BMW 003

Last updated
BMW 003
BMW 003 jet engine.JPG
BMW 003 engine at the Luftwaffenmuseum der Bundeswehr. Airflow from L to R.
Type Turbojet
National originGermany
Manufacturer BMW
First runAugust 1940
Major applications Heinkel He 162
Number built3,500
Developed into BMW 018
BMW GT 101
SNECMA Atar

The BMW 003 (full RLM designation 109-003) is an early axial turbojet engine produced by BMW AG in Germany during World War II. The 003 and the Junkers Jumo 004 were the only German turbojet engines to reach production during World War II.

Contents

Work had begun on the design of the BMW 003 before its contemporary, the Jumo 004, but prolonged developmental problems meant that the BMW 003 entered production much later, and the aircraft projects that had been designed with it in mind were re-engined with the Jumo powerplant instead. The most famous case of this was the Messerschmitt Me 262, which used the 003 in two of the V-series prototypes and in the two experimental A-1b aircraft. The only production aircraft to use the BMW 003 were the Heinkel He 162 and the later C-series, four-engined versions of the Arado Ar 234.

About 3,500 BMW 003 engines were built in Germany, but very few were ever installed in aircraft. [1] The engine also formed the basis for turbojet development in Japan during the war, and in the Soviet Union following the war. A larger derivative was the BMW 018, but only three prototypes had been built by the end of the war.

Design and development

The practicality of jet propulsion had been demonstrated in Germany in early 1937 by Hans von Ohain working with the Heinkel company. Recognising the potential of the invention, the Reich Air Ministry (German : Reichsluftfahrtministerium, abbreviated RLM) encouraged Germany's aero engine manufacturers to begin their own programmes of jet engine development, offering contracts to both Junkers and BMW for an engine capable of 1,520 lb (690 kg) static thrust. [2]

The BMW 003 began development as a project of the Brandenburgische Motorenwerke (Brandenburg Motor Works, known as "Bramo"), under the direction of Hermann Östrich and assigned the RLM designation 109-003 (using the RLM's "109-" prefix, common to all jet and rocket engine projects). Bramo was also developing another turbojet, the 109-002. In 1939, BMW bought out Bramo, and in the acquisition, obtained both engine projects. The 109-002 had a very sophisticated contra-rotating compressor design intended to eliminate torque, but was abandoned in favour of the simpler engine, which in the end proved to have enough development problems of its own.

Construction began late in the same year and the engine ran for the first time in August 1940, [3] but produced only 330 lb (150 kg) thrust, just half what was desired. [4] The first flight test took place in mid-1941, mounted underneath a Messerschmitt Bf 110 testbed airframe. Problems continued, however, so delaying the program that while the Me 262 V1 prototype airframe (the first aircraft intended to use the engine) was ready for flight-testing, there were no power plants available for it and it actually began flight tests with a supplementary, conventional Junkers Jumo 210 piston engine in the nose. It was not until November 1941 that the Me 262 V1 was flown with BMW engines, which both failed during the test. [5] The prototype aircraft had to return to the airfield on the power of the piston engine, which was still fitted. [6] [7]

The general usage of the BMW powerplant was abandoned for the Me 262, except for two experimental examples of the plane known as the Me 262 A-1b. The few Messerschmitt Me 262 A-1b test examples built used the more developed version of the 003 jet, recording an official top speed of 500 mph (800 km/h). The Me 262A-1a production version used the competing Jumo 004, whose heavier weight required the wings to be swept back in order to move the center of gravity into the correct position. Work on the 003 continued anyway, and by late 1942 it had been made far more powerful and reliable. The improved engine was flight tested under a Junkers Ju 88 in October 1943 and was finally ready for mass production in August 1944. Completed engines earned a reputation for unreliability; the time between major overhauls (not technically a TBO) was about 50 hours. [8] (The competing Jumo 004's was between thirty and fifty, and may have been as low as ten.) [8] Through 1944 the 003's reliability improved, making it a suitable power plant for air frame designs competing for the Jägernotprogramm’s light fighter production contract. which was won by the Heinkel He 162 Spatz design.

