Info EDUARD
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{"cz":"Info EDUARD"}
{"cz":"Měsíčník o historii a plastikovém modelářství.","en":"Monthly magazine about history and scale plastic modeling."}
01/2021
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VOL 20, January 2021ISSUE 131INFOPage 2
INFOEDUARDISSUE 131© Eduard - Model Accessories, 2021FREE FOR DOWNLOAD, FREE FOR DISTRIBUTION!This material may only be used for personal use. No part of the textor graphic presentations can be used in another publication in any other media formor otherwise distributed without the prior writtenpermission of Eduard - Model Accessories and authors involved.Editorial and Graphics - Marketing department, Eduard - Model Accessories, Ltd.Page 3
eduardEDITORIAL4JANUARY 2021HISTORY18Charles „Chuck“ YeagerSpitres over Europe part twoINDESTRUCTIBLE: Rudolf BertholdIssued by Eduard-Model Accessories, spol. s.r.o.Mírová 170, Obrnice 435 21support@eduard.com www.eduard.comCONTENTKITSBRASSINPHOTO-ETCHED SETSBIGEDRELEASEBUILTON APPROACHJanuary 2021February 202166723458757686Fw 190A-6 1/48Bf 109G-6 1/48LAU-10/A ZUNI 1/48Mk.20 Rockeye II 1/48SE.5a Hispano Suiza 1/48AIM-9M/L Sidewinder 1/48F/A-18D ATARS 1/48101TAIL END CHARLIEBf 110G-4 ProPACK 1/48FOKKER FOKER! Limited edition 1/72Bf 109G-6/AS Weekend edition 1/48P-51D-5 Weekend edition 1/48P-47D Razorback Super44 1/144Page 4
Dear Friends and Modellers!I must confess that I began wring this in-troducon to the newsleer back at the endof November, immediately aer I nished theintro to the November newsleer. My cleverplan was to put together the introduconbefore Christmas, add a small bit on DonaldFinlay, write the text to the Spiire Mk.IIa, buysome presents, and then just waste my megood n’ well unl January 4th. It was a wellthought out plan that basically worked out,except that on December 19th, just as I -nished making myself a cup of Flat White andprepared to ne tune my intro text, the phonerang. Instead of what I was expecng, whichwas the latest on who in the rm had testedposive for covid, I was informed that our pe-ople were evacuated from the building that isour warehouse and mailing department, be-cause there seems to be something burningthere. So, once again, it has been proven thatignorance is a state of bliss while the universeis actually poinng a gun right between youreyes. I le the coee on the table and I co-vered the 18km between Litvinov and Mostin record me, and I arrived at thirty minutesaer the call came into the re department.There was smoke coming from the warehouseporon, and from the ground, it didn’t look allthat bad. When the black smoke turned whi-te, it looked good, under the circumstances,but that was just wishful thinking, as it turnedout. Soon, the re seemed to have found itssecond wind, and spread through the en-re oor, destroying nearly one million plas-c sprue frames and a four month supply ofmodel boxes. In our case, that is really a lotof boxes. And they burn real good, too. At themoment when the re picked up again, I wassaying goodbye in my mind to not only all ofour sprue part supplies, but also other com-ponents and nished products that were sto-red in the mail area. That is on the rst oorof the building, and at the height of the re,it didn’t look possible for anything to survivethere. Fortunately, when the re was exngu-ished, it became clear that the situaon wasmuch beer, and the losses much less, thanwould have been expected aer viewing thewhole aair from the outside. No small thanksgoes out to the reghters, who were able tolocalize the re and keep it in the upper level,and to the steel and concrete structure of thebuilding hailing from the beginning of the 20thcentury. As the head reghter said, had thisbeen a modern industrial building, it wouldhave burned right down to its foundaon.This building didn’t make it easy for the re tospread to other secons, and perhaps surpri-singly, there was not a signicant amount ofwater damage, either. The water generally o-wed down the stairwells, where, shortly aerthe re had been exnguished, they lookedlike mountain streams. It may not have beencrystal clear, but the water was up to almostthe knees. The end result is that things thatmissed being sent out through the mail sys-tem on the Friday before the re, stored in thele side of the building, escaped the amesunscathed. They may have the disnct smellof burned styrene, but hopefully, this can beaired out. Items in the mail room proper andthe retail department suered some damagefrom the water coming down from the upp-er oors, but this damage is relavely minor.Aer we were given the go-ahead to re-enterthe building by the re department, we mo-ved most goods to the neighboring hall. At themoment, remediaon is being carried out onboth damaged halls, the burned out secondoor and the ooded rst oor. However, itappears that once the building is inspectedand the electrical wiring is cered, the retailand mail departments will be back to normal.This week will be dedicated to moving every-thing back, and the week aer will be used toget the mail room into operaon again, inclu-ding the restart of our e-shop. The supply ofphotoetching, masks, Brassins and Gunze willbe normal. We haven’t got any plasc, or atleast not for everything, so what will probablybe aected for several months will be the ca-talog of kits. We will supply the new releasesfor the current month and for the one aer,in this case, February. Aer that, we will buildup stock in a ow against me, so rst willbe items released in December, 2020, thenNovember, 2020, and with them, relatedproducts. So, for example, the Spiire Mk.IaProPACK, and Spiire Story: The Few will tagalong with Spiire Mk.IIa ProPACK, beingreadied for February. It will be the same forthe Mustangs. We have to renew the P-51D-5Weekend kit, which was to have been packedthis week, but who’s plasc went, quite lite-rally, up in smoke. So, we need to mould theMustang. And while we will be churning outD-5 plasc, we’ll do all of them, including theMustang Mk.IV planned for May. You dig?That takes care of the most pressing ofthings, and we can turn to the original con-tents of the newsleer introducon. This willconcern to a large extent, changes that thisyear will bring us. One of our goals, whichchanges are beginning to aect, is the newsle-er itself. In November, we iniated an edingteam made up of myself, Jan Zdiarsky, JanBobek, Petr Stepanek and Richard Plos. Ourgoal is to improve the aesthec quality of thismaterial and bring it up to a printable form.You read right. Although paper is today con-sidered an outdated medium, there are thoseamong us that simply prefer to read things ona hard copy. And I won’t deny that I am oneof them. Computer versions of books were atone me considered a great Christmas gi,but I, myself, have never read a book on one.Mine was inherited by my mother-in-law. De-mand for a hard copy of the Newsleer is sllthere, despite the fact that everyone can theo-recally print one o themselves. Or just printout the pages they nd interesng. But I mustadmit that geng a printed version of someEDITORIALeduard4INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 5
magazine sll holds some magical feel to it.For this reason, we are seriously consideringpung out a printed version of the newsle-er. The plan is basically such that it would beprinted only for subscribers, and there wouldbe no inventory kept. Not that we would beworried that it would go up in ames, butsimply put, we would print as many as wouldbe needed to just ll orders. The order forthe printed version of the Newsleer wouldcarry with it some benet. One that is beingconsidered is free postage for any order thatincludes the newsleer. The printed versionwould be going out with a delay of a few days,as opposed to the instant internet version, be-cause, truth be told, we usually nish up thenewsleer on the day it is released. That willlikely not change. The Newsleer will, of cour-se, remain our main adversing avenue, thatalso will not change. In any case, we will con-nue to work on the contents, and on stren-gthening the historical component of it. Thehistorical arcles are highly valued by readers.I also intend to include interviews with peo-ple from the worlds of modelling and aviaon.People who would be interesng to interviewand would have something useful to oerabound. In fact, I already bought a recorderfor conducng such interviews, but coronathrew a monkey wrench into the whole idea.Most pilots that I want to interview are nowin what is considered a high-risk group for thevirus, and I have no intenon of pung anyo-ne at risk. That means that the interviews willtake o aer the pandemic. There is also inte-rest in older historical arcles. We have someideas for that as well, and that is to issue a his-torical arcle ‘year book’ that would includethese ‘historical historical’ arcles. It wouldlikely be spread out over several volumes, asthe source of the arcles has become quiterich. We would like to see this come to frui-on around the end of the second quarter, butit won’t be as easy as it may sound, so please,be paent.A few words about the revamped WeekendEdion line, which aracted a lot of aen-on in December’s announcements. Some ofthe reacons expressed the thought that theoriginal (we can say ‘current’) Weekend kitswere inexpensive. Yes, they were. That wasthe idea. The Weekend line is the result ofone crisis and the intent was to aract mo-delers who like to save their money as muchas possible in mes of such crises. In truth,there were no hordes of people scramblingto this line. ProPACKS, although more expen-sive, have always been beer sellers. I havealways had the impression that, at best, theWeekend line was surviving, but just barely.The new Weekend line will ll the needs ofthe mes, based on latest trends, which, ofcourse, we, to a large extent, dictate oursel-ves. Among other things, the new Weekendline will make full use of the skills of our ar-sts, Piotr and Adam. I think these two menare the best aviaon arsts today, if not thebest, period. Nothing against the establishedarsts, and especially not against any of tho-se living today. Their contribuons have beeninvaluable for the development of our indust-ry. Of course, mes change, new technologycomes, and young guns show up among thecreators bringing with them something freshand new. The established arsts and develo-pers are usually prey much set in their ways,and they naturally feel that if they change andadapt to new ways, they are somehow betra-ying themselves. They resist. So, we value andappreciate them, but at the same me, wedon’t limit those who subscribe to progress!Today’s newsleer should include a lisng ofthe Weekend kits planned for the year, withthe understanding that we reserve the right tomake changes as necessary. I didn’t think thatsuch a change would come so soon. In the ini-al plan, we were supposed to release itemsin the rst half of the year for which we hada good supply of plasc. That hit an obviousroadblock. Now, we have no plasc, and theidea behind the assortment of Weekend kitsthat will be available has to go through a fun-damental change. I expect that things will bemuch clearer on this front by about March. Itwill be around then, when we will publish ourrelease schedule for the line.Another thing that was drascally aectedby December’s re is the BFC Admissions Kit.Our plans for the BFC for this year were veryambious. Some of these plans will no longerbe possible to put into acon, and others willneed to be delayed. As an example, we havehad a 1:35th scale Sherman ready for qui-te some me now. Paradoxically, one of theitems planned was a cous Obrnice Leo-pard, a re ghng tank of the local volunteerre brigade. Well, that idea went up in ames.To source new plasc at the moment is see-mingly not going to happen, but we will makethe aempt. If we are unsuccessful, we’ll trysomething else. I think there talk about anObrnice Leopard II, and it was a T-34, or aT-55? That will require us to look into the ma-er.In 1:48th scale, we were planning a Tem-pest Mk.V and a MiG-21MF in 1:72nd, whichwas to mirror closely its older and larger re-lave. It will be possible to release these twokits. But when that will be, will also be a lotclearer around March. Innovaons will hitthe club t-shirts, as well. I admit to having so-mewhat a dilemma surrounding the club ad-missions kit. It surrounds the what-if theme,and you probably know what I am referringto. I am not sure if we should tone the ideadown a bit, if not get rid of it altogether. Thefact is that the historical items, the actual oneswith actual histories, are usually so strong thatI have a feeling that they almost dishonor thewhat-if idea. What is your take on this? I willbe happy to hear your opinions on the maer.When we reach a conclusion on this, the BFCwill be revamped, and it’s quite possible thatanother two admissions kits will be added tothe range, one in 48th and one in 72nd.Another biggie to think about is the eventscalendar for E-day, and others. I fear that thisyear’s calendar will also be on the lean side,and right o the bat, we will have to do wi-thout the Nuremburg Toy Fair. The Februaryevent is cancelled. There was an aempt tomove the event to the summerme, but Idon’t really see this happening. Either way, wewill not be aending, and we will just have todo without. At the end of January, we wouldlike to do another roundtable discussion atVnitroblock, which would be the replacementfor the press conference at Nuremburg. Un-fortunately, this doesn’t look like a live eventat this moment, either. What will be goingon in the spring is currently a lile foggy. It isnot enrely out of the queson that by April,things will improve and it will be possible tohold some of the tradional spring events. Butthe chances are not great. Vaccine distribuonprobably won’t help all that much by spring.Aer that, June is a lile further o, and withit, there is a lile more room for some opmi-sm, and I think I can dig some out, carefully,from deep within my soul. However, it willnot be ModellBrno nor Kit Saloon Nymburk.Both of these are o the table for the year.We will see in the coming years how strongeduard5INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 6
the desire will be to start these back up, but Idon’t see things as being parcularly rosy. Thepeople behind Pilsen are making some noisefor June, and this is being pondered as a po-ssible meframe for PilsenKit. I think the ideais sound, and I hope they go for it. This wouldbe both far enough away from both E-day andthe start of the school year that it would givethem plenty of room for the implementaonof the plan. We are certainly crossing our n-gers for their success!If there is an E-day this year, and there iscertainly a chance that there will be, we wouldlike to push it a lile further again. A radicalchange is our separaon from the SMCzR, andby extension, E-day from the Naonal Champ-ionship, put on by the SMCzR. There will alsono longer be a Hobby Category at E-day, whichwas the naonal Championship. This era is de-nitely done for, but a new one begins: CzechModel Masters. This will be open to all regar-dless of club aliaon or naonality, and re-gistraon within some organizaon will not bea condion. The contest will be governed bya simplied set of guidelines. I am not sayingthis will be a yay or nay contest, and it will holdon to some rules that stem from those usedat the year before last’s E-day. The judgingpersonnel will also come from the colleconof people who judged the Hobby category atthat event. The awards will be high caliber andwill be introduced as the year goes on, and wewill also gradually introduce the categories. Imake it no secret that we want Czech ModelMasters to be the height of modelling in notjust the Czech Republic, but at least in con-nental Europe. The associated events to gowith will come out of the year before last’sscheme, with the lectures on Friday and asmall aviaon day on Saturday. For this year’sevent, we would like to secure the services ofseveral Zlin Trener aircra and an Mi-24.The main theme of today’s newsleer arenew the new ProPACK releases, and so, thepremiere releases for the New Year. Actually,you will be familiar with them, because theyall have been referenced to in the past. Butno one has been able to guess so far what thesecret new release is, and we started that talkback at the Q and A session in the pizzeria atArtur’s retail outlet last year. And I will con-nue to keep that a secret, at least for a lilewhile longer, but I will say that its release dateis set for December. At least, that’s the ideaas it is now. But, you know how fragile planscan be. It could be pushed to later into 2022,but even then, a good me to release the itemwould no doubt be found.As things seem to be turning out, ProPACKsand new Limited Edion kits might not beaected by the re all that much. The Januaryreleases, including the ProPACK Bf 110G-4 in1:48th scale is at the resellers. Unfortunately,the current state of this kit in our inventory isat a minus 45 pieces, and moulding more isjust not in the cards for the near future. So, fornow, it will not be available from our e-shop,but we will strive to x this situaon as soonas it will become possible. In this case, though,this is looking like about the midway point ofthe year. It is similar to both the Weekend kits.Both the Bf 109G-6/AS and the P-51D-5 are inthe minus column, and they won’t be acce-ssible through the e-shop, either. However,these we do expect to churn out and makeavailable through February. They should begoing back into producon immediately af-ter the new releases for February are made.We have seventy kits of the Fokker Fokker!Limited Edion kit and 137 of the 1:144th P--47D Razorback. In the case of the P-47, thesealso represent the last of the accessible kits,and a restock from Platz will take some me.The rst kits for which we will be stockingplasc will be for February’s new releases. Forthis, we have the ProPACK Spiire Mk.IIa rea-dy. This was to have been the rst ProPACKrelease in the new look box. As it is nowada-ys, you can’t stop progress, Movement in onefront invariably leads to progress on another.And this applies, at the moment, to the Pro-PACKs, which when compared to the newWeekend kits, all of a sudden are coming oas a bit of a poorer relave, like they should bethe less expensive line! But they will not be,because the me has come for them to put ona new coat. This will come through February,but you can judge the new look here and now.There are two new Weekends planned forFebruary, the Ni-17 in 1:72nd scale and theMiG-21bis in 48th. The Nieuport won’t be anissue, but the more complicated MiG-21biswill be. The MiG is put o unl the secondhalf of the year. What is not an issue at all isthe 1:48th scale Do 17 that is being preparedunder the name Kampfs. The plasc will beleaving the Ukraine this week, from ICM, andshould arrive on me. So, that makes threenew kits for February. The assortment of newaccessory items remains unchanged. I wouldlike to point your aenon to the Brassin Mer-lin III engine, released as ‘Spiire Mk.I Engine’.At the same me, we are releasing gin baysfor the Spiire Mk.IIa. I also suggest a peekat the collecon of new LooKs and LooKplussets, with items there for the P-38H and F--14A. Both are designed for use with the Ta-miya 1:48th scale kits. Also, you will note theve new decal sheets, mostly covering stencildata, with the excepon of the sheet for theFokker Dr.I that deals with the von Richthofenbrothers. This is under the tle of Die rotenFlieger, and is for the 1:32nd scale Meng kit.This was originally supposed to be a release bythe now probably permanently defunct WNWcompany. Among the new photoetched sets,we have an interesng collecon for the neweduard6INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 7
