Info EDUARD

Monthly magazine about history and scale plastic modeling.

08/2023

Dear Friends Welcome to the August edition of our newsletter and greetings from Corpus Christi, Texas, where my colleagues and I are passing through on our way to San Marcos for the traditional summer IPMS USA Nats. We will be in Texas for two weeks, after the Nats we will move north to Dallas where our main goal is to study three P-40 Warhawks.

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    INFO Eduard
    # 162
    e-magazine FREE Vol 22 August 2023
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    INFO Eduard
    # 162
    e-magazine FREE Vol 22 August 2023
    © Eduard - Model Accessories, 2023
    FREE FOR DOWNLOAD, FREE FOR DISTRIBUTION!
    This material may only be used for personal use. No part of the text
    or graphic presentations can be used in another publication in any other media
    form or otherwise distributed without the prior written
    permission of Eduard - Model Accessories and authors involved.
    Editorial and Graphics - Marketing department, Eduard - Model Accessories, Ltd.
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    eduardeduard
    AUGUST 2023
    CONTENTS
    EDITORIAL
    KITS
    BRASSIN
    PHOTO
    -
    ETCHED SETS
    BIG ED
    BUILT
    ON APPROACH
    September 2023
    TAIL END CHARLIE
    HISTORY
    BOXART STORY
    Bf 109F-4 ProfiPACK 1/72
    THE ZIPPER Limited 1/48
    WILDER CAT Limited 1/48
    A6m3 Zero Type 32 Weekend 1/48
    MiG-21MF Fighter bomber ProfiPACK 1/72 Re-release
    WUNDERSCHÖNE NEUE MASCHINE 1/72
    MIDWAY 1/48
    Spitfire Mk.IXc early 1/48
    FM-2 Wildcat
    -
    “FM” as “fine modification“
    FM-2 Wildcat
    Najhlbšie vraky
    Air war over Ukraine
    -
    Ukrainian Offensive,
    Prigozhin Coup
    The Magic Hundred
    Loose formation
    A surplus star
    4
    6
    30
    34
    58
    74
    92
    102
    108
    125
    Published by Eduard-Model Accessories, spol. s.r.o.
    Mírová 170, Obrnice 435 21
    support@eduard.com www.eduard.com
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    EDITORIAL
    Dear Friends
    Welcome to the August edition of our newsletter
    and greetings from Corpus Christi, Texas, where my
    colleagues and I are passing through on our way to
    San Marcos for the traditional summer IPMS USA
    Nats. We will be in Texas for two weeks, after the Nats
    we will move north to Dallas where our main goal is to
    study three P-40 Warhawks. We want to check some
    details and shapes and possibly scan some sections,
    so we’re bringing along our trusted chief designer Stan
    Archman and his amazing scanner, which already
    afforded us a few rather interesting situations at the
    beginning of our journey. And we haven't even scanned
    the tip of the spinner yet! We don’t really need much;
    basically, we have the bulk of the thing ready. We
    just want to make sure we don't have a design flaw
    and also see the plane in person to develop a proper
    personal feel for it, you understand.
    In the morning we will view the USS Lexington
    and we’ll move on from there. And time is running
    out, so we won't waste any of it and go straight to the
    presentation of our new releases for August. For many
    of you this will be a bit of a bummer because we've
    actually been selling them for a few days now and
    many of you already have them. So, I’ll at least give you
    some background information that might interest you.
    Kits
    In the Limited Edition line, we have an item called
    “Wilder Cat”, in which you’ll find an FM-2 Wildcat kit,
    a modernized and powerful version of the Wildcat,
    built by the Eastern Aircraft Division factory, a branch
    of General Motors. Compared to Wildcats built by
    Grumman, it had a number of changes, mainly
    a more powerful engine, a nine-cylinder Wright
    R-1820-56/56W with a power rating of 1350 hp,
    which means a changes on the nose section, and at
    the rear, featured a higher vertical fin and rudder.
    There are also changes to the wing and other parts
    of the aircraft, and you’ll find mention of this in other
    sections further down in this newsletter. Ten marking
    options are offered, one of which is British. The
    FM-2 served in the Royal Navy as the Wildcat Mk.VI,
    and this version set it apart from others through its
    relatively extensive service outside of the Pacific, i.e.
    the Atlantic. This brings about an expansion of color
    variants, since in the Atlantic, Wildcats were not blue
    as in the Pacific. The FM-2 has also not been actively
    paid attention to by other manufacturers in 1/48th
    (with just one exception). On the other hand, I am
    concerned about the extent to which the technical and
    operational history of this interesting aircraft is known
    to modelers. For the most part, retailers do not seem
    to have an extensive knowledge of the type, frankly.
    Some debate has been stimulated by the fact that
    this Limited Edition kit is not released as a Dual Combo
    boxing, but is a single kit with one set of plastic in the
    package. We decided on this version because we don't
    want to force customers to buy a relatively expensive
    kit with two sets of moldings. To the contrary, we have
    put the range of color versions available to ten aircraft;
    the decals are then designed in such a way that the
    stencil data and national markings cover two complete
    models. So if someone wants to build two FM-2
    Wildcats, they can obtain the Overtrees components
    and basically create a Dual Combo boxing from the kit
    for very reasonable money. Deciding which way to go
    and how many Wildcats you realistically want, or even
    need, is up to you! In the future, the key to deciding
    whether a Limited Edition kit will be released as
    a Dual Combo or a classic single kit will be the technical
    make-up of the kit. If it contains two technically
    different sub variants of a given type, the kit will be
    a Dual Combo, as for example in Wunderschöne neue
    Maschinen, where there are a Bf 109 F-2 and an F-4,
    and there are two different sprues with fuselages and
    wings. The next WnM edition, dedicated to the Bf 109
    G-2 and G-4, will also be a Dual Combo, although the
    sprues will be identical, there will again be technical
    differences, this time more or less only in the wing.
    In the end, all the Limited Edition kits covering the
    Bf 109F/G/K series will be Dual Comb kits, not only
    those covering a specific type, but also the kits whose
    concept runs more along the lines of a theme, such
    as the 1/72nd scale Africa, Barbarossa or Wilde Sau
    concepts. Frankly, in these cases there is a risk of
    even more extensive sets. Among the other Limited
    Editions being prepared, we have the Dual Combo
    kit of the L-39 Albatros, which will be presented in
    a renewed premiere at E-day with a new canopy,
    as well as another 1/48th scale Zero, this time the
    A6M5/5a Zero Model 52. There is also a difference in
    the wing here. The following Dual Combo will be the
    “Mezek”, which as most of you will know, is the S-199.
    Here, it is clear that there are different fuselages, and
    later, the P-51B/C, where it’s also about fuselages.
    Single kit Limited Edition kits will then continue to be
    all repackaged kits, which will apply to the Su-25K in
    the near future. It has always been that way with these
    items and it will continue that way. From our own
    production, the closest to becoming a reality is the
    Kurfürst, Bf 109 K-4, where there will be nine marking
    options, but technically all the machines will be the
    same. Well … not completely, but for taller rudders
    and tailwheel variations, we don’t need to include two
    sets of moldings. This is just a typical example of a kit,
    where Overtrees will solve the possible desire or need
    of the modeler to build more than one model.
    The second August Limited Edition item, dubbed
    “Zipper”, a 1:48th scale F-104C from the Vietnam
    War, is also designed as a single kit. The plastic this
    time, unlike our previous Starfighters, come from
    Kinetic, and in addition to the standard photoetching
    and masks, it also includes resin parts, and offers up
    seven marking options that focus on the 479th and
    8th TFW aircraft, operating in the Vietnam in the 1960s.
    Our series of 1:72nd scale ProfiPACK kits dedicated
    to the many countless versions of the Bf 109 F, G and
    K begins in August with the Bf 109 F-4. If you are left
    with the impression that we forgot about the Bf 109
    F-2, don’t worry, we didn’t. September will tell. The
    first reviews of the new 109s have already appeared,
    mostly positive, which makes us happy. However, some
    criticisms also emerged from them. For example, the
    need to repair a small step between the vertical tail
    surface and its transition to the fuselage. There, after
    gluing the fuselage and fin assemblies together, which
    must be glued there before the fuselage is closed up,
    a small step is created. Please note that contrary
    to how this has been widely reported, this is in fact
    supposed to be there and is not a mistake. We modeled
    it rather painstakingly and carefully watched over the
    mold making to make sure it was there. On the real
    plane, there was a cover plate in this section, which
    passed into the keel in the form of just such a step.
    So please don’t fix it, no matter how tempting it is!
    With respect to 1/72nd scale ProfiPACK kits, the
    MiG-21MF is back on sale in the fighter-bomber version.
    In the Weekend line, we have the A6M3 Zero Model 32,
    also known under the Allied code name Hamp. I have
    a personal connection to this kit because this time last
    year we had a unique opportunity to get up close and
    personal with one of the Hamps undergoing extensive
    restoration in Lafayette, Louisiana. At the time, we had
    no idea that it was an even more interesting machine
    than we thought, nor that this very machine would be
    included in the color options of one of our kits. The
    unexpected has become reality, and the Lafayette
    Hamp is actually, in two of its development guises,
    included in the new Weekend release, in addition to
    the very special insignia featuring the red Hinomaru in
    a white square. This is also why this Zero is interesting,
    INFO Eduard4
    August 2023
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    and that’s why it was worth breaking tradition and
    adding five marking options to this Weekend release.
    ACCESSORIES
    As usual, there are dozens of accessory items
    available in the new item listing. I will mention only
    a few that I think would grab my attention, such as the
    F-35B 1/48th RAM Panel masks for the Italeri kit. We
    have recently started to deal more with these masks
    for surface areas and high-quality markings, because
    spraying them has become an increasingly popular
    modeling technique. Of course, classic canopy masks
    are also on the list. In the LööK line, I would like to
    point out the A-20G Havoc 1:32nd set for the HKM kit.
    In the SPACE line, we have, among other things, the
    Bf 110 G-4 and FM-2 sets for the Eduard kits, and the
    A-10C from Academy, all in 1:48th scale.
    In the Brassin department, we have sets designed
    for our own August releases such as bronze landing
    gear legs, exhausts and aileron mass balance weights
    for the Bf 109F in 1:72nd. We have several sets for the
    48th FM-2, and these include a cockpit, bronze landing
    gear legs, a wing fold and several smaller sets, and
    for the F-104C, an exhaust nozzle and speedbrakes.
    For the 1:48th scale Bf 109F we have a newly designed
    3D printed cockpit, in this case with an older version
    of the seat, that was the same as that found in the
    Bf 109E. A number of the types mentioned are also
    covered in photoetching, but again, you can find much
    more on that by reading further on down through this
    newsletter.
    Historical articles
    It is clear to me that the most popular part of any
    of our monthly newsletters are the historical and
    technical articles. As I already indicated above, the
    Wildcat, in its FM-2 version, was a uniquely interesting
    aircraft, and we would like to coax modelers who
    have neglected this “Wilder Cat” to draw the same
    conclusion. For this reason, there are two articles this
    month focused on the topic of the FM-2. The first one
    was written for us by the renowned American author
    Thomas McKelvey Cleaver, who describes probably
    the most interesting, intensive and successful
    deployment of these aircraft. This was in the Battle
    of Samar Island, referred to by historians as “The US
    Navy’s Finest Hour”. Given that a large Japanese group
    led by Admiral Kurita aboard the gigantic battleship
    Yamato, with two other battleships, eight cruisers, and
    eleven destroyers in tow, was driven off the island by
    a few destroyers and escort carriers, this is probably
    not an overstatement. The second article was written
    by Richard Plos, and it is focused on the creation of
    the FM-2 and its technical differences compared to
    the preceding F4F-4 and, by extension, the FM-1. Miro
    Barič’s miniseries about the search for lost ships
    ends with the fourth volume in this edition. Here the
    topics crossed a bit. He also mentions, among other
    things, the Battle of Samar and the survey of wrecks
    connected to it. The series about the air battles
    over Ukraine by the same author continues with its
    seventeenth edition. In this case, unfortunately, the
    ending of the series is neither in the author’s nor our
    hands ... The section of historical articles is rounded
    out by Boxart Story, a series of short articles that
    describe the historically real events depicted on our
    boxarts. The Bf 109 F-4 and A6M3 Zero Type 32 topics
    were taken up by Jan Bobek and the third was added
    by Richard Plos. This is an article relevant to our
    reissue of the MiG-21MF, the box art of which depicts
    a future Vietnamese astronaut shooting down an
    American B-52. Or maybe not …
    In closing, Wednesday marks the start of the
    IPMS USA National Convention, this year in San
    Marcos, Texas. As every year, we organize an Internet
    Afterparty to go with it, this year it started already on
    the weekend that has just passed. As you may have
    guessed, my colleagues and I are heading to San
    Marcos. I am finishing this introduction with sweat
    running down my face during this leg of the trip, and
    I will finish it off in Corpus Christi, a few hundred
    meters from the USS Lexington, which is moored here
    as a museum piece. Just note that writing an intro to
    the newsletter on the road is always hell, and if I have
    forgotten anything important, I am certain that you will
    find in the flowing pages!
    Happy Modeling!
    Vladimir Sulc
    INFO Eduard
    5
    August 2023
  • “FM” as “fine modification”

    The Wildcat was the first single-wing fighter aircraft produced by Grumman for active service. It bore the main burden of battles in the Pacific from the attack on Pearl Harbor until around February 1943, when the significantly more powerful F4U-1 Corsair and Wildcat’s direct successor, the F6F Hellcat, entered the scene. It was expected that the days of the Wildcat would be numbered with the arrival of these new powerful beasts, but the opposite turned out to be true. Thanks to the highly modernized version, FM-2, the Wildcat continued to participate in combat operations almost until the end of the war.

    HISTORY
    Due to the Navy’s dissatisfaction with the
    Corsairs landing characteristics on aircraft
    carrier decks, the Hellcat became the Navy’s
    main fighter type until the second half of 1944,
    when the Navy accepted the improved Corsairs
    that were previously serving with the USMC
    units. Both types were powered by the big and
    exceptionally powerful Pratt & Whitney R-2800
    Double Wasp engine, an eighteen-cylinder,
    double-row engine, which designers decided to
    install into quite volumious airframe. In June 1943,
    squadrons equipped with the F4F-4 Wildcats still
    represented a significant combat force, and by
    that time, a version that aimed to address several
    issues of its predecessor at once, was already in
    production.
    The Successor Worse Than Its Predecessor
    The F4F-4 represented the worst-performing
    version among all the Wildcat variants. The
    aircraft, burdened with an additional pair of
    machine guns and with significantly reduced
    ammunition per barrel compared to the F4F-3,
    required around 50 minutes to climb to an altitude
    that would allow it to attack Japanese bombers
    flying at about 20,000 ft. Moreover, with only 250
    rounds of ammunition per gun, the pilots found
    themselves facing a shortage of ammo even in
    relatively short dogfights.
    It became clear early on that the F4F-4
    version was not a wise step, but by mid-1942,
    when the F4F-4 was being introduced into
    service, Grumman was fully occupied with the
    development of the Hellcat, as well as the mass
    production of Wildcats, Avengers, Ducks, and
    Widgeons. They simply did not have the capacity
    for further development of a type that was
    supposed to be replaced soon. The preparations
    for Hellcat production had the highest priority,
    The Wildcat was the first single-wing fighter aircraft produced by Grumman
    for active service. It bore the main burden of battles in the Pacific from the
    attack on Pearl Harbor until around February 1943, when the significantly more
    powerful F4U-1 Corsair and Wildcats direct successor, the F6F Hellcat, entered
    the scene. It was expected that the days of the Wildcat would be numbered
    with the arrival of these new powerful beasts, but the opposite turned out to be
    true. Thanks to the highly modernized version, FM-2, the Wildcat continued to
    participate in combat operations almost until the end of the war.
    Text: Richard Plos
    The second production FM-2, BuNo. 15953, during flight tests.
    Photo: NHHC
    FM-2 WILDCATFM-2 WILDCAT
    “FM” as
    fine modification
    INFO Eduard6
    August 2023
  • Page 7

    HISTORY
    leading to the decision to entrust the production
    of the first two mentioned types to another
    manufacturer.
    Aircraft Instead of Cars
    Shortly after the outbreak of war with Japan,
    General Motors halted production at its five
    automobile factories on the East Coast. The
    company’s management was prepared to put
    them to use for wartime production, especially
    to produce aircraft components. As early as
    1942, the Navy organized a meeting between
    General Motors representatives and people from
    Grumman, a key supplier to the Navy’s aviation.
    Grumman’s factory in Bethpage, New York, was
    operating at full capacity, so a solution was
    sought to shift the production of Wildcats and
    Avengers. GM representatives were somewhat
    surprised when they were asked to take over
    the entire production of aircraft instead of just
    manufacturing parts and subassemblies for
    Grumman. To their credit, they accepted the
    challenge. Numerous delegations and work
    teams followed. Grumman’s teams prepared
    the automotive factories for aircraft production,
    while GM personnel learned about aircraft
    production in Bethpage. The advantage was the
    proximity of all the factories. Trenton was about
    160 km from Bethpage, and Linden was roughly
    halfway along this route. In the vast country’s
    terms, these plants were nearly neighbors ...
    By June 1942, all five GM factories had been
    fully converted and ready to start aircraft
    production as an independent division called
    Eastern Aircraft Division. The Trenton factory
    in New Jersey was responsible for producing
    Avengers. Unlike Grummans production,
    designated TBF, the Avengers from Trenton
    were labeled as TBM. The second factory in New
    Jersey, located in Linden, was to manufacture
    F4F-4 Wildcats under the designation FM-1
    (F for Fighter, M for General Motors, and 1 as the
    manufacturer’s first type). The remaining three
    Eastern Aircraft Division factories in Bloomfield
    and Baltimore supplied both final manufacturers
    with the necessary parts.
    The Eastern Aircraft Division received
    a contract to produce 1800 Wildcats on April
    18, 1942, and Grumman subsequently delivered
    prototype subassemblies and parts for
    assembling the first ten F4F-4s. At the same time,
    the factory received training examples marked
    as PK, where the joints were not riveted but
    rather connected with Parker-Kalon fasteners
    for repeated assembly and disassembly. These
    examples were used to train the workers.
    Before the war, the modern factory in Linden
    had produced cars for Buick, Oldsmobile, and
    Pontiac and it was capable of a takt time one
    car per minute. After the transition to Wildcat
    production, during the period when the parallel
    production was ongoing at Grumman, the factory
    had to maintain strict technological discipline to
    A Wildcat FM-2 landing on the deck of the escort aircraft carrier USS Anzio (CVE-57).
    Photo: NHHC
    Parameter F4F-4 FM-2
    Maximum Speed 318 mph 332 mph
    Initial Climb Rate 2,190 ft/min 3,650 ft/min
    Service Ceiling 33,700 ft 34,700 ft
    Range 1,275 mi 1,310 mi
    Combat Radius 830 mi 900 mi
    Comparison of F4F-4 and FM-2 Performance
    While the Grumman F6F Hellcat is widely regarded
    as one of the most successful and effective fighter
    aircraft of World War II, with an impressive victory-to-
    loss ratio of 19:1, the FM-2 Wildcat actually surpassed
    it with an even higher ratio of 33:1!
  • Page 8

    ensure that parts from both manufacturers were
    interchangeable. Many parts manufactured by
    GM factories were sent to Grumman’s assembly
    line and vice versa.
    The First “Fine Modification” (FM-1)
    The first Wildcat produced in Linden had
    its maiden flight on August 31, 1942, i.e., at the
    time of the intense battles for Guadalcanal,
    which exposed the shortcomings of the F4F-4
    version. Its poor climb rate and significantly
    reduced ammo supply per gun compared to the
    F4F-3 did not win much favor among the pilots.
    The first ten FM-1 aircraft were assembled
    from Grumman parts in their original form, but
    starting with the eleventh aircraft, it was decided
    to remove the external machine guns to reduce
    the aircrafts weight, resulting in improved
    climbing performance. After solving some
    problems related to the wing folding system,
    the ammunition supply was almost restored to
    the original level. While the F4F-3 carried 1800
    rounds (450 per gun), FM-1 pilots had 1720 rounds
    available (430 per gun). This was a significant
    improvement compared to the mere 250 rounds
    per gun on the F4F-4.
    In May 1943, Grumman ceased the production
    of Wildcats entirely. By that time, Linden’s
    production was running relatively smoothly,
    although out of the initial order for 1800 aircraft,
    only 839 were produced. Some of them were
    assigned to Composite Squadrons, which
    combined fighter and attack aircraft, i.e., Wildcats
    and Avengers. Many of FM-1s were allocated to
    training units, and 311 aircraft were delivered to
    the British Fleet Air Arm (FAA) under the initial
    designation Martlet V, which was later changed
    to Wildcat V in January 1944.
    With the introduction of Hellcats and Corsairs,
    it seemed that the fate of the aging Wildcat was
    sealed. However, the enormous need for air cover
    for numerous task forces and transport convoys
    required more aircraft carriers than the Navy
    had available. Building one Essex-class aircraft
    carrier took at least 20 months (pre-war periods
    could take up to 37 months) despite increased
    war efforts. Due to the required construction
    time and limited shipyard capacity, it was not
    possible to expect any significant increase in the
    number of conventional aircraft carriers before
    the end of 1944, which was too late. However,
    a solution was found. At the end of 1942, the
    Navy began to receive the first escort aircraft
    carriers of the Casablanca and Bogue classes.
    These were mostly conversions of merchant
    and cargo ships that received flight decks and
    other necessary equipment for carrying up to 27
    aircraft in composite squadrons (although there
    were exceptions, and some operated purely
    fighters, such as VF-26).
    Compared to Essex-class carriers, the
    escort carriers were more than 110 yards
    shorter, lacked armor, multiple elevators for
    rapid flight deck and hangars exchanges, and
    other amenities. As a result, their designation
    CVE was ironically interpreted by the crew as
    Combustible, Vulnerable, Expendable. They were
    slow vessels with limited space on the flight
    FM-2 from the aircraft carrier USS Card (CVE-11) of the Bogue class. The aircraft, in its typical Atlantic
    camouflage, was photographed on February 10, 1944, and belonged to VC-55.
    One of the aces on FM-2 was Lt. Thomas B. Sedaker. In the photo,
    he poses with a cake baked by the cooks of the USS Makin Island
    to celebrate the 2,000th catapult launch from the deck of that ship.
    Thomas Sedaker was the one who performed the launch.
    Squadron Aircraft Carrier
    Number of
    Victories
    VC-27 USS Savo Island 61.5*
    VF-26 USS Santee 31
    VC-81 USS Natoma Bay 21*
    VOC-1 USS Wake Island/USS Marcus Island 20
    VC-84 USS Makin Island 19*
    VC-21 USS Nassau/USS Marcus Island 18
    VC-3 USS Kalinin Bay 17
    VC-75 USS Ommaney Bay 17
    VC-93 USS Shamrock Bay 17
    VC-5 USS Kitkun Bay 16
    VC-10 USS Gambier Bay/USS Tacloban Field 16
    VC-80 USS Manila Bay 16
    Top-Performing FM-2 Squadrons
    *Plus one victory achieved by a TBM Avenger pilot.
    Photo: NHHC
    Photo: NHHC
    HISTORY
    INFO Eduard8
    August 2023
  • Page 9

    deck, where at least nine or ten Avengers had
    to be accommodated as part of the composite
    squadron. This left little space for fighters,
    and the large Hellcats were not suitable for
    these carriers. The Navy demanded a small
    and lightweight fighter that could operate from
    these ships, but there was no time to develop
    an entirely new type. Although the development
    of the Bearcat, which was to meet all the
    requirements, began in 1943, it did not reach
    combat in time. Therefore, the only option was
    to continue producing Wildcats, preferably in
    a more powerful version. Grumman thus prepared
    two prototypes of the XF4F-8, the precursor to
    the following FM-2 production version.
    Lightened, Strengthened, and Ready
    The FM-2 version of the Wildcat is often
    overlooked among its counterparts, as the
    F4F-3 and F4F-4 versions gained greater
    fame due to the heroic performances of their
    pilots during the battles in the Coral Sea, at
    the Midway or Guadalcanal. These successful
    operations produced a whole series of famous
    fighter aces from both the Marine Corps and
    the Navy. However, the purpose and operational
    deployment of the FM-2 were different; it was no
    more the Navy’s main fighter type. Nevertheless,
    at least five more pilots achieved ace status
    with the FM-2 (compared to 54 aces flying
    earlier versions), and the most successful of
    all squadrons flying the FM-2, VC-27 “Saints,”
    eventually became the second most successful
    unit operating Wildcats, regardless of the combat
    area or period. Its pilots managed to shoot down
    a total of 61.5 enemy aircraft during the four-
    month battle for the Philippines. Only VF-5 with
    79 kills surpassed them. In this respect, the FM-2
    ultimately made its mark.
    The increase in the Wildcat’s performance was
    mainly achieved by installing a more powerful yet
    230 lb lighter Wright R-1820-56 engine instead of
    the Pratt & Whitney R-1830-86. Along with other
    modifications, the FM-2 was “slimmed down” by
    500 lb and gained a power improvement of 150
    hp compared to the F4F-4 version. As the new
    engine was supercharged by a single-stage, dual-
    speed compressor, the FM-2 lost its performance
    advantage at higher altitudes. However, this was
    not an issue since these aircraft were primarily
    intended for anti-submarine operations, convoy
    protection from low-level air threats, and attacks
    against ground or surface targets. High-altitude
    combat was not considered part of their combat
    activities. Additionally, most of the FM-2s were
    equipped with engines in versions 56W or 56WA,
    featuring water injection to temporarily boost the
    engine output for up to ten minutes.
    The cooling system underwent a fundamental
    change. The two protruding radiators on the
    lower wing were removed, and their function was
    taken over by a compact radiators located in the
    lower and upper part of the fuselage behind the
    engine. The wing openings were covered with
    shaped metal panels.
    The engine change and cooling system
    redesign necessitated alterations to the nose
    cowlings. The exhaust outlets were not combined
    for the new engine; instead, each cylinder had
    its individual exhaust. Three exhausts ended on
    the right side, two on the left, and two pairs on
    the bottom of the fuselage. The second fuselage
    tank was removed, leaving the FM-2 with only
    one 117 gallons volume. Due to this, FM-2 aircraft
    often flew with additional drop tanks (each of
    58 gallons volume). Starting with aircraft BuNo.
    57044, the fuselage tank was slightly enlarged
    to 126 gallons.
    The glass windows under the cockpit were
    covered, and a new universal tailwheel with
    a larger tire was developed for the FM-2. But the
    most noticeable change compared to all previous
    versions was the taller vertical tail fin and
    rudder to eliminate the increased torque from
    the propeller driven by more powerful engine.
    However, even with more power and more
    efficient propeller, the flight decks of escort
    aircraft carriers were too short for a conventional
    takeoff, and catapults had to do most of the job.
    Nevertheless, the FM-2s dimensions were very
    advantageous. With folded wings, it was only 14
    ft wide, allowing an entire composite squadron
    to be accommodated on a single ships deck.
    While up to 12 Avengers could be carried, the
    number of FM-2s typically ranged from 12 to 14.
    Wilder Wildcat
    The Wildcat aircraft modified into the FM-2
    version quickly won the favor of pilots. It was
    a nimble and reasonably fast aircraft that
    retained one of its typical characteristics –
    the ability to withstand significant damage in
    combat. Additionally, the pilot was protected by
    a new armor plate behind their back (though not
    all aircraft were equipped with it). No wonder the
    new version earned the nickname Wilder Wildcat.
    USS Makin Island (CVE-93) sailing in the South Pacific.
    Pilot Squadron Aircraft Carrier
    Number of
    Victories
    Lt. Ralph E. Elliott, jr. VC-27 USS Savo Island 9
    Lt. Cdr. Harold. N. Funk VF-26 USS Santee 6.5
    Lt. Kenneth G. Hippe VC-3 USS Kalinin Bay 5
    Ens. Joseph D. McGraw VC-10/VC-80
    USS Gambier Bay/
    Manilla Bay
    5
    Lt. Thomas B. Sedaker VC-84 USS Makin Island 5*
    Aces on FM-2
    *Some sources report 4.83 victories.
    HISTORY
    INFO Eduard
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  • Page 10

    Deliveries of the FM-2 began in the first half of
    1944, and squadrons operating both in the Pacific
    and the Atlantic received them. However, their
    main tasks were different. In the Pacific, the FM-2s
    were often used to support ground units during
    landing operations, aided by their ability to carry
    two 250 lb bombs under the wings (from BuNo.
    74359, FM-2s could also carry HVAR rockets).
    In the Atlantic, they primarily provided air cover
    for supply convoys from the US coast to Europe
    and often assisted Avengers in hunting German
    submarines. Of course, in the Pacific, FM-2 pilots
    also provided cover for supply ships or engaged
    in anti-submarine operations.
    The FM-2 scored its first kill on March 20, 1944,
    when Lt.(jg) J. H. Dinnen and Ens. R. P. Kirk of
    VC-63 encountered and shot down a Japanese
    Ki-61 Tony. The most intense aerial combat for
    FM-2 pilots occurred during the two-day Battle
    of Leyte Gulf. On the first day of the battle,
    October 24, 1944, all American carrier-based
    fighters claimed a total of 270 kills, with FM-2
    pilots achieving 65 of them.
    During the Philippine campaign, the Wilder
    Wildcat pilots were also known for providing
    close air support and air cover over the invasion
    beaches. During the Battle of Samar, they directly
    attacked Japanese ships.
    Many Japanese pilots underestimated the
    FM-2 based on its familiar silhouette and were
    subsequently unpleasantly surprised. Several
    Japanese pilots fell victim to their misjudgment,
    and until the surrender of Japan, FM-2 pilots
    achieved a total of 432 kills. Lt. Kenneth G. Hippe
    became the last American “ace in a day” when
    he shot down a total of five Ki-48 Lily bombers
    on October 24, 1944. On the same day but slightly
    earlier, Lt. Cdr. Harold N. Funk achieved the same
    feat, shooting down five enemy aircraft with his
    FM-2, adding one more kill in the afternoon.
    And the most intriguing fact: While the Hellcat
    is generally considered the fighter aircraft with
    the best victory-to-loss ratio, 19:1, there was one
    type that significantly surpassed it. Yes, it was
    the FM-2. Its ratio of aerial victories to losses in
    air combat was 432:13, or 33:1! For comparison,
    the F4F-3 and F4F-4 versions recorded a ratio of
    5.9:1 in 1942.
    In British service, FM-2s were designated as
    Wildcat VI. They were the only version of this
    type that did not receive the Martlet designation.
    They performed similar tasks as in the US Navy.
    In addition to providing air protection for their
    own ships and covering bombers, they also
    conducted ground attacks. For example, during
    Operation Dragoon, to support the Allied landings
    in southern France in August 1944, Wildcat VI
    aircraft carried out bombing attacks with 250
    lb bombs, carried on the modified racks used
    for drop tanks. They also used RP-3 rockets. In
    the North Sea, Wildcat VI pilots engaged in air
    combat with German aircraft and scored several
    kills. Perhaps the most interesting encounter
    occurred on March 26, 1945, when aircraft from
    No. 882 Squadron of HMS Searcher clashed with
    eight Bf 109G planes. German fighters catch the
    opponents with surprise and shot down one
    Wildcat, but subsequently, British pilots used
    the agility of their planes and, according to
    reports, shot down four Bf 109Gs and damaged
    one. Although none of the British pilots became
    aces flying Martlets and Wildcats, it was a highly
    popular type.
    With a total of 4,437 produced units, the
    FM-2 became the most numerous version of the
    Wildcat (a total of 7,905 Wildcats of all versions
    were produced). Production only ceased in May
    1945 when Grumman began manufacturing the
    Bearcat, which was meant to replace the FM-2.
    The first operational squadrons of this type were
    enroute to the Japanese islands when the enemy
    surrendered, and the war ended.
    While the Bearcat represented a significant
    increase in performance compared to the FM-2, it
    ultimately did not leave as remarkable a mark in
    history as the FM-2 did. It was the Wilder Wildcat
    that made sense for escort aircraft carriers of
    the Casablanca and Bogue classes, ensuring
    the safety of millions of tons of material and
    hundreds of thousands of transported personnel
    in the Pacific and Atlantic. In some respects, the
    FM-2 can thus be considered the most significant
    Wildcat version of them all.
    Sources:
    F4F Wildcat in detail & scale, Bert Kinzey, SQUADRON/
    SIGNAL PUBLICATIONS, INC.
    F4F Wildcat in action, Richard S. Dann, SQUADRON/
    SIGNAL PUBLICATIONS, INC.
    Fleet Air Arm, British Carrier Aviation 1039–1945, Ron
    Mackay, SQUADRON/SIGNAL PUBLICATIONS, INC.
    Wildcat Aces of WW2, Barrett Tillman, Osprey Pub-
    lishing, 1995
    The most successful FM-2 pilot with nine confirmed victories was Ralph Earle Elliott Jr.
    Photo: Patricia Elliott family collection
    HISTORY
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  • Page 11

    Different shapes of the exhaust pipes framing.
    1. Taller vertical tail surfaces
    2. Different cooling flaps
    3. Distinct exhaust system
    4. Different location of the gun camera port
    5. Reduced armament to four machine guns
    6. Relocated landing light
    7. Ability to install HVAR or RP-3 rockets
    8. Upright antenna mast
    9. Removal of the second fuel tank
    and its filling port
    10. Wright R-1820-56 engine
    11. Different propeller
    12. Different metal skin shaping under
    the exhausts
    13. Removed wing-mounted radiators
    14. Blanked windows under the cockpit
    15. New tailwheel
    Main differences of FM-2 compared to F4F-4:
    HISTORY
    INFO Eduard
    11
    August 2023
  • FM-2 WILDCAT

    By the fall of 1942, production of the F4F Wildcat, which was seen as a useful aircraft for the composite squadrons operating from escort carriers that would provide anti-submarine cover and close air support for coming invasions, was transferred to General Motors Eastern Aircraft Division. However, Grumman was not completely through with the Wildcat. The possibility of developing a lighter version specifically for operation from escort carriers had been considered before production was taken over by General Motors.

    HISTORY
    The main difference of the new version of
    Wildcat was substitution of the 1,200 h.p. R-1830-
    86 with a 1,350 h.p. Wright R-1820-56 Cyclone
    that was 230 lbs. lighter. The XF4F-8 had four
    guns like the FM-1; it was visually distinguished
    an enlarged rudder and vertical stabilizer to
    counteract the increased torque of the more
    powerful engine. The airplane was 530 lbs. lighter
    than the F4F-4. Initial climb rate was nearly
    doubled, service ceiling was boosted to 36,400
    ft. All in all, this was a “wilder” Wildcat. It went
    into production in early 1943; between then and
    August 1945 4,437 FM-2s were delivered, making
    it the most numerous Wildcat of all.
    In the Pacific, the FM-2 showed up in the new
    Composite Squadrons (VC) in the fall of 1943.
    During the invasions of the Marshalls, Carolines,
    Marianas, and the Philippines, ten more Wildcat
    pilots became aces.
    The U.S. Navy’s Finest Hour
    The FM-2’s most memorable day came on
    October 25, 1944. Task Group 77.4, composed of
    three Task Units 77.1, 77.2, and 77.3 known as
    Taffy One, Two and Three for their radio callsign
    Taffy,” were operating off the island of Samar to
    provide air support to the invasion of Leyte; each
    Task Unit was composed of six escort carriers,
    with two or three destroyers and four or five
    destroyer escorts for support. Each TU had 48
    TBM-1C Avengers and around 100 FM-2 Wildcats
    between the six carriers.
    The previous day, October 24, the Wildcats
    defended the fleet against the many Japanese air
    attacks. The Wildcats of VC-10 aboard the carrier
    USS Gambier Bay (CVE-73) – part of “Taffy Three”
    – were the most successful squadron in the
    entire Task Group. VC-10’s Wildcat pilots, who had
    By the fall of 1942, production of the F4F Wildcat, which
    was seen as a useful aircraft for the composite squadrons
    operating from escort carriers that would provide anti-
    submarine cover and close air support for coming
    invasions, was transferred to General Motors Eastern
    Aircraft Division. However, Grumman was not completely
    through with the Wildcat. The possibility of developing
    a lighter version specifically for operation from escort
    carriers had been considered before production was
    taken over by General Motors.
    By THOMAS McKELVEY CLEAVER
    FM-2 Wildcat fighter on combat air patrol
    during the Leyte Invasion.
    Photo: NHHC
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  • Page 13

