Fantastic story regarding the first encounter between the fantastic Mosquito and equally fantastic Me 262. Nice to hear somebody narrate clearly. Thank you John Summerfield.
The wings weren’t swept back by accident. The horizontal stabiliser was also swept back and it doesn’t have engines hanging on it. The Germans had supersonic wind tunnels and were perfectly aware of the benefit of and pioneered swept back wings. Pilots reported that the 262 had beautiful flying characteristics as well as being 120mph faster than any allied piston aeroplane, confirmed by Capt Eric Brown at the RAE. The allies after the war took a Messerschmitt wing plan off the shelf and applied it to the F86 Sabre, and the Russians did the same with the Mig 15.
Despite everything said about other aircraft, Adolph Galland who was in charge of the Luftwaffe said the mosquito was the Allied plane that gave them the most trouble, they came in low & by the time they were detected they had gone.
Both aircraft are so beautifully constructed! Never heard that story of the first encounter of the ME262 by the RAF, the story told very well indeed, thank you Sir!
Very similar story by a SAAF Mosquito from 60 Squadron: On August 15, 1944, we learned it wasn't. On that day Captain Salomon ("Pi") Pienaar one of South Africa's most brilliant pilots, as he was to prove then and after the war as head of South African Airways, and his navigator, Lieutenant Archie Lockhart-Ross, took off for the Munich area. Both expected this to be a routine job, although opposition was usually hotter over this part of Southern Germany than Czechoslovakia, Austria, Poland, Rumania or any other country in 60 Squadron's field of operations. Airfields, marshalling yards, factories were to be the targets-all pinpoints familiar from previous sorties. They would keep a sharp look-out for fighters, not let the flak upset them, and get away quickly as soon as the job was done. As they approached Gunzberg/Leipheim airfield near Munich at 30,000 feet and 360 m.p.h., Pienaar did a couple of turns to either side to ensure no fighters were creeping up his tail, then turned on to target with Lockhart-Ross over the bombsight. As Pienaar levelled out he had another quick look in his rear-view mirror. A twin-engined aircraft was closing in rapidly. Immediately he slammed both throttles wide open, dropped his wing tanks and began a turn to starboard. Simultaneously the enemy aircraft opened fire from 400 yards and Pienaar saw pieces fly off his aircraft as it flicked into a spin, out of control, with Lockhart-Ross pinned in the nose by gravitational force and the port engine jammed at full throttle. Had he turned to port-as he suspected the enemy would expect him to do-he would have been blown out of the sky. For 11,000 feet Pienaar fought with his wounded aircraft before finally bringing it under control at 450 m.p.h.-to find the pilot of the phenomenal German aircraft poised for another attack and part of his own port wing and tail unit shot away. Pienaar also discovered he could turn only to port and that he would have to fly with the control column hard over to the right. It was a time for great skill and cool nerves. Pienaar had both. With Lockhart-Ross out of the nose and reporting the enemy's position from the top blister hatch, Pienaar outflew the enemy pilot in 11 more attacks in the next 35 minutes, turning inside him off the stern attacks and, on the final head-on attack, trying to ram him. By then both pilot and navigator had identified their foe as a jet-propelled Me. 262, which they had read about in secret reports. It was painted silver with black crosses below the mainplanes, the usual cross on the fuselage and a swastika on the tail. And it had a long nose, clipped wings, underslung engines and a teardrop-type cockpit cover. Its speed was phenomenal. Had the Mosquito been armed "at least twice during the attacks he made the enemy would have been a sitting target for me", said Pienaar. The action had taken the Mosquito some 90 miles to the south of Gunzberg when the engagement was broken off and Pienaar found refuge in a cloud for his juddering aircraft. But the dangers were not yet over for the two South Africans. With the radio and almost all the instruments unserviceable, both throttles jammed and, with 500 feet to spare over the Alps, they limped low over Northern Italy and down the coast to San Severo, where Pienaar put down a perfect belly-landing when the wheels would not go down. They had fuel for only another seven minutes' flying. Pienaar and Lockhart-Ross were given immediate awards of' the Distinguished Flying Cross. Their colleagues were delighted at this honour. They were also apprehensive: the survivors had probably brought back the answer to what had happened to other lone recce aircraft in the area. Those that had not come back.
Excellent presentation. Thank you. Adolph Galland commanded JV44, an Me 262 unit, and spoke of his assignment by Hitler. Galland: "I am sure he had the thoughts, this is better than letting suicide. The chance to be killed in the last ten missions, the last ten missions, was very high. But we didn't pay too much attention to it. In this conditions and in this time, to be killed, was nothing, to us." Johannes Steinhoff was also a member of JV44: "We were going to fight to the very end, having the good feeling that we had done something, we died, being a leader within the frame work of, well, our responsibility as soldiers." These were brave men. No more war.
@War Child Mosquito had the lowest mortality rate of any allied warplane. If the pilot dies, so too must the aircraft, but the pilot may survive at the expense of the plane.
He didn`t claim a victory,he simply asked for the possibility of having a victory claim .He was aware,without witnesses or the Mosquito wreck found it was nearly impossible to get an official confirmed victory.
Thank you for tell the story. The Wooden Wonder and the Swallow (Swalbe) are my 2 favourite aircraft in WW2, both outstanding and unique in their own way.
Great presentation and historical information on both aircraft. I’ve never heard of the first Jet engine versus piston engine shoot down being inaccurate before and with plenty of information to support it. Thanks so much.
it's great that you mention not only the names of the Mosquito crew, but also the name of the Me 262 pilot. it gives this talk a humane aspect - you realize that your foe is not an inhuman machine (tank, aircraft etc.), but there's a living, breathing human being inside, and even if he's your military enemy, he still has his own history, his own family etc. it's much harder to hate and kill each other when we realize it, and it's much harder to wage a blood-thirsty war if we realize that we all are for the most part human beings, capable of mutual communication and understanding, not just some tin soldiers sitting inside of a disposable tank or bomber aircraft.
