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Messerschmitt Bf 109G-10 

National Museum of the U.S. Air Force
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The Messerschmitt Bf 109 began as an entry by the Bayerische Flugzeugwerke in a Luftwaffe (German Air Force) fighter competition in the early 1930s. Willy Messerschmitt's creation incorporated one of the most advanced aerodynamic designs at the time, with retractable landing gear, an enclosed cockpit, automatic slats, cantilever wings and stressed skin construction. During the trials, the Bf 109 clearly outperformed the larger and heavier favorite, Heinkel's He 112. The first production model, the Bf 109B, began coming off the lines in 1936. The redesignation of the Bayerische Flugzeugwerke AG (Aktiengesellschaft or Corporation) to the Messerschmitt AG in 1938 led many to call it the Me 109, although the official Luftwaffe designation of the aircraft remained the Bf 109 throughout the war.
Development and Service
The Bf 109B first entered combat with German-manned Condor Legion units during the Spanish Civil War, and they were a welcome replacement for the obsolete Heinkel He 51 biplane fighter. The Bf 109C, introduced in 1938, retained the twin 7.9mm MG 17 machine guns mounted above the engine but replaced the single MG 17 firing through the propeller spinner with two MG 17s in the wings.
After less than 200 Bf 109Ds were built, the Bf 109E entered production with the Daimler Benz DB 601 in early 1939. Early in World War II, the Bf 109E completely dominated the Polish PZL fighters. In the invasion of France in May 1940, the Bf 109E outfought French Morane-Saulnier MS 406s and British Hawker Hurricanes.
In the air battles over the English Channel and later during the Battle of Britain, the Bf 109E not only exposed its Achilles heel -- its short range -- but also met its equal, the Supermarine Spitfire. The short range of the Bf 109E prevented it from escorting Luftwaffe bombers past London, leaving the greater part of the British Isles free from enemy attack on training and production sites. This problem was a significant contribution to the Luftwaffe's defeat in the Battle of Britain.
The Bf 109F began to replace the E series in late 1940. Intended to counter the Spitfire, the F series had an engine with increased horsepower and a more streamlined airframe and cooling system. More than half of the Luftwaffe single-engine fighter units involved in the invasion of the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941, flew the Bf 109F. The F model also enjoyed considerable superiority over the RAF Kittyhawks (P-40s) and Hurricanes it met over the skies of North Africa.
The limits of the Bf 109 design appeared with the Bf 109G series, which began production in early 1942. The Bf 109G had a higher top speed but was less maneuverable than earlier versions. Some later Gs had bulges in front of the cockpit caused by the larger 13mm MG 131 machine guns, which added further weight and drag. Pilots of the Bf 109G found it increasingly difficult to fly against more capable aircraft such as the P-51D Mustang. Despite its limitations, the G series was the most numerous of the Bf 109 types and remained in production into 1945.
The last major series was the Bf 109K, which was similar to the Bf 109G-10 series. Development problems aggravated by Allied bombing and the rapidly deteriorating war situation limited production of this type to less than 2,000.
During WWII, the Bf 109 was the backbone of the Luftwaffe fighter force, serving on all fronts and also in the air forces of its European allies. Even though the superior Fw 190 began to replace the Bf 109 in some units as early as the summer of 1941, production of the Bf 109 actually rose until the closing months of the war and it remained the most numerous Luftwaffe fighter. By war's end, Germany had built more than 30,000 Bf 109s. Production of the Bf 109 continued on after the war in Czechoslovakia until 1949 and in Spain until 1958. It remains to this day the most produced fighter in history.
G-10 Series
The Messerschmitt Bf 109G-10 series was unusual in that it consisted of new and remanufactured airframes of earlier model Gs equipped with the more powerful Daimler Benz DB 605D series engine. As a result, there was little standardization beyond the common use of the Erla-Haube (or "Galland Hood") improved vision canopy. Even so, the G-10 proved to be the fastest G model.
The museum's Bf 109G-10 is painted to represent an aircraft from Jagdgeschwader 300, a unit that defended Germany against Allied bombers. JG 300 was originally formed as a Wilde Sau (or Wild Boar) night fighter unit in 1943 but converted to the day fighter role as U.S. bomber attacks intensified. In the many pitched battles with the U.S. Army Air Forces, the Bf 109G-10s of JG 300 often provided top cover for the more heavily armed Focke Wulf Fw 190s attacking the bomber formations. This unit also had the distinction of being the last command of the war for Maj. Gunther Rall, who with 275 victories, was the third-highest scoring ace in history.