    HISTORY
    first experienced air combat during the Marianas
    invasion, when pilots shot down three attacking
    Japanese aircraft during the main battle on June
    18, 1944, shot down seven enemy aircraft. Ensign
    Courtney assisted in breaking up an attack
    on American transports by more than 15 twin
    engine bombers. He was credited with assisting
    in destroying one Ki-21 Sally and the probable
    destruction of one Ki-48 Lily. Lieutenant R. W.
    Roby shot down one Lily and assisted in shooting
    down one Sally and Lieutenant Seitz shot down a
    Sally. Lieutenant (jg) Phillips probably destroyed
    two Zekes and Lieutenant(jg) Dugan shot down
    two Sallys. Lieutenant Joe McGraw and others
    in a CAP flight intercepted a group of 15–20 twin
    engine bombers escorted by six to eight Oscars
    he mistakenly identified as Zekes. McGraw
    destroyed two Lilys and damaged a third.
    The next morning, the men, ships and aircraft
    of Taffy One, Two, and Three fought the Battle off
    Samar, which has been called “the Navy’s Finest
    Hour.” This was the last surface engagement ever
    fought by the U.S. Navy against an enemy fleet. In
    the words of Samuel Eliot Morrison, the Pacific
    War’s official historian: “In no engagement of its
    entire history has the United States Navy shown
    more gallantry, guts and gumption than in those
    two morning hours between 0730 and 0930 off
    Samar.” The Battle off Samar involved ships that
    should never have been in the same ocean with
    their opponents, fighting against the greatest
    surface fleet the Empire of Japan ever sent to
    sea.
    On October 24, the First Mobile Striking Force,
    commanded by Admiral Takeo Kurita, lost the
    giant battleship Musashi, sunk by American carrier
    aircraft in the Battle of the Sibuyan Sea. Following
    Musashi’s loss, Kurita broke off his advance, which
    was spotted by American aircraft; Third Fleet
    commander Admiral Willian F. Halsey decided the
    enemy had been defeated and ordered the Fast
    Carrier Task Force to head north to attack the
    Japanese carrier fleet that had been found off Cape
    Engano. However – unknown to the Americans
    – Kurita was ordered to resume his attack. The
    Japanese transited San Bernardino Strait that
    night and emerged into the Philippine Sea at dawn.
    Kurita, aboard Yamato – the world’s most powerful
    battleship – ordered the fleet to head south to attack
    the American invasion fleet in Leyte Gulf.
    Taffy 3, northernmost of the three escort carrier
    groups, included USS St Lo (CVE-63), White Plains
    (CVE-66) Kalinin Bay (CVE-68), Fanshaw Bay
    (CVE-70), Kitkun Bay (CVE 71) and Gambier Bay
    (CVE-73), commanded by Rear Admiral Clifton
    Sprague; the carriers were escorted by three
    Fletcher-class destroyers USS Johnston (DD-
    557), Hoel (DD-533) and Heerman (DD-532), and
    four Butler-class destroyer escorts USS John C.
    Butler (DE-339), Dennis (DE-405), Raymond (DE-
    341) and Samuel B. Roberts (DE-413).
    At 0630 hours, a TBM-1C Avenger flown by
    Ensign Bill Brooks took off from St. Lo on the
    morning patrol. He spotted smoke on the horizon
    to the northwest at 0647 hours. It was the First
    Mobile Striking Force, 17 miles from Taffy-3 and
    bearing down on the CVEs at 30 knots.
    At about the same moment, lookouts on
    St. Lo reported the unmistakable shapes of
    “pagoda masts,” a sure identification of Japanese
    battleships. At 0700 hours, Avenger pilot Ensign
    Hans Jensen sighted the fleet; this was soon
    confirmed by shipboard radar.
    Kurita’s ships had just changed to a circular
    antiaircraft formation when smoke was spotted
    on the horizon. At 0700 hours, Yamato opened
    fire with her 18-inch main battery. On Yamato’s
    bridge, no one could identify the silhouettes of
    the American carriers in the manuals. Kurita
    mistakenly assumed he had a task group of
    the Third Fleet under his guns. He immediately
    ordered “General Attack.”
    The Americans Respond
    With the CVEs limited to a top speed of 18
    knots, Taffy-3 had no hope of outdistancing their
    pursuers. There was no possibility of out-shooting
    them; each carrier had only one 5-inch/38-
    caliber gun on its stern. Admiral Sprague ordered
    the force to turn south toward the others and
    ordered the destroyers to make smoke to provide
    cover while the carriers launched their aircraft.
    Gambier Bay managed to launch most of
    her aircraft while battleship shells rumbled
    overhead. LCDR Edward J. Huxtable, CO of VC-10,
    boarded his Avenger and asked his plane captain
    if he had a bomb load. “He said no, so I told him
    to call LCDR Buzz Borries, the air officer, to see
    USS Kitkun Bay (CVE-71) prepares to launch FM-2 Wildcats fighters during the action.
    FM-2s of Composite Squadron 10 at Tacloban
    Photo: USN via Thomas Cleaver
    Photo: NHHC
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    HISTORY
    if I had time to get a load. We had not turned up
    engines yet and I could not see going off without
    some ordnance. I saw Borries talking to Captain
    Viewig, who made a sweeping motion with his
    arm – ‘Get ‘em off!’”
    About this time, I was startled by what seemed
    like a rifle shot. I looked out and saw it was
    a salvo of heavy-caliber stuff splashing alongside
    White Plains. Until this moment, I had no idea the
    enemy was so near. Now I was more than ready
    to get on that catapult! Three TBMs launched
    ahead of me. The ceiling was at 1,200 feet. I called
    up Admiral Sprague and asked what our orders
    were. ‘Attack immediately!’”
    Following the catapult launches of the
    Avengers, the FM-2 Wildcats were hurriedly
    launched; some were armed with rockets for
    strikes ashore, but most were armed only with
    their four .50-caliber machine guns.
    Huxtable broke out into better visibility.
    “I spotted four cruisers nearby and what appeared
    to be four battleships further back in the gloom.
    There was no possibility of making a high-altitude
    attack. I pulled up into the ceiling and started for
    the cruisers. I had no idea what loads the other
    planes had, but at least we would give them
    a good scare.”
    Huxtable was joined by his Annapolis classmate,
    LCDR Richard Fowler, who led Kitkun Bay’s VC-
    5. They attempted coordinated “hot” and “dry”
    attacks, with FM-2s strafing the ships ahead of
    the Avengers, which dropped their 500-pound
    general purpose bombs. “Our bombs had no effect
    on the ships, but possibly the explosions scared
    the crewmen.”
    The Wildcats and Avengers of Taffy-3 kept an
    unrelenting string of aircraft over Kurita’s fleet,
    giving the admiral the impression the Americans
    had far greater resources than they did.
    Lt(jg) Norman Johnson of Fanshaw Bay’s
    Composite Squadron 68 piloted an Avenger
    with four 500-pound general-purpose bombs.
    He later remembered: “Climbing at full throttle,
    I penetrated the lower cloud cover and leveled off
    at 11,000 feet. I took a final look at the enemy ships,
    which were firing on our ships. When I was about
    five miles away, I nosed down to pick up speed.
    The Japanese battle force was at that moment
    occupied in anti-aircraft protection against an
    air attack. Varied colored bursts mushroomed at
    several levels. It was quite dense and something
    I had to penetrate. I kept my bomb doors closed
    as speed increased. I saw three large battleships
    with rudders hard over and guns spitting flame. At
    7,000 feet, I pushed over into my attack, selecting
    the lead battleship as my target. My radioman
    reminded me ‘Open the bomb bay doors!’ I opened
    the doors and the immediate drag was apparent
    as the airplane was really barreling along now.
    “I was intent on adjusting the target in my
    sight. Suddenly the airplane corkscrewed, and
    the right-side sliding part of the canopy peeled
    off. I pressed the bomb release at what seemed
    the best altitude and concentrated my effort on
    pulling out. The target was so large the bombs
    couldn’t miss. It was a close call as I leveled off
    50 to 100 feet over the water. I pulled up to avoid
    more AA and then hid in the clouds in case there
    were any enemy aircraft around.”
    Over the next 30 minutes, aircraft from the six
    squadrons made repeated bombing and rocket
    runs on the enemy ships, strafing their decks
    as they pulled out. At Tacloban, the field became
    a muddy bog; landing aircraft were damaged as
    they ground-looped in the mud and slammed
    into other planes. By mid-day the airfield was
    covered with wrecked Avengers and Wildcats.
    The Naval “Charge of the Light Brigade”
    While the pilots desperately attempted to
    distract the enemy, Taffy-3’s “small boys” moved
    to defend the carriers after Admiral Sprague
    ordered the three destroyers to attack despite
    the hopeless odds.
    At 0700 hours USS Johnston made smoke in
    response to the incoming shell fire that bracketed
    the carriers. Ten minutes later, Gunnery Officer
    Robert Hagen opened fire at a range of 18,000
    yards and registered several hits on the leading
    heavy cruisers with his radar-directed gunfire.
    After five minutes, Hagen concentrated
    fire on heavy cruiser Kumano. At maximum
    range, Johnston scored several hits on her
    superstructure, which erupted in flame. Kumano
    then targeted Johnston in turn and she was
    soon bracketed by colorful shell splashes.
    Johnston made smoke and zigzagged while she
    accelerated to flank speed and headed toward
    the enemy fleet alone, firing over 200 rounds
    nearly continuously.
    Captain Evans brought Johnston to 9,000 yards
    from the enemy and fired all ten torpedoes. Two
    hit Kumano at 0724 hours and blew her bow off.
    The four other torpedoes continued on toward the
    enemy fleet and battleship Kongô was forced to
    turn away north to avoid them, which took her
    out of the fight. Heavy cruiser Suzuya, which had
    suffered damage from air attacks, stopped her
    pursuit of the Americans to assist Kumano.
    Johnston’s audacious attack confused Admiral
    Kurita, who thought he had been engaged
    by American cruisers. When the rest of the
    Japanese ships were forced to turn away to avoid
    the torpedoes, the carriers gained more precious
    minutes to launch aircraft.
    Evans turned back into his own smoke, but at
    0730 hours, the enemy guns found him. Firing
    at a range of 17,000 yards, Kongô, hit Johnston
    with three 14-inch shells which penetrated into
    her port engine room, where the explosions cut
    her speed in half and disrupted power to the aft
    USS GAMBIER BAY (CVE-73) and two destroyer escorts making smoke at the start of the battle off Samar,
    October 25, 1944. Japanese ships are faintly visible on the horizon.
    Photo: Phi Willard Niet via NHHC
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    HISTORY
    gun mounts. Moments later, three 6-inch shells
    from Yamato struck Johnston’s bridge. Everyone
    was wounded and Commander Evans’ fingers
    of his left hand were traumatically severed by
    shrapnel. Johnston was badly mangled with
    dead and dying sailors strewn across her bloody
    decks. She found refuge in a rain squall, while the
    damage control parties restored power to two of
    the three aft mounts and repair the fire control
    radar. With repairs completed at 0735 hours, she
    opened fire on Japanese destroyers while hidden
    in the smoke.
    Johnston then retired to the Task Group.
    Minutes later, she encountered Heermann and an
    already-damaged Hoel headed in to attack. Evans
    could have continued back to the fleet and no one
    would have faulted him. Instead, he reversed
    course and made smoke to help obscure the two
    as they headed toward the onrushing Japanese.
    Samuel B. Roberts, known to her crew as “Sammy
    B” followed. The attack was a naval “Charge of
    the Light Brigade” that actually happened on the
    90th anniversary of the event immortalized in
    Tennyson’s poem.
    Over the next 40 minutes, Evans engaged in
    several duels with the enemy. At 0830 hours,
    Johnston opened fire on the cruiser Chokai,
    which was firing at the helpless Gambier Bay.
    She then closed to 6,000 yards and traded fire for
    ten minutes with the battleship Haguro, scoring
    numerous hits. At 0840 hours, she intercepted
    a formation of seven destroyers spotted closing in
    on the carriers. Evans attempted to pass in front
    of the enemy, “crossing the T” as gunnery officer
    Hagen opened fire. Johnston was hit several
    times by return fire. The lead enemy destroyer
    turned away to the west and took a dozen hits
    from Johnston as she did so. Hagen quickly
    shifted fire to the next in line and scored five hits
    before it too veered off and the entire squadron
    turned west to avoid Johnston. Three destroyers
    fired their torpedoes at the carriers from 10,500
    yards but no hits were scored. The Japanese
    and American ships were now intertwined in
    a confused jumble.
    More Avengers and Wildcats from the other
    task groups appeared out of the cloudy skies and
    attacked the enemy, while destroyer Hoel headed
    toward the battleship Kongô and took a salvo of
    14-inch shells in her bridge. She closed to 9,000
    yards and fired five torpedoes - none hit, but the
    torpedoes forced Kongô to turn away. Despite
    having three of her five gun mounts as well as
    her port engine knocked out, Hoel drew Japanese
    fire for the next hour as she chased shells and
    distracted the enemy from the carriers. An 8-inch
    shell stopped her at 0830 hours. Having taken 40
    hits, Hoel went down with 259 of her crew. Only
    86 survived, including 19-year old Bob DeSpain, a
    former lifeguard from San Pedro, California, who
    over the next hours swam from group to group
    and gathered the survivors together (this writer
    was privileged to know Bob over the last six
    years of his life; he worked as a docent aboard
    the battleship Iowa in San Pedro).
    Samuel B. Roberts closed to 4,000 yards of
    the cruiser Chôkai, moving at 28 knots after the
    chief engineer, Lieutenant “Lucky” Trowbridge
    bypassed all the safety mechanisms in the
    engines. Her captain, LCDR Robert W. Copeland,
    USNR, announced over the ship’s public address:
    „This will be a fight against overwhelming odds
    from which survival cannot be expected. We
    will do what damage we can.“ Chôkai could
    not lower the guns sufficiently to hit the little
    destroyer escort. Sammy-B launched her three
    torpedoes. One blew off Chôkai’s bow. The little
    ship then showed why she would be known ever
    after as “the destroyer escort that fought like a
    battleship.” She battled on for another hour, firing
    more than 600 5-inch shells from her two guns.
    Maneuvering at very close range, she mauled
    Chôkai with her 40mm and 20mm AA guns. At 0851
    hours, she was hit twice and lost her after 5-inch
    gun when a breech explosion killed and wounded
    several of the crew. She then engaged Chikuma,
    which was also under fire by Heerman. The two
    American ships ripped Chikuma‘s superstructure
    with salvo after salvo: armor-piercing shells,
    high-explosive shells, anti-aircraft shells, and
    even star shells which created chemical fires in
    metal plates hit the cruiser.
    Firing her remaining 5-inch gun, Sammy-B
    devastated Chikuma’s bridge. Fires spread
    through the cruiser’s superstructure. Sammy-B’s
    last shot put the number three gun turret out of
    action just as three 14-inch shells from Kongô
    hit her. The order “Abandon Ship” was given at
    0935 hours and Sammy-B sank 30 minutes later,
    taking 89 of her crew. The 120 survivors clung to
    three life rafts. It would be 50 hours before 80
    were finally rescued from the open sea.
    Cruisers Tone and Chikuma, followed by the
    damaged Chôkai and Kumano, closed in on
    Taffy-3. As they opened fire, Heermann fired her
    main 5-inch battery at Chikuma, then launched
    five torpedoes. Again, they all missed but flagship
    Yamato was now forced to turn away which put
    her out of the fight. With one gun mount knocked
    out, Heermann continued to engage Chikuma.
    Two Avengers and several Wildcats launched
    from Taffy-1 and Taffy-2 attacked the cruiser. Just
    as she turned away, a single shot from Heerman
    struck in her aviation gasoline stowage. Chikuma
    blew up and sank.
    From Defeat to Victory
    Gambier Bay was hit in her starboard engine
    room at 0847 hours. The second hit set fueled
    aircraft afire on the hangar deck. Enormous
    shells passed through her without exploding
    because her thin steel wasn’t enough to stop
    them. She went dead in the water at 0900 hours
    as Tone, Chikuma, and the damaged Chôkai
    closed in. At 0907 hours she capsized, sending
    700 survivors into the water. Gambier Bay was
    the only American aircraft carrier ever sunk in
    a surface engagement.
    Chokai sped past the sinking carrier and took
    aim at White Plains. The little carrier’s 5-inch gun
    crew manned their weapon on her stern. Opening
    fire on Chokai at maximum range, the third shot
    hit the cruiser in her torpedo stowage and Chokai
    exploded, sinking in less than two minutes and
    leaving no survivors. White Plains became the
    only aircraft carrier in history to sink an enemy
    warship with surface gunfire.
    Japanese battleship Musashi under attack
    Photo: USN via Thomas Cleaver
    INFO Eduard
    15
    August 2023
  • Page 16

    HISTORY
    At 0940 hours, Johnston, which had come under
    attack from several enemy destroyers, lost all
    power from the hits and went dead in the water.
    The enemy surrounded her and continued their
    fire. Evans was finally forced to order “Abandon
    Ship” at 0945 hours. At 1005 hours, Johnston
    sank with 186 of her crew going down with her.
    Evans managed to get into the water with other
    crewmen but was never seen again. While he was
    posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor, it was
    the Japanese themselves who first recognized
    his courage. Seaman Robert Billie and several
    other crewmen in a raft watched an enemy
    destroyer cruise slowly past as her captain stood
    on his bridge, saluting the sinking Johnston as an
    honorable opponent.
    Aboard Yamato, Admiral Kurita became
    convinced by the renewed air attacks by the
    Wildcats and Avengers that his fleet had stumbled
    into contact with the U.S. Third Fleet. Expecting
    American battleships to come over the horizon
    at any moment and realizing that his ships were
    so dispersed from their evasive maneuvers that
    it was impossible for them to return to a fighting
    formation to take on the expected enemy, he
    signaled to his fleet to break off action and turn
    back to San Bernardino Strait at 0945 hours.
    American sailors struggling in the sea, and
    those manning their battle stations aboard
    the ships, were amazed as the gunfire faded
    away and the enemy soon disappeared over the
    horizon. Had Admiral Kurita continued on, there
    was nothing stopping his fleet from sinking all
    the escort carriers and moving into Leyte Gulf
    to attack the invasion fleet. The reservists who
    manned the carriers and destroyers and aircraft
    squadrons – most of whom had never seen an
    ocean before they went aboard the ships in which
    they fought and died – had saved the invasion of
    the Philippines.
    After the sinking of Gambier Bay, VC-10
    Wildcat pilot Ensign McGraw was among the
    surviving aircrews who landed on Manila Bay.
    That afternoon, he was launched with other pilots
    from that ship to intercept a formation Val dive
    bombers escorted by Zeke fighters attempting
    to attack the escort carriers. McGraw shot down
    one Val and one Zeke to become VC-10’s only ace.
    A bit more than an hour after the Battle off
    Samar concluded, the U.S. Navy was introduced
    to the power of a new and deadly enemy when
    the Shikishima Unit of the 201st Air Group found
    the surviving carriers of Taffy-3 at 1047 hours. At
    1052 hours, a Zeke believed flown by Lieutenant
    Seki dived on the escort carrier St. Lo. The
    airplane hit the center of the flight deck. The
    250-kilogram bomb penetrated the flight deck
    and exploded on the port side of the hangar deck
    in the midst of several aircraft in the process
    of being refueled and rearmed. A gasoline fire
    quickly broke out, followed by six secondary
    explosions that ended with the detonation of the
    torpedo and bomb magazine. Engulfed in flame,
    St. Lo sank 30 minutes later. From an 889-man
    crew, 113 were killed or missing. Thirty survivors
    later died of their wounds. The 434 survivors
    were rescued from the water by Heermann and
    the destroyer escorts John C. Butler, Raymond,
    and Dennis. The U.S. Navy’s most deadly foe had
    entered the battle.
    Exploze na USS St. Lo (CVE-63) poté, co byla zasažena 25. října 1944 útokem Kamikaze u Samaru.
    Foto: Phi Willard Niet via NHHC
    product page
    #11175
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  • Searching for lost ships with Paul Allen

    In this last installement of searching for the lost ships with Paul Alled we will talk about the shipwrecks lying in the greatest depths of the world. They sank to the bottom of the ocean during the Battle of Samar. These are the American destroyers which, heavily outnumbered, bravely faced the enemy for whom this battle was a swan song.

    HISTORY
    The Battle of Santa Cruz, during which the
    aircraft carrier USS Hornet (CV-8) was sunk
    in October 1942, was for a long time the last
    carriers encounter. While the Allies gradually
    took over the strategic initiative, the Japanese
    carriers were recovering from the losses.
    The damaged ships needed repairs but above
    all the lost aircraft had to be replenished and
    new pilots trained. During the whole 1943 no
    further aircraft carriers battle took place. The
    Japanese Navy was saving the resources and
    preparing for the so-called decisive battle.
    The opportunity arrived in June 1944 when the
    US carriers attacked the Mariana Islands. The
    Japanese threw all they had into the counter
    attack – 1st Mobile Fleet formed by total of 83
    vessels, including 3 large aircraft carriers,
    6 light aircraft carriers and 5 battleships.
    They faced the American 5th Fleet composed
    of 139 ships. The backbone of the US fleet
    was formed by 7 large aircraft carriers,
    8 light aircraft carriers and 7 battleships. The
    American dominance was to be compensated
    by deployment of further 300 Japanese aircraft
    operating from the land bases.
    The result of the Battle of Philippine Sea
    doesn’t need a detailed description, its first day
    went down in the history as a Great Mariana
    Turkey Shoot. The great lack of quality in
    Japanese aircraft and pilots‘ training was
    aparent and the Japanese aircraft were falling
    of the skies in hundreds. One of the American
    pilots described the combat after landing as
    shooting turkeys back home in old times. The
    greatest American fighter aces increased their
    scores thanks to it. Cdr. David McCampbell, who
    up until then was credited with two kills (out of
    total 34), on June 19, 1944, during his first sortie,
    shot down fine D4Y Judy dive bombers and
    during the next sortie added two A6M fighters.
    Lt. Alexander Vraciu, whose score stood at 12
    kills at that time (out of total 19), on the same
    In this last installement of searching for the lost ships with Paul Alled
    we will talk about the shipwrecks lying in the greatest depths of the
    world. They sank to the bottom of the ocean during the Battle of Samar.
    These are the American destroyers which, heavily outnumbered,
    bravely faced the enemy for whom this battle was a swan song.
    SEARCHING FOR LOST SHIPS
    WITH PAUL ALLEN
    SHIPWRECKS IN THE
    GREATEST DEPTHS
    Text: Miro Barič
    USS Samuel B. Roberts (DE-413)
    photographed in the beginning of
    summer 1944. It is the deepest
    lying shipwreck known currently in
    the world.
    Photo: U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command
    Lt.(jg) Alexander Vraciu shows his six fingers for the aerial kills he scored on June 19, 1944.
    Photo: National Archives
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  • Page 19

    HISTORY
    day during one sortie shot down six D4Y Judy
    bombers. It took him eight minutes and he spent
    360 12.7 mm caliber rounds.
    While the American pilots fought the Japanese
    aircraft, on that day the Japanese ships were
    only attacked by the American submarines.
    They fared very well indeed. USS Cavalla hit
    Shokaku with three torpedoes and sank her.
    USS Albacore hit the new carrier Taiho with
    only a single torpedo but a poor execution of
    the rescue operations caused the fuel fumes to
    accumulate under the deck which later caused a
    series of explosions and Taiho sank as well. The
    aircraft from the American carriers attacked
    the Japanese vessels on June 20, 1944, at the
    limit of their range and almost at night. They
    sank light carrier Hiyo and two tankers. They
    also damaged several other ships. However,
    they paid the price by loosing 100 aircraft,
    only 20 were shot down in combat tough. The
    remaining 80 had to crash land due to the lack
    of fuel and the crews were mostly rescued.
    The Japanese losses were significantly higher.
    The air forces they had gathered during the
    whole previous year, were lost in two days. The
    remaining Japanese aircraft carriers without
    airplanes could not longer play an active role
    and in the following battle they were used as
    decoy.
    Four battles in one
    It took place during the Philippines landing
    in October 1944. Actually there was a series
    of several naval battles which became to be
    known under the common name, the Battle of
    Leyte Gulf. The Japanese Navy did not recover
    from the preceding defeats but had to react
    to the Allied invasion. The Japanese deployed
    the old samurai tactics of the feign attack.
    The Northern Force, commanded by Vice
    Admiral Ozawa, assumed the role of a decoy.
    On the paper it looked strong composed of two
    battleships, aircraft carrier Zuikaku and three
    light carrier Zuiho, Chiyoda and Chitose, however
    they altogether carried 108 aircraft only. In the
    meantime, the Center Force led by Viceadmiral
    Kurita and Southern Force consisting of two
    groups led by Viceadmirals Nishimura and
    Shima were to approach the Allied invasion
    fleet through different passages. They were
    at the disadvantage though due to the strict
    radio silence and the admirals were unable to
    coordinate their actions and each of them acted
    individually. Therefore they gradually clashed
    with the US Navy in four battles.
    The first one took place in Sibuyan Sea. First,
    on October 23, 1944, Kurita’s Center Force
    was spotted and attacked by the American
    submarines USS Darter and USS Dace. They
    sank two heavy cruisers and damaged another
    one. Then, on October 24, 1944, the Japanese
    ships became targets of five waves of the
    American carrier-borne aircraft. Those sank
    the battleship Musashi and damaged several
    other ships. Kurita therefore turned around
    180 degrees and started to retreat, and the
    Americans took the bait. Musashi’s wreck was
    one of the first Paul Allen found. It happened
    in March 2015 using his older ship Octopus.
    Musashi lies 900 meters deep and Allens
    expedition discovered that she had exploded
    while sinking. The bow stands upright on the
    ocean’s bottom and the stern is turned upside
    down. The main superstructure and stack lie on
    the sides.
    Nine kills in one sortie
    In the meantime, three waves of Japanese
    airplanes from the land bases attacked the
    American ships. During their defenses Cdr.
    David McCampbell distinguished himself again.
    Only in a pair formation, just with his wingman,
    he attacked the formation of 60-80 airplanes
    approaching the American ships. In the combat,
    which lasted an hour and 35 minutes, he shot
    down 9 Japanese fighters and two probables.
    His wingman, Lt. Roy Rushing was credited with
    another six kills. They completely dismantled
    the Japanese formation. After the landing
    the mechanics did not find any fuel left in
    Campbell Hellcats tanks and there were two
    12.7 mm caliber rounds left for his machine
    guns. For this achievement, as well as the
    previous success in the Battle of Philippine Sea
    four months ago , McCambell was decorated
    with the highest American award, Medal of
    Honour. The rare success by the Japanese side
    was scored by a D4Y Judy dive bomber which
    penetrated the defences and suddenly appeared
    Photo: U.S. Navy
    Photo: U.S. Navy
    Cdr. David McCampbell in the cockpit of his Hellcat on board of USS Essex
    in the beginning of October 1944. At that time his score stood at 21 kills.
    McCampbell is posing in the cockpit of his Hellcat for a propaganda photograph in the end
    of October 1944. By scoring additional 9 kills in a day, he raised his score to 30 victories.
    INFO Eduard
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  • Page 20

    USS Samuel B. Roberts (DE-413) in October 1944, couple of days before her sinking.
    USS Johnston (DD-557) in October 1943, right after her entry in the service.
    USS Hoel (DD-533) in August 1944.
    Cdr. Ernest Evans, commanding officer of destroyer
    Johnston.
    LCdr. Robert Copeland, commanding officer of Samuel
    B. Roberts escort destroyer.
    Photo: U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command
    Photo: U.S. Naval History and Heritage CommandPhoto: U.S. Naval History and Heritage CommandPhoto: U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command
    Photo: U.S. Navy
    HISTORY
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  • Page 21

    above the light aircraft carrier USS Princeton.
    Its bomb exploded in the hangar among fully
    fueled Avenger bombers. The result was a fire
    which after several hours caused an enormous
    explosion of the stored bombs. The ship was
    impossible to rescue and she sank with 108 souls
    lost. Further 233 American sailors perished
    on board of the light cruiser USS Birmingham
    which was at the time of Princeton explosion at
    her side helping with putting out the fires.
    Battle of Surigao Str ait
    In the meantime the Japanese Southern Force
    tried to fight its way through Surigao Strait. On
    October 24, 1944 the American airplanes barely
    caused any damage to Nishimura’s ships but the
    American vessels set up a trap for him in the
    strait. First he faced the attack of the torpedo
    boats and destroyers. Those sank the battleship
    Fuso. Six battleships and eight cruisers under
    the command of Admiral Oldendorf waited for
    the Japanese at the exit from the strait. On
    December 7, 1941, five of these battleships were
    sunk or damaged at Pearl Harbor. California,
    Maryland, Pennsylvania, Tennessee and West
    Virginia then underwent the extensive repairs
    and rebuilds. On the night of October 24-25,
    1944, time of their revenge arrived. Their radar-
    controlled cannon fire sank Yamashiro and
    damaged the cruiser Mogami. It was the last
    battleship encounter in the history.
    The second part of the Southern Force did
    not engage in this battle because it lagged
    behind Nishimura. When Shima realized that
    the first part had been massacred, he ordered
    a retreat. At that moment, Mogami collided
    with the heavy cruiser Nachi and was further
    damaged. This heavy cruiser met a similar fate
    in the Battle of Midway when it collided with
    its sister ship, Mikuma. The collision slowed
    down both ships, making them vulnerable to
    the dive bombers, and Mikuma was eventually
    sunk. Though Mogami survived Midway, it was
    so severely damaged that they had to remove
    its rear turrets and rebuild it as a hybrid cruiser
    – a seaplane carrier. Now, after the collision
    with Nachi, its fate was sealed. The pursuing
    American cruisers inflicted further damage on
    Mogami, and in the morning, it was finished off
    by bombs from an Avenger bomber.
    The wrecks of Yamashiro and Fu were
    discovered by Paul Allen and his ship RV Petrel
    on November 25, 2017. Both ships lie upside
    down at a depth of around 200 meters. On May
    8, 2019, RV Petrel also found the wreck of the
    cruiser Mogami, which lies at a depth of 1450
    meters.
    Battle of Cape Engaño
    Although Ozawa’s Northern Force with
    aircraft carriers tried to attract the attention of
    the Americans, they only discovered it last, in
    the evening of October 24, 1944. However, this
    turned out to be coincidentally perfect timing for
    the Japanese. At the same time, Kurita's Center
    Force had turned back in retreat. American
    Admiral William Halsey was convinced that
    Kurita’s ships were out of action and focused on
    Ozawa.
    The final battle of the aircraft carriers took
    place on October 25, 1944. Early in the morning,
    Ozawa launched an attack wave of 75 aircraft.
    That was all the Japanese aircraft carriers
    could muster, having been decimated in previous
    battles. Most of these planes were shot down,
    and Ozawa had no more left. Subsequently,
    he had to face six waves of American attacks,
    which sank all four Japanese aircraft carriers.
    The Battle of Samar Island
    The Japanese original plan almost
    succeeded. While the Japanese aircraft
    carriers were being used as a bait and being
    massacred, the core of Kurita’s Center Force
    appeared near the invasion beaches. Kurita
    had feigned a retreat and then turned back to
    his original course, sneaking through the San
    Bernardino Strait unnoticed during the night.
    USS Gambier Bay (CVE-73) in April 1944.
    The American destroyers and escort destroyers laying the smoke screen during the Battle of Samar.
    Photo: U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command
    Phto: U.S. Navy
    HISTORY
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  • Page 22

    American Admiral William Halsey sent his main
    forces north against Ozawa, leaving the strait
    unguarded. Another mistake made by Halsey
    was his delayed reaction to reports of the
    Japanese battleships' penetration; he was too
    eager to destroy the enemy’s aircraft carriers.
    Unfortunately, this exposed the entire Philippine
    landing to a deadly risk.
    Against four Japanese battleships, six
    heavy cruisers, and eleven destroyers, there
    were only three groups of small and slow
    escort aircraft carriers providing support to
    the landing forces – Taffy 1, Taffy 2, and Taffy
    3. When the Japanese ships appeared on the
    horizon, Taffy 3, commanded by Admiral Clifton
    Sprague, was the closest to them. The group
    consisted of six escort carriers (Fanshaw Bay,
    Gambier Bay, Kalinin Bay, Kitkun Bay, St. Lo,
    and White Plains), three destroyers (Heermann,
    Hoel, and Johnston), and four escort destroyers
    (Dennis, John C. Butler, Raymond, and Samuel B.
    Roberts). The destroyers of the Fletcher class,
    armed with five 127mm guns and ten torpedo
    tubes, were the most heavily armed ships in
    Taffy 3. The escort destroyers were smaller and
    slower, carrying only two 127mm guns and three
    torpedo launchers. To put it in perspective, the
    battleship Yamato had a larger displacement
    than the entire American force combined!
    In the ensuing battle of David against Goliath,
    the Japanese cruisers Chōkai, Chikuma, and
    Suzuya were sunk, while on the American side,
    the destroyers USS Johnston, USS Hoel, and USS
    Samuel B. Roberts were lost. The escort carrier
    USS Gambier Bay was destroyed by gunfire
    from the cruisers Tone and Chikuma. It was the
    only American aircraft carrier sunk by surface
    gunfire. After the battle with Kurita's forces, the
    heavily tested Taffy 3 group had to face the first
    organized kamikaze attack. Several ships were
    damaged, and the escort carrier USS St. Lo was
    sunk when a Zero carrying a bomb crashed into
    its flight deck and exploded in the hangar among
    refueling aircraft.
    The total American losses in the Battle of
    Samar Island were nearly 1,200 sailors and
    aviators, which is more than the casualties
    in the Battles of Midway and the Coral Sea
    combined. It is no wonder that Clifton Sprague
    harshly criticized Halsey's actions.
    The Battle of Samar Island is renowned as
    the “finest hour of the U.S. Navy,” and more
    detailed information about it can be found in
    Tom Cleaver’s article on page 12 of this issue.
    Now, let’s focus on the wrecks of the ships left
    behind after the battle...
    In the Philippine Trench
    The Battle of Samar Island took place on the
    edge of the Philippine Trench, and as a result, all
    the sunken ships rest in great depths. The wreck
    of USS St. Lo was discovered by the research
    vessel RV Petrel in May 2019, lying at a depth of
    4,736 meters. In the same month, researchers
    also located the cruiser Chōkai at a depth of
    5,173 meters.
    However, in October 2019, RV Petrel found
    parts of a ship believed to be from USS Johnston.
    They were located at a depth of 6,218 meters,
    USS Gambier Bay photographed from the deck of USS Kalinin Bay during the Battle of Samar.
    Gambier Bay lagged behind the rest of the group. In the
    picture we can see as the Japanese grenades exploding
    aorund her.
    Saving the survivors of the Battle of Samar.
    Photo: U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command
    Photo: U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command
    Photo: U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command
    HISTORY
  • Page 23

    making it the deepest known shipwreck at that
    time. The discovery included a gun, a propeller
    shaft, and several other fragments. Indications
    on the seabed suggested that the rest of the
    ship had sunk even deeper, beyond the reach of
    the exploration robot.
    Enter Victor Vescovo, an entrepreneur and
    investor who served in the U.S. Navy for 20
    years and now dedicates himself to deep-sea
    expeditions. He has dived to the deepest points
    in all the world's oceans, including reaching
    the bottom of the Mariana Trench's Challenger
    Deep in April 2019. It was only the third manned
    mission to this location in history.
    On March 31, 2021, Vescovo’s research
    vessel DSV Limiting Factor found the remaining
    wreckage of USS Johnston at a depth of 6,469
    meters, definitively identifying it. This discovery
    set a new record for the deepest known
    shipwreck.
    However, this record was broken again in
    June 2021 when Vescovo and his team found
    the wreck of the escort destroyer USS Samuel
    B. Roberts at a depth of 6,895 meters. According
    to their observations, the ship descended in
    one piece before crashing onto the seabed with
    its bow first, causing hull deformations and
    the detachment of the stern, which now lies
    5 meters away from the main wreck. The hull
    also bears visible damage caused by Japanese
    shelling, including a broken mast.
    Currently, the USS Samuel B. Roberts holds
    the title of the deepest known shipwreck.
    Still, it is believed that some of the ships
    sunk in the Battle of Samar Island lie even
    deeper. Searching for them in the depths of the
    Philippine Trench is extremely challenging. USS
    Gambier Bay and USS Hoel are yet to be found,
    with the destroyer potentially resting at a depth
    of up to 7,300 meters. Even deeper is presumed
    to be the Japanese cruiser Suzuya, which is
    believed to lie at a depth of up to 8,400 meters.
    End of RV Petrel?
    The fate of the research vessel RV Petrel has
    become a symbolic conclusion to the series
    of discoveries mentioned earlier. After Paul
    Allen's passing on October 15, 2018, the RV
    Petrel continued her work. Its crew discovered
    many wrecks mentioned in our articles
    published in 2019. At the beginning of 2020,
    several expeditions were undertaken as part
    of a partnership between the National Oceanic
    and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the
    Paul G. Allen Family Foundation.
    In June 2020, the RV Petrel underwent
    modernization and was equipped with new
    instruments. However, due to the COVID-19
    pandemic, it was put into indefinite storage in a
    dry dock in Scotland. In October 2022, the United
    States Navy purchased the vessel for $12.4
    million. Nonetheless, it remained in the dry dock
    at the port of Leith in Edinburgh.
    Tragedy struck on March 22, 2023, during
    strong winds, when the RV Petrel broke free
    from its moorings and capsized at a 45-degree
    angle. 33 people were injured, but luckily there
    were no fatalities. The extent of the damage and
    the future of the vessel remain unknown at this
    time.
    Number 413 seen on the shipwreck of
    escort destroyer USS Samuel B. Roberts.
    USS Samuel B. Roberts‘ bow.
    Broken stern of USS Samuel B. Roberts.
    The number 557 can be seen on the hull of destroyer USS Johnston.
    The rear gun turret of USS Samuel
    B. Roberts featuring the 127 mm caliber
    cannon.
    The captain‘s bridge of USS Samuel
    B. Roberts. Twin barrel of the 40 mm
    caliber cannon can be seen on the
    starboard and 20 mm cannon on the port.
    A gun turret featuring 127 mm caliber
    cannon on board of USS Johnston.
    Photo: Victor VescovoPhoto: Victor Vescovo
    Photo: Victor VescovoPhoto: Victor Vescovo
    Photo: Victor Vescovo
    Photo: Victor Vescovo
    Photo: Victor Vescovo
    HISTORY
    INFO Eduard
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    August 2023
  • Air war over Ukraine - Ukrainian Offensive, Prigozhin Coup

    June was an extremely hot month in Ukraine, and we’re not referring to global warming. Events unfolded on the front lines that laid the groundwork for significant changes in the future – not only for Ukraine but also for Russia. The Ukrainian offensive began, which, though seemingly progressing slowly, was steady. In Russia, the Wagner Group revolted, but they quickly changed their minds, yet the regime remained shaken. Things were set in motion.

    HISTORY
    Text: Miro Barič
    Photos: Ukrainian
    armed forces, social
    media and other public
    sources
    Air war over Ukraine
    Ukrainian Offensive, Prigozhin Coup
    Ukrainian Mi-24P at a field base.
    June was an extremely hot month in Ukraine, and were not referring
    to global warming. Events unfolded on the front lines that laid the
    groundwork for significant changes in the future – not only for Ukraine
    but also for Russia. The Ukrainian offensive began, which, though
    seemingly progressing slowly, was steady. In Russia, the Wagner
    Group revolted, but they quickly changed their minds, yet the regime
    remained shaken. Things were set in motion.
    In this part of the series, we’ll follow events
    from June 1 to July 1, but first, lets revisit an
    event from the previous period. On May 13, an
    attack group of Russian aircraft, consisting
    of Su-34, Su-35, and 2 × Mi-8 helicopters,
    was shot down in the Bryansk region near
    the Ukrainian border. When the previous part
    was being completed, the exact details of
    what happened had not been confirmed, and
    various possibilities were being considered.
    However, the Ukrainian Armed Forces later
    released a video in which they boasted of their
    successes in air defense. The footage showed
    a Patriot system with markings indicating the
    score, confirming that they were responsible
    for that mentioned Russian group. On the
    side, there are painted silhouettes of aircraft
    and helicopters with the date May 13. By the
    way, they have three Mi-8 helicopters painted
    there, but officially only two were confirmed.
    The Ukrainians, therefore, claim one more.
    It is possible that the Russian group at that time
    consisted of two Mi-8MTPR-1 helicopters for
    electronic warfare and a third Mi-8 prepared
    for search and rescue in case of the attack
    bomber being shot down.
    In addition to this group, the aforementioned
    Patriot system has an impressive collection of
    missiles, including Kinzhals, missiles with a low
    flight path, and drones painted on its side. The
    Ukrainians also demonstrated decent scores
    against the S-300 and NASAMS systems.
    The Patriot system excelled, especially
    during the intensive attacks on Kyiv in May. The
    Russian shelling of the capital decreased in
    June. They probably realized that their attacks
    were just wasting rockets - but officially, they
    accomplished their mission because, according
    to Putin’ְs words, they destroyed five or six
    Patriot systems near Kyiv. Never mind that
    Ukraine received only two of them ...
    Ukrainian Offensive
    Another reason for shifting the Russian
    command’s attention away from Kyiv was the
    Ukrainian counteroffensive. After prolonged
    anticipation, it began in early June in the
    Zaporizhzhia Oblast, southern Ukraine. The
    INFO Eduard24
    August 2023
  • Page 25

