Author Topic: So what's the difference between G10 and the 109K?  (Read 10581 times)

Offline GScholz

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So what's the difference between G10 and the 109K?
« Reply #60 on: February 18, 2004, 04:35:43 PM »
Luftflotte 6 Mittelabschnitt Ostfront/Reichsluftverteidigung im Osten would not have the "earmarked" units since they were on the Russian front, not fighting the allied strategic bombing campaign. Although the majority of the LW strength was on the Russian front the day fighters tasked with the defence of the Reich in the west would usually get the best fighters and supplies. Do you have any records of how many G10s or K4 using C3 in JG 1, JG 2, JG 3, JG 5, JG 11,JG 26, JG 27, JG53, and JG 54 (+ any additional unit tasked with the defence of the Reich in the west)? Or am I completely wrong here?

Are your books close to completion? I find this very interesting. :)
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Offline GScholz

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So what's the difference between G10 and the 109K?
« Reply #61 on: February 18, 2004, 04:57:17 PM »
To my knowledge the K4 was operated by III/JG 1, II/JG 2, III/JG 3, III/JG 4, II/JG 11, III/JG 26, II, III and IV/JG 27, III/JG 51, II and III/JG 52, II and III/JG 53, I, II and III/JG 77, I/NJG 11, II/KG(J) 6 and I and II./KG(J) 27.

Most of these were on the western front defending the Reich.


Edit: At least III/JG 1, III/JG 3, II/JG 11 and II/JG 27 seem to have been earmarked for high altitude combat with allied escort fighters.
« Last Edit: February 18, 2004, 05:06:30 PM by GScholz »
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Offline GODO

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So what's the difference between G10 and the 109K?
« Reply #62 on: February 18, 2004, 05:06:02 PM »
Was C3 used in conjuntion with MW50? I thought it was C3 alone or B4 + MW50.

Offline GScholz

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So what's the difference between G10 and the 109K?
« Reply #63 on: February 18, 2004, 05:11:05 PM »
C3+MW50.
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Offline Angus

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So what's the difference between G10 and the 109K?
« Reply #64 on: February 18, 2004, 06:53:59 PM »
I do not belive this, but yet, I have to give Isengrim/Barbi some credit for providing raw data this time, and also Ecke posted a very good link.
Anyway, I'd still not easily belive that C-3 would always have been available in ample quantities. Why not? Well, generally speaking, after late 1944, aviation fuel supply was a problem for the LW, so they'd have used anything they had their hands on.
Actually, for fuel economy, the LW applied OXEN to pull planes about (ramps, pens and so) in order to save fuel!
(Effort to have enough to launch a max amount of aircraft in operation Bodenplatte)

Oh, in case you may wonder, the oxen were not of the Angus breed :D
It was very interesting to carry out the flight trials at Rechlin with the Spitfire and the Hurricane. Both types are very simple to fly compared to our aircraft, and childishly easy to take-off and land. (Werner Mölders)

Offline VO101_Isegrim

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So what's the difference between G10 and the 109K?
« Reply #65 on: February 19, 2004, 09:22:58 AM »
Yes, a Luftwaffe document showing fuel allocation to 5 JGs. Do you have any German

documents to refute it? We're not talking about Italian planes, after all.


Yes of course, why not completely ignore fuel deliveries to Italian 109 units? After all, we

only talk about a mere 100 Bf 109G-10 s and G-14s that are running mostly on C-3... why not

just ignore it right away?

Why not ignore ? After all, same planes from the same production, same engine limits... I

guess painting a different national MUST change it`s techspecs completely. :) It appears

that for Nashwan, using troubles of a different engine in a different timeframe is a valid

analogia, but using the fuel use of the same engine in the same timeframe is an

invalid one...


From Butch2k:

"C3 was necessary for the 190 equiped units whose engine could not run without. So it seems

that in the last months of the war G-10 and K-4 units were delivered B4 instead and had to

rely on B4+MW-50 rather than C3+MW50."


It`s called an assumption (I logical one, I must add). Not a proof. I hold butch`s opinion

highly, but it is in a different category than actual proof or facts : photographic,

documentary evidence etc. Maybe it`s because my line of work, but an opinion simply

does not compare with the proofs I have seen.

