European Air War from Microprose promises to be yet another in a
gaggle of great WWII flight sims on the horizon. Let's cover
some of the aircraft not highlighted in "Heavy Metal", the article reflecting the aircraft in Janes' WW2 Fighters that was seen on COMBATSIM.COM some months ago.
LOCKHEED P-38H-J LIGHTNING
The P-38H performance specs follow the "J" closely save for the
lack of inter-cooler and oil radiator intakes below the
propshaft. The Lightning never gained the ascendancy in Europe
that it did in the Pacific. The Luftwaffe had plenty of high
altitude aircraft that the Japanese did not and this nullified
the advantage the P-38 had; swooping down on its prey. It easily
took part in long-range escort missions with its ample 2,260 mile
range. In the Mediterranean It was dragged down to low altitude
in most fights and never excelled.
Two Allison V-12s of 1,425
h.p. gave the "J" a climb rate of some 3,000 f.p.m. while on its
way to a 44,000 foot ceiling. At 30,000 feet the Lightning
managed its 414 m.p.h. top speed. The 20mm cannon and four .50's
mounted in the nose were easier to hit with compared to wing
mounted guns that were most effective at certain convergence
ranges. The P-38 could tote ten 5 inch rockets and up to
3,200lbs. of bombs and was successful as a ground attack plane
but was phased out of air to air work as P-47s and P-51s became
plentiful.
The key to success was the basic energy fighter
concept- high speed slash through of the enemy formation. You
can see this modeled in most sims artificial intelligence as the
American fighters go way, way out to take advantage of the speed,
inertia, and distance before they turn to face you with their
guns down your throat.
REPUBLIC P-47C THUNDERBOLT
The P-47C arrived in England to equip three USAAF fighter groups
in January 1943. Outwardly the main difference from the "D" model
in appearance was the rear fuselage decking build up and the
"birdcage" canopy. Climb was later improved with the use of
paddle-blade airscrew on the "D." Otherwise performance was
similar.
The "Jug," as it was fondly nicknamed, was large for a
single- engined fighter. Sitting behind the imposing 2,300 h.p.
Pratt & Whitney 18 cylinder radial, the pilot functioned from the
oversized cockpit. But the 14,000 pound plane was quick with a
433 m.p.h. top end at 30,000 ft. The P-47 had a good roll rate
and was maneuverable for its size. Before the paddle blade props
were installed, initial climb rate was on the order of 2,800
f.p.m.
The massive firepower of 425 r.p.g. of the eight .50's
API (armor piercing incendiary) ammo was savored by those who
flew the 'Bolt. Once an enemy aircraft was in the P-47's sights
it was usually all over as the fifties tore the enemy to shreds.
Large drop tanks improved the short internal fuel range of some
640 miles to 1,250 miles. Thunderbolts were used increasingly as
ground support aircraft as P-51s became available in numbers.
2,000 lbs. of bombs or ten 5 inch rockets could be carried for
this purpose. 203 were sent to Russia on Lend-Lease.
The
Brazilian Air Force and the French even flew against the
Luftwaffe from Corsica in 1944. Stories of its ability to take
heavy damage and out dive anything in the air are legendary
amongst those who knew the Jug. The leading American ace in
Europe, Francis Gabreski with 31 kills, flew it.
NORTH AMERICAN P-51B MUSTANG
Like the P-47C, the P-51B had a notch-back fuselage which was
revamped to use the teardrop, all around vision canopy. Even
though the "B" mounted but four .50 caliber machine guns, a pilot
with a good shooting eye could make triple scores with 280 r.p.g.
inboard and 350 r.p.g. for the outboard pair. Performance was
very similar to the later "D." It was created in a mere 117 days
but lived up to every aspect that was sought out by U.S. fighter
pilots who desperately needed an upper hand.
With a range of 2,200 miles it could stay with the "big friends"
all the way to Berlin and beyond. The 1,695 h.p. Packard-built
Merlin V-12 propelled it to 440 m.p.h. at 25,000 feet. Its
ceiling was 42,000 feet and rate of climb of 3,200 feet per
minute. With a competent pilot it was able to maneuver with most
any German plane though classic dogfights were rare.
