The Fieseler Fi 156 Storch ([ʃtɔrç], "
stork") was a
liaison aircraft designed and produced by the German aircraft manufacturer
Fieseler. Its nickname of Storch was derived from the lengthy legs of its main
landing gear, which gave the aircraft a similar appearance to that of the long-legged, big-winged bird.
Developed during the mid 1930s in response to a request from the
Reichsluftfahrtministerium (Reich Aviation Ministry or RLM), the Fi 156 was an affordable and easy to construct aircraft purpose designed for the liaison,
army co-operation, and
medical evacuation roles. On 24 May 1936, the Fi 156 V1 performed its
maiden flight; the first deliveries took place less than a year later. It was well regarded for its excellent short field (
STOL) performance and low
stalling speed of 50 km/h (31 mph).[2] Around 2,900 aircraft of various models, the most commonplace being the Fi 156C, were produced between 1937 and 1945. The Fi 156 quickly became popular on the export market, eventually being widely used by various nations.
Even after the end of the conflict, production of the type continued in other countries into the 1950s, both for the private market and military operators. In addition to Germany, additional production lines had been established in France, Czechoslovakia, Romania, and the Soviet Union. Furthermore, there have been many attempts to recreate or imitate the Fi 156, including several three-quarter scale
homebuilt aircraft, such as the
Pazmany PL-9 Stork,
RagWing RW19 Stork, and
STOL King. The
Slepcev Storch and French-built later variants of the original aircraft have often appeared at air shows and other flying events. Numerous flight-worthy aircraft are still operational into the twenty-first century.
Development
Background and selection
During 1935, the
Reichsluftfahrtministerium (Reich Aviation Ministry or RLM) issued in
invitation to several aviation companies to submit their proposals for a new aircraft for the Luftwaffe that was to be suitable for the roles of
liaison, army co-operation (today called
forward air control), and
medical evacuation.[3] The German aircraft manufacturer
Fieseler quickly took an interest in the new requirement and opted to produce its own clean sheet design, which was largely conceived of by chief designer Reinhold Mewes and technical director
Erich Bachem. This new aircraft, which was subsequently assigned the Fi 156 designation, was specifically designed to achieve particularly strong short take off and landing ("
STOL") performance.[3]
In addition to Fieseler's submission, competing proposals were submitted from various other aircraft manufacturers, including
Weser Flugzeugbau and
Siebel in the form of the
Bf 163 and
Si 201 respectively.[3] While the Bf 163 broadly resembled the Fi 156, the Si 201 was a relatively unorthodox aircraft; all three designs were evaluated in depth by officials. The Fi 156 emerged as the favoured submission, in part due to its relatively cheap and straightforward construction offered in its design.[4]
On 24 May 1936, the Fi 156 V1, registered D-IKVN, performed its
maiden flight; it was quickly followed by a further four prototypes.[4] From an early stage, the company had envisioned two different production versions, the Fi 156A and Fi 156B, the latter having movable
leading edge slots instead of the formers' fixed slot arrangement. The first production standard aircraft were delivered in early 1937.[4]
German production
About 2,900 Fi 156s, the majority being of the Fi 156C model, were produced between 1937 and 1945.[5] The principal production line was at the
Fieseler Factory in
Kassel. During 1942, production started in the
Morane-Saulnier factory at
Puteaux in
France. Due to the demand for Fieseler as a subcontractor for building the
Fw 190, Fi 156 production was shifted to Leichtbau Budweis in
Budweis by the end of 1943. Factories in other countries under German control manufactured aircraft, including Fi 156s, for Germany.
Soviet production
In 1939, after the signing of the
Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, Germany provided several aircraft, including the Fi 156C, to the
Soviet Union.
Oleg Antonov was made responsible for putting the aircraft into production to meet Soviet requirements, and given a choice between designing an equivalent aircraft or merely copying the German design, the latter was selected. The aircraft was titled OKA-38 and two versions were envisaged: the SS three seat liaison aircraft, and the N-2 air ambulance capable of carrying two stretchers plus a medic. A prototype was constructed in Factory No. 365, established on the basis of
Lithuanian Military Aviation Works, in
Kaunas, recently occupied
Lithuania. The first prototype however was built in Factory No. 23 in
Leningrad and flew before the end of 1940. The production in Kaunas has just started as the factory was lost to the German advance in 1941. While Antonov's efforts had produced a heavier aircraft, which required as much as three times the field for landing and take off as the German Fi 156C (160 m vs 55 m), it also had much greater range and increased load capability.[6] After the conflict, Antonov went on to design the legendary
An-2 STOL biplane, which also has excellent STOL performance.
