Wednesday, 17 December 2025

new Luftwaffe books - JfV 16/I, 'Flieger Asse' and 'Foto Archiv' from Geramond, 'Das Lehrgeschwader 1' Start Verlag

 


The latest (huge) volume in Rogge Buchverlag's Jagdfliegerverbände series (JfV)  - Teil 16/I - has recently landed! This is the first volume of the Prien team's coverage of 1945- entitled 'Einsatz an allen Fronten 1945' this is a no doubt comprehensive account of the Luftwaffe's fighter force during the first three months of 1945. Although it is almost impossible to 'read' and 'review' and do a meaningful write-up, if you have any interest in the late-war Luftwaffe at all, then you will know to add this to your library. A friend told me he made a decision years ago not to collect this series given his lack of room at home - now 24 volumes later with space on bookshelves shrinking- there are just two more volumes to come. 

Teil 16 Teilband I is a daily chronicle of January-March 1945 covering all Luftwaffe Tagjagd day fighter units in action on both East and West fronts (including Norway) detailed over some 650 pages -  Tagjagdverbände of the Lw.- Kdo. West, Luftflotte Reich (including JG 7 and JG 400) and Luftflotten 1, 6 and 4 covering JGs 51,52 and 54 as well as L.fl 5 (Norwegen). On 1 January 1945 the Luftwaffe still had around 2,200 fighters in service, of which approx 1,500 were listed as serviceable, while there were nearly 3,000 pilots trained and available to man them. Of these organisations Lw.-Kdo West could field over 800 fighters even after the heavy losses of late December 1944 attempting to cover the Ardennes offensive - some 56% of the entire force. Luftflotte Reich comprising mostly JG 300 and JG 301 along with the jet and rocket fighters had at least 300 operational machines, while just 15% of the Luftwaffe's fighter force - barely 300 fighters -were based on the Eastern Front covering a huge area from Courland in the north to Hungary in the south. Lfl 5 had over 100 fighters available. It was proposed to 'bulk' up each Geschwader with a V. Gruppe made up of the EJG auxiliary training unit resources but this did not take place.

While the authors have managed to assemble nearly 300 photo images to illustrate this volume, other scarce 'material' also features. For example, the RLM-Abschussfilme - that had enabled a more or less comprehensive compilation of victory claims in previous volumes -  are non-existent for 1945, with only material for JGs 26 and 27 available to compensate for the lack of films. The authors point out that although there may still be 'gaps' in the claims lists - data for the area covered by Luftflotte 4 in early January is described as 'fragmentary' -  much of what has previously been published has been fully revised and augmented; where this has been done it is footnoted - there are well over 3,000 of these to complement the text! The day-by-day chronicle of the activities of the individual Gruppen is compiled from a host of disparate war diaries (eg KTB Lfl.6), Luftlageberichte, flight logs, strength and loss returns (GQM Verlustmeldungen) and reports, along with ULTRA intercepts; eg an ULTRA report dated 4 January 1945 details that II. and IV. Gruppen of EJG 1 were ordered to send four pilots with at least 10 hours on the Bf 109 to Brandenburg-Briest and Parchim to act as 'targets' for the Me 262s of I and III./JG 7. Details of aircraft abandoned, sabotaged and written off as airfields were evacuated are almost completely absent from German records. Fighter production (including repair) and deliveries (by unit) are covered for all types, including the new variants of the Fw 190 - the D-11 and D-13. There are images and details of a G-6 prototype fitted with wing-mounted Mk 108 cannon (also seen recently on-line from the Petrick archive) and a brutal assessment of the He 162 - it may have been built with non-strategic materials and only used one jet engine, but it could not be flown like any 'conventional' fighter and it consequently killed far more of its own pilots than it did the enemies'. Deliveries for all fighter types in the period covered by this volume amounted to some 6,600 aircraft. With the works at Sorau falling to the Soviets on 13 February 1945 the total of Ta 152s actually built and delivered amounted to just 48 machines of which at least 14 were destroyed on the ground during a strafing attack on Neuhausen, near Cottbus, on 16 January 1945.

