This is a list of aircraft type numbers allocated by an institution under the direction of Heereswaffenamt (before May 1933) and the Reich Air Ministry (RLM) between 1933 and 1945 for German military and civilian aircraft and in parallel to the list of German aircraft engines. See RLM aircraft designation system for an explanation of how these numbers were used.
There is no single "master list" applicable all the way from 1933 to 1945 - numbers were occasionally duplicated, reallocated, or re-used. Sources differ on the allocations.
GL/C number | Aircraft | Notes |
8-01 | Not allocated | |
8-02 | Fieseler Fi 2 | Tiger, acrobatic trainer; originally F.2 |
8-03 | Not allocated | |
8-04 | Not allocated | |
8-05 | Fieseler Fi 5 | sports plane; originally F.5 |
8-06 | DFS Model 6 | target glider (prototype), 1936 |
8-07 | Not allocated | |
8-08 | Göppingen Gö 8 | glider, 1/5 scale model of the Do 214; may be a mistake as scale model aircraft weren't covered in the RLM list |
8-09 | Göppingen Gö 9 | Powered aerodynamic scale model of the Do 335; allocation may be a mistake |
8-10 | Dornier Do 10 | (Do C4) fighter (prototype), 1931 |
8-11 | Dornier Do 11 | (Do F) medium bomber, 1931 |
WNF Wn 11 | amphibian transport (prototype) | |
8-12 | Dornier Do 12 | Libelle III (Dragonfly III), amphibian flying boat, 1932 |
Zlín Z-XII (captured aircraft) | sports aircraft | |
8-13 | Dornier Do 13 | medium bomber, development of Do 11, 1933 (prototypes) |
8-14 | Dornier Do 14 | research amphibian (prototype) |
8-15 | Dornier Do 15 | designation given to Dornier Do Y bomber numbers 3 and 4 in an attempt to interest RLM in them |
WNF Wn 15 | touring plane; originally HV 15 | |
8-16 | WNF Wn 16 | trainer (prototype) |
Dornier Do 16 | flying boat; RLM designation for Do J II Wal | |
8-17 | Dornier Do 17 | Fliegender Bleistift (Flying Pencil), medium bomber + reconnaissance + night-fighter |
8-18 | Dornier Do 18 | long-range flying boat, development of Do 16 |
8-19 | Dornier Do 19 | four-engined heavy bomber (2 prototypes only) |
8-20 | Dornier Do 20 | eight-engine flying boat (project) |
8-21 | Not allocated | |
8-22 | Dornier Do 22 | torpedo bomber + reconnaissance land & sea |
8-23 | Dornier Do 23 | medium bomber (development of (Do 13/11) |
8-24 | Dornier Do 24 | intended as reconnaissance flying-boat, used for search and rescue |
8-25 | Dornier Do 25 | Allocated to Dornier, not used; number used postwar |
Klemm Kl 25 | sportsplane, development of Klemm Kl 20; originally L 25 | |
8-26 | Dornier Do 26 | transport + reconnaissance flying-boat |
Klemm Kl 26 | sportsplane, development of L 25 | |
8-27 | BFW M.27 | two-seat sport + trainer, 1930; may be a mistake as 8-27 may have been allocated to Klemm |
Dornier Do 27 | Allocated to Dornier, not used; number used postwar | |
Klemm Kl 27 | version of Kl 26 with enlarged cockpit; acquisition not confirmed | |
8-28 | Not allocated | |
8-29 | Akaflieg Darmstadt D-29 | experimental cabin monoplane; may be a mistake as it conflicts with the Do 29 and Akaflieg aircraft weren't normally covered in the RLM list |
Dornier Do 29 | heavy fighter + bomber (project) | |
8-30 | Cierva C.30 | autogyro, license-built by Focke-Wulf |
8-31 | Klemm Kl 31 | single-engine transport, 1931 |
8-32 | Klemm Kl 32 | single-engine transport, Kl 32 derivative, 1931 |
8-33 | Junkers Ju 33 | single-engine transport, 1926; originally W 33 |
Klemm L 33 | (Klemm L 33), single-seat ultra-light sports plane (prototype), 1933 | |
8-34 | Junkers Ju 34 | single-engine light transport + training (development of Ju 33), 1933; originally W 34 |
8-35 | Klemm Kl 35 | sportplane + trainer, 1935 |
8-36 | Klemm Kl 36 | single-engine transport, 1934 |
8-37 | Heinkel He 37 | Allocated to Heinkel, not used |
8-38 | Heinkel He 38 | fighter land & sea; originally HD 38 |
Junkers Ju 38 | large four-engine passenger and cargo transport; originally G.38 | |
8-39 | DFS 39 | tail-less research aircraft |
8-40 | DFS 40 | tail-less research aircraft; number later allocated to Blohm & Voss |
Blohm & Voss BV 40 | glider interceptor (prototypes) | |
8-41 | Heinkel He 41 | Allocated to Heinkel, not used |
8-42 | Focke-Wulf Fw 42 | twin-engine medium bomber, canard layout (project) |
Heinkel He 42 | seaplane trainer | |
8-43 | Focke-Wulf Fw 43 | Falke ("Falcon"), light utility aircraft (prototype) |
8-44 | Focke-Wulf Fw 44 | Stieglitz ("Goldfinch"), trainer (biplane) |
8-45 | Heinkel He 45 | reconnaissance, later trainer |
8-46 | Heinkel He 46 | reconnaissance (W 34 derivative) |
8-47 | Focke-Wulf Fw 47 | Höhengeier (Vulture), weather plane |
Heinkel He 47 | single-engine light bomber (project) | |
8-48 | Junkers Ju 48 | originally A 48; two-seat fighter-trainer; civil version of K 47 |
8-49 | Junkers Ju 49 | high altitude research plane/record aircraft (prototype) |
Heinkel He 49 | fighter (biplane) | |
8-50 | Heinkel He 50 | reconnaissance + dive bomber (biplane) |
Junkers A50 | Junior, sports plane | |
8-51 | Heinkel He 51 | fighter + close-support (biplane) |
Junkers K 51 | Four-engine heavy bomber; derivative of Ju 38; license-built in Japan as Mitsubishi Ki-20 | |
