Fieseler Fi 166
Fi 166 | |
---|---|
Role | Vertical-launched jet fighter |
Manufacturer | Fieseler |
Designer | Erich Bachem |
Status | Project only |
Number built | None |
In the early 1940s, Erich Bachem, Fieseler's Aircraft's technical manager, developed two designs for a rocket-launched fighter that could reach high altitudes quicker than conventional fighters.[1]
Design One[]
Design one involved a straight-winged jet fighter powered by two Jumo 004 jet engines. It would be launched upright by liquid-fuel rockets. After attaining an altitude of 3660 meters, the rocket would burn out, disconnect and return to earth via parachute for re-use. The fighter would then engage Allied bombers before landing as a conventional airplane.[citation needed]
Data[]
Category | Known Data |
---|---|
Maximum speed | 800 km/h |
Takeoff weight | 5 metric ton |
Flying time | 45 minutes |
See also[]
- Bachem Ba 349 Natter, a similar point-defense interceptor designed by Erich Bachem which achieved test flights (1945)
References[]
- ^ "Fi-166 High-Altitude Rocket Fighter". discaircraft.greyfalcon.us. Retrieved 19 April 2018.
Categories:
- Abandoned military aircraft projects of Germany
- Rocket-powered aircraft
- Fieseler aircraft
- Low-wing aircraft