Info EDUARD
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{"cz":"Info EDUARD"}
{"cz":"Měsíčník o historii a plastikovém modelářství.","en":"Monthly magazine about history and scale plastic modeling."}
11/2022
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INFO Eduard# 153e-magazine FREE Vol 21 November 2022Page 2
INFO Eduard# 153e-magazine FREE Vol 21 November 2022© Eduard - Model Accessories, 2022FREE FOR DOWNLOAD, FREE FOR DISTRIBUTION!This material may only be used for personal use. No part of the textor graphic presentations can be used in another publication in any other mediaform or otherwise distributed without the prior writtenpermission of Eduard - Model Accessories and authors involved.Editorial and Graphics - Marketing department, Eduard - Model Accessories, Ltd.Page 3
eduardeduardNOVEMBER 2022CONTENTSEDITORIALKITSEVENTBRASSINPHOTO-ETCHED SETSBIG EDBUILTON APROACH–December 2022TAIL END CHARLIEHISTORYBOXART STORYF4F-4 Wildcat early ProfiPACK 1/48Bf 109G-14/AS ProfiPACK 1/48TORNADO IDS Limited 1/48Bf 110G-4 Weekend edition 1/72SE.5a Hispano Suiza ProfiPACK 1/48MiG-21PFM ProfiPACK 1/72Absolute Winner of the 2022 Czech (IPMS) ChampionshipRed Tails and Co. 1/48TORA TORA TORA! 1/48Spitfire Story: Per Aspera ad Astra 1/48Me 163B 1/48Bf 109G-10 Erla 1/48F4F-3 wheel bay PRINT 1/48Sopwith Camel SPACE 1/48USS LexingtonPappy of the “Strafers” IIWhite codes, black codes…Air war over Ukraine: Ukrainian blitzkriegSwede at Santa CruzSurprise over HeeschNight over WürzburgThe PreyFrom dusk to dawn462634325870808696114Published by Eduard-Model Accessories, spol. s.r.o.Mírová 170, Obrnice 435 21support@eduard.com www.eduard.comPage 4
EDITORIALGood day, Dear FriendsOne more time I would like to extend mythanks to all of you that made your wayout to Molivice. You overcame your doubtsand fears of the unknown brought aboutby a new venue out in the middle of almostnowhere and by the predicted inclementweather. We were all armed with the be-lief that after two years of forced inactivity,joy could once again be found in the parti-cipation of a favorite activity and the mee-ting up with old friends in an environmentsurrounded by old armor pieces and newmodels. Those of us involved in puttingthe show together are very pleased thatwe have not disappointed. On behalf of allthat attended, I would particularly like tothank Charles Chad Richmond, a man who,at 77 years of age, made his way from Ala-bama to Prague, to make his way Saturdaymorning by train to Lyse nad Labem andthen by bus to Milovice. It was his sixthtrip to E-day and he attended ModelBrnoonce. Chad is a Vietnam War vet, a combatpilot who flew, among others, the AH-1GCobra and the UH-1 Iroquois. He is a holder ofa slew of decorations, a member of Vete-ran’s groups and organizations, as well asa modeler and a friend of our nation. Welook forward to seeing him, and all of you,again next year at E-day 2023! Those thatwere not able to attend the show, or didattend but for some reason missed theE-day Special report, can get a glimpse intothe goings-on in Milovice here.NEW RELEASES FOR NOVEMBERKITSIn the Limited Edition line, we have ourfifth kit of the Tornado, this time a GermanTornado IDS in 1:48th scale. As before, thiskit is based on Revell plastic and containsthe classic assortment of Eduard acces-sories in the form of photoetched, masksand Brassins. There is also an expandeddecal sheet, allowing for one of seven de-cal options, the majority of which are Bin-desluftwaffe and Bundesmarine machinesin striking anniversary schemes. Originally,we had planned to include a Saudi Tornado,but unfortunately, the kit lacks the correctpylons . The options are a mix of the notedanniversary schemes and standard onesbecause we are aware of the fact that noteveryone takes a shine to the anniversa-ry schemes. I would also like to point outthat this kit’s decal sheet provides plenty ofopportunity to test out our decals, for thosewho haven’t yet or those who would like tohone their skills in the application of themthat includes the removal of the carrierfilm.In the ProfiPACK line, we are also soldie-ring on with the 48th scale Wildcat, relea-sing the F4F-4 in its early guise. The kit isdesigned for modelers who don’t feel thatthey would take full advantage of October’sDual Combo Midway kit, containing twocomplete sets of plastic, one for the F4F-3,the other the F4F-4. The hero of the boxartis Stanley Vejtasa, an American pilot withCzech roots, to whom we proudly connect.More on Stanley Vejtasa and about the bo-xart can be found below in this newsletter.There are two November ProfiPACK kits,the other being the Bf 109G-14/AS. I willnow provide a bit of background informa-tion surrounding it. This kit was originallyplanned as a Weekend release , but afterbeing confronted with the myriad of mar-king options, we decided to promote thisitem to the more attractive and better equi-pped ProfiPACK level. There are five mar-king options, including an Italian aircraft.It should also be pointed out, that takinginto account this is a late war German type,the markings are rather striking. It’s plainto see that the ‘109, in terms of attractivemarkings and individual stories to tell, ne-ver disappoints. For lovers of 1:72nd sca-le, I will repeat the good news from thispast E-day: we are currently working onour 1:72nd Bf 109F, G and K and we expectthe first kits to be released next summer.In October, we finalized the parts layout onthe sprues and the technological executi-on of the forms, and this was no easy task.The reason is that, as opposed to the 48thscale Messerschmitts, we are developingthe 72nd scale items as one project, ta-king into account all versions, from the F-2,through the G-2, 4, 6, 14, the AS versions,three G-10s, all the way on through to theK-4. The laying out of all components intofourteen molds was a complicated ride.But don’t worry; none of the kits will havefourteen sprues. The project vision has twosprues with detail parts, which will be co-mmon to all versions, two with clear partsincluding formation lights (which are dou-bled up to provide spares in case of loss ofany of these small bits), either of which willgo into the relevant release. Ten molds co-ver fuselages, wings and unique items forvarious versions, where each kit will inclu-de one of these sprues. Dual boxings aside,there will be two sprues in each kit, but youcan probably see that.Modelers who work in 1:72nd scale of-ten complain, and loudly at that, that weneglect them. I’m sorry for that. I confessthat we are first and foremost a 48th scalemanufacturer with a soft spot for the legacyof the old Monogram kits, but even so, wedo have a segment of our plans dedicatedto your scale. These include new items, toat least one new release per year, LimitedEdition releases based on reboxing others’kits, and Weekend kits that are of our ownmaking and have gone through their Limi-ted and/or ProdiPACK releases. Since ourfire a couple of years back, we have beenintensively renewing our range largely byreleasing Weekend kits based on olderitems. Often, we simplify the packaging ofthese older items by using original, pre-served boxes and sold out ProfiPACK kitsto support the Weekend line. In September,we did this with our Bf 110E kit in the Wee-kend 1:72nd scale line, re-energizing theBf 110s in that scale, and this will extend inNovember to the long-awaited Bf 110G-4.At the same time, we are nearly ready toput back into rotation three older items, theLimited kit ‘Adlertag’, dedicated to the Bf110C and D in the Battle of Britain, and twoINFO Eduard4November 2022Page 5
ProfiPACKs, the Bf 110C/D and Bf 110G-4.These three kits aren’t new, but are itemsthat have not been available for a long timedue to missing sprues. Kits that we con-sider to be new releases will follow afterthe New Year. In January, 2023, it will bea re-edition of the Bf 110E (7083), the Wee-kend Bf 110G-2 in April, and we are hopefulthat the first quarter of 2023 will finally seea list of new ‘110s in 1:48th scale, startingwith the Bf 110E and Bf 110G-2.There is a 1:72nd scale kit amongst the newreleases for November, in the form of theF6F-5N Hellcat, being released in conjunc-tion with the SE-5a Hispano Suiza in 48th.Both of these are ProfiPACK kits, as is ourcommon practice with re-editions.BRASSINMost of November’s new releases in theBrassin line will again be 3D prints. Themain themes will centre around the Wildcatand the Zero of our own provenance. Forthe F4F-3 Wildcat, we are introducing a setof landing flaps and gun bays, and for theF4F-4, a cockpit set. For the A6M3, wheels,exhausts and a cockpit. For the same kit,we also have a LooK set. All are suitable forboth the Model 22 and 23 A6M3.We are not neglecting kits from other ma-nufacturers. For the 1:48th Meng EA-18Gwe offer engine exhausts, and for Zvezda’s1:48th Yak-9D, we have exhausts as well,and a LooK set. A new LooK set is also de-signed for the Revell Tornado IDS. This setis, naturally, suitable for our above men-tioned Limited Edition kit, too. ExpandedLookPlus sets are being released for theTamiya P-38J and F/A-18F (Meng), both in1:48th. For ship modelers, we have two setsof life rafts in 1:350th, and the two new Big-Sins are not to be overlooked, covering ourCamel and Wildcat.PHOTOETCHINGFor the 48th scale Buccaneer S.2C/D fromAirfix we have three photoetched sets avai-lable along with two mask sets. The samecan be said in this scale for the Hobby BossF4U-1A Corsair. Our range of landing flapsgrows with the addition of such an item forour F4F-4 Wildcat. Further sets of masksand photoetching are being released for the48th scale F-35B from Italeri and 32nd sca-le F-35C from Trumpeter. There are sets inthe same scale for Revell’s Bf 109G-2/G-4.In the Zoom line, which offers a simplifiednumber of pre-painted items, we havethe new Weekend Bf 109G-14/AS covered.In 1:72nd scale, we are offering new sets ofmasks and photoetched brass, and theseinclude a set of flaps for the SBD-3 Dau-ntless (Flyhawk) and the I-16 Type 5 (Clear-prop). In 1:35th, November offers up a setfor the M1070 Gun Truck from Hobby Boss,and in the ship scale of 1:350th, we havea new set for the anti-aircraft cruiserHMS Colombo kit from Trumpeter. Don’toverlook the four new BigEds!SPACEIn the increasingly popular Space lineup,we have a total of five new items to in-troduce in 1:48th scale. Of these, the setscovering the Bf 109G-14 and F4F-4 are de-signed for our own kits, and the others arefor the Airfix Buc, Revel Tornado IDS andthe Italeri F-35B.DECALSAs far new decals are concerned, we havea set of generic stencil data for the GermanJu 87 in 1:72nd, and these are suitable forany manufacturer’s kit if the type. For thestill-new P-38J from Tamiya in 1:48th, wehave a sheet coming out called ‘P-38J OverEurope’, coming out of the kit we releaseda number of years back with the samename using plastic from the Academy kit.It contains some very nice markings, anddeserves a closer look!EDDIE THE RIVETERThe 3D decals we released under theEddie the Riveter banner for the new P-38Jattracted a lot of attention amongst mo-delers, and so we decided that we wouldtweak it for the older P-38F/G/H kit. Thisset also includes surface details besidesthe rivets, such as filler caps for the fueltanks. I will point out that the rivets re-presented are of the countersunk variety,not raised half-round as was mistakenlyassumed by some on the internet forums.They also pointed out that the P-38 wingwas puttied a la the P-51 Mustang, but thisis a point of debate. As you know, we havereleased kits recently of aircraft that didhave puttied surface features at productionlevel, and there is a consensus that rivetson surfaces so treated were not visible.Over the course of the research that weconducted for these projects, we studiedseveral examples of the Mustang, amongother types, in museums as well as in pri-vate collections, and we have come to theconclusion that invisible rivets are not en-tirely consistent with the reality of the si-tuation. To a certain degree, it applies tomodern Warbirds that have their surfacestreated with modern products. In aircraftthat were not brought up to airworthiness,or were renovated taking care to preservesurface originality, rivets are visible. Thisis why we went with a fully riveted surfacefor the 72nd scale S-199. This brought aboutprotests from backers of the smooth sur-face school of thought, but I am convincedthat our approach is the best one. But, ofcourse, I won’t force that on anyone. Anybo-dy that does not agree with this viewpointcan certainly refrain from the purchase ofthe set.SWEEP 2We are activating another Sweep salesevent in November. This time, it concernsphotoetched products and will be rela-tively widespread. This event will coversome 2,000 products cost-reduced by 50%.It is planned to go into effect the secondweek of November, the precise date to beannounced on social media and on oure-shop. Those that are so signed up will beinformed by email. The sale will concernmostly older items with lower turnaround.Truth be told, most items are virtually soldout with only a handful at most remainingin stock, but once they’re gone, they’regone, so if any of these have been on yourlist of items to get, don’t delay. They willnot be going back into production. Itemsnot completely sold out will stay in stock,but that stock will not be replenished, andit will only be a matter of time before theseare gone from the catalog as well. After theNew Year, some Brassin items will receivethe same treatment, revolving aroundolder items with a lower turnaround. Therewon’t be as many of these are there will bePE items, but even so it will still be in theneighborhood of 400 products. The reasonfor all of this is a move by our retail andmail order departments to a new facility,which we purchased at the end of the su-mmer and are in the process of renovating.We expect to be able to move in during thefirst quarter of next year, with the retail de-partment slated to do so in February. Thetwo reasons for the reduction in inventoryis to reduce the amount of goods that needto be moved, and to provide a financial cu-shion in case unforeseen circumstancescrop up causing any delay in the selling ofour products. It should all take about twoweeks, and if you would like to help us inthis endeavor, please buy! Acquiring thenew facility, its reconstruction and subse-quent occupancy are the final steps we aretaking to fully recover from the fire we suf-fered in December, 2020. With your support,we can finally put that entire, dark chaptercompletely behind us, once and for all.ARTICLESThis will be the eighth installment of thereport on the air war over Ukraine by MiraBaric. He is also the author of the inte-resting article about the aircraft carrierUSS Lexington. The third and concludingpiece on the father of the strafers, PappyGunn, comes from Richard Plos. We makea return to this year’s National Champi-onships in Plastic Modelling with an ar-ticle about the winning model built by theNational Champ Jan Koutny. We also havefive Boxart Stories, describing the eventsdepicted on the covers of November’s newreleases. Three are by Jan Bobek and theremaining two by Richard Plos.And that would be it for me for now. I wishall that, as opposed to us, are going toTelford a pleasant trip and a good experien-ce, and a good read of our newsletter to all.Happy Modelling,Vladimir SulcINFO Eduard5November 2022Page 6
Photo: Miles HarrisPhoto: Eric FriedebachPaul Allen was born on January 21, 1953,in Seattle, Washington. He met Bill Gatesat Lakeside, the private high school. Bothwere interested in the computers, and bothwere college dropouts. In 1975 they launch-ed the computer company. It was Allen whocame up with its name, Micro-Soft. Laterthe hyphen was dropped. The company wasextremely successful, they penetrated themarket with MS-DOS operating systemwhich ultimately became the top product inthe market. In 1982 however Allen was dia-gnosed with Hodgkin lymphoma, a malignlymphatic system disease. Thanks to theradiotherapy and bone marrow transplan-tation he was cured but that also promptedhim to re-evaluate his life. The companywas no longer his priority and in 1983 heresigned from its leadership. However, hekept his shares which yielded him a wealthvalued at more than 20 billion dollars.After he left Microsoft, he dedicated him-self to his hobbies. Also, he invested in thespace and AI research but primarily bou-ght art and as an avid sports fan severalsports clubs. His top hobby however wasthe military hardware. His father, KennethSam Allen served in WWII. That’s why PaulAllen was fascinated by this period of his-tory since the early age. In 2004 he foundedthe Flying Heritage & Combat Armor Muse-um in Everett, Washington state. It becamehome for many aircraft and tank veteransof WWII. Many of them were operational.However, all his previous activities wereovershadowed by the search for sunkenmilitary shipwrecks at the bottom of theoceans around the globe.In 2003 Allen ordered the constructionof 127 meters long yacht named Octopus.In 2008 he had her converted to the re-search vessel standards. She was equi-pped with two helicopter landing pads andtwo submarines. One of them was remotecontrolled and submerged significantly de-eper. Allen lent the ship for several rescuemissions and research projects as well, forMany people have some kind of hobby. Supposedly our read-ers collect and build scale models of the airplanes, armor, orships. There are some who can afford to play with these subjectsin their actual size. One of those was Paul Allen, well knownco-founder of Microsoft.USSLexingtonFlying Heritage & Combat Armor Museum in Everett, Washington state.Searchingfor the lostships withPaul AllenPart oneText: Miro BaričHISTORYINFO Eduard6November 2022Page 7
Photo: State Library of Victoriaexample research of the ocean fauna andmapping of the ocean bottom for GoogleEarth. In January 2015 he set sail for thefirst large scale search in the Iron BottomSound near Guadalcanal and discovered 29sunken American and Japanese ships. InMarch 2015 he discovered the wreck of thelargest battleship in the world, JapaneseMusashi.Bell from HMS HoodAllen did not only search in the Pacific.In August 2015 he helped the British Navyto retrieve the ship bell from the wreck ofbattle cruiser HMS Hood. She lies almostthree kilometers deep on the bottom of theAtlantic Ocean. Hood was sunk on May 24,1941, in the duel with the German battleshipBismarck. The German shells penetratedthe ammunition storage and caused theexplosion that only three sailors survivedout of 1,418 crew members. It took a yearto restore the bell after its long stay at thebottom of the ocean and on May 24, 2016,exactly on the 75th anniversary of her sin-king the bell rang again. The bell was re-vealed by princess Anne during the cere-mony in Portsmouth. It rang to the honorof the fallen sailors in the presence of theirfamilies. Since then, it has been exhibitedin the National Museum of the Royal Navy,next to the bell from HMS Prince of Wales.This battleship accompanied Hood on herlast voyage and couple of months later,on December 10, 1941, she herself becamea victim of the Japanese aircraft at theMalaysian coast.The original blue paint was preserved onthe bell’s crown and inner surfaces. Origi-nally the bell was installed on the old ba-ttleship HMS Hood dated from 1891. In 1914she was sunk on purpose in the port ofPortland to block one of the approaches inthe case of an attack by submarines or tor-pedoes. Before that however the bell wasremoved and presented to Rear AdmiralHorace Hood. After his death in the battleof Jutland, his widow presented the bellto the new battle cruiser HMS Hood. The-re are two inscriptions on its bottom edge.The top one states: This bell was preservedfrom the battleship HMS Hood 1891–1914by the late Admiral Horace Hood, killed inaction at Jutland on May 31, 1916. There isanother inscription under it which states:As per Lady Hood’s wishes, in the memoryof her husband, this bell is presented to thebattle cruiser HMS Hood, a ship launchedon August 22, 1918.No charm third timeAllen’s ship was constantly busy. In Sep-tember 2015 for example she was mappingthe bottom of the Mediterranean Seaaround Malta. Several sunken ships andshot down airplanes were found. In 2016the billionaire bought a 76 meters long shipPetrel which originally served for the con-struction and maintenance of the under thesurface facilities, for example the oil dri-lling rigs. It took a year to convert her tothe research vessel. At that time, she wasthe only privately owned ship in the worldwhich could search as deep as 6,000 me-ters. She was equipped with several so-nars, one remote control submarine andone self-sustained robot submarine. Shealso featured the system of the electricmotors which compensated for the driftand maintained the vessel in the stable po-sition during the research. The first Petrel’s“catch” was an Italian destroyer ArtigliereHMS Hood in the picture dated from 1924. This British battle cruiser ispired the design of USS Lexington.Flying Heritage & Combat Armor Museum in Everett, Washington state.Photo: Eric FriedebachHISTORYINFO Eduard7November 2022Page 8
