King Of The Skies In The Spanish Civil War | Fiat Cr.32 [Aircraft Overview #90]

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  • Опубликовано: 25 авг 2024
  • Today we're taking a look at the short lived Fiat Cr.30 and the much more successful Fiat Cr.32: a nimble biplane fighter that distinguished itself during the Spanish Civil War. It would also served with multiple nations during this period, and it would even see some limited action in the opening stages of the Second World War.
    Want to join the community? Visit our Discord - / discord
    Want to support the channel? I have a Patreon here - / rexshangar
    Sources:
    Logosluso, A. (2010). Fiat CR.32 Aces of the Spanish Civil War. Osprey Publishing Limited.
    Punka, G. (2000). Fiat CR 32/CR 42 in action. Squadron/Signal Publication, Inc.
    Cattaneo, G. (1965). The Fiat CR. 32. Profile Publications.
    CR.30 & CR,32 Assembly Manuals

Комментарии • 302

  • @RexsHangar
    @RexsHangar  Год назад +57

    Sorry for the plosives in this one, forgot to put the pop filter back on my microphone when I was re-organising the office!
    F.A.Q Section
    Q: Do you take aircraft requests?
    A: I have a list of aircraft I plan to cover, but feel free to add to it with suggestions:)
    Q: Why do you use imperial measurements for some videos, and metric for others?
    A: I do this based on country of manufacture. Imperial measurements for Britain and the U.S, metric for the rest of the world, but I include text in my videos that convert it for both.
    Q: Will you include video footage in your videos, or just photos?
    A: Video footage is very expensive to licence, if I can find footage in the public domain I will try to use it, but a lot of it is hoarded by licencing studies (British Pathe, Periscope films etc). In the future I may be able to afford clips :)
    Q: Why do you sometimes feature images/screenshots from flight simulators?
    A: Sometimes there are not a lot of photos available for certain aircraft, so I substitute this with digital images that are as accurate as possible.

    • @kyle_mk17
      @kyle_mk17 Год назад +2

      ju 290?

    • @theoneandonlyartyom
      @theoneandonlyartyom Год назад

      hey rex, can you make a vid on the Pulqui? basically, a relatively obscure early cold war argentine fighter, the usa was like "no" and began throwing sabres at argentina at cheap prices, so the pulqui was cancelled

    • @philp8872
      @philp8872 Год назад +3

      Hi Rex, another great one, thanks!
      Two suggestions:
      More on AC used in Spanish Civil War.
      Please do more videos with Drachinfel about Carriers!
      -WWII from the technical aspect. I mean the various Battles especially in the Pacific are already covered well by Drachinfel and others, but there is so much else: Evolution of planes and carrier equipment, escort carriers against submarines....
      -Jet age and its effect on carriers, Korea, Vietnam, Falklands....
      I really enjoyed every second of you and Drach on this great topic. (Watched it on my GFs TV where I´m not able to comment)

    • @conradnelson5283
      @conradnelson5283 Год назад

      Never noticed

    • @peterkissinger9696
      @peterkissinger9696 Год назад +1

      Avia B-534?

  • @MonkeyJedi99
    @MonkeyJedi99 Год назад +181

    "...when allied fighters made their appearance, and began the aerial equivalent of seal clubbing."
    I did not expect a Drachism on Rex's Hangar. A surprise, but a welcome one!

    • @auldman
      @auldman Год назад +5

      Ok, I searched… what is Drachism?

    • @wrencormier513
      @wrencormier513 Год назад +26

      @@auldman there's a youtuber named drachinifel, who does longer form military ship videos, and uses that sort of dry joke in his videos

    • @General_Rubenski
      @General_Rubenski Год назад +5

      @@wrencormier513Dry humor is everywhere, especially on RUclips, so why does he get it coined after him?

    • @wrencormier513
      @wrencormier513 Год назад +19

      @@General_Rubenski he's particularly famous in this specific corner of youtube, the long-form video essay on military vehicles of the latter half of the 20th century

    • @auldman
      @auldman Год назад

      @@wrencormier513 thank you

  • @rezzoc91
    @rezzoc91 Год назад +287

    I met a great man in my life, named Giuseppe Ruzzin. He flew on the CR32 in Spain, France and England. Then he went on the 109, 202 and defended Italy in the Sicilian Sky until 1943. He was the pride of Genoese aviators

    • @MarkJoseph81
      @MarkJoseph81 Год назад +24

      On the Axis side in Italy?