fer you to December’s newsleer for furtherdetails. The second half of the year also seesthe coming of a 1:48th scale ProPACK releaseof the Fw 190F-8, and at approximately thesame me, we’ll bring you the new Camel inthe Limited Edion kit Biggles & Co. The rstProPACK of the Camel will appear at the endof the year. The ProPACK Camels will be sub-divided by engine type.If you don’t nd all this parcularly interes-ng, then you will likely change your viewpo-int around E-day. The star of the fall, regar-dless of what happens with E-day, will be theTrener trainers. This is a beauful project, andwill result in beauful kits. I will say right othe bat that we will not be concerned aboutabsolutely every lile detail dierence thatappeared between the versions. Various GPSdetails and local modicaons are just too nu-merous to implement. I am determined to re-main calm in the face of the reviews that willclaim that there are a multude of mistakesin the kit(s). My advice to those on a quest formistakes is to take the me to noce what isnice and unique about a kit instead of poin-ng out errors at all costs. Julia Roberts has alarge nose, but it does nothing to detract fromher beauty. The 48th scale development ofthe Trener line is progressing well, and quick-ly, and these could be done by the end of thesummer. For E-day, or at least around theplanned date of the event, we will release aLimited Edion kit dedicated to the Z-126 andZ-226. A month later should see the ProPACKline of the Z-526AFS. But, I repeat, that’s aways o sll, and the old ‘subject to changewithout prior noce’ thing applies here, too.We may also rst release a Z-326/Z-526 Li-mited Edion kit. Both of these will be reallynice, and it makes no dierence which comesrst. In the fall, we want to organize a TrenerMeet, , but we shall see where this might takeplace, whether it will be in Plzen (Pilsen) or so-mewhere closer to Prague in the central CzechRepublic.And if all goes well, and for now it appearsthat it will, we may even see the S-199 by theend of the year. However, we have learned so-C-130H Hercules from Zvezda in 1:72nd andfor the Spiire Mk.Vc from Airx in the samescale. Further, we have sets for the TF-104Gfrom Kinec and sets for the Tornado ASSTA3.1 from Revell in 1:48th. Then, there’s thestu for Trumpeter’s F-100F in 1:32nd. In theZoom line, the new sets for the new Weekendkits should not be overlooked, nor should thenew BigEds and masks be.So, let’s turn our aenon to the plannedProPACKs and the premiere releases. For therst half of the year, we are preparing the Fw190A-5 in the four-cannon version, the SpiireMk.I (Early version) and the Mustang Mk.IV, allin 1:48th scale and all in that order. For April,we have the kit that was menoned in the lastnewsleer, the 1:72nd scale Bf 109E LimitedEdion under the name of Adlerangri, basedon the new Bf 109E developed in co-operaonwith Special Hobby. The plasc is being supp-lied by SH, so there should be no quantaveissue. In the second half of the year, we willrelease another Bf 109E based Limited Edionkit, dedicated to the era prior to the Bale ofBritain. This model will be a part of the LimitedEdion release Curych (Zurich) 1937, and willthe included companion piece to the B.534.This will be a model of the Bf 109V-13, whichis basically the Bf 109E-0. Over the course ofthe second half of the year, we will go into theBf 109E ProPACKs.It will be an interesng July, when we willroll out our Tempest Mk.II in 1:48th. We’ll be-gin with the ProPACK version, because therewill be a Limited Edion kit based on this mo-del released by Special Hobby. The plasc willbe produced by SH, so here, too, there shouldbe no issues in producon. The moulds areessenally complete, and the shots will beshown through the course of January. Therst Spiire Mk.V in 1:48th scale will makeits appearance in August in the Limited Edi-on tled Eagle’s Call, dedicated to the Ame-rican Eagle squadrons operang within theRAF. Other Limited Edion kits released forthe Spiire Mk.V will follow, and I would re-mething from 2020 when it comes to the ‘ifall goes well…’ predicon. I am not sure yet ifthis will be in 1:72nd scale or in 1:48th. Whichscale will get the nod rst will be determinedin March. If we meet this deadline is possible,but we’ll see if we can do it. But rst, we’llneed to ensure the release of the secret newthing in December.The year 2020 will be a tough one to forget.It will go down as the year for diculty, badluck and catastrophes. From my viewpointthough, the year was not all bad. We came upwith, and put in moon, a lot of good ideas.We managed to, against all odds, put in mo-on some interesng events. We taught oursel-ves new procedures, and we insgated somenew processes that even a year ago seemedimpossible. Financially, 2020 was our most su-ccessful year, bar none. True, we managed toburn down at the end of the year, but I thinkwe are quite capable of turning that around inour favor as well. It is now clear that this ex-perience is speeding up several aspects of ourcompany, and it will bring advancement if forno other reason than it has shown us that ourspace is quickly becoming too small for ouracvies and plans. It’s me to do somethingabout it, and build us a new house. I hope thatthis me next year, it will be standing.The thing that does sadden me, though, isthe departure from this life over the past yearof the people we found so much inspiraonin, people who have le a mark in modellingin parcular and aviaon in general. They willnever be forgoen, and long live their memo-ries!That is all for me for the beginning of 2021.May this year be a lot beer than last year.Happy Modelling!Vladimir Sulceduard7INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 8
S-199eduard8INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 9
CAMELeduard9INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 10
ZLIN Z-126ZLIN Z-226eduard10INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 11
ZLIN Z-326ZLIN Z-526eduard11INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 12
OUR THANKS TO THE FIREFIGHTERSIn recent days, we have received oers of assistance from individu-als, companies and state organizaons. We are both very encouragedand appreciave of this support. However, we want to dedicate thismessage to all the reghters who intervened in the re in our ware-house. This was not an easy task and we are aware that some of themalso suered injuries. We greatly appreciate your work want to ex-tend our hearelt thanks to every one of you. We wish you a speedyrecovery. Our thanks go to these re brigades and we hope that ourlist is complete (see below).Professional reghter units:HZS Ústeckého kraje – územní obvod Most- Staon Most- Staon LitvínovHZS Ústeckého kraje – územní obvod Teplice- Staon Teplice- Staon BílinaHZS Podniku Unipetrol a.s.HZS Podniku Severní energecká a.s.Voluntary Fireghter UnitsSDH ObrniceSDH Most – RudoliceSDH BraňanySDH Litvínov – obecSDH ŽeleniceSDH Horní JiřenSDH MeziboříSDH LomSDH HrobčiceEduard teameduard12INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 13
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* 13. 2. 1923† 8. 12. 2020HISTORYOn October 14, 1947 Chuck Yeager ofcially became the fastest man on the planet. Flyingthe experimental Bell X-1 he reached speed of Mach 1,06 and started the supersonic era inaviation. The nose of the bullet-like aircraft bore the Glamorous Glennis inscription as a tributeto his beloved wife. Similarly named were all his wartime P-51s as well.He met his long-life love when as a young pilot moved together with his squadron to the newbase in Oroville, CA. Chuck was tasked with organizing a dancing evening for the pilots andso he attended local USO ofce for some help. And there they met. „She was pretty as moviestar and was also making more money than I was,“ recalled Chuck later. During the event theyorganised together Chuck also danced with her and, as i turned out, the liking was mutual.„I barely understood every third word he spoke, but I sensed that he was a very strong anddetermined person. The kind of man that I hoped to marry one day.” They married shortlyafter Chuck had returned from Europe at the start of 1945 and the couple stayed together for45 years until Glennis died due to the cancer.From sickness to masteryIt is quite interesting the man, who became one of the most famous pilots in the world withmore than 10,000 ying hours logged had a nausea problem at the start of his career.He learned it while serving as crew chief of an AT-11. Yeager took the backseat as the pilotpracticed landings, and shortly discovered the misery of motion sickness. He was young aircraftmechanic but looked for something more enjoyable and thanks to the Flying Sergeant progra-mme he got the chance, as the age limit was lowered from 20 to 18 years for pilot trainingapplication. He was still sick during rst ights but overcome that weakness thanks to excellentphysical shape and received the pilot badge in March, 1943. During advanced and combattraining he ew the P-39 Airacobra with 363rd Fighter Squadron of 357th Fighter Groupand apart of many struggling young pilots mastered the tricky aircraft. „He was the best of usand became an benchmark for any newbie in the squadron,“ recalled one of colleagues later.The ace in one dayThe 357th Fighting Group moved to England just before Christmas 1943 aboard QueenElisabeth ship to become part of 8th Air Force. Receiving P-51 Mustang, Yeager did not hesi-tate to put the Glamorous Glen on its nose as the tribute to his than ancée. He started combatying in February, 1944 and achieved rst victory on March 4 during the Berlin bombing rideescort. His eighth mission was to be his last for a long time, as he was shot down during combatwith three Fw 190s. Yeager bailed out and hid himself in woods to avoid being captured.A French woodcutter found him and helped him to contact the French resistance movement.With their help Yeager reached Spanish borders on March 30 with two fellow American avi-ators, although they were chased by German soldiers searching for them on ground and fromair using Fi 156 Storch. It was not rst time for Yeager to use parachute. During the trainingight his P-39 caught re and he had to bail out, suffering a back injury, which kept him inhospital for some time. Once back in England Yeager tried hard to overcome the rule, whichprevented any shot down returnee to y over the enemy territory again. There was a dan-ger one could reveal information of the French resistance if shot down again. Finally, Yeagersucceeded thanks to understanding of General Eisenhower. Chuck repaid the mighty AlliedForces commander his faith abundantly. He got P-51C which he named Glamorous Glen II, butsoon received new P-51D Glamorous Glen III. He scored ve kills in one day on October 12,1944 (all victims were Bf 109) and became an ace in one day hero. He nearly repeated theachievement on November 27, shooting down four Fw 109s. But prior to that, he encounteredMe 262 during the escort of B-24. German jets of Komando Nowotny unit stroke at Mustangsof 357th FS after they had leaved the bombers in safe zone. One of the Me 262s red atYeager but missed and Chuck was given a chance to bounce back after evasive manoeuvrein steep climb. He hit the jet several times, but it escaped in clouds. Yeager found himself se-parated from the group, so headed back and spotted the Me 262 approaching the air baseat Achmer. He charged at the German and shot him down despite erce ak defensive ring.CHARLES „CHUCK“ YEAGERThe breakage of sound barrier is one of the prominent miles-tones in aviation development. The “invisible devil” preventingthe aircraft from reaching higher speeds, was a challenge forboth engineers and pilots. Charles “Chuck” Yeager is famousto the world as the rst supersonic man, but there is muchmore behind his lifework.Charles Yeager with Bell X-1 Glamorous Glennis, the rst aircraft breakingsound barrier in horizontal manned ight.photo: USAFphoto: USAFAuthor: Richard Ploseduard14INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 15
HISTORYthe YF-100, he was also one of the rst to conduct ights with XF-104 and many other aircraft.From September 27 to October 5, 1953, he was also member of team evaluating capturedMiG-15 at Kadena AB, Okinawa. He was always the rst pick for engineers and designerswhen they needed proper pilot´s report. Yeager was precise and able to notice importantaspects of ight. After those seven „golden years“ as he recalled this era, he returned tothe duty of military pilot and moved to Europe as commanding ofcer of the 417th FighterBomber Squadron, based at Hahn, West Germany. The unit was ying F-86H Sabres. Yeagerreturned to USA in 1957 and took over the 1st Fighter Day Squadron at George AFB. The unitwas considered “elite” within Tactical Air Command because of its supersonic F-100s.As a Full Colonel Chuck returned to the Edwards AFB in 1961 as the deputy director ofight test. The following year he took over as commander of the new USAF Aerospace Re-search Pilot School (ARPS) designed to prepare military test pilots for space ights. He becamea mentor of the future astronauts, although he was never given a chance to join the spaceprogramme. The reason was lack of academy degree, but he did not regret that too much,because the idea of ying with something he could not control was odd to him. The NF-104was something different for him. This aircraft equipped with additional rocket boosters wasintended to enable future astronauts to get as close to the space as possible and give them theexperience of zero gravity when ying on ballistic arch. Yeager ew this beast for rst timewithout problem and managed to reach 108,000 feet (33 000 m). During the second ight theaircraft pitched up and fell to the at spin at 104,000 feet. Yeager struggled to recover theairplane and nally gave up and ejected. He was seriously injured because of his pressurizedsuit malfunction. The injury kept him in hospital for six weeks.The next stop for Colonel Yeager was 405th Fighter Wing based in Philippines. He com-manded ve squadrons there. Two tactical bomber squadrons ying B-57s in South Vietnam,a squadron of F-100 ghter-bombers based in Taiwan, a pair of F-102 air defence squad-rons at Da Nang and detached units located at Udorn and Bangkok, Thailand. Chuck wasvisiting the squadrons on regular basis and ew with them operationally. With B-57 he added127 ights to his combat record from WWII. After stint at the Kunsan AB, South Korea, hereturned home and was promoted to the rank of Brigadier General. His next stop was Europeagain, where he returned to take over the 7th Air Force commander´ duties in July 1969. Twoyears later he was named U.S. Defense Representative in Pakistan. Another two years later, in1973, he returned home to become USAF Director of Aerospace Safety at Norton AFB, CA.The end of his service was closer and closer and on February 1975 he made his last militaryight in F-4C Phantom II. When he climbed out of the cockpit that day, he had accumulated atotal of 10,131.6 hours in some 361 (!) different types of military aircraft. Three days later hecompleted his service during ceremonies at Norton AFB.Rest without a restAfter the release of The Right Stuff book of Tom Wolf, Chuck Yeager became internationalcelebrity and the movie of the same name further reinforced that status. Chuck even playeda small act in the movie, portraying the bartender in Pancho´s Happy Bottom Riding Club. Thedemand for public appearances, lectures and interviews was endless. Also, his advice has beenmuch sought after by the government, NASA, or the aerospace industry on a wide variety ofissues. He was also part of the team investigating the Challenger Space Shuttle disaster. Duringthe time after the active service he received numerous awards, spent time shing and, of cour-se, kept ying. He settled several records and being a well-known celebrity, he also agreed todo a promotional activity, like the one for Chevrolet Corvette. He was also cooperating with PCgames developers, two of the games bearing his name (Chuck Yeager Advanced Flight Trainerand Chuck Yeager´s Air Combat). He made quite a fortune by that (estimated asset of 1,5million dollars), but, on the other side, the money caused problems in relationship with his fourchildren. Chuck Yeager gave up ying in 1997 at the age of 74 but was t enough to enjoya ride in F-15D in 2012 as a celebration of 65th anniversary of his record ight.The sound barrier breaker, double ghter ace and well-respected leader died on Decem-ber 8, 2020, but the name Charles Yeager will stay in aviation history forever.There were 12,5 aerial victories on Chuck´s account when his tour ended after 64 missionsand 270 ight hours own. He was heading back home where he arrived in January 1945.Chasing a demonAfter his return Yeager married Glennis and served as the ight instructor at Perrin Field,TX for some time. But there was a rule the shot down and returning pilot was given the right toserve at the base of his choose. As the young couple awaited their rst child to be born, theydecided to move closer to home and the Wright Field AFB was their choice. It was the R&Dcentre of US Air Force and Chuck could not have better hand regarding his future… He wastasked with checking out all the aircraft coming out from the maintenance, so he was yingalmost every ghter on the ight line. He demonstrated such exceptional skills that he wasselected to y in air shows as display pilot. He was also noticed by Colonel Albert Boyle, whodecided to give him a chance in his „best of the best“ group of military pilots of Flight Test Divi-sion. As Chuck was only high school graduate, he found quite a challenge to talk to advancedacademics but, as he remembered later: „Because of my ying ability they took mercy on myacademics.” In June 1947 Colonel Boyd chose Yeager as the man to break the sound barrierin rocket powered Bell X-1. The reason Yeager was chosen was because Boyd considered himthe best “instinctive” pilot he had ever seen, and he also knew Chuck had extraordinary skill tostay calm in stressful situations.Yeager made three glides with XS-1 at Muroc AFB prior to conducting rst powered ight onAugust 29. During his eighth ight on October 10, he lost pitch control, as a shock wave formedalong the hinge line of the X-1 elevator at speed of Mach 0.997. The problem was solved bymodication allowing the small changes in angle of incidence of horizontal stabilizer. The modi-cation worked and then the October 14 came! The X-1 with Chuck Yeager in cockpit releasedof B-29 and steadily accelerated up to the Mach 1,06. „The invisible demon“ was broken!Chuck Yeager became a star, the fastest man on the planet and Collier Trophy holder. Thereis also the story of two ribs broken just two days prior to the ight as Chuck fell from horse, andabout the broom shaft to be used as a help for him to close the X-1 door, as the pain preventedChuck from doing so normally. But that is all well-known story thanks to The Right Stuff movie…CommanderChuck Yeager proceed as the test pilot ying X-1A, X-3, X-4, and X-5 at Muroc. He movedto the Edwards AFB later, continuing with aircraft testing. He was one of two pilots evaluatingChuck Yeager ew F-15D as part of the celebrations of his sound breaking ight´s65th anniversary. He was 89 then.photo: Master Sergeant Jason W. Edwards, US Air Forcephoto: USAFphoto: USAFFlying P-51D-15NA Glamorous Glen III, Yeager managed to shoot down ve enemiesin one day and also was victorious in combat with Me 262.Chuck Yeager in cockpit of NF-104.eduard15INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 16
