The Terrifying Tiny Airplane that Completely Shocked Germany

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  • Опубликовано: 2 июн 2022
  • Germany's early advance through the Soviet Union had been fierce and unstoppable, thanks in part to the air superiority that the Wehrmacht had attained over the region.
    As both factions ardently fought during five excruciating months in the Battle of Stalingrad, the Soviets would finally turn the table with Operation Uranus by encircling the invaders and pushing them back.
    Despite the overwhelming victory, the Soviet High Command learned a brutal lesson in Stalingrad: the Luftwaffe significantly outclassed their own Air Force; if they wanted to hold their advantage and push the Nazis out of Russia, they would have to develop better warplanes immediately.
    So began the development of the Yak 3, the smallest fighter used in World War 2 and an aircraft that would give the Luftwaffe a run for its money.
    As the tiny, nimble fighter entered the battlefield of the Eastern Front in the summer of 1944, the German commanders were stunned by what the modest plane could do, and they were forced to issue an urgent order in a frantic attempt to stop the new Soviet threat…
    ---
    Join Dark Skies as we explore the world of aviation with cinematic short documentaries featuring the biggest and fastest airplanes ever built, top-secret military projects, and classified missions with hidden untold true stories. Including US, German, and Soviet warplanes, along with aircraft developments that took place during World War I, World War 2, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Cold War, the Gulf War, and special operations mission in between.
    As images and footage of actual events are not always available, Dark Skies sometimes utilizes similar historical images and footage for dramatic effect and soundtracks for emotional impact. We do our best to keep it as visually accurate as possible.
    All content on Dark Skies is researched, produced, and presented in historical context for educational purposes. We are history enthusiasts and are not always experts in some areas, so please don't hesitate to reach out to us with corrections, additional information, or new ideas.
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Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @CaptHollister
    @CaptHollister 2 года назад +860

    Worth mentioning is that a Free-French squadron, the Normandie-Niémen, flew Yak-3s in the Eastern front as part of the Soviet air force. After the war, Stalin sent them back home with their planes. This squadron was integrated into the Armée de l'Air. Surprisingly, maintenance was not a huge issue for France because the Klimov engine used was initially based on a license-built French Hispano-Suiza motor.

    • @duellingscarguevara
      @duellingscarguevara 2 года назад +15

      I’ve read they had any choice of allied fighter?. The Hispano was the granddaddy, of seaplane racer engines ( RR included?). Didn’t the Italians bolt 2 together, at one stage?.

    • @raulduke6105
      @raulduke6105 2 года назад +5

      Thought it was yak 9’s?

    • @admiral_alman8671
      @admiral_alman8671 2 года назад +36

      So that’s why there is a yak 3 in the French techtree in warthunder

    • @troycarpenter3675
      @troycarpenter3675 2 года назад

      Is there anything the Russians or Chinese haven't copied?

    • @duellingscarguevara
      @duellingscarguevara 2 года назад

      @@troycarpenter3675 🤣what, like paper money, gunpowder, rockets, and that big wall you can see from space? (Yeah, obviously copied that from ancient American engineers?). Maybe that’s why they won’t let anyone look at their pyramids? (Evidence of coke cans and Hershey bars?). Dream on....🤦🏻‍♂️

  • @TheNuckinFoob
    @TheNuckinFoob 2 года назад +310

    WWII was horrific but it damned sure brought out the ingenuity and creativity that resulted in a ton of amazing aircraft.

    • @Satanperkele
      @Satanperkele 2 года назад +13

      Conflict is the bubbling cauldron of creativity & ingenuity :)

    • @JosephStalin-yk2hd
      @JosephStalin-yk2hd 2 года назад +3

      @@Satanperkele doubt

    • @xEvilRaptorx
      @xEvilRaptorx 2 года назад +3

      Tanks advanced like crazy too.
      If anyone wants to try a game with these planes (and tanks)... War Thunder

    • @HighFlyer6969
      @HighFlyer6969 2 года назад +6

      ​@@JosephStalin-yk2hd it's true ,without wars we wouldn't have commercial jets as quick as we did ,better engines in cars etc

    • @mrgone658
      @mrgone658 2 года назад +6

      Sad but true; generally speaking, hostile engagement with each other seems to be our greatest impetus for technological advancement while civility, humility and wisdom are tossed aside.

  • @tebo2770
    @tebo2770 2 года назад +250

    I understand that this is a video about the Yak 3 itself. But, the Russian pilots themselves deserve a whole bunch of credit for making the plane as successful as it was. The German pilots were pretty seasoned by that point, and the 109 was no slouch either. Great plane or not, it took some excellent flying to achieve those lopsided victories against the Luftwaffe.

    • @casematecardinal
      @casematecardinal 2 года назад +15

      By the time the yak 3 was in, many of the great german pilots were gone. Most of their pilots were lost to western planes.

    • @viper2148
      @viper2148 2 года назад +29

      Yeah, I'm not sure what 'lopsided victories' against the Luftwaffe you're talking about.
      The Soviets lost 106,400 aircraft during the war, while the Germans lost 76,875. And the vast majority of German aircraft losses came at the hands of British and Americans, while nearly all of the Soviet losses were due to Germans. That tilts the kill-to-loss ratio hugely in favor of Luftwaffe over the Soviet Air Force.
      In fact, the best Soviet ace ranks at a whopping 231-st spot among the WWII aces, with the positions 1 through 230 stacked with Germans. And all of the best German aces ran up their score by individually shooting down hundreds of Soviets each. Shooting down the British and American pilots was a much tougher task for the Germans and those of them who were unlucky enough to be flying at the Western Theater of operations couldn’t run up their scores quite as easily as their Eastern Front counterparts.

    • @viper2148
      @viper2148 2 года назад +6

      @Lex Bright Raven that's possible, but there is zero evidence that the Soviets enjoyed 'lopsided victories' against the Luftwaffe.

    • @norwegiangadgetman
      @norwegiangadgetman 2 года назад +15

      @@viper2148 I hope you noticed that 60300 of Soviet airplane losses were 'non-combat'?
      And that a lot of the combat losses were older models that were hopelessly outmatched?
      Also, the Finns(you know, the guys that like Saunas, Ice baths and vodka) claim to have shot down at least 5 of the Soviet planes using captured Soviet Polikarov-153 planes, so not all losses were due to the Germans...

    • @viper2148
      @viper2148 2 года назад +11

      @@norwegiangadgetman the Finns shot down a lot of Soviet fighters... because the Soviet fighters and pilots sucked.
      Back to my assertion: there is zero evidence that the Soviets enjoyed 'lopsided victories' against the Luftwaffe.

