Aviatik D.II


The Aviatik D.II was a prototype German single-seat biplane fighter aircraft built by Aviatik during World War I. Only a single aircraft was built, but no production order followed. It later had its conventional wings replaced by bird-shaped wings and has been referred to as the Geest Fighter in this guise. Further development was discontinued.

Background and description

Aviatik had been building the Halberstadt D.II fighter under license as the Aviatik D.I, but decided to build a prototype of their own design in late 1916. The D.II was a single-bay, staggered-wing biplane with fabric-covered wooden wings and a single cockpit. The aircraft was powered by a single water-cooled, Mercedes D.III six-cylinder inline engine using a two-bladed fixed-pitch propeller. The forward fuselage was built from steel tubes with a metal skin while the wooden rear fuselage was skinned with plywood. It was armed with a pair of fixed, synchronized LMG 08/15 machine guns in the forward fuselage. The prototype's performance was mediocre and it was not ordered into production.

Geest Fighter

Before the war's beginning in 1914, Dr. designed and built a series of six monoplanes using his Seagull gull wing design that was intended to compensate for forward or lateral gusts of wind "by a varying angle of incidence and dihedral throughout the wing planform". In 1917, the conventional wings that had been fitted to the Aviatik D.II were replaced by staggered wings designed by Geest with curved leading edges and raked ailerons on the upper wing. During testing, the single-bay aircraft had a maximum speed of and reached a height of in 17.5 minutes, but further development was not continued.

Aviatik D.II-2.jpg|Profile photograph of the Aviatik D.II with the Geest wing
D.II wing shapes.jpg|The upper Geest wing and the lower
Geest Fighter frontal view.jpg|Frontal view of the Geest fighter