HISTORYThe air base at Portreath, to where No.313 Squadron relocated from Lecon-eld on August 26th, 1941, was located on the coast of the southern EnglishCounty of Cornwall, about 20km northwest of the port of Falmouth. It wassituated on a coastal cliff three hundred feet above the ocean and had fourasphalt runways. ‘Particular attention needed to be paid to Runways Number 3and 4, which ended abruptly at the cliff overhanging the ocean.,’ recalled Fran-tisek Fajtl. ‘Crashing into the rocks or the rough waters down below would not endparticularly well for neither pilot nor airplane.’1No.313 Squadron, newly based and converted onto the Spitre Mk.IIa,were integrated into the higher level Portreath Wing. During the timeframespanning from August to October, 1941, it was composed of the following:No.66 Squadron at Perranporth (commanded by S/Ldr Athol S. Forbes, DFC),No.130 Squadron at Portreath (S/Ldr C. J. Donovan) and No.313 Squadron,also at Portreath (S/Ldr Gordon L. Sinclair, DFC and S/Ldr Josef Jaske). Eachof these three squadrons that made up the Wing were equipped with theSpitre Mk.IIa. They also worked quite often together with No. 263 Squadron,at the time ying out of Charmy Down with the twin-engined Whirlwind Mk.I.The Portreath Wing was commanded by the experienced ghter pilot and acefrom New Zealand, W/Cdr Minden V. Blake, DFC.Portreath conducted offensive operations against targets in Brittany andNormandy in occupied France. No. 10 Fighter Group, which was a componentunit, had a total of four Wings: Portreath, Exeter, Ibsley and Middle Wallop,which supported one another during similar operations, and No.313 Squadronwould soon take part. It conducted its rst ghter sweep over enemy territoryon August 31st, 1941. Eleven Spire Mk.IIa ghters took off from Portreath at0930h, led by S/Ldr Gordon L. Sinclair, DFC. Soon after, the pilots set downat Predannack, which was the starting off point for the entire action known asGudgeon 4. Take off for France occurred at 1415h. The task of the squadronwas to y rear cover for six Blenheim Mk.IV bombers that were to attack anaireld at Lannion. This responsibility of the Wing also involved the participa-tion of No.130 and No.263 Squadrons.No.313 Squadron Spitres circled at an altitude of 4,500m and at a di-stance of 30km off the French coast. They then safely escorted their chargeshome. Landing occurred at 1545h. No enemy aircraft were encountered, andso No.313 Squadron conducted their rst sweep without having red off asingle shot.2A sweep that was conducted on September 28th, 1941, was a substantiallymore dramatic affair. On this occasion, the unit was escorting a quartet ofNo.263 Squadron Whirlwind Mk.Is on an offensive mission dubbed Mandolin.This time, the target was an aireld at Morlaix, about 52km northeast of Brest.This mission also required the escorting Spitres to take part in the actualattack on the target.The Whirlwinds left the ground at 1415h from Portreath, followed ve minu-tes later by the Spitres.A heading of 154oput them in line with Morlaix, just past the horizon. Thepurpose of the mission was to take out reconnaissance Ju 88s based there.These enemy assets were making life difcult for the British Royal Navy, yingreconnaissance missions over the Bay of Biscay and relaying positional infor-mation to German submarines.Spitfires over EuropeNo.313 (Czechoslovak) Squadron, RAFPart Two: The Spitfire Mk.IIaAUTHOR: JIŘÍ RAJLICHP/O Vaclav Jicha in front of his Spitre Mk.IIa P8367(RY-E) at Portreath airbase. (author’s collection via V. Kruta)The national ag was own at the bases from whichthe Czechoslovak squadrons operated.eduard16INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 17
HISTORY‘At 1425h, we left the British shoreline at a height of 5m….’ recounted theFlight Leader B F/Lt Stanislav Fejfar in his logbook, ‘Just above the water, atheights of three or four meters, and on a heading of 145 degrees, we headed forFrance. You could see nothing, just water and more water, and you felt as thoughyou could reach out and touch the whitecaps. The minutes seemed to turn intohours, as the monotony of the water’s surface was somewhat tiring.At 1450h, an alert came in the form of a small structure on the shore, a light-house. This prompts you to set everything: engine RPMs, gunsight, gun charging,and you go over everything. Everything’s good to go, and so you go on with thetask at hand….as low as possible, between trees, practically taking the roadsof the villages and towns, escorting the attack aircraft at the highest possiblespeed…‘You could see the waving inhabitants of the towns below, French men, womenand children, who could see the British markings on our wings, and they knew thatin the direction that we were going, there was a German aireld, and that wewere bringing them greetings. We, ourselves, were greeted by anti-aircraft re.You could see red and white lines all around you, so well-known in France, fromtanks. You couldn’t even re back under these conditions, and in no time, you sawthat the Whirlwinds had completed their tasks and were making for home. Youturn to do the same, but you notice that you are being attacked by a twin-enginedaircraft, a Messerschmitt Bf 110. You re, but you can’t tell if you are successful.There’s no time. And then you hear ‘I have to set down….here…give my wife mylove…later, boys….and the radio goes quiet…’3The Germans put a lot of effort into their preparations for the welcome. Theyers literally put their necks on the line, and once again, it was clear thatthese ground attack missions were among the most dangerous of all. No.313Squadron came back home between 1535 and 1600h without missing anyone,but two of her pilots were extremely close to being trapped on the wrong sideof the English Channel.After overying the French coast in the vicinity of Plouescat, the Whirlwindsclimbed to an altitude of 150m. Then, they dropped down to ground level andlet go with their 20mm cannon. The Germans responded in kind at virtuallythe same instant.The pilot of one of the Whirlwinds (P7041), S/Ldr Thomas P. Pugh, DFC, withtwo salvos hit a Messerschmitt Bf 109 parked at the south end of the strip. Ashe ew over the eld just above the ground, he also managed to score hitsagainst a loaded fuel truck at its north end. He made it, although not withouttaking rounds from enemy return re despite ying so low, indicating that thedefensive gun positions must have been in elevated positions.And yet he came back! F/O Karel Kasal after the lucky return from the attack on Morlaix on Sep-tember 28th, 1941. His Spitre Mk.IIA P8259 (RY-T) returned without the right wing tip which hadbeen hit by the airport AA gun re. The aircraft has been in the squadron inventory since August 13th,1941 when the re-equipment to „twos“ (Mk.II) started until November 3rd, 1941 when re-equipmentto „ves“ (Mk.V) was completed. (K.Mrazek).Combat Notes: Pilot PrecautionsPrior to an Operational Flight:1. Mae Wests should always be carried on an operational ight.2. In the event that your own parachute is not available due to repairs or airingout, the use of another unit requires conrmation that the belts are of necessarylength. This should not be done at take-off!3. Similarly, the seatbelts should be checked that they are not too short, and untilthis is done, your aircraft is not ready for ight. It is too late to do this once thetake-off signal is given.4. Prior to taxi, ensure that the oxygen supply is not off to prevent issues oncein the air. It is best to have the groundcrew ensure that the oxygen is on prior toyour mounting the aircraft.5. Wear your overalls, gloves (long), ying boots and goggles. These items havesaved many pilots from serious burns, and otherwise.After Take-Off6. If possible, y at low rpm and with the mixture set to lean. This will save onfuel.7. Prior to ying into cloud cover, conrm your course. That way, if you get disori-ented, you will know your approximate heading should you descend alone.8. Constantly monitor your heading and time, so that you know your approximatelocation, especially above the clouds in case you need to descend (for reasonsof combat, technical difculties etc.) so that you are aware of your direction tobase.9. Prior to climbing to high altitudes, have your oxygen turned on on the ground.Do not rely on your physical condition. At altitude, monitor your oxygen equip-ment.10. Flying through clouds, ensure that the speed indicator heating is on to preventthe tube from freezing. If it freezes, your speed will read as zero, and that isvery disconcerting, especially while in a cloud.11. Always look around you, especially against the sun. You never know whenyou may be attacked. Maintaining a loose formation allows you to keep lookingaround yourself.12. If you cannot keep up with your formation, or you must break off or you getlost during combat, never try to catch up to the formation. Don’t lag too far be-hind, as the lone plane is a lost plane. Drop down to ground level and head forhome. At low levels, and especially over the shorelines, constantly check behindyou to make sure you are not being observed. Pilots have been shot down, evenat low level, because they thought they were safe, on their way home.13. Make sure your guns are set to FIRE when entering airspace where combatwith the enemy may be expected. If you are carrying a gun camera, set it toON. Get used to wearing your goggles, as they have saved the sight of manypilots (from re, shrapnel, etc.).14. If you know you are going into combat with the enemy, set your rpm to 2850and set your mixture to rich. Turn on your gunsight and turn your oxygen to full.Don’t re your weapons too early.15. Watch the sun, escape towards the sun and attack from the sun.16. When you attack an aircraft, be mindful of the fact that you, yourself, couldalso be attacked.17. Should you need to bail out of your aircraft at high altitude, take severaldeep breaths from your oxygen system before you do. Try and open your para-chute at lower altitudes. The enemy is not particularly sentimental, and has beenknown to re at pilots who have taken to their chutes.18. If your aircraft suffers hits over the ocean, try to get as close to the shore asyou can.19. If you need to ditch in the sea, set your aps and landing gear to the UPposition and open your canopy.20. Over water, give preference to bailing out of your airplane over ditching inthe sea. The sea is often rough and the ditched aircraft will sink quickly. If youspot a surface vessel, give preference to bailing out near it, rather that ditchingnear it.21. In the event that you need to ditch in the sea, contact ground control if po-ssible, so that they can get a x on your position. Help will come quickly. Ignite asmoke marker prior to leaving the aircraft.22. If you see a comrade ditching in the sea, or descending by parachute, informground control. Fly over the location of the event and inform and request groundcontrol to get a x on your location (preferably at a higher altitude for moreaccuracy xes). Fly over the site and watch your fuel. If possible, do so until youare relieved by another aircraftAnother Bf 109 found itself in the sights of Sgt. Dimblebee and Sgt. King, andthe same aircraft likely garnered the attention of the commanding ofcer ofNo.263 Squadron himself, W/Cdr Arthur H. Donaldson, DFC, AFC. Dimblebeecame through without a scratch and King received one bullet hole, but Donald-son counted three cannon hits. One of the rounds took off the canopy of theplane he was ying, P7044, and caused him bloody and painful wounds tohis head and arms. He lost consciousness, but his plane remained airborne andeduard17INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 18
HISTORYTypes of Offensive Operations Conductedby Fighter CommandCircusSmall formations of bombers (initially predominantly made up of Blenheims,and from 1942, Bostons) were in these operations escorted by a signicantnumber (up to 350) of Spitres or Hurricanes to the designated target. Thepurpose of these ights was to evoke a response from the enemy and to de-stroy his air assets in combat. The bulk of these operations were undertakenby No.11 Group, Fighter Command, whose bases lay closest to occupiedEurope. It conducted Circus 1 on January 10th, 1941. In the spring, No.10Group joined in, which conducted its Circus 1 on April 17th, 1941.RamrodThis was essentially the same as the Circus operations, but the goal was morethe destruction of designated targets by the bombers. The main task of theescort was protection of the bombers from enemy interception. The pionee-ring unit of these operations was No.10 Group, Fighter Command, whichconducted Ramrod 1 on August 20th, 1941. If a raid during these operati-ons was conducted without bombers (which were often replaced by groundattack Hurricanes), it was designated ‘Fighter Ramrod’.RoadsteadThese raids were conducted against enemy naval targets in the Channel oralong the coast of occupied Europe. They were generally conducted by smallgroups of bombers (Blenheims) or ground attack aircraft (Whirlwinds or Hurri-canes) escorted by ghters. The rst Roadstead raid was ofcially conductedon February 10th, 1941.RhubarbThese raids were conducted as a rule by pairs of ghters against targets onthe coast of occupied Europe. They were conducted at low level to evaderadar. They were, also as a rule, conducted under poor weather conditionsor low overcast, which was then used on the way out as a source of protec-tion against ak and enemy ghters. These operations were referred to asMosquito at rst, and later the code Ranger was also used.RodeoSimilar to Circus, the purpose of these raids was to provoke the enemy into aght, but were conducted without the bomber component. The rst such ope-ration was ofcially conducted on October 27th, 1941, but similar operationswere own earlier, either without a codename, or called other names, such asSphere.Night IntruderThese were night offensives. These were patrols conducted near enemy airbases and shooting down air assets during take-off and landing. There wasa list of codenames that were used for this type of offensive activity, such asGudgeon, Mandolin, Sunrise, Veracity, and Warhead, and so on. These missi-ons were conducted against single, predetermined targets in enemy territoryor coastal areas.Vaclav Jicha (* February 10th, 1914, Dnesice, Prestice county, + February1st, 1945, Turf Law nearby Soutre), one of the great personalities of the313 Squadron. He distinguished himself over France and Great Britain and iscredited with total of 7 conrmed kills, 4 of them in cooperation. Having leftthe combat ying this exeptional pilot gained the fame as a test pilot primarilyworking at Vickers Armstrong Ltd. (Supermarine) in Castle Bromwich nearBirmingham. During his tenure, i.e. from January 1943 until May 1944, he hastest-own total of 1287 Spitres of various versions, out of which 866 singlehandedly and 421 in cooperation with other test pilots. He was mostly occupiedby researching the causes of the engine failures, which belongs among the mostdangerous tasks performed by test pilots. As a result he had to perform fteenemergency landings out of which nine were belly landing so successful that theaircraft did not sustain any damage. „Venda was the best Spitre pilot I haveever had at Castle Bromwich“ wrote chief pilot Alex Henshaw respectfully aboutJicha. Jicha perished ying as a passenger in the twin-engine Anson whichcrashed in bad weather into the Scottish mountains between Edinburgh andBerwick. In addition to his Distinguished Flying Cross (DFC) awarded for hiscombat achievements he was later also awarded the Air Force Cross (AFC) forhis contribution to the aeronautical research. He is one of twenty war comradesto whom F. Fajtl dedicated the whole chapter in his book „The memories of thefallen comrades“ (K. Beinhauer)Vaclav Jicha entering the cockpit of his Spitrecoded RY-D. (author’s collection)eduard18INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 19
HISTORYhe came to about ten miles from Morlaix. He landed with no less than an evenhundred holes in his aircraft, which also had the tailwheel shot away.4Immediately following the attack by the Whirlwinds, some of the Spitres jum-ped into the melee. Two had serious damage inicted upon them. Spitre Mk.IIa,P8259 (RY-T), own by F/O Karel Kasal, received a direct hit to the right wing5,and it was only through sheer skill that he would make it back to England. Evenmore fortunate was the young Sgt Arnost Mrtvy, who was the one that hadsent out his love to his new bride. His Spitre Mk.IIa P7973 (RY-H) came homewith a piece of a telephone pole imbedded in his aircraft, trailing sections oftelephone line. He acquired the trophy in an instant when he went into a turn atextremely low level, and through the ak and the associated confusion of themoment lost situational awareness. Despite a damaged propeller and leadingedge of the wing, and a pierced oil cooler, he managed to cross the EnglishChannel, which at that location spanned some 160km. He and his escorts, SgtProkop Brazda (P7858) and P/O Vaclav Jicha (P8374/RY-S), landed safelyback at Predannack at 1555h.6‘No one from the whole formation had any idea as to what happened to thelast Spitre from Blue Section, which was own by Arnost Mrtvy,’ Frantisek Fajtl,who did not take part in the mission, would later recall in his published memoirs‘Memories of Fallen Friends’. ‘Blinded by erce re from ak and machine guns,he clipped a telephone pole with the propeller and lower cowling of his airplane,severing the wires, damaging the prop and leading edge of the left wing, andpiercing the oil cooler. Now, the ght turned from being against the enemy tobeing against fate. The Spitre trembled as though it just wanted to fall apart inthe air. But, it ew![…]After some tense moments, several of the pilots heard the mufed voice ofArnost Mrtvy exclaiming, in Czech, ‘everything’s shaking like mad, I don’t think Ican bring it home. Boys, give my love to my wife!’ (Arnost Mrtvy was married onlythree weeks prior to this mission, on September 8th, 1941).Jicha and Brazda were ordered to slow down and try and locate the crippledSpitre, and escort it home. Jicha’s radio was malfunctioning, and Brazda couldbarely understand anything he said. He therefore took it upon himself to try andcontact Mrtvy.He slowed down and began intensely to search for his friend. This is a difcultthing to do, and the pilot must rely in large part on luck. There was little to go by,and ground control could not offer assistance because the conditions needed toget a x on him were nonexistent. Arnost Mrtvy was far away, and far too low.Soon, Brazda could hear Mrtvy’s calls louder and clearer. Apparently, he wasgetting closer to Jicha and Brazda. Brazda was obsessed with one main thoughtwhile searching, and that was to keep Mrtvy from veering too far to the west. Hecould miss the westernmost point of Cornwall, Land’s End, and after that, therewas nothing but water and more water…‘Arnost, Prokop (Brazda) here. What is your altitude and heading?’‘I’m at 50m over the water and on a heading of 355, three-three-ve.’‘Brazda calmly but quickly pictured the route back. ‘That’s good, Arnost’, hesaid to himself. He did not ask him to alter his heading.‘Try to climb to 400m, if you can.’ The thought here was more on altitude tobail out, if it came to that, rather than a more dangerous ditching in the sea.‘I can’t climb. I have little power and the engine is overheating’ replied theexhausted Arnost.‘Hold on, Arnost’ You’ll see the shoreline soon, urged Prokop. The operationsshed will do everything it can. Everything will be alright.’After that, Brazda carried on communications with the controllers in the Corn-wall Sector operations shed. He was trying to ascertain whether or not they couldyet see or hear Blue Four yet.‘Not yet’ came the reply. ’He is likely too low.’‘Unfortunately’ thought Prokop, and continued his search.‘Arnost, keep broadcasting, count to ten in English.’‘Alright, though I am not really in the mood’. That was no surprise, as there wasa foot-and-a-half section of telephone pole hanging from the shattered wing andthe engine was on the verge of dying completely.