|
Nazi V-1 Buzz
Bomb-Doodle-Bug
|
![]() |
![]() Early reports were not quite 'on target' so to speak. Note the tapered wings (left) and 'overgrown rockets' (right) |
The air raid sirens had already sounded-" deep-throated, three toned jobs that sounded as though they really meant it," was one American's description of them. When the flying bombs reached Greater London's southern boundary, the guns of the London Defence Region opened up. Anyone who missed the sirens was jolted awake by the roaring bark of the guns, which rattled windows and frightened children. Anyone who opened his blackout curtains could watch the searchlights trying to pinpoint the intruders-odd little airplanes with flaming tails-through a steady drizzle.
What observers caught sight of was a very odd aircraft, a pilotless, jet-propelled aerial torpedo that would bear many names. Officially, it was simply FZG-76-Flakzielgerat (anti-aircraft target device)-76. The anti-aircraft designation was a ruse to throw Allied spies off the track. In Britain, it was known as the "doodlebug" "buzz bomb" and "farting fury," along with a number of other comic names.
The Fieseler company that designed it designated it the Fi-103. The Nazi Propaganda Ministry called the pilotless aircraft Vergeltungswaffe (retaliation weapon) 1, or V-1. But the name almost universaily favored by Britons and Americans alike was "buzz bomb."
A V-1 flying bomb resembled a small aircraft with a stovepipe mounted over its tail and no cockpit. Its overall length was just over 25 feet, with a wingspan of 17 V2 feet. Standard 80-octane gasoline kept its jet engine running, which was housed in the stovepipe assembly; this was the same fuel used by trucks. The flying bomb was easy and cheap ($500) to build and carried a 1,870-pound warhead. But while the flying bomb may have been cheap and simple, it was not very accurate-it could not hit small targets, or even moderate-sized villages. It was accurate enough to hit a target the size of Greater London, however, and that was all that was expected-a way to hit back at the Allies without risking the depleted reserves of the Luftwaffe's bomber fleet.
During the early months of 1943, extensive tests were carried out involving the FZG-76. Only nine months had passed between the beginning of work on the project in March 1942 and the first successful launch, which took place on Christmas Eve, although the flying bomb still had its share of teething problems. One question involved the proper type of launching site for the flying bombs. Some favored large concrete emplacements; others proposed small, portable sites. As head of the Luftwaffe, Reichsmarschall Hermann Goring compromised, ordering four concrete bunkers and 96 smaller sites begun immediately.
Next, men had to be trained to handle and fire the flying bomb. A new Luftwaffe unit was formed in August 1943, called Flakregiment 155 ('N). The anti-aircraft designation was, once again, aimed at deceiving Allied intelligence.
The new unit was placed under the command of Luftwaffe
Colonel Max Wachtel, who had been in charge of all the experimental
flying bomb launches. Wachtel was instructed to get his men ready
for firing the bomb under actual combat conditions, and he took
his orders to heart; his Flakregiment began exercises within days
of the unit's creation. From the western side of Peenemuende,
on Usedom Island in the Baltic Sea, the launching crews began
readying the small, jet-propelled planes and firing them downrange
over the Baltic.
Under Wachtel, Flakregiment 155 ('N) continued its training through the winter of 1943 and into 1944. ByJune 1944, Wachtel and his unit were in France, ready to begin operations. But few others connected with the flying bomb project were as efficient as Wachtel.
One of the main problems was with the production of the flying bombs themselves. Because of the many defects that plagued the bomb, it did not go into production until March 1944. Engineers at the Volkswagen plant at Fallersleben, near Hamburg, did their best to work out the problems, but the pilotless planes kept crashing immediately after launching. Full production did not begin until April 1944, when 1,000 flying bombs rolled off the Volkswagen assembly line.
Wachtel had been ordered to begin launching the pilotless bombs against England by June, but his unit had no equipment, no launching rails and no supplies. It had been decided that lightweight launching ramps, called modified sites, would be used in place of larger ramps that had proved too vulnerable to Allied bombing attacks.
The supplies and equipment that Wachtel needed to begin operations did not arrive until June 12, 1944, only a few hours before he was to begin launching V-is against southern England. Only 10 ramps were ready for launching; 55 were supposed to have been prepared, but not enough spare parts and equipment had been sent for all of them. By 3:30 am, on June 13, the 10 firing ramps were ready. The Luftwaffe high command decided to go ahead despite the fact that so few ramps were operational.