    • @rezzoc91
      @rezzoc91 Год назад +56

      @@MarkJoseph81 yes, but after 43 he didn't join the rsi and decided to become non belligerent by training new pilots

    • @loveofmangos001
      @loveofmangos001 Год назад +35

      I like this story, you can tell it's real because liars usually claim their grandfather flew it

    • @rezzoc91
      @rezzoc91 Год назад

      @@loveofmangos001 you can Google him. His personal plane I think is in Bracciano museum

    • @cmbaileytstc
      @cmbaileytstc Год назад +77

      @@loveofmangos001 My grandfather destroyed five 109s in WWII. Truly the worst mechanic the Luftwaffe ever had.

  • @GianUbertoLauri
    @GianUbertoLauri Год назад +42

    My grandfather witnessed CR32 in Italian East Africa. He reported that most where destroyed on the ground, not in dogfights and that the preferred British strategy was low altitude attacks, trying, often successfully, to avoid early detection. But if Blenheims, possibly with Hurricane escort saw CR32 high above, turned back to attempt a surprise attack another day.
    (BTW, I have the cockpit clock from an Hurricane downed in I.E.A. at home...)

    • @WredFawks
      @WredFawks Год назад +1

      Just as Rex noted, like clubbing baby seals.

    • @GianUbertoLauri
      @GianUbertoLauri Год назад +4

      Dangerous seals. I have a working clock from an hurricane dashboard… warprey…

  • @randomnickify
    @randomnickify Год назад +80

    "My Fiat has V12 engine"
    "You mean your Ferrari?"
    "No, my FIAT" :)

    • @JTA1961
      @JTA1961 Год назад +4

      Good one.

    • @AgentTasmania
      @AgentTasmania Год назад +4

      *Screams past in FIAT 500 with aircraft engine janked in top of it*
      HO COMMESSO UN ERRORE!

  • @fistofthetiger1591
    @fistofthetiger1591 Год назад +21

    This Plane looks like it's a biplane trying to become a monowing. It has to be one of my absolute favorite biplanes just on looks alone. The Italians really do know how to style their Automobiles and their aircraft.

    • @JTA1961
      @JTA1961 Год назад +5

      & that's a fact & a half.

    • @LeeBrasher
      @LeeBrasher 5 месяцев назад +1

      They also know how to put a woman together. 😁

    • @deremjool8043
      @deremjool8043 4 месяца назад +1

      Wait until you see the Cr.42!

    • @thebighurt2495
      @thebighurt2495 3 месяца назад

      The Folgore, Sagittario and Centauro were absolutely *gorgeous* fighters and proof that Italy couldn't design good tanks because they spent their skill points on planes and ships.

  • @zitko19
    @zitko19 Год назад +57

    Great video. As a Slovak myself I really appreciate detailed information on short and pretty much unkown conflict between newborn Slovak state and Hungary in March 1939 (this was mistaken for 1938 but thanks to very limited resources it's surely forgivable). Thank you very much. I can't wait for another great story of another great airplane (what about some of the Czechoslovak planes you mentioned here?).

    • @egoalter1276
      @egoalter1276 6 месяцев назад

      A completely unnecesseary war that did nothing but bitlrth bad blood .

  • @BHuang92
    @BHuang92 Год назад +77

    Arguably one of the best fighter biplanes made.

    • @spingebill8551
      @spingebill8551 Год назад +9

      Indeed. It’s unfortunate, not only was the Cr.32s legacy robbed by the monoplanes of its era and on top of that it’s more advanced cousin the Cr.42, it’s often overlooked as its from Italy.

    • @AndrewGivens
      @AndrewGivens Год назад +2

      @Aqua Fyre Didn't the Avia make the last air-to-air kill for a biplane?

  • @sim.frischh9781
    @sim.frischh9781 Год назад +31

    Those biplanes looked really cool, both the 30 and the 32, with that oversized cooling maw.
    Funny though, them having such a heavy armament at a time when most pilots shot not for the plane but the other pilot.
    Maked them useful forvlonger, probably, because they could actually damage the newer planes more effectively.

  • @Chumdo
    @Chumdo Год назад +17

    I love the use as war thunder for the black and white footage

    • @stevetournay6103
      @stevetournay6103 Год назад +2

      Ahhh, so that's what it is! Clever.

    • @martijn9568
      @martijn9568 Год назад +1

      I'm rather opposed to it as it makes it a lot harder to see what's actual film and what is animated video.😅

  • @hanyoukimura
    @hanyoukimura Год назад +12

    The Cr.32 is one of my favorite biplane designs.

  • @stevetournay6103
    @stevetournay6103 Год назад +19

    The tail of the CR32 has such a classic, almost to the point of caricature, World War I ornateness...
    The two seat CR30 would today be a terrific machine for the currently popular "flight experience" operation, as flown, especially in the US and the UK, with things like Spitfire T9s and TF-51 Mustangs...

