Info Eduard 2021 07
Info Eduard 2021 07
Info Eduard 2021 07
ISSUE 137
CONTENTS
EDITORIAL 4
HISTORY
GELBE EINS
7
WILDE SAU: a Short history
WILDE SAU: Stories
HOW I MET ZDENEK SEKYRKA
BRASSIN 60
PHOTO-ETCHED SETS 74
BIGED 82
RELEASE
July 2021
85
BUILT 86
Spitfire Story: Tally Ho! 1/48
Tempest Mk.V Series 2 1/48
Bf 109G-6 early version 1/48
ON APPROACH
August 2021
90
TAIL END CHARLIE 113
OOMBREE AGO
Significantly better luck was experienced by the crew to the
right of Baker. Serialed 43-38161, it was the most recently built
airplane of the three, and had thirteen combat missions under
its belt. Most of these were flown by a crew commanded by
Lt. Raymond L. Hieronimus. Both of the aforementioned crews
also flew a mission each in this aircraft. The bomber carried the
name ‘Oombree Ago’. Raymond Hieronimus was at the controls
of this airplane on this occasion, and his crew accounted for four
destroyed and one damaged enemy aircraft. Tail gunner S/Sgt.
Marvin D. Cooper: ‘Six e/a were attacked up at 6 o´clock low.
They came straight in and at 600 yards I began firing at the lead
E/A. It was a straight shot with no deflection and smoke began
to come from his left wing. He came in to 300 yards without
wavering where the plane suddenly exploded and disintegrated
in mid air.’
Top turret gunner Sgt. Carlyle E. Miller caught a different
Fw 190: ‘A single E/A came in at 7 o’clock as I was trying to get
another E/A on our right wing. I swung around to 7 o’clock and
started firing at a range of 200 yards. I saw smoke come from the
engine and the E/A fell off to 8 o’clock low and exploded…’
Pilot Raymond L. Heironimus recounted several days after the
battle: ‘Diving out of the sun the Germans attacked... our lead
Fortress fell, its wing tips burning... the bomber to the right did
a wing-over, falling up to pieces... another blew up under us...
those boys were old friends of mine... we saw only half dozen
YELLOW ‘1’
The last aircraft that is within the realm of this article, and is The final moments of Karl Kleemann’s flight was observed from
an integral part of the boxart in question, is Yellow ‘1’, flown by another angle by a student named Dieter Hertzsch: ‘…suddenly,
Ogefr. Karl Kleemann. This Fw 190 had the W.Nr. 681343 assigned a burning German fighter appeared only several meters above
to it, and along with the other Sturmbocks flown by II.(Sturm)/ the houses on the west side of Neumarkt headed in our direction.
JG 4 at this time, it was manufactured by Fiesler at Kassel. He was able to coax it back up one more time, and got directly
The use of the tactical number ‘1’ by a regular pilot within a unit over the brewery. That was followed by a horrible noise coming
was unorthodox. It was usually reserved for the Staffel CO, but it from the direction of the hospital. We ran to the impact point be-
was not a rule. side the hospital in a field, but there was no help we could offer.
There was a large crater clearly visible, a piece of the airplane
Just after the Sturmbock aircraft attacked the 100th BG forma-
some distance away, and a little beyond that, the pilot. Imme-
tion, 339th Fighter Group P-51s appeared, and immediately took
diately before us was the wreckage of the plane, completely
on their German opponents. The R2 modification to the Fw 190A-8
deformed. The twenty-three-year-old pilot from Bad Cannstadt,
made it a lethal weapon against the formations of four-engined
Obgefr. Karl Klee-
heavy bombers. Notably, the 30mm Mk 108 cannon with explosive
mann, could not
ammunition, was capable of cutting apart the ‘dump trucks’ or
be helped…’
‘fat cars’, as the German fighter pilots nicknamed the American
bombers. The other side of the coin was that the heavy weaponry The official
and, as the case may have been, extra armor, made the Fw 190s report that was
somewhat less capable dogfighters, in cases where these situati- released by the
ons arose with the escorting fighters. This was the main reason police gives a so-
for most of the Fw 190s diving out of the picture after completing mewhat more pre-
their first attack, head for the cover of clouds, and make their cise accounting of
way back to their base. Fights typically took place from 26,000 the details. The
feet down to near ground level and from the Czech-German bor- typically police
der northward in line with the town of Chemnitz. It was in this expressionism is
area that II.(Sturm)/JG 4 lost at least six of its Sturmbock fighters worthy of note,
to the Mustangs. One of these was the plane flown by Karl Klee- same as the al-
mann. The burning aircraft appeared low over the centre of Thum, most obligatory
chased by a pair of P-51s. With a sharp turn, he bypassed a church distortion of the
steeple, and crashed in a field immediately behind the fence of fact that Klee-
the city’s hospital garden. Annemarie Kraus was a witness, and mann was shot
recalled later: ‘I was standing in the garden with my grandmo- down by American
ther, when a low-flying aircraft overflew Thum from the direc- fighters. Accor-
tion of Annaberg. Then, another one flew over, lower than the ding to the report,
first, and it was trailing smoke. It avoided the church bell tower, and to the con-
and headed in our direction. We lived to the left of the hospital. trary, it was Klee-
And then we heard a massive explosion. We ran to the location of mann who was the
the impact, as did our neighbors. They didn’t allow us kids near antagonist, and
the actual crashsite. The dead pilot was still in the seat…’ his death was an
aerial mishap:
‘On September 11th, 1944, between 1150h and 1230h, several It was also possible to determine that he belonged to 7.Sturm/
enemy formations flew over Thum. At approximately 1210h, se- Jagdgeschwader 4. This incident has been reported to Air Control
veral low flying enemy aircraft appeared, which were chased and at Chemnitz. According to the information supplied by Kassenin-
shot at by German fighters. One German fighter flew from the spektor Finenkel in Thum, it was requested that the body be
southeast and went into an easterly turn over the square in Thum taken to the mortuary in Thum. The crash site will be guarded
at a height of some 50m. He took on a direction towards the hos- until the wreckage is cleared.’
pital in Thum, and at around 20m from the building he was only
about 10m above the ground and dropping, flying between two Karl Kleemann was buried on September 16th, 1944 at 1530h in
trees in the hospital garden. It is likely that the aircraft clipped the ‘hero section’ of the cemetery in Thum. Annemarie Kraus also
the fence of the hospital, forcing the propeller into a potato recalls those days: ‘The pilot’s picture was displayed for a long
field about six meters past the fence, flipping the aircraft onto time in the window of the Gensel bookstore. He was buried with
its back. After the crash, a plume of smoke could be seen and full honors in the cemetery in Thum. Us kids were present, and
an explosion heard. With that, the aircraft disintegrated. The we observed the ceremony from the cemetery wall…’ The cere-
engine lay 30m to the right of the wreck. The remaining pieces mony was also attended by a delegation from the non-com officer
of the plane, including ammunition, lay strewn about. As a result school in Annaberg, and according to the town of Thum records,
of the impact or the explosion, the pilot was found 110m behind two members of Kleemann’s Staffel were also present.
the impact site. He was still belted to his seat. The parachute
lay unopened beside the pilot. His logbook and other documents,
along with his pistol and field cap, were nearby. The fuselage
of the airplane was a burned out wreck. The pilot’s body was THE STORY DOESN’T END THERE
also burned. The flames on him were put out with a portable
extinguisher, but there were no vital signs anymore. There were The crash of the young pilot in Thum, same as countless other
obvious signs of trauma to the legs, the right shoulder, and face. pilots, was forgotten over time and the memory faded in the
The pilot had an identification stamp on his person. It carried the minds of the witnesses to the event and most young people never
number 542 64817, and from his logbook, it was apparent that he even learned about the event. Official communist doctrine in East
was Obergefreiter Karl Kleemann, born on November 10th, 1923, Germany dictated that when it came to a Second World War Ge-
in Bad Cannstadt. rman pilot dying on German territory, it was too uncomfortable
to not have it swept under the rug or alibistically have the facts the Air Battle Over the Ore Mountains, Frank Retzlaff and Ronny
massaged to fit the needs of the government. It is possible to Gehra. These two have co-operated with us on other occasions.
not use the death of the young pilot for propaganda purposes to They have been the main driving force behind the idea of erecting
the fulfillment of an ideological agenda and the turning around the monument to Karl Kleemann and all victims of the air battle
of horrors that Germany and her Nazism brought to the world. over the Ore Mountains. The memorial came to fruition thanks
On the contrary – it can be used as a reminder of the types of to the understanding and support of the Thum City Council and
horrors that that regime and its insanity brought the world, inc- many local elements. The unveiling of the memorial, as a tribute
luding to her own civilian population and members of her armed to a World War Two German pilot who lost his life on German soil
forces as well. However, such themes are extremely difficult to and a reminder of the vicious horrors and senseless loss caused
contemplate for many people in Germany to this day and are very by war, occurred on September 8th, 2018. It was unveiled by two
much a taboo, and it is, unfortunately, much easier for them to children from both former enemies, a German girl and a Czech
simply close their eyes to the reality of the past than it is to boy, in a symbolic gesture of the need to reconcile. The flags of
use the past as a learning experience from which much can, and both sides of the conflict swayed over the monument – American
should, be taken. and German, and along with them, thanks to German – Czech
co-operation on the project and the involvement of the museum
Under the conditions imposed by a society that hides from its that also pays tribute to Obgefr. Kleemann who died in combat
past, it seems unbelievable that there would be an attempt to over the region, the Czech flag. The site where the monument
erect a memorial to Karl Kleemann, who died in Thum on Septem- is located, has been named ‘Kleemann Eck’ (Kleemann’s Corner)
ber 11th, 1944. The idea was brought forth by two locals, from
our view, two cross-border fellow collaborators of the Museum of Frank and Ronny managed a pretty much unimaginable feat –
unveil a monument to
a Second World War Ge-
rman pilot in Germany,
and in the process con-
vince the local powers
that be of the idea and
bring them on board, and
all this under anti-war
and anti-Nazi sentiment
with no political motives
either way. Last, but not
least, they also were able
to track down Kleeman’s
family and co-ordinate
their efforts with them.
And with that, they were
able to add another pie-
ce to the mosaic of the
Air Battle Over the Ore
Mountains of September
11th, 1944, which should
not be so easily forgotten.
Sources:
Archives of the Museum of Air Battle
over the Ore Mountains on September
11th, 1944 in Kovarska, Czech Republic
City Archives Thum
Artworks: Piotr Forkasiewicz
NEIL PAGE
was easy to ask too much of the DB 605. of 2. Staffel, at the controls of ‘Red 7’ looked on as his silence was broken by the sound of a DB 605 engine,
"..On the way back home the engine blew and started target veered out of formation trailing a thick plume throttled back, flying a landing approach. A Me 109
a fire. Oil came out and so there was no chance to do of black smoke in its wake. After Gfr. Hans Dahmen hove into view and touched down.
anything. I just kept my cool and talked to my control (2. Staffel) and Fhr. Otto Leisner (1. Staffel) had each
officer, who said he knew where I was, and I bailed claimed a Boeing destroyed, the German pilots once Moments later, slipstream screaming across the
out..." again clashed with Mustangs of the 357th FG, now open ports of their wing machine guns, around fif-
joined by P-51s of the 55th FG. After his 3. Staffel teen P-51s of the 355th FG - the 'Steeple Morden
Another 10./JG 300 pilot was Kurt Welter, a contro- Schwarm had been scattered, Jung's G-14 was cha- Strafers' – fell on the 'airfield' at Borkheide, The
versial figure who went on to lead his own Me 262 sed by four Mustangs. In the dogfight that followed, P-51s had ‘discovered’ the airfield having followed
Kommando against the Mosquitoes of the LSNF af- one of the P 51s flew in front of him - a short burst in the new arrival – a JG 3 machine attempting to
ter his successes with 10./ JG 300. In one account he from his three guns resulted only in the jamming of put down after combat. Unleashing a series of firing
claimed to have brought down a Mosquito after colli- the engine-mounted cannon. Managing to get into passes that lasted some ten minutes, the ‘Strafers’
ding with it, an event apparently corroborated by the a good position for a second time, Robert Jung un- attack sent columns of thick black smoke billowing
Mosquito crew who filed a combat report for almost leashed a burst from his cowl machine guns and up into the air. In the chaos and confusion some of
exactly the same place and time - they reported that saw his rounds explode against a P-51’s wing, which the Messerschmitts attempted to taxi away under
a Bf 109 rammed them and took off parts of their appeared to catch fire. The Mustang rolled slowly the cover of the trees, while crews scrambled for
wing so they lost control temporarily before being inverted and went down vertically. Despite the proxi- safety. As the Mustangs departed the scene the re-
able to fly home… mity of the ground, Jung did not have time to observe sults were spectacular -virtually half the entire air-
his victim crash. He himself had taken hits fired craft complement of I./ JG 300 had gone up in flames.
