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#12
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Was there any preferences between submodels (FW190 A-x and Me-109 E-x, G-xx, K-xx)? Howdy, Jukka. Always a pleasure to hear from you. I never tabulated how many flyers preferred specific models, but Galland had a gorgeous old Bf 109 F as late as October 1944! (He used it to fly from Berlin to Jüterbog to save Dahl from Göring's wrath the day he got his Eichenlaub to the KC.) I think it was more a "personal transport" than his actual "war mount" (although even short relocation hops were highly dangerous by that time). I have never heard of any German say they'd pick a Bf 109 G-6/R6 (the cannon-schiffe with underwing pods), although Gustavs with traditional weaponry seemed popular. The Erla haube made a huge difference, as did the addition of cockpit armor. Never heard anyone mentioning a preference for any model prior to the Emil. As Art pointed out, the Emil, particularly with the centerline cannon, was very popular with the pilots. By the time the K-4 came out, pilots didn't even care what model they had, the 'kites' were judged on an individual basis: some G-6s were preferred over G-10s and Ks, if the former were considered to be of better manufacture. "My" guys, the Mosquito hunters stationed at Jüterbog, had access to any Bf 109 available and they tested each new acquisition for their speed - didn't matter how new or which model it was, if it couldn't catch a Mosquito. All of their 109s were AS-engined, and although no one believes this, several pilots in the unit claim they tested a "3-stage blower". The fastest machine in the unit was an overall blue G-6 with cockpit armor and wing guns pulled. It beat every other machine and the pilot had a shooting star painted on the beule (similar to how other units had). Late in the war, when 10./JG 300 went over to NJG 11 as its 5th and 6th Staffel, they still had a mix of G-6, G-10, and G-14s; no one in the entire Gruppe cared one bit about which model they were riding, as long as it got them home. Of the very few FW 190 pilots I've talked to, the FW "could beat anything" (cof) up to medium altitudes and they were easy to bail out of - which all of them (5 or 6?) had done; mention 190 Ds, they just smiled. In the 190 D-series, the pilots felt they could handle any individual Allied fighter - but the problem was, our guys never "...fought you fair, one on one - it was always our Schwarm against 800 Indians!" Perception, I guess. v/r Gordon Stormbirds.com/recon |
#13
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#14
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Subject: WWII FW190's, how good were they in dogfights?
From: nt (Krztalizer) Date: 5/21/04 1:08 AM Pacific Daylight Time Of the very few FW 190 pilots I've talked to, the FW "could beat anything" (cof) up to medium altitudes and they were easy to bail out of - which all of them (5 or 6?) had done; mention 190 Ds, they just smiled. In the 190 D-series, the pilots felt they could handle any individual Allied fighter - but the problem was, our guys never "...fought you fair, one on one - it was always our Schwarm against 800 Indians!" Perception, I guess. v/r Gordon Stormbirds.com/recon Also almost all Lufttwaffe pilots I spoke to in those mid-1945 conversations hated the "K: model. Said they were unreliable.And one even said it was designed to beat the P-51, which it could never do. But only one guy ever said that. Unfortunately I never persued the point and asked any of the others about that. Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
#15
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"ArtKramr" == ArtKramr writes:
ArtKramr Of the many German fighter pilots I spoke to in the ArtKramr Hofbrau Haus in Munich shortly after the war the ArtKramr majority opted for the ME 109. The Emil or "E " model ArtKramr seemed the number one choice. Many were saddened because ArtKramr the Emils were replaced by what they considered models ArtKramr that were not quite as good. These discussions were in ArtKramr the summer of 1945. Interesting. I had always read that the favourite model was the F, with nicer aerodynamics than the E, a better engine, and improved handling and performance. The armament was pretty weak though in the early models (15mm nose cannon, and two 7.7mm cowl guns). The G version introduced the horrible handling characteristics that killed a lot mroe student pilots. Brute power over finess. -- G Hassenpflug * IJN & JMSDF equipment/history fan |
#16
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Subject: WWII FW190's, how good were they in dogfights?
