fbpx
Wikipedia

Weiss Manfréd WM-23 Ezüst Nyíl

The Weiss Manfréd WM-23 Ezüst Nyíl ("Silver Arrow") was a Hungarian fighter aircraft of World War II developed by the Manfréd Weiss Steel and Metal Works. Designed by Samu Béla and his team, the WM-23 was an entirely Hungarian design with retractable landing gear, a three-bladed variable-pitch propeller, a closed canopy, inverted gull wings and an elliptical low-wing design. Development started in summer 1939 with one prototype produced and test flown. Demonstrating good flying characteristics and generally being considered an excellent design, the WM-23 was planned to enter mass production. However, the prototype was destroyed on 21 April 1942, and by this time the MÁVAG Héja fighter was being used which acceptably filled the intended role of the WM-23. Therefore, it was decided to not allocate further resources to completing the project, and to cancel it.

WM-23
Schematic drawing of the WM-23
Role Fighter
National origin Hungary
Manufacturer Weiss Manfréd
Designer Samu Béla and team
First flight Early 1941
Status Cancelled
Primary user Royal Hungarian Air Force (MKHL)
Number built 1
Developed into WM-123 Ezüst Nyíl II

Origins edit

Hungary's need for a modern fighter edit

After the end of the First World War, the Hungarians had serious restrictions placed on their military under the Treaty of Trianon. One of the terms included in the treaty forbade Hungary from having an air force. However, under the cover of civilian flying clubs, a secret air arm was gradually established. In the 1930s, Hungary was more and more openly opposing this treaty and following the Bled agreement in 1938, the existence of the Royal Hungarian Air Force (Magyar Királyi Honvéd Légierő, MKHL) was made known.[1][2]

The backbone of the MKHL's fighter force was initially made up of many Fiat CR.32 biplane fighters which the MKHL had secretly acquired in 1935-1936 (before the MKHL officially existed).[3] In mid 1938, the MKHL ordered many Fiat CR.42 biplane fighters, whilst they were aware that biplanes were becoming obsolete, they needed to rapidly equip their fighter units.[4] Therefore, once the Hungarian fighter units had fighters to fly, the priority of the MKHL was to acquire modern military aircraft. The MKHL looked to Germany for this, however the Germans were unwilling to sell their most modern and capable aircraft and would only sell aircraft that they weren't using or those that were more outdated and obsolete. The Hungarians considered and eventually chose the available Heinkel He 112B, as it was still a capable fighter at the time, only being available because it had narrowly lost the German fighter competition to the Messerschmitt Bf 109.[5]

The beginning of the WM-23 edit

 
A Hungarian He 112B-1 in 1940

On 7 September 1938, Hungary ordered 36 Heinkel He 112B fighters. Unfortunately for the Hungarians, this order would be plagued with issues. Not only was Hungary at the back of the queue, the Germans also prioritised Luftwaffe orders over export orders and on top of that, the Germans deliberately delayed fulfilling Hungary's order for political reasons.[6] In early 1939, a demonstrator He 112B (V9) arrived in Hungary but crashed during a demonstration flight.[7] A new He 112B was then sent, but as the Hungarian pilots flew the aircraft, they soon noticed that the engine – a Junkers Jumo 210 – was underpowered, only allowing them to reach a top speed of 430 km/h. With the Japanese and Spanish orders fulfilled, it seemed Hungary's order would be next, but then Romania placed an order and was put at the front of the queue. With all of these delays, it seemed Hungary would never get the fighters so the Hungarians asked for the licence to produce the He 112B and received it in May 1939.[7] However, to address the underpowered engines, the Hungarians continually attempted to obtain the licence for one of the newer, more powerful engines such as the Junkers Jumo 211, but the Germans refused to hand over the licence for any of the improved engines and so licensed production never happened, with the He 112 licence eventually being cancelled in December. From the initial order of 36, Hungary only received three He 112 B-1s (not including the demonstrator that crashed), and even these came with the 20 mm cannons removed and the underpowered engines.[7] The Germans never fulfilled the order, so the Hungarians looked elsewhere for modern fighters.

In the first half of 1939, possibly as a result of the He 112B contract having difficulties, the Hungarians decided to produce a domestic fighter design. The new aircraft was to have performance similar to or better than modern fighter aircraft of other nations, namely the Curtiss P-36, Seversky P-35, Hawker Hurricane, Polikarpov I-16, Heinkel He 112, and the contemporary versions of the Messerschmitt Bf 109 (which was the D variant in 1939). The aircraft was designated WM-23 Ezüst Nyíl and was designed by the Hungarian company Weiss Manfréd.[8]

Design and development edit

Engine, propeller and cockpit edit

 
3-view drawing of the WM-23

The design of the WM-23 began in the summer of 1939 and it was designed by Samu Béla with Marton Vilmos, Milcsevics Tibor, Pap Márton, Pavláth Jeno and others. The prototype was completed by the end of 1940.[8] The WM-23 was powered by the Weiss Manfréd WM K-14B – a 1,030 hp (768 kW), 14-cylinder, two-row, air-cooled radial engine.[8][9] The WM K-14B was a licensed, modified version of the Gnome-Rhône 14Kfrs Mistral-Major radial.[10] The WM-23's engine had a close-fitting NACA-type cowling[11] and the engine would drive a three-bladed variable-pitch metal VDM[9] (some sources say Hamilton-Standard)[12] propeller.[13] The efficient cooling of the engine was ensured by the use of cowl flaps; these could be opened or closed by the pilot using manual controls.[14] The canopy of the aircraft was rearward-sliding and the view from the cockpit was very good.[11][8] An R-13 radio device, for a 24 V network, with a long antenna was to be installed, although it was not installed on the prototype so the aircraft could be tested and flown sooner.[8]

