Germany's U-boat Rotor Kite of WW2

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  • Опубликовано: 11 сен 2024
  • An overview of the Focke-Achgelis Fa 330 and gyrogliders/autogyros.
    More War Movie Content: / johnnyjohnsonesq
    Request a review: johnnyjohnsonreviews@gmail.com
    Movies/Games featured:
    Das Boot 1981
    U-Boat simulator - Channel: Crush Depth U-Boat Simulator
    #ww2 #history #aircraft

Комментарии • 531

  • @moistmike4150
    @moistmike4150 Год назад +277

    I can imagine being that "Autogyro Guy" towed behind the U-Boat and you report, "Hans! There are two British destroyers moving in on our position!"... and suddenly, your cable tow cable goes slack...

    • @davidshannon5877
      @davidshannon5877 Год назад +16

      Hans! Hans? Vhere have you gone?

    • @wanderingontheway
      @wanderingontheway Год назад

      ❤😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😮

    • @Graeko
      @Graeko Год назад +12

      I would imagine falling generates enough speed to keep the rotors to a reasonable pace, possibly allowing for a somewhat soft crash landing.

    • @slome815
      @slome815 Год назад +11

      @@Graeko Well it's an autogyro, so it would be able to land softly without an engine.

    • @36minutesago7
      @36minutesago7 Год назад +16

      @@Graeko don’t think the landing would be the pilots main concern, but floating in the cold ocean wondering if the sub is going to surface and pick him up might be.

  • @donaldasayers
    @donaldasayers Год назад +79

    A British report on this note drily that in the event of a crash dive the Focke-Achgelis Fa 330 could release the cable, the pilot could make a controlled decent to the sea and 'drown in the usual manner.'

    • @tsoliot5913
      @tsoliot5913 6 месяцев назад +4

      That's unbearably British

    • @jackthebassman1
      @jackthebassman1 3 месяца назад +1

      @@tsoliot5913I agree as a Brit 😂

  • @FlyWithMe_666
    @FlyWithMe_666 Год назад +276

    “Plane alarm! Dive! Dive” … 5 minutes later “Where’s Helikopter Hans? Damn, I think we forgot something…”

    • @alltat
      @alltat Год назад +39

      "Wait... what did this plane look like, exactly?"

    • @warpartyattheoutpost4987
      @warpartyattheoutpost4987 Год назад +20

      @@alltat... "He'll be fine, we'll tape all of his favorite shows."

    • @BROTHERHOOD_OF_NOD1995
      @BROTHERHOOD_OF_NOD1995 Год назад +34

      YOU LEFT ME BEHIND

    • @jastrapper190
      @jastrapper190 Год назад +11

      How deep did we dive? 100 feet? And he was how high when we dived? 90 feet you say? Yeah… I think we might have a problem…

    • @edi9892
      @edi9892 Год назад +8

      This reminds me of a class trip with multiple boats. At the end, the teacher: is everybody here? The class: yes.
      Meanwhile: a bunch of kids struggling to swim ashore through ice cold water and having to tramp home...

  • @User_Un_Friendly
    @User_Un_Friendly Год назад +288

    Astonishingly, I actually remember coming across these towed auto gyros during my WW 2 obsession in high school. 😮. And marveling at their ingenuity.

    • @wirelessone2986
      @wirelessone2986 Год назад +1

      Whats more MAHVALUS DAHLING is well developed radar for unterseeboots

    • @sebastiansuteu1829
      @sebastiansuteu1829 Год назад +1

      @@wirelessone2986 why make an effective radar when you can use this shit?

    • @sergeantbigmac
      @sergeantbigmac Год назад +5

      I think its funny how so many of us of a certain age had that period of WWII obsession in our teens. I wonder what the common denominator was.
      I just wish I wouldve done something productive with it! Like getting a history degree and working in a museum or archival work or something. Or at the very least had the gumption to interview many Veterans I met most of whom have now passed on.

    • @wirelessone2986
      @wirelessone2986 Год назад +1

      @@sebastiansuteu1829LOL very true

    • @jonhohensee3258
      @jonhohensee3258 Год назад

      User un friendly - Astonishingly???

  • @fabianrios9659
    @fabianrios9659 Год назад +114

    I can't believe I'm just now discovering your channel, the movie references to the topic at hand, your humor, the on point social commentary, the constant monty python references, I think this is one of my favorite history channels ever! Great stuff!

