Luftwaffe Dark Green — 2 museum-grade prints in this palette. The Focke-Wulf Fw 190 became the Luftwaffe's most-produced fighter of World War II, entering service in 1941 and forcing immediate Allied respect for its roll rate, firepower, and wide-track undercarriage. JG 26 — Adolf Galland's old Geschwader — remained one of the premier Western Front units flying the Würger against RAF Circus operations and USAAF daylight raids. The Heinkel He 100 represented the road not taken in Luftwaffe fighter procurement — a technically superior airframe sidelined by Messerschmitt's political advantage and existing Bf 109 production infrastructure. He 100 prototypes set multiple world speed records in 1939 using evaporative cooling that eliminated the drag penalty of conventional radiators.