Fairly widely
recognised as the world's most efficient national airline at the end of
the 1920s (while others struggled to survive the great depression),
Deutsche Lufthansa flew highly competitive services throughout Europe
using a heterogeneous fleet of aircraft largely comprising designs
progressively developed from Professor Hugo Junkers' original J 1
all-metal monoplane of 1915. The great majority of these early aircraft
(the J 10, F 13, A 20, F 24, W 33, W 34, Ju 46 and Ju 52) were
single-engined, low-wing monoplanes, but in 1924 there appeared a
three-engined airliner, the G 23, powered by a 195 hp (145 kW) Junkers
L.2 and two 100 hp (75 kW) Mercedes engines. It is thought that, as a
result of Versailles Treaty restrictions imposed on German aircraft
manufacture, this prototype was produced at Junkers' Fili factory near
Moscow with production of about nine aircraft (as well as that of the
much more numerous G 24) was subsequently undertaken in Sweden. The G
24, usually powered by three (280/310 hp) (209/231 kW) Junkers L.5
inline engines, served in numerous confIgurations and with a number of
airlines, including Lufthansa, which retained them in service until
1933-34.
A Junkers Ju 52/3mg6e aircraft with water-soluble distemper temporary
camouflage, operating on the Eastern Front in the winter of 1942-43.
1926 was a busy year
for the Junkers concern, with two new designs (the G 31 tri-motor
transport and the W 33/34) being the most important to fly. The former
was a beefier version of the successful G 24, and the latter an
excellent single-engined transport which was built in large numbers.
Almost at once, the Junkers designers embarked on a new but
considerably enlarged single-engined transport, the Ju 52, which
embodied the cumulative experience of earlier designs and was primarily
intended for freight carrying. Like its predecessors, it was of
standard Junkers all-metal construction with corrugated,
load-sustaining duralumin skinning, and featured the patented Junkers
full-span double wing. Five aircraft were built, of which four
underwent development with various powerplants in Germany and one
(CF-ARM) went to Canada.
The original Ju 52 Ju
52 started life as a single-engine aircraft, designed as a cargo
transport and having a 590 cubic ft (16.7 cubic m) cabin capable of
accommodating a 4,067 lbs (1845 kg) payload. The first Ju 52ba
prototype (D-1974) flew on 13 October 1930 powered by an 800 hp (597
kW) Junkers L.88 engine. Extensive flight testing was carried out
before the prototype was re-engined with a 755 hp (563 kW) BMW VIIau
engine, in which form it was redesignated Ju 52be. The second prototype
was tested with several engines, including the 755 hp (563 kW) BMW VII
(Ju 52de), the 750 hp (559 kW) Armstrong Siddeley Leopard radial (Ju
52di) and finally the 750 hp (559 kW) Junkers Jumo 204 diesel (Ju
52do). Despite its single engine, the Ju 52 was able to carry 15-17
passengers when required.
Production deliveries
began with the third aircraft, but only six single-engine Ju 52s were
built before the company decided to evaluate a three-engine
configuration. The Junkers design team, under Dipl Ing Ernst Zindel,
undertook work to adapt the airframe of what would have been the
seventh Ju 52. It was converted to take three 550 hp (410 kW) Pratt &
Whitney Hornet 9 cylinder radial engines, becoming designated Ju
52/3mce. When first flown in April 1931 it was such a success that the
single-engine version was discontinued in favour of the the Ju 52/3m (Dreimotoren,
or three motor). The first customer was Lloyd Aereo Boliviano which
received a total of seven Ju 52/3mde aircraft beginning in 1932.
Subsequent deliveries
were made to Finland, Sweden and Brazil, as well as to Deutsche
Lufthansa. Ultimately, Ju 52/3ms flew with airlines in Argentina,
Austria, Australia, Belgium, Bolivia, China, Colombia, Czechoslovakia,
Denmark, Ecuador, Estonia, France, Great Britain, Greece, Hungary,
Italy, Lebanon, Mozambique, Norway, Peru, Poland, Portugal, Romania,
South Africa, Spain, Switzerland, Turkey and Uruguay. Powerplants
included Hispano-Suiza, BMW, Junkers Jumo, Bristol Pegasus, Pratt &
Whitney Hornet and Wasp engines. Commercial Ju 52/3ms delivered to
Bolivia were employed as milita transports towards the end of the Gran
Chaco war of 1932-35.
