Focke-Wulf Fw 58 Weihe Explained

Fw 58 Weihe
First Flight:1935
Introduction:1937
Retired:1940s
Primary User:Luftwaffe
Number Built:1,350

The Focke-Wulf Fw 58 Weihe (Harrier) was a twin-engine multi-role aircraft designed and produced by the German aircraft manufacturer Focke-Wulf.

It was developed in response to a request from the Luftwaffe, which sought a multi-role aircraft that could be operated as an advanced trainer for pilots, gunners and radio operators alike. The resulting Fw 58 was a low-wing monoplane powered by a pair of Argus As 10C V-8 piston engines mounted in nacelles on the wing's leading edges. The crew were seated under an enclosed canopy. Aft of the flight deck, the fuselage was open to form a moveable MG 15 machine gun station. The tailwheel undercarriage was retractable. The nose could either be glazer or faired over. The first prototype performed its maiden flight in 1935; the Fw 58 entered regular service two years later.

The Fw 58 was procured in large numbers by the Luftwaffe and thus was widely used across Germany for the training of several categories of military personnel. Furthermore, the type was routinely operated in other capacities, including as a VIP transport, air ambulance, feeder airliner, photo reconnaissance and weather research aircraft.[1] It was also operated as an airliner by the German flag carrier Deutsche Luft Hansa. Several were owned by private pilots, including the aeronautical engineer Kurt Tank. Outside of Germany, the type was built under license by several other nations, including Bulgaria, Hungary and Brazil. Other nations that procured the Fw 58 included the Netherlands, Romania, Croatia and Turkey.

Design and development

Work on the Fw 58 commenced during the early 1930s; its development was closely paralleled by the Arado Ar 77, which was designed to fulfil the same specification.[2]

The Fw 58 featured welded steel tube construction across its fuselage along with mixed materials for its covering.[2] It had a semi-cantilever wing that was primarily metal, but made use of fabric aft of the spar. This wing was mounted relatively low on the fuselage, the centre sections of which were braced between the uppermost point of the engine mounting and the fuselage.[2] In contrast, the tailplane, which was positioned forward of the fin, was braced from beneath via struts. The underside of both of the engine nacelles featured a recess into which the main undercarriage retracted into during flight.[2] The Fw 58 was powered by a pair of Argus As 10C V-8 inverted air-cooled piston engines, capable of generating up to .[2]

During 1935, the first prototype conducted its maiden flight.[2] It was quickly joined by the second prototype which, unlike the first, had been constructed to a military configuration; one of the more prominent visual differences between the two aircraft was the presence of defensive MG 15 machine guns in the nose and dorsal positions of the latter. The configuration of the second prototype, sometimes referred to as Fw 58A, did not actually correspond to many of the quantity production aircraft as production was quickly transitioned to the improved Fw 58B, which most closely corresponded to the design of the fourth prototype.[3] This model featured the ability to carry bombs and could even be outfitted with floats; when in the latter configuration, the aircraft was designated as Fw 58BW. However, the definitive production model was the Fw 58C, which had a faired-in nose and could accommodate up to six passengers.[4]

Operational history

A major customer for the Fw 58 was the Luftwaffe, a large number of its operational units were equipped with multiple aircraft, either Fw 58Bs or Fw 58Cs, for light transport and communications purposes.[4] The type would see use as an air ambulance and several other secondary roles, including aerial application for agricultural products. At least 30 specially configurated Fw 58s were deployed to the Eastern Front to spray potential sources of disease for German ground forces.[5]

Between 1938 and 1939, eight aircraft in an airliner were supplied to the German flag carrier Deutsche Luft Hansa.[4] Furthermore, a few aircraft were used for various experimental purposes, including early trials of aerial refuelling apparatus. Numerous private pilots, including the aeronautical engineer Kurt Tank (who had headed the design of the Fw 58), operated the type as a personal aircraft.[4]

Variants

Fw 58 V1
  • First prototype, first flown in 1934
    Fw 58 V2
  • Second prototype.
    Fw 58 V3
  • Third prototype.
    Fw 58 V4
  • Fourth prototype.
    Fw 58 V14
  • Fw 58 V14, D- OPDR, was fitted with Fowler flaps and boundary layer suction for high-lift experiments at AVA, Göttingen. The suction system was powered by a Hirth aircraft engine in the fuselage and the air exited through two circumferential, parallel rows of slots in the rear fuselage section.[6]
    Fw 58B
  • Fw 58B-1
  • Fw 58B-2
  • This version had a glazed nose and was armed with a 7.92 mm (0.312 in) MG 15 machine gun.
    Fw 58C
  • Solid-nosed, the main wartime production variant, six passenger transport with 260hp Hirth HM 508D engines
    Fw 58W
  • Twin-float floatplane version.

    Operators

    Bulgaria
    Hungary
    Romania
    Slovakia

    Surviving aircraft

    The only Fw 58 on display is at Museu Aeroespacial in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Brazil used this airplane mainly for maritime patrols and the example on display was one of the 25 Fw 58B-2 units license-built in Brazil by Fábrica de Galeão, circa 1941.

    An Fw 58 C-2 is stored in the Norwegian Aviation Museum in Bodø.[11]

    An Fw 58 C crashed on 30 March 1943 in the Lac du Bourget, France, after a low-flying training pass over the lake went wrong. Two of the four airmen on board were rescued by local fishermen. The wreckage lies at a depth of over 112 meters. Due to the dark and cold water, it is still fairly well preserved, though the canvas over the tube frame light structure is gradually deteriorating. A proposal has been made to raise the wreckage, but local divers are strongly opposed because of its status as a war grave, and the risks of damaging it.[12] [13]

    References

    Bibliography

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Wilson 2007, p. 60.
    2. Smith and Kay 1972, p. 160.
    3. Smith and Kay 1972, pp. 160-161.
    4. Smith and Kay 1972, p. 161.
    5. Smith and Kay 1972, pp. 161-162.
    6. Luftfahrt international 18 (1976), pp. 2829ff
    7. http://www.frrom.com/index.php?page=fr010-fw-58b-south-america FR010 Fw 58B South America
    8. Web site: THE FOCKE WULF Fw 58 IN BRAZIL . 2017-08-21 . 2017-08-21 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170821084736/http://www.rudnei.cunha.nom.br/FAB/en/fw-58 . dead .
    9. http://www.aeroflight.co.uk/waf/bulgaria/af/types/fockewulf.htm Focke-Wulf Fw 58 Gulub
    10. Web site: Oryx . Bye Bye Berlin: Türkiye’s He 111 Bombers . 2023-05-23 . Oryx.
    11. Web site: Focke-Wulf . Norsk Luftfartsmuseum . https://web.archive.org/web/20110825085559/http://www.luftfart.museum.no/Utstillinger/Focke%20Wulf.htm . 25 August 2011 .
    12. Web site: Focke-Wulf 58 Weihe crashed in 1943, the wreck is fairly well preserved after 70 years . abandonedspaces.com . 22 March 2017 . Jack . Beckett.
    13. Focke-Wulf Fw 58C . X-Ray Mag . 2016 . 73 . 71-75.