A few questons on the winterized stuka:
First, the symbol located just in front of the cockpit looks like a whale swallowing a ship, IMO. Plus there is an anchor. Was this plane primarily used in an anti-shipping role?
I checked Teamski's profile, and the plane was used in/around the Leningrad region. Thus, if the plane was being used to attack shipping, would its theater of operations be the Baltic or along the northern passages to Murmansk?
Lastly, Moshaisk is painted on the side also. What's that all about?
Thanks.
Winterized Stuka
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I'm not entirely sure about this, however, based on what I remember from a thread a long time ago about this same plane, I think it was metioned that the nautical theme behind the Winter Stuka's insignia came from the fact that the particular unit was origionally intended to be a carrier-based unit on Germany's only aircraft carrier, the Graf Zeppelin. (O.K. I'm not joking about the ship - in fact there was a Revell model made of it, see below.) That project was thankfully never completed and the Stuka unit was reassigned to the Eastern front.

You can just make out the Stukas on the deck in the picture.

You can just make out the Stukas on the deck in the picture.
Good find with the model. Interesting story on the stuka's background. I would have thought the stuka a bit oversized for carrier duty.
Lucky for the Germans they decided not to build the carrier. If they had, its life span would have been rather short, because the Allies would have relentlessly gone after it.
Lucky for the Germans they decided not to build the carrier. If they had, its life span would have been rather short, because the Allies would have relentlessly gone after it.