8-52 | Heinkel He 52 | high-altitude development of He 51 (prototype) |
Junkers Ju 52 | transport + bomber gained nickname Tante Ju ("Auntie Ju"), | |
8-53 | Junkers K 53 | reconnaissance aircraft; only built in Sweden; may be a mistake as license-built aircraft weren't normally covered on the RLM list |
8-54 | DFS 54 | experimental high-altitude glider |
Nagler-Rolz NR 54 | helicopter, development of NR 55 (prototype) | |
8-55 | Nagler-Rolz NR 55 | helicopter (prototype) |
Focke-Wulf Fw 55 | two-seat sportplane/trainer; slightly modified Al 102 | |
8-56 | Focke-Wulf Fw 56 | Stößer ("Falcon Hawk"), trainer (parasol monoplane) |
Heinkel He 56 | observation biplane; license-built in Japan as Aichi E3A | |
8-57 | Focke-Wulf Fw 57 | heavy fighter + bomber (prototype) |
North American NA-16 (captured aircraft) | trainer | |
8-58 | Focke-Wulf Fw 58 | Weihe ("kite"), transport + trainer |
Heinkel He 58 | mail seaplane (prototype) | |
8-59 | Heinkel He 59 | reconnaissance (biplane seaplane) |
8-60 | Heinkel He 60 | ship-borne reconnaissance (biplane seaplane) |
Junkers Ju 60 | single-engine high speed airliner/mailplane (prototype) | |
8-61 | Focke-Wulf Fw 61 | helicopter (2 prototypes), later Fa 61 |
Heinkel He 61 | reconnaissance biplane (derivative of He 45) | |
8-62 | Focke-Wulf Fw 62 | ship-borne reconnaissance (biplane seaplane) |
Heinkel He 62 | observation float biplane, derivate of He 56; license-built in Japan as Aichi AB-5 | |
8-63 | Potez 63 (captured aircraft) | multirole aircraft |
Heinkel He 63 | biplane trainer (prototypes) | |
8-64 | Heinkel He 64 | sports plane (prototypes) |
Arado Ar 64 | fighter (biplane) | |
8-65 | Arado Ar 65 | fighter/trainer, glider towing (biplane - re-engined Ar 64) |
Heinkel He 65 | single-engine high speed mailplane (project), 1932 | |
8-66 | Arado Ar 66 | trainer + night intruder |
Heinkel He 66 | dive bomber, derivative of He 50 for China | |
8-67 | Arado Ar 67 | biplane fighter prototype |
8-68 | Arado Ar 68 | fighter (biplane) |
8-69 | Arado Ar 69 | biplane trainer prototypes, 1933 |
8-70 | Heinkel He 70 | Blitz (Lightning), single-engine transport + mailplane, 1932 |
8-71 | Heinkel He 71 | sports plane |
Avia B-71 (captured aircraft) | fast bomber | |
8-72 | Heinkel He 72 | Kadett (Cadet), trainer |
8-73 | Heinkel He 73 | Allocated to Heinkel, possibly not used |
8-74 | Heinkel He 74 | fighter + advanced trainer (prototypes), 1933 |
8-75 | Albatros Al 75 | Ass (Ace), trainer; originally L 75 |
8-76 | Arado Ar 76 | fighter trainer |
FZG 76 | Cover designation for the V-1 | |
8-77 | Arado Ar 77 | trainer (prototypes) |
8-78 | Arado Ar 78 | Allocated to Arado, possibly not used |
8-79 | Arado Ar 79 | two-seat sportsplane/trainer |
8-80 | Arado Ar 80 | single-seat fighter (prototype), 1934 |
8-81 | Arado Ar 81 | two-seat dive-bomber (prototypes), 1936 |
8-82 | Savoia-Marchetti SM.82 (captured aircraft) | heavy bomber/transport |
8-83 | Not allocated | |
8-84 | Albatros Al 84 | two-seat biplane fighter (prototype), 1931; originally L 84; designation may have been later reserved for Junkers, but was not used |
8-85 | Junkers Ju 85 | high-speed bomber (project); derivative of Ju 88 |
8-86 | Junkers Ju 86 | twin-engine airliner/transport/bomber/reconnaissance aircraft |
8-87 | Junkers Ju 87 | Stuka, dive-bomber |
8-88 | Junkers Ju 88 | twin-engine high-speed bomber/multirole aircraft |
8-89 | Junkers Ju 89 | four-engine heavy bomber (2 prototypes), 1936 |
8-90 | Junkers Ju 90 | four-engine transport/airliner |
8-91 | Junkers Ju 91 | Allocated to Junkers; possibly not used |
8-92 | Junkers Ju 92 | four-engine bomber/troop transport (project); possible confusion with other Junkers aircraft or project |
8-93 | Junkers Ju 93 | Allocated to Junkers; possibly not used |
8-94 | Junkers Ju 94 | Allocated to Junkers; possibly not used |
8-95 | Arado Ar 95 | biplane coastal patrol + attack (land & sea) |
8-96 | Arado Ar 96 | trainer |
8-97 | Fieseler Fi 97 | touring plane |
8-98 | Fieseler Fi 98 | dive-bomber (2 prototypes) |
8-99 | Fieseler Fi 99 | Jungtiger (Young Tiger) sportsplane + touring plane (1 prototype) |
8-100 | Heinkel He 100 | fighter; number originally allocated to Fieseler, but requested by Heinkel as a "special" number for his aircraft |
GL/C number | Aircraft | Notes |
8-101 | Albatros Al 101 | two-seat sportsplane + trainer, 1930; originally L 101 |
8-102 | Albatros Al 102 | two-seat sportsplane + trainer, 1931; originally L 102 |
8-103 | Albatros Al 103 | experimental, 1932; originally L 103 |
Fieseler Fi 103 | also known as FZG 76 (fictitious designation for deception purposes) and V-1 (propaganda designation); manned versions tested as Fi 103R | |
8-104 | Siebel Fh 104 | Hallore, medium transport; originally Kl 104 as it was a Klemm design |
8-105 | Klemm Kl 105 | touring plane, development of Kl 35 (prototypes) |
8-106 | Klemm Kl 106 | sportsplane (prototypes) |
8-107 | Klemm Kl 107 | touring plane |
8-108 | BFW (Messerschmitt) Bf 108 | Taifun (Typhoon), trainer + transport |
