Junkers Ju 388 L
History
Ju 388L-1, W Nr 560049 (FE/T2-4010)
This aircraft was surrendered to US forces in at the Allgemeine Transport Gesellschaft factory at Merseburg in in May 1945. It was flown from Merseburg to Kassel/Waldau (Y-96) for servicing by the 10th Air Depot Group on 20th May 1945. It was later, on 17th June, flown to Cherbourg/Querqueville and taken to the USA aboard HMS Reaper. The Ju 388 was taken to Freeman Field and, after reconditioning, made demonstration flights to the press there in Sept 1945. By June 1946 it had returned to Freeman Field and was held in flyable condition. Technical report F-TR-1138-ND was written on this aircraft and issued in Oct 1946.

Although initially assigned to storage at Davis-Monthan AFB, it was put into storage at No. 803 Special Depot, Park Ridge, Illinois, on 26th Sept 1946. It is at present in storage with the Garber facility at Silver Hill of the National Air and Space Museum.

(From 'War Prizes', by P Butler. Copyright P. Butler 1994, used with permission)
Ju 388 Development Late in the war, the Ju 388 was developed from the existing successful Ju 188. The Ju 388L was a long range reconnaissance version. Powered by two BMW 801 TJ radial engines driving VDM-Dural 4 bladed props. Its cameras were housed in a large wooden ventral pannier which also contained additional fuel. Its sole defensive armament, 2x 13mm machine guns (600 r.p.g.) housed in a rear barbette, were aimed by a PVE 11 periscope sight. This can be seen in the cockpit photo (next page). 47 Ju 388L aircraft were delivered by the end on 1944 including 2 Ju388L-3, powered by the liquid cooled Jumo 213E V-12. Several Ju 388Ls were delivered to 3.staffel of the Versuchsverband Ob. d.L late in 1944 but none of the Fernaufklarungs-Stafflen desinated to receive the aircraft completed conversion in time to became fully operational.

The Ju 388K, a bomber version, was developed shortly after the Ju 388L. The remarkable performance of this small but fast
Schnellbomber would have posed the Allies serious problems. As it was, apart from a few sorties by the reconnaissance model, the Ju 388 failed to see combat.

(Info source: 'War Planes of the Second World War' by William Green)
The Photos. In November 1997 I asked the Curator of German Aircraft at the NASM for permission to see and photograph the last Ta 152 H-0 (see Ta 152 Web Page). In the same storage shed at the Garber Facility the Ju 388 was being worked on. After taking some exterior shots of the fuselage, the restoration staff allowed me to photograph inside the cockpit, entering via the hatch in the bottom of the plane.

The inside was in remarkable condition. Showing its age admittedly, but with none of the damage seen in the Focke-Wulf.

On this page are a series of thumbnails which, if you click on them take you to larger more detailed images. On the second and third pages, the photos are reproduced at higher resolution..
Thumbnails (Click for main image) or go to the next 2 pages where the photos are held at higher resolution.
Link to Ju388 Next Page
All Photos Copyright Charles Silverlight, 2001
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