Months of practice made the pre-launch procedure a set routine for the crews. First, the flying bomb's fuel tank was checked, to make certain that it had been topped off. Following this, the wooden wings were attached-these had been folded over the fuselage to make storing and moving the aircraft easier. After assembly, the plane was aligned precisely with its firing ramp-which was pointed directly at London-and its gyrocompass was set at zero to ensure it flew the straight course on which it had been aimed.
The flying bomb, now ready for launching, was moved onto its firing ramp. After it was loaded onto its catapult, a lug on the underside of the fuselage was attached to the catapult's firing piston. When the piston was released, it accelerated the V-1 off the launch rails in the same way that a jet plane is catapulted off the flight deck of an aircraft carrier.With the stubby-winged flying bomb poised for takeoff, the launching crew took cover inside the "control bunker," a heavily armored trailer that housed the catapult's firing controls, or lumped into a nearby slit trench. The firing officer gave an order, a technician pulled a lever, and the flying bomb's pulse-jet engine came to life with a throbbing, ear-numbing roar.
This simple jet engine was the flying bomb's most unique feature. Housed outside the fuselage, above the tail, the jet is usually described as looking like either a stovepipe or a giant blow torch. At the front end of the engine housing was a set of intake flaps that resembled a Venetian blind. These flaps opened at the beginning of the engine's cycle, allowing air to be drawn into the combustion chamber, where it was mixed with 80-octane fuel. In the second stage of the combustion cycle, the flaps closed and the fuel-oxygen mixture was ignited. With a tremendous flash, a burst of hot exhaust shot out from the rear of the engine to provide forward thmst. Immediately following the exhaust stage, the intake flaps opened again, allowing air into the combustion chamber and repeating the cycle.
This simple jet engine could complete up to 500 combustion cycles every minute, giving the flying bomb a maximum speed of about 400 mph. The engine's pulsing combustion process also gave the flying bomb its distinctive duv-duv-duv sound in flight, a sound that Londoners would soon come to recognize.
After listening for a moment to ensure that the engine was firing properly, the firing officer gave the order to launch. A second lever was pulled, releasing the catapult's piston. The flying bomb lurched forward, shot along the length of steel rail, and lumped uncertainly into the night sky. During the next half-hour, between ab out 3:30 and 4 a.m., nine more of the bombs bolted from their catapults. The launching crews watched as the small aircraft left their ramps, brilliant flashes of fire trailing from their exhausts.
Four of the shots failed, the flying bombs crashing just after takeoff, with explosions loud enough to hurt the eardrums of the catapult crews. Two of the successfully launched flying bombs crashed into the English Channel. The other four reached England; two landed in Kent, one in Surry, and one crashed in London, the intended target of all of them. The London bomb came down in Bethnal Green, East London, about three miles away from its Tower Bridge target point. The explosion killed three people and knocked out a railway bridge.
Although only four flying bombs reached England during this first launch, hundreds more would be launched during the next several weeks. An inexpensive, and not very accurate, mechanism sent the flying bomb diving into its target upon arrival. Each bomb had a small, propellerlike anemometer device on its nose that was connected to the bomb's autopilot. As the flying bomb flew through the air, its forward motion turned the propeller like a pinwheel in the wind. After a preset number of revolutions, the propeller tripped the diving controls, pointing the bomb earthward at a steep angle. The mechanism was set by the catapult crew before launching; the setting of how many revolutions were needed to trip the diving controls was based upon calculations involving the flying bomb's speed and the distance to target.
Any number of factors could undo this inherently imprecise system. Headwinds or tailwinds could alter the machine's groundspeed, mining carefully worked-out calculations that were usually a lot more accurate than the mechanism itself. The autopilot might go haywire and send the bomb plunging into the Channel. Or it might not work at all, causing the bomb to overfly London and keep going until it ran out of fuel. When the windmill device tilted the bomb toward the earth, all the fuel ran to one end of the tank-the end away from the fuel pump. The pump began drawing air, and the engine, cut off from its fuel supply, stopped running.
People in London and southern England very quickly
learned to use this "cutting out" of the engine to their advantage.
Between the time the pulsing duv-duv-duv ended and the bomb hit
the ground, an average of between five and 15 seconds would pass-enough
time for people to dive under a table or some sort of cover. This
characteristic undoubtedly saved many lives.
In spite of the machine's defects, Wachtel's Flakregiment 155 (W) kept launching the bombs at a steady rate. On Saturday, June 18, 1944, his unit launched its 500th flying bomb. One of them landed on Hungerford Bridge, the railway bridge across the Thames River to Charing Cross Station in London. The explosion blew a gaping hole in the middle of the bridge, forcing one of London's major rail terminals to shut down. Later in the day, an American intelligence officer saw the damage done to the bridge-it had been blown almost in half by the explosion. He also noticed that several large buildings on the Thames embankment had all the windows facing the river blown out.