Photo:National Museum of the Royal NavyPhoto:National Museum of the Royal NavyPhoto:National Museum of the Royal Navywhich was found in the Mediterranean Seain March 2017. Then Petrel relocated to thePacific where she discovered the cruiserUSS Indianapolis and between 2017 and2018 searched the battle places around thePhilippines. On March 4th RV Petrel disco-vered the wreck of the aircraft carrier USSLexington sunken in the Battle of Coral Seaon May 8, 1942. This expedition in the springof 2018 was Allen’s last. In the beginning ofOctober 2018, he announced the bad news.The cancer came back for the third time.He had faced the recurrence in 2009 in theform of non-Hodgkin lymphoma. He hadwon the battle with it though. Now he be-lieved he could win for the third time. Whenhe announced the cancer recurrence, hesaid that he and the doctors are optimis-tic as far as the treatment is concerned.During the following two weeks however,the complications occurred, and Paul Allenpassed away on October 15, 2018, at the ageof 65. His wealth, at that time valued at 20.3billion of dollars, has been managed bya fund which carries on with his work. In2019 RV Petrel discovered the number ofwrecks at the bottom of the ocean as well.In 2020 however she was indefinitely doc-ked in Scotland due to the covid pandemic.This year Allen’s heritage managementsold the Flying Heritage & Combat ArmorMuseum to Stewart Walton, grandson ofthe Walmart franchise founder. The co-llection was preserved in its entirety andis currently still located in Everett. Itsre-opening is planned for 2023 under thenew name, Wartime History Museum.From battle cruiser to aircraft carrierLet’s return to USS Lexington. Her careeralmost took a different path. Originally, shewas not to be an aircraft carrier but a ba-ttle cruiser. Due to the frequent changesin design and delays in her constructionshe could not be finished as battle crui-ser. The ideas about the ship combining thespeed of a cruiser and the firepower of abattleship emerged in the USA pretty early.HISTORY75 years after sinking of HMS Hood princess Anne revealed herrestored bell.The sailors are carrying the HMS Hood bell to a museum in 2016.On the left a bell from HMS Prince of Wales, on the right bell fromHMS HoodPhoto: Library of CongressA drawing depicting the originally intended design of USS Lexington armed with ten 356 mm caliber guns.INFO Eduard8November 2022Page 9
A series of studies at the Naval War Co-llege discussed these types of vesselsbefore the actual design of the first battlecruiser, British HMS Invincible was launch-ed in 1907 and accepted to service in 1909.By the way, aforementioned Sir HoraceHood perished in the explosion of Invincible.The same year the first design proposalsfor the American battle cruisers were sub-mitted but the Congress did not approvethem due to the political reasons. Thingsstarted to move forward a bit in 1911 whenJapan commenced the construction of theKongo class battle cruisers. All howeverremained at a design stage. The projectof Lexington class was included into theNaval Law of 1916 requiring the significantexpansion of the US Navy. According to thisplan six ships of this class were to possess34,900 ton displacement, length of 259 me-ters and speed of 35 knots. To accomplishthis, they needed 24 boilers which due tothe long but narrow hull turned out to bea problem. The complicated arrangementof large number of boilers brought aboutthe issue of number of stacks. There wereto be seven in total, four of them next toeach other. The armament was to consistof ten 356 mm (14 inches) caliber guns. Twoper each turret on the bow and stern andfurther three guns in the next two turretslocated above 2-gun turrets closer to thehull center. This arrangement was nece-ssary since the hull in the bow and sternturret locations was too narrow to acco-mmodate the barbette of three gun turret.The main guns were to be complementedby eighteen 127 mm caliber guns.The work on Lexington class was stoppedbefore it fully took off. The reason was thatthe shipyards’ priority were anti-submari-ne vessels. Under different circumstancesthis would have been an advantage. Thanksto the other countries’ experience with thebattle cruisers the number of issues couldbe solved at the design stage instead of co-rrecting them during the actual construc-tion or even completion. The most seriousproblem of this class of ships turned out tobe the longitudinal hull strength. The longand narrow vessels were stressed not onlyunder the inclement weather but also du-ring the gunfire. Bent metal plates had tobe replaced on several British battle crui-sers and their hulls reinforced.HISTORYPhoto: Library of CongressPhoto: Naval History & Heritage CommandUSS Saratoga battle cruiser under the construction in March 1922. The view from stern to bow well illustratesthe barbettes of the main guns’ turrets.The drawing depicting the final design of USS Lexington battle cruiser from 1919 featuring eight 406 mm caliber guns.INFO Eduard9November 2022Page 10
Photo: U. S. Navy National Museum of Naval AviationPhoto: U. S. Navy National Museum of Naval AviationPhoto: U. S. Navy National Museum of Naval AviationUSS Lexington is being moved by harbor tugs, January 1928. The ship entered the service a month ago, but hermaiden voyage was still ahead of her.Gunnery practice from the 203 mm caliber guns, January 1928. From the top USS Saratoga (CV-3), USS Lexington (CV-2) and USS Langley (CV-1)in Puget Sound, 1929.Therefore, the Lexington designers spentthe most of their time on the hull’s stren-gth. After many proposals and calculations,they arrived at the ideal solution – only tochange the design again. In 1917 the Ame-ricans found out that Britain and Japanwere designing even larger battle cruisersequipped with 381 mm and 406 mm cali-ber guns. Lexington class too was to rece-ive new 406 mm caliber guns (16 inches).There were to be eight of them in total – apair in each of four turrets. The secondaryarmament was to consist of sixteen 152 mmcaliber guns. The new type of boilers allo-wed to reduce their total number to 20 andnumber of stacks to five. Another changeoccurred in 1918 after the aforementionedBritish HMS Hood was launched.At that time, it was the largest warship inthe world and left a great impression onthe American officials. The British Navyallowed a single designer to work with theAmericans. He also brought HMS Hooddrawings with him. The result was thelengthening and widening of the hull andchanges in the armor protection. Furtherboilers’ improvement led to the reductionof their total number to 16. Only two stacksremained. All those changes brought thedisplacement up to 44,200 tons and hulllength to 266 meters. The maximum speedwas reduced to 33 knots.Washington Naval ConferenceThe construction of six ships according tothe latest design was ultimately decided in1919 and the work gradually started in 1920and 1921. It did not last long. In Novem-ber 1921 the American Secretary of StateCharles Evans Hughes invited the worldnaval powers to a conference in Washing-ton D.C. The reason was to leash the armrace which had been launched again andproved to be too expensive. The USA, Bri-tain, Japan, France and Italy participatedin the conference which ended in February1922 by signing the agreement prohibitingthe building of new battleships and battlecruisers and also limited the parametersof other classes of vessels. The large ba-ttleships under construction were to bescrapped but the Americans, British andJapanese were allowed to complete themas the aircraft carriers. In the USA theaffected ships were Lexington class. Out ofsix of these vessels Constellation, Ranger,Constitution and United States were soldfor the scrap metal. Lexington and Sarato-ga were converted to the aircraft carriers.This conversion carried with it severaladvantages, but disadvantages as well.New ships retained the good armor andanti-torpedo protection. They also featuredlarger ammunition storages which natura-lly stored the aviation bombs and torpedo-es instead of gun shells. On the contrarythe aviation fuel tanks were smaller, thehangars’ capacity lower and the flight decknarrower in comparison to the aircraft ca-rriers built for their purpose from the start.At the time of the decision to convert herfrom a battle cruiser to an aircraft carrierLexington was 24 % built. While in the pastit took years to work on a similar projectthis time the new design was ready andapproved in four months. The displacementwas reduced by 4,000 ton which was pri-marily achieved by eliminating the maingun turrets with their barbettes.Originally the Lexington class, and alsothe cancelled class of South Dakota ba-ttleships were to receive Mark 2 406 mmcaliber guns with 50 caliber long barrels.Those had been designed in 1916 and 71 ofthem were manufactured. Gradually 68 ofthem were taken over by the Army who in-stalled them in the coastal batteries. Theweight of one gun was 129 tons and couldfire one ton projectile to the 41 km distance.They served in the coastal batteries from1924 until 1947 but did not fire a single shotin anger. The main 406 mm guns were re-moved however, Lexington retained the po-werful gun armament. All over the worldthere were admirals in charge of fleetswho matured on the battleships and nei-HISTORYINFO Eduard10November 2022Page 11
Photo: U. S. Navy National Museum of Naval AviationPhoto: Naval Historical Centerther the scientists nor technical specialists(except of several visionary pioneers) wereclear about the actual deployment of theaircraft carriers and above all their poten-tial for the modern warfare.There were concerns that at night and du-ring the inclement weather this type of ve-ssel will not be able to use her aircraft andtherefore will be at the mercy of the ene-my. Therefore, both Lexington and her sis-ter ship Saratoga were equipped with thebattery of eight 203 mm caliber guns. Theywere installed in four turrets on the star-board side of the flight deck. Two were lo-cated in front of the bridge and two behindthe stack. The Japanese had similar ideasand their aircraft carriers Akagi and Kagacarried ten 203 mm caliber guns each. Forthe AA defense Lexington received twelve127 mm caliber guns. These were installedon the side of the bow and stern, threeeach. A the beginning the ship did not carryany lighter weapons only during 1929–1931the machine guns were added. She recei-ved her first rapid fire guns shortly beforethe USA entered the world conflict. We willtalk about it next time.Lexington was christened by Helen Re-becca Roosevelt, wife of the Deputy of theSecretary of the Navy, Theodor DouglasRobinson. The ship was launched on Oc-tober 3, 1925 and accepted to service onDecember 12, 1927. After the completionshe was 270.7 m long and 32.3 m wide. Herdraft was 9.2 m and the standard displace-ment 36,000 tons which rose to 43,000 tonswith the full aircraft complement. The flightdeck was 264 m long. The initial plan coun-ted with 78 aircraft on board, 36 of thembombers. In the beginning Lexinton carriedCurtiss F6C-1, Boeing F3B-1 and MartinT3M-2 aircraft.Legendary sci-fi authorThe ship’s propulsion consisted of fourelectric motors. Each delivered 16,800 kWand drove one of four screw propellers.The energy for the motors was suppliedby four turbo-generators made by Gene-ral Electric utilizing steam from 16 boilersYarrow. In addition, there were six 750 kWelectric generators which powered othership’s systems (besides the propulsion).The ship’s designers calculated Lexing-ton’s maximum speed at 33.25 knots, sothey were pleasantly surprised when sheachieved 34.59 knots during the trials. TheLexington’s electric propulsion came inhandy in 1929 when the great draft shutdown the water powerplants and city of Ta-coma ended up without electricity. The USNavy sent their new aircraft carrier who-se generators were connected to the highvoltage grid and in a month supplied 4,500MWh of the electrical energy.At that time, from June 1929, the fresh gra-duate of the Naval Academy, ensign RobertA. Heinlein, a future famous sci-fi author,served on Lexington. His most famousbooks are Star Infantry, Moon is a rough lo-ver and Stranger in the strange land. Whileon Lexington his literary career was notthat successful. He did not succeed in theship’s writing contest with his short storyabout a spy affair at the Naval Academy. Hewas successful though in the line of duty. In1931 he was promoted to Lt. jg. and workedin the radio communication which at thattime was still fairly new technology.On March 31, 1931, the earthquake destro-yed Managua, the capital of Nicaragua.Lexington was sent on the humanitarianrelief mission and Heinlein was part of it.Between 1,000 and 2,500 people lost theirlives. Besides the actual shocks the greatdamage was caused by the fires that follo-wed. At that time Lexington was at anchorin Guantanamo, Cuba but a day later shewas already so close that she could launchthe aircraft carrying medical personneland equipment to Managua. Off course, Le-xington not only sailed on the humanitarianmissions. Practically every year she par-ticipated in several naval exercises. Thosefocused on developing the optimal tacticsfor the aircraft carrier. During one suchexercise in 1935 it was found out that af-ter five days of the operations at the highspeeds Lexington quickly became short offuel. Therefore, the system of refueling atsea was developed and later applied duringthe naval battles in the Pacific.The exercises decidedly proved that whenLexington was subject to battleships’ co-mmand, or even had to fight with them ina formation in a classic naval battle, shewas always declared destroyed or at leastheavily damaged. On the contrary, whenshe had more operational flexibility, shescored surprising results. For example,on Sunday February 7, 1932, Lexington andSaratoga executed a surprise attack onPearl Harbor without being noticed by thedefenders. They repeated the same trickon January 31, 1933, at a dawn. And for thethird time Lexington and Saratoga succe-ssfully attacked the Hawaiian Islands onMarch 29, 1938, also at dawn. It seems thatrather than American command the Japa-nese Navy paid much closer attention. Theyattacked Pearl Harbor on Sunday Decem-ber 7, 1941, early in the morning. The Ame-ricans were lucky that the Japanese did notcatch the aircraft carriers there. Lexingtonescorted by three heavy cruisers and fivedestroyers set sail from Pearl Harbor onDecember 5, 1941, to deliver 18 SB2U Vind-icator dive bombers to the Marines statio-ned on Midway Island. Thanks to it she avo-ided the destruction or damage and couldparticipate in the battles of WWII.To be continued.Sources:www.snr.org.ukwww.www.bbc.comwww.facebook.comwww.hmshood.org.ukwww.royalnavy.mod.ukwarfarehistorynetwork.comwww.history.navy.milwww.wings-aviation.chwww.maritime.orgweb.archive.orgMartin T4M bombers taking off the Lexington flight deck, 1931. Curtiss F6C-1 fighters and Martin T3M-2 bombers on the Lexington deck, 1928.HISTORYINFO Eduard11November 2022Page 12
Gunn’s motivation to fight was enor-mous. He wanted to join his family, sinceJanuary 2, 1942, held captive in the Ja-panese POW camp and with his abilitiesand non-orthodox approach to solvingall kinds of problems he significantlycontributed to the victory. Shortly upontheir arrival in Brisbane on December 27,1941, Gunn and other USAAF personnelwas aware how difficult their upcomingmission was. The fresh reinforcementswere not coming, and the Japanese con-tinued their successful campaign acrossthe Pacific. Perhaps the most impor-tant aviation reinforcement was twentyP-40s delivered in crates by a cargo shipwhile another batch was sailing from theUSA towards Australia. Not seeking anyapproval Pappy organized the technicalgroup composed of both the Americansand Australians who started to uncrateand assemble P-40s. Part of this groupwere 25 pilots from 17th FG who escapedfrom Philippines just in time. It turnedout that the supplies were not comple-te. Certain parts were missing but Pa-ppy was able to secure their replace-ments manufacturing them in the localworkshops and in the middle of Januaryall P-40s were assembled, test-flownand armed. General Brereton did not he-sitate to issue the proper order and soon January 16 two groups of seventeenP-40s in total took off from Brisbaneairport for a long route across the halfof Australian continent to Darwin at thenorthern coast.Pappy of course could not be missing theaction; however, but he flew his confis-cated Beechcraft. There was a good re-ason for it. Like all other pilots he belie-HISTORYPAPPY OF THE “STRAFERS” IIMACHINE GUNS FOR MITCHELLSSign of the 3rd Attack Group at the entrance to the Charters Towers airbase.Photo: worldwarphotosIn the first part we left Pappy Gunn at the moment he said good-bye to his family in Manila, Philippines and together with “Buzz”Slingsby at the controls of the second Beechcraft departed forAustralia where they flew the USAAF personnel. Despite the beliefin the rapid reinforcement of the archipelago’s defense and con-sequently the reunion with his family in the course of two-threeweeks the Japanese captured Manila nine days after Pappy’s de-parture and his wife with children became POWs. At that time Gunnbecame the member of the military personnel again but this timeas an Army pilot, not a Navy one as between the wars.Text: Richard PlosINFO Eduard12November 2022Page 13
HISTORYved that their destination are Philippinesand since most of the pilots lacked theexperience navigating on such a longdistances Pappy was supposed to betheir “Flock Leader”. Three P-40s did notcomplete the difficult route and severallandings enroute. Over several days Pa-ppy himself covered some 15,000 kilo-meters by flying back and forth. Upon hisreturn from Surabaya on Java he triedto avoid Japanese-held Davao but at thedusk he encountered a Japanese patrolfloatplane which shot down his unarmedBeechcraft. He spent the night in jung-le and on the following day he reachedthe airport in Zamboanga. He was luckybecause shortly another Beechcraft lan-ded whose pilot was tasked to removea tail wheel and propeller blades froma destroyed B-17. Those were the partsnecessary to make at least one B-17 atDel Monte airworthy. The pilot took Pa-ppy on board, and he repaid the favor byhelping to repair B-17 which with twentypilots and mechanics on board headed toDarwin – with Pappy in the left seat ofcourse.Like a homing pidgeonAccording to many sources, Pappy hadno problem to fly anything airworthy.Even more legendary were his naviga-tional skills. He was supposedly some-thing like a human “homing pidgeon”.It did not matter what the destinationwas or how long the flight took. Lea-ding the formation Pappy always reliablybrought it to the destination without anynavigational preparations. And he evencould not do it, he did not use maps!“I recall one particular flight on whichI accompanied him, “recalled after someyears Major Tom Gerrity. “This flightwas from Brisbane, Australia, north toTownsville. We were flying along at lowaltitude. Pappy seldom flew above fivehundred feet. As we passed over theground that was entirely unfamiliar tome, I asked Pappy where we were andhow he knew the direction to Townsville.At that point Pappy reached over to hisnavigation kit. As I looked into it when heopened it, I saw that it had no maps. Ho-wever, it had a large bottle labeled ‘Pan-ther Juice.’ Pappy pulled out the bottle,pretended to drink from it, then lifting hisnose in the direction of flight and takinga long sniff, he said, ‘Directly ahead of usis where we want to go.’ Of course, bythis time I was somewhat doubtful of Pa-ppy’s navigation technique. I asked howthis established the direction we shouldtake. Pappy said, ‘Well, some weeks agoI flew over this area and there was anold dead cow just ahead. I am followingthe smell.’ Despite such extraordinarynavigation methods Pappy always got tohis destination without any error. I neverdid see him refer to a map, yet on manyflights with him I never found any errorin his navigation.”Pappy’s activities during approximatelyone month after his return from Java arenot reliably documented but it is said,and it would look like him, that he flewBoomerang with Australians defendingRabaul. Boomerangs were no matchfor Zeros and most of them were shotdown including the one flown by Pappy.Shortly before that however he suppo-sedly had managed to shoot down a Zero.He saved himself on a parachute andlanded in the jungle approximately tenmiles from Rabaul. For two weeks hewas walking through wilderness until hereached the little town of Basmata. Fromthere he was evacuated by a flying boatto Australia together with other Aus-tralian pilots. On his walk through thejungle, he only ate berries and worms,lost 25 pounds (11.4 kilos) but survived.Later he shared his survival experiencewith other pilots. And he also tested thegreen pilots’ guts when in the mess hallhe loudly described which worms andbugs are good to eat. The veterans re-called how this information helped someof them survive.Bombing sights’ “relocation”In the beginning of April, a couple of firstB-25s arrived in Australia to equip the3rd Attack Group. It was the first twin--engine bomber capable of flying fromDarwin to Del Monte on Java which wasstill in the American hands. It was de-cided to form the group of ten B-25sand three B-17s under the commandof Brigadier General Ralph Royce andPappy sensed the chance to get back toPhilippines and learn something abouthis family’s fate. He offered himself fora position of a pilot and group’s tech-nical officer. The 3rd AG commander,Col. “Big Jim” Davies was glad to acceptCpt. Gunn. A guy of his capabilitiescame handy. There was a little problemthough. Those B-25s were missing thebomb aiming sights. Pappy recalled thatrecently he spotted some B-25s whenhe flew via Canberra. It was twelveaircraft received for a Dutch squadron andPappy decided to do some closer re-search on this. He got jumped to one DC-2and took off for Canberra. No one knowswhat exactly happened there but nextday Pappy returned with twelve Sperrybomb sights. Some time in May that yearGeneral Kenney, 5th AF Army comman-der learned about the Dutch complainingabout missing bombing sights from theirB-25s. But at that time there were plen-ty of them in stocks in Australia so thewhole issue was settled.After the gunsights relocation opera-tion, the raid of the group of ten B-25sand three B-17s took place on April 12with the target being the ships in Dava-o’s port. After the raid the group landedat Del Monte, re-armed and re-fueledand flew off for another raid, this time“As we passed over the ground that was entirely unfamiliar to me,I asked Pappy where we were and how he knew the direction toTownsville. At that point Pappy reached over to his navigation kit.As I looked into it when he opened it, I saw that it had no maps. Ho-wever, it had a large bottle labeled Panther Juice.” (Maj. Tom Gerrity)Douglas A-20G. The final modification of its attack version. Photo: worldwarphotosINFO Eduard13November 2022Page 14
