Hitlers biggest mistake of that period was his Sept 7th decision to stop hitting the RAF airfields and to start bombing the cities.
exactly!
The 109 was not a stable enough aircraft to mount that kind of weight on. It was also a very small plane, one of the smallest. The were dangerous enough to get off the ground and land, let alone with an extra 800 to 100 lbs on the wings (if the wings could take the weight and hardpoints!
I have seen a few pictures of 109's with drop tanks (or a drop tank under the belly), but I don't think I've ever seen one in the air.
as i said before,drop tanks were just for the later versions ("F" and up),whereas bombs could already be carried by the "E"s ("Jabos" (Jagdbombers) in Russia,quite successfull). later ,there were hard points for other weapons,like 30mm cannons ,rockets and other nice stuff.
I also read that Germany didn't have the aluminium to spare for drop tanks. In fact those that did carry them towards the end were under strict orders not to drop them unless it was a matter of life and death, because they couldn't spare the resources.
this may be true,but at the beginning of the drop-tank-era, (about '41 or '42) you could do with them what you wanted to.
