Monday, 6 January 2025

IBG models I.A.R 80/81 in-box review - 'Great Air Battles of 1944' (2)

 



Continuing our look at the IBG models IAR 80/81 kits. In our first post here we looked at the historical background to the IBG Models IAR 81 C 'Great Air Battles of 1944'  (72nd) kit. Now to see what's in the box. IBG Models kit number 72570 "IAR 81 C- Great Air Battles of 1944" was designed by IAR 80 expert Radu Brinzan and features five frames of some 90 finely moulded parts and seven clear parts, a sheet of photo-etch with 17 parts and a decal sheet with four colourful options and full stencil data.


 Above; PK shot of Grupul 6 IAR 81 Cs with the heavy cannon in the wings. 

Below; a closer look at some of the sprues. Construction starts with the cowl gun assembly which locates onto the cockpit sill/instrument panel at the top and the foot rails which plug into the bottom of the seat. The cockpit is well detailed with 14 plastic parts and seven photo-etched pieces, including harness straps.  




Note the recessed panel lines and riveting detail. I'm probably not the only modeller to think that this is a little 'finer' than the surface texture of the IBG Dora series, but I had no issues with those in any case. You really have to get the light on the rivets to notice them. The fabric texture on the control surfaces looks good (below) and note the raised cockpit wall detail. 



IBG have also produced some 3-D printed accessories, including a beautifully detailed seat and wheels/tyres. 

In summary then, this looks like a slightly less complex kit than the Doras, although that may well be down to the radial as opposed to in-line engine which made for a very large internal sub-assembly. The build starts now!

Below; Escadrila 61 commander Dumitrescu (right) describes a recent combat encounter in front of his IAR 81 C No.320, a markings option in the kit. Note the gunsight in the cockpit. The triangle (left) is red, one of two that identifies the Escadrila. The unit's unoffical emblem was Disney's Bambi and the quails. The bigger white triangle (right) denoted the CO's aircraft. (LFT SO F2557 L32)



Sunday, 5 January 2025

More ECPA-D jewels - Fieseler Storch in North Africa, Instapic #15

 

..I've slightly gone off the 'idea' of posting ECPA-D images for a brief period, 24 hours, a series I call 'Instapic'.. Simply put while it brings in viewers, it doesn't stop people lifting the material and doing whatever with it. As I've pointed out recently to Denys Boudard who encounters the same issues. Anytime he posts, within hours 'his' images appear on other sites - notably a certain forum - to view. Seems that the 'owner'- ever ready to accuse others of 'lifting' material - is quite happy to see his 'members' reposting material they have helped themselves to elsewhere! 



So this may be my final 'Instapic' post. As I've said before, if you want to see lots of lovely unpublished, beautifully clear Luftwaffe images (I mean, literally thousands, hundreds of thousands..) book a week at the ECPA-D in Paris. As I did. You get a great welcome and their staff are really helpful. The images that follow are not even in the 'Luftwaffe' files at the ECPA-D (DAK 294).

Rommel climbing into his machine. A good view of the Kraftstoffstandanzeiger (fuel level indicator) gauge in the lower wing. Two images (bottom) show a Stork's wing tank being topped off from a drum.










Thursday, 2 January 2025

Dornier Do 217 M-1 KG 2 - archive photo scan #35

 

Scanned by this blogger from an image in an album previously owned by Ulf Balke, author of a two-volume history of KG 2, this photo shows an 'anonymous' KG 2 Do 217 M-1 (....and crew). The M-1 was a night bomber variant, equivalent to the Do 217 K, but powered by the liquid-cooled DB 603 and operated by III./KG 2 from mid-1943. Note the absence of exhaust flame dampers - perhaps a shot taken during conversion training in Coulommiers during the spring of 1943. Click to view large.... 



new for 2025, an M-1 variant from ICM in 48th scale





Tuesday, 24 December 2024

Hptm. Rolf Hermichen, 3./JG 26 Fw 190 A-5 'yellow 5' - and a new magazine from Eduard, " Eduard Modeller's Den "


I recently responded to a request for images of the Fw 190 A-5 'yellow 5' flown by 3./JG 26 StaKa Oblt. Rolf Hermichen as featured by Eduard as a markings option in their Fw 190 A-5 kit. 

