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Markings for Bf 109G-4  1/48

Bf 109G-4/R6, WNr. 14997, Lt. Erich Hartmann, 7./JG 52, Taman, the Soviet Union, May 1943

Lt Erich Hartmann, the most successful fighter ace in history, began to ply his trade with 7. Staffel JG 52, to which he was assigned on October 10, 1942. He first flew the Bf 109G-2, but by the first half of March 1943, Bf 109G-4s were arriving. From the beginning of May 1943, after gaining his 11th and 12th kill, he was made Rottenführer (leader of a two-ship flight) and his score began to quickly rise to reach 352 by the end of the war. For his success, he was awarded the Knight’s Cross with Oak Leaves, Swords and Diamonds. Hartmann’s “White 2” was camouflaged in the standard Luftwaffe scheme consisting of RLM 74/75/76. The factory codes on the fuselage sides and the bottom of the wings were not completely obliterated, but only partially oversprayed with a white wave (III. Gruppe marking). The white number 2 and a yellow band together with the yellow bottom wing tips were all common to Luftwaffe aircraft operating on the Eastern Front. The nose of the aircraft carried the marking of its previous user, I./JG 52. Flying this aircraft, Uffz. H. Meissler was forced to belly-land behind enemy lines due to engine failure on May 28, 1943 and was taken prisoner.

 

Bf 109G-4/R6, WNr. 14946, Maj. Wolfgang Ewald, Stab III./JG 3, Kertch, the Soviet Union, April 1943

Wolfgang Ewald was born on March 26, 1911, in Hamburg and joined the ranks of the Luftwaffe in 1935. Shortly after completing fighter training he was attached to 2./J 88, with which he served in Spain until August 1937. Shortly after his return in May 1939, he was named CO of 2./JG 52, which he led through the invasion of Poland and the Blitzkrieg against the Netherlands, Belgium and France. At the end of August, during the Battle of Britain, he was given command of the entire I. Gruppe JG 52. After serving with Jagdfliegerführer 2, he was assigned to III./JG 3 on May 20, 1942 and subsequently led it from July 23. Not even a full year after, on July 14, 1943, Major Ewald was hit by ground fire. He had to bail out and was taken prisoner, spending 76 months in captivity (until December 1949). After his return to Germany, Ewald was involved in the formation of the new Luftwaffe, from which he retired in 1960. He died on February 24, 1995. During his Second World War combat career, he shot down 77 enemy aircraft, and claimed also one victory in Spain. He received the Knight’s Cross on December 9, 1942. The aircraft that Major Ewald flew in April 1943 over the Kerch Peninsula was camouflaged according to the Luftwaffe fighter standard, consisting of RLM 74/75/76. The yellow bottom wing tips and fuselage band denote Eastern Front service, and on the nose is the JG 3 unit marking. Lt. Adolf von Gordon was shot down in this aircraft during combat with Il-2s on April 20, 1943.

 

Bf 109G-4/trop, WNr. 15013 Lt. Ulrich Seiffert, 8./JG 53, Tindja, Tunisia, April 1943

The III./JG 53 took part in the defensive battles of the German Afrika Korps in the face of increasingly offensive pressure emanating from the Allied advance through today’s Tunisia at the end of spring 1943. This unit was based in Sicily, but a temporary home for the 8 Staffel was made at the Tunisian base at Tindja from April 1 to April 20. This tropicalized Bf 109G-4 was flown by Lt. Seiffert during this time period. The aircraft was sprayed in a desert camouflage consisting of RLM 79 which covered the upper and side surfaces, while RLM 78 was the bottom side color. The white bottom wing tips and the white fuselage band ahead of the tail surfaces were identifying marks for aircraft on the southern front. The upper surfaces would later receive a squiggle pattern of RLM 80.