‘Prokop…I can see land.’Brazda could hear the tremble in Mrtvy’s voice.And now, Arost, the shortest route. But do not increase throttle.’Lucky Blue Three, which had also sighted land, followed Prokop’s instructions.Ground control applied their trade and gathered the Czech comrades together.Arnost’s happiness peaked. On his right, the Spitres own by Brazda and Jicha,who safely escorted him back to the eld at Predannack…’7Because the sweep failed to turn up the Ju 88s at Morlaix, Operation Man-dolin 7 was planned for the following day. Attacks were to be conductedagainst the base at Lannion, an alternate spot where it was assumed the Ju 88scould be also found. At 1833h, four Whirlwinds again took off from Predan-nack, escorted by nine No.313 Squadron Spitre Mk.IIas, which were againled by F/Lt. Karel Mrazek.On a heading of 152o, the formation reached the French coast at 1905h,which coincided with dusk. Immediately, they encountered ak. The darkeningsky with the ery explosions of the ak was reminiscent of a Venetian night.The moment that the Whirlwind pilots realized the poor conditions under whichthey found themselves, they changed plans and headed to Morlaix. At 1910h,they initiated their attack at treetop level, and the Junkers aircraft were therethis time! Despite deteriorating visibility and erce re coming up from theground, the Whirlwinds were able to eliminate one of the 88s parked in frontof a hangar on the south side of the eld.Within some twenty minutes, a quartet of ground attack Hurricane Ml.IIc -ghters from No.247 Squadron approached Lannion. That the Germans wouldstill be primed and ready was never in question. They downed aircraft BD832,and it ended up in the drink, as did its pilot, F/O Kenneth W. MacKenzie, DFC.This Battle of Britain veteran survived the ditching in the sea and took to hislife raft and was taken prisoner by the Germans after paddling to shore. P/OS.S. Hord nursed his heavily shot up Z3561 back home, with a wounded leg.The action against Morlaix wasn’t without a cost. No.313 Squadron Spitresescorted home only two of the four Whirlwinds under cover of darkness. Sgt.Jack Maddocks (P6987) landed at 2005h at Predannack, followed by P/OGeoff Warnes (P7061) at 2015h, sucking up the last three gallons of fuel hehad left. A third pilot, F/O Hugh Coghlan, who led the ight of Whirlwindsand who was responsible for the destruction of the aforementioned Ju 88, wasfollowing behind, but ran out of fuel overying the coast. His second enginequit immediately after the rst one died, and he bellied in at Portreath undermoonlit conditions at 2020h. Aircraft P6998, that he was ying, was a write--off. The pilot escaped with only some bruising. The fourth pilot, Sgt. Thomashunter, was not as fortunate. While over the English Channel, but within site ofthe coast at Plymouth, his P7009 lost both engines due to the exhaustion of hisfuel. He had no choice but to bail out of his aircraft, which he did at 2005h,but despite the immediate search for him, he wasn’t found until the ocean gaveup his body on October 10th.8No.313 Squadron was more fortunate. Her Spitres landed at their homeeld lit up with spotlights at 2015h with no losses.9Up to November, 1941, No 313 Squadron conducted another three sweeps.In all cases, these were escort missions for twin engined Blenheims, once to theport of Le Havre, and twice to the eld at Morlaix.10However, due to unfa-P/O Vaclav Jicha and Sgt. Prokop Brazda during fall 1941 at Portreath from where 313 Squadronew missions over the occupied Bretagne. Both were devoted to take care of Sgt. Arnost Mrtvy whoon September 28, 1941 was returning to England in the heavily damaged Spitre Mk.IIA P7973(RY-H). I April 1941 Jicha was defending heavily damaged aircraft with wounded Brazda in thecockpit against six attacking enemy airplanes. This time the fate was cruel to Brazda, he was killedupon his aircraft impact on the English soil (author’s collection).eduard19INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 20
HISTORYOPERATION JUBILEE / THE DIEPPE RAIDPeriod propaganda understandably called Operation Jubilee a victory, butat best, that’s a half truth. In actual the fact, the Allies had to swallow sometough pills. Ground forces were not able to meet all their objectives, andthey suffered massive losses in the process. Out of the deployment of around6,100 men, 4,260 were lost, a rate of 70%. Of these, 1,179 were knownkilled, another 891 were wounded, and 2,190 were taken as German pris-oner. All twenty-eight Churchill tanks that were unloaded on the beach hadto be abandoned. The Navy had to write off one destroyer, 33 other vesselsand 550 men. The Germans, on the other hand, suffered a loss of ‘only’311 dead and missing (some of which were taken across the Channel intocustody), and 280 wounded ground troops. Even the RAF, although havingbeen somewhat successful, did not get off all that well. In the support andcover of the operation, 2,955 sorties were own (2,494 ghter missions, 103bombing missions, 72 reconnaissance ights and 351 rescue missions), for theloss of 103 aircraft written off, with 59 damaged. The RAF committed a totalof 840 aircraft to the operation (over 700 of which were ghters), transla-ting to losses at 19%, 12% of which were irreplaceable. Personnel losses ofthe RAF amounted to 69 killed or missing, 30 wounded and eighteen takenprisoner out of a total of 1,179 men committed to the operation. The largestportion of losses were suffered by ghter units of the RAF, which committed672 aircraft and 730 pilots. They lost a total of 87 destroyed and 46 da-maged aircraft, fty pilots killed, twenty wounded and thirteen captured. Inother words, Fighter Command lost almost three complete Fighter Wings overDieppe. This was the greatest loss for Fighter Command over the course of asingle day. Against the 2,955 sorties own by the RAF, the German Luftwaffeew a total of 945, of which 800 were ghter missions and 145 bomberights. About a third of the effort was very successful, but even their losseswere not insignicant. Although Allied pilots claimed 98-42-185 victories,actual Luftwaffe losses over Dieppe were less than half that: 48 lost and 23damaged aircraft. Half of these losses, specically 23 written off aircraftand fourteen pilots killed, were suffered by the Jagdwaffe. While the Allieshad to write off 103 destroyed and 59 damaged aircraft, the Germansclaimed 112 kills, which very close to the actual number, even if we takeinto account that certainly, some of the British losses were due to ak (whichclaimed thirty victims) or bomber crews (4). Although German losses (48aircraft) were substantially below the number of British losses, they can stillbe considered heavy. They accounted for only 3% of committed strength, but15% of all available aircraft. Once we factor in damaged aircraft, Germanstrength by nightfall were at half strength. For the next several days, thiswould seriously limit German efforts. So, it seems that even if the Germanswere able to achieve a loss rate of 1:2 in their favor, they would be starvedof assets sooner than the RAF.Norman FRANKS: The Greatest Air Battle. Dieppe August 19, 1942. Grub Street, London 1999, pages 156 and 193-199, Donald L. CALDWELL: The JG 26 War Diary, Vol 1: 1939-1942. Grub Street, London 1996, page 277, JaroslavHRBEK: Námořní válka vrcholí. Naše vojsko, Prague 1995, page 156. K účasti čs. stíhačů na operaci Jubilee vizJiří RAJLICH: Na nebi hrdého Albionu. Válečný deník československých letců ve službách britského letectva 1940-1945. 3. část (1942). Svět křídel, Cheb 2001, pages 506-541.F/Lt Mrazek at readiness. (family archive)This Spitre Mk.IIA P8274 (RY-S) Baltic Exchange was frequently own by B-ight leader, F/Lt. Stanislav Fejfar. In the morning of September 6, 1941 he almost paid the ultimate pricedue to the genuine English fog. Because of the bad weather he aborted the convoy patroland due to the poor visibility landed hard at fog engulfed Portreath airport. The aircraft withbroken off landing gear ended up in the repair shop, pilot with sprained left leg on medicalleave. „Readiness from 5 am, then fog moved in shortly after so it became quiet“, he loggedin his diary. „Scramble! I took off as the rst section. Result? After take off we ew into thefog, I have an urge to return to homebase, I even found the airport but after the turn to naleverything disappeared in the surrounding white „milk“. The airplane is damaged and my rightleg hurts. They sent me for 8 days long medical leave.“No. 313 Squadron Spitres Mk.Vb at Portreathairport. On the left biplane trainer Tiger Moth Mk.IIfeaturing the hood for instrument ying practice.eduard20INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 21
HISTORYvorable weather conditions, Fighter Command offensive activities graduallydecreased. The next round of the non-stop offensive was to come in the springof the following year.By that time, No.313 Squadron was fully under Czechoslovak command. TheBritish co-commanders gradually left, because their Czechoslovak counterpartswere able to run things according to British procedures. The departure of theindividual British ofcers was looked upon on an individual basis, dependingon, naturally, the popularity of each one.On June 25th, 1941, F/Lt John ‘Iggie’ Kilmartin, DFC, a co-commander withMrazek of A Flight, left the unit as an established RAF ace. Although he wasn’twith the unit a particularly long time, his departure was genuinely regrettedby the Czechs. ‘It’s a shame. We are losing a great pilot, and a great man.’11they would record in their log books. It was different with the departures ofBritish B Flight co-commander F/Lt Thomas Gillen and lone Squadron Comman-der S/Ldr Gordon Sinclair, DFC. Preserved memoirs and recollections indicateas no surprise, then, that Vasek Jicha dubbed him ‘Papa Walsham’. He acceptedthe nickname, and enjoyed it.Walsham also acted as a sort of mediator between the Squadron CO, bothFlight Leaders, Crewchiefs Robertson and Allen, and the 313th’s technical ofcer,Karel Beinhauer. He was an excellent debater and he was wise. We could sensethat the well being of the squadron was a priority for him, as much as it was tous. We liked him very much.’15Certainly, we wouldn’t be getting too far ahead of ourselves, if we pointedout that Frantisek Fajtl and Walsham had a life-long friendship. They were intouch even as Europe was divided by the Iron Curtain, and it was only endedby Alfred’s passing.In the fall, there was another change that affected the course of things. AtPortreath, No.313 Squadron began exchanging their Spitre Mk.IIas for theSpitre Mk.Vb on October 22nd, 1941. This version was new in several impor-tant regards. In the rst place, the new variant was powered by an improvedRolls Royce Merlin 45, which at an altitude of 3,000m put out 1470hp. Thiswas a signicant improvement over the Merlin XII’s 1175hp used in the SpitreMk.IIa. As a result, the Mk.V was able to achieve a top speed of between597 and 603km/h. It also had a more powerful and effective weapons t.Instead of the until recently effective eight Colt Browning 7.7mm machine guns,the Mk.V had only four of these weapons (with 350 rounds per gun), but alsopacked a pair of British Hispano 20mm cannon, with 60 rounds each.The change in equipment was hailed by all with a high level of satisfaction,and it brought No.313 Squadron to the same level of standard operatedthroughout RAF Fighter Command. There was nothing better at the time thatcould be offered to the pilots. Re-equipment was completed by October 30th,1941 when the eighteenth aircraft was accepted, fullling the prescribedquantity requirement.16By the end of 1941, No.s 310 and 312 Squadrons also converted over to theSpitre Mk.Vb, and this was in accordance with the planned establishment ofthe Czechoslovak Fighter Wing, and thereby fullled one of the requirementsof the process, namely equipment commonality within all three Czechoslovaksquadrons, with the type remaining in service for over two years, and inextri-cably linked to their combat activities in 1942 and 1943. This is a time periodto which we will be paying much attention in connection with the Spitre Mk.Vand its various variants, and not just its use in the Czechoslovak squadrons ofthe RAF.that with their demeanors, these individuals did not endear themselves to theCzechoslovak pilots. Gillen left on September 15th, 1941 to No.118 Squadronand ‘…morale improved signicantly after his departure….’12Similarly, Sinclair’s departure on September 25th, 1941 to No.79 Squadronwas greeted with a certain sense of relief. Due to his somewhat excessive, andeven fanatical, adherence to service protocols, this blond was bestowed thenickname of the ‘White Devil’…’Sinclair respected regulations and directivesto the extreme with self condence and incredible calm, and this earned him thenickname ‘White Devil’, wrote Frantisek Fajtl, ‘he was the type of Brit who wouldadmiringly compliment your English, warmly offer you a drink and invite you intohis home, will gladly offer help with no ulterior motive, but couldn’t hug a personneither with his eyes nor arms ‘ We all wished him the best wherever the windfound him, and we could tell that he was touched, even though he needed insideto quell any outer signals as to what he felt.’13….’nally alone’ was the entry inthe Squadron log. ‘Captain Jaske is now the true CO of the Squadron and everypilot and groundcrew is glad that the White Devil has gone. That night, the eventwas celebrated….’14Not taking into account the ground personal, which almost entirely madeup of Brits, some British ofcers did remain with No.313 Squadron. Amongthem was Wing Adjutant F/Lt Alfred Walsham, who was the direct oppositeof Sinclair…’Alfred Walsham, our Executive Ofcer, did not betray the conceptof the English gentleman,’ recalled Frantisek Fajtl, ’His face was clean shaven,his hair nely groomed, his moustache carefully trimmed, his uniform without awrinkle, and his boots spit n’ polished to a high sheen, all faithful to his demeanor,which was dominated by a certain calm and pleasant nature. He respected serviceprotocols but did not allow himself to be restricted in an iron jacket. When he sawt to employ as useful his many civilian experiences, he did so without hesitation.He served as an administrative ofcer in a naval transport company between thewars. As a result, he t our Squadron’s needs very well, and so he had a bit of freetime on his hands. He would join us quite often. He was not stingy in neither wordnor counsel, and he liked to laugh. He spoke the King’s English clearly and slowly,without the use of vulgarities. He apparently resisted starch, and didn’t pull rank.With great patience, he tolerated what we often did unintentionally to the Englishlanguage, and to our youth, he acted in a friendly, almost fatherly way. It cameF/O Fajtl with both British ight commanders of „Threehundredthirteen“- on the leftF/Lt Gillen, in the middle F/Lt Kilmartin. (author’s collection).1František FAJTL: Vzpomínky na padlé kamarády (Memories of Fallen Friends), pages 153-154.2VÚA-VHA, ČsL-VB, sign. 1762/BI/1/307. Kronika 313. peruti. NA, Kew, AIR 27/1697. (No 313Squadron Operations Record Book).3Staanislav FEJFAR: Deník stíhače (A Fighter’s Diary), pages 113-114.4NA, Kew, AIR 27/1547. No 263 Squadron Operations Record Book.5Flak – Flieger Abwehr Kanonen, též Flugzeug Abwehr Kanonen (Anti-Aircraft Artillery).6VÚA-VHA, ČsL-VB, sign. 1762/BI/1/307. Kronika 313. peruti. NA, Kew, AIR 27/1697.No 313Squadron Operations Record Book, John FOREMAN: Fighter Command War Diaries. Vol. 2(September 1940 to December 1941). Air Research Publ., New Malden 1998, s. 290-291.7František FAJTL: Vzpomínky na padlé kamarády , (Memories of Fallen Friends), pages. 163-1668NA, Kew, AIR 27/1547. No 263 Squadron Operations Record Book, AIR 27/1550-1552. No 263Squadron Operations Record Book – Appendices. F/O H. St. J. Coghlan i P/O G. B. Warnes waslater awarded the DFC and gradually became the Commanding Ocers of No.263. Squadron. Butmore interesting than that is the fact that, Warnes was evidently the rst ocer in the RAF thatoperationally ew wearing early versions of contact lenses, in secret and unknown to doctors.Stanislav FEJFAR (edited by Norman FRANKS with Simon MUGGLETON): A Fighter Pilot´s Call toArms. Defending Britain and France against the Luftwae, 1940-1942. Grub Street, London 2010,page 129.9VÚA-VHA, ČsL-VB, sign. 1762/BI/1/307. Kronika 313. peruti, NA, Kew, AIR 27/1697. No 313Squadron Operations Record Book, Norman FRANKS: The Royal Air Force Fighter Command Lossesof the Second World War. Vol. 1 (1939-1941), page 145, John FOREMAN: Fighter Command WarDiaries. Vol. 2 (September 1940 to December 1941), page 290-291.10VÚA-VHA, ČsL-VB, sign. 1761/BI/1/307. Kronika 313. peruti, NA, Kew, AIR 27/1697. No 313Squadron Operations Record Book.11VÚA-VHA, ČsL-VB, sign. 1761/BI/1/307. Kronika 313. peruti.12VÚA-VHA, ČsL-VB, sign. 1761/BI/1/307. Kronika 313. peruti.13František FAJTL: Létal jsem s Třistatřináctkou, (I Flew with the 313th) page 66.14VÚA-VHA, ČsL-VB, sign. 1761/BI/1/307. Kronika 313. peruti.15František František FAJTL: Létal jsem s Třistatřináctkou , (I Flew with the 313th) pages 82-83.16VÚA-VHA, ČsL-VB, sign. 1761/BI/1/307. Kronika 313. peruti.eduard21INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 22
HISTORYF/O Fajt with his wingman Sgt. Bonisch having returned from a sortie. For some time Frantisek Bonisch ew as an wingmanto Fajtl. Both almost lost lives during the very dangerous mid-air collision which took place on September 18, 1941 overPortreath airport. Making turn to nal approach to the airport (from where the unit was to perform a sweep over Francewhich was ultimately cancelled) the propeller of Sgt. Bonisch’s Spitre Mk.IIA P8274 hit the tailplane of the aircraft P7834(RY-F) Mid Ulster piloted by F/O Fajtl whose vision was blocked by a wing. „Upon landing at the home base I barely escapeddeath“ wrote Frantisek Fajtl. Bonisch took a short cut in the trafc pattern and by a single turn got right behind me and hispropeller cut the tail control surfaces of my Spitre. I felt a sudden shock on my control stick which started to move aroundthe cockpit like crazy. I tried to take control of it any way I could. I did not know what was happening. I suspected the controlfailure and calmed down only when I felt underneath the drag of both main wheels and tail wheel on the solid ground. LuckilyBonisch turned right and I turned left and the bigger luck was that we collided right above the ground. „Baggers“, was theonly Sinclair’s comment (British commander of 313 Squadron, S/Ldr Gordon L. Sinclair) upon arriving in his car at twosilent aircraft waiting to be towed away. He failed to offer us a ride in his empty four seat hilman so we walked all the wayto dispersal. Bonisch received a strickt reprimand for an unauthorized cutting short of the trafce pattern by single turn andwarning of the future breach of the ight discipline. The accident was qualied as a light damage of two airplanes howeverour unit’s reputation sufferend in the eyes of the whole group. (author’s collection).Sgt. Frantisek Bonisch (* April 4, 1913, Prchalov, + February 23, 1942, Thames delta at Shoeburyness).He was killed during the convoy patrol sortie while ying low over water he hit the surface. His SpitreMk.VB AD391 (RY-H) bounced the water twice and then disintegrated on one of the sea shallows barely1500 meters from the shore. „...at 10:25 operations room (F/Lt Burger) is inquiring if Butcher aircraftare OK“, we can read about the event in the squadron diary. We are not receiving from yellow 2 (W/OBonisch). Yellow 1 (F/Lt Hajek) keeps calling yellow 2 with no results. F/Lt Burger is reporting that he rece-ived the report that one airplane crashed into the sea a stated its position. After about 10 minutes searchred 1 (F/Lt Fajtl) found the crashed Spitre on one of the sea shallows approximately 6 miles south eastfrom Southend. The aircraft was broken into several pieces and pilot’s motionless body hanging over theSpitre fuselage. The operations room took the accurate position by pip-squeak and reported that rescueboat will reach the location shortly.“The search and rescue started immediately and several boats set sail towards the the place of the accident.The sailors on the boat that reached the destination rst observed that pilot’s motionless body with afractured skull is hanging out of the cockpit but their vessel got stuck on the shallow. Her commander,Captain E.C.Cordeaux, OBE, DSO, at that time already 56 years old veteran of Jutland, Gallipoli, Nor-way and Dunkerque acted exeptionally bravely. He knew that every minute counts between life and death.He jumped into the ice cold water. Half swimming, half wading he rushed to give Czech pilot a rst aid.The struggle with Thames‘ February waters took twenty minutes until he could reach the wreck. It was toolate. The medical report states that W/O Bonisch suffered the skull fracture and was already deceased.Gallant Cordeaux himself had to be brought to a hospital since it was almost a miracle he survived fortyminutes in the ice cold water. W/O Bonisch was burried in Hornchurch cemetery on February 28, 1942.eduard22INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 23