    • @williammorris584
      @williammorris584 Год назад +2

      I was thinking the same. I’ve been up in a WACO and Stearmans, and loved the open cockpit experience.

    • @nos9784
      @nos9784 Год назад +1

      ​@@williammorris584 I like those ultralight kitplane versions... lots of cool stuff there, and a lot more affordable :)

    • @szilardtoth8814
      @szilardtoth8814 Год назад +1

      Replicas should be built respectively.

  • @ericswain70
    @ericswain70 Год назад +15

    Good morning Rex's Hanger. Great way to start the day. Fiat Cr.32 is one of my favorites.

  • @monostripezebras
    @monostripezebras Год назад +32

    I have always been fascinated by that desgin.. so much design effort in a class that was positively confirmed to be outdated and obsolete.

    • @mathewkelly9968
      @mathewkelly9968 Год назад +7

      Not really when the 32 came out it was cutting edge , the later CR 42 definitely was outdated and obsolete

    • @AndrewGivens
      @AndrewGivens Год назад +3

      @@mathewkelly9968 You can see from how quickly FIAT brought out their G.50 monoplane that the Falco was already out of date on the drawing board. It's a wonder that they proceeded with it at all.

    • @kevintemple245
      @kevintemple245 Год назад +4

      @Andrew Givens the 42 was a great airplane, even if "obsolete". All Italian made planes suffered from a chronic lack of firepower and speed, but the 42 more than made up for it in it's excellent maneuverability. It was able to hold it's own against more modern fighters, especially in the hands of veteran pilots.

    • @zachdew9gaming985
      @zachdew9gaming985 Год назад

      ​@Kevin Temple you are missing the point, it may of held its ground but why design a plane that is already obsolete for the time and then actually produce it.

    • @thebighurt2495
      @thebighurt2495 3 месяца назад

      @@zachdew9gaming985 It was probably a stopgap while they worked on the G.50. Something they could pump out of their factories that was at least an improvement until the real successor was ready.

  • @manricobianchini5276
    @manricobianchini5276 Год назад +5

    Very nice lines, for a biplane fighter. The 42 Bis was nice, as well.

  • @owen368
    @owen368 Год назад +38

    Love the bit of Italians trolling the French.

    • @rezzoc91
      @rezzoc91 Год назад +14

      It's our national sport

    • @JTA1961
      @JTA1961 Год назад

      French loaf is breader while pizza is the upper crust

    • @General_Rubenski
      @General_Rubenski Год назад +1

      @@aquafyrerits slightly more superior than the French? Why lmao, because they smell slightly less worse?

  • @copperator6649
    @copperator6649 Год назад +6

    Italy makes some nice Bi-planes. Cr.32 being a personal favorite

  • @puebespuebes8589
    @puebespuebes8589 Год назад +16

    I love inter wars plane, it was a golden age. If you think about them they are race airplane twisted for war, this is kind of sad but they would not exist whitout war.

    • @DrHundTF2
      @DrHundTF2 Год назад +1

      I wonder if, had we not had the 3-4 wars of that era, if technology would be considerably slowed down. Maybe we’d still have biplanes around often, being popular for close-range racing and ballads.
      I wished airplanes would end up as more than war weapons and money machines nowadays..

    • @puebespuebes8589
      @puebespuebes8589 Год назад

      @@DrHundTF2 sadly that's not how the world seem to work

    • @DrHundTF2
      @DrHundTF2 Год назад

      @@puebespuebes8589 yeah, thanks to a little species known as humanity, we have amazing things that were designed for horrible purposes.

  • @45CaliberCure
    @45CaliberCure Год назад +5

    Really cool to see biplane combat footage like that. I'd only seen very limited footage from WWI. Thank you!

    • @C76Caravan
      @C76Caravan Год назад

      Actually, think some of that is War Thunder and run through an "old camera" emulator/filter. But damn, I really am still not totally sure, that's how real it looks. The I-16 video is probably the one that is most noticeable, the other give away I think being the landscape in the background in some of the other videos. Still think the formation videos are potentially real ones, and towards the end some footage is definitely real.

    • @stephenallen4635
      @stephenallen4635 Год назад

      I think all the footage is actually from the game War Thunder

    • @C76Caravan
      @C76Caravan Год назад

      @@stephenallen4635 not all, esp. at the end the pilot of course and the burning wreck aren't. Also i think some of the initial formation flights look real.

