Horten H.IV

Horten H.IV
Horten H.IV in the Deutsches Museum at Schleissheim, Munich
Role Glider
Manufacturer Horten
Designer Reimar and Walter Horten
Number built 4

The Horten H.IV was a German tailless flying wing glider in which the pilot was to lie in a prone position to reduce the frontal area, and hence drag. It was designed by Reimar and Walter Horten in Göttingen. Four were built between 1941 and 1943. They were flown in a number of unofficial competitions in Germany during World War II. After the war the flying examples were transported to the United Kingdom and the United States where several contest successes were achieved.

Test pilot Captain Eric Brown describes flying a Horten IV at RAE Farnborough in May 1947 towed by a Fieseler Storch.[1]

The H.IV was allocated the RLM ID number 8-251 and by inference Horten Ho 251 though this was little used in practice.[2]

  1. ^ Brown, Capt. Eric (1983). Wings of the Weird & Wonderful. Vol. 1. Airlife. ISBN 0-906393-30-2.
  2. ^ Parsch, Andreas. "German Military Aircraft Designations (1933-1945)". www.designation-systems.net. Retrieved 29 January 2019.

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