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Messerschmitt Me 410 Hornisse

The Messerschmitt Me 410 Hornisse (Hornet) is a German heavy fighter and Schnellbomber, or "Fast Bomber" in English, used by the Luftwaffe during World War II. Though an incremental improvement of the Me 210, it had a new wing plan, longer fuselage and engines of greater power. The changes were significant enough for the aircraft to be renamed the Me 410.

Me 410
Me 410 A-1/U2, RAF Museum Cosford, 1985
Role Heavy fighter, fighter-bomber
Manufacturer Messerschmitt
First flight 14 March 1942
Introduction 1943
Retired 1945
Primary users Luftwaffe
Hungarian Air Force
Produced May 1943-August 1944
Number built 1,189
Developed from Messerschmitt Me 210

Design and development edit

 
Basic side-by-side comparison of the Me 210 and Me 410 wing planforms

Development of the Me 210 had been under way since 1939 but the aircraft proved unstable and was never considered for full-scale production. Modifications to the layout produced the Me 210C and 210D, which proved somewhat superior. As studies progressed on the Me 210D, and with a separate parallel attempt to improve upon the 210 with the Messerschmitt Me 310 in the second half of 1943—which provided almost no aerodynamic improvement over the 210's risky handling qualities—it was instead decided to introduce a new model, the Me 410.

 
The RAF Museum's Me 410, with the doors of its nose bomb-bay open, 2016
 
The RAF Museum's Me 410 with the engines and the outer-wings removed, 2020

The major change between the Me 210 and 410 was the introduction of the larger (at 44.5 litres, 2,720 cu in displacement) and more powerful Daimler-Benz DB 603A engines. They each provided 1,750 metric horsepower (1,730 hp; 1,290 kW) compared to the 1,475 metric horsepower (1,455 hp; 1,085 kW) of the DB 605s used on the Me 210C[Note 1]. The extra power increased the Me 410's maximum speed to 625 kilometres per hour (388 mph), greatly improved rate of climb, service ceiling, and most notably the cruising speed which jumped to 579 km/h (360 mph).

The more powerful engines also improved payload capability to the point where the aircraft could lift a war-load greater than could fit into the bomb bay under the nose. Consequently, shackles were added under the wings for four 50-kilogram (110 lb) bombs. The changes added an extra 680 kg (1,500 lb) to the Me 210 design, but the extra engine power more than made up for the difference. As with the Me 210, the 410's rear gunner used the same pair of Ferngerichtete Drehringseitenlafette FDSL 131/1B turrets mounted on each side of the aircraft, each still armed with a 13 mm (.51 in) MG 131 machine gun, retaining the same pivoting handgun-style grip, trigger and gunsight to aim and fire the ordnance as the 210 did.[1]

The new version included a lengthened fuselage and new, automatic leading edge slats. Both features had been tested on Me 210s and were found to dramatically improve handling. The slats had originally been featured on the earliest Me 210 models, but had been removed on production models due to poor handling. When entering a steep turn, the slats had a tendency to open due to the high angle of attack, analogous to the opening of the slats during the landing approach. (This problem was first observed on the Bf 109V14 and V15 prototypes for the Bf 109E), which added to the problems keeping the aircraft flying smoothly. However, when the problems with the general lateral instability were addressed, this was no longer a real problem.

The wing panels of the earlier Me 210 had been designed with a planform geometry that placed the aerodynamic center further aback compared with the earlier Bf 110, giving the outer sections of the wing planform beyond each engine nacelle a slightly greater, 12.6° leading edge sweepback angle than the inner panels' 6.0° leading edge sweep angle. This resulted in unsuitable handling characteristics in flight for the original Me 210 design. The new Me 410 outer wing panels had their planform geometry revised to bring the aerodynamic center further forwards in comparison with the Me 210, thus making the leading edge sweepback of the outer panels identical to the inner wing panels with both having identical 5.5° sweepback angles, which improved handling.

Deliveries began in January 1943, two years late and continued until September 1944, by which point a total of 1,160 of all versions had been produced by Messerschmitt Augsburg and Dornier München. When it arrived, it was liked by its crews, even though its improved performance was not enough to protect it from the swarms of high performance Allied fighters they faced at this stage of the war.

Operational history edit

 
An Me 410A-1/U4 with a BK 5 cannon peels off during an attack on USAAF B-17s
 
Messerschmitt Me 410A-1/U2 (W. Nr. 420428, 9K+AM) flown by Obfw. Hermann Bolten of the 4./KG 51, shot down June 6th, 1944

The Me 410 night bomber proved to be an elusive target for the RAF night fighters. The first unit to operate over the UK was V./KG 2, which lost its first Me 410 on the night of 13 – 14 July 1943, when it was shot down by a de Havilland Mosquito of No. 85 Squadron RAF.