The Mustang
truly owned the air over Germany and many Luftwaffe pilots were
very apprehensive of engaging them in a one on one basis. Once
the 4th Fighter Group had Mustangs they matched the best German
fighters turn for turn if need be and began running up good
scores.
American pilots generally used the advantage of altitude
with speed and slash techniques to pass through the enemy
formation, pick a target and fire on it; try it in sims, it
works. Up to 2,000 lbs of bombs or six 5 inch rockets could be
slung beneath the P-51 for ground attack work.
MARTIN B-26 MARAUDER
It was fast low altitude weapon traveling 283 m.p.h. at 5,000
feet. It held 4,000 lbs of bombs. The crew of six had up to
eleven .50 caliber machine guns with 4,400 rounds of ammo. Once
the high landing and stall speeds were mastered crews had no real
problems with the B-26. Climb was good for a heavy plane at
1,000 f.p.m. Missions were up to 1,100 miles in length; usually
five hours long.
CONSOLIDATED B-24 LIBERATOR
With 18,188 built, this bomber far surpassed the 12,677 quantity
of B-17s. The "J" model could fly 300 m.p.h. at 30,000 feet with
a 5,000 lb. bombload.
Its crew of ten had that many .50s and
4,716 rounds of ammo for protection. It could climb at 1,025
f.p.m. and it 1,700 mile range usually meant a seven hour
mission. Not able to absorb the damage that the B-17 could, the
loss of one engine meant sweating out a long return to base.
"Libs" became the scourge of the U Boats in their anti-sub
Atlantic patrol duties.
BOEING B-17 FORTRESS
Originally conceived when the theory was that a fast, heavily
armed bomber could complete its mission and defend itself, the B-
17 did bring many crews home even with severe damage and just two
engines. But before the P-51 escort fighters were available to
fend off the enemy, huge losses began to mount.
The "G" was the
consummate model of the line with 13 .50 caliber guns and 5,770
rounds of ammunition operated by the ten man crew. It could fly
at 300 m.p.h. at 25,000 feet. Climbing at 900 f.p.m., it was
able to tote 5,000 lbs of bombs some 1,850 miles which was nearly
nine hours for a mission. It could haul up to 17,600 lbs. at
short ranges.
HAWKER HURRICANE I & II
While the Spitfire was better known, it was the "Hurri" that was
more proliferous during the Battle of Britain. The first
Hurricanes appeared with the RAF in 1937-38. A 1,030 h.p. Merlin
III V-12 powered the Mk.I to a top speed of 324 m.p.h. @ 16,250
ft.
The Hurricane possessed an edge in maneuverability over the
Bf 109E up to 20,000 feet and was a stable gun platform for its
eight .303 machine guns each carrying 334 rounds. Climb rate was
a meager 2,400 f.p.m. Ceiling was 34,200 ft. Its range of 425
mile could be increased with drop tanks to 900 miles. The
Hurricane was exported to numerous countries and fought with the
RAF in every theater of operation. During the Battle of Britain
it was relegated to bomber attack while the Spits mixed it up
with the Luftwaffe fighters.
The Mk. II's 1,460 Merlin XX boosted performance to 342 m.p.h. @
22,000 ft. and climb to 2,750 f.p.m. Maximum range increased to
460/985 internal/external fuel and ceiling was upped to 36,500
ft. Weaponry now boasted twelve .303s or four 20mm cannon in the
IIC and 1,000 lbs of bombs.
SUPERMARINE SPITFIRE Ia
Using the same 1,030 h.p. Merlin III V-12 as the Hurricane I, the
sleeker Spit could manage 365 m.p.h. @ 19,000 ft. with a climb
rate of some 2,500 f.p.m. Though the Mk Ia was appreciably more
maneuverable than the Bf 109E, the German machine could out climb
and out dive it. The eight Browning .303s with 300 r.p.g. were
undermatched to the 109E also. Ceiling was 34,000 feet and range
was 575 miles. The 19 RAF squadrons held the line and beat back
the Luftwaffe during the Battle of Britain.
Spit IX Evening Shot
SUPERMARINE SPITFIRE MK. IX
While better than the Mk. V, the IX still was surpassed in most
cases by the FW 190. The 1,710-1,720 h.p. Rolls Royce Merlins
varied the IXE's maximum speed from 404 m.p.h. at 21,000 feet to
416 m.p.h. at 27,000 feet. The ceiling ranged from 42,500 to a
whopping 45,000 feet!