  • @Naramsit
    @Naramsit 2 года назад +32

    The Yak-9s and the La-5s may be the backbone of the red airforce in the second half of ww2, but the Yak-3 truly struck terror in the hearts of the luftwaffe. A shame it always gets overshadowed by by the BF109 or the P51. They were terrific fighters but they were never so overwhelming to the point were their country's airforce would actively encourage their pilots to avoid combat on sight of the enemy.

    • @williamzk9083
      @williamzk9083 9 месяцев назад

      The Yak 3 first saw service in June 1944 or so. The P-51B/C in the ETO was December 1943 though its first combat was in January 1944. Me 109G14 was entering service in June 1944 and K4 in October 44 and G10 in November 44. One can argue about when the Me 262 entered service whether August 44 or November 44.
      -The Luftwaffe's plans for ground attack was the Focke Wulf Fw 190D12 EB wit Jumo 213 engine capable of 488mph.
      -It was the USAAF that depleted the Luftwaffe and wore down its fighter force. Some of the best fighters from a technical point of view in the west.

    • @adarvirohfanbelarus8889
      @adarvirohfanbelarus8889 7 месяцев назад

      it couse zero terror, lol. La5fn still was more dangerous against german tactic

  • @nsbioy
    @nsbioy Год назад +32

    I have read quite a few memoirs by ww2 Soviet pilots. The tone of their memories changes sharply right around the end of 1943, from desperate fighting a clearly superior enemy to being clearly superior themselves. At the end of the war, it felt like Soviet pilots were not concerned about how many and what kind of German aircraft they were engaging due to them having gained experience and excellent aircraft. Not the case for the first two years of the war.

    • @johnmortin5603
      @johnmortin5603 Год назад +3

      That was when 3/4 of the Luftwaffe was recalled to defend Germany.

    • @thatguy46744
      @thatguy46744 11 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah and also the ussr airforce got its @$$ handed to it throughout the entire war. On top of that the bf109 had vastly superior speeds, and acceleration at high altitude, which is what won aerial battles at the time, not just maneuverability.

    • @fatdaddy1996
      @fatdaddy1996 8 месяцев назад

      John mortun, oh dear.

    • @adarvirohfanbelarus8889
      @adarvirohfanbelarus8889 7 месяцев назад

      I have read tons of interviews by their survivors. All survivors are from 1943 and on. Or has been taken from battle till 1943 like Vorozheikin or Pokryshkin. Nobody survived the slaughter of 1942

  • @getgaijoobed6219
    @getgaijoobed6219 2 года назад +65

    3:20 as a side note, the JSC stands for “Joint Stock Company”, only introduced after the fall of the USSR. Before that, the Yakovlev was an OKB (design firm) owned by the Soviet Government

    • @gueigudze1759
      @gueigudze1759 2 года назад +1

      The author is correct, in his memoirs, Yakovlev himself tells that his first company was JSC. In USSR there was a private company with cooperation between different Government bodies and private workshops. After WW2 the regime for private companies change. Till 1940 there were still private firms.

    • @amberwavedrop999
      @amberwavedrop999 2 года назад +3

      ​@@gueigudze1759 No, Sir. Yakovlev so called firm was yashchic. Do You know what does it mean - yashchic. In Stalin time it was very close to concentration camps, only intelectual concentration camp. It was very closed and militarized structure. And in fact after 1930-n there were no private firms in Soviet union.

  • @keithd5181
    @keithd5181 8 месяцев назад +1

    No. The designer favoured the gun to be synchronised to fire through the propeller. Some versions only had a 12.7 millimetre machine gun and 20 millimetre cannon. 16 June 1944. The Germans avoided altitudes below 5000 metres when the YAK 3 aircraft were around.

  • @Banner_Bearer_of_Eternity
    @Banner_Bearer_of_Eternity 2 года назад +12

    "I made everything possible, comrade Stalin!"
    "I never limited you, comrade Yakovlev. You can make impossible things too"...
    And yet I think that it was La-5FN/La-7 that was the backbone of VVS RKKA at the end of the War. Thanks for the video!

  • @charlesphillips4575
    @charlesphillips4575 2 года назад +21

    The Yak-3 was nothing like the smallest fighter of WW2. e.g. the I-16 had an empty weight of 1,490 kg against 2,105 kg for the Yak-3. Even the famous Zero (A6M2) had an empty weight of 1,680 kg.
    The Yak-3 might be the smallest late war fighter, but I have not checked all the others.

    • @johntillman6068
      @johntillman6068 9 месяцев назад

      CR.42 and Gladiator biplane fighters were also lighter.

  • @SevenBears1
    @SevenBears1 2 года назад +8

    Great quick history lessons. Great channel !!

  • @tzeffsmainchannel
    @tzeffsmainchannel Год назад

    Thank you for the video!

  • @davidbeattie4294
    @davidbeattie4294 2 года назад +80

    Timing is everything. The Yak 3 appeared in the last year of the war. The Luftwaffe was rapidly becoming a spent force divided between the defense of the Reich, the war in Europe, the Med and Eastern Front. Germany was suffering from extreme fuel shortages reducing combat capabilities and curtailing their pilot training program. As an excellent aircraft thrown into battle in large numbers by an increasingly capable Red air force, it is almost inevitable that the Yak 3 was successful.

    • @Tom-uk2ow
      @Tom-uk2ow 2 года назад

      So you cry and talk like children,just admit they are overrated themself in technical and people term

    • @twillison8824
      @twillison8824 2 года назад +7

      Exactly, it didn't show up until the luftwaffe was already decimated by American and British.

    • @BuzzLOLOL
      @BuzzLOLOL 2 года назад +4

      Yes, according to the numbers cited, the Yak 3 was 1% better than the Yak 1... LOL!

    • @michaelely4349
      @michaelely4349 2 года назад +1

      I would say that the yak 3 was not as capable or successful as the LA-5 as far as soviet strategy was concerned. Even though fighter aces made for great propaganda on the home front, the goal was to destroy bombers and attack aircraft. LA-5's took on fw 190's , bf 109's on their way back from a defensive mission and often came out ahead.

    • @michaelely4349
      @michaelely4349 2 года назад

      @@twillison8824 timeline?

  • @JosephDukedoms-ub2yz
    @JosephDukedoms-ub2yz 7 месяцев назад +5

    Yak 3 and the deHavilland mosquito mach 9 are my favorites. Both were made from wood and other composites they were ahead of their time. Both planes are absolutely gorgeous,de Havilland mosquito had no less than 18 different variants.

  • @michaelsteen9396
    @michaelsteen9396 2 года назад +30

    The 20mm machine gun coming from center of the aircraft was a big performance gain in WW2 style dogfighting in itself. Improved altitude, improved climb rate, improved acceleration, improved top speed, all these things made the Yak 3 a good air superiority fighter in that particular type of combat

    • @em1osmurf
      @em1osmurf 2 года назад +4

      that, and the wisdom of designers to not slab it with a half-ton of armor. extreme low weight would have made it a contender for the Zero and/or Corsair. fast-forward to Korea.

