From: John.Powell@p0.f4.n1010.z9.FIDONET.ORG (John Powell)
Newsgroups: alt.paranet.ufo
Subject: Horten Flying Wing, 1/5
Date: 17 Dec 93 04:43:00 GMT


The Horten Flying Wing in World War II: The History & Development of the
Ho 229, by H. P. Dabrowski, translated from the German by David Johnson.
(Schiffer Military History Vol. 47, ISBN 0-88740-357-3)


Sources:
--------

R. Horten/ P.F. Selinger: "Nurflugel", Graz 1983 D. Myhra: "Horten 229"
Monogram Close-Up No. 12, Boylston 1983

B. Lange: "Typenhandbuch der deutschen Luftfahrttechnik", Koblenz 1986

T-2 Report ''German Flying Wings Designed by Horten Brothers",
Wright-Patterson AFB 1946

W. Rosler: "Bericht uber den Fluganfall des
Turbinen-Nurflugel-Flugzeuges Horten IX, V2... (1985, unpublished)

Working Discussion on the 229 Mock-up (13. 10. 1944)

DVL Short Report on the Testing of the Flying Characteristics of the
Horten IX V-1 (Berlin-Adlershof, July 7, 1944)

Power Plant Installation in Go 229  (Horten), (V3+V5), March 7, 1945,
Junkers Flugzeugl- und Motorenwerke A.G.

Flight Log of Lt. Erwin Ziller via Dr. Jorg Ziller

Correspondence with W. Horten, R. Horten, H.J. Meier, D. Myhra, K.
Nickel, W. Radinger, R. Roeser, W. Rosler, H. Scheidhauer, P.F.
Selinger, G. Sengfelder, R. Stadler.


                         The Horten 229 Fighter-Bomber
                           The Horten H V, H VII and
                             H IX All-Wing Aircraft

                              Preliminary Remarks

        The subject of "all-wing" aircraft is too extensive to be
covered in depth here. Therefore, only the Horten H V, H VII and H IX
(the latter also known as the Ho or Go 229) will be dealt with, all of
which were twin-engined aircraft.

        Doctor Reimar Horten, together with Dipl.Ing. Peter Selinger,
has written about all of his aircraft in detail in the book Nurflugel
(Weishaupt Verlag, Graz 1983). Major Walter Horten, at that time
Technical Advisor of the General of Fighters in the
Reichsluftfahrtministerium (RLM), made feasible the realization of his
brother's designs.

                            Nothing New Under The Sun...

        When the newest American super-bomber, the Northrop B-2, was
revealed to the public at Palmdale, California on November 22, 1988,
many aviation history enthusiasts must have noted that the configuration
selected by the aircraft's designers, namely that of the "flying wing,"
had been resurrected from the dead, as it were. Although present day
experience has shown that the all-wing configuration is the best one for
avoiding detection by enemy radar (aided by the latest technology in
materials, electronics and computers), the same configuration has been
in practical use since about 1930. The first jet-powered all-wing
aircraft flew in Germany on February 2, 1945, and at the time was also
virtually undetectable by radar, partly on account of its mixed
construction (wooden wings).

        In the United States, John Knudsen Northrop had been working on
all-wing aircraft since the end of the 1920s. His first aircraft of this
configuration (although it did employ two small vertical tail fins on
thin tail booms) was the "Flying Wing," which flew in 1929. Because of
poor economic conditions during the 1930s, Northrop's twin-engined
all-wing N1M did not appear until 1940, and the N9M until 1942.

        Individual projects were undertaken in varlous countries, but in
the Soviet Union there were numerous attempts, some of them very
promising, to learn the secrets of the all-wing aircraft. The most
successful Soviet designer was Boris Ivanovich Chernanovski, who
developed a series of projects from 1921 to 1940.

        In Germany, the Horten brothers, Reimar and Walter, had in mind
a pure all-wing aircraft with no vertical control surfaces of any kind.
Inspired by the Stork- and Delta-type tailless aircraft of Alexander
Lippisch, they began their work at the end of the 1920s. Successful
flight tests of their first tailless glider were carried out at
Bonn-Hangelar airfield in July 1933. By 1934 they were working at
Germany's "Gliding Mecca," the Wasserkuppe. The all-wing concept had
achieved its first practical success.

        Although development of the all-wing aircraft began at about the
same time in Germany, the Soviet Union and America, there was no
collaboration whatsoever between designers. In spite of this, design
teams in these widely separated parts of the world were convinced that
the all-wing aircraft was the best configuration and pursued the idea
with much idealism. It is no wonder, therefore, that the concept has
been revived in the present day.

