Kawanishi's first
floatplane design was the K-5, which though foreseen as Japan's first successful large seaplane transport turned out to lack the power to take-off carrying any significant load. As no more powerful engine than the
Maybach Mb.IV was available, the K-5's development was abandoned late in 1922. Instead, Eiji Sekiguchi designed a new, smaller, lighter aircraft with the same engine. This, the K-6, was informed by the latest control and stability research from
Göttingen. It was completed in November 1923 and was intended to be used by Kawanishi's
Nippon Koku KK (Japan Aviation Co. Ltd) The K-6 was a
two bay biplane with
fabric covering over a wooden structure. Its equal span wings were rectangular in plan out to rounded tips and braced together without
stagger by parallel pairs of
interplane struts. The pilot's open cockpit was between the wings, close behind the upright, water-cooled Maybach. The K-6's two passengers were in a separate cockpit behind him, originally open but later enclosed under multi-panel glazing faired smoothly into the upper rear
fuselage. The latter was flat sided and remained deep to the tail; its surface served to stabilize the aircraft in
yaw and there was no conventional fixed
fin. The K-6 had a straight-edged, round-topped
rudder, hinged on the extreme fuselage and cut-away for
elevator movement, which was unusual in projecting only below the fuselage. Its
tailplane was mounted on top of the fuselage and braced to the lower fuselage
longerons with pairs of parallel struts. The sides of its flat-surfaced floats met at bow and stern. Each float had a shallow step under the
trailing edge. They were held under the fuselage on fore and aft struts to the lower longerons. ==Operational history==