After February 1935, each individual prototype aircraft were suffixed with "V" (for
Versuchs German: "prototype") and a unique identification number for an individual
airframe for that design type. So, for example, the
Me 262 V3 was the third prototype of the
Me 262 built. Later in World War II, with such aircraft as the
Heinkel He 162, other letters such as "M" for
Muster (model) replaced the "V" designation, and even the Me 262's own later prototypes began using the letter "S" for such models. Once accepted by
Deutsche Lufthansa or the
Luftwaffe, major variants of the aircraft were suffixed alphabetically with a capital letter. For example, the major variants of the Me 262 were numbered Me 262 A, Me 262 B, and Me 262 C, often using the
German "spelling alphabet" for each major variant's letter. While usually sequential alphabetically, this was not always followed; the
He 111H followed the He 111P, and the
Ju 87R was a long-range (
Reichweite) variant of the Ju 87B. More minor variants were then suffixed numerically, beginning with "-0" for pre-production evaluation versions. Thus, the first batch of Me 262 As supplied by Messerschmitt were designated Me 262 A-0, followed by production versions Me 262 A-1 through to (in the case of this particular aircraft) Me 262 A-5. More minor variants still were given a lower case alphabetical suffix. When the
Me 262 A-1a was to be experimentally equipped with different engines, in this given case the
BMW 003 units, it became the
Me 262 A-1b. Additionally, special conversions of basic types were given the suffix
/R or
/U followed by a number.
R was an abbreviation of
Rüstsatz, a pre-packaged kit of parts that was usually installed on aircraft in the field, as opposed to requiring an aircraft factory to install one. The
Rüstsatz designation was used for modification of basic types in order to be usable for a specific mission task like recon, fighter-bomber or bomber-destroyer.
U was
Umrüst-Bausatz ("conversion kit"), often contracted to
Umbau, and was done with aircraft taken from the assembly line but also in repair workshops with airframes already in use, in any environment equipped at least as well as an aircraft factory would have had. The
Umrüst-Bausatz designation was used for smaller equipment changes like additional boost agents for the engine or a different main armament. For example,
Me 262 A-1a/U3 referred to a small number of the standard Me 262 A-1a fighters that were modified by Messerschmitt as reconnaissance aircraft. The suffix
trop (for
tropen "tropical") was applied to aircraft modified to operate in the hot and dusty North African, Mediterranean and southern Russian theatres, for example, the
Bf 109 F-4 trop. Another notable practice in the German aviation industry of the time was for the "increase" of the three-digit section of an earlier design's RLM airframe number by an increment of one hundred for the earlier design's intended upgrade, or replacement: the intended replacement for the
Messerschmitt Bf 110, for example, was the
Messerschmitt Me 210, and similarly, the
Heinkel aviation firm's entry in the May 1942
Amerika Bomber design competition for a trans-oceanic range strategic bomber for the Luftwaffe, initially to be derived from the earlier
Heinkel He 177A heavy bomber — as one of a
trio of parallel design proposals to fully upgrade the 177A design into a true "four-engined" bomber concept — emerged as an almost totally new design (with heavy
He 219 influence) by later in 1943, receiving the designation
Heinkel He 277 by February 1943, of which no examples were ever completed to airworthy status before its cancellation in April 1944. The best-known case of the "third-digit increase" scheme occurred with arguably the most versatile airframe design in German production, the
Junkers Ju 88 — as successive designs meant to replace the original design went through the airframe numbers 188, 288 and 388, as well as the only four-engined development of the series, the
Junkers Ju 488, through using components of most of the three previous designs. It was also not unknown to re-use an earlier RLM airframe number for an entirely new design, usually when the earlier design bearing a given number had lost a production contract, with other possibilities for the practice coming from the likely desire for disinformation to confuse the
Allies. As an example, this occurred between
the Messerschmitt firm's competitor for the production contract won by Fieseler's
Fieseler Fi 156, having its number reused for the rocket-powered
Messerschmitt Me 163 Komet, and could also occur between two different firms, as with
Messerschmitt's unsuccessful Schnellbomber having its RLM airframe number re-used for
Heinkel's He 162 Spatz (Sparrow) design as the
Volksjäger "emergency" jet fighter contract winner. ==Name changes and new constructors==