    Shot of the Patriot system in a video released by the Armed Forces of Ukraine.
    NASAMS system score.
    Detail showing silhouettes of two aircraft and three Mi-8 helicopters with the date
    May 13, 2023.
    The S-300 battery marked with four aircraft, 21 missiles with a flat flight path,
    and 15 rockets kills.
    HISTORY
    Ukrainian Armed Forces started pushing in
    three directions – from Velyka Novosilka
    near Vuhledar towards Mariupol, from Orikhiv
    towards Tokmak and Melitopol, and near Lobova
    on the banks of the Kakhovka Reservoir.
    For Russian propaganda, this was a welcome
    change. In anticipation of the Ukrainian
    offensive, they began publishing various false
    footage of Western military equipment being
    destroyed. There was an instance of using
    a photo of a destroyed Turkish Leopard 2 tank
    from Syria and a video of a Russian helicopter
    destroying combine harvesters and other
    agricultural machinery that didn't resemble
    tanks at all. After the actual start of the
    Ukrainian offensive, true losses of Western
    equipment were, of course, revealed.
    The Russians had been building fortifications
    in southern Ukraine for almost a year. These
    include several lines of trenches and, most
    importantly, extensive minefields. These
    minefields proved to be the most challenging
    obstacle. In one attack attempt, a group of
    Bradley infantry fighting vehicles and several
    Leopard 2 tanks got stuck on the mines. The
    Russians filmed this group from multiple angles
    and repeatedly published the footage until the
    Ukrainians made progress and withdrew the
    damaged vehicles for repair. Unlike Russian
    equipment, Western military vehicles fulfill
    their primary purpose – protecting the crew.
    Most Leopard and Bradley machines did not
    explode after being hit; their crews survived,
    and the vehicles can be repaired later.
    Although the Ukrainian advance is slow, it is
    steady – they have liberated more territory in
    a month than the Russians occupied during their
    winter offensive in six months. In addition to
    the mines, Russian helicopters initially slowed
    down the Ukrainians. Ka-52 helicopters were
    deployed to perform long-range missile strikes
    on enemy equipment since the Ukrainian side
    couldn't get air defense systems close enough
    to the frontlines, and portable Stinger missiles
    have limited range. The Ukrainians reported
    shooting down one to two Ka-52 helicopters
    almost daily, but only one was officially
    confirmed. The confirmed one was captured on
    video flying with a damaged tail. The Russian
    side claimed that the tail was damaged due
    to the firing of their own missile, but this is
    unlikely. It is more plausible that it was hit by
    a Ukrainian surface-to-air missile. Thanks to its
    two counter-rotating rotors, the helicopter was
    able to continue flying and make an emergency
    landing.
    The Ka-52 helicopters primarily operated
    from the Berdiansk base, where satellite
    imagery captured them. However, for unknown
    If there were no war, this shot of the Mi-8 on a field base would be downright idyllic. Notice the machine gun in the
    helicopter’s nose.
    INFO Eduard
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    HISTORY
    reasons, the Ukrainians attacked this airfield
    only on June 30, several weeks after the satellite
    imagery was published. Prior to that, they had
    repeatedly targeted other military facilities
    in Berdiansk with Storm Shadow missiles.
    After the airfield attack, Russian helicopters
    departed from there, and their activity on the
    frontlines decreased. The reduction in activity
    is also related to the change in Ukrainian tactics
    – they deploy less equipment on the front lines
    and use consequent infantry attacks in groups.
    This lack of targets makes it impractical for
    the Ka-52s to risk further losses. At least 39
    helicopters of this type have been destroyed
    during the war in Ukraine.
    Since the beginning of the offensive, the
    Ukrainian advance has been supported by
    strong artillery and missile attacks. These
    attacks not only destroy Russian trenches but
    also target logistical and command centers
    in the rear, as well as Russian artillery. Last
    summer, Russian artillery played a significant
    role in their offensive, but now it’s merely
    a shadow of what it used to be.
    Destroyed Dam
    However, what significantly altered
    Ukrainian plans was the destruction of the
    Kakhovka Dam on the Dnieper River. Its 3.2 km
    long wall exploded in the central part early
    in the morning on June 6, just two days after
    the start of the Ukrainian offensive. The dam
    held back over 18 cubic kilometers of water,
    which flooded the city of Kherson and another
    40 villages downstream on both sides of the
    Dnieper. Approximately 60 civilians lost their
    lives, and the floodwaters took several days to
    recede.
    Although both sides blamed each other
    for the dam’s explosion, it is certain that the
    Russians had control over it. The massive dam
    The destruction of the Kachovska dam caused enormous damage.
    A Russian Ka-52 helicopter with a damaged tail was
    captured on video on June 19.
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    HISTORY
    could not be threatened from the outside with
    weapons accessible to Ukraine; it had to be
    destroyed by an explosion from inside the dam,
    where only the Russians had access. They blew
    it up to prevent the Ukrainians from attempting
    to cross the river. The flooded and waterlogged
    areas made it impossible for some time.
    However, the result is also a huge
    environmental disaster. A significant amount
    of chemicals has been released into the river
    and subsequently into the sea, causing the
    death of many animals. What is even worse,
    four irrigation canals that were fed by the
    dam have dried up. This will negatively affect
    agricultural production and access to drinking
    water for hundreds of thousands of people for
    many years.
    The emptying of the Kakhovka Dam also
    poses a threat to the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear
    Power Plant. The dam water also served as
    a reservoir for cooling the nuclear reactors.
    Furthermore, the Russian forces have laid
    mines in the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant
    complex and are refusing to allow inspectors
    from the International Atomic Energy Agency
    (IAEA) into some areas.
    Prigozhin’s Coup
    After all the events in Ukraine, the Russians
    turned against each other. On the evening of
    June 23, an attempted coup by the Wagner
    Group mercenaries began. Its leader, Yevgeny
    Prigozhin, called it the "March of Justice," citing
    alleged shelling of the base of mercenaries in
    eastern Ukraine by the Russian army, which
    tried to take control of the group. In reality,
    Prigozhin had been planning this uprising for
    a long time and had been amassing vehicles,
    ammunition, and fuel for it, as western
    intelligence agencies discovered from satellite
    images.
    Prigozhin’s goal was to capture Russian
    Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and Chief of
    the General Staff Valery Gerasimov at the
    command center in Rostov, near the Ukrainian
    border, both of whom he had publicly criticized
    for a long time. However, Shoigu and Gerasimov
    managed to escape Rostov in time. Prigozhin
    only caught their deputies at the command
    center. The Wagner Group occupied Rostov
    and subsequently started advancing towards
    Moscow on Saturday, June 24th. They took over
    Voronezh and got within about 200 km of the
    capital. Their columns faced little resistance on
    the ground, as their path was only obstructed
    by roadblocks that could be easily overcome.
    The Russian Air Force attempted to resist.
    Helicopters, for instance, destroyed a fuel
    depot in Voronezh, which the Wagner Group
    had occupied. However, the mercenaries
    also had air defense systems, which caused
    another bleak day for the Russian Air Force. Six
    Funeral of the Il-22M crew in Ivanovo.
    The wreckage of the Il-22M carrying the registration RF-75917 near Kantemi-
    rovka in the Voronezh region. It was also shot down by the Wagner Group on
    June 24th.
    Mi-8MTPR-1 shot down by the Wagner Group on June 24 in the Voronezh
    region.
    Ka-52 registered RF-13418 with
    bort number “yellow 72” from the
    15th brigade of the Russian Army
    Aviation was shot down by the
    Wagner Group on June 24th near the
    village of Komintern in the Voronezh
    region. Lieutenant Colonel Alexey
    Vorozhtsov and Lieutenant Denis
    Oleynikov were killed.
    Burning Il-22M shortly before
    crashing into the ground. The tail,
    the outer wing parts, and both outer
    engines were torn off during the fall.
    INFO Eduard
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    HISTORY
    helicopters and one airplane were destroyed,
    and according to various sources, 15 to 30 of
    their crew members lost their lives.
    Two shot-down attack helicopters were
    Mi-35 and Ka-52, and four Mi-8 helicopters
    included three Mi-8MPTR-1 versions for radio-
    electronic warfare. The destroyed plane was
    an IL-22M, a flying command post based on the
    transport aircraft Il-18. The aircraft belonged
    to the 610th Combat Training and Conversion
    Aviation Center located in Ivanovo, northeast
    of Moscow. The dramatic video captured the
    aircraft's last moments. The burning plane
    spiraled violently as it crashed, resulting in
    its tail, wing parts, and two external engines
    being torn off. The entire crew of ten people
    perished. The names of eight of them were
    released - Lieutenant Colonel Artem Milovanov
    (43), the deputy chief of the mentioned 610th
    center, Captain Artem Sharoglazov (31), the
    aircraft commander, Major Gennady Belyakin
    (50), the navigator, Captain Viktor Polov (43),
    the flight engineer, Captain Igor Volochilov (49),
    the airborne technician, Senior Warrant Officer
    Sergey Starushok (49), the airborne radio
    operator, Senior Sergeant Viktor Podrepny
    (42), the airborne radio operator, and Senior
    Sergeant Alexey Skrykov (29), the airborne
    mechanic. Most of them were buried together in
    Ivanovo, while Milovanov was buried separately
    in Tambov.
    End of the Coup
    The Wagner Group was advancing towards
    Moscow smoothly until the evening of June
    24, when Prigozhin ordered them to halt and
    retreat. The next day, they also left Rostov,
    which they had fully controlled. Allegedly, the
    agreement to stop the action was brokered by
    Belarusian dictator Lukashenko in exchange
    for impunity for the Wagner Group and their
    exile in Belarus. Putin agreed to it, although
    he had declared in a morning TV speech that
    severe punishment awaited the rebels.
    Paradoxically, it turned out that in Russia,
    you can drive tanks, occupy government
    buildings in cities, and shoot down aircraft and
    helicopters of the Russian Air Force without
    any consequences officially. However, if you
    try to protest against the war or even hold up
    a blank piece of paper without any inscription
    in public, you may be imprisoned for several
    Mi-24P carrying the registration RF-92501 and bort number “red 27” crashed on June 22 in Belarus.
    A new shot of the wreckage of the Su-34, which was
    shot down last year in May on the banks of the Oskil
    River near Izyum.
    Shots of the Ka-52, which was destroyed last year
    in September at the Melitopol airbase.
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    HISTORY
    years on charges of extremism ... It is likely
    that Prigozhin hoped that a portion of the army
    would join him or that he could sway part of
    the population to his side. He also wanted to
    capture Shoigu and Gerasimov and use them as
    hostages. None of this worked out for him, so he
    decided to retreat.
    A side effect of this action is that the Wagner
    Group is no longer fighting at Bachmut or
    anywhere else in Ukraine. The Ukrainian army
    is advancing north and south of Bachmut, trying
    to encircle the city. After averting the coup,
    purges also began in the Russian army. Several
    generals and other officers were dismissed,
    transferred, or arrested and interrogated.
    Further Russian Losses
    In addition to the helicopters and aircraft
    destroyed during Prigozhins coup, the Russian
    Air Force suffered more losses. On Thursday,
    June 22, a Russian Mi-24P helicopter with the
    registration RF-92501 and bort number “Red
    27” crashed near the village of Lesnaya in the
    Brest Region of Belarus. The helicopter went
    down on the edge of a forest beside the road,
    and all three crew members were injured.
    On Friday, June 23, in the Luhansk Region,
    a Mi-8MPTR-1 helicopter was shot down. Out of
    the four crew members, only one managed to
    parachute to safety. The other three perished,
    and one of them was identified as officer Kirill
    Babayev.
    On Thursday, June 29, soldiers of the
    Ukrainian 10th Mountain Assault Brigade
    successfully used a portable Igla missile to
    shoot down a Russian Su-25 attack aircraft.
    The hit was captured on video. The Ukrainians
    also claimed to have shot down another Su-25
    on Wednesday, June 7, but that one remains
    unconfirmed.
    During the observed period, previously
    unknown footage of destroyed aircraft from
    both sides emerged. For example, the wreckage
    of a helicopter, likely a Ka-52, destroyed on
    the ground during a Ukrainian rocket attack
    on the Melitopol base on September 1, 2022,
    was captured on video. It was filmed by a crew
    member of another Russian helicopter during
    takeoff from that base.
    Ukrainian Losses
    During the observed period, the Ukrainian
    Air Force suffered two confirmed losses. On
    Friday, June 2nd, a MiG-29 was shot down near
    Pokrovsk in the Donetsk Region. It was piloted
    by Major Vladyslav Saveliev with the call
    sign “Nomad” from the 114th Tactical Aviation
    Brigade. He had previously participated in a U.S.
    training program at Columbus Air Force Base
    in Mississippi. Unfortunately, he did not survive
    the destruction of his fighter jet.
    In the Kharkiv Region, on Friday, June 9,
    a Mi-8 helicopter from the 18th Independent
    Army Aviation Brigade of the Ukrainian Army
    was lost under unknown circumstances. At
    least one crew member, Lieutenant Vladyslav
    Zozulya, did not survive the accident.
    Tragically, civilian populations in Ukraine
    have also suffered losses. An example is the
    attack on a pizzeria in the city of Kramatorsk
    in eastern Ukraine, where Russian rockets
    struck on Tuesday, June 27, killing 13 people.
    Among the victims were three children,
    including 14-year-old twin sisters. Writer
    Viktoria Amelina, who was injured in the
    attack, succumbed to her injuries a few days
    later. Ukrainian forces detained an informant
    responsible for providing the Russians with
    coordinates for the attack. The Russians
    claimed that they targeted a military objective
    and killed 200 foreign mercenaries and
    50 Ukrainian generals and high-ranking officers.
    However, the casualties reported were highly
    exaggerated and implausible for the size of
    a pizzeria.
    In June, there were also increasing
    discussions about the possible training of
    Ukrainian pilots on F-16 fighter jets. This
    initiative, which required significant efforts
    from both sides and considerable funding, came
    late in the conflict (considering the ongoing
    offensive without air cover). Some argue that
    it would be more pertinent to invest in artillery
    and missile munitions and enhance air defense
    capabilities. More on this topic will be covered
    in the next part of the series.
    Mi-24 helicopter delivered to Ukraine from the Czech Republic.
    This Mi-14PS carrying the bort number “yellow 34”; from the 10th brigade of the Ukrainian Naval Aviation was shot down last year in May by a Russian Su-35S fighter
    in the Odessa region. Photos of its wreckage surfaced only recently.
    INFO Eduard
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    BOXART STORY
    With 158 victories, he became the most
    successful German fighter pilot fighting
    against the Western Allies. Marseille had
    versatile skills in both piloting and gunnery.
    He did not hesitate to manoeuvre at low speed
    in enemy formation and to perform deflection
    shooting. He often scored several kills in
    one day. The question remains, of course,
    how successful a fighter Marseille actually
    was. Researchers Dan Case and Nick Hector
    conclude that 135 kills can be documented
    out of the Marseille´s total of 158 officially
    certified and five unconfirmed victories.
    Marseille thus has an 82.8 % accuracy rate
    for his claimed victories.
    From the end of May 1942 and in the first
    half of June his unit, I./JG 27, was deployed
    in support of ground forces during the Battle
    of Gazala. Its pilots also escorted bombers
    over Crete and after the fall of Tobruk, the
    operations concentrated on the fight for
    the air base of Gambut. June 1942 was an
    important month in the young fighter pilot's
    career. He was appointed commander of
    the 3rd Staffel and as he increased his
    score, the magic mark of 100 aerial victories
    approached. He surpassed this milestone on
    June 17.
    Around noon of that day, a four fighters
    flight (Schwarm) of Messerschmitts
    Bf 109 under Marseille’s command attacked
    a formation estimated by the Germans to be
    twenty Curtiss P-40s and ten Hurricanes.
    This was fighter escort of Bostons, which
    actually consisted of three Kittyhawks from
    No. 250 Sqn RAF and twelve Hurricanes from
    No. 73 Sqn RAF. Although outnumbered by
    the enemy, the Germans still confidently
    threw themselves into the fight. Within
    minutes Marseille was battling the allied
    fighters while the other three German pilots
    covered him. Attacking from above, he hit
    his first opponent, then shot down another
    while performing an evasive manoeuvre
    with RAF fighters behind him. He then
    spotted the Hurricanes conducting defensive
    circle around their colleague, who deployed
    parachute and descended to the ground.
    Marseille joined the circling formation and
    shot down two more aircraft. After while
    he targeted a Hurricane flying at about 100
    meters above Gambut airfield and under his
    fire the British machine crashed in flames
    into an anti-aircraft defence position. The
    coveted 100th kill was achieved.
    Marseille in this fierce aerial combat
    reported as shot down two Curtiss P-40s
    and three Hurricanes. In fact, none of the
    Curtisses were hit, but four Hurricanes from
    No. 73 Sq RAF fell victim to Marseille. Sqn Ldr
    D. H. Ward and P/O G. J. Wooley were killed
    while Sgt. Goodwin and P/O Stone bailed out,
    however, both were wounded. Two of their
    colleagues each claimed one damaged Bf 109.
    On their return to base, Marseille and
    his three colleagues spotted two Spitfires
    near Sidi Barrani. These were Mk.IV photo
    reconnaissance Spitfires from 2 PRU.
    Jochen” Marseille climbed up to the
    unsuspecting pair and with accurate fire sent
    F/Lt F. Spicer down, killing him in his machine.
    Upon landing, the exhausted Marseille
    was immediately withdrawn from combat
    operations and flown to Berlin. From the
    hands of Adolf Hitler, he received the Swords
    to the Knight’s Cross with oak leaves. A Nazi
    propaganda machine awaited him, as well
    as a visit to the Messerschmitt company in
    Augsburg. For the first time, he was able to try
    out the new G version of the Messerschmitt
    Bf 109. He returned to fighting in Africa at
    the end of August 1942. A month later he
    was killed when bailing out from a Bf 109
    G-2 after its engine caught fire. In November
    1942, I./JG 27 was withdrawn to Germany and,
    after replenishing losses and resting, was
    deployed in January 1943 to fight over France.
    This “African” unit fought in Western Europe
    until the end of the war.
    New Zealander Derek Harland Ward,
    DFC & Bar, who may have been Marseille's
    100th victim, was a veteran of the Battle of
    France and the Battle of Britain. He became
    commander of No. 73 Sq RAF in September
    1941 and had six victories to his credit. The
    fateful 17 June was marked as “tragic” in
    the unit diary. On the same day the unit had
    to withdraw from Gambut in the face of the
    advancing Germans. However, it continued
    fighting in North Africa and in December 1942
    recorded its 300th air victory.
    Illustration: Marek Ryś
    The Magic Hundred
    Text: Jan Bobek
    #70155
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    #84191
    BOXART STORY
    The B-17 bomber played a key role in the
    European and Mediterranean theater of
    operations, but also figured prominently
    during the early years of the Pacific War.
    However, in the Pacific, B-17s flew less than
    two percent of the total combat sorties of
    this type. In contrast to Europe, where B-17s
    served with thirty-three bomber groups,
    there were only five in the Pacific. Neither the
    number of available planes per Group within
    the Pacific units was comparable to the ETO.
    Particularly early in the conflict, Pacific BGs
    had only five to twenty planes available per
    unit. B-17s were involved in combat as early
    as the attack on Pearl Harbor, albeit more
    as casualties. At this time, the series of B-17
    (B, C, and D) that rarely made it to Europe
    were in service.
    In the early period of B-17 service in the
    PTO, mostly versions without a tail turret
    were used. This influenced the development
    of combat boxes. In the event of an attack by
    Japanese fighters from the rear, B-17B/C/D
    pilots would bring the aircraft into an
    S-style turn, giving their waist gunners the
    opportunity for more effective defensive
    fire. That caused necessity of larger space
    between planes in formation. That spacing was
    maintained later when B-17 versions E and F,
    which already had a tail turret, predominated.
    Unlike in the ETO, where it was attempted to
    keep the formation as tight as possible, in the
    Pacific, individual aircraft were given more
    freedom to maneuver, resulting in formations
    that appeared relatively disorganized. While
    the basis of formations in the Pacific was
    also the V-shape element of three machines,
    formations here tended to be much smaller,
    usually consisting of only 10 to 15 aircraft.
    The B-17, despite its obvious advantages,
    proved to be not quite suitable for the PTO.
    In the early phases of the conflict, when they
    targeted marine convoys and other targets at
    sea, they achieved marginal success. Such
    targets were much more suitable for dive and
    torpedo bombers. Later, when land targets
    became more numerous, B-17 service in the
    PTO was past its zenith. Beginning in early
    1943, they were replaced by faster, longer-
    range B-24s. And by the time Japan itself
    began to be bombed, the more modern B-29s
    bore the brunt of the attacks.
    Two missions of B-17 bomber crews,
    whose route took them around the east
    coast of New Guinea on August 14, 1942,
    were characteristic of this battlefield. First,
    a B-17E crew from the 435th BS, 19th BG, took
    off from Port Moresby in the early morning
    hours on a reconnaissance flight to Rabaul
    and Kavieng. The machine was named “Chief
    Seattle”, the crew was commanded by 1st Lt.
    Wilson L. Cook and one RAAF member was
    on board. The bomber was paid by citizens of
    Seattle through war bond campaign and its
    nom de guerre honoured the memory of Chief
    Seattle, who was the leader of the Suquamish
    and Duwamish tribes.
    Unfortunately, the reconnaissance
    machine encountered nine patrolling Zeros
    of the Tainan Kōkūtai under the command of
    Lt.(jg) Jōji Yamashita. Their mission was to
    provide cover for two cargo vessels and their
    escorting warships. Cook’s outnumbered
    machine was shot down during a five-minute
    air battle with no survivors. One Zero was
    damaged by defensive fire and, together with
    its wingman, its pilot returned to Buna, New
    Guinea.
    The remaining seven Zeros continued
    to cover the convoy, which was partially
    protected by cloud cover. Six B-17s from the
    19th BG searched for the Japanese vessels.
    The formation was led by the CO of the 30th
    BS, Maj. Dean C. Hoevet. Just as the Americans
    were about to drop their bomb load, they
    were attacked by Yamashita’s Zeros. During
    the five-minute battle, four bombers were
    damaged, one of them severely. The American
    gunners managed to shoot down a Zero flown
    by PO3c Masami Arai, who was killed in his
    machine. The Japanese pilots reported that
    the bombers dropped eight bombs, but in
    the bad weather, the crews of the Japanese
    vessels didn’t even notice the bombers’
    attack . Piotr Forkasiewicz captured the
    opening part of this encounter in his painting.
    Tainan Kōkūtai was deployed to the fighting
    over Guadalcanal from August 1942. This unit
    retained the new A6M3 Type 32 Zeros with
    shorter range on New Guinea. The fighting
    over the New Guinea at the end of August
    was disastrous for Tainan Kōkūtai, which is
    described in the article Headhunters over
    Buna in the January 2023 issue of INFO
    Eduard magazine.
    Text: Jan Bobek and Jan Zdiarský
    Illustration: Piotr Forkasiewicz
    Loose formation
    INFO Eduard
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    BOXART STORY #70142
    The last major offensive of the Vietnam War
    was launched by the North Vietnamese Army
    on March 30, 1972, under the name Nguen Hue.
    In response to this “Easter Offensive,” President
    Nixon suspended the ongoing peace talks and
    ordered the launch of the airborne Operation
    Linebacker. Intended to disrupt supplies to enemy
    troops, it was conducted from May 9 to October
    23, 1972, when it was suspended on the promise
    of further peace talks. But these collapsed again,
    and so Linebacker II was launched. Beginning on
    December 18, an intensive twelve-day bombing
    campaign began, during which more than
    20,000 tons of bombs were dropped on military
    and industrial targets. Fifteen B-52s were shot
    down in the process, mostly by SAM anti-aircraft
    missiles. One Stratofortress was claimed by
    Pham Tuan, future Vietnam’s first astronaut, who
    took off against the enemy on the night of 26–27
    December in MiG-21MF No. 5121 from Noi Bai
    base. The GCI directed him to a B-52 formation,
    and he was given permission to attack with two
    missiles and withdraw immediately.
    It was the ninth day of Operation Linebacker
    II and a total of 57 B-52s were sent to the
    airstrikes that night. These were to bomb railway
    stations at Lang Dang, Due Noi and Trung Quan,
    six were to target warehouses at Van Dien and
    three formations of three aircraft were to attack
    three different SAM missile sites. Over Due Noi,
    Black 03 suffered minor damage but returned to
    Utapao base without incident. Much worse was
    the situation over Trung Quan, where 12 bombers
    were targeted by 45 SAM missiles and one of
    them hit the Cobalt 01 of Capt. Frank D. Lewis.
    All crew members suffered injuries, navigator
    1/Lt. Ben. L Fryer being mortally wounded. The
    machine was engulfed in flames, electrical
    systems failed. Shortly after the hit, the pilot
    ordered all crew members to eject. In the
    process, Maj. Allen L. Johnson, EWO, lost his life.
    This was the last B-52 shot down with its crew
    captured.
    The event, which occurred during an attack on
    a SAM site VN-243, had a happier ending despite
    its drama.
    The Ash 02 of Capt. John D. Mize was one of
    a trio bombing that target and one of the 15 SAM
    missiles fired at them hit his left wing while he
    was executing a steep turn away from the target
    after dropping the bombs. Shrapnels injured
    the pilot’s left leg and arm. The badly damaged
    B-52 lost all its left engines, one of which was
    on fire. The bomber fell several thousand feet
    before Mize was able to get it levelled off. It was
    almost superhuman effort, as the big bomber
    had lost most of its boosters, not to mention the
    asymmetrical thrust of the engines. Morerover,
    Mize was wounded, as was the navigator,
    1/Lt William L. Robinson, who anyway was able
    to give his pilot a heading to leave the target
    area without navigational equipment. “It was
    not a question of making it back to the base, but
    one of how far we could get before we had to
    abandon the aircraft”, Mize later said, flying the
    crippled bomber only by his skills and instincts
    as all he had left of his flight instruments were
    the airspeed indicator and altimeter.
    A rescue ship HC-130 joined Ash 02 on the
    border with Laos and, sitting on its right wing,
    gave it cross-check and directed Mize and his
    men to a safe area. But the badly wounded B-52
    was literally disintegrating in mid-air. Mize was
    about to give the order to eject, but the navigator
    cautioned him that they were over mountains,
    and if they could stay airborne for some thirty
    miles, they would have flat rice-paddy fields
    under them. With the last of his strength
    Capt. Mize kept his aircraft in the air, but after
    a while he had to give up and order the crew to
    eject. Lt. Robinson suffered an ejection system
    malfunction and informed his Captain he would
    attempt to jump out through the hole made by
    ejection of radar navigator. Mize gave him three
    minutes, knowing that once the navigator left
    his seat, he would lose contact with him. Almost
    exactly after that time elapsed, all electrical
    systems failed, and Mize had no choice but to
    eject himself as well. But, to his relief, the whole
    crew landed safely on parachutes and was
    rescued. Capt. Mize was awarded the Air Force
    Cross for his heroic performance. He was later
    promoted to rank of Major and stayed in service
    until August 1, 1984. He passed away on June 15,
    2012. Other crew members were awarded the
    DFC and the Purple Heart.
    And what about Pham Tuan? It is highly unlikely
    that his missile could have caused such extensive
    damage to a B-52, nor does the testimony of the
    crew itself add up. The Vietnamese fighter fired
    his missiles, but they probably didn’t hit anything.
    His MiG-21MF is now on display in a museum with
    eight kill stars under the cockpit, but at least one
    of them is surplus ...
    Illustration: Adam Tooby
    A surplus star
    Text: Richard Plos
    INFO Eduard32
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  • Page 34

    #70155
    Bf 109F-4
    1/72
    The ProfiPACK edition kit of German WWII fighter
    plane Bf 109F-4 in 1/72 scale.
    plastic parts: Eduard
    marking options: 6
    decals: Eduard
    PE parts: yes, pre-painted
    painting mask: yes
    resin parts: no
    Product page
    KITS 08/2023
    INFO Eduard34
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  • Page 35

    Bf 109F-4/Trop, WNr. 10137, Oblt. Hans-Joachim Marseille,
    CO of 3./JG 27, Ain-el-Gazala, Libya, June 1942
    Bf 109F-4, WNr. 7183, Hptm. Hans Hahn, III./JG 2,
    St. Pol, France, October 1941
    Bf 109F-4, Maj. Hannes Trautloft, CO of JG 54, Relbitsy,
    the Soviet Union, March 1942
    Hans-Joachim “Jochen” Marseille became the
    most successful German fighter pilot fighting
    against the Western Allies. He was awarded the
    Knight’s Cross with Oak Leaves, Swords and
    Diamonds. As an excellent pilot, and master
    of gunfire and dogfighting, he also shoved
    a respect and grace to his opponents as he tried
    to save downed enemy airmen in the desert by
    dropping news of their fate on the other side of
    the front. On September 30, 1942, he flew the
    Messerschmitt Bf 109G-2/Trop as he led escort
    mission of the 3. Staffel to cover a squadron of
    Ju 87 Stukas. On the return leg, a smoke filled
    the cockpit and Marseille was forced to bail out.
    Hitting the rudder after the emergency exit of the
    plane, he lost consciousness, and his parachute
    did not open. Seconds later, Marseille died from
    the impact on the ground. The aircraft had the
    upper camouflage color RLM 79 sprayed all over
    the fuselage sides as a non-standard finish. The
    lower surfaces were sprayed with RLM 78 and the
    camouflage was complemented by the markings
    of the aircraft operating on the Southern front,
    i.e., white wingtips, white spinner and a band on
    the aft fuselage of the same color. The engine
    cowling bore the emblem of I. Gruppe JG 27 on
    both sides.
    Hans “Assi“ Hahn, a fighter ace and recipient of the
    Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves was in command
    of 4./JG 2 from December 1939. From October 1940
    he overtook the lead of III./JG 2. Fifty kill marks on
    the rudder of his aircraft represented his combat
    success on the Western Front. Hahn added the
    fiftieth kill to his tally on October 13, 1941, when
    he shot down a Spitfire near Boulogne-sur-Mer.
    Altogether he destroyed 66 enemy aircraft in the
    West. In late 1942 “Assi” Hahn moved to the East
    and commanded II./JG 54 from November 1, 1942.
    On February 21, 1943, he was downed, captured
    and spent seven years in captivity, returning back
    to Germany in 1950. He wrote a book about his
    life in prison “Ich spreche die Wahrheit” (I Speak
    the Truth). Hahn’s total score stands at 108 kills.
    The rooster head painted on the fuselage was the
    crest of III./JG 2, based on Hahn’s family name
    (“der Hahn” means “the rooster” in English).
    Hannes Trautloft entered combat in the Spanish
    Civil War. He flew the Bf 109 and participated
    in the development of tactics for this fighter
    aircraft. He fought in the Polish campaign as well
    as in France and managed to achieve at least one
    victory in every campaign. On August 25, 1940, he
    assumed command of JG 54. He led this fighter
    unit through Operation Barbarossa, the attack
    on the Soviet Union, and in subsequent combat
    till July 5, 1943. Trautloft was credited with 58
    victories and he was awarded the Knight’s Cross
    on July 27, 1941. His personal aircraft wore a non-
    standard camouflage scheme. It is not clear which
    colors were used by JG 54 during its deployment
    to the Soviet Union.
    KITS 08/2023
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  • Page 36

    Bf 109F-4/Z, WNr. 13325, Oblt. Viktor Bauer, 9./JG 3, Shchigry,
    the Soviet Union, June 1942
    Bf 109F-4/B, Oblt. Frank Liesendahl, 10.(Jabo)/JG 2,
    France, June 1942
    Bf 109F-4, WNr. 13169, Fw. Heinrich Bartels, 8./JG 5,
    Petsamo, Finland, September 1942
    This aircraft was flown by Viktor Bauer, the holder
    of the Knight’s Cross with Oak Leaves and an ace
    with 106 kills. He achieved most of them in combat
    with Soviet pilots. Bauer flew this particular
    aircraft in the summer of 1942, when German
    Group of Armies A advanced on Stalingrad. The
    unit received Messerschmitts originally intended
    for service in North Africa, thus camouflaged in
    RLM 78/79 colors. The segments of RLM 74/70
    (some sources state RLM 75/71) were added
    to the desert camouflage scheme to make the
    camouflage more effective in the Eastern Front
    environment. The yellow wingtips, fuselage band
    and lower cowling were typical for airplanes
    flown in the East Front. The name Ellen referred
    to Bauer’s wife, the III./JG 3 emblem was painted
    on the nose of the aircraft. Bauer achieved his
    106th and last kill on August 9, 1942, northwest of
    Stalingrad. The very next day he was hit by enemy
    fire, wounded, and had to belly-land his crippled
    plane. After rescue, Bauer served in various posts
    of Ergänzungs (replacement) units.
    During late 1941, the Luftwaffe considered
    renewing bombing of Great Britain and coastal
    shipping. Each fighter unit fighting against the
    Great Britain was ordered to single out one
    Staffel for this purpose. The 10. (Jabo) Staffel
    played this role within JG 2. Under command of
    Oblt. Frank Liesendahl pilots sank 20 vessels
    (total tonnage 630,000 BRT) over a four-month
    period. Liesendahl was killed when attacking
    cargo vessels near Brixham on July 17, 1942.
    Posthumously he was promoted to Hauptmann
    rank and was awarded the Knight’s Cross as well.
    Liesendahl’s personal mount wore a standard day
    fighter camouflage consisting of RLM 74/75/76.
    The ship-munching fox was a 10. (Jabo) Staffel
    badge. Note the symbols of vessels damaged or
    sunk by Liesendahl on the rudder.
    The Austrian Heinrich Bartels, a German ace
    with 99 kills achieved during some 500 combat
    sorties and holder of the Knight’s Cross served
    on all fronts the Luftwaffe units were engaged.
    Half of his kills were gained in the north while
    with JG 5 against Soviet pilots. He met his fate on
    December 23, 1944, against P-47s of the USAAF’s
    56th FG in the Battle for the Ardennes. The wreck
    of his aircraft was discovered in 1968 near the
    town of Bad Godesberg in Germany. He flew this
    aircraft in the second half of 1942 during fighting
    in northern Finland. The aircraft was camouflaged
    in RLM 75/71/76 in a non-standard style dictated
    by operational conditions. In September 1942, the
    rudder displayed 29 kill marks, corresponding to
    his score. After Bartels was awarded the Knight’s
    Cross and after reaching 45th victory, his crew
    chief painted the award on the rudder of the
    airplane.
    KITS 08/2023
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  • Page 37

    Recommended:
    for Bf 109F-4 1/72
    672313 Bf 109F propeller early PRINT (Brassin)
    672314 Bf 109F propeller late PRINT (Brassin)
    672315 Bf 109F gun barrels PRINT (Brassin)
    672316 Bf 109F wheels PRINT (Brassin)
    672317 Bf 109F undercarriage legs BRONZE (Brassin)
    672318 Bf 109F radio compartment PRINT (Brassin)
    672321 Bf 109F/G external fuel tanks (Brassin)
    672322 Bf 109F wheel bays rounded PRINT (Brassin)
    672323 Bf 109F/G wheels bays angular PRINT (Brassin)
    672324 Bf 109 SC250 bomb (Brassin)
    672325 Bf 109F/G exhaust stacks PRINT (Brassin)
    672326 Bf 109F/G/K gun pods PRINT (Brassin)
    672329 Bf 109 balance weights PRINT (Brassin)
    3DL72018 Bf 109F SPACE (3D Decal Set)
    #672329
    #672318
    #672326
    #672317
    OVERTREES
    #70155X
    Bf 109F-4
    1/72
    Product page
    OVERLEPT
    #70155-LEPT
    Bf 109F-4 PE
    -
    Set
    1/72
    Product page
    KITS 08/2023
    INFO Eduard
    37
    August 2023
  • Page 38

    THE ZIPPER
    The Limited edition of the kit of the US jet fighter plane F-104C
    Starfighter in 1/48 scale. The selection of aircraft is focused
    on the units taking part in the Vietnam War.
    plastic parts: Kinetic
    marking options: 7
    decals: Eduard
    PE parts: yes, pre-painted
    painting mask: yes
    resin parts: yes, senzor, wheels and seat
    #11169
    1/48
    Product page
    KITS 08/2023
    INFO Eduard38
    August 2023
  • Page 39

    F-104C-5-LO, 56-0891, Maj. Charles H. Drisko, 435th TFS, 479th TFW, Udorn RTAFB, Thailand, 1967
    F-104C-5-LO, 56-0891, Col. George Laven Jr., 479th TFW, George AFB, California,
    United States, 1959
    F-104 serial number 56-0891 arrived in Udorn,
    Thailand, in January 1967. In the following months
    it was a personal mount of Major Herb Drisko,
    who had the ground personnel paint on the port
    side a cartoon of Snoopy wearing brown leather
    jacket and yellow scarf flying on the 20mm Vulcan
    Gatling Gun with its barels blasting. Under Snoopy
    there was an inscription “SNOOPY SNIPER“. The
    airplane’s starboard was decorated with Herb’s
    wife name Nancy J. After the operations were
    over, in June 1967 F-104 was flown over to the
    USA, to Muniz AFB in Puerto Rico. Charles Herbert
    Drisko, called Herb by his friends, was borne on
    October 26, 1928, in Bartlesville, OK and after
    he graduated from the high school, during the
    period after the war, he worked in the oil fields in
    Wyoming. In July 1951 he joined the Air Force and
    after completing the training and receiving his
    officer‘s commission he served in the Korean War
    as a radar operator on F-89 out of Okinawa. After
    that he completed his pilot training and during
    the Vietnam war flew F-104. He left the Air Force
    in 1971 with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. Herb
    Drisko passed away on October 26, 2000.
    “SNOOPY SNIPER“ history was very colorful. The
    aircraft serial number 56-0891 was received on
    October 15, 1958 as the first C-version airframe
    at Nellis AFB in Las Vegas, Nevada. The aircraft
    was christened Really George as its home base
    was supposed to be 479th TFW at George AFB,
    California. The aircraft was assigned to the
    commander, Col. George Laven Jr., who was
    a WWII ace credited with five kills. Same as his
    previous personal aircraft. Laven’s new F-104
    sported rather gaudy coloration which gradually
    developed to the point that the superior officers
    ordered its removal as it was deemed too wild.
    It was followed by the more moderate blue coat
    with four stripes representing colors of all four
    479th TFW squadrons. George Laven Jr. was
    a self-confident Texan known for his daring
    style of flying. He joined the USAAF in the end of
    December 1940 and completed his pilot training
    in August 1941. He gained his fame during his
    service with 343rd FG flying P-38s and 54th FG
    in Alaska where he guided P-39s. During this
    period he scored four aerial victories and he
    destroyed almost two dozens of locomotives in
    Europe. In March 1945 he was assigned to the
    49th FG Headquarters but regardless he flew
    combat as much as possible and on April 26,
    1945 he shot down H8K2 as his fifth kill. After the
    war he continued in the service. At George AFB
    he commanded several groups and wings. In the
    end of 1950s he was in the command of the 479th
    TFW. He retired as a veteran of three wars and in
    1969 he became a McDonnell Douglas consultant
    in Israel. He continued flying F-4 Phantom II and
    F-15 Eagle.
    KITS 08/2023
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  • Page 40

    F-104C-10-LO, 57-0923, Lt. Col. Robert A. Preciado, 435th TFS,
    479th TFW, Udorn RTAFB, Thailand, July 1967
    F-104C-5-LO, 56-0886, 476th TFS, 479th TFW, Da Nang AB,
    South Vietnam, April 1965
    F-104 serial number 57-0923 arrived in Udorn
    on September 19, 1966. It was assigned to the
    flight commander Lt. Col. Robert Preciado who
    let both sides of his aircraft nose painted with
    the nickname of his wife Dolly Hellooo Dolly,
    long Hellooo coming from the famous musical
    Hello Dolly starring Barbra Streisand. After the
    operations in Udorn were completed, the aircraft
    was flown back to the USA where, in July 1967,
    it arrived in Muniz AFB in Puerto Rico. Starting
    in August 1968 it was assigned to the 198th TFS.
    Robert Preciado was a veteran of three wars.
    During WWII he flew in the Pacific with the Air
    Transport Command and continued his aviation
    career in Korea and Vietnam.
    In 1965 Starfighter serial number 56-0886 flew
    out of Da Nang airbase in the South Vietnam.
    Its nose was decorated with the red inscription
    Fannie and it was one of few 479th TFW planes
    that had their nicknames painted on the fuselage.
    In April 1965, the 479th TFW dispatched 28 F-104C
    to Da Nang airbase. They flew the combat patrols
    over the bay of Tonkin to protect EC-121 Warning
    Star nicknamed College Eye or Disco. The effect
    of the F-104 deployment on the North Vietnamese
    and Chinese MiG operations was immediate. The
    Vietnam Peoples Republic‘s pilots learned very
    soon to avoid any contact with EC-121 airplanes
    which were escorted by F-104. During the whole
    479th TFW deployment in 1965 only two brief
    encounters between F-104C and MiGs took place.
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  • Page 41

    F-104C-5-LO, 56-0910, Capt. James B. Trice, 435th TFS,
    479th TFW, Udorn RTAFB, Thailand, 1967
    F-104C-5-LO, 56-0938, Maj. Bobby D. Betsworth, 435th TFS,
    479th TFW, Udorn RTAFB, Thailand, June-August 1967
    One of the first F-104 delivered to the Udorn AFB
    on June 6, 1966 was Starfighter serial number
    56-0910. It was assigned as a personal mount to
    Capt. James Trice who had his Starfighter nose
    decorated with a nose art with the inscription
    PUSSYCAT. Initially the noseart consisted of the
    cat caricature only, the text was applied later.
    After the operations in Udorn ceased, in July 1967
    the aircraft was flown back to the USA to the
    Muniz AFB in Puerto Rico and starting in August
    1967 it was assigned to the 198th TFS.
    This Starfighter was one of the first eight aircraft
    of this type delivered to the Udorn AFB on June
    6, 1966. It was typically flown by Maj. Bobby
    Bedsworth who hailed from Missouri nicknamed
    Show Me State. For that reason the nose of his
    aircraft was decorated with a mule and this
    inscription. After the operations in Udorn ceased,
    on August 20, 1967 the airplane was flown back to
    the USA to the Muniz AFB in Puerto Rico.
    KITS 08/2023
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    August 2023
  • Page 42

    F-104C-5-LO, 56-0898, Maj. Hugh B. Spencer, 435th TFS,
    479th TFW, Udorn RTAFB, Thailand, 1967
    This Starfighter took part in the very first mission
    in Vietnam in 1965. After the overhaul it was one
    of twelve aircraft which on July 22, 1966 landed
    at Udorn. During the following combat missions it
    was mostly flown by Maj. Hugh Spencer. In March
    1967 the pin up girl named SEX MACHINE was
    painted on the aircraft’s nose. After the operations
    in Udorn were completed, in July 1967 the aircraft
    was flown back to the USA to the Muniz AFB in
    Puerto Rico and in August 1967 it was assigned
    to the 198th TFW. Currently the aircraft is on
    display in the Kalamazoo Air Zoo Aviation History
    Museum in its original markings carried while
    flying at 434th TFS, the large fuselage number
    FG-898 and red markings.
    Recommended:
    for F-104C 1/48
    FE1270 F-104A/C seatbelts STEEL (PE
    -
    Set)
    644158 F-104C LööK (Brassin)
    644168 F-104C LööKplus (Brassin)
    648028 AIM-9B Sidewinder (Brassin)
    648188 M 117 bomb early (Brassin)
    648231 LAU-3/A (Brassin)
    648389 BLU-27 (Brassin)
    648891 F-104A/C airbrakes PRINT (Brassin)
    648892 F-104A/C exhaust nozzle PRINT (Brassin)
    3DL48064 F-104C SPACE (3D Decal Set)
    EX851 F-104A/C TFace (Mask)
    #648892
    #648891
    #648231
    #648389
    #648168
    KITS 08/2023
    INFO Eduard42
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  • Page 43

    1/48
    WILDER CAT
    The Limited edition of the kit of the US WWII aircraft carrier-based fighter FM-2 Wildcat
    in 1/48 scale. This version of the Wildcat was built by the Eastern Aircraft Division
    of General Motors and was easily recognizable thanks to taller fin. It was also the
    most potent of all Wildcats thanks to the more powerful engine.
    plastic parts: Eduard
    marking options: 10
    decals: Eduard
    PE parts: yes, pre-painted
    painting mask: yes
    resin parts: no
    #11175
    Product page
    KITS 08/2023
    INFO Eduard
    43
    August 2023
  • Page 44

    FM-2 - new sprues in detail
    Sprue D
    Sprue K
    KITS 08/2023
    INFO Eduard44
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  • Page 45

    Sprue P
    KITS 08/2023
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  • Page 46

    Ens. Darrell C. Bennett, VC-10, USS Gambier Bay, August 1944
    Lt. Leopold M. Ferko, VC-4, USS White Plains, November 1944
    The Composite Squadron 10 was established
    on September 23, 1943 and adopted the name
    Mallards. The unit served on board the carrier
    USS Gambier Bay from April 5 and after her
    sinking in the Battle off Samar on October 25,
    the unit operated from airfields in Leyte. In
    January 1945, VC-10 was reformed and prepared
    for further deployment, but this never happened
    and it was inactivated at the end of the war. Ens.
    Darrell Bennett was born in Hamburg, Iowa, on
    March 30, 1924 and entered the Navy as an air
    cadet on October 1, 1943. Ten months later he
    was sent on his first operational tour with the
    VC-10 aboard the USS Gambier Bay. On the day
    he arrived, he had his picture taken in front of
    the FM-2 with a painting of two girls on the port
    side of the engine cowling. The first was based
    on a painting called Patriotic Gal by the famous
    Antonio Vargas. It is not known who had the two
    girls painted on the aircraft, but the paintings
    already bore signs of modification and wear. It is
    possible that Bennett only had “Smokey’s” added
    to the inscription “Lucky Witch”, as the “Smokey”
    was his nickname. He fought heroic battles with
    VC-10 during the Battle of Leyte Gulf and narrowly
    escaped sinking with the USS Gambier Bay, which
    was shot up by Japanese cruisers at the Battle
    off Samar. Bennett survived the war and stayed
    in the Navy afterwards. He flew combat missions
    in Korea and later trained recruits. During his
    career, he rose to command Fleet Air Miramar.
    After retirement in 1965 he flew as a private pilot.
    He died in December 2020.
    Leopold Martin Ferko was born to Slovak parents
    on January 29, 1915, in Great Falls, Montana. He
    earned his bachelor’s degree from Stanford
    University, where he was also a star of the
    American football team there. He then taught
    math and English at San Francisco High School
    and also coached the local football team before
    signing up with the Navy and beginning flight
    training on February 3. He then continued as an
    instructor at Corpus Christi, Texas, before being
    transferred to Pearl Harbor in June 1943, where
    he embarked with the VC-4 on the USS White
    Plains. The unit consisted of 16 FM-2s and 12 TBM
    Avengers. During the three days of the Battle of
    Leyte Gulf, he scored all five of his kills, although
    the first two may have been his last. After shooting
    down two Oscars he was in fact attacked himself
    and his FM-2 took one hit after another before the
    attacking enemy was shot down by the Ens. Pool.
    Ferko then had to make an emergency landing at
    Tacloban due to a damaged elevator. There, the
    aircraft was repaired, and he was able to return
    in time to score three more kills. Leopold Ferko
    retired from the Navy with the rank of Lieutenant
    Commander and died on May 16, 1992, in San
    Francisco. This FM-2 was the second one he used
    and the kill symbols were probably only on the
    right side. However, the decals also offer the
    option of placing the symbols on the left side.
    KITS 08/2023
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  • Page 47

