When it comes to movies, my favourite and most disturbing scene is from the German movie “Stalingrad” where the troops fight to board the last outgoing Ju before total defeat of the 6th Army.
7:29 Hitler's Junker also saved him in a surprisingly ignored event: in early 1943 the soviets launched an offensive in Donbass (yes, the same lands that have recently gained tragic notoriety), they smashed the German lines but in classic Russian fashion they forgot that their tanks also needed fuel; unfortunately for them they were just 5 km from Hitler who at the time was visiting Zaporizhzhia (today of nuclear power plant fame), he was promptly flown out of the frontline with his personal plane.
In German we call her "Tante Ju" (Aunt Ju) Last time I saw an original Lufthansa JU-52 flying was at a family day at the Airbus factory in Hamburg. Together with a Lockheed Super Connie. The latter was a fire spitting beast (loved that sound and the flames) while the Ju has a moderate and smoother sound. Both have the same engine type. But in comparrison the Ju sounded more like a "grocery getter" without a muffler, while the Super Connie was the main act at a heavy metal music festival. And as a huge heavy metal fan the Connie was my highlight of the day!
I guess the most iconic movie JU52 is the one quite prominently featured in "Where Eagles Dare". And I believe it was the same plane that portrayed Hitler's JU52 In "Valkyrie". Back in the 90's, I was lucky enough to see one in the air. The Civilian '52 marked ""DAQUI" ,that appears briefly in one of these clips. It flew close by over our house, and my main memory of the experience being just how loud it was.
Thanks for this video. My maternal Grandfather was a Copilot/Navigator on the JU52 most times used in the Balkan Theatre of War. Like many many other Survivors of the War and Carnage of the Nazi Rule he could spoke more openly to me as a his grandson about this time than with his own children. Most impressive to me as a teenager was his tale that from dozens of members of his training class only a handful survived the war
There was a long sequence from the official NZ German weekly newsreel that depicts the 1941 Crete operation before, during, and after it. It has really good soundtrack, depiction of preparations, action scenes, and Ju 52 and other aircraft participating in the operation. My favorite sequence is when the Ju 52s took off and the Ride of the Valkyries were played as background music throughout many scenes afterwards. I aint kiddin when I say it was an inspiration for the same sequence in Apocalypse Now.
I remember about10 years back ,hearing an odd mechanical noise apparently from my Mercedes engine, I stopped the car turning off the engine and got out only to still hear the noise, I looked up only to see a Ju 52 slowly( and I do mean slowly!) wombling its stately way overhead ,I must have watched (and listened!) fr about 30minutes till it disappeared from sight and hearing.Only time I ever saw one, and it wasn't still and lifeless on the ground, but alive and flying as it should :) a wonderfull half hour here in Sweden,I've seen a lot of historic aircraft Dad was in the RAF from before the war untill 69 but no even he'd ever seen one flying, not even in Malta and Egypt (Alexandria et al)were he was based during the war, Wombling is as we all know a completely authentic aeronautical word used to describe an aircraft wending it's slow and happy way, on a warm summers day (if you're a yank or non native English speaker look up 'The Wombles of Wimbledon common' and learn the song,sing to the kiddies :D
8:08 when making a movie with CGI aircrafts you’d think they’d avoid choosing the post-war four engined Antonov AN-12 for the Berlin 1936 Olympics. A very interesting and enjoyable video, cheers!
there’s a couple scenes in the wonderful Catch-22 TV show showing Ju-57 utilized for black market transporting by Milo. Loved him being very passionate about how well made it was and emphasized the leather seating.
My mum said the book is really did not see the original movie that has art Garfunkel in it witch is the basis for Paul Simon to write the only living boy in New York among many other of his songs one of my favourite
Thanks for an excellent overview of the plane's history. Like the C47/DC-3, the Ju 52 has a 'tail dragger' landing gear, which makes it better for landing on primitive runways. That partly explains its long service life. Sheer ruggedness is another reason.
Great video and excellent disposition on "Auntie Ann" as the German ground and air crews called her. Arguably the two biggest contributions of the JU-52 after the war were in the Berlin airlift and during the French Indochina war. During the Berlin Airlift (1948-49) when French and other European nations operating JU-52s flew in supplies in during the lift, albeit in limited quantities compared to the overall tonnage delivered by Great Britian and the United States (What the French lacked in aircraft and crews they made up for in construction of more airfields within western Berlin). The second greatest post war contribution of the JU-52s was during the First Indochina War by the French Air Force from 1946 to 1954. JU-52s were widely used by the French in the early years of fighting against Ho Chi Minh's Vietminh forces dropping paratroopers, reinforcing/supplying isolated garrisons, and evacuating wounded troops from the jungles. Their early use before American supplied C-47s, C-46s, and C-119s took over the roll influenced the first commanding French General to adopt a strategy that mirrors the American attempt of combating the elusive communist forces via airlift, air drop, and air insertion. In the early years of the war the French were able to drive the Vietminh into the major hilly country side where the Communist sought refuge near the Chinese border. The JU-52s conducted bombing raids on suspected Vietminh positions, and ultimately where used in the first major airborne operations against the Vietminh strong holds that nearly captured Ho Chi Minh and his officers. These near success produced some measurable results that became the standard of major French operations throughout the remainder of the war. To that effect the Vietminh forces under the command of Võ Nguyên Giáp learned to counter the French airlift offensives by selecting where and when to engage the paratroopers/ airlifted troops while also acquiring more and better anti-aircraft weaponry supplied by China to cover the increasing Vietminh ground forces. This ultimately culminated in the French defeat at Dien Bien Phu in May 1954 with over 11,000 French, Allied Vietnamese, and Legionaires being captured or killed. Over a period of 70 days the French air forces (using C-47s, C-119s, and some Ju-52s) continually dropped supplies and reinforcements by parachute into the isolated garrison perimeter (even dropping troops with no parachute training). Alas the valley based and land locked garrison was ringed by Vietminh and Chinese Anti-aircraft artillery (AAA) that wreaked havoc on all transport aircraft as little supplies reached the French ground forces after every drop with the perimeter continually shrinking day by day as the runway there was made unusuable on day one. The dependency on the JU-52 early in the war was justified as it was only large quantity asset in the French arsenal and allowed the French the most capable mobility across the Vietnamese countryside with roads and other grounded lines of communication considered hazardous and inefficient, a strategy that was parallel to the American dilema that inspired the Air mobility strategy using Helicopters. Despite its age, the JU-52 was a major asset throughout the French Indochina war as it had with the Berlin airlift and throughout WWII. Always looking forward to your next video Johnny.
