil and an engine configuration that actually produced favorable interference at high speed.[18][19]

The flight deck of the VFW 614 was designed to facilitate easy two-crew operations.[10] The flight crew are provided with a large windscreen, providing favourable external visibility, and a relatively spacious environment. Instead of using side-mounted consoles, a large centrally-mounted console accommodates the primary engine controls and VHF com/nav radio systems, along with the individual controls for adjusting the spoilers, flaps, and trimming.[10] Avionics included a Collins-built flight director, autopilot, and a pilot alerting system.[10]

According to Flight International, the VFW 614 possessed relatively docile and easy to handle flight tendencies, along with light controls, favourable aileron characteristics and a high rate of roll.[20] One negative flight performance attribute was its stall characteristics, which was described as initially occurring "at almost the worst possible place – the inboard end of the ailerons". The stalling regime was explored heavily during the flight test programme, which led to a re-profiling of the wing's leading edge for additional outboard camber being adopted on production aircraft to improve this performance. This gave greater warning and a tendency for relatively straight flight during typical stall conditions.[21]

Operational history edit

 
At Cimber Air in 1977

Shortly after the VFW 614's entry to service, it became clear that sales had fallen far short of expectations. According to author Mark E. Mendenhall, the management within VFW-Fokker was divided and split along national lines. While a number of German staff in the company attributed the poor sales performance to the Dutch sales team having paid the type little heed, even allegedly regarding it as a competitor to Fokker's established product lines for orders, and that salesmen had prioritised the promotion of Dutch-designed airliners instead.[2] Reportedly, some Dutch managers did hold a preference for their own aircraft, regarding them as established successes and the VFW 614 as a waste of effort to market. Dutch management was alleged by Mendenhall to have interfered with the firm's marketing structure to curtail independence and maintain support for their own aircraft.[2]

West German airline Lufthansa declined to procure any VFW 614s. At the time the company had prioritised its development of long haul routes, for which regional airliners were not applicable, while the German government had declined to pressure the airline to buy the type. According to authors H. Dienel and P. Lyth, Lufthansa's lack of interest in the type was attributed as having been a major factor in the commercial failure of the VFW 614.[22] Only three airlines and the German Air Force would ultimately operate new VFW 614s.[23] The aircraft was initially prone to engine problems, and it was too expensive for the small regional airlines for whose needs it was designed.[24] Three aircraft were flown but were never delivered; a total of four airframes were broken up prior to completion.[citation needed]

 
ATTAS used to visualize wingtip vortices

During 1977, the programme was cancelled as a result of the lack of sales, and the last unsold aircraft flew in July 1978. Mendenhall reports that there had been a widespread sentiment amongst German employees that they had been regarded as being subordinate to Fokker, which had increased over time as the VFW 614's commercial failure had become more and more apparent.[25] By 1981, the majority of commercial aircraft had already been disposed of, partially due to the manufacturer having bought back many of the aircraft that year so that it could simultaneously terminate support for the type.[citation needed] Thereafter, only the German Air Force aircraft remained in service, the last being retired in 1999. The last airworthy VFW 614 was in use with DLR for the Advanced Technologies Testing Aircraft System (ATTAS) project. After being based with DLR in Braunschweig, Germany for many years, this aircraft (registered D-ADAM) was retired in December 2012, to the Deutsches Museum Flugwerft in Oberschleißheim, Germany.[citation needed]

Operators edit

 
German Air Force VFW 614
  Denmark
  France
  West Germany

Specifications (VFW 614) edit

 
side view
 
Displayed at Flugwerft Schleißheim

Data from The Observer's Book of Aircraft, 1976.[31] Flight International[32]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 2
  • Capacity: 40–44 passengers in 4 abreast seating
  • Length: 20.6 m (67 ft 7 in)
  • Wingspan: 21.5 m (70 ft 6 in)
  • Height: 7.82 m (25 ft 8 in)
  • Wing area: 64 m2 (690 sq ft)
  • Airfoil: root: NACA 63A015; tip: NACA 65A012[33]
  • Empty weight: 12,179 kg (26,850 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 19,958 kg (44,000 lb)
  • Powerplant: 2 × Rolls-Royce/SNECMA M45H Mk. 501 turbofan engines, 33.2 kN (7,500 lbf) thrust each

