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Kinja'd!!! "Cé hé sin" (michael-m-mouse)
02/15/2018 at 17:28 • Filed to: Focke-Wulf, Ta-152

Kinja'd!!!3 Kinja'd!!! 6

This is a day brought to you by Focke-Wulf and the Ta-152 which exotically we see here in RAF markings. For reasons unclear (edit: it was because of a change in policy in 1944 to name planes after their designers) it was named after its designer, Kurt Tank, rather than its builder.

Kinja'd!!!

Focke-Wulf wound up as part of Airbus. Power was (in the form of an inverted V12) by Daimler-Benz as they then were. They returned to the day job after the war but retained an aerospace interest which also wound up in Airbus..


DISCUSSION (6)


Kinja'd!!! davesaddiction @ opposite-lock.com > Cé hé sin
02/15/2018 at 17:43

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Kurt Tank? What a name...


Kinja'd!!! Cé hé sin > davesaddiction @ opposite-lock.com
02/15/2018 at 17:53

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Sadly, he didn’t do them.


Kinja'd!!! Turbineguy: Nom de Zoom > Cé hé sin
02/15/2018 at 18:02

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Is this the Dora 9 or is that a different 190 variant?


Kinja'd!!! AuthiCooper1300 > Cé hé sin
02/15/2018 at 18:03

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Per Wikipedia:

[...]

Another change in the system was the gradual replacement of the two-letter prefix for the constructor with a prefix for the designer. Almost from the beginning the RLM used an elaborate system of licence-building and subcontracting to maximize its output of huge numbers of relatively few types of ‘standard equipment’ airplanes. Initially, the factory that designed the plane maintained the biggest share of that planes production. With the war proceeding, the Luftwaffe’s need for fresh airplanes quickly outpaced the capacity of the original manufacturers, certainly with its factories now regularly being bombed by the Allies . As a result, the connection between aircraft and original manufacturer eventually lost its significance. Aircraft were now built by a variety of factories often without any links to the constructor whose name it bore. Furthermore, aircraft engineers and designers, a hot commodity for a constructor and therefore aggressively courted and headhunted, were famous for their tendency to leave one company for the next bigger one every few years. Finally more and more of them started their own aircraft development company under their own name. The RLM followed suit by giving their products a two-letter designation reflecting the designer’s name rather than the constructor he (originally) worked for. To further complicate things, those new design bureaus were often assigned ranges (or “blocks”) of aircraft numbers formerly assigned to other constructors but unused. Thus when Focke-Wulf’s chief designer Kurt Tank founded his own design bureau he got assigned the prefix Ta and the block of RLM airframe numbers comprising 8-151 through 8-154. As a result, the further development of his Focke-Wulf Fw 190 became the Tank Ta 152 but remained commonly known as the Focke-Wulf Ta 152 .

[...]

  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RLM_aircraft_designation_system#Name_changes_and_new_constructors


Kinja'd!!! Cé hé sin > AuthiCooper1300
02/15/2018 at 18:06

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Yes, I edited it later!


Kinja'd!!! Cé hé sin > Turbineguy: Nom de Zoom
02/15/2018 at 18:07

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Based on it.