Showing posts with label He 177. Show all posts
Showing posts with label He 177. Show all posts

Saturday, 17 February 2024

5./KG 100 Heinkel He 177 A-5 and crew - archive photo scan #14

 

Via Ulf Balke collection.

Heinkel He 177 A-5/K.IV seen in or around May 1944 in II./KG 100 at Aalborg.  - in other words a He 177 A-5 fitted with Kehl IV equipment for launching stand-off weapons. Click on the image to view large.

Kehl IV allowed missions to be flown with either two Hs 293s (powered) or four Fritz X's (unpowered) in theory. A mix of both stand-off weapons was not possible. The Hs 293 was too large to fit on the wing centre section rack/lower fuselage rack.

II./KG 100 was the last operational He 177 anti-shipping unit. It actually only ever flew one operational mission and that - fortunately for them - did not result in contact with the enemy.

The aircraft appears to be WNr. 550131, 6N+DN of 5.Staffel (so spinners are red up to the section covering the prop blades). 

This aircraft was the first example of the second block of around 240 x He 177 A-5/K.IV Serie aircraft built by Arado, Brandenburg/Neuendorf (ArB) as W.Nr. 550 031 to 550 270. (The first Arado A-5 block was very small; just six as W.Nr. 550 001 to 550 006.) Stkz. is unknown.




 
This nose shot of another A-5 from II./KG 100 has been published in Balke ('Kampfgeschwader 100 Wiking') but the image there was reversed. Note the addition of the sealing tape to the large servicing panels in the fuselage sides behind the cockpit. 

Self-evidently, these scribble schemes were unique to the individual aircraft. It is, however, definitely another He 177 A-5/K.IV of II./KG 100 from the same period. No other He 177 unit carried this scheme which was essentially a quick and economical way of lightening up the dark factory finish. Because these aircraft were only going to have a reasonable chance of surviving a mission if attacks were performed at dusk and the return leg was flown by night,  the factory finish finish had to be lightened up very considerably. A little later the factory finish was changed over to one where the entire fuselage sides and tail fin were painted in a light colour eg see KG 40 in the summer of 1944.

There are a number of photos of this machine, clearly taken at some sort of special photo op - perhaps an 'Erinnerungsfoto' for the six-man crew in front of their aircraft. See the front cover photo of the Griehl+Dressel: He 177-277-274 (Motorbuch) below. Interestingly this machine appears to be parked up in the long grass - literally put out to grass perhaps...as indicated by the caption in the English-language edition of the Griehl/Dressel book..






Caption compiled with the kind assistance of  Ivon N Moore.

Also on this blog;


Sunday, 26 November 2023

He 177 KG 100 - archive photo scan (8)

 


A crew member taking a pee at the tail wheel of I./KG 100 He 177 A-3 '6N+NS' prior to a sortie. Scanned from the Ulf Balke photo archive...




Wednesday, 12 July 2023

He 177 "Zerstörer" in the Ukraine - ebay photo find #361

 


one of the 12 He 177 A-1/U2 "Zerstörer" variants seen here during an intermediate stop in the Ukraine, equipped with a pair of Mk 101 30mm cannon (?) in the chin gondola.

Wednesday, 16 December 2020

Heinkel He 177 Greif, Flugplatz Aalborg -ebay photo find #339

 


notgelandeter Heinkel He 177 "Greif" mit Tarnanstrich - vermutlich geht es um He 177 A-5 mit Kennung "6N+DM" der 4./KG100, Werknummer 550006, notgelandet südwestlich Aalborg, Dänemark, am 9. Mai 1944.

Crash landing of He 177 A-5, WNr.550006, "6N+we.DM, 4.II.KG 100", damaged 9 May 1944 crashed south-west of Aalborg, DK








Saturday, 23 November 2019

He 177 KG 1 - recent ebay photo finds #325





above; Heinkel 177 A-3 "Kurfürst-Luise" der I./KG 1, Frühjahr 1944. On offer here


'prise de guerre' Toulouse








Sunday, 17 February 2019

KG 1 Heinkel He 177 - ebay photo find #303




KG 1 Hindenburg Heinkel He 177 GREIF mit Piloten vor dem Start





Monday, 18 April 2016

He 177 I./ KG 1 Hindenburg, Kommodore Horst v. Riesen - daily Ebay photo find #173


Original Konvolut von 20 x Fotos, KG 1 Hindenburg

".. Kommodore Horst v. Riesen mit Stab in der Fliegerkaserne in Brandis, viele Offiziere und RK+DKIG Träger dabei..."

