To add some information that might not be known. As stated above, all 3 Buchons (or Messers as the Spanish AF called them), flew in the BoB movie. Now the good thing: All of them still exist, 2 of them static exhibits in museums, 1 was airworthy (flying a lot) until a recent take-off mishap. Those 3 MesserStangs were registered G-AWHG, G-AWHL and G-AWHS. G-AWHL (c/n 186, C.4K-122) and G-AWHS (c/n 228, C.4K-170) came to Germany for promoting of the BoB film (after their Patton endeavour), and stood quite some time at Siegerland Airport with a CASA 2.111 outside in the weather. The owner at that time, LSV Hellertal wanted to sell them, but no one wanted them. So G-AWHS was donated to a technical university (RWTH Aachen), after some years went to Auto und Technik Museum Speyer and Sinsheim, where she resides now, converted to a static 109 G-10. G-AWHL stood at Siegerland quite long, finally purchased by Doug Champlin for (reportedly) then 6,000 DM (roughly 2,300$ then, 12,500$ now), I guess scrap value. She was converted to a 109 E-3, now residing in the Museum of Flight in Seattle. G-AWHG (c/n 139, C.4K-75) was damaged in France, later bought by the German MAC group, finally ending at Airbus Group / Messerschmitt Stiftung - Flugmuseum Messerschmitt (Foundation) at Manching. She was converted to an airworthy 109 G-4, flying a lot till recently (several incidents and belly landings, so there might not be much of the original Buchon left).
I thought you might be interested what became of the 3 MesserStangs. Below some links to the museums.
http://sinsheim.technik-museum.de/en/2/ ... e-109.htmlhttp://www.museumofflight.org/aircraft/ ... -bf-109e-3http://www.flugmuseum-messerschmitt.com ... index.htmlMaybe you want to explore this site dedicated to the Bf 109, very good information and mostly up to date, not all info in English though.....:
http://www.me109.info/Michael
P.S.: G-AWHL (the one now in Seattle) in front of the CASA 2.111 at Siegerland Airport ca. 1971:
http://www.flugzeug-bild.de/bilder/me-1 ... d-9637.jpg