Author Topic: Requesting Two New Bombers  (Read 3109 times)

Offline jag88

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Re: Requesting Two New Bombers
« Reply #30 on: February 17, 2013, 10:10:57 AM »
Bullpoop. The He177 was designed in 1936 and mocked up in 1937 originally for the "Bomber A" requirement. In Nov 1937 it was given its RLM type number 8-177. Prototypes flew in 1939, when the Do17 was being replaced by the He-111.

You want to know what was to replace the He-111, though not explicitly designed to? The Ju-88. And it did, for the most part. The Ju-188, 288, and 388, were being pursued as the primary successors to all Luftwaffe bombing (with minor exceptions in the jet family, grossly mismanaged by Hitler).

The He177 wasn't designed or intended to "replace" anything.

The He-111 would cease to be produced as the He-177 came into full production since it would occupy Heinkel's production lines.  Is that clear enough?  The fast bomber role was covered, the He-111 just was a production place holder until the Greif was ready to take its place in the bomber force.

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However, in mid 1944, even at the end, the loss rates due to engine problems were still quite present.

Quick wiki copy, but you can find it in several books as well:

"As the war progressed, He 177 operations became increasingly desultory. Fuel and personnel shortages presented difficulties, and He 177s were sitting on airfields all over Europe awaiting new engines or engine related modifications. During Operation Steinbock, of the 14 He 177 sent out, one suffered a burst tire, 8 returned with overheating or burning engines and of the 4 that reached London one was lost to night fighters. These aircraft were brand new [...]"

That's only 13, though. What wiki doesn't say is another turned back before it even left French airspace, due to mechanical difficulties!

8 out of 14? That's over 50% engine loss rates in one mission alone! In Jan-May 1944! With the "fixed" problems! Those are "new" craft in 1944, that means A-5s. Just because they weren't bursting into flames ALL the time doesn't mean they weren't bursting into piles of scrap metal. They had a very complicated gearbox mechanism and designs like this (side by side engines) on any side during the war had a high failure rate.

-1 for quoting from wiki and even then mutilating the quote, I will complete it just so it is clear:

"These aircraft were brand new, delivered a week before the operation and not fully flown-in, as the air unit had moved to a new airfield the day before and lacked sufficient maintenance personnel and material."

These are the points you will constantly see highlighted in books on the He-177, maintenance, training and logistical issues ended up being the major issue.  It is disappointing to see you resort to a partial in an attempt to score a point.

Oh, btw, those couldnt be A5s since KG 40 was actually pulled form the operation in February to be reequipped with A5s, but lets see why your speculations and mutilated quotes are misleading, from Griehl:

"In many cases, the crews involved were relatively young and inexperienced. The largest number of returnees came From the KG 100 combat group, I/KG 100: no less than 14 of its crews abandoned their mission and returned home early. More than anything else, most of the pilots living He 177s initially had no idea about the bomber's prescribed engine revs and highest permissible climbing speeds. The inevitable resulting powerplant overstressing led to no less than seven crashes and engine fires. Other crews undercut the minimum permissible speed, stalled and crashed. Prior to that, problems had arisen due to the sudden move to a new base at short notice, which had left too little time for comprehensive servicing of the A-3s assigned."

A3s are clearly identified, just as the cause of the problems, lack of adequate training and maintenance.

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Gixxer comments he has both the J Richard Smith & Eddit J Creeks book and the Manfred Griehl & Joachim Dressel book and both seem to agree that even after the "cure" was established with the A-5, they both talk about fires continuing to plague the aircraft. A different reference to Griehl/Dressel says: "In the Griehl/Dressel book on the He177 for the period March to August 1944 there are some 36 177 losses for KG 1 most down to technical reasons."

Even KG1's efforts against Soviet targets from German airfields yielded well above normal rates of engine failures late in the war, with A-3s and A-5s.

Oh?  You mean the unit that has just been formed and received mostly old A1s and barely any maintenance equipment and crews to start training suffered losses?  Shocking.  The quote I made earlier from Price about KG1 addresses exactly the issue you mention, how once training got up to speed such incidents were reduced dramatically.  You either need to read more on the issue or start being more honest in your arguments.

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Quick google search for He177 Order of Battle:

"LW OoB May 31 1944 - He 177A

Stab/KG 1 2/1 (on hand/servicable)
I/KG 1 30/11
II/KG 1 29/0
III/KG 1 30/12

II/KG 100 30/0

part I/KG 40 30(20)/21(11)
II/KG 40 30/26

3./KG 40 10/10

That is 181 'on hand' but ONLY 71 'sevicable' > 39%. A good indication that all was not well with the He177."