The Me 410 was also used as a bomber destroyer against the daylight bomber formations of the USAAF, upgraded with Umrüst-Bausätze factory conversion kits, all bearing a /U suffix, for the design—these suffixes could vary in meaning between subtypes. As one example, the earlier Me 410 A-1/U1 designation signified a camera-fitting in the under-nose ordnance bay for reconnaissance use (as the A-3 was meant to do from its start), while the Me 410 B-2/U1 designation signified a mount of a pair of the long barreled, 30 mm MK 103 cannon in the undernose ordnance bay. The /U2 suffix designated a fitment of two additional 20 mm MG 151/20 cannons in the under-nose ordnance bay instead—the A-1/U4 subtype fitted the massive, 540-kilogram (1,190 lb) Bordkanone series 50 mm (2 in) BK 5 cannon, loaded with 21 rounds in the same under-nose ordnance bay in place of either the /U1's cameras or MK 103s, or the /U2's added pair of MG 151/20 autocannon. For breaking up the bomber formations, many Me 410s also had four underwing tubular launchers, two per wing panel, firing converted 21 cm (8 in) Werfer-Granate 21 infantry barrage rockets. Two Geschwader, Zerstörergeschwader 26 and 76, were thus equipped with the Me 410 by late 1943.

They were moderately successful against unescorted bombers through 1943, with a considerable number of kills against USAAF day bomber formations being achieved. However, the Me 410 was no match in a dogfight with the lighter Allied single-engine fighters such as the North American P-51 Mustang and Supermarine Spitfire. In early 1944, the Me 410 formations encountered swarms of Allied fighters protecting the bomber streams, usually flying far ahead of the combat box formations as an air supremacy move in clearing the skies of any Luftwaffe opposition, resulting in the Me 410's previous successes against escorted bombers now often being offset by their losses. An example of this—as part of a campaign started two days earlier by the USAAF—was on 6 March 1944 during an attack on Berlin by 750 8th AF heavy bombers, when 16 Me 410s were shot down in return for eight B-17s and four P-51s (which were destroyed by Bf 109 and Fw 190 fighters escorting the Me 410s).[2][3] The following month on 11 April, with 8th AF raids hitting Sorau, Rostock and Oschersleben, II./ZG 26's Me 410s accounted for a rare clear success, initially bringing down 10 B-17s without any losses. During the course of the same raid, their second sortie was intercepted by P-51s that destroyed eight Me 410s and three Bf 110s. Sixteen crewmen were killed and three wounded.[4]

From mid-1944, despite being Hitler's favourite bomber destroyer, the Me 410 units were taken from Defence of the Reich duties and production was phased out in favour of heavily armed single-engine fighters as dedicated bomber destroyers, with the Me 410s remaining in service flying on reconnaissance duties only.[5] Some Me 410s were used with Junkers Ju 188s during the Battle of Normandy, for high-altitude night reconnaissance.

Variants edit

A-series aircraft were armed with two 7.92 mm (.312 in) MG 17 machine guns and two 20 mm MG 151/20 cannons in the nose and delivered as the Me 410 A-1 light bomber. The Me 410 A-2 heavy fighter was cancelled because the dual 30 mm (1.18 in) MK 103 cannon mount, also available for the later Me 410B-2 subtype as the Umrüst-Bausatz /U1 factory kit available by 1944, was not ready in time.
The Me 410A featured a bomb bay for carrying bombs. Though by fitting conversion kits, this could be used for other equipment. Initially, three Umrüst-Bausätze (factory conversion kits) were available: the U1 which contained cameras for photo-reconnaissance, the U2 with two 20 mm MG 151/20 cannon with 250 rounds-per-gun for the heavy fighter. And the U4 with a 50 mm (2 in) Bordkanone, BK-5 cannon with 22 rounds (21 rounds to load and 1 extra round in the breech). The purpose of this was to convert either an Me 410A or B-series aircraft into a bomber destroyer.
The BK 5 cannon - derived from the 50 mm (2 in) KwK 39 L/60 of the Panzer III tank - allowed Me 410s to shoot at their targets from over 914 m (1,000 yd), a distance far greater than the range of the bombers' defensive machine-guns. However, in practice frequent problems with jamming, the limited ammunition supply and with the extra 540-kilogram (1,190 lb) weight of the large-calibre gun under the nose made the other anti-bomber versions of Me 410, especially those with extra 20 mm MG 151/20s, much more useful.
The reconnaissance version Me 410 A-3 received a deeper fuselage for additional cameras and fuel. The Me 410 A-3 entered service in small numbers in early 1944 and equipped three long-range reconnaissance Aufklärungsstaffel squadrons, usually grouped larger, three or four-squadron Fernaufklärungsgruppen (one Gruppe on the Western Front and the other two on the Eastern Front).

