Kurt Tank (born February 24, 1898, Bromberg-Schwedenhöhe, Germany—died June 5, 1983, Munich) was a leading aircraft designer and test pilot of the mid-20th century.
After service in World War I, Tank studied electrical engineering at the Berlin Institute of Technology. In 1924, after earning his pilot’s license, he began work at the Rohrbach aircraft factory. There he established the design and testing department.
Tank left Rohrbach in 1930 to work for the Messerschmitt aircraft company (see Willy Messerschmitt), only to leave in 1931 to become the design director and head of flight testing for Focke-Wulf in Bremen. It was there that he developed world-famous aircraft such as the Fw 190 and the Fw 200 Condor. The former was one of Germany’s most important fighter aircraft in World War II, with some 20,000 examples produced in its different variants. The latter began as a long-range passenger airliner and was later used by the Luftwaffe for troop transport, collection of intelligence, and bombing missions. As the war progressed, Tank began plans for a new fighter jet, known as the Ta 183 (some German planes had begun to be prefaced with some form of their designer’s initials rather than those of the manufacturer).
After the war Tank immigrated to Argentina, where he continued work on the Ta 183. He created a variant of it in the I.Ae. 27 Púlqui I, also called the Arrow I, South America’s first jet-powered swept-wing airplane. He continued to refine the design on the Púlqui II, which, like its predecessor, was not successful as a production model. In the mid-1950s Tank moved to India, where he helped develop the country’s very successful HF 24 interceptor. In the late 1960s he returned to Germany to become a consultant for MBB (Messerschmitt-Boelkow-Blohm).