Stealth technologyGerman WWII stealth-plane recreated

Published 10 July 2009

Nazi Germany was on the verge of developing the world’s first stealth airplane; sixty years later, Northrop Grumman engineers have recreated a top-secret German airplane that could have affected the course of the Second World War

Northrop Grumman engineers have recreated a top-secret German airplane that could have affected the course of the Second World War. In the early 1940s, an innovative aircraft design by two German brothers caught the attention of Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich, which began a secret construction project. The Horten 229 (named for its designers, Walter and Reimar Horten) was a jet-powered fighter aircraft with a smooth contour in the shape of a flying wing. That shape is now known to be more difficult for radar to detect than traditional configurations. The Horten 229 was briefly flight tested but could not be deployed before the end of the war.

FOX News reports that, since then, aviation historians have wondered how effective the futuristic design would have been against Allied early-warning radar, widely credited as a major factor in blunting Nazi air power. So the Northrop Grumman engineers designed a full-scale model of the 55-foot flying wing and built it to the exact specifications of the original.

They then mounted the model five stories off the ground then measured its radar signature at the company’s test range in the Mojave Desert. German designer Reiman Horton said he mixed charcoal dust in with wood glue on the exterior of the aircraft to absorb radar waves, which could have shielded the aircraft from detection by British early-warning ground-based radar known as Chain Home. This was tested by the Northrop-Grumman engineers and found to be successful, resulting in a radar cross-section only 40 percent that of conventional aircraft.

The testing revealed that the aircraft, with its frontally prominent engines, would still have been detected by the Allies’ primitive radar, although its Mach 0.92 speed would have prevented any of the Allied fighters from catching it.

Northrop Grumman has now donated the full-scale Horten 229 model to the San Diego Air and Space Museum, California’s official air and space museum and education center. The museum is an affiliate of the Smithsonian Institution and it was the first aero-themed museum to be accredited by the American Association of Museums.