The Me 410B-series was similar to the A-series but replaced the pair of 7.92 mm (.312 in) MG 17s with 13 mm (.51 in) MG 131 machine guns. The originally planned 1,900 hp (1,400 kW) DB 603G engine had been cancelled in early 1944, so all Me 410Bs used DB 603A or DB 603AA engines. The DB 603G would have increased the maximum speed to 630 kilometres per hour (390 mph) and cruising speed to 595 kilometres per hour (370 mph), although the weight increased once again. The versions were the same as with the A-series, the Me 410 B-1 and Me 410 B-3 filling the same roles as the earlier A-1 and A-3 versions, also with the option of using the same Umrüst-Bausätze factory conversion kits as the A-series.

Several experimental models were also developed. The Me 410 B-5 added shackles under the fuselage to carry a torpedo, and removed the MG 131s in the nose to make room for the FuG 200 Hohentwiel 550 MHz UHF-band maritime patrol radar. The bomb bay was not used in this version in order to make room for a 650-litre (170 US gal) fuel tank, and the rearward-firing remote turrets were replaced by another 700 L (180 US gal) fuel tank for long-range missions. The Me 410 B-6 was a similar anti-shipping conversion, but intended for the short-range coastal defence role only. For this mission, it did not use a torpedo, and was instead a simple modification of the B-1 with the FuG 200 radar. The Me 410 B-7/B-8 were updated B-3 reconnaissance models that were only built as prototypes.

The Me 410C was a high-altitude version drawn up in early 1944, with two new wing designs that increased span to 18.25 or 20.45 metres (59.9 or 67.1 ft). The larger wings allowed the gear to retract directly to the rear. A new universal engine mount would allow for the use of any of the DB 603JZ or BMW 801J turbocharged engines or the Jumo 213E two-stage mechanically supercharged engines, driving a new four-blade propeller with very wide blades. The BMW 801 radials were air-cooled and the DB 603 and Jumo 213 used an annular radiator, all Kraftei (power-egg) engine "modules" onto an airframe for ease of installation and field maintenance, so the normal under-wing radiators were removed. None were ever built, as Me 410 production was canceled before the engines matured.

The Me 410D was a simpler upgrade to the B-series to improve altitude performance than the C-series. It would be powered by the DB 603JZ engines, and had a revised forward fuselage to increase the field of view of the pilot and reduce drag. It also replaced portions of the outer wing panels with ones made of wood to conserve strategic materials. Several were built, but like many other attempts at wood construction by the German aviation industry late in World War II, the loss of the Goldschmitt Tego film factory in Wuppertal, in a Royal Air Force night bombing raid, meant the acidic replacement adhesives available were too corrosive to the materials being bonded, and the wooden portions tended to fail. Production was eventually cancelled to concentrate on Bf 109Gs in August 1944, after 1,160 Me 410s had been built, the month after the Jägernotprogramm had gone into effect.

Operators edit

  Nazi Germany
  • Luftwaffe was Me 410 main operator during 1943-45
    • Stabsschwarm & 2.(F)/Aufklärungsgruppe 22
    • 1.(F)/Aufklärungsgruppe 33
    • 1.(F)/FAGr.121
    • 1.,2(Ekdo).,5.(F)/Aufklärungsgruppe 122 (later FAGr 122)
    • Seenotgruppe 80 (sea recon and rescue)
    • 9.,20./ZG 1 'Wespen'
    • 2.,4.,6.,Stab/ZG 26 'Horst Wessel'
    • 1.,2.,3.,/ZG 76
    • Eprobungskommando/(Z)25
    • 5.(nacht),14.(nacht),15.,16./KG 2 (night intruder)
    • 1.(Jagd),2.(nacht),5.(Erg/jagd),6./KG 51 'Edelweiss' (long-range night ops)
    • 1./NJG 5 (Mosquito chaser)
    • 3./NJG 1 (Mosquito chaser)
  United Kingdom
  • Royal Air Force received at least two captured aircraft during war and shortly after.

Surviving aircraft edit

 
Me 410, W.Nr.10018, (FE499) after being sent to the United States

Two Me 410s survive:

Me 410 A-1/U1 (W.Nr.10018, converted from Me 210 airframe)
This Aircraft held by the American National Air and Space Museum and stored awaiting restoration, at the Paul E. Garber Preservation, Restoration, and Storage Facility, located in Suitland Maryland. It was found intact at an airfield in Trapani, Sicily, in August 1943 bearing the markings of the Luftwaffe's 2.Staffel/Fernaufklärungsgruppe 122 and was shipped to the United States in 1944; it was given the US serial number FE499,[6]
 