While the wilde Sau had been relegated to no more by one of his pursuers and had to attempt a dead At least nineteen Bf 109 G-14/AS fighters with fuel
than a night-time sideshow on the fringes of the stick landing, putting his “Yellow 3” down gear up in tanks and magazines recently replenished for a sor-
activities of JG 300, by day the Geschwader faced up
a field. The Bf 109 G 14/AS flipped over as it struck tie had been destroyed. At Jagddivsion HQ there was
to the huge numbers of American aircraft that domi-
the ground. The concussed pilot was pulled clear of consternation. Generalleutnant Beppo Schmid, CO
nated the skies of the Reich..
the aircraft and transported to the nearest hospital. of I. Jagdkorps, accompanied by Kommodore Dahl,
If a victory claim was filed, then it was not confirmed. arrived at Borkheide to inspect the damage. The
Robert Jung was an enthusiastic 17-year old young
Kommandeur I./ JG 300 Hptm. Stamp only narrowly
glider pilot when he was accepted for fighter pilot
A few weeks later I./JG 300 moved to Borkheide, an avoided disciplinary sanctions. In fact he would soon
training in the Luftwaffe during 1942. After attending
isolated village some thirty miles or so south of Ber- depart the Gruppe.
the Luftkriegsschule (War College) and then being
accepted for Jagdfliegerausbildung (fighter pilot lin comprising a handful of houses and a large open
training) he was posted in August 1944 as a youthful expanse of "heath-land" of sandy soil, grassy tufts These JG 300 losses were soon replaced as the first
Fahnenjunker-Unteroffizier (officer candidate) to the and felled pine fir stumps. The pilots and ground Bf 109 G-10s arrived at I./ JG 300 during November
leading 'all-weather' Reich Defence Geschwader JG crews 'lived' in underground log bunkers - a "fore- 1944. Production of the latest DB 605-powered Bf 109
300 and as he put it, ‘.. eager to arrive at the front taste of the coffin" according to one pilot- and spent sub-type the G-10 had started in October 1944 and by
before it was too late.’. (‘inständig hoffend nicht zu most of their days at cockpit readiness. The field February 1945 Erla had produced over 1500 exam-
spät zu kommen’). Just twenty hours after his arri- was surrounded by pines on three sides, in theo- ples. The G-10 had been conceived as a light fast fi-
val at JG 300, Jung’s youthful illusions about life in ry difficult to spot from the air - and by marauding ghter, perhaps the fastest of all the Gustavs, capable
a front-line fighter unit had been shattered - every P-51s. On November 2 the order to go to cockpit rea- of 700 km/h at 7,000 metres. In the fuselage, behind
sortie was a fight for survival against hopeless odds. diness had already come through and a deathly si- the 400 litre main fuel tank was a 115 litre MW in-
Jung later recalled that the JG 300 pilots invariably lence had descended over the field. The pilots found stallation for boosted takeoff and emergency power.
‘..prayed for clouds..’ themselves alone with their thoughts, seated at the The cowl MGs featured a new aerodynamic cover,
controls of their Messerschmitts. Mechanics stood dispensing with the ugly Beulen and both the tall tail
September 13, 1944 was one of those days. There on the wings, ready to wind up the heavy inertia and the tall tail-wheel could be fitted for better stabi-
was huge American aerial activity over Germany - starters of the Daimler-Benz engines. Suddenly the lity and visibility on the ground.
well over 1,000 US bombers and hundreds of figh-
ters were launched at various targets. It was 10h35
when the green flare signalling the order to take off
rose into the sky over the airfield at Esperstedt. The
Messerschmitt 109s of I./JG 300 took off behind the
Bf 109 G-14/AS “double chevron” of Ritterkreuzträger
Hptm. Gerd Stamp. The Gruppe could barely assem-
ble twenty combat-ready aircraft, the last of Stamp’s
machines. This small formation was vectored over
the Halle-Leipzig sector, briefly clashed with 357th
FG Mustangs and then closed on several boxes of
B-17s between Eisenach and Coburg at around 12h15.
Opening up on a B-17 Oblt. Manfred Dieterle, Kapitän
But not even the arrival of the Bf 109 G-10s could halt
the massacre of JG 300’s pilots. On January 14, 1945
during another huge raid over Berlin, Jagdgeschwa-
der 300 and 301 lost at least 90 fighters and 68 pilots,
either dead, wounded or missing in the space of thir-
ty minutes! For Jagdgeschwader 300, aircraft losses,
amounting to at least sixty machines, approached
50% of those committed during the course of the day.
The Staffelführer of 9./ JG 300 Klaus Grothues was
shot down and killed flying Bf 109 G 14/AS “Yellow 2”
north of Rathenow. Credited with 17 victories he was
the last ace of III. Gruppe. His disappearance, coming
as it did one month after the loss of Lt. Otto Köhler -
along with the huge losses in combat that day - had of refugees were heading for Dresden. Viewed from 300. Both these units were shuttling around various
a profound impact on his comrades. the sky these columns of civilians clogging the roads airfields in southern Germany. Their aircraft – essen-
painted a picture of terrible suffering. The Russians tially Erla built G-10s and Bf 109 K-4s - all featured
In late January 1945 I./JG 300 along with the other were everywhere. We flew strafing attacks with va- the blue-white-blue JG 300 fuselage bands introdu-
Gruppen of JG 300 were rushed to the Eastern Front. riable results - low level firing passes against tanks, ced at the turn of the year 1944-45. Brought together
With the Russians within striking distance of Berlin vehicles and infantrymen was no easy task.. " under the banner of Jagdgruppe 300, a short black
there were more pressing concerns than intercep- Gruppe bar was painted over the fuselage bands.
ting bombers and dog-fighting P-51s as Lt. Fried- In March 1945 with just a handful of serviceable air- Ultimately little is known about Jagdgruppe 300 - it
rich-Wilhelm ‘Timo’ Schenk, Staffelführer of 2./JG craft and pilots remaining, I./ JG 300 was disbanded. was 'officially' established through the amalgamati-
300 recalled ; The young and inexperienced pilots in its ranks were on of II. and III./JG 300 in April 1945 and is mentioned
encouraged by ‘Hajo’ Herrmann – the creator of the in a Luftflottenkommando 6 ORB dated May 3, 1945.
" Liegnitz - February 1945. The Russians had crossed wilde Sau - to ‘volunteer’ for the ramming mission to Ordered to Ainring and from there on to Prague with
the Oder near Steinau. (..) When the weather allo- be flown by the Sonderkommando Elbe. The more stated diversionary airfields in Czech territory, their
wed, we flew uninterrupted sorties, up to eight a day experienced pilots had already been posted for jet pilots flew some of the last – and perhaps most ho-
for some of us. The fields and roads between the training - Eberhard Gzik had gone to 9./EJG 2 in No- peless - Luftwaffe sorties of the war.
villages were teeming with thousands of people, wo- vember 1944 and flew with the former Kommandeur
men, children, the elderly, all attempting to flee the of I./ JG 300 Gerhard Stamp in the Me 262 Komman-
Soviet invasion in the bitter cold. Most of the columns do Stamp. The remaining pilots went to III. and IV./ JG
Jagdgruppe Herrmann
Stab/Versuchskommando Herrmann was officially activated on June
26, 1943 at Deelen, the Netherlands. The unit was composed of ex-
perienced pilots, largely of former transport and bomber pilots with
expertise in blind flying techniques. The aircraft were borrowed from
JG 1 and JG 11. Herrmann’s unit was based at Bonn-Hangelar and re-
ceived its baptism of fire during a raid on Cologne on the night of the
July 3 and 4, 1943. Herrmann’s pilots brought down ten British aircraft
for the loss of one of their own. Herrmann himself was credited with
one kill. After the use of Window over Hamburg, they began to be
considered the only effective combat element at the disposal of the
Luftwaffe. The tactic, that involved interception without the use of
ground control or airborne radar, where the fighters roamed at will
and wreaked havoc among enemy bombers in any given operational
area, much like wild boars, was dubbed ‘Wilde Sau’ (Wild Boar).
The evaluation unit’s designation was changed to Jagdgruppe Herr-
mann in July 1943, and it was integrated into II./JG 1. I./JG 300 was
activated in August 1943. In the first phase of its existence, the unit
shared aircraft with day fighter units II./JG 11 and III./JG 11. Another
Hans-Joachim „Hajo“ Herrmann two units, JG 301 and JG 302, were established later, during the fall
of 1943, but the shortage of new aircraft dictated that only one Grup-
(1913 – 2010) pe of each of these Jagdgeschwader units had their own equipment.
Hans-Joachim „Hajo“ Herrmann (1913 - 2010) originally worked as The remaining groups (Gruppen), dubbed ‘Aufsitzer’, or, less flatterin-
a policeman, then joined the army and in August 1935 was recruited gly, ‘Boar’s Ass’, were forced to continue to rely on borrowed aircraft
to the Luftwaffe with the rank of Leutnant. He first served with from day fighter units. All three Wilde Sau units, JG 300, 301 and 302,
Fliegergruppe Nordhausen and in 1936 was assigned as a bomber were, under Hermann’s leadership, integrated into the Jagddivision
pilot to 9./KG 253. In August of that year he was deployed in the 30 and were subordinate to Luftwaffebefehlshaber Mitte.
Spanish Civil War. He flew with the Legion Condor in that theatre
until April 1937 and was awarded the Spanish Cross in Gold with
Swords. Later in the ranks of his Geschwader, renamed KG 4, he Wilde Sau concept
took part as commander of the 7th Staffel in the attack against Po-
land, Norway and France. At the end of May 1940 he was shot down Bf 109G-5 and G-6 fighters that were tasked with Wilde Sau missions
over Dunkirk. In September 1940 he received the Honor Goblet „For carried minimal modifications for night flying. Pilots had to be spe-
Special Achievement in the Air War“ and in October he was awarded cialized in blind flying and in firing at targets at night. To prevent
the Knight‘s Cross. In 1941 he also served briefly with KG 54 and being blinded by exhaust flames at night, the aircraft had visor plates,
IX. Fliegerkorps, but in September he became commander of III./ called Blendschutzleiste, mounted over the exhaust stubs on both si-
KG 30 and joined the fight against Allied convoys on the routes to des of the engine cowl. In the vicinity of the bomber targets, typi-
the Soviet Union. In the summer of 1942 he was transferred to the cally a burning agglomeration, silhouettes of the attacking bombers
Stab of General der Kampfflieger and was in charge of technical and were discernible, but the high level of contrast above these areas,
tactical changes in the deployment of bomber units. From May 1943, the exploding shells of the anti-aircraft guns, searchlight beams, the
he experimented with the „Wilde Sau“ tactic and achieved his first
glare of the fires below reflecting off clouds, smoke, and other effects,
night victory on the night of July 3-4. In the same month he founded
JG 300, and in August he was awarded the Oak Leaf Cluster and easily led to pilot disorientation. Important flight instruments were
simultaneously appointed to command the Jagddivision 30 and in- doubled and placed on a blind flying panel, ensuring important flight
spector of night fighters. In January 1944 he was awarded with the data in case of damage to the aircraft. Navigation and landing lights
Swords to the Knight‘s Cross and two months later became comman- were usually left off, as were landing strip lights. Take-offs and lan-
der of the Jagddivision 1. From November 1944 he served with the dings were usually carried out in total darkness, and only in cases of
Stab of the II Fliegerkorps and in January 1945 became commander emergency , there would be a light placed at the end of the runway,
of the 9. Fliegerdivision. He was the initiator of the formation of pointing straight up, that would indicate to a pilot the axis of the
a fighter unit which was to crash its machines into Allied bombers runway. The aircraft carried standard radio equipment, augmented
(Rammkommando Elbe), and at the end of the war he organized an by a FuG 16ZY navigation system, using directional beams to aid in
air operation for sabotage in the rear of the enemy (Unternehmen navigating, and the FuG 25a IFF system. For acoustic identification of
Bienenstock), whose activities ended at the base Salzburg-Ainring. friendly aircraft, first and foremost among localized counter-air de-
Here he got into a dispute with the commander of JV 44 Heinz Bär
and threatened him with personal liquidation. After the war he was
fensive units, exhaust mounted sirens were installed, called Eberspä-
a Soviet prisoner of war until 1955. He was one of the influential cher. This emitted a distinctive and easily identifiable tone. As an aid
and fanatical military commanders who lost track of the realities of to visual identification, an infrared light was installed on the bottom
the war situation and whose decisions led to unnecessary casualties. surface of the wing, and in cases of emergency, a flare could be fired
After returning to West Germany, he became a lawyer and was an out from the cockpit.
active neo-Nazi and Holocaust denier.