Production in Czechoslovakia
In 1944, production was moved from the Leichtbau
Budweis to the
Mráz factory in
Choceň which produced 138 examples of the Fi 156, locally designated as "K-65 Čáp". Production ended during 1949.
Production in France
During the Second World War, the French manufacturer
Morane-Saulnier was operated under German control, during which time it built a number of German types including the Storch. Immediately after the
liberation of France in 1944, the production of the Fi 156 at the Morane-Saulnier factory was continued at the request of the Armée de l'Air. The resulting batch of aircraft produced with the remaining stock of
Argus air-cooled inverted V8 engines were designated MS 500 Criquet. Aircraft with further modifications and different engines (
inline and
radial) received various different type numbers. The use of the aircraft in
Indochina highlighted the weakness of wood for the construction of the airframe; thus it was decided to build the wings out of metal instead. Among the modifications, the defensive weapon aiming through the back window was dropped, although some aircraft were modified in the field to take a
MAC 34T machine gun firing through one of the side windows. Some 141 aircraft were built before the end of the Second World War while a total of 925 aircraft were built before the end of the production of all types of Criquet by Morane-Saulnier in 1965.
Production in Romania
Licence production was started in Romania in October 1943 at the
ICAR factory in
Bucharest. Only 10 were built by the time the ICAR factory was bombed in May 1944. Production resumed later that year, but only six were completed before repair work halted production. Between June 1945 and 1946, a further 64 aircraft were built.[7]
Summary of production
Production per factory and per type until 31 March 1945:
Type
Fieseler
Morane-Saulnier
Mraz
Leichtbau
Total
A-0
10
10
B-0
14
14
B-1
36
36
C-1
286
286
C-2
239
239
C-3
1,230
525
1,755
C-7
259
32
63
354
D-1
117
117
D-2
46
10
56
Total
1,908
784
78
73
2,867
Modern developments
Because of its superb STOL characteristics, there have been many attempts to recreate or copy the Storch, mainly in the form of various three-quarter scale
homebuilt aircraft, such as the
Pazmany PL-9 Stork, Roger Mann's
RagWing RW19 Stork, and Preceptors
STOL King.
As an example, the
Slepcev Storch is a three-quarter scale reproduction of the original with some simplifications. The use of modern materials provides better STOL performance than the original with a take-off run of 30 m and landing-roll of 50 m with no headwind. It was originally designed and manufactured in Australia[8] and is now manufactured in Serbia.[9]
Design
The Fieseler Fi 156 Storch was a high-wing
monoplane that was particularly effective in terms of its short take off and landing ("
STOL") performance. Its nickname of Storch was derived from the lengthy legs of its main
landing gear, which hung down during flight and gave the aircraft the appearance of a long-legged, big-winged bird. As a product of its relatively low landing speed, the Storch often gave the appearance of landing vertically, or even backwards, when flying directly into strong winds.[citation needed] The aircraft was typically crewed by three personnel seated with its enclosed cabin, which was extensively glazed as to provide generous external views.[10] The structure was composed of welded
steel tubing while the covering was
fabric. Both the tail unit and wings were composed of wood, the latter being clad in
plywood.[4]
The Fi 156 had relatively lengthy wings for its size. A Fixed
slat ran along the entire length of the wing's
leading edge while a hinged and slotted set of control surfaces ran along the entire length of
trailing edge. This arrangement was allegedly inspired by an earlier
Junkers wing design concept, referred to as a Doppelflügel or "double-wing" aircraft wing control surface.[citation needed] On the Fi 156, this setup along each wing panel's trailing edge was split nearly 50/50 between the inboard-located
flaps and outboard-located
ailerons, which, in turn, included
trim tab devices over half of each aileron's trailing edge length. This combination of flaps and slats has been heavily attributed for the aircraft's favourable STOL performance.[5]
An uncommon feature for land-based aircraft was the ability to
fold back the wings of the aircraft along the fuselage, which was somewhat similar to the wings of the
Royal Navy'sFairey Swordfishtorpedo bomber; when folded, the aircraft could be carried on a trailer or even directly towed (albeit slowly) behind a vehicle. The primary hinge for the folding wing was located in the
wing root, where the rear wing spar met the cabin.