Me 410, W.Nr.420430, RAF Museum Cosford (2009)
Me 410 A-1/U2 (W.Nr.420430)
This aircraft is part of the collection of the RAF Museum and is publicly displayed at the Royal Air Force Museum Cosford. It was built in late 1943 by Messerschmitt in Augsburg. There is evidence it served with Zerstörergeschwader 26 before being surrendered at Vaerlose, Denmark in May 1945. It was one of six Me 410s that were taken to the UK in 1945 for evaluation, but the only one to be later selected for preservation and to avoid being scrapped. It underwent restoration in 1986, after which both engines were successfully run on the ground. It was moved to Cosford in 1989 and has remained there since.[7]

Specifications (Me 410 A-1/U-2) edit

Data from The warplanes of the Third Reich,[8] German Combat Planes[9]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 2
  • Length: 12.484 m (40 ft 11.5 in)
  • Wingspan: 16.3513 m (53 ft 7.75 in)
  • Height: 4.280 m (14 ft 0.5 in)
  • Wing area: 36.2031 m2 (389.687 sq ft)
  • Airfoil: root: NACA 23018-636.5; tip: NACA 23010-636.5[10]
  • Empty weight: 7,518 kg (16,574 lb)
  • Gross weight: 9,651 kg (21,276 lb)
  • Fuel capacity: 550 imp gal (660 US gal; 2,500 L) in four wing tanks
  • Powerplant: 2 × Daimler-Benz DB 603A V-12 inverted liquid-cooled piston engines, 1,290 kW (1,750 hp) each for take-off
1,360 kW (1,850 PS) at 2,100 m (6,890 ft)
1,195 kW (1,625 PS) at 5,700 m (18,700 ft)
  • Propellers: 3-bladed VDM constant-speed propeller

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 507 km/h (315 mph, 274 kn) at sea level, 624 km/h (388 mph; 337 kn) at 6,700 m (21,980 ft)
  • Cruise speed: 587 km/h (365 mph, 317 kn)
  • Range: 1,200 km (750 mi, 650 nmi) at maximum continuous cruise speed, 1,690 km (1,050 mi) at economical cruise speed
  • Ferry range: 2,300 km (1,400 mi, 1,200 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 10,000 m (33,000 ft)
  • Time to altitude: 6,000 m (20,000 ft) in 10 minutes 42 seconds

Armament

  • Guns: ** 2 × 7.92 mm (0.31 in) MG 17 machine guns with 1,000 rpg, firing forward
    • 2 × 20 mm (0.79 in) MG 151/20 cannon with 350 rpg, firing forward
    • 2 × 20 mm (0.79 in) MG 151/20 cannon with 250 rpg in the bomb bay, firing forward
    • 2 × 13 mm (0.51 in) MG 131 machine guns with 500 rpg, each firing rearward from FDSL 131/1B remote-operated turret, one per side
  • Rockets: 4 × 21 cm (8.3 in) Werfer-Granate 21 rockets
  • Bombs: up to 1,000 kg (2,200 lb) of disposable stores[11]

See also edit

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Notes edit

  1. ^ The interim Me 310 design experiment actually used the DB 603 powerplant choice first.

References edit

  1. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : Luftwaffe - Messerschmitt Me 410 (Schnellbomber) (YouTube). spottydog4477. Event occurs at 2:55 to 3:25. Retrieved October 26, 2019.
  2. ^ Hess 1994, p. 82.
  3. ^ Caldwell & Muller 2007, p. 137.
  4. ^ Caldwell & Muller 2007, p. 183.
  5. ^ Caldwell & Muller 2007, p. 198.
  6. ^ West, Jim. "Me 410A-2/U1 FE-499". www.indianamilitary.org. Retrieved 18 July 2015.
  7. ^ Simpson, Andrew. "Museum Accession Number 85/A/78, Individual History: Messerschmitt Me410A-1/U2 W/NR.420430/AM72/8483M." Royal Air Force Museum, 2007. Retrieved: 23 December 2011.
  8. ^ Green, William (1970). The warplanes of the Third Reich (1st 1973 reprint ed.). New York: Doubleday. pp. 610–617, 658–664. ISBN 0385057822.
  9. ^ Wagner, Ray; Nowarra, Heinz (1971). German Combat Planes: A Comprehensive Survey and History of the Development of German Military Aircraft from 1914 to 1945. New York: Doubleday. p. 261.
  10. ^ Lednicer, David. "The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage". m-selig.ae.illinois.edu. Retrieved 16 April 2019.
  11. ^ Rechlin E'Stelle Erpr. Nr. 1929. Br.B.Nr. 773/43 g.Kdos.

Further reading edit

  • Caldwell, Donald L.; Muller, Richard R. (2007). The Luftwaffe over Germany: Defense of the Reich. London, UK: Greenhill Books. ISBN 978-1-85367-712-0.
  • Hess, William. N. (1994). B-17 Flying Fortress - Combat and Development History. Motor books. ISBN 0-87938-881-1.
  • Scutts, Jerry (1994). Mustang aces of the Eighth Air Force. Oxford: Osprey Aerospace. ISBN 1-85532-447-4.
  • Stocker, Werner; Petrick, Peter (2007). Messerschmitt Me 210/Me 410 Hornisse/Hornet : an illustrated production history. Hinckley: Midland. ISBN 978-1-85780-271-9.