    • @JohnnyJohnsonEsq
      @JohnnyJohnsonEsq  Год назад +13

      Thanks for the very encouraging words. I try never to miss out on a chance at working in Monty Python :)

  • @malakiblunt
    @malakiblunt Год назад +92

    WW2 helicopters would be a cool subject

    • @JohnnyJohnsonEsq
      @JohnnyJohnsonEsq  Год назад +40

      Absolutely. Korean War helicopters would be fun too. Lots of MASH clips.

    • @User_Un_Friendly
      @User_Un_Friendly Год назад +8

      @@JohnnyJohnsonEsq And the first rocket armed tank-buster helicopters that the US Army develops in violation of the agreement between the Air Force and Army. You see, there was an agreement in place between the Army and Air Force concerning armed aircraft…which only the Air Force was allowed to have. 😮. Fortunately, the rivalry between American service branches never got as bad as the problems between the imperial Japanese army and navy.

    • @warpartyattheoutpost4987
      @warpartyattheoutpost4987 Год назад +4

      @@JohnnyJohnsonEsq... GET TO THA CHOPPA!

    • @warpartyattheoutpost4987
      @warpartyattheoutpost4987 Год назад

      @@User_Un_Friendly, the US Army/Air Force rivalry has a lot of parallels to the US Navy/Marines rivalry.

    • @User_Un_Friendly
      @User_Un_Friendly Год назад +2

      @@warpartyattheoutpost4987 That was actually really bad. The F-ing Navy left the Marines to twist in the wind by refusing to resupply Wake Island, and sailed away from Guadalcanal. Without Japanese rations, the Marines would have starved at Guadalcanal. 😮

  • @mrmicro22
    @mrmicro22 Год назад +45

    Despite my WW2 obsession in high school, I have never heard of this aircraft. Amazing.

  • @mattandrews8528
    @mattandrews8528 Год назад +80

    Now that would definitely be the coolest way to be towed around behind a boat. I dig it.

    • @warpartyattheoutpost4987
      @warpartyattheoutpost4987 Год назад +2

      It's shark free.

    • @johnbeauvais3159
      @johnbeauvais3159 Год назад +1

      I’ve wanted to make something like this for years just to tow behind a car or boat

    • @josedorsaith5261
      @josedorsaith5261 Год назад +1

      @@johnbeauvais3159 oh that would be cool

    • @tissuepaper9962
      @tissuepaper9962 Год назад

      ​@@johnbeauvais3159 behind a car is veeeeeery sketchy, you need a very big clear area lest you crash and die on a house, tree, power cable, etc.

  • @paleoph6168
    @paleoph6168 Год назад +38

    4:40
    That ending lmao!

  • @brianlevine5213
    @brianlevine5213 Год назад +32

    I saw a "kite" at the Auto and Technical Museum in Sinsheim,Germany. It was on display but no information placard. I thought it was a training aid for learning to fly helicopters. Now I know it a kite for a submarine.

    • @femboyorganist
      @femboyorganist Год назад +1

      Sinsheim and spayer have amazing collections but awful displays... its just like going through a warehouse, so there's minimal education value

    • @Shaun_Jones
      @Shaun_Jones 6 месяцев назад

      There’s also one hanging from the ceiling of the National Museum of the US Air Force in Dayton, Ohio.

  • @mxdwnfrcemdia
    @mxdwnfrcemdia Год назад +79

    holy fuck that ending got me in tears. that caught me off guard

    • @The411
      @The411 Год назад +9

      Me too, first time on the channel and the end ref to flat-tardery made me laugh.

    • @ThorsDecree
      @ThorsDecree Год назад +2

      @@The411 Me three, new and will probably be sticking around. Good thing I wasn't drinking coffee at by the end! This is a little bit of WWII aviation history I was not aware of :)

    • @Kruppt808
      @Kruppt808 Год назад +1

      ty, some vids just throw away the last few seconds on the ending..... JJ keeps it spicy :)

  • @DavidCowie2022
    @DavidCowie2022 Год назад +17

    They have one of these in the air museum at Duxford in England. Probably the one that Johnny says was captured.

  • @TallDude73
    @TallDude73 Год назад +17

    A Like for the flat earther joke at the end. About the 330, I always thought the pilot would be ecstatic to go up in it, to be free of the claustrophobic submarine and free as a bird.... for a little while.

