Most Beautiful Aircraft of WW2? (4 Viewers)

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... and it had a German engine, to boot.

Now if only someone had bought and stored all those Swedish DB605s when the Flygwapen threw them on the scrap heap....
I'm not sure exactly where you're getting the "German Engine" from. The J22 used in the early production models Pratt & Whitney SC3Gs obtained from Germany, yes, but not German, the engines had actually been captured by the Germans in France. There were 129 of these French Engines, and the majority of them were used, but the remaining 71 planes, and (presumably planes were refitted) had the Swedish Reverse engineered STWC-3 copy of the Pratt and Whitney SC3G manufactured by Svenska Flygmotor (SFA).

-Stannum
 
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Yes, it had a welded steel tube fuselage with plywood panels. On the topic of fuel tanks, they were manufactured by AB Platindustri, don't know if it is self sealing or not. And it DID in fact have armor. On page 202 of Mikael Forslund's Swedish Fighter Colours it states: "The armour plating behind the pilot's seat was deemed too narrow," this was during operational trials in 1943 by the way. They also added after the report this is referring to a 60mm armored front screen. So the J22 was armored.
The windscreen of the canopy was 60mm - at one point, some armor was added, though I don't know if it was a production feature.
The plate behind the seat was 10mm (3/8") and the firewall armor (if you could call it that) was 5mm (13/64").
 
I'm not sure exactly where you're getting the "German Engine" from. The J22 used in the early production models Pratt & Whitney SC3Gs obtained from Germany, yes, but not German, the engines had actually been captured by the Germans in France. There were 129 of these French Engines, and the majority of them were used, but the remaining 71 planes, and (presumably planes were refitted) had the Swedish Reverse engineered STWC-3 copy of the Pratt and Whitney SC3G manufactured by Svenska Flygmotor (SFA).

-Stannum
It's my understanding that we had an agreement with Sweden to sell them some airplanes and engines. The engine was an import version of the R-1830 (the SC3G you mentioned), so it came from us.
We had to nix that deal, though, but I forget why (feel free to fill in that gap). This is what neccessitated the designing of the J22 to begin with (personally, I think they ended up with a better airplane).
First time I've ever heard/read about the engines coming from Germany.
 
It's my understanding that we had an agreement with Sweden to sell them some airplanes and engines. The engine was an import version of the R-1830 (the SC3G you mentioned), so it came from us.
We had to nix that deal, though, but I forget why (feel free to fill in that gap). This is what neccessitated the designing of the J22 to begin with (personally, I think they ended up with a better airplane).
First time I've ever heard/read about the engines coming from Germany.
The engine was an unlicensed copy of the R-1830 manufactured by Svenska Flygmotor.
After the war, a total royalty payment of $1.00 was negotiated.
 
But the engine came from us, not Germany.
The Swedes manufactured a copy of the R-1830, so *technically* speaking, it was an American engine, yes.

Definitely not German.

I can see some confusion, though, since the Swedish manufacturer's name does seem Germanic, but it was definitely native to Sweden.
 
The Swedes manufactured a copy of the R-1830, so *technically* speaking, it was an American engine, yes.

Definitely not German.

I can see some confusion, though, since the Swedish manufacturer's name does seem Germanic, but it was definitely native to Sweden.
I mentioned this earlier, but the confusion comes from the large number of R-1830s the Swedes bought illegally from the Germans, but they were stolen French engines.
 
A bit off-topic maybe, but here's a J 22 I drew.

J22.jpg


Always DID like the lines ... and the performance given the installed power.

I need to go back and add the bottom gray color to the front view undersurfaces ... and finish the undersurface gray on the side view. Sort of sloppy to leave it that way ...
 
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OK, took care of the undersides ...

View attachment 776326

This plane is a really beauty, with harmonious proportions and slender wings.

I actually like it more than the Fw 190A.

Can you draw a fictional "Dora"-version of it with inline engine (with and without elongated rear fuselage)? ;)
 
This plane is a really beauty, with harmonious proportions and slender wings.

I actually like it more than the Fw 190A.

Can you draw a fictional "Dora"-version of it with inline engine (with and without elongated rear fuselage)? ;)
Can. Takes awhile. Cheers.

I like the SAAB 17 but, then again, I never met an airplane I didn't like at least something about.

It DOES look like they got the tail straight from Vought, maybe from a Corsair.
 

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