Hamburger Flugzeugbau had been set up by the owners of Blohm & Voss shipbuilders to manufacture advanced all-metal aircraft. Dr. Richard Vogt had decided to adopt as a signature feature the use of a hollow welded steel tubular main wing spar, which could be filled with fuel to act as an armoured fuel tank. In other respects the design was relatively conventional.[1]
A conventional low-wing cantilever monoplane with nose-mounted engine and fixed spatted tailwheel undercarriage, the plane accommodated its pilot in an open cockpit above the wing aft section. The fuselage tapered sharply towards the top so that a slight bulge on either side of the cockpit was needed to make room for the pilot's shoulders.
Two examples were produced, differing mainly in their engines. One was fitted with a 1600NaN0 Bramo Sh 14A radial engine and the other with an Argus As 8R in-line engine.
The Ha 136 was designed to a requirement for an advanced fighter trainer that was as difficult to fly as a frontline fighter.
The aircraft first flew in the autumn of 1934 and the fighter-like handling characteristics were confirmed.[2]
However, the RLM changed its mind and decided that advanced fighter training should be carried out on the fighter aircraft themselves. The requirement for the Ha 136 was dropped, and so it never entered production.