    • @JohnnyJohnsonEsq
      @JohnnyJohnsonEsq  Год назад +6

      As terrifying as the kite would be, I'd probably be happier up there than anywhere else on the uboat.

    • @paddington1670
      @paddington1670 Год назад +2

      DIVE DIVE DIVE!!!
      wait, guys!

  • @malakiblunt
    @malakiblunt Год назад +41

    some Autogyros with rotor pre rotation can make vertical take offs they use the engine to spin up the rotor then literaly jump into the air

    • @dimasduarte6340
      @dimasduarte6340 Год назад +1

      That´s true, but few attemps have been made to actually produce them and those that did failed, right now we´re working on the design of a gyrocopter with vtol capabilities, hopefully we can have it flying in the next year or two

    • @dielink182
      @dielink182 Год назад

      @@dimasduarte6340 Cool! Where can I see that?

    • @chouseification
      @chouseification Год назад

      @@dimasduarte6340 there was a remote controlled autogyro kit on sale in the early 90s that was able to do some truly amazing things. The key innovation in that kit that made it world class was they added another channel (expensive back then) to add a clutch servo - that allowed you to start the motor, step back a safe distance and then engage the clutch to spin up the rotor - once you got them to speed, you could pull the clutch then feed some throttle and the thing would apparently leap up and forward, taking only a couple of feet (5-10 at most if you gave it enough gas) of rolling distance before it leaped skyward.

  • @theplasticcommando7394
    @theplasticcommando7394 Год назад +33

    These gyro pilots should have been awarded the Iron Cross just for being a flying submariner!

  • @StrGzr101
    @StrGzr101 Год назад +3

    Mr. Johnson, what say you we hit HomeDepot, build us one of these things, and get somebody to tow it along the Antarctic Ice Wall that divides our plain-et from the nethers that's full of demons and whatnot. No, wait, that's silly. It'll bump the dome. Never mind. Seriously, great work here. I've never even heard of these whirly kites. You bagged a new subscriber.

    • @JohnnyJohnsonEsq
      @JohnnyJohnsonEsq  Год назад +2

      haha right on. Welcome to the channel and thanks for the laugh.

  • @DimBeam1
    @DimBeam1 Год назад +6

    The outro burn was prefect.

  • @TheMilitantHorse
    @TheMilitantHorse Год назад +9

    That burn at the end though, hot damn Johnny.

  • @ExcavationNation
    @ExcavationNation Год назад +3

    Congratulations on 100k

  • @connorhernandez6570
    @connorhernandez6570 Год назад +6

    “Hey captain, do ya think some kid would fly a kite in the middle of the Atlantic?”

  • @mbryson2899
    @mbryson2899 Год назад +12

    Balls of steel. It reminds me of the Zeppelin observer in "Hell's Angels." First to be sacrificed...

  • @MichalKaczorowski
    @MichalKaczorowski Год назад +10

    The thumbnail of the film is a graphic from the 1/16 Takom kit :)

  • @rexmundi3108
    @rexmundi3108 Год назад +7

    I've never seen this before. I'm speechless.

  • @markfeldhaus3693
    @markfeldhaus3693 Год назад +2

    Wow first time i've ever heard about the FA 330. Thank you!!

  • @erintyres3609
    @erintyres3609 Год назад +1

    An Fa 330 is on display at the Smithsonian Institution's Udar-Hazy center near Washington, DC. The display card for it reads in part, "A crew could assemble or disassemble an Fa 330 in three minutes." "U-boat commanders disliked the aircraft -- it gave away their submarine's location both visually and on radar."

  • @CGFIELDS
    @CGFIELDS Год назад +3

    Love the funny 1 liners & Dad jokes at the end of your videos 😂🤣

  • @jaggar28
    @jaggar28 Год назад +3

    The last part about the "Flat Earthers" was hilarious

  • @PSC4.1
    @PSC4.1 Год назад +18

    Imagine being a helicopter pilot in ww2, weirdest thing imaginable.

    • @oldmonkey7720
      @oldmonkey7720 Год назад +2

      not only helicopter pilot (they existed in Wehrmacht or luftwaffe too), but submarine helicopter pilot 😃

  • @itsjohndell
    @itsjohndell Год назад +3

    You missed the autogyro arrival of W.C. Fields in International House!

