Then what, would you tell us?
Germany had serious restrictions after the WW1. They couldnt build a straight heavy bomber, even tho there were projects in the mid-late-'30s to spoof them as civil aircrafts.
Also their decription of the "heavy bomber" was a fast twin engined aircraft at that time: ju-88, do-17 etc. Why? Their conception was the Blitzkrieg: win the war quickly with panzer divisions and close air support, without destroying the victim's industry (they wanted to use it in the future). Heavyes arent so potent in divebombing on tanks...
As we know, the blitzkrieg failed at '41 December, under Moscow. The conception changed too: they had to play the russia's game, the one with better supplies wins. Of course they did everything to destroy the russian industries, but they were already moved behind the Ural. They
needed and wanted an aircraft what can go that far with a large bombload, also do it quickly... And voila, in mid-42, the german heavy bomber arrives: He-177, a revolutionary conception, thrown into action as quickly as possible, with next to no testing and evaluation. How it could not be a complete failure?
It took a little bit more than a year to fix its engine problems, but after that, the aircraft worked just fine. Another question, as like someone said before, the complete allied air superiority made its life very hard.
For those who think, its just a german "hot rod"...
How many P47Ms were used in combat? What are the reports about their reliability?
Im still on the Ju-188 side tho. Not only couse that was a better construction by nature, but it also was built in much larger numbers, was used widely in the war, and a much more flexible airframe, meaning one 3d model could be used on many very different sub-types.