Seen here perched on the tailplane of his I./JG 26 Fw 190 A-5 'yellow 5'. Hermichen was a successful Bf 110 Zerstörer pilot in the Westfeldzug and went East with 6./SKG 210 before joining I./JG 26. Hermichen led 3./JG 26 on the Eastern Front from late January 1943 out of Dno and Riebiltzi, the Gruppe having 'swapped' sectors with III./JG 54 - and adopted their Wintertarnung camouflage finish for their new Fw 190s. Full story in the April 2003 issue of the now defunct Belgian magazine 'Histoire de Guerre'. Covered by Eduard in their boxing of the Fw 190 A-5. Another photo below..




And while on the subject of Eduard, here's a heads-up for a new 'paid-for' magazine that Eduard are producing called "Eduard Modeller's Den".  This first 'Zero' issue features a lengthy piece by Dan Caldwell on the Schweinfurt-Regensburg raid from the Luftwaffe perspective, illustrated with archive photos and plenty of Eduard artwork. Produced under the direction of the two Jans - Zdiarsky and Bobek - the first issue is available to download for free. As I understand it, the "Eduard Modeller's Den" will be a more 'serious' publication than the regular Eduard 'newsletter' and feature a wide range and diversity of topics, but with less emphasis on the advertising of Eduard and their products. Subsequent issues are 'paid-for' but the small fee will enable the reader to exchange 'coupons' for discounts at the Eduard e-store. Good luck with this new venture guys!

https://emd.eduard.com/en

Wednesday, 18 December 2024

Kriegsweihnachten 1944 - Letzte Weihnacht während des Zweiten Weltkrieges

 

JG 54 pilots Thyben and Pahl in Courland, December 1944


By Christmas 1944, the war was going extremely badly for the Germans. Since the Allied landings in Normandy and the huge Russian offensive in the East launched in June and July 1944, both Eastern and Western Fronts had been drawing ever closer. Some two months prior to Christmas 1944, the city of Aachen had become the first major German town to be captured by the Allies. The Soviets had driven into East Prussia in October 1944. The Red Army has already liberated two concentration camps, while the SS was already clearing the Auschwitz extermination camp. SS man Karl Höcker was nonetheless photographed lighting candles by the Christmas tree in Auschwitz-Birkenau. In his Christmas speech, Goebbels referenced the on-going offensive in the Ardennes - the last major attack launched by the Germans on 16 December 1944; ‘What German heart would not beat faster with pride in Christendom when I think here of our soldiers who have now been back on the offensive in the West for over a week?' But even on Christmas Eve the Allies flew massive bombing raids, the war having long since returned to the country from which it started - the 3rd BD of the US 8th AF launched nearly 2,000 B-17s and B-24s against airfields in south-west Germany. ‘There were several heavy air raids here during the Christmas of 1944, all of which I survived in a shaky cellar,’ reported one eyewitness from Bonn. The sirens also sounded in Cologne on 24 December 1944. The official statistics record the dropping of 490 high-explosive bombs between 6.15 pm and 7.25 pm alone.....(from a Westdeutscher Rundfunk WDR2 radio recording, 'Letzte Kriegsweihnacht')


Tuesday, 17 December 2024

Gotha Go 242 reference photos for the new IBG Models 1:72 scale kits



Following on from their announcement last Friday (see below), IBG Models are releasing a pdf on Facebook featuring an illustrated history of the Gotha Go 242. This to coincide with the imminent release of their new 1:72nd scale kit. 

There is another option for modellers looking for Go 242 images, especially as I doubt that SAM will be publishing an 'Aircraft in Profile' feature any time soon - the ECPA-D web site has some great images of the type. 

The photos taken by PK reporter Karl Ottahal are of note - his report shows Gothas on Crete en route to North Africa to resupply the Afrika Korps. File reference is DAK 238. 