on Cebu. At Del Monte they boardedas many pilots and mechanics as possi-ble subsequently and flew to Darwin.Through impudence to promotionOn July 18, 1942, Pappy was, quite unex-pectedly, promoted to Major. Generally,it was anticipated that due to his an-tiques and blunt language he will be ra-ther court marshalled than promoted butit did happen. Pappy did not keep for him-self the comments about “dummies fromWashington to Australia who sent A-20without bombing sights and bomb rac-ks”. The staff inspectors of course heardthis and reported his comments to thehigher ups. Another of his “sins” were theunauthorized modifications of A-20s intothe attack aircraft by installing the ma-chine guns (not exactly sourced accor-ding to the military procedures) in theirnoses. He personally tested this new mo-dification when he took off for a lone mi-ssion. The target was a Japanese airfieldon the northern coast of New Guinea. Hedid a good job, upon his departure seve-ral Japanese aircraft were engulfed insmoke and judging by the explosion it ismore than probable that he hit an ammu-nition dump. After this success, and with“Big Jim’s” silent blessing, together withhis mechanics he started modifying otherA-20s from 90th BG. Besides the machi-ne gun conversion, he also designed newbomb racks since the original ones werestill on board of some ships somewherein the middle of the Ocean and Pappy didnot like them anyway. He designed thenew ones, better ones, in his own words.And he was proven right in the future.He did not ask anyone for permission,he simply acted. The whole 3rd AG stoodbehind him since all knew that whateverPappy designed or made would work.Two men and a bomberThe famous Pappy’s meeting with Gene-ral Kenney took place on August 5, 1942,in Charters Towers, home of 3rd AttackGroup where Pappy served since theaforementioned raid even though he wasnot officially assigned to the unit. Gene-ral was on his first inspection tour afterassuming command of the 5th Air For-ce. At that time the group was not in thebest shape because 8th BS had no air-planes at all, 13th BS had just couple ofDouglas A-24 dive bombers, 89th BS hadtwelve B-25s in the inventory but onlyfive were airworthy and finally 90th BSoperated sixteen A-20s. Pappy was notpresent among the officers General metin the mess hall that day but his namewas mentioned soon enough so the 5thAF commander learned about a guywho knew completely everything aboutthe airplanes and their improvementsincluding machine guns installation.At the same time, he was an outstandingpilot and storyteller. However, some ofhis stories were to be taken with a grainof salt. This got General interested and onthe following day he went to the hangarwhere Pappy, with several mechanicsand his faithful “right hand”, Sgt. Evans,was tuning up an A-20. The General couldsee a group of shirtless sweaty men co-mmanded by a tall, slim, blue eyed manin T-shirt wearing a mechanic’s cap withpinned Major’s insignia.“General, this is Major Gunn, our Engi-neering Officer who invents new waysto make it hard for the Japs every day,”introduced “Big Jim” Pappy to GeneralMcKenney who wanted to know immedia-tely what Pappy and his gang was up to.“Pappy wiped the sweat off his forehead,tilted his cap back, looked me over witha pair of steely blue eyes, grinned, andbegan to talk. He evidently had decidedthat I was intelligent enough to listen tohim. I instinctively knew that I was beingpaid a compliment that had nothing to dowith the two stars on the collar of myshirt,” recalls General McKenney in hisbook. He was stunned how well thoughtout Pappy’s modifications were and histactics according to which it was moreefficient to destroy the Japanese aircrafton the ground rather than in the air. It wasclear to the 5th AF commander that theman in front of him was the one he ne-eded. He had some ideas of his own andsought someone like Pappy who wouldmaterialize them. “I liked Pappy at firstsight, and somehow I knew that he likedme and would break his neck carrying outmy instructions.”When McKenney and Davies were retur-ning to the headquarters General advisedHISTORYPappy in the cockpit of B-25C “Not in Stock” (41-12483). The inscription under the canopy states the roles ofSgt. Evans, co-pilot, occasionally bombardier and gunner, chief mechanic… This aircraft was not assigned tothe combat duties. Pappy used it to deliver supplies to New Guinea. The bombing missions’ symbols were leftfrom the prior combat activity when the aircraft was named Mr.X first and then Longue Lizzard. This aircrafttook part in the April 11, 1942, raid.Pappy (on the right) with the future Brigadier General F. H. Smith (in the center) and an unidentified memberof 3rd AG.Photo: author´s archivePhoto: author´s archiveINFO Eduard14November 2022Page 15
3rd AG commander of his plan. Pappy willremain with the group for another twoweeks to finish his job and then he willreport to the Army Headquarters whe-re he will be assigned as an Officer forthe Special Projects. And he will takewith him his “Friday Man”, Sgt. Evans.Col. Davies opposed but to no avail. Andwhen on August 21 the General returnedto the Army Headquarters Pappy alrea-dy waited in his office. And he receivedhis first assignment right away. At thattime the USAAF was suffering from thelack of the fighters. There were approxi-mately 170 non-airworthy ones gatheredat Eagle Farm airbase, mostly P-40ssuffering from various defects and da-mages. Pappy’s task was to make air-worthy as many as possible in the shor-test time possible. Any workshops inAustralia able to manufacture the nece-ssary spare parts were at his disposal,as well as the required number of me-chanics. Pappy, shadowed by Evans, leftthe office smiling and in relatively shorttime reported that a hundred of fightersare ready for the combat deployment.Against the shipsThe attacks against the surface vesselsshowed that the conventional bombingof these slim and maneuverable tar-gets was difficult. Dropping the bombsfrom the high altitudes was inefficient,lower altitudes were too dangerous forthe bombers since the Japanese conti-nuously boosted their ships’ AA defense.The new tactics was developed, so-calledskip-bombing i.e., bombs released ata very low altitude above the sea surfaceutilizing the effect of the bombs bouncingoff the surface and hitting the ship’s hull.Initially B-17s were considered for thesemissions but they lacked the forward-fi-ring force to silence the enemy’s AA fire.General McKenney decided to try B-25 forthis mission and of course commissionedPappy to execute the task. The goal was tofit into the nose, a bombardier’s position,as many 12.7 mm machine guns as possi-ble with minimum 500 rounds per barrel.The General also requested, based on theGunn’s A-20 modification, to install theadditional machine guns on the fuselagesides or even on its bottom. At that timePappy had one whole hanger in Brisbaneat his disposal. It was in fact the proto-type workshop. The installation of fourmachine guns into the B-25’s glass nosewas created here, and the plan was to adda pair of guns on each side of the fuselageand another three on the bottom of it. Pro-blem with feeding the ammunition beltsat the end prevented the bottom wea-pons installation and it looked that eightforward firing machine guns was a ma-ximum number feasible, the fact neitherKenney nor Gunn considered sufficient.But in the meantime, they had otherproblems to solve. In the beginning theaircraft was nose heavy which Gunnresolved by moving the waist guns tothe rear and by installing the auxiliarytwo hundred gallons fuel tank into thefuselage behind the wing’s trailing edge.This eliminated the installation of theballast in the rear fuselage and in addi-tion increased the aircraft range. Ano-ther problem was popping up the rivetsfrom the skin due to the side weapons’recoil which Pappy ultimately resolvedby installing the rubber inserts betweenthe aircraft skin and the weapons. Suchmodified aircraft received, as an answerto all critics, the inscription “Pappy’sFolly” under the cockpit supplementedby a cartoon of a cowboy with two dra-wn revolvers yelling” “And that’s plainEnglish!”In the middle of December, Pappy, withEvans in the co-pilot’s seat, flew his new“toy” to his good old 3rd AG to show themodification to his old comrades andlet them try it as well. On the followingday after his arrival in Charters Towers“Pappy’s Folly” and five more B-25stook off so as the pilots could see theeffect of Pappy’s simulated attack.The concentrated fire of eight weaponsleft an impression on them and it wasdecided: 3rd AG Mitchells will becomeskip-bombers! The first victim of suchmodified B-25 though became a cowwhich walked into the target area at themoment Pappy squeezed the triggersduring the simulated attack …To be continuedHISTORYA dramatic picture of an A-20 at the moment of explosion of the “skipping bombs” on the ships’ hull.The schematic of the machine gunsinstallation in the B-25 nose andon the fuselage sides.Pic.: author´s archiveThe General could see a group of shirtless sweaty men commandedby a tall, slim, blue eyed man in T-shirt wearing a mechanic’s cap withpinned Major’s insignia.Photo: worldwarphotosINFO Eduard15November 2022Page 16
Another marking feature of the S-199 werethe alpha-numerical fuselage codes iden-tifying the aviation units and institutions –combat units, flying schools, training cen-ters or research centers. The rules andregulations were established, same as forthe national insignias, by the aforementi-oned MNO order: MNO-VL c. j. 157 Taj. let.1946 (Ministry of Defense regulation No.157; Secret; Aviation; 1946) dated Janua-ry 1946, namely its descriptive attachmentNo. 2, graphic attachments Nos. 3 and4 and especially the table of nationalinsignia design (for further study refer to theJan Máče Publisher “Coloration and mar-kings of the Czechoslovak Air Force during1945–1957” publication released in 2004).Let us quote the fourth paragraph fromthe Attachment No. 2 of the Applicati-on and the Maintenance of the Markings:“All code letters are painted in vertical fontand are of the same measurements. Tomake them clearly visible they are paintedblack on the light background and white onthe dark background (in compliance withthe Czechoslovak Aviation Norms)”. Duringthe initial period this identification markingwas placed on both sides of the fuselageand the wing undersides either comple-te on each half of the wing or split so asletters were on one wing half and numeralon the other one. This marking system isdocumented for example on the first res-tored C-10.1 aircraft “black V-9” or S-99.6“black EV-11” (later converted to S-199.183)even though in the second case the pre-sence of the code on the lower wing isdisputable due to the poor quality of thesource photograph. From April 1951 themarkings were applied to the fuselage onlyin accordance with the new order MNO-VLč. j. 0010941/51.In reality not all was done according to therules so in the number of pictures of S-199we can identify the aircraft painted in lightgreen-gray color and the markings pain-ted in white instead of black. The aircraftpainted in darker green overall featured theunit markings consistently painted whitethough. The letters (a letter in case of LVAand VLU/LVU) were separated by a hyphenand the codes were brush-painted into thepreviously outlined shapes, therefore theshapes and sizes of the letters and nume-Text: Michal OvčáčíkPhoto collections of the author, Jaroslava Bartáček,Bohumír Kudlička and Libor Režňák; Letecká badatelna(Aviation Researchers) via Pavel KrejčíWhite codes, black codes…3. partColorationof the CzechoslovakAir Force S-199HISTORYIn the 2nd part dedicated to the Czechoslovak S-199 colorationwe focused on two color shades applied on these aircraft andtwo orders specifying the appearance and positioning of thenational insignias.Avia manufactured S-199.466 painted in the medium green-gray with black code letters UC-80 from the 4th Aviation Training Squadron based at Prostějov-Štichovice. On May 17,1951, the Flying School air cadet Jaroslav Sejrek botched this landing. The arrow pointed to the fuselage step was painted black, sprayed through the stencil.INFO Eduard16November 2022Page 17
rals were not identical, and their appearan-ce slightly differed among the aviation units.From the beginning of 1950s the more stan-dardized shapes appeared sprayed throughthe stencils with typical dividing “bridges”in the letter and number bodies (these li-nes could be however painted over, and thecodes had more streamlined appearance).The serial numbers applied to S-199 werepainted on the vertical tail surface only(on both sides always between the leadingedge and the national insignia), sprayedthrough the stencil in black color and for-mat such as S199-180. Based on the seriallength it could be positioned higher aboveor lower below the stabilizer upper surface.To distinguish the aircraft among the va-rious divisions the order MNO-VL c. j. 157Taj. let. 1946 established the propeller spi-nners color coding (see further) which wasbasically complied with until 1951 whendue to the arrival of the jet aircraft in theCzechoslovak Air Force, it lost its purpose.Nevertheless, the S-199s which continuedto fly retained in many cases the color oftheir spinners even if they were transfe-rred to another unit. The colors applied onthe S-199 spinners were as follows: 2ndAir Division blue, 3rd AD white and 4th ADblack. Some aircraft assigned to the AirMilitary Academy sported white-blue spi-nners (with vertical color division in frontof the propeller blades), other aircraft, notonly from the Academy had their spinnerslater overpainted with the camouflage coloror RLM 02 primer.At this point we conclude our small excur-sion into the Czechoslovak S-199 “colormysteries” dedicated not only to modelers.This topic doesn’t seem to be finished andclosed though since the further researchcan bring interesting new information to thelight. In that case we believe there will bea chance to get back to the topic here, onthe INFO Eduard pages.HISTORYThe code letters JV initially identified the 2nd flight of the 1st Aviation Squadron(4th Air Division) based at Zvolen airfield, also known as “Three Oaks”. The blackfuselage marking, hand painted into previously outlined lettering, is captured in thephotograph. Letter V is taller than letter J. Pilot in the picture is Lt. František Fořt.A great example of the fuselage markings painted precisely according to the Attachment No. 2 to theApplication and Maintenance of the Marking, order of MNO-VL c. j. 157 Taj. Let. 1946: UF-55 was paintedwhite on the dark base. The aircraft in the photograph, S-199 serial number 543, belonged to the 4th AirTraining Squadron and was struck off charge after the crash landing at Prostějov airfield on May 26, 1953.The picture of the former reconnaissance S-199.310, UL-51, from the 5th Aviation Training Squadron. On August 26, 1952, Corporal Josef Mucha was unable to take off with it fromZvolen airfield due to the collapsed landing gear. The aircraft carried yellow identification stripes on the rear fuselage and upper wing surfaces. The black markings on the fuselagewere sprayed through a stencil and the thin division lines in both the letters and numbers were overpainted.INFO Eduard17November 2022Page 18
HISTORYThe dark green camouflaged S-199.185 with white code IF-01, originally belonging to 1st Squadron of 51. lp (51st Air Regiment) in Pilsen. There are clear gaps left by “bridges”of the template in the lines of individual letters and numbers.An emergency landing of Avia S-199.47 from the 2nd flight of the 18th Air Squadron in Plzeň which took place in Dobřany shooting range area on April 23, 1952. Rather weatheredlook of the BS-35 fuselage code is in contrast with glaring white of the national insignia. The code was sprayed through a stencil. The aircraft was painted gray green overall.INFO Eduard18November 2022Page 19
An example of the marking of the S-199.245 “black A-784” from the Air Military Academy inventory, damaged upon landing on September 20, 1949, by student pilot Štefan Bolcha.Later the same marking A-784 was carried by the aircraft serial numbers 134 and 47.Rather poor quality but interesting photograph capturesthe aircraft of the staff flight of the 3rd Air Division mar-ked IR-5 with number shaped in an unusual manner.This S-199 could not be identified further but is paintedlight green-gray overall and features the older typeof “Erla Haube” canopy opening to the side.The photograph of the tail section of the brand new S-199serial number 167 is dated October 1948. The black serialnumber was applied using the stencil in the “S199-167”format. Other stencils are visible: ZDE ZVEDATI (LIFTHERE, on the fuselage), ZDE NETLAČIT (DON’T PUSHHERE, on the rudder trim) and 1.5 atm (on the tail wheelfork), also painted black. Two trim surfaces on the rudderwere painted red.HISTORYINFO Eduard19November 2022Page 20
The long awaited Ukrainian countero-ffensive commenced on August 29 in theKherson area. It was launched simulta-neously in the north, center and south ofthe area. All bridges across Dnieper wererepeatedly hit by HIMARS rocket launch-ers and therefore impaired the Russiansupplies to the troops on the river’s rightbank. The reinforcements and ammunitionhad to be transported across the pontoonbridges and also in Mi-8 helicopters. Thetransport helicopters’ formations wereon these missions escorted by Ka-52 andMi-28 combat helicopters. Initially theUkrainian advance was slow. They learnedtheir lesson on the Russian tactics and didnot want to suffer significant losses for theprice of a little territory gain. In addition,the Ukrainians strictly limited the accessto the information about the whole area.The Russian propaganda took advantageof it. Based on the photographs of seve-ral Ukrainian tanks knocked down duringthe attacks on the Russian fortified posi-tion the Russians claimed the Ukrainianoffensive was a debacle where the wholeUkrainian units were annihilated. On Sep-tember 4 however these “annihilated units”liberated the village of Vysokopylya in thenorth of Kherson area. The Russian hadtransformed it into the heavily fortifiedpoint. Previously it took the Russian tro-ops months and weeks to capture similarUkrainian positions. The Ukrainians wereable to achieve this in couple of days and ina similar manner methodically advance inother places. Since we mentioned HIMARSrocket launchers, they were used, at leastduring the first days of the counterattack,to hit the first line targets. This happenedfor the first time. Until then the Ukrainiansused them exclusively to destroy the veryimport targets located deep in the enemyterritory.Counterattack in two directionsWhile everybody was watching the Khersonarea the Ukrainians unexpectedly hit onthe other side of the frontline, in Kharkovarea. While in the first sector the Russianshad meticulously prepared several linesof defense in the other on the consistentline of defense practically did not exist. TheRussian troops were concentrated in thefortified cities and villages with no man’sland between them. But more importantly,there was open space behind them and nosecond line of defense. And the Ukrainiansprecisely hit this weak point. On September6 they advanced to Balakliya, an importanttransportation center. They did not wastetime by re-capturing the city though, theyrushed further towards Kupyansk. TheRussian troops had to flee Balakliya other-HISTORYThis article covers the period from September 1 to October 1.Since the beginning of war, the most important events took pla-ce during this month. The whole Kharkov area was liberated,and the Ukrainian troops achieved important successes in theKherson area. The aviation activities were closely tied tothe ground fighting so let’s look at that one first.Ukrainian soldiers liberated Kupyansk during a surprise offensive in the Kharkiv region.The beginning of the Ukrainian offensive in Kherson Oblast in late August and early September. In the background areYPR-765 transports, which are the Dutch version of the US M113 machines.Ukrainian soldiers raise the flag in Vysokopylya,Kherson Oblast.Text: Miro BaričPhoto: Ukrainian Armed Forcesand public sourcesAir warover UkraineUkrainianblitzkriegINFO Eduard20November 2022Page 21
