| Junkers Ju 188E |
 | | Description | | Role | Bomber | | Crew | 5 | | First Flight | December, 1941 | | Entered Service | 1943 | | Manufacturer | Junkers | | Dimensions | | Length | 15 m | 49 ft 1 in | | Wingspan | 22 m | 72 ft 2 in | | Height | 4.4 m | 14 ft 7 in | | Wing Area | 56 m² | 603 ft² | | Weights | | Empty | 9,900 kg | 21,825 lb | | Loaded | 14,500 kg | 31,967 lb | | Maximum takeoff | kg | lb | | Powerplant | | Engine | 2x BMW 801G-2/H-2 | | Power (each) | 1,272 kW | 1,730 hp | | Performance | | Maximum speed | 499 km/h @ 6,000 m | 310 mph @ 19,700 ft | | Combat range | 2,190 km | 1,360 miles | | Ferry range | km | miles | | Service ceiling | 9,500 m | 31,170 ft | | Rate of climb | m/min | ft/min | | Wing loading | 258.9 kg/m² | 53.0 lb/ft² | | Power/Mass | 0.175 kW/kg | 0.106 hp/lb | | Armament | | Guns (typical) | 1 × MG 151 20mm cannon 3 × MG 131 13 mm machine gun | | Bombs | 3,000 kg | 6,600 lb | The Ju 188 Rächer (Avenger) was a high-performance medium bomber from Junkers, the planned follow-on to the famed Ju 88 with better performance and payload. It was produced only in limited numbers, due both to the presence of improved versions of the Ju 88, as well as the deteriorating war condition and the resulting focus on fighter production. Junkers Ju 188 bomber. ...
This is a list of aviation-related events from 1941: Events Jacqueline Cochran became the first woman to fly a bomber across the Atlantic Ocean. ...
This is a list of aviation-related events from 1943: Events January January 27 - the USAAF makes its first daylight raid on Germany January 30 - Royal Air Force de Havilland Mosquitos make the first daylight air-raid on Berlin January 30-31 – the H2S radar is used by RAF bombers...
For the Prussian/German landowning classes, see junker. The name Junkers (IPA: /Ëjunkeɺs/) is well known in connection with aircraft, which were produced under this name for the Luftwaffe during World War II. In particular the Ju 87 Stuka and Ju 52 Tante Ju were common symbols of the...
The BMW 801 was a powerful German air-cooled radial aircraft engine built by BMW and used in a number of German military aircraft of World War II. The engine’s cylinders were in two rows of seven cylinders each, the bore and stroke were both 156 mm, giving a...
The MG 151 (MG 151/15) was a 15 mm cannon produced by Waffenfabrik Mauser starting in 1940. ...
The MG 131 was a 13 mm machine gun developed in 1938 by Rheinmetall-Borsig and produced from 1940 to 1945. ...
A medium bomber is a bomber aircraft designed to operate with medium bombloads over medium distances; primarily to distinguish them from the much larger heavy bombers and smaller light bombers. ...
For the Prussian/German landowning classes, see junker. The name Junkers (IPA: /Ëjunkeɺs/) is well known in connection with aircraft, which were produced under this name for the Luftwaffe during World War II. In particular the Ju 87 Stuka and Ju 52 Tante Ju were common symbols of the...
The Junkers Ju 88 was a WW2 Luftwaffe twin-engine multi-role aircraft. ...
Background In 1936 Junkers submitted proposals for the Ju 85 and Ju 88 into competition for the new standardized Luftwaffe high-speed tactical bomber, known as the schnellbomber. The two designs were almost identical, differing only in that the Ju 85 used a twin-rudder and the Ju 88 a single fin. At the same time they offered modified versions of each as the Ju 85B and Ju 88B, again similar to the original designs, but using an "egg shaped" forward fuselage that was essentially one large window. The new design offered somewhat lower drag, and better visibility. At the time this was considered too radical, and eventually the Ju 88A with its simpler fighter-like cockpit won the contest. The Junkers Ju 88 was a WW2 Luftwaffe twin-engine multi-role aircraft. ...
The Luftwaffe â¶(?) (German: air force, IPA: [luftvafÉ]) is the commonly used term for the German air force. ...