Each flying bomb had an efficient system of sensitive fuses and pressure switches that detonated the warhead on first contact, before the machine could bury its nose (and warhead) in the earth. When the 1,900 pounds of high explosives went off on the surface of a roadway, the blast cut down everything within reach. Solid walls crumbled-often, even individual bricks in a wall would be reduced to pebble-sized bits. Windows a quarter of a mile away cracked from the force of the explosion.
A central London fire station got a firsthand look at the effects from the blast of a flying bomb. The firemen had opened the station's big front doors, trying to enjoy a sunny but not very warm June day, when a buzz bomb landed less than a block away. The blast waves first slammed the heavy wooden doors shut; then, a second later, the vacuum created by the explosion wrenched them open again. When the bomb's warhead detonated, shock waves flew out in concentric circles, like gigantic ripples. As the blast waves pulsed outward, they created a vacuum behind them. One London fireman called it a "double whammy" effect-the vacuum was capable of creating as much damage as the blast itself.
In an effort to stop the flying bomb attacks, anti-aircraft defenses and more than 1,000 barrage balloons were sent to Kent, southeast of London. Bombs launched from the Pas de Calais would have to fly over this "gun belt" on their way to London. Also, eight fighter squadrons, equipped with Hawker Typhoons, Supermarine Spitfire IXs and XIVs, and Hawker Tempest Vs, flew standing patrols.
![]() Fighters assigned to combat the flying bombs underwent modifications to squeeze every last bit of power from their engines to help them chase the speedy flying bombs. All armor and excess weight were removed. The leading edges of wings and stabilizers were polished to a high gloss. |
![]() The engines themselves received particular care, with meticulous tuning and overhauling at frequent intervals. After all the cutting and streamlining, the flying bomb interceptors consisted of little more than machine guns and cannons, a fuel tank, and a finely tuned engine. Because the buzz bombs traveled at more than 400 miles per hour, the piston-engine fighters needed all the speed they could muster. Pilots of the modified Spitfires and Tempests could close with the flying bombs more easily. Some could even fly right alongside the bombs, close enough to read the German writing on the fuselages. |
"Tipping the doodlebugs"
nearly always worked. The flying bombs had a very delicate
gyro mechanism; any sudden, violent movement-such as wing
lifting-would cause it to malfunction. With the gyroscope
out of order, the machine would spiral earthward and crash.
From the air, the concentric shock wave of the crashed bomb
was said to look like "a single ripple on a lake." |
![]() |
These are Wing-flipping images are from the gun cameras of another plane |
But this maneuver was not without its risks. The flying bomb was made of rolled sheet steel, while the RAF fighters had a skin of light aluminum alloy. Many a Spitfire and Tempest hobbled back to base with one of its highly polished wings bent and twisted out of shape from the "wing wrestling."
![]() Barrage balloons were deployed against the missiles, but the leading edges of the V-1's wings were equipped with balloon cable cutters and fewer than 300 V-1s are known to have been destroyed by hitting cable. |
Bringing down a buzz bomb with gunfire also presented problems for Allied pilots. The most frequent method of attack was the deflection shot, approaching from the side and opening fire when the bomb crossed the pilot's line of sight. "It's like firing at a large flame with wings sprouting out of it," the pilot of a Tempest V said. "Your cannon scores hits, and suddenly there is a big red flash."
The top "doodlebug ace" was Squadron Leader Joseph Berry, who flew Tempest Vs with the Fighter Interception Unit, and then No. 501 Squadron. Berry's final score was 591/2 V-1s, including a one-night record of seven on July 23. During a low-level chase four days later, he closed to 100 feet before downing the doodlebug, and his and his plane was damaged in the ensuing explosion. To his chagrin, he had to share the credit with a de Havilland Mosquito that had fired at the V-1 from 1,000 yards and, in the opinion of his unit, had "missed hopelessly."
Another noted V-1 specialist was Flying Officer R.F. Burgwal, a Dutch pilot who flew Rolls-Royce Grifon-engined Spitfire XIVs with No. 322 Squadron, a Dutch unit based in southeast England. Burgwal was credited with 21 V-1s, while a squadron mate and fellow Hollander,
Flight Lt. J.L. Plesman, accounted for 12.
Number 616 Squadron could combat the pilotless planes on an equal footing. In July 1944, the unit received seven Gloster Meteors, the RAF's first jet fighter. The Meteor had a maximum speed in excess of 400 miles per hour, and could easily overtake the missiles. But the Meteor suffered from constant gun trouble-its 20mm cannons had a habit of jamming.