Little reminder from a German speaker. The "Ju" is not spoken as two separate letters but together. It sounds like you would say "you". As an additional funn fact, in German-speaking countries the Ju-52 is called "Tante Ju", which translates to aunt Ju.
The long opening sequence in "Where Eagles Dare" has stuck with me for near 50 years since I saw the Ju52, soaring through the Alps, on a huge screen in our local cinema. A very impressive piece of filming.
Nice work on the "Tante Ju" as the Germans called it. Transport aircraft are the unsung heroes of wars. Its usually the fighter's and bombers that get the glory. I have seen photos of the Ju 52 in the bomber role during the Spanish Civil War with a ventral "rubbish bin " turret.
When I was a kid there was a hobby shop that displayed some amazing customer-built models. I clearly remember a kitbashed 1/72 Tante Ju with all the details, including a lowered dustbin turret.
When it comes to iconic historical aircraft rmthe Junkers 52 is a must to include. The airframe was very strong and capable of reengineering to meet the multitudinous tasks assigned to it to fill.
*"The Ju 52's"* would be a good name for a German *"The B-52's"* cover band. We use Ju 52s as ze Germans' standard air transports in our Axis&Allies game.
@@oddballsok indeed so...the butchers bill for Hitler, s invasion of the west was quite heavy...as it was for Britain and the Commonwealth...frankly I was amazed ,Britain shipped so much materiel to Murmansk in Russia from Liverpool ,when our backs were against the wall...
5:33 this is actually a common misconception. The last large-scale German paratrooper drop was really Operation Stösser during the Battle of the Bulge. It was a complete disaster due to inexperienced pilots and bad weather. Paratroopers were dropped all over the place. The lucky ones were dropped into German-half territory and onto at least one German city (Bonn, I believe). The unlucky ones were dropped over enemy territory. They died from injuries sustained in bad landings, surrendered to the Allies, or returned to their own lines. Their mission had been to capture a vital crossroads and hold it until they were relieved by a Waffen-SS panzer division. The division never reached the crossroads anyway. I believe that the reason Operation Stösser is so overlooked is that the Allies didn’t realise it was happening, due to it being even more of a clusterfuck than Crete, Market Garden, and whatever the Russians tried to do last year.
8:05-8:20 Lol the large, CGI cargo planes in the background are Soviet Antonov An-12 transports colored black with Hakenkreuz flags. The aircraft wouldn't be produced until 1957.
I'm from Frankfurt in Hesse, where a JU52 is still flying, you can hear it from miles away because it has a very characteristic sound, then almost everything stands still and looks up, the pilot also knows that we love this Tante JU and occasionally flies a few extra laps, lovely isn't it? 😁
@@Iauchmitschlauch I emigrated from Germany 20 years ago, but it could still be the case that she flies in the Hessian area, those things are indestructible!
@@Iceguide D-AQUI(which is very likely the one youre reffering to) is sadly no longer in service as new requirements for air safety aswell as its old age made it too expensive to fix after structural damages had been found. I saw her in the year before its retirement at an airshow but sadly couldnt fly with it as all seats were already booked :/
For a long time a Ju was stationed in Hamburg for recreational flights. It was really history flying and one could easily walk out to watch it after it was heard, proving the old saying from ww2 that if you heard one there was enough time to get your AA-Guns ready.
I had the honor of knowing aviation author Martin Caidin. He had a JU-52 that he named "Iron Annie" I would fly him in my Harvard MK-2 (AT-6) on the way to and from airshow from our Titusville, Florida, home base during the middle 1970s. I always remember the JU's rugged construction and its gracefulness in flight. It was quite a hit at every event.
This airplane is now owned by Lufthansa Stiftung with call sign D-CDLH. The original sign D-AQUI is also on it. Aircraft is grounded 😣. Had the honour of travelling on her two times 👍
The french air force also restarted production of the JU-52 postwar, with several planes even kitted out with an ad-hoc modification where the cabin was fitted with rails running from the rear of the cabin to the door, where barrels filled with an early form of Napalm would roll before exiting through the door. The model was used during the indochina war as a stopgap before more modern equipment could be produced/procured
Before its accident, an old _Tante Ju_ did regularly fly around Bern. This plane is incredibly loud and slow (a Piper is faster). Just imagine a _Fallschirjäger_ drop in this time: a fascinating and terrifying view all together!
Although the plane depicted in Valkyrie may be accurate, Hitler was flying around in a Focke Wulf Fw-200 Condor at that stage in the war. And I’m not sure that particular paint scheme for the Ju-52 was used for Hitler’s plane once the war had begun, for throughout many documentaries, I’ve seen much footage of him coming and going from one painted in standard military colors. No big, bright red tail.
One my favourite opening scenes of all time in films is WHERE EAGLES DARE, with the Ju 52 appearing in the distance and flying over the mountains. I must give FARGO a mention as another favourite opening scene also, even though it doesn't have any Ju 52s in it!
There is a Teutonic beauty to "Tante". Supremely practical yet the best looking of the 3 engined planes of the time. A generation before the DC3 and not as capable, but still great. Shows what a difference there was in 10 years of tech advancement plus the innovation at Douglas. I would love to get a flight in one.
Back about 15 years ago I saw a Ju 52. Sitting outside of the Wright Patterson USAF museum in Ohio. I later researched it and found out that it was a CASA 352 dressed up to look like a Luftwaffe transport.
there was a ju 52 based near the town i grew up in (on the outskirts of munich) and always got exited when it flew over and my dad pointed it out to me (he is a huge aircraft nerd). i even had a small steel model of it
The starting scene belongs to "Valkyrie" with Tom Cruise. It was made over the southern woods around Berlin. At that day when this recording took place, we made a cycling tour and were really surprized seeing JU 52 with swastika in the sky.
This is my Mother’s story: She was 9 years old and woke up one morning to the sound of aero engines and guns firing. She got out of bed and ran - in her nighty - out on to balcony behind her bedroom. There, looking out Eastwards, she saw a three-engined aircraft flying directly towards her. One engine was on fire and trailing flames and smoke behind it. Then, as it approached, an anti-aircraft battery in the Royal palace grounds on her left sent a stream of fire at the aircraft and set its engine on the other wing on fire. The aircraft just made it over the treeline at the far end of the parade ground opposite her balcony and crashed down into the field, breaking into pieces as it did so. The front section kept moving towards her and came to rest, aflame, in the hedge that separated her parents’ house from the street. She could clearly see the pilots’ faces and they were clearly dead. Then her Mother (my Grandmother) rushed onto the balcony, cried what was she thinking, picked her up into her arms and carried her off into the cellar. The aircraft was, of course, a Ju-52, part of a disastrously failed attempt by the Nazis to capture the head of state, the government and the army high command in one fell swoop.
