Dornier Do 22 Explained

The Dornier Do 22 was a German seaplane, developed in the 1930s. Despite good performance, it was built only in small numbers and entirely for the export market. The type was operated in the Second World War by Finland, Greece and Yugoslavia.

Development and design

In 1934, Dornier's Swiss subsidiary, based at its factory at Altenrhein, designed a three-seat, single-engined military floatplane, the Do C3; two prototypes were built,[1] with the first flown in 1935.

It was a parasol wing monoplane of fabric-covered all-metal construction. Its slightly swept back wing was attached to the fuselage by bracing struts, and its two floats were braced to both the wing and fuselage. It was powered by a Hispano-Suiza 12Ybrs engine driving a three-bladed propeller, and could carry a single torpedo or bombs under the fuselage. Defensive armament was one fixed forward-firing machine gun, also two in the rear cockpit and one in a ventral tunnel.[1] [2]

The first production model, known as the Do 22/See when fitted with floats, did not fly until 15 July 1938 from Dornier's factory at Friedrichshafen, Germany, although it did incorporate parts made in Switzerland.[2] While the Luftwaffe was not interested in the aircraft, examples were sold to Yugoslavia, Greece and Latvia. In March 1939, a prototype with conventional landing gear (the Do 22L), was completed and test-flown, but it did not enter production.[3]

Operational history

The Greek Do 22s were destroyed during the German invasion of the Balkans in 1941, but the crews of eight of the Yugoslav machines successfully evaded capture or destruction by fleeing to Egypt. There they flew under the control of the British Royal Air Force until the lack of spare parts made the aircraft unusable.[4]

The four Latvian aircraft had not been delivered when the Soviet Union occupied Latvia in 1940, and were retained by Germany.[5] In 1942 they were transferred to Finland, being used on floats or skis until the end of the war.[2]

Variants

Do C3
  • Prototypes of the Do 22, two built
    Do 22Kg
  • Export version for Greece.
    Do 22Kj
  • Export version for Yugoslavia.
    Do 22Kl
  • Export version for Latvia. Not delivered, but eventually transferred to Finland.
    Do 22L
  • Land-based aircraft, fitted with a conventional landing gear. One prototype only.

    Operators

    Finnish Air Force – four Do 22KI [6]
  • Greece
  • Yugoslav Royal Navy – 12

    References

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Smith and Kay 1974, p.119.
    2. Green 1962, p.66.
    3. Smith and Kay 1974, p.119–120.
    4. March 1998, p.230.
    5. http://latvianaviation.com/PNR_Dornier.html DORNIER DO-22K1
    6. Backwoods Landing Strip: Finnish Air Force aircraft