8-109 | BFW (Messerschmitt) Bf 109 | fighter |
BFW (Messerschmitt) Bf 109R | Propaganda designation for the Me 209 | |
8-110 | BFW (Messerschmitt) Bf 110 | Key Zerstörer heavy fighter + night-fighter |
8-111 | Heinkel He 111 | bomber |
Heinkel He 111U | Propaganda designation for the He 119 | |
8-112 | Heinkel He 112 | fighter |
8-113 | Heinkel He 113 | Fictitious designation of He 100D-1 for disinformation purposes |
8-114 | Heinkel He 114 | reconnaissance seaplane |
8-115 | Heinkel He 115 | general-purpose seaplane, torpedo-bomber |
8-116 | Heinkel He 116 | long range mail, transport + reconnaissance |
8-117 | Henschel Hs 117 | Schmetterling (Butterfly), surface-to-air missile (rocket-engined); number was originally allocated to Heinkel, but was not used |
8-118 | Heinkel He 118 | dive-bomber (prototypes) |
8-119 | Heinkel He 119 | single propeller-twin engine high-speed bomber (prototypes) 1937 |
8-120 | Heinkel He 120 | four-engine long-range passenger flying-boat (project), 1938 |
8-121 | Henschel Hs 121 | fighter + trainer (prototype) |
8-122 | Henschel Hs 122 | reconnaissance aircraft |
8-123 | Henschel Hs 123 | light dive-bomber, ground-attack (biplane) |
8-124 | Henschel Hs 124 | heavy fighter + bomber (prototype) |
8-125 | Henschel Hs 125 | fighter + trainer (prototype) |
8-126 | Henschel Hs 126 | reconnaissance |
8-127 | Henschel Hs 127 | high-speed bomber (prototype) |
8-128 | Henschel Hs 128 | high altitude research aircraft |
8-129 | Henschel Hs 129 | ground-attack |
8-130 | Henschel Hs 130 | high altitude reconnaissance + bomber, Bomber B competitor (prototypes) |
8-131 | Bücker Bü 131 | Jungmann (Young Man), trainer (biplane) |
8-132 | Henschel Hs 132 | dive bomber (jet-engined) (prototype); number originally allocated to Bücker, but was not used |
8-133 | Bücker Bü 133 | Jungmeister (Young Champion), trainer + competition aerobatics (biplane) |
8-134 | Bücker Bü 134 | touring plane (prototype) |
8-135 | Blohm & Voss Ha 135 | biplane trainer (6 built) |
8-136 | Blohm & Voss Ha 136 | trainer (prototype) |
Hütter Hü 136 | dive-bomber (project) | |
8-137 | Blohm & Voss Ha 137 | light dive-bomber (prototypes) |
8-138 | Blohm & Voss BV 138 | flying-boat, reconnaissance (first two designated as Ha 138) |
8-139 | Blohm & Voss Ha 139 | long-range floatplane |
8-140 | Blohm & Voss Ha 140 | torpedo bomber floatplane (prototypes) |
8-141 | Blohm & Voss BV 141 | reconnaissance (asymmetric) |
8-142 | Blohm & Voss BV 142 | reconnaissance + transport |
8-143 | Blohm & Voss BV 143 | glide bomb (prototype) |
8-144 | Blohm & Voss BV 144 | transport |
8-145 | Gotha Go 145 | trainer |
8-146 | Gotha Go 146 | small transport (twin-engine), 1935 |
8-147 | Gotha Go 147 | STOL tail-less reconnaissance (prototypes) |
Junkers Ju 147 | experimental twin-engine, high-altitude bomber (project); allocation not confirmed | |
8-148 | Gotha Go 148 | Allocated to Gotha; not used for superstitious reasons (1+4+8 = 13) |
8-149 | Gotha Go 149 | trainer (prototypes) |
8-150 | Gotha Go 150 | two engine touring aircraft |
8-151 | Klemm Kl 151 | touring plane (project) |
8-152 | Klemm Kl 152 | fighter (project); number transferred to Focke-Wulf |
Focke-Wulf Ta 152 | fighter (derived from Fw 190) | |
8-153 | Focke-Wulf Ta 153 | fighter (derived from Fw 190, prototype), developed as Ta 152H; number originally allocated to Klemm, but was not used |
8-154 | Focke-Wulf Ta 154 | Moskito (Mosquito), wood-framed night-fighter; number originally allocated to Klemm, but was not used |
8-155 | Blohm & Voss BV 155 | high-altitude interceptor (formerly Me 155); number originally assigned to Klemm, but was not used |
8-156 | Fieseler Fi 156 | Storch (Stork), STOL reconnaissance, ambulance |
8-157 | Fieseler Fi 157 | unmanned target(prototypes) |
8-158 | Fieseler Fi 158 | research aircraft |
8-159 | Focke-Wulf Fw 159 | fighter (prototype only) |
8-160 | Junkers Ju 160 | passenger plane |
8-161 | BFW (Messerschmitt) Bf 161 | reconnaissance aircraft, development of Bf 110 (prototypes) |
8-162 | BFW (Messerschmitt) Bf 162 | Jaguar, fast bomber, development of Bf 110 (prototype) |
Heinkel He 162 | Spatz (sparrow, Heinkel's name for the design) - Jet-powered fighter, winner of the Volksjäger (People's Fighter) design competition; originally designated as He 500, reallocated to 8-162 as a security measure | |
8-163 | BFW (Messerschmitt) Bf 163 | STOL reconnaissance aircraft (one prototype) |
Messerschmitt Me 163 | Komet (Comet), interceptor (rocket-engined); initially known as Me 194 as it continued development of the DFS 194; reallocated to 8-163 as a security measure | |
8-164 | Messerschmitt Me 164 | airliner (prototype) |
8-165 | BFW (Messerschmitt) Bf 165 | 4-engine heavy bomber (mock-up only) |
8-166 | Kiel FK 166 | trainer (prototype); number transferred to Fieseler |
Fieseler Fi 166 | jet fighter (project) | |
8-167 | Fieseler Fi 167 | ship-borne torpedo bomber + reconnaissance (biplane) |
8-168 | Fieseler Fi 168 | ground-attack aircraft (abandoned) |
8-169 | Fieseler Fi 169 | Allocated to Fieseler; possibly not used |
