Heinkel He 45
Heinkel He 45
[Source: Bundesarchiv]
The Heinkel He 45 was a light bomber produced in Germany in the early 1930s, one of the first aircraft adopted by
the newly formed Luftwaffe. Its appearance was that of a conventional biplane and included seating for pilot and
gunner in tandem, open cockpits. Developed in parallel with the He 46, it appeared in 1931 as a general-purpose
biplane and was employed mainly as a trainer, but was also used by the Luftwaffe for reconnaissance and light
bombing duties. Production of this plane totalled 512 aircraft, including those built under licence by
Gotha, Focke-Wulf, and BFW.
Sources:
Gunston, Bill - The Encyclodepia of the Worlds Combat aircraft, 1976, Chartwell Books, Inc., New York
Brown, Eric, Captain - Wings of the Luftwaffe, 1979, Airlife Publishing Ltd., Shrewsbury
Gunston, Bill & Wood, Tony - Hitler's Luftwaffe, 1977, Salamander Books Ltd., London
Donald, David - The Complete Encyclopedia Of World Aircraft, 1997, Brown Packaging Books Ltd., London
Wikipedia - Heinkel He 45
Gunston, Bill - The Encyclodepia of the Worlds Combat aircraft, 1976, Chartwell Books, Inc., New York
Brown, Eric, Captain - Wings of the Luftwaffe, 1979, Airlife Publishing Ltd., Shrewsbury
Gunston, Bill & Wood, Tony - Hitler's Luftwaffe, 1977, Salamander Books Ltd., London
Donald, David - The Complete Encyclopedia Of World Aircraft, 1997, Brown Packaging Books Ltd., London
Wikipedia - Heinkel He 45