    BuNo. 55643, VC-69, USS Guadalcanal, spring/summer 1944
    BuNo. 74626, VC-8, Lt.(jg) Harry N. O’Connor, USS Nehenta Bay, August 1945
    FM-2s played a significant role in the Atlantic,
    where the Composite Squadrons focused on
    support of anti-submarine missions as the
    German U-boats were a major threat to supply
    convoys. The Composite Squadrons operated
    from small Casablanca or Sangamon class
    escort carriers and consisted usually of the TBM
    Avengers and the FM-2 Wildcats. Smaller size of
    FM-2 suited better to the cramped conditions on
    board than the massive Hellcats. USS Gadalcanal
    was converted from the freighter Astrolabe
    Bay and entered service in September 1943.
    During her maiden voyage she destroyed three
    submarines. As a flagship of the Task Group 22.3
    USS Guadalcanal added two more U-boats to her
    score on the second tour. More to it, the TG 22.3
    managed to capture lightly damaged German
    submarine. After that tour the VC-8 was replaced
    by VC-69 in the fall. The unit was activated on
    July 1, 1943 and first was placed on board of USS
    Bogue from May to July 1944. During this cruise,
    pilots were credited with the destruction of the
    Japanese submarine I-52, which was on a secret
    mission to German-occupied Lorient, France.
    No further similar successes were recorded
    by this squadron aboard USS Guadalcanal, and
    the unit was inactivated on June 22, 1945. Her
    FM-2s bore the later Atlantic livery of Dark Gull
    Gray and white. The inner part of the propeller
    blades were painted white to lighten the
    appearance of the “dark hole” in the nose of the
    aircraft. The unit’s emblem was a wolf’s head
    with aviator’s goggles; VC-69 aircraft sported it
    on both sides of the nose.
    Combined Squadron VC-8 operated aboard the
    aircraft carrier USS Nehenta Bay from May to
    September 1945. Prior to that, it had operated
    from the decks of USS Mission Bay and USS
    Guadalcanal. With USS Nehenta Bay, she left the
    Atlantic theater and moved to the Pacific. USS
    Nehenta Bay had been operating in the area since
    June 1944, when she joined with TF-51 aboard
    for offensive operations against the Marianas.
    Subsequently, from August 1944 to January 1945,
    she escorted and protected, with VC-11 aboard,
    tankers for refueling at sea, allowing for more
    efficient use of naval forces. She returned to the
    U.S. on February 19, 1945, for repairs at San Diego,
    and on May 9, already with VC-8 aboard, she
    arrived at Ulithi, where she prepared for attacks
    on Okinawa as part of Task Unit 52.1. She then
    protected tankers again from late June until early
    August, and after the fighting ceased, anchored at
    Pearl Harbor on September 24. There, VC-8 was
    inactivated on October 8. This aircraft, with Lt.(jg)
    O’Connor in the cockpit, crashed on landing on
    August 5, striking the aircraft on board. Two other
    FM-2s (BuNos. 75081 and 74508) were destroyed.
    The aircraft bore the identifying markings of the
    carrier and Task Unit, i.e., white fields on the
    ailerons (extending slightly into the wing) white
    aft under the horizontal tail surfaces, and twin
    yellow stripes on the wing and fuselage in front
    of the tail surfaces.
    KITS 08/2023
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  • Page 48

    VC-80, USS Manila Bay, autumn 1944
    Lt. O’Neill, VC-13, USS Tripoli, spring 1944
    Composite Squadron VC-80 was established on
    December 16, 1943 and, after embarking on USS
    Manila Bay, participated in the battles of Leyte
    and Luzon. The ship operated during the Battle
    of Leyte as part of Task Group TG 77.4.2 (call
    sign Taffy 2) of Rear Admiral Felix B. Stump and
    VC-80 contributed significantly to the success
    of American forces in the largest naval battle
    in history. Then, during the fighting in Lingayen
    Gulf, the USS Manila Bay was hit by a kamikaze
    attack at 1750 hours on January 5. It damaged her
    radar and communications equipment, caused
    a fire, and most importantly, cost the lives of
    14 men. The resulting fire was quickly dealt
    with by firefighters, and some 24 hours later
    VC-80 aircraft were already beginning limited
    operations from her deck. The aircraft depicted
    bore the typical three-color Pacific livery, the
    markings complementing the symbol assigned
    to units operating from USS Manila Bay, a white
    chevron on the vertical tail surfaces.
    VC-13 was established on January 3, 1944 and on
    February 16 of that year embarked on the new
    escort carrier USS Tripoli. The ship suffered a fire
    shortly after her maiden cruise when an acetylene
    torch ignited fuel that was inadvertently dumped
    into the water on the starboard bow. Two seamen
    were killed. After repairs, USS Tripoli departed
    San Diego on January 31 for her new homeport in
    Norfolk, Virginia. She arrived there on February
    16 and sailed for her first mission on March 15
    as the flagship of Task Group 21.15, in which she
    was accompanied by five destroyers. The group
    patrolled west of Cape Verde, disrupting the
    refueling of German submarines. On April 19, an
    Avenger crew spotted German U-513 awaiting her
    “Milch Cow” (a refueling submarine). Subsequent
    attacks were unsuccessful, and the submarine
    escaped. VC-13 thus returned from the cruise
    without success and was replaced on board by
    VC-6 on April 29. New duty station of VC-13 was
    USS Anzio (formerly USS Coral Sea), which the
    squadron embarked on March 22 to engage in
    support of the invasion of Okinawa. The aircraft
    depicted here is from the Atlantic mission
    period. Lt. O’Neill had his photograph taken with
    this FM-2, but it was probably not his personal
    aircraft. Interesting is the white paint extending
    over the leading edges to the upper surfaces. On
    either side of the engine cowling was painted the
    squadron emblem, a black cat with its front paws
    in an obscene gesture. It might have blue or gray
    background. The decals offer both options.
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  • Page 49

    VC-93, Lt.(jg) Robert Sullivan, USS Petrof Bay, Okinawa, April–May 1945
    VC-14, USS Hogatt Bay, November 1944
    VC-93 was established on February 23, 1944 and
    its personnel was first to be trained aboard the
    USS Matanikau (from October 14, 1944). During its
    cruises off the Californian coast, this ship trained
    1,332 pilots in the following months until June
    1945. VC-93 replaced VC-76 aboard USS Petrof
    Bay on March 10, 1945 and sailed from Guam on
    March 21 to prepare for the Battle of Okinawa as
    part of Task Unit 52.1.2. VC-93 pilots supported the
    Marines first in the capture of the Kerama and
    Keise Shima archipelagos and then in the main
    operation on Okinawa. Beginning on April 13, the
    pilots then focused on neutralizing Japanese
    airfields on the Sakashima Archipelago, from
    which the Kamikaze pilots were taking off. By the
    end of their mission on May 26, VC-93 pilots had
    destroyed many enemy aircraft on the ground
    and shot down 17. Two of these kills were credited
    to Lt.(jg) Robert Sullivan. For her next mission,
    VC-93 sailed aboard USS Steamer Bay on June
    10, 1945 and, as part of the 3rd Fleet, assisted
    in the neutralization of Japanese airfields in
    the Sakishima Gunto Archipelago beginning
    June 14. This was followed by a return to San
    Diego and the end of the war. VC-93 aircraft
    operating from aboard USS Perof Bay bore the
    distinguishing symbol of a four-leaf clover on the
    vertical tail surfaces and on the upper right and
    bottom left wing halves. The all-blue livery was
    complemented by a photographically documented
    symbol of Sullivan’s first kill on the right side
    below the cockpit. It is uncertain whether it was
    also on the port side.
    Composite Squadron 14 was established on
    October 12, 1943 and deactivated on October 1, 1945.
    Its history is associated solely with the escort
    carrier USS Hogatt Bay, which was commissioned
    on January 11, 1944 and, after a necessary test
    cruise and one transport mission to and from
    Pearl Harbor, took aboard VC-14’s equipment and
    personnel. Training flight operations followed
    from March 26, with the first landing aboard
    USS Hogatt Bay conducted by Captain William
    Vincent Saunders. The ship embarked on her first
    operational tour on May 1, 1944 and was assigned
    to Task Unit 16.14.6. VC-14 pilots subsequently
    conducted anti-submarine operations and air
    cover for destroyers in the Western Pacific area
    until late November. They were then replaced by
    VC-88 on board and VC-14 did not see further
    operational deployment. This Wildcat is shown
    here in its late service form on the USS Hogatt
    Bay. Of interest is the Judy inscription on the right
    side of the engine cowling, as well as the non-
    standard appearance of the ENCLOSURE RELEASE
    stencil on the right side below the windshield. The
    pilot’s name is difficult to read in the available
    photographs, it might be Lt.(jg) Newburn.
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  • Page 50

    VC-27, Lt. Ralph Elliot, Jr., USS Savo Island, January 1945
    JV640, Sub-Lt W. Park, No. 881 Squadron FAA, HMS Pursuer, August 1944
    Although the FM-2 Wildcats were the most
    powerful and most numerous version of this type,
    they were less frequently engaged in combat
    with enemy aircraft than the previous F4F-3s
    and F4F-4s. Nevertheless, ten pilots managed
    to achieve fighter ace status flying them, and the
    most successful squadron with the FM-2 in terms
    of kills was VC-27, called “The Saints”. Its pilots
    managed to shoot down a total of 61.5 enemy
    aircraft in aerial combat, making it the second
    most successful Wildcat squadron regardless of
    version or period. They were surpassed only by
    the VF-5 with 79 kills. VC-27 was established in
    May 1943 and operated from the escort carrier
    USS Savo Island from July 1944 to January 1945.
    During this time, she participated in five major
    operations, including the epic naval battle off
    Samar, where a small task force repelled a much
    stronger Japanese fleet. Under the command of
    Lt. Cmdr. Percival Jackson, pilots of VC-27 shot
    down more than twice as many enemies as any
    other composite squadron. The commander of the
    VF-27 fighter division, Lt. Ralph Elliott Jr., was the
    most successful ace on FM-2 with nine confirmed
    kills. In addition to its success in aerial combat,
    VC-27 also sank or destroyed 30 Japanese vessels
    and destroyed or damaged over 250 objects such
    as bridges, buildings, fuel or ammunition depots,
    vehicles, and the like. In March 1945, Ralph Elliott,
    Jr. took command of the entire squadron, but
    the war ended before VC-27 could rejoin the
    fighting. Elliott’s FM-2 was emblazoned with the
    inscription BALDY, documented on the right side,
    which also featured nine kill marks.
    The British Fleet Air Arm used Wildcat FM-2s
    under the designation Wildcat Mk. VI, as the
    Martlet name was dropped for the last F4F
    versions. The British Navy used these aircraft
    for similar duties as the American ones, i.e., for
    service on escort carriers, from whose decks they
    provided air cover for convoys and also operated
    against ground or surface targets. Under the Lend
    Lease program, 340 FM-2s were delivered to the
    FAA (220 in 1944 and the rest in 1945), and the first
    of these were received by No. 881 Sqn, which took
    part in the invasion of southern France in August
    1944 aboard HMS Pursuer (Operation Dragoon).
    The unit also took part in actions off the coast
    of Norway before being rearmed with Grumman
    Hellcat Mk.II aircraft in March 1945. In total,
    FM-2s served with 22 FAA combat squadrons,
    with others assigned to non-combat squadrons
    as trainers. The JV640 aircraft sported a drawing
    of a tiny hare with a sword and a Viking shield on
    the right side of the engine cowl and had a non-
    standard rear-view mirror on the windshield.
    KITS 08/2023
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  • Page 51

    Recommended:
    for FM-2 1/48
    481119 FM-2 landing flaps (PE
    -
    Set)
    644222 FM-2 LööK (Brassin)
    648061 HVAR rockets (Brassin)
    648886 FM-2 undercarriage legs BRONZE (Brassin)
    648887 FM-2 wheels (Brassin)
    648888 FM-2 seat PRINT (Brassin)
    648889 FM-2 folding wings PRINT (Brassin)
    648890 FM-2 gun barrels PRINT (Brassin)
    648895 FM-2 cockpit PRINT (Brassin)
    3DL48128 FM-2 SPACE (3D Decal Set)
    OVERTREES
    #82205X
    FM-2 Wildcat
    1/48
    Product page
    OVERLEPT
    #11175-LEPT
    Wildcer Cat PE
    -
    Set
    1/48
    Product page
    #648895
    #648886
    #644222
    KITS 08/2023
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  • Page 52

    A6M3 Zero Type 32
    The Weekend edition kit of Japanese WWII naval fighter plane A6M3 Zero
    Type 32 in 1/48 scale. This version of Zero had wing of reduced span and
    the folding wingtips were eliminated.
    plastic parts: Eduard
    marking options: 4
    decals: Eduard
    PE parts: no
    painting mask: no
    resin parts: no
    #84191
    1/48
    Product page
    KITS 08/2023
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  • Page 53

    c/n 3028, Tainan Kōkūtai, Buna airfield, New Guinea, August 1942
    c/n 3305, Kōkūtai 204, Buin, Bougainville island, January 1943
    Warrant Officer Matsuo Hagiri, Rabaul, New Britain, July 1943
    This aircraft, released by Mitsubishi on June 28,
    1942, was assigned to Lt. Inano, commander of
    Buna detachment of Tainan Kōkūtai. It was donated
    by citizens of Hongwon County in North Korea,
    captured by Allied units at Buna on December 27,
    1942 and selected for further evaluation as well
    as rebuild. Allied personnel at Eagle Farm Field
    built a flyable A6M3 Zero using parts of three
    Zeros transported from Buna Airfield. Inano’s
    surname was originally Takabayashi, but he
    changed that before mid-1941. In late November
    1941, smaller part of Tainan Kōkūtai under his
    command was transferred to French Indochina
    and temporarily became part of 22. Kōkū Sentai
    HQ fighter squadron. Lt. Inano returned to Tainan
    Kōkūtai in July 1942 to participate in combat over
    New Guinea and Guadalcanal. From January 1943
    he was involved in evaluation of weapons for new
    naval aircraft. From October 1944 he served as
    Hikōtaichō of Tainan Kōkūtai (II) in Taiwan.
    This aircraft was manufactured by Mitsubishi,
    probably on November 25, 1942. The radio equipment
    has been dismantled due to weight reduction. At the
    same time, it was equipped with long-barrel guns
    and a later type rudder trim that could be operated
    from the cockpit. Previously known aircraft of this
    unit with yellow fuselage markings had identification
    numbers of values under 148. The wreckage of this
    aircraft was recovered by the Allies in May 1944 off
    Kolombangara Island. The camouflage and markings
    would indicate that its pilot was leader of Chūtai of
    Kōkūtai 204 in early 1943. The first candidate could
    be Lt. Tatenoshin Tanoue, who was shot down in
    a dogfight with Wildcats from VMF-121 on January
    15, 1943, while covering a convoy. However, the
    crash site is too far from the area where combat
    took place. The pilot of the aircraft may have been
    a Lt(jg) Kiyoharu Shibuya, who was lost on January
    23, 1943, in dogfight with the Wildcats of VMO-251
    while escorting the cargo vessel Toa Maru 2 and the
    destroyer Oshio.
    This aircraft was painted in green camouflage
    applied in field conditions and had radio equipment
    removed to reduce weight. Kōkūtai 204 appears to
    have been the only unit in the area to apply green
    field camouflage plus white outline of Hinomaru
    on fuselage and upper wing surfaces. Its pilot was
    Matsuo Hagiri. He was born in 1913 in Shizuoka
    Prefecture and served with the Yokosuka Kōkūtai
    from 1935. In 1937 and 1938 he served on the aircraft
    carrier Sōryū and took part in battles in China. In
    1940, he was among the pilots of the 12th Kōkūtai
    who first tested the Zero in combat conditions. In
    the raid on Chengtu on October 4, 1940, he was one
    of four pilots who landed at an enemy base and set
    its equipment afire. More to it, Hagiri shot down
    three Chinese fighter aircraft after take off from
    the burning enemy base. After further service with
    Yokosuka Kōkūtai, including tests of the Raiden and
    Zero Model 32, he was assigned to Kōkūtai 204 in
    July 1943. In a dogfight on September 24 over Vella
    Lavella, he managed to score two victories, but
    suffered injuries himself and had to be transported
    to Japan. In April 1945, he was wounded again, this
    time in combat against a B-29. In all, he achieved
    13 victories. After the war, he became a Fuji City
    Councilor and a member of the Shizuoka Prefectural
    Council. He died in January 1997.
    KITS 08/2023
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  • Page 54

    Recommended: A6M3 Zero Type 32 1/48
    481091 A6M3 Zero landing flaps (PE
    -
    Set)
    481092 A6M3 Zero (PE
    -
    Set)
    644185 A6M3 LööK (Brassin)
    644189 A6M3 Zero LööKplus (Brassin)
    648695 A6M undercarriage legs BRONZE (Brassin)
    648786 A6M3 seat PRINT (Brassin)
    648787 A6M3 tailwheel PRINT (Brassin)
    648788 A6M3 cannon barrels & cockpit
    guns PRINT (Brassin)
    648799 A6M3 wheels (Brassin)
    648800 A6M3 cockpit PRINT (Brassin)
    648801 A6M3 exhausts PRINT (Brassin)
    648802 A6M3 Type 32 landing flaps PRINT (Brassin)
    648808 A6M wheels w/smooth tire (Brassin)
    648883 A6M3 gun bays short barrel (Brassin)
    648884 A6M3 gun bays long barrel (Brassin)
    3DL48088 A6M3 SPACE (3D Decal Set)
    EX899 A6M3 Zero TFace (Mask)
    c/n 3285, Rabauru Kōkūbuntai, Rabaul, New Britain, August 1943
    c/n 3285, Rabauru Kōkūbuntai, Ballale Airfield, Ballale Island,
    Solomon Islands, October 1943
    This aircraft was manufactured by Mitsubishi
    in November 1942 and early the following year
    received field camouflage consisting of elongated
    green spots on the factory paint of light grey.
    Its markings were changed several times. The
    reconstruction of both markings of this aircraft
    is based on parts of the wreck that have been
    photographically documented. The tail apparently
    first bore the designation T2, which would place
    it with Kōkūtai 204. In mid-1943, it bore the white
    code 3-174 and a white square was painted around
    Hinomaru on the side of both sides of the fuselage.
    This is the only Zero so far where such a marking
    was photographically documented. The exact
    purpose of the white square is unknown and it was
    removed in August 1943. In the second half of that
    year, the tail codes of the aircraft of the Rabaul
    fighter units changed and numerals ranging from
    1 to 9 began to be used. The assignment of the
    numerals to individual units is still not reliably
    determined. Aircraft with these markings are
    unofficially assigned to a combat group called
    Rabauru Kōkūbuntai (Rabaul Air Force). There are
    several theories to explain the meaning of these
    numerical designations. The only unit that used
    several A6M3 Model 32s in the area in the second
    half of 1943 was the aforementioned Kōkūtai 204.
    In August 1943, the white squares on the side of
    this aircraft were repainted and its marking was
    later changed from white 3-174 to yellow code
    5-136. In September and October 1943, Kōkūtai
    204 operated in this area with the last two Model
    32s. It is likely, therefore, that despite the change
    of the tail code this Zero was still in service with
    this unit. Most of unit’s armament consisted of
    A6M2 Model 21 and A6M3 Model 22, and it also
    received its first A6M5 Model 52 during this period.
    Following the neutralization of the Ballale base,
    the unit lost one Model 32. This was apparently
    aircraft with serial number 3285, which was
    salvaged from Ballale in 1968 by Robert Diemert.
    It showed the strafing damage that occurred
    while the aircraft was on the ground. Zero 3285
    was stored at Friendship Airfield in Canada and
    some of its parts were used to rebuild other
    Zeros. It was later purchased by John and Earl
    Calverley of the Blayd Corporation. After that,
    3285 was in a collection in Australia where John
    Fallis purchased it several years ago with the
    help of Graham Orphan of New Zealand’s Classic
    Wings magazine and is restoring it to airworthy
    condition at his company CHUZY SUZY LLC in
    Lafayette, Louisiana. In 2022, the aircraft parts
    were photographed by Eduard staff and with the
    help of researcher Ryan Toews a reconstruction
    of both forms of this unique aircraft was made.
    KITS 08/2023
    INFO Eduard54
    August 2023
  • Page 55

    MiG-21MF Fighter bomber
    The ProfiPACK edition of Soviet Cold War jet
    aircraft MiG-21MF in 1/72 scale.
    plastic parts: Eduard
    marking options: 5
    decals: Eduard
    PE parts: yes, pre-painted
    painting mask: yes
    resin parts: no
    #70142
    1/72
    Product page
    Re-release
    KITS 08/2023
    INFO Eduard
    55
    August 2023
  • Page 56

    No. 5121, Phạm Tuân, 921 Fighter Regiment, Noi Bai AB, Democratic Republic of Vietnam, December 1972
    No. 9712, 9 Fighter Regiment, Bechyně, Czechoslovakia, 1989–1993
    No. 127, 812th Training Air Regiment, Kharkiv Higher Military Aviation School of Pilots,
    Kupyansk Airfield, the Soviet Union, August 1991
    MiG-21MF with tactical number 5121 is currently on
    display in the museum of the Vietnam People’s Air
    Force in Hanoi. Reportedly, on December 27, 1972,
    Phạm Tuân flew this aircraft when he shot down
    an American B-52 which took part in bombing
    operations during the Linebacker II offensive. It
    would be the only MiG-21MF kill of a Stratofortress,
    but American sources claim the bomber was lost
    to anti-aircraft SAM system. Phạm Tuân would
    later become the only Vietnamese astronaut.
    He was a crewmember of Soyuz 37 mission
    and orbited the earth 142 times in the Salyut 6
    space station. For his accomplishments, he was
    awarded high Vietnamese commendations and
    was one of a few foreigners to be awarded the
    Hero of the Soviet Union.
    This aircraft with serial number 969712 was
    built in 1974 and subsequently delivered to
    Czechoslovakia, where it served with the 4 slp
    (stíhací letecký pluk - Fighter Regiment) based
    in Pardubice. It was handed over to 9 Fighter
    Regiment in Bechyně in May 1989. There it flew
    with the coat of arms of the Bechyně town on
    the left side of the nose. After the dissolution of
    Czechoslovakia the aircraft was assigned to the
    Slovak Air Force, and is currently in the collection
    of the air museum at Trenčín, Slovakia. The
    aircraft still has the original camouflage scheme
    from the Soviet Union delivery.
    This aircraft, adorned with a shark mouth and
    eyes, served with the 812. UAP (812 Training Air
    Regiment) operating within the structure of the
    Kharkiv higher training facility, which was in
    2003 named after the famous fighter ace and
    triple Hero of the Soviet Union Ivan N. Kozhedub
    (who was in fact Ukrainian). This one was among
    the aircraft that were displayed during the open
    house on August 18, 1991.
    KITS 08/2023
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  • Page 57

    No. 127, 812th Training Air Regiment, Kharkiv Higher Military Aviation School of Pilots,
    Kupyansk Airfield, the Soviet Union, August 1991
    No. 8447, No. 46 Squadron, Egypt, 1973
    No. 9111, 3 Squadron of Tactical Aviation, Poznań Krzesiny, Poland, 2002
    This is an aircraft from No. 46 Squadron as it
    appeared during combat exercises prior to the
    Yom Kipur War in 1973. To allow quick identification,
    aircraft carried a large black letter with white
    outline on the fin. The nose sported painting of
    the goddess Nekhbet, protector of Upper Egypt.
    Aircraft coded 8447 survived the Yom Kipur War
    and was photographed with this camouflage and
    markings at Cairo in October 1975.
    The 3 ELT (Eskadra Lotnictwa Taktycznego –
    Squadron of Tactical Aviation) was formed at
    Poznań Krzesiny on January 1, 2001. The unit was
    equipped with MiG-21MF, bis and UM aircraft, but
    the MiG-21MFs were used for two years only, i.e.,
    till the end of 2002. The MiG-21bis version stayed
    until 2003 when it was decided to replace them
    with F-16s. On April 1, 2008, the 3 ELT, 6 ELT and
    the 31 Baza Lotnicza (31 Air Base) were disbanded
    and the 31 Baza Lotnictwa Taktycznego (31 Tactical
    Air Base) was formed. Since 2007, this aircraft
    has been displayed at Poznan Krzesiny. It is
    camouflaged in the same shades of grey as used
    on F-15s and F-16s. The raven’s head marking
    on the finwas applied in 2002 on the occasion of
    a gathering of commanding officers in Berlin.
    The emblem of 3 Squadron, the predecessor of
    the 3 ELT, is painted below the windscreen.
    Recommended:
    for MiG-21MF Fighter bomber 1/72
    72689 MiG-21MF (PE
    -
    Set)
    672181 MiG-21MF exhaust nozzle (Brassin)
    672182 MiG-21MF wheels (Brassin)
    672189 UB-16 rocket launchers for MiG-21 (Brassin)
    672191 RS-2US missiles for MiG-21 (Brassin)
    672193 MiG-21MF airbrakes (Brassin)
    672197 MiG-21MF ejection seat (Brassin)
    SIN67217 MiG-21MF armament (Brassin)
    3DL72002 MiG-21MF SPACE (3D Decal Set)
    CX511 MiG-21MF (Mask)
    OVERTREES
    #70142X
    MiG-21MF
    1/72
    Product page
    Product page
    OVERLEPT
    #70142-LEPT
    MiG-21MF
    PE
    -
    Set 1/72
    KITS 08/2023
    INFO Eduard
    57
    August 2023
  • Page 58

    BRASSIN
    LööK set - Brassin pre-painted dashboard and STEEL
    seatbelts for A-20G in 1/32 scale. Easy to assemble,
    replaces plastic parts. Recommended kit: HKM
    Set contains:
    - resin: 3 parts
    - 3D print: 2 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: yes, pre-painted
    - painting mask: no
    LööK set - Brassin pre-painted dashboard and
    STEEL seatbelts for Hurricane Mk.I in 1/48 scale.
    Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts.
    Recommended kit: Hobby Boss
    Set contains:
    - resin: 2 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: yes, pre-painted
    - painting mask: no
    634039
    A-20G LööK
    1/32 HKM
    644220
    Hurricane Mk.I LööK
    1/48 Hobby Boss
    Product page
    Product page
    INFO Eduard58
    August 2023
  • Page 59

    644222
    FM-2 LööK
    1/48 Eduard
    LööK set - Brassin pre-painted dashboard and STEEL
    seatbelts for FM-2 in 1/48 scale. Easy to assemble,
    replaces plastic parts. Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - resin: 1 part
    - 3D print: 1 part
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: yes, pre-painted
    - painting mask: no
    BRASSIN
    LööK set - Brassin pre-painted dashboard
    and STEEL seatbelts for MiG-17F in 1/48 scale.
    Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts.
    Recommended kit: AMMO
    Set contains:
    - resin: 1 part
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: yes, pre-painted
    - painting mask: no
    644223
    MiG-17F LööK
    1/48 AMMO
    Product page
    Product page
    INFO Eduard
    59
    August 2023
  • Page 60

    BRASSIN
    Collection of 4 sets for Spitfire Mk.Ia in 1/32 scale.
    Recommended kit: Kotare
    - LööK set (pre-painted Brassin dashboards & Steelbelts)
    - TFace painting mask
    - undercarriage wheels
    - exhaust stacks
    Collection of 4 sets for Do 335A in 1/48 scale.
    Recommended kit: Tamiya
    - LööK set (pre-painted Brassin dashboards & Steelbelts)
    - TFace painting mask
    - undercarriage wheels
    - exhaust stacks
    634040
    Spitfire Mk.Ia LööKplus
    1/32 Kotare
    644221
    Do 335A LööKplus
    Tamiya
    Product page
    Product page
    INFO Eduard60
    August 2023
  • Page 61

    BRASSIN
    Brassin set - radio equipment for Sd.Kfz. 251/1 Ausf. C
    in 1/35 scale. Made by direct 3D printing.
    Recommended kit: Academy
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 14 parts
    - resin: 1 part
    - decals: yes
    - photo-etched details: yes
    - painting mask: no
    Brassin set - the undercarriage wheels for A-20G
    in 1/32 scale. The set consists of the main wheels
    and a nose wheel. Easy to assemble, replaces
    plastic parts. Recommended kit: HKM
    Set contains:
    - resin: 3 parts
    - 3D print: 2 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: yes
    - painting mask: yes
    632197
    A-20G wheels
    1/32 HKM
    Product page
    Product page
    635033
    Sd.Kfz. 251/1 Ausf. C radio equipment PRINT
    1/35 Academy
    INFO Eduard
    61
    August 2023
  • Page 62

    635034
    WWII German fire extinguishers PRINT
    1/35
    648875
    Bf 109F cockpit w/ early seat PRINT
    1/48 Eduard
    BRASSIN
    Brassin set - fire extinguishers for German
    WWII AFV in 1/35 scale. The set consists
    of 6 extinguishers. Made by direct 3D printing.
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 6 parts
    - decals: yes
    - photo-etched details: yes
    - painting mask: no
    Brassin set - cockpit for Bf 109F in 1/48 scale.
    Made by direct 3D printing. Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 17 parts
    - resin: 1 part
    - decals: yes
    - photo-etched details: yes, pre-painted
    - painting mask: no
    - SPACE 3D decals: no
    Product page
    Product page
    INFO Eduard62
    August 2023
  • Page 63

    BRASSIN
    Brassin set - angular wheel bays for Bf 109F
    in 1/48 scale. Made by direct 3D printing.
    Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 2 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: no
    - painting mask: no
    648881
    Bf 109F wheel bays angular PRINT
    1/48 Eduard
    Brassin set - rounded wheel bays for Bf 109F
    in 1/48 scale. Made by direct 3D printing.
    Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 2 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: no
    - painting mask: no
    648880
    Bf 109F wheel bays rounded PRINT
    1/48 Eduard
    Product page
    Product page
    INFO Eduard
    63
    August 2023
  • Page 64

    BRASSIN
    Brassin set - the undercarriage wheels for F-4E
    in 1/48 scale. The set consists of the main wheels
    and nose wheels. Easy to assemble, replaces plastic
    parts. Recommended kit: Meng
    Set contains:
    - resin: 4 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: no
    - painting mask: yes
    Brassin set - gun bays for A6M3 in 1/48 scale. Designed
    for Zeroes Type 32 and 22 with short-barreled wing guns
    (guns not protruding from the leading edge of the wing).
    Made by direct 3D printing. Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 22 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: yes
    - painting mask: no
    648883
    A6M3 gun bays short barrel PRINT
    1/48 Eduard
    648882
    F-4E wheels
    1/48 Meng
    Product page
    Product page
    INFO Eduard64
    August 2023
  • Page 65

    BRASSIN
    Brassin set - the undercarriage wheels for FM-2
    in 1/48 scale. The set consists of the main wheels
    and a tail wheel. Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts.
    Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - resin: 9 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: yes
    - painting mask: yes
    648887
    FM-2 wheels
    1/48 Eduard
    Brassin set - the undercarriage legs for
    FM-2 in 1/48 scale. The legs are made of bronze.
    Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 4 parts
    - bronze: 2 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: no
    - painting mask: no
    648886
    FM-2 undercarriage legs BRONZE
    1/48 Eduard
    Product page
    Product page
    INFO Eduard
    65
    August 2023
  • Page 66

    BRASSIN
    Brassin set - the seat for FM-2 in 1/48 scale.
    Made by direct 3D printing. Easy to assemble,
    replaces plastic parts. Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 1 part
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: yes, pre-painted
    - painting mask: yes
    Brassin set - folding wings for FM-2 in 1/48 scale.
    The set consists of parts for both wings.
    Made by direct 3D printing. Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 10 parts
    - plastic: 4 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: yes
    - painting mask: no
    648889
    FM-2 folding wings PRINT
    1/48 Eduard
    648888
    FM-2 seat PRINT
    1/48 Eduard
    Product page
    Product page
    INFO Eduard66
    August 2023
  • Page 67

    BRASSIN
    Brassin set - airbrakes for F-104A/C in 1/48 scale.
    Made by direct 3D printing.
    Recommended kit: Kinetic/Eduard
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 2 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: no
    - painting mask: no
    648891
    F-104A/C airbrakes PRINT
    1/48 Kinetic/Eduard
    Brassin set - gun barrels for FM-2
    in 1/48 scale. Made by direct 3D printing.
    Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 4 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: no
    - painting mask: no
    648890
    FM-2 gun barrels PRINT
    1/48 Eduard
    Product page
    Product page
    INFO Eduard
    67
    August 2023
  • Page 68

    BRASSIN
    Brassin set - exhaust nozzle for F-104A/C
    in 1/48 scale. Made by direct 3D printing.
    Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts.
    Recommended kit: Kinetic/Eduard
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 4 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: no
    - painting mask: no
    Brassin set - cockpit for FM-2
    in 1/48 scale. Made by direct 3D printing.
    Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 1 parts
    - decals: yes
    - photo-etched details: yes, pre-painted
    - painting mask: no
    - SPACE 3D decals: no
    648895
    FM-2 cockpit PRINT
    1/48 Eduard
    648892
    F-104A/C exhaust nozzle PRINT
    1/48 Kinetic/Eduard
    Product page
    Product page
    INFO Eduard68
    August 2023
  • Page 69

    BRASSIN
    Brassin set - gun pods for Bf 109F/G/K
    in 1/72 scale. Easy to assemble, replaces
    plastic parts. Made by direct 3D printing.
    Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 8 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: yes
    - painting mask: no
    672326
    Bf 109F/G/K gun pods PRINT
    1/72 Eduard
    Brassin set - the undercarriage legs for Bf 109F
    in 1/72 scale. The legs are made of bronze.
    Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 2 parts
    - bronze: 2 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: no
    - painting mask: no
    672317
    Bf 109F undercarriage legs BRONZE
    1/72 Eduard
    Product page
    Product page
    INFO Eduard
    69
    August 2023
  • Page 70

    BRASSIN
    Brassin set - wing balance weights for Bf 109F in 1/72 scale.
    The set consists of 10 balance weights. Easy to assemble,
    replaces plastic parts. Made by direct 3D printing.
    Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 10 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: no
    - painting mask: no
    Brassin set - the undercarriage wheels for MiG-29
    in 1/72 scale. The set consists of the main wheels
    and nose wheels. Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts.
    Recommended kit: Great Wall Hobby
    Set contains:
    - resin: 4 parts
    - 3D print: 1 part
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: no
    - painting mask: yes
    672330
    MiG-29 wheels
    1/72 Great Wall Hobby
    672329
    Bf 109 balance weights PRINT
    1/72 Eduard
    Product page
    Product page
    INFO Eduard70
    August 2023
  • Page 71

  • Page 72

    BRASSIN
    Collection of 4 sets for F-35A in 1/48 scale.
    Recommended kit: Tamiya
    - cockpit
    - exhaust nozzle
    - undercarriage wheel
    - Remove Before Flight tags SPACE
    All sets included in this BIG SIN are available separately,
    but with every BIG SIN set you save up to 30 %.
    SIN648108
    F-35A
    1/48 Tamiya
    Product page
    INFO Eduard72
    August 2023
  • Page 73

    BRASSIN
    Collection of 7 sets for F-4E in 1/48 scale.
    Recommended kit: Meng
    - AGM-65 Maverick (3 sets)
    - AIM-7M Sparrow
    - AN/ALQ-131 (shallow) ECM pod
    - GBU-10 Paveway I
    - AIM-9M/L Sidewinder
    All sets included in this BIG SIN are available separately,
    but with every BIG SIN set you save up to 30 %.
    SIN648109
    F-4E armament
    1/48 Meng
    Product page
    INFO Eduard
    73
    August 2023
  • Page 74

    PHOTO
    -
    ETCHED
    AUGUST 2023
    A-20G bomb bay
    1/32 HKM
    32484
    INFO Eduard74
    August 2023
  • Page 75

    A-20G main wheel wells
    1/32 HKM
    BRASSIN 02/2022
    PHOTO
    -
    ETCHED
    32485
    INFO Eduard
    75
    August 2023
  • Page 76

    PHOTO
    -
    ETCHED
    A-20G
    1/32 HKM
    A-20G
    33355
    INFO Eduard76
    August 2023
  • Page 77

    PHOTO
    -
    ETCHED
    INFO Eduard
    77
    August 2023
  • Page 78

    PHOTO
    -
    ETCHED
    USS Nimitz CVN-68 part 1
    1/350 Trumpeter
    53295
    INFO Eduard78
    August 2023
  • Page 79

    PHOTO
    -
    ETCHED
    INFO Eduard
    79
    August 2023
  • Page 80

    OV-10A
    1/72 ICM
    73805
    PHOTO
    -
    ETCHED
    INFO Eduard80
    August 2023
  • Page 81

    PHOTO
    -
    ETCHED
    INFO Eduard
    81
    August 2023
  • Page 82

    3DL48127 Bf 110G-4 SPACE 1/48 Eduard
    3DL48128
    FM-2 SPACE 1/48 Eduard
    Product page
    Product page
    easy
    application
    INFO Eduard82
    August 2023
  • Page 83

    3DL48129 F-16D Block 30 SPACE 1/48 Kinetic
    3DL48130
    F-16D Block 40 SPACE 1/48 Kinetic
    SPACE
    Product page
    Product page
    INFO Eduard
    83
    August 2023
  • Page 84

    Product page
    Product page
    Product page
    3DL48131 F-16D Block 50 SPACE 1/48 Kinetic
    3DL48132
    A-10C SPACE 1/48 Academy 3DL72020 OV-10A SPACE 1/72 ICM
    SPACE
    INFO Eduard84
    August 2023
  • Page 85

    3DL72020 OV-10A SPACE 1/72 ICM
    www.eduard.com/bfc
    BUNNY BUNNY FIGHTERFIGHTER
    CLUB
    Eduard's special membership club for all modeling enthusiasts!
    15% Permanent Club discount at Eduard Store – you will receive permanent 15% discount on all Eduard
    products and also discount on various other non-Eduard products. Fixed, permanent, forever!
    Unique valuable Club kits and accessories – you will gain access to unique and nowhere else to be sold
    products, specially made for BFC members.
    Even better prices at Eduard events stand – do you know that Eduard usually has huge discounts on
    their products at fairs and events all over the world? BFC members will have even higher discount at
    these events.
    Club T-shirt – you will receive fancy BFC T-shirt with unique design and special barcode
    (used for event discounts). This exclusive T-shirt will be only available
    to the members of BFC.
    Free entry fee on E-day – you will not have to pay a penny to visit Eduard's E-day.
    That means lot of fun at E-day for two days and entry kit, absolutely free!
    * E-day - INTERNATIONAL SCALE KIT EXHIBITION - IPMS Czech Republic Championship
    BOX CONTENT:
    Plastic parts, Marking options 6, Decal Set, PE parts, Maska, Brassin
    parts (two different types of wheels, landing flaps, dust filter with
    eyelid, intake ring and RP-3 60lb rockets), 3D decals for main and si
    -
    dewalk instrument and control panels with photo-etched details and
    seat belts.
    BOX CONTENT:
    Plastic parts, Marking options 4, Decal Set, PE parts, Maska, Brassin
    parts (undercarriage wheels, cockpit, exhaust nozzle, FOD).
    How to become a member of BFC?How to become a member of BFC?
    Simply by purchasing the Activation product. You will be given 15% discount on (almost) every Eduard
    product in your shopping cart. To apply this discount, the Activation product has to be in your shopping
    cart. Activation product is excluded from this calculation.
    Activation products:Activation products:
    Tempest Mk. V + T-shirt 1/48MiG-21MF + T-shirt 1/72
  • Page 86

    EDDIE THE RIVETER
    ER32001
    Single riveting rows
    1/32
    ER72001
    Single riveting rows
    1/72
    ER48006
    Single riveting rows
    1/48
    Product page
    Product page
    Product page
    INFO Eduard86
    August 2023
  • Rivet the Eddie way

    Working instructions

    Rivet the Eddie way
    EDDIE THE RIVETER
    Assemble the model and prepare the model for
    the painting. Spray with Mr. Finishing Surfacer
    1500, add drops of Super Gloss Clear to the
    mixture so that the sprayed model has glossy
    surface (same grade of smoothness of the surface
    like for decal application).
    INFO Eduard
    87
    August 2023
  • Page 88

    EDDIE THE RIVETER
    Prepare mixture of water
    (100 ml) and dishwashing
    saponite (2–3 drops). Soak
    the dishwashing sponge in the
    mixture.
    Cut off a section with rivets
    from the decal paper with
    scissors or sharp modeling
    knife.
    Put it on the sponge then push
    the sponge so that the decal
    is wet.
    INFO Eduard88
    August 2023
  • Page 89

    EDDIE THE RIVETER
    Wait until the decal could
    be released from the paper.
    Put drops of water/saponite
    mixture on the model surface
    where you want to place the
    decal, then place the decal on
    its position.
    Placed decal.
    Press the applied decal to the
    surface with dry dishwashing
    sponge and remove all water.
    Do not move the sponge!
    Just apply gentle press and
    then draw the sponge apart
    from the surface vertically.
    Otherwise, the decal might get
    deformed.
    INFO Eduard
    89
    August 2023
  • Page 90

    EDDIE THE RIVETER
    After all the decals are on their positions,
    allow at least 24 hours for drying. Then
    spray 3–5 very thin layers of Mr. Finishing
    Surfacer 1500 over the whole model using
    airbrush. Do not use spray in can!
    Continue with painting and final assembly
    of the model. Pay maximum attention to
    masking when using masking tape. The
    adhesion of the tape must be reduced to
    avoid damage of the Surfacer layer or even
    the decal!
    INFO Eduard90
    August 2023
  • Page 91

    DECAL SET
    D72045
    Bf 109F stencil
    1/72 Eduard
    Product page
    INFO Eduard
    91
    August 2023
  • Page 92

    BIG ED
    All sets included in this BIG ED are available separately,
    but with every BIG ED set you save up to 30%.
    BIG33152 CH-54A 1/35 ICM
    BIG49373
    B-24D PART II 1/48 Revell
    321008 CH-54A 1/35
    32482 CH-54A exterior 1/35
    33348 CH-54A seatbelts STEEL 1/35
    JX307 CH-54A 1/35
    481102 B-24D exterior 1/48
    481104 B-24D bomb bay 1/48
    491339 B-24D nose interior 1/48
    Product page
    Product page
    INFO Eduard92
    August 2023
  • Page 93

    All sets included in this BIG ED are available separately,
    but with every BIG ED set you save up to 30%.
    BIG ED
    BIG49374 Mi-17 1/48 AMK
    BIG49375
    F-86D 1/48 Revell
    BIG49376
    PV-1 PART I 1/48 Academy
    481110 Mi-17 cargo floor 1/48
    491352 Mi-17 1/48
    491353 Mi-17 cargo seatbelts 1/48
    FE1353 Mi-17 seatbelts STEEL 1/48
    EX942 Mi-17 1/48
    491350 F-86D 1/48
    FE1351 F-86D seatbelts STEEL 1/48
    EX940 F-86D 1/48
    491348 PV-1 1/48
    FE1349 PV-1 seatbelts STEEL 1/48
    EX944 PV-1 1/48
    Product page
    Product page
    Product page
    INFO Eduard
    93
    August 2023
  • Page 94

    MASKS
    IT FITS!
    EX964 A-10C TFace
    1/48 Academy
    EX965 FM-2 TFace
    1/48 Eduard
    EX966 F-16D Block 30/40/50
    1/48 Kinetic
    EX967 F-16D Block 30/40/50
    TFace
    1/48 Kinetic
    EX968 F-35B RAM coating
    1/48 Italeri
    EX969 A6M2-N Rufe
    national insignia
    1/48 Eduard
    EX970 A6M3 Zero Type 32
    Weekend
    1/48 Eduard
    CX650 OV-10A
    1/72 ICM
    EX966 F-16D Block 30/40/50
    EX966 F-16D Block 30/40/50
    EX967 F-16D Block 30/40/50 TFace
    EX967 F-16D Block 30/40/50 TFace
    EX967 F-16D Block 30/40/50 TFace
    EX967 F-16D Block 30/40/50 TFace
    EX964 A-10C TFace EX964 A-10C TFace
    EX964 A-10C TFaceEX964 A-10C TFace
    INFO Eduard94
    August 2023
  • Page 95

