Found the Mahmoud sortie one (though, from memory, the actual turn was called the Whiting Maneuver, think it's described in Most Secret War).
Paint and covering were burnt entirely off DZ757, and aircraft was later hit by flak, its port engine being put out, but was able to return to base with the aid of searchlights, which lit a path to base. The Mosquito had been previously damaged by flak, being hit in the starboard engine, and had been returning to base when Ladbrooke identified a contact to the rear. Three times Cybulski had chopped throttles and pulled up, causing the e/a to overshoot, and was on the e/a's tail when he found himself faced with the same maneuover, and was about to overshoot. "So I pulled right back and closed the throttles. Just as we were about to stall, I put the nose down. And there he was, sitting right out in front of us. I remember aiming our four cannon and the machine guns right at where his starboard wing tank should be and letting fly."
The e/a exploded, blinding Cybulski, and Ladbrooke took over the controls. The Mosquito was "completely enveloped in flames" and was dived at full throttle for 4,000 feet to extinguish the fire.Patrol time 20.12-00.53, time of claim 23.40.
They had taken off from Coleby Grange shortly after 8 p.m. to make a Mahmoud patrol between Zuyder Zee and Meppen. Except for some heavy flak, a concentration of searchlights and jamming of the A/1 • set, the 90-minutes patrol was uneventful. Homeward bound, Ladbrook got a radar contact, and despite jamming, held it until he and his pilot caught sight of a Do.217 flying east. As the enemy pilot went into a steep climb the night fighter closed rapidly to deliver a three-second burst. "The e.a. immediately exploded with a terrific flash and descended enveloped in flames. Burning petrol and oil flew back onto the Mosquito, scorching the fuselage from nose to tail, the port wing inboard of the engine, the bottom of the starboard wing, the port tailplane and the rudder, from which the fabric was tom away. Pieces of the e.a. struck the port oil cooler, resulting in the loss of oil and making it necessary to shut down the engine ... The pilot was completely blinded by the explosion and it was necessary for the navigator to take control of the aircraft for approximately five minutes until F/L Cybulski regained normal vision ... Course was set for base and after a remarkable 250-mile flight on one engine with aircraft seriously damaged".
DZ757, RA-Q of 410 Squadron, F/L Martin Czybulski and F/O H.H. Ladbrooke.
My source notes are Czybulslki's DFC citation and: Location and Mosquito registration from "de Havilland Mosquito". Squadron letter from an account by Cybulski in "Flying Under Fire, Volume 2", compiled by William J. Wheeler, in which Cybulski himself says this was a Mahmoud sortie and that the crew "found out later" that the e/a was an Me 410. Date from an original photo showing crew & damaged aircraft with hand-written commentary. Fighter Command War Diaries Volume 4 gives location as near Ijmuiden. Time details from
http://bb.1asphost.com/lesbutler/tony/tonywood.htm . Long paragraph of details from
http://www.rcaf.com/410squadron/410eng1-3.htm .
I don't have a positive ID for the German aircraft - will have to try to get Michael Balss' book on NJ losses.
There's also a good page on a rare daylight encounter with an He 219 at this page:
http://www.flensted.eu.com/g1944085.shtmlThe Mosquito actually claimed another "LeO 45" - seems that one managed to get the ditch.