These are the 'Doodlebugs' I have photographed on my travels.
If you have any you have seen in museums etc please post
Nick
These are the 'Doodlebugs' I have photographed on my travels.
If you have any you have seen in museums etc please post
Nick
"In all my years as a soldier, I have never seen men fight so hard." - SS Obergruppenfuhrer Wilhelm Bittrich - Arnhem
Nice one Narcis
Thanks for posting!
Nick
"In all my years as a soldier, I have never seen men fight so hard." - SS Obergruppenfuhrer Wilhelm Bittrich - Arnhem
Nick, thank you for the pics...and thank you for not grouping them as you have others...they are enlargeable (?) like this....which at my age helps! :-)
Excellent Doodlebug collection Gent's.
I like the different paint scheme's
That is an interesting Fieseler Wilko.
I take it that it was a one time use type of thing?
Semper Fi
Phil
It is a very interesting aircraft Phil, I have pasted this info from the museum Web page on the exhibition.
Towards the end of 1943 consideration was given in Germany to possible use of piloted missiles for precision attacks on targets such as warships & other high profile targets like Buckingham Palace & the Houses of Parliament.
Design work was carried out by Deutsches Forschungsinstitut fur Segelfug (German Gliding Research Institute) & the modification of standard V1’s for testing purposes was carried out by the aircraft manufacturer Henschel, under the code name of Reichenberg. Initial test flights were carried out at Larz where the first two aircraft crashed killing the pilots. Test flying was thereafter carried out by Hanna Reitsch & Heinz Kensche.
Two factories were set up to manufacture piloted V1’s, one at Dannenberg & the other at Pulverhof both using slave labour. They produced approximately 175 piloted Fieseler Fi 103R-4’s before production ceased. 70 pilots were under training when the project ceased in October 1944 owing to a shortage of fuel for training & political differences within the German High Command. The operational Fi 103R-4’s were to have been operated by 5/KG200 & was to be known as the Leonidas staffel
Ken
I've seen the one at Duxford on it's ramp, quite huge too..
Great thread, i bet you needed ear plugs to fly the Reichenberg!
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