HISTORYwise they would have been surrounded.This was repeated at several other placesand on September 10 the Ukrainians rea-ched Kupyansk and Izyum. By September12 the whole Kharkov area was liberatedwhen the Ukrainian troops reached theRussian border in the north. On the libe-rated territory they captured hundreds ofpieces of the military equipment left behindin panic by the fleeing occupiers. The cap-tured equipment included the undamaged,most modern Russian T-90M tank whichis supposedly being studied somewherein the West at this time.There has been a lot of speculation if theUkrainians just took advantage of the weakRussian defense lines in the Kharkov area,or they had planned the attack from thebeginning and the Kherson counterattackwas only a bait which the Russians took.As usual the truth is somewhere in be-tween. The Ukrainians supposedly wantedto attack in two places from the beginningand the Kherson direction was not onlya bait and both attacks were planned asthe full scale operations. Even before thesecond operation was launched the infor-mation from “secret services community”leaked into the Western media according towhich the Ukrainians had intended to attackin two directions but the American allies,who were consulted, advised to focus onKherson. It is clear now that leaking thisinformation was to confuse the Russiansand divert their vigilance to the other front--line sectors. And it seems to have workedout. The Russians only managed to reactin their typical fashion – by shelling thecivilian targets far behind the front-line.After the Kharkov area liberation on Sun-day September 11 there were attacks on thepower stations and transformer system.On September 14 the attack on Karachunivdam at the city of Krivyy Rih followed.It was hit by eight rockets launched fromthe bombers. It’s damage caused floodsin the surrounding area. 112 houses wereflooded. Article 56 of the SupplementaryProtocol for the International HumanitarianLaw from 1977 forbids the military attackson the facilities that release the destructiveforces. Specifically, the dams, levees andnuclear power stations are listed.After a short operational break necessa-ry to consolidate the liberated territory,re-supply and give troops some rest, onFriday September 23 the Ukrainian troopson the north-eastern front continued toadvance. The target was city of Lyman. TheUkrainians repeated the successful scena-rio from the beginning of September. Theydid not waste time re-capturig the stronglyfortified city but by-passed it on both sidesthreatening to surround it. This time theRussian troops did not retreat immediate-ly. They planned to ambush the UkrainiansSymbols of combat actions on a HIMARS missile launcher of the Ukrainian Armed Forces.While fleeing the battlefield, the Russian soldiers also left behind an undamaged state-of-the-art T-90M tank.INFO Eduard21November 2022Page 22
a bit further north. For several days theyattacked from different direction on thevillages east of city of Kupyansk where theUkrainians established a little bridgeheadbehind Oskil river. The Russians deployedthe elite units equipped with T-90 tanks. Allthese attacks were repelled though, thanksto the minefields, artillery, mobile missi-les, and aviation. The Russians lost tensof tanks and three to four tactical battaliongroups. They did not relieve the pressureon Lyman and the city surrendered in thebeginning of October. The Ukrainians rea-ched the road connecting another two im-portant cities, Svatove and Krmnina. In thebeginning of October there was anothersuccessful breach in the Kherson area.Mobilization and annexationThere was a little “earthquake” in the di-plomatic and political quarters. The su-ccessful Ukrainian advance forced the Ru-ssian president Putin to declare a partialmobilization on September 21. On March8 in the speech to the Russian women hestated it will never happen. The mobiliza-tion affected 300 thousand reservists withthe military experience and ideally posse-ssing much needed specializations. Theywere to be dispatched to the front afterreceiving the resumption military training.But as a Russian saying goes, they wantedthe best, but it ended as always. A largenumber of men fled Russia since the mi-litary commissars were drafting practica-lly everybody who they could get hold of,regardless of the experience. And over thetime more and more cases were reportedwhen they sent drafted men to the frontimmediately and without any training.Consequently, Putin declared the referen-dums about the annexation to Russia offour occupied Ukrainian areas – Donetsk,Luhansk, Zaporozhiye and Kherson. It didnot matter that none of these are contro-lled by Russians and the fighting is stillgoing on in all of them. These mock refe-rendums were completed on September27 with the outcome predictable in advan-ce. Neither Ukraine nor the rest of theworld honored them. At the UN GeneralAssembly 143 countries voted for the reso-lution condemning the illegal annexation.Only five countries were against – Russia,Belorus, Nicaragua, North Korea andSyria. Despite this fact the Russians claimthe occupied territories belong to them andthreaten with nuclear weapons deploy-ment to defend them.The ongoing war in Ukraine is still conven-tional one and we all hope it will not esca-late based on the aforementioned threats- on the contrary, that it will end as soon aspossible. One of the things that significantlycontributed to the rapid Ukrainian advance,and which deserves more attention arethe HARM missiles. We spoke about theirinitial deployment by the Ukrainians in theprevious article. The information availablewas rather sketchy though and this has notchanged since. It is clear though that besi-des Mig-29 fighters they are being used bySu-27. Probably it is only a matter of insta-lling the modified attachment points. HARMmissiles play the irreplaceable role in blin-ding the Russian AA defense. According tothe unconfirmed Ukrainian information ina day they managed to destroy 10 Russianradars. At the crucial moments of launch-ing the Ukrainian counterattacks thisenabled more flexible deployment of theHISTORYA Ukrainian Su-27 with an AGM-88 HARM missile underhung.A series of shots of the Ukrainian MiG-29UB two-seater. Although not visible in these photos, it is a “white 91” machine. Note the Spirit of Kiev emblem on the nose.A Ukrainian Su-25 in low flight over a highway.INFO Eduard22November 2022Page 23
Ukrainian AF to support the ground attacks.The Russian AF also had to engage in thesupport of the ground attacks. In the pre-ceding months it had always attacked fromthe distance – either by the guided missileslaunched from their own territory far be-hind the frontline or unguided rockets onthe ballistic trajectory couple of kilometersaway from the frontline. During this peri-od of time however the Russian pilots hadto execute repeated direct attacks. It wasrequired in an effort to stop or at least slowdown the Ukrainian blitzkrieg and chaoticsituation on the ground battlefield. Duringthese direct attacks they were of courseexposed to the mobile AA missiles used bythe Ukrainian soldiers which led to the ste-ep increase in the losses.Russian lossesOn September 7 a Su-25SM was shot downin the Kharkov area. At least four porta-ble missiles were launched at it as it canbe seen in the video footage. It shows inwhat environment the Russian pilots haveto operate while directly attacking theground targets.The aircraft wreck was found in four days,on September 11, near the village of Volo-chiv Yar. It carried “blue 04” call sign andregistration number RF-95134. Pilot’s fateremains unknown. Around the same timeSu-34 with “red 20” call sign and registra-tion number RF-95004 was shot down nearIzyum. It’s burnt out wreck was discoveredby the Ukrainian soldiers on September9 during their advance.This type, supposedly a pride of theRussian AF, has not been very successfulin the Ukrainian war. At least 18 Su-34 areconfirmed destroyed. The heavier losseswere suffered only by Su-25 (namely 23)which however more frequently operatein the dangerous vicinity of the frontline.One Su-34 was to be destroyed on Sep-tember 12, but it is not fully confirmed. Theincident was captured on video shot fromthe distance showing the wreck lying ona Crimean field surrounded by the firefigh-ting vehicles and rescue team members.According to some source it could havebeen Su-25.Su-34’s black day was Saturday Septem-ber 24 when two of this aircraft type wereconfirmed destroyed. In fact, the Ukrainiansclaimed more kills on that day, including ahelicopter. Two kills however are recordedon video. The first Sukhoi plunged to theground near Hlushchenkov in the Kharkovarea after the hits by Stinger mobile missi-les set one of its engines on fire. The otherSu-34 crashed on that day at Petropavlivkanear Kupyansk. The crew ejected to safety.During this reporting period the Ukrainiansalso claimed several helicopters destro-yed. The hits by mobile missiles on twoKa-52 are confirmed and both helicopterscrashed on October 1 in the Zaporozhyearea. Their crash was captured on video.Kamov Ka-52 is another aircraft type thathas not been successful in the Ukrainianwar. At least 22 of them were destroyed.Accidents and gift for intelligenceIn addition to the combat losses the inten-se deployment and consequent pilots’ andequipment fatigue result in accidents. Twoof them on the Russian side were recordedduring the reporting period. On September19 two S-25s were taking off from Millero-vo airbase one after the other in quick or-der. Under the wings they carried two droptanks and two B-13L rocket launchers forfive S-13 122 mm caliber rockets, a typicalload for the type of combat missions Ru-ssian AF conducts in Ukraine. Immediatelyafter getting airborne both aircraft startedto turn left. The rear aircraft banked toomuch, slipped to the ground and explo-ded. The pilot did not survive. Accordingto the Russian media it was 27-years oldDaniil Dolbik from city of Donetsk in theRussian Rostov area (not to be confusedwith well-known Donetsk in Ukraine!). TheHISTORYA Russian Su-25 “Blue 04” with registration numberRF-95134 was shot down in Kharkiv Oblast in earlySeptember.The downed Su-30SM with registration number RF-81773 and call sign ”Red 62” left a gift to the Ukrainiansin the form of an RTU 518-PSM electronic warfare container.INFO Eduard23November 2022Page 24
cause of the accident remains unknown.It could have been pilot’s error, suddenmechanical failure or combination of both.Another accident took place on October 1 atBelbek airbase in Sevastopol, Crimea. Mig-31 was unable to gain altitude after the takeoff. A pilot aborted the take off however didnot manage to stop the aircraft before theend of runway, slipped of it and crashed onthe cliffs above the seacoast. The explosionof the ordnance carried under the wing fo-llowed and the Russian pilot perished.Besides the aircraft and helicopters whichdestruction was confirmed during the re-porting period, the wrecks of the aircraftshot down in the preceding months werefound. These have not been recorded in theloss reports yet. The most interesting dis-covery of this kind was Su-30SM carryingthe registration number RF-81773 and “red62” call sign. The Ukrainian soldiers foundits wreck near Izyum but the plane couldhave been shot down several months ear-lier. All that time the Russians have notattempted to recover or destroy it, which issurprising as there was a newest systemfor the electronic warfare on board calledChibiny-U. It consists of the RTU 518-PSMcontainer with the active jamming systemlocated on the right wingtip, RTU 518-LSM1container with the passive detection of thesignals hostile to the aircraft located on theleft wingtip and the system KS REP in thefuselage. The container RTU 518-PSM wasfound at the Su-30SM crash site almost in-tact which will be a gold mine for the Wes-tern intelligence.Ukrainian lossesDuring the reported period the speaker ofthe Russian Ministry of Defense, Igor Ko-nashenkov announced that from the begi-nning of the “special military operation” 300Ukrainian aircraft have been shot down.This is an oddity of the Russian propagan-da since anyone even remotely interes-ted in the matter knows that Ukraine hasnever had so many aircraft altogether. Onthe contrary, from September 1 to October1 only four Ukrainian aircraft have beenshot down. On September 7, on his 95thcombat mission, Vadym Blagovisny, Su-25pilot from 299th Tactical Air Brigade waskilled. He perished a week before his 27thbirthday. On September 19, near Yehoriv-ka in the Donetsk area another Ukraini-an Su-25 was shot down. Pilot’s fate re-mains unknown. The Russian media laterstated that he had been hit by 9K33 Osa(SA-8 Gecko), a self-propelled AA sys-tem. On September 29 in the Kherson areaa Ukrainian Su-24 was destroyed. One ofits engines was hit by an air-ground mi-ssile and set of fire. The crew ejected andsurvived. Only couple of days earlier theUkrainians published a video showinga pair of Su-24 dropping the para-bombson the Russian positions. The UkrainianSu-24s should have been all completelydestroyed long time ago, according to theRussian claim. Apparently, they continueto fly and fight. Thursday September 29however was a black day for the Ukraini-an AF. Besides the aforementioned Su-24,a Mig-29 was lost in combat. Its pilot,26-years old Maj. Taras Redkin was killed.Weapons from IranAnother crucial event was noted duringthe reporting period – Russian deploymentof the Iranian drones. It remains unknownhow many of them Iran delivered, tens ofMohajer-6 and Shahed-129 and severalhundreds of Shahed-136 kamikaze dronesare mentioned. It was reported that as faras Shahed-136 is concerned Russia is inte-rested in several thousands of them. Iranhas denied any drones’ deliveries. It is lo-gical, it would be a breach of the sanctionswhich prohibit the export of select typesof weapons. There is a proof, however.On September 23, near Odessa a Moha-jer-6 drone was fished out of the Black Sea.It had been shot down there previously. Theminiature guided missile was still hangingunder its wing. Its avionics must have beenexamined in detail in order to develop thecountermeasures. A number of countrieswill certainly be interested in them. At leasttwo Shahed-129 drones were shot down bythe Ukrainian forces. These are fairly largedrones. Mohajer-6 wingspan is 10 meters,Shahed-129 16 meters. They are propelledby a noisy reciprocal engine, fly slowly (200kph and 150 kph) and are easily detected byradar. Their advantage is a very long range,2,000 km, and 1,700 km respectively.The most widely used UAVs in the Russi-an service are however the Iranian Sha-hed-136 kamikaze drones. They are 3.5 mlong, feature delta wing and are propelledby four cylinder reciprocal engine drivinga pusher propeller. Their maximum spe-ed is 185 kph. The range is not known, itis said to be around 2000 km. The aircraftweighs 200 kilos out of which 40 kilos go tothe explosive head. The Ukrainians nickna-med them “moped” thanks to their typicalengine sound. The information about theirefficiency vary. One extreme opinion statethat they are exceptionally dangerous andcause Ukrainians heavy losses. The oppo-site opinion describes them as primitiveand easy to destroy. As usual the truth issomewhere in between. Shahed-136 dro-nes are in fact easy to shoot down. Theyfly slow and low, and it was reported thatthe infantry shot them down with Kalashni-kovs. For that reason, the Russians launchthem in large numbers and waves to cho-ke the defenses and let at least couple ofthem to penetrate to the target. Once theymanage that they are accurate and there-fore efficient.HISTORYThe Ukrainians fished out of the Black Sea a nearly intact Iranian Mohajer-6 drone.The Russians have begun using Iran's Shahed-136 kamikaze drones in large numbers.INFO Eduard24November 2022Page 25
HISTORYPreparing a Ukrainian Su-27 for a training flight. It carries no armament on the hangers.INFO Eduard25November 2022Page 26
Stanley Winfield Vejtasa was the only U.S. Navyaviator to receive the Navy Cross for his servi-ce as a bomber and fighter pilot. He cappedhis remarkable career in the 1960s as skipperof the USS Constellation (CV-64) and lateras commander of Naval Air Station Miramar(yes, the Top Gun!).He was born on July 27, 1914, in Paris, Montana.His mother was Inga Amalia Rinnhagen, a Nor-wegian American. He inherited from her theNordic appearance that later earned him thenickname Swede. Stanley's father John wasborn in 1888 in Fairdale, Walsh County, NorthDakota. Swede's Czech grandfather FrantišekJosef Vejtasa, who was from Boňov in the High-lands region (Vysočina), met, in the USA, hiswife Františka née Svobodová, who was bornin Ohrazenice, near Boňov. Besides John, theyhad nine more children. The daughters werenamed Antonia, Amelia and Marry. Two sonswere given the English names Stanley andFrank, but the others had the typically Czechnames Cyril, Anton, Vlastimil and Bohumil.Stanley joined the US Navy in 1937 and inAugust 1939 he became a pilot with SBDDauntless in Scouting Squadron Five(VS-5) aboard the USS Yorktown. He receivedhis first Navy Cross for a raid on March 10,1942, on Salamaua and Lae, New Guinea. Heearned a second one for the May 4, 1942, raidon Tulagi and for the Battle of the Coral Sea,specifically for his part in the sinking of theaircraft carrier Shōhō on May 7 and for aeri-al combat with enemy aircraft during May 8.He received his third Navy Cross for extra-ordinary achievement on October 26, 1942,during the Battle of the Santa Cruz Islands asa member of VF-10 aboard the USS Enterprise.During this battle, the Reaper 7 division he ledwas part of CAP (Combat Air Patrol) over thetask force. Big E and the USS Hornet launcheda total of 37 Wildcats in their defence. Headingtowards the Americans was a Japanese for-mation of 55 aircraft led by Lt. Cdr. ShigeharuMurata. The Japanese commander had visualcontact with the American carrier two minutesbefore his formation appeared on the radars ofboth flat tops. At 0915, Murata gave the orderto attack. What followed was a large-scale en-gagement of more than ninety aircraft, whichwas accompanied on the American side bytremendous improvisation by both ship crewsand airmen due to radar malfunctions on thecarriers.Vejtasa first succeeded in attacking six D3AVals from Zuikaku under Lt.(jg) Nobuo Yonedaand shot down the damaged machine of PO2cToshio Nishimori, who was lagging the for-mation. Vejtasa then attacked three Vals fromZuikaku that were retreating. They were led byLt. Yutaka Ishimaru. Vejtasa managed to shootdown one of the wingmen just above the water.This moment is captured on our boxart by artistPiotr Forkasiewicz. Until this moment Vejtasafailed to drop one of the auxiliary tanks andeven had to restart the engine. At that time, theHornet was hit by three bombs, two torpedoesand two damaged Japanese bombers crashedinto the carrier deliberately. When the secondattack wave approached, only eight Wildcatswere patrolling over the American fleet, fourof them under Vejtasa's command. Thirteenothers were circling low over the surface.Around 1045, Vejtasa formation spotted B5NKate torpedo bombers from Zuikaku betweenstorm clouds and the task force. Vejtasa andhis wingman attacked the formation underLt. Masayuki Yusuhara. He shot down onebomber by himself and then, in cooperationwith another pilot, shot down the crew of PO1cKen-ichirō Toshida. He then attacked three Ka-tes from 45th Shōtai of Zuikaku. Directly frombehind, he shot down 2nd plane of PO1c HeijiTamura, then hit the lead aircraft of Ens. Kazu-masa Kanada and finally destroyed 3rd planeof PO1c Kazu-o Yamauchi.During the Japanese torpedo attack, Vejta-sa pursued low over the water another Kate,apparently commanded by PO1c Yasuo Kikuchiof the 44th Shōtai. Either Vejtasa or one of theships firing furiously at the Japanese hit thebomber. The burning machine slammed intothe destroyer USS Smith, leaving on boarda torpedo warhead that exploded six minu-tes later. Eventually, Vejtasa chased one ofthe bombers retreating low. He set it on firewith the rest of his ammunition and watchedin amazement as the Japanese crew flew theburning machine another five miles before itcrashed into the sea. The battle was not yetover, but Vejtasa´s formation was crucial indisrupting the attack against the Enterprise.His record of seven aerial victories in a singlecombat was matched only by few Americanpilots by the end of the war.BOXART STORY #82202Text: Jan BobekIllustration: Piotr ForkasiewiczSwede at Santa CruzINFO Eduard26November 2022Page 27