    • @leneanderthalien
      @leneanderthalien 2 года назад +1

      the engine and canon are based on the Hispano Suiza y12 and HS404 canon use on the Dewoitine d520: soviet union did buy the license from the y12 before the war.In France is the Y12 nick named "moteur canon" (canon engine) becasue the canon is integrated between the cylinder banks...The HS404 was still use from the brits to fit they fighter, but in a modified version to allow the use from belt feed and avoid icing problems out from the heat from the engine.The HS404 was use up to year 1999 on the Vought F8 F/N Crusader in the french navy

    • @LarryPigeon1
      @LarryPigeon1 2 года назад +1

      It was a simple solution instead of clocking the rotor or the guns to fire perfectly true the rotor because german guns kinda love being behind the engine 😅

    • @alanm.4298
      @alanm.4298 6 месяцев назад

      Another advantage of having the gun mounted right on the centerline of the airplane is that it simplifies aiming at targets.
      When the guns are mounted outboard in the wings, they are set up to converge at a select point ahead of the airplane... That might be anywhere from 200 to 800 yards. In order to get maximum bullets on target and do as much damage as possible, the pursuing pilot must try to achieve that optimal distance from the target. Any farther away or closer and some of their guns will be ineffective. This is even more important with a slower firing auto canon, than a more rapid firing machine gun.
      Of course, the Germans knew this too. The BF109 used a 20mm cannon firing through the spinner, much like the Yak-3. The 109 also had a pair of machine guns mounted on the cowl above the engine, synchronized to fire through the propeller. Most FW190 also had cowl mounted machine guns, while some models also used cannons in the wing roots, all of which needed to be synched to fire through the prop. Other FW190 used outboard mounted cannons.
      American aircraft that used center mounted guns (or nearly so) for similar advantage were the P38 and B25. Today the A10 "Warthog" uses a similar arrangement, with its 30mm "Gatling gun" cannon only slightly offset to allow room for the nose wheel to retract (the nose wheel is also offset, BTW).

  • @jimminniehan2548
    @jimminniehan2548 2 года назад +2

    Really well done, thank you so much for your hard work.

  • @whatsreal7506
    @whatsreal7506 2 года назад

    Thanks. Very cool. Thanks for sharing and keep 'em coming! Good stuff!👌👍

  • @redjacc7581
    @redjacc7581 2 года назад +13

    simply the best dogfighter of the war that most people have never heard of. It's the only plane that the luftwaffe command ordered its pilots not to engage under a certain altitude.

    • @juliancate7089
      @juliancate7089 2 года назад

      How do you define "best"?

    • @ricardobeltranmonribot3182
      @ricardobeltranmonribot3182 2 года назад +1

      If you are talking about the best dogfighter, I think the AM6 Zero was better than the Yak 3, Remember that the US had prohibited dogfight the Zero in any way possible, and the luftwaffe ordered no to engage the Yak 3 at altitudes below 3,000 meters, over that altitude, the Yak 3 became the prey

    • @sergeyzhigalev
      @sergeyzhigalev 2 года назад +2

      @@ricardobeltranmonribot3182 They are too different to compare. Zero initially was intended as middle to long range escort/air superiority fighter to operate at high altitudes above the huge areas of ocean, and it's well reflected in Zero's design. Japanese designers likely planned it as an offensive weapon. Yak-3 derived from the rest of Yak family from the beginning of war, when Soviet airforce urged strong defensive airplane - short to very short range, high climb rate, maneuverability and speed at low altitudes. So if we mean "knife fight in phone booth" by saying "dogfight", Yak-3 was obviously the best.

    • @user-kq9is6kb9h
      @user-kq9is6kb9h Год назад

      Хватит уже транслировать российскую пропаганду! В каком это документе немецким лётчикам якобы запретили вступать в бой с Як-3?

  • @BillHalliwell
    @BillHalliwell Год назад +6

    G'day Dark, Undoubtedly, the secret of the Yak 3s success was its ease of flying; brought about by it's lower weight and its high destructive potential which is great for a pilot of any skill level as it means, literally 'point & shoot'. The smaller the aircraft, generally speaking, the easier they are to fly. This meant that large numbers of novice pilots could be trained and placed right into a Yak 3 with a high expectation of good outcomes.
    While in the hands of highly experienced pilots the Yak 3 would be like giving a new scalpel to a senior surgeon. It was such a famous aircraft in Russia, however, I'm finding it difficult to locate a 1/48 or 1/32 scale model to build, even though Russian models of military equipment are not really popular at this moment in history. Cheers, thanks for another great video. Bill H.

  • @mikyl-fo8rh
    @mikyl-fo8rh Год назад +1

    The Yak3, AK47 and T34 exemplifed the underestimated sophistication and practicality of the Russians.

  • @cramersclassics
    @cramersclassics Год назад

    Well done! Most of the footage I've never seen before. Thanks.

  • @ButchNackley
    @ButchNackley 2 года назад +198

    The Yak-3 really was a terrific airplane. It could be said to be the plane of the time. Very nimble, well armed and easy to fly. It is what a front line fighter plane should be. Yes, it had some drawbacks, but certainly classed as one of the best overall. I pretty much love all the fighters from that period. But my favorite WW2 fighter is the Yak-3.

    • @casematecardinal
      @casematecardinal 2 года назад +7

      Personally, my favorite is a tie between the hellcat and the corsair. One was thr best naval figher of the war and the other was a monster plane in the hands of a skilled pilot. And both made most of the planes used in Europe look like toys with their massive array of suspended armorment.

    • @kirgan1000
      @kirgan1000 2 года назад +2

      Well armed? for a later war fighter, 1 autocanon and 2 machingun, then the standard was 4 autocanons or 3 autocanons and 2 machinguns, the plane did also have poor reliabilit, if it was lack of skilled mechanics and spare parts or a fundamental flaw is left unsaid.

    • @geezee1579
      @geezee1579 2 года назад +8

      I'm impartial to the P40 Tiger Shark. Maybe not one of the best but a classic.

    • @GonzoDonzo
      @GonzoDonzo 2 года назад +9

      Its also a pretty plane

    • @GonzoDonzo
      @GonzoDonzo 2 года назад

      @@kirgan1000 all it takes is one round from a cannon

  • @ericgilbert56
    @ericgilbert56 2 года назад +3

    The Red Airforce is a great story that hasn"t been fully told. Great video.

  • @prof2yousmithe444
    @prof2yousmithe444 2 года назад

    One of my favorite channels! Excellent work!