And as for facts, those BMW 801 equipped 190s were hardly that much of a headache by late

1944 for fuel supply. BTW, if C-3 was so much of a short supply, then prey, tell me, why did

the OKL only supplied the Italians solely with it in 1945 instead of their very own units...

The ANR had G-10s and G-14s... no FW 190s AFAIR. I don`t see this assumption realized in

practice.

The LW, by the end of december, had roughly the following strenght in it`s 1st line fighter

units :

1924 fighters in total, those being:

594 FW 190A/Fs with BMW 801, that require C-3
238 FW 190D, with Jumo213, which used B-4
the rest, about 1000 being Bf 109s, mostly G-14s, that could also run on B-4. These include

circa 125 G-10s and 196 K-4s, a total of 330 or so.

In other words, 30% must be supplyied with with C-3, 55% can use either B-4 or C-3 and will

have the same performance, and about 15%, G-10s and K-4 can gain a lot of power by using C-3

instead of B-4. So I don`t see much of pressure here from FW 190 units for C-3, if a 109G-10

or K-4 unit was not using C-3, then it was most likely due to other reason, mainly logistics

or the existing B-4 fuel stores of the unit that were lived up first. However, on the

majority of photographs I have seen showing G-10s the C-3 fuel triangle is shown.



He then followed it up with a document showing allocation to Stab, I and III JG52, Stab,

I, II and III JG 77, Stab, I, II, III and IV JG300, Stab, I, II, III and IV JG301 and II and

IV JG1.

Aircraft types were 109G6, G10, G14, K4 and FW 190 A8, A9.

Every single gruppe is running B4 in the 109s, C3 in the 190s.


OK, now the facts vs. your version.

Yep, and what you forgot to tell that this document deals with the fuel state of a few

Gruppes in November 1944.. The only one unit that has K-4s is III/JG 77, which

received the planes mostly in October (75 planes fresh from Regensburg). This is about 1/3

of all K-4s in service, in a Gruppe that had planes before that required no better than B-4.

 All those planes were, as mentioned already, from the early Werknummer blocks , ie.

330 119
330 163
330 164
330 165
330 166
330 167
330 168
330 171
330 174
330 176
330 177
330 179
330 183
330 185
330 188
330 190
330 192
330 193
330 194
330 195
330 196
330 197
330 200
330 202
330 204

This is the first block of K-4s being produced from August 1944 onwards, between blocks 330

100 to 330 500. They had the early DB 605 DM engine, capable of only 1800 PS at 1.75ata, NOT

the later DB/DC variant. And this boost was either achieved with B-4 or C-3, the III/JG 77

had only G14s and G-6s before, so they did not need C-3 before, probably had none. Here`s

the answer why those run on B-4.

There it goes further. As you noted, the document tells I/JG 300 is using G-10/R6s in

November, and they are issued B-4 fuel. Note that the JG 30x units were primarly

nightfighter units...

Now, this picture shows a 109G of I/JG 300, from 2 staffel, in september 1944... Note the C

-3 fuel triangle, telling the groundcrew to fill it with 96 octane C-3. I am sure you will

explain that this meant nothing, and the crew in effect loaded the plane with whatever it

wanted, regardless the risk of an engine failure...




Do you have any documents showing the 109K4 gruppes using C3? Note I only claimed most C3

went to the 190s, but so far the only direct evidence shows only B4 going to the 109s.


Only evidence, m8? Don`t you ignore things? Like:

-evidence of Italian Gruppo using mostly C-3 for their 109 G-14s, G-10s (and 3 K-4s?)
-photographic evidence that the Hungarian 101st Regiment using C-3 for their G-10s? C-3 fuel

triangle is clearly visible on the picture...
http://www.messerschmitt-bf109.de/php-bf109g/bf109g10.php?sortby=id
-documentary evidence
-photographic evidence of a K-4 using C-3 again in Prien/Rodeike`s book.
-photographic evidence that JG 300`s G-10 DID use C-3 fuel

The "only B-4 went to 109" mantra is a pile of stinking BS.


You haven't provided any evidence about Luftwaffe use late war.