Even when "fixed" it was still a terrible plane.


See the zeros?  Dont they seem odd to you?  I will explain then to you since you clearly had no interest in finding out why such thing happened as long as you could claim they serve to prove your point.

II/KG 100 was just transitioning into the type, it was not an operational unit and was still flying Do-217K2s as late as April, they received A3s initially an then all were swapped with new A5s equipped for guided bombs, problem was, the Kehl IV installation was incomplete and therefore the aircraft were not operational.  As it was usual with the He-177 the production of spares, replacement parts adn specialized equipment never kept up which further hindered their operation.

This very same Gruppe had a 90% serviceability rate a few months later.

II/KG 40 was refitting with new A5s as well and ran into the same issues which is why you have that odd "0" for these 2 units.

Btw, this was a unit that just before was reporting 80% readiness:

"One positive aspect of the operations was that the operational safety and reliability of the He I77A-3 had been improved, doing away with the need for the usual six- and 12fi-hour control checks. The regular 25-, 50- and 75-hour inspections were now completely sufficient, with special attention being paid to servicing of the coupled powerplants after 50 flying hours.

According to the technicians, the He 177 service-ability rate of II/ KG 40 was frequently in the order of 80 per cent; a great improvement over the 30 per cent or so recorded during the Gruppe's training phase, when flying operations were noticeably affected by moisture in the air which led to frequent accidental earthing of onboard electrical equipment. In contrast to the situation with I/KG 40, only one aircraft assigned to II /KG 40 was lost due to powerplant failure. During operations against Great Britain there had been numerous power-plant problems, caused mainly by the undertrained aircrews overstraining the engines. On the positive side, the Bordeaux-Merignac-based Grippe had carried out the first He 177 long-range flight (lasting 12fi hours) and proposed to increase the aircraft's range still further by using 900-hr (198 Imp gal) underwing auxiliary fuel tanks. Despite this overload, but obviously helped by the even stressing of both powerplants during the long-range flights, it had proved possible to operate engines for up to 115 flying hours without any problems."


See the difference?  When maintenance and training were allowed to take place you have a far different result.

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Folks see this plane on paper and want it because of the "potentially" high bomb loads. It's misleading. It never flew with the max loads unless you count it carrying 2 or 4 guided glider bombs or missiles, each of which could weigh 2000+ pounds. These were also exclusively anti-shipping. When actual bombs were carried, most flew with 4000kg or less.

(Image removed from quote.)

All aircraft had to make tradeoffs when carrying heavy loads and the Greif was no exception, but during Steinbock the trained crews carried 2x1800Kg and 2x1000Kg bombs, that is 5600Kg and as you own chart shows 7000Kg was an option.

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Otherwise they wouldn't have the operational range to reach London (during the black of night) and come back. In the East, they wouldn't use more than 1000kg, because they had to fly at extreme ranges into Soviet territory and back. They flew so high no VVS fighters were there to stop them. Sometimes they set up racetracks and orbited over targets for hours and bombed in waves. That takes a LOT of fuel, which means they were carrying very FEW bombs. In short, people want it added to this game out of reasons of ignorance. They want a "German B17" (quoted because that kind of term is used in most of the requests for the He-177).


Ridicoulous.  1000Kg were used for long range targets and heavier loads for closer ones as Steinbock shows, it all depends on the operational needs and attack profile, it does not mean that they ALWAYS used such loads, that is simply preposterous.

I think it is clear in which side of this argument ignorance has its reign...
« Last Edit: February 17, 2013, 10:23:25 AM by jag88 »
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Offline Karnak

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Re: Requesting Two New Bombers
« Reply #31 on: February 17, 2013, 11:25:16 AM »
The He-111 would cease to be produced as the He-177 came into full production since it would occupy Heinkel's production lines.  Is that clear enough?  The fast bomber role was covered, the He-111 just was a production place holder until the Greif was ready to take its place in the bomber force.
"Replaced by X on the production line." has literally no bearing on "Replaced by X in service."
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Offline jag88

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Re: Requesting Two New Bombers
« Reply #32 on: February 17, 2013, 11:52:05 AM »
"Replaced by X on the production line." has literally no bearing on "Replaced by X in service."

And where exactly did I say that the Greif replaced the He-111 in service?

