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On the limit


Text: Richard Plos

Illustration: Adam Tooby

Cat. No. 8067


The Bell P-39 Airacobra was anything but a high-altitude fighter. Even the prototype, though powered by a turbocharged engine, did not excel at high altitudes in terms of top speed, and after the installation of the Allison V-1710-39 with a single-stage supercharger, the promising fighter was definitely doomed to be combat-used only at low and medium altitudes. All the more interesting is the story of F/O Kirby F. Smith, who managed to shoot down a Ju-88D-1 reconnaissance aircraft flying at an altitude of over 31,000 ft m.

This occurred on August 6, 1943. The pair of F/O Smith and F/O Simmonds from the 346th Fighter Squadron, part of the 350th Fighter Group operating in northwest Africa, was conducting a test flight during which one of the pair simulated an enemy aircraft while the other tried to locate it using radio guidance. During this task, the pilots received a report of the presence of a German reconnaissance aircraft, so they quit their exercise and, after guidance by a ground station, began their climb to the target. The scout had already flown over the coast and headed out over the sea, while the two already notoriously “out of breath” Airacobras fought for literally every feet of altitude as they approached their operational ceiling. The pilots reached the target’s altitude some 100 miles from the coast. Smith wasted no time as the fuel ran out and the engine temperature reached concerning values. As soon as he came within range, he opened fire. The powerful recoil of the 37 mm cannon caused his aircraft to drop some hundred foots, but the stricken Ju 88 went into a slow descent and its crew’s parachutes appeared in the sky...

That day the Luftwaffe lost two Ju 88 reconnaissance aircraft in the Mediterranean. One was doing weather reconnaissance, the other a long-range photo reconnaissance. Both were Ju 88D-1s. K. F. Smith’s victim was most likely the one of Fw. Heinz Pracht from the 3rd (F)/33 (WNr. 143073, 8H+LL), as the other lost Ju 88D-1 belonged to Wekusta 26, a weather reconnaissance squadron based in Frosinone, more than 380 miles from the site of the shoot-down, and it seems unlikely that it would have operated that far away.

Smith and Simmonds would have had an easier situation if they had gone on a test flight with the P-38s that all three squadrons of the 350th FG had received in order to fight the high-flying German reconnaissance aircraft. Each squadron received two of them in May 1943, and their pilots managed to shoot down 26 percent of all Luftwaffe reconnaissance aircraft over northwest Africa by early October.

The story of the formation of the 350th FG is interesting in itself. It was created somewhat out of necessity due to the USAAF command’s efforts to use all available resources prior to the planned invasion of North Africa. And so, it was decided to employ American pilots in Europe, to supplement them with pilots from USA and equip them all with Airacobras, which were originally to be received by the French and had been awaiting their fate in crates in the UK for quite a time. From the USA, a forward echelon of 119 men from the 31st FG and 52nd FG, the groups that flew the P-39, set out for Europe on September 20, 1942, from Harding Field. At the same time, American pilots operating in Europe were being assembled. However, these were not the pilots of the Eagle Squadrons that formed the 4th FG, known as the Debden Eagles, but men scattered in various RAF and RCAF squadrons. The activation of the 350th FG took place at Duxford on October 1 and included the 345th (Devil Hawks), 346th (Checkerboards) and 347th (Screaming Red Asses) Fighter Squadrons.

By early January, 800 ground and flying personnel were ready for action and all moved to Africa during January and February 1943. The P-39 flight from England to Port Lyautey, French Morocco, was itself a dangerous task, as it was a seven-hour flight, conducted largely over enemy territory. Of the 75 pilots who took off for the flight between January 3 and February 28, only 61 reached their destination. Ten were forced to land in Portugal due to headwinds, as was a pilot whose on-board electrical system failed in flight. One pilot was shot down over Biscay by a patrolling Ju 88 from a KG-40, another of those who did not make it to the destination had to make an emergency landing in Spain and another one lost his orientation over Ireland and crashed when trying to return to England.

In Africa, pilots from all squadrons flew patrol and interception missions, provided cover for convoys and escort for bomber, transport or reconnaissance aircraft. Their duties also included close air support, so it could be said that they were the “Jack of all trades”. And, as the story depicted in the boxart by Adam Tooby, who prepared it for kit Cat. No. 8067, proves, they even managed the role of high-altitude fighters with their Airacobras.

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

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