The IX was the first to mount two .50's
with 250 r.p.g. along with two 20mm Hispano cannon carrying 120
r.p.g. On internal fuel range was just 434 miles and with
maximum external still only 980. Climb rate was a healthy 3,500
f.p.m. When needed, the Spit could carry 1,000 lbs of bombs.
SUPERMARINE SPITFIRE MK. XIV
Enter the Rolls Royce Griffon IV with 2,050 h.p. turning a five
blade prop. A whopping 448 m.p.h. could now be achieved at 26,000
feet and climb rate was 4,500 f.p.m. Ceiling was touched at
44,500 ft. Maximum external fuel yielded only 850 miles range.
But the optimum armament of four 120 r.p.g. 20mm Hispano cannon
was excellent when compared to Messerschmitts overall. Many XIVs
carried two 20s and four .303s.
Rear vision was finally improved
with the bubble canopy and cut down rear fuselage deck. 500 lbs
of bombs could be hauled in dive bombing duties. The Mk. XIV was
able to dive at 550 m.p.h. and the first Me 262 to fall victim to
an Allied pilot was done in by a XIV.
HAWKER TYPHOON Ib
Conceived as an interceptor, the Typhoon was rushed into RAF
service. A 2,180 h.p. 24 cylinder Napier Sabre IV engine
powered this very large to a top speed of 405 m.p.h. @ 18,000 ft.
But altitude performance was not there and structural problems
plagued the plane. Climb was a meager 2,420 f.p.m.
The main
fault lay in the severe buffeting and failure of the tailplane in
dives. Many a plane took its pilot to his death in this manner.
But at low altitude the Typhoon faired better. With four 20 mm
cannon with 150 r.p.g. it enjoyed success against Fw 190s and Me
210s raiding the Empire. Its premiere role became ground
pounding. With the ability to carry 2,000 lbs of bombs or eight
rockets, the plane excelled at tank busting. With a bomb load
range was 510 miles. Clean it increased to 610 and with external
fuel 1,000 was maximum.
HAWKER TEMPEST V
A wing designed out of the Typhoon failure rectified the Typhoon
II problems. The design differed so much the new aircraft was
named Tempest. By the time the V arrived in squadrons in 1944
using converted Typhoon airframes, the Tempest was a worthy weapons
delivery system.
Its 2,200 h.p. Napier Sabre IIB 24 cylinder was
like two flat 12 cylinder engines, one atop the other forming an
"H." Performance was superior to the Typhoon with a 435 m.p.h.
maximum speed seen at 17,000 feet. Ceiling was 2,000 feet higher
than the Typhoon at 36,000 feet and range increased to 820/1,300
miles on internal/external fuel. The same Typhoon bomb load or
rocket payload applied to the Tempest. But the main treasure was
the ability to climb at 4,700 f.p.m.
Coupled with four short
barreled Hispano Mk. V 20mm's with 150 r.p.g. the Tempest V was
all the Typhoon was originally hoped for. French pilot Pierre
Closterman flew the Tempest and scored 33 victories by war's end.
DE HAVILLAND MOSQUITO
Made out of wood to conserve valuable metal, the two seat
Mosquito was the versatile British version of the Zerostrorer.
As a light bomber carrying 4,000 lbs. of ordnance it was fast at
408 m.p.h. As a recon aircraft it had altitude performance and a
range of 1,870 miles.
In fighter trim it mounted four .303
caliber guns with 500 rounds each along with four 20mm cannon
with 150 r.p.g. Merlin V-12s from 1,290 to 1,710 h.p. powered
the "Mossy." There was a night fighter version that accompanied
heavy bombers to Germany. Anti-shipping duties saw rockets slung
under the wings and the installation, in one model, of a 57mm
cannon.
FOCKE WULF FW 190 D-9
Removing the 18 cylinder BMW radial and replacing it with a 1,770
h.p. Junkers Jumo 213 A-1 inverted V-12 made for a spectacular
increase in performance of the A-8 airframe. The D-9 was created
purely as an interceptor.
The outboard two of the four 20mm MG
151 cannon in the wings were replaced with the MW 50 (methanol-
water) power boost which raised power to 2,240 h.p. Climbing at
3,400 f.p.m., the "Dora's" two 20mm's with 250 r.p.g. and two
13mm machine guns with 475 r.p.g., were ample armament.
