The Globe At War
Perhaps the most famous dive bomber of the Second World War, the
Ju-87 "Stuka", also represented an intense developmental effort. It
was one thing for the Luftwaffe to be constructed from scratch in
only a few years. However, the Luftwaffe also sought to build in a
balanced, yet cost-effective fashion. The decision to develop vertical
attack aircraft meant the Luftwaffe was forced from early on to put
assets into creating aircraft and training aircrews capable of
effectively conducting precision dive - bombing; an effort producing
substantial technical challenges. These challenges stemmed directly
from the difference between creating bombers maintaining level flight
over a target and bombers that drops from the sky directly toward a
target.

When attacking, the Stuka pilot initially flew his aircraft directly over
the target. At this point however, the method for dropping the bomb
load deviated substantially from the tactics employed by the level
bomber pilot. The dive-bomber pilot, from heights reaching 6,000 feet,
put the plane into a half role and entered a near vertical dive once
over the target. This dive only ended 1,000 feet above the target; a
target hit with a frightening degree of accuracy thanks to the pilots
ability to look down directly at his victim and release the bomb load at
the optimal moment. Owing to the incredible gravitational forces the
dive put on both the plane and pilot, Germany had developed a new
suite of technologies; such as new bombsights and automatic contact
altimeters, to pull the Stuka from its dive with minimal effort from the
pilot.

The Stuka served throughout the war as Germany's primary close air
support aircraft, and although carrying a range of new technologies
which enabled its pilots to achieve a high degree of accuracy; it
nevertheless was a slow, short-range aircraft capable carrying no
more than a light bomb load of 1000 lbs for any reasonable distance.
The inadequate range possessed by the Stuka regrettably for
Germany was not unique to Germany's attack aircraft.

Picture Courtesy of the U.S. Navy


Ju-87 "Stuka" Dive Bomber