    • @stephenallen4635
      @stephenallen4635 Год назад +1

      @@C76Caravan it's all the combat footage sorting a cr 32. The burning wreck could be anything but yes i think the aerobatics are real

    • @C76Caravan
      @C76Caravan Год назад

      @@stephenallen4635 yep, that's what I would think as well.

  • @adrianrutterford762
    @adrianrutterford762 Год назад +5

    Wonderful News!
    A new video from The Hanger.
    Thanks

  • @The_Modeling_Underdog
    @The_Modeling_Underdog Год назад +5

    Great video, Rex.
    This reminded me of an acquaintance's father. He flew Cr.20s, 30s and 32s in three different wars. The Great Chaco War on the Paraguayan side, the SPW as part of the Aviazione Legionaria and then on East Africa until 1941. He was credited with claiming a Vickers Wellesley while flying the 32.
    A few things to point out.Of the aerial circus shown starting with the Letov S-328 and finishing with the Avia B.534, Republican Spain never had any of those for the duration of the war.
    On the Soviet testing of the Cr.32 and it being difficult to fly, the same thing about it needing a skilled pilot happened when the I-16 was introduced "en masse" to the VVS. A hasty training program had to be put up to stop pilots offing themselves on it. The Italian School went the other way and the training of pilots was thorough on airplane characteristics, formation flying and aerobatic excercises. Albeit a bit on the antiquated side, it provided some excellent cadres to the Regia Aeronautica , the Paraguayan Air Service and the Hungarians. That is why they had such a rotund success until more modern aircraft showed up. This is almost mirrored with the Nomohan Incident and the difference between VVS and IJA pilots.
    You may need a video to rescue the much maligned Breda SAFAT 12,7mm. It wasn't a bad gun at all and mostly hampered - like most western cal.50s of the time - by a syncro gear which wasn't up to the task. And yes, people, the early P-40s had the same hideous rate of fire, some 450 rpm.
    Nice to see one of my favourite biplanes of the inter-War period covered.
    Cheers.

  • @glmm2001
    @glmm2001 Год назад +12

    The l-15 was a very good aircraft, better armed (four PV-1 7,62mm) and more maneuverable than the CR. The I-16 was faster but far less maneuverable and the early versions only carried two guns, although the Shkas fired extremely fast for the era. Note many pilots flew with the 7,7mm Breda SAFAT instead of the heavier model to save weight and carry more ammo. When Joaquin Garcia Morato crashed short after the was his aircraft was armed with the lighter guns. On the hodgepodge of A/C used by the government forces, neither the Gladiator or the Avia 534 reached Spain, while no Frecn volunteer flew any of the three Furies available in 1936, to be used as a pattern aircraft for a 50 A/C production run under license contracted before the war

    • @JosipRadnik1
      @JosipRadnik1 Год назад

      Hello Luis
      Since you seem to have some knowledge of the airwar over Spain 1936-39 I thought i might ask you: Were I15bis and i-153's used in Spain and how would you compare these to the CR32's? How would you compare the CR32 to the Heinkel He51?

    • @glmm2001
      @glmm2001 Год назад +8

      @@JosipRadnik1 the I-152 arrived late in the war although it wasn’t very popular, being less maneuverable than the l-15, most of them surviving the war. There’s a persistent rumor the l-153 was used in the SCW but thatˋs completely false. The He-51 was moved to ground attack once the l-15 appeared in numbers, being outclassed by the Soviet aircraft; as the CR-32 successfully soldiered on, we can consider it superior to the Heinkel. Besides, the Germans could replace it with better aircraft like the Me-109B. A small number of G-50s were purchased by the rebels late in the war but the type was impopular, being unreliable and far less maneuverable than the 32. The rebels were so happy with it than they purchased a license and the last Spanish built CR-32 was delivered in 1948. There were plans to replace the old RA-30 engine with something newer and Spanish built but, in the end, the planes built under license used imported Italian engines. CR-32s were deployed in the Canary Islands and encountered Allied airplanes when they ventured into Spanish airspace in several occasions.

  • @hlynnkeith9334
    @hlynnkeith9334 Год назад +5

    I enjoy your histories of interwar aircraft. I prefer to study Great War aviation; at the moment, I study German seaplanes and seaplane tenders. Your episodes come as welcome diversions. Always well done, witty, funny (the aerial equivalent of seal clubbing), and thoroughly researched. My compliments.

  • @ivannovorolnik5054
    @ivannovorolnik5054 Год назад +14

    I would really like to see a video about Avia b534, probably the less known from "one of the best of interwar biplane fighters" group. also seen real combat during ww2. and while at topic Letov Š328, probably last bomber biplane used in ww2 :-)

    • @stevetournay6103
      @stevetournay6103 Год назад

      I think there's an Ed Nash video on those Avias. They were beauties...

