Igo Etrich
Ignaz "Igo" Etrich (born
December 25,
1879 in Ober Altstadt (
Bohemia /
Austria-Hungary) near Trautenau (today: Horni stare mesto near Trutnov, Czech Republic); died
February 4,
1967 Salzburg, Austria), Austrian flight pioneer, pilot and
fixed-wing aircraft developer.
Igo went to school at
Leipzig, where he came in contact with the works of
Otto Lilienthal. His main interest was in
aviation, the problems of bird flight. With his father, a factory-owner, he built a laboratory for developing aeroplanes. After the death of Lilienthal his father acquired some advanced gliders. After reading the books of Prof. Ahlborn about flying seeds, in 1903 he developed his first gliders inspired by the flying seed of Zanonia macrocarpa. He worked together with Franz Xaver Wels and Karl Illner, two men who would become very important for future development and flying. In 1906 Karl Illner was the first
Austrian to fly an Austrian-built
glider.
The next stop of Igo Etrich was
Vienna, where he had his second laboratoy in the
Wiener Prater at the
Rotunde. In 1907 he built his Etrich I, the
Praterspatz (
Sparrow of the Prater) there. Due to the low power (24 PS) of the motor and the limited space for flying, the plane was not a success.
In 1909 in
Wiener Neustadt the first airfield of the Austro-Hungarian Empire was founded.Etrich rented two hangars (or aircraft-sheds, as they were called then) and continued to develop his success, the
Taube. Meanwhile his co-developer Franz Xaver Wels visited
Paris to study the planes of the
Wright Brothers and split with Etrich over the question of whether to build a monoplane or a
biplane.
In 1910 his Etrich II, the
Etrich-Taube (Dove) made its maiden flight. This success was aided by another world-famous engine developer:
Ferdinand Porsche, who designed the reliable 65PS-
Austro-Daimler engine (reliability, a crucial factor in aviation, was poor in these days), which powered this plane.In one of the first flights, Etrich nearly broke his spine when his
Taube fell tail-first to earth. From then on, the skilled Karl Illner made all the flights for Etrich.
Etrich refined his
Taube to meet the requirement of the
military, that a plane had to be able to land on a freshly plowed field.
In 1912 he founded his
Etrich-Fliegerwerke in Liebau (today Lubawka, Poland) and designed the first passenger plane with a totally closed cabin for the passengers, his
Luft-Limousine.
Later he moved to Germany, founding the famous
Brandenburgischen Fliegerwerke. From Liebau he took his major designer with him:
Ernst Heinkel.
Another aircraft designer, Rumpler, modified the design of the
Taube slightly, claimed to be the developer and refused to pay licensing fees to Etrich. After a short dipute in court, Etrich conceded on the advent of
WW 1, and made the design for his
Taube freely available.
After WW 1 Etrich went to the newly founded Czechoslovakia, and built another plane: his
Sport-Taube. Legend has it that it flew faster (equipped with only a 40 PS engine) than the Czech military planes of the time. The authorities claimed he built the plane for smuggling and impounded his plane.
The
Etrich II can be seen at the "Technisches Museum" in Vienna/Austria. The
Sport-Taube can be seen at the "Technischen Museum Prag" .Source: Igo Etrich: "Die Taube - Memoiren eines Luftfahrt Pioniers"