Wings, landing gear and fuselage edit

The WM-23 had wooden, plywood skinned wings with a low-wing design and had camber-changing Fowler flaps.[12] The wings had a subtle inverted-gull wing shape when viewed from the front, and an elliptical shape when viewed from above. According to the calculations made by the engineers, this design not only made the wings robust, but also greatly improved the aircraft's flight performance and controllability.[14] The aircraft's manoeuvrability also promised to be excellent.[14] At the wing root, the chord length was 2.5 m long and the airfoil was a NACA 23018 which transitioned to a NACA 23012 main airfoil until the end of the wing where it tapered to a NACA 23009 airfoil.[8] With a conventional landing gear design, the main undercarriage legs joined to the lowest part of the wings and folded outwards to fully lie within the wing profile.[11] Originally Samu Béla had planned for the landing gear to fold inwards to lie within the fuselage, but factory manager Korbuly László insisted on the landing gear folding outwards – this was chosen to avoid the heat from the engine damaging the rubber of the tyres.[8] The tailwheel was also retractable.[8][13] The fuselage was made of a welded steel tube structure with plywood skinning.[15][12]

Issues during development edit

During testing a few issues arose with the prototype. Firstly, the cooling of the engine did not prove to be efficient enough, despite the modern mechanism used. This led to the powerful engine quickly overheating, so a part of the nose had to be redesigned.[14] Furthermore, there were problems with the landing gear retraction and the brake system also had to be repaired.[8] Finally the aircraft had serious problems with vibrations in various places, especially the ailerons and especially at high speeds. After countless investigations and tests, the problem was partially solved when the exhaust system was redesigned, causing the vibration at lower speeds to disappear, although at high speeds the aircraft would still vibrate.[14][8]

Armament edit

The WM-23's armament edit

The WM-23 prototype did not have guns or bombs installed in order to test fly the aircraft as soon as possible, however the planned armament was two 12.7 mm Gebauer 1940.M GKM machine guns in the upper cowling and two 8 mm Gebauer 1939.M machine guns in the wings.[8][14][9] The two 12.7 mm Gebauer 1940.M GKM machine guns in the upper cowling might have been replaced by two 20 mm Mauser MG 151 cannons later on during development.[16][17][13][18] The WM-23 would have most likely had 300 rpg for the 12.7 mm guns and 500 (possibly 600) rpg for the 8 mm guns. Whilst the WM-23 was designed as a fighter, and this would have been its primary role, it was planned to carry 20 kg bomb(s) making it capable of performing ground attack roles.[8][14][18]

Gebauer machine gun details edit

The Gebauer machine guns are very complicated but advanced vehicle mounted, gas-operated Hungarian machine guns, usually with very high rates of fire. Many Gebauer machine guns are engine-driven; the crankshaft of the aircraft's engine rotates a number of gears inside the machine gun with the assistance of a crank. The bolt is connected to another crankshaft, which rotates when a locking lever is depressed when the gun fires. The Gebauer machine guns were designed by Ferenc Gebauer and produced by Danuvia Engineering Industries Rt.[19]

The 12.7 mm Gebauer 1940.M GKM is a gas-operated, engine-driven heavy machine gun chambered for 12.7×81mmSR [it] as used by the Italian 12.7 mm Breda-SAFAT heavy machine gun.[19] Synchronised with the propeller, it is installed in pairs in the upper cowling and is driven via the crankshaft of the aircraft's engine.[20] These guns had a fast rate of fire of 1,000 rounds per minute each.[19] The 1940.M GKM has a muzzle velocity of 800 m/s and is belt fed with 600 rounds for the two guns, giving it 300 rounds per gun (rpg).[19][20] Considering the Hungarian MÁVAG Héja had two of these guns in the cowling with 300 rpg, the WM-23 would likely also have had 300 rpg for its 12.7 mm guns.

The 8 mm Gebauer 1939.M is a wing mounted, gas-operated machine gun. It has a very high rate of fire of 2000 rounds per minute,[note 1] a muzzle velocity of 730 m/s, and is chambered for 8×56mmR.[21] It uses a 500 round belt, giving it 500 rounds per gun.[22] However according to a different source, it could use a 600 round belt (giving it 600 rpg).[23] The WM-23 would have likely had 500 or 600 rounds per gun for its 8 mm guns.

The prototype and the fate of the WM-23 edit

One prototype was made, which was completed by the end of 1940 and it bore V.501 as its serial number.[11] The prototype had a silver-grey colour with a smooth surface, and looked like a fast plane with an aerodynamic shape, hence it received the name "Ezüst Nyíl" ("Silver Arrow").[8] The exact date of the WM-23's first flight is not perfectly clear, but it was likely first flown between February and March 1941[8][24] (some sources say 23 February 1941, and this seems realistic).[25] During test flights it demonstrated very good acceleration and good flying characteristics, reaching a maximum speed of 530 km/h – significantly better than the 430 km/h maximum speed of the He 112Bs given to Hungary.[8][25]

On 21 April 1942, whilst test flying the aircraft at maximum speed over Tököl, test pilot Sándor Boskovits noticed the usual vibration at high speeds the prototype suffered from intensify, resulting in the starboard (right) aileron breaking off at an altitude of 3000 m. This was a serious problem and soon the aircraft became uncontrollable (and got into a spin according to some sources),[14] despite this the pilot managed to bail out of the aircraft. Boskovits landed safely thanks to his parachute, but the aircraft crashed into the Tököl forest and was completely destroyed.[11][8][24]

 
A Hungarian MÁVAG Héja II. It used the same 12.7 mm guns as the WM-23, one of which can be seen above the cowling. The Héja II was produced instead of the WM-23.

