He's lucky he wasn't flying after 1/1. I think things got pretty hairy. For example, Johannes Steinhof had his 262 accident in April of that year:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johannes_SteinhoffThat's why he spent the rest of his life as a reconstructed crispy critter.
Galland was also shot down - four times. At least one of those was due to a Spitfire (Drobinski of 303 in 1941). I should add, here, that the reason I cited Priller the Spit Killer is that he was the Number One Spit Killer in the Luftwaffe.
I believe "Dolfo" was flying a 109F at the time - and it probably looked like this (note the murderous "MickeyMaus" below the cockpit, a bit more fun than, e.g. Hartmann's "bleeding heart" Karaya or Priller's rather mundane Ace of Hearts):
Galland had a close brush in '45 in his 262, getting shot up by a 47 and having to land the crippled jet at an airfield under attack. I don't know if the vulch light was on.
Anyway, all that's probative of is, even with a great pilot at the controls, both 262s and 109s were very vulnerable - doubtless F-dubs were too. Galland was wounded numerous times. Rall had a thumb shot off and had his spine broken in 3 places. Molders, of course, was killed. Marseille was MIA. The list goes on. Hartmann's expereince was pretty unusual, I think.