From late in 1932, Ju
52/3ms were delivered to Lufthansa, with D-2201 'Boelcke' and D-2202 'Richthofen'
inaugurating the airline's Berlin-London and Berlin-Rome services
before the end of that year. In due course, no fewer than 230 Ju 52/3ms
were registered with Deutsche Lufthansa, continuing to fly commercial
services to Spain, Portugal, Sweden, Switzerland and Turkey almost to
the end World War II.
Like its predecessor,
the Ju 52/3m could operate also on skis or floats, and orders were
placed by Sweden's AB Aerotransport and Finland's Aero O/Y for
floatplane versions. Wheel landing gear was fitted to the otherwise
similar Ju 52/3mce aircraft ordered by Deutsche Lufthansa for delivery
from the spring of 1932, and it was with this airline that the type
began to make a name for itself. Contemporary Lufthansa records quote
the price as Reichsmarks 275,000, and with 15-17 passengers on board
the Junkers had a cruising speed of 132 mph (212 km/h). Large fixed
flaps running the whole length of the wing trailing edge cut the
landing speed to 59 mph (95 km/h), enabling the Ju 52/3m to use small
airfields, a factor particularly useful to airlines operating in South
America. An oxygen supply system was monitored by the radio operator
and could be switched on at passengers' request. Production of the Ju
52/3m built up quickly and by the end of 1935, 97 were in service with
a number of airlines, including 51 with Lufthansa.
Meanwhile, the military
potential of the type was being examined by the clandestine Luftwaffe,
who considered ordering it as a stop-gap until Dornier Do 11 bombers
were delivered. Problems with the latter could not be satisfactorily
overcome, however, so orders were placed for Ju 52/3mge aircraft with
three BMW 132A-1 (license built Pratt & Whitney Hornets) radial engines
rated at 660 hp (492 kW) each and later for the improved Ju 52/3mg3e
machines with 725 hp (541 kW) BMW 132A-3 engines and other
improvements. Bomb-release mechanism was installed in three bomb bays,
such an arrangement being necessary because the wing centre-section and
main spars did not permit a single bay. It was also necessary to
develop vertical bomb storage magazines since space between the spars
did not allow horizontal stowage. A fairing containing a bomb-aiming
device, fuse-setting mechanism and release lever was fitted below the
fuselage, and hinged to the fairing was a retractable 'dustbin'
installation for a machine-gun, which could be winched up into the
fuselage for take-off and landing. The military model also had two
additional fuel tanks in the wings, plus an improved fuel-jettison
system, which when experience proved that the latter was never used it
was later removed.
The Ju 52/3m had its
first taste of military action when 20 Luftwaffe aircraft were flown to
Seville in 1936 to support the Nationalist forces in the Spanish Civil
War. They were used in a ferrying role, bringing back 10,000 Moorish
troops from Morocco to Spain. At the end of the year a special air
force, the Legion Condor, was formed, comprising Luftwaffe personnel
and aircraft operating in Spanish Nationalist uniforms and markings.
The Ju 52s were employed as bombers until replaced a year later by Do
17s and He 111s. Their final operation was flown in March 1939, and the
Ju 52 had flown throughout the Civil War, amassing some 13,000
operational hours and dropping more than 6,000 tons of bombs. Only
eight were lost, five being shot down and the others destroyed on the
ground. The type had proved its reliability in action and was blooded
for the greater conflict about to begin.
Meanwhile, Ju 52/3ms
were continuing in production for civil airlines, with whom the type
remained in service until after the end of World War II. More than 230
were registered to Lufthansa, although some were no doubt passed on to
other customers, including the Luftwaffe. In the period 1934-5, 450
were delivered to the Luftwaffe, and in 1939 that force received 593.
It is of interest to note that three Ju 52/3mg4e aircraft were
delivered to the Swiss air force for transport work, and two of these
were still on active strength until 1981 (with the third preserved for
a museum) when they were finally retired. The two aircraft continue to
fly giving sight seeing tours around Europe.
With the outbreak of
World War II in 1939, the Luftwaffe took over 59 of Lufthansa's fleet
of Ju 52/3ms and the type was used extensively in airborne assault
operations and supply missions. As German troops moved across Europe,
overrunning Denmark, Norway, Belgium, the Netherlands and France, the
Ju 52/3m was seen in ever increasing numbers in supply and paratrooping
roles. At the beginning of the Norwegian operation 571 Ju 52/3m
transports were available in addition to other types, being used on 9
April 1940 in the Luftwaffe's first major airborne operation.