        The Northrop "Flying Wings" and the twin-engined Horten H V, H
VII and H IX aircraft described herein can in a way be considered the
forerunners of the B-2.

        The H V was a pure research aircraft equipped with two
counter-rotating pusher propellers: The H IX was designed as a
twin-engined, turbojet fighter-bomber, and the H VII, also with two
pusher propellers, was intended to serve as a trainer for jet aircraft.
Detailed descriptions of the three types follow.


Horten Va, W.-Nr. 5

        The H Va was built in 1936/37 in cooperation with the Dynamit AG
in Troisdorf, near Cologne. A synthetic material (Trolitax) were used in
the aircraft's construction. Use of this material resulted in a series
of problems, even though the glider Hol's der Teufel had previously been
built using this method. Several of the solutions to these problems were
patented by the Dynamit company. The nose of the H V was covered in
clear Cellon and the two pilots occupied prone positions. The aircraft
was fitted with a tricycle undercarriage with faired main members (only
the nosewheel was retractable), and the two Hirth HM-60-R engines drove
two-bladed pusher propellers directly (no extension shafts). The
propeller manufacturer Peter Kempel produced the propellers from
Lignofol (beech wood impregnated with synthetic resin). The H Va
introduced novel movable wingtip control surfaces.

        The aircraft's only flight took place at Bonn-Hangelar in early
1937. In the aircraft were Walter and Reimar Horten. The extreme aft
location of the engines made the aircraft unstable, and at its low
takeoff speed the aircraft's controls were unable to overcome the
resulting tail-heaviness at the moment of rotation. The H Va became
airborne briefly, then crashed, damaging the aircraft seriously. The
injuries sustained by the two men were relatively minor (Walter Horten
knocked out his two upper front teeth). Following the accident the
Dynamit AG collected the remains of the H Va to carry out tests on the
materials used in its construction.

Horten Vb, W.-Nr. 9

        The H Vb was a research aircraft built at Cologne-Ostheim using
conventional construction methods (wood and steel tube) on instructions
from Major Dinort with the approval of Ernst Udet. As a result of the
accident with the H Va, the movable wingtip controls were dispensed with
and the designers turned to more conventional elevons. The Hirth engines
of the unlucky H Va were used again, but were positioned further forward
and drove their propellers vla short extension shafts, resulting in a
more favorable weight distribution. The H Vb's pilots sat upright next
to each other and were provided with individual raised canopies. Like
the H Va, the H Vb had a fixed tricycle undercarriage. The aircraft's
first flight took place at Cologne-Ostheim in autumn 1937 with Walter
Horten at the controls. From the beginning of the war in 1939 until 1941
the aircraft was parked in the open at Potsdam-Werder airfield, which
was not altogether beneficial for an aircraft built largely of wood.

Horten Vc, W.-Nr. 27

        Efforts by the Luftwaffe-Inspektion 3 (Lln 3, or Luftwaffe
Inspectorate for Fighters, whose Technical Department Head was Walter
Horten) succeeded in convincing Generalflugzeugmeister Ernst Udet that
it was advisable to retum the H V to flying status. In August 1941 a
special detachment of Lln 3 was formed in Minden to oversee the
reconstruction of the aircraft by the Peschke Firm.  Peschke, a former
WW I fighter pilot, had established a flying school at Hangelar and
later an aircraft repair facility at Minden, The latter facility
repaired aircraft such as the Fw 44 Stieglitz, He 72 Kadett, Fi 156
Storch and the RK Schwalbe. Peschke and the Horten brothers knew each
other from Hangelar. In charge of the Lln 3 detachment was Luftwaffe
Leutnant Reimar Horten. His team consisted of three designing engineers
and five other men, including Heinz Scheidhauer, an experienced all-wing
glider specialist. Later the special detachment was moved to Gottingen
and enlarged to thirty men (soldiers, engineers, craftsmen and so on).

        The Horten Vc was converted from the H Vb, which had been badly
damaged by the elements. In Minden the two-seat H Vb became a
single-seat aircraft. The pilot was accommodated in a normal seated
position. The H Va's Hirth engines were retained, as were its steel tube
and wood construction and fixed undercarriage. As property of the
military, it was finished in standard Luftwaffe camouflage and was
assigned the code PE + HO (PE for Peschke and HO for Horten).

        The H Vc made its first flight on May 26, 1942. Walter Horten
later flew the machine to Gottingen, where Luftwaffenkommando IX was
being formed.

