Nice, I kinda like the yellow tail on that one, sorta "retro" for a 44/45 German fighter.
The two-tone underside on the last one is also very interesting...Any explanation for that? Also while you're at it maybe you could tell me what the hell the Germans were thinking when they decided to paint the undersides green...
I would be interested! I really like all 3 of those skins! Where exactly can we find these skins? Are they at M4T?
-Rich
Jaypack basically said the keypoints.
By this time in the war, aircraft were frequently built in parts at separate factories and then assembled. It was very difficult to maintain a uniform RLM adherance across all the various assembly lines so aircraft frequently featured mismatched schemes and odd colours.
Towards te end of the war the Luftwaffe found it difficult to consistently produce the same colour paints. RLM 84 was the late war underside colour, and was supposed to be a pale/lilac blue, but inconsistencies and issues with supply etc meant the colour varied greatly, from very blue to pale green tones.
Also Late in 1944 both Messerschmitt and Focke wulf stopped painting the undersides of their wings.
Generaly the leading edge was painted in one of the upper side colours and the assembly stage.
the colour varied per factory and production batch from rlm 76 to 81 and 83, also the size of the area painted differeed greatly.
the moving surfaces were more often than not standard RLM 76, the rest was bare metal.
Japos Fw190D part 2 has a great section on this, discribing each known type and which factories and production batches used what type of undersurface
Wait 'till my oh frustration gets here...
love em, yellow tail especially, can't wait.