After Norway had been
occupied, a second major airborne assault began against the Low
Countries, on 10 May 1940. Once again the Ju 52/3m was in the thick of
operations, with 430 aircraft, but this time much stiffer opposition
was encountered and almost 40 per cent of the transports were lost. A
total of 162 Ju 52/3m transports was shot down, although some of these
were repaired later as German land forces moved forward and captured
the battle zones.
With the greater
percentage of the west coast of Europe in Axis hands the British
stepped up their offensive against German shipping, many mines being
laid in coastal waters at the entrance to estuaries and rivers along
much of the occupied coast. In a bid to help counter this a number of
minesweeping groups were formed with specially adapted Ju 52/3m(MS)
aircraft. These had large dural rings fitted beneath the fuselage and
braced below the engines, the hoops energized by an auxiliary motor in
the fuselage to deal with magnetic mines. Other Ju 52/3m aircraft each
carried a container with small explosive charges to detonate other
types of mines. It was the practice to fly in groups of three aircraft
at about 124 mph (200 km/h), with the altitude some 130 ft (40 m) above
the estimated level of the mine. While effective in this role, it was
extremely hazardous to both plane and crew.
Nine subsequent
military versions with progressive improvements included the Ju
52/3mg4e with internal equipment changes and a tailwheel replacing the
tailskid, which was followed by the considerably improved Ju 52/3mg5e
that introduced 830 hp (619 kW) BMW 132T engines, exhaust heat for
de-icing, interchangeable wheel, float or ski landing gear and more
advanced radio equipment. The similar J u 52/3mg6e had wheeled landing
gear as standard, and simplified radio, the Ju 52/3mg7e added an
autopilot and a large loading hatch plus, in the similar Ju 52/3mg8e,
an additional cabin roof hatch. Late-production examples of this last
aircraft introduced improved BMW 132Z engines. In early production form
the Ju 52/3mg9e was almost identical, but late construction had
strengthened landing gear and glider towing equipment as standard, as
did the Ju 52/3mg10e which differed only by being capable of float
operations. Penultimate variant was the Ju 52/3mg12e which introduced
BMW 132L powerplant, some of these production aircraft being completed
to airline standards and supplied to Lufthansa under the designation Ju
52/3m12. Final version was the Ju 52/3mg14e, similar to late production
examples of the Ju 52/3mg9e, but with improved armour protection for
the pilot and heavier defensive armament.
The virtual failure of
the Italian campaign against Greece and Yugoslavia, together with the
build-up of British forces on Crete, made it necessary for Germany to
take action in the Balkans, and on 20 May 1941 Operation 'Mercury'
began. It was the Luftwaffe's greatest airborne assault and involved
the landing of 22,750 men and their supplies on Crete. Of these, 10,000
were parachuted in, 750 were carried in 80 DFS 230 gliders, 5,000 were
landed by Ju 52/3m, and 7,000 were seaborne. The attack took place in
two waves, and 493 Ju 52/3m transports were used. Stiff resistance was
encountered from Allied troops that included Australians and New
Zealanders, and although the Luftwaffe had complete air superiority the
German losses were heavy, with 4,500 men lost and 271 Ju 52/3m
transports destroyed or seriously damaged. This was the last mission on
which German paratroops were employed in large numbers in the airborne
role.
The Ju 52/3m force also
received severe mauling at the hands of the RAF during 1942-3 when it
attempted to relieve German forces operating in North Africa, the
biggest single loss occurring on 18 April 1943 when 52 Junkers from
about 100 were shot down near Cape Bon. Ju 52/3m aircraft were also
operating on the Eastern Front in the USSR and suffering heavy losses;
in 1941 these exceeded production, with 451 being delivered and more
than 500 lost. This high casualty rate demanded action, and a new
production line was laid down at the Amiot factory at Colombes, with
arrangements being made with a number of sub-contractors in the Paris
area. The first French-assembled aircraft was accepted in June 1942
with 40 more being delivered in the next six months, and 321 in the
following year.
When German forces were
surrounded at Stalingrad in 1942-3, an attempt was made to fly in
supplies, but the Luftwaffe lost 490 transports, of which 266 were Ju
52/3m transports. Assembly of the Ju 52/3m was arranged with PIRT
(Pestszentlörinc Ipari Telepek or Pestszentlörinc Industrial Workshops)
in Budapest from German-supplied components, and the first of 26 was
completed in January 1944. The Luftwaffe received four and the balance
went to the Hungarian air force.