#82162BOXART STORYThe Messerschmitt Bf 109 G-14/AS witha number one on the side of the fuselagewas found at the end of the war at Twentheairfield in the Netherlands. In the past, therewere disputes about the colour of the stripeson the fuselage, the colour of the fuselagenumber, or whether its serial number was786930 or 786938. In our kit, we leaned to-wards some selection of these possibilities.The machine probably belonged to III./JG 6,although it lacks the III. Gruppe marking andthe bands on the fuselage, which are rare-ly documented on this unit, should be three,two red and a white one in the middle. Thequestion is how this Messerschmitt got tothis base. Because JG 6 did not have a baseat Twenthe and did not operate in this part ofEurope from early January 1945. It cannot beruled out that “1” participated in the attack onAllied airfields on New Year's Day 1945, theso-called Operation Bodenplatte.JG 6 “Horst Wessel” is one of the lesser--known Luftwaffe units. As its combat namesuggests, the I. and II. Gruppe were formedat Königsberg in July 1944 by the re-desig-nation of I. and II./ZG 26 “Horst Wessel”. Theirpilots switched from twin-engined fightersto Fw 190s. The III. Gruppe had a differentorigin, however, and was formed in October1944 by the renaming of I./JG 5 “Eismeer”equipped with Messerschmitt Bf 109s. It wascommanded by the well-known fighter pi-lot Theo Weissenberger, who had 200 aerialvictories to his credit at that time. At theend of November, he left this unit to joinJG 7 armed with Me 262 jets to take overits I. Gruppe. He was replaced by MajorHelmut Kühle, who previously commandedII./JG 52 and before that, in 1943, had the Slovak13./JG 52 under his command.The commander of the entire JG 6 wasAustrian Obstlt. Johann Kogler, originallya Bf 110 pilot and a veteran of the Battle ofBritain. He learned of the plan to attack Alliedairfields at a briefing in early December. Thetarget of JG 6 was to be the Volkel airbase inThe Netherlands. He briefed some of his offi-cers about the operation and its target andeven had a model of Volkel airfield built sothat the raid could be well prepared. Whenthe offensive in the Ardennes began to takeplace, Kogler was surprised because the or-der to raid the Allied airfields had not come.He was even more surprised when the ordereventually came on December 31, 1944, theraid was to be carried out on New Year's Day.Everything seemed to be in perfect read-iness and three Ju 88 night fighters fromIII./NJG 5 were on standby at each Gruppe toguide the attacking formations to their tar-gets in flight very low over the terrain. Thefirst wave of the attack was to be carriedout by Focke-Wulfs from I. and II. Gruppe,while Messerschmitts from III. Gruppe wereto provide altitude cover. The Germans, ho-wever, had no idea of the newly built Alliedair bases at Heesch and Helmond, whichwere on their flight path to Volkel. During theflight to the target, the formation even flew,to the surprise of both sides, over Heeschairfield, where Canadian Spitfires were ba-sed. Moreover, while navigating to Volkel,where two Wings of Tempests and Typho-ons were based, an error was made, and theJG 6 formation did not find the intended tar-get at all. Instead, I./JG 6 mistakenly attackedEindhoven, while II./JG 6 together withIII./JG 6 attacked Helmond also by mistake.The worst losses were suffered by III./JG 6,this unit lost 13 of the 20 Messerschmittsdeployed. It was attacked by several Spitfi-res from No. 401 Squadron RCAF while stillflying towards the target. The German figh-ters reported the Canadians to Kühle, but heordered them to continue to the target. Thenthe Canadians managed to shoot down twoBf 109s. Only then did Kühle order part of hisunit to engage the Spitfires.After the action, JG 6 claimed the destructionor damage of 43 aircraft on the ground andthe shooting down of six fighters in the air.However, the operation ended disastrous-ly for this unit. Kommodore Kogler andMajor Kühle were hit by flak, the Kommo-dore was captured while the commanderof III./JG 6 was killed. Total 43% of the 77 air-craft deployed were destroyed or damaged.The unit lost 23 pilots who were killed,missing, or captured.JG 6 was withdrawn from combat after thisaction in order to be reequipped. Its newKommodore was Gerhard Barkhorn, andit was to fight on the Eastern Front untilthe end of the war.Text: Jan BobekIllustration: Piotr ForkasiewiczSurprise over HeeschINFO Eduard27November 2022Page 28
On the cover of the Bf 110 G-4 night fighterrelease, Adam Tooby depicts a dramatic scenein which fighter ace Wilhelm Johnen shootsdown a British Lancaster bomber. The Me-sserschmitt, which sports Johnen's victoriesmarked on its tail surfaces, was found at theend of the war in Neubiberg, Bavaria, and be-longed to the 7./NJG 6, which was part of theIII./NJG 6 led by Johnen. This machine bringsseveral questions. For example, why are thevictories of the Gruppe commander markedon an airplane from the 7. Staffel. How is itpossible that some of Johnen's victories aremissing or show a wrong date on said mar-kings. Another question is whether or not therudders of this machine were painted white.This Johnen's aircraft is a classic exampleof Luftwaffe improvisation level at the endof the war.Wilhelm Johnen was trained in Pardubicein occupied Bohemia, then in Zeltweg, Styria,Wien-Aspern and finally in Schleissheim, Ba-varia. In June 1941, he became a night fighterpilot in 3./NJG 1. This Staffel was redesignatedin December 1942 to 5./NJG 5 and in May 1944to 9./NJG 6. The last change was related to theredesignation of the entire II./NJG 5 to III./NJG6 and Johnen was appointed commander of8./NJG 6. In mid-February 1945, Hptm. Johnen,already a Knight's Cross recipient, becamecommander of the entire III./NJG 6. His unit,previously deployed in Hungary for severalmonths, had to withdraw to bases in Bavariabefore the advancing Red Army. At the endof March, Johnen was forced to reorganize hisforce and concentrate all combat equipmentand personnel under 7./NJG 6. Hence hisaerial victories appeared on the tail surfacesof a machine from the 7th Staffel, even thoughhe was the commander of the entire Gruppeand didn't previously serve with 7./NJG 6,even when it bore different designations.Wilhelm Johnen achieved his last, 34th vic-tory on the night of 16-17 March 1945 nearWürzburg. His plane was destroyed by RAFMosquito after the landing. The city was rai-ded by 225 Lancasters and 11 Mosquito aircraftfrom 5 Group Bomber Command RAF. Thetown was an important transport hub, but the-re were no industrial or military targets. Theprimary reason for the raid was to break theresistance of the German population. The firstbombs fell on the city at 2125 hours. Firstly 396tons of bombs were released on the buildings,destroying roofs and windows, then the bom-bers dropped 582 tons of incendiary bombs.The raid lasted only twenty minutes, but some3,000 residents and approximately 2,000 refu-gees were killed in the firestorm, which re-ached between 1,500 and 2,000°C. About 90%of the historic centre and 68% of the buildingsin the suburbs were destroyed. Consideringthe extent of the percentages of the urbanarea destroyed, this was bigger a destructionthan the raid on Dresden. The fire was visiblefrom a distance of 240 km and the clearingof the debris was not completed until 1964.The RAF lost only six Lancasters during theraid and probably five of these were attackedby night fighters. It is not certain which onewas shot down by Johnen's crew. One of thesewas an NG352 (EA-J) from No. 49 Squad-ron RAF, commanded by F/O John B. Gibson.Flight Engineer Sgt. Roberts later recalledthat they reached the target area a little ear-lier than the Pathfinder crews. Roberts wasjust pouring tea when their machine was hitby a devastating cannon fire. He knew thathe had about ten seconds to bail out of theburning Lancaster. He helped their bombar-dier, Canadian Sgt. R. M. Henderson, to get outof his position. The machine was full of smo-ke and flames. Apart from the top gunner,Sgt. Austin Finnerty, all crew members man-aged to bail out. In the days that followed, theywere all successively captured. One experi-ence Roberts has not forgotten was a mem-ber of the German Home Guard escorting himwith a World War I spiked helmet.Next morning, two clergy men found radiooperator Sgt. Don J. Hughes hiding in the sa-cristy of the Elbelstadt church. They handedhim over to a local doctor, from whom hewas taken for interrogation. After two daysin police custody, on Sunday, March 18, 1945,detectives Josef Axt and Johann Weber of theWürzburg Criminal Police came for him. Theytook him to the river and Axt shot him in theback of the head. Hughes' body was foundthe next day and after the war he was buriedin the Durnbach War Cemetery. Followinga trial in 1946, Axt was executed by firingsquad, while Weber was sentenced to twentyyears in prison.BOXART STORYText: Jan BobekIllustration: Adam ToobyNight over Würzburg#7465INFO Eduard28November 2022Page 29
BOXART STORYBeing shot down is every fighter pilot’s ni-ghtmare. But it doesn’t have to be someone’send. Many have been shot down, some evenmore than once, and managed to escape. It isadmirable that pilots have returned under fireof combat after such an experience. Unlessthey were captured... Lt. d. R. Hans Schultzwas shot down twice, and he survived bothtimes. The first time he also managed toescape, the second time he was not so lucky.And it is the theme of Adam Tooby’s boxart,where Schultz falls victim to Canadian C. H.R. Lagesse of No. 29 Squadron RAF. However,interesting events preceded this incident...On March 20, 1918, an unprecedented affairoccurred in the Luftstreitkräfte (German AF).Hptm. Rudolf Berthold, the then comman-der of Jasta 18, was to take command of theJG II fighter group, but he conditioned hismove on the possibility of taking his uni-t’s personnel with him. But the inclusion ofJasta 18 into JG II was not possible, so a “greatexchange” happened, the victim of which wasone of the fighter units of JG II, namely Jas-ta 15. The commanders simply swapped theirJasta logs and bases as well. Jasta 18 headedto Guise and became Jasta 15, while the ori-ginal Jasta 15 had to move to Bruille, whereit began operating as Jasta 18. And the verynext day it joined the German spring offensivein the 17th Army sector. Under the commandof Lt. d. Res. August Raben, Jasta 18 adopteda new identity for their aircraft in the formof white fuselages with red noses. The firstday of the offensive passed and the next dayJasta 18 suffered its first loss. Lt. d. R. HansSchultz was shot down over no-man’s land.He was unharmed, managed to escape andreturned to the unit two days later.In the early evening of June 6, nine Jasta18 fighters took off at about 1800 hrs fromLomme airport for a patrol flight north of theFrench town of Hazenbrouck. The unit wasat the time in the process of changing theirAlbatroses for Fokkers D.VII. This new typeprobably prevailed in the formation. At 1745hrs, SE.5a formation of No. 29 Squadron RAFalso took to the air, heading for the samesector. The German pilots spotted the enemyflying a little lower around 18:00 and swoopeddown on them, but the RAF pilots managed toturn their aircraft against the enemy in time.Then a skirmish ensued. Lt. Rolfe chased oneof the Fokkers down to 9000 ft (2700 m), whe-re the aircraft caught fire and crashed. KarlAlbert Mendel, an ace with seven kills, waskilled in the cockpit. Meanwhile Lt. Lagesse inhis SE.5a (D5969) was already chasing FokkerD.VII of Hans Schultz. The combat report sta-ted: “Lt C H R Lagesse, accompanied by CaptR C L Holme MC and Lt H A Whittaker, sawan enemy Scout over Hazebrouck at about1800 hrs. All three dived on it. Lt Lagesse fou-ght it to within about 2000 ft of the ground,when it was obviously due to land this side.He then left it, and the enemy aircraft landednorth of Hazebrouck and turned over on itsnose.” Again, Schultz escaped the crash alive,but this time he did not escape capture andremained in custody for the rest of the war.His Fokker D.VII 386/18 was the first exam-ple of this type to fall into British hands, andof course it was thoroughly examined. Todayit is an exhibit at the Royal Air Force Museumin Hendon.Hans Walter Schultz was born in Berlin on27 May 1893 and began his flying careerwith the observation Fliegerabteilung 273(FA A 273). He completed fighter training from14 October to 14 November 1917 and was thenassigned to Jasta 15, which later became Jas-ta 18. He scored his only kill before being cap-tured on 24 May 1918. He survived his captureand became an architect after the war. He diedon 20 July 1975 in Berlin.His defeater, Camille Henri Raoul Lagesse,achieved his fifth success by shooting downSchultz and thus became an ace. By the endof the war, he had fifteen more kills (includingtwo balloons) under his belly and becamethe 23rd most successful Canadian fighterpilot of the Great War. Born in January 1893on the island of Mauritius, he graduated fromthe Royal College and continued his studiesin France. Then he joined the ranks of the28th London Regiment in 1916 and changed forthe Royal Flying Corps in July 1917, where hewas promoted to the rank of 2nd Lieutenanton September 26, 1917. He transferredto No. 29 Squadron on March 20, 1918 and flewa total of 426 combat hours during the war.He was twice awarded the DFC for his com-bat achievements and received the Croix deGuerre as well. He died just six months afterSchultz, on February 15, 1976, in France.Text: Richard PlosIllustration: Adam ToobyThe Prey#82132INFO Eduard29November 2022Page 30
Night fighters were a specifically trainedbreed of pilots during World War II, andthis was doubly true of the naval ones.One of those who took a keen interestin this “discipline” within the US Navy was thelegendary Butch O'Hare, America’s first na-val fighter ace. He was on a night missionwith his Hellcat F6F-3 when the disappearedsomewhere in the ocean off the Gilbert Is-lands on November 26, 1943. This was nota standard night fighters deployment,however, just a proving-ground operationof “daylight” F6F-3s supported by Avengerequipped with airborne radar.The first actual deployment of nightfighters was preceded by Project Affirm,under which the Navy had been testingthe use of AI radar installed on modifiedF4U-2 Corsairs since 1942. Then in April1943, VF(N)-75 was formed and deployedwith these aircraft from October 31 in theSolomon Islands battles. They operatedfrom a land base, but in January 1944 twodetachments (10 and 11) were withdrawnto form VF(N)-101, which moved aboardUSS Enterprise (Det. 10) and USS Interpid(Det. 11).Then, when the aircraft carrier USS Inde-pendence (CVL-22) was torpedoed and da-maged on November 20, 1943, she sailed forrepairs to San Francisco, where she wasfitted with an additional catapult, and it wasdecided that she would become the base ofa night air group. By July 3, 1944, she wasin the Hawaiian Islands, where she begannight operations training on August 24.The fighter unit, VF(N)-75, was renamedVF-41 on March 26, 1944, and rearmed fromCorsairs to F6F-5N Hellcats and replacedCVLG-22 on board. Shortly thereafter, it wasreinstated as VF(N)-41 i.e. as night fightingunit. Together with the torpedo VT(N)-41,armed with TBF Avengers, they formed theCVLG(N)-41 group.Training in Hawaii was completed after fourdays, on August 29, 1944, when Independen-ce sailed as part of Task Group 38 to takepart in Operation Palaus, which was inten-ded to secure bases for the October attackon the Philippines. Its mission was to provi-de night reconnaissance and patrol flights,but since the enemy was not conducting anynight activity, the unit switched to day ope-rations.In the ranks of the VF(N)-41 was alsoLt. William E. “Bill” Henry, the most succe-ssful naval night fighter ace with 9.5 kills.The unit joined the fighting on September12, 1944, and the first success was sharedby Ens. George W. Obenour and Ens. RobertW. Klock, who shot down one G4M Betty.On the same day, “Bill” Henry also scoredhis first fighter success, sharing one Dinah.While this was his second success at thetime, he achieved the first one as a Dauntle-ss pilot and member of VS-3 when he shotdown a Type 95 biplane on October 3, 1942.William “Bill” Henry was a graduate of Ju-nior College in his native Bakersfield. Heenlisted in the Navy in February 1940 asan air cadet and was promoted to the rankof Ensign on December 19 of that year.He served with VS-3, operating from aboardthe USS Saratoga, from December 1940to December 1942, earning the DFC andAir Medal for his service. He then beca-me a fighter pilot and served in the ranksof VF(N)-75, with which he moved to Inde-pendence after reorganization of the unit.He gradually added more success untilJanuary 16, 1945, when he put a full stopto VF(N)-41’s overall score by destroyinga Ki-43 Oscar. The unit scored 46 confirmedkills, three probable and three damagedwhile operating from USS Independence.On the boxart by Petr Štěpánek, Lt. “Bill”Henry prepares his Hellcat F6F-5N fortakeoff. There’s nothing strange about ta-king off in daylight. There wasn’t alwaysenough “work” for night fighters and so theyflew daytime missions. Sometimes the ra-dar was removed, but the planes were thenunbalanced and harder to control. Henryhimself shot down only four of his victimsat night (three of them H8K Emily), the othersuccesses were achieved at dawn or dusk.Henry earned a bachelor’s degree inAeronautical Engineering from the CaliforniaInstitute of Technology in 1949 but continuedto serve. He was Exec of VF-3, then servedas CO of Section C of that unit at Valley Forgeuntil December 1, 1950. He was subsequent-ly promoted to the rank of Commander andretired on March 1, 1961. He died at the age of75 on June 24, 1995, in Los Altos, California.BOXART STORYText: Richard PlosIllustration: Petr ŠtěpánekFrom dusk to dawn#7079INFO Eduard30November 2022Page 31
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UDÁLOSTText and photo: Jan KoutnýInternationalM1124 MaxxProAbsolute Winner of the 2022Czech (IPMS) Championshipin his own wordsThe model represents the vehicle nickna-med “Sv. Václav” (St. Wenceslas), whichwas used by the Czech Army in Afghani-stan in March-April 2012 in Wardak pro-vince. It was acquired by the Czech Armyas a loan from the US Army. The photo-graphs of the vehicle were taken at theSolthan Kheyl base, and the model is ba-sed on photographs taken by the driverof the vehicle, Mr. Tomáš Procházka. Hedecorated this vehicle with several spe-cific motifs (the inscription Modelář 1:1,the head of a Star Wars trooper and themotif of St. Wenceslas with text). The ve-hicle is complemented by the Czech flag,which was placed on the upper rear partof the hull.Compared to the original 1:72 scale kitfrom Galaxy Hobby, the weapons on thegun turret have been changed, using a 30mm AGS 17 grenade launcher and a 7.62mm PKT machine gun. The upper part ofthe hull was modified, where antennas,jammers and rope were specifically pla-ced compared to the scale kit. The inte-rior of the vehicle and the engine com-partment as well as the detailed chassiswere upgraded. The vehicle is shownwith the gunner's hatch open, the doorsopen and the bonnet open as per the pho-tograph. The wheels have been replacedand the correct diameter of 1189 mm hasbeen used, corresponding to a 16.5 mmdiameter in 1:72 scale. In the kit, the whe-els have 15 mm size in diameter, whichis basically the only fault in an otherwisewell designed kit. On the model, the rearfenders, lower armour tub, side coversin the engine compartment, hood and tu-rret armour have been reduced to matchscale and proportion. Minor details suchas mirror mounts, door handles, weaponhandles, antennas, cables, lights, seats,armament and equipment were addedand refined. The vehicle had several vi-sible damages caused by operation, spe-cifically a dented front bumper under thered letter “M” for “Modelář” (Modeller, re-ferring to the name of Czech plastic sca-le modelling magazine), which was spraypainted, crooked. In addition, the rear leftfender was bent. The lettering on the lo-wer part of the rear door, namely “trai-ler connection” and “NZIJNZ”, was alsosprayed crooked, as shown on the model.Trailer M1102 is a complete new build andcamouflaged based on photos. The entirevehicle, including the trailers, was per-fectly documented when photos of thisvehicle, including the above photo, werepublished on the Modelfórum websitefor the use of modellers by their author,Tomáš Procházka. Link here.USED KITS AND ACCESSORIESKit: M1124 MAXXPRO by Galaxy HobbyScale: 1/72Model of M1102: new build according to thedrawings scaled down to 1:72 scalePhoto etch for the model: TetraGrenade launcher: Alex MiniaturesMachine gun: M240 D/C from Minimali World(modified to PKT 7.62 mm)Equipment: mix of Galaxy Hobby, CMK, OKBGrigorov and other manufacturersWheels: H-ModelsDecals: Aircutter, on a cart by Handl (customwork)Other details: Evergreen profiles, mix of wi-res and photo etch (different manufacturers)INFO Eduard32November 2022Page 33
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BuNo. 03417, Lt. Stanley W. Vejtasa, VF-10, USS Enterprise (CV-6), October 1942BuNo. 5149, VF-3, USS Yorktown (CV-5) & USS Hornet (CV-8), May/June 1942Ens. Thomas W. Rhodes, VF-6, USS Enterprise (CV-6), beginning of August 1942Paris, Montana native, Stanley Winfield Vejtasa aftergraduation from the university in Montana enlistedin the Navy where he undertook the pilot training.He finished it at Pensacola base in June 1939 whenhe was twenty-five years old. Consequently, he wasassigned to VS-5 flying Dauntless off USS Yorktownaircraft carrier (CV-5). During the Battle of CoralSea, he scored the hit on Shōhō aircraft carrier.In May 1942 he was transferred to VF-10 where he flewWildcat off USS Enterprise aircraft carrier until July1943. During the Battle of Santa Cruz, he flew thedepicted Wildcat BuNo. 03417 and scored seven killsat its controls - two D3A Val and five B5N Kate, plusone probable kill of B5N Kate. After this mission hehad eight Japanese flags painted on the accesshatch under the windshield on the fuselage port side.In April 1942 this Wildcat was assigned to VF-3 unitbased at Kaneohe Bay airbase. The following monthit was assigned to Ens. G. F. Markham. After thatthe unit was transferred on board of USS Yorktown(CV-5). During the Battle of Midway Fox-10 was alsoflown by Lt. A. J. Brassfield who during this engage-ment shot down four carrier borne D3A Val bombersand damaged another two. Despite all the effortsof the defenders USS Yorktown was damaged andfor that reason the surviving Yorktown pilots andher Wildcats as well had to be transferred to USSHornet (CV-8) where, under the command of Lt. Cdr.Thatch, they formed the provisional unit designatedVF-3-42-8. One of the pilots of this unit was JohnBurton Bain who flew Wildcat portrayed hereby.At that time Ens. Bain’s score stood at two confirmedkills, A6M Zero fighter from the Battle of Coral Seaand another Zero from the Battle of Midway, shotdown during the preceding raid on Shōkaku. The-refore, there are two Japanese flags painted underhis windshield as a symbol of his success in combat.The national markings in the form of blue circles withwhite star and red circle in the center were paintedon both sides of the fuselage and in four positionson the wings. They were supplemented by red andwhite stripes on the rudder. During the Battleof Midway these stripes were painted over with thecamouflage paint and the red circles were deletedfrom the national insignia. The kill marks were addedonly at the time Ens. Bain was flying this aircraft.Texan Thomas Walker Rhodes enlisted in the Navy onJanuary 7, 1937 and served as a radio operator at VT-2until January 1941 when he commenced his pilot trai-ning. After its completion first he flew with VF-2 andin March 1942 he was ordered to VF-6 where he stayeduntil September 1942. During this deployment he tookpart in the air battles defending the units that had lan-ded at Guadalcanal. On August 7, during the dogfightwith Zeros, his Wildcat was damaged by the gunfireof his opponent, but regardless Rhodes scored oneA6M Zero kill. On August 24 he added a carrier bornebomber B5N Kate to his score. He continued with hiscareer with Navy, ultimately, he scored five kills andon February 1, 1965 retired. He passed away on August15, 2016, at the remarkable age of 99 years.KITS 11/2022INFO Eduard35November 2022Page 36
