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Author Topic: Estonia map ? Yes, released  (Read 42482 times)

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Uzin

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Estonia map ? Yes, released
« on: October 03, 2012, 05:38:43 AM »

Hi,
is anybody interested in the map of Estonia, from Riga Gulf to Moonsund islands  and to Tallin and Pskov nad Narva, with Hanko in the north ? It would cover the gap between stock FinnsGulf and Kurland map:



EDIT on June, 4, 2013:

   This map covers the area of Estonia with surroundings, so filling partially the gap
between Finnsgulf and Kurlandia Il2 maps. The main purpose is to serve for campaign and
missions in 1939-1944 years, with some finetuning it might serve also for 1914-1920 era.
    The  airfields  are mostly grass ones, with exception of those at Tallin, Tartu
and Riga, where authentic shape of concrete runways based on WWII photos were made. The
location of others is widely based on nowadays coordinates. The whole map is made one
ZUTI's Friction mod area, so emergency landing is possible almost everywhere. There are
some exceptions - working swamp and quick sand areas, where the plane can be swallowed.
Poisition and number of these places is let to find by the flier, as a sort of Easter Egg.
   Cities and villages were autopopulated to large extent. The position of lighthouses
is based on contemporary naval maps, their appearance is, however, only that default in
Il2. Appearance of harbours is based on nowadays data.
   The compatibility of the map was tested with the following versions of Il2
Sturmovik 1946:
   
   HSFX 4.01, HSFX 5.01, UP3RC4 and DBW 1.71.

      The map can be downloaded here :

https://www.mediafire.com/download/m44e02ic84pbwo0/Estonia.7z

     EDIT: repaired map d/l here :

https://www.mediafire.com/download/g8ltvo8x686kl3f/Estonia.7z

The readme file there involded contains all the necessary installation guide.

********************************************************************************

Credits:
 
Stoupa: written permission  to use his Pilsen Synagogue.
RedEye_Jir: written permission to use his objects from maps of Spain.
Uufflakke: written permission to use his objects towers.
Cyberolas: written permission to use his textures of villages.

I am glad to give proper credits also to large group of modders who helped in preparation
of this map in this or that way, first of all to betatesters who helped to remove several
bugs I made during the development of the map:
Kopfdorfer, agracier, RealDarko, nachprod aka Murdoc (for the idea of the project), Koloksaj, Greif11, David
Prosser, Mission_bug, Benno, Bravo, Airbourne,  walter_solito, Ian Boys, bomberkiller,
max_thehitman, Ectoflyer, nikmaving (who localised more than thousand bugs), Lagarto,
Karabas-Barabas, Wotan, Bussardi, Oknevas, Dancing Bear, andrey65, Skvorez, deSAD, Foton,
A.V.Sokolov (for his outstanding historical maps), Aragorn1963, in fact, all the SAS,
Aviaskins, Dispersalfield  communities as a whole.

If anybody forgotten, excuse me, please, my memory is not as reliable as several decades
ago, lol.

Patch 1
This patch contains  some missing objects in a vanilla Il2, where Canon's England and Southern Europe objkect packs might be  missing.

DCG Campaign for the Estonia Map by Vonofterdingen
https://www.sas1946.com/main/index.php/topic,38220.0.html

Download the patch 1 here>

https://www.mediafire.com/download/2y68c2a62eleumu/Estonia_Patch_1.7z

Please,
1.  insert the 3do folder of the patch 1 into #SAS/STD folder, let overwrite,
2.  add the content of the file Patch1?add2static?ini.txt file at the end of your #SAS/STD/com/maddox/Il2/objects/static.ini file.
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agracier

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Re: Estonia map ?
« Reply #1 on: October 03, 2012, 07:16:46 AM »

This would be a wonderful area to have as a map.
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Kopfdorfer

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Re: Estonia map ?
« Reply #2 on: October 03, 2012, 07:57:53 AM »

Uzin this is a very interesting area, though with deference I suggest you stretch it a bit to the East (50-60 km?) to allow the Lake Peipus area to be further from the (eastern ) Map edge.
The reason for this suggestion is that for much of 1944 the Germans held the Russians in this area, and to me it would make sense to allow the Russians some "Forming up" space for missions for both air units and ground troops. In addition to the very interesting battles in the NE of this map area for much of 1944 , it would also be fantastic to represent Operation Beowulf , part of which was the German Amphibious invasion of Saaremaa in 1941 , the largest Island in the Gulf to the West of the Estonian Mainland.
Further , the Russians used bases in Estonia (on Saaremaa) to launch their earliest bombing raids on Berlin.


