Gotha Aircraft

From the London Bomber to the Flying Wing Jet Fighter

Gotha Aircraft
Andreas Metzmacher
RRP:
NZ$ 79.99
Our Price:
NZ$ 67.99
Hardback
h248 x 172mm - 160pg
International import eta 10-19 days
9781781557068
Out Of Stock
Currently no stock in-store, stock is sourced to your order
The Gothaer Waggonfabrik (GWF), originally a German rail vehicle manufacturer, entered the aircraft industry in 1913. The driving force behind this major change in production in this small Thuringian duchy in central Germany was a member of the British royal family. Gotha aircraft managed to make a name for themselves internationally. As with ' Fokker' regarding fighter aircraft, the name ' Gotha' is synonymous with German bomber aircraft of the Great War. Even successful seaplanes and the world' s first asymmetric aircraft were a part of GWF' s production at this time, and lasted until the post-war Treaty of Versailles forced the abandonment of aircraft production. Aircraft could not be built in Gotha again until 1933. GWF did get development contracts for the Luftwaffe, but they were essentially incidental side issues and not of the lucrative mass construction variety. In 1939 a world altitude record on the sports aircraft Gotha Go 150, provided GWF with a small though internationally significant highlight. During the war the GWF developed cargo gliders and, under licence, built the Messerschmitt Bf 110. In 1945 Gotha was supposed to undertake batch production of the flying wing jet fighter, Horten Ho 229, and even designed its more radical successor. In 1954 the aircraft construction finally ended and once again, the production consisted of gliders and one last proprietary design was created.
Andreas Metzmacher started out as an aviation author when he made a documentary for a German TV station about the history of Gotha aircraft, although his interest dates back to building models in his youth. Aside from aviation in Gotha, his home town, he is interested above all in the service histories of aircraft and their pilots and writes articles for various German and British aviation magazines.

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