"Tante Ju" ("Aunt Ju"") was a beautiful plane. Also often seen in German and Austrian war film productions such as: "Goebbels und Geduldig" (2001 ) & "Mein Bester Feind " (My best Enemy) from 2011.
Love that plane, in the early 90´s, a close formation of 4 Ju 52 flew straight over my head, passing very low the airfield in Dessau (where the Junkers factory was), a few years later, I could climb into a wreck of an Ju 52, that has been restored. It was one of the lost planes from the Bergen Raid in 1940, which sunk in the lake
The limited range of the Ju 52 meant it was a one way mission. The replacement however the Ju 252 Herlules had vastly better performance but they never manged to build more than a few dozen.
The "Tante" Junkers JU - 52 is a beautiful aircraft. Its was show also in the movies "Partizanska Eskadrila" (1979) historic movie (of course since there was distruction, a models had to be used for that scene. And in "Where Eagles Dare" (1968). The plane used in that movie was owned by a Swiss company and it crashed on 4th of August 2018.
A friend working in South America during the 80's once came upon a JU-52 with a faded Argentinian flag on the tail, when he was in an undisclosed country working for an undisclosed agency. According to another person working at the site, it was supposedly Juan Peron's personal aircraft and given to him around the time of WWII as a gift by the Germans or Spanish. No one's really sure of the full story. But there it was an airplane with Argentinian colors sitting in insolated airfield during the 80's being take care of by a retired mechanic. It was a weird airfield with several (jet and prop) American, German, and British aircraft (including fighters and trainers) scattered around the field. When he came back a couple of years later all the functional aircraft were gone, including the JU-52, and only a couple of wrecks were on the field.
T-158 still in display at Museo Aeronáutico de Morón, engines working but not airworthy, last Ju52 in Argentina. No one Ju52 was Perón personal aircraft. They came in 1946 for the Ministry of Health, and Air Force, withdrawn all in 1958. All Ju52s here were bought from Syndicato Condor, or Aeroposta Argentina (Saint Exupery was a pilot in Aeroposta and flew a Ju52)
Hey Johnny, Further to the Canadian JU-52/1m single engine variant, CF-ARM, is part of the collection of the Royal Aviation Museum of Western Canada in Winnipeg Canada and is currently on display. Well worth the visit, if anyone is ever in the area.
@@JohnnyJohnsonEsq well if you do make the trip, let me know I might see you there. They also just announced the acquisition of a B-26, will probably be in RCAF livery.
Oddly after hearing the concern about it being a single engine craft, I can't think of any iconic bush planes of Canada that were not single engine. Were there any, pre twin Otter which is not what I think of as an Arctic hauler.
There is a range of high end luggage made by Junkers today (the brand) in that highly polished corrugated aluminum. There is also a Junkers watch available.
A few years ago my dad and I were at the military aviation museum in VA Beach with our wwii cckw truck. We got to sit in the back of our truck and watch the museums JU52 do a drop of paratroopers wearing german paratroopers uniforms. I've seen guys wearing wwii us uniforms from a c47 but it was neat being close to a drop from a ju52 like that.
Oh side note. So being the fact I have seen a JU52 do a Para drop I ll make note of this. She is a very slow girl. Dad and I joked, a JU52 doesn't fly she just floats up in the sky and let's the earth rotate under her.
Couple of weeks ago i visited brussels in belgium There they have a war museum and while looking around in the plane section a full ju-52 was hanging there best thing i've seen
A good, solid transport aircraft which was relatively cheap to produce. It was obsolete by WW2, but the Luftwaffe couldn't develop a replacement in sufficient time to produce the demand needed, so they continued to manufacture 'Tante Ju' throughout the war.
Crash of the Swiss JU-52 was the result of "...airline crew members with military pilot training, in particular, had a history of systematically violating recognized air navigation rules and taking high risks." as per crash final report of SESE, the Swiss NTSB.
I understand that in order to ship more men to Spain Franco had some of his North African troops laid on top ot the JU52s wings and hang onto the wings leading edge. I believe it was only a short flight but you do have to wonder how many did not make it. I have long thought that the Ju52 had something of the Ford Trimotor to it. Interestingly Spain also flew the Trimotor.
Crete would have a painful consequence for the Germans as losing 220 of the nearly 500 transport aircraft (mainly Ju-52) would really hit them hard 18 months later when trying to scramble transport planes to resupply the surrounded 6th Army at Stalingrad.
ahem: battle for The Hague , Netherlands 1940 with lot LESS dutch troops and wholly untrained: Germany lost 125 JU52 completely and 47 more badly damaged...172 total...not bad in 4 days ...
@@oddballsok true....the desert air force knocked down a fair few over the Mediterranean, my old da,RIP used to guard Beaufighters, Kittyhawks and Hurricanes,
The Ju 52/3m was an good aircraft but the Luftwaffe needed better to support the kinds of operations it was called upon.. Erhardt Milch, who headed Lufthansa and then Luftwaffe procurement had to rapidly build up the Luftwaffe's bomber squadrons the Ju 52 was chosen as it was the only aircraft that could be rapidly mass produced. The Squadrons then converted to Do 17 and He 111 and the Ju 52 became a transport and training aircraft. The Luftwaffe also tended to crew the Ju 52 with flight instructurs, something which would have severed consequences. Losses suffered by the Ju 52 transport squadrons were severe: -Invasion of Holland: large numbers of Ju 52/3m and their crew, particular flight instructure crew were lost. -Invasion of Crete: large numbers lost due to allied code decrypts knowing drop zones. -Some losses during the successful supply of the German army in the Demnyansk Pocket. -North Africa: large numbers lost due to allied code decrypts knowing flight routes in supply of North Africa. -Stalingrad: the by now severely worn out Ju 52 were hard pressed to operate in the Russian winter supplying the 6th Army in Stalingrad. In many cases aircraft able to carry 2-2.5 tons load were able to lift only 0.5 due to maintenance issues. Unlike the best performing transport, the He 111, the Ju 52 non fuel injected engines often didn't start in the cold without fires or hot air blown on them. -By comparison the DC-3/C47 could carry the same 2-2.5 tons load over 50% faster to 70% greater distance using the same fuel with more cabin space. -As can be imagined had the Luftwaffe have had DC-3 at Stalingrad the aircraft could have performed more trips, been based at safer bases further from Russian raids and flown faster through Russian defenses. -The Germans did develop replacement transports such as the Ju 252 (which had astonishing performance), the Ju 90/290 and the Arado 232 but they never were able to find the resources and make the production sacrifices needed to transfer from Ju 52 to something better. Many Ju 52 were in fact produced in occupied France.