The text opens with a statistical reassessment of the 'Bodenplatte' attacks on Allied airfields in the West - over 900 Luftwaffe aircraft took part (perhaps as many as 1,035 according to the OKW KTB). At least 750 of these were fighters. Losses were horrendous - as many as 214 pilots KIA or taken captive, 267 aircraft lost and a further 112 damaged for some 500 Allied aircraft destroyed on the ground. Is it worth pointing out that few of these new Luftwaffe pilots stood no chance of inflicting comparable losses in the air?  And contrary to common belief only a very small percentage of those German aircraft shot down fell to their own anti-aircraft fire. But few Allied airmen were killed while their machines could soon be replaced so the entire enterprise was a 'Fehlschlag'. Countless lives might have been saved had the Luftwaffe fighter forces simply been disbanded at this stage of the war. Since Normandy, air warfare had increasingly turned into a "Materialschlacht". As a postscript (p643-646) a fascinating Lfl.Kdo 6 document considers the pros and cons of a 'Bodenplatte Ost' fighter attack on Eastern Front airfields ahead of the Soviet onslaught about to be launched from the bridgeheads north of Warsaw, but was rejected for the same reasons that nullified the effort in the West at such cost.. 

During early January poor weather in the East saw most activity over the area of Lfl. 4 (Hungary) with II./JG 51 and II./JG 52 active to the north-west of Budapest while on the Western front huge 8th USAAF raids continued virtually unopposed.  Losses continued to accumulate even where no combat  was flown - poor weather, inadequate training levels, rough field strips, Soviet ground fire etc could  bring down as many German Jagdflieger as enemy fighters! While aware of preparations in the East for the forthcoming Soviet onslaught, details of the paltry fuel stocks from the Luftflotten KTBs this early in the year make it clear that this factor alone would hamper any prospect of decisive or effective 'resistance'. 

Elsewhere as the Soviets tank divisions started to roll through the so-called Generalgouvernement (former Poland) from 12 January some western-based fighter units began their move to the Eastern Front ( eg JG 77 on 17 January). III./JG 51 was particularly active over East Prussian airspace. At this time orders were transmitted to 'remove' one Gruppe from each JG and to convert them to so-called 'Ruhe- or 'rest' -Gruppen' to create a 'ready reserve' to be maintained at full strength, but by early March 1945 shortages both of personnel and fuel led to numerous unit disbandments. One of these was IV./JG 301, a new fighter unit that in actual fact only flew one combat mission in the defence of the Reich (02 March) losing 14 aircraft. Some 130 of the best pilots in the disbanded Gruppen went to the jet units JG 7 and KG (J) 54 for re-training. The huge US 8th AF raid carried out on 02 March was virtually the last 8th USAF bombing raid that was defended by the Jagdwaffe over the Reich - henceforward most of their efforts would be spent countering the Allied Tactical Air forces..

In the East by mid-March the Soviets were just 15 miles or so south of Danzig and despite the poor weather the Luftwaffe was facing literally thousands of Soviet fighter and bomber incursions - 2,100 in the area of Lfl. 6 and around 1,150 in the area of Lw.Kdo Ostpreussen during 9 March alone, to take one day by way of example. To counter, the KTB of Lfl. 6 mentions just 172 fighter sorties for 26 victory claims in addition to 116 Schlachtflieger sorties. There were also over 50 recce sorties flown. There were in all probability attempting to establish where the front lines actually were. Some 60 sorties were flown as escort for Schlacht aircraft, as well as strafing and bombing missions in small numbers around Stettin and Kolberg. By 24 March - date of the Allied Rhine crossings - German defences in the West were totally ineffectual - not a single German fighter managed to intervene during the crossings in the vicinity of Wesel (p578). On the Allied side over 1,300 gliders and 4,600 other aircraft had been assembled.

As usual in this huge series of books there are numerous photographic highlights - despite the fact that PK images for this period are virtually non-existent. Among these are a selection of images of the Me 109 K-4s of JG 11 (from the Schalk album in the Archive of Modern Conflict) which are superb and mostly very large and very clear. Some were taken as late as mid-March on the airfield at Strausberg, east of Berlin with snow on the ground. As G.d.Jagdflieger, GenLt. Galland's visit to I./JG 300 at Borkheide on 16 January 1945 which was briefly covered in the JG 300 history (Lorant/Goyat) features on pages 110-111 with both 'new' and larger images and there is another image of 'Timo' Schenk's 'red 5''(p397).The Fw 190 'black 3' of II./JG 76 (p212) in white is unusual. The four 11./JG 3 Bf 109 K-4 images (p484-485) are 'new' as well, as are the images of the 'dump' of I. and IV./JG 51 wrecks left at Danzig-Langfuhr (p562-563) in March 1945.

