Fokker F.II
| F.II | |
|---|---|
| Role | Airliner |
| Manufacturer | Fokker |
| Designer | Reinhold Platz |
| First flight | October 1919 |
| Retired | 1934 |
| Primary users | Deutsche Aero Lloyd Deutsche Luft Hansa, KLM |
| Number built | about 23 |
| Variants | Fokker F.III |
The Fokker F.II was the first of a long series of commercial aircraft from the Fokker Aircraft Company, flying in 1919. In a biplane age, it presented a distinct clean, high-wing monoplane style that sold successfully across Europe and North America during the development of commercial passenger-carrying aviation.
This design lead to the Fokker F.III which also proved a commercial success. A license produced version was built in Germany, with some modification is sometimes called the Fokker-Grulich F.II
A non-flying replica of a Fokker F.II was built for the Dutch airline KLM, and is on display at the Aviodrome museum in Lelystad in the Netherlands.