There’s also a Swiss company that bought the Junkers name and plans to restart production of the JU-52 as the 52NG. It’s expected to fly next year and will be powered by 3 diesel v8’s
This is clearly not junk, very well made, and edited. Will you ever make a video of Yamato in movies? I know you have some videos with Yamato, but if not, keep on making great episodes. Take care, and all the best.
Thanks as always Chris! I did a Yamato video on the "beehive shell" awhile back but I can definitely find some more Yamato material in the near future :)
By the events pictured in the film "Valkyrie", Hitler no longer travelled in a Ju 52 but had reportedly already switched to a Fw 200. Nonetheless, one has to make use of what can get; better an actual Ju than a CGI Fw.
One thing about Ju-52 operations - was that they were sometimes used for Air Landing troops - and sometimes these landings - were assaults ... resulting in the loss of a number of '52's. .
I have known someone who flew the JU52 during the war, he was shoot down 3 times on the eastern front, but he always told that the worsted missions were the trips out of Stalingrad. Because regularly there the would be people who tied themselves to the undercarriage and after they landed he and his crew had to break there frozen bodys of the aircraft...
The Luftwaffe tought that they could repeat the trick so succesful in Spain either in N. Africa and Stalingrad, but naturally their adversaries were more efficients....
Dunno if anyone else said this, but the Italians made a near identical version called the S.81. As far as I know, it’s best seen in War Thunder, as the first Italian bomber to be unlocked
The Savoia-Marchetti SM.81 Pipistrello and the more advanced Savoia-Marchetti SM.82 were probably more suited to Axis needs than the Ju 52/3m being of wooden construction and in the case of the SM.82 a much larger and higher performance and longer ranged air frame. -The success of the Ju 52/3m was kind of an accident. Junkers already had a all aluminum tri-motor in service since 1926 the Junker G.31. When Erhardt Milch needed to build the Donrier Do 11 was found to be no good and Luftwaffe the Ju 52/3m the only aircraft available that could possibly be ramped up in production. It was made into an airliner by a nose suspended bomb bay and guns and turned into a bomber thus rapidly building the Luftwaffe's Kampfgescwader. In due course the by then well trained bomber squadrons were able to transition to Dornier Do 17 and He 111 while the Ju 52 became transports and trainers. -The Ju 52 was meant to be replaced by the far more capable Ju 252 but the resources for changing the production systems were never found.
I know it looks like a big school bus with wings on it, but thats kind of what i like about it. It's a simple design that looks like it could be easily reproduced and modified without too much hastle without the need of a state-of-the-art productiom facility for things like A380s.
According to Netflix and The Crown, the late Duke of Edinburgh lost his sister when she perished in a Ju 52 flying in to a storm over the alps before the war.
When it comes to movies, my favourite and most disturbing scene is from the German movie “Stalingrad” where the troops fight to board the last outgoing Ju before total defeat of the 6th Army.
remember that scene when it premiered
And? Why do you think anybody cares?
@@kal.50bmg32 I care about his opinion.
@@kal.50bmg32 Because this movie is worth a shoutout.
@@kal.50bmg32 liked your own comment?
7:29 Hitler's Junker also saved him in a surprisingly ignored event: in early 1943 the soviets launched an offensive in Donbass (yes, the same lands that have recently gained tragic notoriety), they smashed the German lines but in classic Russian fashion they forgot that their tanks also needed fuel; unfortunately for them they were just 5 km from Hitler who at the time was visiting Zaporizhzhia (today of nuclear power plant fame), he was promptly flown out of the frontline with his personal plane.
Amount of assasinaton attempts and close calls Hitler escaped is truly outstanding. Wikipedia lists 42 cases, and that may be not even all of them...
Imagine if they had brought more fuel and captured him.
WE RAN OUT OF FUEL
QUICK MY FURHER GET IN THE PLANE FULL OF FUEL
There's a detailed vid made by Mark Felton in his channel regarding the event
@@reynaldoangnged1864 true
In German we call her "Tante Ju" (Aunt Ju)
Last time I saw an original Lufthansa JU-52 flying was at a family day at the Airbus factory in Hamburg. Together with a Lockheed Super Connie. The latter was a fire spitting beast (loved that sound and the flames) while the Ju has a moderate and smoother sound.
Both have the same engine type. But in comparrison the Ju sounded more like a "grocery getter" without a muffler, while the Super Connie was the main act at a heavy metal music festival. And as a huge heavy metal fan the Connie was my highlight of the day!
I guess the most iconic movie JU52 is the one quite prominently featured in "Where Eagles Dare". And I believe it was the same plane that portrayed Hitler's JU52 In "Valkyrie". Back in the 90's, I was lucky enough to see one in the air. The Civilian '52 marked ""DAQUI" ,that appears briefly in one of these clips. It flew close by over our house, and my main memory of the experience being just how loud it was.
Where Eagles Dare has go to be my favourite JU52 film as well. And the music used has got to be my favourite for the most stirring theme to a film
Bad quality image but you need the movie credits scene for the roaring JU-52.
ruclips.net/video/8XKGhG0W0LQ/видео.html
Sadly, that Ju-52 was destroyed in a crash a few years ago
@@Soundwave3591 wrong, the D-AQUI is grounded, a suisse Ju 52 crashed in 2018
D-AQUI used to fly over my house in summer regularly, sometimes multiple times a day. I blame my interest in airplanes partly on her
Thanks for this video. My maternal Grandfather was a Copilot/Navigator on the JU52 most times used in the Balkan Theatre of War. Like many many other Survivors of the War and Carnage of the Nazi Rule he could spoke more openly to me as a his grandson about this time than with his own children. Most impressive to me as a teenager was his tale that from dozens of members of his training class only a handful survived the war
There was a long sequence from the official NZ German weekly newsreel that depicts the 1941 Crete operation before, during, and after it. It has really good soundtrack, depiction of preparations, action scenes, and Ju 52 and other aircraft participating in the operation. My favorite sequence is when the Ju 52s took off and the Ride of the Valkyries were played as background music throughout many scenes afterwards. I aint kiddin when I say it was an inspiration for the same sequence in Apocalypse Now.
My source: ruclips.net/video/wSsF2ycFtfU/видео.html
I remember about10 years back ,hearing an odd mechanical noise apparently from my Mercedes engine, I stopped the car turning off the engine and got out only to still hear the noise, I looked up only to see a Ju 52 slowly( and I do mean slowly!) wombling its stately way overhead ,I must have watched (and listened!) fr about 30minutes till it disappeared from sight and hearing.Only time I ever saw one, and it wasn't still and lifeless on the ground, but alive and flying as it should :) a wonderfull half hour here in Sweden,I've seen a lot of historic aircraft Dad was in the RAF from before the war untill 69 but no even he'd ever seen one flying, not even in Malta and Egypt (Alexandria et al)were he was based during the war, Wombling is as we all know a completely authentic aeronautical word used to describe an aircraft wending it's slow and happy way, on a warm summers day (if you're a yank or non native English speaker look up 'The Wombles of Wimbledon common' and learn the song,sing to the kiddies :D
You just had to include that iconic BoB scene even though it had nothing to do with the subject. That's what makes these videos a pleasure.