Extracted from an article "They showed the way" by Capt. Charles Barry DFC. The Illustrated History of World War II, printed in 1969. This is about an unarmed SAAF recce Mosquito, encountering a German Me-262. These folks had "brass cahones" .. Quote:..... That is why we had two or three rear-view mirrors and a perspex bubble hatch above the navigator's seat. By kneeling on his seat and putting his head in the hatch, the navigator could keep a full watch over the tail. And when he was in the nose of the aircraft over the bombsight to direct the pilot on target-lining up for photographs was the same as lining up for dropping bombs-the pilot did the eye-peeling, glancing into those rear-view mirrors every few seconds. The ideal was to fly above condensation trail height so that the enemy would have to pull a tell-tale plume to reach you. This was easier said than done. Although the trail heights varied-they always began 19,000 feet above freezing level, we were told-you usually could not get above them, even though the Met people said they should be only 2000 feet thick. So there was the choice of flying with trails rolling off the back of your wings like cotton wool, which made it easy for the enemy to spot you, or flying just below trail height so that the pilot of a conventional interceptor would give himself away by pulling trails himself as he climbed above you to dive up extra speed for the attack. That was a relatively minor threat, a conventional, propeller-driven interceptor. We knew how to handle it: put your head down and run. Almost as safe as getting away from flak, which usually had our height and direction but seldom our speed about 450 m.p.h. flat out off a shallow dive. This was remarkably fast in 1943 and the early days of 1944. Fast enough for anything the Germans could throw up against us. Or was it? On August 15, 1944, we learned it wasn't. On that day Captain Salomon ("Pi") Pienaar one of South Africa's most brilliant pilots, as he was to prove then and after the war as head of South African Airways, and his navigator, Lieutenant Archie Lockhart-Ross, took off for the Munich area. Both expected this to be a routine job, although opposition was usually hotter over this part of Southern Germany than Czechoslovakia, Austria, Poland, Rumania or any other country in 60 Squadron's field of operations. Airfields, marshalling yards, factories were to be the targets-all pinpoints familiar from previous sorties. They would keep a sharp look-out for fighters, not let the flak upset them, and get away quickly as soon as the job was done. As they approached Gunzberg/Leipheim airfield near Munich at 30,000 feet and 360 m.p.h., Pienaar did a couple of turns to either side to ensure no fighters were creeping up his tail, then turned on to target with Lockhart-Ross over the bombsight. As Pienaar levelled out he had another quick look in his rear-view mirror. A twin-engined aircraft was closing in rapidly. Immediately he slammed both throttles wide open, dropped his wing tanks and began a turn to starboard. Simultaneously the enemy aircraft opened fire from 400 yards and Pienaar saw pieces fly off his aircraft as it flicked into a spin, out of control, with Lockhart-Ross pinned in the nose by gravitational force and the port engine jammed at full throttle. Had he turned to port-as he suspected the enemy would expect him to do-he would have been blown out of the sky. For 11,000 feet Pienaar fought with his wounded aircraft before finally bringing it under control at 450 m.p.h.-to find the pilot of the phenomenal German aircraft poised for another attack and part of his own port wing and tail unit shot away. Pienaar also discovered he could turn only to port and that he would have to fly with the control column hard over to the right. It was a time for great skill and cool nerves. Pienaar had both. With Lockhart-Ross out of the nose and reporting the enemy's position from the top blister hatch, Pienaar outflew the enemy pilot in 11 more attacks in the next 35 minutes, turning inside him off the stern attacks and, on the final head-on attack, trying to ram him. By then both pilot and navigator had identified their foe as a jet-propelled Me. 262, which they had read about in secret reports. It was painted silver with black crosses below the mainplanes, the usual cross on the fuselage and a swastika on the tail. And it had a long nose, clipped wings, underslung engines and a teardrop-type cockpit cover. Its speed was phenomenal. Had the Mosquito been armed "at least twice during the attacks he made the enemy would have been a sitting target for me", said Pienaar. The action had taken the Mosquito some 90 miles to the south of Gunzberg when the engagement was broken off and Pienaar found refuge in a cloud for his juddering aircraft. But the dangers were not yet over for the two South Africans. With the radio and almost all the instruments unserviceable, both throttles jammed and, with 500 feet to spare over the Alps, they limped low over Northern Italy and down the coast to San Severo, where Pienaar put down a perfect belly-landing when the wheels would not go down. They had fuel for only another seven minutes' flying. Pienaar and Lockhart-Ross were given immediate awards of' the Distinguished Flying Cross. Their colleagues were delighted at this honour. They were also apprehensive: the survivors had probably brought back the answer to what had happened to other lone recce aircraft in the area, those that had not come back.
This is it what the US wrote about this incident. The airplane made a crash landing and was a total loss. Does not look so good. The pilot of the Lightning, 2nd Lt. Eugenen Williams was on a reconnaissance mission photographing the German towns of Minden and Osnabrück, and this is his story: When I came under attack I pushed both throttle forward and dived in order to escape. Below me I discovered another Me 262 and held my machine in a steep nosedive. The altimeter was frighteningly fast and at 4,000 meters I tried to get my F-5 under control, but unable to pull up, I unbuckled my harnest and opened the cockpit roof. The wind pulled me out of the cockpit. Half unconscious, I tried to pull the ripcord of my parachute. However my arms seemed not to obey me. As much as I struggled, I could not reach the handle. Again and again I tried to move my arms. With my left hand I first grabbed my head and then my face, then my collar and my jacket until my hand had finally worked it towards the parachute handle, I grabbed and pulled. The parachute opened just before I touch down. So I lay there, half unconscious on my back. A crowd gathered around me. I could not move my arms. My shoes were gone and part of my trousers were missing. Shreds of my life vest lay on my chest, my pilot helmet and my gloves were also gone. Some men from a Waffen-SS unit arrived and took me to a Hospital. There the doctors discovered that my left arm was broken in four places and my right arm was dislocated. After a few days in the replacement hospital Gütersloh I came to an Air Force prison camp, finally ending up in "Stalag VII A" near Moosburg. Schreiber had another first on 26 July 1944, claiming the first enemy aircraft shoot down in the Messerschmitt jet, a RAF Mosquito PR XVI. However he only manage to damaged it, the crew of the Mosquito, did in fact, manage to return to an Allied held airfield in Italy and here the aircraft made a crash landing and was written off as a total loss.
@@bubiruski8067 The Mosquito in question landed safely in Italy and flew back to RAF Benson the following day (the engagement actually happened on the late afternoon of the 25th July). Schreider did not hit the Mosquito in any of the six passes he made against it. A full account of the engagement is in the 544 Squadron line log held at the UK National Archives.
@@richardvernon317 Ok, you read my previous reply. But is clear that even this is not sure since the low level cowboys are unable to record anything properly and are even unable to count. Nothing is sure, not even if there was a incident at all !
@@bubiruski8067 In this case both the Squadron Line Log and Operational Record Book cover the event in great detail (the line Log entry for Flt Lt Wall's account of the of the whole Sortie and the engagement fills two pages of A4 and the One written by the South African squadron that actually did lose a Mosquito in a crash landing in Italy after being shot up by a 262 on 15th August is just as detailed) Operational Record Books can be very hit or miss depending on the professionalism of the F540 officer, but in this case the incident and correct date come form two sources. 544 Squadron and the Spitfire Squadron in Italy that hosted Flt Lt Wall and his Navigator over night in Italy while the Mosquito was repaired.
