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Junkers G.38

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 77.189.235.180 (talk) at 18:57, 9 July 2018 (Specifications (G.38 1929): Inner engine type corrected. Reference: https://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/19930090392.pdf). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

G.38
Role Transport
Manufacturer Junkers
First flight 6 November 1929
Primary users Lufthansa
Luftwaffe
Number built 2
Variants Mitsubishi Ki-20

The Junkers G.38 was a large German four-engined transport aircraft which first flew in 1929.[1] Two examples were constructed in Germany. Both aircraft flew as a commercial transport within Europe in the years leading up to World War II.

During the 1930s, the design was licensed to Mitsubishi, which constructed and flew a total of six aircraft, in a military bomber/transport configuration, designated Ki-20.[2]

The G.38 carried a crew of seven. Onboard mechanics were able to service the engines in flight[1] due to the G.38's blended wing design, which provided access to all four power plants.

Design and development

Junkers G 38s.

During the 1920s, Hugo Junkers made several attempts to produce a large scale commercial transport. His initial attempt, the four-engined JG1, was developed during 1921-1922; but Junkers was forced to destroy the incomplete airplane based on post-WWI Allied demands citing the Treaty of Versailles. Later in the decade, in 1925, he published design specifications for a proposed eighty passenger trans-Atlantic aircraft - the J.1000 project. Then again, towards the end of the decade, the G.40 project was started by the Junkers design team as a trans-Atlantic mail plane. From the G.40 design, which was a seaplane configuration, Junkers also developed a land plane design, designated the G.38. Despite interest from the German armed forces in the G.40 variant, Junkers pushed forward with the land plane design which, having received financing from the Reich Air Ministry (Reichsluftfahrtministry), was taken forward to the construction stage.

The first Junkers prototype—3301 and marked as D-2000—first flew on 6 November 1929 with four diesel engines: two Junkers L55 12-cylinder V-motors and two 294 kW L8 6-cylinder inline motors with combined power rating of 1470 kW (1971 hp).[3] The Reich Air Ministry purchased the D-2000 for demonstration flights,[4] and took delivery on 27 March 1930. In flight tests, the G.38 set four world records including speed, distance and duration for airplanes lifting a 5000 kg payload.[1] On 2 May 1930 Lufthansa put the D-2000 into commercial service for both scheduled and chartered flights.

Structurally the G.38 conformed to standard Junkers' practice, with a multi-tubular spar cantilever wing covered, like the rest of the aircraft in stressed, corrugated duraluminium. The biplane tail, found in other large aircraft of the time, was intended to reduce rudder forces; initially there were three rudders with only a central fixed fin. The undercarriage was fixed, with double tandem main wheels that were initially enclosed in very large spats. The wing had the usual Junkers "double wing" form, the name referring to the full span movable flaps which served also as ailerons in the outer part.

D-2500 at Schiphol, showing the windows of the wing cabins

On 2 February 1931 the Leipzig-based Junkers' yard re-engined the D-2000 with two Junkers L8 and two L88 motors giving a total power rating of 1764 kW (2366 hp) and increasing passenger capacity from 13 to 19.[3]

The G.38, during its early life, was the largest land plane in the world.[1] Passenger accommodation was sumptuous by today's standards and was meant to rival that found on the competing Zeppelin service offered by DELAG. The plane was unique in that passengers were seated in the wings, which were 1.7 m (5 ft 7 in) thick at the root.[5] There were also two seats in the extreme nose. The leading edge of each wing was fitted with sloping windscreens giving these passengers the forward-facing view[1] usually available only to pilots. There were three 11-seater cabins, plus smoking cabins and wash rooms.

In design terms the G-38 foreshadowed the Blended Wing Body design currently being developed by both NASA and Boeing as an alternative to traditional tube and wing aircraft configurations.

