Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The aircraft in this list include prototype versions of aircraft used by the German Luftwaffe during World War II and unfinished wartime experimental programmes. In the former, development can stretch back to the 1920s and in the latter the project must have started between 1939-1945.
Type 4 Ho-To SPG prototype with a Type 38 12 cm howitzer. Type 95 heavy tank; 4 built in 1934. Hi-Ro Sha 10 cm cannon self-propelled gun on Type 95 heavy tank chassis. Ji-Ro Type 92 10 cm cannon self-propelled gun on Type 95 heavy tank chassis. Type 97 Chi-Ni medium tank; one prototype built. Type 98 Chi-Ho medium tank; 4 built, two in 1940 and ...
This list covers aircraft of the German Luftwaffe during the Second World War from 1939 to 1945. Numerical designations are largely within the RLM designation system. The Luftwaffe officially existed from 1933–1945 but training had started in the 1920s, before the Nazi seizure of power, and many aircraft made in the inter-war years were used ...
For unbuilt projects, see List of German aircraft projects, 1939–45. ... North American NA-64 captured from France and used as trainer; North American P-51 captured;
Arado Ar 66, trainer + night ground attack. Arado Ar 234 Blitz ('Lightning'), bomber + night-fighter (jet-engined) Blohm & Voss Ha 140, torpedo bomber floatplane (prototype) Blohm & Voss BV 237, dive bomber, ground attack (project) Dornier Do 11, (Do F) medium bomber, 1931. Dornier Do 13, medium bomber, 1933.
July 1944, with the Jägernotprogramm. The Amerikabomber (English: America bomber) project was an initiative of the German Ministry of Aviation (Reichsluftfahrtministerium) to obtain a long-range strategic bomber for the Luftwaffe that would be capable of striking the United States (specifically New York City) from Germany, a round-trip ...
Junkers J 11, (navy C3MG, military CLS.I) floatplane version of J 10, 1918. Junkers J 12, prototype four-seat airliner developed from the J 10, precursor of F.13, 1919. Junkers F 13, passenger plane, 1919 originally J 13, sold as Junkers-Larsen in US, 1919. Junkers JG1, large monoplane project, 1921.
The origin of the Me 264 design came from Messerschmitt's long-range reconnaissance aircraft project, the P.1061, of the late 1930s.A variant on the P.1061 was the P.1062 of which three prototypes were built, with only two "engines" to the P.1061's four, but they were the more powerful Daimler-Benz DB 606 "power systems", each comprising a pair of DB 601 inverted V-12 engines.