  • @cam0865
    @cam0865 2 года назад

    This by far for me was your best one yet. Data was good and your diction was very good. Top Notch!

  • @cripplehawk
    @cripplehawk 2 года назад +4

    2:15
    I beg your pardon but
    Which FW190 squadron was in Stalingrad?
    Only Fighter and SG squadrons that were present (All BF-109 operators) were JG52, JG53 and JG3 as well as 1st/SG1 (They did ground attacks flying the E variants) and Royal Romanian's 7th Fighter Air Group. Another fighter plane at Stalingrad was IAR 80B which Romanian 8th Fighter Air Group operated.

  • @LAR-hs2qt
    @LAR-hs2qt Год назад +5

    The right fighter plane design for the right time. If not for weight consideration, I can only imagine, what a super charger added to the engine would have accomplished for this already swift and nimble aircraft.

  • @ericteipen
    @ericteipen 2 года назад

    Thank you for slowing down your narration. It makes it much more enjoyable to watch.

  • @nortoncomando3728
    @nortoncomando3728 2 года назад +1

    Very interesting and I did not know many of these bits of information thanks

  • @gregfromguam
    @gregfromguam Год назад +8

    A radial-engine VVS fighter that saw a lot of success from late 1943 was the Lavochkin La-5FN. Based off the previous LaGG-3 design, it used a Shvetsov radial engine and proved very effective from about 10k on down. A zoom and boom fighter. Had leading slats like the Bf-109. The top Soviet ace flew this fighter until the introduction of the La-7.

    • @adarvirohfanbelarus8889
      @adarvirohfanbelarus8889 7 месяцев назад

      It wasn't boom zoom fighter, it was maneuvarable one good in all planes. It had not really a design or purpose. Soviets didn't had a good engine. Occasionally Lavochkin found ash82-fn and put it on the fighter.

    • @motherlesschild102
      @motherlesschild102 7 месяцев назад

      Many La-5s had a problem in that the cockpit couldn't be opened from the inside once closed. This led to some pilots flying them with the cockpit open, Imagine that during the winter thousands of feet up ! The quality of Soviet aircraft could vary widely depending in part on which factory they were built in.

    • @adarvirohfanbelarus8889
      @adarvirohfanbelarus8889 7 месяцев назад

      @@motherlesschild102 the issue was with hot engine, temperature in cabin was 40C in winter. So pilots kept it open for cooling .
      I never hear about jammed opening in La5. Maybe you mistake it with Il2, whe cockpit opening part had weight of 70kg and that was really inposdible to open

    • @motherlesschild102
      @motherlesschild102 7 месяцев назад

      It could be. I would love to be able to find out for myself, in a variety of La-5s from different factories- on the ground, with no one shooting at me, and a couple of people standing outside with crowbars, just in case !@@adarvirohfanbelarus8889

  • @leneanderthalien
    @leneanderthalien 2 года назад +10

    The Yak 3 had similar size and weight at Dewoitine D520 because did use quasi the same engine: the Klimov 105 was a evolution from the french Hispano Suiza Y12 engine use on Dewoitine D520, and the 20mm ShVAK canon was the reproduction from the Hispano Suiza HS404...

  • @Swimfinz
    @Swimfinz 2 года назад

    Great report, much appreciated!

  • @littlebritain64
    @littlebritain64 9 месяцев назад

    This upload is very interesting! Thank You!👍

  • @afterhourshotrods6882
    @afterhourshotrods6882 2 года назад +6

    What made the Yak 3 so deadly is just simple physics!!! It's known as Power to Rate Ratio!!! Ya stuff a Big Engine into a small lightweight Airframe that's aerodynamically sound and Ta Daaaah!!!! You got yourself one Badass Aircraft....

  • @meatpuppet2136
    @meatpuppet2136 2 года назад +16

    The Soviet struggle to reduce the Luftwaffe's air superiority was greatly aided by the Anglo-American strategic bombing campaign that really hit its stride in 1943. The defense of the homeland drew a lot of resources from the Eastern Front.

    • @georgistarkov717
      @georgistarkov717 2 года назад

      Not to mention the blank check support capitalist America offered to communist Russia in the form of Lend Lease on the day after the Germans invaded in 1941. Even though America was technically neutral.

    • @Kysushanz
      @Kysushanz Год назад +13

      Just like the Allies could never have landed at Normandy if the Soviets hadn't held up and were destroying 40 plus Divisions on the Eastern Front! Allies don't want to acknowledge that fact.

    • @alaindaubresse2161
      @alaindaubresse2161 9 месяцев назад +2

      85 % de l effort de guerre allemand était à l est source américaine

    • @williamzk9083
      @williamzk9083 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@Kysushanz The allied bombing campaign reduced German production by over 40% and another year would have seen B-29s over Germany. The allied oil campaign in prperaion for D-day knocked out German fuel production down to 85% thereby helping the Russians. The Panther production was very badly effected and seldom reach even half of the 600/month (7200 year). So 12000-15000 Panther tanks instead of 6000 and all of them in the Eastern Front. To that we can add Tiger I/II, larger numbers of StuG and Panzer IV. Take away Russia's 600,000 American vehicles. Germany could have won against Russia.

    • @OleDiaBole
      @OleDiaBole 7 месяцев назад +6

      ​@@williamzk9083Germany lost 90% of man and material in East. Land Lease comprised around 8% of Soviet aviation. Very welcome help, but far from detrimental. Amrcn and brit bombing raids were so inprecise they harly dented war production and were exclusive cause of German civillian casualties.

  • @rollfpeters5159
    @rollfpeters5159 Год назад

    like the last video´s --a GREAT WORK--thx rollf

  • @GordonjSmith1
    @GordonjSmith1 2 года назад +2

    Really interesting. Thank you.

  • @moistmike4150
    @moistmike4150 2 года назад +6

    My God! That WW2 must've been terrifying! I'm just glad no one got hurt.

  • @uumuu
    @uumuu 2 года назад +4

    Aside from its brilliant performance I just really like the look of the plane, simple and well proportioned.

  • @oneshotme
    @oneshotme 2 года назад

    Badass little planes
    Enjoyed your video and I gave it a Thumbs Up

  • @timharkins754
    @timharkins754 8 месяцев назад

    Your videos are always entertaining & informative. Well done.

  • @derekstocker6661
    @derekstocker6661 Год назад +7

    Thanks so much for this very well presented documentary, very informative and just goes to show that even in a wartime setting, great advances can be made even under the most difficult of circumstances. Wonderful aircraft.

