Skip to main content

Eugene L Collection (page 5)

Background imageEugene L Collection: Jacob Degens flying machine, 1808, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Jacob Degens flying machine, 1808, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Jacob Degens flying machine, 1808, (1932). Flying machine built by Jacob Degen, a clockmaker from Vienna, who made his first attempt in his tethered ornithopter in the spring of 1808

Background imageEugene L Collection: Caprettis flying machine, 1877, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Caprettis flying machine, 1877, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Caprettis flying machine, 1877, (1932). Italian inventor Ignazio Teodoro Capretti with his winged contraption. From " Die Eroberung Der Luft", (The Conquest of the Air)

Background imageEugene L Collection: Junkers 700-800 horse power diesel aircraft engine, 1932. Creator: Unknown

Junkers 700-800 horse power diesel aircraft engine, 1932. Creator: Unknown
Junkers 700-800 horse power diesel aircraft engine, 1932. German Jumo IV engine. From " Die Eroberung Der Luft", (The Conquest of the Air)

Background imageEugene L Collection: Renard and Krebs airship, 1884, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Renard and Krebs airship, 1884, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Renard and Krebs airship, 1884, (1932). The electric-powered aerostat airship La France, launched by Charles Renard and Arthur Constantin Krebs on 9 August 1884

Background imageEugene L Collection: Otto Lilienthals glider, 1890s, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Otto Lilienthals glider, 1890s, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Otto Lilienthals glider, 1890s, (1932). German gliding pioneer and aeronautical inventor Otto Lilienthal (1848-1896) made about 2, 000 flights before being killed in a crash

Background imageEugene L Collection: Focke-Wulf W 4 floatplane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Focke-Wulf W 4 floatplane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Focke-Wulf W 4 floatplane, 1920s, (1932). The German W 4 was designed in 1927 as a reconnaissance floatplane. From " Die Eroberung Der Luft", (The Conquest of the Air)

Background imageEugene L Collection: Dornier Do X II flying boat, 1920s, 1932. Creator: Unknown

Dornier Do X II flying boat, 1920s, 1932. Creator: Unknown
Dornier Do X II flying boat, 1920s, 1932. The Dornier Do X, produced by the Dornier company of Germany in 1929, was the largest, heaviest, and most powerful flying boat in the world at the time

Background imageEugene L Collection: Gutermuths glider, 1912, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Gutermuths glider, 1912, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Gutermuths glider, 1912, (1932). On 22 July 1912, Hans Gutermuth of the Darmstadt Technical Institute in Germany flew a glider for one minute fifty-two seconds covering a distance of 840 metres

Background imageEugene L Collection: Albatros L 75a Ass plane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Albatros L 75a Ass plane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Albatros L 75a Ass plane, 1920s, (1932). The Ass ( Ace ) was a German trainer biplane with 320 horse power water-cooled BMW engine

Background imageEugene L Collection: Heinkel HD 42 seaplane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Heinkel HD 42 seaplane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Heinkel HD 42 seaplane, 1920s, (1932). The Heinkel HD 42 50, later designated the Heinkel He 42, was a German biplane seaplane later built for the Luftwaffe

Background imageEugene L Collection: Wright brothers flyer, c1903, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Wright brothers flyer, c1903, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Wright brothers flyer, c1903, (1932). Aviation pioneers Orville and Wilbur Wright made the worlds first controlled and powered flights on 17 December 1903 at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, USA

Background imageEugene L Collection: Albatros L. 66a plane, 1920a, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Albatros L. 66a plane, 1920a, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Albatros L.66a plane, 1920a, (1932). The Albatros L.66 was a two-seater sports and training monoplane with a 35 horse power water-cooled engine, built in Germany in the mid-1920s

Background imageEugene L Collection: Berblingers attempt to fly across the Danube, 1811, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Berblingers attempt to fly across the Danube, 1811, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Berblingers attempt to fly across the Danube, 1811, (1932). German inventor Albrecht Ludwig Berblinger (1770-1829), also known as the Tailor of Ulm, constructed a working flying machine

Background imageEugene L Collection: Junkers G 24 Diesel passenger plane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Junkers G 24 Diesel passenger plane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Junkers G 24 Diesel passenger plane, 1920s, (1932). German three-engine, all-metal low-wing monoplane aircraft manufactured by Junkers from 1925

Background imageEugene L Collection: Etrichs Zanonia glider, 1906. (1932). Creator: Unknown

Etrichs Zanonia glider, 1906. (1932). Creator: Unknown
Etrichs Zanonia glider, 1906. (1932). Flying wing aircraft built by Austrian flight pioneer Ignaz Etrich and inspired by the flying seed of Zanonia macrocarpa, a kind of plant

Background imageEugene L Collection: Heinkel He 5b floatplane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Heinkel He 5b floatplane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Heinkel He 5b floatplane, 1920s, (1932). The Heinkel HE 5, produced in Sweden as the Svenskas 5 and nicknamed the Hansa, was a reconnaissance floatplane built during the 1920s

Background imageEugene L Collection: The flying ship of Bartolomeu de Gusmao, c1709 (1932). Creator: Unknown