By 1939 the original Ju 88 had itself evolved with considerably more window area, but in a fashion that was not well streamlined. The RLM was in the process of ordering a "second generation" bomber in a project known as Bomber B, but this was extensively delayed due to the non-delivery of the large 2,500 hp (1,838 kW) class engines the designs relied on. Although Junker's own Ju 288 was currently leading the contest, there was no delivery date on the engines and the Ju 88B project was re-submitted as a stop-gap measure. For this version they used the latest Ju 88A-1 airframe as a baseline, but added the new Junkers Jumo 213 engine, which had recently started bench testing and was expected to deliver 1,500 hp (1,103 kW). Reichsluftfahrtministerium (Reich Aviation Ministry / German Air Ministry / German Aviation Administration) Note: If you are looking for the RLM-GL/C list, please go to List of RLM aircraft designations The Reich Air Ministry (Reichsluftfahrtministerium or RLM), was a German civil service organization in charge of development and production of aircraft...
Bomber B was a German project dating to just before the start of World War II to develop a second-generation high-speed bomber that would replace all medium and heavy bombers then in service with the Luftwaffe. ...
The Junkers Ju 288 was a German bomber aircraft designed during World War II, but which only ever flew in prototype form. ...
The Jumo 213 was a World War II-era V-12 liquid cooled aircraft engine, a development of Junkers Motorens earlier design, the Jumo 211. ...
The RLM wasn't impressed with the new design, as it offered only small improvements over the existing Ju 88A's then in service. However they did suggest that Junkers continue with the prototype work anyway, but asked that they consider fitting the design with the BMW 139 radial engine instead. This engine was cancelled only a few weeks later, and all designs based on it moved to the newer and more powerful BMW 801. Radial engine of a biplane. ...
The BMW 801 was a powerful German air-cooled radial aircraft engine built by BMW and used in a number of German military aircraft of World War II. The engine’s cylinders were in two rows of seven cylinders each, the bore and stroke were both 156 mm, giving a...
Prototypes, Ju 88B-0 The prototype Ju 88B V1, D-AUVS, flew for the first time with the 801A/B engines in early 1940. The fuselage was identical to the Ju 88A-1, which presented a problem: with the extra power, 1,600 hp (1,190 kW), the design could now carry considerably more load than the small bomb bay could fit. An additional external shackle was then added to each wing well outside the engines, although using the rack would seriously hamper performance. During the summer a pre-production run of ten Ju 88B-0 based on the pre-production Ju 88A-4 airframes were delivered. The A-4 used a longer wing for better altitude performance, just over 65 feet (20 m) as opposed to the 60 foot (18 m) span of the earlier A series, but attention to streamlining and new "pointy" wing tips kept drag to about what it was earlier. The airframe changes moved the center of gravity slightly, so the glazed "cockpit" area was made slightly longer to re-balance the aircraft, while also offering better visibility for other members of the crew. In physics, the center of gravity (CoG) of an object is the average location of its weight. ...
Service tests were all successful, and the pilots generally lauded the new cockpit design. However the RLM still remained unconvinced that the small improvement in performance over the existing A-5's and future A-4's was worth investing time in. Instead the pre-production models were modified as long-range reconnaissance aircraft by removing the guns, bombsights and external bomb shackles, and fitting fuel tanks into the bomb bay. Mixed reconnaissance patrol of the Polish Home Army and the Soviet Red Army during Operation Tempest, 1944 Reconnaissance is the military term for the active gathering of information about an enemy, or other conditions, by physical observation. ...
Several of the airframes were retained by Junkers for further development. One of these was fitted with the slightly updated 801C engines and a small power-operated turret on the extreme top of the cockpit mounting a MG 131 machine gun. The MG 131 was a 13 mm machine gun developed in 1938 by Rheinmetall-Borsig and produced from 1940 to 1945. ...
Ju 188 By 1942 it was becoming clear that the Ju 288 wasn't going to be ready any time soon, and at the same time the Ju 88's were increasingly at the mercy of a rapidly improving RAF and Soviet VVS. The RLM finally decided that even the small gains in performance in the Ju 88B were worth considering, and asked Junkers for a series of upgrades as the Ju 188. State motto (Russian): ÐÑолеÑаÑии вÑеÑ
ÑÑÑан, ÑоединÑйÑеÑÑ! (Transliterated: Proletarii vsekh stran, soedinyaytes!) (Translated: Workers of the world, unite!) Capital Moscow Official language None; Russian (de facto) Government Federation of Socialist republics/ Communist state Area - Total - % water Largest on the planet 22,402,200 km² ?% Population - Total - Density 3rd before collapse 293,047,571 (July...
Wikipedia does not yet have an article with this exact name. ...
