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A captured Henschel Hs 129 B-1 at Freeman Army Airfield, Indiana, 1946 | |
Role | Attacker |
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National origin | Nazi Germany |
Manufacturer | Henschel |
First flight | 29 May 1939 |
Introduction | April 1942 |
Retired | 1945 |
Status | Retired |
Primary users |
Luftwaffe
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Produced | June 1940 – September 1944 |
Number built | 865 |
By the mid-1930s, the German military, as well as its counterparts in other countries, had come to see the main role of ground-attack aircraft as the interdiction of logistics and materiel, a task in which targets were often poorly protected and less likely to have strong, well-coordinated defences. For high-value, well-protected tactical targets, the dive bomber was becoming the conventional solution.
It was decided that the 7.5 cm (2.95 in) semi-automatic Rheinmetall PaK 40 anti-tank gun, which had already been adapted for use in the Junkers Ju 88 P-1, would be further modified for use in the Hs 129. This resulted in the BK 7,5 (Bordkanone 7,5), which, even though it weighed 1,200 kg (2,600 lb), was lighter than the PaK 40. Fully automatic, it featured a new, hydraulic recoil-dampening system and a new, more aerodynamic muzzle brake. An autoloader system, with 12 rounds in a rotary magazine, was fitted in the empty space behind the cockpit, within the rear half of the wing root area. The gun and its recoil mechanism occupied a substantial gun pod under the fuselage, and a circular port at the rear of the pod allowed rearwards ejection of spent cartridges immediately after firing. While this new variant, the Hs 129 B-3, was theoretically capable of destroying any tank in the world, the added weight worsened the aircraft's general performance and it was inferior to previous variants
Ceiling
Combat RANGE
Aircraft Speed
Max Crew
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It was anticipated that the main source of damage to such an aircraft would be small arms fire from the ground, meaning that the plane had to be well-armored around its cockpit and engines.
Henschel Hs 129 – Anti-Tank Aircraft SAVE an ENTIRE Army (19th July, ‘43)
Henschel Hs 129 – Anti-Tank Aircraft SAVE an ENTIRE Army (19th July, ‘43)