    • @nos9784
      @nos9784 Год назад

      I just looked up how long the ilya muromets was in service, and was dissapointed to find out it was retired in '22.
      1922, that is, of course 😅

    • @szilardtoth8814
      @szilardtoth8814 Год назад

      The "Š" means Šmolík :-)

  • @shannonwittman950
    @shannonwittman950 Год назад +2

    Another great and informative video! Please know your labors and efforts are much appreciated by many thousands around the world.

  • @messerschmitt7240
    @messerschmitt7240 Год назад +1

    Cr 42 is my all time favourite Fiat aircraft and it's one of the fastest biplanes of all time too.

  • @dyerwulf5459
    @dyerwulf5459 Год назад +7

    This was really well done. Outstanding!

    • @JTA1961
      @JTA1961 Год назад

      That's what I thought also.

  • @tobiasz6613
    @tobiasz6613 Год назад +10

    Keep up the good work.

  • @yes_head
    @yes_head Год назад +19

    Good job, mate. What's crazy to me about the CR.32 (and CR.42) was how long the Italians demanded it stay in service, actually turning down chances to replace them with better monoplanes. I attribute this to the Italian penchant for macho heroics over practical warfighting. "What do you mean an enclosed cockpit? How can I show off my fabulous new silk scarf?" 😉

    • @JTA1961
      @JTA1961 Год назад +1

      Well said...moving on to better isn't easy for some, even when it's staring you in the face

    • @JohnnyRocker2162
      @JohnnyRocker2162 Год назад

      I think you have a very good point on Italian pilots. Their army brothers gave up en mass in North Africa, so the macho mentality was pilots and divers riding torpedoes.

    • @triumphbobberbiker
      @triumphbobberbiker Год назад +3

      You've been watching too many Hollywood mob movies

    • @lolloblue9646
      @lolloblue9646 Год назад +2

      They didn't like the monoplanes proposed to them mostly due to the fact the CR.32 and 42 had incredible maneuverability while some of the early monoplanes such as the Breda Ba.27 were less agile.

  • @AndrewGivens
    @AndrewGivens Год назад +4

    I'm looking forward to the Cr.42 video, but this is a treat - the biplane which was born at the very zenith of biplane operability and efficacy. It seems like it held its own against a lot of warbirds; bis, sesquis, monos; the lot. Can see it struggled hard at the end in the desert but it even seems like it stood up to the Gladiator fairly well?
    Seems like a good record to me - and fascinating that there was so much biplane combat in the 30s.
    Wonder how the Bulldog would have fared against a Cr.30 or .32?

  • @metalman78602
    @metalman78602 Год назад +2

    "..seal clubbing". Gotta love it. Thank you.

  • @danweyant4909
    @danweyant4909 Год назад +5

    To anyone interested in air war over Spain, I recommend "5 down, no glory" - an excellent book above America mercenary pilot Frank Tinker.

  • @MD-qm6gy
    @MD-qm6gy Год назад +1

    Great video. Really looking forward to the Cr.42 episode! That thing was sweet looking.

  • @bigblue6917
    @bigblue6917 Год назад +3

    The Italians did stick to their biplanes longer than most. And excellent though the likes of the Cr.32 and 42 they were definatelly yesterdays men.

    • @spingebill8551
      @spingebill8551 Год назад +2

      Nothing really wrong with that either considering the Italians had their monoplanes too, and their biplanes can probably beat most aged fighters by 1942.
      What I’m saying is the Italian biplanes weren’t on par with let’s say Bf-109s of the time, but to I-15s, I-16s, British biplanes, etc. the Italian biplanes were real menaces.

    • @bigblue6917
      @bigblue6917 Год назад +1

      @@spingebill8551 Nothing I would disagree with you about there. And I will admit a soft spot for these aircraft and that my yesterdays men comment was a bit harsh. Of course the British had the Gloster Gladiator. And more that one pilot became an ace flying them, to the chagrin of a few monoplane fighter pilots.
      It is ironic that in 1942 the days of the biplanes replacement as a front line fighter, the piston engined monoplane, were themselves about to come to an end with the first jet aircraft. And, in the case of Britain, by Gloster. The went straight from biplane to jet plane.

  • @janlindtner305
    @janlindtner305 Год назад +1

    Always a pleasure to open up your features!