    • @user-uc2ox7fl6x
      @user-uc2ox7fl6x 7 месяцев назад

      Як-3 -- очень хороший истребитель, но его роль в воздушном сражении на Восточном фронте сильно преувеличена. Истребители Ла-5ФН, Ла-7, Аэрокобра (тем более Кингкобра) были более универсальными самолетами, а по мощи секундного залпа "пушечная" Аэрокобра превосходила почти все истребители Второй мировой войны. На «Кобре» летал трижды Герой Советского Союза Покрышкин (48 из 59 сбитых им "немцев" пришлись на P-39), дважды Герои Амет-хан Султан, Речкалов, Кутахов, Гулаев, Клубов, Камозин, братья Глинки. Только вышеупомянутые асы преимущественно на «Аэрокобрах» сбили более 330 самолетов врага! В целом, на «Аэрокобрах» воевали 11 из 27 лётчиков-истребителей дважды Героев Советского Союза.
      Так что очень хочется, чтобы авторы данного фильма сделали такой же про роль в боях на советско-германском фронте самолетов, поставленных по ленд-лизу. Еще нужно не забывать, что на Западных фронтах (в Битве за Британию, в Северной Африке, в Сицилии и Италии, а также после высадки в Нормандии) авиация союзников уничтожила в несколько раз больше самолетов и пилотов гитлеровцев и их сателлитов, чем ВВС СССР!

  • @jasper_saberwolf
    @jasper_saberwolf 2 года назад +12

    Great documentary on an interesting plane I didn’t know too much about before. Curious, where does the narrator get the background music from? Is there a particular artist or playlist of royalty free tracks? I’ve found I quite like the music used in Dark skies’ (and sibling channels) videos. Thanks!

    • @samcoon6699
      @samcoon6699 2 года назад +2

      Do a search on RUclips for royalty free music. There are thousands of downloadable songs. It's a wonderful resource. I use it for relaxation.

    • @feellucky271
      @feellucky271 2 года назад

      A friend in making these videos for his business and hobby bought an editing program and I believe not just links to license free music and sound but the fair use of licensed music but I only heard him say he'd gotten it and am assuming a bit but Intend to pursue it eventually for my channels.

  • @MarkSmith-js2pu
    @MarkSmith-js2pu 2 года назад

    Wonderful history that I never knew. Thank you. Subbed.

  • @Wideoval73
    @Wideoval73 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks for another good video. Little confused about the early British videos, but still very good!

  • @-Zevin-
    @-Zevin- 2 года назад +11

    Here is to hoping the next expansion for IL-2 is the battle of Berlin and we get to fly the Yak-3.

    • @BuBornham
      @BuBornham 2 года назад +3

      Came to say the same thing!

  • @stevenrichards8880
    @stevenrichards8880 2 года назад +5

    Great video! I like the Yak-3 so much in fact I bought one, but it's powered by an Allison V-1710-111! Makes a great little warbird.

    • @keithbaker1951
      @keithbaker1951 2 года назад

      Steven richards do you have a channel with your bird? Would absolutely love to subscribe to that!

    • @stevenrichards8880
      @stevenrichards8880 2 года назад +2

      @@keithbaker1951 Thank you Keith, no sir not as yet but perhaps in the future it's been a three-year overhaul process to date getting close to being airborne hopefully by September.

    • @keithbaker1951
      @keithbaker1951 2 года назад

      @@stevenrichards8880 prayers 🙏 bring that ole bird into the modern world

    • @stevenrichards8880
      @stevenrichards8880 2 года назад +1

      @@keithbaker1951 God bless ya brother. Yes, it has been quite a daunting task but well worth it she deserves it and the reward will be beyond words. The world can always use another flying Yak right? You bet!

  • @Shocker-lh6kn
    @Shocker-lh6kn Год назад

    Great video. Had not heard this before.

  • @johnmacdonald1878
    @johnmacdonald1878 9 месяцев назад +2

    The Yak 3 appeared at a time when the Luftwaffe was being systematically destroyed in the west in preparation for D Day. The average experience of the Luftwaffe pilot was declining quickly due to losses and lack of fuel for training. Germany was still producing aircraft in large numbers but nowhere near the numbers the alies were producing. The result was the Luftwaffe was vastly outnumbered on all fronts. The biggest advantage the Yale 3 had was the sheer number of them.

  • @chrislong3938
    @chrislong3938 Год назад +6

    I've never seen one of these but the Spit was easily the smallest fighter I could have imagined!
    It's tiny compared to a Mustang
    If this guy is smaller than those, then I'm really impressed!
    It's funny because I used to drive past San Jose Airport where all the private planes were chocked, and amidst all the Cessnas and Bonanzas was a Mustang that looked to be twice their size!
    I used to go to Reno to watch the Air Races and all the racers looked to be about the same size!
    When One Mustang is parked in the middle of all these other civilian planes, it really sticks out!

    • @ssnerd583
      @ssnerd583 8 месяцев назад +1

      the 109 was a good bit smaller than the Spitfire...this YAK is a touch smaller than the 109

  • @darkknight1340
    @darkknight1340 2 года назад +9

    The Yak family,particularly the 3 and 9 series were incredibly manouevrable but the Lavochkin la 7 ffn really outclassed the FW 190a series and was almost at parity with the 190 D.

    • @caralho5237
      @caralho5237 Год назад

      Especially when it comes to the soviets. The western media already lies and lied a lot, so imagine what a state controlled one would do. They only let you know what they want you to know

  • @jeeperspeepers8323
    @jeeperspeepers8323 2 года назад

    These vids are the very best on RUclips!

  • @vikramjitsingh2838
    @vikramjitsingh2838 2 года назад

    Good stuff. Keep it up 👍

  • @borissljukic1470
    @borissljukic1470 2 года назад +21

    Yak3 had a metal wing carrier which, unlike the wooden one in Yak 1, reduced the weight of the aircraft and the surface of the wing.

    • @michaelmartinez1345
      @michaelmartinez1345 2 года назад

      @Boris Sljukic , " a metal wing carrier " - Also Known As ; ' a spar ' ?

    • @borissljukic1470
      @borissljukic1470 2 года назад +1

      @@michaelmartinez1345 a connector protruding from the hull, and on which the wing is pulled.

    • @borissljukic1470
      @borissljukic1470 2 года назад +1

      @@michaelmartinez1345 or connector bracket. I'm not sure.

    • @borissljukic1470
      @borissljukic1470 2 года назад +2

      @@michaelmartinez1345 it is difficult to translate from the Serbian language who is not in the aero profession. I read this in the 1992 book "LOVACKI AVIONA, JUCE, DANAS, SUTRA" (FIGHTER PLANES YESTERDAY, TODAY, TOMORROW) by Angel Oncenski.

  • @blxtothis
    @blxtothis 2 года назад +4

    Am I alone in loving the archive footage from video libraries, British Gunners and airman being actually shown, masquerading as footage of Russians fighting the invading ‘Nazis’ ?