Furthermore, we agree the Greif was to replace the He-111 in production and was therefore its replacement?
« Last Edit: February 17, 2013, 12:01:37 PM by jag88 »
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Offline Karnak

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Re: Requesting Two New Bombers
« Reply #33 on: February 17, 2013, 12:04:14 PM »
And where exactly did I say that the Greif replaced the He-111 in service?
Here:
If you want a bomber for historical scenarios get a He-111, if you want one for the MA get its replacement, the He-177.
Replaced in production is completely irrelevant to the discussion at hand and the automatic inference is going to be that you mean replaced in service unless you specify otherwise, which you did not.

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Furthermore, we agree the Greif was to replace the He-111 in production and was therefore its replacement?
Of course not.  That would be false.
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Offline jag88

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Re: Requesting Two New Bombers
« Reply #34 on: February 17, 2013, 02:51:28 PM »
How is that irrelevant, because you said so?

Do I really need to quote a dictionary definition of Replacement?  It only seems you got into this argument to discuss semantics and what I meant when I wrote.

Do you think production of the obsolete He-111 would be continued once Greif production went into full scale?  Of course not, you are creating a discussion out of nothing, as if I could have ever said that the He-111 was phased out of service when its widely known they kept on being used and built until all bombers were grounded.



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Offline Karnak

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Re: Requesting Two New Bombers
« Reply #35 on: February 17, 2013, 02:58:56 PM »
Stop prevaricating.

When somebody says "The F-15 replaced the F-4." any reasonable listener is going to think that the speaker is talking about in service unless the conversation has been focused on production lines and such.  When talking about aircraft used by the Luftwaffe, "replaced" is going to mean "replaced in service."

You're being pedantic in trying to retroactively change what you said because you got called out on a falsehood.

The He177 was not intended to replace anything.  It was a new role, heavy bomber, for the Luftwaffe.  The He111 was replaced by the Ju88 and the developments of the Ju88 as well as by the Do217.
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Offline Krusty

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Re: Requesting Two New Bombers
« Reply #36 on: February 17, 2013, 03:17:01 PM »
Of course not Karnak. He's spinning for all he's worth. Like he said, ignorance has its reign, and the king is jag88. He's trying his utter best to justify his want for this plane (or boast that this plane was superb). It's a common stance for select fanatics on these forums.

I didn't mutilate a quote. He's trying to turn it around like a few bbs forum-goers tend to do when they don't have any standing.

You turn it around saying that it was recently arrived to a new airfield. That doesn't mean this crew was untrained and the planes were in disarray. The planes were new, fresh, and as pristine and in best working condition they would ever be in. Simply because they were new to an airfield doesn't mean they couldn't run missions. Ju88s, Me410s, Bf109s, Fw190s, all switched fields VERY frequently, and they didn't have 50% engine failures right after moves.

Yes, there were a lot of maintenance problems with the He177, notably the wheel jacks, the time it took (up to 3 days to finish a simple inspection after 24 hours of flight time), but that doesn't mean they threw them into the air if they weren't functioning. They wouldn't say "Ah, screw it, this engine isn't working but we'll send it up anyways" -- no, that plane sat on the ground until it was fixed.

You seem to be totally ignoring the fact that no matter how well trained the ground crew, the engines weren't up to it. They didn't have the right infrastructure to remove, overhaul, and replace the engines. They sent them out for overhauling but they often wouldn't get done. There were bad results with getting overhauled engines back, and sometimes they got mixed up. Meaning engine changes would put bad engines on after removing bad engines.

Don't try to pass it off as JUST human error. It wasn't. It was mechanical failures compounded by human failures. Your loaded phrasing is fallacious, saying "the trained crews" again implying it was all training issues.

The design itself was greatly flawed. Heinkel had grossly over-stated the load bearing capability of the wings. I believe it was Goring (or somebody high up like him) who watched as one heavily loaded He177 took off and as soon as it was over a hill it crashed and exploded, and then another taking off also crashed. The wings couldn't take it. That was the real reason for the 4-engine redesign, to hide the flaws with the wing. The wings were strengthened in later marks, but overall it was an over-engineered design with major technical problems which couldn't be fully overcome.

Offline jag88

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Re: Requesting Two New Bombers
« Reply #37 on: February 17, 2013, 03:46:52 PM »
You have just said regarding the Ju-88 the same thing I said about the He-177, of course I could assume you are talking about the fast bomber concept and that might be reasonable but, since all I am interested in is in creating an issue where none exists then I opt to believe that you think no He-111s were built after 1940 since they were replaced by Ju-88s and Do-217s so...