  • @marvintpandroid2213
    @marvintpandroid2213 Год назад +4

    Good morning Rex

  • @karlbrundage7472
    @karlbrundage7472 Год назад +3

    Dating myself here: Back in the '90s a videogame company had a series of flight sims based on their "Red Baron" game. The first was "Aces of the Pacific", then "Aces Over Europe" and was to be followed by "Desert Fighters".
    Unfortunately the company folder while "Desert Fighters" was in Beta and was never picked up.
    I was so looking forward to flying a Gladiator against a CR-32 or a Falco.................

    • @gregdrew874
      @gregdrew874 Год назад +1

      Dynamix. I bought my first 386DX so I could play AOTP.

  • @johnforsyth7987
    @johnforsyth7987 Год назад +1

    Thank you for a very informative video. Looking forward to your video on the Cr. 42 Falco.

  • @carlnewman7096
    @carlnewman7096 Год назад +1

    Another great video, keep up the top work feller, & many thanks from pommy land.😎👍🏻

  • @raypurchase801
    @raypurchase801 Год назад +1

    Interesting to read the biography of the South African air ace, Pat Pattle, who took on and defeated these biplanes in his RAF Gladiator.

  • @robertdragoff6909
    @robertdragoff6909 Год назад +2

    Great video as always
    Looking forward to the next video

  • @josega6338
    @josega6338 Год назад +1

    It was called 'Chirri' by the Spanish Nationalists, from the Italian pronounciation of CR.
    A Biplane is a Biplane, WW I machines.

  • @xpump876
    @xpump876 Месяц назад

    I always liked the lines on the Cr32.

  • @jeffgaboury3157
    @jeffgaboury3157 Год назад +2

    Awesome series. I'm really enjoying it!

    • @JTA1961
      @JTA1961 Год назад

      Same here...

  • @russkinter3000
    @russkinter3000 Год назад +3

    Thanks! Fascinating info about a plane that seems to get bad reviews from sources who don't understand the difference between obsolescence and bad design.

  • @guidor.4161
    @guidor.4161 Год назад +1

    Lovely video. I really like this aircraft and hope a 1:32 scale model is released in future...

  • @carloduroni5629
    @carloduroni5629 Год назад +2

    Nice video, Rex. Only one Italian pronounciation remark: you pronounced "Ceccherini" the "other way round". In Italian, when "c" (as well as "g") is before "e" or "i" is pronounced "sweet" (like in "chestnut" or "chile", "jet" or "Jim"). To have it "hard" before "e" or "i" (like "Ken" or "kit", "get" or "give") you have to interpose an "h". Therefore Ceccherini should be pronounced like an "English" "Chekkerini".
    BTW, before "a", "o" or "u" it's kind of the other way around: "c" and "g" are normally "hard" (like in "cat" or "cope") and you must interpose an "i" (not actually pronounced) to make them "sweet" (e.g. Italian "cia..." is like "cha...")

  • @gregbolitho9775
    @gregbolitho9775 Год назад

    Nice 1, didn't know as much about the 32 as I thought I did, but the 42s still a favorite. Thanks m8 nice goin.

  • @jorgewhite6658
    @jorgewhite6658 Год назад +3

    Joaquin Garcia Morato , in Spain they use both familly names of the father and mother

    • @diegoferreiro9478
      @diegoferreiro9478 Год назад +1

      Furthermore, his descendants have merged both family names into one as García-Morato. Some people do it in Spain, usually when the first is a very common family name like García is.

  • @06colkurtz
    @06colkurtz Год назад +1

    Great vid. Well done sir.

  • @ouroboris
    @ouroboris Год назад +1

    "the aerial equivalent of seal-clubbing" 😝I've got to figure out how to work this into a conversation.

  • @pavelavietor1
    @pavelavietor1 Год назад +1

    great presentation thanks 🎉

  • @szilardtoth8814
    @szilardtoth8814 Год назад

    One of my great fave biplane. Thanks for upload.

  • @ghost210377
    @ghost210377 Год назад

    Great report on the CR.32, I especially liked that you included information on the Grecoitalian campaign were the few Greek PZL P.24 actually stood up against Regia Aeronautica. By the way great video on the P.24, not may take the time to look at the history of the less popular aircraft.

  • @user-jyanome-daisuki
    @user-jyanome-daisuki 2 месяца назад

    今、1/32で本機のゴキブリ部隊機(スペイン市民戦争中のコンドル部隊機)をモーターライズ仕様で製作中ですが、翻訳機能を活用して動画を視聴し大変勉強に成りました。そして、僕の塗装選定は大正解だったと得心しました。

  • @antoniolopez696
    @antoniolopez696 Год назад

    Finally a very good video of this airplane! Nice job Rex

  • @triumphbobberbiker
    @triumphbobberbiker Год назад +2

    Rex, any chance you will be covering the Macchi WW2 fighters as well - MC.200s to the MC.205s?
    Keep up the excellent work.

