Arado Ar 234 B-2 bomber
FE-1010
'USA 40'
W Nr 140312
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Photo by Earl L. Ware, Base Photographer
Freeman Field, 1945-6


Photo by Earl L. Ware, Base Photographer
Freeman Field, 1945-6

Photo by Earl L. Ware, Base Photographer
Freeman Field, 1945-6

Photo by Earl L. Ware, Base Photographer
Freeman Field, 1945-6

at Freeman Field

at Freeman Field
Freeman Air Museum FF0150

Final stages of its magnificent restoration in the workshops of Silver Hill in 1988
Alan Curry collection
Source Disposition
NASM one of nine Ar 234s surrendered to British forces at Sola airfield near Stavanger, Norway
War Prizes
pg 219
Surrendered to the RAF at Stavanger
NASM flying from Sola to Cherbourg, France on June 24, 1945, the four Ar 234s joined thirty-four other advanced German aircraft aboard the British aircraft carrier HMS Reaper for shipment to the United States
NASM The Reaper departed from Cherbourg on July 20, arriving at Newark, New Jersey eight days later.
TSEAL 6D
09/01/1945
08/01/1945 at Newark to be sent to Freeman Field
NASM U. S. Army Air Forces personnel reassembled and flew two Ar 234s, including 140312 to Freeman Field, Indiana, for testing and evaluation.
War Prizes
pg 219
recorded as under restoration at Freeman Field on 16 May 1946, with the work '98% complete'
NASM flown to Wright Field, Dayton, Ohio, in July 1946 and transferred to the Accelerated Service Test Maintenance Section (ASTMS) of the Flight Test Division
War Prizes
pg 219
01 August 1946 it was flyable at Wright Field, assigned to the Flight Test Unit (Bomber tests)
NASM flight-testing was completed on October 16, 1946
NASM remained at Wright field until 1947, when it was moved to Orchard Place Airport, Park Ridge, Illinois.
NASM May 1, 1949, the USAF (United States Air Force after 1947) transferred the Ar 234 and other aircraft at Park Ridge to the Smithsonian Institution.
NASM early 1950s, the airplanes were finally moved to a new Smithsonian storage facility at Suitland, Maryland to await restoration.
NASM Restoration of the Museum's Ar 234 began during 1984 and was completed in February 1989
NASM currently in storage at the Paul E. Garber Restoration and Storage Facility awaiting the completion of the museum's new Dulles Center.
Wingspan 14.44 m (46 ft. 3 1/2 in.)
Length 12.64 m (41 ft. 5 1/2 in.)
Height 4.29 m (14 ft. 1 1/2 in.)
Weight 5,200 kg (11,464 lb.) (Empty)
Surrendered to the RAF at Stavanger.  This plane belonged to II/KG76 based at Grove in Denmark and was flown to Norway with many other Luftwaffe aircraft on 5 May 1945 to avoid surrender to British forces in Denmark.  The Ar 234 was handed over to Col Watson and became 'FE-1010' after shipment to the USA aboard HMS Reaper.

Surrendered to the RAF at Stavanger in Norway and handed over to Col Watson.  Flown to Melun and then to Cherbourg for onward shipment to the USA on board HMS Reaper.  It was recorded as under restoration at Freeman Field on 16 May 1946, with the work '98% complete'.  By 01 August 1946 it was flyable at Wright Field, assigned to the Flight Test Unit (Bomber tests).

More than 20 hours of test flying were completed on this aircraft at Wright Field.  The tests were reported completed in Report F-TR-1139-ND released in February 1947.  Shortly after the flight tests were completed, the aircraft was flown to Park Ridge for Museum storage, by Lt Col Fred J. Ascani, who was one of the pilots involved in tests of the aircraft and was the Chief of Bomber Test at the Flight Test Division at the time.  Other flights of the '234' were made by Maj C. Cardenas, Capt James M. Little and Lt Charles J. Clemence, Jr.