 

Bf 109G-4/R6, WNr. 19566, ten. Giuseppe Gianelli, 365a Squadriglia, 150o Gruppo Autonomo, Sciacca, Sicily, July 1943

Italian Macchi C.202 fighters flown by the Regia Aeronautica from the beginning of the war were due to be replaced by their more capable descendants, the Macchi C.205s, Fiat G.55s and Reggiane Re.2005s. Due to slow production initiation of the later types and the need for fighters to combat Allied air power, Germany was asked to supply its southern ally with the Messerschmitts Bf 109G, mostly the G-6 version. The Italians received ten Bf 109G-4s, and all, along with G-2 and G-6 aircraft, were assigned to the 150o Gruppo Autonomo. This unit was made up of the 363a, 364a a 365a squadriglia and to counter the Allied air threat, they were based at Sicily. The Bf 109G-4 used by Italian units came from Luftwaffe stocks and so were camouflaged in RLM 74/75/76 shades. The German national insignia were oversprayed with the Italian color Grigio Azzurro Chiaro 1, and, as in the case of aircraft 365-1, with the addition of small squiggles of Verde Oliva Scuro 2. The usual white identifiers used on the southern front at the wingtips bottom and the fuselage band were added to be consistent with Luftwaffe aircraft.

 

Bf 109G-4, Lt. Av. Petre Protopopescu, Escadrila 57, Grupul 7 Vânătoare, Kirovograd (Kropyvnytskyi/ Ukraine now), the Soviet Union, June 1943

Alongside the German armed forces, combat against the Soviet Union was also carried out by Finland, Italy, Hungary, Romania, Slovakia and Spain Axis allies. Romanian ground units operated alongside the German ones on the southern front supported by their own air units. In March 1943, the Romanian unit Grupul 7 began to accept the Messerschmitts Bf 109G but was subsequently moved to combat areas in the Ukraine. The aircraft flown by Lt. Av Petre Protopopescu carried a camouflage scheme composed of German RLM 74/75/76. The German national insignia was oversprayed with the same colours, and the markings were replaced by Romanian ones, i.e., the St. Michael Cross. The rudder carried the Romanian national colors. Both sides of the front of the aircraft carried the inscription “Don Pedro”, the pilot’s nickname.

12/2023
Info EDUARD 12/2023

Good day, Dear Friends, After a three-year break, we made a return to Telford, and it was a triumphant return at that! After all, Britain is the cradle of our business, and the Telford event is the biggest exhibition in our field and it would be a mistake to miss it. Our plan is to continue attending such events, beginning with Nuremberg in January/February.

12/1/2023

Read

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03/2025

Flying Knights in Australia

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03/2025

Aerial War in Ukraine

Aerial War in Ukraine

03/2025

TEC - Don't whimper and print!

TEC - Don't whimper and print!

03/2025

Editorial

Editorial

Dear Friends, I just returned from Nuremberg. I left there in a rather gloomy mood, knowing that it was most likely my last time. I have always defended the Nuremberg Fair as a useful and beneficial event. But alas, its significance to our industry has steadily declined over the years, while the costs associated with participation in it have continuously done the opposite. Still, it has always brought us some benefit, despite of the expense involved.

02/2025

P-40E Warhawk

P-40E Warhawk

The Curtiss P-40 line of fighter aircraft stood out among American fighter types for having remained in front-line operations from the summer of 1941, before the U.S. entered World War II, through the end of the conflict four years later. Only Grumman’s versatile F4F Wildcat naval fighter could match that record.

02/2025

The MW 50 System as an Alternative to the GM-1

The MW 50 System as an Alternative to the GM-1

This technical discussion supplements the article describing the GM-1 system in the Messerschmitt Bf 109 in the November, 2024 newsletter. Even before World War II, Dr. Otto Lutz (1906-1974) came up with the idea of injecting nitrous oxide into an engine to increase performance. He later published (as late as 1942) a scientific paper on the subject "Über Leistungssteigerung von Flugmotoren durch Zugabe von Sauerstoffträgern", or roughly translated, ‘On increasing the performance of aircraft engines through the addition of oxygen compounds’.

02/2025

Aerial War in Ukraine - A Russian missile shot down a civilian aircraft. Again...

Aerial War in Ukraine - A Russian missile shot down a civilian aircraft. Again...

The battles over Ukraine often involve friendly fire incidents. Russian air defense has already destroyed numerous Russian aircraft and helicopters. Similar incidents have occurred on the Ukrainian side. Several civilian aircraft have also been hit in Russia, though without fatal consequences—until now.

02/2025

Check out other issues

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