Lol you know it. ❤️
I played on that beach as a kid in the early sixties. No Heinkels though :)
8:08 when making a movie with CGI aircrafts you’d think they’d avoid choosing the post-war four engined Antonov AN-12 for the Berlin 1936 Olympics.
A very interesting and enjoyable video, cheers!
there’s a couple scenes in the wonderful Catch-22 TV show showing Ju-57 utilized for black market transporting by Milo. Loved him being very passionate about how well made it was and emphasized the leather seating.
Of course!
Catch 22 was awesome
@@ianashby1449 The book is from Joseph Heller.
My mum said the book is really did not see the original movie that has art Garfunkel in it witch is the basis for Paul Simon to write the only living boy in New York among many other of his songs one of my favourite
It's a simple but amazingly affective aircraft
glad to see izetta for once, that became a forgotten anime, but i enjoyed it
Great post Mr. Johnson. A truly remarkable aircraft. A workhorse for Germany during the war. The German equivalent of the Douglas DC-3/C47-Dakota.
Thanks for an excellent overview of the plane's history. Like the C47/DC-3, the Ju 52 has a 'tail dragger' landing gear, which makes it better for landing on primitive runways. That partly explains its long service life. Sheer ruggedness is another reason.
Don’t mind me just saving this charm for lunch at work later
Great video and excellent disposition on "Auntie Ann" as the German ground and air crews called her. Arguably the two biggest contributions of the JU-52 after the war were in the Berlin airlift and during the French Indochina war. During the Berlin Airlift (1948-49) when French and other European nations operating JU-52s flew in supplies in during the lift, albeit in limited quantities compared to the overall tonnage delivered by Great Britian and the United States (What the French lacked in aircraft and crews they made up for in construction of more airfields within western Berlin).
The second greatest post war contribution of the JU-52s was during the First Indochina War by the French Air Force from 1946 to 1954. JU-52s were widely used by the French in the early years of fighting against Ho Chi Minh's Vietminh forces dropping paratroopers, reinforcing/supplying isolated garrisons, and evacuating wounded troops from the jungles. Their early use before American supplied C-47s, C-46s, and C-119s took over the roll influenced the first commanding French General to adopt a strategy that mirrors the American attempt of combating the elusive communist forces via airlift, air drop, and air insertion. In the early years of the war the French were able to drive the Vietminh into the major hilly country side where the Communist sought refuge near the Chinese border.
The JU-52s conducted bombing raids on suspected Vietminh positions, and ultimately where used in the first major airborne operations against the Vietminh strong holds that nearly captured Ho Chi Minh and his officers. These near success produced some measurable results that became the standard of major French operations throughout the remainder of the war. To that effect the Vietminh forces under the command of Võ Nguyên Giáp learned to counter the French airlift offensives by selecting where and when to engage the paratroopers/ airlifted troops while also acquiring more and better anti-aircraft weaponry supplied by China to cover the increasing Vietminh ground forces.
This ultimately culminated in the French defeat at Dien Bien Phu in May 1954 with over 11,000 French, Allied Vietnamese, and Legionaires being captured or killed. Over a period of 70 days the French air forces (using C-47s, C-119s, and some Ju-52s) continually dropped supplies and reinforcements by parachute into the isolated garrison perimeter (even dropping troops with no parachute training). Alas the valley based and land locked garrison was ringed by Vietminh and Chinese Anti-aircraft artillery (AAA) that wreaked havoc on all transport aircraft as little supplies reached the French ground forces after every drop with the perimeter continually shrinking day by day as the runway there was made unusuable on day one.
The dependency on the JU-52 early in the war was justified as it was only large quantity asset in the French arsenal and allowed the French the most capable mobility across the Vietnamese countryside with roads and other grounded lines of communication considered hazardous and inefficient, a strategy that was parallel to the American dilema that inspired the Air mobility strategy using Helicopters. Despite its age, the JU-52 was a major asset throughout the French Indochina war as it had with the Berlin airlift and throughout WWII.
Always looking forward to your next video Johnny.
Incredibly detailed and accurate post...
Love the information. Thank you so much! 🙏
@@BeingFireRetardant Thanks, I got a little carried away, almost recited my MA thesis haha
@@JohnnyJohnsonEsq No thank you for the cool videos and expanding potential movies/shows to watch.
Little reminder from a German speaker. The "Ju" is not spoken as two separate letters but together. It sounds like you would say "you".
As an additional funn fact, in German-speaking countries the Ju-52 is called "Tante Ju", which translates to aunt Ju.
The long opening sequence in "Where Eagles Dare" has stuck with me for near 50 years since I saw the Ju52, soaring through the Alps, on a huge screen in our local cinema. A very impressive piece of filming.
Nice work on the "Tante Ju" as the Germans called it. Transport aircraft are the unsung heroes of wars. Its usually the fighter's and bombers that get the glory. I have seen photos of the Ju 52 in the bomber role during the Spanish Civil War with a ventral "rubbish bin " turret.
Mrs C,s da was grateful to the USAF and RAF airdrops ,when he served in Burma in the Chindits
When I was a kid there was a hobby shop that displayed some amazing customer-built models. I clearly remember a kitbashed 1/72 Tante Ju with all the details, including a lowered dustbin turret.
@@eamonnclabby7067, we recently added the Chindits to our Axis&Allies board game as commando units.
@@warpartyattheoutpost4987 nice....Kudos to you all...I,m sure Mrs C,s da RIP, would like that as would Orde Wingate...
@@eamonnclabby7067 I used to have Windgates cap badge. My grandma gave it to me.
When it comes to iconic historical aircraft rmthe Junkers 52 is a must to include. The airframe was very strong and capable of reengineering to meet the multitudinous tasks assigned to it to fill.
*"The Ju 52's"* would be a good name for a German *"The B-52's"* cover band.
We use Ju 52s as ze Germans' standard air transports in our Axis&Allies game.
haha yes! Someone get on this
Only if the band members are Jewish. 🙃
Very cool scene from where eagles dare, the ope in scene shows the camouflage ju52 or variation, flying in a alpine setting, very impressive
I remember during a road trip through Franco's Spain in 1963, an entire line up of CASA 352s...all very bright in their Spanish air force markings.
