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Luftwaffe fighter aces : the Jagdflieger and their combat tactics and techniques PDF

240 Pages·2011·5.35 MB·English
by  Spick
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Preview Luftwaffe fighter aces : the Jagdflieger and their combat tactics and techniques

LUFTWAFFE FIGHTER ACES LUFTWAFFE FIGHTER ACES The Jagdflieger and their Combat Tactics and Techniques MIKE SPICK FRONTLINE BOOKS A Greenhill Book First published in Great Britain in 1996 by Greenhill Books, Lionel Leventhal Limited www.greenhillbooks.com Reprinted in this format in 2011 by Frontline Books an imprint of Pen & Sword Books Ltd 47 Church Street Barnsley South Yorkshire S702AS © Mike Spick, 1996 ISBN 978 1 84832 627 9 The right of Mike Spick to be identified as author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission from the Publisher in writing. Printed and bound in Great Britain by CPI Antony Rowe, Chippenham and Eastbourne For a complete list of Pen & Sword titles please contact PEN & SWORD BOOKS LIMITED 47 Church Street, Barnsley, South Yorkshire, S70 2AS, England E-mail:[email protected] Website: www.pen-and-sword.co.uk CONTENTS List of Illustrations Preface Prologue The Fighter Ace—The Luftwaffe—Basic Fighter Manoeuvres—The Legion Kondor 1 The Lightning Victories The Invasion of Poland—The Campaign in the West—Blitzkrieg—Dunkirk—The Experten 2 The Battle of Britain Fighters of the Battle of Britain—Destroyer—Battle Overview—Phase 1: Early July to 10 August —Phase 2: August to 6 September—Phase 3:7 to 30 September—Phase 4:1 October to 31 December —The Experten 3 Barbarossa to Zitadelle First Strike—Advance to Moscow—There and Back Again—Fighters of the Early Eastern Front—The Experten 4 Western Front, 1941–43 Focke-Wulf FW 190A—The British Response—The Campaign—The Experten 5 North Africa Malta—Desert Song—‘Torch’—The Experten 6 The Night Air War, 1940–42 Intruders—The Defence of the Reich—The Aircraft—The Experten 7 The Yank He Cometh, 1943–45 The Defence of the Reich—Gefechtsverband—The Fighters—The Experten 8 Red Sky at Night Window on Hamburg—Silk Purses from Sows’ Ears—New Threats—Schräge Musik—Nuremberg —The Beginning of the End—The Aircraft—The Experten 9 Overlord to Götterdämmerung The Fighters—The Experten 10 Retreat in the East The Fighters—Flying the Bf 109G—The Experten 11 The Jet Aces The Jets and their Opponents—Schwalbe in Action—Me 262 in Service—The Experten Epilogue Overclaiming—Relative Scores—Mirror, Mirror, on the Wall… Appendices 1. Luftwaffe Fighter Unit Organisation—2. Day Fighter Experten—3. Night Fighter Experten—4. Strike Rates Bibliography Index ILLUSTRATIONS Plates (between pages 96 and 121) 1 Werner Mölders emerges from the cockpit of his Bf 109. 2 Mölders boards his Bf 109E in France in 1940. 3 Wilhelm Balthasar, in the closing stages of the Battle of Britain. 4 Helmut Wick, Kommodore of JG 2. 5 Gerd Schöpfet, scorer of 40 victories. 6 Gerd Barkhorn, Kommandeur of II/G 52. 7 Hermann Graf, one of the fastest scorers on the Russian Front. 8 Günther Rall, arguably the best marksman in the Jagdwaffe. 9 Kurt Bühligen, who spent the entire war with JG 2 Richthofen. 10 Adolf Galland, one of the greatest fighter pilots of the war. 11 Spanish veteran Walter ‘Guile’ Oesau. 12 ‘Jochen’ Marseille. 13 Joachim Müncheberg. 14 Helmut Lent, a steady rather than spectacular scorer. 15 Walther Dahl, who scored heavily on the Eastern Front. 16 Pioneer night fighter Ludwig Becker returns from a sortie. 17 Heinz Knoke, who pioneered air-to-air bombing. 18 Heinrich, Prinz zu Sayn-Wittgenstein. 19 The doyen of night fighters: Heinz-Wolfgang Schnaufer. 20 The Führer presents the Oak Leaves to the Knight’s Cross. 21 Experten of JG 26. 