In spite of the balky cannons, however, the Meteors accounted for 13 flying bombs. When the guns failed, pilots could always rely upon the tipping techniques.
Meteor pilot T.D. Dean had a problem with his Meteor's cannons on August 4; he attacked a flying bomb, but his guns jammed. Undeterred, Dean maneuvered his aircraft alongside the bomb, slid a wingtip under the missile's, and executed a sharp bank, using the tipping maneuver. The V-1's gyro mechanism was thrown out of balance, and the flying bomb crashed. This was the first combat victory for an Allied jet fighter.
When
a flying bomb was disabled by gunfire, it behaved in the same
way as any conventional airplane-it went out of control sometimes
trailing smoke, and smashed into the earth. But the V-1s presented
some problems that fighter pilots had not encountered before.
One of the main problems was with the sheet steel skin-it deflected
.303-caliber machine-gun bullets like armor plate.
Cannon fire was most effective against the V-I; a shell from a 20mm cannon would blow a hole right through the steel outer covering. But a 20mm cannon had a much shorter range than a .303 caliber machine gun, forcing the attacking pilot to move in at close range before pressing the firing button. And if a cannon shell should hit the flying bomb's 2,000-pound warhead, the result could be disastrous for the attacker. When a buzz bomb exploded in midair, great chunks of metal sprayed in all directions. The result could be the same as having a huge anti-aircraft shell explode nearby.
Jagged shrapnel holes and blasted-away control surfaces were the reward of a careless or overeager pilot who attacked a flying bomb. At least five aircraft were destroyed by midair flying bomb explosions. One such aircraft, a Spiffire, was flown by a Free French pilot, Jean-Marie Maridor, who attacked a flying bomb at pointblank range near the south coast. The bomb's ton of Trialen exploded, blasting the Spitfire apart and killing Maridor instantly.
The flying bomb offensive against London and southern England continued throughout the summer of 1944. In late summer, the launch sites on the Normandy coast were captured by the Allied armies as they moved inland from the D-Day beaches. By the first week of September, the flying bomb attacks had all but ended. More than 2,000 of them had hit London, with many others coming down on the surrounding suburbs.
The Heinkels approached England at low altitudes to avoid radar detection. The pilot climbed to about 20,000 feet when the bomber neared the flying bomb's launching point, and he instructed the crew to start the bomb's engine and gyroscope. When everything was ready and the bomber had reached its required altitude, the V-I was released. The pilotless plane dropped for several hundred feet before it leveled out and headed toward its target. Some never pulled out, and crashed into the North Sea. But most leveled off and continued along their preset course toward the eastern coastline of England.
Only one or two of those air-launched bombs hit London every day; some shots were aimed at the port of Southampton. Apart from putting an added strain on Britain's defenses, as well as on already taut British nerves, this new attack had little effect. The last flying bomb was launched at London on March 29, 1945, only six weeks before Germany surrendered.
Flying straight and level-as was usually the case
when it crossed the coast-V-1 was a small, fast-moving target
for the AA guns and the fighters of the RAF. Once contact was
made by the latter, there was a choice between tipping the missile
over, or blowing it up with gunfire. Both were effective-but there
was no possible way of stopping the deadly, invisible plunge of
the V-2 rockets
When the operational height of the V-1was found to be between 2000 and 3,000 feet, the gunners were in a difficult position: the height was too low for the heavy guns and too high for the light guns. The missiles speeds were high: from 340 mph crossing the coast to over 400 mph as they approached London. Yet there were several aircraft that could catch it and pass it, particularly if they had some height so they could pick up speed quickly in a dive. The Spitfire XIV, Mustang Ill, Tempest V, and the Mosquito night-fighter were all fast enough-but they could not chase a V-1 too far over England before running into the areas allocated to the gunners.
No other target but London
The first real test of the existing defences came on June 15, when Heinemann again ordered Colonel Wachtel to re-commence the attack. The catapults at 55 sites flew off 244 missiles against London within 24 hours. Of these, 144 crossed the coast of southeast England and 73 fell in the Greater London area, two-thirds of them exploding south of the Thames. Some 100 missiles failed to cross the Channel: 45 of them crashed soon after launching, wrecking nine sites; and in a French village where one crashed ten civilians were killed.
Heinemann was at Wachtel's HO bunker when the catapulting began, and stayed to listen to the spotter aircraft pilot's radio report that the glow in the target area was brighter than he had ever seen after conventional air attacks by the IX Air Corps'. The German High Command announced the attack over the radio, saying that southern England and the London area were bombarded with very high-explosive missiles of novel design during last night and this morning'. On Dr Goebbels' order the word revenge' was not used.
