Dear Fellow WW II Av-Fans:
The PIPE Here, with my very FIRST post at WW2aircraft.net...!!!
For a long, LONG time, I've been fascinated by what I started out calling "Stuck-Ugly" (it got "stuck" with an "ugly" appearance), and then came up with a somewhat more appropriate sobriquet...which I believe im Deutsch translates as "Grauerlicher-Greif"...or GRUESOME GRIFFIN...
...none other than the "welded-engine" bomber, the Heinkel He 177, WAS the worst aircraft of WW 2 !
Like "acesman" at http://www.ww2aircraft.net/forum/aviation/worst-aircraft-ww2-continued-626-8.html#post49516 , "V-1710" at http://www.ww2aircraft.net/forum/aviation/worst-aircraft-ww2-continued-626-24.html#post117412 , and maybe "DerAdlerIstGelandet" at http://www.ww2aircraft.net/forum/aviation/worst-aircraft-ww2-continued-626-24.html#post117578 have more-or-less said already...
...that Gruesome Griffin was just about the worst aircraft in service during the war...from its fire-prone, "welded-together" DB 606 and 610 engines (as Fat Hermann [Goering] derisively put it on at least two occasions), all-too-light elevator controls (as verified by good ol' Eric Brown of the British Royal Navy, one of the greatest test pilots of all time)...an almost TOTAL lack of servicability due to lack of support from not only Heinkel, but the Luftwaffe's mechanic training program, lack of trained pilots, etc, etc...and add to that the oft-noted diving attack requirement from the RLM, which Ernst Heinkel disagreed with from the beginning, and which WAS finally rescinded by Goering in September 1942...that whole He 177 program for a "heavy bomber", the ONLY one that the Luftwaffe was to ever have, was always a disaster in continuous "happening", AND waiting to happen, ALL at the same time...!!!
Just about the single BEST book I've YET read about the Gruesome Griffin, her high-altitude stablemate the He 274, the never-built, PAPER ONLY design known as the He 277, and the...FOR REAL..."most-built" (but NOT by much) truly "four engined" version of the whole Griffin program, the He 177B (for which FOUR prototypes were built, and three of those FLEW in test flights...NO KIDDING) is the book by Manfred Griehl and Joachim Dressel on the He 177 and her "relatives"...!!!
The Griehl/Dressel book totally SHOOTS DOWN the "cover story" urban legend of the He 277 actually being built (those WERE really He 177Bs!!!) and provides the evidence for this...from dates when the "He 277" design's work would have been "approved", versus actual Heinkel documents shown in the book that read "He 177B-5" dated as late as February 1944...and the three-view G.A. drawing in the Griehl-Dressel book of the "He 177B-5" is basically a DEAD RINGER for the actually built, AND flown, He 177 V101 "truly" four engined prototype example.
The entries at Wikipedia for both the 177 AND 277 (respective links there at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/He_177 AND http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heinkel_He_277 ) reflect the updated knowledge found (possibly for the very first time) in the Griehl-Dressel volume, which has a newer publishing year (1998 ) than ANY other book on the He 177 "family" of aircraft, and these two authors HAVE published a goodly number of other WW II German aircraft book titles...so my feeling is that what we were all reading, about the "He 177B cover designation" for the He 277 is almost entirely an "urban legend", and from the text and photos in the book (especially of the factory drawings' general arrangements) that a REAL quartet of He 177B prototypes WERE built, with three of them flying...but the US 15th Air Force got to them before Herr Heinkel could do anything more about it, destroying the third and fourth He 177B prototypes in Vienna-area bombing in very early 1944, with the only photographic image remaining of ANY of the four engined He 177s bieng that nose-on, "lonely" looking one of the He 177 V101, sitting on a foggy German airfield all by itself.
Thanks to the "Wings of the Luftwaffe" book by Eric Brown, I found out about the Gruesome One's flying habits...and the Griehl/Dressel book FINALLY pulling the wool from in front of our eyes concerning the He 177B being a real plane (the He 277 REMAINED a paper-ONLY entity!)...I found out a lot more, than I've ever known before on the Gruesome One, and on an "urban legend" that grew up in many, MANY WW II aviation history books surrounding the entire effort to TRY getting a real four engined heavy bomber for the Luftwaffe, and NOT something with "welded-together" engines...!