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HISTORYINDESTRUCTIBLERUDOLF BERTHOLDRudolf Berthold (full name Oskar Gustav Rudolf Berthold) was born onMarch 24, 1891 in Ditterswind (Bavaria) as a son of Head Forester OskarBerthold as his fth child and rst one of his second wife. After nishing hishumanitarian secondary school in Bamberg in 1909 he decided to enter armyand became member of 3rd Brandenberg Infantry Regiment in Wittenberg.He was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant in 1912. When the Fliegertruppe(Flying Troops) was set as the part of the German army, young Berthold wasimpressed. He started with private pilot training on his own and received pilotlicense number 538 in September 1913. It is worth mentioning Oswald Boelckewas one of his fellows.Just a year later was Rudolf Berthold sent for military pilot training, butthe beginning of the war interrupted the course. He returned to the unit, and,after fortnight spell was sent back to aviation school and transferred to Flie-gertruppe. Two weeks interruption of training was crucial nevertheless andBerthold was assigned to Feldieger-Abteilung 23 (Field Flier Detachment 23)with the base at Grossenhain as the observer only. When the bad weatherprevented any operational ying, Berthold was able to nish his training atthe base nearby. There he made himself friend with Hans Joachim Buddecke,another future ace.Pilot nally!Starting January 18, 1915 Rudolf Berthold was a military pilot. He returnedto the FFA 23 and was given observer Josef Grüner for ying reconnaissancesorties. They quickly became friends. During August 1915, the unit re-equi-pped with AEG G.II twin engine bombers manned by a pilot and two or threeobservers with two swivelling machine guns. The unit also got one Fokker E.I Ein-decker with synchronised machine gun. Berthold preferred to y the bomber,as it was intended to get over enemy territory, while Fokker was used as a pa-trol aircraft on the safe side of the front. Berthold hoped he had better chancefor combat behind the lines and left the Fokker to Buddecke. Berthold ewseveral bombing or gunship missions until November 6, when his friend Grünerdied in the battle with Vickers F.B.5. Berthold was so devastated by death ofhis friend that he had to take a leave. Later he wrote to his diary: „I cannotrecall what happened in the following weeks. Almost aimlessly I wandered„It is sweet and tting to die for one's Fatherland”. In case ofmatured man and soldier there is nothing special, if he deci-des to use such a words as personal motto. But it is somethingdifferent, when 14-years guy, student at secondary school forthe humanities does so. Rudolf Berthold had strong patrioticfeeling from his childhood, and it did not change until his death.He was one of few Great War aces ghting from beginning tillthe end and surviving.around Germany. Everywhere I looked I saw in my mind’s eye the cockadesof the Vickers and my observer hanging over the edge of the aeroplane. AllI thought about were vengeance and combat! Sleep soundly, my friend Grüner,you will be avenged!“Shortly after Berthold´s return to the unit, Buddecke was seconded to the Tur-kish Air Force and Berthold overtook his missions with Eindecker. It was a timewhen the German Army ofcials started to understand the need of specialisedghter units. Predecessors of later formed Jagdstaffeln were the Kampfsein-sitzer Kommando (Single seater ghter detachment) abbreviated KEK, set adhoc for limited period. One KEK was also set at the Château Vaux close to theFFA 23 airbase and Berthold was put in command of it because of his combatexperience. He was waiting for his rst aerial victory until February 2, 1916,when he sent down French Voisin LA. Three days later second victory came,but he was shot down himself on February 10, surviving with slight injury. Afterreceiving Iron Cross of second and rst class for his observer achievements, hewas now decorated by Military Merit Order 4th Class as only one of twelveaviators during WWI.Berthold conducted ying with both Fokker and AEG during following months,then April 25 came, the day, which was really bad for him. His Fokker was hitduring the battle with British observer. He was forced to land with silent engine,but that could not prevent him from further combat. Using the backup Pfalz E.IV(No. 803/15), he took off, but the engine stopped… The airplane fell fromsome 330 feet (100 m) and crashed. What happened after crash was unbe-lievable. When his limp body was pulled from the wreckage, he was believeddead until he revived momentarily with cursing and swearing. After anotherblackout Berthold awoke to nd himself blind and begged onlookers to shoothim. Then he swooned again and reawakened two days later in Kriegslazarett7 (Military Hospital 7) in Saint Quentin. His left leg was seriously broken, healso suffered a broken nose and upper jaw, causing the damage to his op-tic nerves, resulting in temporary blindness. The sense of sight returned aftercouple of days, but Rudolf was to spend long time in hospital with four mothsof subsequent convalescence. During this period famous Max Immelmann waskilled and Oswald Boelcke, another prominent German ace, was banned ope-rational ying due to the concern about impact on the Fliegertruppen moralein case of his death. Berthold was also scheduled to be sent back to Germany,photo: Author collectionAuthor: Richard Ploseduard24INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 25
HISTORYbut he decided to return to his KEK Vaux instead. Although unable to y be-cause of a stiff knee, he could still command. He resumed ying in second halfof August 1916 although he had to be helped to the cockpit, as the left kneewas still too stiff (it bettered later).Berthold achieved his sixth victory on August 24, the next day KUK Vauxbecame Jagdstaffel 4 (Fighter Squadron 4). Berthold´s eight victory cameon September 26 and, as the Pour le Mérite was usually awarded for eightvictories at this stage of the war, Berthold hung the “Blue Max” on his neck onSeptember 12 as 10th German pilot.With the new honour new task emerged, as he was assigned to lead the newJasta 14, based on Fokker Kampfstaffel Falkenhausen, the unit without anyaerial victory so far. Berthold utilized rather calm situation in the Alsace regionfor additional training of his pilots, showing both his perfect „killing“ instincts aswell as the combat experience. He also commanded the unit with stern profe-ssional attitude and uncompromising demand of discipline.Ace and the stark commanderAt the start on 1916 Berthold was already one of the most experiencedcombat pilots within the Luftstreikräte and perceived the need of larger, moreoperational units. He made a plea for amassing air power to the headquar-ters of Armee-Abteilung A (Army Division A) his unit was part of, but withoutsuccess. He also continued with training of the pilots of Jasta 14 until the unitwas moved to the Laon area with more combat action at the start of 1917. Theunit also started to receive new Albatros D.IIIs and Berthold picked the one withserial 2182/16 as his personal mount. He put his personal symbol, the swordof vengeance on it and later he made it painted in homage to his old infantryunit, i.e in red and blue colours. By the time also new Pfalz D.IIIs appeared andBerthold, contrary to many other pilots, preferred this type over the Albatros.But prior to the arrival of rst Pfalz D.IIIs Berthold was wounded again duringthe combat with French Caudron R.9. The bullet hit his lower right shin and asthe wound was not serious he joked in his diary that his right arm was the onlyone of his four extremities to remain unwounded. He could not anticipate, howtroublesome this one would be…He got back to his unit after short period of convalescence (from May5 to June 15) and felt the discipline and combat morale of his pilots declinedduring his absence. Eager to get to the action as soon as possible, he wangleda medical clearance from his physician. He was cleared to y again but did notreturn to lead Jasta 14 as he was moved to the Jasta 18 with base in Harel-bek, Belgium. The intention of the move was clear: Berthold was set to “wakeup” the unit with little success so far and he did so. He promptly emphasizedtraining even though the pilots had to y combat missions simultaneously. Andhe again pitched his idea of using bigger ghter units. Headquarters of the4th Army nally agreed to group Jagdstaffeln 18, 24, 31, and 36 into Jagd-gruppe 7 (JGr. 7) with Berthold in command. He was in his element again andscored regular victories starting with French SPAD sent down on August 21.During September he added 14 victories to his account, but the string was tobe interrupted again. He achieved his 28th victory on October 2, but it washis last for a long time.Critical bulletIt was a cloudy, misty weather in the area of 4th Army on October 10, 1917.Low clouds and rain prevented the air units to conduct any operational ying,but the situation got better in the afternoon and Berthold took off with his pilotsand headed for the area of Roeselare (northeast from Yprés). Jasta 18 tookoff at about 16.45. On the other side of the front two ights of 56th Squad-ron of RFC were set for combat, heading with their S.E.5as to the same area.Leader of the A Flight Captain Gerard C. Maxwell, the ace with 20 victories atthe time (he added six more till the end of the war) stated in his combat report:„Crossed lines at 14,000 feet and patrolled area. At about 5 p.m. saw andattacked about twelve E.A. Scouts, east of Ypres. Dived on several and reda drum of Lewis and about 100 rounds of Vickers at very close range. E.A.went down very steeply and I lost sight of him.“It is believed the aircraft Maxwell was ring at, was Berthold´s one. One ofthe bullets ricocheted in the cockpit and hit his right arm in odd angle, pulve-rizing its humerus. With half-severed ailerons of his aircraft (probably PfalzD.III No. 4004/17) Berthold managed to return to the base but passed outjust after landing. He was quickly moved to the eld hospital in Courtrai, but itdid not have the facilities to heal such a serious injury. It took three weeks forBerthold to be stable enough to be transported to Saint Vincenzstift Hospital inHannover. Meantime his pilot fellows alerted his elder sister Franziska, a nur-sing supervisor in Viktoria-Lazarett (Victoria Hospital) in Berlin. She arrangedfor her brother to be diverted to the clinic of one of Germany's best surgeons,Doctor August Bier. Berthold arrived at the clinic on November 2, 1917 andBier´s priority was to save the arm from amputation. Secondly, he hoped forsome success with rehabilitation. Berthold stayed on clinic for four months. Du-ring this time was promoted to the Hauptmann (Captain) rank and receivedmany letters from comrades as well as ofcials, the one of Luftstreikräte com-mander General Ernst von Hoeppner being among them.GroundedErnst Wilhelm Turck took the command of JGr. 7, but Berthold did not giveup the idea of return. The medical reports were in contrary to his wishes.He learned to write with his left hand ad in his diary he wrote: „If I can write,I can y.“ He was receiving regular dosage of Cocaine as anaesthetics andslightly developed dependence on narcotics. It was changing his behavioursomehow. He was over euphoric and his activity was raised after the narcoticswere applied. In the middle of February 1918, just eight days after he wentfrom the bed for rst time, he volunteered to return to Jagdgruppe 7. Bertholdwas cleared medically on March 1 and returned to command Jagstaffel 18ve days later, although denied permission to y. Due to that Berthold hadarranged for Hans-Joachim Buddecke's transfer into the unit to lead it in theair. The Jasta 18 moved meantime on the Avelin base after the battle of Cam-brai in November 1917. Berthold was warmly received by his old comrades.Even he could not y with them, his presence was something of a much-neededboost after relatively unsuccessful period. Just two days after his arrival to theJagdstaffel, Buddecke was killed in action by Flight Lieutenant Arthur TreloarWhealy (Sopwith Camel s/n B7220).Friend´s death was another big loss for Berthold, but there was no time formourning. Five days later was killed leader of JG II Adolf Ritter von Tutschekand Berthold was promoted to lead the Jagdgeschwader after him. He movedto the Toulis-et-Attencourt, some 140 km from Avelin and because of his perso-nal ties with most of the Jasta 18 pilots he asked for permission to incorporatehis previous Jagdstaffel into the JG II, consisting from Jasta 12, 13, 15 and 19.But he asked in vain, as there was no time for such a move just four days priorto the Spring offensive. Berthold did not give up and made something unpre-cedented. He used the custom the new leader is allowed to take some of theRudolf Berthold (right) with ight instructor Ernst Schlegel in front of Albatros B.IIin 1915.photo: Grega VanWyngaarden collection via Jörn Leckscheideduard25INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 26
HISTORYpersonnel from previous unit to the new one and stretched it to the extent neverseen before. He simply moved everybody and swapped the personnel andplanes with Jasta 15, which effectively become „new“ Jasta 18, while „new“Jasta 15 became the wing's Stab Staffel (command squadron) and retained itsred-blue colours (new Jasta 18 opted for red and white colours).The aireld at Toulis was heavily damaged by the heavy artillery re onApril 12. Most of the aircraft were also destroyed. While waiting for newones and changing airelds Berthold wrote to his diary: “And I will y again...even if they must carry me to the airplane.” According to witnesses he alsovoiced that repeatedly, although his physical condition was bad. He was mo-ving around the base with his right hand in the scarf, frequently under inuenceof the narcotics and his wounds were healing slowly. In his letter to sister writtenon April 25, he wrote: “A bone splinter protruded from my lower wound. Myvery capable medical orderly came immediately with a pair of tweezers,and with much skill and force, he removed it… I passed out during this violentprocedure. The pains were horric. But the lower wound is beginning to close.Only the upper wound still festers very heavily.”Back in the airIt was new Fokker D.VII what made ying for Berthold possible again. Its lightand precise controls enabled him to control the plane one-handed. Seven andhalf months after the bullt crippled his right hand, on May 28, 1919, he led hispilots to the combat again. Prior to the take-off he had a brieng, saying: Weare not here to carry out cavalier aerial combats at 500 metres. The infantryis out there in the mud, waiting for us, and we have to help them.Although it was a close air support ight, Berthold managed to score his 29thvictory, downing one SPAD. During next days and months, he was quite succe-ssful. On May 29 downed two more opponents, despite his synchronising gearmalfunctioned, causing the machine gun to hit the propeller, nearly destroyingit. He crash-landed but survived without injury. Berthold than added six morekills during June, but still suffered severe pains. „My arm has worsened. Be-neath the still open wound it is badly swollen and inamed. I think the bonefragments are forcing their way out, as the cyst that formed is quite hard. Thepains are just awful. Yesterday, during my aerial combat… I screamed loudlyPhoto taken in May 1916 when Pour le Mérire recipient Hans-Joachim Buddecke visited his old unit FFA 23 in Vaux. There was an artist invited, apparently to create portraits ofBuddecke and other airmen. Left to right: unknown, commander of KEK Vaux Rudolf Berthold, visiting artist, ak ofcer Ltn. Warth and two members of FFA 23 - Vzfw. HermannMargot and Ltn. Hans-Joachim von Seydlitz-Gerstenberg. The dog seems to be the same that Berthold is holding in the famous Sanke postcard photo (used as lead photo here as well).photo: Jörn Leckscheid collectionFokker D.VII made it possible for Berthold to y again.Side view from Eduard plastic model kit No. 2133 (marking A)eduard26INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 27
HISTORYin pain,” he wrote in his letter to sister. Yet he was ying, leading, organising,but his spirit was gone. Old comrades were dying and he was not on thesame wave with the new ones. He scored his penultimate an ultimate victory onAugust 10. These were one S.E.5a and one DH.9. After shooting down DH.9as his 44th victim, he found the controls of his Fokker were destroyed by thesuppressive re. His attempt to use a parachute to bail out failed because itrequired the use of both hands and so he stayed in his Fokker, which crashedinto the house in Ablaincourt. It is interesting coincidence that just handful milesaway over the Chaulnes another famous German ace, Erich Loewenhardt colli-ded with another pilot from Jasta 10 Alfred Wenzel. Loewenhardt managedto bail out, but his parachute failed to open, and he died. Berthold stayed inhis plane, crashed, and survived. German infantrymen plucked him from therubble and rushed him to the hospital. His right arm was rebroken. Two dayslater, on August 12, Berthold returned by his own will to the Jasta 15, wherehe got rid of the new commander of Jasta 15 (Heinz Freiherr von Brederlow)with words: “Here I am the boss." After that Berthold took to bed with intentionto command the JG II from there. The following day, he was moved back to thehospital because he was feverish and writhing in pain. Kaiser Wilhelm II per-sonally ordered the ace to hospital. Berthold returned to the clinic of Dr. Bierand after that he took the advantage of staying at home. He was still thinkingabout return to his Jagdgruppe, but during his convalescence the war ended.Cruel endThe months and years after the Great War were difcult for the Germany.Berthold stayed in army as ofcer of the newly formed Reichswehr. He wastasked with commanding the Berlin airbase in Döberitz and he used his skillsto transform dilapidated facility into the impeccable military base. His effortwas hollow, as the base was closed shortly afterwards. After the Munich putsch,where the „Reds“ tried to turn the Bavaria into the Soviet Republic, disillusio-ned Berthold decided to form combat unit within the Freikorps organisationin April 1919. With the name Fränkische Bauerndetachement Eiserne ScharBerthold (Franconian Farmer´s detachment Iron Troop Berthold) the unit wentinto battle in Baltics with Bolshewiks and Lithuanian leftists. Berthold´s troopsreturned at the end of 1919 to Germany. During the military putsch againstthe Friedrich Ebert´s government, the leaders (Wolfgang Kapp and GeneralWalther von Lüttwitz) called Freikorps upon keeping the “order” in the streets.The Chancellor reacted with the general strike announcement. The situation inHamburg was critical, so Berthold and his troops commandeered a train andmoved to join the coup. They arrived to the Harbourg city on March 14 andused the Heimfelder Middle School as the base. Trade union leaders tried tonegotiate disarming the Freikorps, but with no success. Union workers werethen armed to face the Freikorps. Mayor of the city Heinrich Denicke offeredFreikorps free and safe passage if they would disarm. Berthold refused againand past noon his men opened re to clear a passage out of the school. Theworkers shot back and in the ensuing reght there were losses on both sides.The Freikorps were running out of ammo in the late afternoon, so Bertholdstarted to negotiate safe passage for those of his men who would disarm, andthey nally did. But the crowd was surrounding the school in anger due to thecivilian casualties of the putch.The „Ordenskissen“ (Orders Cushion) on display after Berthold´s death, framedby a bunch of photos of him and several of his comrades.photo: Jörn Leckscheid collectionApart of many his colleagues Berthold preferred the Pfalz D.IIIover Albatros D.III. His personal symbol, the winged swordof vengeance was painted on blue fuselage with red nose.The colours of 3rd Brandenberg Infantry Regiment.Side view from Eduard plastic model kit No. 8047 (marking B)eduard27INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 28
