Friday, 27 July 2012

Dans le ciel de France - Jagdgeschwader 2 Vol III 1942 - first look at the new volume due this summer from Erik Mombeeck !




Cover illustration - Fw. Martin Reichherzer of 7./JG 2 seated on a JG 2 Bf 109 “Friedrich”


While it may have taken more than 60 years for the first installment of a detailed history of the second fighter wing of the Luftwaffe to appear with the publication of volume I of 'Dans le ciel de France' ('In the skies of France') back in 2009, Erik Mombeeck is already preparing to launch volume 3 of his French-language chronicle of Jagdgeschwader 2 due this summer. Conducting operations principally over France and the Channel, JG 2 was destined to become one of the most celebrated of German fighter units, accorded extensive coverage by the propaganda services of the Reich. Awarded the honour title "Richthofen" as early as 1935, JG 2 spearheaded the campaign in the West and the assault against England in the Battle of Britain. The unit remained in France when the majority of German fighter units were dispatched eastwards for the invasion of Russia during the spring of 1941. Tasked with defending the airspace of Brittany, Normandy and much of Picardy along the French Channel coastline, JG 2 constituted a bulwark against the incursions of the RAF and the USAF through to the summer of 1944.
This new volume covers the year 1942 with JG 2 continuing  to counter RAF raids over the continent, while for the first time the pilots of the leading Kanal Geschwader would come up against the first examples of what would ultimately become the nemesis of the Jagdwaffe - the long-range P-51 Mustang escort fighter and the B-17 Flying Fortress bomber. This new volume also covers in depth JG 2's conversion on to the first variants of the famed Focke Wulf 190 fighter, the break-out of the German battleships (Donnerkeil) and 
the huge air battle over Dieppe on 19 August 1942 which saw the Geschwader claiming almost 60 Allied aircraft shot down in one day of bitter fighting. And l
ater in the year elements of the Geschwader - including Jules Meimberg's special high altitude Bf 109 Gustav Staffel 11./ JG 2 - would be dispatched to Tunisia following the Anglo-American landings in north-west Africa. An exclusive text extract follows..



       " A murderous summer"

Having completed their conversion training, 2./ JG 2 flew out of Le Bourget on  1 June with ten Fw 190s and headed back to Triqueville. However on their return to Normandy an unpleasant surprise awaited them - their quarters had been taken over by their 6. Staffel comrades under Oblt. Erich Rudorffer. In the event the cohabitation of the two Staffeln on the airfield would be short-lived. Elsewhere Bruno Stolle's 8.Staffel, who had also spent the last two weeks of May at Le Bourget alongside 2. Staffel, now departed St. Brieuc for Morlaix and the coasts of Brittany. The intensity of the fighting along the Channel and the transfer of a number of JG 2 veterans to Geschwader engaged in fighting on the Eastern Front saw the Richthofen receive a number of reinforcements during the month of June. One of the most notable departures to the East was Fw. Otto Pohl, the 5./JG 2 pilot who had registered the Geschwader's 1,000th combat success on 17 April 1942 (his victim on that day an early production RAF Lancaster sent out as part of the low-level raiding force on the MAN diesel engine works at Augsburg, deep in Bavaria). Another transfer was Wolfgang Wehrhagen of 4./JG 2. Both pilots went to JG 77 while a third, Kurt Rose, was posted to JG 51 - of these three pilots only Otto Pohl survived the war. Several JG 77 pilots were posted back to the Kanal Front with JG 2 - among them Lt. Bruno Siekmann who had achieved ten victories in a year of fighting in the East with II./ JG 77 and Lt. Hermann Staege, an aerobatics champion of the pre-war Kunstflugstaffel, incorporated into I./LG 2 during 1939-40, a Gruppe that had been re-designated I./ JG 77. He had been credited with sixteen victories at the time of his transfer to the West. As most of these Eastern Front veterans were Bf 109 pilots they too underwent the Fw 190 conversion course before joining JG 2.








On 21 July 1942 Hptm. Helmut-Felix Bolz, Kommandeur of II./JG 2 shot down an unknown aircraft type that he initially identified as a 'Tomahawk'. A short while later he visited the crash site at Caudebec-en-Caux between Rouen and Le Havre and was able to inspect at first hand what he later learnt was a 'Mustang' (more usually 'P-51' in  American parlance). The Mustang's pilot F/Lt Veal Rowland of No. 239 Squadron had been taken captive.