Then either you`re blind or a liar.


Isegrim, everyone else agrees the Luftwaffe faced a desperate fuel situation late war.[/

b]

You don`t agree with that ? You say the LW`s fuel situation was good ?

It makes sense that they would send C3 to the 190s that couldn't fly without it, and B4

to the 109s that could make do with it.


Yet evidence shows many 109 units used C-3. AKA Theory vs. reality.

Isegrim, what power output is used for your 109K4 speed and climb charts? It's not 1800

ps, is it?


If you had paid attention, both were shown on the charts, 1800, and 2000 PS... of course the

2000 PS is what hurts your feelings more. :cool:

Offline VO101_Isegrim

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So what's the difference between G10 and the 109K?
« Reply #66 on: February 19, 2004, 09:30:08 AM »
And besides, what part in the British report says 1800 ps is achieved with B4?

Uhm, butch said it actually that B-4 and MW50 use was good enough for 1800PS for the DB 605AM... it was in the same thread you take the other qoutes from (in a selective manner).. how did you missed that? Actually I believed the AM required C-3 in any case, but then butch noticed B-4 would do if MW was used as well, and after I checked the wording of the German engine description, I realized that for the AM they don`t actually say C-3 is absolutely neccesary, just "it is used" for Sondernotleistung.


Isegrim, this plane was captured on the 22nd of July 1944. We are talking about the

Luftwaffe fuel supply in 1945. Think there might be a difference in the Luftwaffe's fuel situation in the final months of the war? Everyone else does.


First, let`s rehearse it again, did you, or did you not say, that the clear sentence in the Brit report on the USE of C-3 actually means it was not used ?

Or maybe you can be a man about it, and admit C-3 was used by a 109s..

Now, pray, tell me what difference there was in the ratio of B-4 and C-3 in June 1944

and 1945...  if you would have ever looked up avgas production, stockpile and consumption figures for the LW (which you never did, but continue to form an opinion on that..) from late 1944, then you would have already realized that the production had little to do with the fuel quantity. From about September 1944, the Germans grounded most bombers to save fuel for the fighters (and one should note that a single bomber consumed many times the fuel a fighter needed), and were living up the HUGE avgas stockpiles (about 600 000 TONS in early 1944), instead of relying on the rather minimal production (10-20 000 tons/month in late 1944, vs. ~190 000 tons early 1944). Fuel consumption of the LW, which meant practically fighters and attack a/c only by late 1944, was a steady 40-50 000 tons per month. So unless you prove C-3 was in short supply in the STOCKPILEs vs. B-4, you will have a hard time proving your other claims.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
As for the "1.98ata was not authorized until February 1945" claim... not much needs to be

said. The DB 605D`s manual, 3rd edition, dated 1st December, 1944, says 1.98 IS AUTHORIZED.

PERIOD.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



There's a cleaned up pdf of the 109K4 manual available on the net. It's the December edition. It says the manifold pressure guage only goes up to 1.8ata:

First the correction, you always liked these half truths, but let`s get the full picture, shall we?

The first page from where you took it, says:

Teil 9A
Algemeine Austrustung
(Stand Oktober 1944)
Ausgabe Dezember 1944


Now, for the non-German speakers, this means:

Part 9A
General equipment
Condition as October 1944
Published in December 1944

So in brief, the K-4 manual you wanted to sell as if it would show the  december

state, is really just a newer print that STILL shows the conditions of October 1944 for the first batch of K-4s, such as the ones received by JG 77 and JG 27 in October 1944.... which were the early few that had the DB 605DM, the same ones the fuel delivery docs of November 1944 refer to. And that`s why it is hardly a surprise why a manual for the earlies Kurfurst with DB 605 DM, cleared for a max. 1.75ata, does not need a boost gauge more than a max. 1.8ata sign..

And I am curious how could you missed the "Oktober 1944" text just and inch above... it speaks a lot of your intentions. It`s also interesting to note that it was Neil Stirling who first come up with the manual, he was told that it is for the early planes only, and as I have seen, he accepted that fact and moved on. Unlike you, who keeps ignoring it, and malicously misqoute the document`s true date.

