Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Watermelons on the Road to Tobruk


The Italian Semovente with a 75mm L18 gun did serve the Italian Armed Forces fairly well. The HEAT shell could knock out most British tanks, and it served in both North Africa and Italy. This model is the Tamiya Semovente with markings from the Ariete armored division. Many details were added to the interior, for example radio, shelves, pistol ports, and levers in the driving compartment. Some photo-etch to the hatches and to the brackets for the pioneer tools as well as the engine vent. The figures are modified with various pieces, including a Hornet Carristi head, a fez and arms  from a Bosnian Gebirgsjaeger, and lots of putty. The Beretta is from an Italeri Italian parachutist kit, and I did not add a sling, since tankers tend to avoid things that snag in an AFV. The cart and the fruit is scratch-built. The base is a mix of plaster of paris with a dusting of baking soda. 






























KLM McDonnell Douglas DC-9, an Airfix kit in 1/144 scale


The DC-9 was the aircraft that evolved into the MD-80, MD81s and other mid-range aircraft that can be seen all over the world today. This 1970s-era Airfix kit entertained me for more than a week while I was on a business trip and had some evenings in a hotel room. The decals were in very poor shape, but I had to make do with what I had immediately available, so there's plenty of patchwork and slight yellowing. The KLM livery was a nice change from military colors, though, and the kit came together rather nicely.

















Sunday, October 6, 2013

Pfalz D.XII

The Pfalz D.XII was a contemporary of the much more well-known Fokker D.VII. The Pfalz was not by any means a bad aircraft, but it was less maneuverable than the Fokker and the controls were heavier, although it could dive at much higher speeds. It was also very sturdy for a WWI aircraft. The Pfalz entered service on June 30, 1918, and around 800 planes were built before the Armistice. It was often used in combination with the Fokker D.VII, usually operating at a lower altitude than the better climbing Fokker D.VII.

The Pfalz was used in Jastas from the Kingdom of Bavaria, since Bavaria had sponsored the development of the fighter, and by Jastas on more quiet parts of the front. It seems as if Jasta 35b (the letter "b" was the designator for Bayern, or Bavaria) flew D.XXIs - and Fokker D.VIIs - with similar markings, so let's just assume that this particular Pfalz comes from that unit. Jasta 35b was indeed a Bavarian unit, managed to score 44 victories during the First World War. It suffered six members killed in action and four in flying accidents while nine were wounded in action, five were injured in flying accidents while two became prisoners of war. The following officers commanded the Jasta while the Pfalz served in the unit:

Otto Fuchs: 21 April 1918 - 7 July 1918
Rudolf Stark: 7 July 1918 - 11 November 1918

One source that an officer by the last name of Gratz commanded the unit between July 28 and August 8, 1918. If this is the case, Gratz may have been an acting officer while Stark was on leave or otherwise occupied.

The unit was stationed at the following airfields during the corresponding period:

Cambrai-Epinoy: 18 April 1918 - 28 August 1918
Lieu Saint Armand: 28 August 1918 - 29 September 1918
Bühl, Saarburg: 29 September 1918 - 12 October 1918
Givry, Mons: 12 October 1918 - 29 October 1918
Gosselies, Charleroi, Belgium: 29 October 1918 - 11 November 1918

Leutnant Rudolf Stark

Leutnant Rudolf Stark, the commanding officer of Jasta 35b in two periods during the summer and fall of 1918, was born on February 11, 1897, probably in Bavaria. He initially served with the 2nd Royal Bavarian Uhlans, and he was decorated with the Bavarian Military Merit Order on September 29, 1915 and the Iron Class, 2nd Class, on June 11, 1916. He subsequently applied for transfer to an aviation unit and he was posted to FA(A) 296, a reconnaissance unit, on either November 15 or November 17, 1917. However, he soon applied for fighter duty, and he joined Jastaschule II for training as a fighter pilot. Following training, Stark joined Jasta 34b on January 18, 1918, and he scored five confirmed victories during the spring of 1918. Stark was then appointed as acting unit commander of Jasta 77 on May 24, and he scored his sixth victory on the day he after he arrived. 

On June 7, 1918, Stark was reassigned to Jasta 35b as Staffelführer, scoring an additional five victories beginning on July 1. Stark had flown a Fokker DR. I triplane during at least some of his time with Jasta 77 and initially with Jasta 35b, but the latter unit was soon was re-equipped with Fokker D. VII and Pfalz D.XXI biplanes. 

The D.VII was a popular aircraft, but the Pfalz was a less well-known quantity. Stark summed up his impressions of the Pfalz as follows: "What is a Pfalz D.XII? No one has ever heard of such a machine, and no one knows anything about it. We decline to take these machines. The result is a series of long telephone conversations. We are told that they are very good, better than the Fokkers in some regards (eyewash!!) and we must take them. There are no more Fokkers to be had, and in any case these new Fokkers are better than the Albatros, and when new Fokkers come along we can take them in exchange. All right then, we'll have the Pfalz. Each of us climbed in the new machines with a prejudice against them and immediately tried to find as many faults as possible. The Staffel opinion was the same a as ours. The Werkmeister grumbled because of the trouble the rigging was going to make for him, while the mechanics cursed because of the extra work to assemble and dismantle them and declared them awkward to handle. No one wanted to fly those Pfalz except under compulsion, and those who had to make as much fuss as they could about practising on them. Later the pilots got on very well with them. They flew quite decently and could always keep pace with the Fokkers. Those who flew the Pfalz did so because there were no other machines for them. But they always gazed enviously at the Fokkers and prayed for the quick chance of an exchange."

Stark also said that "During the operations we flew both the Fokker D.VII and Pfalz D.XII in unison. Both types were similar, but the Fokker was more manoeuvrable. Therefore, I gave the Pfalz pilots instructions that during attacks by the enemy, they were to fly below the Fokkers."  However, since Stark's memoirs, Wings of War, have been in print since the 1933 and remains in bookstores to this day, could it be that his opinions about the D.XXI have become representative of the entire German experience with the Pfalz?


Leutnant Stark was wounded in September 16, but he continued fighting until the Armistice. He scored his eleventh and final victory, a SE 5a of No. 56 Squadron, just two days before the end of the war.

During October 1918, only weeks before the Armistice, Jasta 35b became a component part of the last Jagdeschwader to be formed, the Royal Bavarian JG1 commanded by Hauptmann Eduard Von Schleich. The unit fought with distinction against numerically superior foes up to the Armistice on November 11, 1918.

 
A replica of this Fokker D.VII, resplendent in Stark’s 1918 markings, is on display at the USAF Museum in Dayton, Ohio.

The former 1/72 Toko kit (re-boxed by Eastern Express) is somewhat of a little gem. The details are crisp, the dimensions are accurate, an the cockpit is quite well detailed. There was some flash to clean up, but nothing too difficult. However, the painting instructions consist of one version in the instruction leaflet and one on the side of the box, the latter being a lozenge-patterned aircraft. Neither version has any description whatsoever as to what units the aircraft would have belonged to, and I have not been able to find any other references to the versions in the kit. The decals are quite good, though, and this was the first time I applied lozenge decals to an aircraft. The lozenge decals were not wide enough, but as it turned out, the decals were somewhat elastic and could be very gently tugged to cover the span of the wing.