Vol III of 'Dans le Ciel de France - 1942' (French-language text only) will be available later this summer. This title, along with Luftwaffe Gallery 3, can be pre-ordered at Erik Mombeeck's site http://www.luftwaffe.be

Friday, 20 July 2012

For Stalingrad! Ju 88s of KG 77 at Tazinskaja (?)



Currently on offer at Heiko Fuchs ebay sales. Click on these images to see a larger view. And don't forget to click on the link and put on a bid, still nine days left. I post these pictures, not only to grab them 'for posterity' (to coin a phrase) but as a thank you to the vendors kind enough to let me post them here in the first place. I have no problem with helping them to achieve a decent price..

According to the caption these are Ju 88s of KG 77 (3Z) at Charkow, Osnowa during June 1942 along with a selection of ordnance. A member of the ground crew adds a no doubt pithy comment to the tail fin of a 1000 kg bomb. Note the seahorse emblem on the rudder in the third photo, although 9K (KG 51) is obviously not a KG 77 machine...






Below, a nice atmospheric selection of airfield scenes taken at Tazinskaja in the run-up to the encirclement of VI. Armee in Stalingrad, winter 1942. Again according to the caption these are Ju 88s from KG 77. The last two images to conclude this post are very nice clear photos of a Heinkel He 111 Z seen at Bagerowo, Kertsch








new and forthcoming from Geramond ( publishers of Flugzeug Classic) - Flieger-Asse und Kanonenfutter



In their 'Special' series Geramond in Munich publish Flugzeug Classic 'Special 10 - Projecke, Bomber, Transporter' in September 2012. This is a 100-page A-4 softback devoted to fighter, bomber and transporter types and projects. Twelve aircraft and designs are profiled, including one of the leading contenders in the 'Bomber B' programme, the Fw 191 (the Ju 288 was covered in 'Special 9'). Also featured are the two little-known late-war Junkers designs, the Ju 388 and the ill-fated four-engined Junkers Ju 488 'Amerika' bomber project. The Junkers Ju 488 was a hybrid assemblage of Junkers medium twin parts and two prototypes were (partially) constructed in the Latécoère factory in Toulouse (Montaudran district), before the wings and centre section of the V401 were blown up and destroyed in a French resistance attack during July 1944. Other types covered in this Flugzeug Classic 'Special' include the Me 263, Me 323 and the high altitude Bv 155 fighter. 100 photographs and at least 60 colour profiles - not bad for 10 euros! I am a big fan of this series and rate these volumes as highly as the quarterly 'Batailles Aériennes' titles published by Lela Presse. Flugzeug Classic 'Special' issues are available direct from Geramond (although postage from Germany can be a tad on the high side) or via The Book Depository with free postage worldwide.



The August issue of Flugzeug Classic magazine features the usual selection of high quality Luftwaffe content. Cover feature is an eight-page history detailing the story of the R4M air-to-air rocket. Elsewhere there are articles on the air-war in North Africa, the Bv 238 and part 3 of Ju 52 Transporter pilot Wilhelm Geitz's memoirs. German language. More page views available at Geramond.




'Fighter aces and cannon fodder' due in September 2012 from Geramond is Peter Cronauers's 225-page story of the German fighter pilot during WWII. This volume includes plenty of first person accounts and 70 photos as the author describes the careers of six Luftwaffe fighter pilots. German language text.





Thursday, 5 July 2012

new 1:72 scale Eduard Bf 110 E





This 1/72 Bf110 E is a totally new tool kit from Eduard (possibly scaled down from their 1/48 kit). In the box it looks to be the best Bf 110 in this scale so far. The surface detail and panel lines are much finer than the recent new tool Airfix kit, the cockpit is far better detailed and one of the biggest accuracy issues with the Airfix kit appears to have been avoided by Eduard - the engine nacelles do not extend down the wing over the flaps! All in all, combined with a set of mask and cockpit colour zoom etch, this should be a much better model when built than its Airfix or indeed Fujimi rival. The full UK RRP for this kit should be around £19.50 but on the MJW models website the price is just £15.75! It is still possible though to get the Airfix Bf 110 for less than half that, although RRP is now nearly £10 making the Eduard kit an altogether more attractive prospect. Note too that the Eduard Profipack is much better value than a weekend edition which will undoubtedly follow featuring the canopy mask and expanded decal sheet. You do not really want to tackle a Bf 110 canopy without a mask! Having done my own masks on the new Revell Ju 88 I can confirm that it took ages! The cockpit colour Zoom etch will help it look better too, especially the seat belts.You can of course purchase an Eduard Mask and Zoom Etch for the Airfix Bf 110. 

