Monday, 29 September 2025

Charlie Brown and 'his' Me 109 at Hahnweide 2025

 



At the Hahnweide 'Oldtimer' Fliegertreffen 2025 (Kirchheim unter Teck, south-east of Stuttgart), one of the most anticipated highlights was Charlie Brown flying the unique Me 109 E 'rote 12' — according to Charlie the first public display of this aircraft. 'Red 12' is currently the only airworthy example of its kind with Daimler Benz DB 601 engine actually flying anywhere in the world. Although the Emil housed at the Biggin Hill heritage hangar (Kent) is due to fly again soon..

"..Charlie Brown, a well-known warbird pilot with decades of display flying experience, has taken on the unique responsibility of flying this rare aircraft. His flights at Hahnweide 2025 will showcase not only the engineering brilliance of the Messerschmitt but also the careful dedication required to keep such a rare machine airworthy..."


A single click on the 'red button' to watch the 'Paddy Patrone' video here..

Sunday, 28 September 2025

" Zerstörer: The Combat History of the Me 110 in 1940" is published by Wingleader.

 


With John Vasco at the launch of "Zerstörer: The Combat History of the Me 110 in 1940" (published by Wingleader) at the Kent Battle of Britain museum, Hawkinge, 27 September 2025. 



Authored by John Vasco & Peter Cornwell this brand new extensively revised and re-worked reissue of the earlier Luftwaffe book 'classic' has 304 pages with around 500 photos. Available in hardback at £55..

For sample pages and more go to Wingleader 

Alternatively buy from the book shop at the Battle of Britain museum Hawkinge and the funds stay with the museum. The museum is open every day up to 8 November while their bookshop is open through the winter months on a Friday and Saturday.



Saturday, 27 September 2025

PK photographer Hebenstreit (part 1 JG 27) - Bundesarchiv photo report #10


PK photographer Hebenstreit is probably responsible for several of the most-published Bundesarchiv photos ever. Like the shot above, Bild 101I-662-6659-37, here enlarged and cropped to show a slightly different view with a little more of the detail. Click once on the image to view in full-screen mode. Note Bundesarchiv images may be reproduced on non-commercial sites such as this one under a creative commons licence. The 'official' caption reads;

 "Jagdflugzeug Messerschmitt Me 109 G-6 des Jagdgeschwader 27 (I./JG 27; Maschine von Gruppenkommandeur Major Ludwig Franzisket ?) mit zwei MG 151/20 unter den Tragflächen im Flug; ca. Februar/März 1944.." 

It may be that this image dates from September-October 1943 when  I./JG 27 was on 'defence of the Reich' duties involved in defending Austria (the so-called 'Ostmark') from Fels am Wagram. Franzisket was credited with two Fortresses on the 14 October Schweinfurt raid. Always interesting to look at some of the other less well-known images in his various film strips. 







Above; this image is probably not one of Hebenstreit's but shows Gustav 'gun-boats' probably at Fels. Note the long antenna mast and absence of DF loop..




For more see my 16-page feature "JG 27 in the defence of the Reich" in "Luftwaffe Fighters - Combat on all Fronts" Vol 2

Friday, 19 September 2025

Battle of Britain Capel-le-Ferne Memorial flypast, 19 September 2025, John Vasco's Zerstörer at the Battle of Britain museum 27 September 2025

 




The flypast at the Capel-le-Ferne National Memorial to the Few for Battle of Britain Day - 15 September - was postponed last weekend due to the unseasonal high winds over southern England.  Yesterday though was sunny and warm and the BBMF managed to put up three Spitfires and a Hurricane for a tour of some Battle of Britain landmark sites in Kent including Manston and Capel.  The Griffon PR Spit displayed over the Memorial on the cliff-top between Folkestone and Dover. Pictures by John Frackleton.




Meanwhile a few miles away at the Kent Battle of Britain museum in Hawkinge - which houses the most important collection of airframes and artefacts from the Battle of Britain - Pen & Sword author Andy Singleton has recently launched his new book on modelling Battle of Britain fighters. Andy has published a number of modelling 'how-to' manuals for Pen & Sword and builds models for a living, so this volume is well worth looking at.



