Junkers Ju 86 war

Junkers Ju 86

PaísAlemanha nazista
PapelBombardeiro, avião, avião de reconhecimento
Primeiro voo4 de novembro de 1934
Construído900

O Junkers Ju 86 foi um bombardeiro monoplano alemão e avião civil projetado no início da década de 1930 e empregado por várias forças aéreas de ambos os lados durante a Segunda Guerra Mundial. O modelo civil Ju 86B podia transportar dez passageiros. Dois foram entregues à Swissair e cinco à Deutsche Luft Hansa. Além disso, um único Ju 86Z civil foi entregue à AB Aerotransport da Suécia.

Fonte: Junkers Ju 86 na Wikipédia

Junkers Ju 86 K-4 Walk Around
FotógrafoUnknow
LocalizaçãoDesconhecido
Fotos20
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Junkers Ju 86 (História Militar de Schiffer) - Amazon

Veja também:

Segunda Guerra Mundial: A História Visual Definitiva da Blitzkrieg à Bomba Atômica (DK Definitive Visual Histories) - Amazon Segunda Guerra Mundial: Mapa por Mapa (DK, História, Mapa por Mapa) - Amazônia


A Tale of Two Engines

O Junkers Ju 86 K-4 represents a specific and successful export chapter of the Ju 86 family. While the standard German Luftwaffe versions were originally designed with the temperamental Jumo diesel engines, the K-4 (Export version for Sweden) utilized reliable air-cooled radial engines. Sold to Sweden and designated as the B 3, these aircraft proved significantly more dependable than their German counterparts and served as the backbone of the Swedish Air Force’s bomber fleet throughout the Second World War.

Attribute Standard Specification (Ju 86 K-4 / B 3)
Papel Medium Bomber / Reconnaissance
tripulação 4 (Pilot, Navigator/Bombardier, Radio Operator, Gunner)
First Flight (Series) 1934
Usina 2 × Bristol Pegasus III or IX radial engines
Horsepower 905 hp (675 kW) per engine
Maximum Speed 350 km/h (217 mph)
Service Ceiling 7,500 meters (24,600 ft)
Armamento 3 × 7.92 mm machine guns (Nose, Dorsal, Ventral)
Bomb Load 1,000 kg (2,200 lbs) internally

Design and Engineering: The Radial Shift

  • The Move to Radials: Unlike the Ju 86A and D models used by Germany which suffered from diesel engine failures, the K-4 swapped the liquid-cooled Jumo diesels for Bristol Pegasus radials. This change required a redesign of the engine nacelles but vastly improved reliability and maintenance in cold climates.
  • Dustpan Retractable Turret: The Ju 86 featured a unique ventral gunner’s station nicknamed the “dustpan.” This turret was lowered from the belly of the aircraft during combat to provide downward defense and retracted to reduce drag during cruising.
  • Double-Wing (Doppelflügel): Like many Junkers designs (notably the Ju 52), the Ju 86 utilized the Junkers “double-wing” auxiliary flaps. These acted as separate control surfaces set just behind and below the trailing edge of the main wing, providing excellent low-speed lift and handling.
  • All-Metal Smooth Skin: Moving away from the classic Junkers corrugated skin (seen on the Ju 52), the Ju 86 used a modern smooth duralumin stressed-skin construction to improve aerodynamics.

The Swedish Service (SAAB Era)

  • License Production: Sweden was so impressed with the K-4 that the newly formed company SAAB was commissioned to build the aircraft under license. This was a foundational project for SAAB’s future as an aerospace giant.
  • The “Long-Nosed” B 3C: Later Swedish versions (B 3C and B 3D) featured more powerful engines and a slightly modified airframe, remaining in service for transport and target-towing long after the war ended.
  • Survivors: Because Sweden remained neutral, their Ju 86s were not destroyed in combat. The world’s only complete surviving Ju 86 is a Swedish-built K-4 (B 3C) preserved at the Swedish Air Force Museum in Linköping.

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