The long legs of the main
landing gear was furnished with both oil and spring-based
shock absorbers that had a travel of 40 cm (15-3/4 inches), sufficient to permit landings to be conducted on comparatively rough and uneven surfaces; this was combined with a "pre-travel" distance of 20 cm, before the
oleos began damping the landing gear shock.[11]
While initial models were unarmed, starting with the C-2 variant, the Fi 156 was fitted with a raised, fully-glazed position for a flexible rear-firing
MG 157.92mm machine gun for self-defense.[12][5]
Operational history
Second World War
The Storch was extensively operated by the Luftwaffe. Several reconnaissance units operated the type, such as
Aufklärungsgruppe 14 and
Aufklärungsgruppe 21.[13] Furthermore, each
Geschwader was provided with at least one, if not multiple, Fi 156s. Numerous high ranking German officials, particularly members of the
General Staff, had their own Fi 156s, including Field Marshals
Albert Kesselring and
Erwin Rommel.[13]
During the
German invasion of Belgium, in addition to its more routine usage in the liaison role, around 100 Fi 156s were used to transport a battalion of
Infantry Regiment Grossdeutschland, two men per aircraft, landing on a stretch of road behind enemy lines (Operation Niwi).[15][16]
During the
North African campaign, the
Afrika Korps made routine use of the Storch both for transportation and to conduct aerial surveillance. It was also operated by a pair of dedicated desert rescue squadrons to retrieve stranded pilots in this theatre.[13]
During September 1943, the Storch played a pivotal role in
Operation Eiche, the rescue of deposed Italian dictator
Benito Mussolini from a boulder-strewn mountain-top near the
Gran Sasso. Even though the mountain was surrounded by Italian troops, German
commandoOtto Skorzeny and 90
paratroopers used gliders to land on the peak and quickly captured it, then faced the problem of getting back. A
Focke-Achgelis Fa 223helicopter was sent, but it broke down en route. Instead, pilot Heinrich Gerlach flew in a Storch. It landed in 30 m (100 ft), and after Mussolini and Skorzeny boarded, it took off after a run of 80 m (250 ft), even though the aircraft was overloaded. The Storch used in rescuing Mussolini bore the radio code letters, or Stammkennzeichen, of "SJ + LL"[17] in the motion picture coverage of the daring rescue.
A Storch was the final aircraft to be shot down by the Allies on the Western Front, and another was forced down by an L-4 Grasshopper, the military version of the American
Piper J-3 Cub civilian training and sport aircraft and a direct Allied counterpart of the Storch. The pilot and co-pilot of the L-4, lieutenants Duane Francis and Bill Martin, opened fire on the Storch with their
.45 caliber pistols, forcing the German air crew to land and surrender.[20]
During the conflict, a number of Störche were captured by the Allies. One became the personal aircraft of British
Field MarshalBernard Montgomery. Others were used as the personal aircraft of Air Vice Marshal
Arthur Coningham and Air Vice Marshal
Harry Broadhurst, who acquired his Storch in North Africa, and flew it subsequently in Italy and North-West Europe. The British captured 145 Fi 156s, of which 64 were given to the French as war compensation from Germany.[citation needed]
Postwar activities
Both the
French Air Force (Armée de l'Air) and the
French Army Light Aviation (Aviation Légère de l’Armée de Terre) operated the Criquet between 1945 and 1958. Accordingly, the type saw battlefield service in French hands during both the
Indochina War and the
Algerian War.
The
Swiss Air Force, as well as several other mountainous European countries, continued to use the Storch to conduct rescue operations in challenging terrain where STOL performance was necessary. One of the more historically significant operations involving the type was the
Gauli Glacier crash rescue in November 1946, where a pair of
Flugwaffe-flown Storches were the sole means of safely retrieving the twelve survivors of the crash. After the Second World War, numerous aircraft were used in utility roles, including
agricultural spraying. Even into the twenty-first century, numerous Storches have remained operational, the type has become a common sight at air shows. In North America, both the
Collings Foundation and the
Fantasy of Flight museum have airworthy Fi 156 Storch aircraft in their collections.