Developments of the engine included the 003C, which raised thrust to 900 kg (2,000 lb) — in the same thrust class as the competing Jumo 004B, but some 136 kg/300 lb lighter in weight; and the 003D, which raised it to nearly 1,100 kg (2,400 lb), [9] which added one extra compressor stage beyond the seven of the earlier designs, and an extra turbine stage, [10] with the thrust-weight ratio of 16.58 N/kg for the 003D at only 1,431 lb (649 kg) in weight, being some 30% greater than the 1.288 lbf/lb (12.63 N/kg) figure for the 950-kilogram (2,090 lb) Heinkel HeS 011A.

Only two German production aircraft used the 003. The first was the Heinkel He 162A Spatz (since the Volksjäger light fighter design competition mandated its use), [11] with the Spatz utilizing an 003E version, designed to possess ventral mounting points to allow it to be mounted atop the fuselage of an aircraft. The other was the four-engined Arado Ar 234C reconnaissance-bomber variants, which were designed to use what was supposed to be the "more available" engine, [12] despite its primary allocation for the He 162A.

The BMW 003 proved cheaper in materials than the company's own 801 radial, 12,000  to 40,000 , and cheaper than the Junkers Jumo 213 inverted V12 piston engine at 35,000 , but slightly more costly than the competing Junkers Jumo 004's 10,000 . [13] Moreover, the 004 needed only 375 hours to complete (including manufacture, assembly, and shipping), compared to 1,400 for the 801. [14] At Kolbermoor, location of the Heinkel-Hirth engine works, the Fedden Mission, led by Sir Roy Fedden, found jet-engine manufacturing was simpler and required lower-skill labor and less sophisticated tooling than piston engine production; in fact, most of making of hollow turbine blades and sheet metal work on jets could be done by tooling used in making automobile body panels. [15] The lifetime of the combustion chambers was estimated at 200 hours. [8]

Preserved BMW 003 with Riedel flat-twin mechanical APU fitted BMW 003 Riedelanlasser.jpg
Preserved BMW 003 with Riedel flat-twin mechanical APU fitted

The BMW 003 utilized nearly the same starting method as its slightly more powerful Jumo 004 competitor: one of Norbert Riedel's 10 PS flat-twin two-stroke engines, installed within the engine's intake diverter as a mechanical APU, to get the 003's central shaft rotating for operation. An American military-authored post-war review of the BMW 003 stated that an electric starter of some sort was used to "turn over" the Riedel APU, with no existing photos of either wartime or restored BMW 003s showing the "D-shape" pull handle so prominent on the noses of many museum-preserved Jumo 004's intake diverters. [16]

"Mixed-power" upgrade

One late version of the engine added a small rocket motor (the BMW 109-718) at the rear and usually just above the exhaust of the engine, which added some 1,250 kg (2,760 lb) thrust each for three to five minutes, for take off and short dashes. [17] In this configuration, it was known as the BMW 003R and was tested, albeit with some serious reliability problems, on single prototypes for advanced models of the Me 262 (the Me 262C-2b Heimatschützer II [Home Defender II]), [18] and He 162 (He 162E). Both prototypes flew under hybrid jet/rocket power during March 1945, [18] though records do not indicate the results of testing with the 162E.

Only about 500 examples of the BMW 003 were built, [13] [ verification needed ] but the Fedden Mission postwar estimated total German jet engine production by mid-1946 could have reached 100,000 units a year, or more. [8]

The 003 was intended for export to Japan, but working examples of the engine were never supplied. Instead, Japanese engineers used drawings and photos of the engine to design an indigenous turbojet, the Ishikawajima Ne-20.[ citation needed ]

Turboshaft development

The 003 was selected as the basis for a gas turbine development project for the German military's anticipated need for what is today called a turboshaft powerplant for multiple needs — this project was called the GT 101, using the 003 axial-flow turbojet as the starting point in mid-November 1944. Its original purpose would have been to re-engine the Panther tank with a turboshaft-based power system capable of up to a 1,150 PS usable shaft horsepower rating into an AFV's drivetrain, from an engine weight of only 990 lb (450 kg), giving it a 27 hp/ton power-to-weight ratio — just over twice the factor that the Panther's original gasoline-fueled Maybach V12 piston engine provided. [19]

