Arming the cannons on a German Henschel Hs 129Hs 129 Henschel Hs 129 B-1 Role Ground attack Manufacturer Henschel First flight 25 May 1939 Introduced April 1942 Retired 1945 Primary users Luftwaffe Hungarian Air Force Romanian Air Force Produced June 1940 - September 1944 Number built 865 The Henschel Hs 129 was a World War II ground-attack aircraft fielded by the German Luftwaffe. Its nickname, the Panzerknacker (tank cracker), is a deliberate pun—in German, it also means "safe cracker". In combat service the Hs 129 lacked a sufficient chance to prove itself; the aircraft was produced in relatively small numbers and deployed during a time when the Luftwaffe was unable to protect them from attack.
Подготовка к вылету немецкого бомбардировщика Хейнкель He-111H на аэродроме Восточного фронта.
Americans captured this German Junkers Ju-87G at an airfield near Pilsen, Czechoslovakia in May 1945
The Siebel Si204 was a twin engined light transport and trainer aircraft built by Siebel for the Luftwaffe in World War II. It was the last German aircraft shot down on the Western Front of WWII. P…
During the 1930s and 1940s, Messerschmitt made some of the most advanced and effective fighter planes in German service. They played an important part in
www.deutsches-museum.de/en/flugwerft/collections/vtol-air...
Die Flugzeugwerke Dresden Baade 152 war das erste deutsche Düsenverkehrsflugzeug, die Maschine war nicht ausgereift genug, um es zu einer Fluggesellschaft zu schaffen.
The Siebel Si204 was a twin engined light transport and trainer aircraft built by Siebel for the Luftwaffe in World War II. It was the last German aircraft shot down on the Western Front of WWII. P…
The Messerschmitt Bf 108 Taifun was developed as a sport and touring aircraft. In World War 2 the Luftwaffe used it for personnel transport and as a liaison aircraft.
© Shigeo Koike
He 177 Greif Heavy Bomber
Lista traz aeronaves curiosas que surgiram antes ou durante a Segunda Guerra Mundial