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Done +++ Henschel Hs 165 A-1 torpedo bomber, 1943

Started by Dizzyfugu, July 17, 2016, 02:45:28 AM

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Dizzyfugu

Early teaser for the next GB submission: a Henschel Hs 165 A-1, aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1, aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr


More to follow soon.  ;D

Tophe

Uh? What a puzzle! It seems like a mix of Zero/Fw190/Buffalo and (maybe) others... :unsure: :-\ ;D :lol: :thumbsup:
[the word "realistic" hurts my heart...]

Dizzyfugu

Fw 190 is good (engine, most of it  ;)), Brewster Buffalo canopy, too.

No Zero parts, though.  ;D

Dizzyfugu

Here we go, built last week while waiting for an occasion to shoot the Fo-150... a Henschel Hs 165 A-1 torpedo bomber; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943.

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr


Some background:
The origins of the Henschel Hs 165 date back to early 1937, when the Reichsluftfahrtministerium (RLM, German Ministry of Aviation) issued a specification for a carrier-based torpedo bomber to operate from Germany's first aircraft carrier, the Graf Zeppelin construction of which had started at the end of 1936. The specification was originally issued to two aircraft producers, Fieseler and Arado, and demanded an all-metal biplane with a maximum speed of at least 300 km/h (186 mph), a range of at least 1,000 km and capable both of torpedo and dive-bombing. By the summer of 1938 the Fieseler design proved to be superior to the Arado design, the Ar 195.
Anyway, by the time the Fi 167 prototype was ready for tests and proved its excellent handling, the biplane layout was already outdated and did not promise much development potential. Therefore, the RLM's request was repeated in late 1938 and a monoplane requested. Since the Graf Zeppelin was not expected to be completed before the end of 1940, the RLM did not put much pressure behind the project.

Among others, Henschel replied with the Hs 165. It was a compact and conservative low wing monoplane of all-metal construction with a crew of two (pilot and navigator/observer/gunner) under a common, heavily framed and high glasshouse canopy. In order to achieve a high performance, the airframe was originally developed around the new 14 cylinder BMW 139 radial engine with 1,550 hp (1,140 kW). The main landing gear was fully retractable, retracting outwards into wells that were part of the outer, foldable wings. Similar to the Ju87 C, the wings could manually be folded backwards, so that the aircraft became very compact for onboard stowage.
The tail wheel, placed behind a V-shaped arrester hook, could not be retracted, even though a mechanism allowed the control of the tail's ground clearance for the carriage of a torpedo under the fuselage and an optimized angle of attack for starts and landings.
Armament consisted of a pair of 20mm MG FF cannons in the wings, a pair of 7.92mm machine guns above the engine, synchronized to fire through the propeller arc, and another single light machine gun for rear defense.

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr


Among the special equipment of the Hs 165 for naval operations was a two-seat rubber dinghy with signal ammunition and emergency ammunition. A quick fuel dump mechanism and two inflatable 750 L (200 US gal) bags in each wing and a further two 500 L (130 US gal) bags in the fuselage enabled the aircraft to remain afloat for up to three days in calm seas.

When the first two prototypes of the Hs 165 (the V-1 and V-2) were about to be finished, it became clear that the BMW 139 would not materialize, but rather be replaced by an even more powerful engine. The new design was given the name BMW 801 after BMW was given a new block of "109-800" engine numbers by the RLM to use after their merger with Bramo. The first BMW 801A's ran in April 1939, only six months after starting work on the design, with production commencing in 1940.

Hs 165 V-1 was re-engined and ready for testing in mid 1940, while the first catapult launch tests on board of the Graf Zeppelin carrier were already carried out with Arado Ar 197s, modified Junkers Ju 87Bs and modified Messerschmitt Bf 109Ds. However, the Graf Zeppelin was still incomplete and not ready for full military service, and the changing strategic situation led to further work on her being suspended. In the wake of this decision, the completion of further carrier-borne aircraft was stopped and the completed examples were taken into Luftwaffe service in several evaluation/test units.

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr


The Hs 165 initially fell victim to this decision, and only five airworthy airframes were completed as Hs 165 A-0 pre-production aircraft. Anyway, these were kept in service as test beds and other development duties, and Henschel kept working on detail improvements since the aircraft was also intended to become a land-based replacement for the Ju 87 dive bombers which had become obsolete by 1941, too. This aircraft was planned as the Hs 165 B.

However, by the spring of 1942 the usefulness of aircraft carriers in modern naval warfare had been amply demonstrated, and on 13 May 1942, the German Naval Supreme Command ordered work resumed on the German carrier projects. Henschel was happy to have the refined Hs 165 A at hand, and the type was immediately put into production.