8-170 | Heinkel He 170 | reconnaissance aircraft, export version of He 70 |
8-171 | Heinkel He 171 | Allocated to Heinkel; possibly not used |
8-172 | Heinkel He 172 | trainer, derivative of He 72 (prototype) |
8-173 | Heinkel He 173 | Allocated to Heinkel; possibly not used |
8-174 | Heinkel He 174 | Allocated to Heinkel; possibly not used |
8-175 | Bloch MB.175 (captured aircraft) | reconnaissance bomber |
8-176 | Heinkel He 176 | Pioneering rocket-engined experimental aircraft (prototype) |
8-177 | Heinkel He 177 | Greif (Griffon), Germany's only operational long-range heavy bomber |
8-178 | Heinkel He 178 | Pioneering jet-engined experimental aircraft |
8-179 | Heinkel He 179 | Four-engine variant of the He 177 If the source is correct at all, then at most was a work assignment from mid-1939 till September. Never officially assigned by RLM (project) [1] |
8-180 | Bücker Bü 180 | Student, sportsplane + trainer |
8-181 | Bücker Bü 181 | Bestmann (Best man), trainer + ground attack |
8-182 | Bücker Bü 182 | Kornett (Cornet), trainer (three prototypes) |
8-183 | Focke-Wulf Ta 183 | Huckebein, jet-engined fighter (project); number originally allocated to Bücker, but was not used; initially designated as Fw 232 but changed to Ta 183 to avoid confusion with the Ar 232 |
8-184 | Flettner Fl 184 | experimental helicopter (prototype) |
8-185 | Flettner Fl 185 | experimental helicopter (prototype) |
8-186 | Focke-Wulf Fw 186 | reconnaissance autogiro (prototype); number later transferred to Junkers |
Junkers Ju 186 | high-altitude research aircraft derived from Ju 86 | |
8-187 | Focke-Wulf Fw 187 | Falke (Falcon), heavy fighter |
Junkers Ju 187 | dive-bomber (project); designation assigned in-house by Junkers, not the RLM | |
8-188 | Junkers Ju 188 | Rächer (Avenger), bomber, reconnaissance; number originally allocated to Focke-Wulf, but transferred to Junkers at their request |
8-189 | Focke-Wulf Fw 189 | Fliegende Auge ("flying eye")/Eule (Owl)/Uhu (Eagle-owl), reconnaissance |
8-190 | Focke-Wulf Fw 190 | Würger (Shrike/Butcher-Bird), fighter |
8-191 | Focke-Wulf Fw 191 | Bomber B competitor, medium bomber (prototypes) |
8-192 | AGO Ao 192 | Kurier (Courier), light transport |
8-193 | DFS 193 | tail-less research aircraft (project); number possibly originally allocated to AGO, but was not used |
8-194 | DFS 194 | rocket-powered research aircraft, forerunner of Me 163 |
8-195 | Arado Ar 195 | ship-borne torpedo bomber + reconnaissance, derivative of Ar 95 |
8-196 | Arado Ar 196 | ship-borne reconnaissance + coastal patrol (seaplane) |
8-197 | Arado Ar 197 | naval fighter (biplane - derived from Ar 68) |
8-198 | Arado Ar 198 | Fliegende Aquarium (flying aquarium) reconnaissance, (prototypes) |
8-199 | Arado Ar 199 | seaplane trainer |
8-200 | Focke-Wulf Fw 200 | Condor, transport + maritime patrol-bomber; number assigned out of sequence at Focke-Wulf's request |
Dornier Do 200 | Cover designation for captured Boeing B-17 Flying Fortresses; number probably derived from the designation of the unit operating it, KG 200 | |
GL/C number | Aircraft | Notes |
8-201 | Siebel Si 201 | STOL reconnaissance aircraft (prototype) |
8-202 | Siebel Si 202 | Hummel (Bumblebee), sportplane + trainer, 1938 |
8-203 | DFS 203 | assault glider, two DFS 230 fuselages (project); number possibly originally allocated to Siebel, but was not used |
8-204 | Siebel Si 204 | transport + aircrew trainer; development of Fh 104 |
8-205 | Not allocated | |
8-206 | Focke-Wulf Fw 206 | passenger plane (project) |
8-207 | Not allocated | |
8-208 | Messerschmitt Me 208 | touring aircraft, development of Bf 108 (prototypes) |
8-209 | Messerschmitt Me 209 | speed-record aircraft (prototype), four built |
Messerschmitt Me 209 | fighter (1943 prototype - completely different from above), began with "V5" prototype | |
8-210 | Messerschmitt Me 210 | heavy fighter + reconnaissance |
8-211 | Hütter Hü 211 | reconnaissance aircraft, derived from He 219 (project) |
Focke-Wulf Ta 211 | twin-engine fast attack bomber, developed into the Ta 154; in-house designation by Focke-Wulf, named after the engine planned to power it | |
8-212 | Dornier Do 212 | research amphibian (prototype) |
Zlín 212 (captured aircraft) | primary trainer | |
8-213 | Not allocated; possibly reserved for Dornier | |
8-214 | Dornier Do 214 | transport flying-boat (abandoned) |
8-215 | Dornier Do 215 | bomber + reconnaissance + night-fighter, export version of Do 17 Z |
8-216 | Dornier Do 216 | six-engine flying boat (project) |
8-217 | Dornier Do 217 | medium bomber + night-fighter |
8-218 | Dornier Do 218 | Allocated to Dornier, possibly not used |
8-219 | Heinkel He 219 | Uhu (Eagle-Owl) |
8-220 | Heinkel He 220 | four-engine very large passenger flying boat (project) |
8-221 | Dornier Do 221 | Allocated to Dornier, possibly not used |
8-222 | Blohm & Voss BV 222 | Wiking (Viking), transport flying-boat, sea reconnaissance |
8-223 | Focke-Achgelis Fa 223 | Drache (Dragon), transport helicopter (prototype) |
8-224 | Focke-Achgelis Fa 224 | helicopter, development of Fa 61 (project) |