Ens. Benjamin F. Currie, VF-5, USS Saratoga (CV-3)/Guadalcanal, autumn 1942Ens. Hamilton McWhorter, VF-9, USS Ranger (CV-4), October 1942On August 7, 1942, the American naval forces, to the bigsurprise of the Japanese, disembarked the 1st USMCDivision on Guadalcanal and led by General Vandegriftcaptured the Japanese unfinished airfield. The firstAmerican pilots to land on this island were the Ma-rines from VMF-223 (F4F Wildcat) and VMSB-232 (SBDDauntless) who did so on August 20, 1942. Later theywere reinforced by further USAAF and USMC units. Dueto the heavy losses in the battles with the retaliatingJapanese units it was decided to further reinforce thefighter component of the Cactus Air Force, as the airunits operating from Guadalcanal were called, andon September 9 another 24 Wildcats from VF-5 weredispatched to the island from Espiritu Santo. Theyimmediately joined the fight against the incomingJapanese formations. One of the VF-5 pilots involvedin the Henderson airfield’s defense was Ens. BenjaminCurrie. The unit was relieved from the Guadalcanaloperations in the middle of October and sent for a rest.In November the pilots returned to the United Statesand in January 1943 the unit was disbanded.Athens, Georgia native Hamilton McWhorter enlistedin the Navy in June 1941 having graduated from theuniversity in Georgia. After he completed the trainingin Miami he was assigned to VF-9 flying Wildcats. In thebeginning of October, the unit embarked on USS Ranger(CV-4) aircraft carrier headed to the African continentwhere it was to participate in the Allied successfullanding at Casablanca in the French Morocco (operati-on Torch). For the better friend-or-foe recognition theaircraft participating in the operation Torch carrieda yellow outline to the fuselage and lower wings na-tional markings. After the French resistance ceasedthe USS Ranger formation was dispatched back toNorfolk. In the beginning of 1943, VF-9, as the first Navyunit equipped with Hellcats, embarked on USS Essex(CV-9) aircraft carrier and was dispatched to the Pacific.On November 19, 1943, McWhorter became the firstHellcat pilot who scored five kills in the combat again-st the Japanese. During the further battles he addedseven more kills to his credit and his final score stoodat twelve enemy aircraft shot down.OTU VFB-8, Daytona Beach, the United States of America, 1944VFB-8, the operational-training unit, based at NASDaytona Beach in Florida, was from its establishmentin January 1943 commissioned to train the dive bom-bing and equipped with SBD Dauntless aircraft. AfterMarch 1944 its inventory was changed and Dauntle-ss were replaced by F4F and FM versions of Wildcatand the new task of the unit was to train bombingtechniques to the VBF squadrons’ pilots flying Hell-cat. Wildcats were used in this role until September1944 when they were replaced by Hellcats supple-mented by FM-2 in April 1945 and SB2C Helldiver inJune of the same year. The featured F4F-4 Wildcatflew with this unit and sports the tri-color camouf-lage of Glossy Sea Blue on the upper surfaces whilethe side surfaces were sprayed in Intermediate Blue.The lower surfaces were painted white, the natio-nal insignia on the fuselage and wings show designintroduced after August 1943. Wildcats flying at thetraining units carried highly visible markings in theform of large letters and numbers painted on thefuselage, occasionally on the tail surfaces or wings.KITS 11/2022INFO Eduard36November 2022Page 37
OVERTREESOVERLEPT#82202XF4F-4 early1/48Product pageProduct pageRecommended:for F4F-4 Wildcat early 1/48481093 F4F-4 landing flaps (PE-Set)FE1290 F4F seatbelts STEEL (PE-Set)644164 F4F-4 LööK (Brassin)648769 F4F gun barrels PRINT (Brassin)648779 F4F undercarriage legs BRONZE (Brassin)648803 F4F-4 cockpit PRINT (Brassin)3DL48090 F4F-4 SPACE (3D Decal Set)EX904 F4F-4 TFace (Mask)#82202-LEPTF4F-4 Wildcat early1/48Cat. No. 648803Cat. No. 644164Cat. No. 648779Cat. No. 648769KITS 11/2022INFO Eduard37November 2022Page 38
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WNr. 784938, III./JG 6, Bissel, Germany, January 1945WNr. 783891, Fw. Heinz-Paul Müller, 9./JG 300,Jüterbog-Damm, Germany, autumn 1944Lt. Walter Köhne, CO of 6./JG 11, Wunsdorf, Germany, October 1944One of the last established Luftwaffe units wasJagdgeschwader 6 established in July 1944. Its Stabplus I. and II. Gruppe were activated in, at that time,Königsberg (nowadays Kaliningrad) and equippedwith Fw 190A fighters. Its III. Gruppe was establishedin October 1944 by re-naming I./JG 5 and equippedwith Messerschmitts Bf 109G. On January 1, 1945, theentire unit took part in the operation Bodenplatte,an attack of the fighter units on the Allied airportslocated on the liberated territories of the WesternEurope. Bf 109G-14/AS marked Green 1 was pho-tographed in May 1945 at the airport in Twente.It was reported that it had probably landed heredue to the engine failure on its return from theoperation Bodenplatte. JG 6 aircraft typically carriedred-white-red markings on the rear fuselage,this particular aircraft sported only 2 bands.This Messerschmitt Bf 109G-14/AS serial num-ber 783891 and marked Yellow 15 was flown byFw. Heinz-Paul Müller at 9./JG 300. At its controls heclaimed two Mustangs shot down. The service of thisaircraft with Luftwaffe ended on November 27, 1944over Clausthalle-Zellerfeld where it was shot down andits pilot was wounded. JG 300, operating over Germanywithin the Defense of the Reich in the autumn of 1944,marked its aircraft with the red band wrapping aroundthe fuselage behind its national insignia.While the Fw 190A-5 flown by Uffz. Walter Köhneat 1./JG 1 carried the name of pilot’s angora catUschi, his Bf 109G-14/AS he flew commanding 6./JG 11carried the shepherd dog’s head and it name Satan.On July 14, 1944 Lt. Köhne assumed the commandof 6. Staffel JG 11 and coming with it he hadto take conversion training to Bf 109G since he flewFocke-Wulfs with the previous unit. At the timeof his assuming the unit’s command he was theace with twenty-eight kills to his credit and addedanother two until the end of war. He led the unituntil its disbandment in the beginning of April 1945,then he was commanded to Landsberg for theconversion training to Me 262 jets.KITS 11/2022INFO Eduard39November 2022Page 40
WNr. 785185, Lt. Heinz Schüler, 16./JG 5, Stavanger-Forus, Norway, March 1945WNr. 785083, Sgt. Magg. Aroldo Burei, 1a Squadriglia, 1o Gruppo,Caccia ANR, Malpensa, Italy, April 1945In November 1944 in Stavanger 16. Staffel Jagd-geschwader 5 was established in order to bo-ost the IV. Gruppe inventory to four Staffels. TheIV./JG 5 equipment was unified to Bf 109G-14 eventhough couple of Fw 190 continued flying withthe unit till the end of 1944. Bf 109G-14/AS markedblue 17 was flown by Lt. Heinz Schüler who paintedBerlin’s coat of arms under the windshield. It is ap-parent in the photographs that at that time the air-craft did not carry the Defense of the Reich markings,however when Lt. Schüler landed it on March 27,1945 at Stavanger-Sola airport it sported black andyellow bands (JG 5 aircraft marking) behind thefuselage national insignia.After declaration of the Italian Social Republic onSeptember 18th, 1943, a puppet state on the Germanarmed forces occupied territory, and under the le-adership of Benito Mussolini, Germany allowed thisstate to form the army in the strength of four divi-sions. Its aviation component, named AeronauticaNazionale Repubblicana, consisted of two fightergroups (Gruppo Caccia), a group of torpedo bom-bers (Gruppo Aerosiluranti Buscaglia) and severaltransport flights. 1o Gruppo Caccia (Asso di Bastoni)initially flew Macchi C.205 but from November 1944till February 1945 went through the transition trai-ning on Messerschmitt 109 in Holzkirchen, Germany.In February the unit received Messerschmitts 109of the versions G-10 (manufactured by Erla facto-ry in Leipzig), G-14 and G-14/AS and several K-4s.The original German markings were oversprayedin Italian colors and the aircraft received the Itali-an markings. The German iron crosses were left onthe wing underside surfaces.KITS 11/2022INFO Eduard40November 2022Page 41
OVERTREESOVERLEPT#82162XBf 109G-14/AS1/48Product pageProduct pageRecommended:for Bf 109G-14/AS 1/4848942 Bf 109G-14 (PE-Set)FE910 Bf 109G seatbelts STEEL (PE-Set)648247 Bf 109G exhaust stacks (Brassin)648261 Bf 109G-6 wheels (Brassin)648265 Bf 109G external fuel tanks (Brassin)648309 Bf 109G undercarriage legs BRONZE (Brassin)648310 Bf 109G control surfaces (Brassin)3DL48092 Bf 109G-14/AS SPACE (3D Decal Set)D48025 Bf 109G stencils (Decal Set)D48027 Bf 109G Balkenkreuze (Decal Set)D48028 Bf 109G svastikas (Decal Set)EX512 Bf 109G spinner spirals (Mask)EX616 Bf 109G-14 TFace (Mask)#82162-LEPTBf 109G-14/AS1/48Cat. No. 648309Cat. No. 648247Cat. No. 648265KITS 11/2022INFO Eduard41November 2022Page 42
TORNADO IDSLimited edition kit of European twin engine combat aircraftTornado IDS designed for fighter bomber role in German Air Forcein 1/48 scale. Kit presents not only German Tornados in markingsfrom Tiger Meets but also in standard camouflage.plastic parts: Revellmarking options: 7decals: EduardPE parts: yes, pre-paintedpainting mask: yesresin parts: yes, wheels and seatsPrepared in cooperation with Wingman Decals and Jürgen Busse.https://www.shopofphantoms.com/Product page#111651/48KITS 11/2022INFO Eduard42November 2022Page 43
MFG 2, Eggebek airbase, Germany, 2002-2004JaboG 38, Jever airbase, Germany, 1986During 2002-2004 this colorfully painted PanaviaTornado IDS airplane coded 46+20 belonging to theMarinefliegergeschwader 2 was flown at the airshows.MFG 2 unit was as the last fighter wing of the GermanNavy disbanded in 2005. Under the MFG 2 markingon the vertical tail surface this Tornado 46+20 sportsthe insignia of the re-activated Aufklarungsgeschwa-der 51 (AG 51) „Immelmann“ (51st ReconnaissanceWing). This unit was equipped with Tornadoes andtook over part of the MFG 2 tasks. Tornado IDS 46+20camouflage is painted according to the so-calledNorm 87.The Jagdbombergeschwader 38 unit was basedin the North, Lower Saxon’s Jever. It was establishedin August 1983 and was armed with the multi-pur-pose Tornado IDS aircraft. In 1989 its 2nd Staffelwas equipped with Tornadoes ECR and flew themuntil 1995 when the ECR type Tornadoes were trans-ferred to JaboG 32. On August 20005 the JaboG 38was disbanded. The IDS Tornado coded 43+22is camouflaged according to the so-called Norm 76.KITS 11/2022INFO Eduard43November 2022Page 44
AG 51 „Immelmann“, Schleswig-Jagel airbase, Germany, 2002-2003MFG 1, Schleswig-Jagel airbase, Germany, 1993Aufklarungsgeschwader 51, the predecessor of theTaktLwG 51, was re-activated in January 1994. Pre-vious AG 51, together with its sister unit AG 52 (bothwere equipped with the reconnaissance RF-4E), weredisbanded in the middle of 1993. Newly establishedAG 51 received Tornadoes IDS supplemented withECT version. Camouflage of the Tornado coded 43+46was sprayed according to the so-called Norm 95in three shades of grey and due to its participati-on in the NATO Tiger Meet 2002, taking place at thePortuguese airbase Beja (Base Aerea no.11/BaseAerea de Beja) the tiger stripes were addes.Marinefliegergeschwader 1 (MFG 1) wing of theGerman Navy was operational from 1959 to 1993 andin 1981 was equipped with 57 new Tornado fighters.Until then they had flown the American Strarfigh-ters. After the end of Cold War and Germany unifi-cation it was decided to reduce the number of theBundeswehr units. MFG 1 was one of the „victims“of this developments and on December 31, 1993 wasdisbanded. The second MFG 1 flight was incorporatedinto the MFG 2. Tornado IDS 43+87 camouflage waspainted according to the so-called Norm 76.KITS 11/2022INFO Eduard44November 2022Page 45
JaBoG 31, Norvenich airbase, Germany, 2001-2002AG 51 „Immelmann“, Schleswig-Jagel airbase, Germany, 2006-2007Jagdbombergeschwader 31 (abbreviated as JaBoG 31)is the fighter-bomber wing based at Norverich in theWestern Germany. The unit was established in 1957 atBuchel airbase because Norverich base was not yetprepared to operate the new jet airplanes. On April 20,1961 the squadron was named „Boelcke“ in the honorof Oswald Boelcke, WWI Luftstreitkrafte fighter pilot.In 1979 the Jagdbombergeschwader 31 was the firstLuftwaffe unit to be equipped with the new PanaviaTornado IDS aircraft. As a result of the German AirForce restructuring, on October 1, 2013 it was renamedto the Taktisches Luftwaffegeschwader 31 „Boelcke“(abbreviated as TaktLwG 32 „B“). On the same day theunit became the core unit of the newly establishedTactical Air Force Group „Richthofen“. In 2001 theTornado coded 44+21 received the special color sche-me commemorating 1 250 000 hours logged by theLuftwaffe pilots in Tornadoes.Predecessor of the TaktLwG 51, Aufklarungsgeschwa-der 51, was re-activated in January 1994. The previ-ous AG 51, together with its sister unit AG 52 (bothwere equipped with reconnaissance RF-4E) wasdisbanded in the middle of 1993. Newly establishedAG 51 received Tornadoes IDS supplemented by ECRversion. The tiger striping carried by 44+87 waspresented for the first time at the NATO Tiger Meetin 2006 taking place at Albacete airbase in Spain.Tornado IDS 44+87 camouflage was paintedaccording to the so-called Norm 95.KITS 11/2022INFO Eduard45November 2022Page 46
OVERTREESOVERLEPT#11154XTornado IDS1/48#11165-LEPTTornado IDS1/48Product pageProduct pageRecommended: for TORNADO IDS 1/48JaBoG 33, Buchel airbase, Germany, 1999This unit was previously known as Jagdbomber-geschwader 33. Due to the German Air Force restructu-ring, on October 1, 2013 the unit was renamed to theTaktisches Luftwaffengeschwader 33. It is based in theWestern Germany at Buchel airbase and it is the onlyGerman AF unit able to carry the nuclear weapons.Tornado IDS 44+88 camouflage is painted accordingto the so-called Norm 83.644184 Tornado IDS LööK (Brassin)3DL48089 Tornado IDS SPACE (3D Decal Set)EX905 Tornado IDS TFace (Mask)648029 AIM-9M/L (Brassin)648095 GBU-24 (Brassin)648180 AGM-88 HARM (Brassin)648207 IRIS-T (Brassin)648559 B-61 nuclear bombs (Brassin)648598 GBU-54 Thermally Protected (Brassin)KITS 11/2022INFO Eduard46November 2022Page 47
Bf 110G-4 1/72Weekend edition kit of German WWII twin-engine heavyfighter aircraft Bf 110G-4 in 1/72 scale. This version wasused in night fighter role with three crew.plastic parts: Eduardmarking options: 4decals: EduardPE parts: yespainting mask: noresin parts: no#7465Product pageKITS 11/2022INFO Eduard47November 2022Page 48
Hptm. Wilhelm Johnen, 7./NJG 6, Neubiberg, Germany, 1945WNr. 5427, Oblt. Ernst-Georg Drünkler, 2./NJG 5, Leeuwarden, the Netherlands, June 1943WNr. 5547, Ofw. Helmut Treynogga & Uffz. Heinz Schwarz, 6./NJG 6, Stuttgart-Echterdingen, Germany, March 1944Messerschmitt Bf 110G-4 coded 2Z+FR from 7./NJG6 was one of the aircraft the Allies found at theNeubiberg airport in the spring of 1945. Even thoughaccording its codes it belonged to 7. Staffel it wasactually a personal aircraft of Wilhelm Johnen,III./NJG 6 commander. This airplane is much lessknown as the another Johnen’s aircraft coded C9+ENin which he performed an emergency landing dueto the damaged engine at night April 27-28, 1944.2Z+FR was his last aircraft from the later production,equipped with the FuG 220 SN-2D antenna systemwith dipoles fixed at 45 degrees, Eberspächer typeexhausts and Schräge Musik cannons. The camouf-lage was painted in RLM 76 on the lower and sidesurfaces and RLM 75 on the upper surfaces. Thosewere lightened by spraying the irregular „snakes“in RLM 76 quite densely so only small patchesof darker color were visible.In October 1942 Oblt. Ernst-Georg Drünkler wastransferred to 1./NJG 1 and later to NJG 5. Bf 110G-4coded C9+AK from 2./NJG 5 was equipped with FuG202 antenna system and Eberspächer type exhausts.The camouflage was painted in RLM 76 on the lo-were and side surfaces, RLM 74 and RLM 75 on theupper surfaces. During the night of June 12-13, 1943the RAF Bomber Command dispatched 501 aircraft toBochum in the continued Battle of Rhurland, 323 ofthe bombers were Avro Lancasters and 167 HandleyPage Halifaxes plus eleven Mosquitos. On that nightOblt. Ernst-Georg Drünkler claimed his first twoaerial victories. During this mission on early morninghis Bf 110G-4 (serial number 5427) was damagedby the bombers‘ defense fire resulting in the for-ced landing in the water canal at Bergervaart nearBergen op Zoom. The airplane was destroyed.On the night of March 15-16, 1944, after an unsu-ccessful attempt at intercepting the British bom-bers raiding Munich, Ofw. Helmut Treynogga lost theorientation and due to the shortage of fuel lan-ded at Dübendorf airport in Switzerland. Togetherwith his radio-operator Uffz. Heinz Schwarz he wasinterned for five weeks during which time theaircraft equipped with FuG 202 radar was intensivelytested. After the return to Germany Ofw. Treynoggawas re-assigned to the night fighter unit. On thenight of June 4-5, 1944 he again lost the orienta-tion over the Italian city of Graziano. He bailed outbut was found dead. Bf 110G-4 coded 2Z+OP whichOfw. Treynogga landed in Switzerland was camouf-laged in RLM 74 and RLM 75 on the upper and sidesurfaces, the lower surfaces were sprayed in RLM76 except of the lower starboard wing which waspainted black. The aircraft lacked two MG 151/20cannons typically mounted on the lower fuselage.KITS 11/2022INFO Eduard48November 2022Page 49
WNr. 720260, Oblt. Heinz-Wolfgang Schnaufer, Stab IV./NJG 1, Saint Trond, Belgium, April 1944Heinz-Wolfgang Schnaufer, the most successful nightfighter ace of all times, recipient of the Knight Crosswith Oak Leaves, Swords and Diamonds, flew fromthe beginning of his military aviation career withnight fighter units. In total he shot down 121 enemyaircraft, predominantly the four-engine British bom-bers. During the whole war he was wounded onlyonce and none of his crew members was ever woun-ded in combat. He survived the war and at the endof hostilities dedicated himself to the family winebusiness. He died on June 15, 1950, two days after hispersonal car had collided with a truck in Cestas nearBordeaux in France. Schnaufer, nicknamed „The Ni-ght Ghost of St. Trond“, flew this Bf 110G-4 during thespring months of 1944 when he assumed commandof IV. Gruppe Nachtjagdgeschwader 1. The aircraftoriginal camouflage of RLM 74 and RLM 75 on theupper surfaces partially showed through the overco-at of RLM 76. The lower and side surfaces remainedin the original coat of RLM 76, the lower port wingsurface was painted black.Recommended:for Bf 110G-4 1/72SS781 Bf 110G-4 Weekend (PE-Set)672013 Bf 110G wheels (Brassin)CX378 Bf 110G-4 (Mask)Cat. No. 672013KITS 11/2022INFO Eduard49November 2022Page 50
#82132SE.5a Hispano Suiza1/48ProfiPACK edition of British WW1 fighter aircraftSE.5a in 1/48 scale. The kit contains HispanoSuiza powered SE.5as.plastic parts: Eduardmarking options: 5decals: EduardPE parts: yes, pre-paintedpainting mask: yesresin parts: noProduct pageRe-releaseKITS 11/2022INFO Eduard50November 2022Page 51