    EX968 F-35B RAM coating EX968 F-35B RAM coating
    CX650 OV-10A CX650 OV-10A
    MASKS
  • Page 96

    RELEASES
    AUGUST 2023
    KITS
    PE
    -
    SETS
    ZOOMS
    MASKS
    70155 Bf 109F-4 1/72 ProfiPACK
    11169 THE ZIPPER 1/48 Limited
    11175 WILDER CAT 1/48 Limited
    84191 A6M3 Zero Type 32 1/48 Weekend
    70142 MiG-21MF Fighter bomber Re-release 1/72 ProfiPACK
    53295 USS Nimitz CVN-68 part 1 1/350 Trumpeter
    32484 A-20G bomb bay 1/32 HKM
    32485 A-20G main wheel wells 1/32 HKM
    481118 F-16 reinforcement straps STEEL 1/48 Kinetic
    481119 FM-2 landing flaps 1/48 Eduard
    481120 A-10C formation lights 1/48 Academy
    491369 F-16D Block 30 1/48 Kinetic
    491370 F-16D Block 40 1/48 Kinetic
    491371 F-16D Block 50 1/48 Kinetic
    491373 A-10C 1/48 Academy
    73805 OV-10A 1/72 ICM
    FE1369 F-16D Block 30 1/48 Kinetic
    FE1370 F-16D Block 40 1/48 Kinetic
    FE1371 F-16D Block 50 1/48 Kinetic
    FE1372 F-16D Block 30/40/50 seatbelts STEEL 1/48 Kinetic
    FE1373 A-10C 1/48 Academy
    FE1374 A-10C seatbelts STEEL 1/48 Academy
    FE1375 A6M3 Zero Type 32 Weekend 1/48 Eduard
    SS805 OV-10A 1/72 ICM
    EX964 A-10C TFace 1/48 Academy
    EX965 FM-2 TFace 1/48 Eduard
    EX966 F-16D Block 30/40/50 1/48 Kinetic
    EX967 F-16D Block 30/40/50 TFace 1/48 Kinetic
    EX968 F-35B RAM coating 1/48 Italeri
    EX969 A6M2-N Rufe national insignia 1/48 Eduard
    EX970 A6M3 Zero Type 32 Weekend 1/48 Eduard
    CX650 OV-10A 1/72 ICM
    DECAL
    EDDIE THE RIVETER
    D72045 Bf 109F stencils 1/72 Eduard
    ER32001 Single riveting rows 1/32
    ER48006 Single riveting rows 1/48
    ER72001 Single riveting rows 1/72
    INFO Eduard96
    August 2023
  • Page 97

    BIG-EDBIG-ED
    BIG ED
    BIG33152 CH-54A 1/35 ICM
    BIG49373 B-24D PART II 1/48 Revell
    BIG49374 Mi-17 1/48 AMK
    BIG49375 F-86D 1/48 Revell
    BIG49376 PV-1 PART I 1/48 Academy
    RELEASES
    BRASSIN
    LöökPLUS
    BIG SIN
    SPACE
    634039 A-20G LööK 1/32 HKM
    644220 Hurricane Mk.I LööK 1/48 Hobby Boss
    644222 FM-2 LööK 1/48 Eduard
    644223 MiG-17F LööK 1/48 AMMO
    632197 A-20G wheels 1/32 HKM
    635033 Sd.Kfz. 251/1 Ausf. C
    radio equipment PRINT 1/35 Academy
    635034 WWII German fire extinguishers PRINT 1/35
    648875 Bf 109F cockpit w/ early seat PRINT 1/48 Eduard
    648880 Bf 109F wheel bays rounded PRINT 1/48 Eduard
    648881 Bf 109F wheel bays angular PRINT 1/48 Eduard
    648882 F-4E wheels 1/48 Meng
    648883 A6M3 gun bays short barrel PRINT 1/48 Eduard
    648886 FM-2 undercarriage legs BRONZE 1/48 Eduard
    648887 FM-2 wheels 1/48 Eduard
    648888 FM-2 seat PRINT 1/48 Eduard
    648889 FM-2 folding wings PRINT 1/48 Eduard
    648890 FM-2 gun barrels PRINT 1/48 Eduard
    648891 F-104A/C airbrakes PRINT 1/48 Kinetic/Eduard
    648892 F-104A/C exhaust nozzle PRINT 1/48 Kinetic/Eduard
    648895 FM-2 cockpit PRINT 1/48 Eduard
    672317 Bf 109F undercarriage legs BRONZE 1/72 Eduard
    672326 Bf 109F/G/K gun pods PRINT 1/72 Eduard
    672329 Bf 109 balance weights PRINT 1/72 Eduard
    672330 MiG-29 wheels 1/72 Great Wall Hobby
    634040 Spitfire Mk.Ia LööKplus 1/32 Kotare
    644221 Do 335A LööKplus 1/48 Tamiya
    SIN648108 F-35A 1/48 Tamiya
    SIN648109 F-4E armament 1/48 Meng
    3DL48127 Bf 110G-4 SPACE 1/48 Eduard
    3DL48128 FM-2 SPACE 1/48 Eduard
    3DL48129 F-16D Block 30 SPACE 1/48 Kinetic
    3DL48130 F-16D Block 40 SPACE 1/48 Kinetic
    3DL48131 F-16D Block 50 SPACE 1/48 Kinetic
    3DL48132 A-10C SPACE 1/48 Academy
    3DL72020 OV-10A SPACE 1/72 ICM
    AUGUST 2023
    INFO Eduard
    97
    August 2023
  • Page 98

    GUNZE PRODUCTS
    -
    WEATHERING
    WEATHERING COLORS
    YAKUMO
    WWII WESTERN FRONT
    CAT.NO.: WY01
    These Yakumo Colors—Mr. Weathering Color and Mr. Weathering Paste-based weathering colors—
    were supervised by the world-famous modeler, Mr. Mig Jimenez. The mud and dirt colors are made
    with pigments that have been collected from all over the world.
    WY01 is a weathering paint set for German vehicles in the
    WWII Western Front. Thin each color with the separately-sold
    Mr. Weathering Colour Thinner (WCT101/102); or MIG015 thinner
    (YAKUMO thinner).
    From a modeler’s perspective, Europe was the setting of many
    of the most interesting battles of the war, including Normandy,
    the Battle of the Bulge, Hungary, the Warsaw Uprising and the fall
    of Berlin. On these fronts the Germans used several standardized
    camouflage patterns, but each was always based on green and
    brown camouflage colours over a dark yellow base (C039 dark
    yellow, C041 red-brown and C070 dark green). Dust in summer and
    dry mud were the most common effects seen in German vehicles.
    In addition to the two products used to represent these effects,
    the perfect wash tone is also included, and another for streaked
    dirt stains. For the most complete finish, combine with SET
    D
    -
    BASICS.
    MIG
    MIG
    MIG
    MIG
    MIG
    001
    003
    002
    002
    004
    DARK WASH
    Apply the wash with a fine brush to details, in panel lines,
    and around hatches to enhance contrast and volume.
    Remove the excess with a clean brush moistened with
    YAKUMO thinner. Let it dry 24 hours.
    DRY MUD
    You can apply the mud with a thick brush to the underside
    of the vehicle, the tracks, and the suspension. You can
    also apply splashed earth effect with the mud product
    by the flicking a thick brush loaded with product using
    a toothpick. This will create mud splatter effects. Make
    a few tests on an old model or a piece of paper before
    trying it on the model. Let it dry 24 hours.
    DARK STREAKING GRIME
    Stroke well Draw vertical lines on vertical or sloped
    surfaces with irregular shapes and different intensity,
    then blend with a flat brush and YAKUMO thinner to
    soften. Let it dry 24 hours.
    EUROPE DUST
    Pigment colour to simulate dust effects, particularly
    on the horizontal areas and around surface details.
    Apply the pigment dry with a brush and then moisten the
    surface with thinner. Once dry, it can be moistened again
    and touched up to achieve the desired effect.
    Product page
  • Page 99

    GUNZE PRODUCTS
    -
    WEATHERING
    WWII EASTERN FRONT
    CAT.NO.: WY02
    WY02 is a weathering paint set for winter camouflaged vehicles
    in WWII Eastern Front. Thin each color with the separately-sold
    Mr. Weathering Colour Thinner (WCT101/102); or MIG015 thinner
    (YAKUMO thinner).
    The Germans camouflaged their vehicles in the harsh Russian
    winters with white paint to blend it with the snowy landscape.
    A white vehicle needs a very special treatment of aging and dirt
    to be realistic and credible. This special set for German winter
    vehicles includes the necessary products to achieve a realistic
    appearance in a winter environment such as the battles of Moscow,
    Stalingrad, or the siege of Leningrad. This set is specially designed
    for white camouflage applied on German panzer grey colour
    (Panzer Grey - C040 German Grey, C513 „Dunkelgrau“, C514 „Grau“
    etc). For the most complete finish, combine with SET D
    -
    BASICS.
    MIG
    MIG
    MIG
    MIG
    005
    007
    006
    008
    WINTER WASH
    see MIG 001 for description
    MIG-007 - FRESH DARK MUD
    see MIG 003 for description
    WINTER STREAKING GRIME
    see MIG 002 for description
    MIG-008 - DRY EARTH
    see MIG 004 for description
    WWII AFRIKA KORPS
    CAT.NO.: WY03
    WY03 is a weathering paint set for model vehicles in the WWII Afrika
    Korps. It can add realistic sand stains from the harsh weather
    conditions of Africa to your scale model. Thin each color with
    the separately-sold Mr. Weathering Colour Thinner (WCT101/102);
    or MIG015 thinner (YAKUMO thinner).
    The landscapes of Tunisia or Libya were very harsh and hostile
    environments for the vehicles of the German Afrika Korps (DAK).
    The scorching sun and heat faded the colours quickly while
    the dust was ubiquitous. The Germans over painted their grey
    vehicles with various shades of sand colour (i.e. C039 Dark Yellow)
    to make them less visible on the open desert plains. The product
    included in this set allow you to apply washes, dirt effect, and large
    accumulations of dust to give your model realistic look. For more
    complete finish, combine with SET D
    -
    BASICS.
    MIG
    MIG
    MIG
    MIG
    011
    010
    009
    012
    SAND FILTER
    Apply the filter over the entire surface of model uniformly for
    a transparent and subtle effect, without letting the product
    accumulate in recesses and panel lines. Allow the filter to dry
    for 24 hours.
    GRAY STREAKING GRIME
    see MIG 003 for description
    DESERT WASH
    Apply the wash with a fine brush to details, in panel lines, and around
    hatches to enhance contrast and volume. Remove the excess with
    a clean brush moistened with YAKUMO thinner. Let it dry 24 hours.
    MIG-008 - DRY EARTH
    see MIG 004 for description
    Product page
    Product page
  • Page 100

    GUNZE PRODUCTS
    -
    WEATHERING
    BASICS
    CAT.NO.: WY04
    WY04 is a weathering paint set that can be used on various
    military models including tanks. This set of paints can replicate
    basic oil stains, chipped paint, and rust. Thin each color with the
    separately-sold Mr. Weathering Colour Thinner (WCT101/102);
    or MIG015 thinner (YAKUMO thinner).
    Most German military vehicles showed certain universal
    weathering effects, no matter the setting or time of the year. Tanks
    or half-tracks usually showed chipped paint, rust effects, or large
    areas of fuel stains soaked into caked dust or dirt over top. These
    are the weathering effects that bring more life and realism to the
    model, and that is the reason why you must pay special attention
    when adding them. This universal set will allow you to create
    extremely realistic effects on your models, no matter the location
    or time of the year in which they are set. The colours and effects
    are accurate for the cold Russian winter, the Normandy campaign
    or the barren landscapes of the North Africa. Always use this set
    in combination with one of the YAKUMO sets for military vehicles
    in a specific setting.
    MIG
    MIG
    MIG
    MIG
    015
    014
    013
    016
    FUEL & OIL
    Apply this product to the sides of model in the shape of vertical
    lines, or add small drops over a surface treated with MIG014
    pigment. This effect can be diluted with YAKUMO thinner to create
    a softer and more natural effect. Use this effect sparingly and
    apply the effect in scale. Let it dry 12 hours.
    CHIPPING
    The perfect colour to represent chipped paint effects on your
    models, as long as the surface you are depicting was made out
    of iron or steel in the real vehicle. Use a brush with a fine tip to
    paint the chips on the zones most exposed to wear and tear, You
    can also apply the chipping with a piece of sponge or packing foam.
    Let it dry 10 minutes. Can be cleaned with water.
    EARTH & GRIME
    A pigment tone to simulate accumulated dirt, or to create a base
    onto which you can apply fuel stains. Apply the pigment dry with
    a brush to the designed areas. It can also be used to emphasize
    shadows or dirt effect on nooks and crannies.
    MIG-008 - DRY EARTH
    Eventually all vehicles rust in specific areas due to rain, snow and
    dew. Apply the product in small quantities around small details
    such as screw heads, brackets or other fixtures, as well as on
    vertical or sloped surfaces in the form of faded lines. Use he effect
    sparingly and apply the effect in scale.
    Product page
  • Page 101

    DOBŘÍŠSKÁ ŠELMA
    Více informací: www.facebook.com/dobrismodel/ • www.dobrismodel.cz • modelari.dobris@gmail.com • tel. 728 074 851
    PLASTIKOVÉ A PAPÍROVÉ MODELY OD MODELÁŘŮ Z CELÉ ČR • PRODEJCI MODELŮ A MODELÁŘSKÝCH POTŘEB
    DOPOLEDNE DOPROVODNÁ VÝSTAVA AUTO A MOTO VETERÁNŮ • OBČERSTVENÍ • VSTUPNÉ DOBROVOLNÉ
    SOBOTA 19. SRPNA 2023 OD 10:00 DO 15:00
    MODELÁŘSKÁ SOUTĚŽNÍ VÝSTAVA
    Online přihlašování modelů:
    dobris.ipmscz.eu
    Přejímka modelů:
    19. srpna od 8:00 do 10:00
    Startovné: děti zdarma, dospělí 100
    Otevřeno pro veřejnost: 10:00 – 15:00
    SPORTOVNÍ HALA, ŠKOLNÍ 36, DOBŘÍŠ – BOČNÍ VCHOD
  • Page 102

    built by Robert Szwarc
    #2142
    KAMO M
    BUILT
    Product page
    INFO Eduard102
    August 2023
  • Page 103

    Bf 109F-4, Uffz. Hans Döbrich, 6./JG 5, Petsamo, Finland, September 1942
    This aircraft was flown by Hans Döbrich, a fighter
    ace credited with 65 victories. He was downed
    three times and seriously wounded during the
    last incident. He never flew a combat sortie
    again. During the second half of 1942, II./JG 5
    was equipped with “Friedrichs” manufactured
    for service in a tropical environment. The desert
    camouflage colors consisting of RLM 79 and
    RLM 78 were applied at the factory. Feldflugpark
    (Repair Field Unit) in Pori added segments of RLM
    74/70 (some sources state RLM 75/71) which
    helped to camouflage effect over the northern
    territory. The green shamrock on the cowling was
    a crest of 6./JG 5.
    BUILT
    INFO Eduard
    103
    August 2023
  • Page 104

    F4F-3 & F4F-4 Wildcat
    BUILT
    1/48
    built by Jan Baranec
    #11166
    KAMO C
    Product page
    Accessories used:
    644171 F4F-3 early LööK (Brassin)
    648766 F4F-3 exhausts PRINT (Brassin)
    648767 F4F-3 wheels early (Brassin)
    648769 F4F gun barrels PRINT (Brassin)
    648777 F4F-3 cockpit w/ reflector gun sight PRINT (Brassin)
    648795 F4F-3 wheel bay PRINT (Brassin)
    648827 F4F-3A engine PRINT (Brassin)
    648767 F4F-3 wheels early (Brassin)
    648827 F4F-3A engine PRINT (Brassin)
    INFO Eduard104
    August 2023
  • Page 105

    F4F-3A, BuNo. 3920, Lt. James Seton Gray, VF-6, USS Enterprise (CV-6), February 1942
    Milwaukee, Wisconsin native, James Seton Gray
    loved the flying since the childhood. In 1930, at
    the age of sixteen years he became the youngest
    pilot license holder. After he graduated from the
    United States Naval Academy in 1936, he served
    on the ships. In 1938 he started his pilot training
    and after its completion he was assigned to VF-6
    on board of USS Enterprise (CV-6). After the USA
    entered the war, he took part in the first Navy
    raid against the Japanese on Taroa island in
    Marshall Islands. During the raid he shot down
    two A5M Claude fighters. During the Battle of
    Midway he commanded the whole VF-6 escorting
    VT-6 Devastators on their attacks against the
    Japanese carriers. During the afternoon CAP on
    that day he shot down E13A Jake floatplane. Gray
    added further kills to his score while commanding
    the night fighters aboard USS Enterprise in 1944
    and became a fighter ace. Lt. Gray’s Wildcat
    in which he fought over Marshall and Gilbert
    archipelagos was camouflaged in Light Gray and
    Blue Gray. The rudder sports nine red and white
    stripes. The national markings on the fuselage
    and wings were already supposed to be enlarged
    however the aircraft photograph shows that the
    large insignia were painted on the fuselage and
    starboard wing only. The port wing retained the
    original size insignia.
    BUILT
    644171 F4F-3 early LööK (Brassin)
    648795 F4F-3 wheel bay PRINT (Brassin)
    648766 F4F-3 exhausts PRINT (Brassin) 648769 F4F gun barrels PRINT (Brassin)
    648777 F4F-3 cockpit w/ reflector
    gun sight PRINT (Brassin)
    INFO Eduard
    105
    August 2023
  • Page 106

    BUILT
    built by Angelo Lodetti
    Accessories used:
    48765 Spitfire Mk.IXc landing flaps (PE
    -
    Set)
    SIN64808 Spitfire Mk.IXc ESSENTIAL (Brassin)
    Supermarine Spitfire MK IX 101° Gruppo, 5° Stormo - Vicenza/Italy 1950
    Used aftermarket decals.
    Spitfire Mk.IXc early
    1/48
    INFO Eduard106
    August 2023
  • Page 107

    BUILT
    INFO Eduard
    107
    August 2023
  • Page 108

    ON APPROACH
    SEPTEMBER 2023
    644224
    F-4E LööK
    1/48 Meng
    644225
    A-10C LööK
    1/48 Academy
    644227
    Bf 109K-4 LööK
    1/48 Eduard
    BIG33153 Spitfire Mk.I 1/32 Kotare
    BIG33154 AH-64E 1/35 Takom
    BIG49377 PV-1 PART II 1/48 Academy
    BIG49378 Mi-8MT 1/48 Trumpeter
    BIG49379 Mi-8MT CARGO INTERIOR 1/48 Trumpeter
    644224 F-4E LööK 1/48 Meng
    644225 A-10C LööK 1/48 Academy
    644227 Bf 109K-4 LööK 1/48 Eduard
    635035 Sd.Kfz. 251/1 Ausf. C radio equipment dark yellow PRINT
    1/35 Academy
    648884 A6M3 gun bays long barrel PRINT 1/48 Eduard
    648893 F-16D ejection seats PRINT 1/48 Kinetic
    648894 Bf 109 balance weights PRINT 1/48 Eduard
    648896 FM-2 cockpit w/ armoured headrest PRINT 1/48 Eduard
    648897 Hurricane Mk.I wheels 1/48 Hobby Boss
    648898 Hurricane Mk.I exhaust stacks PRINT 1/48 Hobby Boss
    648899 MiG-17 wheels 1/48 AMMO
    648900 FM-2 gun bays PRINT 1/48 Eduard
    648902 Bf 109K-4 engine 1/48 Eduard
    648903 Bf 109K-4 propeller PRINT 1/48 Eduard
    648913 Bf 109K-4 exhaust stacks PRINT 1/48 Eduard
    648914 Bf 109K-4 wheels 1/48 Eduard
    672327 Bf 109F cockpit PRINT 1/72 Eduard
    672331 MiG-29A ejection seat PRINT 1/72 Great Wall Hobby
    672332 MiG-29 exhaust nozzles PRINT 1/72 Great Wall Hobby
    634041 A-20G LööKplus 1/32 HKM
    644226 FM-2 LööKplus 1/48 Eduard
    SIN648110 Anson Mk.I 1/48 Airfix
    SIN648111 A-10C armament 1/48 Academy
    BIG ED (September)
    BRASSIN (September)
    LöökPlus (September)
    BIGSIN (September)
    LööK set - Brassin pre-painted dashboards
    and STEEL seatbelts for F-4E in 1/48 scale.
    Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts.
    Recommended kit: Meng
    Set contains:
    - resin: 5 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details:
    yes, pre-painted
    - painting mask: no
    LööK set - Brassin pre-painted dashboard
    and STEEL seatbelts for A-10C in 1/48 scale.
    Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts.
    Recommended kit: Academy
    Set contains:
    - resin: 2 parts
    - 3D print: 1 part
    - decals: yes
    - photo-etched details:
    yes, pre-painted
    - painting mask: no
    LööK set - Brassin pre-painted dashboard
    and STEEL seatbelts for Bf 109K-4 in 1/48 scale.
    Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts.
    Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - resin: 1 part
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details:
    yes, pre-painted
    - painting mask: no
    PRELIMINARY IMAGES
    PRELIMINARY IMAGES
    PRELIMINARY IMAGES
    INFO Eduard108
    August 2023
  • Page 109

    635035
    Sd.Kfz. 251/1 Ausf. C radio equipment dark yellow PRINT
    1/35 Academy
    ON APPROACH
    Brassin set - radio equipment for Sd.Kfz. 251/1
    Ausf. C in 1/35 scale. Made by direct 3D printing.
    Recommended kit: Academy
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 14 parts
    - resin: 1 part
    - decals: yes
    - photo-etched details: yes
    - painting mask: no
    648884
    A6M3 gun bays long barrle PRINT
    1/48
    648893
    F-16D ejection seats PRINT
    1/48 Kinetic
    Brassin set - gun bays for A6M3 in 1/48 scale.
    Designed for Zeroes Type 32 and 22 with long-
    -barreled wing guns (guns protruding from the
    leading edge of the wing). Made by direct 3D
    printing. Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 18 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: yes
    - painting mask: no
    Brassin set - ejection seats for F-16D in 1/48 scale.
    The set consists of 2 seats. Made by direct 3D
    printing. Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts.
    Recommended kit: Kinetic
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 10 parts
    - decals: yes
    - photo-etched details: yes, pre-painted
    - painting mask: no
    INFO Eduard
    109
    August 2023
  • Page 110

    ON APPROACH
    SEPTEMBER 2023
    648894
    Bf 109 balance weights PRINT
    1/48 Eduard
    648896
    FM-2 cockpit w/ armoured headrest PRINT
    1/48 Eduard
    648897
    Hurricane Mk.I wheels
    1/48 Hobby Boss
    Brassin set - wing balance weights for Bf 109F
    in 1/48 scale. The set consists of 10 balance weights.
    Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts. Made by
    direct 3D printing. Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 10 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: no
    - painting mask: no
    Brassin set - cockpit for FM-2 in 1/48 scale.
    Made by direct 3D printing.
    Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 13 parts
    - decals: yes
    - photo-etched details:
    yes, pre-painted
    - painting mask: no
    - SPACE 3D decals: no
    Brassin set - the undercarriage wheels for
    Hurricane Mk.I in 1/48 scale. The set consists
    of the main wheels and a tail wheel.
    Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts.
    Recommended kit: Hobby Boss
    Set contains:
    - resin: 3 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: no
    - painting mask: yes
    INFO Eduard110
    August 2023
  • Page 111

    ON APPROACHSEPTEMBER 2023
    648898
    Hurricane Mk.I exhaust stacks PRINT
    1/48 Hobby Boss
    648899
    MiG-17 wheels
    1/48 AMMO
    648900
    FM-2 gun bays PRINT
    1/48 Eduard
    Brassin set - exhaust stacks for Hurricane Mk.I
    in 1/48 scale. Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts.
    Recommended kit: Hobby Boss
    Set contains:
    - resin: 2 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: no
    - painting mask: no
    Brassin set - the undercarriage wheels
    for MiG-17 in 1/48 scale. The set consists
    of the main wheels and a nose wheel.
    Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts.
    Recommended kit: AMMO
    Set contains:
    - resin: 3 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: no
    - painting mask: yes
    Brassin set - gun bays for FM-2 in 1/48 scale.
    Made by direct 3D printing. Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 16 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: yes
    - painting mask: no
    INFO Eduard
    111
    August 2023
  • Page 112

    ON APPROACH
    648902
    Bf 109K-4 engine
    1/48 Eduard
    648903
    Bf 109K-4 propeller PRINT
    1/48 Eduard
    648913
    Bf 109K-4 exhaust stacks PRINT
    1/48 Eduard
    Brassin set - the engine for Bf 109K-4 in 1/48 scale.
    The cowling are included. Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - resin: 72 parts
    - decals: yes
    - photo-etched details: yes
    - painting mask: no
    Brassin set - the propeller for Bf 109K-4
    in 1/48 scale. The spinner could be removed.
    Made by direct 3D printing.
    Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 2 parts
    - resin: 4 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: no
    - painting mask: no
    Brassin set - exhaust stacks for Bf 109K-4
    in 1/48 scale. Made by direct 3D printing.
    Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts.
    Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 2 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: yes
    - painting mask: no
    SEPTEMBER 2023
    INFO Eduard112
    August 2023
  • Page 113

    672327
    Bf 109F cockpit PRINT
    1/72 Eduard
    648914
    Bf 109K-4 wheels
    1/48 Eduard
    Brassin set - cockpit for Bf 109F in 1/72 scale.
    Made by direct 3D printing.
    Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 9 parts
    - decals: yes
    - photo-etched details: yes, pre-painted
    - painting mask: no
    - SPACE 3D decals: no
    ON APPROACH
    Brassin set - the undercarriage wheels for Bf 109K-4
    in 1/48 scale. The set consists of the main wheels and
    a tail wheel. Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts.
    Recommended kit: Eduard
    Set contains:
    - resin: 4 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: no
    - painting mask: yes
    672331
    MiG-29A ejection seat PRINT
    1/72 Great Wall Hobby
    Brassin set - ejection seat for MiG-29A in 1/72 scale.
    Made by direct 3D printing. Easy to assemble, replaces
    plastic parts. Recommended kit: Great Wall Hobby
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 3 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: yes, pre-painted
    - painting mask: no
    SEPTEMBER 2023
    INFO Eduard
    113
    August 2023
  • Page 114

    ON APPROACH
    672332
    MiG-29 exhaust nozzles PRINT
    1/72 Great Wall Hobby
    Brassin set - exhaust nozzles for MiG-29 in 1/72 scale.
    Made by direct 3D printing. Easy to assemble, replaces plastic
    parts. Recommended kit: Great Wall Hobby
    Set contains:
    - 3D print: 6 parts
    - decals: no
    - photo-etched details: yes
    - painting mask: no
    Collection of 3 sets for A-20G in 1/32 scale.
    Recommended kit: HKM
    - LööK set (pre-painted Brassin dashboards & Steelbelts)
    - TFace painting mask
    - undercarriage wheels
    634041
    A-20G LööKplus
    1/32 HKM
    SEPTEMBER 2023
    INFO Eduard114
    August 2023
  • Page 115

    ON APPROACH
    Collection of 4 sets for FM-2 in 1/48 scale.
    Recommended kit: Eduard
    - LööK set (pre-painted Brassin dashboards & Steelbelts)
    - TFace painting mask
    - undercarriage wheels
    - gun barrels
    644226
    FM-2 LööKplus
    1/48 Eduard
    SEPTEMBER 2023
    INFO Eduard
    115
    August 2023
  • Page 116

    SIN648110
    Anson Mk.I
    1/48 Airfix
    Collection of 4 sets for Anson Mk.I in 1/48 scale.
    Recommended kit: Airfix
    - undercarriage wheels
    - radiators
    - guns
    - engines
    All sets included in this BIG SIN are available separately,
    but with every BIG SIN set you save up to 30 %.
    ON APPROACH
    SEPTEMBER 2023
    INFO Eduard116
    August 2023
  • Page 117

    SIN648111
    A-10C armament
    1/48 Academy
    Collection of 9 sets for A-10C in 1/48 scale.
    Recommended kit: Academy
    - AGM-65 Maverick
    - TER
    - LAU-3/A
    - GBU-10 Paveway II
    - AIM-9M/L Sidewinder
    - Mk.82 bombs w/airbrake early
    - GBU-12 bomb
    - Sniper ATP
    - AN/ALQ-131 (deep) ECM pod
    All sets included in this BIG SIN are available separately,
    but with every BIG SIN set you save up to 30 %.
    BRASSIN 02/2022BRASSIN 02/2022
    ON APPROACHSEPTEMBER 2023
    INFO Eduard
    117
    August 2023
  • Page 118

    PE
    -
    SETS
    53296 USS Nimitz CVN-68 part 2 1/350 Trumpeter
    53297 USS Nimitz CVN-68 part 3 1/350 Trumpeter
    36504 StuG IV (Sd.Kfz. 167) 1/35 Zvezda
    36505 StuG IV (Sd.Kfz. 167) schurzen 1/35 Zvezda
    36506 Sd.Kfz. 164 Nashorn 1/35 Border Model
    36507 Sd.Kfz. 164 Nashorn ammo boxes 1/35 Border Model
    481121 F-4G reinforcement straps & formation lights 1/48 Meng
    491376 Yak-9T 1/48 Zvezda
    491378 F-4G 1/48 Meng
    72731 PBY-5A exterior 1/72 Hobby 2000/Academy
    73806 PBY-5A 1/72 Hobby 2000/Academy
    73807 B-29 interior 1/72 Hobby 2000/Academy
    ZOOMS
    FE1376 Yak-9T 1/48 Zvezda
    FE1377 Yak-9T seatbelts STEEL 1/48 Zvezda
    FE1378 F-4G 1/48 Meng
    FE1379 F-4G seatbelts STEEL 1/48 Meng
    FE1380 Spitfire Mk.Vc Weekend 1/48 Eduard
    FE1381 Bristol F.2B Fighter Weekend 1/48 Eduard
    SS806 PBY-5A 1/72 Hobby 2000/Academy
    SS807 B-29 1/72 Hobby 2000/Academy
    MASKS
    EX971 FM-2 US national insignia 1/48 Eduard
    EX972 F-4G 1/48 Meng
    EX973 F-4G TFace 1/48 Meng
    EX974 Yak-9T 1/48 Zvezda
    EX975 Yak-9T TFace 1/48 Zvezda
    EX976 Bf 109K TFace 1/48 Eduard
    EX977 Spitfire Mk.Vc Weekend 1/48 Eduard
    EX978 F-4G surface panels 1/48 Meng
    EX979 F-4G wheel bays 1/48 Meng
    SPACE
    3DL48133 Yak-9T SPACE 1/48 Zvezda
    3DL48134 F-4G SPACE 1/48 Meng
    3DL48135 Bf 109K SPACE 1/48 Eduard
    3DL72022 PBY-5A SPACE 1/72 Hobby 2000/Academy
    3DL72023 B-29 SPACE 1/72 Hobby 2000/Academy
    ON APPROACH
    SEPTEMBER 2023
    INFO Eduard118
    August 2023
  • Page 119

    PE
    -
    SETS
    53296 USS Nimitz CVN-68 part 2 1/350 Trumpeter
    53297 USS Nimitz CVN-68 part 3 1/350 Trumpeter
    36504 StuG IV (Sd.Kfz. 167) 1/35 Zvezda
    36505 StuG IV (Sd.Kfz. 167) schurzen 1/35 Zvezda
    36506 Sd.Kfz. 164 Nashorn 1/35 Border Model
    36507 Sd.Kfz. 164 Nashorn ammo boxes 1/35 Border Model
    481121 F-4G reinforcement straps & formation lights 1/48 Meng
    491376 Yak-9T 1/48 Zvezda
    491378 F-4G 1/48 Meng
    72731 PBY-5A exterior 1/72 Hobby 2000/Academy
    73806 PBY-5A 1/72 Hobby 2000/Academy
    73807 B-29 interior 1/72 Hobby 2000/Academy
    ZOOMS
    FE1376 Yak-9T 1/48 Zvezda
    FE1377 Yak-9T seatbelts STEEL 1/48 Zvezda
    FE1378 F-4G 1/48 Meng
    FE1379 F-4G seatbelts STEEL 1/48 Meng
    FE1380 Spitfire Mk.Vc Weekend 1/48 Eduard
    FE1381 Bristol F.2B Fighter Weekend 1/48 Eduard
    SS806 PBY-5A 1/72 Hobby 2000/Academy
    SS807 B-29 1/72 Hobby 2000/Academy
    MASKS
    EX971 FM-2 US national insignia 1/48 Eduard
    EX972 F-4G 1/48 Meng
    EX973 F-4G TFace 1/48 Meng
    EX974 Yak-9T 1/48 Zvezda
    EX975 Yak-9T TFace 1/48 Zvezda
    EX976 Bf 109K TFace 1/48 Eduard
    EX977 Spitfire Mk.Vc Weekend 1/48 Eduard
    EX978 F-4G surface panels 1/48 Meng
    EX979 F-4G wheel bays 1/48 Meng
    SPACE
    3DL48133 Yak-9T SPACE 1/48 Zvezda
    3DL48134 F-4G SPACE 1/48 Meng
    3DL48135 Bf 109K SPACE 1/48 Eduard
    3DL72022 PBY-5A SPACE 1/72 Hobby 2000/Academy
    3DL72023 B-29 SPACE 1/72 Hobby 2000/Academy
    ON APPROACH
    Bf 109F-2 #70154 1/72
    WNr. 8117, Maj. Günther Lützow, CO of JG 3,
    Polonnoye, The Soviet Union, Summer 1941
    WNr. 6797, Hptm. Hartmann Grasser,
    CO of II./JG 51, Orel-North, The Soviet Union,
    Autumn 1942
    Hptm. Dietrich Hrabak, CO of II./JG 54,
    Ostrov, The Soviet Union, July 1941
    WNr. 6720, Oblt. Egon Mayer, CO of 7./JG 2,
    St. Pol-Brias, France, September 1941
    WNr. 8326, Maj. Günther von Maltzahn, CO of JG 53,
    Bila Tserkva, The Soviet Union, July 1941
    Hptm. Hans Philipp, CO of I./JG 54, Krasnogvardeysk,
    The Soviet Union, March 1942
    SEPTEMBER 2023
    INFO Eduard
    119
    August 2023
  • Page 120

    ON APPROACH
    KURFÜRST 1/48#11177
    SEPTEMBER 2023
    INFO Eduard120
    August 2023
  • Page 121

    ON APPROACHSEPTEMBER 2023
    INFO Eduard
    121
    August 2023
  • Page 122

    ON APPROACH
    Bristol F.2B Fighter 1/48#8452
    Bristol F.2B Fighter
    BBrriissttooll FF..22BB
    1/48
    Bristol F.2B
    Scale Plastic Model Kit
    Eduard - Model Accessories
    Mírová 170
    435 21 Obrnice
    Czech Republic
    1/48
    SCALE PLASTIC MODEL KIT
    FOR ADVANCED MODELLERS
    plastic parts for one scale model
    decals for 4 marking options
    MADE IN CZECH REPUBLIC
    Collectible item for adult collectors only
    © Eduard-Model Accessories 2023
    29,95
    Bristol Bristol F.2B FighterF.2B Fighter
    8452
    item
    Bristol F.2B
    Scale Plastic Model Kit
    8452
    item
    item
    www.eduard.com
    1/48
    1/48
    scale
    scale
    scale
    www.eduard.com
    1 48
    8452
    item
    PLASTIKOVÁ STAVEBNICE
    PRO POKROČILÉ MODELÁŘE
    plastové díly pro stavbu jednoho modelu
    obtisky pro 4 markingy
    VYROBENO V ČESKÉ REPUBLICE
    Sběratelská položka pro dospělé modeláře
    8452
    FFiigghhtteerr
    Fighter
    Fighter
    BVFV 4 31 49 CB
    AWA
    BVFV 4 31 49 CB
    AWA
    BVFV 4 31 49 CB
    AWA
    BVFV 4 31 49 CB
    AWA
    Capt. Andrew E. McKeever;
    2Lt. Leslie A. Powell, No. 11 Squadron,
    Fére-en-Tardenois, France, November 1917
    Capt. Arthur A. Peck;
    Capt. John J. L. Williams,
    No. 111 Squadron, Deir el-Balah,
    Palestine, October 1917
    Capt. Sydney Dalrymple;
    2Lt. G. Beagle, No. 139 Squadron,
    Villaverla, Italy, September 1918
    Lt. Sydney A. Oades;
    Lt. D. N. G. Brampton, No. 22 Squadron,
    Villeneuve-des-Vertus, France,
    January 1918
    A7288, Capt. Andrew E. McKeever;
    2Lt. Leslie A. Powell, No. 11 Squadron,
    Fére-en-Tardenois, France,
    November 1917
    A7194, Capt. Arthur H. Peck; Capt. John
    J. Lloyd-Williams, No. 111 Squadron,
    Deir el-Balah, Palestine, October 1917
    A7300, Lt. Sydney A. Oades; Lt. D. N. G.
    Brampton, No. 22 Sqn., Villeneuve-des-Vertus,
    France, January 1918
    D8084, Capt. Sydney Dalrymple;
    2Lt. G. Beagle, No. 139 Squadron,
    Villaverla, Italy, September 1918
    SEPTEMBER 2023
    INFO Eduard122
    August 2023
  • Page 123

    ON APPROACH
    Spitfire Mk.Vc #84192 1/48
    AB216, S/Ldr Robert W. Oxpring,
    No. 91 “Nigeria“ Squadron, RAF Hawkinge,
    Great Britain, April–June 1942
    Lt. Robert C. Curtis, 2nd FS, 52nd FG,
    12th AF, Corsica, December 1943
    EE613, S/Ldr Michel G. B. Donnet,
    No. 350 Squadron, RAF Friston,
    Great Britain, June 1944
    JK661, Cne. Georges Valentin,
    No. 326 Squadron (GC.II/7), Are de l'Air,
    Corsica, September 1943
    SEPTEMBER 2023
    INFO Eduard
    123
    August 2023
  • Page 124

    MiG-21bis
    1/48
    #84130Re-release
    ON APPROACH
    MiG-21bisD, Eskadrila borbenih aviona,
    HRZ i PZO, Zagreb – Pleso, Croatia,
    December 2016
    MiG-21BIS, HävLLv 31, Suomen ilmavoimat,
    Kuopio-Rissala AB, Finland, 1980
    MiG-21bis, 115th GIAP, Soviet VVS,
    Bagram Air Base, Afghanistan, 1980
    MiG-21bis, C2283, No.3 Squadron „Cobras“, Pathankot AB, India, early ´90s
    SEPTEMBER 2023
    INFO Eduard124
    August 2023
  • Tail End Charlie

    Each of us needs some form of relaxation. For instance, two years ago, I started two small vineyards in our family garden in Prague. The original vineyard in the area apparently disappeared in the 18th century, but there are still local names associated with wine production. I purchased young plants of the Cabernet Cortis (red) and Solaris (white) varieties and planted the vines following the advice of an experienced neighbourhood winemaker.

    Each of us needs some form of relaxation.
    For instance, two years ago, I started two
    small vineyards in our family garden in Prague.
    The original vineyard in the area apparently
    disappeared in the 18th century, but there are still
    local names associated with wine production.
    I purchased young plants of the Cabernet Cortis
    (red) and Solaris (white) varieties and planted
    the vines following the advice of an experienced
    neighbourhood winemaker. My winemaker
    friends amicably assure me that I won’t make
    my first good wine for another ten years or so.
    Since I had never grown anything in my life
    besides food mold, no one in my family believed
    anything would grow under my hands. I must be
    doing something right, because the vines are
    thriving and not suffering from mold or other
    diseases and pests. And I don’t use chemical
    sprays, I’ve only applied nettle leachate once.
    Anyway, I’m happy with the vines, although
    I don’t have much time for them this year due
    to the failing health of a family member. When
    I can work in the vineyard, it's a surprisingly
    relaxing experience. Thanks to the vines,
    I have also had several positive experiences
    with winemakers from Moravia, Austria and
    Germany. When I mentioned that I had started
    a small vineyard, they immediately wanted to see
    photos and started passing on helpful advice.
    They took me as a junior colleague, whereas
    I saw myself more as a disoriented beginner.
    I found the winemakers to be a very friendly
    international community. But unlike them, I have
    the advantage that my micro-vineyards are
    a hobby and not a source of livelihood.
    Plastic modelling is a source of income for
    our company and should also bring relaxation
    to our customers, although in this case with
    abundant use of chemistry. In addition, there
    is a community associated with our hobby that
    is mostly friendly and supportive, although
    there are sometimes individuals who take it too
    personally and should probably use some other
    form of relaxation.
    A former colleague of mine from another
    field, named Štěpán, didn’t pick up plastic
    modelling as a hobby until he was about thirty
    years old. He works as a process engineer and
    when he gets off work, he has a full head of
    worries. So, he started looking for a pastime to
    clear his head. He did something of a selection
    procedure and plastic modelling came out the
    winner. Building model jet fighters keeps his
    mind so busy that it really helps him relax. We
    just don’t have enough kits on offer to suit his
    taste unfortunately.
    Many modellers may not see plastic modelling
    as a relaxation because they simply like history,
    or they have been involved in the hobby since
    they were young and they keep enjoying it.
    But I think they still relax with it, even if they
    don’t know it. Plastic modelling can even have
    a positive influence in serious life situations.
    In some countries it is part of the therapy for
    war veterans suffering from post-traumatic
    stress disorder. My admiration in this regard
    goes to the people who are involved in our field
    in Ukraine, whether they are manufacturers,
    traders or modellers. They are trying to carry
    on in wartime conditions that are in many ways
    unparalleled since the Second World War.
    Recently I read in a Facebook group comments
    under the post of a Ukrainian modeller who
    is sharing this hobby with his son. He posted
    a photo of a new model with the comment
    that they continue modelling regardless of the
    terrorist attacks by the Russian state. In his
    opinion, thanks to this relaxation, they are more
    able to cope with the war induced anxiety and
    stress. Surprisingly, one discussant from across
    the Atlantic objected to the Ukrainian modeller
    bringing politics into the group. He got a rather
    intense response from other discussants to the
    fact that plastic modelling as a means of mental
    relaxation from cruise missile raids is not really
    about politics.
    In the area where these Ukrainian modellers
    live, there have been over 1,300 air raid alerts
    since February 24, 2022, each lasting about
    one hour on average. Statistics show that the
    Russians conduct airstrikes evenly on any
    day of the week, with most being declared
    around midnight and around noon. Perhaps this
    discussant from across the Atlantic could visit
    Ukraine and try out forms of relaxation when he
    has to take refuge in an air-raid shelter two or
    three times a day ...
    RELAXATION Text: Jan Bobek
    INFO Eduard
    125
    August 2023
  • Page 126

  • Page 127

  • Editorial


    Dear Friends

    Welcome to the August edition of our newsletter and greetings from Corpus Christi, Texas, where my colleagues and I are passing through on our way to San Marcos for the traditional summer IPMS USA Nats. We will be in Texas for two weeks, after the Nats we will move north to Dallas where our main goal is to study three P-40 Warhawks. We want to check some details and shapes and possibly scan some sections, so we’re bringing along our trusted chief designer Stan Archman and his amazing scanner, which already afforded us a few rather interesting situations at the beginning of our journey. And we haven't even scanned the tip of the spinner yet!  We don’t really need much; basically, we have the bulk of the thing ready. We just want to make sure we don't have a design flaw and also see the plane in person to develop a proper personal feel for it, you understand.

