Alexander Soldenhoff

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Alexander Leo Soldenhoff (1882-1951) was a Swiss artist and aircraft designer. Born in Switzerland, he lived for much of his life in Germany.

In 1906 he married Anna Zweifler from Glarus. They separated in 1947, only a few years before his death.

Painting[edit]

Alexander Soldenhoff trained as an artist and during the early 1900s was employed as an art teacher.

His aeronautical work interrupted his career as a painter, but he would return to it from time to time when he ran out of money to build more aeroplanes.

Aircraft[edit]

Soldenhoff became interested in aviation during the pioneer years of the twentieth century. After the end of WWI he determined to develop a tailless swept-wing "safety aeroplane" after the manner of designs already produced from 1909.

He built his first full-size glider and began attempts to fly in 1915. He completed the Bülbül I in July 1928 and entered it in that year's Rhön competition but it was blown backwards and damaged before he could launch it.

His subsequent aircraft would all be tailless swept-wing, single-engined types with a short fuselage and pusher propeller, although he envisaged some much larger and more complex designs. The examples which flew included:

  • V 1, later redesignated So A/1. 1927.
  • LF 5 "Berliner", later redesignated So A/2. 1929. Flown by Gottlob Espenlaub (the design is sometimes also mistakenly attributed to him).
  • So A/3 "Düsseldorfer". 1930. Soldenhoff's most successful design.
  • So A/4 "Böblingerin". 1931.
  • So A/5, a second "Böblingerin". 1931.
  • SL 1. 1936. Flew briefly. Now on display as the S-5 in the Verkehrshaus der Schweiz (Swiss Museum of Transport}, Lucerne.

References[edit]

  • Frost, Gunter; Die Flugzeuge des Alexander Soldenhoff (The Aeroplanes of Alexander Soldenhoff), Parts 1-3, Flugzeugwerke und andere Luftfahrtbetriebe, Arbeitsgemeinschaft Deutsche Luftfahrthistorik (ADL), 2016. (In German) (Retrieved 15 March 2022)
  • Alexander Soldenhoff, Böblinger Flughafengeschichten. (In German) (Retrieved 15 March 2022)
  • T. Wooldridge; Winged Wonders, Smithsonian. 1985. pp. 28 ff.