Post-war use

Following the war, two captured 003s powered the prototype of the first Soviet jet, the Mikoyan-Gurevich MiG-9. Blueprints for BMW engines had been seized by Soviet forces from both the Basdorf-Zühlsdorf plant near Berlin and the notorious Mittelwerk slave labor facility near Nordhausen. Production of the 003 was set up at the "Red October" GAZ 466 (Gorkovsky Avtomobilny Zavod, or Gorky Automobile Plant) in Leningrad and in Kuznetsov along KMPO, where the engine was mass-produced from 1947 under the designation RD-20 (reactivnyi dvigatel, or "jet drive"). [20]

After the Allied occupation of Germany, Marcel Dassault assisted Hermann Östrich in moving from the American Zone of occupied Germany into the French Zone. Within a couple of years, he was working for Voisin, a division of SNECMA, France's state-owned aircraft engine company. Using the basic design of the 003, he produced the larger Atar jet engine that powered Dassault's Ouragan, Dassault Mirage III and Mystère fighters. [21]

Variants

Data from:Aircraft Engines of the world 1946 [22] and Design Analysis of BMW 003 Turbojet by Maj Rudolph C Schulte, Project Officer, Turbojet and Gas Turbine Developments, HQ, USAAF [23]

BMW 003A-1 (TL 109-003)
Prototype, 5.87 kN (1,320 lbf) / 8,000 rpm / sea level, weight of 609 kg (1,342 lb).
BMW 003A-2 (TL 109-003)
Initial production variant, 7.83 kN (1,760 lbf) / 9,500 rpm / sea level.
BMW 003C (TL 109-003)
Improved design, reduced weight A-2, 8.81 kN (1,980 lbf), equal to Jumo 004B) / 9,500 rpm / sea level
BMW 003D (TL 109-003)
Improved design 003C, 10.76 kN (2,420 lbf) / 10,000 rpm / sea level, weight of 649 kg (1,430 lb) [301 kg/664 lb lighter than the HeS 011], one each extra compressor and turbine stage added for higher thrust, only lengthening the engine by 303 mm (11+1516 in) overall compared to the A-2.
BMW 003E
With ventral mounting points for use atop the fuselage, on the Heinkel He 162 and Henschel Hs 132.
BMW 003R (TLR 109-003)
An 003A-2 subtype turbojet with a BMW 109-718 (RLM powerplant number 109-718) liquid-fuel rocket fixed permanently above the jet exhaust nozzle, running on a hypergolic combination of R-stoff (a.k.a. Tonka or TONKA-250, 50% triethylamine and 50% xylidine) for fuel and SV-Stoff (aka RFNA propellants: 94% HNO3, 6% N2O4) oxidizer, code-named Salbei (sage). The 003R delivered a combined thrust of 20.06 kN (4,510 lbf) for 3 minutes.

Applications

Specifications (BMW 003A-2)

Data from Aircraft Engines of the world 1946 [22]

