i draw my self from the photos.Hello! Espenlaub drawings.
Amazing find and welom aboard Kojotnemo,
and what is your source ?.
Espenlaub E8Czy jest dobre zdjęcie Espenlauba E.8?
Rigerrob, please be more careful when editing quotes. The psychic blond chicks part was posted by Scott (#30), not by me." .... Arndt existed, but ~20 years ago he was propping up ... psychic blond chicks using their long hair as antennae to talk to aliens."
What?
My blonde ex-wife tried talking with aliens.
Hah!
Hah!
... one of his tailless aircraft, which has "LF 5 Goldenloff" [sp?] emblazoned on the nose...
Great! Thank you for the clarification and correction.... one of his tailless aircraft, which has "LF 5 Goldenloff" [sp?] emblazoned on the nose...
The LF 5 is sometimes referred to as the Soldenhoff/Espenlaub LF5 - the design being by Swiss artist Alexander Leo Soldenhoff. So that'd be the name on the nose.
Thank you for the photos of unknown aircraft.Espenlaub E8Czy jest dobre zdjęcie Espenlauba E.8?
You are right. it's certainly not Fritz Opel, who I think was a plump little guy with spectacles, and it's not RAK1 either. That was not an aeroplane but a car that achieved a speed of 47 mph. Fritz went on to build RAK2. See replica in the museum at Speyer below .Here is British Pathe newsreel footage, erroneously described as, "Fritz von Opel . . . test[ing] the RAK 1, a rocket-powered plane, in Germany." This actually appears to be footage of Gottlob Espenlaub flying his black powder rocket-powered glider (there's even footage of fire damage to the tail) and one of his tailless aircraft, which has "LF 5 Goldenloff" [sp?] emblazoned on the nose.
YouTube: British Pathé - "Early rocket airplanes in trials" (1929)
obviosly with the rocket plane he was quite a chickgetter...Here is British Pathe newsreel footage, erroneously described as, "Fritz von Opel . . . test[ing] the RAK 1, a rocket-powered plane, in Germany." This actually appears to be footage of Gottlob Espenlaub flying his black powder rocket-powered glider (there's even footage of fire damage to the tail) and one of his tailless aircraft, which has "LF 5 Goldenloff" [sp?] emblazoned on the nose.
YouTube: British Pathé - "Early rocket airplanes in trials" (1929)
You are right. it's certainly not Fritz Opel, who I think was a plump little guy with spectacles, and it's not RAK1 either. That was not an aeroplane but a car ... He quit at 147 mph with some of his rocket tubes unfired because the car was threatening to become airborne.
When I saw those RAK2 wings I too wondered whether they would generate more lift than downforce. They might have worked better upside down.You are right. it's certainly not Fritz Opel, who I think was a plump little guy with spectacles, and it's not RAK1 either. That was not an aeroplane but a car ... He quit at 147 mph with some of his rocket tubes unfired because the car was threatening to become airborne.
Indeed, as Boxman said, that was Gottlob Espenlaub in the front cockpit of the {i]Cherub[/i]-powered 'all wing' Soldenhoff LF 5 after its repair by Espenlaub-Flugzeugbau at Düsseldorf. That same aircraft was illustrated in Reply #36 - while losing its nose wheel in August 1929 with Espenlaub at the controls.
Just for the record, the aircraft illustrated in Reply #35 is another Alexander Soldenhoff design - the So A/5.
As for the RAK2, interesting to speculate what would have happened had Opel inverted those wings ...
BTW: We do have a thread for Alexander Soldenhoff designs:
-- https://www.secretprojects.co.uk/threads/soldenhoff-real-aircraft-and-projects.21624/
There is also a good webpage covering Alexander Soldenhoff's aircraft designs and his encounters with 'Espe' Espenlaub:
-- https://flughafenbb.com/1919-1945/flugpionier-soldenhoff/
Or possibly RAK3 and RAK4. They both ran on rails. Unfortunately they both blew up.The RAK2 as inspiration later gave birth to the SE 1910.