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 704 km/h (437 mph, 380 kn)
  • Range: 1,195 km (743 mi, 645 nmi) with 40 passengers
  • Service ceiling: 7,620 m (25,000 ft)
  • Rate of climb: 15.75 m/s (3,100 ft/min)

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Eriksson and Steenhuis 2015, p. 122.
  2. ^ a b c d Mendenhall 2005, p. 326.
  3. ^ Mellberg 1995, pp. 94–95.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Field 1974, p. 489.
  5. ^ a b Mellberg 1995, p. 95.
  6. ^ Mendenhall 2005, pp. 325–326.
  7. ^ a b Fricker, John. "Ach du Leiber Flugindustrie." Flying Magazine, May 1966. Vol. 78, No. 5. ISSN 0015-4806. p. 77.
  8. ^ a b c Kocivar, Ben. "." Popular Science, October 1971. p. 67.
  9. ^ Mellberg 1995, pp. 95, 98.
  10. ^ a b c d Field 1974, p. 490.
  11. ^ "F27 Project – Nederlands Industrieel Erfgoed Vliegend Houden".
  12. ^ a b Mellberg 1995, p. 98.
  13. ^ Gunston, Bill. "The Phoenix of Derby." New Scientist, 9 December 1971. Vol. 52, No. 773. ISSN 0262-4079. p. 77.
  14. ^ a b Eriksson and Steenhuis 2015, pp. 121–122.
  15. ^ Field 1974, pp. 489–490.
  16. ^ Chichester-Miles, I (16 August 1973). . Flight International. pp. 320–321. Archived from the original on 4 September 2017.
  17. ^ "Engine/Airframe Interference." G. Krenz, AGARD R-712, Special Course on Subsonic/Transonic Aerodynamic Interference for Aircraft, Wright-Patterson AFB, Dayton Ohio, 16–20 May 1983.
  18. ^ Fujino, Michimasa; Kawamura, Yuichi (1 January 2003). "Wave-Drag Characteristics of an Over-the-Wing Nacelle Business-Jet Configuration". Journal of Aircraft. 40 (6): 1177–1184. doi:10.2514/2.7207 – via American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics.
  19. ^ Garrison, Peter. "Technicalities: You want to put them where?" Flying Magazine, December 2005. Vol. 132, No. 12. ISSN 0015-4806. p. 105.
  20. ^ Field 1974, pp. 491–492.
  21. ^ Field 1974, p. 491.
  22. ^ Dienel and Lyth 1999, pp. 97–98.
  23. ^ Jackson 1976, p. 62.
  24. ^ Mellberg 1995, pp. 98–99.
  25. ^ Mendenhall 2005, p. 332.
  26. ^ Bowman, Craig (2023-06-15). "The aircraft with Above Wing Engines: Meet The VFW-Fokker 614". Jets ’n’ Props. Retrieved 2023-10-03.
  27. ^ "VFW 614 AHEAD OF ITS TIME". www.key.aero. 2018-09-20. Retrieved 2023-10-03.
  28. ^ Nicolaou 1979, pp. 50–51
  29. ^ Nicolaou 1979, p 51
  30. ^ Guillem and Bénichou 2016, p. 40
  31. ^ Green 1976, p. 214.
  32. ^ Field 1974, p. 492.
  33. ^ Lednicer, David. "The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage". m-selig.ae.illinois.edu. Retrieved 16 April 2019.