Production of the Ju
52/3m ended in Germany in mid-1944, and while figures vary it seems
likely that the total number built in Germany and France from 1932
until 1944 was 4,845. Post-war, the French built more than 400 for Air
France and their air force, by which the type was designated AAC.1.
CASA (Construcciones Aeronáuticas S.A.) built 170 in Spain for the air
force under the designation CASA 352, and it is largely these aircraft,
surplus to Spanish military requirements, that have begun to appear in
museums and private collections. Ten aircraft were reconditioned by
Short Bros and Harland in Belfast, and entered service on 18 November
1946 with British European Airways as (G-AHOC) and (G-AHOL) on the
Croydon-Liverpool-Belfast service.
Called "Tante Ju" (Aunt
Ju) by the Germans, but also known unofficially by the Allies as "Iron
Annie" or the "Corrugated Coffin", The Ju 52/3m was an extremely rugged
and reliable aircraft. The backbone of the Luftwaffe transport units,
its service life extended well beyond the end of the war. Seven
aircraft are still airworthy today. (D-AQUI) of Lufthansa, three of Ju-Air
in Switzerland (with one more flyable but static in a museum) and (Zs-depr)
of South African Airways, (N352JU) of the Confederate Air Force and
(CG-ARM) of the Western Canada Aviation Museum which also flys a single
engine (CF-ARM) Ju 52/1m. One more is currently in the final stages of
assembly in Portugal, after restoration in Norway. Not a bad record for
an aircraft over 70 years old.
The Cabin
When fitted with seats,
the Ju 52/3m could carry up to 18 passengers, with two rows of single
seats separated by a single aisle. By removing the seats, the cabin
could hold a surprising amount of cargo. Entry to the cabin was made
through a door on the port side. This could be opened in flight to
permit para-dropping of either supplies or troops. On the starboard
side was a large cargo loading door, with upward and downward-hinging
flaps. The space behind the cabin door was often used for cargo storage
or provided the stand for the gunner. Behind the gunner, an inspection
tunnel with reinforced fioor-way provided access to the control
linkages under the tail. The Ju 52 was originally envisaged as a
bomber/transport, carrying weapons in two internal bays. As such, it
was used during the Spanish Civil War, while transport Ju 52/3ms were
later used as bombers by the French in Indo-China. World War II
Luftwaffe use was largely restricted to the transport role, but until
1943 the Ju 52 units retained their KGrzbV appellation, this standing
for Kampfgruppe zur besondern Verwendung, or 'bomber wing for special
purposes'. The large aerial above the cockpit was a mast for the single
wire aerial which ran to the tail. Behind it, a loop aerial served the
direction-finding equipment.
The Wings and Tail
Unit
A feature of Junkers
designs of the period was the detached flap/aileron assembly positioned
below and behind the main wing structure. The ailerons drooped at low
speed to act as partial flaps which. together with the normal slotted
inboard flaps. gave the type tremendous STOL capability. The entire
wing could be detached from the fuselage and was attached by eight
ball-and-socket joints. Both tail and tailplane were built, like the
wing, on a multi-spar structure. The elevators (and ailerons) featured
distinctive balancing horns to lighten control forces.
The Undercarriage
The Ju 52/3m had a
fixed undercarriage of immense strength, although its narrow track made
it prone to bouncing from side to side, The 3mg5e version had
provisions for wheel, ski or even float undercarriage to match the
operational environment in which it found itself. Early Ju 52/3ms had a
tailskid but, due to the poor nature of Germany's military airfields, a
tailwheel was introduced from the 3mg4e onwards. This greatly improved
manoeuvrability on the ground. The Ju 52/3m was factory-fitted with
large spats to streamline the mainwheels, but in the operational
environment most of these were removed, as they rapidly clogged with
sand or mud.
The Powerplant
The Ju 52/3mg5e was
powered by a trio of closely cowled 830 hp (619 kW) BMW 132T-2
9-cylinder air-cooled radial engines. The two outboard engines were
'toed-out', or in other words, were set at an angle to the main thrust
line. This reduced the considerable yaw if one of the wing engines was
lost, by pulling the aircraft away from the dead engine. The nacelles
housed the engine oil tanks above the wing leading edge. Filler caps
above them served the oil (forward) and fuel (rear) tanks. The fuel was
held in wing tanks, positioned inboard of the engines. Exhaust gas from
the engines was collected by annular ducts and ejected below and to the
sides of each engine. These caused characteristic stains on the
fuselage and wings, but kept the filler caps and cockpit area clean.
The 3mg5e introduced exhaust de-icing.