    • @warpartyattheoutpost4987
      @warpartyattheoutpost4987 Год назад +3

      If it was International House of Pancakes the flat Earthers would've loved it!

    • @itsjohndell
      @itsjohndell Год назад +2

      @@warpartyattheoutpost4987 Good one!

  • @warpartyattheoutpost4987
    @warpartyattheoutpost4987 Год назад +2

    No Gyro Captain from *ROAD WARRIOR?!*
    *"That's dishonest! Low."*

  • @colingibson3921
    @colingibson3921 Год назад +4

    I did read that they could have the pilot in a parachute, and that the aircraft had a quick release. ie. It would detached the blades and he would separate from the frame to descend alone on the shute if a warship or what ever was spotted. ??

    • @SpidaMez
      @SpidaMez Год назад +1

      So you are saying that thing is more safe than an Ah-64?

    • @warpartyattheoutpost4987
      @warpartyattheoutpost4987 Год назад

      @@SpidaMez... about as safe as holding Cuisinart over your head while ice skating?
      Maybe.

    • @grantm6514
      @grantm6514 Год назад +3

      You are correct about jettisoning the rotor, but I think the pilot stayed in his seat since the parachute pack was behind the rotor mast.

  • @mastur3677
    @mastur3677 Год назад +5

    I'm pretty sure I bought one of these at outpost for scrap before

    • @danhay8933
      @danhay8933 Год назад

      Ah the 2 seater model, a fine craft indeed

  • @bigblue6917
    @bigblue6917 Год назад +6

    Never apologise to flat earthers. Their problems are all self-inflicted.
    I do know about Focke-Achgelis Fa 330 as I came across it some time ago. One of the problems it faced was that with the greater use of longer range maritime aircraft and escort carriers it became a liability. Ironically the submarines ability to crash-dive so quickly came about because those submarines used at the beginning of the war took tow minutes to crash-dive which was to long and left them vulnerable to attack.
    It may have worked much more successfully earlier in the war but by the time it came into service it was too late.

  • @MrArgus11111
    @MrArgus11111 Год назад +7

    No way someone would talk me into that thing for any amount of money. Especially in a warzone. if the Uboat dives without you... forget it.

  • @Brood_Master
    @Brood_Master Год назад +2

    Love that quip about flat earthers at the end... 😂

  • @Marylandbrony
    @Marylandbrony Год назад +239

    I'm a flat earther and this video made perfect sense.

  • @frin4053
    @frin4053 Год назад +15

    This looks like a heavy inspiration for the Rust "minicopter". Although it has been proven that the Rust thing, an actual small helicopter, would not at all work in real life, the resemblance between the real and fictional game versions is interesting.

  • @jamesboyle6134
    @jamesboyle6134 Год назад +3

    Mama, can we have an aircraft carrier?
    Nein, we have aircraft carriers at home!
    Aircraft carriers at home: ...

  • @cristosl
    @cristosl Год назад +1

    The swipe at flat earthers got you a thumbs up

  • @starzkream
    @starzkream Год назад +3

    Das Boot, the greatest submarine movie ever made. It blows the rest out of the water.

  • @flomisa6866
    @flomisa6866 Год назад +3

    Amazing video and explanation

  • @canigetanoorah
    @canigetanoorah Год назад +3

    Awesome video, now i need to get ready to go gyroboating. You know that super popular water sport that everyone loves

  • @stevenschwartzhoff1703
    @stevenschwartzhoff1703 Год назад +9

    THere is one in the Museum of the US Airforce in Dayton, Ohio. I was always amazed by it as a kid, but this is to first time I saw how it was really used. Thanks.

    • @lot2196
      @lot2196 Год назад

      Yes, I saw it the other month when I visited. Greatest museum in the world! I'm lucky to only live a little over an hour away.

  • @aaronjohn6586
    @aaronjohn6586 Год назад +1

    Best Auto Gyro was "Little Nellie" from James Bond film, "You only live twice"

  • @user-op8fg3ny3j
    @user-op8fg3ny3j Год назад +4

    Gaijin: Adds it as an overpriced premium

  • @camelthegamer7165
    @camelthegamer7165 Год назад +2

    I love how one step is "pray."

