Lot

19

Advertising poster Rohrbach Roland Airplane Lufthansa BMW

In Original Vintage Posters incl Aviation and Air...

This auction is live! You need to be registered and approved to bid at this auction.
You have been outbid. For the best chance of winning, increase your maximum bid.
Your bid or registration is pending approval with the auctioneer. Please check your email account for more details.
Unfortunately, your registration has been declined by the auctioneer. You can contact the auctioneer on +44 207 352 9309 for more information.
You are the current highest bidder! To be sure to win, log in for the live auction broadcast on or increase your max bid.
Leave a bid now! Your registration has been successful.
Sorry, bidding has ended on this item. We have thousands of new lots everyday, start a new search.
Bidding on this auction has not started. Please register now so you are approved to bid when auction starts.
Advertising poster Rohrbach Roland Airplane Lufthansa BMW
Interested in the price of this lot?
Subscribe to the price guide
London
Rohrbach Roland Airplane Lufthansa BMW. Original vintage poster. The Rohrbach Ro VIII Roland was an airliner produced in Germany during the 1920s. It was a conventional strut-braced, high-wing monoplane, based loosely on the Zeppelin-Staaken E-4/20 that Adolf Rohrbach designed in 1920. It had a fully enclosed flight deck and passenger cabin, and featured fixed, tailskid undercarriage. Power was supplied by three engines, one in the nose, and two mounted in nacelles on the wings. Construction was of metal throughout. In 1926 Deutsche Luft Hansa purchased the prototype Roland, followed by five production examples over that year and the next. The production machines were built with open flight decks, although they were later enclosed, as on the prototype. These were put to work servicing a route between Berlin and London via Hanover and Amsterdam. In July 1927 the Roland held the world endurance record for a payload of 1,000 kg with a flight of 14 hours 23 minutes, and the world distance record for a payload of 2,000 kg of 1,750 km (1,090 mi). At different times, the Roland held twenty-two world records. In 1928, LuftHansa replaced three of its Rolands with new machines of slightly different design. Designated Ro VIIIa, these had a fuselage that was stretched by 30 cm (1 ft) and were powered by the more powerful BMW V engines in place of the BMW IVs fitted to the prototype and first production batch. A new Spanish airline, Iberia, purchased the three Rolands that Luft Hansa retired, and put them into service on its inaugural service between Madrid and Barcelona. In 1929, Rohrbach produced nine examples of a substantially updated Roland for Luft Hansa. These featured a major redesign of the flight deck, and a new wing design.[4] Dubbed the Roland II, these aircraft continued in service with the airline until 1936 on its Hamburg–Malmö and Berlin–Munich routes. LuftHansa sold at least three of these aircraft to Deruluft upon retirement.[4] The Luftwaffe acquired another one, armed it, and operated it at the clandestine school at Lipetsk to train bomber crews. During his 1932 election campaign, Adolf Hitler hired a Rohrbach Ro VIII Roland aeroplane from Deutsche Luft Hansa for his two first series of campaign flights in March and July. The aeroplane was named Immelmann I after World War I pilot Max Immelmann. Hitler switched to a Ju-52 in November 1932. Fair condition, backed on linen which is backed on board, minor loss on margins, staining. Germany, 1930s, designed by Uknown, 1930s, 96x72.5cm.
Rohrbach Roland Airplane Lufthansa BMW. Original vintage poster. The Rohrbach Ro VIII Roland was an airliner produced in Germany during the 1920s. It was a conventional strut-braced, high-wing monoplane, based loosely on the Zeppelin-Staaken E-4/20 that Adolf Rohrbach designed in 1920. It had a fully enclosed flight deck and passenger cabin, and featured fixed, tailskid undercarriage. Power was supplied by three engines, one in the nose, and two mounted in nacelles on the wings. Construction was of metal throughout. In 1926 Deutsche Luft Hansa purchased the prototype Roland, followed by five production examples over that year and the next. The production machines were built with open flight decks, although they were later enclosed, as on the prototype. These were put to work servicing a route between Berlin and London via Hanover and Amsterdam. In July 1927 the Roland held the world endurance record for a payload of 1,000 kg with a flight of 14 hours 23 minutes, and the world distance record for a payload of 2,000 kg of 1,750 km (1,090 mi). At different times, the Roland held twenty-two world records. In 1928, LuftHansa replaced three of its Rolands with new machines of slightly different design. Designated Ro VIIIa, these had a fuselage that was stretched by 30 cm (1 ft) and were powered by the more powerful BMW V engines in place of the BMW IVs fitted to the prototype and first production batch. A new Spanish airline, Iberia, purchased the three Rolands that Luft Hansa retired, and put them into service on its inaugural service between Madrid and Barcelona. In 1929, Rohrbach produced nine examples of a substantially updated Roland for Luft Hansa. These featured a major redesign of the flight deck, and a new wing design.[4] Dubbed the Roland II, these aircraft continued in service with the airline until 1936 on its Hamburg–Malmö and Berlin–Munich routes. LuftHansa sold at least three of these aircraft to Deruluft upon retirement.[4] The Luftwaffe acquired another one, armed it, and operated it at the clandestine school at Lipetsk to train bomber crews. During his 1932 election campaign, Adolf Hitler hired a Rohrbach Ro VIII Roland aeroplane from Deutsche Luft Hansa for his two first series of campaign flights in March and July. The aeroplane was named Immelmann I after World War I pilot Max Immelmann. Hitler switched to a Ju-52 in November 1932. Fair condition, backed on linen which is backed on board, minor loss on margins, staining. Germany, 1930s, designed by Uknown, 1930s, 96x72.5cm.