On June 17 the British Chiefs-of-Staff and Tedder,
Hill, and Pile attended a meeting with Churchill to discuss the
new defence requirements: these necessarily varied from the earlier
plan, when only a few ski sites were regarded as points of enemy
activity. Hill and Pile were directed to counter the attack with
reinforcement of the defences and effective deployment of the
guns, aircraft, and balloons, and to General Eisenhower was sent
a request for all possible measures to neutralise the supply and
launching sites subject to no interference with the essential
requirements of the Battle of France'.
Also on June 17 Hitler flew to northern France to congratulate Heinemann and Wachtel. He forbade the regiment to aim the cherry stone', as he called the missile, at any other target but London and readily agreed to order an immediate increase in the production of the weapon. The following day a flying bomb destroyed the Guards Chapel of Wellington Barracks, a few hundred yards from Buckingham Palace. It was hit during a morning service and 121 men, women, and children were killed and 68 injured. Also on this day the 500th V1left its launching ramp.
Eisenhower readily ordered that the V-weapon bases (code-named Crossbow') should be second only in priority to 'the urgent requirements of battle'. However, the heavy air offensive against the German oil industry did not slacken to any degree because of V-site attacks which were, in most cases, quite useless, since the old supply sites were again the target. Fortunately, Nucourt and Saint-Leu-d'Esserent were identified as V-1 store depots and heavily attacked by the US 8th Air Force during the last week in June. In the first week of July the RAF made two attacks on the heavily defended mushroom caves of Saint-LeudEsserent. In the first attack 617 Squadron dropped the 12,000-pound Tailboy' bombs: but the limestone roof of the caves held.
Much to Hitler's chagrin, Eisenhower did not order an invasion of the Dieppe area in order to chase through the Pas-de-Calais after V-1 bases-even if it were possible to mount such an invasion at short notice. The Germans did, however, benefit greatly from the deployment of Allied bombers from other activities more closely connected to the battle being fought on the ground. The Fuhrer again underestimated the British determination to put up with hardship and refusal to be coerced into making a rash move. Hitler was jubilant that England was under fire again and reported to be suffering more than it did during the Blitz. He described how the V-1 attacks were tying down hundreds of enemy aircraft . . . and bringing vital relief to the Fatherland and to the battlefields in the West'. He also seemed to be impressed by the economy of the V-1: It needs no fuel for a return flight" he boasted.
By June 29, 2,000 flying bombs had been launched against England.
![]() Mr. Tracy Dungan sends in this great photo saying...The V1 is a full-sized replica on display at the giant Watten hardened V-weapons bunker in Calais, France. It hangs outside, the trees and sunlight are real, I only removed the poles and lines and added a motion blur. Also, I have your page linked from my links page, and was wondering if you could link to mine somewhere on your site http://www.v2rocket.com.....Thanks Tracy |
Meanwhile the defenders south of London changed their formation when they found that both the guns and the fighters were restricted. The solution was to place the guns in a belt along the coast from Newhaven to St Margaret's Bay. They would have an unrestricted field of fire and their shells could explode harmlessly Out to sea instead of over towns and villages. New proximity-fuse shells would help to overcome the deficiency of the heavy guns when firing at the low-flying missiles, and radar experts decided that their equipment would work better on the coast than inland,
This positioning too gave the fighters a better chance to catch their quarry on the run from the coast to the North Downs where the balloons hung their wire tentacles, floating in thick bunches between Limpsfield and Cobham. Some 370 flying bombs- out of an estimated 1,000 launched-had reached London up to June 23. But by June 28 nearly 800 guns of all calibre were in readiness and 1,000 balloons were elevated. The fighter pilots found that it was too dangerous to shoot down a V-i from too close behind and that the safe distance was not less than 200 yards. The best method was to allow the missile to fly past on one side, then fire a deflection shot once it was far enough away. Some pilots, particularly if out of ammunition or with jammed guns, placed a wing tip under the wing tip of the V-1, tumbling it off course by quickly banking away. Another simple method of spoiling its flight was to fly in front of it and allow the slipstream to unbalance it so much that it would spin out of control.
While the Germans maintained their launching rate of 100 a day the continuation of V-site bombing was an essential part of the defence. Towards the end of June, over 40% of the Allied bomber effort from Britain was directed against Crossbow targets- despite objections from some Allied commanders who wanted more strategic air operations to be flown over Germany. Despite the bombing of the V-sites and supply centres, an average of almost 120 flying bombs a day were launched in the first week of July. After the first two weeks of bombing, some 1,769 people had been killed and in the Strand the Air Ministry itself was hit and 198 people killed. On July 1 a flying bomb crashed in Chelsea, killing 124; four days later the total death roll was 2,500. Reprisals against German towns and villages were considered but such reprisals were not likely to ease the situation. Moreover, Eisenhower was opposed to this kind of retaliation.