Fuel carried by the Bf 109G-6, under normal conditions, allowed for
around eighty minutes of flight time, fifteen of which were generally
Bf 109G-6/R6 „Red 29“, 2./JG 302 operating from Helsinki-Malmi in early 1944 under tactical designation Einsatzkomman-
do Helsinki. Note black lower surfaces on the starboard wing and the flame-damping exhaust covers. Photo: SA-Kuva
Oil Campaign de. Since summer 1944 the Gruppe JG 300 and JG 301 were deployed
as a fighter cover for the heavy fighters Fw 190A-8/R2 in this manner,
With the Battle for Berlin at the end, the combined bombing offen- since the fall equipped with Bf 109G-14/AS and later (since December
sive ceased as well. Until May 1944 the Allied Air Forces defined the 1944) with Bf-109G-10. In the dogfight with American fighter escorts,
priority tasks: the attacks on the cities, the attacks on the V-1 laun- which were in summer and fall practically exclusively equipped with
ching pads and the attacks on the German railway system. On May 8 powerful P-51D Mustang surpassing Bf 109G-14/AS in the most flight
the USAAF launched the Oil Campaign with the German fuel industry parameters, the Wilde Sau units suffered heavy losses which were
as a main target. The USAAF day bombers have become the primary difficult to replace.
opponents of the German fighters. In the end of 1943, and in the first
half of 1944, the power balance in the battlefield changed. With the Not only the aircraft parameters mattered. The other supporting
USAAF arrival in ETO and its growing combat capability and above all equipment played a role too. The anti-G pants or a new gyroscopic
introduction of P-51B to the escort fighter groups, the German fighter gunsight K-14 gave USAAF fighter pilots further advantage. Apparently
units were under the extreme pressure. It rapidly turned out that the most important factor of the Allied air superiority became the
they were falling behind in terms of organization, technology as well thorough, highly efficient new pilots‘ training. On the other side the
as personnel. It was necessary to quickly replenish the fighter units level of training of the young German pilots was deteriorating. The
ranks. Therefore, as early as spring 1944, the majority of Wilde Sau average flight time logged by new Luftwaffe pilots was 100-120 hours
units were gradually integrated into the Reichsverteidigung (RLV) sys- out of which only around 10 hours on the combat airplanes. That was
tem and deployed in the day fighting against the American bombing less than half of the flight time of their opponents whose training
force. was heavily focused on the combat flying. During the summer, as the
Allied attacks on the oil refineries continued, the fuel allocation to
the training units was cut down. In June 1944 the monthly fuel alloca-
The tactics tion to Luftwaffe pilot schools was 50 000 tons. In October 1944 it
was only 7000 tons. The negative impact on pilots‘ training is obvious.
After the successful deployment of Sturmstaffel 1, in summer the
In the fall the fuel was in short supply everywhere.
Sturmgruppen IV.(Sturm)/JG 3, IV.(Sturm)JG 4 and II.(Sturm)/JG 300
were established and equipped with heavy, armored Fw 190A-8/R2. The combat tactics played the crucial role. The offensive deployment
The first combat debut of the new Sturmgruppen took place on July of the American fighters was conducted by flying ahead of its own
7, 1944 during the raid on Leipzig. The new tactics of attacking the formation and clearing the area of the enemy fighters, blocking the
American formations further relied on the fighter formations called German airports by continuously circling fighters and strafing the air-
Gefechtsverbände concentrated around heavy Sturmgruppen attac- ports and supply lines. This tactics proved to be fatal for Luftwaffe.
king the bombers with their Fw 190A-8 and Fw 190A-8/R2 and the
units equipped with the lighter Bf 109G that would provide the top
cover against the American escort fighter arriving at the higher altitu-
red by both sides. 8th AF lost 46 bombers and 25 fighters. RLV lost 110 advanced and sophisticated Jagdschloss system appeared and in ge-
out of 305 attacking fighters i.e. 36% loss ratio. 60 pilots were killed, neral the system of the search and vector radars was being developed
25 survived with injuries. On September 12 the 8th AF attacked again, and expanded. The radars with short range Wurzburg A, C and D were
the outcome for RLV was even worse. 147 fighters entered combat, 76 being developed with effective range 40 km. In the system of moni-
were shot down, 42 pilots killed i.e. 52% loss ratio! On September 13 toring the combat situation, night fighter and anti-aircraft artillery
15th AF arrived at the scene raiding plants in Odertal (Oder valley) vectoring, the radio communication interception and passive moni-
and Blechhammer (Blachownia Śląska) in Silesia. It comes as a sur- toring of H2X airborne radars transmission played the important role.
prise that RLV still managed to throw 137 fighters into combat, 63 of This translated into the higher efficiency of both the night fighters
them got close enough to attack the enemy formation. In the middle deployment and anti-aircraft artillery which, as the war progressed,
of October the German fuel supplies have reached the lowest level played more important role and losses it inflicted on the attacking
since the beginning of war. On August 1 the Warsaw Uprising started. bombers were heavier than those caused by fighters. The single-engi-
On September 17 the operation Market Garden commenced which cal- ne fighters hanging out in the airspace without radar presented more
med down the situation above Germany a little bit. 8th AF operated of the burden to the system than the benefit. The concept of such
above the Dutch combat area and together with 15th AF conducted deployment visioned by Hajo Hermann in 1944 was no longer feasible.
the supply flights in Warsaw area and smaller scale operations above It did not mean though these fighters could not be useful. As opposed
the central Germany. to the heavy twin-engine fighters they possessed one valuable advan-
tage - the speed.
Night operations Wilde Sau in 1944
Let‘s take advantage of the relative combat ina-
ctivity and talk about the night operations Wilde
Sau. They did not cease even though their restric-
tions and transfer of the Wilde Sau fighters to the
day operations were caused by different factors,
besides the arrival of USAAF arrival in the thea-
ter. Among others it was strengthening the night
fighter units equipped with twin-engine aircraft
featuring the airborne radar and improvement of
their armament and other equipment. The tech-
nical conditions of the ground radar network have
improved as well. New devices, such as Mammut,
have arrived with the effective range 300km,
Freya went through the modernization, the very
Serious challenge to the current air defense system were Allied fast 8th AF Grand Finale
reconnaissance and bomber aircraft, British Mosquitos in the first
place. Since 1943 RAF deployed them in the small scale disruptive Let’s go back to fall 1944 when the Oil Campaign was at its peak.
but annoying attacks and Luftwaffe lacked the means to stop them. In November the 8th AF conducted 13 raids, 15th AF 12. In November
The reconnaissance Mosquitos and Spitfires flying during daylight the fuel production in Germany dropped to 31% of the June producti-
at the high speed and altitude presented another problem. In August on. November 2 the 8th AF deployed 1174 bombers and 968 fighters in
1944 the special anti-Mosquito flight was established to counter the the raid on Merseburg/Leuna. All 15 fighter groups of the 8th AF flew
disruptive raids of the De Haviland Mosquito squadrons commanded the mission. During the raid RLV lost 133 out of 305 deployed aircraft
by RAF Light Night Strike Force. which represents 44%. This repeated itself on almost every raid. On
November 6 RLV command conference took place at Hitler’s den. An-
At the end of summer, 1944, as a reaction to destructive raids gry Hitler expressed the opinion that further aircraft supplies to RLV
conducted by De Havilland Mosquito light bombers of the Light Ni- was only a waste of material. A day after, Göring delivered his famous
ght Strike Force RAF, a specialized anti-Mosquito unit was formed, address at Wannsee. In in 3 and half hours long emotional speech he
10./JG 300, also called ‘Mosquito Staffel’, under the leadership of Karl humiliated the whole Luftwaffe command.
Mitterdorfer. The unit flew out of Jüterbog and was tasked with inter-
cepting lone Mosquitos bombing Berlin and other fast enemy aircraft On November 27 the 8th AF conducted an interesting operation.
attacking by night. Mosquito Staffel was equipped with the new high- 10 fighter groups flew a mock raid on Merseburg. Half of the fighter
-performance Bf 109G-14/AS, built by Messerschmitt at Regensburg. groups flew at the altitude typical for the bombers in order to lure
Its high-performance characteristics came from its power plant, the RLV fighters into the combat. The other half flew the top cover. JG 3
DB 605D, coupled with the MW50 water injection system, boosting and JG 3 did not take the bait and disappeared from the area. Howe-
power output for temporary emergency situations. Thanks to its high ver JG 300 and JG 301 were ambushed and lost 39 aircraft destroyed
maximum speed at high altitude, around 10,000m, the Bf 109G-14/AS and 27 pilots killed. 8th AF bombers in the meantime bombed the
had at the very least, a theoretical chance of intercepting successfu- marshalling yards in the southern Germany without any interference
lly the fast Mosquito, flying at these heights. Vectoring to the target from Luftwaffe fighters.
was done through a modification to the Wilde Sau method, utilizing
a hybrid of ground control, guidance using directional beams and In December the 8th AF refocused on Berlin. On December 5 the am-
ground-based searchlights, which brought some success, despite not munition factory in Tegel was attacked. 1st and 3rd Bombing Divisi-
stopping or even limiting these attacks. on sortied on Berlin while 2nd BD on Munich. RAF Bomber Command
dispatched its bombers escorted by Spitfires to Soest, a historic town
Using 10./JG300 as the foundation, the II./NJG11 was formed in No- between Paderborn and Dortmund, with large marshalling yards. This
vember still equipped with Bf 109. in January 1944, based on the ex- well planned operation completely disintegrated the RLV defense
perienced personnel of I./JG300, the night fighter 1./Nachtjagdgrup- as they literally did not know what to do first. JG1 was engaged by
pe 10 (NJGr.10) was established flying Fw 190A, Bf 109G, Bf 110 and Mustangs even before it commenced the attack. It lost 37 aircraft
other types. in August 1944 2./NJG 11 was formed from the section of and 25 pilots and was effectively out of the action. JG 301 and JG 27
1./NJGr. 10 and in October 3./NJG 11 from the remainder. And on Au- above Soest shared the same fate. In total RLV lost 77 aircraft and 44
gust 28, to complete this process, 1./NJG 11 emerged from 6./JG300. pilots, the Americans and British did not loose a single bomber. 8th
A number of NJG 11 operational single-engine fighters were equipped AF lost 11 Mustangs and RAF one Spitfire. RLV commanders were going
with radar but a portion was without it and continued flying Wilde insane at that time. The American flyers were duly fulfilling the task
Sau missions. And then we have Sonderkommando Stamp established Gen. Arnolds had given them and were close to finish it.
in November 1944, shortly renamed Sonderkommando Welter after
a new commander. This experimental unit operated Me 262A-1a in On December 16 the German counter offensive in Ardennes was laun-
the night fighter role without the airborne radar i.e. in Wilde Sau ched and the weather was bad. 8th AF operated above Ardennes, as
style. On January 28, 1945 the unit was renamed as 10./NJG 11. Until conditions permitted, while 15th AF flew missions over Germany al-
April 1945 it was flying out of Burg airport at Magdeburg, then on April most without any RLV fighters opposition. Nevertheless, on Christmas
24 it flew over to Reinfeld and on May 7 to Schleswig-Jagel where on Eve, December 24, 8th AF conducted its largest raid deploying 2700
May 8 the unit surrendered to the British. aircraft. Then it returned to Ardennes. On December 31 and New Ye-
ar’s 1945 It continued the strategic bombing. The ill-fated German
Operation Bodenplatte, which practically finished the hard-tested
Photo taken after the war at Bad Aibling airfield in Bavaria. The Fw 190A-8 „White 5“ probably belonged to 7./JG 300. On the right is
a Bf 110G-4 (W.Nr. 180 837), the „2Z+NU“ of 10./NJG 6. The Fw 190A-8 with light blue paint carries the Stammkennzeichen VS+BX and
the fuselage designation „yellow 10“. Photo: Fold3
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Bf 109G-10 Erla, WNr. 490249, Uffz. Hans Dahmen, 2./JG 300, Borkheide, Germany, December 1944
This aircraft with the Gisela inscription was flown by Uffz. Hanz Dahmen in December 1944 from the airfield in Borkheide,
southwest of Potsdam. The designation was later changed to red 12. In December 1944 the marking of the JG 300 aircraft was
changed to blue-white-blue fuselage band. In the second half of January 1945 was JG 300 deployed on the eastern front to fight
on the Oder River, conducting ground attacks and strafing advancing Soviet troops. By this time, Hans Dahmen had already seen
heavy fights in the fall of 1944, in which he shot down a B-17 on September 13, as well as the bloodbath of JG 300 pilots during
the USAAF raid on Berlin on January 14, 1945.
Bf 109G-10 Erla, WNr. 151965 (not confirmed), I. or III./JG 300, Germany, early 1945
WNr. 151965 is an example of a Bf 109G-10 produced by the Erla factory, series 151. These machines were characterized by
a wing with large bulges over the undercarriage well and camouflage in a dark green overpaint on the upper and side surfaces,
including the lower fuselage except of the center wing. This color would be green version of the RLM 81, or even older RLM 70
or 71 or another green paint. The bottom of the wing including the center section were left in bare metal, but the bottom surfaces
of the ailerons and flaps were painted in light blue RLM 76. The lower surfaces of the wingtips and the horizontal tail were also
painted in the same color. The underwing crosses were painted in form of black angles.
Bf 109G-10 Erla, Jagdgruppe 300, Prague-Gbel, Protectorate Böhmen und Mähren, May 8, 1945
This aircraft, originally belonging to 16./JG 300, is an Erla build 150 or 151 series machine with large bulges over the undercarri-
age wells. This machine was flown from Prague-Gbel airfield on May 8, 1945 by Fw. Josef Unminger, a pilot of Flugzeugüber-
führungsgeschwader 1. He had to make a belly-landing due to the lack of fuel near the city of Bochov near Karlsbad in Western
Bohemia and the aircraft was destroyed by retreating German soldiers by several shots of Panzerfaust. Unminger was captured
by the Russians but managed to escape from captivity and returned home to Bavaria after long way through Saxony and
Thuringia.
Bf 109G-14/AS, Fw. Eberhard Gzik, 2./JG 300, Borkheide, Germany, October 1944
This Bf 109G-14/AS belonging to I./JG 300 was either a Series 780 machine produced by the Messerschmitt factory in Augsburg,
or a Series 413 or 460, produced by the Erla factory in Leipzig. During the fall of the 1944, the I./JG 300 led by Hptm. Gerhard
Stamp conducted fighter cover for the Fw 190A-8/R2 Sturmbock heavy fighters. The unit suffered serious losses during tough
combats with USAAF fighters in September and October. On October 2, I./JG 300 lost 19 aircraft destroyed and 13 damaged by
Mustangs of the 355th FG which strafed the Borkheide airfield. Fw. Eberhard Gzik was posted to 9./EJG 2 in November 1944 and
flew the Me 262 in Kommando Stamp. He achieved three aerial victories during the war.
