Aircraft ;HD -
Heinkel Doppeldecker •
Heinkel HD 14 •
Heinkel HD 15 •
Heinkel HD 16 •
Heinkel HD 17 •
Heinkel HD 19 •
Heinkel HD 20 •
Heinkel HD 21 •
Heinkel HD 22 •
Heinkel HD 23 •
Heinkel HD 24 seaplane trainer (1926) •
Heinkel HD 25 •
Heinkel HD 26 •
Heinkel HD 27 •
Heinkel HD 28 •
Heinkel HD 29 •
Heinkel HD 30 •
Heinkel HD 32 •
Heinkel HD 33 •
Heinkel HD 34 •
Heinkel HD 35 •
Heinkel HD 36 •
Heinkel HD 37 fighter (biplane) •
Heinkel HD 38 fighter (biplane) •
Heinkel HD 39 •
Heinkel HD 40 •
Heinkel HD 41 •
Heinkel HD 43 fighter (biplane) •
Heinkel HD 44 •
Heinkel HD 55 reconnaissance flying boat •
Heinkel HD 56 reconnaissance seaplane; built in Japan as the Aichi E3A ;HE -
Heinkel Eindecker •
Heinkel HE 1 low-wing floatplane (monoplane) •
Heinkel HE 2 improvement on the HE 1 •
Heinkel HE 3 •
Heinkel HE 4 reconnaissance (monoplane) •
Heinkel HE 5 reconnaissance (monoplane) •
Heinkel HE 6 •
Heinkel HE 7 •
Heinkel HE 8 reconnaissance (monoplane) •
Heinkel HE 9 •
Heinkel HE 10 •
Heinkel HE 12 •
Heinkel HE 18 •
Heinkel HE 31 HE 8 with a Packard 3A-2500 engine •
Heinkel HE 57 Heron, passenger flying boat (prototype); Heinkel's last flying boat and first all-metal aircraft •
Heinkel HE 58 enlarged HE 12 ;He -
Heinkel (RLM designator) •
Heinkel He 42 seaplane trainer; originally
HD 42 •
Heinkel He 45 biplane light bomber; originally
HD 45 •
Heinkel He 46 reconnaissance/army co-operation monoplane; originally
HD 46 •
Heinkel He 47 trainer (project); existed as a mockup, but was lost in a factory fire in 1934 •
Heinkel He 48 short-range reconnaissance (project); mockup inspected in 1935, but cancelled in 1936 •
Heinkel He 49 biplane fighter; originally
HD 49 •
Heinkel He 50 reconnaissance + dive bomber (biplane); originally
HD 50 •
Heinkel He 51 biplane fighter developed from the He 49 •
Heinkel He 52 high-altitude version of He 51 (prototype) •
Heinkel He 59 multirole biplane; originally
HD 59 •
Heinkel He 60 ship-borne reconnaissance (biplane seaplane); originally
HD 60 •
Heinkel He 61 export version of He 45 for China; originally
HD 61 •
Heinkel He 62 reconnaissance seaplane; originally
HD 62 •
Heinkel He 63 prototype trainer biplane; originally
HD 63 •
Heinkel He 64 sports plane; originally
HE 64 •
Heinkel He 65 single-engine, high-speed mail plane (project) •
Heinkel He 66 export version of He 50 for Japan; originally
HD 66 •
Heinkel He 70 Blitz (Lightning), high-speed single-engine mail plane, 1932 •
Heinkel He 71 single-seat monoplane; shrunken He 64 •
Heinkel He 72 Kadett (Cadet), trainer •
Heinkel He 74 biplane light fighter/advanced trainer (prototype); lost to the Fw 56 and Ar 76 •
Heinkel He 100 fighter •
Heinkel He 111 medium bomber/airliner •
Heinkel He 112 fighter •
Heinkel He 113 (fictitious alternative designation for He 100D-1) •
Heinkel He 114 reconnaissance seaplane •
Heinkel He 115 military seaplane •
Heinkel He 116 long-range reconnaissance/mail plane •
Heinkel He 118 prototype dive bomber; lost to the Ju 87 •
Heinkel He 119 experimental single-engine high-speed reconnaissance/bomber, 1937 •
Heinkel He 120 four-engine long-range passenger flying boat (project), 1938; cancelled in favor of the BV 222 •
Heinkel He 162 Spatz (sparrow),
Volksjäger (People's Fighter) design competition choice, fighter (jet-engined) •
Heinkel He 170 export version of He 70 for Hungary •
Heinkel He 172 He 72B with NACA cowling (prototype) •
Heinkel He 176 pioneering liquid-fueled rocket-powered experimental aircraft (prototype) •
Heinkel He 177 Greif (Griffon), the Third Reich's only long-range
heavy bomber •
Heinkel He 178 world's first jet-engined aircraft •
Heinkel He 179 variant of He 177 with four separate engines, not built •
Heinkel He 219 Uhu (Eagle-Owl), night fighter •
Heinkel He 220 four-engine long-range passenger flying boat (project), 1939; cancelled in favor of the BV 222 •
Heinkel He 270 He 70 with DB 601 engine •
Heinkel He 274 high-altitude heavy bomber, He 177 development, two prototypes completed post-war in France •
Heinkel He 275 four-engine heavy bomber; project only •
Heinkel He 277 heavy bomber, paper-only