F/O Lobban was again flying on 25 March 1945, this time with F/L Stuart Mackay (my father) as pilot. They were flying out of RAF Benson 544 Squadron in Mosquito #MM283 on an operation to photo the area between Lubeck and Stettin. Over Peenemunde they were attacked by a Me 262 and this time the 262 was successful and shot them down.They crash landed 5 miles from the Russian lines. After several days locked up in the local guardhouse they were eventually transferred to Stalag Luft 1. There they shared a hut with the crew of a Canadian Liberator. Their experience in the camp was recounted by the pilot of the Liberator F/O Kennith Blyth in his book Cradle Crew. He recounts" Lobban and Mackay were intercepted by the fast German ME 262. The Mosquito's top speed was only 450 mph. While trying to escape Jock and Mac were hit by the German fighter; their rudder was badly damaged, and their starboard engine caught fire. Mac put the Mosquito into a dive: he felt that by going close to the deck he could evade the fighter and at the same time put out the fire. The German Me followed him down. At a low level the Mosquito was hit again by ground fire from ship defences. Jock and Mac were forced to ditch in the water near Albaek off the coast of Denmark. To their surprise, when they got out of the aircraft, the water was only a few feet deep. Their dinghy inflated but they waded to shore. One of the ships that had shot at them was the famous battleship Lutzow..." " Since both Jock and Mac were uninjured, they decided to set out for the Russian lines. but the isthmus they were on was heavily defended, so they were soon captured." "Jock was Mac's fifth navigator and Mac was Jock's eleventh pilot. Whoever said the PRU (Photographic Reconnaissance Unit) was apiece of cake ?" They were liberated by the Russians in May 1945.
Sorry to say,but Albaek is more than 300 km away from Peenemünde ,the next danish coast 80 km to the west..Swinemünde is locatet 25 km east of Peenemünde.Lützow was send to Swinemünde from Danzig on April 8th.
My grandfather, the late Wing Commander H.A Forbes,flying out of Upwood for 139 Jamaica squadron was shot down in his Mosquito 27 March 1945 by an Me-262. His pilot Andre van Amsterdam parachuted first, and was sadly never seen again. My grandfather was eventually captured and also taken to Stalag Luft 1 so almost certainly would have met your father. Shortly before his death my grandfather was put in touch with the pilot who shot him down and they exchanged correspondence. Incredibly, in 2019 I discovered that pilot was still alive and was able to exchange some emails and letters before making a trip to the site of the POW camp.
You are on the list! Fascinating video and many thanks for bringing this formerly unknown (to myself) encounter to my attention. My nearest air museum is the Yorkshire Air Museum at Elvington, where they used to have a Mosquito FB variant, complete with AI radar aerials, and which moved to the Lincolnshire Aviation Heritage Centre in 2017.
@@davidhipkinsable Nearly two years between first flight of a German Jet and that of a British one. Me-262 flew on Jet power well before the Meteor (Gloster's chief Test Pilot refused to clear the Meteor for full scale flight trials until the engines were powerful enough to allow the aircraft to safely fly on a single engine). Two days between first attempted combat by a Me-262 (25th July 1944) and that of a Meteor (against a V-1) on 27th July 1944.
Great video and a great story :-) I have been to Cosford many times (yep a bit of an aircraft nut!) and can honestly say its a fantastic museum. It has a wide range of Aircraft from the pre war era right up to modern times. The highlight for me is the TSR2. This aircraft looks futuristic now, you can only imagine what it looked like in the 60's
Two of the loveliest aircraft of WWII. The mosquito still takes my breathe away. We have one being fully restored just near Melbourne Australia. I will go along to check both it and a Sopwith Camel in full glory.
The whole event was recorded in the 544 Squadron B Flight line log on the evening of 26th July when the Mosquito got back to Benson from its overnight stop in Italy. The engagement actually happened on the 25th July. In the log the Mosquito crew said that they had been attacked by a Jet Fighter that looked like an Me-262. The Spitfire squadron that repaired the Mosquito in Italy also recorded the visit by the Mosquito and the fact that they had run into a Jet Fighter. Most of Allied pilots knew that the Germans and Allies were working on them.
I had the privilige to meet a canadian pilot who flew photo recon mosquitoes. He was in his 90's. I asked him if he had faced a 262, he did. "So Bill, obviously you survived the encounters. How did you pull it off?" Bill answered, " I would bring her down and fly as close to the ground as I could. The 262 was too fast and it would always overshoot." So I looked at him and said, " Balls to the wall?". All of a sudden Bill looked like he was 19 again and with a huge grin replied, "Balls to the wall." I will never forget this chance encounter for the rest of my life.
Thanks for sharing this informative and interesting story. Both the Mosquito and the Me 262 were incredible aircraft. I hope to visit your museum in the future. Cheers from Thailand! 👍😁👍
I’m a little puzzled because the story I had of the first encounter was of South African Air Force pilot Pine Pienaar flying a Mosquito sans weapons and with wing mods over France. No matter, we have excellent examples of both aircraft at the military museum in Saxonwold, Joburg. The jet is a two-seater fitted with radar aerials.
I've been to the RAF Museum in Colindale and not only saw and photographed but also touched an Me 262. I also saw the 'Battle of Britain Hall' as well as a Huge Vulcan among many other planes. I had a great time.
good informative video and a great story...the Schwalbe did have a terribly week nosewheel strut. and any lateral influence would wreck the forward undercarriage. ground-crews had to use force-dispersing cables additional to the towbar for towing....you can even see footage of a strut collapse in the "Watsons Wizzers" landings in Cherbourg.....good video...kutgw!!!
Very informative video Joe, two extraordinary aircraft and even more extraordinary men in those aircraft. I love to hear more from you guys at Cosford.
Thank you for the great presentation of the Me 262 I have visited the beautiful RAF Museum in Cosford many times and it is always interesting to see new exhibits. I have still one question. What happened to the Me 410, and where is it now to visit? In 2017 I saw it in Cosford and in 2019 it disappeared.
First time I hear about why the Messerschmitt has a swept wing, sort of by coincidence. The theory of using a swept wing for drag reduction was already introduced in 1930. Dr. Busemann pioneered the theory in 1935 and was confirmed in Gottingen in 1939. Willy Messerschmitt was informed of the findings in december 1939. Development of the Me262 started in April 1939. First flight was in April 1941 with a conventional engine in the nose. Pictures suggest that it was already equipped with swept back wings. Fascinating stuff.
The fact that the outer wings were swept further back to restore the centre of gravity, is well documented. However, the story told here is simplified for the sake of brevity.
Thank you for your comment. Now the remark makes more sense to me. Could have been solved by choosing better wording. Takes a view seconds not extending the video much.
I really enjoyed this bit on the Mosquito even though I was sad to hear that the Lieutenant died during the landing. The gentleman doing the presentation is quite accomplished and does a fine job but I think he would be better served by an investment in quality audio gear. I suspect this piece was shot on an iPhone. Modern cell phones are OK for shooting home movies but for a production shoot such as this one, not optimal. One of the most difficult challenges in making movies is recording good audio. #1 option would be to use a decent shotgun mike on a boom. You can do this with a one man crew by attaching the mike boom to a stand. Secondarily, for most of the shots, the shotgun can be attached to the camera. #2 option would be to get a decent wireless mike and hang it on the announcer. Keep up the good work. You have a marvelous museum!
