Zane,
Erich Hartmann was the ace of aces. His record was 352. Here's a short youtube link, with some great historic video:
http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=LofmuZoIp ... re=related
It is also interesting to me to learn from several recent documents that actual "kills" were much more accurately reported by the Luftwaffe than by the US Army Air Corps. Much of this for the AAC was publicity, of course.
In any case, after the war, the German records of losses were compared to the US claims of kills, and the numbers didn't jibe well at all.....many more claims of kills than of actual losses. Of course, kills were based on a lot of potentially flawed information sources.
It turns out that the German records of kills claimed were actually pretty close to matching the Allied record of aircraft lost, as to where, how many on on what date.
Hartmann flew almost exclusively on the Eastern front, against the Russians--345 of his kills were Russian aircraft. There were many aircraft out there, and many of the Russian pilots were fairly inexperienced.
The other difference between our fighter pilots and the Germans was that our pilots flew a set number of sorties (which varied over the course of the war) then were returned home, and celebrated as heros, selling war bonds, etc. They were too valuable in that role to risk in combat again. Few of our top fighter pilots flew more than a year in combat, most far less than that. Richard Bong, the top scoring US ace, was in that category, and ironically was killed in a flight test aircraft.
On the other hand, the Luftwaffe pilots flew throughout the war. Most of the top Luftwaffe aces started flying in the Spanish Civil War, and flew throughout, till the end of hostilities, so they had MUCH longer time and many more combat sorties to build their scores.
MTV