8-225 | AGO Ao 225 | heavy fighter (project); number reassigned to Focke-Achgelis |
Focke-Achgelis Fa 225 | autogyro assault glider conversion of DFS 230 (prototype) | |
8-226 | Blohm & Voss BV 226 | renumbered as BV 246; 8-226 reassigned to Horten |
Horten Ho 226 | flying wing research aircraft (prototype), also called H.VII | |
8-227 | FGP 227 | small scale development aircraft for BV 238 |
8-228 | DFS 228 | rocket-powered reconnaissance aircraft (prototype only) |
8-229 | Horten Ho 229 | fighter jet-propelled (flying-wing); also called H.IX and later Go 229 |
8-230 | DFS 230 | transport and assault glider |
Morane-Saulnier MS.230 (captured aircraft) | basic trainer | |
8-231 | Arado Ar 231 | fold-wing U-boat reconnaissance aircraft (prototype) |
8-232 | Arado Ar 232 | heavy transport |
8-233 | Arado Ar 233 | seaplane (concept), 1940; replaced by Ar 430 |
8-234 | Arado Ar 234 | Blitz (Lightning), bomber + reconnaissance (jet-engined) |
8-235 | Dornier Do 235 | four-engine heavy bomber (project); allocation not confirmed |
8-236 | Focke-Achgelis Fa 236 | Allocated to Focke-Achgelis, possibly not used |
8-237 | Blohm & Voss BV 237 | asymmetric ground attack aircraft (project) |
8-238 | Blohm & Voss BV 238 | six-engine very long range transport flying-boat (prototype). Largest aircraft built by any Axis nation |
Focke-Wulf Fw 238 | four-engine long-range heavy bomber (project, 1941); number assigned in-house at Focke-Wulf, not by the RLM | |
8-239 | Arado Ar 239 | high-altitude bomber (project); allocation not confirmed |
Focke-Wulf Fw 239 | twin-jet bomber (project, 1944); also known as "1000x1000x1000 Bomber, Project A"; likely an in-house designation | |
8-240 | Arado Ar 240 | heavy fighter + reconnaissance |
8-241 | Gotha Go 241 | touring plane (project) |
8-242 | Gotha Go 242 | transport glider |
8-243 | Messerschmitt Me 243 | Allocated to Messerschmitt, possibly not used |
8-244 | Gotha Go 244 | powered glider, engined Go 242 |
8-245 | Gotha Go 245 | Allocated to Gotha, possibly not used |
8-246 | Blohm & Voss BV 246 | Hagelkorn (Hailstone), glide bomb; originally BV 226 |
8-247 | Not allocated | |
8-248 | Junkers Ju 248 | Evolution of Me 163, later development as Messerschmitt Me 263 |
8-249 | Focke-Wulf Fw 249 | eight-engine heavy transport aircraft (project, 1941), also known as Focke-Wulf-Projekt 195; number assigned in-house by Focke-Wulf, not the RLM |
8-250 | Blohm & Voss BV 250 | transport aircraft based on BV 238 (project) |
Focke-Wulf Fw 250 | twin-jet fighter-bomber (project) | |
Horten Ho 250 | flying wing sailplane (prototype), also known as H.III | |
8-251 | Focke-Wulf Fw 251 | three-seat all-weather night jet fighter (project); likely an in-house Focke-Wulf designation |
Horten Ho 251 | flying wing glider (prototypes), also known as H.IV | |
8-252 | Horten Ho 252 | flying wing research aircraft (prototype), also known as H.V |
Junkers Ju 252 | transport, 15 built | |
8-253 | Fieseler Fi 253 | Spatz (Sparrow), sportsplane (prototypes) |
Horten Ho 253 | flying wing glider (prototypes), also known as H.VI | |
8-254 | Focke-Wulf Ta 254 | twin-engine multipurpose combat aircraft, derivate of Ta 154C (project) |
Horten Ho 254 | flying wing research aircraft (prototype), also known as H VII; became Horten Ho 226 | |
8-255 | Not allocated | |
8-256 | Fieseler Fi 256 | simplified derivative of Fi 156 (prototype) |
8-257 | Skoda-Kauba SK 257 | advanced fighter-trainer (prototypes) |
8-258 | Not allocated | |
8-259 | Focke-Wulf Fw 259 | Frontjäger, fighter (project) |
8-260 | Not allocated | |
8-261 | Messerschmitt Me 261 | long-range courier (prototype only) |
Focke-Wulf Fw 261 | four-engine heavy bomber (project), also known as Focke-Wulf-Projekt 0310225; number assigned in-house by Focke-Wulf, not by the RLM | |
8-262 | Messerschmitt Me 262 | Schwalbe (Swallow), fighter, Sturmvogel (Stormbird), attack (jet-engined) |
8-263 | Messerschmitt Me 263 | interceptor (rocket-engined), (early development as Junkers Ju 248) |
8-264 | Messerschmitt Me 264 | Amerikabomber design competitor, long-range bomber (three prototypes built/flown) |
8-265 | Flettner Fl 265 | Pioneering, first-ever synchropter helicopter, for reconnaissance use |
Messerschmitt Me 265 | tail-less fighter (project), became Messerschmitt Me 329 | |
8-266 | Focke-Achgelis Fa 266 | Hornisse (Hornet), helicopter (prototype) |
8-267 | Gotha Go 267 | allocated to Gotha, possibly not used |
Horten Ho 267 | twin-turbojet flying wing; possibly identical to or related to Ho/Go 229 and/or Go 267; allocation not confirmed | |
8-268 | Junkers Ju 268 | flying bomb (project), intended for use with He 162 |
8-269 | Focke-Achgelis Fa 269 | convertiplane (project) |
8-270 | Heinkel He 270 | high-speed bomber (prototype) |
8-271 | Weserflug We 271 | amphibian transport (prototype) |
8-272 | Focke-Wulf Fw 272 | mixed-power multipurpose fighter, allocation not confirmed; number originally allocated to Heinkel, but not used [2] |
8-273 | Heinkel He 273 | Allocated to Heinkel, possibly not used |
