Fritz von Opel and Sander were instrumental in popularizing rockets as means of propulsion for vehicles. In the 1920s, they initiated together with
Max Valier, co-founder of the "
Verein für Raumschiffahrt", the world's first rocket program,
Opel-RAK, leading to speed records for automobiles, rail vehicles and the first public manned rocket-powered flight in September 1929. Months earlier in 1928, one of his rocket-powered prototypes, the Opel RAK2, reached piloted by von Opel himself at the AVUS speedway in Berlin a record speed of 238 km/h, watched by 3000 spectators and world media, among them
Fritz Lang, director of
Metropolis and
Woman in the Moon, world boxing champion
Max Schmeling and many more sports and show business celebrities. A world record for rail vehicles was reached with RAK3 and a top speed of 256 km/h. After these successes, von Opel piloted the world's first public rocket-powered flight using
Opel RAK.1, a rocket plane designed by
Julius Hatry.
Timeline • On 15 March 1928, Opel tested his first rocket-powered car, the
Opel RAK.1, and achieved a top speed of 75 km/h (47 mph) in it, proving the feasibility of the concept of rocket propulsion. Less than two months later, he reached a speed of 230 km/h (143 mph) in the
RAK.2, driven by 24
solid-fuel rockets. • Later that same year, he purchased a
sailplane named the "
Lippisch Ente" (
Ente is "duck" in German) from
Alexander Lippisch and attached rocket motors to it, creating the world's first rocket plane on 11 June. The aircraft exploded on its second test flight, before Opel had had a chance to pilot it himself, so he commissioned a new aircraft, also called the RAK.1, from
Julius Hatry, and flew it at
Frankfurt-am-Main on 30 September 1929. In the meantime, another mishap had claimed the
RAK.3, a rocket-powered railway car powered by 30 solid-fuel rockets which had reached a speed of 254 km/h (157 mph). • Also in 1928, Opel built and test ran a rocket-powered
motorcycle called the Monster. == Liquid-fuel rocket development, test launches and a planned flight across the English channel ==