Prior to the crash, the WM-23 was planned to enter mass production, however after the crash, the situation was different.[26] By this time the MÁVAG Héja fighter was in use, and it acceptably filled the intended role of the WM-23. Furthermore, Hungarian licence production of the more powerful Messerschmitt Bf 109 (F-4 and G series) was in sight, and now the only prototype of the WM-23 was lost.[8] In this situation, there was not much point in allocating further resources to completing the project, as a new prototype would need to be made, further development would need to be done to resolve the high speed vibration problems the aircraft still suffered from, and production would need to actually begin.[14] All of this would take some time, and since the WM-23 had similar performance to the Héja and inferior performance to the Bf 109F-4 and G series, by the time the WM-23 would be introduced, it would provide no major benefit over the Héja and would soon be replaced by the Bf 109. This would be a huge waste of resources and so the WM-23 project was cancelled.

It can be said that the WM-23 project was cancelled because the engineers took too long trying to find the causes of the vibrations and could not eliminate them fully.[14] As such, the aircraft was never fully ready for mass production and had to keep being tested and investigated, eventually leading to its crash. Since this occurred so late, similarly or more capable fighters were becoming available so the WM-23 was no longer a modern enough design to warrant more resources being invested into completing the project.

Variants edit

Plans for an improved version of the WM-23 Ezüst Nyíl, referred to as the WM-123 Ezüst Nyíl II had reached an advanced stage before being cancelled. An all-metal fighter aircraft with a monocoque fuselage, the Ezüst Nyíl II would have a powerful 1475 hp (1100 kW) DB 605 engine and would be armed with cannons (most likely 20 mm MG 151s). The Ezüst Nyíl II was planned to be introduced in 1943, but the project was eventually cancelled.[12][11][8][13]

Around this time, Hungary acquired the licence to build the reputable Messerschmitt Bf 109 in Hungary. This may have been why the project was cancelled. After acquiring the licence for the Bf 109, it would have been pointless to waste years and lots of resources developing and testing the WM-123 Ezüst Nyíl II, since it had the same DB 605 engine and cannons as the already tested Bf 109G. The Bf 109G would go on to become the backbone of the Hungarian air force in the latter half of the war.

Two-seat reconnaissance, ground attack and training variants were also designed with the 870 hp (649 kW) WM K-14A engines being used instead. It is not perfectly clear which variant was referred to as what, but the WM 22B (or WM 23B) seems to have been the reconnaissance variant and the WM 23G was either the training or ground attack variant. These variants were also not developed further.[8][13][24]

Specifications (WM-23) edit

Data from Hungarian Fighter Colours – 1930-1945: Volume 2,[27] Magyar fejlesztések a II. világháborúban és a Magyar Királyi Honvédség haditechnikája,[14] and A WM–23 magyar kísérleti vadászrepülőgép 1940–1942[8]

General characteristics

  • Crew: 1
  • Length: 9.12 m (29 ft 11 in)
  • Wingspan: 9.6 m (31 ft 6 in)
  • Height: 3.3 m (10 ft 10 in)
  • Wing area: 18.5 m2 (199 sq ft)
  • Airfoil: root: NACA 23018; tip: NACA 23009[8]
  • Empty weight: 2,200 kg (4,850 lb)
  • Gross weight: 2,600 kg (5,732 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 3,290 kg (7,253 lb) [18]
  • Fuel capacity: at least 300 kg (660 lb)[8]
  • Powerplant: 1 × Weiss Manfréd WM K-14B 14-cylinder two-row air-cooled radial piston engine, 768 kW (1,030 hp)
  • Propellers: 3-bladed variable-pitch propeller

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 530 km/h (330 mph, 290 kn)
  • Cruise speed: 472 km/h (293 mph, 255 kn) [16]
  • Range: 600 km (370 mi, 320 nmi)
  • Service ceiling: 9,600 m (31,500 ft) [27]
  • Rate of climb: 16.7 m/s (3,290 ft/min) (calculated from 1000 m/min)[16]
  • Time to altitude: 6,000 m (20,000 ft) in 6 minutes[18]
  • Wing loading: 140 kg/m2 (29 lb/sq ft)
  • Power/mass: 0.295 kW/kg (0.179 hp/lb)
  • Take-off run: 250 m (820 ft)[8]

Armament

  • Guns:
    • 2 × 12.7 mm (.50 in) synchronized Gebauer 1940.M GKM machine guns in the upper cowling, likely with 300 rpg [note 2]
    • 2 × 8 mm (.31 in) Gebauer 1939.M machine guns in the wings, likely with 500 or 600 rpg
  • Bombs: 20 kg (44 lb) bomb(s)

Avionics
R-13 radio[8]

