DO-335 VS TA-152

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The Do 335 was nowhere near ready in 1945 anyway. But in theory it would have been a top bomber destroyer. But new allied fighters matched its much vaunted speed anyway and then it was a turkey in a dog fight.
 
The Do 335 was nowhere near ready in 1945 anyway. But in theory it would have been a top bomber destroyer. But new allied fighters matched its much vaunted speed anyway and then it was a turkey in a dog fight.

That is why I think it would have been better for fast reconnaissance...
 
In my opinion the 335 was the top achievement of the twin engined PROP 'heavy fighter' concept.
Her problem was that the new jest age made her already obsolete, like all the last generation prop planes.

It had a speed advantage on the contemporary prop fighters, MAYBE would have kept this advantage with further development (if the new prop Allied fighter were faster than the 1945 models, the 335 had her whole potential to develop too) but could have never kept the pace with the jets.

Same for the Ta152, with the difference that it was the last refinement of an existing project rather than the first of a new concept: had the war continued, most likely the 152 could have been more effective than the 335 in the 6-12 months before the jets take over because it was already 'debugged' and combat ready.
By the time the 335 could be 100% combat ready, Meteor and P80 would have been available and the Germans (of course) would have had jet options far superior than te 335.
 
In my opinion the 335 was the top achievement of the twin engined PROP 'heavy fighter' concept.
Her problem was that the new jest age made her already obsolete, like all the last generation prop planes.

It had a speed advantage on the contemporary prop fighters, MAYBE would have kept this advantage with further development (if the new prop Allied fighter were faster than the 1945 models, the 335 had her whole potential to develop too) but could have never kept the pace with the jets.

Same for the Ta152, with the difference that it was the last refinement of an existing project rather than the first of a new concept: had the war continued, most likely the 152 could have been more effective than the 335 in the 6-12 months before the jets take over because it was already 'debugged' and combat ready.
By the time the 335 could be 100% combat ready, Meteor and P80 would have been available and the Germans (of course) would have had jet options far superior than te 335.

IMHO - when you compare performance with respect to ceiling, top speed, dive, turn, climb and acceleration with the top FIGHTER designs in early 1945.. you are looking at the Tempests, the Fw190D's, the Ta152s, the Spits, the La7s, 51H, P-47N, P38L etc- they were ALL bumping limitations to a.) aerodynamics, b.) basic design parameters such as wing loading, weights, wing design, etc and c.) engine performance at a Thrust to Weight and high altitutde capabilities.

While I woul have a hard time arguing against the Ta152 as the 'best' in many categories - in my opinion, in the hands of excellent fighter pilots with experience and skill fighting each other there would not be that much to choose from given that the skill of the pilots kept the engagement out of the arena of least performance.. in other words don't fight an Fw190A7 with a 51D on the deck - or attempt to engage a Ta152 at 36,000 feet with a Tempest.

The 47J/N, the 51H and future M, the Ta152, the Fw190D-13, the F-8F, the Spits were all bumping limitations due to critical Mach, prop performance, engine aspiration etc. so none was going to achieve a great performance leap over the others from mid 1945 forward...
 
In my opinion the 335 was the top achievement of the twin engined PROP 'heavy fighter' concept.
Her problem was that the new jest age made her already obsolete, like all the last generation prop planes.

It had a speed advantage on the contemporary prop fighters, MAYBE would have kept this advantage with further development (if the new prop Allied fighter were faster than the 1945 models, the 335 had her whole potential to develop too) but could have never kept the pace with the jets.

Same for the Ta152, with the difference that it was the last refinement of an existing project rather than the first of a new concept: had the war continued, most likely the 152 could have been more effective than the 335 in the 6-12 months before the jets take over because it was already 'debugged' and combat ready.
By the time the 335 could be 100% combat ready, Meteor and P80 would have been available and the Germans (of course) would have had jet options far superior than te 335.

You said it very well . . . however, in the last paragraph, you mentioned something I hadn't really ever thought about before: even assuming the War had continued another year or two, for all it's technical acheivements and performance potential, the -335 would have easily fallen prey to any of the jets. It would have been prey to even the "slowest" jets ("slow" being relative); the Meteor, which was the slowest of the first-generation jets, could have easily overtaken a Pfeil. So the -335 was basically obsolete before it even had a chance to become operational.
 
