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Characteristics of F-8s in Luftlotte
5 in 1944
Few photographs
are currently available of the A-8s and F-8s in use
on the northern front. One very interesting photograph
has been published by Keskinen & Stenman (1998).
This photograph (figure 1) reveals several interesting
features relevant to W. Nr 931 862. It establishes
beyond doubt that Fw 190s of 13./JG 5 did use the
wavy band of IV. Gruppe and it was finished in the
Staffel-colour of white, probably with a thin black
outline. Camouflage of this plane appears to be normal
and it is a rather clean plane, although oil spils
around the engine cowl panels suggest some heavy use.
Interestingly, no bomb rack is carried and the plane
does not have the blown canopy seen on most F-8s.
Unfortunately, no ID numeral is visible and it is
not impossible that this particular plane is indeed
White 1 itself.
Mankau (19??)
published another photograph of a JG 5 F-8 in an early
article on White 1. It was probably taken just after
the first F-8s had been delivered to JG 5, as the
oil cooler has not received any white paint. Being
a frontal view, the photograph does not reveal much,
except that the same type of underwing balkenkreuz
was carried and that the camouflage was standard for
the type. It probably is a good representation of
White 1 prior to unit markings being applied.
Only one other
unit used F-8s in Luftflotte 5, this being I./SG 5,
formerly 14.(J)/JG 5. By mid-1944 the unit operated
from bases in southern Finland and it had several
F-8s on strength. The one flown by the Gruppekommandeur
was W. Nr. 931 666, coded Q9+AB. Other known F-8s
from this unit are Black 6 and Black 10. These F-8s
all shows sign of substantial overpainting on the
fuselage side, both Q9+AB and Black 10 evidently having
had a yellow fuselage theatre marking at one time.
It is thus unlikely that one or more of I./SG 5s F-8s
were among the machines delivered to JG 5 in September.
All of these Focke-Wulfs have early flat-topped canopies
and bomb racks.
The camouflage
colours of all F-8s detailed above is in all likelyhood
the normal 74/75/76 scheme. It is also evident that
they were originally finished with a light motling
of 74/75 on the fuselage sides and tail.
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