See also edit

Hungarian military aircraft from the same era

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

Related lists

Notes edit

  1. ^ The rate of fire reached as high as 2038 rpm during testing.
  2. ^ The 2 × 12.7 mm guns might have been replaced later on during development by 2 × 20 mm (.78 in) synchronized Mauser MG 151/20 cannons in the upper cowling[17]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Szabó, Miklós (2005). (PDF). Nação e Defesa. 3rd ser. 110: 191–195. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 8 January 2023 – via idn.gov.pt.
  2. ^ Joseph, Frank (2012). The Axis air forces: flying in support of the German Luftwaffe. Santa Barbara, California: Praeger. p. 141. ISBN 9780313395901. OCLC 774295801.
  3. ^ Neulen 2000, p. 120
  4. ^ Green & Swanborough 1982–1983, pp. 4–5
  5. ^ Bernád & Punka 2014, pp. 193–198
  6. ^ Renner, Stephen (14 November 2016). Broken wings: the Hungarian Air Force, 1918-45. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. pp. 198–199. ISBN 9780253023391. OCLC 972157471.
  7. ^ a b c Bernád & Punka 2014, pp. 193–197
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Winkler
  9. ^ a b c Bernád & Punka 2014, p. 213
  10. ^ "Серебряная стрела. Ещё о венгерском истребителе WM-23" [Silver Arrow. More about the Hungarian fighter WM-23]. flyjet.hu (in Russian). 21 December 2018. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Fitzsimons, Bernard (1969). The Illustrated Encyclopedia of 20th Century Weapons and Warfare. Vol. 24. Columbia House. p. 2599. ISBN 9780906704004.
  12. ^ a b c d Miranda, Justo (5 December 2019). Enemy at the Gates: Panic Fighters of the Second World War. Fonthill Media. Chapter 12 – Hungary. ISBN 978-1781557662.
  13. ^ a b c d e . www.samoloty.ow.pl (in Polish). Archived from the original on 1 September 2009. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Rieder 2005, pp. 163–168
  15. ^ Bernád & Punka 2014, p. 212
  16. ^ a b c "Weiss WM-23 Ezust Nyil". www.airwar.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  17. ^ a b "Weiss Manfred WM-23". aviArmor (in Russian). 2 September 2018. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  18. ^ a b c d "HUN - Weiss Manfréd WM 23 Ezüst Nyíl". Armedconflicts.com (in English and Czech). Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  19. ^ a b c d "Gebauer 1918.M (26/31.M, 1940.M GKM)". www.airwar.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  20. ^ a b Pap 2012, p. 701
  21. ^ Pap 2012, pp. 708–711
  22. ^ "Gebauer 1939.M". www.airwar.ru (in Russian). Retrieved 7 January 2023.
  23. ^ Pap 2012, p. 698
  24. ^ a b c Bernád & Punka 2014, p. 214
  25. ^ a b Tóth, Marcell (7 January 2018). "Legendás magyar fegyverek (IV. rész): WM-23 Ezüstnyíl" [Legendary Hungarian weapons (Part IV): WM-23 Silver Arrow]. tortenelem.blogstar.hu (in Hungarian). Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  26. ^ Kováts, Lajos (1979). "ADATOK A MAGYAR LÉGIERŐ ANYAGI-TECHNIKAI ÁLLAPOTÁRÓL 1938—1944" [DATA ON THE HUNGARIAN AIR FORCE'S MATERIAL AND TECHNICAL SITUATION 1938—1944] (PDF). Hadtörténelmi Közlemények a Hadtörténeti Intézet és Múzeum folyóirata (in Hungarian). 26 (3): 481 – via epa.oszk.hu.
  27. ^ a b Bernád & Punka 2014, pp. 212–216

Bibliography edit

  • Bernád, Dénes; Punka, György (13 February 2014). Hungarian Fighter Colours – 1930-1945: Volume 2. Vol. 2. Mushroom Model Publications. ISBN 978-8363678210.
  • Green, William; Swanborough, Gordon (December 1982 – March 1983). "Fighter Biplane Finale...The Falco". Air Enthusiast. No. 20. pp. 4–5. ISSN 0143-5450.
  • Neulen, Hans Werner (2000). In the Skies of Europe. Ramsbury, Marlborough, UK: The Crowood Press. p. 120. ISBN 1-86126-799-1.
  • Pap, Péter (28 September 2012). "ADATTÁR GEBAUER FERENC FEGYVERKONSTRUKTŐR PÁLYAFUTÁSÁHOZ ÉS AZ ÁLTALA TERVEZETT LŐFEGYVEREK KATEGORIZÁLÁSA" [Data Repository on the career of firearms designer Ferenc Gebauer and the categorisation of the firearms designed by him] (PDF). Hadtörténelmi Közlemények a Hadtörténeti Intézet és Múzeum folyóirata (in Hungarian). 125 (3) – via epa.oszk.hu.
  • Rieder, Kurt (2005). Magyar fejlesztések a II. világháborúban és a Magyar Királyi Honvédség haditechnikája [Hungarian developments during the Second World War and the Royal Hungarian Army's military technology] (in Hungarian). Vagabund Kiadó. pp. 163–168. ISBN 9789639409521.
  • Winkler, László. [The WM–23 Hungarian experimental fighter aircraft 1940–1942]. haditechnika.hu (in Hungarian). Archived from the original on 23 September 2008. Retrieved 1 January 2023.