Everyone has heard of the great American, British and Canadian bomber stream that pounded Germany from the air during World War 2. These bombers are often credited with winning the war by destroying German industry and demoralizing the population. Indeed, the bombers of the western Allies did wreak havoc in Germany by day and night, but not too many people know that the Russians too had a strategic bombing campaign over Germany, and these raids were as terrible as any the British or Americans could construe.

The very first raid happened as the German forces were approaching Moscow in late 1941. Hitler's Directive 33, issued on 19 July, 1941, had called for a bombing campaign to soften the Soviet capital as a prelude to its proposed capture. Arriving over Moscow at 10 pm, the He.111Hs and JU.88As of KG3, 27, 53, 54 and 55 dropped a total of 104 tonnes of HE and 46,000 incendiaries for over 5 hours. The Soviets were prepared, however, and intense AA fire and over 300 searchlights managed to disperse the raiders.

The Luftwaffe would continue to strike at Moscow throughout 1941, but they never achieved Hitler's objective of reducing the city to rubble. On the contrary, they only stiffened the will of the Muscovites and prompted them to fight to the last.

The bombings enraged Stalin. He fumed over the fact that the Luftwaffe could hit his capital, but the puny bomber arm of the VVS (Voyenno-Vozdushny Sili, or Red Air Forces) could not strike back. Or could they? The VVS had undergone serious cutbacks in the '30s, and many of the Spanish Civil War veterans had been purged. But the USSR had to redeem her honour and take vengeance for the bombing of her capital city. Stalin demanded that the V-VS bomb Berlin. The raid was set for August 11, 1941, and was to be launched from Pushkino, near Leningrad.

This would not be the first time that Berlin had been bombed. The RAF had hit the city a number of times before, proving Göring's statement that "enemy bombs shall never fall on Berlin" to be false. Also, the Soviet navy, Voyenno Morsky Flot) had sent a token raid on August 7, using 14 Pe.8 heavy bombers. But this was to be the first major air raid conducted by the VVS on an enemy city so far away. The previous bombings of Helsinki and Belgrade would pale in comparison.

At that time, the VVS had only three aircraft types available that could reach a target that was becoming more and more distant with each day the German army advanced into Russia. Those were the Ilyushin Il-4, the Yermolayev Yer-2 and the Petlyakov Pe-8. In order to achieve the necessary range for the mission, these aircraft had to have their regular engines removed and replaced with long-range diesels. This was done at the order of Stalin himself.

On the same day as the small raid, 14 Pe-8s were assembled at Pushkino for their first sortie. Originally, 18 bombers had been dispatched to the field, but four had had to return to the factory due to engine malfunctions, while a fifth was almost shot down by anti-aircraft guns as it approached its destination.

Although experienced airline pilots, the selected aircrews would have considerable problems with formation flying or taking off and landing on unpaved runways. This would prove to be a serious handicap. Also a problem were the Pe-8's peculiar new ACh-30B diesel engines, of which fuel flow had to be adjusted by the pilot. Worse, the engine's RPMs fluctuated wildly, and occasionally the engines would just stop, especially at high altitudes. These problems were dealt with as quickly as possible so as not to hinder the raid.

Vodopyanov planned his route to around the coastlines of Estonia and Latvia, then across the Baltic to a landfall north of Stettin, hoping to avoid the Luftwaffe Jagdflieger. The total distance to Berlin was calculated at 1,680 miles, which would be flown at the Pe-8's long-range cruising speed of 175 mph and at an altitude of 23,000 feet. If they left at last light, the estimated time of arrival over Berlin would be around midnight.

Finally, at 9:15 p.m. on August 11, the 14 Pe-8s took to the sky. At about the same time, two squadrons of Il-4s from the 200th BAP took off from Saaremaa to join the attack. Colonel Nikolai I. Novodranov's 420th BAP was also ordered to send a squadron of Yer-2s to Berlin.