Amerika Bomber He 177 development (by February 1943) with four
BMW 801E radial engines, never built •
Heinkel He 278 four-engine turboprop bomber; project only •
Heinkel He 280 jet fighter; first jet fighter to fly •
Heinkel He 319 multirole aircraft (project); unrelated to the He 219 •
Heinkel He 343 four-engine jet bomber (project), 1944 •
Heinkel He 419 He 219 with longer wingspan and He 319 tail (project) •
Heinkel He 519, high-speed bomber (He 119 derivative; project only), 1944 •
Heinkel A7He He 112 development for the
IJAAS •
Heinkel Navy Type He Interceptor Fighter He 100 development for the IJNAS P -
Projekt • Heinkel P.1041 - He 177 • Heinkel P.1054 • Heinkel P.1060 - He 219 • Heinkel P.1062 - fighter (project), 1942 • Heinkel P.1063 - mid-wing fast attack aircraft (project), 1942 • Heinkel P.1064 - long-range mid-wing bomber with BMW 801Ea engine (project), 1943 • Heinkel P.1065 - fighter-bomber designs • Heinkel P.1066 - ground attack aircraft with two BMW 801E or BMW Jumo 222C engines (project), 1942 • Heinkel P.1068 - He 343 • Heinkel P.1069 - mid-wing fighter with Junkers Jumo 004B engine (project), 1943 • Heinkel P.1070 - fighter-reconnaissance with two Junkers Jumo 004B engines (project), 1943 • Heinkel P.1071 - asymmetrical fuselage fighter with two Junkers Jumo 004B engines (project), 1943 • Heinkel P.1072 - Mid-wing bomber with four BMW 003A-0 engines (project) 1943 •
Heinkel P.1073 - twin jet engine fighter (project); design evolved into the He 162 • Heinkel P.1074 - four engine fighter with BMW 801E engines (project), 1944 • Heinkel P.1075 - mid-wing long-range fighter with twin DB 603E engines (project), 1944 •
Heinkel P.1076, a nearly conventional 1944 design, with slightly forward swept wings and
contra-rotating propellers at the front. •
Heinkel P.1077 Julia/
Romeo rocket-propulsion point-defense interceptor •
Heinkel P.1078 jet-powered interceptor designs; Emergency Fighter Program candidate • Heinkel He P.1078A, fighter (jet-engined) (project) • Heinkel He P.1078B, tailless fighter (jet-engined) (project) • Heinkel He P.1078C, tailless fighter (jet-engined) (project), 1944 •
Heinkel P.1079 all-weather jet fighter designs • Heinkel He P.1079A, two-engine night-fighter (jet-engined) (project) • Heinkel He P.1079B/I, all-weather heavy fighter (flying wing design) (jet-engined) • Heinkel He P.1079B/II, all-weather heavy fighter (flying wing design) (jet-engined), 1945 •
Heinkel P.1080 ramjet fighter (project); Emergency Fighter Program candidate • Heinkel P.1084 - transport aircraft (project), 1942 •
Heinkel Lerche (Lark) VTOL ground attack/fighter •
Heinkel Wespe (Wasp) VTOL tail sitter interceptor
Microcar Heinkel introduced the "Kabine"
bubble car in 1956. It competed with the
BMW Isetta and the
Messerschmitt KR200. It had a
unit body and a
four-stroke single-cylinder engine. Heinkel stopped manufacturing the Kabine in 1958 but production continued under licence, first by Dundalk Engineering Company in Ireland and then by
Trojan Cars Ltd., which ceased production in 1966.
Scooters Heinkel introduced the "Tourist"
motor scooter in the 1950s which was known for its reliability. A large and relatively heavy touring machine, it provided good weather protection with a full
fairing and the front wheel turning under a fixed nose extension. The "Tourist" had effective streamlining, perhaps unsurprising in view of its aircraft ancestry, and although it had only a , 9.5
bhp 4-stroke engine, it was capable of sustaining speeds of up to (official figures ), given time to get there. Heinkel also made a lighter scooter called the Heinkel 150.
Mopeds Heinkel built the Perle
moped from 1954 to 1957. The Perle was a sophisticated cycle with a cast alloy
unit frame, rear
suspension, a fully enclosed chain with part of the chain enclosure integral with the
swingarm, and interchangeable wheels. This high level of sophistication came at a high cost. As with most mopeds, it had a
two-stroke engine with a displacement of 50cc that operated on a mixture of gasoline and lubrication oil. Approximately twenty-seven thousand Perles were sold. ==See also==