Bf 109G-14/AS, Fw. Wolfgang Hundsdörfer, 2./JG 300, Esperstedt, Germany, September 1944
There was the emblem of a dog cartoon with a B-17 in its mouth and the inscription Lumpi on the fuselage side below the cockpit
of this aircraft. Lumpi was the pilot´s, Wolfgang Hunsdörfer's, nickname. On the fuselage, in front of the tail surfaces was a red
stripe, the designation of JG 300 aircraft within the Reichsverteidigung system. In December 1944 was this marking changed to
blue-white-blue stripes.
Bf 109G-14/AS, Ofhr. Klaus Grothues, CO of 9./ JG 300, Mark Zwuschen, Germany, December 1944
This Yellow 1 was damaged when the landing gear dug into the soft ground and the propeller hit the runway surface of the Mark
Zwuschen airfield. The aircraft had the undercarriage legs painted red. Klaus Grothues was the last ace of III./JG 300 with 17
confirmed kills. He was killed in action during an attack against the formation of the American bombers during USAAF raid on
Berlin on January 14, 1945. Grothues was shot down near Rathenow, west of Berlin when at controls of the Bf 109G-14 Yellow 2.
Bf 109G-14/AS, Ofhr. Bruno Klostermann, 11./JG 300, Jüterbog-Waldlager, Germany, December 1944
Ofhr. Bruno Klostermann was a cousin of the French fighter ace Pierre Clostermann. Unlike his more famous relative, he did
not live to see the end of the war, as he was killed in action during the USAAF's big raid on Berlin on January 14, 1945. That date
was a black day for the Wilde Sau units, with JG 300 and JG 301 losing nearly 90 aircraft and 68 pilots in thirty minutes. Jagd-
geschwader 300 alone lost 50 % of all its aircraft. Klostermann's Green 12 had the undercarriage legs painted red.
Bf 109G-14/AS, Lt. Karl Mitterdorfer, CO of 10./JG 300, Jüterbog, Germany, September 1944
In the late summer and early autumn of 1944, the JG 300 established a special Mosquito-Jagdstaffel to combat the night incur-
sions over Berlin conducted by de Havilland Mosquito bombers of the RAF's Light Night Strike Force. The 10.(N)/JG 300 operated
out of Jüterbog under Staffelkapitän Karl Mitterdorfer. His White 1 featured the unit's comet emblem on both sides of the cowling
and a narrower-than-usual red band around the rear fuselage. The aircraft´s lower starboard wing surfaces were black.
Bf 109G-10 Erla, WNr. 151035, Stab IV./JG 301, Stendal-Borstel, Germany, early 1945
WNr. 151035 was an example of an early Bf 109G-10 series 151 produced by the Erla factory. These machines were characterized
by a wing with large bulge over the undercarriage well. It is believed this aircraft served with the staff Staffel of the IV. Gruppe
JG 301 at the Stendal-Borstel air base in Saxony-Anhalt. Further details about this aircraft are unknown.
OVERTREES
Bf 109G-10 1/48
Cat. No. 82164X Cat. No. 82164-LEPT1
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OVERTREES
Bf 109G-14/AS 1/48
Cat. No. 82162X Cat. No. 82162-LEPT1
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Bf 109E-3, WNr. 5102, Lt. Herbert Kunze, Stab I./JG 77, Döberitz, Germany, June 1940
This aircraft was manufactured by WNF in early autumn 1939 and assigned to I./JG 77 led by Hptm. Johannes Janke. This unit
was frequently relocated prior to World War II outbreak so it was no wonder the members of I./JG 77 ironically dubbed themsel-
ves “Wanderzirkus Janke” (Janke’s Wandering Circus) and expressed their feelings about the constant relocation with a scuffed
boot as the unit's emblem. Janke's adjutant Lt. Kunze was born in Berlin in 1918. He achieved two victories in September 1940 and
lived to see his promotion to the rank of Oberleutnant. He was killed in combat with Spitfires of No. 603 Squadron on September
14, 1940 while at the controls of Bf 109E-4 WNr. 3759. He crashed near Lympne and was buried two days later in Hawkinge Ce-
metery. Kunze originally used a Bf 109E-1 with the name “Sepp” under the cockpit, but for this Bf 109E-3 he chose to paint a small
rabbit with a spear between its ears and the inscription “Kieki”.
Bf 109E-4, WNr. 5274, Lt. Werner Machold, 1./JG 2, Marigny, France, June 1940
Machold was serving with 1./JG 2 at the beginning of World War II. He was very successful in Battle of France, gaining 10 victo-
ries including three Hurricanes and one Spitfire. His 11th victory was a “Tomahawk” claimed on August 11 at about midday near
Portland. Oberfeldwebel Machold continued to gain victories during the Battle of Britain and became eighth German fighter
pilot to reach 20-victories mark. On September 5, 1940, he was awarded the Knight Cross for 21 victories. On September 7,
Machold was transferred to 9./JG 2. He recorded his 24th through 26th victories on September 30, shooting down three Spitfires.
Oberleutnant Machold was appointed Staffelkapitän of 7./JG 2 in spring 1941. On June 9, 1941 during a low-level Jabo attack on
a shipping convoy off Portland was his Bf 109 E-7/Z (WNr. 5983) “White 15” hit by anti-aircraft fire from a Royal Navy destroyer.
Machold belly-landed near Swanage, Dorset and became prisoner of war. Werner Machold claimed 32 victories in more than
250 combat missions. He achieved all his victories over the Western front.
Bf 109E-1, WNr. 3413, Lt. Hans Krug, 5./JG 26, Marquise, France, July 1940
Hans Krug was born in 1899 and served in various Bavarian aviation units during the Great War. He was flying combat missions
from March till May 1918. Considered rather old for fighter pilot in Germany during mid-thirties he joined the Spanish nationalist
air force instead of Legion Condor like other German “volunteers”. Krug often flew alongside Spanish ace Joaquin Garcia Morato,
whose Fiat CR.32 carried bullfighting motto “VISTA SUERTE Y AL TORO” (The look, good fortune and lets´s go for the bull!). Krug
adopted this inscription on his “Emil”, as he was finally accepted to Luftwaffe and entered successful service with II./JG 26
“Schlageter” with rank of Leutnant. He scored with 5./JG 26 five victories during French campaign including one unconfirmed. All
were depicted on his tail with kill marks. Krug scored additional five victories during Battle of Britain and took over leadership of
4./JG 26. He was shot down by RAF fighters over England and performed belly landing near Pluckley in the evening of Septem-
ber 7. His name is sometimes confused with bomber pilot Lt. Peter Krug who escaped from prison camp in Canada to the United
States.
Bf 109E-4, WNr. 3709, Oblt. Josef Fözö, CO of 4./JG 51, Desvres, France, July 1940
Raven with running nose and umbrella was badge of II./JG 51 and was later adopted by some of unit´s Staffeln with different
background colors. Mickey Mouse is personal emblem of Josef Fözö who was a Vienna-born Austrian. As a pre-war pilot of
Austrian Air Force Fözö joined Luftwaffe in 1938 and volunteered for service in Spain where he scored three victories. He was
already commander of 4./JG 51 at the beginning of World War II and downed one balloon during Sitzkrieg and two RAF fighters
during “Kanalkampf” in July. His second and third victory were scored west of Cap Griz-Nez against Hurricanes of No. 56 Sqn.
During Battle of Britain he scored nine victories against RAF and one more in April 1941. Fözö was appointed commander of II./JG
51 and was seriously injured on Russian front in July 1941. He was awarded Knight Cross during the same month. After recovery
he became commander of I./JG 51 in May 1942. However, he was injured again the same month. After lengthy recovery Fözö took
over commanding position on operational training unit JG 108. His total score was 27 victories including service in Spain. Fözö
passed away in Vienna in 1979, at the age of 67 years.
Bf 109E-3, Maj. Adolf Galland, CO of III./JG 26, Caffiers, France, August 1940
Major Adolf Galland was the highest scoring Luftwaffe fighter pilot of Battle of Britain. In the period from August 8 to October 31,
1940, he scored 32 victories including 15 Spitfires. After service with Legion Condor, 4.(S)/LG 2 and JG 27 he became comman-
der of III./JG 26 on June 11, 1940. This unit was the second-most successful Jagdgruppe of Battle of Britain with 105 victories
achieved. Galland´s last victories (19th to 22nd) with III./JG 26 were scored on August 15. He claimed one Spitfire possibly flown
by RAF ace F/Lt A.C. Deere of No. 54 Sqn. and later added two Spitfires of No. 64 Sqn. On August 22 Galland became Kommodore
of JG 26 “Schlageter”. He took position of General der Jagdflieger later, becoming the youngest Luftwaffe General. He did not get
along with Göring very well and lost his position in 1944. During the last months of the war, he was allowed to organize elite unit
Jagdverband 44 equipped with Me 262 Schwalbe jet fighters. Adolf Galland achieved 104 aerial victories during 705 missions,
all on the Western front. Included in his score are at least seven victories achieved when he was flying the Me 262. Galland also
downed four four-engined bombers. He was himself shot down four times.
Bf 109E-3, Maj. Adolf Galland, CO of III./JG 26, Caffiers, France, late August 1940
This is Galland´s aircraft as it appeared at the end of August 1940, i.e., with yellow identification markings introduced by Luftwaffe
command at the beginning of August 1940. Some authors believe that this is aircraft WNr. 4820 flown by Galland during August
1940 as his last personal mount when at command of III./JG 26. But… The 4820 was manufactured by Arado in July 1940 as
E-1/B and Galland´s logbook states E-1 version as well, but photographs reveal his aircraft sported cannons in the wing. There is
another aircraft of Galland known from this period, and it is also attributed to WNr. 4820. But again, this “Emil” shows cannons in
the wings and earlier style of the canopy. After the war, Adolf Galland took part in development of Argentine Air Force and was
also active in German fighter pilot association. He also became one of the advisers during the filming of Battle of Britain movie.
Fellow adviser RAF ace Robert S. Tuck became Galland´s very close friend and godfather of his son.
Bf 109E-1, WNr. 3771, flown by Fw. Ernst Arnold, 3./JG 27, Peuplingues, France, August 1940
Fw. Arnold was shot down in the late afternoon on August 30 during free hunt sortie over England. The I./JG 27 formation was
attacked by RAF fighters and Arnold´s “Emil” was hit in radiator, possibly by F/O B. J. G. Carbury of No. 603 Squadron. He had
performed belly-landing at Westwood Court, near Faversham, Kent and his Aircraft was placed on display in Exeter as the
fundraising motivation element. Africa emblem of I./JG 27 was introduced in late spring 1940 as reminder of German African
colonies lost after Great War. The scissors (in German language “Schere”) and the “r” letter are play on the name of former
Schwarmführer and within the 3. Staffel popular Lt. Ulrich Scherer. He was declared missing after combat with Hurricanes of
No. 615 Sqn. near Cherbourg on July 20. The unit lost Gruppenkommandeur Hptm. Helmut Riegel during the same combat. Sta-
ffelkapitän of 3./JG 27 was future Knight Cross recipient Oblt. Gerhard Homuth who was later successfully leading I./JG 27 in Af-
rica. Homuth scored 15 victories during 1940 and his final score resulting from 450 combat missions counted 63 aerial victories.
Homuth was engaged in a 20-minutes dogfight with Russian fighters on August 2, 1943, and remains missing from that time on…
Bf 109E-1, WNr. 3417, Gefr. Erich Mummert, 4./JG 52, Peuplingues, France, September 1940
This Messerschmitt saw very long career, being manufactured by Arado company in the late summer or early autumn 1939. Its
camouflage consists of RLM 71, 02 and 65 and probably went through several changes. It cannot be ruled out the aircraft was
finished in the RLM 70/71 scheme on upper surfaces originally. Probably due to error, the JG 52 kept this aircraft in books as the
E-4 variant. Red cat emblem was introduced as unit badge in 1939 when the Staffel carried designation 1./JG 71. Erich Mummert
was shot down with this “Emil” on September 30 in the afternoon during bomber escort mission. Six JG 52 fighters had been
attacked by Spitfires and tried to form a defensive circle. But Germans were running out of fuel and had to abandon the combat
soon. Being pursued by Spitfires the combat got slightly chaotic for Germans and Mummert´s aircraft was hit in radiator by the
“friendly” fire of another Bf 109. Mummert performed belly-landing on the edge of Detling airfield. Another II./JG 52 pilot was also
shot down and bailed out, being captured near Detling as well. Commander of 4./JG 52 was the legendary Johannes Steinhoff,
the man, who acted as Kommodore of the Jagdgeschwader 7 flying with Me 262s and later joined Adolf Galland and his elite
Jagdverband 44.
