In 1937, a patent was first filed for a new aircraft that would be powered by two engines in the same fuselage, one located in the front pulling and one in the rear, pushing. The main advantage to this layout would be the increased power of a two-engine design without the attendant drag issues of two engine nacelles. Shortly thereafter, Professor Claudius Dornier began designing an aircraft that would incorporate these features, the Dornier Do P.59. This project eventually became the Dornier Do 335, the fastest propeller-driven production aircraft of WWII. An aircraft testbed was commissioned in order to prove the feasibility of a pusher propeller driven by an extension shaft. Designed by Doctor Ulrich Hüter and built at the Schempp-Hirth glider factory at Wüsterburg, the test aircraft was designated as the Göppingen Gö 9.
The Göppingen Gö 9 was a small aircraft. Other than the propulsion method, it had a very normal layout. Basically, the Göppingen Gö 9 was identical to the Dornier Do 17, except the dimensions were reduced by 1:2.5. The fuselage was cylindrical, with the wings being mounted midfuselage. A cruciform tail unit was designed, with the bottom fin being supplied with a small wheel which acted as a tail bumper to keep the rear propeller from striking the ground on takeoff. The pilot sat in a cockpit located in the front of the aircraft, and the extreme nose was glassed in. One advanced feature for this small testbed was a fully retractable tricycle landing gear system. Power was supplied by a Hirth I M60 R air-cooled in-line engine which only developed 80 horsepower. The engine was mounted just behind the cockpit, midfuselage over the wings. A long extension shaft ran the length of the rear fuselage and drove the four-bladed pusher propeller.
Registered as D-EBYN, the Göppingen Gö 9 was extensively tested on the ground before it was taken into the air. The first test flights were made in early 1940, and was towed into the air by a Dornier Do 17 medium bomber. With Dornier test pilot Quenzler at the controls, the Göppingen Gö 9 handled well, and proved the feasibility of the rear engine concept. Many more test flights were made, and the tiny Göppingen Gö 9 even took off on its own power. The ultimate fate of this interesting test aircraft is unknown.
germans indeed are very industrious and hard working people.If you want to get the best education then go to germany
naim1177 2 weeks ago
great video, do you have more videos about göppingen in these times ?
akiragp 2 weeks ago
интересный самолет
bozlk 3 months ago
igorks music ?????????????
bozlk 3 months ago
Так ставили пропеллер, когда отлаживали планер для реактивного мотора.
SergioDoenetz 6 months ago
This Film has been made at the military airport Göppingen (Germany). After 1945 there has been the Big Red One.
vonGreifenfels 6 months ago
Nice footage. Thanks for uploading. Thumbs up!
megatwingo 9 months ago
Would make a nice wee microlight these days. Wonder if the plans still exist? It'd be a bit of a Jaw dropper at Warbirds over Wanaka
TheCD21 1 year ago
What's the song? I love it :O
By the way, cool video! An aircraft that could fly upside down in the 1930's is teh pwnage!
FishyTrogo 2 years ago
GÄNSEHAUT!!!
5Zylinder 2 years ago