22 Walter Nowotny, the top-scoring Austrian pilot of the war. 23 Erich ‘Bubi’ Hartmann of JG 52. 24 Johannes ‘Macky’ Steinhoff as a young Leutnant in 1939. 25 Heinz ‘Pritzl’ Baer, one of the few ‘first-to-last’ Experten. 26 The Bf 109B, first used in the Spanish Civil War by J 88. 27 A Bf 109G-4 in Russia. 28 The Focke-Wulf FW 190A, which gave British pilots nightmares. 29 The Messerschmitt Bf 110C Zerstörer. 30 The Bf 110G. 31 The Messerschmitt Me 163 Komet rocket fighter. 32 The Heinkel 162A Volksjäger. 33 The Messerschmitt Me 262 Schwalbe. 34 The Me 262B, the world’s first effective jet night fighter. 35 Two ex-Luftwaffe aircraft seen at the Champlin Fighter Museum. Figures 1 Effect of Speed on Turn Radius 2 The Break 3 The Scissors 4 The Immelmann Turn 5 The Sandwich 6 Schwarm Formation and Cross-over Turn 7 The Decoy 8 Curve of Pursuit 9 Comparative Turning Abilities, Bf 109 vs Spitfire I 10 Typical Staffel Formation, Summer 1940 11 Galland’s Favoured ‘Up and Under’ Attack 12 Schöpfel’s Combat, 18 August 1940 13 Deflection Shooting 14 The Abschwung 15 Vector Roll Attack 16 Bühligen’s Victory, 13 June 1941 17 Boxing 18 Marseille against the Defensive Circle, North Africa 19 Ludwig Becker’s Night Stalk 20 Against the ‘Heavies’ 21 Head-on Against the ‘Heavies’ 22 Schräge Musik Attack 23 The Spiral Climb 24 Hartmann’s ‘Last Ditch’ Evasion Manoeuvre 25 The Roller-Coaster Attack PREFACE Flying has no equivalent, while war is the second oldest profession. Combined, they are the ultimate in human experience. The fighter pilot is the modern equivalent of the ancient single combat champion, whose worth was measured by the number of his victories. Yet no champion of old ever approached the number of victories attributed to the leading fighter pilots of the Luftwaffe in the Second World War. What sort of men were they? The truth is that fighter pilots are an international fraternity, a brotherhood divided only by language and the national insignia on their aircraft. The German pilots of the Second World War may have been more successful, but in essence they were no different from those of any other nation or period. Many retained an innate decency in spite of the slaughter, under the banner of chivalry. As second highest scorer Gerd Barkhorn once told Erich Hartmann, ‘… you must remember that one day that Russian pilot was the baby son of a beautiful Russian girl. He has his right to life and love the same as we do.’ The war itself took a heavy toll, and the intervening years have not been kind. Even as this book was being written, the redoubtable Adolf Galland, Georg- Peter Eder—‘Lucky 13’—and ace of aces Erich Hartmann all ‘went upstairs’. For those remaining, fifty years has faded the memory. As my friend Julius Neumann, once a young Bf 109E pilot with II/JG 27 told me, ‘The heroes are getting tired.’ This being the case, entirely new material was virtually unobtainable. I am therefore indebted to my friends Alfred Price and Edward Sims for permission to quote extracts from their published works, and to Martin Middlebrook for permission to use two passages from his book The Nuremberg Raid. All sources used are listed in the Bibliography. My thanks are also due to my friends at Cranwell College Library and the Royal Aeronautical Society, and to Mr Brian Cocks of Helpston, for their generous help in making information available.

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In this exciting book Mike Spick shows how the Luftwaffe's leading fighter pilots were able to outscore their allied counterparts so effectively and completely during the Second World War. When the records of the Jagdflieger pilots became available after the war, they were initially greeted with inc
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