Zeppelin-Staaken

Former German aircraft manufacturer

Zeppelin-Staaken (sometimes Zeppelin Werke Staaken), was a German aircraft manufacturer originally named Versuchsbau G.m.b.H. Gotha-Ost (Experimental Works Gotha-East (V.G.O.)) when it was formed in mid-1914 by Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin and Robert Bosch. The company rented facilities in Gotha with the objective to build large, long-range bomber aircraft. Alexander Baumann was hired by Zeppelin as the head designer. The company moved to the village of Staaken, near Berlin, in mid-1916 and was renamed Flugzeugwerft G.m.b.H., although it was commonly known as Zeppelin-Staaken.[1]

A Zeppelin-Staaken R.VI

Aircraft built

  • Zeppelin-Staaken Riesenflugzeuge
    • Zeppelin-Staaken L
    • Zeppelin-Staaken R.IV
    • Zeppelin-Staaken R.V
    • Zeppelin-Staaken R.VI
    • Zeppelin-Staaken R.VII
    • Zeppelin-Staaken 8301
    • Zeppelin-Staaken R.XIV
    • Zeppelin-Staaken R.XV
    • Zeppelin-Staaken R.XVI
    • Zeppelin-Staaken E-4/20

See also

  • Riesenflugzeug

References

Citations

  1. ^ Haddow & Grosz, pp. 209–211, 230–231

Bibliography

  • Haddow, George William & Grosz, Peter Michael (1988) [1962]. The German Giants: The German R-Planes 1914 – 1918 (3rd ed.). London: Putnam. ISBN 0-85177-812-7.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Zeppelin-Staaken.
  • Zeppelin-Staaken R.III German Military Aviation Service
  • v
  • t
  • e
Zeppelin aircraft
Lighter-than-air
(airships)
Manufacturer
hull
numbers
A Class
B Class
C Class
D Class
  • LZ 6
E Class
  • LZ 7
  • LZ 8
F Class
G Class
H Class
I Class
  • LZ 18
J Class
  • skipped
K Class
  • LZ 21
L Class
M Class
N Class
  • LZ 26
O Class
P Class
Q Class
R Class
S Class
  • LZ 91
  • LZ 92
T Class
  • LZ 93
  • LZ 94
U Class
  • LZ 95
  • LZ 96
  • LZ 97
  • LZ 98
  • LZ 99
V Class
  • LZ 100
  • LZ 101
  • LZ 103
  • LZ 105
  • LZ 106
  • LZ 107
  • LZ 108
  • LZ 109
  • LZ 110
  • LZ 111
W Class
X Class
Post-war
Unbuilt
  • LZ 70
  • LZ 115–LZ 119
  • LZ 122–LZ 125
  • LZ 128
  • LZ 131–LZ 132
Operator's
identification
Names
  • Bodensee
  • Deutschland
  • Deutschland II
  • Dixmude
  • Esperia
  • Graf Zeppelin
  • Graf Zeppelin II
  • Hindenburg
  • Hansa
  • USS Los Angeles
  • Méditerranée
  • Nordstern
  • Sachsen
  • Schwaben
  • Viktoria Luise
Army Z
designations1
  • Z I
  • Ersatz Z I
  • Ersatz Z I (2)
  • Z II
  • Ersatz Z II
  • Z III
  • Z IV
  • Z V
  • Z VI
  • Z VII
  • Z VIII
  • Z IX
  • Z X
  • Z XI
  • Z XII
Army LZ
designations2
Navy L
designations
Heavier-than-air
(aeroplanes)
Zeppelin-Staaken
Zeppelin-Lindau
Zeppelin Flugzeugebau
Other
1Early Army designations, used pre-war. 2Wartime Army LZ designations were not always matched to Zeppelin's LZ hull number.
  • v
  • t
  • e
AEG
Daimler
DFW
Junkers
  • R.I
LFG Roland
  • R.I
Linke-Hofmann
Schütte-Lanz
  • R.I
Siemens-Schuckert
Zeppelin-Staaken
Zeppelin-Lindau1
1. Rs was not an official Idflieg designation as aircraft were intended for the Navy.