The reader will be particularly impressed with Ulf Balke's maps - the first of these appears on p28 "Tagjagdverbände of Luftflotte Reich, January 1945" followed by similar maps for Lw.Kdo West, and the Eastern Front Luftflotten 6 during January 1945. These are repeated for the month of March 1945. 

With only two more books to go in the series you are unlikely to want to start collecting them all now but if - like many enthusiasts- you are particularly interested in the late-war period this is one volume you cannot miss. For ordering and a full list of contents go to the Rogge Verlag website at http://jagdgeschwader.net

Below; Ofhr Peter Esser entered the Luftwaffe in late 1942. After being trained in JG 107 and 2./EJG Ost, he joined 7./JG 77 during August 1944. During September, he was transferred to 2./JG 53, ending the war in 6./JG 52. He is seen here at Vesprem, Hungary on 18 March 1945 after an afternoon sortie during which he claimed a P-51 south-east of the airfield. Note the 'tulip' decoration on the yellow nose of this G-14..




Two recent 'FlugzeugClassic' 'Extra' titles from the team behind Geramond's monthly magazine. 'Flieger Asse' ( 'Air Aces') features a selection of lengthy extracts from the published works of 296 Verlag who are now sadly defunct. I don't have all of their titles by any means so this compilation is very timely, possibly the last chance to become acquainted with some of these books which will undoubtedly become rather rare, most notably Roderich Cesscotti's (KG 30, KG 100, JG 301) memoir 'Langstreckenflug'. 'Foto Archiv' appears to be a selection of the 'Foto album' pages from the magazine 'FlugzeugClassic' there's not an awful lot of text in this one, just 100 pages of rare images from the personal albums of bomber and fighter pilots, maintenance 'black-men' and similar as previously published in the 'Foto album' pages of the monthly magazine. If you've not seen 'FlugzeugClassic' before most of these images will be new to you. My particular favourites concern Gerd Neuhaus who was a Ju 88 nightfighter pilot in NJG 4 before volunteering for II./JG 4. Both of these Geramond monographs can be purchased via amazon.co.uk for around £12 which is a bargain.


The new title from Start/Urbanke is published. "Das Lehrgeschwader 1 -  Mediterranean deployment  1941-42 in rare colour images"

 " ..Christmas came a little early this year. Thanks to my wonderful (and most importantly, partner in crime) wife, I received the long-awaited Start Verlag volume on the LG 1. It's an excellent volume, packed with beautiful colour images, accompanied by a comprehensive text, maps, and beautiful color profiles by Simon Schatz. The final section is also very interesting, with biographies of the war correspondents who took the photos, people about whom little or nothing is generally known. It would be wonderful to have a similar volume covering the years 1943-44 in the near future; who knows! Highly recommended!.."  Giampiero Piva




And a quick mention for 'Defenders of the Reich', Robert Forsyth's latest hardback for Osprey, recently reviewed by Victoria Taylor in the Daily Telegraph.

Eduard 1:72 Bf 109 G-10 JG 300 - Michel Wilhelme

 

"..The 156th is finished. Another Eduard Bf 109 in 1:72 (Royal Class box set). Always perfect, I never tire of these Eduard kits, there are always lots of cool schemes for them too. This latest model is a G-10 belonging to JG 300 and found outside a hangar in Prague. The camouflage is rather different from what we're used to seeing. It's a late-war scheme where it was better to have dark colours so as not to be seen by Allied fighters. The paint is either AK, Mig or Vallejo, which in my opinion are the best colours..."  Michel Wilhelme
 

Elements of JG 300 flew into Prague-Gbell during the period 03-05 May 1945 having been ordered there from Salzberg Ainring. This is one of their machines from 11. Staffel (blue-white-blue bands) seen after arrival in Prague. No other JGs were ordered to Prague -there was a TG in Rusin and an SG Gruppe somewhere north of Prague. The last situation report from Luftflotte 6 dated 7 May 45 confirmed the 'transfer'...as for the Staffel number, it should be green although Eduard's 'yellow 7' looks quite 'green'! Note III. and IV. Gruppen of JG 300 did not use a Gruppe marking aft of the cross..