External links edit

  • German WW II manual for Me 410A-1/U-4's Bordkanone BK 5 cannon installation
  • Me 410 at the Royal Air Force Museum, Cosford
  • US Intelligence Report on Me 410 at LoneSentry.com

messerschmitt, hornisse, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, ja. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Messerschmitt Me 410 Hornisse news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2018 Learn how and when to remove this message The Messerschmitt Me 410 Hornisse Hornet is a German heavy fighter and Schnellbomber or Fast Bomber in English used by the Luftwaffe during World War II Though an incremental improvement of the Me 210 it had a new wing plan longer fuselage and engines of greater power The changes were significant enough for the aircraft to be renamed the Me 410 Me 410 Me 410 A 1 U2 RAF Museum Cosford 1985 Role Heavy fighter fighter bomber Manufacturer Messerschmitt First flight 14 March 1942 Introduction 1943 Retired 1945 Primary users LuftwaffeHungarian Air Force Produced May 1943 August 1944 Number built 1 189 Developed from Messerschmitt Me 210 Contents 1 Design and development 2 Operational history 3 Variants 4 Operators 5 Surviving aircraft 6 Specifications Me 410 A 1 U 2 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksDesign and development edit nbsp Basic side by side comparison of the Me 210 and Me 410 wing planforms Development of the Me 210 had been under way since 1939 but the aircraft proved unstable and was never considered for full scale production Modifications to the layout produced the Me 210C and 210D which proved somewhat superior As studies progressed on the Me 210D and with a separate parallel attempt to improve upon the 210 with the Messerschmitt Me 310 in the second half of 1943 which provided almost no aerodynamic improvement over the 210 s risky handling qualities it was instead decided to introduce a new model the Me 410 nbsp The RAF Museum s Me 410 with the doors of its nose bomb bay open 2016 nbsp The RAF Museum s Me 410 with the engines and the outer wings removed 2020 The major change between the Me 210 and 410 was the introduction of the larger at 44 5 litres 2 720 cu in displacement and more powerful Daimler Benz DB 603A engines They each provided 1 750 metric horsepower 1 730 hp 1 290 kW compared to the 1 475 metric horsepower 1 455 hp 1 085 kW of the DB 605s used on the Me 210C Note 1 The extra power increased the Me 410 s maximum speed to 625 kilometres per hour 388 mph greatly improved rate of climb service ceiling and most notably the cruising speed which jumped to 579 km h 360 mph The more powerful engines also improved payload capability to the point where the aircraft could lift a war load greater than could fit into the bomb bay under the nose Consequently shackles were added under the wings for four 50 kilogram 110 lb bombs The changes added an extra 680 kg 1 500 lb to the Me 210 design but the extra engine power more than made up for the difference As with the Me 210 the 410 s rear gunner used the same pair of Ferngerichtete Drehringseitenlafette FDSL 131 1B turrets mounted on each side of the aircraft each still armed with a 13 mm 51 in MG 131 machine gun retaining the same pivoting handgun style grip trigger and gunsight to aim and fire the ordnance as the 210 did 1 The new version included a lengthened fuselage and new automatic leading edge slats Both features had been tested on Me 210s and were found to dramatically improve handling The slats had originally been featured on the earliest Me 210 models but had been removed on production models due to poor handling When entering a steep turn the slats had a tendency to open due to the high angle of attack analogous to the opening of the slats during the landing approach This problem was first observed on the Bf 109V14 and V15 prototypes for the Bf 109E which added to the problems keeping the aircraft flying smoothly However when the problems with the general lateral instability were addressed this was no longer a real problem The wing panels of the earlier Me 210 had been designed with a planform geometry that placed the aerodynamic center further aback compared with the earlier Bf 110 giving the outer sections of the wing planform beyond each engine nacelle a slightly greater 12 6 leading edge sweepback angle than the inner panels 6 0 leading edge sweep angle This resulted in unsuitable handling characteristics in flight for the original Me 210 design The new Me 410 outer wing panels had their planform geometry revised to bring the aerodynamic center further forwards in comparison with the Me 210 thus making the leading edge sweepback of the outer panels identical to the inner wing panels with both having identical 5 5 sweepback angles which improved handling Deliveries began in January 1943 two years late and