Now, please tell us who does a fuel gauge for a K-4 with an early, rare engine variant proves in October 1944 proves that 1.98 ata was not used in November/December on later variants...?

It`s like arguing that the Spit IX never used more than +15 lbs boost, just because it`s Merlin 61 equipped variant`s manual lists no more in 1942...

"Schwarze man" then reffered to the manual he'd sent to Butch, who replied:

Why don`t you qoute SM, Chris too? Maybe because in his posts he makes it clear, that in the December Ausgabe of the DB 605 D the 1.98 ata pressure is CLEARED ? SM also made it clear in the discussion, that the engine manual he referred to was already the 3rd edition, so most likely it was like this in November already ? So as long as the manual is THERE, and it SAID to the troops that 'you can use 1.98ata', I am not going to believe that it wasn`t, unless there is any other order that actually says 'don`t use 1.98ata vs. as said in the manual'.

There`s such WELL-KNOWN limitation to the DB 605A - why not for the DB 605D? Right now what I think, taking all available evidence in account, and not just ignoring the parts I don`t like, is that the 1.98 ata boost was cleared in mid-November or so for the DB/DC (most likely not for the DM, but those must have been quite rare), because the manual SAYS SO.
Possibly they encountered some troubles in use, which is quite usual with a new engine, that`s why the further investigations in early 1945. But unless there`s direct proof that 1.98ata was banned, one cannot think that, unless of course allows himself to neglect the rules of formal logic and rely on likely, or less likely assumptions.

Of course, Chris (SM) might be completely wrong, after all, he`s only responsible for the engine maintaince of the only airworthy Messerschmitt Bf 109 G-10 with DB 605 D today... but I suppose he has some idea of the limitations and techspecs of the engine he works every day.


 The Db605A in the 109G2 was supposed to run at 1.42ata.

Where did you take that ? The Rechlin tests already for a G-1 say 1.42 is "not yet cleared".

Where did you take 1.42ata was cleared in the beginning of service? I tell you, nowhere, it`s an assumption, made up by you to support your other assumptions. Sandcastle built on sand...


Now, what do you think the 109G manual said prior to that? Max boost 1.42 ata? Yet it

wasn't allowed to use that in service until June 43.


I highly doubt it would say anything before June 1942, simply `cos the plane did not see service before June 1942... :) Your nicely crafted story is basically that the 1.42ata is, according to you, supposed to be 'in the G-2s manual' (which you have never seen...) before it even saw service, and then it was called back, because of the troubles in service.... I see some conflicting elements in your version. :lol



It's not like there isn't a precedent of a German engine not being safe to run at full power when it was newly introduced, is it?

It`s not like it would be any new when introducing a new engine, nobody knows that better then the British, don`t you think? The Merlin III was supposed to be cleared for +12 lbs WEP, then it was severly restricted because of operational troubles, special report has to be written after every use... otherwise for strictly combat for short periods, more than +9 was FORBIDDEN.  
The Merlin 6x series were supposed to run at +18lbs, yet for about a year they had put up with +15 lbs until 1943. When they were supposed to reach +25lbs with 150 grade fuel, severe timing and ball bearing troubles happened and many of those had to be restriced to +21 lbs, and as far as I know, the Americans restriced them even further for safety.
 The Griffon 65 series was supposed to run at +25 lbs, yet in service, AGAIN for ball bearing troubles they were restricted in service use to +21lbs, were not cleared for higher boost even in mid 1945, if ever.
But I could simply save the typing and say "Napier Sabre", which remained so unreliable during the entire war that Typhoon pilots wrote black jokes on their planes about how they will burn in their cocpit after startup.. they lost Wing Commanders even in 1944 to engine failures soon after takeoff. So I say it`s all relative.

And neither do you, which is the whole point Isegrim.

You have figures that we know very little about, yet you are using them as gospel.


So the difference between you and me is that I don`t claim anything regards the conditions I don`t know, why you make up these conditions yourself to keep ignore the result.. And I post the same figures butch and others do. I wonder what could be wrong with them? Maybe the part : 377 mph at SL? Compared to 358 mph for the Spit XIV? :lol


This is the reason I believe the 109K4 was rarely able to match the figures in Isegrim's chart.