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8 мар 2022

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Комментарии : 25   
@stevefreeland9255
@stevefreeland9255 2 года назад
What a beautiful machine! Looks like she just came off the factory assembly line! Love the details you provided with video. It would be super cool if you all added those as a narration to the video.
@USAFmuseum
@USAFmuseum 2 года назад
Thanks Steve! Feel free to view the description or the website fact sheet for the details. Cheers!
@lotnylotny671
@lotnylotny671 7 месяцев назад
He looks like he left the factory yesterday. Amazing condition for a copy from World War II.
@f86fman
@f86fman 2 года назад
Open Cockpit Day on Sat., 3/12/22. Bf-109 and P-47 Jug. NMUSAF.
@USAFmuseum
@USAFmuseum 2 года назад
Thanks Teddy!!!
@juanpablorossicabrales9176
@juanpablorossicabrales9176 2 года назад
Excelente video.
@mgbrv8
@mgbrv8 2 года назад
It would be awesome to have some narration about this aircraft history how it’s survived etc
@kenlarock7490
@kenlarock7490 2 года назад
There's info in the description on this aircraft.
@ezragroenewald1752
@ezragroenewald1752 Год назад
Absolutely love this plane if I was a pilot I'd love to take it for a flight.
@patricklarry6645
@patricklarry6645 2 года назад
German engineering!
@magoid
@magoid 2 года назад
I'm under the impression the G-10 model had a longer tailwheel than previous models? This have the short one.
@LupusAries
@LupusAries 2 года назад
Yes and no, the problem is to find what the germans call a "Sortenreine" (built as spec) Version of the late 109s, as they basically built them with what they had. The G-10 itself is based on the G-6/G-6AS with the better engine cowling and the better engines of the K-4, so both the DB605DB and DB605DC, with whatever was on hand. The DC is the version with the C3 fuel instead of the B4 fuel. Then there are early versions with the MG-151/20 Propeller hub cannon, and the U4 variants with the 30mm MK108. As for the wheels, whatever was on hand, so you can have short tail wheels, long tail wheels, etc. Same as you can have those with the metal big rudder or the big wooden rudder. It is essentially a stop-gap version to keep production running and have a decent fighter until the K-4 could go into production, due to the aforementioned nature it was also called the "Bastardflugzeug Produktion Erla" or the "Bastard plane out of the Erla Production" ;) :P. IMO it is the best of the late 109s, as it is almost as fast and powerful as the K-4, but decidedly lighter and more maneuverable. It also has the best handling out of the late war 109s imho. A G10/U4 weighs about 57 Kilos less than a K-4, that's however with the 30mm cannon, which is about 4 Kilos heavier than the MG-151/20. Now the Engines for the G-10 and K-4 vary, usually the DB-605D (early G-10), DB605DB (for most of them), and the DB-605DC (for a few). They have respectively 1,800, 1,850 and 2,000 of WEP with MW50 at sea level, and late war german fighters had to lean hard on the MW-50, because the allies had, frankly, much better engines in the late war. Yes some of them were carburator or something close to but not quite direct injection, but when it came to power and reliable one, they beat the shit out of german engines. All of these engines had around 1,450 hp on combat power at sea level and around 1,270-ish hp at 6,000m. WEP with MW-50 was around 1,600 at 6,000m for the DB-605DB and 1,800 for the DB605DC. So a K-4 might on the basis have 50 HP more than some G-10 (the most simulated one), but that is eaten up by the weight increase of 57 kilos, and the fact that IRL a G-10 just as likely could have the more powerful DC engine like the K-4, because the engine mounts did fit and the germans did not care about building the "correct" 109 at that time, just about building as many as the could, and if the engine fit, it was jammed in there. The G-10 was the most numerous of the high performing 109s you could expect to meet from mid-1944 on. The K-4 came very late in 1944, around November-december and only in small numbers. G-10 vs K-4 is a bit like the MK. IX vs. the Mk. VIII on the Spitfire side, it's a botch job stopgap, but it works rather beautifully.
@ryanmoeller3308
@ryanmoeller3308 2 года назад
I absolutely LOVE the BF-109!! Such a GREAT aircraft, especially with the cannon in the nose!! Are those blue AN fittings stock or new?? LOL.. Keep up the GREAT work! Much respect and support from Yuma, AZ. 👍👍
@mikesmith7249
@mikesmith7249 2 года назад
I cant imagine they're stock. I dont think Germany was using AN (ArmyNavy) specs during the war.
@USAFmuseum
@USAFmuseum 2 года назад
Hi Ryan thanks for viewing another video, we hope you and your family are doing great in AZ!!!
@ryanmoeller3308
@ryanmoeller3308 2 года назад
@@mikesmith7249 I know.. I was just messing around.. I'm an A&P Mechanic.. 👍👍
@ryanmoeller3308
@ryanmoeller3308 2 года назад
@@USAFmuseum Doing very well!! Trying to make it to the NMUSAF as soon as possible.. 😁😁
@mikesmith7249
@mikesmith7249 2 года назад
@@ryanmoeller3308 I guess a lot of A&Ps hang out here lol.
@525Lines
@525Lines 2 года назад
I think years ago y'all brought the original German engineers in to restore one of the German aircraft. Could you do something on that?
@USAFmuseum
@USAFmuseum 2 года назад
I'm not sure that happened but no footage exists if it did.
@brianstabile165
@brianstabile165 2 года назад
He risked his life 2 times a day to save a unknown enemy Fly for the air Brothers hero’s foes! Killing machine flying home B17 Honor in the sky Son title:no bullets fly by Sabaton
@christopherkehoe3402
@christopherkehoe3402 3 месяца назад
does it fly?
@stephenkneller6435
@stephenkneller6435 11 месяцев назад
Outstanding. It is wonderful that these aircraft are preserved for future generations. The only part that is missing, is the technology that was also developed by both sides during the war. It would be nice to see displays on these technologies. I would recommend the National Museum of the USAF look into getting this collection for display, then expand it with US WW II technologies. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-fYiwHctZuec.html
@vrosi1963
@vrosi1963 Год назад
Perfection, was the inner cowling paint glossy in ww2 ?
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