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Installation of better engines does not solve the problem the He-111 had - the external carriage of bigger bombs (above 500 kg). The He-111 with, say, BMW 801s aboard will have to cut the range and/or bombs tonnage carried - the Do-217 can do anything similar already, and it can carry big bombs internally. Neither of those has the capability to have a bigger firepower than He 177 was capable to carry in it's tail.
Hmm - I've suggested the escort fighters. The He 177 cruised as fast as the He 111 was doing flat out, without bombs and 1/2 fuel.
The wing was redesigned time and time again. It was first redesigned to accommodate extra fuel tanks after the evaporative cooling system was abandoned in order to compensate for the loss of range that would have been incurred due to the drag of the radiators. Then it was redesigned because of the infamous dive bombing requirement. That in turn led to a complete redesign of the undercarriage to accommodate the extra weight....and so it went on until virtually the end of the war.
It was a lame duck and the RLM should have abandoned it (and any number of other projects) to concentrate on projects that might actually work and be useful.
Cheers
Steve
Hmm - what other design was able to offer the capability to hit the factories Soviets relocated, along with capability to be a competent long range marine patrol bomber? The dive bombing requirement need to be cancelled ASAP.
How was it any more lame than the Manchester before the Lancaster redesign?
How was it any more lame than the Manchester before the Lancaster redesign?
My understanding is that the crews certainly considered the Manchester to be a 'Dog'. That said the rest of the posting I totally agree with
....
The Manchester was not in any sense a dog of an aircraft. Once modified to fly with four Merlins rather than two Vultures it easily became the Lancaster, the problems left with the engines. Unfortunately the same cannot be said of the He 177.
The Lancaster was based on a good aeroplane in the Manchester, it's why the conversion was so easy. Putting four engines on the He 177 was just polishing a turd. They polished long and hard for years but never got a meaningfully operational aircraft out of it.
Cheers
Steve
How much damage was inflicted on Germany's enemies by He 177s?
The He 177 would have been a better aircraft than the Manchester, but the point is that the British fixed the Manchester and produced the Lancaster.
The Manchester/Lancaster was the mainstay of Bomber Command from mid war onwards. Well over 7,000 were built and they flew a total of 156,192 of Bomber Command's 389,809 sorties for the entire war, including before the type entered service.
I'd love to see some comparable statistics for the wonderful He 177.
I don't know how you quantify what makes a good aeroplane but the 'clunker' (in Col. Watson's words) that was the He 177 never was one. Whether it ever could have been is a moot point because the Germans couldn't make it work properly in significant numbers, despite all that polishing.
The only thing I'd question there is the need for four cannons. Such armament wasn't required until those pesky American bombers started arriving in numbers