The rst volume in a landmark series of theGreat War aviation books with detailedmarkings of German ghter planes is out!The rst volume of a series of books dealing with thecolours of German WW I ghter aeroplanes oers aninsight into the research process of looking for thetrue colours of the Fliegertruppe ghter aircraft.A detailed presentation covering the author´s longterm research, conducted mainly in the 1970s and80s, sheds light on the process of uncovering longlost documentation revealing the true colours ofthe aircraft and recounting the adventures of theirpilots. The book contains 58 colour proles, manyof these not seen before, while others correctprevious misinterpretations of markings. Moreover,some 223 photographs and 61 reproductionsof documents are published here.Renowned historian and author Bruno Schmälingcompleted this book with the cooperation of fellowresearcher Jörn Leckscheid, a long-time friendof Eduard.The book has been published byAeronaut Boooks (USA) andis availabe worldwide from theAmazon.com and its localrepresentations.More about publisher at:www.aeronautbooks.comHISTORYSources:Iron man Rudolf Berthold: Germany´s indomitable ace of World War I; PeterKildu; Grub Street Publishing 2012Rudolf Berthold. Sieger in 44 Luftschlachten. Erschlagen im Bruderkampfe fürDeutschlands Freiheit; Ludwig F. Gengler; Schlieen-Verlag 1934Jagdgeschwader Nr II Geschwader Berthold; Greg VanWyngarden, OspreyPublishing Limited, 2005www.theaerodrome.comwww.ndr.deRudolf Berthold in front of his Fokker D.VII as commanding ofcer of JG II.photo: Jörn Leckscheid collectionBerthold´s end is still somehow unclear, as several different versions exist. Themost anticipated tells the story about his attempt to leave the school throughthe back of the building. The angry onlookers spotted “Blue Max” on his neckand swarm of people attacked him. The other one says he managed to escapethe school but was recognised in the coffee bar a little bit later with similarconsequences. The third one, stating Rudolf Berthold was throttled to deathwith the ribbon of his Pour le Merite as ligature, is only a myth. In any case, hewas lynched by outraged crow, suffering numerous injuries, and shot twice tothe head. According to some of the sources his face was stomped into bloodymush and his paralyzed right arm was ripped from its socket. His corpse wasafter that robbed of decorations and coat. Somebody rescued Berthold's Pourle Merite, Iron Cross First Class, and Pilot's Badge from a garbage dump inHarburg.Rudolf Berthold was buried on March 30, 1920 in Berlin's cemetery theInvalidenfriedhof next to his best friend Buddecke. On his rst gravestone, sincedestroyed, was allegedly stated: “Slain in the brother ght for the freedom ofthe German lands."Icon without gloryRudolf Berthold was for sure very brave and combative man, excellent pilot,organiser, and commander. The Nazi propaganda used all that spirit to makehim idol and martyr. There were also wreath-lying ceremonies full of the Nazisalutations at his grave. His sister Franziska, who took so much care about him,died in 1932, one of his brothers, three years older Arno Oskar Berthold (infact his step-brother, as they had different mother) moved to USA in twen-ties and was serving as National Guard member for some time. He died onJanuary 4, 1942. His son and Rudolf´s nephew become Colonel of US AirForce in eighties.Special thanks to Greg VanWyngaarden andJörn Leckscheid for photos and additional informations.eduard28INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 29
The rst volume in a landmark series of theGreat War aviation books with detailedmarkings of German ghter planes is out!The rst volume of a series of books dealing with thecolours of German WW I ghter aeroplanes oers aninsight into the research process of looking for thetrue colours of the Fliegertruppe ghter aircraft.A detailed presentation covering the author´s longterm research, conducted mainly in the 1970s and80s, sheds light on the process of uncovering longlost documentation revealing the true colours ofthe aircraft and recounting the adventures of theirpilots. The book contains 58 colour proles, manyof these not seen before, while others correctprevious misinterpretations of markings. Moreover,some 223 photographs and 61 reproductionsof documents are published here.Renowned historian and author Bruno Schmälingcompleted this book with the cooperation of fellowresearcher Jörn Leckscheid, a long-time friendof Eduard.The book has been published byAeronaut Boooks (USA) andis availabe worldwide from theAmazon.com and its localrepresentations.More about publisher at:www.aeronautbooks.comPage 30
1/48 Kat. No. 8208Eduard plastic partsPhoto-etched setPaiting mask5 marking optionsBrassin: nose gun coverwith bulgeKITS 01/2021Bf 110G-4 1/48eduard30INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 31
KITS 01/2021Lt. Heinz-Wolfgang Schnaufer, II./NJG 1, Saint-Trond, Belgium, April/May 1943Maj. Helmut Lent, the CO of Stab NJG 3, Stade, Germany, September 1944Heinz Wolgang Schnaufer, the most successful night ghter ace, served with night ghter units from the very beginning of his aviaon career.He is credited with 121 victories, most of them being Brish four-engined bombers. He was wounded only once during WWII, and no mem-ber of his crew was ever wounded in acon. Schnaufer was awarded the Knight´s Cross with Oak leaves, Swords and Diamonds. Schnaufersurvived the war and worked at his family winery. He died on June 15th, 1950, two days aer a fatal collision involving his car and a truck inCestas, close to Bordeaux, France.Schnaufer was dubbed 'The Spook from St. Trond', and he ew this aircra in the spring 1943. The aircra wore the standard camouagescheme of RLM 74/75/76 colors. A WB 151 pod containing a pair of MG 151/20 cannon can be seen in photographs of Schnaufer’s aircra.Helmut Lent joined the Luwae in 1936. He enlisted as a ghter pilot and served with II./JG 141. On May 1st, 1939, II./JG 141 was rede-signated I./ZG 76 and equipped with Bf 110 ghters. In bales over Poland, Norway and France, Lent downed seven enemy aircra, and101 victories were added to his credit while serving with NJG 1, NJG 2 and NJG 3. On August 1st, 1943, when he was 25 years old, Maj. Lentwas appointed CO of the enre NJG 3. He led the Geschwader unl October 5th, 1944 when his Ju 88G-6 crashed during landing aer portengine failure. The enre crew succumbed to their injuries within two days. Lent was awarded the Knight´s Cross with Oak Leaves, Swordsand Diamonds.Lent´s Bf 110G-4 wore a standard day ghter camouage scheme of RLM 74/75/76. The starboard wing undersurfaces were painted black.Note the Geschwader CO marking on the fuselage, quite an unusual pracce for night ghter units.eduard31INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 32
WNr. 740039, Oblt. Leopold Fellerer, CO of II./NJG 5, Parchim, Germany, January 1944Hptm. Walter Borchers, CO of III./NJG 5, Neuruppin, Germany, January 1944WNr. 5547, Ofw. Helmut Treynogga, 6./NJG 6, Echterdingen, Germany, March 1944Oblt. Leopold Fellerer came from Vienna, Austria, where he was born on July 7th, 1919. In 1935 he volunteered for the Austrian Air Force,but was rejected, and he joined the army instead. Aer the Anschluss of 1938, he again aempted to get into the Air Force, this me theLuwae, but was again rejected, and so he remained with the infantry. Aer several more aempts, his applicaon was nally accepted,and he began training as a bomber pilot in November 1938. At the beginning of 1941 he was assigned to II./NJG 1, where he accountedfor the rst kill of a Brish bomber. On October 10th, 1942, he was given command of 3./NJG 1, which would be renamed in Decemberof the same year as 5./NJG 5. Over the course of the year, his tally had grown to eighteen and Fellerer was elevated to Hauptmann, takingcommand of II./NJG 5. On April 8th, 1944, he received the Knight’s Cross for what were by then 34 aerial victories, and in May of that year,he was made CO of III./NJG 6. Over the course of the Second World War, he was credited with 41 kills. During the ies, he served with theAustrian Air Force, and commanded Langenlebarn Air Base in Tulln. He was killed on July 15th, 1968 in a crash of a Cessna L-19 near Krems.Walter Borchers, a future ace with 59 kills, was born on January 22nd, 1916 in the Ofen, in Lower Saxony. At the beginning of the war, he wasaached to 5./ZG 76, equipped with Bf 110s. He took command of the 5. Stael in the spring of 1940. A year later, the unit was tasked withnight ghng and redesignated 8./NJG 3. On April 22nd, 1943, Oblt. Borchers was given command of III./NJG 5, and in a year, as a Major,command of the enre NJG 5. He perished in the cockpit of a Ju 88G-6 on March 6th, 1945, aer having downed a Brish Lancaster north ofAltenburg. This came at the hands of a Mosquito night ghter crewed by W/Cdr Walter Gibb and F/Lt Kendall from No.239 Squadron, RAF.Out of Borchers’ crew, only the rear gunner survived. Walter Borchers had two brothers, all served in the Second World War, and all wereawarded the Knight’s Cross. The oldest of them, Hermann, received his on October 16th, 1944. Adolf on November 22nd, 1944 and theyoungest of the trio, Walter, on July 27th, 1944. Both his brothers, Adolf and Hermann, survived the war.On the night of the 15/16th of March, 1944, aer unsuccessful aempts at intercepng Brish bombers aacking Munich, Ofw. Treynoggabecame disoriented and for a lack of fuel, set down at Dübendorf in Switzerland. Together with his radio operator, Uz. Heinz Schwarz, hewould spend ve weeks in Switzerland and his aircra, equipped with a FuG 202 radar, was thoroughly tested. Aer his return to Germany,Ofw. Treynogga was again assigned to the night ghng role. On the night of the 5/6th of June, 1944, he again became disoriented over thetown of Graziano in Italy, and he bailed out of his aircra. He did not survive the event.Bf 110G-4 coded 2Z+OP, with which Ofw. Treynogga landed in Switzerland, was camouaged in RLM 74/75 on the upper surfaces and thelower ones were sprayed RLM 76. The excepon was the lower surface of the right wing, which was in black. This aircra lacked the two MG151/20 cannon under the fuselage.KITS 01/2021Kat. č. 672248eduard32INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 33
KITS 01/2021Recommended for Bf 110G-4644081 Bf 110G-4 Löök 1/48 (Brassin)648603 Bf 110G wheels 1/48 (Brassin)648606 Bf 110G-4 exhaust stacks 1/48 (Brassin)648604 Bf 110G-4 gun muzzles 1/48 (Brassin) – release 02/2021648605 Bf 110G-4 Schräge Musik 1/48 (Brassin) – release 02/2021OVERTREESBf 110G-4 1/48 Cat. No 8208XCat. No 8208-LEPTCat. No. 644081Cat. No. 648606Cat. No. 648603eduard33INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 34
KITS 01/2021Bf 109G-6/AS 1/481/48 Cat. No. 84169Eduard plastic parts5 marking optionseduard34INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 35
KITS 01/20219./JG 1, Paderborn, Germany, May 1944WNr. 412179, Uz. Horst Petzschler, 2./JG 3, Burg near Magdeburg, Germany, May 1944The Bf 109G-6/AS was developed to intercept enemy aircra at higher altudes. This accounts for the camouage paint consisng of justRLM 76. At unit level, these aircra oen received addional coats of then standard colours consisng of RLM 74 and RLM 75 over the sideand upper surfaces. The JG 1 unit emblem was applied to the nose, and this was a winged numeral '1' inside of a square, rotated to sit onone of its corners. On period photographs of Yellow '14', the red fuselage band is clearly visible, signifying the fact that this aircra servedwithin the Defense of the Reich system. The vercal bar located within it was a designator for III. Gruppe planes, and was always renderedin the Stael colour. This was, in the case of the 9. Stael, yellow. Some sources conclude that the fuselage code of Yellow '14' covered theearlier applied numeral '3', while others suggest that the covered designaon was either the factory applied 'TO' or 'TQ'. We are oeringboth possibilies.Horst Petzschler was born in Berlin on September 1st, 1921 and joined the Luwae on April 1st, 1941. Aer undergoing ghter pilot trai-ning, he was assigned to JG 51 on August 23rd, 1943, and it was there he would gain his rst three kills. On April 13th, 1944, he was trans-ferred to 2./JG 3 which was a component of the Defence of the Reich structure, but by June 1944, he would return to JG 51 on the EasternFront. On May 4th, 1945, III./JG 51 was relocated to Schleswig-Holstein from eastern Prussia. Horst Petzschler did not reach that locaon dueto a navigaon error and landed at Bulltoa in Sweden, where he was interned and in January 1946, the Swedes handed him over to theSoviets. He was released from capvity on September 22nd, 1949. On his return, he worked for the Berlin Police Department and in 1953,he emigrated to Canada and then the United States, where he worked in the aviaon industry. He rered in 1988. Over the course of theSecond World War, he downed 26 enemy aircra.During his service with 2./JG 3, Uz. Petzschler ew an aircra coded Balck '14'. The aircra was painted RLM 76 overall at the plant andcarried the JG 3 insignia on the nose. On May 30th, 1944, Fw. Oo Bülsow was shot down during combat in this airplane over Belzig.eduard35INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 36
KITS 01/2021Hptm. Friedrich-Karl Müller, CO of 1./NJGr. 10, Werneuchen, Germany, July 1944MT-463, ylikersan (Sta Sergeant) Tapio Järvi, 2/HLeLv 24, Lappeenranta, Finland, July/August 1944The future Knight’s Cross recipient, the ace with 30 night victories over the enemy aircra, was born on December 4th, 1912 in Sulzbach inSaarland. In 1934 he completed his pilot training and got the job with Luhansa. Aer the outbreak of World War Two he was ordered tothe Luwae. Inially he was ying as a transport pilot, later as an instrument ying instructor. In December 1942 he was assigned to KG 50operang He 177 aircra, in the summer of the following year he responded to Hajo Hermann call and requested the reassignment to JG300 famous for its Wilde Sau (single-engine ghter night intercepon deployment) taccs. While serving with this unit he was credited with19 kills and in January 1944 he was ordered to form 1./NJGr. 10. In August 1944 he was promoted to command I./NJG 11 and lead this unitunl the end of World War II. He passed away on November 2nd, 1987.The lower and parally side surfaces were painted black for the beer night camouage. The red stripe surrounding the rear fuselage indi-cated the original owner of this aircra within Reich Defense, JG 300.The pilot’s “score” was painted on the both sides of the rudder in theform of the 23 stripes with the enemy naonality and date of the victory.Among the deliveries of Bf 109G-2 and G-6 ghters to Germany’s ally Finland were two G-6/AS version aircra. In the Finnish Air Force, thesewere coded MT-463 and MT-471. MT-463 was delivered on June 28th, 1944 and was assigned to HLeLv 24, where it was own by, amongother pilots, ylikersan Järvi, who used to down two of his total 27 kills. A further ve kills in this aircra were claimed by another four pilots.The Bf 109G-6/AS did not represent any major advantage for the Finnish Air Force, because the majority of air combat with the Soviets tookplace at altudes below 3,000m. The DB 605AS, which powered the type, was designed to oer advantages at high altudes.The camouage scheme of this aircra consisted of sprayed RLM 74/75/76 with the blue swaskas on white discs on the fuselage and wingposions. The code MT-463 appeared on the fuselage ahead of the tail surfaces. The yellow number of the aircra within the unit wasapplied between the fuselage code and the cockpit. There are no available photographs of this aircra during its combat career with HLeLv24, but from other period photographs of other such aircra, the list of aircra numbers for this specic plane has been reduced to 2, 4 or 6.eduard36INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 37
KITS 01/2021MT-463, HLeLv 31, U, Finland, Summer 1948The end of the ghts with the Soviet Union brought a ceasere from September 5th, 1944. One of the condions of the ceasere was achange in the marking of the Finnish aircra – the blue swaska was substuted by cockade bearing Finnish naonal colours, i.e. blue andwhite. Lentolaivue 24, whose pilots of Messerschmis Bf 109G reached the total of 304 victories in air ghts, kept these ghters also duringthe period of peace duty. From December 4th, 1944 the planes served with HLeLv 31, which is sll acve today. The pilots of this squadrony F-18C Hornets at present me.The aircra concerned is the same as the one portrayed in the previous paint, though, used in the post-war service – this is proved by thenaonal insignia in Finnish naonal colours introduced from April 1st, 1945. The marking of the aircra is accompanied by the painng ofthe bat placed on the blue cloud and the moon – marking of the HLeLv 31 night ghters. The moon used to be white or yellow; MT-463 haswhite moon. The rudder was repainted most likely with the Finnish olive green colour.Recommended for Bf 109G-6/AS48885 Bf 109G-6 1/48 (PE-Set)FE1142 Bf 109G-6/AS Weekend 1/48 (PE-Set)644003 Bf 109G-6 LööK 1/48 (Brassin)648261 Bf 109G-6 wheels 1/48 (Brassin)648239 Bf 109G-6 radio compartment 1/48 (Brassin)648240 Bf 109G-6 cockpit 1/48 (Brassin)648247 Bf 109G exhaust stacks 1/48 (Brassin)648309 Bf 109G undercarriage legs BRONZE 1/48 (Brassin)648265 Bf 109G external fuel tanks (Brassin)EX512 Bf 109G spinner spirals 1/48 (Mask)EX524 Bf 109G-6 Erla canopy 1/48 (Mask)EX581 Bf 109G Erla canopy TFace 1/48 (Mask)Cat. No. 644003Cat. No. 648240eduard37INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 38
KITS 01/2021P-51D-5 1/481/48 Cat. No. 84172Eduard plastic parts5 marking optionseduard38INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 39
KITS 01/202144-13761, Capt. Jack M. Ilfrey, 79th FS, 20th FG, 8th AF, USAAF Staon 367 Kings Clie,Northamptonshire, Great Britain, Autumn 1944Captain Jack Ilfrey became an ace in North Africa, where he claimed 5½ kills (and 2 damaged) while ying P-38F “Texas Terror”. He joined20th FG, 79th FS at USAAF Staon Kings Clie in England on April 20th, 1944, serving as Ops Ocer from June 14th, 1944. He claimed twomore Bf 109Gs on May 24th, ying P-38J “Happy Jack´s go Buggy”. He was shot down behind enemy lines in France on June 12th, but hesuccessfully evaded capture walking and cycling 150 miles to Allied lines in Normandy with help of French civilians. He became 79th FS COon September 7th, leading the unit unl December 9th, 1944. He completed 142 combat missions over ETO and MTO. The 20th FG did notreplace their P-38Js with P-51Cs unl July 1944, changing them for P-51Ds shortly aerwards. The early Mustangs of the 20th FG are knownto have upper surfaces overpainted with green color, probably with RAF Dark Green, with irregular spling line between green uppersurfaces and silver/natural metal boom surfaces. The 20th FG was nicknamed “Loco Busters” because made signicant number of aacksagainst railroad network.44-13317, Capt. Donald R. Emerson, 336th FS, 4th FG, 8th AF, USAAF Staon 356 Debden,Essex, Great Britain, September 1944The 4th FG was nicknamed Debden Eagles thanks to its home base and origins, as it was formed from RAF Eagle squadron (71st, 121st and133rd squadrons). Aer the incorporaon into 8th AF the squadrons were re-named to 334th FS, 335th FS and 336th FS. As of April 1st,1943 their Spiires were replaced by P-47s and in February 1944 these were changed for P-51s. Donald Emerson joined the ranks of 4thFighter Group on March 9th, 1944 and during the following eight months of duty he ew 89 sores during which he was credited with 4½enemy aircra shot down. On December 25th, 1944 he perished returning from the bomber escort mission when he spoed six Bf 109s. Du-ring the ensuing combat he descended close to the terrain and was hit by the an-aircra re over the front. Pilot was probably killed, andhis aircra crashed nearby the town of Siard in The Netherlands. However, he had managed to shoot down two of his opponents. Capt.Emerson had the fuselage port side of his Mustang decorated with boxing Donald Duck in resemblance to his rst name. There are sevenkill markings painted under the windshield. From the beginning of September, the invasion stripes on the upper wings and fuselage sidessurfaces of the allied aircra were deleted and le on the lower surfaces only.eduard39INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 40