  • @joekurtz8303
    @joekurtz8303 Год назад +1

    Learn something New every day.
    Thnx hadn't seen or heard of this craft on a submarine, historical concept for observation, thnx

  • @loishope6605
    @loishope6605 Год назад +2

    There Is one on display at the National AF Museum at Wright Patterson AFB.

  • @williamashbless7904
    @williamashbless7904 Год назад +5

    The minimum towing speed was 17 kts. That’s pretty much flank speed for a U-boat and burning that kind of fuel was usually reserved for making an attack or overtaking a convoy.
    Also, U-boats were tiny and had a crew of 40-50 seamen.
    Risking the loss of even one crewman was a huge risk in operations for such small ships.
    I suppose the success off Madagascar had a lot to do with lack of allied resources in such a remote theatre of war.
    Again, you provide excellent information in a concise manner that doesn’t bore your viewers.

    • @keithammleter3824
      @keithammleter3824 Год назад +2

      As the man said, they could tow it into the wind, so that the lift is as you get from the sum of boat speed and wind speed, Strong winds are routine out in the ocean. I don't think the German Navy fretted too much about loosing a man now and then. They were cross-trained - no man on board was indispensible. You seriously risked your life serving in a U-boat anyway.

    • @shelbyseelbach9568
      @shelbyseelbach9568 Год назад

      Wind speed, not ground speed. There is a big difference. Same reason carriers launch and recover aircraft while pointed into the prevailing wind.

  • @superchucksvd
    @superchucksvd Год назад +2

    I just got back from the air museum in Dayton and youtube must have heard me talking about thier example because this video popped up. Great video by the way and long live our great flying pancake in space.

  • @Thoroughly_Wet
    @Thoroughly_Wet Год назад +1

    "Ve needz to dive!"
    "But Hans iz shtill up zhere!"
    "I don't givez a damn!"

  • @getkraken8064
    @getkraken8064 Год назад +2

    If I ever write another novel, the U-boat will definitely have one of these. Thanks.

  • @gooraway1
    @gooraway1 Год назад +2

    You missed the scene in Das Boot of the Captain waterskiing behind the U Boat. He hoped it would catch on after the war!

  • @gourdlord3064
    @gourdlord3064 Год назад +4

    Seems like a cool item for a horror movie with a u-boat crew as the protagonists. They send the kite above the mysterious fog, he radios back sounds of wonder and awe and then one final cut short scream as **something** gets him.

    • @dragonfell5078
      @dragonfell5078 Год назад +1

      Yooo that's terrifying

    • @ye11owman29
      @ye11owman29 Год назад

      A big ginat man picks him up and eats him and says More?

  • @djangorheinhardt
    @djangorheinhardt Год назад +4

    I am surprised noone has mentioned " Little Nellie " the gyrocopter used in one of the James Bond films .It was built and flown by a Commander Wallis who was made up to look like Bond .It is on display at his farm in the midlands ( i think ! )

  • @opaaloys
    @opaaloys Год назад +1

    If we compare modern warfare and WW2. We can generally use it for reconaisance. If you have Autogiro-Kite pulled by a Jeep in the rear of an convoy and the Comander gives a generally order of duck and cover. You get immedately the result how good and fast a convoi is vanishing from the road. A Comander of a Tank battalion gets a good overview of the position of his tanks . To decifer the Enigma on one hand and a Capitain moves his tanks with radio and autogiro -kite that is edge braking in that time.

  • @tk-5268
    @tk-5268 Год назад +3

    *starts video*
    "What did you just call me johnny!?"

  • @BrownFoxWarrior
    @BrownFoxWarrior Год назад +9

    Poor guy never achieved his dream of gyro boating as a popular water sport.

  • @eamonnclabby7067
    @eamonnclabby7067 Год назад +1

    I didn't,t see that one coming...nice one ,Johnny....

  • @hkkhgffh3613
    @hkkhgffh3613 Год назад +1

    Guys this footage is from a movie called Das Boot!

  • @aerohk
    @aerohk Год назад +2

    Just when you thought you have heard about all the crazy engineering project the german has done, there are always more.

  • @edwardbianchi192
    @edwardbianchi192 Год назад +1

    Never seen or heard about this. Thanks!

  • @jeromewagschal9485
    @jeromewagschal9485 Год назад +9

    That's amazing...I was not aware of the existence of that tiny unpowered aircraft...
    From a technical point of view I wonder how fast the rotor blades turned in order to keep it up in the air like that ?