Ottahal was posted missing on 5 September 1944, flying as the gunner on board an Aufklärungsgruppe 123 Ju 88 coded '4U+KK' that failed to arrive in Crete on a flight from Athens..
 

Saturday, 14 December 2024

Romanian I.A.R 80/81 IBG models 1:72 - the 10 June 1944 Ploesti raid (1)

 


IBG Models IAR 81 C 'Great Air Battles of 1944' box-art depicting  IAR- 81 C no. 320 flown by Slt. Av. Mircea Dumitrescu, commander of Escadrilla 61 downing a  15 AF P-38 on 10 June 1944.

The most 'prestigious' achievement of the Industria Aeronautica Romana works during WWII was the IAR 80 fighter of which 450 examples were constructed at a monthly rate of around 10-13 aircraft during the period 1940-43. Construction numbers would have been higher but for shortages of machine guns, gun sights etc. During testing the prototype exceeded 500 km/h at 4000 m altitude. The main armament comprised four Belgian Browning FN (7.62) machine guns. The fighter was powered by the (license-built Gnome Rhone) 1025 hp IAR 14K engine.

Design work which had started in 1937 was to a certain extent based on Polish expertise - Romanian engineers Grosu and Cosereanu conceived the IAR 80 around the modified and strengthened rear fuselage and tail section of a Polish PZL P.24E fighter while the wings were based on the Italian SM 79 reduced in size by 50%;  authors Roba and Craciunoiu in 'Romanian Aeronautics' conclude that " the IAR 80 was an outstanding achievement, perhaps the best example of how to do a job with limited resources.." The machine underwent continuous improvement, resulting in a number of different versions - the first significant variant was the IAR 80 B featuring a  lengthened fuselage starting with aircraft No. 201 (by 70 mm in front of the firewall) and extended wing span of 11 metres starting with aircraft No. 212.

The IAR 81 was an improved fighter-bomber variant, featuring the long nose and wings and bomb racks under the fuselage and wings, while the 80/81 C were heavy fighters equipped with two 20 mm MG FF or MG 151/20 cannon and Browning machine guns. With 150 airframes the IAR 81 C was the most numerous of all versions. The longer fuselage, wide-span wings and engine cowling air filter also made this variant probably the most distinctive of the IAR 80/81 series.

The box art of IBG Models kit number 72570  "IAR 81 C- Great Air Battles of 1944" features IAR- 81 C no. 320 flown by Slt. Av. Mircea Dumitrescu, commander of Escadrilla 61. Dumitrescu claimed two P-38s on the 10 June 1944 raid (see below). His machine features the unofficial Esc. 61 Disney 'Bambi' emblem on the beautiful box-top artwork. Pilot and fighter were captured on film by a PK Berichter in a photo 'reportage' that can be seen in the ECPA-D archive. (sample images below - click on the images to view full-screen)



Following the disastrous 'Tidal Wave' mission on 1 August 1943, the Allied air offensive against the Ploesti oilfields and refineries only got underway again in the spring of 1944, this time from airfields around Foggia, Italy. The raid on 10 June 1944 was notable for being flown not by heavy bombers but by more than 75 P-38s from the 1st and 82nd Fighter groups - the 82nd FG machines being fitted with 300 gallon drop tanks and a 1000 kg bomb. Intercepted at low altitude over the oilfields, Bf 109s from III./JG 77 and I./JG 53 dove on the P-38 fighter-bombers with the 39 1st FG P-38 escorts late on the scene. The usual smoke-screens had not been deployed by the defenders, so 15th AF planners achieved the element of surprise they had hoped for. And in the ensuing combats Lt. Herbert B. Hatch claimed five IAR 80s - mistaking the Romanian fighters for 'FW-190s'. But he was the only 71st FS pilot to return to Italy that day! The 82nd FG lost 8 and the 1st FG a further 14 P-38s. For the loss of four machines the IAR 81s of Grupul 6 claimed 23 P-38s. Needless to say the 15th AF did not repeat their 'Lightning' attack of 10 June..