External links edit

  • (The WM–23 Hungarian experimental fighter aircraft 1940–1942, in Hungarian)

weiss, manfréd, ezüst, nyíl, silver, arrow, hungarian, fighter, aircraft, world, developed, manfréd, weiss, steel, metal, works, designed, samu, béla, team, entirely, hungarian, design, with, retractable, landing, gear, three, bladed, variable, pitch, propelle. The Weiss Manfred WM 23 Ezust Nyil Silver Arrow was a Hungarian fighter aircraft of World War II developed by the Manfred Weiss Steel and Metal Works Designed by Samu Bela and his team the WM 23 was an entirely Hungarian design with retractable landing gear a three bladed variable pitch propeller a closed canopy inverted gull wings and an elliptical low wing design Development started in summer 1939 with one prototype produced and test flown Demonstrating good flying characteristics and generally being considered an excellent design the WM 23 was planned to enter mass production However the prototype was destroyed on 21 April 1942 and by this time the MAVAG Heja fighter was being used which acceptably filled the intended role of the WM 23 Therefore it was decided to not allocate further resources to completing the project and to cancel it WM 23Schematic drawing of the WM 23Role FighterNational origin HungaryManufacturer Weiss ManfredDesigner Samu Bela and teamFirst flight Early 1941Status CancelledPrimary user Royal Hungarian Air Force MKHL Number built 1Developed into WM 123 Ezust Nyil II Contents 1 Origins 1 1 Hungary s need for a modern fighter 1 2 The beginning of the WM 23 2 Design and development 2 1 Engine propeller and cockpit 2 2 Wings landing gear and fuselage 2 3 Issues during development 3 Armament 3 1 The WM 23 s armament 3 2 Gebauer machine gun details 4 The prototype and the fate of the WM 23 5 Variants 6 Specifications WM 23 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Bibliography 10 External linksOrigins editHungary s need for a modern fighter edit After the end of the First World War the Hungarians had serious restrictions placed on their military under the Treaty of Trianon One of the terms included in the treaty forbade Hungary from having an air force However under the cover of civilian flying clubs a secret air arm was gradually established In the 1930s Hungary was more and more openly opposing this treaty and following the Bled agreement in 1938 the existence of the Royal Hungarian Air Force Magyar Kiralyi Honved Legiero MKHL was made known 1 2 The backbone of the MKHL s fighter force was initially made up of many Fiat CR 32 biplane fighters which the MKHL had secretly acquired in 1935 1936 before the MKHL officially existed 3 In mid 1938 the MKHL ordered many Fiat CR 42 biplane fighters whilst they were aware that biplanes were becoming obsolete they needed to rapidly equip their fighter units 4 Therefore once the Hungarian fighter units had fighters to fly the priority of the MKHL was to acquire modern military aircraft The MKHL looked to Germany for this however the Germans were unwilling to sell their most modern and capable aircraft and would only sell aircraft that they weren t using or those that were more outdated and obsolete The Hungarians considered and eventually chose the available Heinkel He 112B as it was still a capable fighter at the time only being available because it had narrowly lost the German fighter competition to the Messerschmitt Bf 109 5 The beginning of the WM 23 edit nbsp A Hungarian He 112B 1 in 1940On 7 September 1938 Hungary ordered 36 Heinkel He 112B fighters Unfortunately for the Hungarians this order would be plagued with issues Not only was Hungary at the back of the queue the Germans also prioritised Luftwaffe orders over export orders and on top of that the Germans deliberately delayed fulfilling Hungary s order for political reasons 6 In early 1939 a demonstrator He 112B V9 arrived in Hungary but crashed during a demonstration flight 7 A new He 112B was then sent but as the Hungarian pilots flew the aircraft they soon noticed that the engine a Junkers Jumo 210 was underpowered only allowing them to reach a top speed of 430 km h With the Japanese and Spanish orders fulfilled it seemed Hungary s order would be next but then Romania placed an order and was put at the front of the queue With all of these delays it seemed Hungary would never get the fighters so the Hungarians asked for the licence to produce the He 112B and received it in May 1939 7 However to address the underpowered engines the Hungarians continually attempted to obtain the licence for one of the newer more powerful engines such as the Junkers Jumo 211 but the Germans refused to hand over the licence for any of the improved engines and so licensed production never happened with the He 112 licence eventually being cancelled in December From the initial order of 36 Hungary only received three He 112 B 1s not including the demonstrator that crashed and even these came with the 20 mm cannons removed and the underpowered engines 7 The Germans never fulfilled the order so the Hungarians looked elsewhere for modern fighters In the first half of 1939 possibly as a result of the He 112B contract having difficulties the Hungarians decided to produce a domestic fighter design The new aircraft was to have performance similar to or better than modern fighter aircraft of other nations namely the Curtiss P 36 Seversky P 35 Hawker Hurricane Polikarpov I 16 Heinkel He 112 and the contemporary versions of the Messerschmitt Bf 109 which was the D variant in 1939 The