Copyright 2011 by Brandon Cope
Home Page
Back to Vehicles
Flettner Fl 282 reconaissance helicopter
The Fl 282 Kolibri (Hummingbird) was a small two-man helicopter
designed for observation and light utility duties. It was derived
from the Fl 265, a late 1930's design of similar size and performance.
The Fl 265 and Fl 282 both used an unusual (for the time) mounting for
the twin two-blade rotors, both powered by the same engine. Rather than
mounting them on outriggers (which would have greatly increased the
width of the aircraft) they were an intermeshing design, each set at a
slight angle. The pilot was completely exposed at the front of he
helicopter, while the observer was partially exposed in a set behind
the engine.
First flying in 1941, some 24 Fl 282's were built eventually (some
sources claim up to 32) as prototypes or preproduction aircraft. Around
twenty of these were operated from ships of the Kriegsmarine, from the cruiser Köln (landing on a pad atop
one
of her gun turrets) and smaller ships, in the Aegean, Baltic and
Mediterranean. Their main use was in antisubmarine warfare (able to
spot subs up to 130 feet under the surface in the Mediterranean) and
radioing for a surface ship and shadowing the sub until it arrived (or
marking the location if it was not able to remain). The Fl 282 was also
used to run errands between ships. They proved reliable and
agile, even in poor weather conditions. A least three were operated
with
Transportstaffel 40, along with Fa 223's (p.W:MP76). The B-2 was
specifically designed for land use by the Wehrmacht; apart from
reconaissance, it was used for artillery spotting. An order for 1,000
Fl 282's was placed in 1944 but Allied bombing prevented this from
being filled.
The Fl 282B-2 has a crew of a pilot and (optional) observer.
The Fl 282 uses 5.4 gallons of aviation fuel per hour.
Subassemblies: Small Helicopter Chassis +2, 2 Medium
Helicopter Rotors -1, three
fixed Wheels -1
P&P: 119 kW HP gasoline engines w/119-kW MMR
transmission, 15 gallon standard tanks [Body]
Occ: 1
MCS, 1
XCS
Cargo: 1.5.
Armor |
F |
R/L |
B |
T |
U |
Body |
2/3 |
2/3 |
2/3 |
2/3 |
2/3 |
Rotors |
3/10 |
3/10 |
3/10 |
3/10 |
3/10 |
Wheels |
3/5 |
3/5 |
3/5 |
3/5 |
3/5 |
Equipment
Body: medium range radio receiver and transmitter, navigational
instruments.
Statistics
Size: 22'x39'x7' |
Payload: 0.27 tons |
Lwt: 1.1 tons |
Volume: 72
|
Maint.: 110 hours |
Price: $3,300 |
HT: 12
HP: 112 [body], 16 [each rotor], 10 [each wheel]
aSpeed: 93
|
aAccel: 2
|
aDecel: 9
|
aMR: 2
|
aSR: 1
|
Stall: 0 mph |
Design Notes
The design aSpeed was 117 mph and design loaded weight was increased
10%. Chassis cost, weight and HP were doubled (rotor DR was not
doubled, however). Lift was increased 55% to the historical number.
The fuel is carried in two completely exposed tanks below and to the
left and right of the pilot's seat. For design porposes, these two
tanks took volume from the body, but do not get protection from the
body DR. In the versions without an observer, there is a single fuel
tank of 28 gallons fully enclosed in the body instead of these two
smaller tanks.
The cargo space should be considered as part of the observer's
position; there is at least one photo showing two men crammed into the
observer's station.
Variants
The Fl 265 (1939) had the same stats. The pilot was completely enclosed
in a cockpit and the engine was at the nose of the helicopter, rather
than behind the pilot.
All 24 Fl 282's were slightly different from each ither, testing
various configurations. The first three Fl 282's (Fl 282A-1) did not
carry an observer and the
pilot was protected by a plexiglass and metal frame 'bubble' around his
position. The A-2 (an unbuilt project) would have
been similar to the A-1, but modified to be carried in a hanger on
a submarine.
The B-1 was an improved A-1, but with a completely exposed pilot, with
a long range radio reciever and transmitter and one-man life raft. It
also included two magnesium flares or smoke bombs for marking the
location of a submarine. To aid in ship landings in poor weather, a 33'
cable was carried under
the helicopter. The pilot would release one end of this over the
landing pad, where the deck crew would secure it to a winch and slowly
pull the Fl 282 in; the pilot would maintain just enough power to keep
the cable taught.