continued until September 1944 by which point a total of 1 160 of all versions had been produced by Messerschmitt Augsburg and Dornier Munchen When it arrived it was liked by its crews even though its improved performance was not enough to protect it from the swarms of high performance Allied fighters they faced at this stage of the war Operational history edit nbsp An Me 410A 1 U4 with a BK 5 cannon peels off during an attack on USAAF B 17s nbsp Messerschmitt Me 410A 1 U2 W Nr 420428 9K AM flown by Obfw Hermann Bolten of the 4 KG 51 shot down June 6th 1944 The Me 410 night bomber proved to be an elusive target for the RAF night fighters The first unit to operate over the UK was V KG 2 which lost its first Me 410 on the night of 13 14 July 1943 when it was shot down by a de Havilland Mosquito of No 85 Squadron RAF The Me 410 was also used as a bomber destroyer against the daylight bomber formations of the USAAF upgraded with Umrust Bausatze factory conversion kits all bearing a U suffix for the design these suffixes could vary in meaning between subtypes As one example the earlier Me 410 A 1 U1 designation signified a camera fitting in the under nose ordnance bay for reconnaissance use as the A 3 was meant to do from its start while the Me 410 B 2 U1 designation signified a mount of a pair of the long barreled 30 mm MK 103 cannon in the undernose ordnance bay The U2 suffix designated a fitment of two additional 20 mm MG 151 20 cannons in the under nose ordnance bay instead the A 1 U4 subtype fitted the massive 540 kilogram 1 190 lb Bordkanone series 50 mm 2 in BK 5 cannon loaded with 21 rounds in the same under nose ordnance bay in place of either the U1 s cameras or MK 103s or the U2 s added pair of MG 151 20 autocannon For breaking up the bomber formations many Me 410s also had four underwing tubular launchers two per wing panel firing converted 21 cm 8 in Werfer Granate 21 infantry barrage rockets Two Geschwader Zerstorergeschwader 26 and 76 were thus equipped with the Me 410 by late 1943 They were moderately successful against unescorted bombers through 1943 with a considerable number of kills against USAAF day bomber formations being achieved However the Me 410 was no match in a dogfight with the lighter Allied single engine fighters such as the North American P 51 Mustang and Supermarine Spitfire In early 1944 the Me 410 formations encountered swarms of Allied fighters protecting the bomber streams usually flying far ahead of the combat box formations as an air supremacy move in clearing the skies of any Luftwaffe opposition resulting in the Me 410 s previous successes against escorted bombers now often being offset by their losses An example of this as part of a campaign started two days earlier by the USAAF was on 6 March 1944 during an attack on Berlin by 750 8th AF heavy bombers when 16 Me 410s were shot down in return for eight B 17s and four P 51s which were destroyed by Bf 109 and Fw 190 fighters escorting the Me 410s 2 3 The following month on 11 April with 8th AF raids hitting Sorau Rostock and Oschersleben II ZG 26 s Me 410s accounted for a rare clear success initially bringing down 10 B 17s without any losses During the course of the same raid their second sortie was intercepted by P 51s that destroyed eight Me 410s and three Bf 110s Sixteen crewmen were killed and three wounded 4 From mid 1944 despite being Hitler s favourite bomber destroyer the Me 410 units were taken from Defence of the Reich duties and production was phased out in favour of heavily armed single engine fighters as dedicated bomber destroyers with the Me 410s remaining in service flying on reconnaissance duties only 5 Some Me 410s were used with Junkers Ju 188s during the Battle of Normandy for high altitude night reconnaissance Variants editA series aircraft were armed with two 7 92 mm 312 in MG 17 machine guns and two 20 mm MG 151 20 cannons in the nose and delivered as the Me 410 A 1 light bomber The Me 410 A 2 heavy fighter was cancelled because the dual 30 mm 1 18 in MK 103 cannon mount also available for the later Me 410B 2 subtype as the Umrust Bausatz U1 factory kit available by 1944 was not ready in time The Me 410A featured a bomb bay for carrying bombs Though by fitting conversion kits this could be used for other equipment Initially three Umrust Bausatze factory conversion kits were available the U1 which contained cameras for photo reconnaissance the U2 with two 20 mm MG 151 20 cannon with 250 rounds per gun for the heavy fighter And the U4 with a 50 mm 2 in Bordkanone BK 5 cannon with 22 rounds 21 rounds to load and 1 extra round in the breech The purpose of this was to convert either an Me 410A or B series aircraft into a bomber destroyer The BK 5 cannon derived from the 50 mm 2 in KwK 39 L 60 of the Panzer III tank allowed Me 410s to shoot at their targets from over 914 