8-274 | Heinkel He 274 | high-altitude heavy bomber, originally the "He 177H" design in October 1941 (prototype, 2 completed by French post-war) |
8-275 | Heinkel He 275 | four-engine heavy bomber (project, 1945); allocation not confirmed, possibly a mistake |
8-276 | Heinkel He 276 | Allocated to Heinkel, possibly not used |
8-277 | Heinkel He 277 | Amerikabomber design competitor, derivative of He 177 (with He 219-inspired fuselage/tail) with RLM number assigned to it by February 1943, a paper design only (never built) |
8-278 | Heinkel He 278 | turboprop fighter (project); allocation not confirmed |
8-279 | Heinkel He 279 | Allocated to Heinkel, not used |
8-280 | Heinkel He 280 | fighter (jet-engined); originally He 180, but changed to He 280 to avoid confusion with the Bü 180 |
8-281 | Focke-Wulf Fw 281 | turboprop-powered single-seat fighter (project), turboprop version of "Flitzer" jet fighter, allocation not confirmed; originally allocated to Heinkel, but was not used [2] |
8-282 | Flettner Fl 282 | Kolibri (Hummingbird), twin-rotor reconnaissance synchropter-layout helicopter |
8-283 | Focke-Wulf Ta 283 | ramjet fighter, 1945 (project) |
Focke-Achgelis Fa 283 | turbojet autogyro (project) | |
8-284 | Focke-Achgelis Fa 284 | twin-rotor flying crane helicopter, 1943 (prototype) |
8-285 | Flettner Fl 285 | helicopter (project) |
8-286 | Junkers Ju 286 | six-engine high-altitude bomber developed from the Ju 86, 1942 (prototype) |
8-287 | Junkers Ju 287 | heavy bomber (jet-engined), 1944 (prototype) |
8-288 | Junkers Ju 288 | Key Bomber B aviation contract winner, 1941 (prototypes) |
8-289 | Junkers Ju 289 | Allocated to Junkers, possibly not used |
8-290 | Junkers Ju 290 | Seeadler (Sea Eagle), long-range bomber, patrol, transport |
8-291 | Henschel Hs 291 | Possibly an air-launched anti-ship missile (project) |
8-292 | Argus As 292 | target & reconnaissance drone; number originally allocated to Henschel, but was not used |
8-293 | Henschel Hs 293 | radio-guided glide bomb |
8-294 | Henschel Hs 294 | radio-guided air-to-sea missile |
8-295 | Henschel Hs 295 | rocket-boosted glide bomb (prototypes); development of Hs 293 |
8-296 | Arado Ar 296 | proposed development of Ar 96 built with non-strategic materials (project); number reassigned to Henschel |
Henschel Hs 296 | radio-guided rocket-boosted glide bomb, development of Hs 293 (prototypes) | |
8-297 | Henschel Hs 297 | Föhn, surface-to-air rocket; became the Hs 117 |
8-298 | Henschel Hs 298 | rocket-powered, air-to-air radio-guided missile |
8-299 | Junkers Ju 299 | Allocated to Junkers, possibly not used |
8-300 | Focke-Wulf Fw 300 | four-engine transatlantic airliner, enlarged derivative of Fw 200 (project) |
GL/C number | Aircraft | Notes |
8-301 | DFS 301 | project; possibly related to DFS 346 |
8-302 | Not allocated | |
8-303 | Not allocated | |
8-304 | Not allocated; possibly allocated to Siebel for a fighter project[ citation needed ] | |
8-305 | Not allocated | |
8-306 | Not allocated | |
8-307 | Not allocated | |
8-308 | Not allocated | |
8-309 | Messerschmitt Me 309 | fighter, development of Bf 109 (prototype) |
8-310 | Messerschmitt Me 310 | high altitude fighter, development of Me 210 (project) |
8-311 | Not allocated | |
8-312 | Not allocated | |
8-313 | Caproni Ca.313 (captured aircraft) | twin-engine reconnaissance bomber |
8-314 | Not allocated | |
8-315 | Henschel Hs 315 | possibly a missile project[ citation needed ] |
8-316 | Not allocated | |
8-317 | Dornier Do 317 | bomber, development of Do 217 (prototypes) and Bomber B competitor |
8-318 | Dornier Do 318 | flying boat, development of Do 24 (project) |
8-319 | Heinkel He 319 | development of He 219 |
8-320 | Messerschmitt Me 320 | Allocated to Messerschmitt, possibly not used |
8-321 | Messerschmitt Me 321 | Gigant (Giant), transport glider |
8-322 | Junkers Ju 322 | Mammut (Mammoth), transport glider (prototype), 1941) |
8-323 | Messerschmitt Me 323 | Gigant (Giant), transport (powered Me 321) |
8-324 | Not allocated | |
8-325 | Focke-Wulf Fw 325 | Allocated for Focke-Wulf, not used; may be a typo for the Fa 325 and designation may have been reserved for Focke-Achgelis and not Focke-Wulf |
Focke-Achgelis Fa 325 | Krabbe (Crab), transport helicopter (project) | |
8-326 | Not allocated | |
8-327 | Messerschmitt Me 327 | rocket-propelled interceptor, derivative of Me 163A; possibly an initial designation for Me 163B |
8-328 | Messerschmitt Me 328 | bomber launched fighter (prototype) |
8-329 | Messerschmitt Me 329 | tail-less flying-wing fighter (project) |
8-330 | Focke-Achgelis Fa 330 | Bachstelze (Wagtail) towed observation rotor-kite |
8-331 | DFS 331 | cargo glider (prototype) |
8-332 | DFS 332 | twin-fuselage cargo glider (project) |
8-333 | Fieseler Fi 333 | transport (concept) |
8-334 | Arado Ar 334 | Derivative of Ar 234 (project) [3] |
Messerschmitt Me 334 | tail-less fighter development of Me 163 (project); number possibly not allocated by RLM | |
8-335 | Dornier Do 335 | Pfeil (Arrow), fighter-bomber (push-pull engine configuration) |