Also taking place at the Battle of Britain museum next week (27 September) is the 'official' launch of the new Vasco/Cornwell volume on the Me 110 in 1940.

" Zerstörer: The Combat History of the Me 110 in 1940" is published by Wingleader. Authored by John Vasco & Peter Cornwell this extensively revised and re-worked reissue of the earlier 'classic' has 300 pages with around 500 photos and will be available in hardback at £55..


Also on this blog;

Sir Hugh Dowding bust unveiled at the Capel Battle of Britain Memorial

September 15 Battle of Britain Day - German fighter pilots and the 'myth'

'The story behind the book' - an interview with leading Battle of Britain author John Vasco




Thursday, 18 September 2025

II./JG 53 .." in the East " - DAA 1679 and 1763 (ECPA-D)

 

Denys Boudard has recently posted a number of images from DAA 1679/1763 on social media. For those who don't participate in Mark Zuckerberg's 'forums' (or believe in enriching them with 'free' content) here's a look at some of those files with a couple of additions.

DAA 1679 and DAA 1763 are just two of the hundreds of PK files held at the ECPA-D. DAA 1679 and DAA 1763 comprising some 32 and 36 images respectively focus on the machines and personalities of II./JG 53 on the Eastern Front - according to the archive's own caption. This includes aces like Wurmheller (seen third right below) and the Kommodore (middle) climbing down from his Friedrich.

Wurmheller made 19 claims with JG 53 prior to joining JG 2 in the West some weeks after the launch of Barbarossa. At least one 'expert' has pointed out that most of the men in the images are wearing life-jackets - this image therefore may well have been taken prior to Barbarossa. But note how the aircraft are arrayed grouped together on the field in the image below - and the absence of buildings or airfield infrastructure in the photo. I can imagine that these views were taken after the transfer to the unit's field strip in eastern Poland just prior to the invasion of  Russia - for example. And the Jagdflieger wore life-jackets more often than not - more than one German fighter pilot drowned after bailing out and coming down into a lake, reservoir, marshland and/or large river...






Check out Anders Hjortsberg artwork here


Also on this blog;

Visiting the ECPA-D, November 2024

The Luftwaffe blog at the ECPA-D, November 2023


Wednesday, 17 September 2025

new-tool Spitfire Mk I & II from IBG Models

 


IBG Models have a new-tool 72nd scale Spitfire series underway. This blog has reviewed their IAR 80/81 series and built the Gotha 242 and Fw 190 D-9 - great kits, loads of detail with plenty of internal and external options and more importantly, the fit is always good for such relatively 'complex' kits...

Click on the image to go straight to the IBG site where you can download the instructions and see the 10 markings options in the first 'black box' release  





pics by 'dixieflyer'

Squadron Leader Hilary Richard Lionel “Robin” Hood's 41 Sqd Spitfire EB-R for 'Robin'. Operational over Dunkirk from Hornchurch, Hood downed a Do 17 on 1 June by diving at it head-on, despite being effectively unarmed having run out of ammunition. He claimed a 109 and a Ju 87 on 29 July but on 5 September he collided with another aircraft while attacking a Dornier and crashed into the Channel. He is still listed as missing, one of some 179 RAF pilots who were lost and whose bodies were never recovered.


Below; some of the 'bonus' markings in the new IBG Models 'Black Box' Spitfire I & II kit include two 92 Sqd schemes from May 1940 and a 65 Sqd machine from Manston as seen in late July 1940.  The replica Spitfire at the Capel-le-Ferne 'National memorial to the Few' on the cliffs between Folkestone and Dover has been refurbished (following storm damage) in a Manston 65 Sqd scheme..




Tuesday, 16 September 2025

Karl-Heinz Ossenkopf I./JG 26 Dora-9 pilot, April 1945

 

 Both 'Avions' and 'Aeroplane' are running the same feature in their current issues - Holger Ziehm's interview with K-H Ossenkopf. Ziehm is a former Bundesluftwaffe F-4 pilot while Ossenkop arrived at the front following the D-Day landings and saw combat with the latest and best Allied fighters at the controls of his I./JG 26 Fw 190 D-9. He even managed several victories until he was shot down and hospitalised by an RAF 80 Sqd Tempest on 17 April 1945. 