The sole Ju 88E-0 was modified with several additional guns, another MG 131 firing rearward just below the turret, one firing forward through the nose, and the twinned MG 81Z in the ventral bulge firing rearward. Two other airframes had their engines and outer wings removed to act as testbeds for water ditching, as it was planned to use the 188 in long overwater flights against British shipping. A second 188 test airframe was also built up from another 88A-4, this one including larger tail surfaces to provide more directional control at higher altitudes, a feature also used on future Ju 88 models. Originally known as Ju 88V44, this airframe was later designated Ju 188V1. October 1942 the program was given the go-ahead to start planning for production. A second prototype was delivered in January, which moved the outer bomb shackles to a position inboard of the engines. Both started testing the dive bombing system installed in the 88A-4 in February. The RLM then asked for another change, allowing the aircraft to mount either the BMW 801 or Jumo 213 engines as a complete "power egg" that would simply be bolted on and hooked up. Concerns about the Jumo 213, now years overdue, were offset by this engine's better altitude performance, so it made sense to delay the aircraft slightly if that meant it could switch to the 213 as soon as they became available. To allow both versions to use the same propeller, BMW modified the gearing on the 801D series to run at the same RPMs as the Jumo, resulting in the 801G/H.
Ju 188A & E The Ju 188 was designed to be fitted with either the 1,750 hp (1,287 kW) Jumo 213A or 1,730 hp (1,272 kW) BMW 801G/H engines without any changes to the airframe. It was originally intended that both would be known as A models, but the naming was later changed: the Ju 188A model powered by the Jumo, and the Ju 188E with the 801. The Jumo 213 was a World War II-era V-12 liquid cooled aircraft engine, a development of Junkers Motorens earlier design, the Jumo 211. ...
The BMW 801 was a powerful German air-cooled radial aircraft engine built by BMW and used in a number of German military aircraft of World War II. The engine’s cylinders were in two rows of seven cylinders each, the bore and stroke were both 156 mm, giving a...
The first three production Ju 188E-1 machines were delivered with the BWM engines in February 1943, another seven in March, and eight in April. A conversion testing unit was formed up in May, and after testing were attached to an operational unit. By the end of the year 283 aircraft had been delivered, and two new factories were added to the production effort. Most operational machines differed from the prototypes only in having a 20 mm MG151/20 cannon in the nose and dorsal turrets in place of the 13 mm MG131. The Ju 188E-2 was built as a torpedo-bomber. Although the A and E models were to have been delivered at the same time, the Jumo engine was still having difficulties getting into production. Nevertheless the first Jumo powered Ju 188A-1 versions were shipped only shortly after the BMW versions, albeit at a much slower rate. By the time delivery rates were finally picking up in late 1943 the Jumo was available in a new MW50 "boosted" version that delivered 2,100 hp (1,544 kW) for takeoff. With this engine the plaers were known as the Ju 188A-2, and started deliveries in early 1944. This was matched with the 801G/H series engines in the E model, geared to match the RPM range of the Jumo and thus be able to run the same propeller. MW 50 was a 50-50 mixture of methanol and water (thus the name) that was sprayed into the supercharger of German aircraft engines primarily for its anti-detonant effect, allowing the use of increased boost pressures. ...
A modified version mounting a small FuG 200 Hohentwiel sea-search radar set under the nose and shackles for a torpedo for naval strike missions was delivered as the E-2, and with the Jumo as the A-3. The only other difference was the removal of the outer pair of wing bomb shackles. This long range radar antenna (approximately 40m (130ft) in diameter) rotates on a track to observe activities near the horizon. ...
A torpedo in Rail terminology refers to a small explosive device strapped to the top of the rail to alert an approaching train of immediate danger ahead. ...
For all its good points, the Ju 188 was only a small improvement over the Ju 88 it was supposed to replace. The bombload and bomb-bay was no larger than the earlier plane, so although it could handle a larger load by mounting externally, doing so hurt performance. Even then the performance was rather poor considering all the effort – only 325 mph (523 km/h) or less. One has to wonder about the German armament designers as well, the fancy dorsal turret had only one gun in it, yet they retained the single-gun flexible position only a few centimeters away from it. In the meantime the various projects to finally provide the plane with real tail armament were all abandoned. Delivery problems of the Jumo were never entirely sorted out, and the only model to be built in large numbers were the E series with the 801. Even then so few were available that they were generally given out to Ju 88 units, who flew them on "special" missions where the longer range or better performance would be helpful.
Ju 188C It was planned all along to skip over a "B model" to avoid confusion with the original Ju 88B, but in the original planning the A and E models would both be called A's. The Ju 188C would thus be the next model in line. The C series was built to the extent of a single example, by modifying one of the few A-1 machines. To this they added the new power-operated FA 15 turret in the tail. The turret mounted two 13 mm MG 131 machine guns, aimed with a double-periscope (top and bottom) system mounted in the cockpit. A machine gun is a fully-automatic firearm that is capable of firing bullets in rapid succession. ...