    • @SilliamWilliam-xb7sl
      @SilliamWilliam-xb7sl Год назад

      There's a video on spanish autogyros and if i remember correctly they don't spin that fast because the craft itself is lightweight, it only needs considerable power to generate lift . if you want a related video there's a channel called Mustard that showcases an urban autogyro concept with rocket powered rotor for take off

  • @geordiedog1749
    @geordiedog1749 Год назад +1

    The comedy value of one of them having to be wound in pronto once a enemy plane CBDR was sighted would be quality.

  • @rismarck
    @rismarck Год назад +4

    Here I go again learning more bout history in 5 minutes than 3 years at a university. Great channel Johnny!

  • @mikemarcus214
    @mikemarcus214 Год назад +1

    Nice - interesting content and explained well... ...and I loved the dig at the end.

  • @blazeelvirafirehoof7844
    @blazeelvirafirehoof7844 Год назад +1

    If you put a small engine on the autogyro, you could fly the slow little aircraft around after severing the cable for when the submarine crash dive to avoid getting blown up. Doesn't have to a big or powerful one. Just enough to keep above stall speed in a straight line.

  • @francisebbecke2727
    @francisebbecke2727 Год назад

    I had never heard of these before. Thanks for posting these.

  • @rolfagten857
    @rolfagten857 Год назад +3

    are there any German Rotor Kites still preserved. And where is the Gyrocopter scene from "The Rocketeer" (1991) ??

    • @OldJoe212
      @OldJoe212 Год назад

      Check this out... en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Focke-Achgelis_Fa_330

    • @warpartyattheoutpost4987
      @warpartyattheoutpost4987 Год назад +1

      ... and where is Jennifer Connelly?

    • @rolfagten857
      @rolfagten857 Год назад

      @@warpartyattheoutpost4987 in the Cockpit in TopGun Mavrick

  • @blasterofmuppets4754
    @blasterofmuppets4754 Год назад +1

    These are actually mentioned in the Book "Das Boot" .

  • @clearcreek69
    @clearcreek69 Год назад +2

    This reminds me of the helicopter pilot from The Road Warrior.

  • @felixcat9318
    @felixcat9318 Год назад

    The Pilot had absolutely no need to deploy a parachute because his aircraft was always in autorotation and capable of making a fully controlled descent.
    His greatest concern was egressing the autogyro before it sank and not being struck by the rotor blades, or fragments of them if they'd shattered on impact with the waters surface!
    Thereafter, not being caught up in cables or wreckage as the autogyro quickly sank.
    Having got that far, surviving the water temperature and sea conditions in his liferaft and praying for rescue by his submarine, or by anyone else that happened on by.

  • @haziqamsyar2009
    @haziqamsyar2009 Год назад +1

    this kite gangsta until the line snaps

  • @rbaldino
    @rbaldino Год назад

    That last line was savage, lol.

  • @regard.pduplessis2109
    @regard.pduplessis2109 Год назад +1

    Another great video of something i never knew about.

  • @guylelanglois6642
    @guylelanglois6642 Год назад

    Amazing that at sixty plus and being a WW2 history buff I have never heard of this unit. Thanks

  • @guardrailbiter
    @guardrailbiter Год назад

    "What did you do aboard the submarine?"
    "Hehe. Pilot."

  • @mikebyrd8278
    @mikebyrd8278 Год назад +3

    They sure are fun to fly

  • @kevinc8744
    @kevinc8744 Год назад +2

    Think about it... it would take balls of steel to pilot one of these aircraft.

  • @coffeecocaine8878
    @coffeecocaine8878 Год назад +5

    Wow gyro boating, why didnt that ever take off lol

  • @jeffreyfitzgerald1779
    @jeffreyfitzgerald1779 Год назад +2

    I thought the drawback of the autogyro has always been that it requires an extra long runway for take off. Short landing, but it takes a long time to build up lift in the rotors to take off under it's own power.

    • @kaasmeester5903
      @kaasmeester5903 Год назад

      IIRC some autogyros have a little starter engine to spin up the rotors a little, before starting the take off roll.
      I used to fly an R/C autogyro, it did require a bit of a run on take off even after giving the rotors a spin by hand, but it lifted off nicely at a relatively low speed. Take off took about as long as with a fixed wing plane, but using less runway.