    In the morning we will view the USS Lexington and we’ll move on from there. And time is running out, so we won't waste any of it and go straight to the presentation of our new releases for August. For many of you this will be a bit of a bummer because we've actually been selling them for a few days now and many of you already have them. So, I’ll at least give you some background information that might interest you.

     

    Kits

    In the Limited Edition line, we have an item called “Wilder Cat”, in which you’ll find an FM-2 Wildcat kit, a modernized and powerful version of the Wildcat, built by the Eastern Aircraft Division factory, a branch of General Motors. Compared to Wildcats built by Grumman, it had a number of changes, mainly a more powerful engine, a nine-cylinder Wright R-1820-56/56W with a power rating of 1350 hp, which means a changes on the nose section, and at the rear, featured a higher vertical fin and rudder. There are also changes to the wing and other parts of the aircraft, and you’ll find mention of this in other sections further down in this newsletter. Ten marking options are offered, one of which is British. The FM-2 served in the Royal Navy as the Wildcat Mk.VI, and this version set it apart from others through its relatively extensive service outside of the Pacific, i.e. the Atlantic. This brings about an expansion of color variants, since in the Atlantic, Wildcats were not blue as in the Pacific. The FM-2 has also not been actively paid attention to by other manufacturers in 1/48th (with just one exception). On the other hand, I am concerned about the extent to which the technical and operational history of this interesting aircraft is known to modelers. For the most part, retailers do not seem to have an extensive knowledge of the type, frankly.

    Some debate has been stimulated by the fact that this Limited Edition kit is not released as a Dual Combo boxing, but is a single kit with one set of plastic in the package. We decided on this version because we don't want to force customers to buy a relatively expensive kit with two sets of moldings. To the contrary, we have put the range of color versions available to ten aircraft; the decals are then designed in such a way that the stencil data and national markings cover two complete models. So if someone wants to build two FM-2 Wildcats, they can obtain the Overtrees components and basically create a Dual Combo boxing from the kit for very reasonable money. Deciding which way to go and how many Wildcats you realistically want, or even need, is up to you! In the future, the key to deciding whether a Limited Edition kit will be released as a Dual Combo or a classic single kit will be the technical make-up of the kit. If it contains two technically different sub variants of a given type, the kit will be a Dual Combo, as for example in Wunderschöne neue Maschinen, where there are a Bf 109 F-2 and an F-4, and there are two different sprues with fuselages and wings. The next WnM edition, dedicated to the Bf 109 G-2 and G-4, will also be a Dual Combo, although the sprues will be identical, there will again be technical differences, this time more or less only in the wing. In the end, all the Limited Edition kits covering the Bf 109F/G/K series will be Dual Comb kits, not only those covering a specific type, but also the kits whose concept runs more along the lines of a theme, such as the 1/72nd scale Africa, Barbarossa or Wilde Sau concepts. Frankly, in these cases there is a risk of even more extensive sets. Among the other Limited Editions being prepared, we have the Dual Combo kit of the L-39 Albatros, which will be presented in a renewed premiere at E-day with a new canopy, as well as another 1/48th scale Zero, this time the A6M5/5a Zero Model 52. There is also a difference in the wing here. The following Dual Combo will be the “Mezek”, which as most of you will know, is the S-199. Here, it is clear that there are different fuselages, and later, the P-51B/C, where it’s also about fuselages. Single kit Limited Edition kits will then continue to be all repackaged kits, which will apply to the Su-25K in the near future. It has always been that way with these items and it will continue that way. From our own production, the closest to becoming a reality is the Kurfürst, Bf 109 K-4, where there will be nine marking options, but technically all the machines will be the same. Well … not completely, but for taller rudders and tailwheel variations, we don’t need to include two sets of moldings. This is just a typical example of a kit, where Overtrees will solve the possible desire or need of the modeler to build more than one model.

    The second August Limited Edition item, dubbed “Zipper”, a 1:48th scale F-104C from the Vietnam War, is also designed as a single kit. The plastic this time, unlike our previous Starfighters, come from Kinetic, and in addition to the standard photoetching and masks, it also includes resin parts, and offers up seven marking options that focus on the 479th and 8th TFW aircraft, operating in the Vietnam in the 1960s.

    Our series of 1:72nd scale ProfiPACK kits dedicated to the many countless versions of the Bf 109 F, G and K begins in August with the Bf 109 F-4. If you are left with the impression that we forgot about the Bf 109 F-2, don’t worry, we didn’t. September will tell. The first reviews of the new 109s have already appeared, mostly positive, which makes us happy. However, some criticisms also emerged from them. For example, the need to repair a small step between the vertical tail surface and its transition to the fuselage. There, after gluing the fuselage and fin assemblies together, which must be glued there before the fuselage is closed up, a small step is created. Please note that contrary to how this has been widely reported, this is in fact supposed to be there and is not a mistake. We modeled it rather painstakingly and carefully watched over the mold making to make sure it was there. On the real plane, there was a cover plate in this section, which passed into the keel in the form of just such a step. So please don’t fix it, no matter how tempting it is!

    With respect to 1/72nd scale ProfiPACK kits, the MiG-21MF is back on sale in the fighter-bomber version. In the Weekend line, we have the A6M3 Zero Model 32, also known under the Allied code name Hamp. I have a personal connection to this kit because this time last year we had a unique opportunity to get up close and personal with one of the Hamps undergoing extensive restoration in Lafayette, Louisiana. At the time, we had no idea that it was an even more interesting machine than we thought, nor that this very machine would be included in the color options of one of our kits. The unexpected has become reality, and the Lafayette Hamp is actually, in two of its development guises, included in the new Weekend release, in addition to the very special insignia featuring the red Hinomaru in a white square. This is also why this Zero is interesting, and that’s why it was worth breaking tradition and adding five marking options to this Weekend release

     

    ACCESSORIES

    As usual, there are dozens of accessory items available in the new item listing. I will mention only a few that I think would grab my attention, such as the F-35B 1/48th RAM Panel masks for the Italeri kit. We have recently started to deal more with these masks for surface areas and high-quality markings, because spraying them has become an increasingly popular modeling technique. Of course, classic canopy masks are also on the list. In the LööK line, I would like to point out the A-20G Havoc 1:32nd set for the HKM kit. In the SPACE line, we have, among other things, the Bf 110 G-4 and FM-2 sets for the Eduard kits, and the A-10C from Academy, all in 1:48th scale.

    In the Brassin department, we have sets designed for our own August releases such as bronze landing gear legs, exhausts and aileron mass balance weights for the Bf 109F in 1:72nd. We have several sets for the 48th  FM-2, and these include a cockpit, bronze landing gear legs, a wing fold and several smaller sets, and for the F-104C, an exhaust nozzle and speedbrakes. For the 1:48th scale Bf 109F we have a newly designed 3D printed cockpit, in this case with an older version of the seat, that was the same as that found in the Bf 109E. A number of the types mentioned are also covered in photoetching, but again, you can find much more on that by reading further on down through this newsletter.

     

    Historical articles

    It is clear to me that the most popular part of any of our monthly newsletters are the historical and technical articles. As I already indicated above, the Wildcat, in its FM-2 version, was a uniquely interesting aircraft, and we would like to coax modelers who have neglected this “Wilder Cat” to draw the same conclusion. For this reason, there are two articles this month focused on the topic of the FM-2. The first one was written for us by the renowned American author Thomas McKelvey Cleaver, who describes probably the most interesting, intensive and successful deployment of these aircraft. This was in the Battle of Samar Island, referred to by historians as “The US Navy’s Finest Hour”. Given that a large Japanese group led by Admiral Kurita aboard the gigantic battleship Yamato, with two other battleships, eight cruisers, and eleven destroyers in tow, was driven off the island by a few destroyers and escort carriers, this is probably not an overstatement. The second article was written by Richard Plos, and it is focused on the creation of the FM-2 and its technical differences compared to the preceding F4F-4 and, by extension, the FM-1. Miro Barič’s miniseries about the search for lost ships ends with the fourth volume in this edition. Here the topics crossed a bit. He also mentions, among other things, the Battle of Samar and the survey of wrecks connected to it. The series about the air battles over Ukraine by the same author continues with its seventeenth edition. In this case, unfortunately, the ending of the series is neither in the author’s nor our hands ... The section of historical articles is rounded out by Boxart Story, a series of short articles that describe the historically real events depicted on our boxarts. The Bf 109 F-4 and A6M3 Zero Type 32 topics were taken up by Jan Bobek and the third was added by Richard Plos. This is an article relevant to our reissue of the MiG-21MF, the box art of which depicts a future Vietnamese astronaut shooting down an American B-52. Or maybe not …

    In closing, Wednesday marks the start of the IPMS USA National Convention, this year in San Marcos, Texas. As every year, we organize an Internet Afterparty to go with it, this year it started already on the weekend that has just passed. As you may have guessed, my colleagues and I are heading to San Marcos. I am finishing this introduction with sweat running down my face during this leg of the trip, and I will finish it off in Corpus Christi, a few hundred meters from the USS Lexington, which is moored here as a museum piece. Just note that writing an intro to the newsletter on the road is always hell, and if I have forgotten anything important, I am certain that you will find in the flowing pages!

     

    Happy Modeling!

    Vladimir Sulc

     

  • FM-2 as fine modification

    The second production FM-2, BuNo. 15953, during flight tests. Photo: NHHC

    FM-2 WILDCAT

    Text: Richard plos


    The Wildcat was the first single-wing fighter aircraft produced by Grumman for active service. It bore the main burden of battles in the Pacific from the attack on Pearl Harbor until around February 1943, when the significantly more powerful F4U-1 Corsair and Wildcat’s direct successor, the F6F Hellcat, entered the scene. It was expected that the days of the Wildcat would be numbered with the arrival of these new powerful beasts, but the opposite turned out to be true. Thanks to the highly modernized version, FM-2, the Wildcat continued to participate in combat operations almost until the end of the war.

     

    Due to the Navy’s dissatisfaction with the Corsair’s landing characteristics on aircraft carrier decks, the Hellcat became the Navy’s main fighter type until the second half of 1944, when the Navy accepted the improved Corsairs that were previously serving with the USMC units. Both types were powered by the big and exceptionally powerful Pratt & Whitney R-2800 Double Wasp engine, an eighteen-cylinder, double-row engine, which designers decided to install into quite volumious airframe. In June 1943, squadrons equipped with the F4F-4 Wildcats still represented a significant combat force, and by that time, a version that aimed to address several issues of its predecessor at once, was already in production.

     

    The Successor Worse Than Its Predecessor

    The F4F-4 represented the worst-performing version among all the Wildcat variants. The aircraft, burdened with an additional pair of machine guns and with significantly reduced ammunition per barrel compared to the F4F-3, required around 50 minutes to climb to an altitude that would allow it to attack Japanese bombers flying at about 20,000 ft. Moreover, with only 250 rounds of ammunition per gun, the pilots found themselves facing a shortage of ammo even in relatively short dogfights.

    It became clear early on that the F4F-4 version was not a wise step, but by mid-1942, when the F4F-4 was being introduced into service, Grumman was fully occupied with the development of the Hellcat, as well as the mass production of Wildcats, Avengers, Ducks, and Widgeons. They simply did not have the capacity for further development of a type that was supposed to be replaced soon. The preparations for Hellcat production had the highest priority, leading to the decision to entrust the production of the first two mentioned types to another manufacturer.

     

    Aircraft Instead of Cars

    Shortly after the outbreak of war with Japan, General Motors halted production at its five automobile factories on the East Coast. The company’s management was prepared to put them to use for wartime production, especially to produce aircraft components. As early as 1942, the Navy organized a meeting between General Motors representatives and people from Grumman, a key supplier to the Navy’s aviation. Grumman’s factory in Bethpage, New York, was operating at full capacity, so a solution was sought to shift the production of Wildcats and Avengers. GM representatives were somewhat surprised when they were asked to take over the entire production of aircraft instead of just manufacturing parts and subassemblies for Grumman. To their credit, they accepted the challenge. Numerous delegations and work teams followed. Grumman’s teams prepared the automotive factories for aircraft production, while GM personnel learned about aircraft production in Bethpage. The advantage was the proximity of all the factories. Trenton was about 160 km from Bethpage, and Linden was roughly halfway along this route. In the vast country’s terms, these plants were nearly neighbors ...

    By June 1942, all five GM factories had been fully converted and ready to start aircraft production as an independent division called Eastern Aircraft Division. The Trenton factory in New Jersey was responsible for producing Avengers. Unlike Grumman’s production, designated TBF, the Avengers from Trenton were labeled as TBM. The second factory in New Jersey, located in Linden, was to manufacture F4F-4 Wildcats under the designation FM-1 (F for Fighter, M for General Motors, and 1 as the manufacturer’s first type). The remaining three Eastern Aircraft Division factories in Bloomfield and Baltimore supplied both final manufacturers with the necessary parts.

    The Eastern Aircraft Division received a contract to produce 1800 Wildcats on April 18, 1942, and Grumman subsequently delivered prototype subassemblies and parts for assembling the first ten F4F-4s. At the same time, the factory received training examples marked as PK, where the joints were not riveted but rather connected with Parker-Kalon fasteners for repeated assembly and disassembly. These examples were used to train the workers.

    Before the war, the modern factory in Linden had produced cars for Buick, Oldsmobile, and Pontiac and it was capable of a takt time one car per minute. After the transition to Wildcat production, during the period when the parallel production was ongoing at Grumman, the factory had to maintain strict technological discipline to ensure that parts from both manufacturers were interchangeable. Many parts manufactured by GM factories were sent to Grumman’s assembly line and vice versa.

    A Wildcat FM-2 landing on the deck of the escort aircraft carrier USS Anzio (CVE-57). Photo: NHHC

     

    The First “Fine Modification” (FM-1)

    The first Wildcat produced in Linden had its maiden flight on August 31, 1942, i.e., at the time of the intense battles for Guadalcanal, which exposed the shortcomings of the F4F-4 version. Its poor climb rate and significantly reduced ammo supply per gun compared to the F4F-3 did not win much favor among the pilots. The first ten FM-1 aircraft were assembled from Grumman parts in their original form, but starting with the eleventh aircraft, it was decided to remove the external machine guns to reduce the aircraft’s weight, resulting in improved climbing performance. After solving some problems related to the wing folding system, the ammunition supply was almost restored to the original level. While the F4F-3 carried 1800 rounds (450 per gun), FM-1 pilots had 1720 rounds available (430 per gun). This was a significant improvement compared to the mere 250 rounds per gun on the F4F-4.

    In May 1943, Grumman ceased the production of Wildcats entirely. By that time, Linden’s production was running relatively smoothly, although out of the initial order for 1800 aircraft, only 839 were produced. Some of them were assigned to Composite Squadrons, which combined fighter and attack aircraft, i.e., Wildcats and Avengers. Many of FM-1s were allocated to training units, and 311 aircraft were delivered to the British Fleet Air Arm (FAA) under the initial designation Martlet V, which was later changed to Wildcat V in January 1944.

    With the introduction of Hellcats and Corsairs, it seemed that the fate of the aging Wildcat was sealed. However, the enormous need for air cover for numerous task forces and transport convoys required more aircraft carriers than the Navy had available. Building one Essex-class aircraft carrier took at least 20 months (pre-war periods could take up to 37 months) despite increased war efforts. Due to the required construction time and limited shipyard capacity, it was not possible to expect any significant increase in the number of conventional aircraft carriers before the end of 1944, which was too late. However, a solution was found. At the end of 1942, the Navy began to receive the first escort aircraft carriers of the Casablanca and Bogue classes. These were mostly conversions of merchant and cargo ships that received flight decks and other necessary equipment for carrying up to 27 aircraft in composite squadrons (although there were exceptions, and some operated purely fighters, such as VF-26).

    Compared to Essex-class carriers, the escort carriers were more than 110 yards shorter, lacked armor, multiple elevators for rapid flight deck and hangars exchanges, and other amenities. As a result, their designation CVE was ironically interpreted by the crew as Combustible, Vulnerable, Expendable. They were slow vessels with limited space on the flight deck, where at least nine or ten Avengers had to be accommodated as part of the composite squadron. This left little space for fighters, and the large Hellcats were not suitable for these carriers. The Navy demanded a small and lightweight fighter that could operate from these ships, but there was no time to develop an entirely new type. Although the development of the Bearcat, which was to meet all the requirements, began in 1943, it did not reach combat in time. Therefore, the only option was to continue producing Wildcats, preferably in a more powerful version. Grumman thus prepared two prototypes of the XF4F-8, the precursor to the following FM-2 production version.

    FM-2 from the aircraft carrier USS Card (CVE-11) of the Bogue class. The aircraft, in its typical Atlantic camouflage, was photographed on February 10, 1944, and belonged to VC-55. Photo: NHHC

     

    Lightened, Strengthened, and Ready

    The FM-2 version of the Wildcat is often overlooked among its counterparts, as the F4F-3 and F4F-4 versions gained greater fame due to the heroic performances of their pilots during the battles in the Coral Sea, at the Midway or Guadalcanal. These successful operations produced a whole series of famous fighter aces from both the Marine Corps and the Navy. However, the purpose and operational deployment of the FM-2 were different; it was no more the Navy’s main fighter type. Nevertheless, at least five more pilots achieved ace status with the FM-2 (compared to 54 aces flying earlier versions), and the most successful of all squadrons flying the FM-2, VC-27 “Saints,” eventually became the second most successful unit operating Wildcats, regardless of the combat area or period. Its pilots managed to shoot down a total of 61.5 enemy aircraft during the four-month battle for the Philippines. Only VF-5 with 79 kills surpassed them. In this respect, the FM-2 ultimately made its mark.

    The increase in the Wildcat’s performance was mainly achieved by installing a more powerful yet 230 lb lighter Wright R-1820-56 engine instead of the Pratt & Whitney R-1830-86. Along with other modifications, the FM-2 was “slimmed down” by 500 lb and gained a power improvement of 150 hp compared to the F4F-4 version. As the new engine was supercharged by a single-stage, dual-speed compressor, the FM-2 lost its performance advantage at higher altitudes. However, this was not an issue since these aircraft were primarily intended for anti-submarine operations, convoy protection from low-level air threats, and attacks against ground or surface targets. High-altitude combat was not considered part of their combat activities. Additionally, most of the FM-2s were equipped with engines in versions 56W or 56WA, featuring water injection to temporarily boost the engine output for up to ten minutes.

    The cooling system underwent a fundamental change. The two protruding radiators on the lower wing were removed, and their function was taken over by a compact radiators located in the lower and upper part of the fuselage behind the engine. The wing openings were covered with shaped metal panels.

    The engine change and cooling system redesign necessitated alterations to the nose cowlings. The exhaust outlets were not combined for the new engine; instead, each cylinder had its individual exhaust. Three exhausts ended on the right side, two on the left, and two pairs on the bottom of the fuselage. The second fuselage tank was removed, leaving the FM-2 with only one 117 gallons volume. Due to this, FM-2 aircraft often flew with additional drop tanks (each of 58 gallons volume). Starting with aircraft BuNo. 57044, the fuselage tank was slightly enlarged to 126 gallons.

    The glass windows under the cockpit were covered, and a new universal tailwheel with a larger tire was developed for the FM-2. But the most noticeable change compared to all previous versions was the taller vertical tail fin and rudder to eliminate the increased torque from the propeller driven by more powerful engine. However, even with more power and more efficient propeller, the flight decks of escort aircraft carriers were too short for a conventional takeoff, and catapults had to do most of the job. Nevertheless, the FM-2’s dimensions were very advantageous. With folded wings, it was only 14 ft wide, allowing an entire composite squadron to be accommodated on a single ship’s deck. While up to 12 Avengers could be carried, the number of FM-2s typically ranged from 12 to 14.

    One of the aces on FM-2 was Lt. Thomas B. Sedaker. In the photo, he poses with a cake baked by the cooks of the USS Makin Island to celebrate the 2,000th catapult launch from the deck of that ship. Thomas Sedaker was the one who performed the launch. Photo: NHHC

     

    “Wilder Wildcat”

    The Wildcat aircraft modified into the FM-2 version quickly won the favor of pilots. It was a nimble and reasonably fast aircraft that retained one of its typical characteristics – the ability to withstand significant damage in combat. Additionally, the pilot was protected by a new armor plate behind their back (though not all aircraft were equipped with it). No wonder the new version earned the nickname Wilder Wildcat.

    Deliveries of the FM-2 began in the first half of 1944, and squadrons operating both in the Pacific and the Atlantic received them. However, their main tasks were different. In the Pacific, the FM-2s were often used to support ground units during landing operations, aided by their ability to carry two 250 lb bombs under the wings (from BuNo. 74359, FM-2s could also carry HVAR rockets). In the Atlantic, they primarily provided air cover for supply convoys from the US coast to Europe and often assisted Avengers in hunting German submarines. Of course, in the Pacific, FM-2 pilots also provided cover for supply ships or engaged in anti-submarine operations.

    The FM-2 scored its first kill on March 20, 1944, when Lt.(jg) J. H. Dinnen and Ens. R. P. Kirk of VC-63 encountered and shot down a Japanese Ki-61 Tony. The most intense aerial combat for FM-2 pilots occurred during the two-day Battle of Leyte Gulf. On the first day of the battle, October 24, 1944, all American carrier-based fighters claimed a total of 270 kills, with FM-2 pilots achieving 65 of them.

    USS Makin Island (CVE-93) sailing in the South Pacific.


    During the Philippine campaign, the Wilder Wildcat pilots were also known for providing close air support and air cover over the invasion beaches. During the Battle of Samar, they directly attacked Japanese ships.

    Many Japanese pilots underestimated the FM-2 based on its familiar silhouette and were subsequently unpleasantly surprised. Several Japanese pilots fell victim to their misjudgment, and until the surrender of Japan, FM-2 pilots achieved a total of 432 kills. Lt. Kenneth G. Hippe became the last American “ace in a day” when he shot down a total of five Ki-48 Lily bombers on October 24, 1944. On the same day but slightly earlier, Lt. Cdr. Harold N. Funk achieved the same feat, shooting down five enemy aircraft with his FM-2, adding one more kill in the afternoon.

    And the most intriguing fact: While the Hellcat is generally considered the fighter aircraft with the best victory-to-loss ratio, 19:1, there was one type that significantly surpassed it. Yes, it was the FM-2. Its ratio of aerial victories to losses in air combat was 432:13, or 33:1! For comparison, the F4F-3 and F4F-4 versions recorded a ratio of 5.9:1 in 1942.

    In British service, FM-2s were designated as Wildcat VI. They were the only version of this type that did not receive the Martlet designation. They performed similar tasks as in the US Navy. In addition to providing air protection for their own ships and covering bombers, they also conducted ground attacks. For example, during Operation Dragoon, to support the Allied landings in southern France in August 1944, Wildcat VI aircraft carried out bombing attacks with 250 lb bombs, carried on the modified racks used for drop tanks. They also used RP-3 rockets. In the North Sea, Wildcat VI pilots engaged in air combat with German aircraft and scored several kills. Perhaps the most interesting encounter occurred on March 26, 1945, when aircraft from No. 882 Squadron of HMS Searcher clashed with eight Bf 109G planes. German fighters catch the opponents with surprise and shot down one Wildcat, but subsequently, British pilots used the agility of their planes and, according to reports, shot down four Bf 109Gs and damaged one. Although none of the British pilots became aces flying Martlets and Wildcats, it was a highly popular type.

    The most successful FM-2 pilot with nine confirmed victories was Ralph Earle Elliott Jr.  Photo: Patricia Elliott family collection


    With a total of 4,437 produced units, the FM-2 became the most numerous version of the Wildcat (a total of 7,905 Wildcats of all versions were produced). Production only ceased in May 1945 when Grumman began manufacturing the Bearcat, which was meant to replace the FM-2. The first operational squadrons of this type were enroute to the Japanese islands when the enemy surrendered, and the war ended.

    While the Bearcat represented a significant increase in performance compared to the FM-2, it ultimately did not leave as remarkable a mark in history as the FM-2 did. It was the Wilder Wildcat that made sense for escort aircraft carriers of the Casablanca and Bogue classes, ensuring the safety of millions of tons of material and hundreds of thousands of transported personnel in the Pacific and Atlantic. In some respects, the FM-2 can thus be considered the most significant Wildcat version of them all.


    Main differences of FM-2 compared to F4F-4:

    1. Taller vertical tail surfaces

    2. Different cooling flaps

    3. Distinct exhaust system

    4. Different location of the gun camera port

    5. Reduced armament to four machine guns

    6. Relocated landing light

    7. Ability to install HVAR or RP-3 rockets

    8. Upright antenna mast

    9. Removal of the second fuel tank and its filling port


    10. Wright R-1820-56 engine

    11. Different propeller

    12. Different metal skin shaping under the exhausts

    13. Removed wing-mounted radiators

    14. Blanked windows under the cockpit

    15. New tailwheel


    Different shapes of the exhaust pipes framing.


    Sources:

    F4F Wildcat in detail & scale, Bert Kinzey, SQUADRON/SIGNAL PUBLICATIONS, INC.

    F4F Wildcat in action, Richard S. Dann, SQUADRON/SIGNAL PUBLICATIONS, INC.

    Fleet Air Arm, British Carrier Aviation 1039–1945, Ron Mackay, SQUADRON/SIGNAL PUBLICATIONS, INC.

    Wildcat Aces of WW2, Barrett Tillman, Osprey Publishing, 1995

  • FM-2 Wildcat

    FM-2 Wildcat fighter on combat air patrol over USS Santee (CVE-29) during the Leyte Invasion. Photo: NHHC


    Text: THOMAS McKELVEY CLEAVER


    By the fall of 1942, production of the F4F Wildcat, which was seen as a useful aircraft for the composite squadrons operating from escort carriers that would provide anti-submarine cover and close air support for coming invasions, was transferred to General Motors Eastern Aircraft Division. However, Grumman was not completely through with the Wildcat. The possibility of developing a lighter version specifically for operation from escort carriers had been considered before production was taken over by General Motors.

     

    The main difference of the new version of Wildcat was substitution of the 1,200 h.p. R-1830-86 with a 1,350 h.p. Wright R-1820-56 Cyclone that was 230 lbs. lighter. The XF4F-8 had four guns like the FM-1; it was visually distinguished an enlarged rudder and vertical stabilizer to counteract the increased torque of the more powerful engine. The airplane was 530 lbs. lighter than the F4F-4. Initial climb rate was nearly doubled, service ceiling was boosted to 36,400 ft. All in all, this was a “wilder” Wildcat. It went into production in early 1943; between then and August 1945 4,437 FM-2s were delivered, making it the most numerous Wildcat of all.

    In the Pacific, the FM-2 showed up in the new Composite Squadrons (VC) in the fall of 1943.  During the invasions of the Marshalls, Carolines, Marianas, and the Philippines, ten more Wildcat pilots became aces. 

     

    The U.S. Navy’s Finest Hour

    The FM-2’s most memorable day came on October 25, 1944. Task Group 77.4, composed of three Task Units 77.1, 77.2, and 77.3 known as Taffy One, Two and Three for their radio callsign “Taffy,” were operating off the island of Samar to provide air support to the invasion of Leyte; each Task Unit was composed of six escort carriers, with two or three destroyers and four or five destroyer escorts for support. Each TU had 48 TBM-1C Avengers and around 100 FM-2 Wildcats between the six carriers.

    The previous day, October 24, the Wildcats defended the fleet against the many Japanese air attacks. The Wildcats of VC-10 aboard the carrier USS Gambier Bay (CVE-73) – part of “Taffy Three” – were the most successful squadron in the entire Task Group. VC-10’s Wildcat pilots, who had first experienced air combat during the Marianas invasion, when pilots shot down three attacking Japanese aircraft during the main battle on June 18, 1944, shot down seven enemy aircraft. Ensign Courtney assisted in breaking up an attack on American transports by more than 15 twin engine bombers. He was credited with assisting in destroying one Ki-21 Sally and the probable destruction of one Ki-48 Lily. Lieutenant R. W. Roby shot down one Lily and assisted in shooting down one Sally and Lieutenant Seitz shot down a Sally. Lieutenant (jg) Phillips probably destroyed two Zekes and Lieutenant(jg) Dugan shot down two Sallys. Lieutenant Joe McGraw and others in a CAP flight intercepted a group of 15–20 twin engine bombers escorted by six to eight Oscars he mistakenly identified as Zekes. McGraw destroyed two Lilys and damaged a third.

    The next morning, the men, ships and aircraft of Taffy One, Two, and Three fought the Battle off Samar, which has been called “the Navy’s Finest Hour.” This was the last surface engagement ever fought by the U.S. Navy against an enemy fleet. In the words of Samuel Eliot Morrison, the Pacific War’s official historian: “In no engagement of its entire history has the United States Navy shown more gallantry, guts and gumption than in those two morning hours between 0730 and 0930 off Samar.” The Battle off Samar involved ships that should never have been in the same ocean with their opponents, fighting against the greatest surface fleet the Empire of Japan ever sent to sea.

    On October 24, the First Mobile Striking Force, commanded by Admiral Takeo Kurita, lost the giant battleship Musashi, sunk by American carrier aircraft in the Battle of the Sibuyan Sea. Following Musashi’s loss, Kurita broke off his advance, which was spotted by American aircraft; Third Fleet commander Admiral Willian F. Halsey decided the enemy had been defeated and ordered the Fast Carrier Task Force to head north to attack the Japanese carrier fleet that had been found off Cape Engano. However – unknown to the Americans – Kurita was ordered to resume his attack. The Japanese transited San Bernardino Strait that night and emerged into the Philippine Sea at dawn. Kurita, aboard Yamato – the world’s most powerful battleship – ordered the fleet to head south to attack the American invasion fleet in Leyte Gulf.

    Taffy 3, northernmost of the three escort carrier groups, included USS St Lo (CVE-63), White Plains (CVE-66) Kalinin Bay (CVE-68), Fanshaw Bay (CVE-70), Kitkun Bay (CVE 71) and Gambier Bay (CVE-73), commanded by Rear Admiral Clifton Sprague; the carriers were escorted by three Fletcher-class destroyers USS Johnston (DD-557), Hoel (DD-533) and Heerman (DD-532), and four Butler-class destroyer escorts USS John C. Butler (DE-339), Dennis (DE-405), Raymond (DE-341) and Samuel B. Roberts (DE-413).

    At 0630 hours, a TBM-1C Avenger flown by Ensign Bill Brooks took off from St. Lo on the morning patrol. He spotted smoke on the horizon to the northwest at 0647 hours. It was the First Mobile Striking Force, 17 miles from Taffy-3 and bearing down on the CVEs at 30 knots.

    At about the same moment, lookouts on St. Lo reported the unmistakable shapes of “pagoda masts,” a sure identification of Japanese battleships. At 0700 hours, Avenger pilot Ensign Hans Jensen sighted the fleet; this was soon confirmed by shipboard radar.

    Kurita’s ships had just changed to a circular antiaircraft formation when smoke was spotted on the horizon. At 0700 hours, Yamato opened fire with her 18-inch main battery. On Yamato’s bridge, no one could identify the silhouettes of the American carriers in the manuals. Kurita mistakenly assumed he had a task group of the Third Fleet under his guns. He immediately ordered “General Attack.”

    USS Kitkun Bay (CVE-71) prepares to launch FM-2 Wildcats fighters during the action. Photo: NHHC

     

    The Americans Respond

    With the CVEs limited to a top speed of 18 knots, Taffy-3 had no hope of outdistancing their pursuers. There was no possibility of out-shooting them; each carrier had only one 5-inch/38-caliber gun on its stern. Admiral Sprague ordered the force to turn south toward the others and ordered the destroyers to make smoke to provide cover while the carriers launched their aircraft.

    Gambier Bay managed to launch most of her aircraft while battleship shells rumbled overhead. LCDR Edward J. Huxtable, CO of VC-10, boarded his Avenger and asked his plane captain if he had a bomb load. “He said no, so I told him to call LCDR Buzz Borries, the air officer, to see if I had time to get a load. We had not turned up engines yet and I could not see going off without some ordnance. I saw Borries talking to Captain Viewig, who made a sweeping motion with his arm – ‘Get ‘em off!’”

    “About this time, I was startled by what seemed like a rifle shot. I looked out and saw it was a salvo of heavy-caliber stuff splashing alongside White Plains. Until this moment, I had no idea the enemy was so near. Now I was more than ready to get on that catapult! Three TBMs launched ahead of me. The ceiling was at 1,200 feet. I called up Admiral Sprague and asked what our orders were. ‘Attack immediately!’”

    Following the catapult launches of the Avengers, the FM-2 Wildcats were hurriedly launched; some were armed with rockets for strikes ashore, but most were armed only with their four .50-caliber machine guns.

    Huxtable broke out into better visibility. “I spotted four cruisers nearby and what appeared to be four battleships further back in the gloom. There was no possibility of making a high-altitude attack. I pulled up into the ceiling and started for the cruisers. I had no idea what loads the other planes had, but at least we would give them a good scare.”

    Huxtable was joined by his Annapolis classmate, LCDR Richard Fowler, who led Kitkun Bay’s VC-5. They attempted coordinated “hot” and “dry” attacks, with FM-2s strafing the ships ahead of the Avengers, which dropped their 500-pound general purpose bombs. “Our bombs had no effect on the ships, but possibly the explosions scared the crewmen.”

    The Wildcats and Avengers of Taffy-3 kept an unrelenting string of aircraft over Kurita’s fleet, giving the admiral the impression the Americans had far greater resources than they did.

    Lt(jg) Norman Johnson of Fanshaw Bay’s Composite Squadron 68 piloted an Avenger with four 500-pound general-purpose bombs. He later remembered: “Climbing at full throttle, I penetrated the lower cloud cover and leveled off at 11,000 feet. I took a final look at the enemy ships, which were firing on our ships. When I was about five miles away, I nosed down to pick up speed. The Japanese battle force was at that moment occupied in anti-aircraft protection against an air attack. Varied colored bursts mushroomed at several levels. It was quite dense and something I had to penetrate. I kept my bomb doors closed as speed increased. I saw three large battleships with rudders hard over and guns spitting flame. At 7,000 feet, I pushed over into my attack, selecting the lead battleship as my target. My radioman reminded me ‘Open the bomb bay doors!’ I opened the doors and the immediate drag was apparent as the airplane was really barreling along now.

    “I was intent on adjusting the target in my sight. Suddenly the airplane corkscrewed, and the right-side sliding part of the canopy peeled off. I pressed the bomb release at what seemed the best altitude and concentrated my effort on pulling out. The target was so large the bombs couldn’t miss. It was a close call as I leveled off 50 to 100 feet over the water. I pulled up to avoid more AA and then hid in the clouds in case there were any enemy aircraft around.”

    Over the next 30 minutes, aircraft from the six squadrons made repeated bombing and rocket runs on the enemy ships, strafing their decks as they pulled out. At Tacloban, the field became a muddy bog; landing aircraft were damaged as they ground-looped in the mud and slammed into other planes. By mid-day the airfield was covered with wrecked Avengers and Wildcats.           

     FM-2s of Composite Squadron 10 at Tacloban.  Photo: USN via Thomas Cleaver


    The Naval “Charge of the Light Brigade”

    While the pilots desperately attempted to distract the enemy, Taffy-3’s “small boys” moved to defend the carriers after Admiral Sprague ordered the three destroyers to attack despite the hopeless odds.

    At 0700 hours USS Johnston made smoke in response to the incoming shell fire that bracketed the carriers. Ten minutes later, Gunnery Officer Robert Hagen opened fire at a range of 18,000 yards and registered several hits on the leading heavy cruisers with his radar-directed gunfire.

    After five minutes, Hagen concentrated fire on heavy cruiser Kumano. At maximum range, Johnston scored several hits on her superstructure, which erupted in flame. Kumano then targeted Johnston in turn and she was soon bracketed by colorful shell splashes. Johnston made smoke and zigzagged while she accelerated to flank speed and headed toward the enemy fleet alone, firing over 200 rounds nearly continuously.

    Captain Evans brought Johnston to 9,000 yards from the enemy and fired all ten torpedoes. Two hit Kumano at 0724 hours and blew her bow off. The four other torpedoes continued on toward the enemy fleet and battleship Kongô was forced to turn away north to avoid them, which took her out of the fight. Heavy cruiser Suzuya, which had suffered damage from air attacks, stopped her pursuit of the Americans to assist Kumano.

    Johnston’s audacious attack confused Admiral Kurita, who thought he had been engaged by American cruisers. When the rest of the Japanese ships were forced to turn away to avoid the torpedoes, the carriers gained more precious minutes to launch aircraft.

    Evans turned back into his own smoke, but at 0730 hours, the enemy guns found him. Firing at a range of 17,000 yards, Kongô, hit Johnston with three 14-inch shells which penetrated into her port engine room, where the explosions cut her speed in half and disrupted power to the aft gun mounts. Moments later, three 6-inch shells from Yamato struck Johnston’s bridge. Everyone was wounded and Commander Evans’ fingers of his left hand were traumatically severed by shrapnel. Johnston was badly mangled with dead and dying sailors strewn across her bloody decks. She found refuge in a rain squall, while the damage control parties restored power to two of the three aft mounts and repair the fire control radar. With repairs completed at 0735 hours, she opened fire on Japanese destroyers while hidden in the smoke.

    USS GAMBIER BAY (CVE-73) and two destroyer escorts making smoke at the start of the battle off Samar, October 25, 1944. Japanese ships are faintly visible on the horizon.  Photo: Phi Willard Niet via NHHC


    Johnston then retired to the Task Group. Minutes later, she encountered Heermann and an already-damaged Hoel headed in to attack. Evans could have continued back to the fleet and no one would have faulted him. Instead, he reversed course and made smoke to help obscure the two as they headed toward the onrushing Japanese. Samuel B. Roberts, known to her crew as “Sammy B” followed. The attack was a naval “Charge of the Light Brigade” that actually happened on the 90th anniversary of the event immortalized in Tennyson’s poem.

    Over the next 40 minutes, Evans engaged in several duels with the enemy. At 0830 hours, Johnston opened fire on the cruiser Chokai, which was firing at the helpless Gambier Bay. She then closed to 6,000 yards and traded fire for ten minutes with the battleship Haguro, scoring numerous hits. At 0840 hours, she intercepted a formation of seven destroyers spotted closing in on the carriers. Evans attempted to pass in front of the enemy, “crossing the T” as gunnery officer Hagen opened fire. Johnston was hit several times by return fire. The lead enemy destroyer turned away to the west and took a dozen hits from Johnston as she did so. Hagen quickly shifted fire to the next in line and scored five hits before it too veered off and the entire squadron turned west to avoid Johnston. Three destroyers fired their torpedoes at the carriers from 10,500 yards but no hits were scored. The Japanese and American ships were now intertwined in a confused jumble.

    More Avengers and Wildcats from the other task groups appeared out of the cloudy skies and attacked the enemy, while destroyer Hoel headed toward the battleship Kongô and took a salvo of 14-inch shells in her bridge. She closed to 9,000 yards and fired five torpedoes - none hit, but the torpedoes forced Kongô to turn away. Despite having three of her five gun mounts as well as her port engine knocked out, Hoel drew Japanese fire for the next hour as she chased shells and distracted the enemy from the carriers. An 8-inch shell stopped her at 0830 hours. Having taken 40 hits, Hoel went down with 259 of her crew. Only 86 survived, including 19-year old Bob DeSpain, a former lifeguard from San Pedro, California, who over the next hours swam from group to group and gathered the survivors together (this writer was privileged to know Bob over the last six years of his life; he worked as a docent aboard the battleship Iowa in San Pedro).

    Japanese battleship Musashi under attack. Photo: USN via Thomas Cleaver


    Samuel B. Roberts closed to 4,000 yards of the cruiser Chôkai, moving at 28 knots after the chief engineer, Lieutenant “Lucky” Trowbridge bypassed all the safety mechanisms in the engines. Her captain, LCDR Robert W. Copeland, USNR, announced over the ship’s public address: "This will be a fight against overwhelming odds from which survival cannot be expected. We will do what damage we can." Chôkai could not lower the guns sufficiently to hit the little destroyer escort. Sammy-B launched her three torpedoes. One blew off Chôkai’s bow. The little ship then showed why she would be known ever after as “the destroyer escort that fought like a battleship.” She battled on for another hour, firing more than 600 5-inch shells from her two guns. Maneuvering at very close range, she mauled Chôkai with her 40mm and 20mm AA guns. At 0851 hours, she was hit twice and lost her after 5-inch gun when a breech explosion killed and wounded several of the crew. She then engaged Chikuma, which was also under fire by Heerman. The two American ships ripped Chikuma's superstructure with salvo after salvo: armor-piercing shells, high-explosive shells, anti-aircraft shells, and even star shells which created chemical fires in metal plates hit the cruiser.

    Firing her remaining 5-inch gun, Sammy-B devastated Chikuma’s bridge. Fires spread through the cruiser’s superstructure. Sammy-B’s last shot put the number three gun turret out of action just as three 14-inch shells from Kongô hit her. The order “Abandon Ship” was given at 0935 hours and Sammy-B sank 30 minutes later, taking 89 of her crew. The 120 survivors clung to three life rafts. It would be 50 hours before 80 were finally rescued from the open sea.

