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Info EDUARD 08/2010, Page 15
Info EDUARD 08/2010, Page 16
Info Eduard - August 2010
Info Eduard - August 2010
Page 14
In his memoirs, Trautloft looks back at the nomination
with respect and humility. He described as such:
Staffelkapitän fights, Kommandeur leads, but the
Kommodore its up to him to shape the Geschwader,
define its character, and give it its very spirit’.
The new Kommodore meets up with his former
brothers in arms from I./JG 77 and his friend, Janke,
at the end of August. And that sets up a paradoxal
situation, because I./JG
Furthermore, so that things weren’t too simple,
Trautloft’s unit wasn’t a single entity. Its only original
component was I./JG 54. But, II./JG 54 was up to the
beginning of July, 1940, an individual, standalone unit
with the designation I./JG 76 (earlier falling under JG 2),
and III./JG 54 was also standalone originally carrying
the designation I./JG 21, and operationally falling under
JG 27. Trautloft then was faced with a formidable task:
take these individual components, and meld them into
one unit, and successfully deploy it in combat.
Another conflict into which Trautloft led his fighters was
the Balkan campaign. Participants included II. and III./JG
54, and, of course, the Kommodore and his Stab. The
German pilots met the Messerschmitt Bf 109 E-3s that
were flown by the Yugoslavs in combat. After the end of
the conflict, Trautloft flew a captured glider over Belgrade,
which ended in a crash, but without injuries.
In June, 1941, the entire Jagdgeschwader 54 took
part in the invasion of the Soviet Union. By that time, the
unit emblem had become Trautloft’s Green Heart, and
the pilot’s accepted as their own. It began to appear on
aircraft, ground equipment, and even on the collar of the
Kommodor’s dachshund. Even to this day, some JG 54
veterans have the Green Heart on their mail box.
The different type of combat and the environmental
conditions found in the Soviet Union compared to western
Europe quickly led JG 54 to modify the camouflage of
its aircraft. An example can be found again with the
Kommodor’s aircraft, which, at the beginning of the
Soviet campaign, had little in common with standard
camouflage schemes. There are several theories as
to where these colors came from. Anders Hjortsberg,
in a commentary with one of his illustrations in this article,
summarizes most of these. Personally, I feel that over the
course of three years of war, during which JG 54 modified
the camouflage of its aircraft, led to all of the following
theories, and even the possibility of the use of paints from
other sources.
Bf 109 G-2 flown by Hannes Trautloft in the summer of 1942. Color
photos of this aircraft show that the upper camouflage colors probably
consisted of RLM 70, RLM 02 and a rather bright medium green not
corresponding to any contemporary Luftwaffe color. The aircraft was
also photographed without the broad yellow fuselage band. This
machine had pressure-sealing vertical head armor equal to G-1 or G-3
version.
There have been many theories about the non-standard colors used by
JG 54 on the Eastern front. One has been the use of captured Soviet
paints. Suggestions have also been made that Finnish paint had been
used and the Finns indeed used a bright medium green that comes
close to what some JG 54 machines wore. Two theories involve the use
of RLM colors. One, as put forward by Ken Merrick, is that JG 54 used
the old colors RLM 61 and RLM 62 in a field test before their re-intro-
duction as RLM 81 and RLM 82 respectively. The final theory is that
JG 54 mixed regular camouflage colors like RLM 70 and RLM 71
with parking colors like RLM 04 and RLM 23 to obtain the browns
and greens found in some photos. Indeed, a mix of RLM 04 and RLM
71 could be used to create the medium color seen on Trautloft’s G-2.
Text and Illustrations by Anders Hjortsberg
W. Nr. 19456 was originally a Bf 109 G-4 which was damaged in
a bombing raid of Trapani on May 10, 1943 whilst on strength with
6./JG 27. When it was repaired, it was also upgraded to G-6 standard,
although it retained the earlier wheel configuration with spoked main
wheels and open tailwheel well. Trautloft used it in June, 1943.
It is finished in a standard RLM 74/75/76 camouflage scheme
which has been additionally mottled with what appears to be RLM 70.
During autumn 1943 this machine was flown by members of Stab
of the General der Jagdflieger, among others by Hannes Trautloft
and Günther Lützow. Text and Illustrations by Anders Hjortsberg
HISTORY
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