This aircraft is currently in the Silver Hill facility of the National Air and Space Museum and its restoration to display condition was completed early in 1989.  It is believed that this aircraft will be transferred to the main Air and Space Museum in downtown Washington, DC.  As restored, the '234' is painted in the markings  of an aircraft of KG76, coded ad 'F1+GS'; these markings were not found on the aircraft during its restoration, but were selected as being suitably representative markings.

source: "War Prizes" by Phil Butler, pg 219

click on following three photos for enlarged view
Courtesy of Neil Corbett

Arado 234 at Freeman and tested by Bob Cardenas and Fred Ascani

Ebay auction for plastic model, 02/04/2007

The Arado Ar 234 B Blitz (Lightning) was the world's first operational jet bomber and reconnaissance aircraft. Two Junkers Jumo 004 B turbojets powered this clean, graceful design. Speed made the Blitz virtually immune to attacks from piston-engined Allied fighters. The jet's maximum velocity topped 735 kph (456 mph). Although overshadowed by the more famous Messerschmitt Me 262 jet fighter, the relatively few Ar 234s that reached Luftwaffe units before the end of the German surrender provided excellent (if ultimately futile) service, particularly as reconnaissance aircraft. Development of the Ar 234 began in 1940. The German Aviation Ministry issued an order to Dr. Walter Blume, technical director of the state-owned Arado concern, to design and build a reconnaissance aircraft propelled by the turbojet engines then under development by BMW and Junkers. Rüdiger Kosin led the design team. Largely free from Air Ministry interference, Kosin created a high-wing monoplane with two turbojet engines mounted in nacelles under the wings. The rear fuselage contained two downward-looking reconnaissance cameras. To reduce weight and free space for larger fuselage fuel tanks, the initial prototype series dispensed with a conventional landing gear in favor of retractable skids mounted beneath the fuselage and nacelles. The airplane would taxi and takeoff atop a wheeled trolley that the pilot jettisoned as the jet left the runway. Ground crews recovered the trolley and refurbished it for the next flight. Engine problems repeatedly slowed flight testing the first Ar 234. BMW and Junkers both experienced trouble building jet engines in quantities sufficient for both the Me 262 and Ar 234 programs. Although Arado completed the Ar 234 V1 airframe in late 1942, the Messerschmitt aircraft took priority and claimed the trickle of flight-ready engines that Junkers managed to turn out. Consequently, the Ar 234 V1 did not fly until July 30, 1943. Before it flew, the Air Ministry directed Arado to redesign the landing gear and give the jet a bombing capability. Kosin and his team enlarged the fuselage slightly to accommodate a conventional tricycle landing gear and added a semi-recessed bomb bay under the fuselage. To allow the pilot to act as a bombardier, Kosin mounted a Lotfe 7K bombsight in the fuselage floor ahead of the control column, which the pilot swung out of his way to use the sight. A Patin PDS autopilot guided the aircraft during the bombing run. The pilot-bombardier used another periscope sight during shallow-angle, glide bombing. The first prototype for the revised design, designated Ar 234 V9, flew on March 12, 1944. The bomber version, designated Ar 234 B-0, became the first subtype built in quantity. The Air Ministry ordered 200 Ar 234 Bs and Arado built them at a new Luftwaffe airfield factory at Alt Lönnewitz in Saxony. The factory finished and delivered all 200 airplanes by the end of December 1944 but managed to roll out another 20 by war's end. The initial order had called for two versions of the Ar 234 B: the B-1 reconnaissance aircraft and the B-2 bomber but Arado built only the B-2 version. The company converted B-2 airframes into reconnaissance aircraft. Plans called for more advanced versions of the Arado jet, including the Ar 234 C powered by four BMW 003 A-1 engines and fitted with a pressurized cockpit. Sub variants of the "C" model included the C-3 multi-role aircraft and the C-3N two-seat night-fighter. However, only 14 Ar 234 Cs left the Arado factory before Soviet forces overran the area. The four-engine Ar 234 was, however, the fastest jet aircraft of World War II. Prototypes for the more advanced Ar 234 D reconnaissance aircraft and bomber with provision for a second crewman were under construction but not completed at war's end. A Luftwaffe pilot flew the first Ar 234 combat mission on August 6, 1944, when Erich Sommer piloted the V5 prototype on a reconnaissance sortie over the Allied beachhead in Normandy. He encountered no opposition. During his two-hour flight, Sommer gathered more useful intelligence than the Luftwaffe obtained during the previous two months. Virtually immune to interception, the Ar 234 continued to provide the German High Command with valuable reconnaissance until nearly the end of the war. The intelligence gathered, however, allowed German military planners to do little more than delay inevitable defeat. Only one Luftwaffe unit, KG 76 (Kampfgeschwader or Bomber Wing 76), was equipped with Ar 234 bombers before Germany's surrender. As the production of the Ar 234 B-2 increased in tempo during fall 1944, the unit received its first aircraft and began training at Burg bei Magdeburg. The unit flew its first operations during December 1944 in support of the Ardennes Offensive. Typical missions consisted of pinprick attacks conducted by less than 20 aircraft, each carrying a single 500 kg (1,100 lb.) bomb. The unit participated in the desperate attacks against the Allied bridgehead over the Rhine at Remagen during mid-March 1945, but failed to drop the Ludendorff railway bridge and suffered a number of losses to anti-aircraft fire. The deteriorating war situation, coupled with shortages of fuel and spare parts, prevented KG 76 from flying more than a handful of sorties from late March to the end of the war. The unit conducted its last missions against Soviet forces encircling Berlin during the final days of April. During the first week of May the unit's few surviving aircraft were either dispersed to airfields still in German hands or destroyed to prevent their capture. The National Air and Space Museum's Blitz, an Arado Ar 234 B-2 bomber carrying Werk Nummer (manufacturer's serial number) 140312, was one of nine Ar 234s surrendered to British forces at Sola airfield near Stavanger, Norway. It is the sole surviving example of an Ar 234. The aircraft had been on strength with 9./KG 76 (Ninth Squadron/ bomber Wing 76) during the final weeks of the war, having served earlier with the unit's eighth squadron. It and three other Ar 234s were collected by the famous "Watson's Whizzers" group of the USAAF (United States Army Air Forces) for shipment to the United States. After flying from Sola to Cherbourg, France on June 24, 1945, the four Ar 234s joined thirty-four other advanced German aircraft aboard the British aircraft carrier HMS Reaper for shipment to the United States. The Reaper departed from Cherbourg on July 20, arriving at Newark, New Jersey eight days later. U. S. Army Air Forces personnel reassembled and flew two Ar 234s, including 140312, to Freeman Field, Indiana, for testing and evaluation. The USAAF assigned the foreign equipment number FE-1010 to this Ar 234 for inventory and tracking purpose. 