No, the reason is, the ONLY reason is, briefly, is that the K-4 is faster than MkXIV at SL even if one takes the highest operational boost for the Spit, and lowest operational boost for the Messer. :D


I think C3 was comparable, or even a bit better, than 100/130. But the 109 needed MW50 to reach the same sort of pressures without detonation as the Merlin on 100/150.

Not really. The DB 605DC was working on MUCH higher compression ratios than the Merlin,which was as low as 6:1 (DB 605D was 8.5:1, even the earliest DBs run at higher than 6:1...).. which means by the time of detonation, the pressure within the engine is higher in the DB 605 than in the Merlin, even w/o taking into account the higher compression also leads to higher tempretures, which makes the gas expand, increasing pressure further. Not to mention water injection works a bit different than just raising rich mixture`s critical octane rating.

Offline VO101_Isegrim

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So what's the difference between G10 and the 109K?
« Reply #67 on: February 19, 2004, 09:32:05 AM »


Fusalge of a G-6/AS awaiting restoration in Belgium, bearing it`s original markings.

Offline MiloMorai

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So what's the difference between G10 and the 109K?
« Reply #68 on: February 19, 2004, 09:39:31 AM »
Barbi, people can be convicted of a crime with circumstantial evidence.

Quote
It`s called an assumption (I logical one, I must add). Not a proof. I hold butch`s opinion highly, but it is in a different category than actual proof or facts : photographic, documentary evidence etc. Maybe it`s because my line of work, but an opinion simply does not compare with the proofs I have seen.


Barbi, why not post the 2 pics of Lt Walter's Me109K-4, yellow 8, with the 87 in the fuel triangle  on pg 173.


Nice pic. How many G-6/ASs were around in 1945?  Production had ended by Sept 1944. The G-6/AS was not a common model of 109 either, with ~690 being made.(less than 2%)
« Last Edit: February 19, 2004, 09:50:28 AM by MiloMorai »

Offline VO101_Isegrim

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So what's the difference between G10 and the 109K?
« Reply #69 on: February 19, 2004, 09:48:04 AM »
Barbi, people can be convicted of a crime with circumstantial evidence.

You don`t mean OJ Simpson wasn`t innocent? :D Seriously, I hope you don`t start teaching me about penal process... last time you tried, you said people has to prove their own innocence in France before the court when accused with crime, otherwise they are found guilty... Yeah, maybe under Charlemagne. :rofl

Barbi, why not post the 2 pics of Lt Walter's Me109K-4, yellow 8, with the 87 in the fuel triangle on pg 173.

Why not post them by yourself? What would that prove? K-4s run also at 87 octane? Nobody argues that.. Well, maybe except you, for the flame`s sake. :)

Offline VO101_Isegrim

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So what's the difference between G10 and the 109K?
« Reply #70 on: February 19, 2004, 09:50:00 AM »
For Butch:

If you want to contact George Punka, I have his email address.

Offline MiloMorai

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So what's the difference between G10 and the 109K?
« Reply #71 on: February 19, 2004, 10:14:54 AM »
Well Barbi for an ambulance chaser, I guess you don't do a bad job.:rofl :rofl


You have your knickers again all in a knot because of your lack of reading comprehension, for Nashwan did not say C3 was not used, only that its use by 109 a/c was not that common late war. (as 1945 wore on) The only reason you want all late war (from Jan '45) 109s to use C3 fuel is to have the numbers as high as possible.:)


As for the Walter 109, I would if I could.:) It should be noted the photos were taken in March 1945 while your photo is from the summer to fall 1944. These would be an indication that C3 fuel was on the decline.

Offline butch2k

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So what's the difference between G10 and the 109K?
« Reply #72 on: February 19, 2004, 10:44:10 AM »
Thanks a lot for Punka's address, i know he is working on a G-14 book.

The C3 stencil was applied on almost every G-10/K-4 because the DB 605DM was supposed to run on C3 to achieve the 1.75ata, exactly like the DB 605ASM.
 
BUT following shortage of C3, later revision of the motorenkarte, associated MW-50 documents and TA documents show B4 as a possible substitute fuel. The only restriction was not to cut MW-50 supply while running at a high boost because of detonation. And the aircraft were not repainted in any way.