Another excellent post by Johnny...lots of JU52 were lost at Crete...and in North Africa...
and in Holland 1940....!
@@oddballsok indeed so...the butchers bill for Hitler, s invasion of the west was quite heavy...as it was for Britain and the Commonwealth...frankly I was amazed ,Britain shipped so much materiel to Murmansk in Russia from Liverpool ,when our backs were against the wall...
The plane with the swiss-flagg on min 0:55 is the also "A702/hb-hot" which crashed in 2018 in the mountains of Graubünden.
5:33 this is actually a common misconception. The last large-scale German paratrooper drop was really Operation Stösser during the Battle of the Bulge.
It was a complete disaster due to inexperienced pilots and bad weather. Paratroopers were dropped all over the place. The lucky ones were dropped into German-half territory and onto at least one German city (Bonn, I believe). The unlucky ones were dropped over enemy territory. They died from injuries sustained in bad landings, surrendered to the Allies, or returned to their own lines.
Their mission had been to capture a vital crossroads and hold it until they were relieved by a Waffen-SS panzer division. The division never reached the crossroads anyway.
I believe that the reason Operation Stösser is so overlooked is that the Allies didn’t realise it was happening, due to it being even more of a clusterfuck than Crete, Market Garden, and whatever the Russians tried to do last year.
Ju Air is sadly grounded because of the crash you mentioned. the investigation showed that the fleet had some major corrosion and cracking problems
8:05-8:20
Lol the large, CGI cargo planes in the background are Soviet Antonov An-12 transports colored black with Hakenkreuz flags. The aircraft wouldn't be produced until 1957.
lol yes! Good additional info here. Much appreciated.
Good call...
The same mistake is made in "The Night of the Fox" (1990) when George Peppard flees back to England.
1:08
"The last Ju 52 was produced by Spain in 1952..."
I see what Spain did there.
lol this is a much appreciated comment
I'm from Frankfurt in Hesse, where a JU52 is still flying, you can hear it from miles away because it has a very characteristic sound, then almost everything stands still and looks up, the pilot also knows that we love this Tante JU and occasionally flies a few extra laps, lovely isn't it? 😁
Is it still flying? I thought they grounded it. Its been a while ive seen it airborne
@@Iauchmitschlauch I emigrated from Germany 20 years ago, but it could still be the case that she flies in the Hessian area, those things are indestructible!
@@Iceguide D-AQUI(which is very likely the one youre reffering to) is sadly no longer in service as new requirements for air safety aswell as its old age made it too expensive to fix after structural damages had been found. I saw her in the year before its retirement at an airshow but sadly couldnt fly with it as all seats were already booked :/
@@Jere_9717 Thank you for this information 👍
For a long time a Ju was stationed in Hamburg for recreational flights. It was really history flying and one could easily walk out to watch it after it was heard, proving the old saying from ww2 that if you heard one there was enough time to get your AA-Guns ready.
I had the honor of knowing aviation author Martin Caidin.
He had a JU-52 that he named "Iron Annie"
I would fly him in my Harvard MK-2 (AT-6) on the way to and from airshow from our Titusville, Florida, home base during the middle 1970s.
I always remember the JU's rugged construction and its gracefulness in flight.
It was quite a hit at every event.
This airplane is now owned by Lufthansa Stiftung with call sign D-CDLH. The original sign D-AQUI is also on it. Aircraft is grounded 😣.
Had the honour of travelling on her two times 👍
The french air force also restarted production of the JU-52 postwar, with several planes even kitted out with an ad-hoc modification where the cabin was fitted with rails running from the rear of the cabin to the door, where barrels filled with an early form of Napalm would roll before exiting through the door. The model was used during the indochina war as a stopgap before more modern equipment could be produced/procured
As old player of Sniper Elite Playstation 2
You remember the time you have to defend your escape plane?
Before its accident, an old _Tante Ju_ did regularly fly around Bern. This plane is incredibly loud and slow (a Piper is faster). Just imagine a _Fallschirjäger_ drop in this time: a fascinating and terrifying view all together!
Although the plane depicted in Valkyrie may be accurate, Hitler was flying around in a Focke Wulf Fw-200 Condor at that stage in the war. And I’m not sure that particular paint scheme for the Ju-52 was used for Hitler’s plane once the war had begun, for throughout many documentaries, I’ve seen much footage of him coming and going from one painted in standard military colors. No big, bright red tail.
One my favourite opening scenes of all time in films is WHERE EAGLES DARE, with the Ju 52 appearing in the distance and flying over the mountains.
I must give FARGO a mention as another favourite opening scene also, even though it doesn't have any Ju 52s in it!
There is a Teutonic beauty to "Tante". Supremely practical yet the best looking of the 3 engined planes of the time. A generation before the DC3 and not as capable, but still great. Shows what a difference there was in 10 years of tech advancement plus the innovation at Douglas. I would love to get a flight in one.
I saw one in the Technikmuseum of Berlin, and I was amazed about how big it was , took almost a quarter of the room(slightly exaggerated)
3:41 Shuumatzu no Izetta, dang I remember that anime and never expected it to be featured in the channel
In Munich Germany Lufthansa has a JU 52 that you get rides on and also there is a JU 52 at a small airport site museum.
The Ju52 used in Valkyrie was the same one used for Where Eagles Dare.
Back about 15 years ago I saw a Ju 52. Sitting outside of the Wright Patterson USAF museum in Ohio. I later researched it and found out that it was a CASA 352 dressed up to look like a Luftwaffe transport.
there was a ju 52 based near the town i grew up in (on the outskirts of munich) and always got exited when it flew over and my dad pointed it out to me (he is a huge aircraft nerd). i even had a small steel model of it
until 2019 one was still flying around my town, was always a pleasure to see
The starting scene belongs to "Valkyrie" with Tom Cruise. It was made over the southern woods around Berlin. At that day when this recording took place, we made a cycling tour and were really surprized seeing JU 52 with swastika in the sky.
This is my Mother’s story:
She was 9 years old and woke up one morning to the sound of aero engines and guns firing. She got out of bed and ran - in her nighty - out on to balcony behind her bedroom. There, looking out Eastwards, she saw a three-engined aircraft flying directly towards her. One engine was on fire and trailing flames and smoke behind it. Then, as it approached, an anti-aircraft battery in the Royal palace grounds on her left sent a stream of fire at the aircraft and set its engine on the other wing on fire. The aircraft just made it over the treeline at the far end of the parade ground opposite her balcony and crashed down into the field, breaking into pieces as it did so. The front section kept moving towards her and came to rest, aflame, in the hedge that separated her parents’ house from the street. She could clearly see the pilots’ faces and they were clearly dead.