http://www.nasm.si.edu/research/aero/aircraft/ardrar2.htm.

Survivors

(Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center)

Only one Ar 234 survives today. The aircraft is an Ar 234B-2 bomber variant carrying
Werknummer (manufacturer's serial number) 140312, and was one of nine Ar 234s surrendered to British forces at Sola Airfield near Stavanger, Norway. The aircraft had been operating with 9. staffel III./Kampfgeschwader 76 (later reorganized as Einsatzstaffel) during the final weeks of the war, having operated previously with the 8th squadron.

This aircraft and three others were collected by the famous "Watson's Whizzers" of the USAAF to be shipped back to the United States for flight testing. The aircraft was flown from Sola to Cherbourg, France on June 24, 1945 where it joined thirty-four other advanced German aircraft shipped back to the U.S. aboard the British aircraft carrier .
Reaper departed from Cherbourg on July 20, arriving at Newark, New Jersey eight days later. Upon arrival two of the Ar 234s were reassembled (including 140312) and flown by USAAF pilots to Freeman Field, Indiana for testing and evaluation. 140312 was assigned the foreign equipment number FE-1010. The fate of the second Ar 234 flown to Freeman Field remains a mystery. One of the remaining two was reassembled by the United States Navy for testing, but was found to be in un-flyable condition and was scrapped.

After receiving new engines, radio and oxygen equipment, 140312 was transferred to Wright Field near Dayton, Ohio and delivered to the Accelerated Service Test Maintenance Squadron (ASTMS) of the Flight Test Division in July 1946. Flight testing was completed on 16 October 1946 though the aircraft remained at Wright Field until 1947. It was then transferred to Orchard Place Airport, Park Ridge, Illinois, and remained at Orchard Place Airport until 1 May 1949 when it, and several other aircraft stored at the airport were transferred to the Smithsonian Institution. During the early 1950s the Ar 234 was moved to the Smithsonian's Paul Garber Restoration Facility at Suitland, Maryland for storage, and eventual restoration.

The Smithsonian began restoration of 140312 in 1984 and completed it in February 1989. All paint had been stripped from the aircraft prior to the Smithsonian receiving it, so the aircraft was painted with the markings of an aircraft of 8./KG 76, the first operational unit to fly the "Blitz". The restored aircraft was first displayed at the Smithsonian's main museum building in downtown Washington D.C. in 1993 as part of a display titled "Wonder Weapon? The Arado Ar 234." In 2005 it became one of the first aircraft moved to the new Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center near Dulles International Airport. Today, 140312 is displayed next to the last surviving Dornier Do 335, an aircraft that had accompanied it on its voyage across the Atlantic Ocean aboard the
Reaper over 60 years earlier.

This aircraft is displayed with a pair of Hellmuth Walter designed, liquid-fueled RATO units mounted under its wings. These RATO units may be the only known surviving examples in existence to be mounted on an aircraft.

http://arado-ar-234.co.tv/

Jim West
jimdwest@centurylink.net
www.IndianaMilitary.org