I actually sat in a real ME262 at the US Air Force Museum in Dayton, Ohio about 10 years ago. Back then my dad worked as a volunteer at the museum & once a year they had an employee appreciation day at the museum & opened up several aircraft so I climbed in the ME262. I was surprised how few gauges there were in the cockpit.
My Father, Flt Lt. J.W.Rothenbush,DFC,flew Halifax and Lancaster bombers for 434 Sqd RCAF and on March 31 1945 on a mission to Hamburg they were attacked twice by a 262 Jet. I remember as a kid, Harry Saul,his mid upper telling the story of not being able to swing his guns across fast enough to hit this insanely fast aircraft which had no propellers????
At 00:36 and throughout, Flight Lieutenant Wall is transcribed correctly but narrated as Flight Lieutenant HALL. Got to say that those were two epoch-making aircraft both beautiful as well as brilliantly effective. The ME-262 is elegant and rather eclipses the nearly contemporary Gloster Meteor for looks as it manages to be rakish and svelte around the nose and fuselage whereas the Meteor is more dumpy. One can only speculate how a meeting between to of those might have turned out.
Great presentation - my only concern would be to use some noise cancelation or better / other mic. The noise is as loud as the voice - this is somewhat distracting. Besides that - top video! :)
Yes. Then again, fighter pilots tend to be quite cocky and confident they could bring one down. However, I think your comment applies well for the guys in the bombers!
@@giovannipierre5309 do you think the Germans first publicly announced their jets were ready to engage allied bombers? The British jets weren't operational until the the last weeks of the war
5:29 They consider us stupid ! The me262 had not only a swept wing but also horizontal and vertical stabilizer even more swept. For CG issues there would not have been a need to design swept tail surfaces. The horizontal stabilizer with a 7 degree pitch up trim range to meet the torque of the n-wave. Every modern airliner has such features. Do they believe we are all stupid ?
The PR Mk. 32, a lighter version of the PR Mk. XVI with extended wingtips was designed and built in response to the threat posed by German jet fighters. It could operate regularly at altitudes in the vicinity of 40,000 feet (service ceiling 42,000 feet) which made it somewhat harder to intercept. Only five were built, the first entering service in early December 1944.
Foi uma pena o Messerschmitt Me-262 ter sido desenvolvido muito tarde. Mas, no contexto de uma Alemanha trabalhando muito além do que podia, no esforço de guerra lançou mão de trabalho escravo inclusive, até que foi uma conquista para o desenvolvimento da ciência aeronáutica...
LOL. the story about the wing sweep gets my goat. I think that it was concocted by Americans who want to steal the credit of being the first to use swept wings. To counter that argument, i would point out that a piston engined prototype of the ME262 was in flying trials before the jet engines were ready. This prototype had swept wings from the start. The Tail plane is swept. The rudder is swept. The nose is extended such that a 45 degree cone with apex at the nose misses the wing tips. Taken as a whole, it is quite clear that Willy Messersmitt had a good understanding of transonic flight and took precautions to delay the effects as far as possible into the performance envelope. Please consider the evidence that the Americans came second in this race by about 3 years.
The principle of swept back wings was well known. However, the Me 262 was originally designed without (much) swept back wings. The outer wings were swept back further to restore the centre of gravity. These facts are all well documented by RAF Museum documentation.
@@RoyalAirForceMuseum In other words you agree that the outer wings were swept from the start. The sweep was extended to the inner wings in a design adjustment. I disagree with your point above. At the time compressibility phenomina was not well understood in the USA or UK but multiple German designs has delta or swept wings.
Fantastic story regarding the first encounter between the fantastic Mosquito and equally fantastic Me 262. Nice to hear somebody narrate clearly. Thank you John Summerfield.
The wings weren’t swept back by accident. The horizontal stabiliser was also swept back and it doesn’t have engines hanging on it. The Germans had supersonic wind tunnels and were perfectly aware of the benefit of and pioneered swept back wings. Pilots reported that the 262 had beautiful flying characteristics as well as being 120mph faster than any allied piston aeroplane, confirmed by Capt Eric Brown at the RAE. The allies after the war took a Messerschmitt wing plan off the shelf and applied it to the F86 Sabre, and the Russians did the same with the Mig 15.
Excellent comment, absolutely true, FYI; the MiG-15 was designed by Heinkel engineer *Seigfried Gunter.*
Thank you for the invitation to the museum in Cosford. I will think about paying a visit.
Despite everything said about other aircraft, Adolph Galland who was in charge of the Luftwaffe said the mosquito was the Allied plane that gave them the most trouble, they came in low & by the time they were detected they had gone.
Both aircraft are so beautifully constructed! Never heard that story of the first encounter of the ME262 by the RAF, the story told very well indeed, thank you Sir!
Very similar story by a SAAF Mosquito from 60 Squadron: On August 15, 1944, we learned it wasn't. On that day Captain Salomon ("Pi") Pienaar one of South Africa's most brilliant pilots, as he was to prove then and after the war as head of South African Airways, and his navigator, Lieutenant Archie Lockhart-Ross, took off for the Munich area. Both expected this to be a routine job, although opposition was usually hotter over this part of Southern Germany than Czechoslovakia, Austria, Poland, Rumania or any other country in 60 Squadron's field of operations. Airfields, marshalling yards, factories were to be the targets-all pinpoints familiar from previous sorties. They would keep a sharp look-out for fighters, not let the flak upset them, and get away quickly as soon as the job was done. As they approached Gunzberg/Leipheim airfield near Munich at 30,000 feet and 360 m.p.h., Pienaar did a couple of turns to either side to ensure no fighters were creeping up his tail, then turned on to target with Lockhart-Ross over the bombsight. As Pienaar levelled out he had another quick look in his rear-view mirror. A twin-engined aircraft was closing in rapidly. Immediately he slammed both throttles wide open, dropped his wing tanks and began a turn to starboard. Simultaneously the enemy aircraft opened fire from 400 yards and Pienaar saw pieces fly off his aircraft as it flicked into a spin, out of control, with Lockhart-Ross pinned in the nose by gravitational force and the port engine jammed at full throttle. Had he turned to port-as he suspected the enemy would expect him to do-he would have been blown out of the sky. For 11,000 feet Pienaar fought with his wounded aircraft before finally bringing it under control at 450 m.p.h.-to find the pilot of the phenomenal German aircraft poised for another attack and part of his own port wing and tail unit shot away. Pienaar also discovered he could turn only to port and that he would have to fly with the control column hard over to the right. It was a time for great skill and cool nerves. Pienaar had both. With Lockhart-Ross out of the nose and reporting the enemy's position from the top blister hatch, Pienaar outflew the enemy pilot in 11 more attacks in the next 35 minutes, turning inside him off the stern attacks and, on the final head-on attack, trying to ram him. By then both pilot and navigator had identified their foe as a jet-propelled Me. 262, which they had read about in secret reports. It was painted silver with black crosses below the mainplanes, the usual cross on the fuselage and a swastika on the tail. And it had a long nose, clipped wings, underslung engines and a teardrop-type cockpit cover. Its speed was phenomenal.
