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         The He 162 had its 
         genesis in a demand by the Jägerstab (Fighter Staff) for a Volksjäger 
         (People's Fighter) that was simple, inexpensive and suitable for 
         production by semi-skilled and unskilled labour out of non-strategic 
         materials such as wood. It was to be powered by a single BMW 003 
         turbojet, weigh no more than 2000 kg (4410 lbs) fully loaded, carry an 
         armament of one or two 30mm cannon, fly faster than 750 kph (466 mph), 
         possess an endurance of 30 minutes at sea level and be able to take off 
         in a distance less than 500 meters (1640 feet). This requirement was 
         distributed to all the major aircraft companies on 8 Sep 1944 with 
         responses due by 20 September so that mass production could commence 1 
         January! The Volksjäger concept was pushed by Party Leader Otto Saur, 
         director of the Jägerstab and a protégé of Albert Speer, head of the 
         Ministry of Armaments, over the vociferous objections of Adolf Galland, 
         General der Jagdflieger (General of Day Fighters). Galland believed 
         that all of Germany's remaining aircraft production facilities should 
         be concentrated on proven aircraft such as the Me 262. He also didn't 
         believe that pilots could be trained quickly enough to fly the aircraft 
         in the numbers envisioned. Designers such as Kurt Tank and Willy 
         Messerschmitt also objected to the project on the more technical 
         grounds of a totally unrealistic specification and an absurdly short 
         amount of time for design and preparations for production. Despite this 
         opposition the submission date was actually advanced by 6 days to 14 
         September! 
         
           
          
         
           
         A Heinkel He 162A-2 of 1./JG 1 based at Leck airfield - Germany 1945 
         Proposals were received 
         from Blohm und Voss, Arado, Focke-Wulf, and Heinkel when the first 
         evaluations were made on 15 September, Messerschmitt having refused to 
         submit a proposal. Focke-Wulf's proposal was deemed unrealistic, 
         Arado's was completely rejected and Heinkel's was deemed unsuitable; 
         while Blohm und Voss's was judged the best submitted. The Heinkel 
         proposal unacceptable on 5 counts: a sea-level endurance of only 20 
         minutes; the unusual location of the engine on top of the fuselage 
         would undoubtedly result in maintenance problems; it failed to meet the 
         stipulated take-off requirement; it would take too long to dismantle 
         for rail transport; and it was designed to carry 20mm cannon rather 
         than the 30mm specified. Heinkel's representative protested that their 
         proposal was being evaluated by standards other than those applied to 
         the other proposals to the detriment of Heinkel's proposal. Another 
         meeting was scheduled for 19 September to make a decision after all the 
         proposals were re-evaluated. 
         By this time new 
         proposals had been received from Junkers, Focke-Wulf, Siebel and 
         Fiesler, but the result was much the same. Blohm und Voss's Projekt 211 
         was judged the best with Heinkel's as second-best. 
         It may well have been 
         second-best, but it possessed one major advantage over the Blohm und 
         Voss proposal; it was much further along in the design process. Heinkel 
         had been working on a simple and unsophisticated jet fighter, the Spatz 
         (Sparrow), since the early part of the summer and had even test-flown 
         the BMW 003 in July to obtain necessary performance data. The effort to 
         convert the Spatz into the Volksjäger was not inconsiderable, but it 
         was far easier and faster than working from a clean sheet of paper as 
         the others had to do. 
         On 23 September Heinkel 
         showed a mock-up of their Volksjäger to officials while the decision 
         was made to proceed with the Volksjäger concept in a meeting at 
         Göring's headquarters that same day. It was decided that pilots would 
         be recruited from the ranks of the Hitlerjugend (Hitler Youth). The 
         boys would be taught to fly on the Volksjäger if they didn't already 
         know how to fly and would finish their training by flying operational 
         missions! Party Leader Saur favored Heinkel's Projekt 1073 over the 
         Blohm und Voss Projekt 211 and ordered construction of the first 
         prototype the next day on his own authority. 
         
           
         Heinkel had nearly 
         carried the day, but it wasn't until two aerodynamicists were consulted 
         that the partisans of the P.211 were finally defeated. They ventured 
         the opinion that there might be a problem with the airflow of the 
         engine inlet and this was enough that the Heinkel proposal was ordered 
         into production at an initial rate of a thousand aircraft per month. 
         The aircraft was originally designated the He 500, but this was quickly 
         changed to the He 162, a number previously used by Messerschmitt's 
         contender for the Schnellbomber (fast bomber) competition that had been 
         won by the Ju 88. The project was code-named 'Salamander', this being 
         often confused for the name of the aircraft itself. 
         The final drawings were 
         complete by 29 October, one day ahead of schedule and the first 
         prototypes were in an advanced stage of construction. The He 162 was 
         unique in the history of aviation as the only aircraft in which 
         development, pre-production prototypes and main production lines were 
         started almost simultaneously and proceeded in parallel. 