http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/NEW-Eduard-1-72-EDK7083-Messerschmitt-Bf110E-Profipack-/160838021195?pt=UK_ToysGames_ModelKits_ModelKits_JN&hash=item2572b1704b#ht_500wt_715

One of the five markings options in the kit is this 4./NJG 1 machine, G9+JM, featuring a Haifischmaul 'sharksmouth' marking and wearing an application of the maritime green '72' as worn temporarily for patrols over the Channel during the Donnerkeil 'Channel Dash' operation - the break-out of the German battle cruisers Scharnhorst and Gneisenau from Brittany during February 1942.





 

Bf 109 Friedrich JG 53


http://www.ebay.de/itm/Foto-Messerschmitt-Me109-Wrack-Kennung-JG-53-Pik-As-Jagdgeschwader-Molders-Bf109-/180919069394?pt=Militaria&hash=item2a1f9dead2#ht_868wt_932

courtesy of Marco at koelsch333 Ebay sales.

My first thought was that this was a belly-landed Bf 109 G-14 from 7. Staffel JG 53 machine shot down during JG 53's Bodenplatte raid on Metz-Frescaty 01/01/1945. Slightly 'off-beam' to put it mildly. A blog reader writes with a correction; this is Bf 109 F-4 WNr 7187 White 4 of 4./JG53 (pilot Lt. Fritz Dinger) crashed 05-10-1941 at Szologubowk. That is evident from the selection of previously published pics of this same machine. Thank you!






ZG 26 on Sicily



Michael Meyer's current Ebay sales 



Waffen justieren (gun harmonisation) being carried out on 9. Staffel ZG 26 Bf 110s during early 1941 on Sicily. The a/c below is Bf 110 C/D "3U+NT", WNr. 3458. Note the Staffelwappen, a stylised Hahn or cockerel on the Zerstörerdoppelwinkel, the double chevron of the 'destroyer units'. The spinner tips are yellow. The lower picture shows 9. Staffel Warte outside their accomodation on the airfield at Palermo



Wednesday, 4 July 2012

Lela Presse on Facebook - new Luftwaffe books, JG 53 history Vol III


Catch up with all the latest news and publications from Lela Presse on their new Facebook page

http://www.facebook.com/AvionsLelapresse

Please note your blog author will be taking time out over the next few months to work on various new publications for Lela Presse, VDM Heinz Nickel and Erik Mombeek. Lela Presse currently have Luftwaffe Seaplanes Vol III and a history of the Focke Wulf 190 in French service (with English captions) in preparation.  Part III of Jean-Louis Roba's excellent history of JG 53 is due on 20 July. (French language only); A-4 softback, 96 pages, 200 photos, Thierry Dekker artwork. Order your copy here, highly recommended at only 12 Euros..

 http://www.avions-bateaux.com/produit/batailles-aeriennes/1879


Summary of contents:
-  II. and III./JG 53 over Malta (1 – 20 May 1942)
-  III./JG 53 in north Africa (June – October 1942)
-  Stab and II./JG 53 alone against Malta (May - June 1942)
-  Stab and II./JG 53 over Malta (July – October 1942)
-  Final assault against Malta
-  I. and II./JG 53 (October 1942)
-  The 'Pik As' in Tunisia (November 1942 – May 1943)
-  The 'Pik As' on Sicily (13 May – 9 July 1943)




Read my extensive review of part 2 of this series elsewhere on this blog
http://falkeeins.blogspot.co.uk/2012/02/history-of-jagdgeschwader-53-pik-as.html

Elsewhere I am currently proofing my contribution to Part 5 of the hugely impressive Stipdonk/Meyer  "Die Deutsche Luftwaffe - Zerstörer- und Nachtjagdverbände" series published through VDM Heinz Nickel, Zweibrücken, Germany. No news on publication yet though.





As the title suggests this series is primarily concerned with Luftwaffe Zerstörer (‘destroyer’ or heavy fighters) and Nachtjagd (nightfighting) operations. The books are essentially photo journals with extensive German and English captions. The authors have released one book per year over the past four years with each volume featuring around 400-500 images over 200 pages in an A4 soft-back format. Most of the photos in each volume are previously unpublished and well printed. They are captioned in German and English except for Volume 4, which is German-language only.

