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R4M rocket

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colspan="2" Template:WPMILHIST Infobox style | R4M rocket
Type Rocket
Place of origin Germany
colspan="2" Template:WPMILHIST Infobox style | Service history
In service 1944-1945
Used by Luftwaffe
Wars World War II
colspan="2" Template:WPMILHIST Infobox style | Production history
Designed 1944
Manufacturer Heber AG, Osterode, Germany
Variants Air-to-air & Air-to-ground
colspan="2" Template:WPMILHIST Infobox style | Specifications
Weight 3.85 kg
Length 812 mm
Width 55 mm

Muzzle velocity 525 m/s
Effective range 600-1,000 m
Maximum range 1,500 m
Filling weight 520 g Hexogen for Air-to-air

The R4M rocket, nicknamed the Hurricane (Template:Lang-de) due to its distinctive smoke trail when fired, was the first practical anti-aircraft rocket. It was developed by the German Luftwaffe during World War II and used briefly before the end of the war. After the war the R4M served as the pattern for a number of similar systems, used by almost all interceptor aircraft during the 1940s and '50s.

Development

The R4M was developed in order to deal with the increasing weight of anti-bomber weapons being deployed by Luftwaffe fighters. Their design had started out with the 20 mm MG 151/20 cannons, compact enough to be mounted in an internal wing bay mounting in the Focke-Wulf Fw 190, but it was found that it took an average of twenty 20 mm hits to shoot down a typical four engined bomber. The 20 mm cannons, also fitted to the Bf 109 but in drag-producing underwing gun pods on the "109", were then replaced (or supplemented) with the 30 mm MK 108 cannon, in slightly larger underwing pods, which could bring down a bomber with an average of one to three hits. However the MK 108 was much heavier and the larger ammunition made it difficult to carry more than one or two "passes" worth. Worse, the low muzzle velocity of this gun meant it had a very short range and extreme curvature of trajectory, of over 41 meters at 1,000 meters range. In approaching close enough to get hits, the fighters placed themselves within the range of the bomber's defensive guns. The more powerful MK 103 cannon had higher muzzle velocity and increased range, at the cost of greatly increased weight, size and much lower rate of fire: 380-420 RPM vs. 600-650 RPM for the MK 108.

Also, the Nebelwerfer 42-derived Werfer-Granate 21 (Wfr. Gr. 21) Dodel rockets fitted to Messerschmitt Bf 109 and Bf 110, and Focke-Wulf Fw 190 fighters, used to break up the USAAF combat box bomber formations, had launch tubes that were not only drag-producing, from their exposed five-strut under-wing mounting setup, but also from the fact that the launch tubes needed to be aimed upwards at some 15° from level flight, to counter the rocket's considerable ballistic drop after firing, adding to the already considerable drag the launch tube mountings created.

The solution was to replace the underwing gun pods, and draggy large-calibre underwing rocket launch tubes, with a small diameter solid-fuel rocket engine-propelled projectile, mounting a warhead similar to that of the cannon shell. Although each "round" was heavier than the corresponding gun-fired shell, the lack of a gun reduced the overall weight considerably. The weight difference was so great that even a much larger and longer ranged rocket was still lighter than the guns it could replace.

The anti-aircraft version of the R4M used a large warhead of 55 mm with 520 g (17.6 ounces) of Hexogen explosive charge, nearly guaranteeing a kill with one hit. Each R4M weighed 3.2 kg and was provided with enough fuel to be fired from 1000 m, outside the range of the bomber's defensive guns. The main body of the rocket consisted of a simple steel tube with flip-out fins on the tail for stabilization. A battery typically consisted of two groups of 12 rockets and when all 24 were fired at once they would fill an area about 15 by 30 m at 1000 m, dense enough that one was almost certain to hit its target. The R4Ms were usually fired in four salvos of six missiles at intervals of 0.07 seconds from a range of 600 m. Two warheads were available for the R4M, the common PB-3 with a 0.4 kg charge for anti-aircraft use and the larger shaped charge, similar in construction to the Panzerschreck, the Panzerblitz II (PB-2), for anti-tank use.

Operations

Only a small number of aircraft were fitted with the R4M, mostly Messerschmitt Me 262s and the ground attack version of the Fw 190s, which mounted them on small wooden racks under the wings.

The weapon had excellent results. French ace Pierre Clostermann notes in his book The Big Show that in March 1945, six R4M-armed Me 262s flying out of the Oberammergau flight test center and led by Luftwaffe General Gordon Gollob claimed to have shot down fourteen B-17s in a mission. In April 1945, R4M-equipped Me 262s claimed to have shot down thirty B-17s for the loss of three aircraft. The Luftwaffe found the R4M missiles to have similar trajectory to the 30 mm MK 108 cannon in flight, therefore the standard Revi 16B gunsight was utilized effectively. After the war the R4M served as the pattern for both the US 2.75 in (70 mm) FFAR (Fin-Folding Aerial Rocket) and the larger 5 in (127 mm) Zuni.

Pictures

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{{From Wikipedia)}