List of German World War II jet aces
This list of German World War II jet aces has a sortable table of notable German jet ace pilots during World War II.
Background
A flying ace or fighter ace is a military aviator credited with shooting down five or more enemy aircraft during aerial combat (The Germans traditionally set the threshold at 10 victories.). During World War II, hundreds of German Luftwaffe fighter pilots achieved this feat flying contemporary piston engine fighter aircraft.[1] However, only 28 pilots are credited with shooting down five or more enemy aircraft while flying a jet-powered aircraft.
Jet aircraft first engaged in air combat on 26 July 1944 , when Leutnant Alfred Schreiber, flying Messerschmitt Me 262 A-1a W.Nr. 130 017 (German language: Werknummer – factory serial number), attacked an unarmed photo-reconnaissance De Havilland Mosquito PR Mk XVI, of No. 540 Squadron RAF, over the Alps. Some sources refer to this as the first victory in air combat by a pilot of a jet fighter,[2] although the crew of the damaged Mosquito managed to return to an Allied airfield in Italy.
The first confirmed destruction of an enemy aircraft by an Me 262 pilot occurred on 8 August 1944, when Leutnant Joachim Weber shot down another Mosquito PR XVI from No. 540 Squadron, over Ohlstadt, in Bavaria.[3]
On 15 August 1944, Schreiber took off to intercept a Mosquito PR XVI (NS520) of 60 Squadron, South African Air Force crewed by Captain S. Pienaar and Lieutenant A. Lockhart-Ross, who were tasked with photographing airfields in the Black Forest area. Schreiber caused severe damage in his first attack and made more than 10 passes at the Mosquito before low fuel levels cause him to break off. Pienaar and Lockhart-Ross survived a crash landing at San Severo in Italy; their reconnaissance film and debriefing provided the Allies with valuable intelligence on the Me 262.
During 1944–45, the Luftwaffe committed two other jet- or rocket-powered fighters to combat operations. In addition to the Me 262, the Messerschmitt Me 163 Komet and the Heinkel He 162 Volksjäger both become operational. Few claims were made by pilots of the Me 163 and He 162, and none achieved ace status on either of these types.[4]
German jet aces
This along with the * (asterisk), indicates that the pilot was either killed in action or killed in a flying accident.
The list is initially sorted by the number of jet victories claimed.[5]
Name | Rank | Victories flying jets | Jet fighter unit(s) | Total wartime victories | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Welter, KurtKurt Welter | Oberleutnant | 20+[Note 1] | Kdo Welter, 10./NJG 11 | 63 | Possibly the all-time leading jet ace. |
Bar, HeinrichHeinrich Bär | Oberstleutnant | 16 | EJG 2, JV 44 | 220 | started jet combat in 1945 |
Schall, FranzFranz Schall* | Hauptmann | 14 | Kdo Nowotny, JG 7 | 137 | Killed in flying accident 10 April 1945[5] |
Buchner, HermannHermann Buchner | Oberfeldwebel | 12 | Kdo Nowotny JG 7 | 58 | |
Eder, Georg-PeterGeorg-Peter Eder | Major | 12 | Kdo Nowotny JG 7 | 78 | Wounded 16 February 1945[5] |
Rudorffer, ErichErich Rudorffer | Major | 12 | JG 7 | 222 | |
Schnörrer, KarlKarl Schnörrer | Leutnant | 11 | EKdo 262 Kdo Nowotny JG 7 | 46 | Wounded 30 March 1945[5] |
Büttner, ErichErich Büttner* | Oberfeldwebel | 8 | EKdo 262 Kdo Nowotny JG 7 | 8 | Killed in action 20 March 1945[5] |
