Blohm & Voss P 188
The Blohm & Voss Bv P 188 was a long-range, heavy jet bomber design project by the Blohm & Voss aircraft manufacturing division during the last years of the Third Reich. It featured a novel W-wing planform with variable incidence.
The project was rejected in favour of the Junkers Ju 287 and no aircraft was ever built.
Design
In 1943 the RLM. the German Air Ministry, issued a specification for a long-range heavy bomber to be powered by jet engines. Richard Vogt, chief designer for the Blohm und Voss aircraft division, responded with the BV P.188.Blohm & Voss had been studying the swept wing and its associated problems such as aeroelasticity. As a swept wing bends under aerodynamic loads, its angle of attack changes, causing undesirable effects. Vogt proposed that the direction of sweep be changed mid-span, so that the outer part of the wing would compensate for any bending of the inner part. The resulting W-wing was adopted for the P.188. The wing inner sections were swept back 20 degrees while the outer halves were swept 20 degrees forward.
The fuselage centre section comprised a one-piece steel fuel tank, with the pivoting wing carry-through structure passing through it and above the bomb bay. Fore and aft fuselage sections were of duralumin light alloy. A pressurized crew cabin was located at the forward end of the fuselage.
The main undercarriage consisted of two sets of vertically retracting wheels located fore and aft in tandem under the fuselage. Because of this the fuselage could not rotate for takeoff in the usual way and instead a variable-incidence wing, originally developed for the BV 144 transport, was used. Small retractable outrigger wheels would be placed in the wings.
The bomber was to be powered by four Junkers Jumo 004C turbojets placed below the wings.
Because of the uncertainties surrounding the design, four variants were put forward in all, differing mainly in their engine locations, armament, cabin and tail layout. In the event, the design was perceived as a high risk and the project was rejected in favour of the Junkers Ju 287 forward-swept prototype.