3 results found
City / Airport:Düsseldorf - International (EDDL / DUS)Map
Country:Germany
Photo Date:6 July 1930
Photo by:Udo HaafkeContact
Photo ID:423478Submit Correction
View count: 289
First and most probably last visit of the worlds biggest aircraft by the time at DUS, crowds were gathering to see the unique G-38. Only two examples were built. D-2000 later operated for Deutsche Lufthansa, was reregistered as D-AZUR in 1934 and crashed at Dessau in May 1936. Picture was taken by my late Grandfather.
Registration / Serial:D-2000
Aircraft Version:Junkers G38a
C/n (msn):3001
Operator Titles:Junkers
City / Airport:Düsseldorf - International (EDDL / DUS)Map
Country:Germany
Photo Date:6 July 1930
Photo by:Udo HaafkeContact
City / Airport:Düsseldorf - International (EDDL / DUS)Map
Country:Germany
Photo Date:6 July 1930
Photo by:Udo HaafkeContact
Photo ID:423478Submit Correction
View count: 289
First and most probably last visit of the worlds biggest aircraft by the time at DUS, crowds were gathering to see the unique G-38. Only two examples were built. D-2000 later operated for Deutsche Lufthansa, was reregistered as D-AZUR in 1934 and crashed at Dessau in May 1936. Picture was taken by my late Grandfather.
Registration / Serial:D-2000
Aircraft Version:Junkers G38a
C/n (msn):3001
Operator Titles:Junkers
City / Airport:Düsseldorf - International (EDDL / DUS)Map
Country:Germany
Photo Date:6 July 1930
Photo by:Udo HaafkeContact
Location:In Flight
Country:Netherlands
Photo Date:31 August 1930 to 8 September 1930
Photo from:AirHistory.net Photo Archive
Photo ID:288258Submit Correction
View count: 1036
Cracking air-to-air photograph by the Dutch army air arm of the G.38 prototype, almost certainly taken when the aircraft visited the Netherlands on the occasion of the 5th International Congress on Air Navigation in The Hague. It visited Rotterdam - Waalhaven and Amsterdam - Schiphol and overflew central The Hague, 'the fowl taking flight in fear'. Photo from: Nederlands Instituut voor Militaire Historie
Registration / Serial:D-2000
Aircraft Version:Junkers G38a
C/n (msn):3001
Operator Titles:Junkers
Location:In Flight
Country:Netherlands
Photo Date:31 August 1930 to 8 September 1930
Photo from:AirHistory.net Photo Archive
Location:In Flight
Country:Netherlands
Photo Date:31 August 1930 to 8 September 1930
Photo from:AirHistory.net Photo Archive
Photo ID:288258Submit Correction
View count: 1036
Cracking air-to-air photograph by the Dutch army air arm of the G.38 prototype, almost certainly taken when the aircraft visited the Netherlands on the occasion of the 5th International Congress on Air Navigation in The Hague. It visited Rotterdam - Waalhaven and Amsterdam - Schiphol and overflew central The Hague, 'the fowl taking flight in fear'. Photo from: Nederlands Instituut voor Militaire Historie
Registration / Serial:D-2000
Aircraft Version:Junkers G38a
C/n (msn):3001
Operator Titles:Junkers
Location:In Flight
Country:Netherlands
Photo Date:31 August 1930 to 8 September 1930
Photo from:AirHistory.net Photo Archive
Location:In Flight
Country:Germany
Photo Date:1932
Photo from:AirHistory.net Photo Archive
Photo ID:136137Submit Correction
View count: 1280
The second of the two Junkers G38s, photographed in flight near Dresden. The largest landplane in the world for some time, the G38 must have provided a fantastic view for the lucky passengers seated in the blended wing. D-2500, later D-APIS, entered Lufthansa service on 1 July 1932. It was eventually used by the Luftwaffe as a transport and destroyed in an air raid in Athens on 17 May 1941. Photo by: Walter Hahn / SLUB / Deutsche Fotothek
Registration / Serial:D-2500
Aircraft Version:Junkers G38ce
C/n (msn):3302
Operator Titles:Deutsche Luft Hansa
Location:In Flight
Country:Germany
Photo Date:1932
Photo from:AirHistory.net Photo Archive
Location:In Flight
Country:Germany
Photo Date:1932
Photo from:AirHistory.net Photo Archive
Photo ID:136137Submit Correction
View count: 1280
The second of the two Junkers G38s, photographed in flight near Dresden. The largest landplane in the world for some time, the G38 must have provided a fantastic view for the lucky passengers seated in the blended wing. D-2500, later D-APIS, entered Lufthansa service on 1 July 1932. It was eventually used by the Luftwaffe as a transport and destroyed in an air raid in Athens on 17 May 1941. Photo by: Walter Hahn / SLUB / Deutsche Fotothek
Registration / Serial:D-2500
Aircraft Version:Junkers G38ce
C/n (msn):3302
Operator Titles:Deutsche Luft Hansa
Location:In Flight
Country:Germany
Photo Date:1932
Photo from:AirHistory.net Photo Archive