m 1 000 yd a distance far greater than the range of the bombers defensive machine guns However in practice frequent problems with jamming the limited ammunition supply and with the extra 540 kilogram 1 190 lb weight of the large calibre gun under the nose made the other anti bomber versions of Me 410 especially those with extra 20 mm MG 151 20s much more useful The reconnaissance version Me 410 A 3 received a deeper fuselage for additional cameras and fuel The Me 410 A 3 entered service in small numbers in early 1944 and equipped three long range reconnaissance Aufklarungsstaffel squadrons usually grouped larger three or four squadron Fernaufklarungsgruppen one Gruppe on the Western Front and the other two on the Eastern Front The Me 410B series was similar to the A series but replaced the pair of 7 92 mm 312 in MG 17s with 13 mm 51 in MG 131 machine guns The originally planned 1 900 hp 1 400 kW DB 603G engine had been cancelled in early 1944 so all Me 410Bs used DB 603A or DB 603AA engines The DB 603G would have increased the maximum speed to 630 kilometres per hour 390 mph and cruising speed to 595 kilometres per hour 370 mph although the weight increased once again The versions were the same as with the A series the Me 410 B 1 and Me 410 B 3 filling the same roles as the earlier A 1 and A 3 versions also with the option of using the same Umrust Bausatze factory conversion kits as the A series Several experimental models were also developed The Me 410 B 5 added shackles under the fuselage to carry a torpedo and removed the MG 131s in the nose to make room for the FuG 200 Hohentwiel 550 MHz UHF band maritime patrol radar The bomb bay was not used in this version in order to make room for a 650 litre 170 US gal fuel tank and the rearward firing remote turrets were replaced by another 700 L 180 US gal fuel tank for long range missions The Me 410 B 6 was a similar anti shipping conversion but intended for the short range coastal defence role only For this mission it did not use a torpedo and was instead a simple modification of the B 1 with the FuG 200 radar The Me 410 B 7 B 8 were updated B 3 reconnaissance models that were only built as prototypes The Me 410C was a high altitude version drawn up in early 1944 with two new wing designs that increased span to 18 25 or 20 45 metres 59 9 or 67 1 ft The larger wings allowed the gear to retract directly to the rear A new universal engine mount would allow for the use of any of the DB 603JZ or BMW 801J turbocharged engines or the Jumo 213E two stage mechanically supercharged engines driving a new four blade propeller with very wide blades The BMW 801 radials were air cooled and the DB 603 and Jumo 213 used an annular radiator all Kraftei power egg engine modules onto an airframe for ease of installation and field maintenance so the normal under wing radiators were removed None were ever built as Me 410 production was canceled before the engines matured The Me 410D was a simpler upgrade to the B series to improve altitude performance than the C series It would be powered by the DB 603JZ engines and had a revised forward fuselage to increase the field of view of the pilot and reduce drag It also replaced portions of the outer wing panels with ones made of wood to conserve strategic materials Several were built but like many other attempts at wood construction by the German aviation industry late in World War II the loss of the Goldschmitt Tego film factory in Wuppertal in a Royal Air Force night bombing raid meant the acidic replacement adhesives available were too corrosive to the materials being bonded and the wooden portions tended to fail Production was eventually cancelled to concentrate on Bf 109Gs in August 1944 after 1 160 Me 410s had been built the month after the Jagernotprogramm had gone into effect Operators edit nbsp Nazi Germany Luftwaffe was Me 410 main operator during 1943 45 Stabsschwarm amp 2 F Aufklarungsgruppe 22 1 F Aufklarungsgruppe 33 1 F FAGr 121 1 2 Ekdo 5 F Aufklarungsgruppe 122 later FAGr 122 Seenotgruppe 80 sea recon and rescue 9 20 ZG 1 Wespen 2 4 6 Stab ZG 26 Horst Wessel 1 2 3 ZG 76 Eprobungskommando Z 25 5 nacht 14 nacht 15 16 KG 2 night intruder 1 Jagd 2 nacht 5 Erg jagd 6 KG 51 Edelweiss long range night ops 1 NJG 5 Mosquito chaser 3 NJG 1 Mosquito chaser nbsp United Kingdom Royal Air Force received at least two captured aircraft during war and shortly after No 1426 Flight RAF operated a single Me 410 A 3 WNr 10259 RAF serial TF209 during the war Surviving aircraft edit nbsp Me 410 W Nr 10018 FE499 after being sent to the United States Two Me 410s survive Me 410 A 1 U1 W Nr 10018 converted from Me 210 airframe This Aircraft held by the American National Air and Space Museum and stored awaiting restoration at the Paul E Garber Preservation Restoration and Storage Facility located in Suitland