The D-9
was basically the same weight as the A-8 with the radial. Two
feet is all the Jumo added to the nose and an extra 1 1/2 in the
tail for center balance compensation. Maximum speed at sea level
was 357 m.p.h. and rose to 426 m.p.h. at 21,653 feet. Range was
520 miles, and adequate for its mission.
MESSERSCHMITT BF 109E-3
The "C" and "D" models adequately proved themselves with the
Condor Legion in Spain. The "E" is model reached assembly lines
in 1940 and was the Luftwaffe mainstay during the Battle of
Britain. Where British aircraft were mounting .303 caliber
machine guns, the Me 110 and Bf 109 carried 20mm's in addition to
their rifles caliber machine guns. With the two 1,000 r.p.g.
7.92s in the cowl and two 20 mm with 60 rounds each in the wings,
the 109 was comfortably armed.
The E-3 mounted and additional MG
FF 20 millimeter cannon in the airscrew hub. Vibrations
sometimes occurred in the hub cannon during firing. With the
1,175 h.p. Diamler-Benz DB 601A inverted V-12, the "E" reached a
maximum speed of 348 m.p.h. @ 14,456 ft. Climb was an
substantial 3,510 f.p.m.
The ceiling was 37,500 feet but range
was dismally short at 410 miles. Most pilots returning from
raids on England sweated out the dreaded, red "fuel low" light on
the dash. In the respect of armament, the "E" was never really
improved upon much. The "F" was more lightly armed still with
the two 7.92mm's and one 15mm, then later one 20mm. The "G" did
optionally mount heavier armament, but it was at the expense of
performance.
MESSERSCHMITT BF 109G-6
The G was the most proliferous model due to its ability to accept
infinite modifications. The G-6 was the first model to supplant
its two 13mm cowl mounted machine guns and nose mounted 20mm
cannon with either a pair of 20mm MG 151s or 30mm Mk 108s!
Further tinkering added a 21 cm. rocket tube beneath each wing
for still greater potency against Allied bombers. Field
modifications by master armorers led to many varieties of one off
aircraft.
Of course the bolt-ons degraded performance. This
author once asked General Galland if his personal aircraft
carried the extra 20s when the practice was just starting. He
simply snorted, "hell yes!" Its 1,475 h.p. Diamler-Benz direct
port fuel injected V-12 gave it a top speed of 387 m.p.h. at
22,970 feet.
The plane's ceiling was 39,750 feet with a climb
rate of nearly 3,300 f.p.m. Range was only 615 miles at best.
And with the extra gondola guns, maneuverability suffered.
Favored by the top German aces, the 109G-6 excelled as the
workhorse of the Luftwaffe. What ever shortcomings it had, one
must remember that Ace of Aces, Erich Hartmann scored his 352
kills in the venerated 109.
MESSERSCHMITT BF 109K-4
In 1943 an high altitude version of the 109 with a constant-chord
center section and strengthened tailplane commenced. After a
service evaluation at Guyancourt, near Paris the H-1 received
favorable reviews in 1944. With GM 1 (nitrous oxide) power boost
the H-1 could reach 47,000 feet!
Development progressed and the
"K" soon appeared. No "I" suffix was assigned to the 109 and the
"J" was the Spanish built version. The "H" was dropped in favor
of the Ta 152. The MW 50 (methanol/water) injection raised the
K-4's DB 605ASCM/DCM from 1,500 h.p. to 2,000 h.p.
Erich Hartmann
could flat outrun Mustangs with the K-4's speed of 452 m.p.h. @
19,685 ft.
Ceiling, while lower than the H-1, was still a
respectable 41,000 ft. Range was right back to the early "E" with
a meager 365 miles on internal fuel. The climb rate was a
phenomenal 4,823 f.p.m. The guns were a curious mix. Two high
velocity, flat trajectory MG 151 15mm's were coupled with the MK.
103, and later, MK. 108 30mm cannon all in the nose. Of course
two 20mm "gondola guns" could be attached to the wings as needed.