    Cruisers Tone and Chikuma, followed by the damaged Chôkai and Kumano, closed in on Taffy-3. As they opened fire, Heermann fired her main 5-inch battery at Chikuma, then launched five torpedoes. Again, they all missed but flagship Yamato was now forced to turn away which put her out of the fight. With one gun mount knocked out, Heermann continued to engage Chikuma. Two Avengers and several Wildcats launched from Taffy-1 and Taffy-2 attacked the cruiser. Just as she turned away, a single shot from Heerman struck in her aviation gasoline stowage. Chikuma blew up and sank.

    Explosion on USS ST. LO (CVE-63) after she was hit be a Kamikaze of Samar on October 25, 1944. Photo: Phi Willard Niet via NHHC

     

    From Defeat to Victory

    Gambier Bay was hit in her starboard engine room at 0847 hours. The second hit set fueled aircraft afire on the hangar deck. Enormous shells passed through her without exploding because her thin steel wasn’t enough to stop them. She went dead in the water at 0900 hours as Tone, Chikuma, and the damaged Chôkai closed in. At 0907 hours she capsized, sending 700 survivors into the water. Gambier Bay was the only American aircraft carrier ever sunk in a surface engagement.

    Chokai sped past the sinking carrier and took aim at White Plains. The little carrier’s 5-inch gun crew manned their weapon on her stern. Opening fire on Chokai at maximum range, the third shot hit the cruiser in her torpedo stowage and Chokai exploded, sinking in less than two minutes and leaving no survivors. White Plains became the only aircraft carrier in history to sink an enemy warship with surface gunfire.

    At 0940 hours, Johnston, which had come under attack from several enemy destroyers, lost all power from the hits and went dead in the water. The enemy surrounded her and continued their fire. Evans was finally forced to order “Abandon Ship” at 0945 hours. At 1005 hours, Johnston sank with 186 of her crew going down with her. Evans managed to get into the water with other crewmen but was never seen again. While he was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor, it was the Japanese themselves who first recognized his courage. Seaman Robert Billie and several other crewmen in a raft watched an enemy destroyer cruise slowly past as her captain stood on his bridge, saluting the sinking Johnston as an honorable opponent.

    Aboard Yamato, Admiral Kurita became convinced by the renewed air attacks by the Wildcats and Avengers that his fleet had stumbled into contact with the U.S. Third Fleet. Expecting American battleships to come over the horizon at any moment and realizing that his ships were so dispersed from their evasive maneuvers that it was impossible for them to return to a fighting formation to take on the expected enemy, he signaled to his fleet to break off action and turn back to San Bernardino Strait at 0945 hours.

    American sailors struggling in the sea, and those manning their battle stations aboard the ships, were amazed as the gunfire faded away and the enemy soon disappeared over the horizon. Had Admiral Kurita continued on, there was nothing stopping his fleet from sinking all the escort carriers and moving into Leyte Gulf to attack the invasion fleet. The reservists who manned the carriers and destroyers and aircraft squadrons – most of whom had never seen an ocean before they went aboard the ships in which they fought and died – had saved the invasion of the Philippines.

    After the sinking of Gambier Bay, VC-10 Wildcat pilot Ensign McGraw was among the surviving aircrews who landed on Manila Bay. That afternoon, he was launched with other pilots from that ship to intercept a formation Val dive bombers escorted by Zeke fighters attempting to attack the escort carriers. McGraw shot down one Val and one Zeke to become VC-10’s only ace.

    A bit more than an hour after the Battle off Samar concluded, the U.S. Navy was introduced to the power of a new and deadly enemy when the Shikishima Unit of the 201st Air Group found the surviving carriers of Taffy-3 at 1047 hours. At 1052 hours, a Zeke believed flown by Lieutenant Seki dived on the escort carrier St. Lo. The airplane hit the center of the flight deck. The 250-kilogram bomb penetrated the flight deck and exploded on the port side of the hangar deck in the midst of several aircraft in the process of being refueled and rearmed. A gasoline fire quickly broke out, followed by six secondary explosions that ended with the detonation of the torpedo and bomb magazine. Engulfed in flame, St. Lo sank 30 minutes later. From an 889-man crew, 113 were killed or missing. Thirty survivors later died of their wounds. The 434 survivors were rescued from the water by Heermann and the destroyer escorts John C. Butler, Raymond, and Dennis. The U.S. Navy’s most deadly foe had entered the battle.

  • Searching for lost ships with Paul Allen

    USS Samuel B. Roberts (DE-413) photographed in the beginning of summer 1944. It is the deepest lying shipwreck known currently in the world. Photo: U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command

    Shipwrecks in the greatest depths

     Text: Miro Barič


    In this last installement of searching for the lost ships with Paul Alled we will talk about the shipwrecks lying in the greatest depths of the world. They sank to the bottom of the ocean during the Battle of Samar. These are the American destroyers which, heavily outnumbered, bravely faced the enemy for whom this battle was a swan song.

    The Battle of Santa Cruz, during which the aircraft carrier USS Hornet (CV-8) was sunk in October 1942, was for a long time the last carriers encounter. While the Allies gradually took over the strategic initiative, the Japanese carriers were recovering from the losses. The damaged ships needed repairs but above all the lost aircraft had to be replenished and new pilots trained. During the whole 1943 no further aircraft carriers battle took place. The Japanese Navy was saving the resources and preparing for the so-called decisive battle. The opportunity arrived in June 1944 when the US carriers attacked the Mariana Islands. The Japanese threw all they had into the counter attack – 1st Mobile Fleet formed by total of 83 vessels, including 3 large aircraft carriers, 6 light aircraft carriers and 5 battleships. They faced the American 5th Fleet composed of 139 ships. The backbone of the US fleet was formed by 7 large aircraft carriers, 8 light aircraft carriers and 7 battleships. The American dominance was to be compensated by deployment of further 300 Japanese aircraft operating from the land bases.

    The result of the Battle of Philippine Sea doesn’t need a detailed description, its first day went down in the history as a Great Mariana Turkey Shoot. The great lack of quality in Japanese aircraft and pilots‘ training was aparent and the Japanese aircraft were falling of the skies in hundreds. One of the American pilots described the combat after landing as shooting turkeys back home in old times. The greatest American fighter aces increased their scores thanks to it. Cdr. David McCampbell, who up until then was credited with two kills (out of total 34), on June 19, 1944, during his first sortie, shot down fine D4Y Judy dive bombers and during the next sortie added two A6M fighters. Lt. Alexander Vraciu, whose score stood at 12 kills at that time (out of total 19), on the same day during one sortie shot down six D4Y Judy bombers. It took him eight minutes and he spent 360 12.7 mm caliber rounds.

    While the American pilots fought the Japanese aircraft, on that day the Japanese ships were only attacked by the American submarines. They fared very well indeed. USS Cavalla hit Shokaku with three torpedoes and sank her. USS Albacore hit the new carrier Taiho with only a single torpedo but a poor execution of the rescue operations caused the fuel fumes to accumulate under the deck which later caused a series of explosions and Taiho sank as well. The aircraft from the American carriers attacked the Japanese vessels on June 20, 1944, at the limit of their range and almost at night. They sank light carrier Hiyo and two tankers. They also damaged several other ships. However, they paid the price by loosing 100 aircraft, only 20 were shot down in combat tough. The remaining 80 had to crash land due to the lack of fuel and the crews were mostly rescued. The Japanese losses were significantly higher. The air forces they had gathered during the whole previous year, were lost in two days. The remaining Japanese aircraft carriers without airplanes could not longer play an active role and in the following battle they were used as decoy.

    L.(jg) Alexander Vraciu shows his six fingers for the aerial kills he scored on June 19, 1944. Photo: National Archives

    Cdr. David McCampbell in the cockpit of his Hellcat on board of USS Essex in the beginning of October 1944. At that time his score stood at 21 kills. Foto: U.S. Navy

     McCampbell is posing in the cockpit of his Hellcat for a propaganda photograph in the end of October 1944. By scoring additional 9 kills in a day, he raised his score to 30 victories. Foto: U.S. Navy


    Four battles in one

    It took place during the Philippines landing in October 1944. Actually there was a series of several naval battles which became to be known under the common name, the Battle of Leyte Gulf. The Japanese Navy did not recover from the preceding defeats but had to react to the Allied invasion. The Japanese deployed the old samurai tactics of the feign attack. The Northern Force, commanded by Vice Admiral Ozawa, assumed the role of a decoy. On the paper it looked strong composed of two battleships, aircraft carrier Zuikaku and three light carrier Zuiho, Chiyoda and Chitose, however they altogether carried 108 aircraft only. In the meantime, the Center Force led by Viceadmiral Kurita and Southern Force consisting of two groups led by Viceadmirals Nishimura and Shima were to approach the Allied invasion fleet through different passages. They were at the disadvantage though due to the strict radio silence and the admirals were unable to coordinate their actions and each of them acted individually. Therefore they gradually clashed with the US Navy in four battles.

    The first one took place in Sibuyan Sea. First, on October 23, 1944, Kurita’s Center Force was spotted and attacked by the American submarines USS Darter and USS Dace. They sank two heavy cruisers and damaged another one. Then, on October 24, 1944, the Japanese ships became targets of five waves of the American carrier-borne aircraft. Those sank the battleship Musashi and damaged several other ships. Kurita therefore turned around 180 degrees and started to retreat, and the Americans took the bait. Musashi’s wreck was one of the first Paul Allen found. It happened in March 2015 using his older ship Octopus. Musashi lies 900 meters deep and Allen’s expedition discovered that she had exploded while sinking. The bow stands upright on the ocean’s bottom and the stern is turned upside down. The main superstructure and stack lie on the sides.

    USS Samuel B. Roberts (DE-413) in October 1944, couple of days before her sinking. Photo: U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command

    LCdr. Robert Copeland, commanding officer of Samuel B. Roberts escort destroyer. Photo: U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command

    USS Johnston (DD-557) in October 1943, right after her entry in the service. Photo: U.S. Navy

    Cdr. Ernest Evans, commanding officer of destroyer Johnston. Photo: U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command


    Nine kills in one sortie          

    In the meantime, three waves of Japanese airplanes from the land bases attacked the American ships. During their defenses Cdr. David McCampbell distinguished himself again. Only in a pair formation, just with his wingman, he attacked the formation of 60-80 airplanes approaching the American ships. In the combat, which lasted an hour and 35 minutes, he shot down 9 Japanese fighters and two probables. His wingman, Lt. Roy Rushing was credited with another six kills. They completely dismantled the Japanese formation. After the landing the mechanics did not find any fuel left in Campbell Hellcat’s tanks and there were two 12.7 mm caliber rounds left for his machine guns. For this achievement, as well as the previous success in the Battle of Philippine Sea four months ago , McCambell was decorated with the highest American award, Medal of Honour. The rare success by the Japanese side was scored by a D4Y Judy dive bomber which penetrated the defences and suddenly appeared above the light aircraft carrier USS Princeton. Its bomb exploded in the hangar among fully fueled Avenger bombers. The result was a fire which after several hours caused an enormous explosion of the stored bombs. The ship was impossible to rescue and she sank with 108 souls lost. Further 233 American sailors perished on board of the light cruiser USS Birmingham which was at the time of Princeton explosion at her side helping with putting out the fires.

    USS Hoel (DD-533) in August 1944. Photo: U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command

    The American destroyers and escort destroyers laying the smoke screen during the Battle of Samar. Photo: U.S. Navy


    Battle of Surigao Strait

    In the meantime the Japanese Southern Force tried to fight its way through Surigao Strait. On October 24, 1944 the American airplanes barely caused any damage to Nishimura’s ships but the American vessels set up a trap for him in the strait. First he faced the attack of the torpedo boats and destroyers. Those sank the battleship Fuso. Six battleships and eight cruisers under the command of Admiral Oldendorf waited for the Japanese at the exit from the strait. On December 7, 1941, five of these battleships were sunk or damaged at Pearl Harbor. California, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Tennessee and West Virginia then underwent the extensive repairs and rebuilds. On the night of October 24-25, 1944, time of their revenge arrived. Their radar-controlled cannon fire sank Yamashiro and damaged the cruiser Mogami. It was the last battleship encounter in the history.

    The second part of the Southern Force did not engage in this battle because it lagged behind Nishimura. When Shima realized that the first part had been massacred, he ordered a retreat. At that moment, Mogami collided with the heavy cruiser Nachi and was further damaged. This heavy cruiser met a similar fate in the Battle of Midway when it collided with its sister ship, Mikuma. The collision slowed down both ships, making them vulnerable to the dive bombers, and Mikuma was eventually sunk. Though Mogami survived Midway, it was so severely damaged that they had to remove its rear turrets and rebuild it as a hybrid cruiser – a seaplane carrier. Now, after the collision with Nachi, its fate was sealed. The pursuing American cruisers inflicted further damage on Mogami, and in the morning, it was finished off by bombs from an Avenger bomber.

    The wrecks of Yamashiro and Fusō were discovered by Paul Allen and his ship RV Petrel on November 25, 2017. Both ships lie upside down at a depth of around 200 meters. On May 8, 2019, RV Petrel also found the wreck of the cruiser Mogami, which lies at a depth of 1450 meters.

    USS Gambier Bay (CVE-73) in April 1944. Photo: U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command

     

    Battle of Cape Engaño

    Although Ozawa’s Northern Force with aircraft carriers tried to attract the attention of the Americans, they only discovered it last, in the evening of October 24, 1944. However, this turned out to be coincidentally perfect timing for the Japanese. At the same time, Kurita's Center Force had turned back in retreat. American Admiral William Halsey was convinced that Kurita’s ships were out of action and focused on Ozawa.

    The final battle of the aircraft carriers took place on October 25, 1944. Early in the morning, Ozawa launched an attack wave of 75 aircraft. That was all the Japanese aircraft carriers could muster, having been decimated in previous battles. Most of these planes were shot down, and Ozawa had no more left. Subsequently, he had to face six waves of American attacks, which sank all four Japanese aircraft carriers.

    USS Gambier Bay photographed from the deck of USS Kalinin Bay during the Battle of Samar. Photo: U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command

     

    The Battle of Samar Island

    The Japanese original plan almost succeeded. While the Japanese aircraft carriers were being used as a bait and being massacred, the core of Kurita’s Center Force appeared near the invasion beaches. Kurita had feigned a retreat and then turned back to his original course, sneaking through the San Bernardino Strait unnoticed during the night. American Admiral William Halsey sent his main forces north against Ozawa, leaving the strait unguarded. Another mistake made by Halsey was his delayed reaction to reports of the Japanese battleships' penetration; he was too eager to destroy the enemy’s aircraft carriers. Unfortunately, this exposed the entire Philippine landing to a deadly risk.

    Against four Japanese battleships, six heavy cruisers, and eleven destroyers, there were only three groups of small and slow escort aircraft carriers providing support to the landing forces – Taffy 1, Taffy 2, and Taffy 3. When the Japanese ships appeared on the horizon, Taffy 3, commanded by Admiral Clifton Sprague, was the closest to them. The group consisted of six escort carriers (Fanshaw Bay, Gambier Bay, Kalinin Bay, Kitkun Bay, St. Lo, and White Plains), three destroyers (Heermann, Hoel, and Johnston), and four escort destroyers (Dennis, John C. Butler, Raymond, and Samuel B. Roberts). The destroyers of the Fletcher class, armed with five 127mm guns and ten torpedo tubes, were the most heavily armed ships in Taffy 3. The escort destroyers were smaller and slower, carrying only two 127mm guns and three torpedo launchers. To put it in perspective, the battleship Yamato had a larger displacement than the entire American force combined!

    In the ensuing battle of David against Goliath, the Japanese cruisers Chōkai, Chikuma, and Suzuya were sunk, while on the American side, the destroyers USS Johnston, USS Hoel, and USS Samuel B. Roberts were lost. The escort carrier USS Gambier Bay was destroyed by gunfire from the cruisers Tone and Chikuma. It was the only American aircraft carrier sunk by surface gunfire. After the battle with Kurita's forces, the heavily tested Taffy 3 group had to face the first organized kamikaze attack. Several ships were damaged, and the escort carrier USS St. Lo was sunk when a Zero carrying a bomb crashed into its flight deck and exploded in the hangar among refueling aircraft.

    The total American losses in the Battle of Samar Island were nearly 1,200 sailors and aviators, which is more than the casualties in the Battles of Midway and the Coral Sea combined. It is no wonder that Clifton Sprague harshly criticized Halsey's actions.

    The Battle of Samar Island is renowned as the “finest hour of the U.S. Navy,” and more detailed information about it can be found in Tom Cleaver’s article on page ?? of this issue. Now, let’s focus on the wrecks of the ships left behind after the battle...

    Gambier Bay lagged behind the rest of the group. In the picture we can see as the Japanese grenades exploding aorund her. Photo: U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command

    Saving the survivors of the Battle of Samar. Photo: U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command


    In the Philippine Trench

    The Battle of Samar Island took place on the edge of the Philippine Trench, and as a result, all the sunken ships rest in great depths. The wreck of USS St. Lo was discovered by the research vessel RV Petrel in May 2019, lying at a depth of 4,736 meters. In the same month, researchers also located the cruiser Chōkai at a depth of 5,173 meters.

    However, in October 2019, RV Petrel found parts of a ship believed to be from USS Johnston. They were located at a depth of 6,218 meters, making it the deepest known shipwreck at that time. The discovery included a gun, a propeller shaft, and several other fragments. Indications on the seabed suggested that the rest of the ship had sunk even deeper, beyond the reach of the exploration robot.

    Enter Victor Vescovo, an entrepreneur and investor who served in the U.S. Navy for 20 years and now dedicates himself to deep-sea expeditions. He has dived to the deepest points in all the world's oceans, including reaching the bottom of the Mariana Trench's Challenger Deep in April 2019. It was only the third manned mission to this location in history.

    On March 31, 2021, Vescovo’s research vessel DSV Limiting Factor found the remaining wreckage of USS Johnston at a depth of 6,469 meters, definitively identifying it. This discovery set a new record for the deepest known shipwreck.

    However, this record was broken again in June 2021 when Vescovo and his team found the wreck of the escort destroyer USS Samuel B. Roberts at a depth of 6,895 meters. According to their observations, the ship descended in one piece before crashing onto the seabed with its bow first, causing hull deformations and the detachment of the stern, which now lies 5 meters away from the main wreck. The hull also bears visible damage caused by Japanese shelling, including a broken mast.

    Currently, the USS Samuel B. Roberts holds the title of the deepest known shipwreck. Still, it is believed that some of the ships sunk in the Battle of Samar Island lie even deeper. Searching for them in the depths of the Philippine Trench is extremely challenging. USS Gambier Bay and USS Hoel are yet to be found, with the destroyer potentially resting at a depth of up to 7,300 meters. Even deeper is presumed to be the Japanese cruiser Suzuya, which is believed to lie at a depth of up to 8,400 meters.

    Number 413 seen on the shipwreck of escort destroyer USS Samuel B. Roberts. Photo: Victor Vescovo

    Broken stern of USS Samuel B. Roberts. Photo: Victor Vescovo

     The rear gun turret of USS Samuel B. Roberts featuring the 127 mm caliber cannon. Photo: Victor Vescovo

    The captain‘s bridge of USS Samuel B. Roberts. Twin barrel of the 40 mm caliber cannon can be seen on the starboard and 20 mm cannon on the port. Photo: Victor Vescovo

    USS Samuel B. Roberts‘ bow.  Photo: Victor Vescovo

    The number 557 can be seen on the hull of destroyer USS Johnston.  Photo: Victor Vescovo

    A gun turret featuring 127 mm caliber cannon on board of USS Johnston. Photo: Victor Vescovo


    End of RV Petrel?

    The fate of the research vessel RV Petrel has become a symbolic conclusion to the series of discoveries mentioned earlier. After Paul Allen's passing on October 15, 2018, the RV Petrel continued her work. Its crew discovered many wrecks mentioned in our articles published in 2019. At the beginning of 2020, several expeditions were undertaken as part of a partnership between the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation.

    In June 2020, the RV Petrel underwent modernization and was equipped with new instruments. However, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, it was put into indefinite storage in a dry dock in Scotland. In October 2022, the United States Navy purchased the vessel for $12.4 million. Nonetheless, it remained in the dry dock at the port of Leith in Edinburgh.

    Tragedy struck on March 22, 2023, during strong winds, when the RV Petrel broke free from its moorings and capsized at a 45-degree angle. 33 people were injured, but luckily there were no fatalities. The extent of the damage and the future of the vessel remain unknown at this time.

  • The Magic Hundred


    Text: Jan Bobek

    Illustration by Marek Ryś

    #70155


    With 158 victories, he became the most successful German fighter pilot fighting against the Western Allies. Marseille had versatile skills in both piloting and gunnery. He did not hesitate to manoeuvre at low speed in enemy formation and to perform deflection shooting. He often scored several kills in one day. The question remains, of course, how successful a fighter Marseille actually was. Researchers Dan Case and Nick Hector conclude that 135 kills can be documented out of the Marseille´s total of 158 officially certified and five unconfirmed victories. Marseille thus has an 82.8 % accuracy rate for his claimed victories.

    From the end of May 1942 and in the first half of June his unit, I./JG 27, was deployed in support of ground forces during the Battle of Gazala. Its pilots also escorted bombers over Crete and after the fall of Tobruk, the operations concentrated on the fight for the air base of Gambut. June 1942 was an important month in the young fighter pilot's career. He was appointed commander of the 3rd Staffel and as he increased his score, the magic mark of 100 aerial victories approached. He surpassed this milestone on June 17.

    Around noon of that day, a four fighters flight (Schwarm) of Messerschmitts Bf 109 under Marseille’s command attacked a formation estimated by the Germans to be twenty Curtiss P-40s and ten Hurricanes. This was fighter escort of Bostons, which actually consisted of three Kittyhawks from No. 250 Sqn RAF and twelve Hurricanes from No. 73 Sqn RAF. Although outnumbered by the enemy, the Germans still confidently threw themselves into the fight. Within minutes Marseille was battling the allied fighters while the other three German pilots covered him. Attacking from above, he hit his first opponent, then shot down another while performing an evasive manoeuvre with RAF fighters behind him. He then spotted the Hurricanes conducting defensive circle around their colleague, who deployed parachute and descended to the ground. Marseille joined the circling formation and shot down two more aircraft. After while he targeted a Hurricane flying at about 100 meters above Gambut airfield and under his fire the British machine crashed in flames into an anti-aircraft defence position. The coveted 100th kill was achieved.

    Marseille in this fierce aerial combat reported as shot down two Curtiss P-40s and three Hurricanes. In fact, none of the Curtisses were hit, but four Hurricanes from No. 73 Sq RAF fell victim to Marseille.  Sqn Ldr D. H. Ward and P/O G. J. Wooley were killed while Sgt. Goodwin and P/O Stone bailed out, however, both were wounded. Two of their colleagues each claimed one damaged Bf 109.

    On their return to base, Marseille and his three colleagues spotted two Spitfires near Sidi Barrani. These were Mk.IV photo reconnaissance Spitfires from 2 PRU. “Jochen” Marseille climbed up to the unsuspecting pair and with accurate fire sent F/Lt F. Spicer down, killing him in his machine.

    Upon landing, the exhausted Marseille was immediately withdrawn from combat operations and flown to Berlin. From the hands of Adolf Hitler, he received the Swords to the Knight’s Cross with oak leaves. A Nazi propaganda machine awaited him, as well as a visit to the Messerschmitt company in Augsburg. For the first time, he was able to try out the new G version of the Messerschmitt Bf 109. He returned to fighting in Africa at the end of August 1942. A month later he was killed when bailing out from a Bf 109 G-2 after its engine caught fire. In November 1942, I./JG 27 was withdrawn to Germany and, after replenishing losses and resting, was deployed in January 1943 to fight over France. This “African” unit fought in Western Europe until the end of the war.

    New Zealander Derek Harland Ward, DFC & Bar, who may have been Marseille's 100th victim, was a veteran of the Battle of France and the Battle of Britain. He became commander of No. 73 Sq RAF in September 1941 and had six victories to his credit. The fateful 17 June was marked as “tragic” in the unit diary. On the same day the unit had to withdraw from Gambut in the face of the advancing Germans. However, it continued fighting in North Africa and in December 1942 recorded its 300th air victory.

  • A surplus star


    Text: Richard Plos

    Ilustrace: Adam Tooby

    #70142


    The last major offensive of the Vietnam War was launched by the North Vietnamese Army on March 30, 1972, under the name Nguen Hue. In response to this “Easter Offensive,” President Nixon suspended the ongoing peace talks and ordered the launch of the airborne Operation Linebacker. Intended to disrupt supplies to enemy troops, it was conducted from May 9 to October 23, 1972, when it was suspended on the promise of further peace talks. But these collapsed again, and so Linebacker II was launched. Beginning on December 18, an intensive twelve-day bombing campaign began, during which more than 20,000 tons of bombs were dropped on military and industrial targets. Fifteen B-52s were shot down in the process, mostly by SAM anti-aircraft missiles. One Stratofortress was claimed by Pham Tuan, future Vietnam’s first astronaut, who took off against the enemy on the night of 26–27 December in MiG-21MF No. 5121 from Noi Bai base. The GCI directed him to a B-52 formation, and he was given permission to attack with two missiles and withdraw immediately.

    It was the ninth day of Operation Linebacker II and a total of 57 B-52s were sent to the airstrikes that night. These were to bomb railway stations at Lang Dang, Due Noi and Trung Quan, six were to target warehouses at Van Dien and three formations of three aircraft were to attack three different SAM missile sites. Over Due Noi, Black 03 suffered minor damage but returned to Utapao base without incident. Much worse was the situation over Trung Quan, where 12 bombers were targeted by 45 SAM missiles   and one of them hit the Cobalt 01 of Capt. Frank D. Lewis. All crew members suffered injuries, navigator 1/Lt. Ben. L Fryer being mortally wounded. The machine was engulfed in flames, electrical systems failed. Shortly after the hit, the pilot ordered all crew members to eject. In the process, Maj. Allen L. Johnson, EWO, lost his life. This was the last B-52 shot down with its crew captured. The event, which occurred during an attack on a SAM site VN-243, had a happier ending despite its drama.

    The Ash 02 of Capt. John D. Mize was one of a trio bombing that target and one of the 15 SAM missiles fired at them hit his left wing while he was executing a steep turn away from the target after dropping the bombs. Shrapnels injured the pilot’s left leg and arm. The badly damaged B-52 lost all its left engines, one of which was on fire. The bomber fell several thousand feet before Mize was able to get it levelled off. It was almost superhuman effort, as the big bomber had lost most of its boosters, not to mention the asymmetrical thrust of the engines. Morerover, Mize was wounded, as was the navigator, 1/Lt William L. Robinson, who anyway was able to give his pilot a heading to leave the target area without navigational equipment. “It was not a question of making it back to the base, but one of how far we could get before we had to abandon the aircraft”, Mize later said, flying the crippled bomber only by his skills and instincts as all he had left of his flight instruments were the airspeed indicator and altimeter.

    A rescue ship HC-130 joined Ash 02 on the border with Laos and, sitting on its right wing, gave it cross-check and directed Mize and his men to a safe area. But the badly wounded B-52 was literally disintegrating in mid-air. Mize was about to give the order to eject, but the navigator cautioned him that they were over mountains, and if they could stay airborne for some thirty miles, they would have flat rice-paddy fields under them. With the last of his strength Capt. Mize kept his aircraft in the air, but after a while he had to give up and order the crew to eject. Lt. Robinson suffered an ejection system malfunction and informed his Captain he would attempt to jump out through the hole made by ejection of radar navigator. Mize gave him three minutes, knowing that once the navigator left his seat, he would lose contact with him. Almost exactly after that time elapsed, all electrical systems failed, and Mize had no choice but to eject himself as well. But, to his relief, the whole crew landed safely on parachutes and was rescued. Capt. Mize was awarded the Air Force Cross for his heroic performance. He was later promoted to rank of Major and stayed in service until August 1, 1984. He passed away on June 15, 2012. Other crew members were awarded the DFC and the Purple Heart.

    And what about Pham Tuan? It is highly unlikely that his missile could have caused such extensive damage to a B-52, nor does the testimony of the crew itself add up. The Vietnamese fighter fired his missiles, but they probably didn’t hit anything. His MiG-21MF is now on display in a museum with eight kill stars under the cockpit, but at least one of them is surplus ...

     

  • Loose formation


    Text: Jan Bobek a Jan Zdiarský

    Illustration: Piotr Forkasiewicz

    #84191


    The B-17 bomber played a key role in the European and Mediterranean theater of operations, but also figured prominently during the early years of the Pacific War. However, in the Pacific, B-17s flew less than two percent of the total combat sorties of this type. In contrast to Europe, where B-17s served with thirty-three bomber groups, there were only five in the Pacific. Neither the number of available planes per Group within the Pacific units was comparable to the ETO. Particularly early in the conflict, Pacific BGs had only five to twenty planes available per unit. B-17s were involved in combat as early as the attack on Pearl Harbor, albeit  more as casualties. At this time, the series of B-17 (B, C, and D) that rarely made it to Europe were in service.

    In the early period of B-17 service in the PTO, mostly versions without a tail turret were used. This influenced the development of combat boxes. In the event of an attack by Japanese fighters from the rear, B-17B/C/D pilots would bring the aircraft into an S-style turn, giving their waist gunners the opportunity for more effective defensive fire. That caused necessity of larger space between planes in formation. That spacing was maintained  later when B-17 versions E and F, which already had a tail turret, predominated. Unlike in the ETO, where it was attempted to keep the formation as tight as possible, in the Pacific, individual aircraft were given more freedom to maneuver, resulting in formations that appeared relatively disorganized. While the basis of formations in the Pacific was also the V-shape element of three machines, formations here tended to be much smaller, usually consisting of only 10 to 15 aircraft.

    The B-17, despite its obvious advantages, proved to be not quite suitable for the PTO. In the early phases of the conflict, when they targeted marine convoys and other targets at sea, they achieved marginal success. Such targets were much more suitable for dive and torpedo bombers. Later, when land targets became more numerous, B-17 service in the PTO was past its zenith. Beginning in early 1943, they were replaced by faster, longer-range B-24s. And by the time Japan itself began to be bombed, the more modern B-29s bore the brunt of the attacks.

    Two missions of B-17 bomber crews, whose route took them around the east coast of New Guinea on August 14, 1942, were characteristic of this battlefield. First, a B-17E crew from the 435th BS, 19th BG, took off from Port Moresby in the early morning hours on a reconnaissance flight to Rabaul and  Kavieng. The machine was named “Chief Seattle”, the crew was commanded by 1st Lt. Wilson L. Cook and one RAAF member was on board. The bomber was paid by citizens of Seattle through war bond campaign and its nom de guerre honoured the memory of Chief Seattle, who was the leader of the Suquamish and Duwamish tribes.

    Unfortunately, the reconnaissance machine encountered nine patrolling Zeros of the Tainan Kōkūtai under the command of Lt.(jg) Jōji Yamashita. Their mission was to provide cover for two cargo vessels and their escorting warships. Cook’s outnumbered machine was shot down during a five-minute air battle with no survivors. One Zero was damaged by defensive fire and, together with its wingman, its pilot returned to Buna, New Guinea.

    The remaining seven Zeros continued to cover the convoy, which was partially protected by cloud cover. Six B-17s from the 19th BG searched for the Japanese vessels. The formation was led by the CO of the 30th BS, Maj. Dean C. Hoevet. Just as the Americans were about to drop their bomb load, they were attacked by Yamashita’s Zeros. During the five-minute battle, four bombers were damaged, one of them severely. The American gunners managed to shoot down a Zero flown by PO3c Masami Arai, who was killed in his machine. The Japanese pilots reported that the bombers dropped eight bombs, but in the bad weather, the crews of the Japanese vessels didn’t even notice the bombers’ attack . Piotr Forkasiewicz captured the opening part of this encounter in his painting.

    Tainan Kōkūtai was deployed to the fighting over Guadalcanal from August 1942. This unit retained the new A6M3 Type 32 Zeros with shorter range on New Guinea. The fighting over the New Guinea at the end of August was disastrous for Tainan Kōkūtai, which is described in the article Headhunters over Buna in the January 2023 issue of INFO Eduard magazine. 

  • Markings for Bf 109F-4 1/72

    Bf 109F-4/Trop, WNr. 10137, Oblt. Hans-Joachim Marseille, CO of 3./JG 27, Ain-el-Gazala, Libya, June 1942

    Hans-Joachim “Jochen” Marseille became the most successful German fighter pilot fighting against the Western Allies. He was awarded the Knight’s Cross with Oak Leaves, Swords and Diamonds. As an excellent pilot, and master of gunfire and dogfighting, he also shoved a respect and grace to his opponents as he tried to save downed enemy airmen in the desert by dropping news of their fate on the other side of the front. On September 30, 1942, he flew the Messerschmitt Bf 109G-2/Trop as he led escort mission of the 3. Staffel to cover a squadron of Ju 87 Stukas. On the return leg, a smoke filled the cockpit and Marseille was forced to bail out. Hitting the rudder after the emergency exit of the plane, he lost consciousness, and his parachute did not open. Seconds later, Marseille died from the impact on the ground. The aircraft had the upper camouflage color RLM 79 sprayed all over the fuselage sides as a non-standard finish. The lower surfaces were sprayed with RLM 78 and the camouflage was complemented by the markings of the aircraft operating on the Southern front, i.e., white wingtips, white spinner and a band on the aft fuselage of the same color. The engine cowling bore the emblem of I. Gruppe JG 27 on both sides.

     

    Bf 109F-4, WNr. 7183, Hptm. Hans Hahn, III./JG 2, St. Pol, France, October 1941

    Hans “Assi“ Hahn, a fighter ace and recipient of the Knight's Cross with Oak Leaves was in command of 4./JG 2 from December 1939. From October 1940 he overtook the lead of III./JG 2. Fifty kill marks on the rudder of his aircraft represented his combat success on the Western Front. Hahn added the fiftieth kill to his tally on October 13, 1941, when he shot down a Spitfire near Boulogne-sur-Mer. Altogether he destroyed 66 enemy aircraft in the West. In late 1942 “Assi” Hahn moved to the East and commanded II./JG 54 from November 1, 1942. On February 21, 1943, he was downed, captured and spent seven years in captivity, returning back to Germany in 1950. He wrote a book about his life in prison “Ich spreche die Wahrheit” (I Speak the Truth). Hahn’s total score stands at 108 kills. The rooster head painted on the fuselage was the crest of III./JG 2, based on Hahn’s family name (“der Hahn” means “the rooster” in English).

     

    Bf 109F-4, Maj. Hannes Trautloft, CO of JG 54, Relbitsy, the Soviet Union, March 1942

    Hannes Trautloft entered combat in the Spanish Civil War. He flew the Bf 109 and participated in the development of tactics for this fighter aircraft. He fought in the Polish campaign as well as in France and managed to achieve at least one victory in every campaign. On August 25, 1940, he assumed command of JG 54. He led this fighter unit through Operation Barbarossa, the attack on the Soviet Union, and in subsequent combat till July 5, 1943. Trautloft was credited with 58 victories and he was awarded the Knight’s Cross on July 27, 1941. His personal aircraft wore a non-standard camouflage scheme. It is not clear which colors were used by JG 54 during its deployment to the Soviet Union.

     

    Bf 109F-4/Z, WNr. 13325, Oblt. Viktor Bauer, 9./JG 3, Shchigry, the Soviet Union, June 1942

    This aircraft was flown by Viktor Bauer, the holder of the Knight’s Cross with Oak Leaves and an ace with 106 kills. He achieved most of them in combat with Soviet pilots. Bauer flew this particular aircraft in the summer of 1942, when German Group of Armies A advanced on Stalingrad. The unit received Messerschmitts originally intended for service in North Africa, thus camouflaged in RLM 78/79 colors. The segments of RLM 74/70 (some sources state RLM 75/71) were added to the desert camouflage scheme to make the camouflage more effective in the Eastern Front environment. The yellow wingtips, fuselage band and lower cowling were typical for airplanes flown in the East Front. The name Ellen referred to Bauer’s wife, the III./JG 3 emblem was painted on the nose of the aircraft. Bauer achieved his 106th and last kill on August 9, 1942, northwest of Stalingrad. The very next day he was hit by enemy fire, wounded, and had to belly-land his crippled plane. After rescue, Bauer served in various posts of Ergänzungs (replacement) units.

     

    Bf 109F-4/B, Oblt. Frank Liesendahl, 10.(Jabo)/JG 2, France, June 1942

    During late 1941, the Luftwaffe considered renewing bombing of Great Britain and coastal shipping. Each fighter unit fighting against the Great Britain was ordered to single out one Staffel for this purpose. The 10. (Jabo) Staffel played this role within JG 2. Under command of Oblt. Frank Liesendahl pilots sank 20 vessels (total tonnage 630,000 BRT) over a four-month period. Liesendahl was killed when attacking cargo vessels near Brixham on July 17, 1942. Posthumously he was promoted to Hauptmann rank and was awarded the Knight’s Cross as well. Liesendahl’s personal mount wore a standard day fighter camouflage consisting of RLM 74/75/76. The ship-munching fox was a 10. (Jabo) Staffel badge. Note the symbols of vessels damaged or sunk by Liesendahl on the rudder.

     

    Bf 109F-4, WNr. 13169, Fw. Heinrich Bartels, 8./JG 5, Petsamo, Finland, September 1942

    The Austrian Heinrich Bartels, a German ace with 99 kills achieved during some 500 combat sorties and holder of the Knight’s Cross served on all fronts the Luftwaffe units were engaged. Half of his kills were gained in the north while with JG 5 against Soviet pilots. He met his fate on December 23, 1944, against P-47s of the USAAF’s 56th FG in the Battle for the Ardennes. The wreck of his aircraft was discovered in 1968 near the town of Bad Godesberg in Germany. He flew this aircraft in the second half of 1942 during fighting in northern Finland. The aircraft was camouflaged in RLM 75/71/76 in a non-standard style dictated by operational conditions. In September 1942, the rudder displayed 29 kill marks, corresponding to his score. After Bartels was awarded the Knight’s Cross and after reaching 45th victory, his crew chief painted the award on the rudder of the airplane.

  • Markings for F-104C 1/48

    F-104C-5-LO, 56-0891, Maj. Charles H. Drisko, 435th TFS, 479th TFW, Udorn RTAFB, Thailand, 1967

    F-104 serial number 56-0891 arrived in Udorn, Thailand, in January 1967. In the following months it was a personal mount of Major Herb Drisko, who had the ground personnel paint on the port side a cartoon of Snoopy wearing brown leather jacket and yellow scarf flying on the 20mm Vulcan Gatling Gun with its barels blasting. Under Snoopy there was an inscription “SNOOPY SNIPER“. The airplane’s starboard was decorated with Herb’s wife name Nancy J. After the operations were over, in June 1967 F-104 was flown over to the USA, to Muniz AFB in Puerto Rico. Charles Herbert Drisko, called Herb by his friends, was borne on October 26, 1928, in Bartlesville, OK and after he graduated from the high school, during the period after the war, he worked in the oil fields in Wyoming. In July 1951 he joined the Air Force and after completing the training and receiving his officer‘s commission he served in the Korean War as a radar operator on F-89 out of Okinawa. After that he completed his pilot training and during the Vietnam war flew F-104. He left the Air Force in 1971 with the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. Herb Drisko passed away on October 26, 2000.


    F-104C-5-LO, 56-0891, Col. George Laven Jr., 479th TFW, George AFB, California, United States, 1959

    “SNOOPY SNIPER“ history was very colorful. The aircraft serial number 56-0891 was received on October 15, 1958 as the first C-version airframe at Nellis AFB in Las Vegas, Nevada. The aircraft was christened Really George as its home base was supposed to be 479th TFW at George AFB, California. The aircraft was assigned to the commander, Col. George Laven Jr., who was a WWII ace credited with five kills. Same as his previous personal aircraft. Laven’s new F-104 sported rather gaudy coloration which gradually developed to the point that the superior officers ordered its removal as it was deemed too wild. It was followed by the more moderate blue coat with four stripes representing colors of all four 479th TFW squadrons. George Laven Jr. was a self-confident Texan known for his daring style of flying. He joined the USAAF in the end of December 1940 and completed his pilot training in August 1941. He gained his fame during his service with 343rd FG flying P-38s and 54th FG in Alaska where he guided P-39s. During this period he scored four aerial victories and he destroyed almost two dozens of locomotives in Europe. In March 1945 he was assigned to the 49th FG Headquarters but regardless he flew combat as much as possible and on April 26, 1945 he shot down H8K2 as his fifth kill. After the war he continued in the service. At George AFB he commanded several groups and wings. In the end of 1950s he was in the command of the 479th TFW. He retired as a veteran of three wars and in 1969 he became a McDonnell Douglas consultant in Israel. He continued flying F-4 Phantom II and F-15 Eagle.


    F-104C-10-LO, 57-0923, Lt. Col. Robert A. Preciado, 435th TFS, 479th TFW, Udorn RTAFB, Thailand, July 1967

    F-104 serial number 57-0923 arrived in Udorn on September 19, 1966. It was assigned to the flight commander Lt. Col. Robert Preciado who let both sides of his aircraft nose painted with the nickname of his wife Dolly Hellooo Dolly, long Hellooo coming from the famous musical Hello Dolly starring Barbra Streisand. After the operations in Udorn were completed, the aircraft was flown back to the USA where, in July 1967, it arrived in Muniz AFB in Puerto Rico. Starting in August 1968 it was assigned to the 198th TFS. Robert Preciado was a veteran of three wars. During WWII he flew in the Pacific with the Air Transport Command and continued his aviation career in Korea and Vietnam.

     

    F-104C-5-LO, 56-0886, 476th TFS, 479th TFW, Da Nang AB, South Vietnam, April 1965

    In 1965 Starfighter serial number 56-0886 flew out of Da Nang airbase in the South Vietnam. Its nose was decorated with the red inscription Fannie and it was one of few 479th TFW planes that had their nicknames painted on the fuselage. In April 1965, the 479th TFW dispatched 28 F-104C to Da Nang airbase. They flew the combat patrols over the bay of Tonkin to protect EC-121 Warning Star nicknamed College Eye or Disco. The effect of the F-104 deployment on the North Vietnamese and Chinese MiG operations was immediate. The Vietnam Peoples Republic‘s pilots learned very soon to avoid any contact with EC-121 airplanes which were escorted by F-104. During the whole 479th TFW deployment in 1965 only two brief encounters between F-104C and MiGs took place.