This modification would have greatly improved defensive firepower, always lacking on German designs, but reliability was so poor it was decided to adbandon the system.
Ju 188D & F In early 1944 it was decided to focus on reconnaissance versions of the A and E models The airframe was modified with the removal of the bomb aimer and the forward gun, and additional fuel cells were added to extend the range to 2,110 miles (3,400 km). The Ju 188D-1 was otherwise similar to the A-1, and the Ju 188D-2 fitted nose radar for naval reconnaissance. Similar conversions of the E models were the Ju 188F-1 and Ju 188F-2.
Ju 188G & H One problem with the Ju 88 that carried into the 188 was the lack of internal room for bomb storage. Both carried the majority of their bombload on the outside of the plane on racks under the wing, where it greatly effected performance. This was to have been addressed in the G and H models, which extended the fuselage downward for more room with the addition of a wooden pannier. This modification also left enough room at the tail to fit a manned turret in place of the C model's remote-control one. However this system proved to be just as limited as the remote-control FA 15, being so small that only gunners could fit into it, and had basically no ability to escape in an emergency. The RLM rejected the design and planned on mounting the FA 15 even if it was unreliable. Oddly, the designs still had the nose area extended under the plane for a rear gunner, when this would no longer be needed and its removal would have greatly cleaned up the lines of the plane. With the Jumos now being sent to fighter production, the Ju 188G-2 was to use the 801 only, with the reconnaissance conversion known as the Ju 188H-2. Neither entered production before the war ended.
Ju 188R In the summer of 1944 three E models were modified as night fighters with the addition of radar and either four 20 mm MG 151/20's or two 30 mm MK 103's in the nose. However the added visibility of the 188 was not useful in the night role, and as the added drag of the radar washed out any speed difference, so the Ju 188R-0 was not ordered. A night fighter is a fighter aircraft adapted for use at night, or in other times of bad visibility. ...
High-altitude versions In 1943 it was planned to upgrade the entire lineup with even more wing area and a pressurized cockpit for high-altitude work. A single basic airframe would be offered in three versions, the Ju 188J heavy fighter, Ju 188K bomber, and the Ju 188L reconnaissance version. All three did away with the under-slung gunner's compartment, leading to a cleaner nose profile, and the bomber and recce versions mounted their loads in a long pannier under the middle of the plane instead of the deeper fuselage of the G and H models. A heavy fighter is a fighter aircraft designed to be used in the long-range role, or while carrying heavier weapons loads. ...
Simpler versions of these with no defensive armament and even longer wings became the Ju 188S fighter and Ju 188T intruder. With Jumo 213E-1 engines 2,100 hp (1,544 kW) at take-off and 1,690 hp (1,243 kW) at 31,400 ft (9,570 m), the Ju 188T could reach 435 mph (700 km/h). Operating at this altitude, the Ju 188S could carry only 800 kg of bombs. Before any of these could start production, the entire lineup was renamed the Ju 388, the vastly improved performance warranting this change in name. The Junkers Ju 388J Störtebeker was a World War II heavy fighter based on the famous Ju 88 airframe. ...
| Related content | | Related Development | Junkers Ju 88 - Junkers Ju 388 The Junkers Ju 88 was a WW2 Luftwaffe twin-engine multi-role aircraft. ...
The Junkers Ju 388J Störtebeker was a World War II heavy fighter based on the famous Ju 88 airframe. ...
| | Similar Aircraft | | | Designation Series | Fw 187 - Ju 187 - Ju 188 - Fw 189 - Fw 190 - Fw 191 The Focke-Wulf Fw 187 Falke (Falcon) was created by Kurt Tank as a heavy fighter and a competitor to the Messerschmitt Bf 110 in the Zerstörer (destroyer) role. ...
The Junkers Ju 187 was designed to replace the aging Ju 87 Stuka, which by the time of the Battle of Britain was fast approaching obselescence, the Ju 187 project never made it to production. ...
The Focke-Wulf Fw 189 was a twin-engine twin-boom three seat tactical reconnaissance and army cooperation aircraft. ...
Focke-Wulf Fw 190A in flight. ...
The Focke-Wulf Fw 191 was a prototype German bomber aircraft of World War II. Designed to a 1939 Luftwaffe specification for a high-performance medium bomber (the Bomber B programme), the project was crippled by engine problems and a complex electric motor system. ...
| | Related Lists | List of military aircraft of Germany This list of military aircraft of Germany includes prototype, pre-production, and operational types. ...
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