Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Kommando Nowotny

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Country
  
Type
  
Fighter Aircraft

Branch
  
Size
  
Air Force Gruppe

Role
  
Air supremacy

Kommando Nowotny imgwpscnrucammsar455pics22b1jpg

Active
  
September 1944 – November 1944

Notable commanders
  
Walter Nowotny (26 September – 8 November 1944), Erich Hohagen (8–19 November 1944)

Similar
  
Jagdverband 44, Jagdgeschwader 54, Jagdgeschwader 101, Kampfgeschwader 51, Jagdgeschwader 26

Kommando nowotny part 1


Kommando Nowotny was a Luftwaffe fighter Gruppe formed during the last months of World War II for testing and establishing tactics for the Messerschmitt Me 262 jet fighter, and was created and first commanded by Walter Nowotny, from whom it drew its name.

Contents

Kommando nowotny part 2 uhu


History

Following the disestablishment of the earlier Erprobungskommando 262 test unit (previously based at Bavaria's Lechfeld Air Base) on 26 September 1944, Kommando Nowotny was formed later the same day in Achmer and Hesepe with Stab/Kommando Nowotny from Stab III./Zerstörergeschwader 26 (ZG 26), 1./Kdo Nowotny from 9./ZG 26, 2./Kdo Nowotny from 8./ZG 26 and 3./Kdo Nowotny (new). Thus its strength was 3 Staffeln (that of a typical Gruppe) and a Stab flight.

On 3 October it attained operational status with a complement of about 40 Me 262A-1a jet interceptors. Over the next month and a half the unit operated against allied aircraft, while at the same time trying to establish proper tactics for a jet fighter unit. It also had to deal with many technical problems plaguing the unproven Me 262.

The unit was the first to realise that a dedicated protection-squadron of single piston-engined, single-seat fighters like the Bf 109G and Fw 190 were a necessity for the jets, as the Me 262 could not manoeuvre or accelerate well at low speeds, and thus was a sitting duck for any allied fighters nearby during take-off and landing.

Due to the experimental nature of the unit, and the technical difficulties in operating the jet fighters, the unit had a less than illustrious record. A total of 22 enemy aircraft were claimed for a loss of 26 Me 262s. Shortly after Walter Nowotny's death on 8 November, the unit was redesignated III./Jagdgeschwader 7 (JG 7) on 19 November, and therefore ceased to exist as an independent unit.

References

Kommando Nowotny Wikipedia