Things began to go wrong for the huge Pe-8s right from the start. As Major Konstantin P. Yegorov's plane was taking off, two of the new diesel engines cut out on the same side, sending it crashing to earth and killing all 11 crewmen. As the bombers made their way toward the Baltic, Captain Aleksandr N. Tyagunin's plane came under attack first by Finnish fighters and then by trigger-happy Soviet AA gunners, who sent it plunging into the sea.

Lieutenant Vasily D. Bidny was just 40 minutes from Pushkino when his right inner engine caught fire. He put out the flames by shutting down the engine, but as he flew over Danzig at 19,685 feet, the left outer engine failed, too. The Pe-8 was struggling to stay aloft on two engines with a full bombload, but descended to 6,560 feet. Bidny decided to hit the secondary target of Stettin and dropped his bombs on the Lauenburg railroad station. Bidny managed to bring his plane down safely near Leningrad, just as his last of fuel ran out.

The remaining 11 Pe-8s pressed on toward Berlin, releasing their bombloads over various parts of the city. Group leader Vodopyanov experienced no difficulties until he was only 12 minutes away from Berlin. At an altitude of 22,965 feet, one of his Pe-8's diesel engines began to falter. Vodopyanov had come too far to stop now, and he grimly kept the plane on course while German AA guns opened fire. He reached the target and his bombardier released the 8,188 pound bombload. Just then a flak shell hit the plane and sent shell splinters tearing into the fuselage and puncturing a fuel tank in the right wing. Vodopyanov calculated that he had about four hours' fuel left for a five-hour flight and ordered his navigator, Aleksandr P. Shtepenko, to abandon the originial circuitous return route and set a direct course for home.

Vodopyanov's troubles didn't stop there. His plane flew through a low pressure area and began to ice up. This in turn caused the instruments to frost over and become unreadable. By the time he got clear of the foul weather, Vodopyanov found himself down to 6,560 feet. He was then over Estonia, right over the German-Soviet front line. Navigator Shtepenko announced, "ETA base 30 minutes," but he spoke too soon, for at that very moment all four engines stopped dead. The large airplane came down in a forest, but Vodopyanov and his crew emerged unhurt and made their way to safety on the Soviet side of the lines.

In the end, only four of the other Pe-8 crews could claim to have made the round trip without incident when they arrived at Pushkino on the morning of August 12. Two other bombers turned up later in the day. Major Mikhail M. Ugryumov ran out of fuel and landed near a tractor factory outside of Kalinin, where he refuelled his plane from buckets and then returned home. Major Aleksandr A. Kurban's engines seized up several times, compelling him to restart them by going into shallow dives, consuming precious fuel each time. He ran out of fuel at Krasnoye Selo but force-landed his plane, refuelled and eventually made it to Pushkino. Three other Pe-8s were less fortunate. One pilot became disoriented and made his way to axis-ally Finland, where he and his crew were taken prisoner.

It had also been a disastrous mission for the 1st Squadron of the 420th BAP. Not only were its Yer-2s overloaded with fuel, but its pilots, veteran of Aeroflot, were appalled by the grass airstrip at Pushkino. When Lieutenant Aleksandr I. Molodschy tried to take off, both of his engines began to lose power and his brakes failed. Molodschy kept going at full throttle and took off, only to come down again and then run out of runway. The Yer-2 crashed, but Molodschy and his crew survived.

After several other Yer-2s suffered similar accidents, the mission was cancelled--though not before at least three Yer-2s had managed to take off. Low clouds forced Lieutenant Vladimir M. Malinin to descend to 2,700 feet before dropping his bombs over Berlin. He survived this hazardous manoeuvre only to be shot down by friendly fire on his return voyage. The entire crew was killed. Commandant V.A. Kubyshko also bombed the German capital, only to be attacked by several Soviet fighters during his return flight. His plane went down in flames, but he and his crew managed to bail out safely. The third Yer-2, piloted by Captain A.G. Stepanov, was last seen over Berlin, but never returned.

