The first 32 He-111H-3s were delivered to Romania in 1940 and used to equip the newly
formed 5th Bomber Group, which soon became the elite "heavy" bomber unit of the Romanian
Royal Aeronautics. It fought during the entire 1941 campaign in Bessarabia and at Odessa
and lost seven of its Heinkels. They also claimed 17 Soviet fighters shot down, of which
the first was on 22 June, and 47 aircraft destroyed on the ground.
In early 1942, another 15 airplanes were bought from Germany. These were newer models:
He-111H-6s, which could also launch torpedoes. All but one were assigned to the 78th
Squadron, which served in the 5th Bomber Group in 1941. It was renamed the 78th Naval Bomber
Squadron and separated from the group. The other two squadrons, equipped with He-111H-3s were
sent on the front in September 1942, with the rest of the Romanian Combat Air Grouping and
saw action over Stalingrad.
The losses were high and the remaining He-111s and Bf-109Es were united in an ad-hoc unit
called the Mixed Group, under the command of the lt. cdor. Iosifescu, the commander of the
5th Bomber Group. But at the end of February, only He-111 was still available for action.
The unit was sent back to Romania for rest and reorganization.
In 1943, the 5th Bomber Group was reequipped with more modern Ju-88A-4s. The only unit
that still had He-111s was the 78th Naval Bomber Squadron. But in 1944, when the front
reached Romania, all available forces were thrown against the advancing Red Army. The
78th Squadron was incorporated into the 4th Bomber Group and saw intensive action on the
front in Moldavia.
After 23 August 1944, when Romania quit the Axis and joined the Allies, all the
German-made medium bombers were joined in the 5th Bomber Group, where the 78th Squadron
served until October 1944, when the remaining 3 He-111H-6s were retreated from the first
line.
In the summer of 1944, ten He-111E-3 transports were bought, but because the front was
close to the supply bases, they only saw more action in September, against the Germans,
when several of them were assigned to the Mixed Transport Squadron.
One He-111H-20 was captured after the events of 23 August and hastily impressed into
service as a VIP transport
The He-111H-3
Picture from "Rumanian Air Force, the prime decade 1938-1947" by
Dénes Bernád, Squadron/Signal Publications, 1999
Wingspan |
22.6 m |
Length |
16.4 m |
Height |
4 m |
Weight (empty) |
8680 kg |
Weight (loaded) |
14000 kg |
Maximum speed at 6000 m |
406 km/h |
Service ceiling |
8501 m |
Range |
1930 km; 2800 km max |
Engine |
2xJunkers Jumo 211D-1 1200 HP |
Machine-guns |
6x7.92 mm |
Guns |
1x20 mm |
Crew |
5 |
Bombs |
2000 kg |
The He-111H-6
Wingspan |
22.6 m |
Length |
16.4 m |
Height |
4 m |
Weight (empty) |
8680 kg |
Weight (loaded) |
14000 kg |
Maximum speed at 6000 m |
406 km/h |
Service ceiling |
8501 m |
Range |
1930 km; 2800 km max |
Engine |
2xJunkers Jumo 211F-1 1350 HP |
Machine-guns |
6x7.92 mm |
Guns |
1x20 mm |
Crew |
5 |
Bombs |
2000 kg |
The He-111H-20
Wingspan |
22.6 m |
Length |
16.4 m |
Height |
4 m |
Weight (empty) |
8680 kg |
Weight (loaded) |
14000 kg |
Maximum speed at 6000 m |
406 km/h |
Service ceiling |
8501 m |
Range |
1930 km; 2800 km max |
Engine |
2xJunkers Jumo 213E-1 1750 HP |
Machine-guns |
6x7.92 mm |
Crew |
2 |
The He-111E-3
Wingspan |
22.6 m |
Length |
17.5 m |
Height |
4 m |
Weight (empty) |
6818 kg |
Weight (loaded) |
9600 kg |
Maximum speed at 4000 m |
420 km/h |
Service ceiling |
7200 m |
Range |
1500 km |
Engine |
2xJJunkers Jumo 211A-1 1000 HP |
Machine-guns |
3x13.2mm & 2x7.92 mm |
Crew |
5 |
Bombs |
1000 kg |
|