This aircraft article has not been updated to WikiProject Aircraft's current standards. Please see this page for more details. | Messerschmitt Me 323 |
 | | Description | | Role | Heavy transport | | Crew | 5 | | First flight | Fall 1941 | | Entered service | 1943 | | Manufacturer | Messerschmitt A.G. | | Dimensions | | Length | 28.2 m | 92 ft 4 in | | Wingspan | 55.2 m | 181 ft 0 in | | Height | 10.15 m | 33 ft3.5 in | | Wing area | m² | ft² | | Weights | | Empty | 27,330 kg | 60,260 lb | | Loaded | 29,500 kg | 65,000 lb | | Maximum takeoff | 43,000 kg | 94,815 lb | | Powerplant | | Engine | 6 Gnôme-Rhône 14N | | Power (each) | 700 kW | 950 hp | | Performance | | Maximum speed | 270 km/h | 170 mph | | Combat range | 800 km | 500 mile | | Ferry range | 1,100 km | 684 miles | | Service ceiling | 4,000 m | 13,100 ft | | Rate of climb | 216 m/min | 710 ft/min | | Armament | | Guns | (example) 18 × 7.92 mm MG81 machine-guns | The Messerschmitt Me 323 "Gigant" was a German transport aircraft of the Second World War. It was a powered variant of the Me 321 glider. It was the biggest land-based cargo airplane of the war. Just over 200 are recorded as having been made. An Airbus A380, currently the worlds largest passenger airliner An aircraft is any vehicle or craft capable of atmospheric flight. ...
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Messerschmitt Me 323 Gigant Heavy Transport Published in: Aircraft of the Fighting Powers Vol V Ed: H J Cooper, O G Thetford and D A. Russell Harborough Publishing Co, Leicester, England 1945. ...
Messerschmitt is a famous German aircraft manufacturer, known primarily for their World War II fighter aircraft, notably the Bf 109 and Me 262. ...
Messerschmitt is a famous German aircraft manufacturer, known primarily for their World War II fighter aircraft, notably the Bf 109 and Me 262. ...
A cargo aircraft, also alternately known as a transport aircraft, is an aircraft dedicated to handling transport of materials and oversized loads. ...
Mushroom cloud from the nuclear explosion over Nagasaki rising 18 km into the air. ...
During the preparation for a possible invasion of Britain during World War II (called Operation Sealion), the Oberkommando des Heeres (OKH) required a cargo glider that would carry about 130 equipped soldiers because it was not possible to ship all the important weapons and goods by naval vessels. ...
Gliders or Sailplanes are heavier-than-air aircraft primarily intended for unpowered flight. ...
Development
The genesis of the Me 323 Gigant (giant) transport was in a 1940 German requirement for a large assault glider. The DFS 230 light glider had already proven its worth in the famous attack on Fort Eben-Emael in Belgium (the first ever assault by gliderborne troops), and would later be used successfully in the Crete invasion in 1941. However, the prospective invasion of Great Britain focused minds on the need to be able to airlift vehicles and other heavy equipment as part of an initial assault wave. Although Operation Sealion was cancelled, the requirement was still a valid one with the focus now on the forthcoming invasion of the USSR. Map of the area between Belgium and the Netherlands near Fort Eben-Emael Fort Eben-Emaels cupola penetrated by a shaped charge Eben-Emael was a Belgian fortress in between Liège and Maastricht, near the Albert Canal, defending the Belgian-German border. ...
Combatants Greece United Kingdom New Zealand Australia Germany Italy Commanders Bernard Freyberg Kurt Student Strength United Kingdom: 15,000 Greece: 11,000 Australia: 7,100 New Zealand: 6,700 Total: 40,000 (10,000 without fighting capability. ...
Operation Sealion (Unternehmen (Undertaking) Seelöwe in German) was a World War II German plan to invade the United Kingdom. ...
On October 18 1940, Junkers and Messerschmitt were given just 14 days to submit a proposal for a large transport glider. The emphasis was still very much on the assault role: the ambitious requirement was to be able to carry either an 88mm gun and half-track tractor, or a PzKpfw IV medium tank. The Junkers Ju 322 'Mammut' reached prototype form, but was completely unsatisfactory and was scrapped. The Messerschmitt was originally designated the Me 261w, was then changed to Me 263, eventually becoming the Me 321. Although the Me 321 saw considerable service, it was never used for a Maltese invasion, or for any other such undertakings. October 18 is the 291st day of the year (292nd in leap years). ...
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...