Upon his return, the mission commander and Pe-8 pilot, Major Vodopyanov was rushed to Moscow. Brought before Stalin and a roomful of Party officials, marshals and generals, Vodopyanov was asked for a mission report and summary.

"Eleven of our aircraft reached the target, six aircraft regained their base, one was shot down by our own anti-aircraft artillery, one is missing and the rest made forced landings owing to engine failures. My aircraft crash-landed in a forest."

Vodopyanov then lost his composure and cried out:

"I'm ready to tear out those damned diesels with my teeth! Engines must be reliable for operational flying, and flying with these diesels means the loss of aircraft and men."

In spite of the attack on Stalin's personal decision, the dictator listened as Vodopyanov concluded with a request for navigational beacons.

When a Party Official shot back at Vodopyanov for his request, Stalin spoke up, ending the argument and dismissing Vodopyanov. Colonel Aleksandr E. Golovanov replaced Vodopyanov in command of the 81st DBAD soon afterward. Vodopyanov was assigned to assist in testing a Pe-8 with Shvetsov M-82 radial engines in place of the Charomsky diesels. Also, a homing beacon called Pchelka (little bee) was introduced at V-VS air bases. The realities of war had changed Stalin's attitude since the terrifying days of his prewar purges.

Despite the problems with the Pe-8s, they soldiered on. On September 1, a completely successful Pe-8 raid on Königsberg was effected. Raids on Berlin continued, too. Naval DB-3s flew a total of 10 sorties over Berlin before their base at Saaremaa had to be evacuated in the face of imminent German capture. The final attack was made on the night of September 4-5. A total of 86 naval aircraft participated in the raids, of which 33 were reported to have reached Berlin, while others bombed secondary targets, including Stettin, Königsberg, Memel, Danzig, Swinemünde and Libau. Daylight bombing was even tried, but met with no success and was cancelled.

Although given a high priority, the Soviet raids were never intended to have carry the same weight as the RAF, RCAF and USAAF raids in the west. They were performed merely to pay the Germans back for their equally ineffective attacks on Moscow and provide a much needed boost to morale on the home front. It is kind of ironic that while the bombing of Germany's capital was left mainly to the airmen operating from southern England, it was the humble Soviet infantryman that dealt the city's final death blow, capturing it block by bloodily contested block.




German occupation in Estonia 1941-1944
 
The German occupation power in Estonia, 1941-44The Estonian soldiers in World War II in three different uniformsHolocaust in EstoniaNational resistance to the German occupation in Estonia 1941-1944Attempt to restore Estonian independence in 1944more?Germany had no intention of restoring the independence of the countries occupied by the Soviet Union in 1940. The Baltic countries and Belarus were now subjected to civilian occupation power. Four general commissariats were united into one state commissariat, Ostland, which in turn was answerable to the Ministry for the Occupied Eastern Territories, headed by Alfred Rosenberg. The laws valid before 20 June 1940 were restored if they were in compliance with German laws. The local administrative body operated at the general commissariat level – the Estonian Self-Administration headed by Hjalmar Mäe. The reasons for the relatively relaxed occupation regime in Estonia, compared with, for example, Latvia, include the fierce anti-Soviet sentiments of the Estonians, their higher standing in the German ‘race table’, the closeness of Finland, the civil and military double power, and the fact that Estonia was a strategically important rear area, a purveyor of agricultural products, and the producer of oil shale. Oil shale became increasingly important as Germany’s fuel deposits fell into the hands of the enemy.
?Political repression in the occupied territories, including Estonia, was supervised by Heinrich Himmler’s SS and police system. The German security police in Estonia were established on the basis of the Einsatzgruppe A Sonderkommando 1a, who arrived here together with the Wehrmacht. The Estonian security police were subservient to their German counterpart. By early 1942, all of the one thousand Jews still in Estonia were exterminated. Along with the Estonian Jews, about 8000 other Estonian citizens were killed. The main non-racial accusation was cooperation with the Soviet regime (participation in the crimes of the Soviet regime, simply belonging to the Communist Party, etc). In the course of the German occupation, other Jews brought to the concentration camps in Estonian territory from elsewhere in Europe were killed there, a total of 7500-7800 people. Among those who arrested and killed Jews were Estonians serving in the German secret police and army. In addition, about one third of the approximately 45,000 war prisoners held in Estonia perished, mostly due to exhaustion and epidemics.
?There was no guerrilla movement in Estonia comparable to that in France or in the Balkans. For the majority of the Estonian population, enemy number one was the Soviet Union, which had destroyed their independent statehood and local national elite, as well as eliminating private ownership and previous social relations. The activity of the Soviet partisans despatched to Estonia was thus insignificant. They managed a few acts of disruption, but because of the population’s anti-Soviet sentiments, most of them tried to simply hide at their relatives’, were quickly captured or gave themselves up voluntarily. The national resistance movement that emerged among the intelligentsia and aspired to restore independence became much more widespread. After people lost hope in autumn 1941 that the Germans were going to restore Estonia’s independence, and after the declaration of the Atlantic Charter, they directed their efforts towards the Western countries. The pre-war acute political discord between the pro-government people and those supporting opposition parties was overcome in early 1944, when the last Prime Minister, Jüri Uluots, cooperated with the underground National Committee of the Republic of Estonia. Despite their anti-German orientation, the national resistance movement considered it essential to oppose the invading Red Army. In September 1944, when the Germans were leaving, Prime Minister Jüri Uluots, acting as President, formed the government headed by Otto Tief. After Estonia was occupied by the Red Army, the members of the resistance movement were arrested and sent to prison camps.