Yours Sincerely,
The PIPE!
The PIPE Here, with my very FIRST post at WW2aircraft.net...!!!
For a long, LONG time, I've been fascinated by what I started out calling "Stuck-Ugly" (it got "stuck" with an "ugly" appearance), and then came up with a somewhat more appropriate sobriquet...which I believe im Deutsch translates as "Grauerlicher-Greif"...or GRUESOME GRIFFIN...
...none other than the "welded-engine" bomber, the Heinkel He 177, WAS the worst aircraft of WW 2 !
Like "acesman" at http://www.ww2aircraft.net/forum/aviation/worst-aircraft-ww2-continued-626-8.html#post49516 , "V-1710" at http://www.ww2aircraft.net/forum/aviation/worst-aircraft-ww2-continued-626-24.html#post117412 , and maybe "DerAdlerIstGelandet" at http://www.ww2aircraft.net/forum/aviation/worst-aircraft-ww2-continued-626-24.html#post117578 have more-or-less said already...
...that Gruesome Griffin was just about the worst aircraft in service during the war...from its fire-prone, "welded-together" DB 606 and 610 engines (as Fat Hermann [Goering] derisively put it on at least two occasions), all-too-light elevator controls (as verified by good ol' Eric Brown of the British Royal Navy, one of the greatest test pilots of all time)...an almost TOTAL lack of servicability due to lack of support from not only Heinkel, but the Luftwaffe's mechanic training program, lack of trained pilots, etc, etc...and add to that the oft-noted diving attack requirement from the RLM, which Ernst Heinkel disagreed with from the beginning, and which WAS finally rescinded by Goering in September 1942...that whole He 177 program for a "heavy bomber", the ONLY one that the Luftwaffe was to ever have, was always a disaster in continuous "happening", AND waiting to happen, ALL at the same time...!!!
Just about the single BEST book I've YET read about the Gruesome Griffin, her high-altitude stablemate the He 274, the never-built, PAPER ONLY design known as the He 277, and the...FOR REAL..."most-built" (but NOT by much) truly "four engined" version of the whole Griffin program, the He 177B (for which FOUR prototypes were built, and three of those FLEW in test flights...NO KIDDING) is the book by Manfred Griehl and Joachim Dressel on the He 177 and her "relatives"...!!!
The Griehl/Dressel book totally SHOOTS DOWN the "cover story" urban legend of the He 277 actually being built (those WERE really He 177Bs!!!) and provides the evidence for this...from dates when the "He 277" design's work would have been "approved", versus actual Heinkel documents shown in the book that read "He 177B-5" dated as late as February 1944...and the three-view G.A. drawing in the Griehl-Dressel book of the "He 177B-5" is basically a DEAD RINGER for the actually built, AND flown, He 177 V101 "truly" four engined prototype example.
The entries at Wikipedia for both the 177 AND 277 (respective links there at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/He_177 AND http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heinkel_He_277 ) reflect the updated knowledge found (possibly for the very first time) in the Griehl-Dressel volume, which has a newer publishing year (1998 ) than ANY other book on the He 177 "family" of aircraft, and these two authors HAVE published a goodly number of other WW II German aircraft book titles...so my feeling is that what we were all reading, about the "He 177B cover designation" for the He 277 is almost entirely an "urban legend", and from the text and photos in the book (especially of the factory drawings' general arrangements) that a REAL quartet of He 177B prototypes WERE built, with three of them flying...but the US 15th Air Force got to them before Herr Heinkel could do anything more about it, destroying the third and fourth He 177B prototypes in Vienna-area bombing in very early 1944, with the only photographic image remaining of ANY of the four engined He 177s bieng that nose-on, "lonely" looking one of the He 177 V101, sitting on a foggy German airfield all by itself.
Thanks to the "Wings of the Luftwaffe" book by Eric Brown, I found out about the Gruesome One's flying habits...and the Griehl/Dressel book FINALLY pulling the wool from in front of our eyes concerning the He 177B being a real plane (the He 277 REMAINED a paper-ONLY entity!)...I found out a lot more, than I've ever known before on the Gruesome One, and on an "urban legend" that grew up in many, MANY WW II aviation history books surrounding the entire effort to TRY getting a real four engined heavy bomber for the Luftwaffe, and NOT something with "welded-together" engines...!
Yours Sincerely,
The PIPE!
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