         The production 
         arrangements were quite complex and are an excellent example of the 
         effort Germany had to make to minimize the vulnerability of her 
         aviation industry. Little was it realized that this decentralization 
         plan would play right into the hands of the Allies as the 8th Air Force 
         executed its plan to destroy all German means of transport from 
         railcars to river barges. 
         Final assembly was to 
         be at 3 plants, Heinkel-Nord at Rostock-Marienhe, Junkers at Bernburg 
         and Mittelwerke at Nordhausen; the first two being expected to assemble 
         a thousand machines a month and the latter, two thousand. All wooden 
         components were to be produced by two groups of wood-working and 
         furniture-manufacturing firms specially organized the Erfurt and 
         Stuttgart areas. Metal fuselages were to be built by Heinkel factories 
         at Barth in Pomerania, Pütnitz in Mecklenburg, Stassfurt in Saxony and 
         at Berlin-Oranienburg as well as the Junkers factories in Schönbeck, 
         Ascherleben, Leopoldshall, Halberstadt and Bernburg. In addition 
         fuselages were to be built in former salt mines at Eglen and Tarthun. 
         The Heinkel factory at Wien-Schwechat was to handle construction of the 
         prototypes and later to begin production in a converted chalk mine 
         outside Vienna at Hinterbühl. Another salt mine near Urseurg housed the 
         machinery from the Berlin-Spandau and Basdorf-Zülsdorf engine factories 
         for the production of the BMW 003 engines. The production schedule 
         called for the first thousand aircraft to be ready by the end of April 
         1945 and output to reach two thousand per month the following month. 
         The He 162A was one of the most distinctive aircraft ever designed with 
         its engine mounted above the fuselage and downward-drooping wing tips. 
         The Heinkel design team had placed the engine in this unusual position 
         to minimize any difficulties with the inlet and exhaust ducting, the 
         aerodynamics of which were poorly understood. 
         In line with the 
         semi-expendable nature of the Volksjäger, the He 162 was a rather spare 
         design, but it did include a simple ejection seat as pilots were 
         considered rather more valuable than the aircraft itself. It was 
         essential as the chances of bailing out in the usual manner were 
         considered less than optimal with the jet intake mounted right behind 
         and above the cockpit. 
         The first prototype, 
         the He 162 V1, made its initial flight on 6 December, 90 days from the 
         receipt of the requirement! A record unparalleled for a modern combat 
         aircraft. The flight was mostly uneventful except that a wooden 
         landing-gear door was torn away during the high-speed portion of the 
         flight. Four days later, the second flight ended in tragedy as the 
         starboard wing leading edge separated from the aircraft which caused it 
         to crash in front of large crowd of VIPs. The pilot did not survive. An 
         investigation determined that the bonding agent for the wood was 
         defective. It was a new adhesive that had to be used as the factory 
         producing the usual bonding agent had been bombed out. The Ta 154 
         Moskito was cancelled because of this type of problem, but the He 162 
         program had too much political weight behind it to suffer a similar 
         fate. 
         The second prototype 
         flew on 22 December and others rapidly followed. It was initially to be 
         armed with 2x 30mm MK 108 cannon, but the airframe proved to be too 
         lightly built for such a heavy armament. Flight test revealed problems 
         with lateral instability, snaking at high speeds and severe instability 
         during left-hand high G turns. It also proved to need much more runway 
         for take-off and landing than allowed by the specification. The tail 
         surfaces were enlarged and the wing tips extended and drooped on the V3 
         and V4 prototypes in a successful effort to resolve most of these 
         problems. Had time permitted the wing would have undoubtedly been fully 
         redesigned rather than the expedient wing tip drooping. 
         Very few He 162A-1 
         aircraft were built with the 30mm cannon before production switched to 
         the A-2 model armed with 2x 20mm MG 151 cannon. The A-2 also 
         incorporated a number of aerodynamic changes to increase stability, but 
         these were not fully successful as it remained very unforgiving of 
         abrupt movements of the controls. The 162 had a very high rate of roll, 
         but much care had to be taken as full rudder induced a lot of shudder 
         and buffeting. Only three-quarters rudder could be used if a smooth 
         turn was desired, such as when trying to shoot at an enemy! Experienced 
         piston-engine pilot had to unlearn their habit of throwing themselves 
         around the sky if they wished to master the 162 as it demanded smooth, 
         flowing motions from its pilot. In brief the He 162 was a handful for 
         experienced pilots and would have been a death-trap for the average 
         Hitlerjugend pilot fresh from glider training. 
         The Luftwaffe formed 
         Erprobungskommando (Evaluation Unit) 162 under Heinz Bär, the 8th 
         leading ace of all time with 220 kills, in January '45 to evaluate the 
         He 162 at the Rechlin test centre. By April Erprobungskommando 162 had 
         joined Adolf Galland's band of disgruntled fighter pilots, JV 44, with 
         its Me 262s at their base near München, but had little opportunity for 
         combat as the 162 wasn't yet considered ready for action. 