General characteristics

Components

Performance

See also

Related development

Comparable engines

Related lists

Notes

  1. "BMW 003 Turbojet Engine". airandspace.si.edu. Retrieved 10 November 2021.
  2. Christopher, John. The Race for Hitler's X-Planes (The Mill, Gloucestershire: History Press, 2013), p.60.
  3. Gunston 1989, p.27.
  4. Christopher, p.60.
  5. Christopher, p.61.
  6. Pavelec, Sterling Michael (2007). The Jet Race and the Second World War. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN   978-0-275-99355-9.
  7. Radinger, Will; Schick, Walter (1996). Me262 (in German). Berlin: Avantic Verlag GmbH. p. 23. ISBN   978-3-925505-21-8.
  8. 1 2 3 4 Christopher, p.76.
  9. Schulte, Rudolph C. (1946). "Design Analysis of BMW 003 Turbojet - "Gas Turbine Units Developed by BMW - Model Designation: BMW 003D"". legendsintheirowntime.com. United States Army Air Force - Turbojet and Gus Turbine Developments, HQ, AAF. Archived from the original on September 29, 2018. Retrieved September 3, 2016. Static SL thrust 2,420 lb @ 10,000 rpm
  10. Christopher, p.73.
  11. Christopher, John. The Race for Hitler's X-Planes (The Mill, Gloucestershire: History Press, 2013), p.145.
  12. Christopher, pp.73–74.
  13. 1 2 Christopher, p.74.
  14. Christopher, p.75.
  15. Christopher, pp.74–75.
  16. Schulte, Rudolph C. (1946). "Design Analysis of BMW 003 Turbojet - "Starting the Engine"". legendsintheirowntime.com. United States Army Air Force - Turbojet and Gus Turbine Developments, HQ, AAF. Archived from the original on September 29, 2018. Retrieved September 3, 2016. Starting procedure is as follows: Starting engine is primed by closing electric primer switch, then ignition of turbojet and ignition and electric starting motor of Riedel engine are turned on (this engine can also be started manually by pulling a cable). After the Riedel unit has reached a speed of about 300 rpm, it automatically engages the compressor shaft of the turbojet. At about 800 rpm of the starting engine, starting fuel pump is turned on, and at 1,200 rpm the main (J-2) fuel is turned on. The starter engine is kept engaged until the turbojet attains 2,000 rpm, at which the starter engine and starting fuel are turned off, the turbojet rapidly accelerating to rated speed of 9,500 rpm on the J-2 fuel
  17. Christopher, p.124.
  18. 1 2 Christopher, p.125.
  19. Kay, Antony (2002). German Jet Engine and Gas Turbine Development 1930-1945. Shrewsbury, UK: Airlife Publishing. ISBN   9781840372946.
  20. Albrecht, Ulrich (1994). The Soviet Armaments Industry. Routledge. ISBN   978-3-7186-5313-3.
  21. von Wogau, Karl (2004). The Path to European Defence. Maklu. ISBN   978-90-6215-923-9.
  22. 1 2 Wilkinson, Paul H. (1946). Aircraft Engines of the world 1946. London: Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons. pp. 300–301.
  23. Schulte, Rudolph C. (1946). "Design Analysis of BMW 003 Turbojet". legendsintheirowntime.com. United States Army Air Force - Turbojet and Gus Turbine Developments, HQ, AAF. Archived from the original on September 29, 2018. Retrieved September 3, 2016.

Bibliography

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Arado Ar 234</span> 1943 German jet bomber by Arado

The Arado Ar 234 Blitz is a jet-powered bomber designed and produced by the German aircraft manufacturer Arado. It was the world's first operational turbojet-powered bomber, seeing service during the final years of the Second World War.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Junkers Jumo 004</span> Very early turbojet aircraft engine

The Junkers Jumo 004 was the world's first production turbojet engine in operational use, and the first successful axial compressor turbojet engine. Some 8,000 units were manufactured by Junkers in Germany late in World War II, powering the Messerschmitt Me 262 fighter and the Arado Ar 234 reconnaissance/bomber, along with prototypes, including the Horten Ho 229. Variants and copies of the engine were produced in Eastern Europe and the USSR for several years following the end of WWII.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Heinkel He 280</span> Experimental jet aircraft

The Heinkel He 280 was an early turbojet-powered fighter aircraft designed and produced by the German aircraft manufacturer Heinkel. It was the first jet fighter to fly in the world.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Junkers Ju 287</span> Prototype German jet bomber

The Junkers Ju 287 was an aerodynamic testbed built in Nazi Germany to develop the technology required for a multi-engine jet bomber. It was powered by four Junkers Jumo 004 engines, featured a novel forward-swept wing, and, apart from the wing, was assembled largely from components scavenged from other aircraft. It was one of the very few jet propelled aircraft ever built with fixed landing gear.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Messerschmitt Me 328</span> German parasite fighter prototypes

The Messerschmitt Me 328 was a prototype pulsejet-powered fighter aircraft designed and produced by the German aircraft manufacturer Messerschmitt AG.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Henschel Hs 132</span> 1945 prototype multi-role combat aircraft by Henschel

The Henschel Hs 132 was a World War II dive bomber and interceptor aircraft of the German Luftwaffe that never saw service. The unorthodox design featured a top-mounted BMW 003 jet engine and the pilot in a prone position. The Soviet Army occupied the factory just as the Hs 132 V1 was nearing flight testing, the V2 and V3 being 80% and 75% completed.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ishikawajima Ne-20</span>

The Ishikawajima Ne-20 was Japan's first turbojet engine. It was developed during World War II in parallel with the nation's first military jet, the Nakajima Kikka.