aircraft was designated WM 23 Ezust Nyil and was designed by the Hungarian company Weiss Manfred 8 Design and development editEngine propeller and cockpit edit nbsp 3 view drawing of the WM 23The design of the WM 23 began in the summer of 1939 and it was designed by Samu Bela with Marton Vilmos Milcsevics Tibor Pap Marton Pavlath Jeno and others The prototype was completed by the end of 1940 8 The WM 23 was powered by the Weiss Manfred WM K 14B a 1 030 hp 768 kW 14 cylinder two row air cooled radial engine 8 9 The WM K 14B was a licensed modified version of the Gnome Rhone 14Kfrs Mistral Major radial 10 The WM 23 s engine had a close fitting NACA type cowling 11 and the engine would drive a three bladed variable pitch metal VDM 9 some sources say Hamilton Standard 12 propeller 13 The efficient cooling of the engine was ensured by the use of cowl flaps these could be opened or closed by the pilot using manual controls 14 The canopy of the aircraft was rearward sliding and the view from the cockpit was very good 11 8 An R 13 radio device for a 24 V network with a long antenna was to be installed although it was not installed on the prototype so the aircraft could be tested and flown sooner 8 Wings landing gear and fuselage edit The WM 23 had wooden plywood skinned wings with a low wing design and had camber changing Fowler flaps 12 The wings had a subtle inverted gull wing shape when viewed from the front and an elliptical shape when viewed from above According to the calculations made by the engineers this design not only made the wings robust but also greatly improved the aircraft s flight performance and controllability 14 The aircraft s manoeuvrability also promised to be excellent 14 At the wing root the chord length was 2 5 m long and the airfoil was a NACA 23018 which transitioned to a NACA 23012 main airfoil until the end of the wing where it tapered to a NACA 23009 airfoil 8 With a conventional landing gear design the main undercarriage legs joined to the lowest part of the wings and folded outwards to fully lie within the wing profile 11 Originally Samu Bela had planned for the landing gear to fold inwards to lie within the fuselage but factory manager Korbuly Laszlo insisted on the landing gear folding outwards this was chosen to avoid the heat from the engine damaging the rubber of the tyres 8 The tailwheel was also retractable 8 13 The fuselage was made of a welded steel tube structure with plywood skinning 15 12 Issues during development edit During testing a few issues arose with the prototype Firstly the cooling of the engine did not prove to be efficient enough despite the modern mechanism used This led to the powerful engine quickly overheating so a part of the nose had to be redesigned 14 Furthermore there were problems with the landing gear retraction and the brake system also had to be repaired 8 Finally the aircraft had serious problems with vibrations in various places especially the ailerons and especially at high speeds After countless investigations and tests the problem was partially solved when the exhaust system was redesigned causing the vibration at lower speeds to disappear although at high speeds the aircraft would still vibrate 14 8 Armament editThe WM 23 s armament edit The WM 23 prototype did not have guns or bombs installed in order to test fly the aircraft as soon as possible however the planned armament was two 12 7 mm Gebauer 1940 M GKM machine guns in the upper cowling and two 8 mm Gebauer 1939 M machine guns in the wings 8 14 9 The two 12 7 mm Gebauer 1940 M GKM machine guns in the upper cowling might have been replaced by two 20 mm Mauser MG 151 cannons later on during development 16 17 13 18 The WM 23 would have most likely had 300 rpg for the 12 7 mm guns and 500 possibly 600 rpg for the 8 mm guns Whilst the WM 23 was designed as a fighter and this would have been its primary role it was planned to carry 20 kg bomb s making it capable of performing ground attack roles 8 14 18 Gebauer machine gun details edit The Gebauer machine guns are very complicated but advanced vehicle mounted gas operated Hungarian machine guns usually with very high rates of fire Many Gebauer machine guns are engine driven the crankshaft of the aircraft s engine rotates a number of gears inside the machine gun with the assistance of a crank The bolt is connected to another crankshaft which rotates when a locking lever is depressed when the gun fires The Gebauer machine guns were designed by Ferenc Gebauer and produced by Danuvia Engineering Industries Rt 19 The 12 7 mm Gebauer 1940 M GKM is a gas operated engine driven heavy machine gun chambered for 12 7 81mmSR it as used by the Italian 12 7 mm Breda SAFAT heavy machine gun 19 Synchronised with the propeller it is installed in pairs in the upper cowling and is driven via the crankshaft of the aircraft s engine 20 These guns had a fast rate of fire of 1 000 rounds per minute each 19 The 1940 M GKM has a muzzle velocity of 800 m s and is belt fed with 600 rounds for the two guns giving it 300 rounds per gun rpg 19 20 Considering the Hungarian MAVAG Heja had two of these guns in the cowling with 300 rpg the WM 23 would likely also have had 300 rpg for its 12 7 mm guns The 8 mm Gebauer 1939 M is a wing mounted gas operated machine gun It has a very high rate of fire of 2000 rounds per minute note 1 a muzzle velocity of 730 m s and is chambered for 8 56mmR 21 It uses a 500 round belt giving it 500 rounds per gun 22 However according to a different source it could use a 600 