Thanks
perttime 
Great story and great profiles. I have couple of RWD-8s from the polish PZW kit company in my stash. Mayby one should end as an Estonian.
MAT: That would be fantastic!
The RW story of Estonian RWD-8s is a bit confused. Before the Soviet occupation, Gerhard Buschmann had been an Eesti Aeroklubi member. But, as a Baltic
Volksdeutsche, he had previously begun secretly working for the
Abwehr. Buschmann seems to have being largely responsible for burying the 4 x PTO-4 trainers mentioned in my backstory ... but also a single RWD-8 - the former ES-RWD (c/n 3) built under license by the
Eesti Õhu- ja Gaasikaitse. [1]
My backstory bit about two RWD-8s in Estonia prior to the Soviet arrival is true. One was ES-RVD - an RWD-8 which escaped from Poland in Sept 1939. The identity of that Polish aircraft prior to its escape to Estonia remains a mystery (to me, anyway). Another was our Estonian-built ES-RWD. The latter was dug up and reassembled in the Summer of 1941. It became part of the
Sonderstaffel Buschmann - later 16./Aufkl. Gr. 127 (
See). However, it seems that c/n 3 was left in fairly rough shape after its forest burial and retrieval.
By mid-Summer of 1942, ex-ES-RWD had been withdrawn from service and replaced by another, Polish-made RWD-8. AFAIK, that second aircraft was
not the former-ES-RVD. One anecdotal source suggests the this 'new' RWD-8 was transferred from Luftwaffe war-prize stocks in Lithuania. Although it is not at all clear, it is possible that both
Sonderstaffel Buschmann RWD-8s wore the codes SB+AJ. [2]
--
https://militaar.net/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=23393It seems that no RWD-8 (or RWD-13, AFAIK) ever wore Estonian military markings Of course, neither that nor any of the above really matters for a what-if build. I'm just indulging myself in deep dive down the research tunnel

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[1] In English-language sources, this is usually referred to at the 'Tallinn Aircraft Depot'. More properly,
Eesti Õhu- ja Gaasikaitse refers to the workshops of the local air defence establishment. The Estonian-made RWD-8 is often also attributed to the makers of the PTO-4 (ie: Rein Tooma, Otto Org, and Voldemar Post). It sounds like prewar Estonian aircraft designers were also expected to roll up their sleeves out on the shop floor!
[2] Those markings resembled both German
Stammkennzeichner and
Verbandskennzeichner ... but they were neither. The 4-letter
Stammkennzeichner were manufacturers' markings. The Luftwaffe's
Verbandskennzeichner were individual aircraft makings - with the alpha-numerical 'first two' indicating
geschwader, the third letter for individual aircraft; and the fourth showing which
Staffel that aircraft belonged to.
By contrast, all
Sonderstaffel Buschmann aircraft were coded SB+Ax. That 'SB' obviously just stood for '
Sonderstaffel Buschmann'. The A which followed the
Balkenkruze is a mystery to me. But the
final letter acted as the individual aircraft identifier. So, an identification 'system' distinct to this Estonian unit.