Had the Mosquito been armed "at least twice during the attacks he made the enemy would have been a sitting target for me", said Pienaar. The action had taken the Mosquito some 90 miles to the south of Gunzberg when the engagement was broken off and Pienaar found refuge in a cloud for his juddering aircraft. But the dangers were not yet over for the two South Africans. With the radio and almost all the instruments unserviceable, both throttles jammed and, with 500 feet to spare over the Alps, they limped low over Northern Italy and down the coast to San Severo, where Pienaar put down a perfect belly-landing when the wheels would not go down. They had fuel for only another seven minutes' flying. Pienaar and Lockhart-Ross were given immediate awards of' the Distinguished Flying Cross. Their colleagues were delighted at this honour. They were also apprehensive: the survivors had probably brought back the answer to what had happened to other lone recce aircraft in the area. Those that had not come back.
Excellent presentation. Thank you. Adolph Galland commanded JV44, an Me 262 unit, and spoke of his assignment by Hitler. Galland: "I am sure he had the thoughts, this is better than letting suicide. The chance to be killed in the last ten missions, the last ten missions, was very high. But we didn't pay too much attention to it. In this conditions and in this time, to be killed, was nothing, to us." Johannes Steinhoff was also a member of JV44: "We were going to fight to the very end, having the good feeling that we had done something, we died, being a leader within the frame work of, well, our responsibility as soldiers." These were brave men. No more war.
Thanks, RAF Museum -- a well-told story by Jon Summerfield
This is one utterly fantastic documentary.
Thank you so much, Tommies!👍🏻
Respect for both sides, that's how it should be, thank you.
The swept wings on the F86 and Mig were because they are based on the Focke Wulf designs "acquired after the war"
Schreiber: "I claim the first jet kill in history"
Mosquito: "news of my death has been greatly exaggerated"
@War Child Mosquito had the lowest mortality rate of any allied warplane. If the pilot dies, so too must the aircraft, but the pilot may survive at the expense of the plane.
@War Child I don't know which video you watched, but the one I watched it was the 262 that crashed, the Mossie made it safely to Italy.
@@JohnHill-qo3hb In the video I watched they both made it back safely. The 262 pilot was killed in a later landing incident.
@@stevek8829 touche`
He didn`t claim a victory,he simply asked for the possibility of having a victory claim .He was aware,without witnesses or the Mosquito wreck found it was nearly impossible to get an official confirmed victory.
Fascinating insight into both the encounter and the design evolution of the Me 262. Thank you for posting this.
Very informative. I had never heard about this encounter. Thankfully the Mossie wasn't the first jet kill. Well done Jon.
Thanks, all the way from New Zealand where we made another Mossie fly recently!
Thank you for tell the story. The Wooden Wonder and the Swallow (Swalbe) are my 2 favourite aircraft in WW2, both outstanding and unique in their own way.
Wonderful information of people and aircraft . Thank you for preserving this important history and these amazing aircraft.
An interesting video, thanks.
I visited the Cosford RAF museum in 1997 while working in Telford; time to return and view the excellent displays.
Jon, What a guy. Sorely missed. The best video the museum produced. Maybe better than mine even!
Great presentation and historical information on both aircraft. I’ve never heard of the first Jet engine versus piston engine shoot down being inaccurate before and with plenty of information to support it. Thanks so much.
it's great that you mention not only the names of the Mosquito crew, but also the name of the Me 262 pilot. it gives this talk a humane aspect - you realize that your foe is not an inhuman machine (tank, aircraft etc.), but there's a living, breathing human being inside, and even if he's your military enemy, he still has his own history, his own family etc. it's much harder to hate and kill each other when we realize it, and it's much harder to wage a blood-thirsty war if we realize that we all are for the most part human beings, capable of mutual communication and understanding, not just some tin soldiers sitting inside of a disposable tank or bomber aircraft.
Thank you for your lovely comment.
Extracted from an article "They showed the way" by Capt. Charles Barry DFC. The Illustrated History of World War II, printed in 1969. This is about an unarmed SAAF recce Mosquito, encountering a German Me-262. These folks had "brass cahones" ..
Quote:..... That is why we had two or three rear-view mirrors and a perspex bubble hatch above the navigator's seat. By kneeling on his seat and putting his head in the hatch, the navigator could keep a full watch over the tail. And when he was in the nose of the aircraft over the bombsight to direct the pilot on target-lining up for photographs was the same as lining up for dropping bombs-the pilot did the eye-peeling, glancing into those rear-view mirrors every few seconds.
The ideal was to fly above condensation trail height so that the enemy would have to pull a tell-tale plume to reach you. This was easier said than done. Although the trail heights varied-they always began 19,000 feet above freezing level, we were told-you usually could not get above them, even though the Met people said they should be only 2000 feet thick. So there was the choice of flying with trails rolling off the back of your wings like cotton wool, which made it easy for the enemy to spot you, or flying just below trail height so that the pilot of a conventional interceptor would give himself away by pulling trails himself as he climbed above you to dive up extra speed for the attack. That was a relatively minor threat, a conventional, propeller-driven interceptor. We knew how to handle it: put your head down and run. Almost as safe as getting away from flak, which usually had our height and direction but seldom our speed about 450 m.p.h. flat out off a shallow dive.
This was remarkably fast in 1943 and the early days of 1944. Fast enough for anything the
Germans could throw up against us. Or was it?
On August 15, 1944, we learned it wasn't. On that day Captain Salomon ("Pi") Pienaar
one of South Africa's most brilliant pilots, as he was to prove then and after the war as head of South African Airways, and his navigator, Lieutenant Archie Lockhart-Ross, took off for the Munich area. Both expected this to be a routine job, although opposition was usually hotter over this part of Southern Germany than Czechoslovakia, Austria, Poland, Rumania or any other country in 60 Squadron's field of operations. Airfields, marshalling yards, factories were to be the targets-all pinpoints familiar from previous sorties. They would keep a sharp look-out for fighters, not let the flak upset them, and get away
quickly as soon as the job was done. As they approached Gunzberg/Leipheim airfield near Munich at 30,000 feet and 360 m.p.h., Pienaar did a couple of turns to either side to ensure no fighters were creeping up his tail, then turned on to target with Lockhart-Ross over the bombsight.
