Messerschmitt Me 163B

Messerschmitt Me 163B

PaísAlemanha
PapelAviões de combate movidos a foguetes
Primeiro voo1 de setembro de 1941
Construído370

O Messerschmitt Me 163 Komet era um avião de caça alemão movido a foguetes. Projetado por Alexander Lippisch, é o único avião de caça movido a foguetes que já esteve operacional e a primeira aeronave pilotada de qualquer tipo a ultrapassar 1000 km/h (621 mph) em voo de nível. Seu design foi revolucionário e seu desempenho sem precedentes. O piloto de testes alemão Heini Dittmar no início de julho de 1944 atingiu 1.130 km/h (700 mph), um recorde não oficial de velocidade aérea incomparável por aeronaves movidas a turbojatos por quase uma década. Mais de 300 aeronaves foram construídas, mas o Komet mostrou-se ineficaz em seu papel dedicado como um avião interceptador e foi responsável pela destruição de apenas cerca de nove a dezoito aeronaves aliadas contra dez perdas. Além das perdas de combate, muitos pilotos foram mortos durante os testes e treinamentos

Fonte: Messerschmitt Me 163 Komet na Wikipédia

Messerschmitt Me 163B Komet Anda por aí
FotógrafoJohn Heck
LocalizaçãoMuseu Nacional da USAF
Fotos23
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A Flying Bomb in the Service of the Reich

O Messerschmitt Me 163B Komet was arguably the most radical combat aircraft of World War II. Designed by Alexander Lippisch as a tailless, swept-wing interceptor, it utilized a liquid-fuel rocket motor to reach speeds and climb rates that were decades ahead of its time. However, this performance came at a terrifying cost. The Komet was as dangerous to its pilots and ground crews as it was to the Allied bombers it hunted, earning a reputation as a “suicide machine” due to its highly volatile fuels and treacherous landing characteristics.

Attribute Technical Specification (Me 163B-1)
Papel Point-Defense Rocket Interceptor
tripulação 1 (Pilot)
Motor 1 × Walter HWK 109-509A-2 liquid-fuel rocket
Maximum Speed 960 km/h (596 mph) — Mach 0.83
Climb Rate Initial: 81 m/s (16,000 ft/min)
Endurance 7.5 to 8 minutes of powered flight
Armamento 2 × 30mm MK 108 cannons (60 rounds per gun)
Landing Gear Jettisonable takeoff dolly / Retractable landing skid

Design Engineering: Chemistry vs. Aerodynamics

  • The Hypergolic Nightmare: The Komet was powered by T-Stoff (hydrogen peroxide) and C-Stoff (hydrazine hydrate and methanol). These two chemicals were hypergolic, meaning they exploded instantly upon contact. A single drop of one in the other’s tank would destroy the aircraft. They were so corrosive that pilots had to wear special non-organic protective suits to prevent being dissolved alive in the event of a leak.
  • Tailless Swept Wings: To minimize drag at high subsonic speeds, the Komet lacked a horizontal stabilizer (tail). Its swept wings provided both lift and control, making it exceptionally stable in high-speed dives but notoriously difficult to land because it simply “wanted to keep flying.”
  • The Two-Part Landing: To save weight, the Komet took off on a two-wheeled “dolly” that was jettisoned once airborne. After exhausting its fuel, the pilot had to glide back and land on a retractable belly skid. If the skid failed to deploy or the landing was too hard, the impact could slosh remaining fuel together, resulting in a fatal explosion.
  • Nose-Cone Generator: Since the rocket engine produced no electrical power, the Komet featured a tiny wooden propeller on its nose. This “rat” (Ram Air Turbine) spun in the slipstream to power the aircraft’s radio and flight instruments.

Combat History: Seven Minutes of Terror

  • The Vertical Intercept: A typical Komet mission lasted less than ten minutes. The pilot would blast off the runway at a 70-degree angle, reaching 30,000 feet in under four minutes. They would then dive through the bomber formation at nearly 600 mph, giving them only a fraction of a second to aim and fire the slow-velocity 30mm cannons.
  • The “Gliding Target”: Once the fuel ran out, the Komet became a heavy, unpowered glider. Allied fighter pilots quickly learned to wait for the rocket flame to go out; once the Komet was “silent,” it was a sitting duck as it struggled to reach its home airfield.
  • Limited Impact: Despite its psychological terror, the Me 163 was a failure as a weapon system. Fewer than 20 Allied bombers were officially credited to the Komet, while more Komets were lost to landing accidents and engine explosions than to enemy fire.
  • Sabotage: Many surviving Komets show evidence of sabotage by the forced laborers who built them, including contaminated glue in the wooden wings and rocks placed between fuel tanks and support straps to cause punctures.

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