**REQUEST** Arado E.560/11
#1

Arado E.560/11

Span 24 m 78' 9
Flying Weight 28600 kg 63052 lbs
Height 5.1 m 16' 1"
Length 19.1 m 62' 8"
Engines 4 x BMW 018 turbojets w/ 2300 kg (5071 lbs) thrust each
Bomb Load 4000 kg 8818 lbs
Armament: Two fixed forward firing MG 151 20 mm cannon in the fuselage nose (200 rounds),
two fixed rear firing MG 151 20 mm cannon in the aft fuselage (200 rounds) and one
MG 151 20 mm tail cannon (400 rounds), remote-controlled via a periscope in the cockpit



http://www.luft46.com/arado/are560.html
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#2

Quote:Since the design work was submitted in the closing days of WWII, only a few incomplete documents have survived
Clearly an essential addition to IL-2 then. :roll:

There must be hundreds if not thousands of aircraft designs that got to this stage during WW II. Why is it that only German and Japanese ones get requested?
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#3

That's an experymental or not?
If it's an experimental i think other plane who really flew must be created before experimental project

But it's a nice plane
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#4

WhoDatNotSayin Wrote:Why is it that only German and Japanese ones get requested?

Becuase they had the most interesting out of this world designs, and I don't know of any except Shinden and stuff that Japan had on the drawing boards, Japan was just making copys of German stuff.
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#5

Verhängnis Wrote:
WhoDatNotSayin Wrote:Why is it that only German and Japanese ones get requested?

[...]Japan was just making copys of German stuff[...]
?
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#6

Well you always here things about the Nazi's sending Jet engines, Me-163, design plans and blue prints to Japan on U-boats which always get sunk. I actually don't know any other Japanese '46 planes or anything, nut ah excuse what I said, I didn't think it through much. Smile
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#7

Infact, The Germans where sending some of there Tech to the Japanese. They sent a Fw-190 to them. And then the Ki-100 emerged from what I've read. Goes for the same for the Me-262 and Me-163 that they made variations of I suppose.
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#8

I know much about japanese 46' designs. Yes they had many of their own...
Kayaba Katsuodri
G10N1
J7W1
J9Y
Genkan-jet-bomber
and and and---
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#9

WhoDatNotSayin Wrote:
Quote:Since the design work was submitted in the closing days of WWII, only a few incomplete documents have survived
Clearly an essential addition to IL-2 then. :roll:

There must be hundreds if not thousands of aircraft designs that got to this stage during WW II. Why is it that only German and Japanese ones get requested?

I see your point---but also the Germans really privileged innovation, perhaps more than other countries--and perhaps to their detriment.
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