Fokker Super Universal

Super Universal
Restored Fokker Super Universal at the Western Canada Aviation Museum in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Role Airliner
Manufacturer Fokker-America
Canadian Vickers
First flight March 1928
Number built ca. 200
Developed from Fokker Universal
Variants Nakajima Ki-6
Fokker Super Universal airplane docked in a nose hangar, Ontario, [ca. 1925]
Fokker Super Universal of the Bryd Antarctic expedition of 1929
Fokker Super Universal in Alberta, Canada 1935. The person is famous Canadian aviator Leigh Brintnell

The Fokker Super Universal was an airliner produced in the United States in the late 1920s by Fokker America, an enlarged and improved version of the Fokker Universal, fitted with cantilever wings and an enclosed cockpit. It was also called the Model 8. It was subsequently also manufactured under license in Canada, and in Japan as the Nakajima–Fokker Super Universal and for the IJAAF as the Nakajima Ki-6 and later in the puppet state of Manchukuo as the Manshū Super Universal. It was used on the Byrd Antarctic expedition and was one of the most produced of the Fokker America models.