Encyclopedia > Heinkel He 162

  Article Content

Heinkel He 162

The Heinkel He 162 Volksjäger was the second jet engined fighter aircraft to be fielded by the Luftwaffe in WWII. It is know primarily for a series of spectacular disasters during testing.

When the US 8th Air Force[?] re-opened the bombing campaign on Germany in early 1944, the bombers returned to the skies along with the North American P-51 Mustang in escort. Within a month the Luftwaffe was broken. Poor management by Milch had led to a proliferation of largely similar planes, all of which were designs that were at least three years old and simply couldn't compete with the P-51.

The solution was the jet engine. The Messerschmitt Me 262 looked like it was untouchable, and even small numbers of these planes could be devastating to the bomber streams. But a small number was all you could get, the engines lasted less than 12 hours on average and the planes spent the majority of their time on the ground. The solution appeared to be a disposable plane, and the Volksjäger project was born.The Volksjäger, or Peoples Fighter, took some convincing before it was finally approved in late 1944.

When it was, the design was selected and approved in only three weeks, with Heinkel[?] winning the contract over the better Arado[?] design because they could be in production earlier. Heinkel designed a neat, sporty-looking little aircraft, with a sleek streamlined fuselage, the BMW-003 engine carried in a nacelle on the back of the aircraft, twin tailfins to allow the vertical tailplanes to clear the jet exhaust, a high-mounted straight wing with a shallow dihedral, and tricycle landing gear that retracted into the fuselageThe plane was flying in an astoundingly short period of time; the design was picked on the 25th of September and first flew on the 6th of December, less than 90 days later.

Of course this fast turnaround also had its drawbacks. One of the planes fell apart in mid-air during a demonstration flight, when the glue holding the wings together came apart. This led to a hasty re-design of the wing, which was already gearing up for production. A bigger problem was that the plane had too much dihedral in an effort to make it easy to fly, but instead this had the negative effect of making the plane have serious dutch roll[?] problems. There was simply no time to fix that one, and the planes when into service with various stop-gap measures that never really helped.

By that time any hope of having the aircraft in widespread use was somewhat pointless, as the war was clearly drawing to a close. Nevertheless the ambitious production program continued and 300 were complete by the war's end, with another 100 ready for delivery. Only one gruppen had completely re-formed with the He 162 in late April, and they claimed two or three planes in combat before their base was taken over by the British in early May.



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Reformed churches

... of Scotland[?] and the Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland[?] The Presbyterian Church in Ireland serves the whole of the island. Reformed churches in the U.S. ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 41.6 ms