The resulting Hs 165 A-1 differed in many equipment details from the former pre-production aircraft, and the armament was upgraded, too. The wing-mounted MG FF 20mm cannons were replaced with more effective and lighter MG 151/20 guns, while the pair of MG 17 machine guns above the engine was replaced by a pair of heavy MG 131 machine guns. The observer's single, light MG 15 machine gun was also upgraded to a belt-fed MG 81Z with two barrels, or a single MG 131.
The original BMW 801A engine remained the same, though, and due to the Hs 165 A-1's higher overall weight the aircraft's performance deteriorated slightly.

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr


Production did not last for long though, because further work on the Graf Zeppelin was soon terminated, and this time for good. In the meantime, the RLM had also decided to reduce the variety of aircraft types and rather develop specialized versions of existing aircraft than dedicated types like the Hs 165. As a consequence Hs 165 production was stopped again in June 1943, with several improved versions on the drawing board. These included the A-2 single seater and the C with an alternative liquid-cooled Jumo 213 powerplant.
The land-based Hs 165 B never materialized because, at the time of the type's introduction into service, the dive bomber concept had turned out to be much too vulnerable in the European theatre of operations. Effectively, the Hs 165 needed cover from more agile fighters and did not stand a chance against enemy fighters.

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr


However, until the end of production about 100 Hs 165 aircraft had been delivered to land-based front line units, since no German aircraft carrier ever materialized, and these machines were primarily used in Northern Europe in the coastal defense role and for harassment attacks in the North and Baltic Sea until 1945.
In service, they were gradually replaced by Ju 88 torpedo bombers and the Fw 190 A-5a/U14, which was able to carry a single torpedo, too, but offered a much better performance than the heavy and large Hs 165.

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr






General characteristics:
    Crew: 2 (pilot and observer/gunner)
    Length: 11.08 m (36 ft 4 in)
    Wingspan: 13.95 m (45 ft 9 in)
    Height: 4.18 m (13 ft 8 in)
    Wing area: 26.8 m² (288 ft²)
    Empty weight: 9,725 lb (4,411 kg)
    Max. takeoff weight: 14,300 lb (6,486 kg)

Powerplant:
    1 × BMW 801A air-cooled 14 cylinder two row radial engine, 1,700 hp (1,250 kW)

Performance:
    Maximum speed: 302 mph (262 kn, 486 km/h) at 11,000 ft (3,350 m)
    Cruise speed: 235 mph (204 kn, 378 km/h)
    Range: 1,400 miles (1,220 nmi, 2,253 km)
    Service ceiling: 22,500 ft (6,860 m)
    Wing loading: 43.1 lb/ft² (210 kg/m²)
    Power/mass: 0.12 hp/lb (0.19 kW/kg)

Armament:
    2× 20 mm MG 151/20 cannon in the wings
    2 × 13 mm MG 131 machine gun above the engine
    1 × 7.92 mm MG 81Z, firing backwards

    1× 1000 kg (2,200 lb) bomb, or
    1× 765 kg (1,685 lb) torpedo, or
    1 × 500 kg (1,100 lb) bomb plus 4 × 50 kg (110 lb) bombs, or
    4 × 250 kg (551 lb) ventrally


The kit and its assembly:
Another entry for the 2016 "In the Navy" Group Build at whatfimodelers.com, and in this case a complete kitbash for a fictional aircraft. Originally, this idea started as a Hs 126 on floats, which then  turned into a low wing aircraft (in the Ju 87 class) and finally evolved into a carrier-capable torpedo bomber. Pretty dramatic evolution, but once the plan was settled, things quickly turned into hardware.

Ingredients include:
- Fuselage, cockpit and stabilizers (though mounted differently) from an Italeri Hs 126
- Wings from a Mastercraft (ex ZTM Plastyk) PZL 23 Karas, with the ventral gondala removed
- Landing gear from a Matchbox He 70, wheels from a Mastercraft Su-22;
- Engine/cowling from an Academy Fw 190, plus various donation parts and a putty plug
- Canopy from a Matchbox Brewster Buffalo
- German torpedo from the spares box (IIRC from an Italeri He 111)

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) - WiP by dizzyfugu, on Flickr

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) - WiP by dizzyfugu, on Flickr

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) - WiP by dizzyfugu, on Flickr

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) - WiP by dizzyfugu, on Flickr


Even though this is a kitbash, work was rather easy and straightforward, because most of the parts come from OOB donation kits. First, the Hs 126 fuselage was finished without an interior and the Fw 190 nose section transplanted. Inside, a styrene tube was added in order to hold the propeller and let it spin freely. In parallel, the landing gear wells were cut into the wings and the flaps separated/opened. Then the canopy was integrated into the fuselage, using styrene strips and putty.

