X PLANES OF THE THIRD REICH SERIES An Illustrated Series on Germany's
Experimental Aircraft of World War II Powered by a single HeS 001A
turbojet engine, Woldemer Voigt, who had artfully crafted the Me 262,
ran out of time before he could make the 1101's design "jell" as he
struggled to produce the world's first variable wing sweep, ultra light
weight interceptor, and armed with Germany's state-of-the art
wing-mounted air-to-air guided missiles. Post-war, Bell Aircraft sought
to carry on Voigt's planning and resolved to make the complicated
mathematics of light weight, variable wing sweep and wing-mounted
weapons come together in a single aircraft design. The result was the
Bell X-5, and it too, was disappointing. This photographic history of
the Me P.1101 by David Myhra features mostly previously unpublished
photos, three-view line drawings, and stunningly realistic photos of a
1101 scale model.