Raab-Katzenstein
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Raab-Katzenstein was a 1920s German aircraft manufacturer based in Kassel.
The main character of the company was its designer Gerhard Fieseler. Following World War I, he returned to printing, but yearned to return to flying. In 1926, he closed his print shop in Eschweiler and became a flight instructor with Raab-Katzenstein and continued to hone his flying skills, becoming an accomplished stunt pilot. In 1927, he performed a particularly daring routine in Zürich and started to command increasingly high fees for appearances. In 1928, he designed his own stunt plane, the Fieseler F1, built by Raab-Katzenstein. He also designed Raab-Katzenstein RK-26 Tigerschwalbe aircraft in the end of the 1920s which was offered and sold to a Swedish company called AB Svenska Järnvägverkstaderna (ASJA), which built 25 of the type for Swedish Air Force in the beginning of the 1930s.
In 1930, Raab-Katzenstien was bankrupt, and Fieseler decided to strike out on his own. Using money he had been saving from his aerobatics, he bought the Segelflugzeugbau Kassel sailplane factory and renamed it Fieseler Flugzeugbau.
Aircraft
- Fieseler F1
- Raab-Katzenstein RK-9 Grasmücke
- Raab-Katzenstein RK-26 Tiegerschwalbe
See also
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Raab-Katzenstein. |
- Sk 10 - Raab-Katzenstein RK-26 Tigerschwalbe (1932-1945)
- Photographs and description of the RK 9 “Grasmücke” (German)
- Short history of Antonius Raab, Kurt Katzenstein and the Waldauer Flugplatzes (German)
- 90 Jahre Flugplatz Bonn-Hangelar (history of Bonn-Hangelar mentioning Raab-Katzenstein, German)