Since C3 could sustain up to 2.2ata supply of MW-50 could be shutdown w/o any detrimental effects provided the pilot did not let the engine temp rise. Some testbed engine ran at 1.7ata with just C3 for instance.

Note that it was planned to up the DB605D max boost to 2.3ata with both C3 and MW-50.

As for the fuel supply, i own copies showing detailled stockpile status for february-april 1945 but i can't publish it here nor comment much on it. But yes the C3 was definitely scarce.

Offline VO101_Isegrim

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So what's the difference between G10 and the 109K?
« Reply #73 on: February 19, 2004, 11:10:40 AM »
Mail sent, butch.

Offline Nashwan

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So what's the difference between G10 and the 109K?
« Reply #74 on: February 19, 2004, 04:41:50 PM »
Thanks for the additional info butch.

Quote
Yes of course, why not completely ignore fuel deliveries to Italian 109 units? After all, we

only talk about a mere 100 Bf 109G-10 s and G-14s that are running mostly on C-3... why not

just ignore it right away?


The Italian air force is not the German air force. You can't assume fuel deliveries were of the same type for the two air forces.

Quote
Why not ignore ? After all, same planes from the same production, same engine limits... I

guess painting a different national MUST change it`s techspecs completely.


It's nothing to do with tech specs, it's to do with fuel availability, and the possibilities of supply to the airfields.

Quote
It`s called an assumption (I logical one, I must add). Not a proof. I hold butch`s opinion

highly, but it is in a different category than actual proof or facts : photographic,

documentary evidence etc. Maybe it`s because my line of work, but an opinion simply

does not compare with the proofs I have seen.


I won't answer all of this, because I'll assume you hadn't read butch's latest comments when you wrote it, and I think what butch has posted in this thread already answers it very well.

Quote
OK, now the facts vs. your version.

Yep, and what you forgot to tell that this document deals with the fuel state of a few

Gruppes in November 1944..


I don't have a date for the doc, if I did I would have posted it. BTW, are you claiming that the fuel situation improved for the Luftwaffe between Nov 44 and the end of the war?

Quote
And besides, what part in the British report says 1800 ps is achieved with B4?

Uhm, butch said it actually that B-4 and MW50 use was good enough for 1800PS for the DB 605AM... it was in the same thread you take the other qoutes from (in a selective manner).. how did you missed that?


I haven't got the whole thread saved, so I don't know what else was said. I've never disputed B4 and MW 50 could give 1800ps,  in fact in the same post I said:

"B4 and MW 50 provided 1800or 1850 ps. "

What I asked was where in the British report does it say that? I used the word "besides" to indicate it was not a bone of contention, ie it was besides the point. I was merely  interested, because I have seen the part of the report on the 109 lair website (sorry don't have the address on this pc) and I wondered if there was more.

Quote
First, let`s rehearse it again, did you, or did you not say, that the clear sentence in the Brit report on the USE of C-3 actually means it was not used ?


I don't know. I can't even recall us discussing this particular report, which doesn't mean I am saying we didn't, just that it doesn't stick in my mind.

I doubt that I claimed it meant it wasn't used, but if I hadn't seen the full report in context, I might have said it meant C3 was the normal type, and might not have been what was actually used.

Quote
Or maybe you can be a man about it, and admit C-3 was used by a 109s..


I've never denied C3 was used by 109s. AFAIK, they were using it as early as the BoB. What I have said is I don't believe C3 was the standard fuel for 109s in 1945.

Quote
and 1945... if you would have ever looked up avgas production, stockpile and consumption figures for the LW (which you never did, but continue to form an opinion on that..) from late 1944, then you would have already realized that the production had little to do with the fuel quantity. From about September 1944, the Germans grounded most bombers to save fuel for the fighters (and one should note that a single bomber consumed many times the fuel a fighter needed), and were living up the HUGE avgas stockpiles (about 600 000 TONS in early 1944), instead of relying on the rather minimal production (10-20 000 tons/month in late 1944, vs. ~190 000 tons early 1944). Fuel consumption of the LW, which meant practically fighters and attack a/c only by late 1944, was a steady 40-50 000 tons per month. So unless you prove C-3 was in short supply in the STOCKPILEs vs. B-4, you will have a hard time proving your other claims.