    • @timhancock6626
      @timhancock6626 Год назад

      You do need a runway, but it's not that long if you have the mechanism to spin up the rotor whilst stationary. Ken Wallis used to take off in the field behind his house in Norfolk. My late brother was a close neighbour so we used to go and watch now and again when Ken was flying. He did make it look so easy as he had decades of experience building and flying them. He was a remarkable pilot and engineer.

  • @alfredmarcos1761
    @alfredmarcos1761 Год назад +1

    This reminded me of Far Cry 4, I was thinking there is no way this thing is real...then again the truth is stranger than fiction.

  • @CNCmachiningisfun
    @CNCmachiningisfun Год назад

    I had a kite like this, when I was a kid. What an amazing thing it was :) .
    Also, I LOVED your jab at flattards.

  • @weirdshibainu
    @weirdshibainu Год назад +1

    Man...talk about a dicey assignment.

  • @timcastle165
    @timcastle165 Год назад +1

    The Smithsonian Air and Space museum in Dulles,Virginia has a FA330 on display.

  • @MyLateralThawts
    @MyLateralThawts Год назад +1

    Saw one on display in Berlin’s Technische Museum. Nice place to visit.

  • @LDN76
    @LDN76 Год назад

    Wauw, its very rare I find something new about the war, this is one of them. Never knew. Cool

  • @dapper3322
    @dapper3322 Год назад +1

    I guess this is where they got the idea for the mini in Rust.

  • @bikiniluvnguy1
    @bikiniluvnguy1 Год назад +1

    "nah, climb in, its perfectly safe....."

  • @gainerman
    @gainerman Год назад +2

    I am inspired to make a modern day auto gyro to replace my parasail

  • @joeseabert8391
    @joeseabert8391 Год назад +1

    Gyrocopter, one landed in DC by the White House and flew under radar and was piloted by a mailman. They are still around and don’t require a pilot license

  • @nicholaswimborne
    @nicholaswimborne Год назад +1

    I didn't understand a thing!
    And, the earth is flat I tell you!
    But I still enjoyed it. Thanks Johnny!

  • @alexwild4350
    @alexwild4350 Год назад

    Its not made clear in the video the difference between an auto gyro and a helicopter, it is that a helicopter can hover. An auto gyro can't hover because its rotating blades that generate the lift and have no propulsion of their own, cannot sustain enough rotation to generate enough lift without being driven forward through the air. This is why, as shown in the video, the auto gyro's amazing low speed landing is demonstrated, but that is still not a hover, its a slow speed landing.
    Germany I think did have two designs of helicopters operational during the war. They were experimental with insufficient payload to be useful.

  • @mollysmoshingtankcrew9441
    @mollysmoshingtankcrew9441 Год назад +1

    they are also increadibly dangerous. my uncle lost his life while piloting a modern gyro copter

  • @bigbird0993
    @bigbird0993 Год назад +5

    I knew helicopters were used in WW2 but did not know it dated back to 1923 and that multiple nations used it and used in this many numbers that's great to learn good vid

    • @leifvejby8023
      @leifvejby8023 Год назад +6

      These weren't helicopters but gyrogliders, unpowered autogyros.

    • @ricksmith4736
      @ricksmith4736 Год назад

      Really... Do you vote too??

    • @bigbird0993
      @bigbird0993 Год назад

      @@ricksmith4736 ?

    • @ricksmith4736
      @ricksmith4736 Год назад

      @@bigbird0993 You " Knew " helicopters were used in WW2?? What else do you " know " that is NOT true when you vote?

  • @caffineatedchef1001
    @caffineatedchef1001 Год назад +1

    They were speed running the Cayo Perico Heist

  • @hansihintersee3142
    @hansihintersee3142 Год назад +1

    You can find one near PARIS : 3 esplanade de l’Air et de l’Espace
    Le Bourget BP 173 - 93352 France - I have seen it Years before ....

  • @elebeu
    @elebeu Год назад

    That guy at 0:32 ... Smile Hans.

  • @A.R.R.Original
    @A.R.R.Original Год назад +2

    No way the Minicopter was invented in Germany 💀
    Bruh I tought rust invented that.

  • @simonbowens4489
    @simonbowens4489 Год назад

    If enemy craft were seen, the report was that the sub crash dived "and the Pilot left to drown in the normal way" 😂