Both the 'Avions' and 'Aeroplane' magazines feature Fw 190 D-9s on their covers and fairly random and well-known images of Doras inside to illustrate their lay-outs. The less said about the 'Aeroplane' cover illustration the better. As Keith put it;

"..why am I looking at a hideous Typhoon/Tempest mash-up? Why has the production team let this through the net? The fuselage is flat sided behind the cockpit which is wrong and the wings are definitely Typhoon, why? It seems such a shame to tarnish what is still a leading publication for aviation history.."

Not to mention the poor translation; ".. D-9 in the end times." (!!)

Meanwhile Graham Boak noted on britmodeller;

" I looked at the Fw 190 (on the cover of 'Aeroplane') and noticed that it had a decent representation of a late-war finish, and I hauled out my JAPO books to check. However the pilot's favourite "Black 8" was a very early one, but written off in a forced landing. He replaced it with another Black 8, no details given, but when shot down was flying a (presumably) 'Black 2' (ie, a replacement 2. Staffel machine) The artwork shows a Black 8..."..

The 'Avions' cover on the other hand features an Eric Schwartz profile described as depicting K-H Ossenkop's regular machine during the period February-March 1945, a 'black 8' W.Nr 210968 of 2./JG 26. 

Ossenkop describes the events of 17 April 1945 when he was shot down over Lake Schwerin. 

" ..my wingman Uffz. Karl Fröb was sticking close to me. My 'black 8' was not available that morning so I had been assigned 'white 2', a replacement crate, but something of a lame duck. [..] I closed on the Spitfire, one of the latest, most powerful models, most probably with a well-trained and experienced pilot at the controls. He hadn't seen me. I checked my rear, then opened up. Pieces of debris flew off the enemy aircraft, he rolled over and dove. I could see a banner of smoke streaming from him so knew that he was probably on fire. I had no time to watch his fate - enemy fighters were now on our tails. We dove into the mist just above the surface of the  lake. Visibility was poor but at least we had escaped the Spitfires. Then, in a split second, I saw a fountain of water erupt from the lake. My inexperienced wingman [Fröb] had just gone straight in!..."

Attempting then to rejoin Oblt. Dortenmann who was leading a formation over Lubeck, Ossenkop ran into some aggressively flown 80 Sqn Tempests. It would be his last action of the war. Ossenkop was forced to bail out and was injured colliding with the tail of his Dora. So according to Ziehm, Ossenkop was shot down in 'white 2' (sic!) on 17/4/45. 'Black 8' WNr. 210968, the pilot's usual a/c, was u/s.. but was nonetheless lost on that same sortie with Uffz. Karl Fröb at the controls! Elsewhere Caldwell doesn't have any details on Ossenkop's loss at all, while he confirms that Fröb, flying as Ossenkop's wingman, was downed in 'black 8' - which Ossenkop himself states was u/s. Something doesn't add up!  Answers on a post card please..



Sunday, 7 September 2025

JG 77 Herz As in the 'East', January -February 1945 (Bf 109 K-4)

From the Luftflotte 6 KTB, 25 January 1945


.. a partial listing of just some of the units transferred to and/or already operating on the 'Eastern Front' in late January 1945 included the three Gruppen of JG 77...



Below; Uffz. Alfred Nitsch - former recce pilot and instructor - in the cockpit of his 12./JG 77 'blue 3' at Neuruppin, late October 1944. The aircraft is K-4 WNr. 330177 which was lost during the Ardennes campaign on 23 December at Houverath with Fw. Hans Rossner at the controls. Note the 'Deutsche Luftwaffe' armband over Nitsch's flying suit, worn to identify the wearer as a Luftwaffe pilot to German civilians. The antenna mast is visible on the folding hood section, a feature of an early series machine.  Previously published on the cover of 'Avions' magazine No. 243 - the first part of an extensive three-part feature on the Bf 109 K-4 in combat. (This issue was 'notable' in the long history of 'Avions' magazine for the being the first to feature the same aircraft type on consecutive magazine covers, in this instance a Bf 109 K-4 of III./JG 77).