Messerschmitt is a famous German aircraft manufacturer, known primarily for their World War II fighter aircraft, notably the Bf 109 and Me 262. ...
The German eighty-eight was likely the best known, even famous, artillery piece of World War II. It was not one gun, but a series of anti-aircraft guns officially called the 8. ...
The Panzerkampfwagen IV (PzKpfw IV), more commonly referred to as the Panzer IV, was a tank developed by Germany and used extensively in World War II. It was designed initially as an infantry-support medium tank, to work in conjunction with the anti-tank Pzkpfw III. Later in the war...
The Junkers Ju 322 or âMammutâ was a proposed heavy transport glider, resembling a giant flying wing, for use by the Luftwaffe in World War II, only two prototypes were ever built. ...
Early in 1941, the decision had been taken to produce a motorized variant of the Me 321. It was now realised that a serious heavy-lift requirement would exist outside the specialized assault role, and that a huge glider that needed specialised towing aircraft, rocket packs and other equipment was simply not the answer. After much study, it was decided to fit six French Gnome-Rhone GR14N engines. These were in production and readily available, and could easily be bolted on the wing, which consequently needed to be strengthened. A cabin for a flight engineer was added in each wing between the inboard and centre engines, although the pilot could override each engineer’s decision on engine and propeller control. A brand-new permanent landing gear was bolted on to the side of each fuselage, and gave the resulting Me 323 superb rough-field performance. Compared to the Me 321, the Me 323 had a much-reduced payload of between 10 - 12 tonnes, which was the price that had to be paid for an aircraft that could operate autonomously. Even with the engines, rocket assisted take off packs were still frequently used. JATO is an acronym for Jet Assisted Take Off. ...
Features The Messerschmitt Me-323 was ununusal and revolutionary in several ways: - it was developed from a glider, the Me-321 transport glider
- it was among the largest of aircraft to fly in WWII
- it loaded through 11-foot high doors in the front of the fuselage
- it was powered wholly by French engines
- it could use Jet Assisted Take Off (JATO).
The aircraft was designed with massive, semi-cantilever, high-mounted wings in order to lift the heavy weights desired. As the aircraft technology was not yet sufficiently advanced for this type of wing, they had to be braced from the fuselage out to the middle of the wing. To reduce weight and to save on aluminum much of the wing was made of plywood and fabric. The fuselage was of composite metal-wood-fabric with heavy bracing in the floor to hold the weight. In order to get the powered version of the glider airborne it was equipped with six Gnome-Rhone engines. The French engines were chosen as their design was complete and they could be built in occupied France without interfering with German engine production. The landing gear were a set of 10 semi-recessed wheels designed to flex like caterpillar treads for landing on rough terrain and to distribute the weight over a large area. In all, it bore a remarkable resemblance to the heavy-airlift aircraft of today, indeed, it was the forerunner of this type of transport aircraft. The cargo hold was 36 feet long, 10 feet wide and 11 feet high. The typical loads it carried were: two 4-ton trucks, or 8,700 loaves of bread, or an 88 mm Flak gun, its equipment, ammunition and crew, or 52 drums of fuel (45 gal/252 L), or 130 men, or 60 stretchers. It was, for its time, a remarkable aircraft. The Me-323 transport had a crew of five consisting of two pilots, two flight engineers and a radio operator. Two additional gunners could be carried as well. The pilot's area was in front of the leading edge of the wing at the top of the cargo area and was armoured. It was powered by six Gnome-Rhone 14N 48/49 14 cylinder radial, air-cooled engines each rated at 990 hp. Four rockets could be mounted on each wing outside of the last engine to assist with take-offs. The left and right side engines had to be counter-rotating to avoid the severe torque that would be generated by six engines rotating in the same direction. It had a maximum speed of only 136 mph (218 km/h) at sea level and speed dropped with altitude. Range is not known, but it was used to quickly build up troops in North Africa flying from Italy. It was armed with five 13 mm machine guns firing from a dorsal position behind the wings and from the fusilage. They were manned by the extra gunners, radio operator and engineers. To make the Me 323 fit for cheap mass production, it had been designed with a fabric-covered steel tube framing instead of a conventional light-alloy monocoque structure. Initially, the Me 323 was going to be fitted with four engines, but prototype flight testing showed that six engines were necessary to achieve the desired load-carrying capability. The French Gnôme-Rhône engines used had been designed by Gabriel Voisin. The old steel cable of a colliery winding tower Steel is an alloy whose major component is iron, with carbon content between 0. ...
Monocoque (French for single shell) is a construction technique that uses the external skin of an object to support some or most of the load on the structure. ...