round belt giving it 600 rpg 23 The WM 23 would have likely had 500 or 600 rounds per gun for its 8 mm guns The prototype and the fate of the WM 23 editOne prototype was made which was completed by the end of 1940 and it bore V 501 as its serial number 11 The prototype had a silver grey colour with a smooth surface and looked like a fast plane with an aerodynamic shape hence it received the name Ezust Nyil Silver Arrow 8 The exact date of the WM 23 s first flight is not perfectly clear but it was likely first flown between February and March 1941 8 24 some sources say 23 February 1941 and this seems realistic 25 During test flights it demonstrated very good acceleration and good flying characteristics reaching a maximum speed of 530 km h significantly better than the 430 km h maximum speed of the He 112Bs given to Hungary 8 25 On 21 April 1942 whilst test flying the aircraft at maximum speed over Tokol test pilot Sandor Boskovits noticed the usual vibration at high speeds the prototype suffered from intensify resulting in the starboard right aileron breaking off at an altitude of 3000 m This was a serious problem and soon the aircraft became uncontrollable and got into a spin according to some sources 14 despite this the pilot managed to bail out of the aircraft Boskovits landed safely thanks to his parachute but the aircraft crashed into the Tokol forest and was completely destroyed 11 8 24 nbsp A Hungarian MAVAG Heja II It used the same 12 7 mm guns as the WM 23 one of which can be seen above the cowling The Heja II was produced instead of the WM 23 Prior to the crash the WM 23 was planned to enter mass production however after the crash the situation was different 26 By this time the MAVAG Heja fighter was in use and it acceptably filled the intended role of the WM 23 Furthermore Hungarian licence production of the more powerful Messerschmitt Bf 109 F 4 and G series was in sight and now the only prototype of the WM 23 was lost 8 In this situation there was not much point in allocating further resources to completing the project as a new prototype would need to be made further development would need to be done to resolve the high speed vibration problems the aircraft still suffered from and production would need to actually begin 14 All of this would take some time and since the WM 23 had similar performance to the Heja and inferior performance to the Bf 109F 4 and G series by the time the WM 23 would be introduced it would provide no major benefit over the Heja and would soon be replaced by the Bf 109 This would be a huge waste of resources and so the WM 23 project was cancelled It can be said that the WM 23 project was cancelled because the engineers took too long trying to find the causes of the vibrations and could not eliminate them fully 14 As such the aircraft was never fully ready for mass production and had to keep being tested and investigated eventually leading to its crash Since this occurred so late similarly or more capable fighters were becoming available so the WM 23 was no longer a modern enough design to warrant more resources being invested into completing the project Variants editPlans for an improved version of the WM 23 Ezust Nyil referred to as the WM 123 Ezust Nyil II had reached an advanced stage before being cancelled An all metal fighter aircraft with a monocoque fuselage the Ezust Nyil II would have a powerful 1475 hp 1100 kW DB 605 engine and would be armed with cannons most likely 20 mm MG 151s The Ezust Nyil II was planned to be introduced in 1943 but the project was eventually cancelled 12 11 8 13 Around this time Hungary acquired the licence to build the reputable Messerschmitt Bf 109 in Hungary This may have been why the project was cancelled After acquiring the licence for the Bf 109 it would have been pointless to waste years and lots of resources developing and testing the WM 123 Ezust Nyil II since it had the same DB 605 engine and cannons as the already tested Bf 109G The Bf 109G would go on to become the backbone of the Hungarian air force in the latter half of the war Two seat reconnaissance ground attack and training variants were also designed with the 870 hp 649 kW WM K 14A engines being used instead It is not perfectly clear which variant was referred to as what but the WM 22B or WM 23B seems to have been the reconnaissance variant and the WM 23G was either the training or ground attack variant These variants were also not developed further 8 13 24 Specifications WM 23 editData from Hungarian Fighter Colours 1930 1945 Volume 2 27 Magyar fejlesztesek a II vilaghaboruban es a Magyar Kiralyi Honvedseg haditechnikaja 14 and A WM 23 magyar kiserleti vadaszrepulogep 1940 1942 8 General characteristicsCrew 1 Length 9 12 m 29 ft 11 in Wingspan 9 6 m 31 ft 6 in Height 3 3 m 10 ft 10 in Wing area 18 5 m2 199 sq ft Airfoil root NACA 23018 tip NACA 23009 8 Empty weight 2 200 kg 4 850 lb Gross weight 2 600 kg 5 732 lb Max takeoff weight 3 290 kg 7 253 lb 18 Fuel capacity at least 300 kg 660 lb 8 Powerplant 1 Weiss Manfred WM K 14B 14 cylinder two row air cooled radial piston engine 768 kW 1 030 hp Propellers 3 bladed variable pitch propellerPerformance Maximum speed 530 km h 330 mph 290 kn Cruise speed 472 km h 293 mph 255 kn 16 Range 600 km 370 mi 320 nmi Service ceiling 9 600 m 31 500 ft 27 Rate of climb 16 7 m s 3 290 ft min calculated from 1000 m min 16 Time to altitude 6 000 m 20 000 ft in 6 minutes 18 Wing loading 140 kg m2 29 lb sq ft Power mass 0 295 kW kg 0 179 hp lb Take off run 250 m 820 ft 8 