  
The last fortnight of 1944 operating over the Ardennes and western Germany were some of the hardest days yet endured by the men of JG 77 -  there was hardly a single sortie flown that was not marked by heavy losses. In total that short period saw 26 pilots killed, 13 seriously injured and one taken captive and around 80 Messerschmitts lost! No fewer than 26 of these were III. Gruppe Bf 109 K-4s. Among the losses were the Gruppenkommandeur of I./JG 77 Hptm. Lothar Baumann, the Staffelkapitän of 2./JG 77 Oblt. Iring Englisch (replaced by Lt. Ulrich Peiper), and 133-victory ace and Geschwaderkommodore Maj. Johannes Wiese. Ordered up by Galland on the morning of 25 December, and heading north-west over the Ruhr at 8,700m, Wiese and what was left of his Stabsschwarm (Fw. Hansch) failed to rendezvous with I./JG 77 over Duisberg and found themselves caught up with 401 Sqd Spitfires over Euskirchen;

" ...Flying at about 8700 m over Duisberg, I saw the Rhine in front of me and a little behind me - flying from west to east - enemy fighters. After a brief wing waggle, I immediately made a steep turn to the left towards their formation and, as I started the attack, I recognised further aircraft, now clearly identified as Spitfires, above, below and beside me. In the course of the ensuing sharp turn, I had difficulty jettisoning my drop tank. Behind me I saw a machine burning brightly. This was probably Fw. Hansch's aircraft. Despite all my evasive manoeuvres I came under repeated attack from all sides, received hits in the engine, a hit in the cabin and felt several impacts in the fuselage and tail. I had thrown the machine into such wild manoeuvres that it was now out of control. With the cockpit icing up and the engine smoking and losing power, I decided to parachute clear.." 

Hansch had been quickly shot down and killed. Wiese bailed out but his chute failed to correctly deploy and the Kommodore was badly injured in the heavy landing.. On 31 December one of the last 'veterans' of 11./JG 77, Fw Karl-Heinz Böttner, led a recce Rotte in the direction of Münster. Both Böttner (Bf 109 K-4 'yellow 2', injured) and his wingman Lt. Gerhard Eck (Bf 109 K-4 'yellow 12', killed) were shot down by Spitfires..

On 1 January JG 77 flew the Bodenplatte mission  against Allied air bases in Belgium (mostly) -  JG 77 took part in a futile 'raid' on the airfield at Deurne (Antwerp). Kapitän of 11./JG 77 and leading III. Gruppe on the operation against Deurne  in his Bf 109 K-4 "yellow 10", ace 'Heinz' Hackler was hit by anti-aircraft fire and failed to return. Johann Twietmeyer at the controls of his K-4 'red 7' was hit by ground-fire while strafing an American road column during the raid. He made a forced landing in a field (Rosendaal) and escaped unhurt. Although ‘Bodenplatte’ was an abject failure for JG 77, taken as a whole the operation nevertheless put a brake on Allied air attacks in the early days of 1945. JG 77 took advantage of the situation to organise ferry flights of Bf 109s from factories. On 2 January, two I./JG 77 pilots were killed during these delivery flights. At the end of the first week of January, support operations over the Ardennes resumed. By this time, the German offensive in the Ardennes was in its final days.

14 January 1945 saw major battles in the air over the south-eastern corner of Germany. I. and II./JG 77 operated primarily to counter Allied ‘Jabos’ around Bastogne and St. Vith. While I./JG 77 suffered two fatalities over Münster/Düsseldorf, II./JG 77 had six killed and four wounded including Uffz. Fritz Giere who was forced to bail out of his G-10 in the region of Hamm (presumably Hamm am Rhein, a municipality south of Darmstadt). According to the loss listing Giere was shot up under his chute and came down in the Rhine and drowned. A Spitfire and a Beaufighter were claimed by II./JG 77.

On 15 January I./JG 77 received orders to transfer to the East, under new Kommodore Maj. Erich Leie - previously Kommandeur of I./JG 2 and high-scoring ace with JG 51 in the East (117 claims by October 1944). Below; part of a photo-set to mark the award of Leie's RK (21 victories) taken on August 1, 1941.