MESSERSCHMITT BF 110C-4 ZEROSTORER (Destroyer)
The 110 fulfilled the 1934 Luftwaffe dream of a heavy, long
range, escort fighter. Its success was short lived. After the
early stage of the war against puny air forces, the 110 was on
the defensive for the duration. The Zerostorer was amply armed
with four 7.92mm machine guns, each with 1,000 rounds, and two
20mm cannon carrying 180 r.p.g.
The rear gunner had a single 7.92
with 750 rounds. American pilots were amused by the twinkle of
the "pop gun" as they bore in for an easy kill. The Me 110 was
called "meat on the table" by P-47 pilots like Gabreski and Bob
Johnson. The two DB 601A were identical to those used on the
109E-1 at 1,000 h.p. Utmost speed was 349 m.p.h. @ 22,965 ft.
The ceiling was only 32,000 feet, but it was adequate for early
war missions. Climb rate was only 2,200 f.p.m. and range was
just 528 miles.
MESSERSCHMITT BF 110G-4
Like most German aircraft, the 110 evolved and was extensively
modified. Since it could not maneuver to defend itself well, it
was soon apparent that another role must be found. If it was
escorted by single engined fighters the 110 could be a bomber
destroyer using its heavy gun armament and rockets and/or air-to-
air bombs.
As a three seat night fighter with FuG radar lugging
two Mk. 108 30mm with 135 r.p.g. and two 20mm with 300 r.p.g.,
plus two 7.92s with 400 r.p.g. for the rear gunner, the 110
found its niche. The leading Luftwaffe night ace Major Heinz-Wolfgang
Schnaufer racked up 121 kills.
Though the G-4 had two 1,475 h.p.
DB 605Bs, it could make only 342 m.p.h. due to the extra weight.
It maxed out at 26,000 feet and could climb at a 2,270 f.p.m.
rate. With external fuel range was 1,305 miles, plenty of loiter
time for stalking Allied bombers. Some "G" sub-variants had two
20mm's mounted to fire obliquely upward when positioned below and
behind a bomber. Another had a 37mm cannon. Some "G's" had GM 1
power boost and others did not. Myriad field modifications
produced still more mutations.
MESSERSCHMITT ME 410B HORNISSE (Hornet)
The culmination of Zerostorers was the debut of the 410 in 1943.
Finally with two 1,900 h.p. DB 603G engines the big plane could
manage 391 m.p.h. @ 26,575 feet. It climbed at 2,100 f.p.m.
Range was 1,450 miles and the ceiling topped out at 32,800 feet.
Now the heavy fighter could almost take on daylight operations
with some hope of success.
Me 262
A rear gunner controlled a pair of
13mm machine guns in remote barbettes. Up front the bomb bay for
light ordnance, had become a true weapons bay with a vast array
and mixture of heavy guns and rockets. 8cm., 21cm., 30cm.
rockets and 20mm., 30mm. and 37mm cannon were used. A 50
millimeter cannon was used in one model. II/ZG 26 ace Hauptman
Tratt scored 38 victories in zerostorers. Lt. Rudi Dassaw
mounted no less than eight 20mm's on his 410.
JUNKERS JU 88A
The first JU 88 flew in 1936 and before the war ended over 15,000
had been produced. The "A" alone had sub-variants up to A-17.
Confusing sub-models to these had alternate designations too.
The A-4 model is very representative of the line. It used two
Junkers Jumo 211J-1 V-12s of 1,350 h.p. engines. It could manage
273 m.p.h. at 17,500 feet and 1,980 miles with maximum fuel. It
took 23 minutes to attain 17,500 feet.
Bomb load was 2,200 lbs.
normally but it could max out for short hauls with two 2,200 lb
bomb on inboard shackles and two more 1,100 pounders on the
outboard ones. A crew of four defended with mostly 7.92mm hand
held guns and sometimes a forward firing 20mm. The tropicalized
A-4/Trop was used in the Western Desert.
JUNKERS JU88C
The "C" was conceived as a Zerostorer, or heavy fighter. Like
the Bf 110, it was not formidable enough to hold its own in
daylight operations with Allied fighters. Using FuG onboard
radar array in the solid nose reduced top speed from 311 m.p.h.
at 19,685 ft. by 25 m.p.h. Two Jumo 211-Js of 1,410 h.p.
propelled it to a 32,480 foot ceiling and a climb rate of 1,770
f.p.m. Three 20mm cannon and three 7.92mm guns were fixed in the
nose and a 13mm swivel mount defended the rear. A 20mm could be
mounted at an oblique, upward angle as well.