8-336 | Focke-Achgelis Fa 336 | scout helicopter (prototype), 1944; powered derivative of Fa 330; prototype completed postwar in France as SNCASO SE-3101 |
8-337 | Junkers Ju 337 | Allocated to Junkers, possibly not used |
8-338 | Not allocated | |
8-339 | Flettner Fl 339 | reconnaissance helicopter |
8-340 | Arado Ar 340 | proposed high-altitude bomber. The original designation was an Arado internal project number Ar E.340. It is not known, if the number ever was assigned. |
8-341 | Akaflieg Berlin B9 | research aircraft (prone pilot). Refer to Akaflieg Berlin. |
8-342 | Doblhoff Wn 342 | experimental helicopter (prototype) |
8-343 | Heinkel He 343 | jet bomber (project) |
8-344 | Kramer Rk 344 | X-4 air-to-air missile (rocket-powered) |
Sombold So 344 | rocket-powered parasite fighter (project); unclear if RLM or in-house designation | |
8-345 | Gotha Go 345 | assault glider (prototypes) |
8-346 | DFS 346 | supersonic research aircraft (incomplete prototype only) |
8-347 | Kramer Rk 347 | X-7 anti-tank missile (prototypes) |
8-348 | Not allocated | |
8-349 | Bachem Ba 349 | Natter (Adder or Viper), VTVL point-defense interceptor (rocket-engine) |
8-352 | Junkers Ju 352 | Herkules, transport |
8-356 | allocated to Fieseler for a Fi-156 development or for a Junkers project | |
8-362 | Messerschmitt Me 362 | three-engine jet airliner |
8-364 | Messerschmitt Me 364 | long-range bomber, development of Me 264 (project); would have been an in-house designation assigned by Messerschmitt, not by the RLM |
8-368 | Messerschmitt Me 368 | Possibly allocated to Messerschmitt; no other details |
8-388 | Junkers Ju 388 | high altitude night fighter + bomber + reconnaissance, development of Ju 188 |
8-390 | Junkers Ju 390 | Amerikabomber long-range design competitor (two prototypes built/flown), derivate of Ju 290 |
8-391 | Focke-Wulf Fw 391 | development of Fw 191 (project) |
8-393 | Arado Ar 393 | Possibly allocated to Arado; no other details |
8-396 | Arado Ar 396 | two-seat trainer, 1944; derivative of Ar 96, mainly built of wood |
8-400 | Focke-Wulf Ta 400 | eight-engine, mixed-power transatlantic bomber, 1944 (project) |
GL/C number | Aircraft | Notes |
8-409 | Messerschmitt Me 409 | original designation for the Messerschmitt Me 155B [4] |
8-410 | Messerschmitt Me 410 | Hornisse (Hornet) heavy fighter, development of Me 210 - production |
8-417 | Dornier Do 417 | medium bomber - (project) |
8-419 | Heinkel He 419 | high-altitude fighter, development of He 219 |
8-423 | Zeppelin-Messerschmitt ZMe 423 | heavy transport, development of Me 323 - (project) |
8-430 | Arado Ar 430 | amphibian transport - (project); number transferred to Gotha |
Gotha Ka 430 | cargo glider - (prototype) | |
8-432 | Arado Ar 432 | redesignation of Ar 232C |
8-435 | Dornier Do 435 | two-seat night fighter; development of Do 335 - (project) |
8-440 | Arado Ar 440 | development of Ar 240 - prototype |
8-445 | Caudron C.445 (captured aircraft) | twin-engine transport |
8-446 | DFS 446 | project; possibly related to DFS 346 |
8-452 | Junkers Ju 452 | heavy transport, development of Ju 252 in wooden construction (project?) |
8-462 | Messerschmitt Me 462 | jet bomber (project); number proposed by Messerschmitt for the P.1107, but probably not officially allocated by the RLM |
8-468 | DFS 468 | project, no other details |
8-488 | Junkers Ju 488 | heavy bomber, derivative of Ju 288 - (project) |
8-491 | Focke-Wulf Fw 491 | development of Fw 391 - (project) |
8-500 | Heinkel He 500 | original designation for Volksjäger project - became He 162 |
8-509 | Messerschmitt Me 509 | fighter, derivative of Me 309 - (project) |
8-510 | Messerschmitt Me 510 | fighter-bomber, derivative of Me 410 - (project) |
8-519 | Heinkel He 519 | high-speed bomber, derivative of He 119 (project) |
8-520 | Dewoitine D.520 (captured aircraft) | fighter |
8-523 | ZSO 523 | six-engine military cargo transport; development of ZMe 323 (project) |
8-532 | Arado Ar 532 | four-engine transport (project) |
8-534 | Avia B-534 (captured aircraft) | fighter |
8-535 | Heinkel He 535 | mixed-power night fighter and high-speed reconnaissance aircraft; derivative of Do 335 (incomplete project); transferred to Heinkel as He 535 |
8-600 | Messerschmitt Me 600 | proposed designation by Messerschmitt for Sack AS-6 production |
8-609 | Messerschmitt Me 609 | heavy fighter, two Me 309 fuselages joined together (incomplete project) |
8-632 | Arado Ar 632 | four-engine transport - incomplete project |
8-635 | Dornier Do 635 | heavy fighter, two Do 335 fuselages joined together (incomplete project); initial design work by Heinkel as the He 635; transferred to Dornier as the Do 635; transferred to Junkers as the Ju 635 who simplified the design |
The Luftwaffe was the aerial-warfare branch of the Wehrmacht before and during World War II. Germany's military air arms during World War I, the Luftstreitkräfte of the Imperial Army and the Marine-Fliegerabteilung of the Imperial Navy, had been disbanded in May 1920 in accordance with the terms of the 1919 Treaty of Versailles which banned Germany from having any air force.
