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IL-2 Sturmovik: Birds of Prey Famous title comes to consoles.

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  #1  
Old 06-22-2010, 04:59 PM
olife olife is offline
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Originally Posted by FOZ_1983 View Post
The pink Spitfire was for low level recon i believe, to (as pointed out) blend in (very well to) with a background of low level cloud. Ugly but effective.........

Proves that its more of a womans plane, while the Hurricane was for the men haha.

For me i'd have one of the following Camo's

1) YB-W as in my sig picture, the aircraft of Flying Officer Harold Bird-Wilson of No 17 Squadron during the Battle of Britain. Throughout the Battle, No17 Squadron was in the thick of the action over southern England, mainly based at Debden and Tangmere. ‘Birdy’ had previously had a pre-war flying accident in which he was badly burned, becoming one of the earliest aircrew ‘guinea pig’ patients of the famous, pioneering plastic surgeon, Sir Archibald McIndoe. After his recovery he joined No 17 Squadron in April 1940 and fought continuously through the Battle of France and the Battle of Britain, achieving 6 confirmed kills, sharing in the destruction of several others and being awarded a DFC. His luck ran out on 24th September when he became Adolf Galland’s 40th victim and had to bale out of a flaming YB-W over the channel.

2)



He was 23 years old and a Flight Lieutenant in 249 Squadron, Royal Air Force during the Second World War when he was awarded the Victoria Cross. On 16 August 1940 near Southampton, England, Nicolson's Hurricane was fired on by a Messerschmitt Bf 110, injuring the pilot in one eye and one foot. His engine was also damaged and the petrol tank set alight. As he struggled to leave the blazing machine he saw another Messerschmitt, and managing to get back into the bucket seat, pressed the firing button and continued firing until the enemy plane dived away to destruction. Not until then did he bail out, and he was able to open his parachute in time to land safely in a field. On his descent, he was fired on by excited Home Guard troops, who ignored his cry of being a RAF pilot. The VC was gazetted on 15 November 1940
thanks a lot foz for this real story

just to add the usa paint their recon spits in blue and maybe the raf spits were in blue color too but for sure the raf recon spits were in pink
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File Type: jpg Mk_11_GB_16Sqn.jpg (11.7 KB, 8 views)

Last edited by olife; 06-22-2010 at 05:08 PM.
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  #2  
Old 06-22-2010, 05:06 PM
winny winny is offline
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I'd strip the paint..



I'd be very dead very quickly but I'd look pretty cool.. and that's what counts right?

Last edited by winny; 06-22-2010 at 10:06 PM.
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  #3  
Old 06-22-2010, 05:26 PM
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bobbysocks bobbysocks is offline
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Taken in late 44 these 16 Sq PR-IX's use a captured airfield from the Luftwaffe, note the cleverly camouflaged hanger.
These pink Spitfires were used to take low-level oblique pictures on days when there were some clouds, near sunset or sunrise,these aircraft were also used for dropping pictures and messages to field headquarters by placing them into the old 44 gallon-size drop tanks, and dropping the tank from just above the ground
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Old 06-22-2010, 05:31 PM
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bobbysocks bobbysocks is offline
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a guy made these for me before i knew you couldnt swap skins in BoP. guess when i go PC i will have stuff to play with.
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Old 06-22-2010, 06:01 PM
dkwookie dkwookie is offline
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Well no pink for my Spitfire, I would go with this:
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Old 06-22-2010, 06:41 PM
olife olife is offline
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Well no pink for my Spitfire, I would go with this:
waooow!very nice pic!!!!!!
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Old 06-23-2010, 03:42 AM
kozzm0 kozzm0 is offline
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Originally Posted by dkwookie View Post
Well no pink for my Spitfire, I would go with this:
Not me... they painted that thing to look like an eagle but it looks more like a badly mutated duck

If I was gonna paint my plane, I would paint it invisible
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Old 06-22-2010, 07:23 PM
olife olife is offline
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a guy made these for me before i knew you couldnt swap skins in BoP. guess when i go PC i will have stuff to play with.
very nice mustang!!
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Old 06-22-2010, 09:45 PM
Soviet Ace Soviet Ace is offline
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I'd paint my Yak-3 like this

Because after reading below about Sergiey Luganski, I'd want his Yak-3. (And the 'Ace's Ornament' they're speaking of, is the oak leaves and 32 on the nose. Why did I say Oil Cooler? )