HEINKEL HE 111
For an aircraft that was so sleek and modern looking in 1935,
just five years later it would struggle to survive missions,
obsolete. As with most of the German airframes, the 111 would
morph into a staggering collection of variants used everywhere.
The "P" model is atypical of the Battle of Britain with a top
speed of 247 m.p.h. at 16,400 ft. coming from two Junker Jumo
211F-2s of 1,015 h.p. powerplants. It had an adequate for the
time ceiling of 25,500 feet coupled with a 1,490 mile range. It
could carry 3,300 lbs. of bombs and was a fine torpedo bomber
with two standard "fish." Assorted 7.9mms and a 20mm comprised
the armament for the crew of five.
JUNKERS JU 87 STUKA
Even non-aircraft enthusiasts recognize the ungainly Stuka. The
fixed landing gear covered with spats, the gull wing, the squared
edged design all make the JU 87 unmistakable. The Blitzkreig
(lightning war) and Stuka are forever entwined in history. The
JU 87B was used during the Battle of Britain after stunning
triumph over ill equipped airforces and armies earlier. With its
dive brakes extended it could float down at 150 m.p.h. and bear
in on a target with total precision and dropping its 1,100 lb
bomb load.
The 1,100 h.p. Jumo 211Da V-12 could manage 238
m.p.h. at 13,410 feet clean. Its ceiling of 26,250 ft. was rarely
visited since it was always used in low, close in attack. The
pilot had two 7.92mm guns at his disposal and a usually short-
lived rear gunner had one also. The pilot got an additional two
20mm cannon in later models. It was a rugged bird but no match
for the fighters of its day.
MESSERSCHMITT ME 262A-1a SCHWALBE (Swallow)
"It was like angels were pushing," was General Adolph Galland's
remark after his first flight in the 262. Indeed the 540 m.p.h.
twin jet interceptor ushered in a new era of air combat. Though
not powerful by today's standards, the Junkers Jumo 004 turbojets
generated 1,980 lb. thrust enabling the bird to climb at 3,937
f.p.m.
But the key element was the four MK 108 30mm cannon in
the nose. One hit could bring down an Allied bomber. If that
wasn't enough, the 24 R4M rockets salvoed like buckshot, from
beyond gun range, made it possible to hit multiple targets or
cause enough chaos to instigate mid-air collisions.
The crude-
by-today's-standards turbines required constant maintenance and
pilots fiddled with the throttles to find a setting where the
often balky jets worked smoothly. Once set they would leave them
alone and fly at that constant velocity, make their runs through
the gauntlet of bomber fire, and hopefully survive.
There were 22
jet aces that flew the 262 with units such as Galland's JV 44 in
the latter days of the war. Heinz B„r led with 16 kills. The
popular myth was that if Hitler had not made some of them bombers,
things would have been different. Galland states that, save for
bomb shackles, all 262's were true fighters. It was just too
little too late. Had it debuted a year earlier, in numbers,
perhaps daylight bombing would have suffered.
V-1 (FIESELER FZG-76)
"Vergeltungwaffe" is the word for it; vengeance weapon. They
were launched from rails on land and by He 111s in the air. They
created fear in their target in 1944 England.
This giant leap of
technology was the first cruise missile really. With a span of
17 feet and length of only 25, the V-1 was packed with a 1,870
lb. warhead. The Askania auto pilot was able to steer the bomb
only accurately enough to reach the city intended, not specific buildings
or even blocks.
With an Argus 019-014 pulse jet engine, the V-1
could make 350 m.p.h. traveling between 300- 2,500 meters. With
a gyroscope, altimeter and compass working in concert with
control links and servos the thing flew up to 160 miles before
the simple distance counter signaled it was at the pre-
determined range.
The elevators were depressed and the bomb
went into a sudden dive pulling fuel away from the motor. The
rude sounding motor would cut off warning victims that the V-1
was in its final phase before detonation. Some were shot down by
fast fighters and some were tipped out of control during a wing
to wing maneuver. Some 20,000 were launched and about 50% made
it to England. There was a piloted version of the FZG-76
intended for suicide use but the program did not see fruition.