Bibliography edit

  • Dienel, H. and P. Lyth. Flying the Flag: European Commercial Air Transport since 1945. Springer, 1999. ISBN 1-34926-951-4.
  • Eriksson, Sören and Harm-Jan Steenhuis. The Global Commercial Aviation Industry. Routledge, 2015. ISBN 1-13667-239-7.
  • Field, Hugh (18 April 1974). "In the Air: Continental commuter". Flight International. pp. 489–492.
  • Guillem, Jacques; Bénichou, Michel (November 2016). "VFW 614: Trois p'tits tours et puis s'en va". Le Fana de l'Aviation (in French). No. 564. pp. 32–40. ISSN 0757-4169.
  • Green, William. The Observer's Book of Aircraft. London. Frederick Warne & Co. Ltd., 1976. ISBN 0-7232-1553-7.
  • Jackson, Paul A. German Military Aviation 1956–1976. Hinckley, Leicestershire, UK: Midland Counties Publications, 1976. ISBN 0-904597-03-2.
  • Mendenhall, Mark E. (2005). Mergers and Acquisitions: Managing Culture and Human Resources. Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-4661-3.
  • Nicolaou, Stéphane (May 1979). "VFW-Fokker 614". Le Fana de l'Aviation (in French). No. 114. pp. 44–51.
  • Mellberg, Bill. "VFW 614: Ahead of its Time". Air International, February 1995, Vol 48 No 2. Stamford, UK:Key Publishing. ISSN 0306-5634. pp. 94–99.

External links edit

  • Airliners.net photos
  • photos of the VFW614
  • YouTube video of the VFW 614
  • VFW 614 ATTAS – out of operation

