Information about the Transall aircraft
In 2011, German Air Force (Deutsche Luftwaffe) transport aircraft of the type Transall C 160 were retired for the first time. Thousands of soldiers got to know the robust aircraft as a reliable means of transport. The first aircraft to be retired landed on Tuesday, 12th April 2011 at 8:45 am at Speyer Airport. It became part of major aviation exhibitions at Technik Museum Sinsheim and Speyer.
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, the German Air Force and the French Air Force needed a tactical transport aircraft. Development of the robust aircraft was in the hands of Vereinigte Flugtechnische Werke Bremen, Hamburger Flugzeugbau and the French company Nord Aviation. The first of three prototypes flew in February 1963. The German Air Force received its first aircraft on 30th April 1968. Another 110 Transall aircraft followed and replaced the previously used "Noratlas" Nord 2501. It has 93 seats for transporting passengers. It has room for 62 stretchers and four caregivers when transporting sick or wounded people. In addition, each one has 5 crew members. It has a payload of 16,000 kg. Vehicles can drive directly into the aircraft via the rear loading ramp. The Transall aircraft has self-supporting shoulder wings with a length of 40 m, a wingspread of 40 metres and a height of 12.3 metres. The two four-bladed propellers with a diameter of 5.4 metres are driven by two Rolls-Royce engines with a nominal output of 5747 hp each. Its average cruising speed is 490 km/h, and maximum speed is 520 km/h. The rate of climb is 8 m/s. The machine reaches a service ceiling of about 30,000 feet.
Technik Museum Speyer e.V.
Museumsplatz
74889 Sinsheim
Telefon: +49 (7261) 9299-0
Telefax: +49 (7261) 9299-70
http://speyer.technik-museum.de
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