Fw 190 A-7

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The Focke-Wulf Fw 190 A‑7 was introduced in late 1943 as an incremental but important development of the A‑series, designed to give the Luftwaffe a sturdier fighter against American heavy bombers. It represented a transitional step between the earlier A‑5/A‑6 and the heavily armed A‑8, combining improved firepower with modest refinements in equipment and protection.

History and development :

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By 1943 the Luftwaffe faced a new challenge: the steady arrival of American four‑engined bombers over Europe. Earlier Fw 190 variants had proven formidable against RAF Spitfires and medium bombers, but the growing threat of massed daylight raids demanded heavier armament and better survivability. The A‑7 was conceived as a response to this situation. Entering production in November 1943, it retained the rugged BMW 801D‑2 radial engine of the A‑6 but introduced a revised weapons layout: two 13 mm MG 131 heavy machine guns mounted above the engine cowling replaced the lighter MG 17s, while the wings carried four 20 mm MG 151/20 cannons. This gave the aircraft a powerful punch capable of shredding bomber formations, while still keeping it agile enough to contest Allied escorts.

Structurally, the A‑7 was very similar to the A‑6, with only minor changes in canopy fittings and equipment. It could carry bombs or drop tanks, allowing it to serve as a fighter‑bomber when required, but its primary role was interception. In service, the A‑7 was flown by units such as JG 26 in northern France, where pilots like Adolf “Addi” Glunz used it to score victories against both bombers and fighters. Glunz himself flew the A‑7 during 1943, claiming dozens of kills, including heavy bombers, without ever being shot down.

Performance remained solid at low and medium altitudes, with a top speed of about 605 km/h (376 mph) and a range of roughly 800 km, but like all radial‑engined Fw 190s it struggled above 6,000 meters. This limitation meant that while the A‑7 was effective against bomber streams at moderate altitudes, it was increasingly vulnerable to high‑flying escorts such as the P‑51 Mustang. Production numbers were relatively limited compared to the later A‑8, which became the most numerous variant, but the A‑7 marked an important evolutionary step: it was the first Fw 190 to adopt the heavier MG 131s, setting the pattern for subsequent models.

Focke-Wulf Fw 190 A-7 from the JG26 stationed at Boissy-le-Bois in the North of France between Paris and Rouen, 1944.

art Images of Fw 190 A-7 / image of the fw 190 A-7 with 270l fuel modification :

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Specifications
General Characteristics :

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Crew: 1 (pilot)

Length: 9.10 m (29 ft 10 in)

Wingspan: 10.51 m (34 ft 6 in)

Height: 3.95 m (12 ft 11 in)

Empty Weight: 4,000 kg (8,820 lb)

Loaded Weight: 4,900 kg (10,800 lb)

Powerplant: 1 × BMW 801D‑2 radial engine, 1,700 hp

Performance Maximum Speed: 605 km/h (376 mph) at 6,000 m

Range: 800 km (500 miles) combat radius

Service Ceiling: 10,600 m (34,775 ft)

Rate of Climb: 15 m/s (3,000 ft/min)

Armament :

Machine Guns: 2 × 13 mm MG 131 (mounted above the engine)

Cannons: 4 × 20 mm MG 151/20 (two in wing roots, two in outer wings)

Optional Kits: A‑7/R2: 2 × MK 108 30 mm cannons (outer wings) A‑7 “Doppelreiter”: 270 L slipper tanks on upper wings

Ordnance Options: Up to 500 kg (1,100 lb) of bombs or drop tanks for extended range

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Sources :

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1- Special drawing

Screenshot 2026-05-27 015640

2–Aera Detail 6
Screenshot 2026-05-27 015836

3-Wiki Focke-Wulf Fw 190 - Wikipedia

4- Focke-Wulf FW 190 Vol. 1 (Monografie 01) by Krzysztof Janowicz

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Thanks for Reading !

in liveeee

8 Likes

More WW2!! 💙

3 Likes

Good to see the A-7, would probably be a good transitional aircraft at 4.7 or 5.0 between the A-5 and A-8.

Unfortunately, the slipper tanks (and drop tanks in general for props) are pretty much useless for Air RB, outside of maybe enduring confrontations, if those ever became a semi-permanent fixture.

I do wish that the slipper tanks for this and the Spitfires, along with drop tanks for other aircraft are added as modifications at some point for an EC mode with way bigger maps and long match timers; though it would be nice to have the option anyways at the very least as a sort of cool factor.

2 Likes

true would be awesome if mr snail add it as optional modification !

more images for the Fuel modification :
Focke-Wulf Fw 190A-7, W.Nr. 380394, with 275 litre Doppelreiter (slipper) tanks. Location and date unknown
i found images from facebook:

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While not much use in sim either, do keep in mind that enduring confrontation IS a permanent fixture in air simulator battles.

However, I can’t see any reason to take more than 45 minutes’ worth of fuel in sim. Maybe I could see drop tanks being used so that you only take 30 minutes’ worth of fuel, take a drop tank which you drop once you are at a frontline or A point on something like Denmark or Sinai.

Also, this is my customary “please come play sim” post: please give sim a try! You don’t need expensive gear and learning it takes only a few hours of conscious and mindful practice of basic flying principles (take off, land, coordinated flight, spin recovery, falling leaf maneuver). You don’t need expensive gear either - give my controls a try and you’ll do just fine: WT Live // Controls by RunaDacino.

Only place my controls give me grief is in TSS/Duelling due to needing better rudder control but for typical EC flying it’s a non-issue.

1 Like

I know about sim, unfortunately I am one of those people who get migraines, and for some reason sim mode and other simulator games set it off, meaning sim is much less accessible to me.

(My guess is the look controls, which are very disorienting with manual control from a mouse or hat switch, and I don’t have the income to just drop money on a VR head set or head-tracker just to test it out. )

Ever tried this?:

Maxalt (Branded Rizatriptan) 10 mg Tablets - Migraine | 123 Meds.

I can highly recommend it!

1 Like

Lol. I’m American, first off; second, I can’t take that specific medication because I’m on SSRIs and have a heart condition; bad side effects. Thirdly, the medication for migraines I CAN take cost $700 per case of 10 tablets (WITH INSURANCE)

RIP Me.

1 Like

Sorry to hear about the surrounding issues - and also that you guys get off ripped by big pharma.

Playing a few matches sim with the risk of paying 70 bucks for a potential migraine attack would require a perfect product like a Manurhin MR 73 - but wt offers the quality of a Chinese quad bike (my brother-in-law bought one and scrapped it within 2 months😂).

Take care!

1 Like