fokker, also, twin, engined, jetliner, designed, constructed, joint, dutch, west, german, aviation, company, fokker, first, powered, passenger, liner, developed, produced, west, germany, east, german, baade, being, first, german, airliner, well, first, german,. The VFW Fokker 614 also VFW 614 was a twin engined jetliner designed and constructed by joint Dutch and West German aviation company VFW Fokker It is the first jet powered passenger liner to be developed and produced in West Germany the East German Baade 152 being the first German jet airliner as well as the first German built civil aircraft to have been manufactured for a decade 2 VFW 614 Muk Air VFW 614 Role Regional airliner Manufacturer Fokker VFW First flight 14 July 1971 Introduction August 1975 Retired 7 December 2012 Status Retired Primary users German Air ForceTouraine Air Transport Air Alsace Cimber Air Number built 19 1 The VFW 614 was originally proposed during the early 1960s as the E 614 which was a concept for a 36 40 seat aircraft by a consortium of West German aircraft companies who were soon re organised into Vereinigte Flugtechnische Werke VFW Originally intended as a Douglas DC 3 replacement its most distinctive feature was that its engines were mounted in pods on pylons above the wing The VFW 614 was produced in small numbers during the early to mid 1970s by VFW Fokker a company resulting from a merger between VFW and the Dutch aircraft company Fokker The program was cancelled in 1977 since anticipated sales and thus production were not achieved Contents 1 Development 2 Design 3 Operational history 4 Operators 5 Specifications VFW 614 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Notes 7 2 Bibliography 8 External linksDevelopment edit nbsp Overwing pylon mounted Rolls Royce SNECMA M45H The VFW 614 was originally proposed in 1961 by the Entwicklungsring Nord ERNO group comprising Focke Wulf Hamburger Flugzeugbau HFB and Weser as the E 614 a 36 40 seat aircraft powered by a pair of American built Lycoming PLF1B 2 turbofan engines During this time the West German industry underwent a substantial reorganisation resulting in the establishment of Vereinigte Flugtechnische Werke VFW based at Bremen Germany Development of what would become the VFW 614 proceeded under the new combined company 3 Lycoming ultimately chose to abandon development of the PLF1 which led to development of the type continuing using an alternative powerplant the Rolls Royce SNECMA M45H turbofan engine in its place 4 Unlike the PLF1 the M45H was developed specially to power the VFW 614 5 At the time it was considered to have been a relatively bold ambition to develop both an entirely new airframe and a new engine in parallel 4 Throughout development a major priority placed upon the engines was upon noise reduction so as to allow the airliner to use small municipal airports without incurring noise abatement restrictions upon its operations 4 In 1968 the project was given the go ahead 5 at this point 80 percent of the secured backing for the type originated from the West German Government During 1970 full scale production of the VFW 614 was approved by which time VFW had merged with Dutch aircraft manufacturer Fokker a move which had the distinction of being Europe s first transnational aircraft company 4 6 Aerospace publication Flying Magazine accredits Fokker s involvement in the project with several refinements and changes to the emerging design of the VFW 614 which included the discarding of a T tail in favour of a conventional unit furnished with a low set vertical stabilizer and dihedral 7 During this time Fokker sought to broaden its financial basis and determined that the VFW 614 had promise as such the company intended to market the type through Fokker s established civil sales unit and support infrastructure however the union has been regarded by some commentators as having been an unhappy arrangement and had only lasted for only ten years before its dissolution 2 In addition several risk sharing agreements had been concluded with other aviation companies including Siebel Flugzeugwerke ATG SEAT in Germany Fairey and SABCA in Belgium and Shorts in the United Kingdom Final assembly of the aircraft was to be performed at VFW s Bremen facility citation needed Development of the aircraft had been heavily influenced by the pre war American piston engine Douglas DC 3 passenger aircraft 4 During late 1971 it was reported that the company had anticipated overall sales of the VFW 614 airliner to reach between 300 and 400 units which was to have included its use by various American operators 8 On 14 July 1971 the first of three prototypes performed its maiden flight 9 The first flight of the aircraft was also the first time that the engine had been airborne having not been previously flown on a test bed 4 To speed up flight testing the first and second prototypes which were reportedly almost identical were dispatched to Spain for three months of comprehensive trials to evaluate their performance under hot and high conditions 10 Shortly after the accumulation of 800 flying hours the design was frozen for production and manufacturing activity commenced on the first ten production airliners 4 Development of the aircraft was protracted and orders slow to materialise despite a strong marketing campaign The situation was not helped by Rolls Royce s bankruptcy in 1971 which threatened the supply of engines 11 According to aircraft publication Flight International by 1974 the performance guarantees on both the thrust and fuel consumption of the M45H had been fulfilled 