
Junkers Ju-87G-2 Stuka | |
| Pays | Allemagne nazie |
| Type | Bombardier de plongée et avions d’attaque au sol |
| Premier vol | Le 17 septembre 1935 |
| Construit | Plus de 6500 |
Lla Junkers Ju 87 Ou Stuka ( Stuka ) (de Sturzkampfflugzeug, « bombardier de plongée ») était un bombardier de plongée allemand et un avion d’attaque au sol. Conçu par Hermann Pohlmann, il a volé pour la première fois en 1935. Le Ju 87 a fait ses débuts au combat en 1937 avec la Luftwaffe’s Légion Condor pendant la guerre civile espagnole. Il a servi les forces de l’Axe pendant la Seconde Guerre mondiale. Ju 87G: Avec la variante G, la cellule vieillissante du Ju 87 a trouvé une nouvelle vie en tant qu’avion antichar. Il s’agissait de la version opérationnelle finale du Stuka, et a été déployé sur le front de l’Est.
Source: Junkers Ju-87G-2 Stuka sur Wiki
| Junkers Ju-87G-2 Stuka | |
|---|---|
| Photographe | Jaro Mucha |
| Localisation | Inconnu |
| Photos | 21 |
Voir aussi :
| Junkers Ju-87 G2 Walk Around | |
|---|---|
| Photographe | Unknow |
| Localisation | Inconnu |
| Photos | 69 |
A Second Life on the Eastern Front
Lla Junkers Ju 87 G-2 was the final combat evolution of the legendary Stuka. By 1943, the aircraft was dangerously obsolete as a dive bomber due to its low speed and vulnerability to modern fighters. However, the desperate need to halt Soviet « tank deluges » led to the Kanonenvogel (Cannon Bird). Stripped of its dive brakes and bomb racks, the G-2 was fitted with two massive 37mm flak cannons. In the hands of experts, this ungainly aircraft became a surgical instrument of destruction, capable of cracking open a T-34 with a single well-placed shot to the rear armor.
| Attribute | Technical Specification (Ju 87 G-2) |
|---|---|
| Rôle | Anti-Tank / Close Air Support |
| Crew | 2 (Pilot and Rear Gunner) |
| Groupe motopropulseur | 1 × Junkers Jumo 211J-1 V12 inverted liquid-cooled engine |
| Horsepower | 1,420 hp (1,044 kW) |
| Vitesse maximale | 344 km/h (214 mph) — reduced by pod drag |
| Armement principal | 2 × 37 mm Bordkanone BK 3,7 cannons (12 rounds per gun) |
| Defensive Armament | 1 × 7.92 mm MG 81Z twin machine gun (rear cockpit) |
| Wing Span | 15.0 m (49 ft 2.5 in) — extended from earlier models |
Design Engineering: The Tank-Cracker
- The BK 3,7 Cannons: These were adapted from the 3.7 cm Flak 18 anti-aircraft gun. Firing tungsten-cored Hartkernmunition (APCR), they could penetrate the thin top or rear armor of any Soviet tank. However, each pod weighed over 600 lbs, making the plane incredibly « lourd » on the controls.
- Removal of Dive Brakes: The G-series was no longer intended for vertical diving. The iconic dive brakes were removed to save weight and offset the massive drag of the gun pods. Attacks were instead carried out in shallow, low-level glides.
- Extended Wings: Based on the Ju 87 D-5 airframe, the G-2 featured extended outer wing panels. This was necessary to provide enough lift for the heavily encumbered aircraft and to improve stability when the large cannons fired.
- Recoil Sync: The guns were synchronized to fire simultaneously. If one gun jammed while the other fired, the massive off-center recoil could literally jerk the aircraft out of the sky or cause it to spin.
The Legend of Hans-Ulrich Rudel
- The Knight of the Sky: Hans-Ulrich Rudel is the pilot most synonymous with the G-2. He is credited with destroying 519 Soviet tanks, a battleship (the Marat), and a cruiser. He was the only person to receive the « Golden Oak Leaves » to the Knight’s Cross.
- Lla « Rear-Attack » Tactic: Rudel perfected the art of flying at « chimney-height » to approach tanks from the rear, where the armor over the engine vents was thinnest. He often flew so low that his aircraft was buffeted by the explosion of the tanks he hit.
- High-Stakes Combat: The G-2 was a « marginal » warplane. It was so slow that it required an escort of Focke-Wulf Fw 190s just to survive the flight to the target. If caught by Soviet fighters without cover, the G-2 was almost defenseless.
- Surviving Examples: One of the few original Ju 87 G-2s in existence is preserved at the Royal Air Force Museum in London. It serves as a stark reminder of the « last stand » of the Stuka on the Eastern Front.
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Nouvel ensemble de 40 photos