The Red Army invasion of Estonia in 1944
 
The Red Army in wrecked Narva in 1944
 Related items
War events in Estonia in 1944Attempt to restore Estonian independence in 1944The Great Escape to the West in 1944The Estonian soldiers in World War II in three different uniformsmore
German military cemetery in Narva in 1944
 ?Warfare reached the Estonian territory again in February 1944, when the Red Army broke the Leningrad blockade and quickly moved westwards. Despite the pessimism of the German army command’s land forces, Adolf Hitler considered it important to hold Estonia. Abandoning Estonia would have meant a threat by the Red Army’s Baltic fleet to German delivery of iron ore from Sweden, Germany’s ally Finland would have been in a difficult position, and Estonian oil shale was essential to the war industry. A large number of additional troops were sent to Estonia, including the 20th Estonian SS-division, which was constantly supplemented with new conscripts. In the bloody battles from February to March the attack of the Red Army was halted on the Narva front, and warfare almost ceased until July. The Red Army took some of its troops to Finland, and the eastern front focused on Belarus. Several German divisions were transferred from the Narva front to Belarus, and replaced by the newly formed Estonian troops. At the end of July, the Germans abandoned the Narva front and retreated ca 25 km westwards, to prepared positions in the Sinimäed Hills. The Red Army attempts to break through in the Sinimäed Hills were repelled at an enormous cost in human life. In early August, the Red Army began an attack in north-eastern Latvia and made its way to the Emajõgi River by the end of the month, where the front stabilised. The Red Army’s success in Latvia and Lithuania posed a threat that the troops still in Estonia would be cut off and on 16 September Hitler agreed to abandon mainland Estonia. The Red Army attack started on 17 September; the 8th Estonian rifle brigade took part as well. The German army retreated quickly from the south-east, the Narva River and the Sinimäed Hills, leaving the Estonian troops in a difficult situation. Tallinn was given up on 22 September. Bloody battles were fought on Saaremaa Island, where the Red Army conquered the Sõrve Peninsula only on 24 November 1944.
 