  • @craigpennington1251
    @craigpennington1251 Год назад

    Great video on a little publicized bi plane fighter. Stuff like this gets tucked away somewhere & forgotten. Don't suppose that any are airworthy today. Would be cool if so.

  • @daviddavid5880
    @daviddavid5880 Год назад

    Wow. I take it forward visibility wasn't much of a priority with these guys. That front view is a slot. Another great video. Keep up the good work.

  • @JTA1961
    @JTA1961 Год назад

    Continuing to be impressed by this channels overall levels of excellence without intersecting political bias

  • @ingosippel9653
    @ingosippel9653 Год назад

    Super Channel, thank you 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @candidodacquisto7930
    @candidodacquisto7930 Год назад

    My all-time favorite biplane

  • @johnw4659
    @johnw4659 Год назад +1

    A beautiful design

  • @caseysmith544
    @caseysmith544 Год назад +1

    The Fiat company made some of the best looking biplanes ever made.

    • @JTA1961
      @JTA1961 Год назад

      "Planely" not the same guy designed their cars then...

  • @rob5944
    @rob5944 Год назад

    I believe the phrase is under one's belt BTW. 👍

  • @abdulabdanahib9617
    @abdulabdanahib9617 Год назад

    one of my favorite youtube channel

  • @maryclarafjare
    @maryclarafjare Год назад

    This was cool, I learned so much! Thank you!

  • @roelantverhoeven371
    @roelantverhoeven371 Год назад +1

    easely the most menacing looking biplane ever...

  • @Simon_Nonymous
    @Simon_Nonymous Год назад +2

    I wonder if War Thunder could be tempted to work backwards from the current stable of biplanes to create a full Spanish Civil war plane set - I don't think there are many missing - and maybe even wind all the way back through interwar planes to the Great War, even if they would have to create a new category, like they did between coastal and bluewater fleets?

    • @adrianramos9644
      @adrianramos9644 Год назад +2

      That's my biggest wish but it won't happen, Gaijin (war thunder developers) are only centered on top tier jets at the moment and probably won't look back. But I hope they do someday

  • @PaperworkNinja
    @PaperworkNinja Год назад

    That was a great presentation on an interesting plane!

  • @ianhartley395
    @ianhartley395 Год назад

    I get Typhoon vibes from this plane with that chin scoop. Both are intimidating and extremely cool looking airplanes

  • @johnmay6090
    @johnmay6090 Год назад

    Interesting old video on this plane. Well done!

  • @frankisimpa1920
    @frankisimpa1920 2 месяца назад

    Great video. Only a correction: no French volunteers flew the Hawker Fury (with Hispano engines), only Spaniard pilots, and Lieutenant Monico was downed by Garcia LaCalle, who would be an Ace on the Republican side and would rise to the range of Commander and chief of all republican fighters.

  •  Год назад +9

    Nice video, but you made a small error at the beginning of the Spanish civil war. You named a city "Corboda" when it's Córdoba :-)

    • @mogaman28
      @mogaman28 Год назад

      The tick over the O mark the stress

    • @JTA1961
      @JTA1961 Год назад

      Is that where Chrysler robbed the name from for their car ?

    •  Год назад

      @@JTA1961 It is very possible, there are also cities in Latin America named after the spanish one

  • @user-ls4kz9zu7r
    @user-ls4kz9zu7r Год назад +3

    Slowak - hungarian war was în march 1939. Not în 1938. There were no Gloster Gladiator , Letov S328, PZL 24, Bloch 151, Avia B534 in Spainsh civil war.

  • @patjohnson3100
    @patjohnson3100 Год назад

    Very interesting and enjoyable video.

  • @davidclare4983
    @davidclare4983 Год назад

    Thanks!

  • @salvagedb2470
    @salvagedb2470 Год назад +5

    " the Ariel equivilant of Seal clubbing " , luv it..Good one Rex as always.

    • @daayoungs4326
      @daayoungs4326 Год назад +2

      Only outdone by when he compared the rocket-assisted Heinkel fighter to a sleep-deprived honey badger.

    • @salvagedb2470
      @salvagedb2470 Год назад +1

      @@daayoungs4326 Ha ha ! Rex can be relied up for some real winners of the verbal humour..

