c. 1920s ,
NAS Pensacola Between 1911 and 1922
O.W. Timm built several aircraft with varying success before he founded, in 1922, the O.W. Timm Aircraft Company. Timm manufactured six models of a parasol design, the Collegiate. In 1934 Otto and his brother
Wally Timm joined to form a new company named the
Timm Airplane Company to produce the Timm T-S140, a high wing twin engine aircraft using new features developed at
NACA such as flaps and tricycle landing gear. Wally Timm formed his own Glendale based aviation company later on, the Wally Timm Inc. The company developed a "plastic" material made of resin and wood similar to the
Duramold process. The Duramold and Haskelite process was first developed in 1937. Followed by
Gene Vidal's Weldwood and later the Aeromold process. The Aeromold process differs in that it is baked at a low at cutting and forming, and for fusing together sections after the resins are added. In 1939, at the onset of World War II, the company operated as the
Timm Aircraft Corporation, building the PT160K trainer prototype using the aeromold process. By 1941, the U.S. Navy ordered the aeromold
N2T-1 with a production run reaching 260 aircraft along with other small aircraft parts made of the aeromold process. Profits increased to $70,000 from $240 the year prior. The company also license-built 436 of the
CG-4A glider used by allied troops. A Plywood construction variant, the CG-4B was developed by Timm in case of material shortages, but did not go into production. In some episodes of the 1941 movie serial,
Sky Raiders, aircraft hangars of Timm Aircraft Corporation are clearly visible. They were located adjacent to the
Van Nuys Airport in
Van Nuys, Los Angeles. After World War II, the company specialized in returning surplus
Douglas C-47 aircraft back into airliner configurations. The company also created a subsidiary, Timm Industries, Inc to manufacture
vending machines such as the Frank-O-Matic and Coca-Cola bottle dispensers. By 1948, production had ceased to the point where the company leased out its production facilities to the
Marquardt Corporation, a maker of Ramjet engines. In 1953, a proxy war among shareholders was started, with C. D. Rudolph winning control of the board. The company did not produce any new aircraft after this point. In 1957, the company merged with the International Glass Corporation. ==Aircraft==