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-   -   German aircraft designations - Fundamental issues (http://forum.12oclockhigh.net/showthread.php?t=47092)

Lennart Andersson 12th January 2017 11:48

German aircraft designations - Fundamental issues
 
This post will only deal with version suffixes of German aircraft designations, Do 17E, Bf 109E-3, etc, and will not discuss other things, such as ”Me” versus ”Bf, or ”FW” versus ”Fw”.

In April or May 1932 the RVM tried to simplify German aircraft designations and the different systems used by the manufacturers were gradually unified, but with Junkers and a few others continuing to use their own variants. The manufacturers name was abbreviated to two letters, for example “He” for Heinkel, which in that case replaced “HE” and “HD” used by that company previously. Different versions of the same type were often characterised by adding a letter, normally lower case, as a suffix to the designation, for example HE 9e. In 1932 upper case letters became the norm and the HD 41a therefore became the He 41A.
It seems, however, that the RLM did not use these version suffixes very frequently in their own documents. For example the Flugzeugbaumustertabelle (table of aircraft types) dated 1 October 1936 has version letters only for the Do 17E, Do 17F, Do 17M and He 45G. All the other types lack version suffixes. Only in 1937 (Flugzeug-Beschaffungsprogramm, 1 September 1937) the use of version letters seems to be more frequent, but still not for all types. It seems that the version letter was added only when there was a real need to differentiate between the versions.
It should perhaps be noted that, although I have not practiced that here because it can sometimes be confusing, the number of the type designation and the version letter were often divided my a space: He 72 D.

V-numbers for prototypes and development aircraft
Adding a “V” and a number to the designations allotted to new prototypes seems to have started already sometime in 1934. The earliest example that I can find is a Heinkel protocol dated 8 June 1934 that mentions the He 112 V1 and V2, and there is also a table of Entwicklungsflugzeuge (development aircraft) dated 15 November 1934 with V-numbers. The Flugzeug-Entwicklungsprogramm (aircraft development program) dated 1 February 1935 does not show any V-numbers, but the one dated 8 May 1935 does.

Number suffixes to version letters
The first examples of letters with a number added for sub-versions seems to be the He 70F1, He 70F2, He 70G1 and He 70G2, normally written without a hyphen, that seems to have been invented by Heinkel in 1935. This system then appears to have been more generally adopted by the RLM in 1936. For example Ju 160D-0 D-UBIQ and Ju 86B-0 D-AHYP were registered as such in April and May 1936. An FW 56A-2 was registered in July 1936 and in March 1937 the Bü 131B-3 followed. Later in 1937 we find the Do 17E-2, Do 17F-1, Ju 86C-1, Bf 108B-1 and others in the published register.
On the other hand the Flugzeug-Beschaffungsprogramm (aircraft procurement program) of 1 April 1939 still has sub-version numbers only for the Bf 109E-1 and Bf 109E-3. In a Lieferplan (delivery plan) dated 1 September 1939 there are more examples of the sub-numbers, but it is still not a system that is generally adopted for all types in this type of document.

Conclusion
Unfortunately no original RLM document that regulates these things seems to have been found. Until this happens we will have to draw conclusions from other types of documents that do exist, and further research is necessary.
For the moment the general conclusion seems to be that version letters were not always used and while the letter plus number system for sub-versions appears to have been invented in 1936, it was not used much until 1939/1940. This means that some of the designations published by William Green in “Warplanes of the Third Reich” and in his articles (and many followers) never existed and are pure fiction. One example is what he calls the productions versions of the Heinkel He 51: “He 51A-0”, “He 51A-1”, “He 51B-0”, “He 51B-1”, etc This type of designation, with a dash and a number, did not exist when these aircraft were built and delivered. Another fact that shows that Green’s designations were invented by himself is that the He 51A and He 51B were in fact only prototypes, and the first series production versions were designated He 51C and He 51D!

It would be interesting to know if any original documents are known that throw more light on these fundamental Luftwaffe research issues.

Lennart Andersson

Sergio Luis dos Santos 12th January 2017 12:44

Re: German aircraft designations - Fundamental issues
 
Interesting.

Revi16 12th January 2017 13:30

Re: German aircraft designations - Fundamental issues
 
Another possible reason for these variations is the simple fact that "humans" typed these documents. Every document was typed by a human and each human will type the same information differently whether there is a regulation or not, Bf-109e, Bf-109E, BF-109e, BF-109E, Me-109e, Me-109E, ME-109e, etc.., etc..

I've seen original Messerschmitt documents (microfilm) at NASM where Bf-109 and Me-109 are both used. If the manufacturer can't keep it straight, what are the chances everyone else did?

The same discrepancies occur on the American side as well.

sirbob 12th January 2017 13:36

Re: German aircraft designations - Fundamental issues
 
Well done, Lennart.
I do hope that our members can work together to find a deffinitive answer to the question you have raised, rather than pedantically stating unfounded opinions.
Even if it means I will have to spend weeks changing my computer files from "109E" to "109 E" etc.


Revi16. I get your point, and this may explain the use of different forms. But IF we can uncover an official directive we can avoid prolonging the disorder.

Lennart Andersson 12th January 2017 16:08

Re: German aircraft designations - Fundamental issues
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Revi16 (Post 228130)
Another possible reason for these variations is the simple fact that "humans" typed these documents. Every document was typed by a human and each human will type the same information differently whether there is a regulation or not, Bf-109e, Bf-109E, BF-109e, BF-109E, Me-109e, Me-109E, ME-109e, etc.., etc.

You are absolutely right, but, as I mentioned, Bf/BF or Me is not the issue here.

Lennart A

PS: I do not think that I have ever seen an example where a hyphen is used between the manufacturer abbreviation and the type number in a German aircraft designation (but there probably are such examples as well). It is the same in Sweden. SAAB built B 17s, not B-17s.

Nick Beale 12th January 2017 17:52

Re: German aircraft designations - Fundamental issues
 
For what it's worth, Gen.Qu. 6. Abt. loss reports use the format "Fw 190 A8" but RAF ADI(K) and A.I.2(g) ones use "Fw 190 A-8", so the spacing is common to all three but the sub-type hyphenation isn't.

edNorth 12th January 2017 18:26

Re: German aircraft designations - Fundamental issues
 
GQM is not good example. Terrible in many respects.
https://img.yumpu.com/39845051/1/358...jpg?quality=80

Best
Ed

Rasmussen 12th January 2017 18:26

Re: German aircraft designations - Fundamental issues
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Nick Beale (Post 228152)
..., so the spacing is common to all three but the sub-type hyphenation isn't.

... was common. So you find in "Flugzeug-Programm LP 226A" a lot of Bf 109 G-5,G-6,H-2 and so on and in "Geänderter LP 226 nach F2-Besprechung" from 19.05.1944 even an G-6/U-2.

Juha 12th January 2017 18:41

Re: German aircraft designations - Fundamental issues
 
Very interesting and also confusing. If the GQM and aircraft manufacturers used "Bf 109 F-2" type identifications, could the use of them be terrible wrong?

Juha

Nick Beale 12th January 2017 19:01

Re: German aircraft designations - Fundamental issues
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by edNorth (Post 228154)
GQM is not good example. Terrible in many respects.
https://img.yumpu.com/39845051/1/358...jpg?quality=80

Best
Ed

I didn't say they were good, just an example of an official source! (They certainly had a problem spelling place names). The RAF Intelligence teams however commonly got their type designations from documents (e.g. maintenance cards) or fuselage data plates, so I'm guessing that they commonly reproduced what they saw there.


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