Aviaticum Aviation Museum
The Aviaticum flight museum at the civil airfield Wiener Neustadt / Ost in Wiener Neustadt showed exhibits and models of aircraft, mainly from the history of gliding in Austria , in a 400 m² hall . The museum was rented in one of the halls of the aircraft manufacturer Diamond Aircraft from the beginning , but had to leave it in 2019 due to its own needs and is in the process of moving to one of the historic aircraft hangars also at the East Airfield.
history
The museum is based on the collection of pioneer Toni Kahlbacher (1914–2004) and Reinhard Keimel from 1983 for an Austrian gliding museum Hundsheim / Spitzerberg , which could not be realized there - 5 km south of Hainburg an der Donau . In cooperation with the City of Wiener Neustadt , the State of Lower Austria and the company Diamond Aircraft Industries GmbH from 1993 onwards, it was finally possible to open the Aviaticum in the new building at the East Airfield in 1999. The museum is based on the private foundation Aviaticum Flight Museum von Kahlbacher and City of Wr. Neustadt and is operated by an association.
Exhibits
10 early glider and motorized pilots, such as Etrich-Taube (Anton Ott, Mag. Linner) still with wire-braced wings, Olympic titmouse and Rhönlerche , a helicopter with a 7-m rotor. Parachutes, including one from China from the time of the Cultural Revolution, and a gas balloon made of rubberized linen with a volume of 900 m³. In 2000 the museum received a collection of aviation and aviation history books.
Among other things, a Messerschmitt Bf 109 , a Meteor FL 54, a Pischof Autoplan, built by Anton Ott and a Lohner-Etrich Taube Series-F, built by Prof. Mag. Heinz Linner and Anton (Toni) Ott, can be seen.
Gliders
- SG 38 , OE-0107, school glider
- Hütter H 17, OE-0050, transition school glider
- Hütter H 17b, OE 0350, training glider
- DFS Olympia Meise , OE-0124, standard aircraft for the 1940 Olympics
- Göppingen “Goevier-II” , OE-0104, two-seater for aerobatic training and exercises
- Raab "Doppelraab IV" , OE-0333, two-seater, training and training glider
- Dittmar "Condor IV" , OE-0981, two-seat performance glider
- SZD-9bis "Bocian 1D" , OE-0562, two-seat school glider
- Schleicher "Rhönlerche II" , OE-0884, two-seater, training and training glider
- Disk Mü 18 "B-Spatz", OE-0387, training glider
- Disk "Specht" , OE-0291, two-seater training glider
- Disk "Bergfalke IV", OE-0307, two-seater training glider
- Disk Mü 18 "L-Spatz W" , OE-0699, performance glider
- Air SA 104 “Emouchet”, OE-0215, training and training glider
- SZD-22 "Mucha Standard" , standard high-performance glider
- Akaflieg Vienna "AFW 8", OE-0523, two-seater glider
- Grunau Baby III , OE-0236, training glider
- Musger Mg 19a "Steinadler", OE-0197, two-seater performance glider
- Musger Mg 23, OE-0425, performance glider
- Musger Mg 23SL, OE-0690, performance glider
- Lilienthal glider
- Reconstruction of the DaVinci glider
- Glider from the Red Bull Flugtag
Balloons
- Riedinger K-945/2-Ri, gas balloon
- One man basket , Josef Starkbaum
- World record basket with burner, self-made by Josef Starkbaum
Powered aircraft
- Lohner-Etrich F "Taube" , OE-CET, reconnaissance, training and training aircraft
- Messerschmitt Bf 109 serial no. 784998
- Westermayer B8M-Austria, OE-AXW, gyroplane
- Pischof Autoplan from 1910, replica by Walter Krobath 2005
- Escape glider ČSSR
- Midget Mustang N927
- Meteor FL 54 90HP, OE-ABA
- Santos-Dumont Demoiselle replica from the ČSSR, OK-XUD8
helicopter
- Bell 47 G4
Ultralight
- Pipistrel Spider Trike OE-8113
Aircraft engines
- Svenska Flygmotor AB RM 2B
- Svenska Flygmotor RM6C type 66
- BMW 132 A3
- BMW 801 D2
- Daimler-Benz DB 603 E1
- Junkers Jumo 205
- Junkers Jumo 211
- Junkers Jumo 213
- Rolls-Royce Merlin 22
- Gnôme-Rhône 9N Monosoupape rotary engine
- Siemens Sh 14
- Argus As 10 C
- Argus As 411
- Zundapp Z 92
- Hirth HM 60 R
- Hirth HM 500 A1
- Hirth HM 508 D
- Kroeber M4
- Rotax 912
Flight simulators
- Link Trainer (1958, formerly Austrian Airlines )
See also
Individual evidence
- ↑ relocation: Flight Museum is moving in the NÖN from March 5, 2019 Retrieved on November 20, 2019
- ↑ According to information on the museum's website, accessed on August 9, 2019, the museum is closed due to relocation to a new location. The article describes the conditions before closing. In November 2019, the information was received by telephone that the move to an - unheated - hall a few hundred meters from the previous location is in progress and that an opening there is planned by around spring 2020.
- ↑ Aviation Museum Aviaticum: aircraft, accessed 5 February 2009
Web links
Coordinates: 47 ° 50 ′ 34 ″ N , 16 ° 15 ′ 9 ″ E