Maryland It was found intact at an airfield in Trapani Sicily in August 1943 bearing the markings of the Luftwaffe s 2 Staffel Fernaufklarungsgruppe 122 and was shipped to the United States in 1944 it was given the US serial number FE499 6 nbsp Me 410 W Nr 420430 RAF Museum Cosford 2009 Me 410 A 1 U2 W Nr 420430 This aircraft is part of the collection of the RAF Museum and is publicly displayed at the Royal Air Force Museum Cosford It was built in late 1943 by Messerschmitt in Augsburg There is evidence it served with Zerstorergeschwader 26 before being surrendered at Vaerlose Denmark in May 1945 It was one of six Me 410s that were taken to the UK in 1945 for evaluation but the only one to be later selected for preservation and to avoid being scrapped It underwent restoration in 1986 after which both engines were successfully run on the ground It was moved to Cosford in 1989 and has remained there since 7 Specifications Me 410 A 1 U 2 editData from The warplanes of the Third Reich 8 German Combat Planes 9 General characteristicsCrew 2 Length 12 484 m 40 ft 11 5 in Wingspan 16 3513 m 53 ft 7 75 in Height 4 280 m 14 ft 0 5 in Wing area 36 2031 m2 389 687 sq ft Airfoil root NACA 23018 636 5 tip NACA 23010 636 5 10 Empty weight 7 518 kg 16 574 lb Gross weight 9 651 kg 21 276 lb Fuel capacity 550 imp gal 660 US gal 2 500 L in four wing tanks Powerplant 2 Daimler Benz DB 603A V 12 inverted liquid cooled piston engines 1 290 kW 1 750 hp each for take off 1 360 kW 1 850 PS at 2 100 m 6 890 ft 1 195 kW 1 625 PS at 5 700 m 18 700 ft dd dd dd Propellers 3 bladed VDM constant speed propeller Performance Maximum speed 507 km h 315 mph 274 kn at sea level 624 km h 388 mph 337 kn at 6 700 m 21 980 ft Cruise speed 587 km h 365 mph 317 kn Range 1 200 km 750 mi 650 nmi at maximum continuous cruise speed 1 690 km 1 050 mi at economical cruise speed Ferry range 2 300 km 1 400 mi 1 200 nmi Service ceiling 10 000 m 33 000 ft Time to altitude 6 000 m 20 000 ft in 10 minutes 42 seconds Armament Guns 2 7 92 mm 0 31 in MG 17 machine guns with 1 000 rpg firing forward 2 20 mm 0 79 in MG 151 20 cannon with 350 rpg firing forward 2 20 mm 0 79 in MG 151 20 cannon with 250 rpg in the bomb bay firing forward 2 13 mm 0 51 in MG 131 machine guns with 500 rpg each firing rearward from FDSL 131 1B remote operated turret one per side Rockets 4 21 cm 8 3 in Werfer Granate 21 rockets Bombs up to 1 000 kg 2 200 lb of disposable stores 11 See also editRelated development Messerschmitt Me 210 Messerschmitt Me 310 Aircraft of comparable role configuration and era Bristol Beaufighter de Havilland Mosquito Kawasaki Ki 102 Messerschmitt Bf 110 Northrop P 61 Black Widow Rikugun Ki 93Notes edit The interim Me 310 design experiment actually used the DB 603 powerplant choice first References edit Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Luftwaffe Messerschmitt Me 410 Schnellbomber YouTube spottydog4477 Event occurs at 2 55 to 3 25 Retrieved October 26 2019 Hess 1994 p 82 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 p 137 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 p 183 Caldwell amp Muller 2007 p 198 West Jim Me 410A 2 U1 FE 499 www indianamilitary org Retrieved 18 July 2015 Simpson Andrew Museum Accession Number 85 A 78 Individual History Messerschmitt Me410A 1 U2 W NR 420430 AM72 8483M Royal Air Force Museum 2007 Retrieved 23 December 2011 Green William 1970 The warplanes of the Third Reich 1st 1973 reprint ed New York Doubleday pp 610 617 658 664 ISBN 0385057822 Wagner Ray Nowarra Heinz 1971 German Combat Planes A Comprehensive Survey and History of the Development of German Military Aircraft from 1914 to 1945 New York Doubleday p 261 Lednicer David The Incomplete Guide to Airfoil Usage m selig ae illinois edu Retrieved 16 April 2019 Rechlin E Stelle Erpr Nr 1929 Br B Nr 773 43 g Kdos Further reading editCaldwell Donald L Muller Richard R 2007 The Luftwaffe over Germany Defense of the Reich London UK Greenhill Books ISBN 978 1 85367 712 0 Hess William N 1994 B 17 Flying Fortress Combat and Development History Motor books ISBN 0 87938 881 1 Scutts Jerry 1994 Mustang aces of the Eighth Air Force Oxford Osprey Aerospace ISBN 1 85532 447 4 Stocker Werner Petrick Peter 2007 Messerschmitt Me 210 Me 410 Hornisse Hornet an illustrated production history Hinckley Midland ISBN 978 1 85780 271 9 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Messerschmitt Me 410 German WW II manual for Me 410A 1 U 4 s Bordkanone BK 5 cannon installation Me 410 at the Royal Air Force Museum Cosford US Intelligence Report on Me 410 at LoneSentry com Portal nbsp AviationMesserschmitt Me 410 Hornisse at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Messerschmitt Me 410 Hornisse amp oldid 1205282534, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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