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-   -   Me262 found at Deelen (http://forum.12oclockhigh.net/showthread.php?t=39397)

Richard T. Eger 5th November 2014 16:43

Re: Me262 found at Deelen
 
Dear All,

I just got off the phone with my friend Manfred Boehme. It does, indeed, seem likely that the "L" was the last letter of the unit code for this aircraft.

According to Manfred, W.Nr. 130026 was assigned to Erprobungskommando Schenk on 5.7.44. The Kdo. initially used large letters, with W.Nr. 130026 being black "A". At the end of Aug. 1944, Kdo. Schenk was absorbed into KG 51 and the aircraft's code was changed to 9K+AL. It was assigned to 3./KG 51 and the unit was working up at Lechfeld. During the first week, the unit moved to its operational base at Rheine. On 12.9.44 W.Nr. 130026 was shot down by German flak. A few parts from it were found at Elden, which was 3.1 km southwest of Arnheim.

Regards,
Richard

edNorth 6th November 2014 02:27

Re: Me262 found at Deelen
 
Good catch to find that part with the W.Nr. painted. Having "L" (painted after W.Nr.) has many similar instances in Ju 88´s. These W.Nr. usually were painted on detachable parts, where R or L stood for right or left, as I understand it, as aid to mark the (detachiable) part, and its proper place on the airframe. Finding W.Nr. matching loss reports usually nails down correct plane wreck.
Best
Ed

stephen f. polyak 6th November 2014 03:01

Re: Me262 found at Deelen
 
3 Attachment(s)
Guys,

I'll be honest, I too am enjoying the discussions here, and thanks to all contributors.

While some of the photos offer tempting possibilities, I still have not seen indisputable proof of a 262 main plate on a fuselage. It could be that main plates were the rare exception not the rule, or that main plates were for some reason not fitted. If main plates were on 262s, even a small number, sooner or later hard evidence will come out. Really strange, but for that matter has anyone ever seen a main plate on a Me163, Ar234, He162, etc?

I can say with some certainty that, perhaps without exception, main data plates on German WW2 airplanes (one per plane) were located on the left side of the fuselage or on the leading edge of the left wing near the fuselage (i.e., wing root). Also, the main plate was fitted to the outside of the airframe.

Plate features changed later in the war: For example - zinc replaced aluminum, hand-made plates (small pieces of blank metal without acid etching/screen printing) were used more often, manufactured etched/printed plates became smaller, manufactured plates were trimmed or reversed for reuse. Entries were added by basic hand stamping, whereas, earlier, entries were sometimes added carefully by mechanical engraving with a rotary bit, acceptance/inspector stamp marks were less frequent.

Airframe part and assembly plates were on 262s. Here are some examples.

Best regards,
Steve



Quote:

Originally Posted by Nick Beale (Post 191327)
Also possible are an economy measure or a shortage of plates (lack of metal, disrupted delivery of the finished item, bomb damage to the workshop that made them ...)


Don Pearson 6th November 2014 03:31

Re: Me262 found at Deelen
 
Is it possible that the rivets on a data plate, or the plate itself, would present an aerodynamic issue? Or be torn off at speed?

Don

ouidjat 6th November 2014 05:31

Re: Me262 found at Deelen
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Don Pearson (Post 191667)
Is it possible that the rivets on a data plate, or the plate itself, would present an aerodynamic issue? Or be torn off at speed?

Don

Hello Don,

No doubt about that specially when we look at late machine being puttying on these area to make them smooth.
Another reason:
During the sixties and 70s the aerodynamic lessons given at SUPAERO Toulouse used a book (I had, or maybe I still have) in which full chapter was dedicated to Bernoulli number and surface effect using ... Me262 example were riveted skin and puttyied skins were both studied!


Regards, Franck.

Richard T. Eger 6th November 2014 13:35

Re: Me262 found at Deelen
 
Dear Stephen,

I can help you with the 3 ID plates that you show:

Baugruppe
262.601 Triebwerksverkleidung am Flügel rechts
262.307 Tragflügel links, Querruder links
262.514 Landeklappe außen rechts

Regards,
Richard

Jaap Woortman 6th November 2014 14:52

Re: Me262 found at Deelen
 
In Luftwaffe over Czech territory - 1945 IV, I have found this picture.

Jaap

Vince Malfara 6th November 2014 16:59

Re: Me262 found at Deelen
 
Nice conversation here. Regarding Stephens post about data plates, I'll continue to search until I find something more definitive, until then I found a listing on eBay, I hope this is allowed, showing the smaller version of plates.

http://www.ebay.ca/itm/WW2-German-Lu...item35df3291ab

Richard T. Eger 7th November 2014 02:01

Re: Me262 found at Deelen
 
Dear Jaap,

The various Baugruppe for the Me 262 were, themselves, grouped via "F" numbers. Here are the major breakdowns according to a table in the first manual for the Oct. 1943 Ersatzteil-Liste published by Hafner Archiv:

Rumpfwerk F 105
--Rumpf F 100
----Rumpfmittelteil F 103
----Rumpfhinterteil F 104
----Führerraum F 101
Rumpfspitze F 106
Leitwerk F 300
Tragwerk F 500
--Tragflügel links F 501
--Tragflügel rechts F 502
Triebwerk links F 600
Triebwerk rechts F 601

Regards,
Richard

stephen f. polyak 7th November 2014 02:39

Re: Me262 found at Deelen
 
Richard,

Thank you for those details.

Steve


Quote:

Originally Posted by Richard T. Eger (Post 191677)
Dear Stephen,

I can help you with the 3 ID plates that you show:

Baugruppe
262.601 Triebwerksverkleidung am Flügel rechts
262.307 Tragflügel links, Querruder links
262.514 Landeklappe außen rechts

Regards,
Richard



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