Bf 109E-4, WNr. 5375, Hptm. Wilhelm Meyerweissflog, Stab JG 53, Etaples, France, September 1940
Wilhelm Meyerweissflog was born in 1889 and served in military during Great War. It is assumed he lived in Switzerland after the
war and travelled to USA as businessman regularly. In the ranks of the JG 53 “Pik As” he was acting as an administrative officer
of Geschwaderstab. His aircraft was photographed during refueling at former British airbase La Villiaze, Guernsey, part of occu-
pied Channel Islands. Meyerweissflog was captured on September 5, 1940. During interrogation he said: “Saw the boys going
off and thought he would like a flip too. He jumped into his aircraft, flew vaguely in the direction of England and was neatly shot
through the petrol tank by a British fighter," probably by F/Lt. P. C. Hughes flying Spitfire of No. 234 Sqn. Hptm. Meyerweissflog
made a forced landing at Monkton farm near St. Nicholas-at-Wade at 15.45 hrs “from which more by luck than good judgement
he came out safely and, when apprehended, had not the slightest idea where he was”. To further quote the interrogation report,
his start and mission were described as a “Very freelance patrol”, and his morale as “Good under trying circumstances”.
Bf 109E-4, WNr. 3709, Oblt. Josef Fözö, CO of 4./JG 51, Desvres, France, second half of September 1940
This is Fözö´s aircraft after he scored his 14th victory on October 15 in the morning near London when escorting fighter bom-
bers. Yellow cowling and rudder were identification markings introduced at beginning of September to identify Bf 109s assigned
to fighter bomber missions.
WNr. 1480, Oblt. Franz von Werra, Gruppenadjutant of II./JG 3, Wierre-au-Bois, France, September 1940
Franz von Werra became the first German fighter ace to fall into British hands. It happened on the morning of September 5, 1940,
when he was shot down with this “Emil” over the county of Kent. Von Werra then became famous for his escape from
a Canadian prison camp. He was able to return halfway around the world to German territory, where he rejoined the Luftwaffe
and continued his combat flights. He served on both the eastern and western fronts but was strictly ordered to avoid the shores
of England. This proved fatal when he failed to return from a flight over the English Channel as CO of I./JG 53 on October 25, 1941.
The WNr. 1480 carried the standard camouflage of RLM 02/71/65 with white identification markings. These included the rudder
and wingtips. It is also often depicted with a white engine cowling, but a careful study of photographs and archival documents
prove contrary to it and the supposed white paint was in fact a newer and lighter coat of RLM 65 paint. It is possible that the
cover came from another aircraft. The vertical tail area bears the symbols of von Werra's achievements, i.e. eight aerial victories
and five aircraft destroyed on the ground. They are depicted on each side in a slightly different form. The RLM65 color extended
to the upper surfaces of the leading-edge wing.
Bf 109E-4, WNr. 5153, Oblt. Egon Troha, CO of 9./JG 3, Desvres, France, October 1940
Egon Troha was born in Austria in 1916 and after finishing his pilot and fighter training, he started to serve in the ranks of the JG
26 in 1939. Later he joined the JG 27 before being finally assigned to III./JG 3. Troha scored five victories during 1940 including one
Dutch Fokker C.V and on October 1 he became commander of 9./JG 3. His last kill, probably a Hurricane of No. 605 Sqn., was sco-
red on October 26 just after midday west of Boulogne. On October 29 Oblt. Troha was attacked by Spitfires of No. 74 Sqn. during
mission over England. He believed his wingman was covering him, but instead he got a burst of fire which damaged radiator of
his Messerschmitt. He force-landed near Shepherdswell. During his stay in Canadian prison camp, Troha lost an eye in a pris-
oner´s riot and was repatriated. After return to Germany he was promoted to Hauptmann and served with operational training
unit JG 108 till the end of war. Troha´s plane was manufactured by WNF in autumn 1939 as Bf 109E-3. In 1940 it was not upgraded
only with new canopy but probably also with new MG FF/M cannons, so unit kept the airplane in records as E-4. The sea horse
emblem was created by the core of original unit´s pilots who were supposed to form fighter squadron of German aircraft carrier
Graf Zeppelin.
Bf 109E-4, WNr. 4869, flown by Lt. Bernhard Malischewski, Stab II./JG 54, Campagne-les-Guines, France, October 1940
This “Emil” was personal mount of Stab II./JG 54 officer Lt. Bernhard Malischewski who was already long serving member at the
time, as his presence was dating back to the times, when the unit had original designation I./JG 76. He scored one victory during
Sitzkrieg and three more during French campaign and the Battle of Britain. His last victory dates to the September 29 when he
shot down a Spitfire near London. Malischewski was captured on October 12 after forced landing south of Tenterden, Kent. It is
believed he was shot down by S/Ldr R. S. Tuck, however Malischewski stated the engine failure was his real defeater in the do-
gfight. Indeed, his airplane did not have any hits from enemy fire. In the UK he was kept as prisoner of war at Camp 13, the Hayes
Camp, Swanwick, Derbyshire. He joined the group of prisoners, who were planning escape through a tunnel. One of the group
members was Franz von Werra. They nicknamed themselves as “Swanwick Tiefbau A. G.” meaning Swanwick Engineering Co.
Three prisoners including von Werra escaped, but Malischewski gave up the effort earlier during digging process. In February
1945 he was sentenced to 28 days detention for attempting to escape from the train bringing him from one Canadian camp to
another. He was promoted to rank of Oberleutnant during his captivity and passed away in 1975.
Sprue - A - E-3/4
Sprue - A - E-1
Sprue - B
Sprue - B
Sprue - B
Sprue - C - velký
Sprue - C - malý
Sprue - C - malý
Product page
WNr. 682181, Fw. Hubert Engst, 6.(Sturm)/ JG 300, Löbnitz, Germany, early 1945
A native of Krauschwitz, Hubert Engst was born on November 10, 1921 and on completion of flight training in July 1943, he was
assigned to JG Hermann (later redesignated as JG 300), specialists in the use of Wilde Sau tactics (night attacks against bom-
bers using single-engine fighters). Here, on his first combat flight and only three hours after his arrival he would shoot down
a Stirling bomber. Hubert Engst flew with the 5. and later 6. Staffel of JG 300, the unit integrated from the beginning of its exi-
stence into the structure of the Defense of the Reich. According to the sources Engst shot down some 20 aircraft. He was shot
down twice himself. Remains of his Fw 190A-8/R2 WNr. 681361 “Yellow 7” were discovered in 2011 near Otin close to Jindrichuv
Hradec. They are part of the collection of the local museum there nowadays. Hubert Engst lived in the former East Germany
after the WWII and died in 1981. The standard RLM74/75/76 scheme was complemented by JG 300 colors and markings from the
end of the war in the shape of a blue-white-blue band of prescribed 900 mm overall width. A horizontal strip designating aircraft
of the II. Gruppe was painted over the band, its yellow color was specific to the planes of the 6. Staffel.
WNr. 681343, Obgefr. Karl Kleemann, 7.(Sturm)/JG 4, Welzow, Germany, September 1944
Karl Kleemann became a member of 7. Staffel II.(Sturm)/JG 4 in August 1944. The newly formed unit was to fight with Allied
four-engine bomber formations. Its first combat occurred on September 11, 1944, and its pilots achieved considerable success
in combat with aircraft from the 3rd Bomb Division. With the support of Messerschmitts from the III. Gruppe, they managed to
shoot down fourteen B-17s, mostly from the 100th Bomb Group. The Sturmgruppe paid for this with the loss of at least 20 Sturm-
bocks and 12 pilots killed. Karl Kleemann in the aircraft designated “Yellow 1” was one of them. To escape the battle area, many
Sturmbock pilots got into dogfights with American fighters. Kleemann's machine appeared shortly after 12:10 at an altitude of 160
ft (50 m) over the town of Thum, pursued by several P-51s. After a sharp turn over the center of town, the aircraft crashed in
a field just next to the town hospital and exploded. In September 2018 a monument was unveiled near the crash site, designed as
a memorial to all the victims of the Battle of the Erzgebirge. Kleemann's Sturmbock bore the standard livery used by II.(Sturm)/
JG 4. The RLM 74/75/76 color scheme was supplemented by the fuselage markings of JG 4 according to the Reich Defense Sys-
tem (black and white band). The horizontal stripe of the II. Gruppe was not used on JG 4 aircraft during this period. The emblem
on the engine cowling could have had the crest of the knight's helmet painted yellow, or it could have remained unpainted. During
the period in question, JG 4 still used side armor windows on its Fw 190s. The fuselage machine guns were often removed.
WNr. 739431, Ltn. Norbert Graziadei, 5.(Sturm)/JG 300, Löbnitz, Germany, October 1944
A native of Vienna, Norbert Graziadei was born on February 20, 1920. He joined the Luftwaffe in 1941 and completed pilot training,
after which he flew with a transport squadron. In April 1944, he joined the fighters, underwent night fighter training, and on
June 14 he was sent to II./JG 300, which was at the time conducting Wilde Sau night flights using single seaters to fight British
bomber raids. Later on the unit was transferred to the Defence of the Reich system, which necessitated change in its activities,
as it became a day combat unit. Graziadei was chosen by the commander of 6./JG 300 as his deputy and technical officer. In Sep-
tember, the change occurred again and II. Gruppe became Sturmgruppe, i.e. a special group for fighting daylight bombers. On 25
September 1944, Ltn. Graziadei, nicknamed Naggi, was transferred to the 5. Staffel, where he also acted as the technical officer
and CO´ s deputy, now to Ltn. Bretschneider. Norbert Graziadei survived deployment during World War II, shooting down a total
of ten enemy aircraft. He died in 1999. During his time with the 5. (Sturm)/JG 300, he flew at least two Fw 190A-8/R2s, designated
“Red 2”, which bore the inscription “Moidl”, the Tyrolean dialect term for girl (Mädchen), on the armour under the front plate.
MiG-21bisD, Eskadrila borbenih aviona, HRZ i PZO, Zagreb – Pleso, Croatia, December 2016
The Croatian Air Force purchased forty MiG-21bis fighters and MiG-21UM trainers from Ukraine in 1995. In 2003, eight MiG-21bis
aircraft were modernized to bisD standard in Romania. The modernization program included upgrade of the navigation, com-
munication and IFF equipment. In 2014, another modernization took place involving seven Croat MiG-21bisD/UMD aircraft, along
with a purchase of another five aircraft from repair facility in Odessa. The modernized aircraft received an all-grey camouflage
scheme. Aircraft coded 116 received a stylized “25” on the left side of the fin to commemorate 25th anniversary of the Croatian
Air Force.
MiG-21bis, 115th GIAP, Soviet VVS, Bagram Air Base, Afghanistan, 1980
Fighter cover duties during the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan were conducted by the 115th Guards' Regiment at the end of 1979.
The unit was equipped with the MiG-21bis and was based at Kokaity in Uzbekistan, a Soviet Socialist State at the time. Three days
after the invasion beginning, the 1st Squadron moved to Bagram Air Base, followed by a second Squadron on January 23, 1980.
Due to the lack of any enemy fighters, the 115th GIAP became involved in ground support duties together with the 136th APIB.
MiG-21bis aircraft of the 115th GIAP used in Afghanistan were painted in green and brown on the upper surfaces at the beginning
of the war, with lower surfaces in a blue-grey tone.
MiG-21bis, C2283, No.3 Squadron „Cobras“, Pathankot AB, India, early ´90s
C2283 displays a unique combination of camouflage scheme and colorful ID markings. The unit personnel named their aircraft
after snakes, among which “Rattler”, “Mamba” and “Cobra” are known. The dorsal section of the fuselage was taken from another
MiG-21bis, probably from a “Mamba”. The history of No.3 Squadron goes back to October 1941, when the unit was activated in
Peshawar, equipped with the Hawker Audax. During the second half of the Twentieth Century, the unit took part in every conflict
that India was involved in with neighboring states. The No.3 Squadron used the MiG-21bis from July 1980 to 2002, when it was
re-equipped with the modernized MiG-21 “Bison”.
Product page
Re-release
Bf 109F-4, WNr. 7183, Hptm. Hans Hahn, III./JG 2, St. Pol, France, October 13, 1941
Hans „Assi“ Hahn, a fighter ace and recipient of the Knight's Cross with oak leaves was in command of 4./JG 2 from December,
1939 and starting from October 1940 he overtook the lead of III./JG 2. Fifty kill marks on the rudder related to his service on the
Western Front. Hahn added the fiftieth kill to his tally on October 13, 1941, shooting down a Spitfire near Boulogne-sur-Mer. Alto-
gether he destroyed 66 enemy aircraft in the West. In late 1942 “Assi” Hahn moved to the East and commanded II./JG 54 from No-
vember 1, 1942. On February 21, 1943, he was downed and captured. He spent seven years in captivity, returning back to Germany
in 1950. He wrote a book about his life in prison Prisoner of War in Russia (Ich spreche die Wahrheit – I Speak the Truth). Hahn´s
total score stands at 108 kills. The rooster head was the crest of III./JG 2, based on Hahn´s family name (“der Hahn” means “the
rooster” in English).
Bf 109F-4, WNr. 7243, Oblt. Otto Kath, Stab/JG 54, Staraya Russa, Soviet Union, early December 1941
Otto Kath served as Geschwaderadjutant for Hannes Trautloft, the famous fighter ace and CO of JG 54 from March, 1941 till Sep-
tember, 1943. Trautloft retained Kath when moving from I./JG 20 to JG 54. Kath is credited with 6 kills. The standard camouflage
of RLM 74/75/76 was oversprayed with washable white paint on the upper sides as the temporary winter camouflage. The only
exception was the framing of the canopy. The non-standard Geschwader Stab marking is green, which was the color reserved
for aircraft of the HQ members. The green heart was the symbol of the JG 54 “Grünherz”. Note the yellow Eastern Front mar-
kings on the wings, rudder, and fuselage.
