The
Fokker F.XVIII was an airliner produced in the Netherlands in the early 1930s, essentially a scaled-up version of the
Fokker F.XII intended for long-distance flights. Like its predecessor, it was a conventional high-wing cantilever monoplane with fixed tailwheel undercarriage. Its cabin could seat 12 passengers, or four-to-six on seats convertible to sleeping berths. Only five were built, all for KLM, and registered as PH-AIO, 'AIP, 'AIQ, 'AIR and 'AIS, all of which were named after birds. Used by KLM on its
Amsterdam-
Batavia route, the F.XVIII became celebrated in the Netherlands due to two especially noteworthy flights. In December 1933, one aircraft (registration
PH-AIP,
Pelikaan - "Pelican") was used to make a special Christmas mail flight to Batavia, completing the round trip in a flight time of 73 hours 34 minutes. The following Christmas, another F.XVIII (registration
PH-AIS,
Snip - "Snipe") made a similar flight to
Curaçao in 55 hour 58 minutes after having been specially re-engined for the journey.