4 On 1 February 1972 the programme was damaged by the loss of the first prototype which was attributed to an instance of elevator flutter 12 which played a role in further diminishing the order situation By late 1974 orders had been placed for the long lead items to complete an anticipated 30 production VFW 614s along with sufficient critical items to build up to 50 airliners 4 By February 1975 only ten aircraft had been ordered During April 1975 the first production VFW 614 made its first flight it was delivered to Denmark s Cimber Air four months later 12 Design edit nbsp VFW 614 inflight from above The VFW Fokker 614 was a twin engined short haul regional airliner it was developed as in part to serve as a replacement for the popular propeller driven pre war Douglas DC 3 7 4 The 614 was the first passenger jetliner to be developed by West Germany and featured an unconventional engine configuration In its era the aircraft was one of the smallest and slowest airliners to have been produced 13 The VFW 614 was powered by a pair of Rolls Royce SNECMA M45H turbofan engines This powerplant being relatively quiet and smokeless had been specially developed to power the airliner 14 For further internal noise reduction soundproofing was present within the cabin 15 These engines were installed on the airliner in an unconventional manner having been mounted above the wings upon pylons at a mid wing position 14 This arrangement had several advantages such as avoiding the structural weight penalties imposed by rear mounted engines and the potential ingestion risks present when engines were mounted beneath the wings 8 The engine configuration allowed the adoption of a short sturdy undercarriage which was specially suited to performing operations from austere or otherwise poorly prepared runways 1 The position of the engine over the wing compared to under wing also shielded people on the ground from intake noise during flyovers this shielding effect is also present for aft mounted engines 16 In conjunction with the above wing engine installation an unswept wing outfitted with a continuous trailing edge flap was adopted this possessed no unfavourable interaction with the engine flow 8 The continuous flap gave excellent low speed performance however during high speed travel interference between the wing and pylon flow fields resulted in flow separation which in turn limited the cruise speed to M0 65 17 A recent aircraft the HondaJet which also featured an over wing engine installation used a high speed natural laminar flow airfoil and an engine configuration that actually produced favorable interference at high speed 18 19 The flight deck of the VFW 614 was designed to facilitate easy two crew operations 10 The flight crew are provided with a large windscreen providing favourable external visibility and a relatively spacious environment Instead of using side mounted consoles a large centrally mounted console accommodates the primary engine controls and VHF com nav radio systems along with the individual controls for adjusting the spoilers flaps and trimming 10 Avionics included a Collins built flight director autopilot and a pilot alerting system 10 According to Flight International the VFW 614 possessed relatively docile and easy to handle flight tendencies along with light controls favourable aileron characteristics and a high rate of roll 20 One negative flight performance attribute was its stall characteristics which was described as initially occurring at almost the worst possible place the inboard end of the ailerons The stalling regime was explored heavily during the flight test programme which led to a re profiling of the wing s leading edge for additional outboard camber being adopted on production aircraft to improve this performance This gave greater warning and a tendency for relatively straight flight during typical stall conditions 21 Operational history edit nbsp At Cimber Air in 1977 Shortly after the VFW 614 s entry to service it became clear that sales had fallen far short of expectations According to author Mark E Mendenhall the management within VFW Fokker was divided and split along national lines While a number of German staff in the company attributed the poor sales performance to the Dutch sales team having paid the type little heed even allegedly regarding it as a competitor to Fokker s established product lines for orders and that salesmen had prioritised the promotion of Dutch designed airliners instead 2 Reportedly some Dutch managers did hold a preference for their own aircraft regarding them as established successes and the VFW 614 as a waste of effort to market Dutch management was alleged by Mendenhall to have interfered with the firm s marketing structure to curtail independence and maintain support for their own aircraft 2 West German airline Lufthansa declined to procure any VFW 614s At the time the company had prioritised its development of long haul routes for which regional airliners were not applicable while the German government had declined to pressure the airline to buy the type According to authors H Dienel and P Lyth Lufthansa s lack of interest in the type was attributed as having been a major factor in the commercial failure of the VFW 614 22 Only three airlines and the German Air Force would ultimately operate new VFW 614s 23 The aircraft was initially prone to engine problems and it was too expensive for the small regional airlines for whose needs it was designed 24 Three aircraft were flown but were never delivered a total of four airframes were broken up prior to completion