Bf 109F-4/trop, WNr. 8693, Lt. Hans-Joachim Marseille, 3./JG 27, North Africa, February 1942
This aircraft was flown by Lt. Hans-Joachim Marseille, a fighter ace with 158 kills to his credit. Marseille was awarded the Kni-
ght´s Cross with Swords, Oak Leaves and Diamonds as the recognition of his remarkable success. He was shooting down ene-
my aircraft at rapid rate with many multiple one-day victories. The German propaganda made use of it to make Marseille a star.
The tale ended with Marseille´s death. He was killed in accident on September 30, 1942. The camouflage of his aircraft consisted
of RLM 79 “Sandgelb” on the upper surfaces and RLM 78 “Himmelblau” on the lower ones. The rudder was adorned with fifty kill
marks (Abschussmarken) and appears to be oversprayed with a red-brown primer. Marseille achieved his 49th and 50th kills
on February 21, 1942. His victims were two Kittyhawks. The white-painted wingtips and fuselage band were Luftwaffe markings
used on the aircraft flown in the Mediterranean theatre.
Bf 109F-4, WNr. 13325, Oblt. Viktor Bauer, 9./JG 3, Shchigry, Soviet Union, June 1942
This aircraft was flown by Viktor Bauer, holder of the Knight's Cross with an oak leaves and ace with 106 kills. He achieved most
of them in combats with Soviet pilots. Bauer flew this particular aircraft in the summer of 1942, when German Group of Armies
A advanced on Stalingrad. The unit received Messerschmitts originally intended for service in North Africa, thus camouflaged in
RLM 78/79 colors. The segments of RLM 74/70 (some sources state RLM 75/71) were added to the desert camouflage scheme to
better the camouflage effect in the Eastern Front environment. The yellow wingtips, fuselage band and lower cowling were typi-
cal for airplanes flown in the east. Note the III./JG 3 badge on the nose. The name Ellen referred to Bauer´s wife. Bauer achieved
his 106th and last kill on August 9, 1942, northwest of Stalingrad. The very next day he was hit by enemy fire, wounded, and had to
belly land his crippled plane. After rescue, Bauer served in various posts of Ergänzungs (replacement) units.
Bf 109F-4/B, W. Nr. 7629, Oblt. Frank Liesendahl, 10. (Jabo)/JG 2, France, June 1942
During late 1941, the Luftwaffe considered renewing bombing of Great Britain and coastal shipping. Each fighter unit fighting
against the Great Britain was ordered to single out one Staffel for this purpose. The 10. (Jabo) Staffel played this role within
JG 2. Under command of Oblt. Frank Liesendahl this Staffel sank 20 vessels (total tonnage 630.000 BRT) over a four-month
period. Liesendahl was killed when attacking cargo vessels near Brixham on July 17, 1942. Posthumously he was promoted
to Hauptmann rank and was awarded the Knight´s Cross as well. Liesendahl´s personal mount wore a standard day fighter
camouflage consisting of RLM 74/75/76. The ship-munching fox was a 10. (Jabo) Staffel badge. Note the symbols of vessels da-
maged or sunk by Liesendahl on the rudder.
OVERTREES
Bf 109F-4 1/48
Cat. No. 82114X Cat. No. 82114-LEPT1
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Re-release
Spitfire LF Mk.IXc, MH712, W/O Henryk Dygala, No. 302 (Polish) Sqn., ALG G10 Plumetot, France, August 1944
The No. 302 (Polish) Squadron was one of the units that participated in the invasion of Normandy in June 1944. The D-Day „In-
vasion Stripes“ painted on the bottom of the fuselage and wings indicate that fact as well. This aircraft was equipped with wing
racks for 250Ib bombs. The pointed rudder was freshly painted and so the colors appeared darker than the rest of the aircraft.
Nose art paintings were not common within the RAF, so this one, the girl sitting on the bomb, is one of exceptions. The Polish
stencil right of the cockpit door “Wycierac obuwie” means “Wipe your shoes“.
Spitfire HF Mk.IXc, MJ296, F/Lt Otto Smik, No. 312 (Czechoslovak) Sqn., RAF North Weald, United Kingdom, August 1944
This Spitfire was flown by F/Lt Otto Smik, the CO of B Flight of No. 312 (Czechoslovak) Squadron. On the cockpit door 8,5 confir-
med kill marks plus three V-1s destroyed were painted as his personal score of that time. Smik was flying this Spitfire during
July and August on strafing missions over occupied Europe. He was shot down by AA fire during an attack on Gilze-Rijen Air
Base but survived and with the help of the Dutch resistance, he returned to Great Britain. Smik met his fate on November 28,
1944, when he was killed during attack on the Zwolle railway station. The camouflage and marking of this Spitfire were typical for
No. 312 (Czechoslovak) Sqn. with the unit badge painted on both sides of the cowling. Available photos do not reveal the type of
the rudder. The MJ296 could have had either the rounded or pointed type.
Spitfire LF Mk.IXc, MJ586, S/Lt. Pierre Clostermann, No. 602 Sqn., Longues-sur-Mer, France, July 1944
Pierre Clostermann, a famous French fighter ace, became known worldwide thanks to his book “Le Grand Cirque” (The Big
Show) as well. One of the aircraft he was flying during the war was Spitfire MJ586. Clostermann´s score of seven confirmed,
three probable and seven damaged enemy aircraft is painted below windshield. French sources credit Clostermann with 20
kills, but it has been a topic of debate for many years. The post war French numbers are inconsistent with those of wartime
documentation in British archives due to different methodology of these two Air Forces. At the end of WWII, Clostermann flew
Tempests with No. 3 Squadron RAF. Note the squadron badge on both sides of the engine cowling.
Spitfire LF Mk.lXc, MJ250, F/O Desmond Ibbotson, No. 601 Sqn., Italy, Summer, 1944
MJ250 was flown by No. 601 "County of London" Squadron from July 1944. The unit was operating from the airfields at Perugia,
Loreto and Fano at that time. The aircraft was used primarily for dive-bombing operations. MJ250 survived the war but was
scrapped shortly afterward. The MJ250 was regularly flown by F/O Desmond Ibbotson, DFC & Bar. This fighter ace is credited
with 11 confirmed and four probable kills plus five damaged aircraft. He died on November 19, 1944 at the controls of Spitfire
MH614. The camouflage colors of MJ250 were removed except for the upper engine and fuel tank cowling. These parts seem to
be taken from another aircraft which retained the camouflage colors. Note the unit badge on the fin tip.
Spitfire LF Mk.lXc, ML135, P/O Jerry Billing, No. 401 Sqn., RAF Tangmere, United Kingdom, June 7, 1944
Jerry Billing was one of many Canadians serving with RAF. He volunteered in October 1942 to help the Malta defense. After
joining No. 185 Squadron, he fought over the island until March 1943, when he was downed by a Bf 109. Billing was transferred to
No. 401 Squadron in 1944. He downed a Ju 88 bomber and damaged two Fw 190s on June 7, 1944, the second day of the invasion
of Normandy. On July 1, 1944, his Spitfire ML135 was hit by AA fire and Billing belly-landed in no-man's land in France. He man-
aged to get back to the UK with the help of a French family. After WWII, Jerry Billing re-enlisted in the Royal Canadian Air Force
and became an instructor. In 1951 he joined the Blue Devils, a Canadian aerobatics team flying Vampire jets. Billing left the RCAF
in 1964, becoming DeHavilland test pilot.
Spitfire LF Mk.lXc, ML 135, flown by Jerry Billing, No. 401 Sqn., France, July 1, 1944
Jerry Billing was shot down at the controls of ML135 on July 1, 1944, belly-landing seven miles south of Carentan, France.
The D-Day stripes were left on the undersides only and the female name „Dorothy“ appeared under the windscreen.
OVERTREES 1/48
Spitfire Mk.IXc late version
Cat. No. 8289X Cat. No. 8281-LEPT1
Product page
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WNr. 412179, flown by Uffz. Horst Petzschler, 2./JG 3, Burg near Magdeburg, Germany, May 1944
Horst Petzschler was born in Berlin on September 1st, 1921 and joined the Luftwaffe on April 1st, 1941. After undergoing fighter
pilot training, he was assigned to JG 51 on August 23rd, 1943, and it was there he would gain his first three kills. On April 13th,
1944, he was transferred to 2./JG 3 which was a component of the Defence of the Reich structure, but by June 1944, he would
return to JG 51 on the Eastern Front. On May 4th, 1945, III./JG 51 was relocated to Schleswig-Holstein from eastern Prussia.
Horst Petzschler did not reach that location due to a navigation error and landed at Bulltofta in Sweden, where he was interned
and in January 1946, the Swedes handed him over to the Soviets. He was released from captivity on September 22nd, 1949. On
his return, he worked for the Berlin Police Department and in 1953, he emigrated to Canada and then the United States, where he
worked in the aviation industry. He retired in 1988. Over the course of the Second World War, he downed 26 enemy aircraft.
During his service with 2./JG 3, Uffz. Petzschler flew an aircraft coded Black '14'. The aircraft was painted RLM 76 overall at the
plant and carried the JG 3 insignia on the nose. On May 30th, 1944, Fw. Otto Bülsow was shot down during combat in this airplane
over Belzig.
MT-463, flown by ylikersanti (Staff Sergeant) Tapio Järvi, 2/HLeLv 24, Lappeenranta, Finland, July/August 1944
Among the deliveries of Bf 109G-2 and G-6 fighters to Germany’s ally Finland were two G-6/AS version aircraft. In the Finnish Air
Force, these were coded MT-463 and MT-471. MT-463 was delivered on June 28th, 1944 and was assigned to HLeLv 24, where it
was flown by, among other pilots, ylikersanti Järvi, who used to down two of his total 27 kills. A further five kills in this aircraft
were claimed by another four pilots. The Bf 109G-6/AS did not represent any major advantage for the Finnish Air Force, because
the majority of air combat with the Soviets took place at altitudes below 3,000m. The DB 605AS, which powered the type, was
designed to offer advantages at high altitudes.
The camouflage scheme of this aircraft consisted of sprayed RLM 74/75/76 with the blue swastikas on discs on the fuselage and
wing positions. The code MT-463 appeared on the fuselage ahead of the tail surfaces. The yellow number of the aircraft within
the unit was applied between the fuselage code and the cockpit. There are no available photographs of this aircraft during its
combat career with HLeLv 24, but from other period photographs of other such aircraft, the list of aircraft numbers for this spe-
cific plane has been reduced to 2, 4 or 6.
644103
B-17F LööK
1/48 HKM
LööK set - Brassin pre-painted dashboard and
STEEL seatbelts for B-17F in 1/48 scale. Easy to
assemble, replaces plastic parts. Recommended
kit: HKM
Set contains:
- resin: 4 parts
- decals: no
- photo-etched details: yes, pre-painted
- painting mask: no
Product page
644104
Tempest Mk.II LööK
1/48 Eduard/Special Hobby
LööK set - Brassin pre-painted dashboard and
STEEL seatbelts for Tempest Mk.II in 1/48 scale.
Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts. Reco-
mmended kit: Eduard / Special Hobby
Set contains:
- resin: 1 part
- decals: no
- photo-etched details: yes, pre-painted
- painting mask: no
Product page
644105
Blenheim Mk.I LööK
1/48 Airfix
LööK set - Brassin pre-painted dashboard
and STEEL seatbelts for Blenheim Mk.I
in 1/48 scale. Easy to assemble, replaces
plastic parts. Recommended kit: Airfix
Set contains:
- resin: 2 parts
- decals: no
- photo-etched details: yes, pre-painted
- painting mask: no
Product page
632178
TIALD pod
1/32
Brassin set - the British primary laser
designator for laser-guided bombs in 1/32
scale. The set consists of 1 laser designator.
Compatible with Tornado GR.1/4.
Set contains:
- resin: 4 parts
- decals: yes
- photo-etched details: yes
- painting mask: no
Product page
1/48 HKM
Brassin set - the guns for B-17F in 1/48
scale. The set consists of 14 guns.
Recommended kit: HKM
Set contains:
- resin: 32 parts
- decals: no
- photo-etched details: yes
- painting mask: no
648635
B-17F superchargers Product page
1/48 HKM
Brassin set - the superchargers for B-17F
in 1/48 scale. The set consists of 4 super-
chargers. Recommended kit: HKM
Set contains:
- resin: 6 parts
- decals: no
- photo-etched details: no
- painting mask: no
Set contains:
- resin: 3 parts
- decals: no
- photo-etched details: no
- painting mask: yes
Product page
648637
Tempest Mk.II undercarriage legs BRONZE
1/48 Eduard/Special Hobby
Brassin set - the undercarriage legs for Tempest
Mk.II in 1/48 scale. The set consists of the main
wheels legs and wheel bay doors. Easy to assem-
ble, replaces plastic parts.
Recommended kit: Eduard / Special Hobby
Set contains:
- resin: 6 parts
- decals: no
- photo-etched details: no
- painting mask: no
- bronze: 2 parts
Product page
648642
B-17 wheels cross tread
1/48 HKM
Brassin set - the undercarriage wheels for B-17
in 1/48 scale. The set consists of the main wheels
and a tail wheel. Easy to assemble, replaces plastic
parts. Recommended kit: HKM
Set contains:
- resin: 7 parts
- decals: no
- photo-etched details: no
- painting mask: yes
Product page
648647
P-51D wheels block tread 2
1/48 Eduard
Brassin set - the undercarriage wheels for P-51D
in 1/48 scale. The set consists of the main wheels
and a tail wheel. Easy to assemble, replaces plastic
parts. Recommended kit: Eduard
Set contains:
- resin: 5 parts
- decals: no
- photo-etched details: no
- painting mask: yes
Product page
Set contains:
- resin: 23 parts
- decals: no
- photo-etched details: yes
- painting mask: no
Product page
648649
Fw 190F-8 fuselage guns Product page
1/48 Eduard
Brassin set - the fuselage guns for
Fw 190F-8 in 1/48 scale.