D5969, Lt. Camille H. R. Lagesse, No. 29 Squadron, St. Omer, France, June 1918C5303, Lt. Leslie N. Franklin, No. 56 Squadron, Baizieux, France, March 1918D3511, Maj. Roderick S. Dallas, No. 40 Squadron, Bruay Airfield, France, May 1918Canadian Camille Henri Raoul Lagesse was bornin January 1883 in Quatre Bornes on the islandof Mauritius, where he studied at Royal College.He undertook further studies at Bordeaux universityin France after which he worked in the sugar refine-ry. In 1916, he joined the 28th Battalion of the LondonRegiment in England. By July 1917, he was reassignedto the Royal Flying Corps and, after completing histraining, he was transferred to No. 29 Squadron,where he served from March 1918. He stayed with thisunit until the end of the war and achieved twentyvictories during this time. His service was appre-ciated by the DFC (twice) and the Croix de Guerreawards. Lt. Lagesse, whose nickname “Largearse”was playing on his name, scored his first five killswhen flying this aircraft. One of his victims wasLt. H. Schultz, a Jasta 18 Fokker D.VII pilot, whomLagesse forced to land on June 6, 1918. Chulz thenbecame a POW. Upperside surfaces of D5969 SE.5awere painted in usual PC-10 color, which tended tochange in time from greenish khaki-like to morebrownish hue. Undersides were left in the natu-ral fabric color. The PC-10 overlaped to the bottomsurfaces.The famous No. 56 Squadron was not only made upof names such as James McCudden, Arthur RhysDavids and Albert Ball, also pilots that didn't reachquite the same aerial success served with the unit.One of these was Lt. Leslie Nansen Franklin, whoshot down a total of four enemy aircraft over France.He met his end on July 14, 1918. During an attack ona reconnaissance LVG Type C, he was shot downand last seen as his aircraft plummeted in flamesnear Hendecourt in France. The aircraft on whichLt. Franklin achieved his second victory, carriedthe standard SE.5a camouflage scheme made up ofPC-10 on the upper and side surfaces while the lo-wer surfaces remained in the natural fabric color.Fighters flown by No. 56 Squadron were carryinga wide white stripe around the rear fuselage(not extending to the bottom surface of the fuse-lage) from the end of September 1917 to the end ofMarch 1918. The stylized white letter X was repeatedon the upper surface of the top wing and againon the lower surface of the bottom wing in black.Roderick Stanley Dallas, DSO & Bar, DSC, Croixde Guerre avec Palme, was born on July 30, 1891,in Mount Stanley remote property not too far fromthe town of Esk in Queensland, Australia. He refusedto serve with the RFC and he joined the RNAS instead,where he undergo pilot training. His next move ledhim to 1st Naval Wing at the end of 1915 and he be-came the unit’s CO on June 14, 1917. Before the mergeof the Royal Flying Corps and the Royal Naval AirService into the Royal Air Force in April 1918, he hadbeen named the CO of No. 40 Squadron RFC, equi-pped with SE.5a fighters. June 1, 1918, was a fate-ful day, as he met a trio of Fokkers Dr.I from Jasta14. In the ensuing combat he was shot down by Lt.Johannes Werner. At that time, Major Dallas wasofficially credited with 39 kills (some sources claim32), the score making him second most successfulAustralian fighter pilot of Great War. The standardcamouflage scheme on the aircraft of No. 40 Squadronwere complemented by addition of PC-12 brown andOchre Yellow (which was used for mixing PC-10 color)on the upper surfaces of the aircraft. The serialnumber was partially overpainted and the roundelsremained on the wings only.KITS 11/2022INFO Eduard51November 2022Page 52
F5910, Lt. William G. Claxton, No. 41 Squadron, Lealvillers, France, February 1918C9539, Capt. Henry G. Forrest, No. 2 Squadron, Australian Flying Corps, Savy-Berlette,France, March 1918Lt. William Gordon Claxton, DSO, DFC & Bar, was bornin June 1899 in the town of Gladstone in the Canadianprovince of Manitoba. At the age of eighteen he joi-ned the RFC and underwent training on Canadian soil.He ended up being assigned to No. 41 Squadron ope-rating over France. In the period between May 27 andAugust 13, Claxton achieved 37 kills. For his calmnessunder intense combat situations, he earned thenickname “Dozy”. On August 17, 1918, he was shotdown by future 50-kills ace Lt. Johannes Gilderme-ister during combat with Jasta 20 Fokker D.VIIs eastof Wervicq. He was second Gildermeister’s victim.With serious head wounds, he managed to land be-hind enemy lines and thanks to the quick treatmentin hospital his life was saved by a German doctor.After the war, he made a living as a newsman anddied on September 28, 1967, in Toronto. AircraftofNo. 41 Squadron were marked with a pair of verti-cal white stripes behind the national roundels fromMarch 22, 1918, and aircraft of A Flight had wheeldiscs painted in blue. The individual aircraft letterin white was repeated on the top surface of theupper wing.Australian ace Capt. Henry Garnet Forrest, DFC, wasborn on December 5, 1895, in Brunswick, Melbourne,Australia. He joined the Australian Army in 1915 andtook part in the Battle of Gallipoli as a member ofthe 23rd Infantry Battalion. In April 1917, he joined theranks of the Australian Flying Corps and followingtraining, he served progressively with Nos. 32 and43 Squadron. On August 6, 1917, he was wounded andafter recovery time, he was assigned to No. 2 Squad-ron AFC. He achieved eleven kills there and servedwith this unit till the end of the war. He consequent-ly left the service and died on December 3, 1945,in Caulfeld in Australia. Capt. Henry G. Forrest,nicknamed “Rusty”, achieved all of his eleven killsflying this airplane. Its upper surfaces were pain-ted in standard PC-10 color. Aircraft of the 2nd AFCcarried a white boomerang ahead of the tail surfacesduring this time period, and the individual aircraftletter was repeated on the upper surface of thetop wing.KITS 11/2022INFO Eduard52November 2022Page 53
OVERTREESOVERLEPT#82131XSE.5a1/48#82132-LEPTSE.5a Hispano Suiza1/48Product pageProduct pageRecommended:for SE.5a Hispano Suiza 1/4848915 SE.5a stretchers (PE-Set)FE843 SE.5a seatbelts early STEEL (PE-Set)648296 SE.5a propeller two-blade (left rotating) (Brassin)648299 SE.5a guns (Brassin)648318 SE.5a propeller four-blade (Brassin)648320 SE.5a radiator - Hispano Suiza for 2blade prop (Brassin)Cat. No. 648299 Cat. No. 648320Cat. No. 648318KITS 11/2022INFO Eduard53November 2022Page 54
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F6F-5N, Lt. William E. Henry, VF(N)-41, USS Independence (CVL-22), September 1944F6F-5N, VMF-511, USS Block Island (CVE-106), April 1945This aircraft was flown by Lt. William E. „Bill“ Henry,the most successful night fighter ace within US Navy.He was credited with 9.5 kills achieved during theperiod from September 1944 to January 1945. Threeof his victims were four engine “Emily” flying boats.This F6F-5N was sprayed Glossy Sea Blue color andrepresents the standard late-war Navy camouflagescheme. The markings and the radar cover werepainted white.The first aircraft carrier to have a US Marine Cor-ps night fighter unit on board was USS Block Island(CVE-106). VMF-511 embarked on Block Island inMarch 1945, and was a mixed group of eight Corsairs,two photo-reconnaissance F6F-5P Hellcats and eightF6F-5N Hellcat night fighters. The squadron joinedthe Okinawa battle on May 10, 1945 and was conse-quently sent to the eastern coast of Borneo to supp-ort landing operations at Balikpapan. The first andonly success came on July 3, 1945, when 1st Lt. Bru-ce Reuter shot down an E13A “Jake” floatplane. TheHellcat nicknamed “Butch” was one of eight VMF-511Hellcat nightfighters aboard Block Island. The Whiteblock with Blue “I” is a carrier identification symbolwhile the small Blue “M” signifies the USMC.KITS 11/2022INFO Eduard55November 2022Page 56
Hellcat NF Mk.II, No. 892 Naval Air Squadron, Drem Airbase, Great Britain, May – August 1945F6F-5N, BuNo. 78669, Maj. Bruce Porter, CO of VMF(N)-542, Yontan Airfield, Okinawa, May 1945No. 892 Naval Air Squadron was reformed in April1945 as a night fighter squadron with 16 NF Mk.IIHellcats. After a short deployment onboard HMSPremier, the squadron was subsequently underta-king night fighter training at Drem Airbase till theend of the WWII. The Hellcat depicted was built forthe US Navy and bore the BuNo. 79015. It was pur-chased then by the Royal Navy and coded KD 127.The British roundels were applied on the originalUS camouflage scheme. The wing armament option isnot clear from the reference photo, but it seems the20-mm cannons were mounted.Hellcat BuNo. 78669 was the personal mount offive-kills ace Maj. Bruce Porter, Commanding Officerof VMF(N)-542. He inherited this F6F-5N from his pre-decessor. The Hellcat carried a big red heart and thewhite name “Millie Lou” on the nose. Porter orderedhis ground crew to overpaint it immediately afterhis arrival and a big bottle of Schenley bourbon and“Black Death” in white overpainted the previous noseart. Porter downed three Zeros over the Solomonsin June/July 1943 while serving with VMF-121.On June 15, 1945 he added two more kills to histally, shooting down a Kawasaki Ki-45 “Nick” heavyfighter and a “Betty” bomber carrying an Ohkasuicide rocket plane.KITS 11/2022INFO Eduard56November 2022Page 57
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BRASSINLööK set - Brassin pre-painted dashboard and STEELseatbelts for Yak-9D in 1/48 scale. Easy to assemble,replaces plastic parts. Recommended kit: ZvezdaSet contains:- resin: 1 part- 3D print: 2 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: yes,pre-painted- painting mask: noLööK set - Brassin pre-painted dashboardand STEEL seatbelts for Tornado IDS in 1/48 scale.Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts.Recommended kit: Revell / EduardSet contains:- resin: 5 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: yes,pre-painted- painting mask: no644181Yak-9D LööK1/48 Zvezda644184Tornado IDS LööK1/48 Revell/EduardProduct pageProduct pageINFO Eduard58November 2022Page 59
LööK set - Brassin pre-painted dashboardand STEEL seatbelts for A6M3 in 1/48 scale.Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts.Recommended kit: EduardSet contains:- resin: 4 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: yes, pre-painted- painting mask: noCollection of 4 sets for P-38J in 1/48 scale.Recommended kit: Tamiya- LööK set (pre-painted Brassin dashboards & Steelbelts)- TFace painting mask- superchargers- undercarriage wheels644185A6M3 LööK1/48 Eduard644182P-38J LööKplus1/48 TamiyaProduct pageProduct pageBRASSIN 02/2022BRASSININFO Eduard59November 2022Page 60
BRASSINCollection of 4 sets for F/A-18F in 1/48 scale.Recommended kit: Meng- LööK set (pre-painted Brassin dashboards & Steelbelts)- TFace painting mask- ejection seats- undercarriage wheelsBrassin set - the wing gun bays for F4F-3in 1/48 scale. The set consists of the bays for both wings.Made by direct 3D printing. Recommended kit: EduardSet contains:- 3D parts: 18 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: yes- painting mask: no644183F/A-18F LööKplus1/48 Meng648793F4F-3 gun bays PRINT1/48 EduardProduct pageProduct pageINFO Eduard60November 2022Page 61
BRASSIN 02/2022BRASSINBrassin set - landing flaps for F4F-3 in 1/48 scale.The set consists of the deployed flaps for both wings.Made by direct 3D printing. Recommended kit: EduardSet contains:- 3D print: 6 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: yes- painting mask: no648794F4F-3 landing flaps PRINT1/48 EduardProduct pageBrassin set - the undercarriage wheelsfor A6M3 in 1/48 scale. The set consists of themain wheels and a tailwheel. Easy to assemble,replaces plastic parts. Recommended kit: EduardSet contains:- resin: 3 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: no- painting mask: yes648799A6M3 wheels1/48 EduardProduct pageINFO Eduard61November 2022Page 62
BRASSINBrassin set - the cockpit for A6M3 in 1/48 scale.Made by direct 3D printing. Easy to assemble,replaces plastic parts. Recommended kit: EduardSet contains:- 3D print: 31 parts- decals: yes- photo-etched details: yes,pre-painted- painting mask: no648800A6M3 cockpit PRINT1/48 Eduard648801A6M3 exhausts PRINT1/48 EduardProduct pageProduct pageBrassin set - the exhausts for A6M3 in 1/48 scale.Made by direct 3D printing. Easy to assemble,replaces plastic parts. Recommended kit: EduardSet contains:- 3D print: 2 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: no- painting mask: noINFO Eduard62November 2022Page 63
BRASSIN 02/2022BRASSINBrassin set - the cockpit for F4F-4 in 1/48 scale.Made by direct 3D printing. Easy to assemble,replaces plastic parts. Recommended kit: EduardSet contains:- 3D print: 12 parts- decals: yes- photo-etched details: yes, pre-painted- painting mask: no648803F4F-4 cockpit PRINT1/48 EduardProduct pageINFO Eduard63November 2022Page 64
BRASSINBrassin set - exhaust nozzles for EA-18Gin 1/48 scale. Made by direct 3D printing.Recommended kit: MengSet contains:- 3D print: 6 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: no- painting mask: noBrassin set - the exhaust stacks for Yak-9D in 1/48 scale.Made by direct 3D printing. Easy to assemble, replacesplastic parts. Recommended kit: ZvezdaSet contains:- 3D print: 8 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: no- painting mask: no648804EA-18G exhaust nozzles PRINT1/48 Meng648805Yak-9D exhaust stacks PRINT1/48 ZvezdaProduct pageProduct pageINFO Eduard64November 2022Page 65
Brassin set - Carley type lifeboats for 25 peoplein 1/350 scale. The set consists of 10 floats.Made by direct 3D printing.Set contains:- 3D print: 10 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: yes- painting mask: no653012Carley float for 25 people – Type 2 PRINT1/350Product pageBRASSIN 02/2022BRASSINBrassin set - Carley type lifeboats for 25 peoplein 1/350 scale. The set consists of 10 floats.Made by direct 3D printing.Set contains:- 3D print: 10 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: yes- painting mask: no653011Carley float for 25 people – Type 1 PRINT1/350Product pageINFO Eduard65November 2022Page 66
Vickers Mk.I gunwheels20lb bomb carrier PRINTseat PRINTRotherham airpumps PRINTGnome engine PRINTBRASSINSIN64893Sopwith Camel Gnome engine1/48 EduardProduct pageCollection of 6 sets for Sopwith Camel in 1/48 scale.Recommended kit: Eduard- Gnome engine PRINT- wheels- seat PRINT- Vickers Mk.I gun- Rotherham air pumps PRINT- 20lb bomb carrier PRINTAll sets included in this BIG SIN are available separately,but with every BIG SIN set you save up to 30 %.INFO Eduard66November 2022Page 67
exhausts PRINTcockpit w/ reflector gun sight PRINTBRASSINCollection of 4 sets for F4F-3 in 1/48 scale.Recommended kit: Eduard- cockpit PRINT- wheels- exhausts PRINT- undercarriage legs BRONZEAll sets included in this BIG SIN are available separately,but with every BIG SIN set you save up to 30 %.SIN64894F4F-3 w/ reflector gunsight ESSENTIAL1/48 EduardProduct pageundercarriage legs BRONZEwheels earlyINFO Eduard67November 2022Page 68
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DECAL SETD48107P-38J over Europe1/48 TamiyaProduct pageP-38J-25-LO, s/n 44-23627,1stLt. Sam Plotecia, 392nd FS,367th FG, Juvincourt AB,France, 1944P-38J-15-LO, s/n 42-68004,1stLt. Clark R. Livingston,392nd FS, 367th FG, Juvincourt AB,France, December 1944P-38J-10-LO, s/n 42-67685,Maj. Joseph Myers, 38th FS, 55th FG,Nuthampstead AB, England,November 1943P-38J-10-LO, s/n 42-67940,Lt. Jack M. Jarell, 485th FS,370th FGP-38J-25-LO, s/n 44-328677,Maj. Robert C. Rogers, 492nd FS,367th FG, Peray, France, August 1944INFO Eduard78November 2022Page 79
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BIG EDAll sets included in this BIG ED are available separately,but with every BIG ED set you save up to 30%.BIG5367 USS Constellation CV-64 PART II 1/350 TrumpeterBIG49347EA-18G 1/48 Meng53180 USN ensign flag modern STEEL 1/35053233 Aircraft Carrier figures USN present 3D 1/35053284 USS Constellation CV-64 part 4 - hull & deck 1/35053285 USS Constellation CV-64 part 5 - island 1/350491288 EA-18G 1/48FE1289 EA-18G seatbelts STEEL 1/48EX876 EA-18G 1/48Product pageProduct pageINFO Eduard80November 2022Page 81
BIG72172 Stirling Mk.III ADVANCED 1/72 Italeri72722 Stirling Mk.III exterior 1/7272723 Stirling Mk.III fuselage bomb bay 1/7272724 Stirling Mk.III wings bomb bays 1/7273776 Stirling Mk.III 1/72CX629 Stirling Mk.III 1/72Product pageAll sets included in this BIG ED are available separately,but with every BIG ED set you save up to 30%.BRASSIN 02/2022BRASSIN 02/2022BIG EDBIG72171 Stirling Mk.III ESSENTIAL 1/72 Italeri72722 Stirling Mk.III exterior 1/7273776 Stirling Mk.III 1/72CX629 Stirling Mk.III 1/72Product pageINFO Eduard81November 2022Page 82
MASKSIT FITS!JX297 F-35C1/32 TrumpeterJX298 F-35C TFace1/32 TrumpeterJX299 Bf 109G-2/41/32 RevellJX300 Bf 109G-2/4 TFace1/32 RevellEX900 F-35B1/48 ItaleriEX901 F-35B TFace1/48 ItaleriEX902 F4U-1A1/48 Hobby BossEX903 F4U-1A TFace1/48 Hobby BossEX904 F4F-4 TFace1/48 EduardEX905 Tornado IDS TFace1/48 Eduard/RevellEX906 Buccaneer S.2C/D1/48 AirfixEX907 Buccaneer S.2C/D TFace1/48 AirfixCX633 Bf 110E1/72 EduardJX297 F-35CJX297 F-35CJX297 F-35CJX299 Bf 109G-2/4 JX299 Bf 109G-2/4 JX299 Bf 109G-2/4JX298 F-35C TFaceJX298 F-35C TFaceJX298 F-35C TFaceJX300 Bf 109G-2/4 TFaceJX300 Bf 109G-2/4 TFace JX300 Bf 109G-2/4 TFace JX300 Bf 109G-2/4 TFaceJX300 Bf 109G-2/4 TFace JX300 Bf 109G-2/4 TFaceJX298 F-35C TFaceJX298 F-35C TFaceJX298 F-35C TFaceINFO Eduard82November 2022Page 83
MASKSEX902 F4U-A1 EX902 F4U-A1 EX902 F4U-A1EX900 F-35B EX900 F-35B EX900 F-35BEX903 F4U-A1 TFaceEX903 F4U-A1 TFace EX903 F4U-A1 TFace EX903 F4U-A1 TFaceEX903 F4U-A1 TFace EX903 F4U-A1 TFaceEX901 F-35B TFaceEX901 F-35B TFaceEX904 F4F-4 TFace EX904 F4F-4 TFaceEX904 F4F-4 TFaceEX901 F-35B TFace EX901 F-35B TFaceEX901 F-35B TFace EX901 F-35B TFaceEX906 Buccaneer S.2C/DEX907 Buccaneer S.2C/D TFace EX907 Buccaneer S.2C/D TFace EX907 Buccaneer S.2C/D TFaceINFO Eduard83November 2022Page 84
RELEASESNOVEMBER 2022KITSPE-SETSZOOMSMASKS82202 F4F-4 Wildcat early 1/48 ProfiPACK82162 Bf 109G-14/AS 1/48 ProfiPACK11165 TORNADO IDS 1/48 Limited7465 Bf 110G 1/72 Weekend edition82132 SE.5a Hispano Suiza Re-release 1/48 ProfiPACK7079 F6F-5N Nightfighter Re-release 1/72 ProfiPACK53287 HMS Colombo 1/350 Trumpeter321001 F-35C 1/32 Trumpeter321002 Bf 109G-2/4 1/32 Revell36491 M1070 Gun truck 1/35 Hobby Boss481093 F4F-4 landing flaps 1/48 Eduard491312 F-35B 1/48 Italeri491314 F4U-1A 1/48 Hobby Boss491316 Buccaneer S.2C/D 1/48 Airfix72725 SBD-3 air brakes 1/72 Flyhawk73780 SBD-3 1/72 Flyhawk73782 I-16 Type 5 1/72 Clear Prop33335 F-35C 1/32 Trumpeter33336 F-35C seatbelts STEEL 1/32 Trumpeter33337 Bf 109G-2/4 1/32 Revell33338 Bf 109G-2/4 seatbelts STEEL 1/32 RevellFE1312 F-35B 1/48 ItaleriFE1313 F-35B seatbelts STEEL 1/48 ItaleriFE1314 F4U-1A 1/48 Hobby BossFE1315 F4U-1A seatbelts STEEL 1/48 Hobby BossFE1316 Buccaneer S.2C/D 1/48 AirfixFE1317 Buccaneer S.2C/D seatbelts STEEL 1/48 AirfixSS780 SBD-3 1/72 FlyhawkSS781 Bf 110G-4 Weekend 1/72 EduardJX297 F-35C 1/32 TrumpeterJX298 F-35C TFace 1/32 TrumpeterJX299 Bf 109G-2/4 1/32 RevellJX300 Bf 109G-2/4 TFace 1/32 RevellEX900 F-35B 1/48 ItaleriEX901 F-35B TFace 1/48 ItaleriEX902 F4U-1A 1/48 Hobby BossEX903 F4U-1A TFace 1/48 Hobby BossEX904 F4F-4 TFace 1/48 EduardEX905 Tornado IDS TFace 1/48 Eduard/RevellEX906 Buccaneer S.2C/D 1/48 AirfixEX907 Buccaneer S.2C/D TFace 1/48 AirfixCX633 Bf 110E 1/72 EduardINFO Eduard84November 2022Page 85
RELEASESBIG-EDBIG-EDBIG EDBRASSINLöökPLUSBIG SINSPACEDECALSEDDIE THE RIVETERBIG5367 USS Constellation CV-64 PART II 1/350 TrumpeterBIG49347 EA-18G 1/48 MengBIG72171 Stirling Mk.III ESSENTIAL 1/72 ItaleriBIG72172 Stirling Mk.III ADVANCED 1/72 Italeri644181 Yak-9D LööK 1/48 Zvezda644184 Tornado IDS LööK 1/48 Revell/Eduard644185 A6M3 LööK 1/48 Eduard648793 F4F-3 gun bays PRINT 1/48 Eduard648794 F4F-3 landing flaps PRINT 1/48 Eduard648799 A6M3 wheels 1/48 Eduard648800 A6M3 cockpit PRINT 1/48 Eduard648801 A6M3 exhausts PRINT 1/48 Eduard648803 F4F-4 cockpit PRINT 1/48 Eduard648804 EA-18G exhaust nozzles PRINT 1/48 Meng648805 Yak-9D exhaust stacks PRINT 1/48 Zvezda653011 Carley float for 25 people –Type 1 PRINT 1/350653012 Carley float for 25 people –Type 2 PRINT 1/350644182 P-38J LööKplus 1/48 Tamiya644183 F/A-18F LööKplus 1/48 MengSIN64893 Sopwith Camel Gnome engine 1/48 EduardSIN64894 F4F-3 w/ reflector gunsightESSENTIAL 1/48 Eduard3DL48089 Tornado IDS SPACE 1/48 Eduard/Revell3DL48090 F4F-4 SPACE 1/48 Eduard3DL48091 F-35B SPACE 1/48 Italeri3DL48092 Bf 109G-14/AS SPACE 1/48 Eduard3DL48092 Buccaneer S.2C/D SPACE 1/48 AirfixD48107 P-38J over Europe 1/48 TamiyaD72044 Ju 87 stencils 1/72Academy, Airfix, Italeri, RevellER48004 P-38F/G/H raised rivets & surface details 1/48 TamiyaNOVEMBER 2022INFO Eduard85November 2022Page 86
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BUILTP-51D-5, 44-15284, Lt. Col. Felix L. Vidal, CO of 325th FG, 15th AF, Lesina, Italy, spring 1945Felix Louis Vidal was born on July 22, 1912, inMadison, South Dakota. After graduation fromMadison High School, he enlisted in the milita-ry academy in West Point. After the graduation,he went through pilot training and when the USAentered WWII he held the staff and commandposts. On March 2, 1945, he assumed commandof the 325th Fighter Group and on June 6, 1945,Lt. Col. Wyatt P. Exum replaced him in this role.Felix Vidal's further career was associated withthe aviation and army and he retired in 1963 withthe rank of Brigadier General. He passed awayon July 16, 1983, in Brevard, Florida. During histenure with the 325th FG, nicknamed Checkertailsdue to their recognition markings, Felix Vidal flewMustang christened Dusty Butt. On May 31, 1945,this airplane was damaged during the crash.644031 P-51D-15+ LööK (Brassin)648485 P-51D exhaust stacks (Brassin)648504 P-51D wheels cross tread (Brassin)648522 P-51D cockpit (Brassin)648571 P-51D 75gal drop tanks (Brassin)648742 P-51D wheel bay PRINT (Brassin)ACCESSORIES USED:INFO Eduard87November 2022Page 88