     

    F-104C-5-LO, 56-0910, Capt. James B. Trice, 435th TFS, 479th TFW, Udorn RTAFB, Thailand, 1967

    One of the first F-104 delivered to the Udorn AFB on June 6, 1966 was Starfighter serial number 56-0910. It was assigned as a personal mount to Capt. James Trice who had his Starfighter nose decorated with a nose art with the inscription PUSSYCAT. Initially the noseart consisted of the cat caricature only, the text was applied later. After the operations in Udorn ceased, in July 1967 the aircraft was flown back to the USA to the Muniz AFB in Puerto Rico and starting in August 1967 it was assigned to the 198th TFS.


    F-104C-5-LO, 56-0938, Maj. Bobby D. Betsworth, 435th TFS, 479th TFW, Udorn RTAFB, Thailand, June-August 1967

    This Starfighter was one of the first eight aircraft of this type delivered to the Udorn AFB on June 6, 1966. It was typically flown by Maj. Bobby Bedsworth who hailed from Missouri nicknamed Show Me State. For that reason the nose of his aircraft was decorated with a mule and this inscription. After the operations in Udorn ceased, on August 20, 1967 the airplane was flown back to the USA to the Muniz AFB in Puerto Rico.

     

    F-104C-5-LO, 56-0898, Maj. Hugh B. Spencer, 435th TFS, 479th TFW, Udorn RTAFB, Thailand, 1967 

    This Starfighter took part in the very first mission in Vietnam in 1965. After the overhaul it was one of twelve aircraft which on July 22, 1966 landed at Udorn. During the following combat missions it was mostly flown by Maj. Hugh Spencer. In March 1967 the pin up girl named SEX MACHINE was painted on the aircraft’s nose. After the operations in Udorn were completed, in July 1967 the aircraft was flown back to the USA to the Muniz AFB in Puerto Rico and in August 1967 it was assigned to the 198th TFW. Currently the aircraft is on display in the Kalamazoo Air Zoo Aviation History Museum in its original markings carried while flying at 434th TFS, the large fuselage number FG-898 and red markings.

  • Markings for FM-2 1/48

    Ens. Darrell C. Bennett, VC-10, USS Gambier Bay, August 1944

    The Composite Squadron 10 was established on September 23, 1943 and adopted the name Mallards. The unit served on board the carrier USS Gambier Bay from April 5 and after her sinking in the Battle off Samar on October 25, the unit operated from airfields in Leyte. In January 1945, VC-10 was reformed and prepared for further deployment, but this never happened and it was inactivated at the end of the war. Ens. Darrell Bennett was born in Hamburg, Iowa, on March 30, 1924 and entered the Navy as an air cadet on October 1, 1943. Ten months later he was sent on his first operational tour with the VC-10 aboard the USS Gambier Bay. On the day he arrived, he had his picture taken in front of the FM-2 with a painting of two girls on the port side of the engine cowling. The first was based on a painting called Patriotic Gal by the famous Antonio Vargas. It is not known who had the two girls painted on the aircraft, but the paintings already bore signs of modification and wear. It is possible that Bennett only had “Smokey’s” added to the inscription “Lucky Witch”, as the “Smokey” was his nickname. He fought heroic battles with VC-10 during the Battle of Leyte Gulf and narrowly escaped sinking with the USS Gambier Bay, which was shot up by Japanese cruisers at the Battle off Samar. Bennett survived the war and stayed in the Navy afterwards. He flew combat missions in Korea and later trained recruits. During his career, he rose to command Fleet Air Miramar. After retirement in 1965 he flew as a private pilot. He died in December 2020.

     

    Lt. Leopold M. Ferko, VC-4, USS White Plains, November 1944

    Leopold Martin Ferko was born to Slovak parents on January 29, 1915, in Great Falls, Montana. He earned his bachelor’s degree from Stanford University, where he was also a star of the American football team there. He then taught math and English at San Francisco High School and also coached the local football team before signing up with the Navy and beginning flight training on February 3. He then continued as an instructor at Corpus Christi, Texas, before being transferred to Pearl Harbor in June 1943, where he embarked with the VC-4 on the USS White Plains. The unit consisted of 16 FM-2s and 12 TBM Avengers. During the three days of the Battle of Leyte Gulf, he scored all five of his kills, although the first two may have been his last. After shooting down two Oscars he was in fact attacked himself and his FM-2 took one hit after another before the attacking enemy was shot down by the Ens. Pool. Ferko then had to make an emergency landing at Tacloban due to a damaged elevator. There, the aircraft was repaired, and he was able to return in time to score three more kills. Leopold Ferko retired from the Navy with the rank of Lieutenant Commander and died on May 16, 1992, in San Francisco. This FM-2 was the second one he used and the kill symbols were probably only on the right side. However, the decals also offer the option of placing the symbols on the left side.

     

    BuNo. 55643, VC-69, USS Guadalcanal, spring/summer 1944

    FM-2s played a significant role in the Atlantic, where the Composite Squadrons focused on support of anti-submarine missions as the German U-boats were a major threat to supply convoys. The Composite Squadrons operated from small Casablanca or Sangamon class escort carriers and consisted usually of the TBM Avengers and the FM-2 Wildcats. Smaller size of FM-2 suited better to the cramped conditions on board than the massive Hellcats. USS Gadalcanal was converted from the freighter Astrolabe Bay and entered service in September 1943. During her maiden voyage she destroyed three submarines. As a flagship of the Task Group 22.3 USS Guadalcanal added two more U-boats to her score on the second tour. More to it, the TG 22.3 managed to capture lightly damaged German submarine. After that tour the VC-8 was replaced by VC-69 in the fall. The unit was activated on July 1, 1943 and first was placed on board of USS Bogue from May to July 1944. During this cruise, pilots were credited with the destruction of the Japanese submarine I-52, which was on a secret mission to German-occupied Lorient, France. No further similar successes were recorded by this squadron aboard USS Guadalcanal, and the unit was inactivated on June 22, 1945. Her FM-2s bore the later Atlantic livery of Dark Gull Gray and white. The inner part of the propeller blades were painted white to lighten the appearance of the “dark hole” in the nose of the aircraft. The unit’s emblem was a wolf’s head with aviator’s goggles; VC-69 aircraft sported it on both sides of the nose.


    BuNo. 74626, VC-8, Lt.(jg) Harry N. O’Connor, USS Nehenta Bay, August 1945

    Combined Squadron VC-8 operated aboard the aircraft carrier USS Nehenta Bay from May to September 1945. Prior to that, it had operated from the decks of USS Mission Bay and USS Guadalcanal. With USS Nehenta Bay, she left the Atlantic theater and moved to the Pacific. USS Nehenta Bay had been operating in the area since June 1944, when she joined with TF-51 aboard for offensive operations against the Marianas. Subsequently, from August 1944 to January 1945, she escorted and protected, with VC-11 aboard, tankers for refueling at sea, allowing for more efficient use of naval forces. She returned to the U.S. on February 19, 1945, for repairs at San Diego, and on May 9, already with VC-8 aboard, she arrived at Ulithi, where she prepared for attacks on Okinawa as part of Task Unit 52.1. She then protected tankers again from late June until early August, and after the fighting ceased, anchored at Pearl Harbor on September 24. There, VC-8 was inactivated on October 8. This aircraft, with Lt.(jg) O’Connor in the cockpit, crashed on landing on August 5, striking the aircraft on board. Two other FM-2s (BuNos. 75081 and 74508) were destroyed. The aircraft bore the identifying markings of the carrier and Task Unit, i.e., white fields on the ailerons (extending slightly into the wing) white aft under the horizontal tail surfaces, and twin yellow stripes on the wing and fuselage in front of the tail surfaces.


    VC-80, USS Manila Bay, autumn 1944

    Composite Squadron VC-80 was established on December 16, 1943 and, after embarking on USS Manila Bay, participated in the battles of Leyte and Luzon. The ship operated during the Battle of Leyte as part of Task Group TG 77.4.2 (call sign Taffy 2) of Rear Admiral Felix B. Stump and VC-80 contributed significantly to the success of American forces in the largest naval battle in history. Then, during the fighting in Lingayen Gulf, the USS Manila Bay was hit by a kamikaze attack at 1750 hours on January 5. It damaged her radar and communications equipment, caused a fire, and most importantly, cost the lives of 14 men. The resulting fire was quickly dealt with by firefighters, and some 24 hours later VC-80 aircraft were already beginning limited operations from her deck. The aircraft depicted bore the typical three-color Pacific livery, the markings complementing the symbol assigned to units operating from USS Manila Bay, a white chevron on the vertical tail surfaces.

     

    Lt. O’Neill, VC-13, USS Tripoli, spring 1944

    VC-13 was established on January 3, 1944 and on February 16 of that year embarked on the new escort carrier USS Tripoli. The ship suffered a fire shortly after her maiden cruise when an acetylene torch ignited fuel that was inadvertently dumped into the water on the starboard bow. Two seamen were killed. After repairs, USS Tripoli departed San Diego on January 31 for her new homeport in Norfolk, Virginia. She arrived there on February 16 and sailed for her first mission on March 15 as the flagship of Task Group 21.15, in which she was accompanied by five destroyers. The group patrolled west of Cape Verde, disrupting the refueling of German submarines. On April 19, an Avenger crew spotted German U-513 awaiting her “Milch Cow” (a refueling submarine). Subsequent attacks were unsuccessful, and the submarine escaped. VC-13 thus returned from the cruise without success and was replaced on board by VC-6 on April 29. New duty station of VC-13 was USS Anzio (formerly USS Coral Sea), which the squadron embarked on March 22 to engage in support of the invasion of Okinawa. The aircraft depicted here is from the Atlantic mission period. Lt. O’Neill had his photograph taken with this FM-2, but it was probably not his personal aircraft. Interesting is the white paint extending over the leading edges to the upper surfaces. On either side of the engine cowling was painted the squadron emblem, a black cat with its front paws in an obscene gesture. It might have blue or gray background. The decals offer both options.

     

    VC-93, Lt.(jg) Robert Sullivan, USS Petrof Bay, Okinawa, April–May 1945

    VC-93 was established on February 23, 1944 and its personnel was first to be trained aboard the USS Matanikau (from October 14, 1944). During its cruises off the Californian coast, this ship trained 1,332 pilots in the following months until June 1945. VC-93 replaced VC-76 aboard USS Petrof Bay on March 10, 1945 and sailed from Guam on March 21 to prepare for the Battle of Okinawa as part of Task Unit 52.1.2. VC-93 pilots supported the Marines first in the capture of the Kerama and Keise Shima archipelagos and then in the main operation on Okinawa. Beginning on April 13, the pilots then focused on neutralizing Japanese airfields on the Sakashima Archipelago, from which the Kamikaze pilots were taking off. By the end of their mission on May 26, VC-93 pilots had destroyed many enemy aircraft on the ground and shot down 17. Two of these kills were credited to Lt.(jg) Robert Sullivan. For her next mission, VC-93 sailed aboard USS Steamer Bay on June 10, 1945 and, as part of the 3rd Fleet, assisted in the neutralization of Japanese airfields in the Sakishima Gunto Archipelago beginning June 14. This was followed by a return to San Diego and the end of the war. VC-93 aircraft operating from aboard USS Perof Bay bore the distinguishing symbol of a four-leaf clover on the vertical tail surfaces and on the upper right and bottom left wing halves. The all-blue livery was complemented by a photographically documented symbol of Sullivan’s first kill on the right side below the cockpit. It is uncertain whether it was also on the port side.


    VC-14, USS Hogatt Bay, November 1944

    Composite Squadron 14 was established on October 12, 1943 and deactivated on October 1, 1945. Its history is associated solely with the escort carrier USS Hogatt Bay, which was commissioned on January 11, 1944 and, after a necessary test cruise and one transport mission to and from Pearl Harbor, took aboard VC-14’s equipment and personnel. Training flight operations followed from March 26, with the first landing aboard USS Hogatt Bay conducted by Captain William Vincent Saunders. The ship embarked on her first operational tour on May 1, 1944 and was assigned to Task Unit 16.14.6. VC-14 pilots subsequently conducted anti-submarine operations and air cover for destroyers in the Western Pacific area until late November. They were then replaced by VC-88 on board and VC-14 did not see further operational deployment. This Wildcat is shown here in its late service form on the USS Hogatt Bay. Of interest is the Judy inscription on the right side of the engine cowling, as well as the non-standard appearance of the ENCLOSURE RELEASE stencil on the right side below the windshield. The pilot’s name is difficult to read in the available photographs, it might be Lt.(jg) Newburn.


    VC-27, Lt. Ralph Elliot, Jr., USS Savo Island, January 1945

    Although the FM-2 Wildcats were the most powerful and most numerous version of this type, they were less frequently engaged in combat with enemy aircraft than the previous F4F-3s and F4F-4s. Nevertheless, ten pilots managed to achieve fighter ace status flying them, and the most successful squadron with the FM-2 in terms of kills was VC-27, called “The Saints”. Its pilots managed to shoot down a total of 61.5 enemy aircraft in aerial combat, making it the second most successful Wildcat squadron regardless of version or period. They were surpassed only by the VF-5 with 79 kills. VC-27 was established in May 1943 and operated from the escort carrier USS Savo Island from July 1944 to January 1945. During this time, she participated in five major operations, including the epic naval battle off Samar, where a small task force repelled a much stronger Japanese fleet. Under the command of Lt. Cmdr. Percival Jackson, pilots of VC-27 shot down more than twice as many enemies as any other composite squadron. The commander of the VF-27 fighter division, Lt. Ralph Elliott Jr., was the most successful ace on FM-2 with nine confirmed kills. In addition to its success in aerial combat, VC-27 also sank or destroyed 30 Japanese vessels and destroyed or damaged over 250 objects such as bridges, buildings, fuel or ammunition depots, vehicles, and the like. In March 1945, Ralph Elliott, Jr. took command of the entire squadron, but the war ended before VC-27 could rejoin the fighting. Elliott’s FM-2 was emblazoned with the inscription BALDY, documented on the right side, which also featured nine kill marks.


    JV640, Sub-Lt W. Park, No. 881 Squadron FAA, HMS Pursuer, August 1944

    The British Fleet Air Arm used Wildcat FM-2s under the designation Wildcat Mk. VI, as the Martlet name was dropped for the last F4F versions. The British Navy used these aircraft for similar duties as the American ones, i.e., for service on escort carriers, from whose decks they provided air cover for convoys and also operated against ground or surface targets. Under the Lend Lease program, 340 FM-2s were delivered to the FAA (220 in 1944 and the rest in 1945), and the first of these were received by No. 881 Sqn, which took part in the invasion of southern France in August 1944 aboard HMS Pursuer (Operation Dragoon). The unit also took part in actions off the coast of Norway before being rearmed with Grumman Hellcat Mk.II aircraft in March 1945. In total, FM-2s served with 22 FAA combat squadrons, with others assigned to non-combat squadrons as trainers. The JV640 aircraft sported a drawing of a tiny hare with a sword and a Viking shield on the right side of the engine cowl and had a non-standard rear-view mirror on the windshield.

  • Markings for A6M3 Zero Type 32 1/48

    c/n 3028, Tainan Kōkūtai, Buna airfield, New Guinea, August 1942

    This aircraft, released by Mitsubishi on June 28, 1942, was assigned to Lt. Inano, commander of Buna detachment of Tainan Kōkūtai. It was donated by citizens of Hongwon County in North Korea, captured by Allied units at Buna on December 27, 1942 and selected for further evaluation as well as rebuild. Allied personnel at Eagle Farm Field built a flyable A6M3 Zero using parts of three Zeros transported from Buna Airfield. Inano’s surname was originally Takabayashi, but he changed that before mid-1941. In late November 1941, smaller part of Tainan Kōkūtai under his command was transferred to French Indochina and temporarily became part of 22. Kōkū Sentai HQ fighter squadron. Lt. Inano returned to Tainan Kōkūtai in July 1942 to participate in combat over New Guinea and Guadalcanal. From January 1943 he was involved in evaluation of weapons for new naval aircraft. From October 1944 he served as Hikōtaichō of Tainan Kōkūtai (II) in Taiwan.

     

    c/n 3305, Kōkūtai 204, Buin, Bougainville island, January 1943

    This aircraft was manufactured by Mitsubishi, probably on November 25, 1942. The radio equipment has been dismantled due to weight reduction. At the same time, it was equipped with long-barrel guns and a later type rudder trim that could be operated from the cockpit. Previously known aircraft of this unit with yellow fuselage markings had identification numbers of values under 148. The wreckage of this aircraft was recovered by the Allies in May 1944 off Kolombangara Island. The camouflage and markings would indicate that its pilot was leader of Chūtai of Kōkūtai 204 in early 1943. The first candidate could be Lt. Tatenoshin Tanoue, who was shot down in a dogfight with Wildcats from VMF-121 on January 15, 1943, while covering a convoy. However, the crash site is too far from the area where combat took place. The pilot of the aircraft may have been a Lt(jg) Kiyoharu Shibuya, who was lost on January 23, 1943, in dogfight with the Wildcats of VMO-251 while escorting the cargo vessel Toa Maru 2 and the destroyer Oshio.


    Warrant Officer Matsuo Hagiri, Rabaul, New Britain, July 1943

    This aircraft was painted in green camouflage applied in field conditions and had radio equipment removed to reduce weight. Kōkūtai 204 appears to have been the only unit in the area to apply green field camouflage plus white outline of Hinomaru on fuselage and upper wing surfaces. Its pilot was Matsuo Hagiri. He was born in 1913 in Shizuoka Prefecture and served with the Yokosuka Kōkūtai from 1935. In 1937 and 1938 he served on the aircraft carrier Sōryū and took part in battles in China. In 1940, he was among the pilots of the 12th Kōkūtai who first tested the Zero in combat conditions. In the raid on Chengtu on October 4, 1940, he was one of four pilots who landed at an enemy base and set its equipment afire. More to it, Hagiri shot down three Chinese fighter aircraft after take off from the burning enemy base. After further service with Yokosuka Kōkūtai, including tests of the Raiden and Zero Model 32, he was assigned to Kōkūtai 204 in July 1943. In a dogfight on September 24 over Vella Lavella, he managed to score two victories, but suffered injuries himself and had to be transported to Japan. In April 1945, he was wounded again, this time in combat against a B-29. In all, he achieved 13 victories. After the war, he became a Fuji City Councilor and a member of the Shizuoka Prefectural Council. He died in January 1997.


    c/n 3285, Rabauru Kōkūbuntai, Rabaul, New Britain, August 1943

    This aircraft was manufactured by Mitsubishi in November 1942 and early the following year received field camouflage consisting of elongated green spots on the factory paint of light grey. Its markings were changed several times. The reconstruction of both markings of this aircraft is based on parts of the wreck that have been photographically documented. The tail apparently first bore the designation T2, which would place it with Kōkūtai 204. In mid-1943, it bore the white code 3-174 and a white square was painted around Hinomaru on the side of both sides of the fuselage. This is the only Zero so far where such a marking was photographically documented. The exact purpose of the white square is unknown and it was removed in August 1943. In the second half of that year, the tail codes of the aircraft of the Rabaul fighter units changed and numerals ranging from 1 to 9 began to be used. The assignment of the numerals to individual units is still not reliably determined. Aircraft with these markings are unofficially assigned to a combat group called Rabauru Kōkūbuntai (Rabaul Air Force). There are several theories to explain the meaning of these numerical designations. The only unit that used several A6M3 Model 32s in the area in the second half of 1943 was the aforementioned Kōkūtai 204.

     

    c/n 3285, Rabauru Kōkūbuntai, Ballale Airfield, Ballale Island, Solomon Islands, October 1943

    In August 1943, the white squares on the side of this aircraft were repainted and its marking was later changed from white 3-174 to yellow code 5-136. In September and October 1943, Kōkūtai 204 operated in this area with the last two Model 32s. It is likely, therefore, that despite the change of the tail code this Zero was still in service with this unit. Most of unit’s armament consisted of A6M2 Model 21 and A6M3 Model 22, and it also received its first A6M5 Model 52 during this period. Following the neutralization of the Ballale base, the unit lost one Model 32. This was apparently aircraft with serial number 3285, which was salvaged from Ballale in 1968 by Robert Diemert. It showed the strafing damage that occurred while the aircraft was on the ground. Zero 3285 was stored at Friendship Airfield in Canada and some of its parts were used to rebuild other Zeros. It was later purchased by John and Earl Calverley of the Blayd Corporation. After that, 3285 was in a collection in Australia where John Fallis purchased it several years ago with the help of Graham Orphan of New Zealand’s Classic Wings magazine and is restoring it to airworthy condition at his company CHUZY SUZY LLC in Lafayette, Louisiana. In 2022, the aircraft parts were photographed by Eduard staff and with the help of researcher Ryan Toews a reconstruction of both forms of this unique aircraft was made.

  • Markings for MiG-21MF Fighter Bomber 1/72

    No. 5121, Phạm Tuân, 921 Fighter Regiment, Noi Bai AB, Democratic Republic of Vietnam, December 1972

    MiG-21MF with tactical number 5121 is currently on display in the museum of the Vietnam People’s Air Force in Hanoi. Reportedly, on December 27, 1972, Phạm Tuân flew this aircraft when he shot down an American B-52 which took part in bombing operations during the Linebacker II offensive. It would be the only MiG-21MF kill of a Stratofortress, but American sources claim the bomber was lost to anti-aircraft SAM system. Phạm Tuân would later become the only Vietnamese astronaut. He was a crewmember of Soyuz 37 mission and orbited the earth 142 times in the Salyut 6 space station. For his accomplishments, he was awarded high Vietnamese commendations and was one of a few foreigners to be awarded the Hero of the Soviet Union.

     

    No. 9712, 9 Fighter Regiment, Bechyně, Czechoslovakia, 1989–1993

    This aircraft with serial number 969712 was built in 1974 and subsequently delivered to Czechoslovakia, where it served with the 4 slp (stíhací letecký pluk - Fighter Regiment) based in Pardubice. It was handed over to 9 Fighter Regiment in Bechyně in May 1989. There it flew with the coat of arms of the Bechyně town on the left side of the nose. After the dissolution of Czechoslovakia the aircraft was assigned to the Slovak Air Force, and is currently in the collection of the air museum at Trenčín, Slovakia. The aircraft still has the original camouflage scheme from the Soviet Union delivery.


    No. 127, 812th Training Air Regiment, Kharkiv Higher Military Aviation School of Pilots, Kupyansk Airfield, the Soviet Union, August 1991

    This aircraft, adorned with a shark mouth and eyes, served with the 812. UAP (812 Training Air Regiment) operating within the structure of the Kharkiv higher training facility, which was in 2003 named after the famous fighter ace and triple Hero of the Soviet Union Ivan N. Kozhedub (who was in fact Ukrainian). This one was among the aircraft that were displayed during the open house on August 18, 1991.

     

    No. 8447, No. 46 Squadron, Egypt, 1973

    This is an aircraft from No. 46 Squadron as it appeared during combat exercises prior to the Yom Kipur War in 1973. To allow quick identification, aircraft carried a large black letter with white outline on the fin. The nose sported painting of the goddess Nekhbet, protector of Upper Egypt. Aircraft coded 8447 survived the Yom Kipur War and was photographed with this camouflage and markings at Cairo in October 1975.

     

    No. 9111, 3 Squadron of Tactical Aviation, Poznań Krzesiny, Poland, 2002

    The 3 ELT (Eskadra Lotnictwa Taktycznego – Squadron of Tactical Aviation) was formed at Poznań Krzesiny on January 1, 2001. The unit was equipped with MiG-21MF, bis and UM aircraft, but the MiG-21MFs were used for two years only, i.e., till the end of 2002. The MiG-21bis version stayed until 2003 when it was decided to replace them with F-16s. On April 1, 2008, the 3 ELT, 6 ELT and the 31 Baza Lotnicza (31 Air Base) were disbanded and the 31 Baza Lotnictwa Taktycznego (31 Tactical Air Base) was formed. Since 2007, this aircraft has been displayed at Poznan Krzesiny. It is camouflaged in the same shades of grey as used on F-15s and F-16s. The raven’s head marking on the finwas applied in 2002 on the occasion of a gathering of commanding officers in Berlin. The emblem of 3 Squadron, the predecessor of the 3 ELT, is painted below the windscreen.

  • Tail End Charlie

    Relaxation

    Each of us needs some form of relaxation.  For instance, two years ago, I started two small vineyards in our family garden in Prague. The original vineyard in the area apparently disappeared in the 18th century, but there are still local names associated with wine production. I purchased young plants of the Cabernet Cortis (red) and Solaris (white) varieties and planted the vines following the advice of an experienced neighbourhood winemaker. My winemaker friends amicably assure me that I won’t make my first good wine for another ten years or so. Since I had never grown anything in my life besides food mold, no one in my family believed anything would grow under my hands. I must be doing something right, because the vines are thriving and not suffering from mold or other diseases and pests. And I don’t use chemical sprays, I’ve only applied nettle leachate once. Anyway, I’m happy with the vines, although I don’t have much time for them this year due to the failing health of a family member. When I can work in the vineyard, it's a surprisingly relaxing experience. Thanks to the vines, I have also had several positive experiences with winemakers from Moravia, Austria and Germany. When I mentioned that I had started a small vineyard, they immediately wanted to see photos and started passing on helpful advice. They took me as a junior colleague, whereas I saw myself more as a disoriented beginner. I found the winemakers to be a very friendly international community. But unlike them, I have the advantage that my micro-vineyards are a hobby and not a source of livelihood.

    Plastic modelling is a source of income for our company and should also bring relaxation to our customers, although in this case with abundant use of chemistry. In addition, there is a community associated with our hobby that is mostly friendly and supportive, although there are sometimes individuals who take it too personally and should probably use some other form of relaxation.


    A former colleague of mine from another field, named Štěpán, didn’t pick up plastic modelling as a hobby until he was about thirty years old. He works as a process engineer and when he gets off work, he has a full head of worries. So, he started looking for a pastime to clear his head. He did something of a selection procedure and plastic modelling came out the winner. Building model jet fighters keeps his mind so busy that it really helps him relax. We just don’t have enough kits on offer to suit his taste unfortunately.

    Many modellers may not see plastic modelling as a relaxation because they simply like history, or they have been involved in the hobby since they were young and they keep enjoying it. But I think they still relax with it, even if they don’t know it. Plastic modelling can even have a positive influence in serious life situations. In some countries it is part of the therapy for war veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. My admiration in this regard goes to the people who are involved in our field in Ukraine, whether they are manufacturers, traders or modellers. They are trying to carry on in wartime conditions that are in many ways unparalleled since the Second World War.

    Recently I read in a Facebook group comments under the post of a Ukrainian modeller who is sharing this hobby with his son. He posted a photo of a new model with the comment that they continue modelling regardless of the terrorist attacks by the Russian state. In his opinion, thanks to this relaxation, they are more able to cope with the war induced anxiety and stress. Surprisingly, one discussant from across the Atlantic objected to the Ukrainian modeller bringing politics into the group. He got a rather intense response from other discussants to the fact that plastic modelling as a means of mental relaxation from cruise missile raids is not really about politics.

    In the area where these Ukrainian modellers live, there have been over 1,300 air raid alerts since February 24, 2022, each lasting about one hour on average. Statistics show that the Russians conduct airstrikes evenly on any day of the week, with most being declared around midnight and around noon. Perhaps this discussant from across the Atlantic could visit Ukraine and try out forms of relaxation when he has to take refuge in an air-raid shelter two or three times a day ...

    Text: Jan Bobek

  • Air war over Ukraine

    Ukrainian Mi-24P at a field base.

    Ukrainian Offensive, Prigozhin Coup

    Text: Miro Barič

    Photos:  Ukrainian armed forces, social media and other public sources

    June was an extremely hot month in Ukraine, and we’re not referring to global warming. Events unfolded on the front lines that laid the groundwork for significant changes in the future – not only for Ukraine but also for Russia. The Ukrainian offensive began, which, though seemingly progressing slowly, was steady. In Russia, the Wagner Group revolted, but they quickly changed their minds, yet the regime remained shaken. Things were set in motion.

     

    In this part of the series, we’ll follow events from June 1 to July 1, but first, let’s revisit an event from the previous period. On May 13, an attack group of Russian aircraft, consisting of Su-34, Su-35, and 2 × Mi-8 helicopters, was shot down in the Bryansk region near the Ukrainian border. When the previous part was being completed, the exact details of what happened had not been confirmed, and various possibilities were being considered. However, the Ukrainian Armed Forces later released a video in which they boasted of their successes in air defense. The footage showed a Patriot system with markings indicating the score, confirming that they were responsible for that mentioned Russian group. On the side, there are painted silhouettes of aircraft and helicopters with the date May 13. By the way, they have three Mi-8 helicopters painted there, but officially only two were confirmed. The Ukrainians, therefore, claim one more. It is possible that the Russian group at that time consisted of two Mi-8MTPR-1 helicopters for electronic warfare and a third Mi-8 prepared for search and rescue in case of the attack bomber being shot down.

    In addition to this group, the aforementioned Patriot system has an impressive collection of missiles, including Kinzhals, missiles with a low flight path, and drones painted on its side. The Ukrainians also demonstrated decent scores against the S-300 and NASAMS systems.

    The Patriot system excelled, especially during the intensive attacks on Kyiv in May. The Russian shelling of the capital decreased in June. They probably realized that their attacks were just wasting rockets - but officially, they accomplished their mission because, according to Putin’ְs words, they destroyed five or six Patriot systems near Kyiv. Never mind that Ukraine received only two of them ...

    Shot of the Patriot system in a video released by the Armed Forces of Ukraine.

     Detail showing silhouettes of two aircraft and three Mi-8 helicopters with the date May 13, 2023.

    NASAMS system score.

    The S-300 battery marked with four aircraft, 21 missiles with a flat flight path, and 15 rockets kills.


    Ukrainian Offensive

    Another reason for shifting the Russian command’s attention away from Kyiv was the Ukrainian counteroffensive. After prolonged anticipation, it began in early June in the Zaporizhzhia Oblast, southern Ukraine. The Ukrainian Armed Forces started pushing in three directions – from Velyka Novosilka near Vuhledar towards Mariupol, from Orikhiv towards Tokmak and Melitopol, and near Lobova on the banks of the Kakhovka Reservoir.

    For Russian propaganda, this was a welcome change. In anticipation of the Ukrainian offensive, they began publishing various false footage of Western military equipment being destroyed. There was an instance of using a photo of a destroyed Turkish Leopard 2 tank from Syria and a video of a Russian helicopter destroying combine harvesters and other agricultural machinery that didn't resemble tanks at all. After the actual start of the Ukrainian offensive, true losses of Western equipment were, of course, revealed.

    The Russians had been building fortifications in southern Ukraine for almost a year. These include several lines of trenches and, most importantly, extensive minefields. These minefields proved to be the most challenging obstacle. In one attack attempt, a group of Bradley infantry fighting vehicles and several Leopard 2 tanks got stuck on the mines. The Russians filmed this group from multiple angles and repeatedly published the footage until the Ukrainians made progress and withdrew the damaged vehicles for repair. Unlike Russian equipment, Western military vehicles fulfill their primary purpose – protecting the crew. Most Leopard and Bradley machines did not explode after being hit; their crews survived, and the vehicles can be repaired later.

    Although the Ukrainian advance is slow, it is steady – they have liberated more territory in a month than the Russians occupied during their winter offensive in six months. In addition to the mines, Russian helicopters initially slowed down the Ukrainians. Ka-52 helicopters were deployed to perform long-range missile strikes on enemy equipment since the Ukrainian side couldn't get air defense systems close enough to the frontlines, and portable Stinger missiles have limited range. The Ukrainians reported shooting down one to two Ka-52 helicopters almost daily, but only one was officially confirmed. The confirmed one was captured on video flying with a damaged tail. The Russian side claimed that the tail was damaged due to the firing of their own missile, but this is unlikely. It is more plausible that it was hit by a Ukrainian surface-to-air missile. Thanks to its two counter-rotating rotors, the helicopter was able to continue flying and make an emergency landing.

    The Ka-52 helicopters primarily operated from the Berdiansk base, where satellite imagery captured them. However, for unknown reasons, the Ukrainians attacked this airfield only on June 30, several weeks after the satellite imagery was published. Prior to that, they had repeatedly targeted other military facilities in Berdiansk with Storm Shadow missiles. After the airfield attack, Russian helicopters departed from there, and their activity on the frontlines decreased. The reduction in activity is also related to the change in Ukrainian tactics – they deploy less equipment on the front lines and use consequent infantry attacks in groups. This lack of targets makes it impractical for the Ka-52s to risk further losses. At least 39 helicopters of this type have been destroyed during the war in Ukraine.

    Since the beginning of the offensive, the Ukrainian advance has been supported by strong artillery and missile attacks. These attacks not only destroy Russian trenches but also target logistical and command centers in the rear, as well as Russian artillery. Last summer, Russian artillery played a significant role in their offensive, but now it’s merely a shadow of what it used to be.

    If there were no war, this shot of the Mi-8 on a field base would be downright idyllic. Notice the machine gun in the helicopter’s nose.

    A Russian Ka-52 helicopter with a damaged tail was captured on video on June 19.

     

    Destroyed Dam

    However, what significantly altered Ukrainian plans was the destruction of the Kakhovka Dam on the Dnieper River. Its 3.2 km long wall exploded in the central part early in the morning on June 6, just two days after the start of the Ukrainian offensive. The dam held back over 18 cubic kilometers of water, which flooded the city of Kherson and another 40 villages downstream on both sides of the Dnieper. Approximately 60 civilians lost their lives, and the floodwaters took several days to recede.

    Although both sides blamed each other for the dam’s explosion, it is certain that the Russians had control over it. The massive dam could not be threatened from the outside with weapons accessible to Ukraine; it had to be destroyed by an explosion from inside the dam, where only the Russians had access. They blew it up to prevent the Ukrainians from attempting to cross the river. The flooded and waterlogged areas made it impossible for some time.

    However, the result is also a huge environmental disaster. A significant amount of chemicals has been released into the river and subsequently into the sea, causing the death of many animals. What is even worse, four irrigation canals that were fed by the dam have dried up. This will negatively affect agricultural production and access to drinking water for hundreds of thousands of people for many years.

    The emptying of the Kakhovka Dam also poses a threat to the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant. The dam water also served as a reservoir for cooling the nuclear reactors. Furthermore, the Russian forces have laid mines in the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant complex and are refusing to allow inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) into some areas.

    The destruction of the Kachovska dam caused enormous damage.

     

    Prigozhin’s Coup

    After all the events in Ukraine, the Russians turned against each other. On the evening of June 23, an attempted coup by the Wagner Group mercenaries began. Its leader, Yevgeny Prigozhin, called it the "March of Justice," citing alleged shelling of the base of mercenaries in eastern Ukraine by the Russian army, which tried to take control of the group. In reality, Prigozhin had been planning this uprising for a long time and had been amassing vehicles, ammunition, and fuel for it, as western intelligence agencies discovered from satellite images.

    Prigozhin’s goal was to capture Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and Chief of the General Staff Valery Gerasimov at the command center in Rostov, near the Ukrainian border, both of whom he had publicly criticized for a long time. However, Shoigu and Gerasimov managed to escape Rostov in time. Prigozhin only caught their deputies at the command center. The Wagner Group occupied Rostov and subsequently started advancing towards Moscow on Saturday, June 24th. They took over Voronezh and got within about 200 km of the capital. Their columns faced little resistance on the ground, as their path was only obstructed by roadblocks that could be easily overcome.

    Mi-8MTPR-1 shot down by the Wagner Group on June 24 in the Voronezh region.


    The Russian Air Force attempted to resist. Helicopters, for instance, destroyed a fuel depot in Voronezh, which the Wagner Group had occupied. However, the mercenaries also had air defense systems, which caused another bleak day for the Russian Air Force. Six helicopters and one airplane were destroyed, and according to various sources, 15 to 30 of their crew members lost their lives.

    Two shot-down attack helicopters were Mi-35 and Ka-52, and four Mi-8 helicopters included three Mi-8MPTR-1 versions for radio-electronic warfare. The destroyed plane was an IL-22M, a flying command post based on the transport aircraft Il-18. The aircraft belonged to the 610th Combat Training and Conversion Aviation Center located in Ivanovo, northeast of Moscow. The dramatic video captured the aircraft's last moments. The burning plane spiraled violently as it crashed, resulting in its tail, wing parts, and two external engines being torn off. The entire crew of ten people perished. The names of eight of them were released - Lieutenant Colonel Artem Milovanov (43), the deputy chief of the mentioned 610th center, Captain Artem Sharoglazov (31), the aircraft commander, Major Gennady Belyakin (50), the navigator, Captain Viktor Polov (43), the flight engineer, Captain Igor Volochilov (49), the airborne technician, Senior Warrant Officer Sergey Starushok (49), the airborne radio operator, Senior Sergeant Viktor Podrepny (42), the airborne radio operator, and Senior Sergeant Alexey Skrykov (29), the airborne mechanic. Most of them were buried together in Ivanovo, while Milovanov was buried separately in Tambov.

    Ka-52 registered RF-13418 with bort number “yellow 72” from the 15th brigade of the Russian Army Aviation was shot down by the Wagner Group on June 24th near the village of Komintern in the Voronezh region. Lieutenant Colonel Alexey Vorozhtsov and Lieutenant Denis Oleynikov were killed.

     

    End of the Coup

    The Wagner Group was advancing towards Moscow smoothly until the evening of June 24, when Prigozhin ordered them to halt and retreat. The next day, they also left Rostov, which they had fully controlled. Allegedly, the agreement to stop the action was brokered by Belarusian dictator Lukashenko in exchange for impunity for the Wagner Group and their exile in Belarus. Putin agreed to it, although he had declared in a morning TV speech that severe punishment awaited the rebels.

    Paradoxically, it turned out that in Russia, you can drive tanks, occupy government buildings in cities, and shoot down aircraft and helicopters of the Russian Air Force without any consequences officially. However, if you try to protest against the war or even hold up a blank piece of paper without any inscription in public, you may be imprisoned for several years on charges of extremism ...

    It is likely that Prigozhin hoped that a portion of the army would join him or that he could sway part of the population to his side. He also wanted to capture Shoigu and Gerasimov and use them as hostages. None of this worked out for him, so he decided to retreat.

    A side effect of this action is that the Wagner Group is no longer fighting at Bachmut or anywhere else in Ukraine. The Ukrainian army is advancing north and south of Bachmut, trying to encircle the city. After averting the coup, purges also began in the Russian army. Several generals and other officers were dismissed, transferred, or arrested and interrogated.

    Burning Il-22M shortly before crashing into the ground. The tail, the outer wing parts, and both outer engines were torn off during the fall.

    The wreckage of the Il-22M carrying the registration RF-75917 near Kantemirovka in the Voronezh region. It was also shot down by the Wagner Group on June 24th.

    Funeral of the Il-22M crew in Ivanovo.


    Further Russian Losses

    In addition to the helicopters and aircraft destroyed during Prigozhin’s coup, the Russian Air Force suffered more losses. On Thursday, June 22, a Russian Mi-24P helicopter with the registration RF-92501 and bort number “Red 27” crashed near the village of Lesnaya in the Brest Region of Belarus. The helicopter went down on the edge of a forest beside the road, and all three crew members were injured.

    On Friday, June 23, in the Luhansk Region, a Mi-8MPTR-1 helicopter was shot down. Out of the four crew members, only one managed to parachute to safety. The other three perished, and one of them was identified as officer Kirill Babayev.

    On Thursday, June 29, soldiers of the Ukrainian 10th Mountain Assault Brigade successfully used a portable Igla missile to shoot down a Russian Su-25 attack aircraft. The hit was captured on video. The Ukrainians also claimed to have shot down another Su-25 on Wednesday, June 7, but that one remains unconfirmed.

    During the observed period, previously unknown footage of destroyed aircraft from both sides emerged. For example, the wreckage of a helicopter, likely a Ka-52, destroyed on the ground during a Ukrainian rocket attack on the Melitopol base on September 1, 2022, was captured on video. It was filmed by a crew member of another Russian helicopter during takeoff from that base.

    Mi-24P carrying the registration RF-92501 and bort number “red 27” crashed on June 22 in Belarus.

    A new shot of the wreckage of the Su-34, which was shot down last year in May on the banks of the Oskil River near Izyum.

    Shots of the Ka-52, which was destroyed last year in September at the Melitopol airbase.


    Ukrainian Losses

    During the observed period, the Ukrainian Air Force suffered two confirmed losses. On Friday, June 2nd, a MiG-29 was shot down near Pokrovsk in the Donetsk Region. It was piloted by Major Vladyslav Saveliev with the call sign “Nomad” from the 114th Tactical Aviation Brigade. He had previously participated in a U.S. training program at Columbus Air Force Base in Mississippi. Unfortunately, he did not survive the destruction of his fighter jet.

    In the Kharkiv Region, on Friday, June 9, a Mi-8 helicopter from the 18th Independent Army Aviation Brigade of the Ukrainian Army was lost under unknown circumstances. At least one crew member, Lieutenant Vladyslav Zozulya, did not survive the accident.

    Tragically, civilian populations in Ukraine have also suffered losses. An example is the attack on a pizzeria in the city of Kramatorsk in eastern Ukraine, where Russian rockets struck on Tuesday, June 27, killing 13 people. Among the victims were three children, including 14-year-old twin sisters. Writer Viktoria Amelina, who was injured in the attack, succumbed to her injuries a few days later. Ukrainian forces detained an informant responsible for providing the Russians with coordinates for the attack. The Russians claimed that they targeted a military objective and killed 200 foreign mercenaries and 50 Ukrainian generals and high-ranking officers. However, the casualties reported were highly exaggerated and implausible for the size of a pizzeria.

    In June, there were also increasing discussions about the possible training of Ukrainian pilots on F-16 fighter jets. This initiative, which required significant efforts from both sides and considerable funding, came late in the conflict (considering the ongoing offensive without air cover). Some argue that it would be more pertinent to invest in artillery and missile munitions and enhance air defense capabilities. More on this topic will be covered in the next part of the series.

    Mi-24 helicopter delivered to Ukraine from the Czech Republic.

    This Mi-14PS carrying the bort number “yellow 34”;  from the 10th brigade of the Ukrainian Naval Aviation was shot down last year in May by a Russian Su-35S fighter in the Odessa region. Photos of its wreckage surfaced only recently.

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Info EDUARD