Recommended kit: Eduard
Set contains:
- resin: 17 parts
- decals: no
- photo-etched details: yes
- painting mask: no
648650
Fw 190F-8 engine & fuselage guns
1/48 Eduard
Brassin set - the engine and fuselage
guns for Fw 190F-8 in 1/48 scale.
Recommended kit: Eduard
Set contains:
- resin: 31 parts
- decals: no
- photo-etched details: yes
- painting mask: no
Product page
672265
Sky Shadow ECM pod
1/72
Brassin set - the British radar jamming
Sky Shadow pod for Tornado in 1/72 scale.
Set consists of 1 pod.
Set contains:
- resin: 4 parts
- decals: yes
- photo-etched details: no
- painting mask: no
Product page
1/72
Brassin set - - the GPS/laser guided weapon
CPU-123 Paveway II in 1/72 scale. Set consists
of 2 bombs. Compatible with British Tornado
GR.1/4.
Set contains:
- resin: 14 parts
- decals: yes
- photo-etched details: yes
- painting mask: no
672269
BOZ-107 pod
1/72
Brassin set - the BOZ-EC missile
countermeassure pod in 1/72 scale.
Compatible with Tornado.
Set contains:
- resin: 2 parts
- decals: yes
- photo-etched details: yes
- painting mask: no
Product page
672270
Tornado GR.1 exhaust nozzles
1/72 Eduard/Revell
Brassin set - the exhaust nozzles for
Tornado GR.1 in 1/72 scale.
Recommended kit: Eduard / Revell
Set contains:
- resin: 6 parts
- decals: no
- photo-etched details: yes
- painting mask: no
Product page
644108
MiG-21PF grey LööKplus
1/48 Eduard
Collection of 4 sets for MiG-21PF in 1/48 scale by Eduard.
Product page
Product page
#3DL48024
B-17F/G radio compartment SPACE
for 1/48 kit HKM
Product page
#3DL48025
F-14D SPACE
for 1/48 kit Tamiya
Product page
#3DL48026
MiG-21bis SPACE
for 1/48 kit Eduard
Product page
#3DL48027
Fw 190A-8/R2 SPACE
for 1/48 kit Eduard
Product page
#3DL48028
Bf 109F-4
for 1/48 kit Eduard
Product page
#3DL48029
Spitfire Mk.IXc late version
for 1/48 kit Eduard
Product page
Jackal 1
1/35 Hobby Boss Jackal 1 1/35 Hobby Boss (36465)
F/A-18E
F/A-18E 1/48 Meng (491194)
F/A-18E 1/48 Meng (FE1194) (Zoom)
F/A-18E seatbelts STEEL 1/48 Meng (FE1195) (Zoom)
1/48 Meng
F/A-18E 1/48 Meng (EX786) (Mask)
F/A-18E TFace 1/48 Meng (EX786) (Mask)
1/48 Kinetic
IA-58A Pucara seatbelts STEEL 1/48 Kinetic (FE1197) (Zoom)
IA-58A Pucara 1/48 Kinetic (EX778) (Mask)
IA-58A Pucara TFace 1/48 Kinetic (EX779) (Mask)
44-13660, Lt. Kenneth A. Skinner, 79th FS, 20th FG, 8th AF, King´s Cliffe,
Northamptonshire, Great Britain, Autumn 1944
44-13760, Capt. Glenn M. Webb, 79th FS, 20th FG, 8th AF, Northamptonshire,
King´s Cliffe, Great Britain, October 1944
44-13619, Lt. Robert W. Graham, 487th FS, 352nd FG, 8th AF, Bodney,
Norfolk, Great Britain, July 1944
44-13471, Capt. Evan M. Johnson, 505th FS, 339th FG, 8th AF, Fowlmere, Cambridgeshire,
Great Britain, May 1944
44-13410, Col. Thomas J. J. Christian, 375th FS, 361st FG, 8th AF, Bottisham,
Cambridgeshire, Great Britain, July 1944
JX277 JX278
JX278
EX786 EX787
EX787
EX790 EX791
EX791
EX792
EX793 EX793
84 eduard INFO Eduard - July 2021
July 2021
KITS
11148 WILDE SAU Episode two Saudämmerung 1/48 Limited edition
2136 ANGLERANGRIFF 1/72 Limited edition
84114 Fw 190A-8/R2 1/48 Weekend edition
84130 MiG-21bis 1/48 Weekend edition
82114 Bf 109F-4 (reedice) 1/48 ProfiPACK
8281 Spitfire Mk.IXc (reedice) 1/48 ProfiPACK
84169 Bf 109G-6 (reedice) 1/48 Weekend edition
PE-SETS
36464 T-60 1/35 Hobby Boss
36465 Jackal 1 1/35 Hobby Boss
32468 F-100C exterior 1/32 Trumpeter
32469 F-100C slats 1/32 Trumpeter
32470 F-100C air brake 1/32 Trumpeter
32471 F-100C undercarriage 1/32 Trumpeter
32472 F-100C gun bay 1/32 Trumpeter
32989 F-100C interior 1/32 Trumpeter
481056 B-17F ammo feed chutes 1/48 HKM
491192 Ju 87D 1/48 Hasegawa
491194 F/A-18E 1/48 Meng
491196 IA-58A Pucara 1/48 Kinetic
491198 F-84F 1/48 Kinetic
491201 B-17F wooden floors & ammo boxes 1/48 HKM
73744 F-111D 1/72 Hasegawa
73745 F-111F 1/72 Hasegawa
ZOOMS
33284 F-100C 1/32 Trumpeter
33285 F-100C seatbelts STEEL 1/32 Trumpeter
FE1192 Ju 87D 1/48 Hasegawa
FE1193 Ju 87D seatbelts STEEL 1/48 Hasegawa
FE1194 F/A-18E 1/48 Meng
FE1195 F/A-18E seatbelts STEEL 1/48 Meng
FE1196 IA-58A Pucara 1/48 Kinetic
FE1197 IA-58A Pucara seatbelts STEEL 1/48 Kinetic
FE1198 F-84F 1/48 Kinetic
FE1199 F-84F seatbelts STEEL 1/48 Kinetic
FE1200 Fw 190A-8/R2 Weekend 1/48 Eduard
FE1202 Lancaster B Mk.I seatbelts STEEL 1/48 HKM
SS744 F-111D 1/72 Hasegawa
SS745 F-111F 1/72 Hasegawa
MASKS
JX277 F-100C 1/32 Trumpeter
JX278 F-100C TFace 1/32 Trumpeter
EX785 Ju 87D TFace 1/48 Hasegawa
EX786 F/A-18E 1/48 Meng
EX787 F/A-18E TFace 1/48 Meng
EX788 IA-58A Pucara 1/48 Kinetic
EX789 IA-58A Pucara TFace 1/48 Kinetic
EX790 F-84F 1/48 Kinetic
EX791 F-84F TFace 1/48 Kinetic
EX792 Lancaster B Mk.I 1/48 HKM
EX793 Lancaster B Mk.I TFace 1/48 HKM
BIGED SETS
BIG33133 P-40M part I 1/32 Trumpeter
BIG33134 P-40M part II 1/32 Trumpeter
BIG33135 PT-13 Kaydet 1/32 Roden
BIG49291 MiG-15bis 1/48 Bronco/Hobby 2000
BIG49292 Harrier GR.1 1/48 Kinetic
BIG49293 Harrier GR.3 1/48 Kinetic
BRASSIN
632178 TIALD pod 1/32
644103 B-17F LööK 1/48 HKM
644104 Tempest Mk.II LööK 1/48 Eduard/Special Hobby
644105 Blenheim Mk.I LööK 1/48 Airfix
648634 B-17F guns 1/48 HKM
648635 B-17F superchargers 1/48 HKM
648636 Tempest Mk.II wheels 1/48 Eduard/Special Hobby
648637 Tempest Mk.II undercarriage legs BRONZE 1/48 Eduard/Special Hobby
648642 B-17 wheels cross tread 1/48 HKM
648647 P-51D wheels block tread 2 1/48 Eduard
648648 Fw 190F-8 engine 1/48 Eduard
648649 Fw 190F-8 fuselage guns 1/48 Eduard
648650 Fw 190F-8 engine & fuselage guns 1/48 Eduard
672265 Sky Shadow ECM pod 1/72
672268 CPU-123 Paveway II 1/72
672269 BOZ-107 pod 1/72
672270 Tornado GR.1 exhaust nozzles 1/72 Eduard/Revell
LookPLUS
644108 MiG-21PF grey LööKplus 1/48 Eduard
644109 MiG-21PFM grey LööKplus 1/48 Eduard
DECAL SET
D32010 P-51D-5 "15th AF" 1/32 Tamiya/Revell
D32011 P-51D-5 "357th FG" 1/32 Tamiya/Revell
D48085 P-51D-5 "8th AF" 1/48 Eduard
D72033 Italian smoke rings camouflage 1/72
SPACE
3DL48024 B-17F/G radio compartment SPACE 1/48 HKM
3DL48025 F-14D SPACE 1/48 Tamiya
3DL48026 MiG-21bis SPACE 1/48 Eduard
3DL48027 Fw 190A-8/R2 SPACE 1/48 Eduard
3DL48028 Bf 109F-4 SPACE 1/48 Eduard
3DL48029 Spitfire Mk.IXc late version SPACE 1/48 Eduard Release
BUILT
1/48
Donald Finlay was a famous British athlete. He was the European champion in the 110 metre hurdle in 1938. He won the bronze medal at the
1932 Summer Olympic Games in Los Angeles, and the silver medal at the 1936 Summer Olympic Games in Berlin, both in the 110m hurdle event.
After the war, he was British team captain at the 1948 Summer Olympics in London, where he was chosen to take the Olympic Oath. He joined
the RAF in 1935. He led No. 54 Squadron in the Battle of Britain, and he was shot down over Ramsgate on August 28th and was wounded.
After recovering, he took command of No. 41 Squadron and he achieved four kills during the BoB. His aircraft here illustrates the camouflage
scheme and markings of Fighter Command aircraft in late 1940 and early 1941. The black painted (Night) left wing, Sky fuselage band and Sky
spinner were ordered by the Air Ministry on November 27th, 1940.
Product page
Tempest Mk.V
Series 2 1/48
Cat. No. 82122
Built by Carlo Beltramini
IPMS Italia - Verona
JN803, No. 486 (RNZAF) Squadron, No. 122 Wing, B.80 Volkel, the Netherlands, October 1944
One of the earliest Tempest Mk.V Series 2 aircraft was delivered to No. 486 (RNZAF) Squadron at RAF Newchurch on May 17th, 1944. It was
flown throughout the campaign against the V-1 flying bombs, by many different pilots. It is believed that the 26 kill markings relate to claims
made by pilots flying the aircraft rather than claims by any one pilot. This total makes JN803 one of the most successful Tempests against the
V-1. At the end of September 1944 the Newchurch Tempests left No. 150 Wing and flew to join No. 122 Wing at B.60 Grimbergen in Belgium and
month later to the newly captured B.80 Volkel in the Netherlands. JN803 was often flown by F/O ‘Jack’ Stafford, who had shot down 4 of the
V-1s on its scoreboard. In December 1944 it was issued to No. 3 Squadron. However, the aircraft was lost in combat on December 30th, 1944,
when shot down by Bf 109s of IV./JG 27, its pilot captured and murdered by a security officer at Rheine airfield.
Tempest in the standard camouflage, so called Day Fighter Scheme, sports only partial recognition markings in the form of black and white
“invasion” stripes. Their application on the wing and fuselage upper surfaces was discontinued by the order dated September 10th, 1944.
The V-1 kill markings are painted under the windshield on the fuselage starboard.
Product page
W.Nr. 15919, Flown by Maj. Hermann Graf, CO of JG 50, Wiesbaden – Erbenheim, September 1943
Hermann Graf was credited with 212 kills, 202 of them over the Eastern Front. He was awarded the Knight Cross with Oak Leaves, Swords
and Diamonds on September 16, 1942 for 172 kills. Graf flew this colorful aircraft in the fall of 1943 when he served as the CO of JG 50. Jagd-
geschwader 50 wa sofficially created on August 15, 1943 out of Jagdgruppe Süd der ObdL that was formed as a highaltitude fighter unit to com-
bat recce Mosquitos from July 21, 1943. JG 50 was led by Hermann Graf who gave birth to the unit´s crest painted under the canopy. The Red
Hunter symbolized the German Luftwaffe soccer team known under thenick name 'Die roten Jäger'. Graf was a member of this team, along
with then German national team members. The unit existed for only a few months, and in October 1943 was incorporated into I./JG 301.
