Looking really good Graham. The camo is a doddle to mask,I've done a few! The hardest bit is getting the mottle to look right,not too dense but not too fine either. Are you doing Galland's machine? I'm guessing,from the time,that it would be W.Nr 5819. If so I've got a few piccies of that machine on this very computer. The Airfix profile looks very good though.
(I know he flew a W.Nr 5966? (old memory) but I think that was an E-7)
Cheers
Steve
I've done some drop tank digging.DEFINITELY the E-7 was factory equipped equipped to carry the alloy 300l tank included,for some reason, in this kit. According to Galland himself the E-7 reached his unit (JG26) in early November 1940. This puts them technically outside the period called the BOB by the British.The drop tank installation was not a field modification. It was a factory conversion, resulting in a new designation. E-4 became E-7, E-1 became E-8, E-6 became E-9. This maybe why I was a little confused over my E numbers earlier!
Interestingly some aircraft may have been rigged up with the ability to use a tank earlier,though they were not used during the battle. One problem with effecively doubling the Bf109Es endurance from 1.5 to 3 hours was a lack of oil capacity. An interesting feature discovered in the wreckage of a crashed Bf109E in February 1940 was a tap in the cockpit with instructions to pump over extra oil after 1.5 hours flight.
Anyway,the upshot of all this is that BOB period Bf109Es did not carry drop tanks.
Incidentally people building "defense of the Reich" fighters nearly always fit the drop tank. They've got an,at best, 50 percent chance of being correct as,according to captured Luftwaffe pilots, they were only ever fitted for the first interception of the day. Subsequently the Luftwaffe expected to get a whole Gruppe re-armed,re-fuelled and airborne in less than half an hour,hence no drop tanks.
Here is a page from a large U.S.8th airforce document compiled on Luftwaffe (GAF) tactics from POWs etc. It comes from the section headed "Interception Procedure"
It's there in black and white!
Cheers
Steve