Then her Mother (my Grandmother) rushed onto the balcony, cried what was she thinking, picked her up into her arms and carried her off into the cellar.
The aircraft was, of course, a Ju-52, part of a disastrously failed attempt by the Nazis to capture the head of state, the government and the army high command in one fell swoop.
A Ju52 trip in the Swiss Alps! Added to my bucket list.
"Tante Ju" ("Aunt Ju"") was a beautiful plane. Also often seen in German and Austrian war film productions such as: "Goebbels und Geduldig" (2001 ) & "Mein Bester Feind " (My best Enemy) from 2011.
Love that plane, in the early 90´s, a close formation of 4 Ju 52 flew straight over my head, passing very low the airfield in Dessau (where the Junkers factory was), a few years later, I could climb into a wreck of an Ju 52, that has been restored. It was one of the lost planes from the Bergen Raid in 1940, which sunk in the lake
The limited range of the Ju 52 meant it was a one way mission. The replacement however the Ju 252 Herlules had vastly better performance but they never manged to build more than a few dozen.
2:21 "Oh, you don't want one engine? Fuck it! Have three!"
Germans and over-engineering ...
As always very well done. Asa WW2 junkie I have watched your videos more than once. Please keep them coming.
Great video, thanks! I want to watch The Dirty Dozen the Next Mission now!
The "Tante" Junkers JU - 52 is a beautiful aircraft. Its was show also in the movies "Partizanska Eskadrila" (1979) historic movie (of course since there was distruction, a models had to be used for that scene. And in "Where Eagles Dare" (1968). The plane used in that movie was owned by a Swiss company and it crashed on 4th of August 2018.
That thumbnail lol
Yea
I'm pretty sure it's from Izzeta lol.
A friend working in South America during the 80's once came upon a JU-52 with a faded Argentinian flag on the tail, when he was in an undisclosed country working for an undisclosed agency. According to another person working at the site, it was supposedly Juan Peron's personal aircraft and given to him around the time of WWII as a gift by the Germans or Spanish. No one's really sure of the full story. But there it was an airplane with Argentinian colors sitting in insolated airfield during the 80's being take care of by a retired mechanic. It was a weird airfield with several (jet and prop) American, German, and British aircraft (including fighters and trainers) scattered around the field. When he came back a couple of years later all the functional aircraft were gone, including the JU-52, and only a couple of wrecks were on the field.
T-158 still in display at Museo Aeronáutico de Morón, engines working but not airworthy, last Ju52 in Argentina. No one Ju52 was Perón personal aircraft. They came in 1946 for the Ministry of Health, and Air Force, withdrawn all in 1958. All Ju52s here were bought from Syndicato Condor, or Aeroposta Argentina (Saint Exupery was a pilot in Aeroposta and flew a Ju52)
@@eduardosantabaya5348 Thank you, that's good to know.
Hey Johnny,
Further to the Canadian JU-52/1m single engine variant, CF-ARM, is part of the collection of the Royal Aviation Museum of Western Canada in Winnipeg Canada and is currently on display. Well worth the visit, if anyone is ever in the area.
Will make my way over hopefully next year. Next door to me from Saskatchewan.
@@JohnnyJohnsonEsq well if you do make the trip, let me know I might see you there. They also just announced the acquisition of a B-26, will probably be in RCAF livery.
Oddly after hearing the concern about it being a single engine craft, I can't think of any iconic bush planes of Canada that were not single engine. Were there any, pre twin Otter which is not what I think of as an Arctic hauler.
Corrugated and polished fuselages, and rivets with exposed heads, have to be some of the most beautiful sights when it comes to airplanes.
There is a range of high end luggage made by Junkers today (the brand) in that highly polished corrugated aluminum. There is also a Junkers watch available.
its gotten to the point that if someone says "alright" I wait for the "I'm Johnny" to follow
A few years ago my dad and I were at the military aviation museum in VA Beach with our wwii cckw truck. We got to sit in the back of our truck and watch the museums JU52 do a drop of paratroopers wearing german paratroopers uniforms. I've seen guys wearing wwii us uniforms from a c47 but it was neat being close to a drop from a ju52 like that.
Oh side note. So being the fact I have seen a JU52 do a Para drop I ll make note of this. She is a very slow girl. Dad and I joked, a JU52 doesn't fly she just floats up in the sky and let's the earth rotate under her.
This was the first model I ever built as a kid. I remeber getting glue everywhere 😂. Thanks for this video, was great.
what i think we need the most is a video about the Panzer IV (espacially for the GuP fans out there)
I always loved how ford had a similar aircraft model. Can’t wait to see air cargo and the postal service thrive
Couple of weeks ago i visited brussels in belgium
There they have a war museum and while looking around in the plane section a full ju-52 was hanging there best thing i've seen
Hey Johnny can you talk about the dc-3 and it's many roles in movies
Gets my vote....
absolutely. Big project so give me some time on that one.
... its* many roles (it's = it is)
A good, solid transport aircraft which was relatively cheap to produce. It was obsolete by WW2, but the Luftwaffe couldn't develop a replacement in sufficient time to produce the demand needed, so they continued to manufacture 'Tante Ju' throughout the war.
This video is actually genuinely underated and damm ❤😂🎉.
Crash of the Swiss JU-52 was the result of "...airline crew members with military pilot training, in particular, had a history of systematically violating recognized air navigation rules and taking high risks." as per crash final report of SESE, the Swiss NTSB.
Nice videos you make i love them
Yess Johnny! Its finally here, thank you!
I got you
I understand that in order to ship more men to Spain Franco had some of his North African troops laid on top ot the JU52s wings and hang onto the wings leading edge. I believe it was only a short flight but you do have to wonder how many did not make it.
I have long thought that the Ju52 had something of the Ford Trimotor to it. Interestingly Spain also flew the Trimotor.
Geez I didn't know that! I rather take my chances and try to swim lol
Big lpaten suit between Ford and Junkers over metal construction patents were held in a Czehoslovakian Court. Junkers won.
Great vid as per usual Johnny 👌 👏 👍
Crazy how many are still flying today...and many more in museums around the world, one nearby as RAF Cosford near Birmingham , UK.
Johnny, I could watch your offerings all day long if I didn't have other responsibilities.
Great stuff!!!!
Thanks Joel I appreciate that! More to come!
Crete would have a painful consequence for the Germans as losing 220 of the nearly 500 transport aircraft (mainly Ju-52) would really hit them hard 18 months later when trying to scramble transport planes to resupply the surrounded 6th Army at Stalingrad.
ahem: battle for The Hague , Netherlands 1940 with lot LESS dutch troops and wholly untrained: Germany lost 125 JU52 completely and 47 more badly damaged...172 total...not bad in 4 days ...