As Pienaar levelled out he had another quick look in his rear-view mirror. A twin-engined aircraft was closing in rapidly. Immediately he slammed both throttles wide open, dropped his wing tanks and began a turn to starboard. Simultaneously the enemy aircraft opened
fire from 400 yards and Pienaar saw pieces fly off his aircraft as it flicked into a spin, out of control, with Lockhart-Ross pinned in the nose by gravitational force and the port engine jammed at full throttle. Had he turned to port-as he suspected the enemy would expect him to do-he would have been blown out of the sky. For 11,000 feet Pienaar
fought with his wounded aircraft before finally bringing it under control at 450 m.p.h.-to find the pilot of the phenomenal German aircraft poised for another attack and part of his own port wing and tail unit shot away.
Pienaar also discovered he could turn only to port and that he would have to fly with the control column hard over to the right. It was a time for great skill and cool nerves. Pienaar had both. With Lockhart-Ross out of the nose and reporting the enemy's position from the top blister hatch, Pienaar outflew the enemy pilot in 11 more attacks in the next 35 minutes, turning inside him off the stern attacks and, on the final head-on attack, trying to ram him. By then both pilot and navigator had identified their foe as a jet-propelled Me. 262, which they had read about in secret reports. It was painted silver with black crosses below the mainplanes, the usual cross on the fuselage and a swastika on the tail. And it had a long nose, clipped wings, underslung engines and a teardrop-type cockpit cover. Its speed was phenomenal.
Had the Mosquito been armed "at least twice during the attacks he made the enemy would have been a sitting target for me", said Pienaar. The action had taken the Mosquito some 90 miles to the south of Gunzberg when the engagement was broken off and Pienaar found refuge in a cloud for his juddering aircraft. But the dangers were not yet over for the two South Africans. With the radio and almost all the instruments unserviceable, both throttles jammed and, with 500 feet to spare over the Alps, they
limped low over Northern Italy and down the coast to San Severo, where Pienaar put down a perfect belly-landing when the wheels would not go down. They had fuel for only another seven minutes' flying. Pienaar and Lockhart-Ross were given immediate awards of' the Distinguished Flying Cross.
Their colleagues were delighted at this honour.
They were also apprehensive: the survivors had probably brought back the answer to what had happened to other lone recce aircraft in the area, those that had not come back.
This is it what the US wrote about this incident.
The airplane made a crash landing and was a total loss.
Does not look so good.
The pilot of the Lightning, 2nd Lt. Eugenen Williams was on a reconnaissance mission photographing the German towns of Minden and Osnabrück, and this is his story:
When I came under attack I pushed both throttle forward and dived in order to escape. Below me I discovered another Me 262 and held my machine in a steep nosedive. The altimeter was frighteningly fast and at 4,000 meters I tried to get my F-5 under control, but unable to pull up, I unbuckled my harnest and opened the cockpit roof. The wind pulled me out of the cockpit. Half unconscious, I tried to pull the ripcord of my parachute. However my arms seemed not to obey me. As much as I struggled, I could not reach the handle.
Again and again I tried to move my arms. With my left hand I first grabbed my head and then my face, then my collar and my jacket until my hand had finally worked it towards the parachute handle, I grabbed and pulled. The parachute opened just before I touch down. So I lay there, half unconscious on my back.
A crowd gathered around me. I could not move my arms. My shoes were gone and part of my trousers were missing. Shreds of my life vest lay on my chest, my pilot helmet and my gloves were also gone. Some men from a Waffen-SS unit arrived and took me to a Hospital. There the doctors discovered that my left arm was broken in four places and my right arm was dislocated. After a few days in the replacement hospital Gütersloh I came to an Air Force prison camp, finally ending up in "Stalag VII A" near Moosburg.
Schreiber had another first on 26 July 1944, claiming the first enemy aircraft shoot down in the Messerschmitt jet, a RAF Mosquito PR XVI. However he only manage to damaged it, the crew of the Mosquito, did in fact, manage to return to an Allied held airfield in Italy and here the aircraft made a crash landing and was written off as a total loss.
Cahones? Please Google foreign words before you make an ass of yourself again!
@@bubiruski8067 The Mosquito in question landed safely in Italy and flew back to RAF Benson the following day (the engagement actually happened on the late afternoon of the 25th July). Schreider did not hit the Mosquito in any of the six passes he made against it. A full account of the engagement is in the 544 Squadron line log held at the UK National Archives.
@@richardvernon317 Ok, you read my previous reply. But is clear that even this is not sure since the low level cowboys are unable to record anything properly and are even unable to count.
Nothing is sure, not even if there was a incident at all !
@@bubiruski8067 In this case both the Squadron Line Log and Operational Record Book cover the event in great detail (the line Log entry for Flt Lt Wall's account of the of the whole Sortie and the engagement fills two pages of A4 and the One written by the South African squadron that actually did lose a Mosquito in a crash landing in Italy after being shot up by a 262 on 15th August is just as detailed) Operational Record Books can be very hit or miss depending on the professionalism of the F540 officer, but in this case the incident and correct date come form two sources. 544 Squadron and the Spitfire Squadron in Italy that hosted Flt Lt Wall and his Navigator over night in Italy while the Mosquito was repaired.
I've seen them. Both superb exhibits of historically important aircraft.
Well worth the visit but Cosford has so much more as well.
F/O Lobban was again flying on 25 March 1945, this time with F/L Stuart Mackay (my father) as pilot.
They were flying out of RAF Benson 544 Squadron in Mosquito #MM283 on an operation to photo the area between Lubeck and Stettin.
Over Peenemunde they were attacked by a Me 262 and this time the 262 was successful and shot them down.They crash landed 5 miles from the Russian lines.
After several days locked up in the local guardhouse they were eventually transferred to Stalag Luft 1. There they shared a hut with the crew of a Canadian Liberator. Their experience in the camp was recounted by the pilot of the Liberator F/O Kennith Blyth in his book Cradle Crew.
He recounts" Lobban and Mackay were intercepted by the fast German ME 262. The Mosquito's top speed was only 450 mph.
While trying to escape Jock and Mac were hit by the German fighter; their rudder was badly damaged, and their starboard engine caught fire. Mac put the Mosquito into a dive: he felt that by going close to the deck he could evade the fighter and at the same time put out the fire. The German Me followed him down. At a low level the Mosquito was hit again by ground fire from ship defences.
Jock and Mac were forced to ditch in the water near Albaek off the coast of Denmark. To their surprise, when they got out of the aircraft, the water was only a few feet deep. Their dinghy inflated but they waded to shore. One of the ships that had shot at them was the famous battleship Lutzow..."
" Since both Jock and Mac were uninjured, they decided to set out for the Russian lines. but the isthmus they were on was heavily defended, so they were soon captured."
"Jock was Mac's fifth navigator and Mac was Jock's eleventh pilot. Whoever said the PRU (Photographic Reconnaissance Unit) was apiece of cake ?"
They were liberated by the Russians in May 1945.
Thank you for sharing this amazing epilogue
Sorry to say,but Albaek is more than 300 km away from Peenemünde ,the next danish coast 80 km to the west..Swinemünde is locatet 25 km east of Peenemünde.Lützow was send to Swinemünde from Danzig on April 8th.