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) - WiP by dizzyfugu, on Flickr

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) - WiP by dizzyfugu, on Flickr


For the wings, a wide opening had to be cut into the Hs 126's lower fuselage, and the parts took some putty work to blend together.
Once the wings were in place, the landing gear was mounted as well as the scratched torpedo hardpoint. The cockpit interior followed suit with new seats and two figures, then the Buffalo canopy was modified for the rear machine gun mount and glued into place.


Painting and markings:
I wanted a rather "dry", typical German livery, and settled for a simple splinter scheme with a low waterline in the naval colors RLM 72 (a kind of very dark olive drab) and 73 (a bluish, very dark green) with light blue (RLM 65) undersides.

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) - WiP by dizzyfugu, on Flickr


In this case I used enamels from the Modelmaster Authentic range, treated with a light black ink wash and with serious panel shading (with Humbrol 66 and a mix of Humbrol 30 + 77, respectively), because some color pictures I got hands on from early German naval aircraft (e. g. He 115 or Ar 196) suggest that the two murky, green tones weathered and bleached easily, and the enhanced contrast between the very similar colors was IMHO helpful, anyway.
The interior and the landing gearw as painted in contemporary RLM 02, the torpedo is simple black with a gun metal tip and a brass propeller.

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) - WiP by dizzyfugu, on Flickr

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) - WiP by dizzyfugu, on Flickr

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr


The markings had to be puzzled together; I originally wanted the kit to be part of one of the Küstenfliegergruppen, in particular KüFliGr 106. But in mid 1943, these were partly integrated into the Kampffliegergruppen, and offensive parts of KüFliGr 106 were added to KG 6. It took some time to figure out where KG 6 was operating in the time frame I wanted to place the Hs 165, and eventually found 8./KG 6 from the third group that was based in Belgium at that time and flew Ju 88 torpedo bombers - so I added the Hs 165 to that squadron.

As a side effect, the aircraft would not carry any of the fuselage bands or other bright ID markings - the only color highlights are the red wing tip and the individual code "K" letter, and I used a grey decal for the 8th squadron's code letter "S" for better contrast with the dark green livery. Another "highlight" is a KG 6 emblem behind the engine, which I found on a Peddinghaus Decals sheet in the stash. Anyway, this minimal and very conservative livery does not look bad at all, though?




1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr

1:72 Henschel Hs 165 A-1; aircraft K6+KS of III./KG 6, Deutsche Luftwaffe; Melsbroek (Belgium), autumn 1943 (Whif/Kitbashing) by dizzyfugu, on Flickr


A complex kitbashing,done in about a week, and despite some trouble and major body work the result looks IMHO very good - especially the flight scenes, with the retracted (retouched...) landing gear show the sleek lines of the Hs 126, the fictional Hs 165 looks pretty fast and purposeful. And with a different engine, this could also carry some Hinomaru - the thing reminds me a lot of Japanese torpedo bombers (e. g. the B5N?) and carrier-borne reconnaissance aircraft?

zenrat

Excellent job of kitbashing.
For some reason i'm getting distinct Stuka vibes from it.  I know it's completely different, not even having gull wings or spats but it's there for me.  I think it's the canopy and the paint/markings.  It couldn't be anything other than German in my book.
:thumbsup:
Fred

- Can't be bothered to do the proper research and get it right.

Another ill conceived, lazily thought out, crudely executed and badly painted piece of half arsed what-if modelling muppetry from zenrat industries.

zenrat industries:  We're everywhere...for your convenience..

Dizzyfugu

Quote from: zenrat on July 18, 2016, 01:40:10 AM
For some reason i'm getting distinct Stuka vibes from it. 

Thank you!  :cheers: And, yes, the Ju 87 was a kind of "spriritual cousin" for this one. In fact, I had planned to mount Ju 87 wings (with a retractable landing gear, though) to the Hs 126 fuselage, but found it too obvious. The Karas wings were a lucky find in the parts pile, and they were perfect in shape and size, even though the implantation was more complex than expected.

dumaniac

Lovely kit bash - great inspiration

well done and great pics

Dizzyfugu

Thank you, too. Glad you like it - looks rather unspectacular, I guess...

Army of One

BODY,BODY....HEAD..!!!!

IF YER HIT, YER DEAD!!!!

KiwiZac

Zac in NZ
#avgeek, modelbuilder, photographer, writer. Callsign: "HANDBAG"
https://linktr.ee/zacyates

DogfighterZen

Quote from: Dizzyfugu on July 20, 2016, 04:17:18 AM
Thank you, too. Glad you like it - looks rather unspectacular, I guess...

But it's still an amazing job done! :thumbsup:
"Sticks and stones may break some bones but a 3.57's gonna blow your damn head off!!"


comrade harps

Whatever.