Al of the above shows that the Do-335, was an ingenious answer to the problems of a twin-engined fighter - but too late. It needed to be in Squadron service in '43 when it's range and firepower would have had a dramatic effect of Allied bomber formations.
Perhaps Dornier should have been charged with producing a Germanised Fokker D.XXIII, which could have evolved, and been in time!?
 
Eric Brown flew Do 335s and he said they were plagued with teething faults.

Could have been fixed with time but they had no time.

Could have been a devastating nightfighter which is probably where it was going.

One of the clever German designs that did absolutely zip.
 
Hans Werner Lerche, test pilot of the Do-335, loved the a/c and mentions its excellent handling at all speeds, plus its great performance.

However that having been said, the Do-335 IMO while a great piston engined a/c, was unnecessary seeing that the LW already possessed a fighter with better capabilities. The Me-262 was allot faster than the Do-335 and carried the best armament for shooting down bombers.

As for the topic, well the Ta-152H-1 is the best by far.
 
the Do 335 was useless oversized piece of garbage, Clostermann never met one and the only time it flew was in the testing stage from one field to another or a flyby and turn around that is fact. the 262 and the tech advances in the jet industry made the Do 335 only a test piece for push, pull technology one reason why any further development was just dropped

I have a late war pic of 3-4 Do's just sitting on a field derilict and busted open by the Germans so they would not be captured totally intact

the Do and the Ta cannot even be fairly compared
 
Hi Erich,

>the Do and the Ta cannot even be fairly compared

For a fair comparison of the airframes, you'd have to eliminate the engine from the equation.

Equipped with the Jumo 213E installed in the Focke-Wulf Ta 152H, which was considerably more powerful than the DB 603A which drove the early Dornier Do 335, the type could have achieved top speeds of 800 km/h or better.

The Do 335 might not have made a great dogfighter, but it sure was fast.

Regards,

Henning (HoHun)
 
Still it wasn't fast enough. The Me-262 was allot faster, lighter and carried a more powerful armament.

The Do-335 is an impressive piston engined a/c, no doubt, but another a/c [Me262] already filled out its intended role far more efficiently than the Do-335 could ever hope to do.

The future was coming with the Me-262.

As for comparing the Do-335 with the Ta-152H, well they were two different types of aircraft intended for two different roles. However they both resembled the pinnacle of piston engined aircraft design.
 
The Do-335 suffered from cooling problems with the rear engine when running at high powers. The engine would overheat so the rear exhaust flaps had to be opened, which would cause the aircraft to porpoise at high speed. The problems would most likely have been solved with time, but time wasn't available. The Me-262 was probably better for the application anyway.

Compared to the similar sized d.H. Hornet, the Do-335 arrangement doesn't seem to offer a great many advantages for the problems it caused.
 
In order to assess the effectiveness of these two aircraft, we need to examine their capability against allied aircraft, not including jets, they would have met in the summer of 1945, the P-51H, and P-47M, and let's throw in the F4U-4 for fun. Aircraft are listed from best to worst.

Wing Loading, Gross (lbs/wing area)
F4U-4 39.6
P-51H 40.4
Ta-152H 41.7
P-47M 43.1
Do-335 51.0

Power Loading,Gross-SL (wt/hp)
P-51H 4.3
F4U-4 5.06
P-47M 5.1
Ta-152H 5.1
Do-335 5.8

Power Loading-25k
P-47M 4.74
P-51H 5.94
F4U-4 6.9
Ta-152H 7.48
Do-335 unk

Power loading-30k
P-47M 4.74
P-51H 7.11
F4U-4 7.3
Ta-152H 7.8
Do-335 ukn

Airspeed-SL (mph)
P-51H 410 mph
F4U-4 374
Ta-152H 370
P-47M 365
Do-335 ukn

Airspeed 25k
Do-335 474 (at 21k)
P-51H 466
P-47M 453
Ta -152 449
F4U-4 448

Airspeed 30k
P-47M 467
Ta-152H 463
P-51H 448
F4U-4 442
Do-335 unk

Rate of climb, SL (ft/min)
P-51H 4600
P-47M 4000
F4U-4 3600 (at mil rated power, not WEP)
Ta-152H 3445 (only data I've seen)
Do-335 2165