By July 19 there were 1,800 guns and a couple of hundred rocket-projectiles in the anti-aircraft belt and there were hundreds more balloons holding up cable. The gunners and fighter pilots were accounting for more and more flying bombs: by the end of the month the figures were beginning to show a marked upward trend.
Hitler's Reprisal Weapons were missiles of terror aimed at London, where some war production fell because of time lost during raids and the loss of killed and injured workers. Moreover, the Allied air forces were distracted from their main objectives in tactical support of the armies. But it could have been much worse, as General Eisenhower suggested in Crusade in Europe: 'It seemed likely that if the German had succeeded in perfecting and using these new weapons six months earlier than he did, our invasion of Europe would have proved exceedingly difficult, perhaps impossible. I feel sure that if they had succeeded in using these weapons over a 5 month period, and particularly if they had made the Portsmouth-Southampton area one of their principal targets, 'Overlord" may have been written off.'
Of the many unorthodox weapons proposed for use by the Luftwaffe during the last 18 months of W.W. II one of the most remarkable was a piloted version of the Fi 103 missile: Reichenberg IV. One of the unusual side stories of the flying-bomb campaign was development of a piloted "suicide" V-1.
In late 1943, the Germans had experimented with "manned
missiles", in which pilots would point their aircraft at
a ground target and bail out. Experiments along this line were
performed with Focke-Wulf FW-190 and pulsejet-powered Messerschmitt
Me-328 fighters, but proved unsuccessful. In May 1944, SS Hauptsturmfuehrer
Otto Skorzeny, German's brilliant and ruthless commando leader,
proposed using the V-1 for this job. Within two weeks, prototypes
of variants of the manned weapon, known as "Reichenberg",
were built, with designations "R-I" through "R-IV".
Intended for use against shipping or heavily-defended ground targets,
the piloted Fi 103 missile was developed under the code-name Reichenberg,
and its progenitors were primarily Flugkapitdn Hanna Reitsch,
the internationally-famous German woman pilot, and SS-Hauptsturmfdhrer
Otto Skorzeny. Previously, Flugkapitan Reitsch and a certain Hauptmann
Heinrich Lange had promoted a scheme for the recruiting of a cadre
of pilots willing to sacrifice their lives if necessary by crashing
their aircraft on to important targets. Although this scheme met
with little favorable response from other than a few fanatics,
it was pursued in modified form on a limited scale.
Initial piloted trials were conducted at Lärz in September
1944, the aircraft without power plant being launched from beneath
the port wing of an He 111 bomber but crashing when the pilot
lost control after inadvertently jettisoning his cockpit canopy.
The second flight test on the following day also terminated in
the loss of the aircraft.
Four piloted models of the Fi 103 were evolved under the Reichenberg
program, three of these being training variants. These were the
Reichenberg I single-seater with landing skid and flaps; the Reichenberg
II with a
second
cockpit in the position normally occupied by the warhead in the
operational version, and the Reichenberg III single-seater with
a similar arrangement of landing skid and flaps but with the Argus
As 014 impulse duct fitted and ballast compensating for the weight
of the warhead.
The operational model was the Reichenberg IV, and its
conversion from the standard Fi 103 missile was the essence of
simplicity.
The basic Fi-103 fuselage was divided into six compartments respectively
housing the magnetic compass, the 1,874lb. Amatol warhead, the
fuel tank, two circular compressed air bottles, the autopilot
and height and range setting controls, and the servo mechanisms
controlling the rudder and elevators. The conversion to Reichenberg
IV standards included the insertion of a small cockpit ahead of
the propulsive duct. The instrument panel comprised an arming
switch, a clock, an airspeed indicator, an altimeter, and a turn-and-bank
indicator, a gyrocompass being carried by a floor-mounted bracket
which also provided a mounting for a three-phase inverter and
a small 24-volt wet battery. Flight controls were of the conventional
stick-andrudder bar type, and the pilot was accommodated by a
plywood bucket seat with a padded headrest. The single-piece hood,
which incorporated an armour-glass windscreen, hinged to starboard,
and guidelines were provided for calculating diving angles.
The cockpit occupied the space taken in the pilotless version
by the compressed air bottles, and the Reichenberg IV was provided
with only one compressed air bottle, this being housed in the
aft compartment normally occupied by the missile's autopilot.
The entire trailing edge of the wing was occupied by the ailerons.