Caravan of refugees in September 1944
 ?In autumn 1944, approximately 70,000 Estonians fled from Estonia to Germany and Sweden. Upon arrival, they were installed in refugee camps. Integration of the refugees into the local society happened more quickly in Sweden, whereas in war-ravaged Germany many had to stay in refugee camps until the late 1940s. The Soviet Union’s aggressive repatriation politics caused fear in many people that they might be forcefully returned to the Soviet Union. This resulted in the ‘second wave of migration’ – refugees moved on to the USA, Canada etc, sometimes using unsuitable ships for ocean travel.
?Immediately after conquering Estonia, the Soviet security forces embarked on active suppression of the resistance movement and arrested the Estonians who had served in the German or Finnish armies. In less than a year, over 10,000 people were arrested. Some Estonian war prisoners placed in filter camps were sent to Red Army units, some to prison camps, and some were freed. At the same time, about 20,000 men were mobilised into the Red Army. The resistance movement managed to operate until the early 1950s.
?In World War II Estonia lost a total of 200,000 people: executed, killed in action, imprisoned, deported, mobilised, forcefully evacuated and those who fled the country (some later managed to return). Material damage was relatively minor compared to that in western Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Poland and Germany. The town of Narva was totally destroyed, and extensive damage was done to Tartu, Mustvee and Tallinn, in the latter especially during the bombing raids in March 1944. The ‘scorched-earth’ tactics employed by the Soviets in 1941 and by the Germans in 1944 failed because of the single-minded resistance of the population.
?At the conferences in Yalta and Potsdam, the Soviet Union successfully persuaded the Western allies to leave the Baltic countries to the Union. Non-recognition politics nevertheless continued. For Estonia, the political consequences of World War II ended with the restoration of independence in 1991 and the Russian troops leaving the country in 1994.


I think this would be a very fine addition to the Maps of IL2 , and Uzin your detailed work would make a fantastic map.
I hope you pick up this project. I would certainly fly on it!

Kopfdorfer
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Uzin

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Re: Estonia map ?
« Reply #3 on: October 03, 2012, 09:03:15 AM »

Thank you very much, Kopfdorfer. I hope your amazing text would be nice introduction to the map release in the future, all credits would be to you, of course.
I have read the book by J.A. Vinogradov: "I fly to Berlin" ,this book and the inspiration by Murdoc (aka nachprod) lead to the thoughts about this project.
Murdoc also mentioned on the war actions during WW I in this area, perhaps he also will add some more info.
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agracier

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Re: Estonia map ?
« Reply #4 on: October 03, 2012, 09:23:38 AM »

Murdoc also mentioned on the war actions during WW I in this area, perhaps he also will add some more info.

In 1917 the Germans conducted an amphibious operation to take the city of Riga ... it was a successful operation, unlike the Dardanelles. But I'm not sure if there was any real air activity historically during or immediately after the landings. Probably there was to a degree, but not intensively I would surmise. But who's to prevent a bit of alternative mission building?

The first true land-naval-air combined amphibious operation was not carried out until 1925 - in Spanish Morocco near the city of Alhucemas. Some 20 000 troops were landed on 2 beaches west of Alhucemas. It led to the defeat the rebellious Rif tribesmen and ended what seemed like a hopeless colonial war for the Spanish government. But that is for another map ...
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Kopfdorfer

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Re: Estonia map ?
« Reply #5 on: October 03, 2012, 11:04:35 AM »

I can't take credit for the text , only for posting it here. Two parts are from the Encyclopedia of Estonia Website , and the other a site I don't remember. I was aware of some of this history generally ( some famous land battles including the Tiger tank ace Otto Carius ) and specifically because one of my best friends is Estonian , and we often discuss the WW II history of the Baltic Region.

Kopfdorfer
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RealDarko

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Re: Estonia map ?
« Reply #6 on: October 03, 2012, 01:29:05 PM »

Kopfdorfer, thanks for the bombing explanation.
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Uzin

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Re: Estonia map ?
« Reply #8 on: October 04, 2012, 07:52:47 AM »

Thanks to Murdoc, we can see that there are real historical air fights and campaigns in the area worth to be simulated in Il2, not only the what-if ones. It is a pity that the texts are not yet translated into English. Another possible task for anybody capable of that. Volunteers would be welcome !  ;)
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David Prosser

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Re: Estonia map ?
« Reply #9 on: October 13, 2012, 12:25:16 AM »

Hi, Uzin. It looks like this map could be used in both wars then.

cheers

David Prosser

Mission_bug

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Re: Estonia map ?
« Reply #10 on: October 13, 2012, 06:26:40 AM »

I think this map would be a superb addition to the sim Uzin, I look forward to using it some time in the future. 8)

Wishing you all the very best, Pete. ;D
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Benno

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Re: Estonia map ?
« Reply #11 on: November 12, 2012, 06:44:22 AM »

It would be very nice , Uzin !
Benno :P
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