Henry Farman, left, and Gabriel Voisin. ...
Operational Record Capable of carrying 100 combat-equipped troops or a similar freight load of about 15 tons, the Me 323 was used in 1943 to ferry supplies and reserve troops from Italy and Sicily to the German Afrika Korps in Tunis and the area of North Africa. However, from Ultra intelligence, the transport formations' flight schedules were known to the Allies who used this information to send fighter squadron to ambush the aerial convoys and shoot down the transports. Year 1943 (MCMXLIII) was a common year starting on Friday (the link is to a full 1943 calendar). ...
Sicily (Sicilia in Italian, Latin, Sicilian and Spanish, Σικελία in Greek, Sqallija Maltese) is an autonomous region of Italy and the largest island in the Mediterranean Sea, with an area of 25,700 km² and 5 million inhabitants. ...
A world map showing the continent of Africa. ...
Ultra (sometimes capitalized ULTRA) was the name used by the British for intelligence resulting from decryption of German communications in World War II. The term eventually became the standard designation in both Britain and the United States for all intelligence from high-level cryptanalytic sources. ...
Look up ally in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
For example, on 22 April 1943 near Cape Bon, several squadrons of Spitfires and P-40 Kittyhawks attacked a unit of 14 petrol-carrying Me 323s and their fighter escorts. All 14 were shot down with the loss of about 120 crew and 700 drums of fuel. April 22 is the 112th day of the year in the Gregorian calendar (113th in leap years). ...
The Supermarine Spitfire was an iconic British single-seat fighter used primarily by the RAF and many Allied countries through the Second World War and into the 1950s. ...
The Curtiss P-40 was an American fighter aircraft which first flew in 1938 and played a vital role in the crucial middle stages of World War II. Developed from the pre-war radial-engined P-36 Hawk, the P-40 became known as the Tomahawk, the Kittyhawk, and finally...
Just under 200 Me 323's were built before production ceased in April 1944. There were several production versions, beginning with the D-1. Later D- and E- versions differed in the choice of power plant and in defensive armament, with improvements in structural strength, total cargo load and fuel capacity also being implemented. Nonetheless, the Me 323 remained significantly underpowered. There was a proposal to install six BMW 801 radials, but this never came to pass. The Me 323 was also a short-range aircraft, with a typical range (loaded) of 1,000 - 1,200 km. Despite this, the limited numbers of Me 323's in service were an invaluable asset to the Germans, and saw intensive use. The Me 323 was something of a 'sitting duck', being so slow and large an aircraft. In the final weeks of the North African campaign in April/May 1943, 43 Gigants were lost, along with much greater numbers of Ju 52's. In terms of aircraft design, the Me 323 was actually very resilient, and could absorb a huge amount of enemy fire - the Afrika Korps' nickname of Leukoplastbomber (Elastoplast Bomber) was somewhat unfair. However, no transport aircraft can ever be expected to survive without air superiority or at least, comprehensive local air cover, and it is believed that no Me 323's survived in service beyond the summer of 1944.
Surviving Relics No complete aircraft survive, but the Luftwaffen Museum der Bundeswehr at Berlin-Gatow has a Me 323 main wing spar in its collection. Berlin-Gatow, a district of south-western Berlin is located west of the Havelsee lake and has forested areas within its boundaries. ...
| Related content | | Related development | Me 321 During the preparation for a possible invasion of Britain during World War II (called Operation Sealion), the Oberkommando des Heeres (OKH) required a cargo glider that would carry about 130 equipped soldiers because it was not possible to ship all the important weapons and goods by naval vessels. ...
| | Similar aircraft | Ju 322 | | Designation series | He 319 - Me 321 - Ju 322 - Me 323 - Me 328 - Me 329 - FA 330 During the preparation for a possible invasion of Britain during World War II (called Operation Sealion), the Oberkommando des Heeres (OKH) required a cargo glider that would carry about 130 equipped soldiers because it was not possible to ship all the important weapons and goods by naval vessels. ...
The Junkers Ju 322 or âMammutâ was a proposed heavy transport glider, resembling a giant flying wing, for use by the Luftwaffe in World War II, only two prototypes were ever built. ...
The Messerschmitt Me 328 was originally designed as a parasite fighter to protect Luftwaffe bomber formations during World War II. During its protracted development, a wide variety of other roles were suggested for it. ...
The Messerschmitt Me 329 was an experimental heavy fighter and attack aircraft developed by Messerschmitt towards the end of World War II. It was a competitor and possible successor to the Me 410. ...
| | 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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