Nielsen & Winther

Nielsen & Winther was a Danish machine factory and aeroplane manufacturer based in Copenhagen, Denmark.

An advertisement for Nielsen & Winther featuring the company's plant on Øresundsvej in Amager

History

The machine factory was founded in 1873. It was from 1899 to 1916 based in a building at Blegdamsvej 60 designed by [[Axel Berg]9. It then relocated to a new building designed by Frederik Wagner at Ryesgade 51-55 as well as a large new plant at Øresundsvej 147.[1]

Aircraft production

The Amager plant was home to a new aeroplane division. It delivered six Nielsen & Winther Type Aa aeroplanes to the Royal Danish Air Force in 1917.[2] One aircraft was delivered to the Royal Norwegian Navy Air Service in 1918. Three of the six Danish aircraft crashed in accidents and the three remaining ones were therefore grounded. The Amager plant was sold to Vølund in 1920.[3]

Aircraft produced by Nielsen & Winther:- Data from A/S Nielsen & Winther[2]

Aa - c/n N&W.1
1-seat fighter with 90 hp (67 kW) Thulin A engine, delivered 15 January 1917, withdrawn from use 31 March 1919.
Aa - c/n N&W.2
crashed 17 December 1917.
Aa - c/n N&W.3
crashed 19 Mar 1919.
Aa - c/n N&W.4
converted to ground trainer 31 March 1919, scrapped 1924.
Aa - c/n N&W.5
converted to ground trainer on 31 March 1919, scrapped 1924.
Aa - c/n N&W.6
crashed 17 October 1918.
Ab - c/n N&W.70
sold to A.Jarfeldt, a Danish/Argentinian pilot, exported to Argentina/Bolivia.
Ab - c/n N&W.71
completed but not delivered.
Ac
2-seat float-plane version of Aa (prototype) crashed at Øresund.
Bd
2-seat float plane 110 hp (82 kW) Scania-Vabis PD engine ; exported to the Royal Norwegian Navy Air Service.
C
Two Bi-plane ground rolling trainers used by the Nielsen & Winther flying School.
D
4-seater “Tourist-biplane” 170 hp (127 kW) Nielsen & Winther M.A.J. engine; probably never flown.
E
planned Cargo aircraft 170 hp (127 kW) Nielsen & Winther M.A.J. engine ; not built.
Fa
Sports flying-boat ; sold to C.Hundinghouse Jensen.
Fa - c/n N&W.21
Sports flying-boat exported to Norway, registered as N1 to Einar Juell.

Football club

Nielsen & Winther was also the name of a football club founded in 1918 by workers at the factory:[4]

Legacy

The company's former buildings at Blegdamsvej 60 and Ryesgade 51-55 have survived. The Amager plant, taken over by Vølund, was demolished in 2001. Its premises in the Free Port was taken over by Riffelsyndikatet.

gollark: Actually, you can be safe if you train in all combat sports ever for several years retroactively.
gollark: Graphene oxide? Why are people being thing about graphene oxide, of all things?
gollark: People can get used to basically arbitrarily bad things.
gollark: Well, what I'd actually want is to have COVID-19 be mostly insignificant, not for it to still be quite bad but for people to be used to it.
gollark: Oh, another issue is that it's not really possible to test that unless you do challenge trials or something, which people are unwilling to.

References

  1. "Nielsen & Winther". fsfvaer.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 30 January 2020.
  2. "A/S Nielsen & Winther" (PDF). ole-nikolajsen.com. Retrieved 30 January 2020.
  3. "Sundby". denstoredanske.dk (in Danish). Retrieved 30 January 2020.
  4. "Nielsen & Winther" (in Danish). DBU. Retrieved 30 January 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.