KrazyKraut
Banned
- 337
- Apr 21, 2008
I was referring to th DH108. I probably should've made that more clear.The DH 106 was designed in 1944 and the swept tailless layout (which they obviously chose not to go with ultimately) was one of three being considered, long before the RAE had the chance to fly the 163. Indeed the De Havilland project's existence heightened the RAE's interest in evaluating the Me 163 when one was captured as a chance to fly the layout early (for us). I am sure that once one was available they looked at the 163 very closely indeed, as you say.
It seems we were in a misunderstanding then. As the basis for this argument was airframe design I falsely concluded from your first post that you meant the Me 163 airframe to be underdeveloped. As far as propulsion goes, I agree. However, I doubt that the Walter engine could've ever made into something really safe. For the Me 163 that meant either deploy or scrap the project altogether. Incorporating a jet engine basically meant designing a new plane.The 163 was not a rush project like the Bachem Natter for example, Lippisch had been designing it for several years but its deployment was rushed. As he had been waiting for a rocket motor to be delivered from Walther since May 1942 there was even a piston engined version, the Me 334 schemed by Lippisch which was only shelved after the rocket powereed version had finally flown.
Yes the problems of the 163 were entirely the fault of its motor and fuel system, but it was a complete package, you could not have one without the other as all the schemes for a jet powered version of the 163 were still on the drawing board so yes, I do consider that it was rushed into service.