Original Vintage Posters incl Aviation and Airlines

Sale Date(s)
Venue Address
404 King's Road
London
SW10 0LJ
United Kingdom

General delivery information available from the auctioneer

Buyer Pays Shipping Cost and import duties. We offer worldwide shipping, payment on collection is possible.

We ship posters worldwide rolled in shock-resistant and hard wearing tubes.  

We dispatch items within 1-4 working days after payment and notify customers if there is any delay. Delivery to UK addresses usually takes 2-3 working days. Delivery to international addresses varies depending on destination and usually takes 7-10 working days.  

Important Information

AntikBar, the original vintage poster specialist, will be holding their next auction on Saturday 14 April, starting online at 3pm (UK time). This auction will feature a selection of aviation and airline related posters from propeller planes to the early jet engine era alongside a wide variety of original vintage posters from around the world: travel, cinema, sport, advertising, war, propaganda.

All sales are final, items are as described. Payment is required within 4 days after auction.  Please send us requests for more information if needed. We will provide you quotes for worldwide shipping, no returns, buyer is responsible for customs clearance and payment of customs fees.  Ownership of goods passes to buyer once the items are picked up by a shipper or taken in by the Post Office, we do not assume responsibility for goods in transit.  Payment in Pounds (GBP) is possible on collection at our gallery in London.  Auctioneer reserves the right to sell the lots for which the payment was not completed.

Terms & Conditions

AntikBar Limited offers an online bidding service via the-saleroom.com for bidders that register on this bidding platform.

In completing the bidder registration on www.the-saleroom.com and providing your credit card details and unless alternative arrangements are agreed with AntikBar Limited :

1. authorise AntikBar Limited , if they so wish, to charge the credit card given in part or full payment, including all fees, for items successfully purchased in the auction via the-saleroom.com, and

2. confirm that you are authorised to provide these credit card details to AntikBar Limited through www.the-saleroom.com and agree that AntikBar Limited are entitled to ship the goods to the card holder name and card holder address provided in fulfilment of the sale.

Please note that any lots purchased via the-saleroom.com live auction service will be subject to an additional 3% commission charge + VAT at the rate imposed on the hammer price

 


All sales are final, items are as described. Please send us requests for more information if needed. We will provide you quotes for worldwide shipping, no returns, buyer is responsible for customs clearance and payment of customs fees. Ownership of goods passes to buyer once the items are picked up by a shipper or taken in by the Post Office, we do not assume responsibility for goods in transit. Payment is required within 7 days after auction. Payment in Pounds (GBP) is possible on collection in London and Moscow (by special arrangement). Auctioneer reserves the right to sell the lots for which the payment was not completed. Auctioneer reserves the right to sell the lots for which the payment was not completed.

Buyer Pays Shipping Cost and import duties. We offer worldwide shipping, payment on collection is possible.

See Full Terms And Conditions