Lennartz, HelmutHelmut Lennartz | Feldwebel | 8 | EKdo 262 Kdo Nowotny JG 7 | 13 | First aerial victory over a B-17 Flying Fortress by a jet fighter on 15 August 1944.[7] |
Rademacher, RudolfRudolf Rademacher | Leutnant | 8 | JG 7 | 126 | |
Schuck, WalterWalter Schuck | Oberleutnant | 8 | JG 7 | 206 | |
Wegmann, GüntherGünther Wegmann | Oberleutnant | 8 | EKdo 262 JG 7 | 14 | Wounded 18 March 1945[5] |
Weihs, Hans-DieterHans-Dieter Weihs | Leutnant | 8 | JG 7 | 8 | Midair collision with Hans Waldmann on 18 March 1945, killing Waldmann.[8] |
Weissenberger, TheodorTheodor Weissenberger | Major | 8 | JG 7 | 208 | |
Ambs, AlfredAlfred Ambs | Leutnant | 7 | JG 7 | 7 | |
Arnold, HeinzHeinz Arnold* | Oberfeldwebel | 7 | JG 7 | 49 | Killed in action 17 April 1945[5] Arnold's Me 262 A-1a W.Nr.500491 "Yellow 7" of II./JG 7 bearing his personal victory marks is now on display at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., USA.[9] |
Becker, Karl-HeinzKarl-Heinz Becker | Feldwebel | 7 | 10./NJG 11 | 7 | |
Galland, AdolfAdolf Galland | Generalleutnant | 7 | JV 44 | 104 | Assigned to create JV44 in March 1945. Wounded 26 April 1945[5] |
Köster, FranzFranz Köster | Unteroffizier | 7 | EJG 2 JG 7 JV 44 | 7 | |
Muller, FritzFritz Müller | Leutnant | 6 | JG 7 | 22 | |
Steinhoff, JohannesJohannes Steinhoff | Oberst | 6 | JG 7 JV 44 | 176 | Wounded 18 April 1945[5] |
Baudach, HelmutHelmut Baudach* | Oberfeldwebel | 5 | Kdo Nowotny JG 7 | 20 | Killed in action 22 February 1945[5] |
Ehrler, HeinrichHeinrich Ehrler* | Major | 5 | JG 7 | 206 | Killed in action 4 April 1945[5] |
Grünberg, HansHans Grünberg | Oberleutnant | 5 | JG 7 JV 44 | 82 | |
Heim, JosephJoseph Heim* | Gefreiter | 5 | JG 7 | 5 | Killed in action 10 April 1945[5] |
Neumann, KlausKlaus Neumann | Leutnant | 5 | JG 7 JV 44 | 37 | |
Schreiber, AlfredAlfred Schreiber* | Leutnant | 5 | Kdo Nowotny JG 7 | 5 | First jet ace in aviation history[10] Killed in flying accident 26 November 1944[5] |
Späte, WolfgangWolfgang Späte | Major | 5 | (JG 400) JV 44 | 99 |
Footnotes
References
Citations
- ↑ Spick 1996, pp. 2–3.
- ↑ Radinger & Schick 1993, p. 51.
- ↑ Morgan & Weal 1998, pp. 16–17.
- ↑ Spick 1996, p. 204.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Morgan & Weal 1998, p. 88.
- ↑ Hinchliffe 1998, pp. 210, 294.
- ↑ Morgan & Weal 1998, p. 17.
- ↑ Weal 2003, p. 92.
- ↑ Radinger & Schick 1993, p. 60.
- ↑ Foreman & Harvey 1995, p. 81.
Bibliography
- Boehme, Manfred (1992). JG 7 The World's First Jet Fighter Unit 1944/1945. Atglen, PA: Schiffer Publishing Ltd. ISBN 0-88740-395-6..
- Boyne, Walter J. (1980). Messerschmitt Me 262 Arrow to the Future. United States of America: Smithsonian Institution. ISBN 0-87474-275-7..
- Foreman, John; Harvey, S.E. (1995), Messerschmitt Combat Diary Me.262, Crecy Publishing Ltd, ISBN 1-871187-30-3.
- Hinchliffe, Peter (1998), Luftkrieg bei Nacht 1939–1945 [Air War at Night], Motorbuch Verlag, ISBN 3-613-01861-6.
- Morgan, Hugh; Weal, John (1998), German Jet Aces of World War II, London: Orsprey Publishing Limited, ISBN 1-85532-634-5.
- Radinger, Willy; Schick, Walther (1993), Messerschmitt Me 262 Development Testing Production, Schiffer Publishing Ltd, ISBN 0-88740-516-9.
- Spick, Mike (1996), Luftwaffe Fighter Aces, New York: Ivy Books, ISBN 0-8041-1696-2.
- Weal, John (2003), Bf109 Aces of the Russian Front, Oxford: Osprey Publishing Limited, ISBN 1-84176-084-6.