My grandfather, the late Wing Commander H.A Forbes,flying out of Upwood for 139 Jamaica squadron was shot down in his Mosquito 27 March 1945 by an Me-262. His pilot Andre van Amsterdam parachuted first, and was sadly never seen again. My grandfather was eventually captured and also taken to Stalag Luft 1 so almost certainly would have met your father. Shortly before his death my grandfather was put in touch with the pilot who shot him down and they exchanged correspondence. Incredibly, in 2019 I discovered that pilot was still alive and was able to exchange some emails and letters before making a trip to the site of the POW camp.
Smashing video. My father was stationed at Cosford for a couple of years before being posted up to Sealand
This is a very enjoyable video, well researched, well-presented, and great footage.
You are on the list! Fascinating video and many thanks for bringing this formerly unknown (to myself) encounter to my attention. My nearest air museum is the Yorkshire Air Museum at Elvington, where they used to have a Mosquito FB variant, complete with AI radar aerials, and which moved to the Lincolnshire Aviation Heritage Centre in 2017.
I enjoyed hearing about the first encounter with the ME 262 by a Mosquito.
Only 2 sides ahd operational combat jest in WW2 - and both the German and Brit jets first took flight (in secret) within na eek of each other
@@davidhipkinsable Nearly two years between first flight of a German Jet and that of a British one. Me-262 flew on Jet power well before the Meteor (Gloster's chief Test Pilot refused to clear the Meteor for full scale flight trials until the engines were powerful enough to allow the aircraft to safely fly on a single engine). Two days between first attempted combat by a Me-262 (25th July 1944) and that of a Meteor (against a V-1) on 27th July 1944.
Many German pilots and planes were lost during take offs and landings in these jets.
Great video and a great story :-) I have been to Cosford many times (yep a bit of an aircraft nut!) and can honestly say its a fantastic museum. It has a wide range of Aircraft from the pre war era right up to modern times. The highlight for me is the TSR2. This aircraft looks futuristic now, you can only imagine what it looked like in the 60's
Great documentary and story. Thanks for posting. The RAF Museum is on my bucket list.
Good video. The museum is exceptional and really worth a visit.
A very good museum, we went there several years ago. Lots of prototypes on display.
We also had a sit in a Jet Provost.
Best story on both pales I've heard! Great work.
Thank you! An excellent presentation,which,with it's down-to-earth manner certainly is an incentive to visit this museum!
Incredible video. Incredible channel. Incredible Air Force.
excellent video and explanation!!!
i guess that encounter was a nasty surprise for the RAF
What beautiful airplanes and what a great story! Thanks for sharing.
Two of the loveliest aircraft of WWII. The mosquito still takes my breathe away. We have one being fully restored just near Melbourne Australia. I will go along to check both it and a Sopwith Camel in full glory.
breath
Interesting story about the mosquito and the first M-262 contact
Imagine the first allies seeing these jet planes from close and wondering how these can fly without propeller
The whole event was recorded in the 544 Squadron B Flight line log on the evening of 26th July when the Mosquito got back to Benson from its overnight stop in Italy. The engagement actually happened on the 25th July. In the log the Mosquito crew said that they had been attacked by a Jet Fighter that looked like an Me-262. The Spitfire squadron that repaired the Mosquito in Italy also recorded the visit by the Mosquito and the fact that they had run into a Jet Fighter. Most of Allied pilots knew that the Germans and Allies were working on them.
I had the privilige to meet a canadian pilot who flew photo recon mosquitoes. He was in his 90's. I asked him if he had faced a 262, he did. "So Bill, obviously you survived the encounters. How did you pull it off?" Bill answered, " I would bring her down and fly as close to the ground as I could. The 262 was too fast and it would always overshoot." So I looked at him and said, " Balls to the wall?". All of a sudden Bill looked like he was 19 again and with a huge grin replied, "Balls to the wall." I will never forget this chance encounter for the rest of my life.
Club swinging neanderthalensis
Thank you for posting. Great story.
Thanks for sharing this informative and interesting story. Both the Mosquito and the Me 262 were incredible aircraft. I hope to visit your museum in the future.
Cheers from Thailand! 👍😁👍
I’m a little puzzled because the story I had of the first encounter was of South African Air Force pilot Pine Pienaar flying a Mosquito sans weapons and with wing mods over France. No matter, we have excellent examples of both aircraft at the military museum in Saxonwold, Joburg. The jet is a two-seater fitted with radar aerials.
I've been to the RAF Museum in Colindale and not only saw and photographed but also touched an Me 262. I also saw the 'Battle of Britain Hall' as well as a Huge Vulcan among many other planes. I had a great time.
The Vulcan was designed by a German girl.
Google for Johanna Weber !
Very informative, I really enjoy listening to stories like this one.
Did not know the swept back wing was a 'happy' accident! Thanks for a very informative vid - Cheers!
Thanks fron Norway. I liked very much the story and the way you tell it. I hope to visit your museum in my life.
good informative video and a great story...the Schwalbe did have a terribly week nosewheel strut. and any lateral influence would wreck the forward undercarriage. ground-crews had to use force-dispersing cables additional to the towbar for towing....you can even see footage of a strut collapse in the "Watsons Wizzers" landings in Cherbourg.....good video...kutgw!!!
Thank you for an informative and inspiring narration Mr. Summerfield.
Very informative video Joe, two extraordinary aircraft and even more extraordinary men in those aircraft.
I love to hear more from you guys at Cosford.
The first jet on jet was the Meteor vs the V-1.
Thanks Sir, great story and pictures.
What an excellent presentation. I must go back to Cosford, last visit was 5 or 6 years ago.
Good stuff. Been there and its worth it. They also have a Liberator which my father flew.
Really enjoyed that, thanks uploader.
Incredible story and thanks for introducing us to the museum.
A nice little story on two quite interesting WWII aircraft.
What a thrilling story, artfully told!
Wow, what a fabulous video. I'll be back at Hendon (or Cosford...) after lockdown! Thanks.
Really nice story about the first kill. Thx!
Thank you for the great presentation of the Me 262
I have visited the beautiful RAF Museum in Cosford many times and it is always interesting to see new exhibits.
I have still one question. What happened to the Me 410, and where is it now to visit? In 2017 I saw it in Cosford and in 2019 it disappeared.
It is undergoing a brief restoration.
@@RoyalAirForceMuseum ... *thanks for your reply*
First time I hear about why the Messerschmitt has a swept wing, sort of by coincidence. The theory of using a swept wing for drag reduction was already introduced in 1930. Dr. Busemann pioneered the theory in 1935 and was confirmed in Gottingen in 1939. Willy Messerschmitt was informed of the findings in december 1939. Development of the Me262 started in April 1939. First flight was in April 1941 with a conventional engine in the nose. Pictures suggest that it was already equipped with swept back wings. Fascinating stuff.