    • @Steve-GM0HUU
      @Steve-GM0HUU 2 года назад +5

      No, you are not alone 🙂.

    • @narabdela
      @narabdela 8 месяцев назад

      Lol, it's a Dark Skies trademark. "Use any old footage, they'll never notice" 🤣

  • @jayg1438
    @jayg1438 2 года назад +2

    Very happy aircraft from USSR/ Poland/ Romania etc are being covered now due to channels like this. Great work!
    Have you covered the IAR 80/81 from Romania?

  • @carlguile2856
    @carlguile2856 2 года назад +1

    Entry monologue perfect! 👍🏻

  • @the5thmusketeer215
    @the5thmusketeer215 2 года назад +15

    My understanding was that the YAK-3 had a very tight turning circle… Once you’re In a dogfight, that’s a tremendous advantage in itself since, whoever can get onto the tail of the other aircraft, is the one more likely to be flying home that Day.

    • @xmeda
      @xmeda 2 года назад +4

      If you have speed, fast dive and high ceiling, you can simply choose when to fight and when to go home. While if you only had turn capability, you were the one who always had to accept fight or leave enemy.. Those are the differences which for example ME-262 shown extremely well.

    • @the5thmusketeer215
      @the5thmusketeer215 2 года назад +3

      @@xmeda What you say is true, but if two aircraft have broadly similar performance, then a tighter turning circle is a very significant advantage.

    • @GunsmithSid
      @GunsmithSid 2 года назад +4

      This is a reason it was so effective at low altitude - no room for the faster diving plane to gain speed and so you had to turn to escape - and the little Yak did that quite well and could bring its guns to bear.

    • @phillipgrubb2443
      @phillipgrubb2443 2 года назад +4

      @@xmeda The ME262 was not effective at all. It could have been a great fighter if it had been full developed. But it never was. It literally went from paper, straight to manufacturing. It actually hampered them in the end by getting a bunch of the remaining aces killed by p51s and late war Russian fighters. A bunch died before they even got to a fight because the fighter was highly unreliable. Prone to crashing at both takeoff and landing. And that's without mentioning the literal poison the engines released into the cockpit.

    • @direktorpresident
      @direktorpresident 2 года назад +3

      @@phillipgrubb2443 How did twin wing-mounted turbojets release literal poison into the cockpit?

  • @edoardoandretta9550
    @edoardoandretta9550 2 года назад +10

    Operation Uranus: a colonoscopy for German forces

  • @Tiagomottadmello
    @Tiagomottadmello Год назад

    Great vídeo !! 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @plainbreaker1392
    @plainbreaker1392 2 года назад +2

    The Yak3 was a testament to simplicity of design wedded to purpose.

  • @evandotterer4365
    @evandotterer4365 2 года назад +4

    Thank you for posting this content despite negative opinions about Russia. History can still be observed and not ignored. Much respect

    • @JackGordone
      @JackGordone 2 года назад

      Only those drunk on the multiple lies spewed by Western media have a negative view of Russia. From my POV, President Putin is one of the very few adults on the international scene right now. He's making a monkey clan out of the "leadership" of the collective West just now.

    • @evandotterer4365
      @evandotterer4365 2 года назад

      @@JackGordone he’s got some balls but I think he could left Ukraine alone.
      Realistically who wants to invade Russia. Nobody.
      I think the main victim is the Russian people like always. Being totally fucked by government is just life for them. But then again it’s happening in America to. So who iam to judge.

  • @wdtaut5650
    @wdtaut5650 2 года назад +19

    0:41 and 9:27 The MiG 3 was _not_ the smallest fighter of WWII. The French Caudron C.714 was substantially lighter and smaller in every dimension except length.

    • @Banner_Bearer_of_Eternity
      @Banner_Bearer_of_Eternity 2 года назад +1

      Everybody in the West tend to call Polikarpov I-200 "Mikoyan MiG-3". Yes, Mikoyan was known to every Soviet citizen. I mean THAT Mikoyan - Communist Party Central Commitee member, not his brother who has stolen Polikarpov's design bureau. Polikarpov abandoned I-200 project in favor of I-185 that was really supperior to any German fighter back then (the aircaraft tested at the Kaliningrad Front demonstrated that). But... Who cares? 😄

  • @KMac329
    @KMac329 2 года назад +2

    Excellent presentation. I'm an amateur generalist when it comes to WWII history. Soviet air power history is overshadowed by developments in the West. Thank you for filling in this gap in my knowledge of Soviet air power design.

  • @alecfoster5542
    @alecfoster5542 2 года назад +2

    Pilots of the Normandie-Niémen considered the Yak-3 superior to the Spitfire and the P-51 Mustang.

    • @twolak1972
      @twolak1972 9 месяцев назад

      It was, lighter, fast, more agile and better turner . Speed doesnt always mean you,re better . YOU JUST DIE GOING FASTER

  • @SSHitMan
    @SSHitMan 2 года назад +5

    The Mitsubishi A6M Zero was nearly 1,000 lbs lighter than the Yak-3

    • @Tbal_96
      @Tbal_96 2 года назад +2

      This Channel routinely makes click bait titles and routinely gets names/facts/and visuals wrong... It's not even worth wasting the time to type it out man...
      Russia themselves used the I-16 as a fighter during the war which is half the size of both the Yak-3 and Zero

    • @niclasjohansson4333
      @niclasjohansson4333 2 года назад +2

      The Yak 3 was a lot faster than the Zero.

  • @air-headedaviator1805
    @air-headedaviator1805 2 года назад +62

    You know having seen a Yak-3 in person I wouldn’t say it was small. Its fuselage is comparable in size to a P-40, while the wing span is similar in span to a 109. It has an aggressive profile due to that, so it does appear nimble, tho its crazy how much of a difference it made against German fighters. With the G model its overall performance on paper out matched it. I guess its a wonder how their aircraft were optimized, and how supporting those weapons worked on the Eastern front

    • @Bagledog5000
      @Bagledog5000 2 года назад +15

      I'd say smallest fighter would possibly go to early Japanese designs like the A5M or the Ki-27. The Polikarpov I-15 or 16 are smaller as well. More click bait from DS, no surprises really.

    • @cosmoray9750
      @cosmoray9750 2 года назад

      Oslo Freedom Forum
      ruclips.net/video/y6S_fHt5ndo/видео.html

    • @michaeljgraff
      @michaeljgraff 2 года назад +4

      i think the idea was to keep as much weight close to the axis of rotation and therefore increase maneuverability. that is probly why they sucked up high stiill heavy and water cooled with lower power but very little weight in the wings which takes advantage of thicker air.