"...It is difficult to establish an exhaustive list of all JG 300 pilots who managed to fly to Prag-Gbell, then Saaz and finally Eger. Among those who reached Prag were Lt. Meichsner, Kapitän of 11./JG 300, as well as Feldwebeln Hans Gerich and Günther Borchert of the same Staffel, and Lt. Reinhardt Weiss of 12./JG 300; in II. Gruppe, Gruppenkommandeur Oblt. Waldemar Radener and Ofw. Fred Dohms (8./JG 300). IV. Gruppe was better represented, at least five pilots reaching Prag, including Oblt. Heinz Förster (Staffelkapitän 13./JG 300), Fw. Hermann Berdelmann and Uffz. Eugen Maier (14./JG 300), as well as Fw. Walter Ehmer (16./JG 300). Two IV./JG 300 pilots, Lt. Burger and Ofw. Gräfner (13. Staffel), died in the street fighting in the Czech capital, most probably during the afternoon of 4 May 1945..." 

Monday, 15 December 2025

AIMs Me 109 data plate and engine stencil decals for the Airfix 1:24 Gustav

 


Blog post #109 for 2025. John at AIMs has been hard at work to produce a variety of (decal, resin and etch) enhancements for the new Airfix 1:24 scale Bf 109 G. Available now are a set of manufacturer data plate decals along with stencil detail decals for the cockpit and DB 605 engine. AIMs also have resin and etch sets forthcoming for a G-5 (pressurisation kit) and a G-6/U4 (camera control and fairing). And more decal schemes for a variety of JGs. These sheets include a number of 'wilde Sau' options - Dieterle's machine will look especially striking in this larger scale. Contact John at aimsmodels1@gmail.com  











Saturday, 13 December 2025

wilde Sau Bf 109s of JG 302, Fw. Andreas Hartl - Bundesarchiv photo find #12





More interesting schemes for the new 1:24 scale Airfix Gustav. Not strictly speaking a 'photo report' - these are screen grabs from Wochenschau broadcast No 709/1944 which can be viewed in decent quality in the Bundesarchiv digital Lesesaal (see link below).   According to the commentary these images show Bf 109 G-6/R6 night fighters - committed almost exclusively on day sorties from April 1944 - returning back into Ludwigslust from a (training) sortie during March 1944. Given the 'clues' in the report these are almost certainly from II./JG 302 - all have red fuselage bands, a II. Gruppe bar and the fuselage codes preceded with the large 'N' for 'Nacht'. The starboard wing lower surfaces are black. (note the cannon gondola in the nearest G-6 to the camera in the image below). Pilots are seen dismounting and reporting in to their Gruppenkommandeur, Maj. Treumund Engelhardt, a former KG 2 bomber pilot. The Wochenschau film moves on to show a successful 'Nachwuchs', identifying the pilot who features in the footage describing a victory in front of his comrades as Fw. Andreas Hartl. Hartl was a wilde Sau ace with 6./JG 302. 




Above;  Hartl reporting in. Note the large infra-red light on the lower wing of his Gustav (in the cross), which identified the wilde Säue to German anti-aircraft batteries on the ground. In addition the wilde Sau usually removed the pilot head armour as can be seen in the previous images.

Below; Hartl congratulated by a comrade in front of his 5. or 6.Staffel G-6 'N 1+ bar' (?)  6. Staffel usually equates to yellow numbers - and on p214 of JfV 13/VI  Jochen Prien states Hartl was flying 'yellow 5'. The footage though does not appear to show Hartl climbing down from 'yellow 5'. Hartl is principally seen in front of 'N 1' (see first screen shot above, maybe red, but certainly darker than the yellow octane triangle alongside it). 'Red N 1' may of course be the aircraft of the Staffelkapitän of 5./JG 302 during this period, Oblt. Karlheinz Seeler...

