Recent find today: What if the 410 had counter rotating props?
Kurfurst (yes, him) asked on LEMB a while back:
I thought the 410B had 603E engines, which AFAIK is quite similiar in concept to the DB 605AS, ie. 603A + 603G supercharger = 603E...? Right?
The response from member name felix99, citing his source:
A good question, Kurfürst. If you check the report extract from the GL/C Chef meeting of 3 Jun 43, p. 116, of the 110/210/410 book, you will see the following: "(The GL/C Chef) confirms the weeks-old decision to initially power the Me 410 with the DB 603A, followed by the DB 603A and D. Starting on 1 January 1945 the Me 410 will convert to the standard fighter/heavy fighter engine in the form of the DB 603 G/K and rapid-change variable pitch propeller. (General Vorwald stated that) the DB 603 E/F has been ruled out for both the Me 410 and the He 219."
The two items in brackets are as stated in the original report on the meeting. And, in case anyone isn't aware of this, note that the 2nd letter for each engine is the counter-clockwise propeller rotation version of that engine. So, the 603A rotates the propeller clockwise, and the 603D is the 603A with the propeller rotating counter-clockwise.
I think that with counter rotating props it would have given the design a noted edge, even if overall specs weren't too great. Similar to the P-38.
So far the only photos I noticed are both same-handed. Anybody know if the counter-rotating setup was ever used?