KITS 01/202144-13597, Lt. William E. Fowler, 487th FS, 352nd FG, 8th AF, USAAF Staon 141 Bodney,Norfolk, Great Britain, September 1944Lt. Col. John C. Meyer, acng CO of the 487th FS and the ace credited with 37½ destroyed enemy aircra, claimed four of his 24 aerial victo-ries in cockpit of this mount on September 11th, 1944. Stardust was originally a personal aircra of Lt. William E. Fowler, nicknamed „Flaps“,who ended his combat tour just three days before Meyer´s four-victory raid. The Stardust was than assigned to Lt. Jack „Moose“ Landrum,who renamed it „Moose“. He was shot down and killed on October 24th, 1944, while strang at Hannover. The 352nd Fighter Group, basedat USAAF Staon Bodney, was fourth most successful FG of the 8th USAAF with 519 enemy planes destroyed in the air and 287 on theground, with 119 losses of their own. All three squadrons painted noses of their Mustangs with blue colour. In September 1944, the paintof the noses was changed from Medium Blue to the Dark Blue, which remained the Group´s color unl end of the War. Note the light areaover the fuselage naonal insignia of the Stardust, which is clear natural metal surface aer the washing of the invasion stripes on the uppersurfaces including the upper surfaces of the wings.44-13316, Leonard K. Carson, 362nd FS, 357th FG, 8th AF, USAAF Staon 373 Leiston,Suolk, Great Britain, June 1944The second top scoring Fighter Group of the 8th USAAF and the top scoring FG equipped with P-51D Mustangs was 357nd FG, creditedwith 609 German aircra destroyed in the air and 106 on the ground, with their own losses of 128 aircra. The unit had 35 aces, led byMajor Leonard „Kit“ Carson with 18½ aerial victories. He became 362nd FS CO on April 8th, 1945. The key to the success of the unit was itsghng academy, called Clobber College, where the experienced pilots taught the newcomers the ghng taccs. The 362nd FS receivedtheir P-51Ds just a few days before D-day. Most of the unit´s early Mustangs had upper surfaces camouaged Dark Green with Neutral Greyboom surfaces, or Dark Green upper surfaces over the aluminium/natural metal boom surfaces with narrow border between green andNMF surfaces high on fuselage sides. The colors were probably RAF paints overtaken from RAF stock. The “Nooky Booky II” wears full D-daystripes, as the aircra was delivered to the unit probably around June 6th, 1944. The previous name of this plane was “Mildred”.eduard40INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 41
44-13597, Lt. William E. Fowler, 487th FS, 352nd FG, 8th AF, USAAF Staon 141 Bodney,Norfolk, Great Britain, September 194444-13316, Leonard K. Carson, 362nd FS, 357th FG, 8th AF, USAAF Staon 373 Leiston,Suolk, Great Britain, June 1944KITS 01/2021Recommended for P-51D-5481000 P-51D 1/48 (PE-Set)FE1021 P-51D seatbelts STEEL 1/48 (PE-Set)FE1141 P-51D-5 Weekend 1/48 (PE-Set)644021 P-51D-5 LööK 1/48 (Brassin)648486 P-51D exhaust stacks w/ fairing 1/48 (Brassin)648489 P-51D-5 cockpit 1/48 (Brassin)648494 P-51D wheels diamond tread 1/48 (Brassin)648495 P-51D undercarriage legs BRONZE 1/48 (Brassin)648555 P-51D engine 1/48 (Brassin)648570 P-51D gun sights 1/48 (Brassin)EX663 P-51D TFace 1/48 (Mask)EX740 P-51D Weekend 1/48 (Mask)Cat. No. 644021Cat. No. 648495Cat. No. 648555Cat. No. 648489Cat. No. 648570eduard41INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 42
P-47D RazorbackPlatz plastic partsPaiting mask5 marking options1/144, Cat. No. 4469KITS 01/2021Recommended:144016 P-47 Razorback1/144 (PE-Set) release 02/2020eduard42INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 43
KITS 01/2021P-47D-11-RE, s/n 42-75510, Lt. Col Francis Gabreski, 61st FS,56th FG, 8th AF, Halesworth, England, February 1944P-47D-23-RA, s/n 42-27908, 86th FS, 79th FG, 12th AF, Fano,Italy, September 1944P-47D-23-RA, s/n 42-27884, Maj. William D. Dunham, 460th FS,348th FG, 7th AF, Tacloban, Philippines, December 1944P-47D-20-RE, s/n 42-76553, 1st Lt. Arlie J. Blood, 510th FS,405th FG, 9th AF, Christchurch, England, May 1944P-47D-22-RE, s/n 42-26298, Lt. Albert P. Knafelz, 62nd FS,56th FG, 8th AF, Boxted, England, July 1944eduard43INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 44
KITS 01/20211/72 Cat. No. 2133Eduard plastic partsPhoto-etched setPaiting mask12 marking optionsExtra: BMW IIIa andM e r c e d e s D . I I I e n g i n e sDUAL COMBOeduard44INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 45
Fokker D.VII Early, mil. No unknown, Hptm. Rudolf Berthold, CO of JG II, Le Mesnil-Nesle,France, June 1918Fokker D.VII Early, 365/18, Lt. Josef Carl Peter Jacobs, CO of Jasta 7, St Marguerite, France,August 1918The rst D.VII of combave and patrioc 44 victories ace Rudolf Berthold was of early producon batch and is well known thanks to thephoto, showing it in the colours of Jasta 15 (Berthold was leading it before promoted to the JG II command), i.e. red nose and middle bluefuselage and upper surfaces of the wings. The abovemenoned photo depicts the aircra in unnished state of paint job when part of thefuselage was sll le in original factory streaked painng. It was overpainted later as the reports state. You can choose which one schemeYou prefer. The boom of the fuselage was neither le in original factory light blue colour, or also overpainted by middle blue. Regarding theboom side of the wings we tend to the „lozenge“ four colour light variant, but some sources are stang light blue overpaint of it.Long serving commander of Jasta 7 (from August 2, 1917 ll the end of the war), the 47 victory ace, was famous for his all black Fokkers Dr.Iand D.VII marked with the disnct ame-breathing devils´ head painted on both sides of the fuselage as his personal emblem. While the sha-pe of the devil is well documented on the Dr.I, there is only one rather poor photo of Jacobs´ D.VII, so the shape of the devil depicted hereand in the decals is reconstrucon based on visible details on the D.VII, but taking into consideraon the shape used on Dr.I, where no otherclue exists. Jacobs´ D.VII was photographed with upper engine cowling removed, which was a common quick-x to the overheang problemsfollowing the self-ignion of phosphorous ammunion in several D.VIIs in mid-July.KITS 01/2021eduard45INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 46
Fokker D.VII Early, 387/18, Oblt. Harald Auarth, CO of Jasta 29, Aertrycke, Belgium,October 1918Fokker D.VII Early, 286/18, Vzfw. Willi Gabriel, Jasta 11, Cappy, France, May 1918Flying this D.VII, Harald Auarth managed to shoot down several aircra but also experienced one forced landing with it aer catching somedefensive re from the observer of a DH- 9 from 206th USAS Squadron on October 5, 1918. The D.VII survived and Auarth scored also thelast of his 29 victories with it. According to the photo and Jasta 29 reports the D.VII of Harald Auarth sported the usual colours of Jasta 29,i.e. yellow nose with green fuselage and personal marking of white comet insignia on both sides. The upper side of top wing was paintedeither green or yellow as a common pracce of personal mounts of the Jasta leaders. There is some uncertainty regarding the type of„lozenge“ fabric used. Although the four-colour variant should be the right one according to the most respected sources, some possibilityof ve-colour variant is sll open. An alternave set of ve-colour “lozenge” decals can be bought separately.Willi Gabriel had just a brief career as a ghter pilot, aer he spent most of war ying two seaters. He nally managed to persuade JG Icommander Wilhelm Reinhardt to assign him to Jasta 11, where he started his ghter pilot career on May 17, 1918. Adding 10 victories tohis only one he achieved during his observing pilot career he ran into troubles due to his lack of discipline and was nally “grounded” andposted out of the Jasta 11 in August 1918. His early D.VII sported very colourful scheme with orange rear end, fuselage stripes and light blue/orange chevrons on the horizontal stabilizer and elevator. The orange fuselage stripes were painted later. You can therefore choose in whichstate You prefer to nish this marking. There is some uncertainty regarding the type of „lozenge“ fabric used. Although the four-colour vari-ant should be the right one according to the most respected sources, some possibility of ve-colour variant is sll open. An alternave set ofve-colour “lozenge” decals can be bought separately.KITS 01/2021eduard46INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 47
Fokker D.VII Late, mil. No unknown, Heinz Küstner, Jasta 18, Habsheim, Mönngen,Metz, France, October/November 1918Fokker D.VII Late, 4301/18, Vzfw. Oo Heinrich Baurose, Jasta 71, Habsheim, France,November 1918Typical Jasta 18 marking of red and white colours was applied also to the Heinz Küstner´s mount, but according to some sources the paintjob was not nished on the boom of the wings which therefore stayed in four colour „lozenge“ printed fabric. The black raven becomeJasta´s trademark aer its leader August Raben (raven in German) made it famous on his plane. Küstner´s late variant of D.VII sported also„Mercedes“ three-pointed black star behind the Raven. The tail unit has been mostly depicted with black stripes, but, according to thenewest ndings they should be red as well as the wings and front fuselage. Previously, Küstner had own a very similar-looking D.VII built byAlbatros.A lile is known about Oo Heinrich Baurose, the ghter pilot with no ocial aerial victories. He served with Jasta 20 from April 16, 1917ll February 6, 1918, aer that period he was moved to Jasta 71. He might be one of the vicms of the famous Billy Bishop´s raid on June 2,1917, when Canadian pilot destroyed several aircra during his solo dawn patrol; some in the air, some on the ground when taxiing. If so,Baurose survived… His aircra was typical late producon D.VII from Schwerin factory and is well known thanks to several photos, where theinscripon Oo and B/W tail stripes are clearly visible. Also removed top engine cowling is evident, either due to the maintenance or as themeans for beer engine cooling during hot summer.KITS 01/2021eduard47INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 48
Fokker D.VII Early, mil. No unknown, Oblt z. S. Gohard Sachsenberg, CO of MFJ 1,Coolkerke, Belgium, September 1918Fokker D.VII Mid, 505/18, 2592, OStv. Friedrich Wilhelm Hippert, Grenzschutz-Ost,East Prussia, 1919The second highest scoring ace of all the German marine pilots in WWI, Gohard Sachsenberg (second only to Theo Osterkamp), achieved31 victories and was decorated with Pour le Mérite on August 5, 1918. From October 1918 Sachsenberg led the rst naval air wing, theMarine Jagdgruppe 1. Aer the War he formed the Jagdgeschwader Sachsenberg, providing the aerial support to Freikorps units ghngon Balc borders of Germany. His aircra from the me of leading the MFJ1 unit sported diagonal black checkerboard painted over yellowfuselage. Eight partly worn black stripes on the upper side of top wing are considered to be kind of reinforcement tape, as the linen cover ofupper wing centre secon had a tendency to part company with the airframe during the erce combat manoeuvres. The black stripes on theelevator were in contrary the idencaon marks of MFJ 1. Sachsenberg used an Oigee gunsight on his D.VII.One of the most colourful D.VIIs used to be the mount of Wilhelm Hippert, the WWI ace with eight victories. Hippert was ghng with theMimmi, the pet name of his belowed ancée Wilhelmine Bückert, painted on the upper side of the top wing. Willi served with FA(A) 227during 1917 and achieved one aerial victory shared with his observer. Transferred to Jasta 39 he scored for the rst me as a ghter pilot onOctober 2, 1917. He moved again on March 5, 1918, joining Jasta 74. It was long believed, this checkerboard D.VII was operated by this unit,but latest ndings revealed the D.VII in this parcular appearance is a post war marking, when serving with Grenzschutz-Ost, helping theFreikorps to ght in the eastern regions of Germany. The top engine cowlings were eld-modied for beer engine and ammunion cooling.KITS 01/2021eduard48INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 49
Fokker D.VIIF 4282/18, Ltn. d. R. Arthur Laumann, Jasta 10, Bernes, France, August 1918Fokker D.VIIF mil. No unknown, Oblt. Erich Loewenhardt, Jasta 10, Puisieux Ferme,France, August 1918As an arllery soldier Laumann was sent to pilot training only aer many requests in August 1917. Eight months later he joined FA(A) 265,the unit led by his brother, for just brief service, as he was transferred to Jasta 66 in May. Laumann soon became ace there and even com-mander of the unit on July 21, 1918. He recorded last ve of his 28 victories when leading Jasta 10, where he ew this D.VIIF from the midproducon batch. Apart of the factory „lozenge“ cover, the yellow nose and wide band around the fuselage with his personal AL inscriponmade his D.VII something special. The yellow colour of the band was considered only as probable but has been conrmed by his combatreports. Laumann was one of the pilots ying with opcal gunsight mounted in front of the cockpit.Erich Loewenhardt spent rst two years of the war with infantry. He started ying in 1916 as an observer. Aer successful applicaon forpilot training he joined FA(A) 265 in 1916 prior to undertaking ghter training early in 1917. He joined Jasta 10 thereaer in March 1917. Hewas appointed commander of the unit aer scoring his rst 15 victories on April 1, 1918 and received the Pour le Mérite on May 31. Twomonths later, on August 10, he shot down his 54th and last vicm, but collided with another pilot from Jasta 11 during this combat. Althoughsuccessfully bailing out, his parachute did not open and the Jasta 10 leader fell to his death. No photo of this yellow D.VII is known, but itsappearance is well described by various eye-witness accounts, who described the plane as being “canary yellow”. Contrary to most of thereconstrucons we are convinced the upper side of top wing was yellow, as well as the cowling under the machine guns. This plane was anearly example from the 4250/18 – 4449/18 producon batch.KITS 01/2021eduard49INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 50
Fokker D.VIIF, 4253/18, Oblt. Ernst Udet, Jasta 4, Beugneux, France, July 1918Fokker D.VIIF, mil. No unknown, Rtm. Karl Bolle, CO of Jasta 2, Lens Mons, France, October 1918The all-red BMW powered mount of Ernst Udet reached Jasta 4 in late July 1918. Udet ew this plane with great success in August 1918,being credited with 20 victories in just 20 days. Due to unknown reasons the upper wing of his mount was changed for one coming from anO.A.W.-built D.VII. Udet, the highest scoring German ace surviving the war, ew this D.VIIF without the upper cowling to improve the coolingof the engine and ammunion. The Lo! painng on the fuselage was there to honour his ancée Eleanor Zink, which he married in 1920. Thefamous “Du doch nicht!!” inscripon was not present on this aircra.Karl Bolle started his aviaon career as the pilot of KG4 and later of Kampstael 23, where he was ying with Lothar von Richthofen as hisobserver. He was moved to the Jasta 28 during the summer of 1917 and aer becoming an ace with ve victories, he was promoted tocommand the Jasta 2 on February 20, 1918. Bolle was leading this famous unit ll the end of the war, his tally counng 36 aerial victories.On August 28, 1918, he received the Pour le Mérite. Aer the war he remained acve pilot and was appointed Director of the GermanTransportaon Flying School in 1920. This aircra of Karl Bolle carried the wide yellow band with white and black outlines and was a typicalmid- producon Schwerin built D.VIIF with the BMW IIIa engine and also came from the 4250/18 – 4449/18 producon batch.KITS 01/2021eduard50INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 51
Recommended for Fokker D.VII672223 Fokker D.VII (OAW) engine/Mercedes D.III 1/72 (Brassin)672224 Fokker D.VIIF engine/BMW IIIa 1/72 (Brassin)D72019 Fokker D.VII rib tapes 4color lozenge 1/72 (Decal)D72020 Fokker D.VII rib tapes 5color lozenge 1/72 (Decal)KITS 01/2021Cat. No. 672223Cat. No. 672224OVERTREESFOkker D.VII (Fokker) 1/72Cat. No 70133XCat. No 2133-LEPTA+BG+Heduard51INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 52
BFC105WILDE SAU Episode One: Ring of Fire with extra decal1/481/48, Cat. No. BFC105Complete WILDE SAU kitEpisode One: Ring of Fire(Limited edition Cat. No 11140)Extended with the oer of the othermachines from JG 300.BFCFOR BFC MEMBERS ONLYeduard52INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 53
BFC106WILDE SAU Episode One: Ring of Fire with extra decal1/481/48, Cat. No. BFC106Complete WILDE SAU kitEpisode One: Ring of Fire(Limited edition Cat. No 11140)Extended with the oer of theother machines from JG 301and JG 302.BFCFOR BFC MEMBERS ONLYeduard53INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 54
01/2021LööK set - Brassin pre-painted dashboardand STEEL seatbelts for Spiire Mk.II in1/48 scale. Easy to assemble, replacesplasc parts.Recommended kit: EduardSet contains:- resin: 1 part,- decals: no,- photo-etched details: yes, pre-painted,- painng mask: no.LööK set - Brassin pre-painted dashboardand STEEL seatbelts for Beaughter Mk.IFin 1/48 scale. Easy to assemble, replacesplasc parts.Recommended kit: RevellSet contains:- resin: 1 part,- decals: no,- photo-etched details: yes, pre-painted,- painng mask: no.644080Spitre Mk.II LööK1/48 Eduard644079Beaughter Mk.IF LööK1/48 Revelleduard54INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 55
Brassin set - AGM-88 HARM missiles in1/32 scale. The set consists of 2 missiles.Compable with F-4G, EA-6B, F-15E, F-16,F/A-18, EA-18G, Tornado IDS/ECR,Euroghter Typhoon, F-35.Set contains:- resin: 14 parts,- decals: yes,- photo-etched details: yes,- painng mask: no.LööK set - Brassin pre-painted dashboardand STEEL seatbelts for Bf 110G-4in 1/48 scale. Easy to assemble, replacesplasc parts.Recommended kit: EduardSet contains:- resin: 3 parts,- decals: no,- photo-etched details: yes, pre-painted,- painng mask: no.632164AGM-88 HARM1/32644081Bf 110G-4 LööK1/48 EduardBRASSIN 01/2021eduard55INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 56
BRASSIN 01/2021Brassin set - the Browning twin-gunfor Lysander in 1/48 scale.Recommended kit: EduardSet contains:- resin: 8 parts,- decals: no,- photo-etched details: yes,- painng mask: no.Brassin set - the engine for Spiire Mk.Iin 1/48 scale. The cowlings included.Recommended kit: EduardSet contains:- resin: many parts,- decals: no,- photo-etched details: yes,- painng mask: no.648584Lysander Twin Browning machine gun1/48 Eduard648582Spitre Mk.I engine1/48 EduardStránka produktueduard56INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 57
