forum.12oclockhigh.net/album.php?albumid=73&pictureid=1324
"This was the only prototype to be fitted with a rudder without the counter balance horn," Smith & Creek,
Me 262 Volume Two, (1998), p. 391. Note the almost 90 degree angle to the bottom of this rudder.
http://forum.12oclockhigh.net/album....pictureid=1325
420. Here, Karl Baur is sitting in the cockpit of "V167" with a good view of the EZ 42
Adler gunsight. It was intended to automatically calculate the deflection angle necessary to hit a target while both aircraft were manoeuvering. Note the heavy wearing of the camouflage paints where the pilot climbed into the cockpit.
http://forum.12oclockhigh.net/album....pictureid=1326
421. The EZ 42 can also be seen in this photo. Faulty installation made the sight useless and it was locked "so as to function like a conventional fixed reflector sight," Smith & Creek, p. 332.
"By the end of March 1945 it had completed 303 flights totalling 50 hours, 25 minutes," Dan O'Connell,
Me 262 Production Log, (2005). p. 31.