Armament Guns 2 12 7 mm 50 in synchronized Gebauer 1940 M GKM machine guns in the upper cowling likely with 300 rpg note 2 2 8 mm 31 in Gebauer 1939 M machine guns in the wings likely with 500 or 600 rpg Bombs 20 kg 44 lb bomb s Avionics R 13 radio 8 See also editHungarian military aircraft from the same era Weiss Manfred WM 16 Budapest Weiss Manfred WM 21 Solyom MAVAG Heja Varga RMI 1 X HAircraft of comparable role configuration and era Bell P 39 Airacobra Bloch MB 150 CAC Boomerang Curtiss P 36 Hawk Dewoitine D 520 Fiat G 50 Grumman F4F Wildcat Hawker Hurricane Heinkel He 100 Heinkel He 112 IAR 80 Kawasaki Ki 61 Lavochkin LaGG 3 Lavochkin La 5 Macchi C 202 MAVAG Heja Messerschmitt Bf 109 Mikoyan Gurevich MiG 3 Mitsubishi A6M Zero Morane Saulnier MS 406 Nakajima Ki 43 Polikarpov I 16 Reggiane Re 2000 Falco I Reggiane Re 2001 Falco II Reggiane Re 2002 Ariete Rogozarski IK 3 Supermarine Spitfire Yakovlev Yak 1Related lists List of aircraft of World War II List of aircraft of Hungary in World War II List of fighter aircraftNotes edit The rate of fire reached as high as 2038 rpm during testing The 2 12 7 mm guns might have been replaced later on during development by 2 20 mm 78 in synchronized Mauser MG 151 20 cannons in the upper cowling 17 References editCitations edit Szabo Miklos 2005 Establishment of the Hungarian Air Force and the Activity of the Hungarian Royal Honved Air Force in World War II Respectively PDF Nacao e Defesa 3rd ser 110 191 195 Archived from the original PDF on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 8 January 2023 via idn gov pt Joseph Frank 2012 The Axis air forces flying in support of the German Luftwaffe Santa Barbara California Praeger p 141 ISBN 9780313395901 OCLC 774295801 Neulen 2000 p 120 Green amp Swanborough 1982 1983 pp 4 5 Bernad amp Punka 2014 pp 193 198 Renner Stephen 14 November 2016 Broken wings the Hungarian Air Force 1918 45 Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press pp 198 199 ISBN 9780253023391 OCLC 972157471 a b c Bernad amp Punka 2014 pp 193 197 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Winkler a b c Bernad amp Punka 2014 p 213 Serebryanaya strela Eshyo o vengerskom istrebitele WM 23 Silver Arrow More about the Hungarian fighter WM 23 flyjet hu in Russian 21 December 2018 Retrieved 2 January 2023 a b c d e f Fitzsimons Bernard 1969 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of 20th Century Weapons and Warfare Vol 24 Columbia House p 2599 ISBN 9780906704004 a b c d Miranda Justo 5 December 2019 Enemy at the Gates Panic Fighters of the Second World War Fonthill Media Chapter 12 Hungary ISBN 978 1781557662 a b c d e Weiss Manfred WM 23 Ezust Nyil www samoloty ow pl in Polish Archived from the original on 1 September 2009 Retrieved 2 January 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k Rieder 2005 pp 163 168 Bernad amp Punka 2014 p 212 a b c Weiss WM 23 Ezust Nyil www airwar ru in Russian Retrieved 2 January 2023 a b Weiss Manfred WM 23 aviArmor in Russian 2 September 2018 Retrieved 2 January 2023 a b c d HUN Weiss Manfred WM 23 Ezust Nyil Armedconflicts com in English and Czech Retrieved 2 January 2023 a b c d Gebauer 1918 M 26 31 M 1940 M GKM www airwar ru in Russian Retrieved 2 January 2023 a b Pap 2012 p 701 Pap 2012 pp 708 711 Gebauer 1939 M www airwar ru in Russian Retrieved 7 January 2023 Pap 2012 p 698 a b c Bernad amp Punka 2014 p 214 a b Toth Marcell 7 January 2018 Legendas magyar fegyverek IV resz WM 23 Ezustnyil Legendary Hungarian weapons Part IV WM 23 Silver Arrow tortenelem blogstar hu in Hungarian Retrieved 2 January 2023 Kovats Lajos 1979 ADATOK A MAGYAR LEGIERO ANYAGI TECHNIKAI ALLAPOTARoL 1938 1944 DATA ON THE HUNGARIAN AIR FORCE S MATERIAL AND TECHNICAL SITUATION 1938 1944 PDF Hadtortenelmi Kozlemenyek a Hadtorteneti Intezet es Muzeum folyoirata in Hungarian 26 3 481 via epa oszk hu a b Bernad amp Punka 2014 pp 212 216 Bibliography edit Bernad Denes Punka Gyorgy 13 February 2014 Hungarian Fighter Colours 1930 1945 Volume 2 Vol 2 Mushroom Model Publications ISBN 978 8363678210 Green William Swanborough Gordon December 1982 March 1983 Fighter Biplane Finale The Falco Air Enthusiast No 20 pp 4 5 ISSN 0143 5450 Neulen Hans Werner 2000 In the Skies of Europe Ramsbury Marlborough UK The Crowood Press p 120 ISBN 1 86126 799 1 Pap Peter 28 September 2012 ADATTAR GEBAUER FERENC FEGYVERKONSTRUKTOR PALYAFUTASAHOZ ES AZ ALTALA TERVEZETT LOFEGYVEREK KATEGORIZALASA Data Repository on the career of firearms designer Ferenc Gebauer and the categorisation of the firearms designed by him PDF Hadtortenelmi Kozlemenyek a Hadtorteneti Intezet es Muzeum folyoirata in Hungarian 125 3 via epa oszk hu Rieder Kurt 2005 Magyar fejlesztesek a II vilaghaboruban es a Magyar Kiralyi Honvedseg haditechnikaja Hungarian developments during the Second World War and the Royal Hungarian Army s military technology in Hungarian Vagabund Kiado pp 163 168 ISBN 9789639409521 Winkler Laszlo A WM 23 magyar kiserleti vadaszrepulogep 1940 1942 The WM 23 Hungarian experimental fighter aircraft 1940 1942 haditechnika hu in Hungarian Archived from the original on 23 September 2008 Retrieved 1 January 2023 External links editWinkler Laszlo A WM 23 magyar kiserleti vadaszrepulogep 1940 1942 The WM 23 Hungarian experimental fighter aircraft 1940 1942 in Hungarian Portals nbsp Aviation nbsp World War II nbsp Hungary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Weiss Manfred WM 23 Ezust Nyil amp oldid 1188305793, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.