Description
Bronze Collection Zeppelin Propeller Powered Railcar II
1:220 scale model produced by Marklin. This model is ready-to-run straight out of the box and would make a excellent addition to any model railway collection.
Features:
Analogue DC Model
Best suited to Epoch II Model Railways
This model mainly operates in Germany
This model is decorated in Zeppelin company markings
Model from the MƤrklin Z Investment Casting Edition.
One-time release of the model with loco body cast in fine bronze.
Bell armature motor.
Front LED lighting.
Elegant wooden packaging.
Certificate of authenticity.
Details
The Schienenzeppelin (German for rail zeppelin) was an extraordinary experimental railcar conceived in 1929 by German aircraft engineer Franz Kruckenberg and built for the Deutsche Reichsbahn workshops in Hannover-Leinhausen. Unlike conventional trains, this prototype was powered not by driving wheels but by a rear-mounted aircraft propeller driven by a high-power petrol aero engine. Its streamlined aluminium body, inspired by contemporary Zeppelin airships, made it look and perform unlike anything seen on rails before.
Completed at the end of 1930, the railcar measured about 25.85 m long, rode on just two axles and could carry around 40 passengers in a simple interior. During trials it demonstrated astonishing speed for the era: in May 1931 it exceeded 200 km/h and on 21 June 1931 it set a world railway speed record of 230.2 km/h, a record for petrol-powered rail vehicles that stood for decades.
Despite its success in high-speed trials, the Schienenzeppelinās unusual propulsion posed serious practical issues. The open propeller was dangerous around stations, the vehicle could not easily reverse, and it could not haul additional cars or climb steep gradients effectively. As railway technology advanced and safety concerns grew, the concept was not developed further. In 1939 the sole example was dismantled and its materials repurposed.