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Focke-Wulf Flitzer

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Fw Project VII Flitzer
Wartime model of the Project VII design
Role Fighter
Manufacturer Focke-Wulf
Status Unfinished project
Number built One mockup built and a few prototype sub-assemblies completed[1]

The Focke-Wulf Project VII Flitzer ("streaker" or "dasher", sometimes incorrectly translated as "madcap") was a jet fighter under development in Germany at the end of World War II.

Development

The design began as Focke-Wulf Project VI which had a central fuselage and two booms carrying the rear control surfaces, having great similarity with the contemporary de Havilland Vampire.[2]

Project V had the air inlets still positioned on either side of the nose, just below the cockpit.[3]

The estimated horizontal speed was not satisfactory and in the next development, Project VII, the jet intakes were situated in the wing roots. Further improvements over Project VI were a narrower fuselage and a changed pilot's canopy. In order to improve the rate of climb, a Walter HWK 109-509 hypergolic liquid-propellant rocket was built in to give supplementary thrust. A complete mockup was built and all construction and assembly plans were finished, but the aircraft was not accepted by the Reich Air Ministry (Reichsluftfahrtministerium, RLM).[4]

Specifications (design draft of 15 September 1944)

Data from [citation needed]

General characteristics

  • Crew: one pilot

Performance

See also

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

References

  1. ^ Focke-Wulf Project VII Flitzer
  2. ^ Myhra, David (1998). Secret Aircraft Designs of the Third Reich. Atglen: Schiffer. pp. 141–42.
  3. ^ Lens, K.; H. J. Nowarra (1964). Die Deutschen Flugzeuge. Munich: J F Lehmans Verlag.
  4. ^ Nowarra, Heinz (1983). Die deutsche Luftrüstung 1933–1945. Bonn: Bernard and Graefe. pp. Teil 2, p.117.

Bibliography

  • Masters, David (1982). German Jet Genesis. London: Jane's Publishing.
  • Schick, Walter; Ingolf Meyer (1997). Luftwaffe Secret Projects: Fighters 1939–1945. Hinckley: Midland Publishing. pp. 143–44.
  • Smith, J. R. (1973). Focke-Wulf: An Aircraft Album. London: Ian Allan.
  • Smith, J. R.; A. Kay (1972). German Aircraft of the Second World War. London: Putnam.
  • Wagner, Wolfgang (1980). Kurt Tank: Konstruckteur und Test Pilot bei Focke-Wulf. Munich: Bernard and Graefe.