Specifications (Junkers
Ju 52/3mg3e "Tante Ju")
Type: Medium
Bomber, 18 Seat Troop Transport, 12 Stretcher Ambulance, Glider Tug &
Freight Transport
Accommodation/Crew:
A crew of three flew the Ju 52, with a pilot and co-pilot sitting
side-by-side and the radio operator sitting on a jump-seat between
them. The cockpit was raised above the level of the main cabin floor.
Design: Chief
Engineer Ernst Zindel from an original design by Hugo Junkers
Manufacturer:
Junkers Flugzeug un Motorenwerke AG in Dressau with Assembly Plants in
Leipzig-Mockau (A.T.G.) and Villacoubly, near Paris (Junkers
controlled). Later, a new production line was laid down at the Amoit
Factory in Columbes and assembly of German built componets was done at
PIRT in Budapest. Post-war production was done by Ateliers
Aeronautiques de Colombes (400 aircraft) and CASA (Construcciones
Aeronáuticas S.A.) in Getafe, Spain (170 aircraft)
Powerplant: (Ju
52/3mg3e) Three 725 hp (541 kW) BMW 132A-3 9-cylinder air-cooled radial
engines. (Ju 52/3mg5e) Three 830 hp (619 kW) BMW 132T-2 9-cylinder
air-cooled radial engines. (Ju 52/3mg8e - late production) Three 850 hp
(634 kW) BMW 132Z 9-cylinder air-cooled radial engines. (Ju 52/3mg12e)
Three 800 hp (597 kW) BMW 132L 9-cylinder air-cooled radial engines.
Performance:
Maximum speed 171 mph (275 km/h) at 2,955 ft (900 m); economical
cruising speed 130 mph (210 km/h); service ceiling 19,360 ft (5900 m);
climb to 10,000 ft (3050 m) in 17 minutes.
Fuel Capacity:
(Standard) fuel capacity of 544 Imp Gallons or 654 US Gallons (2,475
Liters) with an (Auxiliary) fuel capacity of about 696 Imperial Gallons
(3,164 Liters) total.
Range: Standard
range 620 miles (1,000 km) or 808 miles (1300 km) with auxiliary fuel.
Weight: Empty
12,610 lbs (5720 kg) with a maximum take-off weight of 20,900 lbs (9500
kg) but this was increased to 23,194 (10500 kg) starting with the Ju
52/3mg4e. The Ju 52/3mg7e saw this increase once again to 24,200 lbs
(10990 kg).
Dimensions: Span
95 ft 11 1/2 in (29.25 m); length 62 ft 0 in (18.90 m); height 18 ft 2
1/2 in (5.55 m); wing area 1,189.45 sq ft (110.50 sq m).
Armament: One
7.92 mm (0.31 in) MG 15 machine-gun in the dorsal position and one 7.92
mm (0.31 in) MG 15 machine-gun in a retractable ventral "dustbin"
position, plus up to 1,321 lbs (600 kg) of bombs, normally consisting
of six 220 lbs (100 kg) bombs. It could carry 12 Stretchers or 4,067
lbs (1845 kg) of freight when configured as a transport.
Variants: Ju
52ba, Ju 52be, Ju 52de, Ju 52di, Ju 52do, Ju 52/3mce, Ju 52/3mde, Ju
52/3mge, Ju 52/3mg3e, Ju 52/3m Wasser, Ju 52/3mg4e, Ju 52/3mg5e, Ju
52/3mg5e See, Ju 52/3mg6e, Ju 52/3m(MS), Ju 52/3mg7e, Ju 52/3mg8e, Ju
52/3mg9e, Ju 52/3mg10e, Ju 52/3mg11e, Ju 52/3mg12e, Ju 52/3mg13e, Ju
52/3mg14e, AAC.1 Toucan, CASA C-352-L.
Equipment/Avionics:
Most aircraft carried Radio Direction Finder (RDF) equipment as denoted
by the loop antenna on top of the forward fuselage.
History: First
flight (Ju 52ba) 13 October 1930, First flight (Ju 52/3mce) April 1931,
first delivery (Ju 52/3mde) to Lloyd Aereo Boliviano early 1932,
initial delivery (Ju 52/3mce) to Deutsche Lufthansa early 1932, initial
delivery (Ju 52/3mg14e) late 1943, end production (Ju 52/3m) mid 1944.
Operators:
Germany (Luftwaffe), Bulgaria, Croatia, Hungary, Portugal, Romania,
Slovakia, Spain, Switzerland.