In December 1939 an order for 50 Bf-109Es was issued to Bayeriche Flugzeugwerke. The
first 11 aircraft arrived during the spring of 1940. The remaining 39 came a year later.
The newly formed 7th Fighter Group received the the modern german fighters. In June 1941
it had 36 Bf-109Es at its disposal.
The Romanian Bf-109Es took part in Operation Barbarossa from the very first missions,
when they escorted the bombers to attack Soviet airfields. But the first vicrories came the
second day, on 23 June, when 16 Emils engaged 25 Soviets and shot down six. The air war
over the southern part of the Eastern Front was, however, very brutal. The first loss of
the 7th Fighter Group came on 5 July, when adj. Ilie Vatamanu's airplane was hit by AAA.
After the 1941 campaign was over, the Romanian fighter arm had to be reorganized because
of the losses it had suffered. Fifteen second-hand Bf-109E7s arrived from Germany in early
1942 and replenished the forces of the 7th Fighter Group.
The 37 Bf-109Es strong group was sent on the front again in the autumn of 1942, near
Stalingrad. It was surrounded in November 1942 by the Soviet counteroffensive and had to
make a dramatic escape from encirclement when it lost 5 airplanes. Another 3 were left
behind and were captured by the Red Army. The remnants were joined with the rests of the
5th Bomber Group and formed a mixed group which remained on the front until February
1943, when it returned home.
The 7th Fighter Group returned to the front in March, but this time it was going to
be equipped with the new Bf-109G. The remaining Emils were assigned to training duties
or to the 52nd Fighter Squadron. This unit was flew fighter cover missions over the Black
Sea, but in 1944 joined the rest of the groups in several interceptions against the US 15th
Air Force.
After August 1944, the "old" Bf-109Es didn't see any more action. They were phased out
and in 1946 the remaining were all retired.
The Bf-109E3
Picture from "Rumanian Air Force, the prime decade 1938-1947" by
Dénes Bernád, Squadron/Signal Publications, 1999
Wingspan |
9.87 m |
Length |
8.65 m |
Height |
2.5 m |
Weight (empty) |
2125 kg |
Weight (loaded) |
2660 kg |
Maximum speed at 4438 m |
540 km/h |
Climbs to 6000 m |
7 min. 45 sec. |
Maximum operational ceiling |
10500 m |
Range |
480 km; 660 km max. |
Engine |
Daimler-Benz DB 601Aa 1175 HP |
Machine-guns |
2x7.92 mm (1000 rounds) |
Guns |
3x20 mm (320 rounds) |
The Bf-109E4
Wingspan |
9.87 m |
Length |
8.65 m |
Height |
2.5 m |
Weight (empty) |
2125 kg |
Weight (loaded) |
2665 kg |
Maximum speed at 4438 m |
560 km/h |
Climbs to 6000 m |
7 min. 45 sec. |
Maximum operational ceiling |
11000 m |
Range |
480 km; 660 km max. |
Engine |
Daimler-Benz DB 601Aa 1175 HP |
Machine-guns |
2x7.92 mm (1000 rounds) |
Guns |
2x20 mm (320 rounds) |
The Bf-109E7
Picture courtesy of Mrs. Balta
Wingspan |
9.87 m |
Length |
8.65 m |
Height |
2.5 m |
Weight (empty) |
2125 kg |
Weight (loaded) |
2665 kg |
Maximum speed at 4438 m |
560 km/h |
Climbs to 6000 m |
7 min. 45 sec. |
Maximum operational ceiling |
11000 m |
Range |
480 km; 660 km max. |
Engine |
1 × Daimler-Benz DB 601N 1200 HP |
Machine-guns |
2x7.92 mm (1000 rounds) |
Guns |
3x20 mm (320 rounds) |
Bombs |
1x250 kg or 4x50 kg |
|