More info here
http://falkeeins.blogspot.co.uk/2010/07/die-deutsche-luftwaffe-zerstorer-und.html

A review of Colin Heaton's new 'Me 262 Stormbird' title 


from the publisher's blurb;

" The Me 262 was the first of its kind, the first jet-powered aircraft. Although conceived before the war, with the initial plans being drawn in April 1939, the Stormbird was beset with technological (particularly the revolutionary engines) and political difficulties, resulting in it not entering combat until August 1944, with claims of nineteen downed Allied aircraft. The performance of the Me 262 so far exceeded that of Allied aircraft that on 1 Sepember 1944, USAAF General Carl Spaatz remarked that if greater numbers of German jets appeared, they could inflict losses heavy enough to force cancellation of the Allied daylight bombing offensive. The story of how the Stormbird came to be is fascinating history, and it comes to life in the hands noted historian Colin Heaton. Told largely in the words of the German aces who flew it, The Me 262 Stormbird provides the complete history of this remarkable airplane from the drawing boards to combat in the skies over the Third Reich..."


I had fairly low expectations for this book when I ordered it, certainly Amazon's blurb is not a good start: "The Me 262 was the first of its kind, the first jet-powered aircraft." Joe Peterburs assessment, 'an interesting and informative account of the significance and development of the Me 262' features on the front cover blurb. The dust-jacket and the general design though is first class - the jacket has a marvellous velvety feel to it as well. As for the contents, it is mostly of interest for the numerous first-person accounts furnished via author interviews or quoted directly from articles and books - " from the pilots who flew, fought and survived it..". A number of Heaton's interviewees especially Galland, Steinhoff, Herrmann etc have of course published their own memoirs, usually good translations from the original German. Here they are 'interviewed' in English so don't offer much more than " ..and there I was at 20,000 ft.." or Georg-Peter Eder's " my first kill in the Me 262 was fantastic!" or Herrmann's " the Me 262 was not a great night fighter as high speeds made accuracy an issue.."  . It is easy to come away with the impression that Heaton is somewhat in awe of these high-ranking and highly decorated veteran Luftwaffe pilots - he may have shot down lots of (mostly) poor quality Russian pilots on the Eastern Front, but to describe Nowotny as a tactical innovator is well wide of the mark - see Manfred Boehme's benchmark history of JG 7 (Schiffer Publishing) for Messerschmitt's own deep concerns about Nowotny's 'qualities' to be entrusted with the Me 262 trials unit. The relative unknowns, pilots like Georg Czypionka (10./ NJG 11) unfortunately get only brief - and not terribly insightful - passages.

" I remember my introduction to the Me 262 fondly. I had arrived at Burg airfield on a March afternoon...after my first two flights at dusk I flew my first Me 262 combat sortie that night. I was returning from my sortie, ten or fifteen minutes from the airfield, when all of a sudden a Mosquito crossed my way (sic). It was pure coincidence, I just decided to fire a burst into him as he came into the Revi. With a very strong armament of four cannons (sic) he went down..."

The author also fills his text with cringe-worthy 'colloquialisms' too - sentences such as "the Me 262 was a potential game-changer for the Germans" make me wince every time. These criticisms aside, while the Me 262 was technologically very impressive, its shortcomings and teething problems rendered much of its impact more psychological than anything else, so the human aspects - the focus of Heaton's take on the story - make for an interesting read. If a little repetitive - the high speeds, the poor low speed performance, engine flame outs, the difficulties in juggling the throttle controls - all these aspects of flying the Me 262 were a given for every Me 262 pilot. A proportion of the interview material originally appeared in magazine interviews such as 'Aviation History' - there is for example a lengthy description of Nowotny's last moments which is well recounted over three pages from the observers on the ground and the successful P-51 pilots. The extensive bibliography and chapter notes are notable for some curious omissions but do indicate though that a fair amount of research went into the book - Heaton has spent time in the archives and put together an organisational framework on which to build a supporting structure for his personal accounts - while the collection of personal letters, data, information, and documents was accumulated from an impressively lengthy list of (not exclusively) German participants. Rather mysteriously though the Classic Smith/Creek/Forsyth four-volume history of the Me 262 isn't listed. Neither is Manfred Boehme's benchmark JG 7 opus. Of the cited 336 pages, at least 100 of these comprise the usual lists of aces, 8th AF jet claims, Me 262 losses and technical appendices.Overall Heaton's work is a decent enough angle on a well-trodden story and while this title won't replace any of the standard texts we have for the 262, you may find that it complements them quite nicely.

Visit author Colin Heaton's website for news of his forthcoming Luftwaffe books

http://www.lewisheatonbooks.com/