No, not at all.
Heydrich was a frightening man, possessed of a powerful intellect and ambition, and seemingly free of all moral scruples, and yet, he could be moved to tears by a piece of music. A fascinating character, and one who would surely have eventually usurped or replaced Himmler, whose position in the Reich was fixed more by his unswerving loyalty to Hitler, than by his personal ability or competence.
As it is, it seems very likely to me that Himmler made sure that Heydrich wouldn’t recover from his wounds, sustained when Czech patriots ambushed him as part of the ill-fated Operation Anthropoid. Himmler’s personal physician went to see Heydrich, who was recovering in hospital; next thing you know, Heydrich slips into a coma and dies. Very suspicious, and I suspect Himmler took advantage of the situation to his own ends.
In terms of disgust, you’re probably thinking of Oskar Dirlewanger, an SS officer who was so bad even the Nazis hated him.
He was put in charge of a unit comprised largely of former poachers and set to work on anti-partisan action. In reality, this was just an excuse for him and his men to engage in the most brutal atrocities imaginable, all done while pissed as parrots.
He’s the origin of the soap made from Jews story, incidentally; a rumour went round that Dirlewanger had chopped a man up and boiled him with horse meat to make soap. Other among his pastimes included sexual torture of Jewish women, injecting them with poison so they convulsed naked to death while he and his friends watched and laughed, rape and murder of civilians, looting writ large and basically terrorising people in a way that Genghis Khan would have been embarrassed by.
He managed to survive the war, but was beaten to death in Allied custody when it was realised who he was. Stone cold psychopath, and yet another Nazi opportunist, like Mengele, for whom the war was an opportunity to live out their basest fantasies under the smokescreen of some sort of imagined racial imperative.