Really? The 1940 Ju-88 replaced the He-111?  So the Germans did not build 4088 He-111s 4 years after the Ju-88 went into full production in 1940?

Funny.

Regarding "falsehoods" yeah... you just want to believe that the guy who usually includes quotes to back his arguments believes that the He-111 was at some point fully retired from service and replaced by He-177s...

Since you are very negative about the He-177 you certainly seem to wish so...

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Offline jag88

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Re: Requesting Two New Bombers
« Reply #38 on: February 17, 2013, 04:20:31 PM »
Of course not Karnak. He's spinning for all he's worth. Like he said, ignorance has its reign, and the king is jag88. He's trying his utter best to justify his want for this plane (or boast that this plane was superb). It's a common stance for select fanatics on these forums.

I didn't mutilate a quote. He's trying to turn it around like a few bbs forum-goers tend to do when they don't have any standing.

You turn it around saying that it was recently arrived to a new airfield. That doesn't mean this crew was untrained and the planes were in disarray. The planes were new, fresh, and as pristine and in best working condition they would ever be in. Simply because they were new to an airfield doesn't mean they couldn't run missions. Ju88s, Me410s, Bf109s, Fw190s, all switched fields VERY frequently, and they didn't have 50% engine failures right after moves.

Yes, there were a lot of maintenance problems with the He177, notably the wheel jacks, the time it took (up to 3 days to finish a simple inspection after 24 hours of flight time), but that doesn't mean they threw them into the air if they weren't functioning. They wouldn't say "Ah, screw it, this engine isn't working but we'll send it up anyways" -- no, that plane sat on the ground until it was fixed.

You seem to be totally ignoring the fact that no matter how well trained the ground crew, the engines weren't up to it. They didn't have the right infrastructure to remove, overhaul, and replace the engines. They sent them out for overhauling but they often wouldn't get done. There were bad results with getting overhauled engines back, and sometimes they got mixed up. Meaning engine changes would put bad engines on after removing bad engines.

Don't try to pass it off as JUST human error. It wasn't. It was mechanical failures compounded by human failures. Your loaded phrasing is fallacious, saying "the trained crews" again implying it was all training issues.

The design itself was greatly flawed. Heinkel had grossly over-stated the load bearing capability of the wings. I believe it was Goring (or somebody high up like him) who watched as one heavily loaded He177 took off and as soon as it was over a hill it crashed and exploded, and then another taking off also crashed. The wings couldn't take it. That was the real reason for the 4-engine redesign, to hide the flaws with the wing. The wings were strengthened in later marks, but overall it was an over-engineered design with major technical problems which couldn't be fully overcome.

Lol, yeah, I thought you wouldnt like being called in a blatant attempt to lie, how desperate you have to be to mutilate a quote from wiki, at least edit the wiki entry, put some effort into it!  Anyways.

Lets see, training:

"The Technical School of Luftflotte 2 responsible for training ground personnel at Fassberg had two He 177s for instructional purposes, these being the second A-0 built by Arado and an A-1. In June 1943, IV/ KG 40 also had only two He 177 training aircraft, both A-0s, to instruct its crews on this new long-range bomber. The number was increased during the second half of 1943 with the arrival of 12 Kekf-equipped and several other He 177s; but due to the aforementioned grounding of all He 177s between February and May, training could not restart until October. A good seven months had been lost.

Early in 1944, the training unit was transferred to Lechfeld. A more serious problem was the lack of operationally experienced aircrews for instructional purposes. Due to the high loss rate II/KG 40 could not transfer any experienced crews to IV/KG 40 until March 1944, when two crews were made available for this vital task. As a result of this personnel shortage, 24 aircrews had to be handed over to I and II / KCl 40 after only 15 hours of instruction on the He 177. Not only that; none of the new crews could complete their 'special weapon' training while at IV/KG 40 for lack of a proper bombing range. On 14 April 1944 IV/KG 40 had a total of 35 He 177A-0 / -1 /-3s, of which only 13 were serviceable. There were six instructors to train the young crews on the Fw 200, and 10 others for the He 177 — a total of just 16 instructors for no less than 80 student crews! Matters were made worse by the low serviceability of the He 177s used for training purposes due to the lack of replacement power-plants, and the loss of new-build He 177s as a result of enemy air raids."