![]() |
![]() The R-I and R-II were glider trainers and lacked engines. The R-I was a single-seat trainer, while the R-II was a two-seat trainer with dual cockpits (above). The R-III was a two-seat powered trainer, while the R-IV (below and left) was the operational weapon. ![]() |
The Reichenberg IV was intended to be carried
to the vicinity of its target beneath an He 111 bomber in a similar
fashion to the pilotless Fi 103s launched 
against the British Isles by Kampfgeschwader 53, communication
between pilot and launching aircraft being maintained via a four-channel
connector in the top of the fuselage ahead of the cockpit. In
theory the pilot was intended to jettison the cockpit canopy and
bail out after aiming his aircraft at the target, but it was calculated
that his chance of survival was little better than one in a hundred.
To release the canopy it was necessary to operate a lever on the
port side of the cockpit, the canopy having to swing through an
angle of 45 degrees before the forward-hinged connection on the
starboard side could be detached, and at the estimated target
approach speeds of 490-530 m.p.h. it is highly improbable that
this method of jettisoning the canopy would have proved practical.
The training of a nucleus of instructors on the Reichenberg I
and II was initiated, and although a successful landing called
for considerable skill, the unpowered Reichenberg presented no
insurmountable problems. In principle, the pilot was to aim the
Reichenberg at a target and then bail out. In practice, the weapon
lacked an ejection seat, and though provisions were made for escape,
getting out of such an aircraft safely as it dived at high speed
towards a target was problematic. The volunteer pilots who were
to fly the bombs were known as "Selbstopfermaenner (Suicide
Men)". Unsurprisingly, many German officers did not like
the scheme. In October 1944, a new commander named Werner Baumbach
was appointed to KG-200, and he preferred Mistel to Reichenberg.
The Germans had little enthusiasm for kamikaze missions.
After Oberstleutnant Werner Baumbach took
over as Gesch waderKommodore of KG 200 in October 1944, the entire
programe was suppressed. By this time some 175 Fi 103 missiles
had been adapted for the Reichenberg program but none had been
used operationally.
Along with the Reichenberg, another interesting dead-end adaptation
of the V-1 was its use as an external fuel tank that could be
towed behind an aircraft by a long pipe, with the pipe acting
as both tow bar and fuel connection. The scheme was evaluated
with an Ar-234 jet bomber, but never got beyond preliminary tests.
Fi 103 Reichenberg IV Specs |
Thought you'd like to see what a quick
afternoon build developed. Using the Me 109 cockpit and
a bit of adjustment and add-ons, and this is what I came
up with. Not one of my better builds, but it shows it can
be done! The trouble was the engine is different than the
one shown on the info page, the cockpit is different and
the rudder has a different shape, and I didn't add the skid
on the bottom. If I were to do this again I would change
those items and take a bit more time designing the engine
and it's attachments and make a smoother fit. Take care!
Jim K (1998) |
![]() This is the original version designed in 1987 ..or there abouts. It was more graphic than accurate with German markings everywhere |
The American version of the V-1: JB FLYING
BOMB aka Loon
The JB-2 is a U.S. made copy of the famous German V-1
surface-to-surface pilotless flying bomb first used against England
on June 12-13, 1944. The airframe for the JB-2 was built by the
Republic Aviation Corporation and the engine by the Ford Motor
Company from drawings prepared at Wright Field, using dimensions
taken from the remains of several V-1s brought from Germany.
About 1,000 JB-2s were built for the Army and Navy. Production
delivery began in January 1945, but it was cancelled on VJ Day.
The first one to be test flown in the U.S. was launched at Eglin
Field, Fla., in October 1944. Just before the end of the war,
JB-2s were placed aboard an aircraft carrier en route to the Pacific
for possible use in the proposed invasion of the Japanese home
islands. Although the JB-2 was never used in combat, it provided
valuable data for the design and construction of more advanced
weapons.
![]() The JB-2 on display was obtained from the Continental Motors Corporation, Muskegan, Mich. in December 1956. |
SPECIFICATIONS Span: 17 ft. 8 in. Length: 27 ft. 1 in. Height: 4 ft. 8 in. Weight: 5,023 lbs. loaded Armament: 2,100 lb. high-explosive warhead Engine: Ford PJ-31-F-1 of 900 lbs. thrust (copy of German Argus-Schmidt pulse-jet) Operating speed: 375-400 mph Launching speed: 220 mph Range: 150 miles Operating Altitude: 2,000 to 4,000 ft. |
USAAF JB-2 / JB-1 and Navy KGW-1"Loon"
Despite the V-1's limitations, the US military was very interested
in it. In comparison to the bumbling American efforts in radio-controlled
flying bombs such as the BQ
weapons the German V-1 looked pretty good, and in July 1944 captured
V-1 components were shipped to Wright-Patterson Field in Ohio
for evaluation. Within three weeks, the USAAF and American industry
had built their own V-1, which was designated the "Jet Bomb
2 (JB-2)" and more informally known as the "Thunderbug".