        Flugkapitan Prof. Dr. Josef Stuper, then Director of the
Instituts fur Forschungsflugbetrieb und Flugwesen (Institute for Flight
Research and Aviation) at the Aerodynamischen Versuchsanstalt (AVA)
Gottingen (Gottingen Aerodynamic Research Institute), carried out test
flights in the H Vc.  Late in the summer of 1943 an incident occurred
involving the H Vc. Stuper took off from the center of the airfield with
the aircraft's flaps in the down position. The aircraft's under-carriage
struck the roof of a hangar and the H Vc crashed. Stuper escaped without
serious injury, but the aircraft was badly damaged. It was subsequently
stored at Gottingen in anticipation of restoration following the end of
the war. Events were to prove differently, however, as all of the
aircraft held there were assembled at the edge of the airfield and
burned following Germany's surrender. A projected glider tug based on
the H Vc was not built.

Horten VII, W.-Nr. 29

        Construction of the H VII took place at the Gottingen Bureau.
The aircraft's wings, which were of wooden construction, were built by
the Lln 3 workshop, while the center section, which was of welded tube
steel construction with Dural skinning, was manufactured by the Peschke
Firm in Minden. The aircraft made its first flight in May 1943 with
Heinz Scheidhauer and Walter Horten on board. The aircraft had
originally been conceived as a flying test-bed for the Argus-Schmidt
pulse-jet engine after the H V had proved unsuitable for the role. When
this plan was abandoned it was proposed as a fighter training aircraft.
The H VII was powered by two Argus AS-10-SC engines drivinq two-bladed
constant-speed propellers via extension shafts. The aircraft featured a
fully retractable twin nosewheel under-carriage. So-called "wingtip
rudders" were used in place of a conventional rudder. The aircraft was
assigned the RLM-Number 8-226. The aircraft's pilots were Heinz
Scheidhauer, Erwin Ziller and Walter Horten. In autumn 1944 Oberst
Knemeyer demonstrated the H VII to Hermann Goring at Oranienburg, after
the Reichsmarschall had expressed a desire to see a Horten aircraft in
action.



        Knemeyer was the RLM flight-test chief and was favorably
disposed toward the aircraft developed by the Horten brothers. Goring, a
former WW I fighter pilot, had not participated in the later gliding
boom and was unfamiliar with the aircraft which emerged from the
program. He wanted to see the aircraft fly on one engine, which Heinz
Scheidhauer did without any hesitation. The Reichsmarschall was
impressed; the Peschke Firm received an order for twenty examples.

        Construction of the H VII V2 began in 1944, but the aircraft had
not been completed when the war ended. The V3, which was to see the
"wingtip rudders" replaced by spoilers above and below the wings, as on
the H IX, progressed no farther than the manufacturing of various
components.

        In February 1945 Heinz Scheidhauer flew the H VII to Gottingen.
Hydraulic failure prevented him from extending the aircraft's
undercarriage, and he was forced to make a belly landing. The resulting
damage had not been repaired when, on April 7, 1945, US troops occupied
the airfield. The aircraft presumably suffered the same fate as the H V
and was burned.

Horten IX V1, W.-Nr. 38

        Walter Horten was aware of the performance achieved by the DFS
194 rocket-powered research aircraft, and thus knew that wooden
construction methods were suitable for high-performance aircraft. After
seeing the Me 262 in March 1943 he set out to acquire information on the
Jumo 004 turbojet engine. Further work on the H VII was abandoned and
all efforts were concentrated on the H IX, which originated from
Goring's 1000x1000x1000 demand, in which the Reichsmarschall specified
that no new project would be considered unless it achieved the following
performance figures: a speed of at least 1,000 kph and the ability to
carry a 1,000 kg bomb load 1,000 km into enemy territory. Justifiable
deviations from these figures would be accepted. At that time Walter
Horten was a Hauptmann on the staff of Lln3. He managed to obtain a
transfer to Gottingen, where he took over command of Luftwaffenkommando
IX. Soon afterward, however, the Kommando was officially disbanded, and
as a result Lln3 ceased to be the office responsible for development of
the Horten projects. New life was injected into the Horten Firm, when,
in August, Hermann Goring informed the company that work on the H IX
turbojet fighter-bomber was to proceed with all urgency and that it was
to construct a flyable, but unpowered, example as soon as possible.

