BV 138B | |
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An image of a BV 138 published in a British Aircraft guide. | |
Role |
Maritime patrol Long-Range Reconnaissance |
Manufacturer | Blohm & Voss |
Designer | Richard Vogt |
First flight | 15 July, 1937 |
Introduction | October, 1940 |
Primary user | Luftwaffe |
Produced | 1938–1943 |
Number built | 297 |
The Blohm & Voss BV 138 Seedrache (Sea Dragon), but nicknamed Der Fliegende Holzschuh ("flying clog", from the side-view shape of its fuselage) was a World War II German trimotor flying boat that served as the Luftwaffe's main seaborne long-range maritime patrol and naval reconnaissance aircraft.
A total of 297 BV 138s were built between 1938 and 1943.
The appearance of the BV 138 was unique, in its combination of unusual design features, such as: twin boom tail unit, trimotor configuration, and fuselage slung beneath the wings. One nickname, "the Flying Clog" was derived from the shape of the slab-sided hull unit. These features together produced the aircraft's ungainly appearance, but inspired a certain affection among its crew and mechanics.
Three piston engines were used. The central engine was mounted above the wing, driving a four-blade propeller, while the wing engines were lower, with three-blade propellers. The pre-production prototypes and the BV 138 A-01 to BV 138 A-06, were powered by various makes of engines ranging from 485–746 kW (650–1,000 hp). The first standardized version, BV 138 B-1, was powered by three 880 PS (868 hp, 647 kW) Junkers Jumo 205D two-stroke, opposed-piston aircraft diesel engines. The engine cowlings also had an atypical appearance, due to the unique nature of the vertical orientation of the six-cylinder opposed-piston Jumo 205 diesel engines, and resembled the cowlings of 4 or 6-cylinder inverted inline engines found on smaller civil and utility aircraft from the Jumo 205's propshaft placement, emerging forward at the uppermost front end of the powerplant.