The stragglers reached Ohlau on 18 January (today Olawa in south-west Poland) some 25 kms south-east of Breslau (Wroclaw). Recently appointed Kommandeur of I./JG 77 was 15-victory ace and former Staffelkapitän of 6./JG 77, Hptm. Joachim Deicke. Kommandeur of II./JG 77 was Maj. Siegfried Freytag and III. Gruppe was led by Hptm. Armin Köhler. As with all the other fighter Geschwader hurriedly transferred to the East, the three Gruppen would be tasked with Straßenjagd - strafing road columns. (according to Lft 6 figures over 4,000 sorties were flown by fighter Gruppen in the East  during January 1945 - for just 134 victories, which suggests that either combat was avoided or the Soviets were not flying much in the poor weather or both. Either way, not an indicator of 'air superiority'. See Prien JG 77 Teil 4, p2280 )

 The last JG 77 pilot lost in the West during January was Gefr. Hans Körner who was killed in the crash of his G-14 'blue 9' on 24 January near Gütersloh (Verl) during the transfer flight.(shot down according to one source)

The situation on the 'Eastern Front' was catastrophic. The pilots of JG 77 flew several sorties per day, with the futile aim of slowing the Soviet advance. Casualties, mainly due to the Red Army's solid anti-aircraft fire, were severe and the incomplete official lists for this period give only a small idea of the scale of the losses. Nevertheless, although the Soviet air force enjoyed numerical superiority equal to that of the Western Allies, a handful of German aces continued to add to their scoreboards - undoubtedly due to the fact that the Soviet Boston and Pe-2 medium bombers were, for example, less ‘sophisticated’ than the B-24s and B-17s of the US bomber formations and the Soviet pilots less well trained (even if they were more of a handful than those encountered during ‘Barbarossa’).

On 30 January, Lt Walter Wildenauer (11./JG 77), who had already been shot down and wounded on 23 December, disappeared during the strafing of an anti-aircraft position in the Ratibor region. Lt Gerhard Staroste, a veteran of 2./JG 77, was wounded. The next day, Fw Gerd Lenke (3./JG 77) disappeared south-west of Gleiwitz (now Gliwice); the same fate befell Uffz Walter Wawoczny (12./JG 77) and three pilots from II/JG 77. The losses were not only the result of enemy action. On 31 January, Uffz. Gerhard Letzbor (8./JG 77) took off from Beneschau. The three Staffeln were set up in a triangle at the edge of the runway. In the event of the entire Gruppe being ordered up they were supposed to taxi out in turn. The signal was given too early for 6./JG 77, who started up the engines of their Bf 109s and began to move out onto the strip. Meanwhile the hapless 8. Staffel pilot had only just lined up at the threshold. Moments later Letzbor's G-10 ploughed into another Bf 109 in the middle of the runway. (Zusammenstoß Start)  The injured pilot was evacuated to a hospital in Prague, where he was later captured by Soviet troops. By late January I./JG 77 was split between Beneschau and Prerau. II./JG 77 was in Beneschau (today Benešov, a town in the Central Bohemian Region of the Czech Republic). III./JG 77 was in Proßnitz, some 200 kilometres east of Prague.

 According to Uffz Bartholomäi (8./JG 77) the mood among some JG 77 pilots was relatively upbeat, despite the atmosphere of defeat, fear and gloom;

 '..contacts with the Czech people were excellent. I stayed with locals in Buslawitz, near our Beneschau airfield. Food and drink were plentiful. Although it may seem surprising at the moment, our morale was high, as was our spirit of comradeship. We continued to believe in final victory against all odds. I did relatively little ground strafing, most of our missions were free hunting and escorting bombers or fighter-bombers (including Rudel's unit). In our spare time, we played cards, listened to music or wrote letters to our families '. 

Even so, Bartholomäi was shot down three times in the East. He had to parachute once and made one belly-landing at Beneschau, getting clear of his Bf 109 just before it exploded. 


Also on this blog;



As usual, thanks to Jochen Prien and team for presenting all the data featured in posts like these in their Jagdfliegerverbände series, most notably here in JfV 13/VI 'Einsatz in der Reichsverteidigung und im Westen' and the forthcoming Teil 16/I 'Einsatz an allen Fronten', the first of two volumes to cover 1945. The JfV series is available directly from the publisher at jagdgeschwader.net

Thursday, 4 September 2025

II./JG 77 Emil and Friedrich - ebay photo find #388

 



According to the seller this is a II./JG 77 Emil - and I'm inclined to think that he is correct. But for the II. Gruppe bar I might have said this was a I.(J)/LG 2 machine. Note narrow fuselage band ahead of the Kennung, yellow cowl and the interesting 'stripey mottling' probably of 71 and 02. Wing tips appear to be white..

