VFW-Fokker 614 DLR Amazingly RARE German jet with engines above wings! [AirClips SlideShows]
The
VFW-Fokker 614 (also
VFW 614) was a twin-engined jetliner designed and built in
West Germany. It was produced in small numbers by VFW-Fokker in the early- to mid-1970s. It was originally intended as a
DC-3 replacement. Its most distinctive feature was that its engines were mounted in pods on pylons above the wing.
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 two Lycoming PLF1B-2 turbofans.
West German industry was subsequently reorganised and
Vereinigte Flugtechnische Werke (
VFW) was established at
Bremen.
Development of what was now the VFW 614 continued. Although Lycoming abandoned the PLF1, development continued using the Rolls-Royce/
SNECMA M45H turbofan, which was developed specially for the VFW 614. In
1968, the project was given the go-ahead, with 80 percent of the backing from the West German
Government.
Full scale production was approved in
1970, by which time VFW had merged with Fokker (a somewhat unhappy arrangement which lasted for only ten years). Also risk sharing agreements had been concluded with
SIAT in
Germany, Fairey and
SABCA in
Belgium and
Shorts in the UK.
Final assembly of the aircraft would be done in Bremen.
Overwing pylon-mounted
Rolls Royce powerplant The first of three prototypes flew on July 14,
1971. The aircraft was revealed to be of unconventional configuration, with two quiet, smoke-free, but untested M45H turbofans mounted on pylons above the wings. This arrangement was used to avoid the structural weight penalties of rear mounted engines and the potential ingestion problems of engines mounted under the wings. This allowed a short and sturdy undercarriage, specially suited for operations from poorly prepared runways. 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. Also, the first prototype was lost on
1 February 1972 due to elevator flutter, worsening the order situation. By
February 1975 only ten aircraft had been ordered. The first production
VFW-614 flew in
April 1975 and was delivered to
Denmark's
Cimber Air four months later.
Only three airlines and the
German Air Force operated new VFW 614s. The aircraft was initially prone to engine problems, and it was too expensive for the small regional airlines for whose needs it was designed. Three aircraft were flown but never delivered, and four airframes were broken up before completion. The programme was officially cancelled in
1977, and the last unsold aircraft flew in July 1978. Most aircraft had been disposed of by
1981, with the manufacturer buying back the aircraft and simultaneously ending support of it. 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.
The German Aerospace
Center (
German: Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt e.V.), abbreviated DLR, is the national center for aerospace, energy and transportation research of the
Federal Republic of Germany. Its headquarters are located in
Cologne and it has other multiple locations throughout Germany. The DLR is engaged in a wide range of research and development projects in national and international partnerships. In addition to conducting its own research projects, DLR also acts as the German space agency. As such, it is responsible for planning and implementing the German space programme on behalf of the
German federal government. As a project management agency, DLR also coordinates and answers the technical and organizational implementation of projects funded by a number of German federal ministries.