  • @jehoiakimelidoronila5450
    @jehoiakimelidoronila5450 Год назад +1

    Didn't realize that some "black and white" reels are actually from war thunder

  • @joseantonioplaza8596
    @joseantonioplaza8596 Год назад

    The cockroach nickname comes from a popular song; that’s the reason behind the cockroach is depicted playing a trumpet

  • @jasonz7788
    @jasonz7788 Год назад

    Thanks Rex

  • @superjuca55
    @superjuca55 Год назад

    Nice trolling atempt against the King of Fighters camarade Polikarpov. Very nice humor. Gulag for you.

  • @JohnSmith-rw8uh
    @JohnSmith-rw8uh 7 месяцев назад

    Need to do the later Italian fighters the Macchi 202 and 205. The Reggiane 2001 and 2005

  • @bambukouk
    @bambukouk Год назад +1

    interestingly at 14:05 what looks like PZL P-11

  • @oldesertguy9616
    @oldesertguy9616 Год назад

    What a handsome plane.

  • @MemorialRifleRange
    @MemorialRifleRange Год назад

    Thank you

  • @volters9561
    @volters9561 Год назад +3

    14:05 It's a Greek PZL P-24,

  • @onkelmicke9670
    @onkelmicke9670 Год назад +1

    It would be nice to see the Ar 68

  • @yoloman3607
    @yoloman3607 Год назад

    In warthunder this thing gets explosive 12.7mm ammunition and a jacked climb rate, it is the terror of bottom tier.

  • @williamharvey8895
    @williamharvey8895 Год назад

    Arial seal clubbing, and the beatings will continue. Classic lol

  • @worrierqueen5695
    @worrierqueen5695 6 дней назад

    I hate to be a pain but according to the Aircraft overview playlist, the 90th video is "It Rewrote The Book On Bomber Design | Martin B-10 [Aircraft Overview #43]?" making following the site's direction difficult.

  • @RemusKingOfRome
    @RemusKingOfRome Год назад

    Would be great to fly such in a "Spanish Civil War" scenario for IL2 Blitz.

  • @tombogan03884
    @tombogan03884 8 месяцев назад +1

    2:00 The 7. 7 caliber Breda was a piece of junk , the larger caliber however was an excellent gun, used by the British in many WW II armored vehicles.

  • @lewiswestfall2687
    @lewiswestfall2687 Год назад

    thanks

  • @msytdc1577
    @msytdc1577 Год назад +1

    1:58 okay, but why the little propeller above the engine? At 5:39 it's gone, with the pod being only a fuel tank. Half the photos and the 3D model has the propeller so it clearly served some purpose...

    • @kitronkid
      @kitronkid Год назад +1

      Fuel pump or dynamo my guess.

    • @msytdc1577
      @msytdc1577 Год назад

      @@kitronkid Well I thought maybe electrical, but there was no radio installed in this model per the video, and presumably it would only working while in forward motion while flying, so that's not much good for use by the engine. I doubt the plane had or needed hydraulic controls of any sort at the speeds it flew at, and it has fixed landing gear, so I doubt it'd be that. I mean maybe it could be a fuel pump but what benefit would there be to route the fuel all the way up there and then back to the engine when you could simply use a vacuum or mechanical pump attached to the engine where the fuel needs to end up anyway, and again same issue with when it would be usable, so at most it could be supplemental, not suitable for the engine at idle.

  • @OgrabliatorKorovanov
    @OgrabliatorKorovanov Год назад +2

    hmmm. if fiat was "a king of spanish skies"... then who was I-16? no to mention bf-109...

  • @Abdullah-mn6sw
    @Abdullah-mn6sw Год назад

    Best early plane in War thunder.

  • @Jawst
    @Jawst Год назад +1

    4 adverts interrupted me already, and only 15 minutes in!!!

  • @jeebus6263
    @jeebus6263 Год назад

    interesting interwar development

  • @jackdale9831
    @jackdale9831 Год назад

    A Daimler-Benz DB 601/603 was put in a CR-42 Falco, normally configured with a Radial engine. The so modded CR-42/Db engine, made it the "fastest-Biplane" of the war @ 250+mph in level flight, although only one was converted. Was a DB 603 ever used on a CR-32? Do you know if the "Blue Division" of Spanish Volunteers, ever had a "ground-attack 'Wing' " of HA--32s/Cr-42s, or did they depend solely on the Luftwaffe as their "Air Force?" A DB-603 would have doubled,--almost tripled the HP of the Fiat engine, and would've Extended its use as a night-fighter/ground-attacker, because it would've flown as fast as the Ju-87, but would have been more nimble. It could carry more Weight of bombs, if the fusilage construction was "UP to it" Of course, one wouldn't DIVE a Bip-fighter, as one would a Stuka, unless you were trying to blow-out a fire