    • @michaelely4349
      @michaelely4349 2 года назад

      Well put - it's hard to quantify things like centerline firepower where roll alone does not change your aim (ask an A6M zero pilot) or

    • @leeanderson2912
      @leeanderson2912 2 года назад +2

      By the time YAK-3 came into Soviet Service, the Luftwaffe had lost most of its experienced pilots. Germany had the bad luck of facing this great airplane at the worst possible time.

  • @chasetower6773
    @chasetower6773 2 года назад

    Thanks again

  • @barmherzigsein3259
    @barmherzigsein3259 2 года назад +1

    Well done! 🙏 Thank You!
    Salomè (Live well, in Peace).
    Mögest Du in das Licht, der Wahrheit, und dem SEIN der Schöpfung leben.

  • @bradthackston2323
    @bradthackston2323 2 года назад +5

    Same reason the f-16 is a beast small fast and quick

  • @6.5x55
    @6.5x55 2 года назад +3

    Hard lessons from combat: Don't turn with an A6M and don't fight down low with a Yak3.

  • @ijontichy7179
    @ijontichy7179 2 года назад +1

    The pilots. They made the Yak-3 so outstanding.

  • @ronjon7942
    @ronjon7942 2 года назад

    Thnx for this one, I never appreciated Soviet prop planes so thank you for getting me on track.

  • @zapszapper9105
    @zapszapper9105 2 года назад +16

    Like the P51 in Western Europe and the Hurricane and spitfire in the Battle of Britain, Right plane at the right time, What they needed was high performance/(more than FW190) at below 10,000ft 3000 m, That is what they got in the Yak3. (Remember also 80% of the fighting against Nazi Germany was also in the East)

    • @willthorson4543
      @willthorson4543 2 года назад

      % means nothing. 100% of strategic bombing came from the west. See? War is war.the U.S. fought on every ocean, on almost every continent, had over 100 D-days, supplied and supported all the allies. Literally FED the Russian military and civilians . just because Russia fought across their country into Berlin doesn't mean anything. The allies as a whole won.

    • @casematecardinal
      @casematecardinal 2 года назад +2

      On the ground. Many pilots were lost to western allies with constant incursions into their own airspace

    • @johntillman6068
      @johntillman6068 9 месяцев назад

      The Luftwaffe was destroyed in the West by allied tactical air forces and over Germany by the RAF/USAAF combined strategic bomber offensive.

  • @thomasburke7995
    @thomasburke7995 2 года назад +4

    Soviet era thinking.. typical to this day.. develope a very robust yet technologically simple piece of machinery.. eliminate as much possible distractions or for thought to operate it. Find and train the simplest of people to use it.. then build it by the thousands..

  • @ninjalanternshark1508
    @ninjalanternshark1508 2 года назад

    Your narrating has improved a lot since your early videos.

  • @ZZstaff
    @ZZstaff 2 года назад

    Thank you.

  • @aviationgaming1564
    @aviationgaming1564 2 года назад +4

    Don’t forget that it’s not the aircraft it’s the pilot. You can have an aircraft with good speed and great maneuverability (like the Zero) you could have a good pilot which makes that aircraft feared or have a terrible and make that aircraft look weak.

  • @scotteilers3141
    @scotteilers3141 2 года назад +3

    I knew nothing about this plane. Very interesting piece. All of your videos are so well researched, I don’t know how you find the time to actually make the videos themselves. Very impressive.

    • @fredemny3304
      @fredemny3304 8 месяцев назад

      "All of your videos are so well researched". Seriously? Dark Skies is notorious the length and breadth of RUclips for his shoddy research.

  • @drmarkintexas-400
    @drmarkintexas-400 2 года назад

    🏆🏆🏆👍🇺🇲🙏.
    Thank you for sharing

  • @keithroy9217
    @keithroy9217 Год назад +1

    I think the fact that scared the Luftwaffe even more was the fact that many of these fighters were flown by women. The master race couldn’t really cope with that revelation!

  • @guypehaim1080
    @guypehaim1080 2 года назад +13

    I think the performance of the Yak-3 is due to the power-to-weight ratio and the close coupling of the control surfaces.

  • @marvinschmitz3442
    @marvinschmitz3442 2 года назад +91

    I've never seen either aircraft in person, but at an airshow in Melbourne Florida I saw a F8 bearcat at the show. My first thought apon seeing it was how large of an airplane it was. Almost as large as an F4 Phantom at least in wing span. Never underestimate the power in small mechanical devices.

    • @paulbarnes6124
      @paulbarnes6124 2 года назад +3

      Fortunate to see yak 3 at Brisbane airshow 2018.it sounded great 👍

    • @shawns0762
      @shawns0762 2 года назад +16

      You mean the F8 Crusader? The Grumman Bearcat was relatively small, smaller than it's predecessor the Hellcat.

    • @Crashed131963
      @Crashed131963 2 года назад +7

      The Hellcat which the Bearcat was to replace was a larger plane. The Thunderbolt was larger than Both.

    • @shawns0762
      @shawns0762 2 года назад +1

      @@Crashed131963 Ha Ha, beat you by 1 minute

    • @ssnerd583
      @ssnerd583 2 года назад +5

      if you want to be shocked, see if you can find pics of a P47 next to a Bf109....that will blow your mind...and the YAK-3 was SMALLER than the 109!!!

  • @martyngittins1274
    @martyngittins1274 Год назад

    Good video

  • @allgood6760
    @allgood6760 6 месяцев назад

    Thanks for this👍 we have a Yak-3 warbird here in NZ 🇳🇿✈️

  • @sigeberhtmercia767
    @sigeberhtmercia767 2 года назад +3

    I think the I-16 Polikarpov might be a little smaller than the Yak 3 but not by much and unlike the Yak 3 was already outclassed at the start of hostilities.

  • @caramelypoops
    @caramelypoops 2 года назад +13

    I think a group of pilots need to review this plane against its contemporaries like the FW190, ME109, Mustang, Spitfire an d Zero and find out which one they like most, not so much as a weapon but as a flying machine. I think that would be very interesting.

    • @jaxxmadine
      @jaxxmadine 2 года назад +2

      Prolly gunna be the zero. Lightweight and maneuverable makes flying more fun and easy.

    • @TheOriginalFaxon
      @TheOriginalFaxon 2 года назад +1

      What, The P38 doesn't get any love here? don't forget the P47 while you're at it, it was a highly capable fighter if a bit of a pig, it was like having a pickup truck but with a superturbocharged Cummins V12 in it. Actually that scale of engine isn't far off from what the p47 had period, tbh, with the only exception being it was a gasoline engine

    • @jaxxmadine
      @jaxxmadine 2 года назад +3

      @@TheOriginalFaxon what are you on about?

    • @TheOriginalFaxon
      @TheOriginalFaxon 2 года назад +1

      @@jaxxmadine talking about WWII era fighters and engines, how bout you?

