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Legends 51

Photography Aviation posted on Jan 05, 2015
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Description


Greetings Folks, I noted someone asked if a shot of the He162 was upcoming, well here it is! Sitting next to the Mitchell, I've tidied it up a bit as I only had a fairly old shot surprisingly.. This is a Heinkel He162 A-2 Built by Heinkel -Nord at Marienehe, near Rostock - one of probably 55 He162s built there, from a total of 171 He162s built; delivered? late April to II/JG1 at Leck airfield, near Husum, Schleswig-Holstein, on the Danish border - a collecting point for many surviving Luftwaffe units in northern Germany at this time, the unit being declared combat ready at Leck on 20 April. No code recorded but believed to be ‘Red 2’. One of at least 116 He162A `Volksjager’ (People’s Fighter) aircraft officially delivered to the Luftwaffe, a minimum of 55 being completed at Marienehe. On 3 May 45 JG1 was organised into two Gruppes, 1 Einsatz (combat) and II Sammel (replacement). Fuel shortages seemingly restricted operational use of the type which was underway by 25th April 1945, and the last He162 operational flight from Leck was on 6 May 1945, by a single aircraft which crashed on landing; a ceasefire had come into effect later the previous day. One of a few left worldwide.. Request are taken for this series, anything aimed for.. Enjoy Rob

Comments (12)


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magnus073

9:52AM | Mon, 05 January 2015

Very nice work on this cool presentation, Rob.

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neiwil

10:23AM | Mon, 05 January 2015

The piggy back engine on this always puts me in mind of the failed manned V1, totally unrelated I know...... Actually I don't think I included this in my German X-craft models....can't think why, will have to look into it....Great shot of a worthy addition to the Legends stable.....another one of those ' with a bit more time and enough fuel '......could have been a worry for the allies......

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bebopdlx

10:25AM | Mon, 05 January 2015

I have never seen this plane before, cool shot and info.

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Maxidyne

11:37AM | Mon, 05 January 2015

I'm with Neil on this. A bit more time and development and this could have been a real headache for the allies. A fine capture mate.

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jayfar

1:00PM | Mon, 05 January 2015

New to me too Rob but very interesting.

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taliesin86001

1:18PM | Mon, 05 January 2015

I've seen drawings of this plane before, but I think this is the first photo I've seen of an actual one!

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Faemike55

6:22PM | Mon, 05 January 2015

Weird looking aircraft, though I wonder what the arrow on the nose is for - Plane Flies this way?

Faemike55

6:24PM | Mon, 05 January 2015

Just looked at this again and realized that ejecting from this plane is chancy at best with that engine intake right there

Tamarrion

9:26PM | Mon, 05 January 2015

Oh, the Salamander! One of the coolest designs the Germans came up with. Even today it looks like something from a sci-fi movie. Yeah, I think the designers overlooked the possible need for rapid (and survivable) egress while in flight.

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Buffalo1

10:10AM | Tue, 06 January 2015

Thanks, Rob. That was me who wanted to see this cool fighter. I agree with Neil, too. However some idiot thought that they could quickly train Hilter Youth to fly this plane.

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tracker234

7:05PM | Tue, 06 January 2015

Oh be still my beating heart! The HE-162 is one of my all time favourites. The original premise was indeed flawed, but it did yield a simple, yet advanced fighter that with development would have been a formidable foe to the allied forces. Thanks so much for the great photo, well done!

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RodS

8:29PM | Wed, 07 January 2015

A great photo of this fascinating bit of history, Rob. It never ceases to amaze me what the Nazis were working on - some very advanced stuff for the day. It would be a very different world today if they'd had the time and resources to develop some of these technologies fully.

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flavia49

7:17PM | Sat, 10 January 2015

fantastic capture


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Photograph Details
F Numberf/4.0
MakeNIKON CORPORATION
ModelNIKON D40
Shutter Speed125/1000
ISO Speed800
Focal Length26

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