The Akademische Fliegergruppe of the Technical University of Darmstadt (
Akaflieg Darmstadt) was first formed in 1921. It was, and is, a group of aeronautical students who design and construct aircraft as part of their studies and with the help and encouragement of their University. Design work on the Circe began in 1962-3 by a team of students,
Wolf Lemke (responsible for the wing),
Gerhard Waibel (fuselage and tail) and Heiko Friess (airbrakes). They were later joined by the younger
Klaus Holighaus. Professor Franz Wortmann designed a new airfoil for the Circe. Construction began in 1963 and the aircraft flew for the first time, piloted by Wolf Lemke, on 28 March 1964 at
Gelnhausen. The Circe is built from
composite materials, with flying surfaces and
fuselage shells made from glass-balsa-glass sandwiches. The wings have a single
spar with flanges of aligned glass fibre (uni-directional
rovings) and a glass-balsa sandwich web. The fuselage has
GRP-balsa stiffening cross-members. The wing is tapered in two sections, with more taper on the outer 40% of the span. Such double taper plans can provide
lift/drag ratios close to that of the ideal
elliptical wing, and have benign
stall characteristics.
Ailerons occupy all the trailing edge of the outer panels, with
flaps across the inner panels. Four sets of Schempp-Hirth
airbrakes, two per wing, are located just behind the spar, roughly centred on the inner panels. Each set extends its surfaces, mounted like
parallel rulers, above and below the wing. They were difficult to design because of the considerable flexure of the wing, the latter leading to the Circe's nickname of
Gummiflügel () at a time of stiffer structures. The fuselage of the Circe is slender and circular in cross section aft of the
shoulder mounted wings. The vertical tail is tall and rather upright, with some forward sweep on the
rudder trailing edge. The original horizontal
T-tail was straight tapered in plan, with sweep only on the
leading edge. Forward of the wing leading edge the
cockpit, housing the pilot in semi-reclining position, has a long, two piece
canopy which swells above the rear fuselage line. The rear part of the canopy opens for access. The Circe has a retractable
monowheel undercarriage, assisted by a tail bumper. The testing that followed the first flight showed that there was a tendency to
tail flutter, so a long, projecting
mass balance was added at the centre of the tailplane. The whole tail was later redesigned by Holighaus who produced a shorter
fin and rudder and got rid of the sweep of the original horizontal surface by adding forward swept
elevators. The tailplane was also significantly reduced in size. At about the same time as the V-1 was being constructed at Darmstadt, a second Circe, the V-2, was built by Walter Schneider. It differed from the V-1 in having a parachute brake rather than the spoilers of the V-1 and turned out rather heavier. ==Operational history==