Rate of climb, 25k
Ta-152 unk, 2854 at 29k
P-47M 3000
F4U-4 2700 at mil power, not WEP
P-51H 2350
Do-335 unk

Ceiling (ft.)
Ta-152H 49540
P-41H 41600
F4U-4 41600
P-47M 41000
Do-335 37400

Of course, this doesn't show all the comparison and some I don't have, especially with the Do-335 and its DB-603E engine. But we can come up with some trends. One, the Do-335 is very heavy, with a loaded weight of 21,120 lbs (about the weight of the A-20 attack bomber) and this shows up in its poor power loading and wing loading. This also appears to impact its rate of climb and time to climb (I only had time-to-climb for the V-1 version which has a slightly less powerful engine. Time to climb to 26k was 14.5 min compared to the 7 min for the P-51H). Also, its ceiling was the lowest of the bunch. It is very fast at 21k ft make 474 mph, but not far off from the P-51H which most likely has quite a superior climb and power loading. This airspeed difference (less than 10 mph) is not enough to make an overpowering aircraft, as the speed advantage of the Me-262 did.

The power curve for the P-47M is amazing with basically a level 2800 hp from10k to 33k+, which shows up on its impressive power loading.

Below 25k ft., both the P-51H and F4U-4 would be formidable opposition to both the Do-335 and Ta-152H. The P-47M really comes into its own from 25k to about 33k due to its large power loading advantage. At around 30k rate of climb drops off.

Ta-152H would pretty well contest the airspace above 25k and dominate above 30k.

There was no need for the Do-335. It did not add enough performance to warrant development. Time, money and energy would have been better spent on the Ta-152H, or better yet all effort should have been on building the Me-262 as a fighter in '44. Now that would have made a difference.
 
Davparlr,

As has often been stated the 3,444 ft/min climb rate was achieved when running at Steig u. Kampfleistung. At SonderNotleistung the Ta-152H's climb rate is over 5,000 ft/min atleast, and with the Jumo 213 EB which was ready by wars end this would've increased even further.

The top SL speed varied from 585 - 597 km/h, while top speed at alt was 760+ km/h.

Furthermore the wingloading figures are as we both know useless really, esp. considering the many differences in wing airfoil designs between these aircraft.

The Ta-152H benefitted from using a very high lift airfoil (NACA 23000 series) whilst it also featured a very high AR wing design, increasing lift even further whilst significantly decreasing drag, esp. in maneuvers.

The Do-335 featured the same NACA 23000 airfoil, however it was a VERY thick airfoil (Root: 23018 Tip: 23012), which means a higher amount of lift, however the AR of the wing wasn't very high, increasing drag in maneuvers.

Do-335
Wing span: 13.8 m
Wing area: 38.5 m^2
Wing AR: 4.94
Empty weight: 7,260 kg
Loaded weight: 8,590 kg
Max loaded weight: 9,600 kg
 
Hi Davparlr,

>Airspeed 25k
>Do-335 474 (at 21k)
>P-51H 466
>P-47M 453
>Ta -152 449
>F4U-4 448

Good approach to use speeds at identical altitude!

That the Do 335 reaches its top speed below 25000 ft, yet is the fastest in the group shows its main strength: Straight-line speed. With the engine of the Ta 152H, it could - according to my peronsal estimate - probably have reached 500 mph at about 25000 ft, and about the same speed at 36000 ft. (Being slower in between.)

Note that the advantage of the Do 335 over the Ta 152H is greater at 25000 ft than at 36000 ft due to the small wing of the Do 335. It would have benefitted from a larger wing, and I seem to remember reading about plans to implement one.

>There was no need for the Do-335. It did not add enough performance to warrant development.

The Do 335's primary strength was straight-line speed, and it could have exceeded the Allied propeller fighters' performance by a fair margin in that regard. It would not have matched their climb or turn rate. The Do 335 took second place to the jet fighter, but if jet technology had met an unexpected obstacle, the Do 335 would still have meant a technological advantage for the Luftwaffe, albeit of reduced magnitude.

One thing to keep in mind is that early jet engines were not that powerful at high altitude, and accordinlgy, a large-wing Do 335 variant might have been a better interceptor for high-flying B-29 bombers than a Me 262.

Just to show the factors that might have played a role in the development of the Do 335 - it might not have been needed in the "scenario" that unfolded historically, but if history had taken a slightly different road than the one we're familiar with, the Do 335 might have turned out to be a very useful development after all.