On one of the days of May 1944 , Sergiey Luganski and his wingman took off on an important reconnaissance mission. While Viktor Usov accomplished his task of covering his commander, Luganski discovered some German tanks and armoured columns. They flew at low altitude in order to avoid enemy fighters. Having fulfilled their mission, the two Soviets entered their return flight. What they didn't notice was that a 'hidden' pair of Bf 109s followed them. Later, Luganski assumed they must have noticed the rich ace 'ornaments' on his Yakovlev, which made them decide to avoid an open confrontation, and instead seeking the chance in a surprise attack. They waited patiently, and when Luganski, having reduced the speed of his aircraft, started landing - they decided to hit.
The Ground control noticed the danger and warned both pilots by R/T. Viktor Usov turned sharply to defend his leader and soon he had shot the German wingman in flames. But just in that moment, the leader of the German section hit Usov's plane and he was forced to bail out. Now only the two leaders, the Russian and the German, remained in the air. The German pilot turned against Luganski. The Soviet ace was just coming in to land. A small touch down with lowered landing gears probably saved his life. A stream of enemy rounds passed slightly above his plane. While closing his landing gears, Luganski entered combat. Following his first run, the German climbed to make his next attack. He had the advantage - Luganski was flying slowly at deck. The Bf 109 came after him again and opened fire. Several shells slammed into Luganski's Yak. The canopy and instruments panel were damaged, but the plane still was able to fight.
Luganski, noticing the top class of his adversary and aware that his own aircraft was almost out of fuel, realized that he had only one chance of surviving - to use the Yak's superior horizontal. The German pilot, obviously certain of his success, entered a turn fight. After few very sharp rounds, Luganski had the Bf 109 in his gun sight. A fire burst shattered the German’s cockpit hood, injured the pilot and cut the engine power off. The German aircraft slid in the air for a moment, then it made a belly-landing 3 kms from the Soviet airfield. Soviet soldier rushed to capture him and suddenly the hunter had become the prey. Luganski saw this and a few minutes later he landed on nothing but fuel fumes. The duel had lasted no more than 7 minuts long, but it was enough to completely exhaust Luganski. The German pilot was captured: It turned out that his name was Otto. On his killboard were 70 victories, including 30 on Eastern Front. He had just been appointed for the Oak Leaves to his Knight’s Cross. Next day the commander of the 1st Ukrainian Front, Marshal I.S. Koniev arrived at airfield. He inspected the wreck of the German ace’s Bf 109, and decided to award Luganski a second Golden Star, so Luganski received his second Soviet Hero title on 1 July 1944. By that time, his victory score had rosen to 33, achieved during 335 combat sorties.

Last edited by Soviet Ace; 06-22-2010 at 09:53 PM.
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  #10  
Old 06-23-2010, 12:45 AM
olife olife is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Soviet Ace View Post
I'd paint my Yak-3 like this

Because after reading below about Sergiey Luganski, I'd want his Yak-3. (And the 'Ace's Ornament' they're speaking of, is the oak leaves and 32 on the nose. Why did I say Oil Cooler? )

On one of the days of May 1944 , Sergiey Luganski and his wingman took off on an important reconnaissance mission. While Viktor Usov accomplished his task of covering his commander, Luganski discovered some German tanks and armoured columns. They flew at low altitude in order to avoid enemy fighters. Having fulfilled their mission, the two Soviets entered their return flight. What they didn't notice was that a 'hidden' pair of Bf 109s followed them. Later, Luganski assumed they must have noticed the rich ace 'ornaments' on his Yakovlev, which made them decide to avoid an open confrontation, and instead seeking the chance in a surprise attack. They waited patiently, and when Luganski, having reduced the speed of his aircraft, started landing - they decided to hit.
The Ground control noticed the danger and warned both pilots by R/T. Viktor Usov turned sharply to defend his leader and soon he had shot the German wingman in flames. But just in that moment, the leader of the German section hit Usov's plane and he was forced to bail out. Now only the two leaders, the Russian and the German, remained in the air. The German pilot turned against Luganski. The Soviet ace was just coming in to land. A small touch down with lowered landing gears probably saved his life. A stream of enemy rounds passed slightly above his plane. While closing his landing gears, Luganski entered combat. Following his first run, the German climbed to make his next attack. He had the advantage - Luganski was flying slowly at deck. The Bf 109 came after him again and opened fire. Several shells slammed into Luganski's Yak. The canopy and instruments panel were damaged, but the plane still was able to fight.
Luganski, noticing the top class of his adversary and aware that his own aircraft was almost out of fuel, realized that he had only one chance of surviving - to use the Yak's superior horizontal. The German pilot, obviously certain of his success, entered a turn fight. After few very sharp rounds, Luganski had the Bf 109 in his gun sight. A fire burst shattered the German’s cockpit hood, injured the pilot and cut the engine power off. The German aircraft slid in the air for a moment, then it made a belly-landing 3 kms from the Soviet airfield. Soviet soldier rushed to capture him and suddenly the hunter had become the prey. Luganski saw this and a few minutes later he landed on nothing but fuel fumes. The duel had lasted no more than 7 minuts long, but it was enough to completely exhaust Luganski. The German pilot was captured: It turned out that his name was Otto. On his killboard were 70 victories, including 30 on Eastern Front. He had just been appointed for the Oak Leaves to his Knight’s Cross. Next day the commander of the 1st Ukrainian Front, Marshal I.S. Koniev arrived at airfield. He inspected the wreck of the German ace’s Bf 109, and decided to award Luganski a second Golden Star, so Luganski received his second Soviet Hero title on 1 July 1944. By that time, his victory score had rosen to 33, achieved during 335 combat sorties.
really great bud!!!
thanks for this great and interesting story
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