Vahe Demirjian
I really should change my personal text
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A new publication on the Ju 287 is out on Amazon (published last August):
The author of this publication wrote about the Junkers Ju 287 and EF 131 in a 1991 issue of the German aviation magazine Aviatik, but this publication is more extensive and comprehensive, including not just drawings of the Ju 287 prototypes and planned production versions but also a specifications table for the Ju 287/EF 131 series, EF 140, and EF 132, images of the nearly complete but unflown Ju 287 V2, a drawing of the outer skin layout of the Ju 287 V3, and info about the Type 150 sweptback wing bomber and VEB 152 airliner. Note that a few specs in the Ju 287 specifications table for the Ju 287V3 and production Ju 287/EF 131, namely the length and wingspan, are incorrect because the Ju 287 V3 and the baseline production Ju 287 had a wingspan of 63 feet 8 inches and a length of 63 feet (in contrast to the Ju 287 V1 and V2 having a wingspan of 66 feet and length of 60 feet), while the EF 131 was slightly longer than the production Ju 287 and Ju 287 V3, V4, V5, and V6. The specifications given for the EF 132 clearly pertain to one of the later sweptback designs for the EF 132 in 1946, because the initial EF 132 project was a sweptback wing bomber with a wingspan of 106 feet, whereas the 1947 design for the EF 132 had six Mikulin turbojets.
The following link is available for publications by Uwe Jack:
Junkers Ju 287: The most advanced Jet-Bomber of the Luftwaffe (Aerospace History Files): Jack, Uwe W.: 9798678677266: Amazon.com: Books
Junkers Ju 287: The most advanced Jet-Bomber of the Luftwaffe (Aerospace History Files) [Jack, Uwe W.] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Junkers Ju 287: The most advanced Jet-Bomber of the Luftwaffe (Aerospace History Files)
www.amazon.com
The author of this publication wrote about the Junkers Ju 287 and EF 131 in a 1991 issue of the German aviation magazine Aviatik, but this publication is more extensive and comprehensive, including not just drawings of the Ju 287 prototypes and planned production versions but also a specifications table for the Ju 287/EF 131 series, EF 140, and EF 132, images of the nearly complete but unflown Ju 287 V2, a drawing of the outer skin layout of the Ju 287 V3, and info about the Type 150 sweptback wing bomber and VEB 152 airliner. Note that a few specs in the Ju 287 specifications table for the Ju 287V3 and production Ju 287/EF 131, namely the length and wingspan, are incorrect because the Ju 287 V3 and the baseline production Ju 287 had a wingspan of 63 feet 8 inches and a length of 63 feet (in contrast to the Ju 287 V1 and V2 having a wingspan of 66 feet and length of 60 feet), while the EF 131 was slightly longer than the production Ju 287 and Ju 287 V3, V4, V5, and V6. The specifications given for the EF 132 clearly pertain to one of the later sweptback designs for the EF 132 in 1946, because the initial EF 132 project was a sweptback wing bomber with a wingspan of 106 feet, whereas the 1947 design for the EF 132 had six Mikulin turbojets.
The following link is available for publications by Uwe Jack:
Welcome!
The new publication series "Aerospace History Files". Part 01 the Luftwaffe's six-engined Jet-Bomber Junkers Ju 287, part 02 the manned V-1 flying bomb, part 03 Messerschmitt Me 263 rocket fighter.
aerospace-jack.com