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Ship-based reconnaissance floatplane From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Heinkel He 60 was a German single-engined biplane reconnaissance seaplane designed to be catapulted from Kriegsmarine (German navy) warships of the 1930s.
He 60 | |
---|---|
General information | |
Type | Reconnaissance seaplane |
Manufacturer | Heinkel |
Primary users | Luftwaffe |
Number built | 361 |
History | |
Introduction date | 1933 |
First flight | Early 1933 |
Retired | 1943 |
The Heinkel He 60 was designed by Heinkel engineer Reinhold Mewes, the designer of the He 59.[1] The resulting design was a single-engined biplane of mixed wood and metal construction with fabric covering. Its single bay wings were of equal-span and had significant stagger.[2]
The first prototype flew early in 1933 and proved to be underpowered with its 492 kW (660 hp) BMW VI engine. The second prototype had a more powerful version of the BMW engine, but this only marginally improved its performance and was unreliable, so production aircraft reverted to the original engine.[2][3] Of conventional configuration, the He 60 was a sturdy aircraft, designed (as the specification required) to be capable of operating on the open sea. As a result, it was always somewhat underpowered for its weight, which made handling sluggish and the aircraft vulnerable to enemy fire. Attempts were made to solve its lack of power by fitting one aircraft with a Daimler-Benz DB 600 engine, but engines were not available for production.[4] About 200 He 60Cs and Ds were built by Arado and Weser.[5]
Initial deliveries of the He 60 were to Kriegsmarine training units in June 1933.[4] From 1934, the major production version, the He 60C began to be delivered to the shipboard observation seaplane units of the Kriegsmarine, operating from the catapults of all German cruisers.[6] It also saw action with Spanish Nationalist forces during the Civil War.[1]
In 1939 it was replaced as a shipboard aircraft first by the He 114 in service, then soon after by the Arado Ar 196, but it remained in service with several coast reconnaissance Staffeln (squadrons) when World War II began.[7] It had been withdrawn from front-line service by 1940, but returned to use following Germany's invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, being used by various SAGr (Seeaufklarungsgruppe/Maritime reconnaissance group)[8] for coastal patrol work in the Baltic and Mediterranean Seas. All He 60s were removed from service by October 1943.[1]
Data from War Planes of the Second World War: Volume Six Floatplanes [6]
General characteristics
Performance
Armament
Related lists
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