By the end of World War II, some 200 of these small, motorless,
three-bladed autogyros had been built for Focke Achgelis by the Weser
Flugzeugwerke at Delmenhorst. This rotorcraft was flown as a kite towed by a
submarine from a cable 60 to 150 metres in length. The collapsible assembly was
made of steel tubes, and just behind the pilot's seat was a pylon to support the
rotor. The latter's hub was of the simplest possible autogyro type with flapping
and drag hinges. The rotor was set in motion by a rope or by hand alone, if
there was sufficient wind blowing. To bring the autogyro back, the towing rope
was pulled in by winch, and when the aircraft landed the rotor was brought to a
standstill with a brake.
Training to handle this autogyro was given in a wind tunnel at
Ghalais Meudon in France. An original Fa 330 is still preserved in the
French Air Museum.
P.Lambermont "Helicopters and Autogyros of the
World", 1958

Early in 1942, Focke Achgelis at Laupheim were asked to design
a simple single-seat gyro kite which surfaced U-boats could tow aloft to extend
the observer's range of view. At this time, the U-boats were being forced away
from the dense shipping areas around the coasts of Britain and the United States
to hunt further out into the Atlantic where there was greater safety, but where
their low position in the water made searching for, and shadowing, the
spread-out convoys a very difficult task unless a bosun's chair could be
attached to the periscope.
The gyro kite, designated Fa 330 Bachstelze, was seen as some
sort of solution and ingenuity was shown in its design. The machine could be
easily assembled or dismantled in a few minutes and stowed through a U-boat
hatch. The body structure consisted of two main steel tubes, one horizontal and
one vertical. On the horizontal tube was mounted the pilot's seat with controls
and a small instrument panel, and landing skids, and, at the rear end, a simple
tailplane, fin and rudder. The vertical tube, behind the pilot's seat, formed a
pylon for the rotor.
The freely-rotating rotor had three blades, each of which
consisted of a tubular-steel spar with plywood ribs and thin plywood and fabric
covering. Each rotor blade had flapping and dragging hinges with adjustable
dampers. Blade pitch could only be adjusted, with screws, on the ground before
take-off. The best results were normally obtained with the blade pitch as coarse
as possible, although starting was then more difficult. In addition to the
flapping and dragging dampers, there were also inter blade connecting cables and
blade-droop cables, the latter being attached to the blades and to an inverted
tripod extending upward from the rotor hub. The rotor axis was slightly ahead of
the machine's c of G, and the towing cable attachment point was slightly ahead
and below the c of G.
Movement of the control column tilted the rotor head in the
appropriate direction for longitudinal and lateral control, and operation of the
rudder pedals gave directional control. The tailplane was not adjustable. The Fa
330 was launched from the deck of the surface-running U-boat by giving the
machine a slight backwards tilt once the rotor was revolving. If there was a
wind, a push by hand sufficed to get the rotor moving, but otherwise a pull-rope
was wound around a grooved drum on the rotor hub. In case this rope did not slip
off when the rotor started, an over-ride mechanism was fitted.
Pilot training was given in a wind-tunnel at Chalais-Meudon
near Paris, and the kite was very easy to operate and could be flown hands-off
for up to 10 seconds. It is believed that two or three crew members of each Fa
330 equipped U-boat learned to fly it.
Having 150m of towing cable available, it was possible to
maintain an altitude of 120m thereby extending the possible range of vision very
usefully to 40km compared with only 8km on the U-boat deck. In an emergency, the
pilot, who had telephone contact with the U-boat, pulled a lever over his head
which jettisoned the rotor and released the towing cable. As the rotor flew away
and up, it pulled out a parachute mounted behind the pylon. At this stage, the
pilot, attached to the parachute, unfastened his safety belt to allow the
remainder of the Fa 330 to fall into the sea while he made a normal parachute
descent. In a normal descent, the kite was winched in to the deck and, upon
landing, the rotor brake applied.
Although designed by Focke Achgelis, the Fa 330 was built by
the Weser-Flugzeugbau at Hoykenkamp, near Bremen. This particular factory
manufactured Focke-Wulf Fw 190 fuselages, a few Fa 223 helicopters and about two
hundred Fa 330s. Variations made in the basic design were an increase in rotor
diameter to 8.53m on late machines and the option of adding simple landing
wheels to the skids. There was also a proposal, designated Fa 336, to build a
powered version of the Fa 330 with landing wheels and a 60hp engine.
The principal U-boat class to use the Fa 330 was the
ocean-going Type IX which had a surface displacement of 740 tons, a surface
speed of 18kt and a submerged speed of 7.5kt. Among the operational U-boats of
the Kriegsmarine, only the Type IX-D/2 supply U-boat had a faster surface speed
of 19.2kt, and this type possibly used the Fa 330 also. Little is known of
actual operations with the kite, or how many were issued, but there is no doubt
that the use of the gyro kite was unpopular, because, in an emergency, the
U-boat had either to delay its dive in order to pick up the kite's pilot, or
dive and hope to pick him up later. The advantages of a self-propelled machine
seem clear. The first Fa 330s were probably issued in mid 1942 but were used in
the South Atlantic only on rare occasions. From June 1942, the harried U-boat
forces swung their main effort from the Atlantic to the Gulf of Aden and the
Indian Ocean, where more use of the gyro kite was made. U-861, for example, used
her kite on a patrol in the Indian Ocean off Madagascar. However, the new
theatre of operations provided opportunities to exchange the Fa 330 for, in the
eyes of the commander, something more usable. At Penang, Malaya, the Japanese
had permitted the establishment of a U-boat base in the summer of 1943, and it
was here that an Fa 330 was exchanged for a small Japanese floatplane. On
another occasion, at ihe Surabaya (Java) U boat base, a gyro kite was exchanged
for a Japanese floatplane to supplement the two Arado reconnaissance aircraft
which kept watch over the harbour.
More Fa 330s survive today than any other examples of German
rotary-wing aircraft, not only because they were built in by far the greatest
numbers, but probably also because their small size does not make great demands
on valuable preservation space.
J.R.Smith, Antony L. Kay "German Aircraft of the
Second World War", 1972
Technical data for Fa-330
Rotor diameter: 7.32m, length: 4.4m, empty
weight: 83kg, tow speed: 40km/h, min speed - 25km/h