This is the kind of training new pilots were getting, is no wonder equipment problems were exacerbated and new ones created.  No one is trying to claim the aircraft en even less its engines were perfect, far from it, but in spite of them the aircraft did attain a reasonable readiness and serviceability that made it viable and were not falling in flames from the sky as you like to imply.

Trained crews could and did use the aircraft more efficiently, which is why they could use 5600Kg loads to raid London when the new crews, those 15 hour guys, used only 4000Kg loads, not less as you so tendentiously tried to imply.

I can quote similar passages for the ground crews which handled and mishandled maintenance, or often simply lacked the necessary tools to service and replace engines and even tires... but somehow I get the feel you are one of those guys immune to facts, quotes and evidence...

Note that lack of infrastructure you now recognize is not the planes fault and is symptomatic of how ill-prepared the Luftwaffe was to field the aircraft, the 80 and 90% serviceability rates achieved stand as proof of what could be obtained when things were done properly.

Your mentions crashes, prototypes of all aircraft often did but, as you so slyly recognize, those wing faults were corrected by Heinkel fairly early and reinforced even further when inclined flight tests showed the need for more strength.

Oh, you mentioned aircaft at their best when delivered, that is not the case when they have not been properly tested before delivery and this happened often, I can quote the source... but why bother?

Bottomline, the aircraft did achieve a reasonable serviceability, sadly it happened too late when the Luftwaffe had no further use for bombers.  Had the diving request been dropped and equipped with 4 engines as the Manchester did and it might have been very different story.

Oh, and please quote the date in which these 2 aircraft you mention crashed?  I smell another major load of bovine excrement...
« Last Edit: February 17, 2013, 04:32:51 PM by jag88 »
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Offline Karnak

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Re: Requesting Two New Bombers
« Reply #39 on: February 17, 2013, 04:45:35 PM »
The closest aircraft to the He177 is, in many ways, the Avro Manchester.  Perhaps the He277 would have been a winner as the Lancaster was, but the He177 never got a chance to go to four engines like that.

The Avro Manchester was a disaster in service as well.  The program was canceled well short of its original size and Avro was asked to build either Short Stirlings or Handley-Page Halifaxes.  It was only a desperation redesign of the Manchester, using already designed Merlin engine mounts for Beaufighters, that allowed Avro to keep building their own design as the Lancaster.
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Offline Krusty

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Re: Requesting Two New Bombers
« Reply #40 on: February 17, 2013, 05:42:12 PM »
Such fallacy again... ALL German pilots were getting the same short training hours. It was a desperate time. However, the lack of training was most evient in combat experience, NOT in the plane falling apart. green 109 pilots got the shaft more so. Hell, they took bf110G back-seaters and gave them 21 hours and put them in the FRONT seat of Me262s!

And yet... strangely enough, the new crews on Ju88s weren't blowing out engines repeatedly. 109 pilots weren't turning back at 50%+ failure rates. Me410 pilots weren't setting engines on fire.

You're using poor training as a crutch of an explanation, because you don't want to believe otherwise. You are fully ignorant of any history of the He111 or Ju88, so your "expertise" is highly doubtful in other areas of similar bombers. The He111s production continued, but only at a trickle. It was used as a VIP transport and other test beds, all the way through the war. It was NOT the main frontline bomber for the LW. Everybody acknowledges this. The Ju88 was more durable, more flexible, had better performance, better defenses, better bombload, and better future upgradability. Oh, and it was faster to build, cost less money, and took less man hours and metal to produce. It was conciously chosen to be the future of LW bombing as early as 1940.

This is a basic principle of Luftwaffe bombers. If you don't know any of this, you're barking up a wrong tree, and cherry picking tidbits from some book you read without really understanding the big picture or what really was going on. You read 1 book and then spit it out as if you're an expert. You have no credibility after many of your own comments prove to be hilariously false.

Offline jag88

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Re: Requesting Two New Bombers
« Reply #41 on: February 17, 2013, 06:26:39 PM »
Such fallacy again... ALL German pilots were getting the same short training hours. It was a desperate time. However, the lack of training was most evient in combat experience, NOT in the plane falling apart. green 109 pilots got the shaft more so. Hell, they took bf110G back-seaters and gave them 21 hours and put them in the FRONT seat of Me262s!

And yet... strangely enough, the new crews on Ju88s weren't blowing out engines repeatedly. 109 pilots weren't turning back at 50%+ failure rates. Me410 pilots weren't setting engines on fire.

