Prototype airframes of the Ju 288 and Fw 191 designs were ready mid-1940 but neither the Jumo 222 nor the DB 604 were ready. Both teams decided to power their prototypes with the
BMW 801 radial engine, although with 900 hp less per engine and with the BMW 801 radials themselves barely out of initial development, the planes were seriously underpowered. For comparative purposes, the nearly-equal displacement
Wright Twin Cyclone radial engine was powering the American
B-25 Mitchell twin-engined medium bomber with some 1,270 kW (1,700 hp) apiece of output, even with the B-25 having only a top airspeed of some 440 km/h (273 mph) at a take off weight of 15.9 tonnes (35,000 lb). The first Jumo 222A/B development engines did not arrive until October 1941 and some eleven months later the DB 604 project was cancelled. By May 1942, in desperation, it was suggested that the
Daimler-Benz DB 606 be used instead, even though it was considerably larger and heavier (1.5 tonnes) and was well known to have serious problems. Prototypes of both designs with these engines were ordered, although the Fw 191 was just getting into the air with the BMW 801 radials at this point and the Ju 288 was showing a continual tendency to break its main landing gear on touchdown, partly due to its
undercarriage problems caused by its complex method of stowing the oleo struts during retraction. The RLM had no designs to fill the gap left if Bomber B did not work, even though some minor designs like the
Henschel Hs 130, usually powered with two DB 603 or 605 engines and the
Dornier Do 317, being tried with the same, trouble-prone DB 606 or 610
"welded-together engines" on some of its prototype airframes were also being considered. A slightly improved Ju 88, based on the prototype Ju 88B design, was ordered as the
Ju 188 and several prototypes of stretched versions of existing bomber designs with four engines were also ordered, as with Junkers'
Ju 488 in 1943–44. In June 1943, the T-Amt finally gave up. By this point, even if the Jumo 222 began working reliably—as it had started to do in the summer of 1943—a shortage of the metals needed for its high-temperature alloys meant it would not be able to enter production in any case, with just under 300 development powerplants built. The three-year development period during the war in Europe, which yielded no combat-ready designs, indicated that the Bomber B project was a time-consuming endeavor that produced nothing. This situation also ensured that no alternative designs were available by late 1943, when their existing twin-engine medium bombers, mostly developed in the mid-to-late 1930s, began to become hopelessly outdated. With the failure of Bomber B, four engine versions of the He 177, which had first been officially considered as early as October 1941 with the "He 177H" paper-only derivative, the ancestor of the
Heinkel He 274 high-altitude design project, were considered as replacements for the mainline variants of the He 177A through most of 1943. The trio of completed
DB 603-powered
He 177B prototypes would start their flight tests by the end of 1943. Production of the B-series He 177s by
Arado Flugzeugwerke, the prime subcontractor for Heinkel's heavy bombers, was never undertaken as the Arado firm had priority for its jet-powered
Arado Ar 234 bomber and by early July 1944, four months before Arado would be able to commence license-built construction of the He 177B-5, the
Luftwaffe began the
Emergency Fighter Program. ==Notes==