This article outlines the important developments in the history of the development of the air-breathing (duct) jet engine. Although the most common type, the gas turbine powered jet engine, was certainly a 20th-century invention, many of the needed advances in theory and technology leading to this invention were made well before this time.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Heinkel HeS 011</span> German turbojet engine

The Heinkel HeS 011 or Heinkel-Hirth 109-011(HeS - Heinkel Strahltriebwerke) was an advanced World War II jet engine built by Heinkel-Hirth. It featured a unique compressor arrangement, starting with a low-compression impeller in the intake, followed by a "diagonal" stage similar to a centrifugal compressor, and then a three-stage axial compressor. Many of the German jet-powered aircraft designs at the end of the war were designed to use the HeS 011, but the HeS 011 engine was not ready for production before the war ended in Europe and only small numbers of prototypes were produced.

The HeS 30(HeS - Heinkel Strahltriebwerke) was an early jet engine, originally designed by Adolf Müller at Junkers, but eventually built and tested at Heinkel. It was possibly the best of the "Class I" engines, a class that included the more famous BMW 003 and Junkers Jumo 004. As it started somewhat later than these two designs, and was thus expected to enter service later, the Reichluftfahrtministerium (RLM) ordered Heinkel to stop work on the design and put their efforts into more advanced designs.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Heinkel HeS 3</span>

The Heinkel HeS 3 was the world's first operational jet engine to power an aircraft. Designed by Hans von Ohain while working at Heinkel, the engine first flew as the primary power of the Heinkel He 178, piloted by Erich Warsitz on 27 August 1939. Although successful, the engine had too little thrust to be really useful, and work started on the more powerful Heinkel HeS 8 as their first production design.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Heinkel HeS 8</span>

The Heinkel HeS 8 was an early jet engine designed by Hans von Ohain while working at Heinkel. It was the first jet engine to be financially supported by the RLM, bearing the official name 109-001. Had development continued it would have been known as the Heinkel 001, but it does not appear this was used in practice.

The Focke-Wulf Ta 400 was a large six-engined heavy bomber design developed in Nazi Germany in 1943 by Focke-Wulf as a serious contender for the Amerikabomber project. One of the first aircraft to be developed from components from multiple countries, it was also one of the most advanced Focke-Wulf designs of World War II, though it never progressed beyond a wind tunnel model.

The Avro Canada TR.4 Chinook was Canada's first turbojet engine, designed by Turbo Research and manufactured by A.V. Roe Canada Ltd. Named for the warm Chinook wind that blows in the Rocky Mountains, only three Chinooks were built and none were used operationally. The Chinook was nevertheless an extremely successful design in terms of introducing new concepts and materials, and after being scaled up from 2,600 lbf (12 kN) to 6,500 lbf (29 kN), would become the Orenda.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Blohm & Voss P 194</span> Type of aircraft

The Blohm & Voss P 194 was a German design for a mixed-power Stuka or ground-attack aircraft and tactical bomber, during World War II.

The Lyulka TR-1 was a turbojet designed by Arkhip Lyulka and produced by his Lyulka design bureau. It was the first indigenous Soviet jet engine.

The BMW 109-718 was a liquid-fuelled rocket engine developed by BMW at their Bruckmühl facility, in Germany during the Second World War.

The Junkers Jumo 109-012, known colloquially post-war as Jumo 012, was a turbojet engine under development in Germany during the Second World War. In essence, it was a scaled up version of the Jumo 004. It was intended to power the EF 132 and variants of the Ju 287.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Messerschmitt Me 262 variants</span> Variants of the Messerschmitt Me 262

The Messerschmitt Me 262 was a German World War II fighter aircraft built by Messerschmitt in the later stages of the war, and under license by Avia post-war.