The fact that the outer wings were swept further back to restore the centre of gravity, is well documented. However, the story told here is simplified for the sake of brevity.
Thank you for your comment. Now the remark makes more sense to me. Could have been solved by choosing better wording. Takes a view seconds not extending the video much.
Correct, the swept wings were not an accident, the Projekt 1065 had swept wings from inception.
I really enjoyed this bit on the Mosquito even though I was sad to hear that the Lieutenant died during the landing. The gentleman doing the presentation is quite accomplished and does a fine job but I think he would be better served by an investment in quality audio gear. I suspect this piece was shot on an iPhone. Modern cell phones are OK for shooting home movies but for a production shoot such as this one, not optimal. One of the most difficult challenges in making movies is recording good audio. #1 option would be to use a decent shotgun mike on a boom. You can do this with a one man crew by attaching the mike boom to a stand. Secondarily, for most of the shots, the shotgun can be attached to the camera. #2 option would be to get a decent wireless mike and hang it on the announcer. Keep up the good work. You have a marvelous museum!
You are very right. The airco system was very loud and there is a lot of echo in this hangar. In future, we will use clip on mic.
I actually sat in a real ME262 at the US Air Force Museum in Dayton, Ohio about 10 years ago. Back then my dad worked as a volunteer at the museum & once a year they had an employee appreciation day at the museum & opened up several aircraft so I climbed in the ME262. I was surprised how few gauges there were in the cockpit.
5:29 Not even a absolute beginner in airplane design can believe this
Love this video, very informative, love these old aircraft, engineering marvels for the day!
Hear Hear!!!
very interesting story , I would love to come and see your displays .thanks very much for taking the time to make this video.
Great video, as a member of the ATC in the mid 60s I spent lots of time at RAF Cosford, no museum then.
We did our ATC camps at RAF Church Fenton, Yorks.
Flew the Chipmunks, top cadets got flips in Jet Provost.
Just to say - Kurt Welter shot down 27 Mosquitos with his me262.
Kurt Welter survived the wars end.
Great Video, thanks for sure I will be visiting you on my next visit to UK. Greetings from Chile
The head-on sectional profile and wing plan of the Boeing 737 looks a lot like the Me262.
Please do more videos like this!!
Good job your bringing this to us. Thanks.
My Father, Flt Lt. J.W.Rothenbush,DFC,flew Halifax and Lancaster bombers for 434 Sqd RCAF and on March 31 1945 on a mission to Hamburg they were attacked twice by a 262 Jet. I remember as a kid, Harry Saul,his mid upper telling the story of not being able to swing his guns across fast enough to hit this insanely fast aircraft which had no propellers????
Brilliant battle history , well done.
Very cool, thanks for sharing your knowledge!!
A very interesting story, told well.
At 00:36 and throughout, Flight Lieutenant Wall is transcribed correctly but narrated as Flight Lieutenant HALL.
Got to say that those were two epoch-making aircraft both beautiful as well as brilliantly effective. The ME-262 is elegant and rather eclipses the nearly contemporary Gloster Meteor for looks as it manages to be rakish and svelte around the nose and fuselage whereas the Meteor is more dumpy. One can only speculate how a meeting between to of those might have turned out.
Cosford is a great museum well worth the trip
Both the Mosquito and the Me 262 was very gorgeous planes, in my opinion. :-)
Great presentation - my only concern would be to use some noise cancelation or better / other mic. The noise is as loud as the voice - this is somewhat distracting. Besides that - top video! :)
Thank you for the presentation.
Thank you, I will try to visit this museum one day.
I always imagined it must have been shocking to allied pilots when they first encountered the 262
Yes. Then again, fighter pilots tend to be quite cocky and confident they could bring one down. However, I think your comment applies well for the guys in the bombers!
KMN 0341
Why? The British had their own jet fighters.
@@giovannipierre5309 do you think the Germans first publicly announced their jets were ready to engage allied bombers? The British jets weren't operational until the the last weeks of the war
KMN 0341
They were operational in 1944.
@@giovannipierre5309 after doing a quick search, I must humbly admit you are correct sir
5:29 They consider us stupid !
The me262 had not only a swept wing but also horizontal and vertical stabilizer even more swept. For CG issues there would not have been a need to design swept tail surfaces. The horizontal stabilizer with a 7 degree pitch up trim range to meet the torque of the n-wave.
Every modern airliner has such features.
Do they believe we are all stupid ?
The PR Mk. 32, a lighter version of the PR Mk. XVI with extended wingtips was designed and built in response to the threat posed by German jet fighters. It could operate regularly at altitudes in the vicinity of 40,000 feet (service ceiling 42,000 feet) which made it somewhat harder to intercept. Only five were built, the first entering service in early December 1944.
many thanks for a very interesting story on two of my favourite planes
Great museum, Free and well worth a visit !!
Thanks for interesting facts. Will be there next year.
I grew up dreaming to fly those old planes. I only made it to gyrocopters, microlights, and hang-gliders. Still, I love flying today - as a passenger.
Very informative and interesting. Thanks so much for the upload 👍
These were much bigger than i expected
My Dad flew in one of these; upside down under the Forth Bridge! Polish pilot, notorious for taking lots of liberties!
If you are going fast enough, none can read the numbers on your tail. nice!!
Remind me of both my Airfix 1/72 scale aircraft the all black NightFighter and the famous Mosquito. Saw the movie '633 Squadron' too
very nice presentation . about 2 fabulous machines !!
Foi uma pena o Messerschmitt Me-262 ter sido desenvolvido muito tarde. Mas, no contexto de uma Alemanha trabalhando muito além do que podia, no esforço de guerra lançou mão de trabalho escravo inclusive, até que foi uma conquista para o desenvolvimento da ciência aeronáutica...
LOL. the story about the wing sweep gets my goat. I think that it was concocted by Americans who want to steal the credit of being the first to use swept wings. To counter that argument, i would point out that a piston engined prototype of the ME262 was in flying trials before the jet engines were ready. This prototype had swept wings from the start. The Tail plane is swept. The rudder is swept. The nose is extended such that a 45 degree cone with apex at the nose misses the wing tips. Taken as a whole, it is quite clear that Willy Messersmitt had a good understanding of transonic flight and took precautions to delay the effects as far as possible into the performance envelope. Please consider the evidence that the Americans came second in this race by about 3 years.
The principle of swept back wings was well known. However, the Me 262 was originally designed without (much) swept back wings. The outer wings were swept back further to restore the centre of gravity. These facts are all well documented by RAF Museum documentation.
@@RoyalAirForceMuseum In other words you agree that the outer wings were swept from the start. The sweep was extended to the inner wings in a design adjustment.
I disagree with your point above. At the time compressibility phenomina was not well understood in the USA or UK but multiple German designs has delta or swept wings.
Good presentation.