According to the Wochenschau commentary and as apparently mentioned in an OKW Bericht, Hartl had shot down 11 bombers in just his first seven combat sorties, including four (sic!) during the night of 24-25 March 1944 which saw over 800 RAF bombers over Berlin. Even Welter and Wischnewski only managed two apiece on that raid so this information is very doubtful. (Boiten gives Hartl just three confirmed and five unconfirmed victories in total). Note the pilots are wearing life-jackets - despite operating over central/western Germany - and the dust cover is still over the cannon barrel in the view below, so the footage may just be posed for the cameras. Andreas Hartl was shot down and killed on a day sortie on 8 April 1944 as recalled, below, by his 6./JG 302 comrade Fritz Gniffke.  (translation by this blog)



“..on 8 April 1944 at around 12:15 – and somewhat to our consternation -we were put on thirty-minute readiness. Few, if any of us, had had any combat experience by day. Then at 13:00 the green flare soared into the sky over the airfield – the signal for the forty Messerschmitts of our Gruppe to get airborne! This on its own was an impressive spectacle, but then twenty minutes later we made visual contact with an armada of B-24 Liberators ploughing through the skies over Braunschweig. I can still recall closing in on and opening up at less than 100 metres distance on two of these lumbering machines, making no evasive manoeuvres whatsoever. The starboard wing of one of the American bombers was a sheet of flame. I was unable to observe further as we soon found a gaggle of Mustangs on our tails and after some thirty minutes of wild turning and diving during the course of which I lost 4,000 metres altitude I was able to give the American fighters the slip and landed at Ludwigslust bathed in sweat. We learnt that we had lost one of the best pilots in our Staffel during this encounter - Fw. Andreas Hartl was machine-gunned by P-51s as he hung under his parachute..." 

Fritz Gniffke (6./JG 302)



Thanks to Anders Hjortsberg and Jaroslav "Alan Grey" Mazanec for help with this post. Gniffke account extracted from "Luftwaffe fighters -Combat on all Fronts" Vol I by Neil Page (Mortons, 2021)





Tuesday, 9 December 2025

Werftzug. mot 3/20 Ju 88s of KG 76 - archive image scan #50

 

#50 in our ongoing series of rare images scanned for this blog from various 'professional' and 'personal' collections. A selection of these KG 76 Ju 88s recently appeared for sale on ebay.de but obviously the seller didn't post them in this quality. Professionally photographed, they depict the activities of a motorised Werftzug on an Eastern Front airfield (Kursk) during the summer of 1942. The Werftzug was an organizational unit, specifically a technical or maintenance platoon/section, typically attached at the Gruppe level. Its primary function was to provide essential maintenance, technical support, and repair services for the aircraft within its assigned Gruppe, which usually consisted of approximately 30-40 aircraft. The personnel in the Werftzug included ground crew, mechanics, and other technical specialists responsible for keeping the aircraft operational. The Werftzug was an integral part of the operational structure of a flying unit, ensuring that the aircraft were maintained and ready for combat missions. The term Zug translates to "platoon," indicating a relatively small but vital body of specialist personnel and equipment. Note the 'F1' code on the Ju 88 (KG 76) and the 'C' heavy fighter with the 'fake' over-painted nose intended to 'disguise' the heavy forward firing armament. 








Monday, 8 December 2025

Lt. Ernst-Günther Behling - JG 77, SG 2 - archive photo scan #48

 

Two images from the album of Lt. Ernst-Günther Behling. Below; an early F-4 in an interesting scheme, probably a machine of the Geschwaderstab JG 77. Note over-painted yellow rudder and the partial yellow engine cowl - an interesting alternative scheme for the new Airfix JG 77 Friedrich (1:72nd) . Günther Behling was born on 9 Nov 1919 in Halen (North Rhine-Westphalia). He trained in JFS 4 and joined the EJG 77 in July 41. Then in August 1941 he was posted to 7. (and later 8.)/JG 77. He transfered to 2./SG 2 sometime in April 1943 and, but for a short period in JG 102 (June 44) excepted, he flew only in Schlacht units (I./SG 10 in Jan 44 and Sch.G. 151 in Feb 45).





Ritterkreuz award ceremony in the desert - archive photo scan #47

 


Generalmajor Seidemann Fliegerführer Afrika visted Sturzkampfgeschwader 3 during October 1942 to present the RK to Oblt. Hans von Bargen and Oblt. Herbert Stry, successful in 300 Stuka sorties.  Stry's  BF Ofw. Konsorke received the DKiG. 



Also on this blog;

Kriegsberichter  Hans Gross