    • @jaxxmadine
      @jaxxmadine 2 года назад +1

      @@TheOriginalFaxon trying to figure out where you got a v12 diesel in a p47

  • @bobbyduke777
    @bobbyduke777 Год назад +1

    Small, light, high power. always makes a better performer.

  • @BILLYBOBB3080
    @BILLYBOBB3080 2 года назад +51

    You know you laughed when you said Uranus.

    • @jwnagy
      @jwnagy 2 года назад +7

      I hear Stalin wanted to change the name to Operation Urectum.😃😃

    • @burtvhulberthyhbn7583
      @burtvhulberthyhbn7583 2 года назад +4

      @@jwnagy rectum?
      Hell damn near killed him.

    • @badmutherfunster
      @badmutherfunster 2 года назад +1

      Ffs stop it before I piss myself 🤣

    • @ptrgreeny
      @ptrgreeny 2 года назад +2

      The Soviets had to wipe out the Klingons

    • @ibDirtyGlasses
      @ibDirtyGlasses 2 года назад +1

      I don't know how to feel about you not knowing me yet knowing I laughed when I heard it 🤣

  • @perosoygoyito
    @perosoygoyito 2 года назад +7

    Interesting tribute to the Yak-3 and its tactical superiority vs various dive and level bombers but how did it match up vs the ME 109 or FW 190s in one-on-one dogfighting?

    • @elektro36
      @elektro36 2 года назад +2

      On high altitudes the 109 may had some chance due to better compressors but on mid to low altitides the yak3 just performed way better in both turnrate and engine-power due to the low weight of the plane.

    • @PyromaN93
      @PyromaN93 2 года назад +1

      @@elektro36 I'd say, YaK-3 will eat it with ease. 20s for combat turn, lesser than 20s for single turn. This is slightly worse, than Zero can do.

  • @TheLeadpepper
    @TheLeadpepper 2 года назад

    One of the fighters I never paid attention to.. Thanks..

  • @stevenleek1254
    @stevenleek1254 2 года назад +6

    I've heard that BF109s had heavy controls at low altitude

    • @casematecardinal
      @casematecardinal 2 года назад

      They were somewhat sluggish in turns and rolls at lower altitudes and speeds but these downsides are generally played up more than what was realistic

  • @kit888
    @kit888 2 года назад +9

    Small fighter. Sounds like they traded off range to get performance, and they Germans couldn't exploit that weakness.

    • @casematecardinal
      @casematecardinal 2 года назад

      Basically it was the opposite of the zero.

    • @MDzmitry
      @MDzmitry 2 года назад

      Well, the Yak-3's range was around 660-700+ km, which is similar to earlier Yak variants (except for specific Yak-9D with 900-1000km and Yak-9DD with approx. 1300km).
      And same goes for Bf.109 and the Spitfire, all 3 in their primary "fighter" models had a near similar range varying from 650 to 720-750 km.
      And that's understandable, as all 3 were built primarily for interception and air superiority. In such scenarios the battles were usually fought pretty close to the "base", and there was no need in more fuel that would make the performance worse.
      Sorry for vague numbers, I'm too lazy to look up flight ranges for every modification of each design.

  • @iamchanuthwick
    @iamchanuthwick 2 года назад

    Pls do a video on the Mig 21

  • @jimmyc3238
    @jimmyc3238 Год назад

    Another great video! BTW, what are the two planes shown at 1:45? The one on the left looks like an RAF Mosquito, and the one on the right looks like it has black and white D-Day markings.

    • @hawnyfox3411
      @hawnyfox3411 Год назад

      Jimmy = That footage has clearly been "erroneously used" & has absolutely NOTHING to do with the Yak.3 - (Laughably - It's "Dark Skies" bad editing !)
      Mosquito is from No. 219 Squadron** RAF & the other a/c is nothing more than an RAF C.47 Dakota of Transport-Command - **(Note the 'FK' fuselage codes
      If you look at the footage shown at 01.39 , it shows an RAF Dakota on fire (still smouldering), with it's nose & centre-section gone.
      ALL as in ALL of that footage (both you & I, have) mentioned, is almost certainly taken at RAF Melsbroek , in Belgium, after "Bodenplatte" (1st Jan'45)
      I say that with some degree of certainty, because at around 01:41 , you can VERY CLEARLY SEE an RAF B.25-'C' Mitchell - The 'C' variant that No.2 Group were using at Melsbroek on the day (morning) of the "Bodenplatte" raid.
      Hope that helps ?
      .

  • @doomhippie6673
    @doomhippie6673 2 года назад +12

    when we discuss airwar on the eastern front we have to take into account the number of planes in service, the amount of fuel available and the number of pilots. I don't know the exact numbers here, but a quick google research said that Germany had 793 fighters on the Estern Front in 1944. I don't know how much of those were operational nor about the the fuel situation. However, the losses of skilled pilots of the German airforce by 1944 due to overextaesion, the western allied bombing campaign over the Reich and being outnumbered in the sky was very significant. I don't believe the loss of a couple dozen airplanes "scared" the Luftwaffe out of the sky. If the Yak 3 was really that good of an airplane it makes a lot of sense to tell your own pilots to not engage them if possible in areas in which they excelled. That's basically the same advice as saying: "If the enemy has a machine gun on that hill, don't charge blindly against the hill." I'd call that common sense.

    • @bricefleckenstein9666
      @bricefleckenstein9666 2 года назад +1

      The fuel situation for Germany was serious through most of 1944, growing increasingly worse as they needed to keep more of it closer to home to help fuel their industries.

  • @wrobelx
    @wrobelx 2 года назад +4

    meanwhile in war thunder....
    *literally impossible to turn*

  • @jamesetal7088
    @jamesetal7088 2 года назад

    Utterly fascinating.

  • @edpzz
    @edpzz 2 года назад +1

    Intresting footage of the RAF Regt at 2;16 did not know they were at Stalingrad

  • @brucemcbain3150
    @brucemcbain3150 2 года назад +5

    Very interesting. My own understanding of the air war has been colored by western media -of course- so it is great hearing about this fighter. I wonder what Hartmann thought about the Yak-3.

  • @williammyers1612
    @williammyers1612 Год назад +6

    A Zero fighter made a forced landing at Dutch Harbor in the Aleutians in June of 1942. The fighter was found mostly intact by US forces and was shipped back stateside for examination in July of 1942.
    As a result, the Navy got one of the best fighters made during the war, the F6F Hellcat.

    • @MooreFishing-ky3wq
      @MooreFishing-ky3wq Год назад +4

      The F6F Hellcat was already under development by the June of 1942 .

    • @rollotomasislawyer3405
      @rollotomasislawyer3405 Год назад

      @@MooreFishing-ky3wq Correct and the Zero was almost obsolete by then.