You're using poor training as a crutch of an explanation, because you don't want to believe otherwise. You are fully ignorant of any history of the He111 or Ju88, so your "expertise" is highly doubtful in other areas of similar bombers. The He111s production continued, but only at a trickle. It was used as a VIP transport and other test beds, all the way through the war. It was NOT the main frontline bomber for the LW. Everybody acknowledges this. The Ju88 was more durable, more flexible, had better performance, better defenses, better bombload, and better future upgradability. Oh, and it was faster to build, cost less money, and took less man hours and metal to produce. It was conciously chosen to be the future of LW bombing as early as 1940.

This is a basic principle of Luftwaffe bombers. If you don't know any of this, you're barking up a wrong tree, and cherry picking tidbits from some book you read without really understanding the big picture or what really was going on. You read 1 book and then spit it out as if you're an expert. You have no credibility after many of your own comments prove to be hilariously false.

Man, you are truly amusing!

My comments false?  Maybe I missed the loads of quotes and sources that indicate my arguments were wrong... maybe I got distracted... but I believe is far more likely you are full of crap, I see you have not produced a source for the 2 aircraft you claimed crashed in a single exhibition so I am counting that as yet another lie.

It is hilarious to see you lie desperately, making carp left and right trying to justify your ignorant rants.  This is the He-111 production you claim became a trickle:


Year           1942                           1943                           1944
Quarter   Q1   Q2   Q3   Q4   Q1   Q2   Q3   Q4   Q1   Q2   Q3   Q4
N Produced   301   350   356   330   462   340   302   301   313   317   126   0

As you can see you lie, again, there is barely any reduction in production until the Luftwaffe cancelled all bomber orders, they kept on making 111s in Heinkel factories instead of Ju-88s because they were waiting for the Greif production to take over... I copied it from wiki, but only because they included a footnote and source... and I didnt mutilate anything.

You seem too dense to understand that all the models you mention already had the infrastructure and training establishment in place and ready to accept new recruits while the He-177 lacked all that, not only the training was short, the quality of it was wanting since they couldnt divert crews for training.  And no, Bf-110 pilots were not being sent to Me-262s in early 1944 with 21 hours... there were no Me-262s in early 1944 (the test unit was formed in april).  Later on the Luftwaffe would resort to send poorly trained fighter pilots many of them form bomber units, but that was after they had no fuel to train them, not voluntarily and on a whim which was the case with Steinbock.

Speaking of credibility, I quote and mention my sources, dont make crap out of thin air as you do and at least I know that the He-111 kept on being built for a long time after the Ju-88 came into service, not because it was better, not because it was comparable, not even close, but because they needed bombers and it did not make sense to retool for Ju-88s and delay production when "soon" you would have to retool for He-177s anyway.

What a joke.

« Last Edit: February 17, 2013, 07:08:53 PM by jag88 »
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Offline jag88

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Re: Requesting Two New Bombers
« Reply #42 on: February 17, 2013, 06:37:46 PM »
The closest aircraft to the He177 is, in many ways, the Avro Manchester.  Perhaps the He277 would have been a winner as the Lancaster was, but the He177 never got a chance to go to four engines like that.

The Avro Manchester was a disaster in service as well.  The program was canceled well short of its original size and Avro was asked to build either Short Stirlings or Handley-Page Halifaxes.  It was only a desperation redesign of the Manchester, using already designed Merlin engine mounts for Beaufighters, that allowed Avro to keep building their own design as the Lancaster.

Yes, the parallels are striking, Heinkel repeatedly requested that at least 2 of the prototypes be made with 4 engines but it was rejected on the grounds that such an aircraft would not be able to dive.  Madness.
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Offline Tank-Ace

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Re: Requesting Two New Bombers
« Reply #43 on: February 17, 2013, 08:35:50 PM »
+1 for the He 111.

H3/4 for early war.
H6 for early-mid
H11/H16.

Differences between H3 and 4, and H11 and 16 are more ordnance options, and revised armament, respectively.
You started this thread and it was obviously about your want and desire in spite of your use of 'we' and Google.

"Once more unto the breach"

Offline jag88

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  • Posts: 142
Re: Requesting Two New Bombers
« Reply #44 on: February 18, 2013, 04:44:01 PM »
Adding to my last, the LW could have easily fielded something like this had they authorized those four engined prototypes 4 years earlier when proposed:



This is the B5 prototype, the 4 engined version of the A5 that flew in Dec. 1943.
The 88 in my name has nothing to do with nazis, skinheads or any other type of half-wit, nor with the "ideas" they support.