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BUILTLt. Masaji Suganami, Sōryū Fighter Squadron, first attack waveIn the first wave, eight Zeros from Sōryū, led bySuganami, attacked Wheeler and Ewa airfields.They destroyed 27 aircraft on the ground and shotdown five planes in combat. Suganami then lostorientation, so he decided to return over the tar-get and sacrifice himself. However, he encounte-red other planes and returned to the carrier. Af-ter graduating Naval Academy in 1933, he servedin 13th and Tsukuba Kōkūtais. He led fighters on thecarrier Ryūjō till November 1941, after that Sōryūfighters until June 1942. At the Battle of Midway,in the first attack wave, his formation shot downsix American fighters. From July 1942 he served asHikōtaichō of fighters at Genzan Kōkūtai (later Kō-kūtai 252). Suganami went missing on November14, 1942 while escorting Rear Admiral Tanaka's de-stroyers off Guadalcanal. Six Zeros under his co-mmand provided the 4th CAP. They first attemptedto attack a "beautiful formation" of B-17s. After thatattack on ten F4Fs from VF-10 brought them fourvictories. On return Suganami, over the protestsof his subordinates, separated from the formationand headed southwesterly. He apparently joinedthe attack on SBDs from VB-10 and later, beforerunning out of fuel, shot down Lt. Col. "Joe" Bauer,commander of VMF-212 and Medal of Honor reci-pient.481076 landing flaps (PE-Set)648692 A6M2 type 21 cockpit PRINT (Brassin)648693 A6M2 wheels (Brassin)648694 A6M2 engine PRINT (Brassin)648722 A6M2 exhausts PRINT (Brassin)ACCESSORIES USED:INFO Eduard89November 2022Page 90
BUILT1/48DUAL COMBOCat. No. 11162marking Lbuilt by Robert SzwarcProduct pageA58-145 (EE852), F/Lt Llewellyn Wettenhall,No. 79 Squadron RAAF, Kiriwina,Trobriand Islands, DecemberSpitfire flown by F/Lt Llewellyn Wettenhall within No. 79 SquadronRAAF in the fall of 1943 carried the name "Nipponese" and girl'snose art on the port side. On December 31, 1943 the pilot's fate wassealed in this aircraft when it was lost crossing the south coast ofNew Britain during the scouting mission of six Spitfires near thisisland. After crossing the coast the formation entered the denseclouds and the unit lost contact with its leader. F/Lt Wettenhall hasnever been seen again.648738Spitfire Mk.Vlanding flaps PRINT(Brassin)INFO Eduard90November 2022Page 91
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BUILTWNr. 491353, Cap. Ugo Drago, CO of 4a Squadriglia, 2o Gruppo Caccia, Aeronautica NazionaleRepubblicana, Aviano, Italy, February 1945After the declaration of Italian Social Republicon September 18, 1943, a puppet state on the terri-tory of Italy occupied by German military under thecommand of Benito Mussolini, Germany allowedthis Republic to establish its own military forceof four divisions. Its air force component calledAeronautica Nazionale Repubblicana consistedof two fighter plane groups (Gruppo Caccia), tor-pedo groups (Gruppo Aerosiluranti Buscaglia) andseveral transportation squadrons. In 1945, bothfighter plane squadrons flew MesserschmittsBf 109G-6/G-10/G-14. The Commanding Officerof 4a Squadriglia, carrying the title of Gigi Tre Osei,was in this time Capitano Ugo Drago, an ace withseventeen kills to his credit. In April 1945, he wasawarded the German Knight's Cross. After thewar, he emigrated to Argentina, where he madea living as a flight instructor. He returned to Italyin 1953 and took up a post with Alitalia with whichhe flew until 1973. He died in Rome on April 22,2007. Towards the end of the war, the majorityof markings on ANR aircraft in the form of fuselageand wing crosses were no longer removed, withonly the swastika being oversprayed and repla-ced by markings of Italian aircraft. This marking,an Italian flag edged in yellow, was also addedto the fuselage sides.INFO Eduard93November 2022Page 94
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ON APPROACHDECEMBER 2022644186Z-326 LööK1/48 Eduard644187F-35B LööK1/48 Italeri644188Mosquito B Mk.IV LööK1/48 Tamiya635017WWII German clamps Type 1 PRINT1/35BIG33144 Yak-9T 1/32 ICMBIG33145 Bf 109G-6 1/35 Border ModelBIG49348 Spitfire F Mk.XVIII 1/48 AirfixBIG49349 P-38J 1/48 TamiyaBIG49350 F-86F-40 1/48 AirfixBIG49351 Yak-9D 1/48 Zvezda644186 Z-326 LööK 1/48 Eduard644187 F-35B LööK 1/48 Italeri644188 Mosquito B Mk.IV LööK 1/48 Tamiya632183 Bf 109G-4 wheels 1/32 Revell632184 Bf 109G-2/4 exhaust stacks 1/32 Revell632185 Bf 109G-2/4 undercarriage legs BRONZE 1/32 Revell635017 WWII German clamps Type 1 PRINT 1/35635020 MG 34 gun w/ammunition belt PRINT 1/35648796 WWII USAAF oxygen cylinder A-4 PRINT 1/48648798 F6F wheel bays PRINT 1/48 Eduard648802 A6M3 Type 32 landing flaps PRINT 1/48 Eduard648806 A6M3 Type 22 folding wingtips PRINT 1/48 Eduard648807 A6M3 Type 22 landing flaps PRINT 1/48 Eduard648808 A6M wheels w/smooth tire 1/48 Eduard648811 P-38J seat PRINT 1/48 Tamiya648812 P-38J cockpit PRINT 1/48 Tamiya648814 Buccaneer S.2C/D wheels 1/48 Airfix653013 Carley float for 40 people – Type 1 PRINT 1/350653014 Carley float for 40 people – Type 2 PRINT 1/350644189 A6M3 Zero LööKplus 1/48 Eduard644190 Tornado IDS LööKplus 1/48 RevellSIN64895 A6M2 Zero Model 21 ADVANCED 1/48 EduardSIN64896 F4F-3 w/ telescopic gunsight ESSENTIAL 1/48 EduardBIG ED (December)BRASSIN (December)LöökPlus (December)BIGSIN (December)LööK set - Brassin pre-painted dashboardand STEEL seatbelts for Z-326 in 1/48 scale.Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts.Recommended kit: EduardSet contains:- resin: 2 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details:yes, pre-painted- painting mask: noLööK set - Brassin pre-painted dashboardand STEEL seatbelts for F-35B in 1/48 scale.Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts.Recommended kit: ItaleriSet contains:- resin: 1 part- decals: no- photo-etched details: yes,pre-painted- painting mask: noLööK set - Brassin pre-painted dashboardand STEEL seatbelts for Mosquito B Mk.IVin 1/48 scale. Easy to assemble, replaces plasticparts. Recommended kit: TamiyaSet contains:- resin: 3 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: yes,pre-painted- painting mask: noBrassin set - clamps for German WWII AFVin 1/35 scale. Made by direct 3D printing.Set contains:- 3D print: 50 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: no- painting mask: noPRELIMINARY IMAGESPRELIMINARY IMAGESPRELIMINARY IMAGESINFO Eduard96November 2022Page 97
635020MG 34 gun w/ammunition belt PRINT1/35ON APPROACHLööK set - MG 34 German WWII machine gun in 1/35 scale.The set consists of 1 gun. Made by direct 3D printing.Set contains:- resin: 4 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: no- painting mask: no632183Bf 109G-4 wheels1/32 Revell632184Bf 109G-2/4 exhaust stacks1/32 RevellBrassin set - the undercarriage wheels for Bf 109G-4in 1/32 scale. The set consists of the main wheels anda tailwheel. Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts.Recommended kit: RevellSet contains:- resin: 3 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: no- painting mask: yesBrassin set - exhaust stacks for Bf 109G-4in 1/32 scale. Easy to assemble, replacesplastic parts. Recommended kit: RevellSet contains:- resin: 2 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: yes- painting mask: noINFO Eduard97November 2022Page 98
ON APPROACHDECEMBER 2022632185Bf 109G-2/4 undercarriage legs BRONZE1/32 Revell648796WWII USAAF oxygen cylinder A-4 PRINT1/48648798F6F wheel bays PRINT1/48 EduardBrassin set - the undercarriage legs for Bf 109G-2/4 in 1/32 scale.The legs are made of bronze. Recommended kit: RevellSet contains:- resin: 2 parts- bronze: 2 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: no- painting mask: noBrassin set - oxygen tanks for US WII aicraft in 1/48 scale.The set consists of 6 tanks. Made by direct 3D printing.Set contains:- 3D print: 6 parts- decals: yes- photo-etched details: no- painting mask: noBrassin set - wheel bays for F6Fin 1/48 scale. Made by direct 3D printing.Recommended kit: EduardSet contains:- 3D print: 4 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: no- painting mask: noINFO Eduard98November 2022Page 99
ON APPROACHDECEMBER 2022648802A6M3 Type 32 landing flaps PRINT1/48 Eduard648806A6M3 Type 22 folding wingtips PRINT1/48 Eduard648807A6M3 Type 22 landing flaps PRINT1/48 EduardBrassin set - landing flaps for A6M3 Type 32in 1/48 scale. The set consists of the deployedflaps for both wings. Made by direct 3D printing.Recommended kit: EduardSet contains:- 3D print: 4 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: yes- painting mask: noBrassin set - folding wingtips for A6M3 Type 22 in 1/48 scale.The set consists of the wingtips for both wings. Made bydirect 3D printing. Recommended kit: EduardSet contains:- 3D print: 4 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: yes- painting mask: noBrassin set - landing flaps for A6M3 Type 22 in 1/48 scale.The set consists of the deployed flaps for both wings.Made by direct 3D printing. Recommended kit: EduardSet contains:- 3D print: 6 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: yes- painting mask: noINFO Eduard99November 2022Page 100
ON APPROACH648808A6M wheels w/smooth tire1/48 Eduard648811P-38J seat PRINT1/48 Tamiya648812P-38J cockpit PRINT1/48 TamiyaBrassin set - the undercarriage wheels for A6MZero in 1/48 scale. The set consists of the mainwheels and a tailwheel. Easy to assemble,replaces plastic parts. Recommended kit: EduardSet contains:- resin: 3 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: no- painting mask: yesBrassin set - the seat for P-38J in 1/48 scale.Made by direct 3D printing. Easy to assemble,replaces plastic parts. Recommended kit: TamiyaSet contains:- 3D print: 1 part- decals: no- photo-etched details: yes, pre-painted- painting mask: noBrassin set - the cockpit for P-38Jin 1/48 scale. Made by direct 3D printing.Recommended kit: TamiyaSet contains:- 3D print: 40 parts- decals: yes- photo-etched details: yes,pre-painted- painting mask: noDECEMBER 2022INFO Eduard100November 2022Page 101
ON APPROACH648814Buccaneer S.2C/D wheels1/48 Airfix653013Carley float for 40 people – Type 1 PRINT1/350653014Carley float for 40 people – Type 2 PRINT1/350Brassin set - the undercarriage wheels forBuccaneer S.2C/D in 1/48 scale. The set consistsof the main wheels and a nose wheel.Easy to assemble, replaces plastic parts.Recommended kit: AirfixSet contains:- resin: 3 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: no- painting mask: yesBrassin set - Carley type lifeboats for 40 peoplein 1/350 scale. The set consists of 10 floats.Made by direct 3D printing.Set contains:- 3D print: 10 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: yes- painting mask: noBrassin set - Carley type lifeboats for 40 peoplein 1/350 scale. The set consists of 10 floats.Made by direct 3D printing.Set contains:- 3D print: 10 parts- decals: no- photo-etched details: yes- painting mask: noDECEMBER 2022INFO Eduard101November 2022Page 102
ON APPROACH644189A6M3 Zero LööKplus1/48 EduardCollection of 4 sets for A6M3 Zero in 1/48 scale.Recommended kit: Eduard- LööK set (pre-painted Brassin dashboards & Steelbelts)- TFace painting mask- seat- undercarriage wheelsDECEMBER 2022INFO Eduard102November 2022Page 103
BRASSIN 02/2022BRASSIN 02/2022ON APPROACH644190Tornado IDS LööKplus1/48 RevellCollection of 3 sets for Tornado IDS in 1/48 scale.Recommended kit: Revell- LööK set (pre-painted Brassin dashboards & Steelbelts)- TFace painting mask- undercarriage wheelsDECEMBER 2022INFO Eduard103November 2022Page 104
ON APPROACHSIN64895A6M2 Zero Model 21 ADVANCED1/48 EduardCollection of 5 sets for A6M2 Zero Type 21 in 1/48 scale.Recommended kit: Eduard- engine PRINT- gun bays PRINT- tailwheel PRINT- landing flaps PRINT- folding wigtips PRINTAll sets included in this BIG SIN are available separately,but with every BIG SIN set you save up to 30 %.DECEMBER 2022INFO Eduard104November 2022Page 105
SIN64896F4F-3 w/ telescopic gunsight ESSENTIAL1/48 EduardCollection of 4 sets for F4F-3 in 1/48 scale.Recommended kit: Eduard- cockpit PRINT- wheels- exhausts PRINT- undercarriage legs BRONZEAll sets included in this BIG SIN are available separately,but with every BIG SIN set you save up to 30 %.BRASSIN 02/2022BRASSIN 02/2022ON APPROACHDECEMBER 2022INFO Eduard105November 2022Page 106
PE-SETS53288 USS DDG-1000 Zumwalt 1/350 Snowman Models/Takom32479 Yak-9K landing flaps 1/32 ICM321003 Yak-9K 1/32 ICM36492 WC-51 1/35 Zvezda481094 Beaufort Mk.I bomb bay 1/48 ICM481095 Beaufort Mk.I landing flaps 1/48 ICM491318 Beaufort Mk.I 1/48 ICM491320 Mi-4 1/48 Trumpeter72726 B-26B/C Marauder exterior 1/72 Hasegawa/Hobby 200073783 A-1H 1/72 Hasegawa/Hobby 200073784 A-1J 1/72 Hasegawa/Hobby 200073785 P-39Q 1/72 Arma Hobby73786 B-26B/C Marauder interior 1/72 Hasegawa/Hobby 200073787 Yak-9D 1/72 ZvezdaZOOMS33339 Yak-9K 1/32 ICM33340 Yak-9K seatbelts STEEL 1/32 ICMFE1318 Beaufort Mk.I 1/48 ICMFE1319 Beaufort Mk.I seatbelts STEEL 1/48 ICMFE1320 Mi-4 1/48 TrumpeterFE1321 Mi-4 seatbelts STEEL 1/48 TrumpeterSS785 P-39Q 1/72 Arma HobbySS786 B-26B/C Marauder 1/72 Hasegawa/Hobby 2000SS787 Yak-9D 1/72 ZvezdaMASKSJX301 Yak-9K 1/32 ICMJX302 Yak-9K TFace 1/32 ICMEX908 Beaufort Mk.I 1/48 ICMEX909 Beaufort Mk.I TFace 1/48 ICMEX910 Mi-4 1/48 TrumpeterEX911 Mi-4 TFace 1/48 TrumpeterCX634 Yak-9D 1/72 ZvezdaCX635 A-1H 1/72 Hasegawa/Hobby 2000CX636 A-1J 1/72 Hasegawa/Hobby 2000SPACE3DL32009 Yak-9K SPACE 1/32 ICM3DL48094 Beaufort Mk.I SPACE 1/48 ICM3DL48095 Mi-4 SPACE 1/48 Trumpeter3DL48096 Z-326 SPACE 1/48 Eduard3DL72005 Ki-84 Hayate SPACE 1/72 Arma Hobby3DL72006 P-51B SPACE 1/72 Arma HobbyDECALSD32019 Ju 87 stencils 1/32 Hasegawa/Trumpeter/RevellON APPROACHDECEMBER 2022INFO Eduard106November 2022Page 107
ON APPROACHBf 109E-3 #7032 1/72WNr. 1079, Ofw. Erich Rudorffer, 2./JG 2,Baumont-le-Roger, France, September 1940WNr. 1380, Obstlt. Carl-Alfred Schumacher,CO of JG 1, Jever, Germany, early 1940WNr. 1271, Oblt. Helmut Henz, CO of 4./JG 77,Kristiandsand-Kjevik, Norway, September 1940Oblt. August-Wilhelm Schumann, 5./JG 52,Mannheim-Sandhofen, Germany,November-December 1939Obstlt. Max Ibel, CO of JG 27,Guines, France, September-October 1940WNr. 5058, Fw. Arthur Haase, 6./JG 51, Marquise-West, France, August 1940DECEMBER 2022INFO Eduard107November 2022Page 108
ON APPROACHSAMURAI 1/48#11168A6M3 Zero Type 22 and 32Dual Comboc/n 3032, Lt. Kiku-ichi Inano,Tainan Kōkūtai, Buna airfield,New Guinea, August 1942Kōkūtai 204, Vunakanau airfield,Rabaul, New Britain, April 1943PO1c Kyoshi Itō, 3. Kōkūtai,Koepang airfield, Timor Island,September 1942Tainan Kōkūtai (II), Tainan airbase,Taiwan, summer 1944DECEMBER 2022INFO Eduard108November 2022Page 109
ON APPROACHTsukuba Kōkūtai, Tsukuba airbase,Japan, 1944Kōkūtai 204, Rabaul, New Britain,April 1943Lt.(jg) Takeyoshi Ôno, Kōkūtai 251,Rabaul airbase, New Britain, May 1943Rabauru Kōkūbuntai, Lakunai airfield,Rabaul, New Britain, second half 1943Lt. Cdr. Saburō Shindō, Kōkūtai 582,Buin airfield, Bougainville Island, June 1943Iwakuni Kōkūtai, Iwakuni airbase,Japan, 1944Kōkūtai 251, Rabaul airbase,New Britain, May 1943Ensign Tetsuzō Iwamoto,probably Kōkūtai 253, Rabaul, New Britain,late 1943/early 1944DECEMBER 2022INFO Eduard109November 2022Page 110
ON APPROACHP-51D-10 1/48#84184s/n 44-14223, Lt. Col. Elwyn G. Righetti,CO of 55th FG, 8th AF, Wormingford,United Kingdom, December 1944–March 1945s/n 44-14237, Capt. William T. Whisner,487th FS, 352nd FG, 8th AF, Bodney,Great Britain, November 1944s/n 44-14292, Col. Claiborne H. Kinnard,CO of 4th FG, 8th AF, Debden, United Kingdom,November 1944s/n 44-14789, Capt. John B. England, 362nd FS, 357th FG, 8th AF, Leiston,United Kingdom, December 1944DECEMBER 2022INFO Eduard110November 2022Page 111
Spitfire Mk.IXc #7466 1/72MK244, W/Cdr Jan Čermák,No. 312 (Czechoslovak) Squadron,No. 134 Wing, RAF Appledram,United Kingdom, June 1944MK832, S/Ldr Robert K. Hayward,No. 411 squadron, B.4 Beny-sur-Mer Airfield RAF,France, July–August 1944Lt. Robert J. Connors, 309th FS, 31st FG, 12th AF,Castel Volturno, Italy, February–March 1944MK144, S/Ldr Alan G. Page, No. 132 Squadron,RAF Ford, United Kingdom, February–May 1944ON APPROACHDECEMBER 2022INFO Eduard111November 2022Page 112
ON APPROACHFw 190D-9 1/48#8188PRELIMINARY IMAGESDECEMBER 2022INFO Eduard112November 2022Page 113
Re-release1./KG(J) 6, Prague-Kbely,Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia,March/April 1945WNr. 130342, 5./NJG 11,Fassberg, Germany 194513./JG 27, Schleswig-Holstein,Germany, May 1945WNr. 130282, Hptm. Franz Wienhusen, CO of IV./JG 4,Frankfurt/Rhein-Main, Germany, November 1944WNr. 130297, Fw. Horst Petzschler,10./JG 51, Insterburg, East Prussia,May 1945Bf 109G-10 Mtt. Regensburg1/48 #82119ON APPROACHDECEMBER 2022INFO Eduard113November 2022Page 114
FIGHTING A BAD MOODAre you often in a bad mood this year?We are overwhelmed with news on allsides with information about the warin Ukraine, inflation, rising energy pri-ces and what increased costs and pri-ces mean for business as for householdbudget. This confusion is not improvedby politicians who sometimes give theimpression of living in an ivory tower ona glass rock with their heads in theclouds. I am not just referring to theCzech Republic, but somehow to a num-ber of other countries from which I readthe news. Although the Czechs, with theirbureaucracy and slow decision making,sometimes seem to want to take the topspot in this discipline.Walking through Prague, where I live, onecan see numbers of closed business asa result of the covid pandemic. Now somecompanies, shops and restaurants arealso closing because of inflation and thesagging energy market. The situation isnot easy for our company either. With theRussian invasion of Ukraine, there hasbeen a significant drop in sales virtuallyovernight. Even after eight months, themarket situation has not calmed downand it is still not certain whether we havehit bottom or not. The current negativedevelopment period is now longer thanthe whole 2008-2009 crisis.These worries add on top of what thepast two years have given us. We arestill dealing with the rise in the price ofproduction materials, the sharp increasein the cost of international transport,accompanied by the delays and unrelia-bility of delivery times.We consider innovation to be the maintool to deal with the crisis. We have al-ways been an innovative company, butthe current issues pushed us to acce-lerate our innovative activities. Since thelast spring, we have been investing hea-vily in 3D printing technology. We havealready bought four printers and are inthe process of buying two more, we areimproving our production processes andthanks to this, despite the crisis, our sa-les of Brassins are growing compared tolast year. We are also planning to pur-chase two new injection machines for thepress shop to increase production capa-city. We have introduced new procedu-res in the production of metallic moulds,such as 3D scanning to review progressof tooling, which helps us to reduce pro-duction time, saves costs, and also ensu-res optimal fitting of the components ofthe kits. The reviewers don't write any-thing about it, they probably take it forgranted, but it's not.We are also innovating our marketingactivities, for example, we have set up anInstagram account, the number of peo-ple who follow it has already exceededfive thousand, and thanks to their activeinvolvement it is still growing. Anotherbig change is ahead for Eduard INFO ma-gazine, we are preparing the introductionof the Triobo software, which will lead toa new, more modern and professionalonline form of the magazine. This jour-nal has undergone a dynamic evolutionin the last two years from one monthlyarticle we now bring three to four mainarticles and recently we have introducedone-page Boxart stories. We see theseas part of an improvement with the kits,where we've started to pay even moreattention than before to the historicalbackground of the box arts. Eduard INFOmagazine is no longer just a list of news,it is also fun for modellers and is on itsway to becoming a quality and popularscale modelling magazine.The bad mood and the global crisis canbe fought in different ways. Scale mode-lling is one of the unequivocally positiveways to relax and create something thatmakes you happy. We are doing every-thing we can to improve the current si-tuation. Do it too! Fight, resist, don't giveup! Help us, be with us. BUILD, assemble,learn new techniques, use our innovati-ons! You will help us and yourself. We willreward you by making great new kits andaccessories for you that will keep youentertained and put you back in a goodmood. Plus, we'll give you a monthly INFOmagazine with lots of inspiration andkeep you entertained on Facebook andInstagram. Who has this nowadays? Andget ready for another Sweep discountevent, this time it will be all about photoetch and later followed by Brassins.Jan BobekINFO Eduard114November 2022Page 115
www.eduard.com/bfcBUNNY BUNNY FIGHTERFIGHTERCLUBEduard's special membership club for all modeling enthusiasts!15% Permanent Club discount at Eduard Store – you will receive permanent 15% discount on all Eduardproducts 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 soldproducts, specially made for BFC members.Even better prices at Eduard events stand – do you know that Eduard usually has huge discounts ontheir products at fairs and events all over the world? BFC members will have even higher discount atthese 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 availableto 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 ChampionshipBOX CONTENT:Plastic parts, Marking options 6, Decal Set, PE parts, Maska, Brassinparts (two different types of wheels, landing flaps, dust filter witheyelid, intake ring and RP-3 60lb rockets), 3D decals for main and si-dewalk instrument and control panels with photo-etched details andseat belts.BOX CONTENT:Plastic parts, Marking options 4, Decal Set, PE parts, Maska, Brassinparts (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 Eduardproduct in your shopping cart. To apply this discount, the Activation product has to be in your shoppingcart. Activation product is excluded from this calculation.Activation products:Activation products:Tempest Mk. V + T-shirt 1/48MiG-21MF + T-shirt 1/72
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