I have quoted German production figures to you before now, so I have obviously looked it up.

What did most bombers run on? B4? That would suggest less demand for B4 late in the war. Given that most 190s required C3, and that few bombers were flying, what exactly were the Luftwaffe doing with the B4 if not using it in the 109s?

Remember the problem for the Lufwaffe was not just the amount of fuel, but getting that fuel to where it was needed.

Quote
As for the "1.98ata was not authorized until February 1945" claim... not much needs to be

said. The DB 605D`s manual, 3rd edition, dated 1st December, 1944, says 1.98 IS AUTHORIZED.

PERIOD.


I think Butch has already answered this.

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First the correction, you always liked these half truths, but let`s get the full picture, shall we?

The first page from where you took it, says:

Teil 9A
Algemeine Austrustung
(Stand Oktober 1944)
Ausgabe Dezember 1944

Now, for the non-German speakers, this means:

Part 9A
General equipment
Condition as October 1944
Published in December 1944

So in brief, the K-4 manual you wanted to sell as if it would show the december

state, is really just a newer print that STILL shows the conditions of October 1944


You say it's a half truth when I say it's the December edition, yet you repeat that the manual says "December edition".
:rolleyes:

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And I am curious how could you missed the "Oktober 1944" text just and inch above... it speaks a lot of your intentions.


I used google totranslae it. Google says it's the December edition, which is what I called it.

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Now, please tell us who does a fuel gauge for a K-4 with an early, rare engine variant proves in October 1944 proves that 1.98 ata was not used in November/December on later variants...?


Sorry Isegrim, you are claiming 1.98ata was standard in December, I posted details from a manual published in December showing 1.8ata was the max the boost guauge read up to. That's relevant.

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It`s like arguing that the Spit IX never used more than +15 lbs boost, just because it`s Merlin 61 equipped variant`s manual lists no more in 1942...


If the Spitfire IX manual published in 1943 showed 15lbs boost, I'd consider it very relevant, and a good indication that 15lbs was all that was allowed. I am after all pointing to a manual published in December 44, not October.

After all, the start of the manual says the following:
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Hiermit genehmige ich die D. (Luft) T. 2109 K-4 Teil 9 A — N. f. D. —
“Bf 109 K-4 Flugzeug-Handbuch Teil 9 A: Allgemeine Ausrüstung
(Stand Oktober 1944) Ausgabe Dezember 1944”.
Sie tritt mit dem Tage der Herausgabe in Kraft.


Which Google translates as:
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Hereby do I approve the D (air) to T. 2109 K-4 part of 9 A  N. f. D. —
"Bf 109 K-4 airplane manual part of 9 A:  General equipment (conditions October 1944) edition December 1944".  

It enters into force with the day of publication.


And the day of publication is listed as:

Rechlin, den 29. Dezember 1944


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Why don`t you qoute SM, Chris too? Maybe because in his posts he makes it clear, that in the December Ausgabe of the DB 605 D the 1.98 ata pressure is CLEARED ?


Because you already have!

You posted:

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The DB 605D`s manual, 3rd edition, dated 1st December, 1944, says 1.98 IS AUTHORIZED. PERIOD.


I posted Butch's reply to Chris' post, which said the same thing.

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So as long as the manual is THERE, and it SAID to the troops that 'you can use 1.98ata', I am not going to believe that it wasn`t, unless there is any other order that actually says 'don`t use 1.98ata vs. as said in the manual'.


Which is why you should read what Butch has said again.

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Where did you take 1.42ata was cleared in the beginning of service? I tell you, nowhere, it`s an assumption, made up by you to support your other assumptions. Sandcastle built on sand...


From the order banning the use of 1.42ata, which says that a number of cases of breakdowns have occured.

It's also an order banning the use of 1.42ata, which would hardly be neccessary if the information sent to the pilots had told them that 1.3 was the max anyway. I mean, if they'd been told 1.3 was the maximum, why send them another instruction saying 1.42 can't be used?