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Britain was willing to spend a large portion of their wartime economy on heavy bombers. Germany wasn't. That's why Britain had the Lancaster but Germany did not have the He-277.what Germany had at their own fingertips too, if only the hierarchy had seen it.
What was the primary difference between the He177 and He274?
Was the He277 a derivative of the He177? He274? Both?
DB605 and Jumo211 liquid cooled V12s were the only aircraft engines Germany was not short of. If the He-177 / He-277 is to be powered by 4 engines they must be one of these two types.
The Ta-152 entered mass production during 1945. It's rather pointless for Germany to begin manufacturing a heavy bomber at that late date. A bomber that enters mass production during 1942 would be an entirely different story even if powered by smaller 1,340 hp Jumo 211 engines.If that rationale were true davebender, then 1,805 Focke Wulf Ta -152 fighters would never have been built with Jumo 213E engines either.
The German Navy needed something for a long range patrol bomber. Historically they used a combination of Fw-200s, Ju-290s and He-177s plus some medium range Do-217s. It would probably be less expensive and more effective for the navy to mass produce a single model optimized specifically for their requirements.
1930s Germany had no "will" for a protracted war period. That didn't change until the USA entered the conflict during December 1941. By then it was too late for Germany to establish the industrial and training base necessary for a large force of heavy bombers. From 1941 onward most German war production was required just to maintain 200 or so Heer divisions in combat, along with their supporting Luftwaffe fighter and CAS units.German high command had no 'will' for a protracted strategic bombing campaign