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Bv 155B (V2) FE-505 Stock No. 3609-01-0904-BV-155B |
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No photo at Freeman Field |
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in storage at Silver Hill, 1988 Alan Curry collection |
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| Source | Disposition |
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War Prizes pg 218 |
Surrendered to British forces at the Blohmu u Voss Finkenwerder works in incomplete condition |
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War Prizes pg 218 |
07/31/1945 Shipped to the UK and taken to Farnborough by 20 October 1945 to appear in the static display at the German Aircraft Exhibition there from 29 October to 9 November 1945 |
| Below | 07/31/1945 Notice to Freeman Field of the planes' shipment to them. |
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War Prizes pg 218 |
Transferred to No. 47 MU, Sealand, on 26 November 1945, Shipped to New York aboard the SS Port Fairy, 01/27/1946. |
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War Prizes pg 218 |
It was then taken to Freeman Field, Indiana. |
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War Prizes pg 218 |
went to Park Ridge for storage, arriving there 21 August 1946. |
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War Prizes pg 218 |
It is currently stored for the National Air and Space Museum. This aircraft has never flown |
| Wingspan | 20.5 m (67 ft. 3 in.) |
| Length | 12 m ( 39 ft. 4 1/2 in.) |
| Height | 2.98 m (9 ft. 9 1/2 in.) |
| Weight | 4,860 kg (10,716 lb) empty |
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The origins of the Blohm & Voss Bv 155 lay in a meeting held at the Messerschmitt's Augsburg plant in May 1942 to discuss the "Special High Altitude Fighter". Both Messerschmitt and Fock-Wulf expressed interest in developing a special high altitude fighter, Messerschmitt had already done some design work on a related project. Messerschmitt's preliminary study, known as the Bf 109 ST, which had been allocated the official RLM 8-series aircraft designation Me 155. The number 155 had previously been assigned to the Klemm firm but since it had not taken up the number the RLM reassigned it to Messerschmitt. At the same time, numbers 152, 153 and 154, which had also been allocated to Klemm but not used, were reassigned to Focke-WuIf. The original Me 109 ST was advanced in three variants; A, B & C (version A) called for a carrier/aircraft fitted with the DB 605, while (version B) called for a similar fighter powered by the high altitude DB 628. In order to relieve his already over committed design bureau and to speed development, Messerschmitt decided to transfer the Me 155B to Paris. Due to various problems work progressed only slowly throughout the remainder of 1942. By early 1943 things were starting to go wrong with the project, whares Fock-Wulf were progressing well with their Ta 152, little had been achieved with the Me 155B. During the first half of 1943, Messerschmitt's design engineers had evolved basic parameters of an (extreme high altitude fighter) design study under the company designation Me P1091. By mid 1943 the Messerschmitt people were vacillating as ever pursuing the Me 209H in competition with the Ta 152H and turning there Me P1091 in to the Me 155B. |
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FE-505 Bv-155B V3 This prototype was captured before it was completed , and came to the US by way of the Royal Aircraft Establishment in Farnborough , England, where it was on display in fall 1945. It was probably shipped to the US in early 1946, going to Park Ridge that summer, and subsequently to Silver Hill. It is presently in storage at the Paul E. Garber Facility. |
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| Notice of shipment to Freeman Field |
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05/15/2011 - Date correction made to "Transferred to No. 47 MU, Sealand,"
by Johan Visschedijk |
Jim Westhost106th@106thInfDivAssn.org www.IndianaMilitary.org |