Variants
Fi 156 V1: Prototype equipped with an adjustable metal propeller, registration D-IKVN (produced in 1935–1936)
Fi 156 V2: Prototype equipped with a wooden propeller. First prototype to fly (May 10, 1936). registration D-IDVS (produced in 1935–1936)
Fi 156 V3: Prototype identical to the V2. Test machine for various radio equipment, registration D-IGLI (produced in 1936)
Fi 156 V4: Prototype identical to the V3. Skis for landing gear and disposable auxiliary tank. (produced in 1936–1937)
Fi 156 V5: Production prototype for A-series. (produced in 1937)
Fi 156 A-0: Pre-production aircraft, identical to the V3. Ten aircraft were produced. (produced in 1937–1938)
Fi 156 A-1: First production models for service, ordered into production by the Luftwaffe with an order for 16 aircraft, the first production aircraft entered service in mid-1937. Some sources cite that only six were effectively produced. (produced in 1938)
Fi 156 B: Fitted with a new system which could retract the normally fixed leading edge slats and had a number of minor aerodynamic cleanups, boosting the speed to 208 km/h (130 mph). The Luftwaffe did not consider such a small difference to be important and the Fi-156 B was not produced.
Fi 156 C-0: Pre-production. Essentially a "flexible" version of the A model. (produced in 1939)
Fi 156 C-1: Three-seat liaison version. (produced in 1939–1940)
Fi 156 C-2: Two-seat observation type, which had a raised, fully glazed rear dorsal gun position for mounting a
MG 15 machine gun for defense. (produced in 1940)
Fi 156 C-3: Replaced the C-1 and C-2 with a "universal cockpit" suited for any role. (produced in 1940–1941)
Fi 156 C-3/Trop: Version adapted for tropical and desert conditions. Filtered intakes. (produced in 1940–1942)
Fi 156 C-5: Addition of a belly
hardpoint for a camera pod or jettisionable auxiliary tanks. Some were fitted with skis, rather than wheels, for operation on snow. (produced in 1941–1945)
Fi 156 C-5/Trop: Version adapted for tropical and desert conditions. Filtered intakes. (produced in 1941–1945)
Fi 156 C-7: Three-seat liaison version. "Flat" cockpit glazing similar to the C-1.
Fi 156 D-0: Pre-production version of the air ambulance version of the C model with a larger cockpit and extra rear fuselage-location starboard-side door for stretcher accommodation. Powered by an Argus As 10P engine. (produced in 1941)
Fi 156 D-1: Production version of the D-0. (produced in 1942–1945)
Fi 156 E-0: Liaison version identical to the C-1; 10 pre-production aircraft were fitted with tracked landing gear and were produced in 1941–1942.
Fi 156 F or P: Counter insurgency version. Identical to the C-3 with machine guns in side windows and bomb-racks and smoke layers. (produced in 1942)
Fi 156 U: Anti-submarine version. Identical to the C-3 with depth charge. (produced in 1940)
Fi 156 K-1: Export version of the C-1 (Bought by Sweden).
MS.500: Liaison version. French produced with 240 hp French built
Argus engine, as the Fi 156 had used.
MS.501: With a 233 hp
Renault 6Q inverted, air-cooled "straight six" engine instead of the Argus inverted V8.
MS.502: Liaison version. Identical to the MS-500, with the Argus engine replaced by a 230 hp
Salmson 9ab radial engine.
MS.504: with a 304 hp
Jacobs R-755-A2 radial engine.
MS.505: Observation version of the MS-500 with the Argus engine replaced by a 304 hp
Jacobs R-755-A2 radial engine.
MS.506: with a 235 hp Lycoming engine.
Mráz K-65 Čáp: Production in Czechoslovakia after World War II.
Antonov OKA-38Aist ("stork" in
Russian): An unlicensed Soviet copy of the Fi 156, powered by a copy of a Renault MV-6 inverted, air-cooled straight-six engine (similar to the Renault 6Q), was starting production as the factory was overrun by German forces in 1941
4230/39 – Fi 156 K-1 on display at the
Finnish Aviation Museum in
Vantaa, Uusimaa. It is the only surviving
Finnish Air ForceStorch. It retains its civilian paint scheme and registration, OH-FSA, from its final owner. It previously carried the serial number ST-112 and the registration OH-VSF.[26]
Germany
73 – MS.505 airworthy at the Fliegendes Museum in
Großenhain, Saxony. It is registered as D-EGTY and is painted in French Air Force colors.[27][28]
^Sengfelder, Günther (1993). German Aircraft Landing Gear. Atglen, PA, USA: Schiffer Publishing. p. 84.
ISBN0-88740-470-7. (Photo caption) The long shock absorber leg of the Fi 156 with its streamlined fairing. 200 mm of idle stroke was available in addition to the 400 mm stroke of the shock absorber.
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