From: Gernot Hassenpflug Date: 5/21/04 9:29 AM Pacific Daylight Time Of the many German fighter pilots I spoke to in the Hofbrau Haus in Munich shortly after the war the majority opted for the ME 109. The Emil or "E " model seemed the number one choice. Many were saddened because the Emils were replaced by what they considered models that were not quite as good. These discussions were in the summer of 1945. Interesting. I had always read that the favourite model was the F, with nicer aerodynamics than the E, a better engine, and improved handling and performance. The armament was pretty weak though in the early models (15mm nose cannon, and two 7.7mm cowl guns). The G version introduced the horrible handling characteristics that killed a lot mroe student pilots. Brute power over finess. -- G Hassenpflug * IJN & JMSDF equipment/history fan Well I really am just recalling what these Luftwaffe pilots told me over cold beer and wurst at the Hofbrau Haus in Munich. I have no first hand knowledge myself on this subject. They also were down on the "K". They said it was unreliable because they tried to get power out of that engine that it was never designed to deliver. Of course the war had just ended and here we were, former enemies chatting over beer only weeks after we stopped shooting at each other. .. It was a bit strange at first but we all soon got used to it. Some of the guys who flew bombers had some interesting comments about the Norden bombsight and their bombsight, but that is another topic for another time.This post is about Emils. Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
#17
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Of the many German fighter pilots I spoke to in the Hofbrau Haus in Munich shortly after the war the majority opted for the ME 109. The Emil or "E " model seemed the number one choice. Many were saddened because the Emils were replaced by what they considered models that were not quite as good. These discussions were in the summer of 1945. Arthur Kramer So what was it like, to be having a beer with people, with whom you both were fighting against each other just weeks or months earlier? Ron Tanker 65, C-54E (DC-4) Silver City Tanker Base |
#18
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Subject: WWII FW190's, how good were they in dogfights?
From: 362436 (Ron) Date: 5/21/04 10:46 AM Pacific Daylight Time Message-id: Of the many German fighter pilots I spoke to in the Hofbrau Haus in Munich shortly after the war the majority opted for the ME 109. The Emil or "E " model seemed the number one choice. Many were saddened because the Emils were replaced by what they considered models that were not quite as good. These discussions were in the summer of 1945. Arthur Kramer So what was it like, to be having a beer with people, with whom you both were fighting against each other just weeks or months earlier? Ron Tanker 65, C-54E (DC-4) Silver City Tanker Base Very strange. We were rather stand-offish at first. Damned Nazis. But as time went on we saw they were just a bunch of guys just like us. Same age, Same experience. After a while we became rather friendly with a select few of them..I had a lot of talks with a German bombardier. It turned out we had a lot in common. But I had to be careful because the anti-fraternization laws were still in effect. But I did smuggle some food out of the mess hall for his wife and kid. He lived in Schleissheim right outside our airfield and I got him a job in the group photolab which helped a lot. Strange days never to be forgotten. Arthur Kramer 344th BG 494th BS England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany Visit my WW II B-26 website at: http://www.coastcomp.com/artkramer |
#19
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Howdy, Jukka. Always a pleasure to hear from you. Howdy, but you probably mix me with Jukka O. Kauppinen? Undoubtably Sorry about that. If its any help, I confused you with a great guy. some G-6s were preferred over G-10s and Ks, if the former were considered to be of better manufacture. As an dogfighter most powerful, lightest and reliable engine would be preferred option if flight characteristics otherwise doesn't decline. The greater speed of the later, more powerful models was often gained at the expense of a piston rod flying out the hood at bad moments. Apparently, blowing an engine in the Emil took real effort - by the time you got to a G-14 or K, the engine was likely to blow up after even a few moments at boost. Heard that from several different pilots - two of them blew up their motors under identical circumstances; one made a deadstick landing from 9,000 m (at night!), the other dumped his into a lake outside Berlin. The screws were so eager to hang him for the loss of a brand new G-14 that they went to the trouble of fishing the 109 out of the lake - when the damage was obviously due to defects in the blower, they let the pilot off the hook. Did engine upgrades happen in field also in E-, G- and K-series Me-109's and was there a preferred engine/blower combo? Field upgrades - Usually not, as far as I know. Everyone preferred the AS motors once they became available. I have read that DB's (and alla others) engines quality diminish all the time, estimated work hours dropped hundreds of hours to some dozen hours. Absolutely. I have a complaint letter from an NJG 11 Staffelkapitan to the wing, gritching about engine life being ~15 hours before replacement (dated March 45) - granted, by that time, the pilots were running scared and boost was being selected a lot more often than the manufacturer intended. Thats why aces wanted to stay "old" models and engines? That probably had a hand in it, plus wing loading got so bad the later models were becoming real pigs. A good G-2 or G-5, sent back to the factory and returned as a later model was almost guaranteed to come back as a handling nightmare. v/r Gordon ====(A+C==== USN SAR An LZ is a place you want to land, not stay. |
#20
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Also almost all Lufttwaffe pilots I spoke to in those mid-1945 conversations
hated the "K: model. Said they were unreliable. Although its aethetically one of the more attractive of the 109s, I haven't heard of anyone being a fan of them. You'd think with that big tail and all the other "end-time" improvements that they'd be good ships, but by then quality was down quite a bit. And one even said it was designed to beat the P-51, which it could never do. But only one guy ever said that. I'm sure that was Willi's intent, but it never worked out that way - the P-51 was simply superb in a fight; add in the quality of our pilots and the K-4 was never going to be good enough. The 109 was inadequate after 1943 and should not have remained in production. But, Speer didn't ask my opinion. v/r Gordon ====(A+C==== USN SAR An LZ is a place you want to land, not stay. |
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