BIG ED (August)
BIG49294 Su-33 1/48 Minibase
BIG49295 Sabre F.4 1/48 Airfix
BIG49296 MV-22 1/48 1/48 Hobby Boss
BIG49297 Blenheim Mk.I 1/48 Airfix
BIG49298 B-17F part I 1/48 HKM
BIG49294 BIG49296 BIG49299 B-17F part II 1/48 HKM
LöökPlus (August)
644110 P-39Q LööKplus 1/48 Eduard
644111 Mustang Mk.IV LööKplus 1/48 Eduard
BIGSIN (August)
SIN64873 B-17F 1/48 HKM
648641 RP-3 60lb rockets for Tempest Mk.II 1/48 Eduard/Special Hobby
PE-SETS
53267 USS Langley AV-3 1/350 Trumpeter
53268 USS Langley AV-3 safety nets 1/350 Trumpeter
32473 F-100C interior pt.2 1/32 Trumpeter
32990 AH-1G 1/32 ICM
36466 Cromwell Mk.IV 1/35 Airfix
481057 Mi-24P cargo interior 1/48 Zvezda
481058 Mi-24P exterior 1/48 Zvezda
481059 Lancaster B Mk.I radiators 1/48 HKM
481060 Lancaster B Mk.I bomb bay 1/48 HKM
481063 Lancaster B Mk.I landing flaps 1/48 HKM
481064 Tempest Mk.II landing flaps 1/48 Eduard/Special Hobby
481065 Spitfire Mk.V landing flaps 1/48 Eduard
491203 Lancaster B Mk.I cockpit 1/48 HKM
491204 Me 163B 1/48 Gaspatch Model
491205 Mi-24P interior 1/48 Zvezda
73746 A-4B 1/72 Fujimi / Hobby 2000
ZOOMS
33286 AH-1G 1/32 ICM
33287 AH-1G seatbelts STEEL 1/32 ICM
FE1203 Lancaster B Mk.I 1/48 HKM
FE1204 Me 163B seatbelts STEEL 1/48 Gaspatch Model
FE1205 Mi-24P 1/48 Zvezda
FE1206 Mi-24P seatbelts STEEL 1/48 Zvezda
FE1207 Spitfire Mk.V seatbelts STEEL 1/48 Eduard
FE1208 Tempest Mk.II seatbelts STEEL 1/48 Eduard/Special Hobby
FE1209 Fw 190D-9 Weekend 1/48 Eduard
FE1210 Spitfire F Mk.IXc Weekend 1/48 Eduard
FE1211 Fw 190D-9 seatbelts STEEL 1/48 Eduard
SS746 A-4B 1/72 Fujimi / Hobby 2000
MASKS
JX279 AH-1G 1/32 ICM
JX280 AH-1G TFace 1/32 ICM
EX794 Me 163B 1/48 Gaspatch Model
EX795 Me 163B TFace 1/48 Gaspatch Model
EX796 Tempest Mk.II TFace 1/48 Eduard/Special Hobby
EX797 Spitfire Mk.V TFace 1/48 Eduard
EX798 Mi-24P 1/48 Zvezda
EX799 Mi-24P TFace 1/48 Zvezda
CX602 A-4B 1/72 Fujimi/Hobby 2000
CX603 F-4E 1/72 Fine Molds
DECAL SETS
D32012 Tempest Mk.V stencils 1/32 Special Hobby/Revell
D48086 Tempest Mk.II stencils 1/48 Eduard/Special Hobby
D48087 Tempest Mk.II roundels 1/48 Eduard/Special Hobby
D48088 Spitfire Mk.V stencils 1/48 Eduard
D48089 Su-7 stencils 1/48 OEZ/Směr
D48090 Su-27 1/48 GWH
SPACE
3DL48030 Tempest Mk.II SPACE 1/48 Eduard/Special Hobby
3DL48031 Spitfire Mk.V SPACE 1/48 Eduard
3DL48032 Me 163B SPACE 1/48 Gaspatch Model
3DL48033 Lancaster B Mk.I SPACE 1/48 HKM
1/48
EAGLE´S CALL
Cat. No. 11149 1/48
Spitfire Mk.Vb, BM581, P/O William P. Kelly, No. 121 (Eagle) Squadron, RAF Southend, Essex, United Kingdom, July 1942
EAGLE´S CALL
Spitfire Mk.Vc Trop, 307th FS, 31st FG, 12th AF, La Senia,
Algier, end of 1942
Spitfire Mk.Vc Trop, Lt. George G. Loving, 309th FS, 31st FG,
12th AF, Pommigliano, Italy, December 1943
Spitfire Mk.Vc Trop, Lt. Richard Alexander, 2nd FS, 52nd FG, 12th AF, Borgo, Corsica, early 1944
Fw 190D-9
1/48
Spitfire F Mk.IX
1/48
Cat. No.84175
MiG-21MF
Re-release
HOW I MET
ZDENĚK SEKYRKA
I met Zdeněk Sekyrka through the advertisement. It happened
on March 11, 1986. I realised that my kit collection has over-
grown and I will never build so many models-as if it were the
point in scale modeling, right? I judged that I need to reduce it
and somehow focus on a certain theme. I decided to concen-
trate on the WWII aircraft and right at the beginning of 1986
published and ad in Letectví a kosmonautika magazine that
I trade kits of the post war era for the models of the WWII air-
craft. On that day, when the advertisement was published, on
afore mentioned March 11, my life was changed significant-
a disagreement with his businnes partner and came up with
ly and forever, even though I was not aware of it yet at that
the offer one cannot refuse. Neither did I and started to make
moment. Since the morning my home phone kept ringing, but
„epoxids“ with Zdeněk. Soon I realized that he had worked out
it was manageable. In the evening, after seven, the doorbell
the technological details of the molds making long time ago.
rang. A shorter guy with moustache was standing in front of
Unlike other groups who made similar models, and there were
the door, he was smiling, a rolled copy of Letectví in one hand,
quite a number of those in Czechoslovakia, Zdeněk poured mo-
a bag with models in the other and announced that he is re-
dels into the hard epoxide molds. So, not like nowadays, when
sponding to the ad. I invited him inside and no sooner did I make
the resin kits and detailed sets are cast from polyurethane,
coffee for him the doorbell rang the second time. There was
cure within tens of seconds and the productivity in compari-
a guy in front of the door who resembled Alice Cooper without
son with the „old times“ is exponential. Everything was much
make-up, looked angry, a rolled copy of Letectví in one hand,
a bag with models in another a said he was responding to an slower then, one set of castings, which was basically one com-
ad. Before got him a bat (infamous event at A. Cooper’s concert) plete kit, would take 24 hours to make. That was the time du-
and made coffee for him both gentlemen were already engaged ring which the mixture of the epoxide resin ChS Epoxy 1200
in a friendly chat which did not finish late until after midnight. hardened and could be removed from the molds. Zdeněk was
Well, gentlemen left for home but in fact we never parted and an expert in this. I had no clue, I was a beginner that had a lot
our fates have been connected for the next 35 years, and still to learn. I started with making a master. Nigel Hannant, who
are nowadays. The first visitor was Zdeněk Sekyrka and the in 80s was engaged in lively barter business with Czech and
second one’s name was Zdeněk Flégl. other Eastern European modelers, asked for resin kits of the
It all started pretty innocently. We used to meet in my kitchen WWI aircraft in 1/72 scale and paid 6 pounds per piece. That
or in Flégl’s kitchen, discussed the kits, how to obtain them, was a large sum of money for a small model! So I duly made
when can be sourced what because at that time more then bu- a masters for Fokker D.VIII in 1/72 scale. I was so excited by this
ying the kits we had to „obtain“ them. In Flégl’s kitchen I saw the achievement that before leaving to meet Zdeněk I put the box
photoetched parts for the first time. Both Zdeněks talked about with the masters on the roof of my Škoda 105L and just took off.
them with great deal of knowledge, as if they had used them for Only when I parked the car in front of Zdeněk’s house I found
years. Truth is that one of them bought the Airwaves photoched out that the box is missing.
set at Hannant’s. It can be said that this was the initial impulse, I rushed back home and my suspicion was unfortunately con-
technological beginning of the future Eduard. The next impulse firmed. The box was lying in the middle of the street, the parts
came couple of months later. It turned out, that Zdeněk, besides scattered all around it because the garbage truck had just run
the classical scale modeling and collecting the kits and litera- over it. To my big surprise the damage was not serious and in a
ture, also makes resin models. So called „epoxids“. He had had couple of days I was able to repair the masters. Zdeněk made
the molds, brought it over to my place and trained me in casting.
How to mix the resin, how to get rid of the bubbles, how to treat
the molds so as the castings would not get stuck to them, how
to apply resin with brush into the molds, how to close them,
apply clamps... and wait. Next day he came to show me how
to open the molds, pull our the castings, clean them and apply
resin again. Then I performed this daily. Pour, close, open next
day, pull out, clean, treat the surfaces, pour the resin, close...
again and again, like a robot. In the meantime I made another
masters, Fokker D.VI. Zdeněk was micro-managing me so as
my masters were better, taught me the right procedures and I,
to pay something back, came up with the proposal that the real
model had to have the assembly instructions and a box.
To my surprise Zdeněk agreed. So as you can understand be-
tter, the Czech „epoxids“ have never featured anything like that.
They were packaged in poly bags without a box or instructions.
A skilled modeler can help himself, right? Zdeněk came up with
the idea that we will make the boxes ourselves, out of the bo- and private enterprise was no longer illegal.
xes designed for desserts. He made a pattern and I bought all However, we did not legalize our business but parted our ways,
available dessert boxes in the whole North Bohemian region, in a good manner. Reason was the photoetched parts (PE),
from Klášterec nad Ohří to Dečín. And we started to make bo- Zdeněk in fact. He should not have shown them to me. I could
xes. We printed the box art on the plain office paper on Xerox not get them out of my head. After some time not only I organi-
which was available in Autodrom, the motor racinf circuit in zed resin castings in the whole town of Most but together with
Most, and on the boxes we glued the labels with the descrip- another friend and coworker from Chemical Factory, Ctirad
tion. We also printed the instruction sheets on that Xerox in Kuřák, we developed the technology for PE production. In 1989
Autodrom. And we christened the new product, Eduard. At that it seemed that we have achieved tangible results. Accidentally,
time it was my nickname, which had been given to me several Zdeněk’s brother, Mig-21 pilot and captain of the Czechoslo-
years earlier while I worked at Chemical Factory in Litvínov, vak People’s Army, in the middle of 1989, having tried to leave
and which I truly hated. So I said to myself that I will ellegantly army for some time, finally left, matter of fact was let go and
get rid of it by passing it on the new line of „epoxids“. I speak of was looking for the job. He got an idea to seek a position as
a new line of products because there was no company yet. On a designer in Směr Cooperative in Prague. He secured a mee-
the contrary, it was an illegal enterprise. To make models lega- ting with Oto Jartim and Karel Mišák, company’s designers at
lly was not really possible even though there were some gifted that time, and he took me along. My intention was to offer Směr
individuals, for example one Jiří Šilhánek, who were able to Cooperative to implement the production of our invention, PE
legalize this type of business even under the rule of socialism. for plastic models. The result was that I returned with the pro-
However, I did not know Jiří Šilhánek personally at that time, he posal to establish the company, or cooperative, to manufacture
was a mysterious person, something between Karel Gott and the photoetched parts for Směr. Ctirad Kuřák was excited by
Fidel Castro. I had my doubts that such a person exists at all, this idea, we started to put the business plan together but soon
and if he does I will never meet him anyway. enough the dilemma was apparent, the product can either be
And moreover, it turned out, that creating the masters, making PE or models. We could not wear two hats at the same time.
molds, cutting and gluing the boxes, running among stationari- We decided in favour of PE, Zdeněk wanted to stick with models
es to buy the desert boxes, printing the instructions, packaging so we parted our ways. We split the assets so as Zdeněk kept
the models and bringing them to the post office and in addition the molds and production of our models and I kept the name,
casting and cleaning parts it’s just too much work for two pe- Eduard. The reason was that Ctirad was really fond of that
ople. I decided to hire the employees, illegally of course. The name, after all he was one of those who liked my nickname
majority were recruited from friends or their family members, and enjoyed using it. Zdeněk was joined by his brother and Ivan
our family members... we put together the network of some ten Víšek, another modeling friend of ours, and started to work on
people, distributed the molds and I set on the path of a scale launching the company to produce „epoxids“. After two years
model manufacturing manager by checking on coworkers, dis- they gave up and shortly afterwards Zdeněk joined Eduard.
tributing the molds and resin which in the meantime we bought During the interim period we of course saw each other and
out in the whole region, including Louny, Kladno and Slaný. At Zdeněk decidedly helped develop our company. At that time he
the same time I was collecting the finished castings. Other pe- worked in the computing center of The Mining Constructions
ople were packaging them and our illegal business flourished. Most company.
And skyrocketed and that was too much for Zdeněk to handle. In their building in the city center, Mining Constructions owned
He always came in the evening, we sat in the kitchen and Zde- the computing center with a huge computer. I would say that
něk was convincing me that we had to let go because if not they this monster occupying two floors of the large building repre-
find us, arrest us and put us in jail. Truth is that this kind of acti- sented the computing power of today’s smart phone. Regar-
vity resembled a little bit marijuana growing and dealing with dless, the company bought, at that time an advanced desktop
it and police could have arrested us for this had not they had with Intel 286 processor and a plotting machine. Soon enough
other problems. They did not have time. Before an arrested for Zdeněk recognized that the computer is an ideal device for PE
illegal business came, the revolution started, regime collapsed design and negotiated a PC lease. So I started to draw PE in Mi-