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Allied and Soviet Air Forces Please use this forum to discuss the Air Forces of the Western Allies and the Soviet Union. |
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#1
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Soviet pilots' claims against 'P.24'
By checking the three printed sources on Soviet aces available to me (two in English and one in Russian), I noticed that there were a few claims against (P.Z.L.) 'P.24'. It must have been a confusion with the similarly looking P.11s.
Here is what I wrote in the (preliminary version of an) article manuscript I am currently working on. "It has to be noted that Soviet pilots did claim several ‘P.24s’ (most probably a confusion with the very similarly looking P.11). All known claims filed in 1941 against P.24s were done by members of the 55th IAP, based at Beltsi (Bălţi) airfield, in Bessarabia, near the Rumanian frontier, equipped with a mixture of I-153s, I-16s and MiG-3s. For example, Ml. Lt. Leonid Dyachenko claimed a P.24 in June or July 1941 aboard his MiG-3. His ‘polk-mate’, St. Lt. Kuzma Y. Selivestrov, reported to shot down a’P.24’ while flying his MiG-3, No. 12, on 28 June 1941. A famous Soviet ace, Kpt. Grigoriy A. Rechkalov of the same IAP, scored a victory over a ‘P.24’ also on 28 June 1941, while flying an obsolescent I-153 biplane (on 28 June, two ARR P.11s were lost to enemy fighters). Polkovnik Alexandr Pokryshkyn - second highest scoring VVS ace - also claimed a ‘P.24’ in 1941, while flying a MiG-3 as part of the same 55th IAP. Ml. Lt. Fyodor F. Arkhipenko of the 27th IAP lists a P.24 in his overall tally. Reportedly, he scored his kill as late as 15 April 1944 (!) in the area of Jassy (Iaşi), in Moldavia. Even Ivan N. Kozhedub, the top scoring Soviet ace, had a P.24 on it’s tally, claimed in early 1944. Curiously, in the type-written list of claims, included in his notebook and recently published in a Russian book on Soviet aces, the P.24 is crossed out with a pen and replaced with… Me 262!" Would it be possible for someone to check the claims of the 55th IAP, most notably for 28 June 1941? Are there any other claims of 'P.24's by other units?
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Dénes |
#2
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Re: Soviet pilots' claims against 'P.24'
Dénes,
What is the "recently published ... Russian book on Soviet aces" that you mentioned? Title, author, etc. And where did you obtain it? Frank.
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Civilization is the most fragile ecology of all. |
#3
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Re: Soviet pilots' claims against 'P.24'
Hi Denes,
The exact date of Kozhedub's 'PZL-24' claim is 11 April 1944, place - Syrka (sorry don't know correct is this or not), time 17.50. The archive sources about 55 iap claims of summer 1941 are very contradictory. Seliverstov claims 1 'PZL-24' on 26.06.41, but in other source the date is 25.06 and the type - 'Me-109'... Viktorov also claims 1 'PZL-24' on 26.06.41, but in other source it's listed as 'Me-109'... Diachenko claims 1 'PZL-24' on 27.06.41, but in other source it's listed as 'Hs-126'... Seliverstov claims next 1 'PZL-24' on 03.07.41, but in other source it's listed as 'PZL-37'!.. Pokryshkin claims 1 'PZL-24' on 03.07.41... Svetlichnyi claims 1 'PZL-24' on 03.07.41... Grachev claims 1 'PZL-24' on 26.07.41... Except 'PZL-24's there are also several 'PZL-23's in victory list of 55 iap ... Several other VVS iaps claimed 'PZL-24's, most of them in summer 1941. For example, 146 iap has no less then 5 'PZL-24's on it's claim list (and several 'SET-7's)!
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All the Best! Last edited by MB; 9th May 2005 at 17:12. |
#4
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Re: Soviet pilots' claims against 'P.24'
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BTW, it's the same book I've shown to you when we met here in Toronto last year.
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Dénes |
#5
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Re: Soviet pilots' claims against 'P.24'
Thanks, MB, for the very interesting additional info.
Well, it seems like the combat diary (?) of the 55th IAP is indeed contradictory. I am not surprised, though, as I've found similar contradictions while studying the archival documents of the Rumanian, Bulgarian and Hungarian air forces. I am surprised that the initial claims are for June 26 and 27, not 28, as the sources I consulted note. There was no P.11 loss on either of these dates. However - as I noted in my previous post - two P.11s were indeed lost in combat on June 28, 1941, so that should have been the proper claim date. I am wondering if there is a published Russian source for the 55th IAP activity in 1941, both non-Russian authors took they information from. I would assume yes. If so, can someone point it out? I would like to note that both P.Z.L. P.23 and P.37, as well as SET-7 types were in service with ARR, thus the Soviet fighter pilots' claims could have been accurate. I should check if there were indeed losses in those days, though.
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Dénes |
#6
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Re: Soviet pilots' claims against 'P.24'
Dénes,
Well, I guess I don't have to search for a new book on Soviet aces. I just have to continue trying to find the "old" book, which I have been looking for for years in the (apparently) non-existant (or maybe non-Internet based) Russian used book market. *sigh* And if I could find it I would still have to translate it ... Frank.
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Civilization is the most fragile ecology of all. |
#7
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Re: Soviet pilots' claims against 'P.24'
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All the Best! |
#8
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Re: Soviet pilots' claims against 'P.24'
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Dénes |
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