@@oddballsok true....the desert air force knocked down a fair few over the Mediterranean, my old da,RIP used to guard Beaufighters, Kittyhawks and Hurricanes,
The Ju 52/3m was an good aircraft but the Luftwaffe needed better to support the kinds of operations it was called upon.. Erhardt Milch, who headed Lufthansa and then Luftwaffe procurement had to rapidly build up the Luftwaffe's bomber squadrons the Ju 52 was chosen as it was the only aircraft that could be rapidly mass produced. The Squadrons then converted to Do 17 and He 111 and the Ju 52 became a transport and training aircraft. The Luftwaffe also tended to crew the Ju 52 with flight instructurs, something which would have severed consequences. Losses suffered by the Ju 52 transport squadrons were severe:
-Invasion of Holland: large numbers of Ju 52/3m and their crew, particular flight instructure crew were lost.
-Invasion of Crete: large numbers lost due to allied code decrypts knowing drop zones.
-Some losses during the successful supply of the German army in the Demnyansk Pocket.
-North Africa: large numbers lost due to allied code decrypts knowing flight routes in supply of North Africa.
-Stalingrad: the by now severely worn out Ju 52 were hard pressed to operate in the Russian winter supplying the 6th Army in Stalingrad. In many cases aircraft able to carry 2-2.5 tons load were able to lift only 0.5 due to maintenance issues. Unlike the best performing transport, the He 111, the Ju 52 non fuel injected engines often didn't start in the cold without fires or hot air blown on them.
-By comparison the DC-3/C47 could carry the same 2-2.5 tons load over 50% faster to 70% greater distance using the same fuel with more cabin space.
-As can be imagined had the Luftwaffe have had DC-3 at Stalingrad the aircraft could have performed more trips, been based at safer bases further from Russian raids and flown faster through Russian defenses.
-The Germans did develop replacement transports such as the Ju 252 (which had astonishing performance), the Ju 90/290 and the Arado 232 but they never were able to find the resources and make the production sacrifices needed to transfer from Ju 52 to something better. Many Ju 52 were in fact produced in occupied France.
Always informative and entertaining
There’s also a Swiss company that bought the Junkers name and plans to restart production of the JU-52 as the 52NG. It’s expected to fly next year and will be powered by 3 diesel v8’s
That's exactly the company that crashed one of the historic JU-52 in the Swiss Alps a few years ago.
Johnny is the man just keeps the awesome videos coming love em man def helps thru the hard times
8:26
I didn't know there were a sequel to The Dirty Dozen
*was
I think they made a few actuality but the quality got worse and worse.
@@alanmacpherson3225 totally passed me by...
3 sequels and a TV serie
This is clearly not junk, very well made, and edited.
Will you ever make a video of Yamato in movies? I know you have some videos with Yamato, but if not, keep on making great episodes.
Take care, and all the best.
Thanks as always Chris! I did a Yamato video on the "beehive shell" awhile back but I can definitely find some more Yamato material in the near future :)
@@JohnnyJohnsonEsq maybe...the Bismarck, Tirpitz....?
By the events pictured in the film "Valkyrie", Hitler no longer travelled in a Ju 52 but had reportedly already switched to a Fw 200.
Nonetheless, one has to make use of what can get; better an actual Ju than a CGI Fw.
Thanks for adding this
Taxi for Hitler....
One thing about Ju-52 operations - was that they were sometimes used for Air Landing troops - and sometimes these landings - were assaults ... resulting in the loss of a number of '52's.
.
I have known someone who flew the JU52 during the war, he was shoot down 3 times on the eastern front, but he always told that the worsted missions were the trips out of Stalingrad. Because regularly there the would be people who tied themselves to the undercarriage and after they landed he and his crew had to break there frozen bodys of the aircraft...
Great video Johnny, just shows how good some of the german airframes were, but they had to keep fiddling with a good design.
It certainly looks distinctive ... if you've never seen a Ford Trimotor.
I like an even number engines.
The Olympic ju-52 is very interesting. First sky promo perhaps?
Where Eagles Dare uses Ju 52s. Great film.
The Luftwaffe tought that they could repeat the trick so succesful in Spain either in N. Africa and Stalingrad, but naturally their adversaries were more efficients....
The beginning scene showing a Ju-52 in “The Battle for Britain” while Aces High plays in the background.
Dunno if anyone else said this, but the Italians made a near identical version called the S.81. As far as I know, it’s best seen in War Thunder, as the first Italian bomber to be unlocked
The Savoia-Marchetti SM.81 Pipistrello and the more advanced Savoia-Marchetti SM.82 were probably more suited to Axis needs than the Ju 52/3m being of wooden construction and in the case of the SM.82 a much larger and higher performance and longer ranged air frame.
-The success of the Ju 52/3m was kind of an accident. Junkers already had a all aluminum tri-motor in service since 1926 the Junker G.31. When Erhardt Milch needed to build the Donrier Do 11 was found to be no good and Luftwaffe the Ju 52/3m the only aircraft available that could possibly be ramped up in production. It was made into an airliner by a nose suspended bomb bay and guns and turned into a bomber thus rapidly building the Luftwaffe's Kampfgescwader. In due course the by then well trained bomber squadrons were able to transition to Dornier Do 17 and He 111 while the Ju 52 became transports and trainers.
-The Ju 52 was meant to be replaced by the far more capable Ju 252 but the resources for changing the production systems were never found.
In the miniseries "A Piece of Cake" a JU-52 rescue plane is shot down by Spitfires over the channel.
I know it looks like a big school bus with wings on it, but thats kind of what i like about it. It's a simple design that looks like it could be easily reproduced and modified without too much hastle without the need of a state-of-the-art productiom facility for things like A380s.
Wish you would have included more footage from “Where Eagles Dare”!
I know I felt the same way after posting haha
@@JohnnyJohnsonEsq lol still great vid
@@JohnnyJohnsonEsq a real hidden gem...
Best opening track to a military high adventure movie.
Nothing feels more home to me than a Skytrain tho.
I do love the Ju 52 thanks for it helping save Spain.
One of my favorite transport aircraft.
Being a maritime aircraft nerd here...FW Condor ...Flying boats..Liberators...belated thanks for sharing the Catalina
DURING 1930'S, IF I HAVE ENOUGH MONEY, I CAN GO FROM PEKING/BEIJING TO HONGKONG BY Ju-52
According to Netflix and The Crown, the late Duke of Edinburgh lost his sister when she perished in a Ju 52 flying in to a storm over the alps before the war.
I have to say i have never seen The Dirty Dozen: Next Mission i only heard that was a sequel to the original.
Was it based on Italian designs? Many Italian bombers were tri-engine