First prototype at Berlin Tempelhof Airport showing spatted tandem main wheels, the aileron section of the "double wing" and—most unusually—retractable oil and water radiators

Operational history

On 1 July 1931 Lufthansa initiated regularly scheduled service between Berlin and London on flights carrying up to 13 passengers.[1] This London-Berlin service was halted in October 1931 to retrofit the aircraft and expand the passenger cabin of the D-2000. Construction lasted from this time until the summer of 1932, during which a second deck was built within the D-2000's fuselage—enabling an increased cargo capacity and seating for up to 30 passengers. Additionally the D-2000's engines were again upgraded to four L88s, giving a combined power total of 2352 kW (3154 hp). Also at this time the D-2000's certificate number was changed to D-AZUR.

Meanwhile, a second G.38—factory number 3302 and c/n D-2500, later changed to D-APIS—was built with a double deck fuselage and capacity for 34 passengers. Six passengers were carried three per wing in each leading edge, the remaining 22, on two levels, in the fuselage. Lufthansa used D-APIS on a scheduled service covering the cities Berlin, Hanover, Amsterdam, and London. This aircraft was named the General Feldmarschall von Hindenburg.

In 1934 D-2000/D-AZUR had its engines upgraded, this time with Jumo 4 engines, giving a total power rating of 3000 kW (4023 hp).[6]

Both planes were in service simultaneously until 1936, when D-AZUR crashed in Dessau during a post-maintenance test flight. Lufthansa had to write off this aircraft due to the extensive damage, but test pilot Wilhelm Zimmermann survived the crash, and there were no other casualties.

The second G.38—marked D-2500 and later D-APIS—flew successfully within the Lufthansa fleet for nearly a decade. With the outbreak of World War II the D-2500/D-APIS was pressed into military service as a transport craft by the Luftwaffe. It was destroyed on the ground during an RAF air raid on Athens on 17 May 1941.[1][7]

Specifications (G.38 1929)

Junkers G 38 3-view drawing from NACA Aircraft Circular No.116

General characteristics

  • Crew: 7
  • Capacity: 30 (D-2000/D-AZUR) and 34 (D-2500/D-APIS) passengers[3]
  • Length: 23.21 m (76 ft 2 in) [3]
  • Wingspan: 44 m (144 ft 4 in)
  • Height: 7.2 m (23 ft 7 in) [1]
  • Wing area: 290 m2 (3,100 sq ft) [1]
  • Empty weight: 14,920 kg (32,893 lb) [3]
  • Gross weight: 24,000 kg (52,911 lb)
  • Max takeoff weight: 21,240 kg (46,826 lb) [1][3]
  • Powerplant: 2 × Junkers L88 V-12 water-cooled piston engines inboard
  • Powerplant: 2 × Junkers L8a six-cylinder, water-cooled, in-line piston engines, 308 kW (413 hp) each at take-off, outboard
  • Propellers: 2-bladed wooden fixed pitch propellers outboard, 4-bladed wooden fixed pitch propellers inboard

Performance

  • Maximum speed: 225 km/h (140 mph, 121 kn) [5]
  • Cruise speed: 175 km/h (109 mph, 94 kn)
  • Range: 3,460 km (2,150 mi, 1,870 nmi) [5]
  • Service ceiling: 3,690 m (12,110 ft) [5]

Operators

The G.38 was featured in the 2013 semi-fictional movie ''The Wind Rises'' by Japanese director Hayao Miyazaki, as was Hugo Junkers.[8]

See also

Related development

Aircraft of comparable role, configuration, and era

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j EADS
  2. ^ Schnaedelbach
  3. ^ a b c d e f Junkers
  4. ^ G38 Special, translated: "ten hour flight with press on board over Germany; a round Europe flight to eleven capitals and showing the airplane to prominent business people and politicians"
  5. ^ a b c d Turner, P. St.J, & Nowarra, H. Junkers: an aircraft album (1971). New York:Arco Publishing Inc
  6. ^ "Longer Range of Diesel Plane Cuts Fuel Cost". Popular Mechanics, December 1935.
  7. ^ Junkers, G38 Special
  8. ^ "ZOOM Plane and not so simple - The Boston Globe". BostonGlobe.com. Retrieved 2017-05-05.

Bibliography