        Luftwaffenkommando IX, which officially no longer existed,
continued to be funded and carried on its work, but without direct
influence from the Technischen Amt of the RLM. The H IX V1 was an
unpowered research glider and received the RLM-Number 8-229. The
aircraft was of mixed construction (welded steel tube and wood) and was
covered with several layers of plywood of various qualities, the outer
layer being of the best quality. This method of construction made radar
detection of the aircraft extremely difficult. The pilot was
accommodated in a normal seated position. The first flight of the V1
took place on March 1, 1944, at Gottingen with Heinz Scheidhauer at the
controls. Following several towed takeoffs, the aircraft was sent to
Oranienburg near Berlin for flight testing, with Scheidhauer as pilot. A
brief report submitted by the DVL on April 7, 1944, indicated that the
aircraft provided an excellent gun platform.

        In order to simulate the stabilizing effect of the engines,
which were absent from the V1, the aircraft's main undercarriage legs
were faired from the outset; only the aircraft's nosewheel was
retractable. On March 5 the nose gear failed after it developed a wobble
on Oranienburg's concrete runway. A special pressure suit was to have
replaced the absent cockpit pressurization, but was never used in
practice.

        The machine was sent to Brandis, where it was to be tested by
the military and used for training purposes. It was found there by
soldiers of the US 9th Armored Division at the end of the war and was
later burned in a "clearing action."

Horten HIX, Werk-Nr.9, 1944/45

        The H IX V2 was a test machine powered by two Jumo 004 turbojets
and was assigned the RLM number 8-229. It was the world's first
turbojet-powered all-wing aircraft.  The V2 had a fully retractable
undercarriage and was unarmed. The pilot was accommodated in a
conventional seated position.

        Serious difficulties and delays in construction arose when the
planned BMW 003 engines had to be replaced by more powerful Jumo 004s.
The diameter of the Junkers engine was greater than that of the BMW
product, requiring redesign of the engine bays. Like its predecessors,
the aircraft was of mixed construction. The V2's undercarriage consisted
of the tailwheel from a wrecked He 177 bomber, which was used as
nosewheel, and the main undercarriage from a Bf 109 fighter.

        The first test flight was made from Oranienburg on February 2,
1945, with Leutnant Erwin Ziller at the controls, and lasted about 30
minutes. The Horten brothers had known Ziller from the competitions at
the Wasserkuppe. Ziller had familiarized himself with all-wing aircraft
in December 1944 and January 1945, making several flights in the Horten
H IX V1 glider (an He 111 served as glider tug) and the twin-engined
Horten H VII at Oranienburg.

        Ziller spent the last three days of December 1944 at
Erprobungsstelle Rechlin, where he made a total of five flights in the
Me 262. These flights provided Ziller with an opportunity to become
familiar with the operation and characteristics of the Jumo 004 turbojet
engine.




        At the end of a second successful test flight on February 3,
1945, Ziller deployed the aircraft's braking parachute too soon on his
landing approach. The result was a hard landing which damaged the
aircraft's main undercarrlage. Consequently, the third test flight in
the Horten H IX did not take place until February 18, 1945. Returning
after about 45 minutes in the air, Ziller was seen to dive the aircraft
and pull up several times at an altitude of about 800 meters, apparently
in an effort to relight an engine. The undercarriage was lowered
unusually early, at an altitude of about 400 meters. The V2's speed
decreased and, accompanied by increasing engine noise, its nose dropped
and the aircraft entered a right-hand turn. The H IX completed a 360
degree turn with its wings banked 20 degrees. It then accelerated and
completed a second and third 360 degree turn, the angle of bank
increasing all the while. As it began a fourth circle, the aircraft
struck the frozen turf beyond the airfield boundary.

        Walter Rosler was the first Horten employee to reach the crash
site, about two-and-a-half minutes after the accident. In his report he
stated: "The first thing I saw was the two Junkers engines lying on the
other side of the embankment. I could hear the turbine running down in
the still-warm left power plant, while there was not a sound from the
cooled-off right engine which lay beside it. . ." There was a strong
smell of fuel, but no fire. Other than the jet engines and plexiglass
cockpit hood, the aircraft had been completely destroyed. Like the
engines, Ziller was ejected from the aircraft on impact. He was thrown
against a large tree and killed instantly. Ziller had not used his
radio, and had continued to fly the aircraft with an engine out and the
undercarriage extended. He did not attempt to use his ejection seat and
parachute to safety, and the aicraft's canopy was not jettisoned. It
seems certain that he was attempting to save the valuable aircraft.

        What had happened? The empty compressed air bottle in the
wreckage confirmed that the undercarriage had been lowered with
compressed air after a loss of hydraulic power following the failure of
an engine. Had there been a stall, beginning at the right wingtip? Had
the test pilot been rendered unconscious and unable to react by
carbonizing oil from the remaining engine, which had eventually
overheated? (There were no bulkheads separating the cockpit from the
engine bays.)