See today's 'Featured blog post' entitled "..from Larissa to Salonika.." for similarly marked II./JG 77 machines in Greece during April 1941..(especially the combination of white wingtips and yellow rudder/cowl)

Another JG 77 Emil in Greece - note 'R' Richthofen badge beneath the cockpit...


Below; Another ex-JG 2 Bf 109 E in Greece,  JG 77 ace Emil Omert in the cockpit probably at Molaoi

 
Staying with the same seller, this is a neat view of Anton Hackl's 5./JG 77 Bf 109 F-4 'black 5' during the summer of 1942 (Crimea). Note the Seeadler emblem ahead of the cockpit..


Tuesday, 2 September 2025

1. Flieger Div. activity summary March 1945, Fw. Helmut Mischke III./SG 1

 


During Feb-March 1945  1. Fliegerdivsion  was subordinated to II. Fliegerkorps (previously Luftflotte 6) on the Eastern Front. A Fliegerdivision usually commanded a mixed force of no more than 5 or 6 Gruppen that included reconnaissance, fighter and ground-attack units. By this stage of the war the Russians were barely 100 miles from Berlin.

".. During the first three days of March 1945 units of 1. Fliegerdiv. destroyed at least 74 tanks, damaging a further 39 in continuous attacks..

On 1 March Kommandeur and Ritterkreuz holder III./SG 1 Maj. (Karl) Schrepfer flew his 800th combat sortie. On 11 March our fighter aircraft scored 25 'kills' while our Schlacht ground attack Fw 190s downed 12 enemy aircraft.  Of note was the performance of Ofw. (Helmut) Mischke of III./SG 1 who, in two ground-attack sorties, scored 9 victories, 4 of which were returned while his Fw 190 was fully loaded. Eichenlaub holder Maj. Schroer, Kommodore of JG 3, returned victories 104-106 on 11 March and added another three on 15 March..."

( note: Kracker re Mischke "..17 known Western (sic) victories between 20 February and 11 March, 1945 with his bomb attached! (re-sic) Eight of these victories were scored on 20 February, 1945 and nine on 11 March, 1945..." )





".. on the same day N.A.G. 3 flew the unit's 7000th combat sortie. III./JG 3 achieved its 2000th victory. On 18 March Ofw. Mischke returned another five victories ..(note; not mentioned in Kracker)

An extract from the daily report of 3. Pz AOK dated 20 March;

" in action against constant enemy aircraft raids and ground targets, the flying units and anti-aircraft artillery provided the most invaluable support..."

Luftwaffe operations on 26 March against the Altküstrinchen bridgehead resulted in effective strikes against enemy infantry according to army reports.. "




Monday, 1 September 2025

Fw 190 coded 'JFE' , Bf 108 PS-T

 

According to the Robinson/Derry "Flightcraft" book on the Fw 190 (to which this blogger largely contributed) this is Fw 190 F-8, WNr 933849, which was found abandoned on a Luftwaffe airfield and appropriated by W/Cdr James Francis ‘Stocky’ Edwards, RCAF, 127 Wing, in late 1944/early 1945. The story goes that W/Cdr Edwards spotted the Fw 190 in an adjacent field while returning from a sortie during the Allied advance through Belgium and the Netherlands and had it transported to the base where the Wing was operating from which, according to the photo’s original caption was Soltau, Germany, but may possibly have been B.58 Melsbroek or B.56 Evere in Belgium. All the aircraft’s Luftwaffe markings were overpainted and RAF roundels and fin flashes applied, as were the Wing Commander’s initials ‘JFE’. Apparently, the aircraft was unofficially flown several times, although its ultimate fate is uncertain. The Messerschmitt Bf 108 in the background also carries RAF markings and the initials ‘PST’ of fellow Canadian, Group Captain Percival Stanley ‘Stan’ Turner, who oversaw the conversion of 127 Wing on to ground attack duties and flew with the Wing on several missions. (Courtesy of Carl Vincent)