citation needed nbsp ATTAS used to visualize wingtip vortices During 1977 the programme was cancelled as a result of the lack of sales and the last unsold aircraft flew in July 1978 Mendenhall reports that there had been a widespread sentiment amongst German employees that they had been regarded as being subordinate to Fokker which had increased over time as the VFW 614 s commercial failure had become more and more apparent 25 By 1981 the majority of commercial aircraft had already been disposed of partially due to the manufacturer having bought back many of the aircraft that year so that it could simultaneously terminate support for the type citation needed Thereafter only the German Air Force aircraft remained in service the last being retired in 1999 The last airworthy VFW 614 was in use with DLR for the Advanced Technologies Testing Aircraft System ATTAS project After being based with DLR in Braunschweig Germany for many years this aircraft registered D ADAM was retired in December 2012 to the Deutsches Museum Flugwerft in Oberschleissheim Germany citation needed Operators editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp German Air Force VFW 614 nbsp Denmark Cimber Air received two aircraft 26 nbsp France Air Alsace bought three aircraft 27 Touraine Air Transport ordered eight aircraft but cancelled the remaining order after receiving two 28 nbsp West Germany West German Air Force received three aircraft 29 30 Specifications VFW 614 edit nbsp side view nbsp Displayed at Flugwerft Schleissheim Data from The Observer s Book of Aircraft 1976 31 Flight International 32 General characteristicsCrew 2 Capacity 40 44 passengers in 4 abreast seating Length 20 6 m 67 ft 7 in Wingspan 21 5 m 70 ft 6 in Height 7 82 m 25 ft 8 in Wing area 64 m2 690 sq ft Airfoil root NACA 63A015 tip NACA 65A012 33 Empty weight 12 179 kg 26 850 lb Max takeoff weight 19 958 kg 44 000 lb Powerplant 2 Rolls Royce SNECMA M45H Mk 501 turbofan engines 33 2 kN 7 500 lbf thrust each Performance Maximum speed 704 km h 437 mph 380 kn Range 1 195 km 743 mi 645 nmi with 40 passengers Service ceiling 7 620 m 25 000 ft Rate of climb 15 75 m s 3 100 ft min See also edit nbsp Aviation portal Honda MH02 Honda HA 420 HondaJetReferences editNotes edit a b Eriksson and Steenhuis 2015 p 122 a b c d Mendenhall 2005 p 326 Mellberg 1995 pp 94 95 a b c d e f g h i j Field 1974 p 489 a b Mellberg 1995 p 95 Mendenhall 2005 pp 325 326 a b Fricker John Ach du Leiber Flugindustrie Flying Magazine May 1966 Vol 78 No 5 ISSN 0015 4806 p 77 a b c Kocivar Ben Popular Science October 1971 p 67 Mellberg 1995 pp 95 98 a b c d Field 1974 p 490 F27 Project Nederlands Industrieel Erfgoed Vliegend Houden a b Mellberg 1995 p 98 Gunston Bill The Phoenix of Derby New Scientist 9 December 1971 Vol 52 No 773 ISSN 0262 4079 p 77 a b Eriksson and Steenhuis 2015 pp 121 122 Field 1974 pp 489 490 Chichester Miles I 16 August 1973 Noise shielding the Hawker Siddeley approach Flight International pp 320 321 Archived from the original on 4 September 2017 Engine Airframe Interference G Krenz AGARD R 712 Special Course on Subsonic Transonic Aerodynamic Interference for Aircraft Wright Patterson AFB Dayton Ohio 16 20 May 1983 Fujino Michimasa Kawamura Yuichi 1 January 2003 Wave Drag Characteristics of an Over the Wing Nacelle Business Jet Configuration Journal of Aircraft 40 6 1177 1184 doi 10 2514 2 7207 via American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics Garrison Peter Technicalities You want to put them where Flying Magazine December 2005 Vol 132 No 12 ISSN 0015 4806 p 105 Field 1974 pp 491 492 Field 1974 p 491 Dienel and Lyth 1999 pp 97 98 Jackson 1976 p 62 Mellberg 1995 pp 98 99 Mendenhall 2005 p 332 Bowman Craig 2023 06 15 The aircraft with Above Wing Engines Meet The VFW Fokker 614 Jets n Props Retrieved 2023 10 03 VFW 614 AHEAD OF ITS TIME www key aero 2018 09 20 Retrieved 2023 10 03 Nicolaou 1979 pp 50 51 Nicolaou 1979 p 51 Guillem and Benichou 2016 p 40 Green 1976 p 214 Field 1974 p 492 Lednicer David The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage m selig ae illinois edu Retrieved 16 April 2019 Bibliography edit Dienel H and P Lyth Flying the Flag European Commercial Air Transport since 1945 Springer 1999 ISBN 1 34926 951 4 Eriksson Soren and Harm Jan Steenhuis The Global Commercial Aviation Industry Routledge 2015 ISBN 1 13667 239 7 Field Hugh 18 April 1974 In the Air Continental commuter Flight International pp 489 492 Guillem Jacques Benichou Michel November 2016 VFW 614 Trois p tits tours et puis s en va Le Fana de l Aviation in French No 564 pp 32 40 ISSN 0757 4169 Green William The Observer s Book of Aircraft London Frederick Warne amp Co Ltd 1976 ISBN 0 7232 1553 7 Jackson Paul A German Military Aviation 1956 1976 Hinckley Leicestershire UK Midland Counties Publications 1976 ISBN 0 904597 03 2 Mendenhall Mark E 2005 Mergers and Acquisitions Managing Culture and Human Resources Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 4661 3 Nicolaou Stephane May 1979 VFW Fokker 614 Le Fana de l Aviation in French No 114 pp 44 51 Mellberg Bill VFW 614 Ahead of its Time Air International February 1995 Vol 48 No 2 Stamford UK Key Publishing ISSN 0306 5634 pp 94 99 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to VFW 614 category Airliners net photos Friends of the VFW 614 photos of the VFW614 Flug Revue Online Airpics com photos YouTube video of the VFW 614 VFW 614 ATTAS out of operation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title VFW Fokker 614 amp oldid 1223522150, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.