Regards,

Henning (HoHun)
 
Hohun,

You're right about a larger/longer wing being planned for the Do-335, the AR being increased, and with the Jumo 213 EB this would've amde for a very potent high alt bomber interceptor. Armed with two Mk-103's it would've layed waste to the bombers from ranges where they had no hope of firing back.

You can see the planned development on this drawing:
Do335.Cutaway.jpg
 
Hi Davparlr,

>Airspeed 25k
>Do-335 474 (at 21k)
>P-51H 466
>P-47M 453
>Ta -152 449
>F4U-4 448

Good approach to use speeds at identical altitude!

That the Do 335 reaches its top speed below 25000 ft, yet is the fastest in the group shows its main strength: Straight-line speed. With the engine of the Ta 152H, it could - according to my peronsal estimate - probably have reached 500 mph at about 25000 ft, and about the same speed at 36000 ft. (Being slower in between.)

I am not sure as I do not have any data on the DB 603E and its supercharger implementation. The low ceiling, however, tends to imply that the aircraft is more tuned to lower altitude performance (25k and below). As for 500 mph, I think that the piston powered aircraft was pretty well reaching its perfomance limit in speed and several aircraft claimed to have flown 500 mph, all of which I am skeptical of, if nothing more than lack of proper instrumentation. The XP-72, with 3000 hp at 25k, was claimed have achieved 500 mph but apparently the pilot denied it. I believe him. It apparently did go 480-490 mph, which I have some skepticism about, but it did have 3000 hp and the P-47 airframe was proven to be fast. By the time the Do-335 began flying, the XP-72 had been cancelled due to changing need for a escort fighter and not an interceptor, and most likely the promised performance of the upcoming jets. It is interesting to note that the engine in the XP-72, while at the time the most powerful piston engine in WWII, eventually obtained over 4000 hp in later years.

The Do 335's primary strength was straight-line speed, and it could have exceeded the Allied propeller fighters' performance by a fair margin in that regard. It would not have matched their climb or turn rate. The Do 335 took second place to the jet fighter, but if jet technology had met an unexpected obstacle, the Do 335 would still have meant a technological advantage for the Luftwaffe, albeit of reduced magnitude.

True, I did not think of this.
 
Hi Davparlr,

>I am not sure as I do not have any data on the DB 603E and its supercharger implementation. The low ceiling, however, tends to imply that the aircraft is more tuned to lower altitude performance (25k and below).

The aerodynamical advantage of the Do 335 is evident from the height differential for roughly equal top speed since at low altitude, it is handicapped by the greater drag of the denser air. If you look at speed over altitude diagrams of WW2 fighters, speed invariably increases with altitude until the full through height of the engine is reached. (Since many engines had two supercharger speeds, they had two full-throttle heights, giving the familiar "sawtooth" look of so many curves.)

In short, if you provide the Do 335 with an engine of equal power but greater full throttle height that matches those of the fighters it's compared against, it will be faster than it was at 21000 ft, where it was as fast in terms of true airspeed as the others at 25000 ft.

(The low ceiling you observed is caused not only by the engine characteristics, but also by the relatively small wing.)

>As for 500 mph, I think that the piston powered aircraft was pretty well reaching its perfomance limit in speed and several aircraft claimed to have flown 500 mph, all of which I am skeptical of, if nothing more than lack of proper instrumentation.

I absolutely agree on the value of caution. In fact, I'd have been disappointed if the 500 mph figure I suggested would not have been met with skepticism :)

All I can say is that I have calculated it carefully, and don't mean it to be the final word on the type anyway. I just thought quoting an actual figure I personally consider realistic would be better than simply writing "It would have been very, very fast" ;)

>By the time the Do-335 began flying, the XP-72 had been cancelled due to changing need for a escort fighter and not an interceptor, and most likely the promised performance of the upcoming jets.

Quite right - in fact, there was some disappointment among Luftwaffe officers assigned to the secret Do 335 project when they learned it was not going to be a jet aircraft. The technological landslide is also evident from some later Do 335 spin-off paper projects that showed the rear engine being replaced by a turbojet, a configuration which resembles the later (and actually built) Ryan Fireball fighter.

Regards,

Henning (HoHun)
 

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