        Unfortunately, only Leutnant Ziller could have answered these
questions, and he had failed to survive. In the opinion of the
investigating experts sabotage could not be ruled out.

Horten H IX V3, RLN-Number 8-229

        The H IX V3 was an unarmed, twin-Jet, single seat aircraft.
Further production of the fighter bomber was assigned to the Gothaer
Waggonfabrik (GWF). Well-known for its Go 241 carg0 glider, Gotha was
considered the company best suited to manufacture Horten aircraft. The
aircraft's turbojet engines were installed splayed 15 degrees left and
right of the aircraft centerline and 4 degrees nose down. The new
installation was tested in a center section mock-up. Construction of the
H IX V3 was nearly complete when the Gotha Works at Friederichsroda was
overrun by troops of the American 3rd Army's VII Corps on April 14,
1945. The aircraft was assigned the number T2-490 by the Americans. The
aircraft's official RLM designation is uncertain, as it was referred to
as the Ho 229 as well as the Go 229. Also found in the destroyed and
abandoned works were several other prototypes in various stages of
construction, including a two-seat version.

        The V3 was sent to the United States by ship, along with other
captured aircraft, and finally ended up in the H. H. "Hap" Arnold
collection of the Air Force Technical Museum. The all-wing aircraft was
to have been brought to flying status at Park Ridge, Illinois, but
budget cuts in the late forties and early fifties brought these plans to
an end. The V3 was handed over to the present-day National Air and Space
Museum (NASM) in Washington D.C.


Technical Data:
---------------

Type            Span/m  Length/m  Height/m  Empty      Gross
------------                                weight/kg  weight/kg
                ------  --------  --------  ---------  ---------

Horten H Va     14.00    -         -        1,600      1,840

Horten Vb       16.00   6.00      2.10      1,360      1,600

Horetn Vc       16.00   6.00       -        1,440      1,600

Horten H VII    16.00   7.40      2.60      2,200      3,200

Horten IX V1    16.76   7.60       -        1,900      2,000

Horten H IX V2  16.76   7.47      2.81      4,844      6,876

Horten H IX V3  16.80   7.47      2.81      5,067      8,999

Horten H IX V4           -         -         -          -

Horten H IX V5           -         -         -          -

Horten H IX V6  16.76    -         -         -          -

Horten IX V7             -         -         -          -

Horten IX V8             -         -         -          -


Technical Data:
---------------

Type            Power Plants  Output      Maximum    Cruise     Landing
------------                              speed/kph  speed/kph  speed/kph
                ------------  ------      ---------  ---------  ----------

Horten H Va     2xHirth HM60R 80HP each   280        250        84

Horten Vb       2xHirth HM60R 80HP each   260        230        70

Horetn Vc       2xHirth HM60R 80HP each   260        230        70

Horten H VII    2xArgus AS10C 240HP each  340        310        100

Horten IX V1       -            -          -          -         75

Horten H IX V2  2xJumo 004B-2 900KG each  977        690        145

Horten H IX V3  2xJumo 004B-2 900KG each  977        632        156

Horten H IX V4     -            -          -          -          -

Horten H IX V5     -            -          -          -          -

Horten H IX V6  2xJumo 004B-2 900KG each   -          -          -

Horten IX V7       -            -          -          -          -

Horten IX V8       -            -          -          -          -


Technical Data:
---------------

Type            Crew      Armament      Remarks
------------    -------   --------      ------------------------------

Horten H Va     2 prone      -          Research aircraft, synthetic
                                        materials.

Horten Vb       2 prone      -          Research aircraft, mixed wood
                                        and steel tube construction.

Horetn Vc       1 seated     -          Research aircraft, mixed wood
                                        and steel tube construction.

Horten H VII    2 seated     -          Fighter trainer Ho 226,
                                        wood-Dural construction.

Horten IX V1    1            -          Research aircraft, mixed wood
                                        and steel tube construction.

Horten H IX V2  1 seated     -          Fighter test aircraft, wood and
                                        steel tube construction.

Horten H IX V3  1 seated  2xMK 103 or   Fighter-bomber Ho Prototype
                          4xMK 108 or   Reconnaissance Aircraft.
                          2xMK 108 and
                          2xRB8-/81

Horten H IX V4  1 seated     -          Ho 229 B-1 night fighter.

Horten H IX V5  1 seated     -          Ho 229 B-1 night fighter.

Horten H IX V6  2 seated  4xMK 108 or   Trainer, night fighter trainer.
                          2xMK 103

Horten IX V7                 -          Prototype 3, A-series with full
                                        equipment.

Horten IX V8                 -          -


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