         On 8 February I/JG 1 
         was ordered to turn over its Fw 190s to II/JG 1 and proceed to Parchim 
         to begin conversion to the He 162, but their first aircraft didn't 
         arrive until the end of the month. Later joined by the Geschwaderstab 
         they stayed there until bombed out by the British on 8 April. They 
         moved to a number of different airfields in North Germany to avoid 
         being overrun by the advancing Allies ending the war at Leck in 
         Schleswig-Holstein. II/JG 1 left their Fw 190s behind on 8 April as 
         they transferred to Rostock to begin the conversion to the He 162, but 
         joined the first Gruppe at Leck on 2 May to escape the Soviet advance. 
         The conversion of III/JG 1 was planned to begin in mid-April, but it 
         was disbanded on 24 April and its personnel were distributed to other 
         units. On 3 May JG 1 was reorganized into two Gruppen, I (Einsatz 
         [Combat]) and II (Sammel [Replacement]). They totalled some 50 pilots 
         and aircraft in 6 staffeln. 
         I/JG 1 was declared 
         combat-ready on 23 April, after it had already claimed one British 
         fighter on 19 April. Feldwebel Günther Kirchner was credited with 
         shooting down a fighter when the captured pilot admitted he'd been shot 
         down by a jet. Unfortunately Kirchner himself was shot down shortly 
         thereafter by another British fighter. At least two other claims were 
         made by He 162 pilots before the end of the war, although only one 
         Tempest V can be confirmed from British records since a number of 
         British aircraft were lost to unknown causes at times and places that 
         match these other claims. At least one and possibly three He 162s were 
         lost to enemy action. 
         The BMW engine proved 
         to be far less sensitive to throttle movements than those of the Me 
         262, though still prone to flameouts. This allowed the He 162 to be 
         flown up to the limits of the pilot's confidence in the aircraft, 
         unlike the Me 262 whose engines restricted much in the way of 
         manoeuvres. 
         The He 162's primary 
         drawback was its very short endurance of 30 minutes at sea-level. This 
         forced the pilot to pay close attention to his fuel gauge and allowed 
         little leeway for bad weather or enemy aircraft over the pilot's home 
         airfield. In fact several of the operational losses can be attributed 
         simply to running out of fuel. 
         Other problems were the 
         lack of visibility above and to the rear and the inability of the tail 
         to handle the maximum stress that the rudder could generate. The former 
         would only really have been a problem if the 162 was at a low enough 
         speed that it could be bounced by piston-engined fighters since the 
         area obscured by the engine is the most vulnerable of any aircraft. The 
         weakness of the tail instilled a lack of confidence in its pilots that 
         the 162 could withstand extreme manoeuvres and they, therefore, were 
         reluctant to do so lest it break-up in mid-air. 
         Despite all these 
         caveats, the He 162 would have been a effective fighter in the hands of 
         a trained pilot if the war had continued, easily superior to the best 
         fighters fielded by the Allies, possibly even including the P-80A. 
         Specifications (Heinkel 
         He 162A-2 Salamander) 
         Type: Single 
         Seat Interceptor  
         Design: Ernst 
         Heinkel Design Team.  
         Manufacturer: 
         Ernst Heinkel AG. First batch Vienna-Schwechat. Production totally 
         dispersed with underground assembly at Nordhausen (Mittelwerke), 
         Bernberg (Junkers) and Rostock (Heinkel). 
         Powerplant: One 
         1,764 hp (800 kw) thrust BMW 003A-1 or E-2 Orkan single shaft turbojet 
         engine. 
         Performance: 
         Maximum speed 522 mph (840 km/h) at 19,685 ft (6000 m); service ceiling 
         39,500 ft (12040 m). Endurance 57 minutes at 35,990 (10970m). Climb 
         rate 3,780 ft/min (19.2m /sec) at sea level - 1,950 ft/min (9.9m /sec) 
         at 19,690 ft (6000 m) - 315 ft/min (1.6m /sec) at 36,090 ft (11000 m). 
         Range: 410 miles 
         (660 km) at 35,990 ft (10970 m). 
         Weight: Empty 
         4,520 lbs (2050 kg) with a maximum take-off weight of 5,941 lbs (2695 
         kg). 
         Dimensions: Span 
         23 ft 7 1/2 in (7.20 m); length 29 ft 8 1/4 in (9.05 m); height 8 ft 7 
         1/2 in (2.55 m); wing area 120.56 sq ft (11.20 sq m). 
         Armament: 
         (Early) Two 30 mm Rheinmetall MK 108 cannon with 50 rounds per gun. 
         (Late) Two 20 mm Mauser MG 151/20 cannons with 120 rounds per gun. 
         Variants: He 
         162A-0 (pre-production), He 162A-1, He 162A-2. 
         Avionics: FuG 24 
         R/T (radio) FuG 25a IFF. 
         History: First 
         flight 6 December 1944; first delivery January 1945. 
         Operators: 
         Germany (Luftwaffe).  |