 According to the seller these photos were taken from a KG 1 album and show officers and Kommandeure of KG 1 awaiting a visit from Kommodore Horst von Riesen in Brandis, presumably April 1944. Two lower images show RK holder Hptm. Otto von Ballasko (cf. Alfred Price He 177 Profile) followed in the last image by von Riesen's departure. Only two of the twenty images on offer here (see link below) show any of the unit's He 177s. Note the elaborate spinner decoration in the image below.


Below; Major von Cossart (also third left above) in discussion with Oblt Sickert. Hptm Manfred von Cossart was Kdr. of IV./KG 1 from late 1942 until February 1944. With promotion to  the rank of Major, von Cossart assumed command of I./ KG 1. On the dissolution of KG 1 this officer was posted to IV./ JG 301, prior to a posting to Erg.JGr. Ost and a transfer to JG 7. (via the de Zeng/Stankey officer career summaries here)





Hptm. Otto von Ballasko


von Riesen departs Brandis


According to Flugbuch entries listed in Ransom's  brief history of Flugplatz Brandis "Zwischen Leipzig und der Mulde" the first He 177 arrivals for I. Gruppe KG 1 flew into Brandis, some 18 km east of Leipzig, during February 1944; He 177 A-1 WNr. 15184 arrived in Brandis on 18 February 1944. By April I./KG 1 still had only sixteen He 177 bombers on strength and it was not until March 1944 that the newer A-3 model arrived.  II./ KG 1 in Burg and IV./ KG 1 in Neuburg also had claim on some of these newer machines. Of  I./KG 1's 22 He 177 A-3s on strength on 25 April 1944 only six were einsatzbereit (combat-ready) the Gruppe having already lost three He 177s in crashes. By 10 June 1944 the Gruppe had lost a further 16 machines ! ( cf. Ransom p.46)  At least one He 177 was lost in the 28 May 1944 US 8th AF air raid on Brandis. Heinkel He 177 A-3 V4+HK departed Brandis for Neuruppin on 14 July 1944 as the He 177s were moved to various bases in central Germany. Gruppen of KG 1 had taken part in raids on targets in Russia and been deployed against Soviet tank columns that had broken through German defensive positions before fuel shortages grounded KG 1's He 177 bomber fleet in late July 1944.


He 177 A-3 V4+AK  seen in May/June 1944, Flugplatz Brandis (via ebay auction)


IV./KG 1 He 177 with black lower surfaces, summer 1944





Tuesday, 9 June 2015

Ju 290 A " 9V+LK " of 2./ FAGr.5, Bf 110 NJG 1 - daily Ebay photo find #120




Ju 290 A " 9V+LK " of 2./ FAGr.5 photographed in Neuburg/Donau on 19 August 1944. This aircraft flew a Verlegungsflug - transfer flight - back to the Reich on this date, returning to Germany from the French Atlantic coast base of Mont de Marsan before making a forced landing in Neuburg according to the seller's caption. The photo shows the Staffel 'band' after disembarking from the machine - note also among the passengers a number of French women 'repatriated' back to Germany from the unit's 'staff'.



View from inside the cockpit of Ju 290 A "9V+LK" of 2./FAGr 5 in flight over the Atlantic in early 1944. To the left is Staffelkapitän and Flugzeugführer Hptm. Georg Eckl










via horrido511 Ebay sales here



Sicilian-based Me 210



neat photo set of an NJG 1 Bf 110 in the 'early' overall black scheme seen at Köln/Ostheim coded 'G9+EN' with yellow fuselage band..





Go here 

Russian Beute types, La 5 and MiG 3



via Marco at koelsch333 here 




Above; F-2 'Doppelwinkel' of the Stab III./ JG 3. Wknr.8127. Hptm. Werner Andres. Uman, 28 August 1941...caption Frank Benoiton here
 These images 'JuJu' on offer here