The Focke-Wulf Ta 154 Moskito was a fast twin-engined German night fighter aircraft designed by Kurt Tank and produced by Focke-Wulf during late World War II. Only a few were produced, proving to have less impressive performance than the prototypes.
Arado Flugzeugwerke was a German aircraft manufacturer, originally established as the Warnemünde factory of the Flugzeugbau Friedrichshafen firm, which produced land-based military aircraft and seaplanes during the First and Second World Wars.
Alexander Lippisch's Delta IV was a continuation of his work on delta wing designs pioneered in his Delta I, Delta II and Delta III aircraft.
The Dornier Do 11 was a German heavy bomber, developed in secret in the early 1930s. It was originally called the Dornier F before being renamed by the Reichsluftfahrtministerium (RLM) in 1933, and was considered a heavy bomber at the time. It came into service in 1932, a continuation of a line of bomber designs from the Dornier Do P in 1930, and the Dornier Do Y in 1931. The line would continue to develop with the Dornier Do 13 and Dornier Do 23.
The Japanese military aircraft designation systems for the Imperial period (pre-1945) had multiple designation systems for each armed service. This led to the Allies' use of code names during World War II, and these code names are still better known in English-language texts than the real Japanese names for the aircraft. A number of different schemes were simultaneously in use.
The Idflieg designation system was used to classify German heavier-than-air military aircraft from the early days of the Fliegertruppe/Luftstreitkräfte to the end of World War I. The system evolved during this period as new classes of aircraft came into use.
Between 1933 and 1945, the organization of the Luftwaffe underwent several changes. Originally, the German military high command, for their air warfare forces, decided to use an organizational structure similar to the army and navy, treating the aviation branch as a strategic weapon of war. Later on, during the period of rapid rearmament, the Luftwaffe was organized more in a geographical fashion.
Contrary to the methods used by the Reich Air Ministry (RLM) for the allocation of aircraft designations, the designers and manufacturers of sailplanes and gliders in Germany enjoyed the freedom of choosing their own designations for their products up until 1945.
The Junkers Ju 252 was a German cargo aircraft that made its first flight in late October 1941. The aircraft was planned as a replacement for the Junkers Ju 52/3m in commercial airline service, but only a small number were built as cargo aircraft for the Luftwaffe.
The Arado E.555 was a long range strategic bomber proposed by the German Arado company during World War II in response to the RLM's Amerikabomber project. The E.555 designation was applied to a series of long range jet bomber designs of various sizes, powerplant, crew and weapon load configurations. As design studies only, no aircraft were developed or constructed and the entire E.555 project was cancelled at the end of 1944.
The Ministry of Aviation was a government department during the period of Nazi Germany (1933–45). It is also the original name of the Detlev-Rohwedder-Haus building on the Wilhelmstrasse in central Berlin, Germany, which today houses the German Finance Ministry.
The Klemm Kl 151 was a German prototype light passenger aircraft designed by Dr. Hanns Klemm and chief engineer Carl Bucher during World War II. Only one model was built.
The Focke-Wulf Flitzer was a jet fighter under development in Germany at the end of World War II.
The German Air Ministry had a system for aircraft designation which was an attempt by the aviation authorities of the Third Reich to standardize and produce an identifier for each aircraft design's airframe type produced in Germany. It was in use from 1933 to 1945 though many pre-1933 aircraft were included and the system had changes over those years. As well as aircraft of the Luftwaffe, it covered civilian airliners and sport planes, due to the RLM handing all aviation-related matters in the Third Reich, both civilian and military in nature.
Japanese aero-engines for military aircraft were given a wide variety of designations depending on the customer. This led to much confusion, particularly among the Allied forces, where a single engine type could have up to six different designations. This situation emerged because of the almost total lack of co-operation in weapons procurement between the IJAAS and the IJNAS.
The Horten H.VII was a flying wing fighter-trainer aircraft designed by the Horten brothers in Nazi Germany during World War II.
The Messerschmitt P.1107 was a jet-powered bomber project developed in the final years of the Second World War.
The DFS Model 6 was a target glider built by Deutsche Forschungsanstalt für Segelflug in 1936. It was intended for anti-aircraft training, but only prototypes were built. It was assigned the RLM designation 8-6.