Brassin set - the exhaust stacks forBf 110G-4 in 1/48 scale. Easy to assemble,replaces plasc parts.Recommended kit: EduardSet contains:- resin: 4 parts,- decals: no,- photo-etched details: yes,- painng mask: no.Brassin set - the undercarriage wheelsfor Bf 110G in 1/48 scale. The set consistsof the main wheels and a tailwheel.Easy to assemble, replaces plasc parts.Recommended kit: EduardSet contains:- resin: 4 parts,- decals: no,- photo-etched details: no,- painng mask: yes.648606Bf 110G-4 exhaust stacks1/48 Eduard648603Bf 110G wheels1/48 EduardBRASSIN 01/2021eduard57INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 58
BRASSIN 01/2021Brassin set - the gun bays for SpiireMk.IIa in 1/48 scale. The set consistsof gunbays for both wings.Recommended kit: EduardSet contains:- resin: 44 parts,- decals: no,- photo-etched details: yes,- painng mask: no.Brassin set - the exhaust stacks forBf 110C/D/E in 1/48 scale. Easy to assem-ble, replaces plasc parts.Recommended kit: EduardSet contains:- resin: 4 parts,- decals: no,- photo-etched details: no,- painng mask: no.648610Spitre Mk.IIa gun bays1/48 Eduard648607Bf 110C/D/E exhaust stacks1/48 Eduardeduard58INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 59
Brassin set - the exhaust stacks for SpiireMk.Vc in 1/72 scale. Easy to assemble,replaces plasc parts.Recommended kit: AirxSet contains:- resin: 2 parts,- decals: no,- photo-etched details: no,- painng mask: no.Brassin set - the undercarriage wheelsfor Spiire Mk.Vc in 1/72 scale. The setconsists of the main wheels anda tailwheel. Easy to assemble,replaces plasc parts.Recommended kit: AirxSet contains:- resin: 3 parts,- decals: no,- photo-etched details: no,- painng mask: yes.672250Spitre Mk.Vc exhaust stacks1/72 Airx672249Spitre Mk.Vc wheels1/72 AirxBRASSIN 01/2021eduard59INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 60
BRASSIN 01/2021Collecon of 4 sets for P-38H in 1/48 scale by Tamiya.- LööK set (pre-painted Brassin dashboard & Steelbelts),- TFace painng mask,- undercarriage wheels,- gun barrels.644083P-38H LööKplus1/48 Tamiyaeduard60INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 61
Collecon of 3 sets for F-14A in 1/48 scale by Tamiya.- LööK set (pre-painted Brassin dashboard & Steelbelts),- TFace painng mask,- undercarriage wheels.644084F-14A w/ late wheels LööKplus1/48 TamiyaBRASSIN 01/2021eduard61INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 62
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PE-SETS AND MASKS 01/2021C-130H exterior 1/72 Zvezda (72713)C-130H interior 1/72 Zvezda (73729)C-130H cargo seatbelts 1/72 Zvezda (73730)C-130H cargo interior 1/72 Zvezda (73731)C-130H cargo oor 1/72 Zvezda (73732)C-130H interior 1/72 Zvezda (SS729) (Zoom)C-130H 1/72 Zvezda (CX590) (Mask)C-130H1/72 ZvezdaEXTERIORINTERIOR+ZOOMeduard63INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 64
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PE-SETS AND MASKS 01/2021CARGOFLOOReduard65INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 66
DECAL 01/2021Cat. No. D32006Die roten Flieger1/32 Mengeduard66INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 67
Cat. No. D48068P-39 stencils1/48 EduardCat. No. D48067Spire Mk.II stencils1/48 EduardCat. No. D48069P-47D stencils1/48 EDUARD/TAMIYA/ACADEMY/HASEGAWA/HOBBY BOSSCat. No. D72029Z-37 stencils, code leers & labels1/72 EduardDECAL 01/2021eduard67INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 68
32975 PT-17 / N2S-3 1/3233266 PT-17 / N2S-3 seatbelts STEEL 1/32JX262 PT-17 / N2S-3 1/32481035 SBD-2 landing aps 1/48491126 SBD-2 1/48FE1127 SBD-2 seatbelts STEEL 1/48EX729 SBD-2 TFace 1/48481036 Su-27S exterior 1/48491128 Su-27S interior 1/48FE1129 Su-27S seatbelts STEEL 1/48EX731 Su-27S 1/48BIG33124 PT-17 / N2S-3 1/32 ICMBIG49272 SBD-2 1/48 AcademyBIG49273 Su-27S 1/48 Kitty HawkAll sets included in this BIG ED are available separately,but with every BIG ED set you save up to 30%.eduard68INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 69
481037 Su-27UB exterior 1/48491130 Su-27UB interior 1/48FE1131 Su-27UB seatbelts STEEL 1/48EX733 Su-27UB 1/48481034 Beaughter Mk.IF landing aps 1/48491124 Beaughter Mk.IF 1/48FE1125 Beaughter Mk.IF seatbelts STEEL 1/48EX726 Beaughter Mk.IF 1/48BIG49274 Su-27UB 1/48 Kitty HawkBIG49275 Beaughter Mk.IF 1/48 RevellAll sets included in this BIG ED are available separately,but with every BIG ED set you save up to 30%.eduard69INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 70
PE-SETS AND MASKS 01/2021EDUARD MASK IT FITS!JX267 F-100F 1/32 TrumpeterJX268 F-100F TFace 1/48 TrumpeterEX738 TF-104G 1/48 KinecEX739 TF-104G TFace 1/48 KinecEX740 P-51D Weekend 1/48 EduardEX741 Tornado ASSTA 3.1 1/48 RevellEX742 Tornado ASSTA 3.1 TFace 1/48 RevellCX589 Spiire Mk.Vc 1/72 AirxCX590 C-130H 1/72 ZvezdaCX591 EF-111A 1/72 RevellJX267 JX268EX738EX741EX742CX589CX591JX268EX739EX739EX741CX590eduard70INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 71
KITS8208 Bf 110G-4 1/48 ProPACK2133 Fokker Fokker! 1/72 Limited edition84169 Bf 109G-6/AS 1/48 Weekend edition84172 P-51D-5 1/48 Weekend edition4469 P-47D Razorback 1/144 Super44PE-SETS32458 F-100F exterior 1/32 Trumpeter32459 F-100F slats 1/32 Trumpeter32460 F-100F air brake 1/32 Trumpeter32461 F-100F undercarriage 1/32 Trumpeter32980 F-100F interior 1/32 Trumpeter36457 Jagdpanzer Marder I 1/35 Tamiya481040 Tornado ASSTA 3.1 exterior 1/48 Revell491137 Tornado ASSTA 3.1 interior 1/48 Revell491138 Tornado ASSTA 3.1 undercarriage 1/48 Revell491139 TF-104G 1/48 Kinetic72713 C-130H exterior 1/72 Zvezda73728 Spitre Mk.Vc 1/72 Airx73729 C-130H interior 1/72 Zvezda73730 C-130H cargo seatbelts 1/72 Zvezda73731 C-130H cargo interior 1/72 Zvezda73732 C-130H cargo oor 1/72 ZvezdaZOOMS33272 F-100F 1/32 Trumpeter33273 F-100F seatbelts STEEL 1/32 TrumpeterFE1137 Tornado ASSTA 3.1 1/48 RevellFE1138 Tornado ASSTA 3.1 seatbelts STEEL 1/48 RevellFE1139 TF-104G 1/48 KineticFE1140 TF-104G seatbelts STEEL 1/48 KineticFE1141 P-51D-5 Weekend 1/48 EduardFE1142 Bf 109G-6/AS Weekend 1/48 EduardSS728 Spitre Mk.Vc 1/72 AirxSS729 C-130H 1/72 ZvezdaMASKSJX267 F-100F 1/32 TrumpeterJX268 F-100F TFace 1/48 TrumpeterEX738 TF-104G 1/48 KineticEX739 TF-104G TFace 1/48 KineticEX740 P-51D Weekend 1/48 EduardEX741 Tornado ASSTA 3.1 1/48 RevellEX742 Tornado ASSTA 3.1 TFace 1/48 RevellCX589 Spitre Mk.Vc 1/72 AirxCX590 C-130H 1/72 ZvezdaCX591 EF-111A 1/72 RevellBIGEDBIG33124 PT-17 / N2S-3 1/32 ICMBIG49272 SBD-2 1/48 AcademyBIG49273 Su-27S 1/48 Kitty HawkBIG49274 Su-27UB 1/48 Kitty HawkBIG49275 Beaughter Mk.IF 1/48 RevellBRASSIN632164 AGM-88 HARM 1/32644079 Beaughter Mk.IF LööK 1/48 Revell644080 Spitre Mk.II LööK 1/48 Eduard644081 Bf 110G-4 LööK 1/48 Eduard648582 Spitre Mk.I engine 1/48 Eduard648584 Lysander Twin Browning machine gun 1/48 Eduard648603 Bf 110G wheels 1/48 Eduard648606 Bf 110G-4 exhaust stacks 1/48 Eduard648607 Bf 110C/D/E exhaust stacks 1/48 Eduard648610 Spitre Mk.IIa gun bays 1/48 Eduard672249 Spitre Mk.Vc wheels 1/72 Airx672250 Spitre Mk.Vc exhaust stacks 1/72 AirxLookPLUS644083 P-38H LööKplus 1/48 Tamiya644084 F-14A w/ late wheels LööKplus 1/48 TamiyaDECALSD32006 Die roten Flieger 1/32 MengD48067 Spitre Mk.II stencils 1/48 EduardD48068 P-39 stencils 1/48 EduardD48069 P-47D stencils 1/48 EduardD72029 Z-37 stencils, code letters & labels 1/72 EduardSPACE3DL48001 Mi-24V SPACE 1/48 Zvezda3DL48003 P-51D-10 SPACE 1/48 Eduard3DL48004 P-51D-15+ SPACE 1/48 Eduard3DL72001 Z-37 SPACE 1/72 Eduard3DL72002 MiG-21MF SPACE 1/72 EduardJanuary 2021Page 72
BUILTFw 190A-61/48built by Daniel MarekCAMO CCat. No. 82148eduard72INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 73
BUILTLt. Heinz-Günther Lück, 1./JG 1, Deelen, the Netherlands, August 1943Lt. Lück, a pilot with ve aerial victories (all over B-17 aircra) ew during his whole warme career with JG 1. During the summer 1943, I. Gruppe aircra carried a garish mar-kings in the form of the checkerboard on the engine cowling, black and white in the case of 1. Stael. It was deleted aer the US Thunderbolts sporng the idencal markingsaacked Deelen airbase and the an-aircra gunners did not engage as they confused them with the friendly aircra on the landing approach. Heinz-Günther Lück had his dogpet, black Scosh terrier named Lucki, painted under the canopy and his rudder sported two victories in the form of white bars.eduard73INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 74
BUILTBf 109G-61/48built by Daniel MarekCAMO CCat. No. 8268eduard74INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 75
BUILTW.Nr. 18807, Ofw. Alfred Surau, 9./JG 3, Bad Wörishofen, September, 1943This aircra was own by Ofw. Alfred Surau, a ghter acecredited with 45 victories (some sources claim 46). Surau´s rstvicm hit the ground in Russia on February 28, 1943.He served on the Eastern Front ll the end of August, 1943.The rst kills in the West were two B-17s in September, 1943.Two more were added to Surau´s tally on October 1. His lastcombat sore came on October 14, 1943. Surau took part inan aerial bale with US bombers over Schweinfurt, but B-17gunners hit his G-6. Surau was seriously wounded and died thesame day in a Wertheim hospital.The excess paint on the gun cowling idened 9./JG 3 aircra,and the JG 3 badge is painted on the engine cowling. Therudder could be painted in yellow. The RLM 02 splotches weresprayed on fuselage sides.eduard75INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 76
LAU-10/A ZUNI1/48BUILTbuilt by Ugur KenelCat. No. 648226eduard76INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 77
Mk.20 Rockeye II1/48BUILTbuilt by Ugur KenelCat. No. 648168eduard77INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 78
BUILTSE.5a Hispano SuizaSE.5a Hispano Suiza#82132-LEPT SE.5a Hispano Suiza (PE-Set)#648299 SE.5a guns (Brassin)#648319 SE.5a radiator - Hispano Suiza for 4blade prop (Brassin)#648318 SE.5a propeller four-blade (Brassin)built by Matthias BeckerJet & PropCat. No. 8453eduard78INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 79
BUILTB536, 2nd Lt. Kenneth William Junor, No. 56 Squadron, Baizieux, France, March 1918Kenneth Junor was born on August 3rd, 1894 in Toronto and after completing studies at the University of Toronto he joined the Canadian military in 1915,with which he took part in the Battle of Somme. In April 1917, he was accepted into the Royal Flying Corps, underwent training, and in December 1917was assigned to No.56 Squadron. There, he would serve until April 23rd, 1918, when he was shot down by Ltn. Egon Koepsch of Jasta 4. Kenneth Junorsuccumbed to his injuries. Over the course of his service during the First World War, Junor shot down eight German aircraft.The SE.5a in which Ken Junor claimed two of his victories carried the standard camouage scheme of the type, consisting of PC10 on the upper and sidesurfaces while the lower surfaces remained in the colour of canvas. No.56 Squadron ghters carried a wide white band on the rear fuselage (not extendingaround the bottom of the fuselage and was not connected at the top of the spine) from the end of September 1917 til March 1918.#82132-LEPT SE.5a Hispano Suiza (PE-Set)#648333 SE.5a wheels (Brassin)#648299 SE.5a guns (Brassin)eduard79INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 80
AIM-9M/L Sidewinder1/48BUILTbuilt by Ugur KenelCat. No. 648029eduard80INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 81
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BIG5358 SMS Viribus Unis 1/350 TrumpeterBIG33125 Mirage 2000D 1/32 Kiy HawkBIG33126 Mirage 2000N 1/32 Kiy HawkBIG49276 HH-34J 1/48 TrumpeterBIG49277 S-2E 1/48 KinecBIG72163 Beaufort Mk.I 1/72 Airx632165 AIM-132 ASRAAM 1/32632167 MG 81Z gun 1/32644082 Do 17Z bomber LööK 1/48 Eduard/ICM648604 Bf 110G-4 gun muzzles 1/48 Eduard648605 Bf 110G-4 Schräge Musik 1/48 Eduard648608 Do 17Z wheels 1/48 Eduard/ICM648609 Do 17Z bomber guns 1/48 Eduard/ICM648611 Spiire Mk.IIb gun bays 1/48 Eduard648612 SUU-23 gun pod 1/48672253 Z-37A spraying booms 1/72 Eduard672254 GBU-31(V)1/B JDAM 1/72672256 R-27R/R1 / AA-10 Alamo-A 1/72634023 A-26B Invader LööKplus 1/32 Hobby Boss644085 Mi-24V LööKplus 1/48 ZvezdaBIG ED (February)BRASSIN (February)LöökPlus (February)BIG72163BIG5358BIG49276ON APPROACHON APPROACHFEBRUARY 2021BRASSIN644082 Do 17Z bomber LööK 1/48 Eduard/ICMeduard82INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 83
632165 AIM-132 ASRAAM 1/32632167 MG 81Z gun 1/32BRASSINFEBRUARY 2021ON APPROACHON APPROACHeduard83INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 84
648604 Bf 110G-4 gun muzzles 1/48 EduardBRASSINON APPROACHON APPROACH648605 Bf 110G-4 Schräge Musik 1/48 EduardFEBRUARY 2021eduard84INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 85
648608 Do 17Z wheels 1/48 Eduard/ICM648609 Do 17Z bomber guns 1/48 Eduard/ICMBRASSINON APPROACHON APPROACHFEBRUARY 2021eduard85INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 86
648611 Spitre Mk.IIb gun bays 1/48 EduardBRASSINON APPROACHON APPROACH648612 SUU-23 gun pod 1/48FEBRUARY 2021eduard86INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 87
672254 GBU-31(V)1/B JDAM 1/72BRASSIN672253 Z-37A spraying booms 1/72 EduardON APPROACHON APPROACHFEBRUARY 2021eduard87INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 88
BRASSINON APPROACHON APPROACH672256 R-27R/R1 / AA-10 Alamo-A 1/72FEBRUARY 2021Page 89
BRASSIN634023 A-26B Invader LööKplus 1/32 Hobby BossCollection of 3 sets for A-26B Invader in 1/32 scale by Hobby Boss.- LööK set (pre-painted Brassin dashboard & Steelbelts),- TFace painting mask,- undercarriage wheels.ON APPROACHON APPROACHFEBRUARY 2021eduard89INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 90
644085 Mi-24V LööKplus 1/48 ZvezdaCollection of 4 sets for Mi-24V in 1/48 scale by Zvezda.- LööK set (pre-painted Brassin dashboard & Steelbelts),- TFace painting mask,- undercarriage wheels,- Pitot tubes.BRASSINON APPROACHON APPROACHFEBRUARY 2021eduard90INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 91
PE-SETS32462 Tornado GR.4 exterior 1/32 Italeri32981 Tornado GR.4 interior 1/32 Italeri36458 Merkava MK.2D 1/35 Takom481041 Ju 188 exterior 1/48 Revell481042 Il-2 landing aps 1/48 Zvezda491143 Ju 188 interior 1/48 Revell491145 Il-2 1/48 Zvezda491147 F-104DJ 1/48 Kinec73733 F-4EJ Kai 1/72 Fine Molds144016 P-47D Razorback 1/144 Eduard/PlatzZOOMS33274 Tornado GR.4 1/32 Italeri33275 Tornado GR.4 seatbelts STEEL 1/32 ItaleriFE1143 Ju 188 1/48 RevellFE1144 Ju 188 seatbelts STEEL 1/48 RevellFE1145 Il-2 1/48 ZvezdaFE1146 Il-2 seatbelts STEEL 1/48 ZvezdaFE1147 F-104DJ 1/48 KinecFE1148 F-104DJ seatbelts early STEEL 1/48 KinecFE1149 MiG-21bis Weekend 1/48 EduardSS733 F-4EJ Kai 1/72 Fine MoldsSS734 Nieuport Ni-17 Weekend 1/72 EduardMASKSJX269 Tornado GR.4 1/32 ItaleriJX270 Tornado GR.4 TFace 1/32 ItaleriEX745 Ju 188 1/48 RevellEX746 Ju 188 TFace 1/48 RevellEX747 F-104DJ 1/48 KinecEX748 F-104DJ TFace 1/48 KinecEX749 Il-2 1/48 ZvezdaEX750 Il-2 TFace 1/48 ZvezdaEX751 MiG-21bis Weekend 1/48 EduardEX752 Bf 110C TFace 1/48 EduardEX753 Bf 110D TFace 1/48 EduardEX754 Bf 110G-4 TFace 1/48 EduardCX593 F-4EJ Kai 1/72 Fine MoldsCX594 Nieuport Ni-17 Weekend 1/72 EduardDECALSD32007 Die alten Kanonen 1/32 MengD32008 Flying circus / JG I 1/32 MengD48071 P-38 stencils 1/48 Tamiya/Academy/HasegawaD48072 Harrier Gr.7/9 stencils 1/48 Revell/HasegawaSPACE3DL48002 P-51D-5 SPACE 1/48 Eduard3DL48005 Spiire Mk.I early SPACE 1/48 Eduard3DL48006 Spiire Mk.I late SPACE 1/48 Eduard3DL48007 Spiire Mk.II SPACE 1/48 Eduard3DL72003 MiG-21PF SPACE 1/72 Eduard3DL72004 MiG-21PFM SPACE 1/72 EduardPE-Sets, Masks and DecalsFEBRUARY 2021eduard91INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 92
KITSSpitre Mk.IIaON APPROACHON APPROACHCat. No. 821531/ 4 8FEBRUARY 2021eduard92INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 93
KITSON APPROACHON APPROACHKampfstiftCat. No. 111471/48Do 17Z-1, 5./KG 3, Heiligenbeil, Germany, 1939Do 17Z-2, WNr. 1160, 7./KG 3, St. Trond, Belgium, August 1940PRELIMINARY IMAGESFEBRUARY 2021eduard93INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 94
KITSON APPROACHON APPROACHKampfstift 1/48Do 17Z-2, WNr. 2555, 8./KG 76, Cormeilles-en-Vixen, France, September 1940Do 17Z-5, WNr. 2787, 1./KGr. 606, Lannion, France, October 1940Do 17Z-2, 3./KG 2, Athens-Tatoi, Greece, May 1941Do 17Z, 7./KG 3, Wjazma, Soviet Union, Winter 1941Do 17Z-2, 10./ZG 26, Castel Benito, Libya, 1941Do 17Z-3, vänr. Olli Kepsu, 2/LeLv 46, Linnunnie-mi landing ground, Finnland, February 1942PRELIMINARY IMAGESFEBRUARY 2021eduard94INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 95
KITSNieuport Ni-17ON APPROACHON APPROACH1/ 7 2Cat. No. 7404FEBRUARY 2021eduard95INFO Eduard - January 2021Page 96
WOULD YOU LIKE YOUR PERSONALTRAINER?Choosing the subject for production isquite complex process at Eduard. It is nosecret or surprise the economy of the pro-ject has its say. But it´s not the only voicewe are listening to. It is also of signicantimportance, how close is the subject toour hearts. Sometimes a project emerges,which is really close and due to that makesits way to production. One of them is „onapproach“ today, as we are preparing theline of Zlín Trenér aircraft moulded in 1/48scale. It is a civilian type, so no aces, noweapons, no heart-breaking stories aboutpilots and their wartime adventures. Justa trainer and aerobatic aircraft in manycolourful schemes, notoriously known notonly with Czech or Slovak pilots... Trenéraircraft were and some are still ying inmany other countries. During 73 yearsfrom its maiden ight the Trenér, produ-ced in various modications, has towed,trained, and pleased thousands of pilotsaround the world. Many of them are mo-dellers as well, which is a little bit trickyfor us to be honest. These people know thesubject inside out, especially the one theywere or are still ying with. And the deve-lopment of the line from the original Z-26to the latest variants like Z-726 is a verycomplex matter, even more complex than,for example, the one of Bf 109. So, we allknow here it is a hard task under attentiveeyes of our customers and enthusiasts.Yes, there are many references and in-formation we can use and rely on. On theother side virtually every aircraft of theline undergone several modications, up-grades or repaints during its life. Not onlythe changes made by factory, but also the“eld” ones. That all makes Trenér (yeas itmeans “trainer” as You probably suspect!)something special. I can hardly nd ano-ther comparable subject in our productionor development. We have touched thisworld of civilian aircraft already with theZ-37 Bumlebee in 1/72nd scale but moul-ding and modelling the Trenér line will beeven more “dynamic”.This leads me to an idea of a new rela-tionship between Eduard and its customersor fans. We are at the stage, when the 3Ddesign is almost nished, and everythingis prepared for the moulds manufacturingprocess. And we are starting to select theright subjects for our Weekends, ProPacks and Limited Edition kits. We knowthere are numerous photos among people,so if you have your favorite Trenér, theone you were ying with, or someone ofyour relatives or fellows, let us know andwe will consider it! There are also manystories about ying this aircraft whichshould not be forgotten. It is much longerin active service than many of us are living,so it is no wonder…I must say that I cannot promise everyproposal will make it nally to the box, butwhat you can take as granted is, we willnot omit any and give it proper attentionand thoughts. It is also certain we will notbe able to mould every single aspect ofevery airplane. All those small brackets,dierences in instrument panels, radios,antennae and so on, and so on… Every-thing has its limits, to be honest. In someareas we will rely on craftsmanship of themodellers, on their ability to create smalldetail here and there in case of pure per-fectionists. But do not worry, the appro-ach of Eduard to the Trenér line will be asattentive and complex as usual with otherkits. I bet there will be no better Trenérin 1/48th scale for many years to come. So,if you would like to be part of our “Tre-ner Expert” team, let us know, please, attrener@eduard.com. No proposal will beoverlooked, none stays without answer.That is something I can promise to you!Richard Ploseduard96INFO Eduard - January 2021
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