In August, the USAAF placed an order for 1,000 JB-2s with improved
guidance systems: Ford built the pulsejet engine, designated "PJ-31";
Republic built the airframe, though that job would later be subcontracted
to Willys-Overland; and other manufacturers built the control
systems, launch rockets, launch frames, and remaining components.
First successful launch of a JB-2 was on 5 June 1945.
The JB-2s were launched off a rail with a solid rocket booster,
in contrast to the somewhat complicated steam catapult system
used by the Germans. Two versions of JB-2s were built, one with
a gyroscopic guidance system like that used with the V-1, and
the other with a radio-radar guidance system. The USAAF also experimented
with air-launching the JB-2. Most of the launches were from a
B-17 bomber, though some were performed from B-24s and B-29s,
but the USAAF decided it wasn't a good idea in any case. The Air
Force was so enthusiastic with the results that they increased
the order for JB-2s to 75,000 in January 1945. However, the end
of the war in August dampened enthusiasm for the weapon, and the
program was terminated in September of that year after over a
thousand had been built.
The US Navy experimented with their own V-1 variant, the "KUW-1
(later LTV-N-2) Loon". After initial ground launch tests
in 1946, a submarine, the USS CUSK was modified to launch the
flying bombs. In February 1947, the CUSK successfully launched
a Loon. The flying bomb was stored in a watertight hanger on the
deck of the submarine, and assembled and launched by solid rocket
boosters while the submarine was on the surface. It was tracked
by radar and controlled by radio.
Another submarine, the USS CARBONERO, was used in the tests as
a tracking and control platform. In 1948, a surface vessel, the
USS NORTON SOUND, was
modified
for Loon launches, and performed four launches in 1949 and 1950.
It doesn't appear that the Navy was ever serious about fielding
the Loon but saw it as a useful test vehicle for improved naval
cruise missiles.
The Soviets also built copies and derivatives of the V-1 and the
French operated a target drone based on the V-1 and designated
the "Arsenal 5.501" well into the 1950s, though it differed
from the original design in having twin tailfins and radio control.
In the summer of 1944, about 2,500 pounds of salvaged German V-1
parts were shipped from England to the United States for analysis.
The U.S. Army Air Force planned to copy the pilotless flying bomb
design and use the weapon against Germany, so engineers at Wright-Patterson
Field studied the V-1 components carefully. Within three weeks
the plans were copied and the first American-built V-1 was finished,
designated the JB-2. However, USAAF officials noted the flying
bomb design's inherent inaccuracy over long ranges and realized
the device was really only effective as a "weapon of terror"
unless the long-range accuracy was significantly improved. Despite
this realization, the government ordered the JB-2 into production
for use in the European Theatre, with thousands of the flying
bombs to be built.
Republic Aircraft Corporation was given the contract for the overall
airframe (later subcontracted to Willys-Overland), Ford Motor
Company was to produce the pulsejet engine, Jack and Heintz the
control devices, and Alloy Products the pressurized containers
for the fuel and compressed air. Northrop was contracted to produce
the launch sleds and Monsanto the launch rockets. USAAF flight
testing was conducted at Eglin Field in Florida and Wendover Field
in Utah to perfect the guidance system for the JB-2
JB-2 flight testing at Wendover Field, Utah The JB-2 (and the
U.S. Navy variant of the JB-2, the "Loon") differed
very little from the original German V-1 design. Only the method
of launch and the guidance system were changed appreciably by
American designers. The USAAF also experimented briefly with air
launch of the device from Boeing B-17s, but concentrated on ground
launch techniques after a time. Early test flights failed, but
finally on 5 June 1945 the USAAF JB-2 flew successfully for the
first time. However, World War II was fast drawing to a close
and the need for the JB-2 weapon system was reduced. When production
was finally terminated in September 1945 only 1,385 JB-2s had
been delivered to the War Department.
This JB-2 flying bomb is an American-built duplicate of the German
V-1. It was recovered from the test range at Wendover Field, where
captured German V-1s and their American counterparts underwent
evaluation and flight testing during the late 1940s. Army JB-2s
earned the nickname "Wendover Willie" during testing
in the Utah desert, and each example usually made several flights
before being either retired or destroyed in crashes or explosions.
This example was restored by the 649th Combat Logistics Support
Squadron at Hill Aerospace Museum in 1995.