The flying ship of Bartolomeu de Gusmao, c1709 (1932). Creator: Unknown
The flying ship of Bartolomeu de Gusmao, c1709 (1932). On 17 April 1709, Friar Bartolomeu de Gusmao (1685-1724), a Portuguese Jesuit priest and naturalist, petitioned King John V of Portugal

Background imageEugene L Collection: Lenormands parachute, 1783, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Lenormands parachute, 1783, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Lenormands parachute, 1783, (1932). French chemist, physicist and inventor Louis-Se bastien Lenormand (1757-1837) is considered as the first man to make a witnessed descent with a parachute

Background imageEugene L Collection: Grades monoplane, 1908, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Grades monoplane, 1908, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Grades monoplane, 1908, (1932). German aviation pioneer Hans Grade (1879-1946) made the first successful motor-flight over German soil at Magdeburg in 1908

Background imageEugene L Collection: Heinkel He 58 seaplane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Heinkel He 58 seaplane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Heinkel He 58 seaplane, 1920s, (1932). The He 58 was a pontoon-equipped mail plane built in Germany in 1929, designed to be launched by catapult from a liner at sea

Background imageEugene L Collection: Radio room on board Dornier flying boat, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Radio room on board Dornier flying boat, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Radio room on board Dornier flying boat, 1920s, (1932). From " Die Eroberung Der Luft", (The Conquest of the Air), cigarette card album produced by the Garba ty cigarette factory, 1932

Background imageEugene L Collection: Albatros L 101 plane, 1932. Creator: Unknown

Albatros L 101 plane, 1932. Creator: Unknown
Albatros L 101 plane, 1932. The Albatros Al 101 German trainer aircraft with 100 horse power air-cooled Argus As 8 engine

Background imageEugene L Collection: Albatros L76 Aeolus plane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Albatros L76 Aeolus plane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Albatros L76 Aeolus plane, 1920s, (1932). German military reconnaissance aircraft with 490 horse power water-cooled BMW engine

Background imageEugene L Collection: Heinkel HD 32 biplane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Heinkel HD 32 biplane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Heinkel HD 32 biplane, 1920s, (1932). German trainer aircraft with 100 horse power air-cooled Siemens radial engine. From " Die Eroberung Der Luft", (The Conquest of the Air)

Background imageEugene L Collection: Klemm L 25 IVa plane, 1932. Creator: Unknown

Klemm L 25 IVa plane, 1932. Creator: Unknown
Klemm L 25 IVa plane, 1932. German sportsplane with 100 horse power air-cooled Armstrong Siddeley Genet engine. From " Die Eroberung Der Luft", (The Conquest of the Air)

Background imageEugene L Collection: Albatros L 82 plane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Albatros L 82 plane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Albatros L 82 plane, 1920s, (1932). German trainer biplane with 100 horse power air-cooled de Havilland engine. From " Die Eroberung Der Luft", (The Conquest of the Air)

Background imageEugene L Collection: Raab-Katzenstein KI 1 biplane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Raab-Katzenstein KI 1 biplane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Raab-Katzenstein KI 1 biplane, 1920s, (1932). The The Raab-Katzenstein KL.1 Schwalbe ( Swallow ), German aircraft used for aerobatic displays, with 80 horse power air-cooled Siemens engine

Background imageEugene L Collection: Junkers G 31b plane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Junkers G 31b plane, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Junkers G 31b plane, 1920s, (1932). The Junkers G 31 advanced tri-motor airliner was produced in Germany in the 1920s. Like other Junkers types, it was an all-metal, low-wing cantilever monoplane

Background imageEugene L Collection: Dornier Delphin III flying boat, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Dornier Delphin III flying boat, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Dornier Delphin III flying boat, 1920s, (1932). The Delphin ( Dolphin ) III was a German single-engine commercial flying boat built by Dornier Flugzeugwerke in the 1920s

Background imageEugene L Collection: Arnold Bocklins flying machine, 1885, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Arnold Bocklins flying machine, 1885, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Arnold Bo cklins flying machine, 1885, (1932). The Swiss painter Arnold Bo cklin (1827-1901) drew up plans for a flying machine without an engine

Background imageEugene L Collection: Wright brothers glider, c1900, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Wright brothers glider, c1900, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Wright brothers glider, c1900, (1932). Aviation pioneers Orville and Wilbur Wright made the worlds first controlled and powered flights on 17 December 1903 at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina, USA

Background imageEugene L Collection: Dornier Do X I flying boat, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown

Dornier Do X I flying boat, 1920s, (1932). Creator: Unknown
Dornier Do X I flying boat, 1920s, (1932). The Dornier Do X, produced by the Dornier company of Germany in 1929, was the largest, heaviest, and most powerful flying boat in the world at the time

Background imageEugene L Collection: Heinkel Hd 39 cargo plane, 1932. Creator: Unknown

Heinkel Hd 39 cargo plane, 1932. Creator: Unknown
Heinkel Hd 39 cargo plane, 1932. The Heinkel HD 39 was a special-purpose cargo biplane developed in Germany in the 1920s to distribute the Berlin newspaper B.Z



All Professionally Made to Order for Quick Shipping