U.S.A.F. 13th B.S. B-57B "Canberra" Air Strikes - Vietnam 1967 (Restored)

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • U.S.A.F. 13th B.S. B-57B "Canberra" Air Strikes - Vietnam 1967 (Restored)
    The Martin B-57 was the American license built version of the British English Electric "Canberra." It was produce in several variants. The B-57B version was the most widely used "tactical" aircraft. This film shows planes from the U.S.A.F. 13th B.S. performing missions in Vietnam in the summer- fall of 1967. At that time the Squadron was operating out of Da Nang Air Base. Parts of the surviving film are very dark with significant color shifts. I was able to restore them using digital technology. The original film is silent. I added sound effects.
    Zeno
    Zeno's Warbird Video Drive-In
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Комментарии • 32

  • @ZenosWarbirds
    @ZenosWarbirds  Год назад

    Your purchases in our video store help make this channel possible! (Our videos are not monetized. RUclips acts in mysterious ways.)
    Visit our aviation DVD store at www.zenosflightshop.com for the World's largest selection of World War 2 & vintage jet aircraft aviation videos.
    We have 100s of films in our library and have licensed footage to major TV networks and cable channels world wide. For more info see ruclips.net/user/ZenosWarbirdsabout

  • @well-blazeredman6187
    @well-blazeredman6187 Год назад +6

    Like that tandem cockpit in the B-57.

  • @remylopez4821
    @remylopez4821 Месяц назад +2

    As a young kid in the early seventies the first model aircraft I built was of a B-57. I remember getting some fishing line and hanging it off my bedroom ceiling lamp in a diving attitude

  • @laurentj7998
    @laurentj7998 Год назад +4

    Like military planes with Vietnam camo .

  • @allgood6760
    @allgood6760 Месяц назад +1

    Thanks for this our RNZAF operated Canberra planes and we have one in a museum 👍✈️🇳🇿

  • @Nighthawke70
    @Nighthawke70 Год назад +4

    Then Col. Chuck Yeager flew B-57 missions in the Nam for awhile. his eyesight got him more than a few shacks with debris blowing out the other end of a tunnel he hit on the other side of the same hill. He also trained bomber pilots there as well.

    • @laurentj7998
      @laurentj7998 Год назад +3

      Yeager has lived his whole life as an Adventure 😎🤙

  • @petersmith7126
    @petersmith7126 5 дней назад

    All Canberras carried a crew of two .... Majority in a side by side cockpit.... I think thd RAF B(I)6 flown by RAF Germany was single crewed with the offset canopy to Port Side and the Visually Similar PR9 had 2 with one buried in the nose of the aircraft

  • @DennisHowerton
    @DennisHowerton 15 дней назад

    The B-57B was a good looking tactical bomber, but the A-4E had a faster cruise speed, a similar bomb load, cost less to purchase and operate, and could be flown from land bases and aircraft carriers.

  • @DennisHowerton-q7m
    @DennisHowerton-q7m 3 месяца назад

    The B-57B was a fine tactical bomber, but it wasn't intended to strafe targets. That was the A-4 Skyhawk's job.

  • @localbod
    @localbod 5 месяцев назад +1

    As far as I'm aware, the Canberra was one of only two foreign combat aircraft types to be used by the United States.

    • @well-blazeredman6187
      @well-blazeredman6187 5 месяцев назад +1

      That can't be correct. The Spitfire and Mosquito were both flown by American forces in WW2.

    • @localbod
      @localbod 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@well-blazeredman6187 Yes, however the Harrier and Canberra were both manufactured on license and became part of the U.S. inventory.
      The Spitfire and Mosquito were only used in the ETO and they weren't based stateside.

    • @andrewwmacfadyen6958
      @andrewwmacfadyen6958 5 месяцев назад

      Also Beaufighter

    • @andrewwmacfadyen6958
      @andrewwmacfadyen6958 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@localbod Harrier production was joint, the Harrier II was a much higher percentage US.

  • @TeargasHorse
    @TeargasHorse Год назад +2

    Was the license built Canberra the only non-US combat aircraft to fly for the US? And yes, the Merlin engine was license built....oh yeah, the Harrier!! Any more?

    • @ZenosWarbirds
      @ZenosWarbirds  Год назад

      I’m not sure what your point is. If you spend some time on my channel, you’ll find that none of that is news to me. As a matter of fact, I uploaded a Harrier video recently. Have a nice day😊

    • @well-blazeredman6187
      @well-blazeredman6187 Год назад +1

      The US received some British aircraft in WW2. I can recall seeing Spitfires and Mosquitos in US colours. PR variants, I think.

    • @ZenosWarbirds
      @ZenosWarbirds  Год назад +1

      That’s correct.I think the Mosquitoes were from Canada. From the USA Britain received & operated B-17s, B-24, B-25s, B-26s A-20s, A-29s, Marin Marylands, Lockheed Venturas, P51s, F6Fs, F4Us & TBF Avengers. 👍

    • @FPilotBierce
      @FPilotBierce Год назад

      When the AEF went to France in the First World War, all their airplanes were British or French. Most of the fighter squadrons had SPADs or Nieuport 28s, plus there was one squadron with SE5As and another with Sopwith Camels. The American bomber squadrons had DH4s (some built under license in the States with Liberty engines) or SPAD 11s (like Billy Mitchell's one in the Smithsonian collection) or Salmsons.

    • @ZenosWarbirds
      @ZenosWarbirds  Год назад

      The American aircraft most produced & used by Britain & the U.S. in WW1 were variants of Curtiss seaplane long range flying boats for anti submarine & reconnaissance duties and the Curtiss “Jenny” JN-4 trainer.

  • @nonnobissolum
    @nonnobissolum Год назад

    What is going on in the general vicinity of 9 minutes 15 seconds? Perfect white Ark transiting across the mountain top? Too short and inaccurate to be a guided-missile I would think I must have failed, and hard time believing that something represented a secondary explosion them that aren't so perfectly along the flight path over the top and down the other side? Excuse any voice to text errors. I'm sure you get the gist of what I'm saying.

    • @Phill87Cro
      @Phill87Cro Год назад

      Napalm container bounced back in the air?

  • @lightbox617
    @lightbox617 Год назад +2

    t
    The most interesting thing that the US did with the Camberra was triple it's wing span, hyper pressurize the cockpit an send it out a recon at 60,000 plus feet.

    • @SteveGillow
      @SteveGillow Год назад

      I used to work with a gentleman who was a navigator on the big wing during Vietnam. Told stories about getting flown back to the States for be fitted for his pumpkin suit and how the pilot let him take the stick for a bit, but he ended up in a shallow dive that over-speeded it. Apparently its coffin corner was only little bit more forgiving than the U-2.

    • @mytmousemalibu
      @mytmousemalibu Год назад

      I have a patch for the WB-57 Long Wing given to me by a WB crewman.

    • @andrewhunter180
      @andrewhunter180 Год назад

      British flue them over the USSR in 1953

    • @khb6686
      @khb6686 2 месяца назад +1

      My dad was the back seat radio intercept crewman in that model for years.

  • @50buttfish
    @50buttfish Год назад +2

    The early version of A-10 Warthog, only with BOMBS!

    • @andrewhunter180
      @andrewhunter180 Год назад

      You must not know a lot if you think a B57 is the early version of the A10

    • @ZenosWarbirds
      @ZenosWarbirds  Год назад

      It was a joke son.😉