What Happened To Flying Wings?

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  • Опубликовано: 26 авг 2022
  • Watch 'Tip of the Spear: The B-2 Spirit' here: nebula.tv/videos/mustard-tip-...
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    Thanks to Azzecco for producing the incredible XB-35 and YB-49 modes used in this video, visit: www.artstation.com/acez3d
    At the start of the 1940’s, flying wing aircraft seemed destined to be the next evolution in aircraft design. By eliminating structural components typically found on conventional aircraft, such as engine nacelles, fuselage and tail, parasitic drag would be reduced down to its absolute minimum. The result would be a high-lift, low-drag aircraft with unequaled speed, range and efficiency.
    Despite earlier efforts around the world to develop all-wing aircraft designs, arguably no single person was more committed to the concept than pioneering American aircraft designer Jack Northrop. Beginning in the 1920’s Northrop studied the concept, drawing up countless designs for flying wing aircraft. By 1940, he had successfully produced two prototypes, the Model 1 (“X216H”) in 1929 and the Northrop N-1M in 1940. But Northrop’s ambitions went far beyond just experimental planes.
    Responding to an urgent need for the United States to develop the first ever intercontinental bomber, in 1941 Northrop presented the United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) with a concept for an enormous flying wing bomber that would offer unparalleled speed, range and efficiency. Not only would the aircraft far outperform conventional bombers, the all-wing design would make it structurally more simple and economical to build. Impressed with Northrop’s concept, the USAAF agreed to fund the aircraft’s development, ordering an experimental model designated as the XB-35 and pre-production models designated as YB-35s. The USAAF would eventually order over 200 production aircraft which were to be designated as B-35s. Later, a jet powered version, designated as the YB-49 would also be produced.
    But engineering such unconventional aircraft would be a daunting engineering challenge for Northrop and his small team of engineers. Eliminating conventional control surfaces would maximize lift and minimize drag, but it would also create new unforeseen technical issues, many of which would only be discovered during flight testing - with tragic consequences. Despite best efforts by Northrop to solve technical issues with flying wing aircraft, solutions would prove elusive using technology available in the 1940s.
    Thanks for watching!

Комментарии • 6 тыс.

  • @MustardChannel
    @MustardChannel  Год назад +6549

    Correction: At 10:16 I accidently say "B-57" when I meant to say "B-47". The Canberra is worthy of its own video :)

    • @Mis-fe9fc
      @Mis-fe9fc Год назад +53

      all good!

    • @Loeb5
      @Loeb5 Год назад +70

      And I can’t wait for that one!

    • @remy1340
      @remy1340 Год назад +16

      BROOO I LOVE YOUR VIDS

    • @Drastt
      @Drastt Год назад +4

      Hello

    • @r2d2hunter38
      @r2d2hunter38 Год назад +26

      Yes Canberra can have it’s own video and hopefully sooner than 2 months

  • @Sundae_
    @Sundae_ Год назад +17929

    The story of Northrop being able to see his dream come true before passing away is quite heartwarming in a way

    • @maxime1776
      @maxime1776 Год назад +677

      That’s a beautiful ending 😊

    • @adenkyramud5005
      @adenkyramud5005 Год назад +716

      Gave me goosebumps. Very happy to hear that he got to see this.

    • @Alxium
      @Alxium Год назад +814

      A nice change of pace, the other videos always talk about inventors who never saw their ideas fully realized, it is always nice to hear about someone being able to see their ideas succeed.

    • @polygonalfortress
      @polygonalfortress Год назад +261

      a wholesome moment for sure i wish more historical figures could've had, to witness their dreams fulfilled

    • @n908qd7
      @n908qd7 Год назад +68

      It really was an emotional moment :)

  • @Kavaeric
    @Kavaeric Год назад +5089

    I did not know Northrop himself actually got to see the plans for the B2 stealth bomber. What a feeling that must have been.

    • @pilotgeorge2000
      @pilotgeorge2000 Год назад +361

      Not the plans, he saw S/N 001

    • @rockzs74r
      @rockzs74r Год назад +245

      And yet some self proclaimed enthusiast didn't give him one bit of credit because they taught B2 was a Nazi made

    • @satagaming9144
      @satagaming9144 Год назад +331

      @@rockzs74r Wait, you mean a plane (Ho 229) that flew three (3) times under jet power, that nobody over here saw technical details of until 1945 (after Northrop had already flown many flying wings); the designers of which never set foot on American soil, much less spoke to anyone from Northrop. A plane of which we recovered one broken wingless prototype, whose only similarity to the B-2 is that they look similar if you squint; not designed with stealth in mind; the supposed "charcoal paint" to make it so both never existed and didn't work if it had; one that Northrop tested with their own equipment, used to design the B-2, only decades after the B-2 had been designed, and found it to be worthless? You mean that plane isn't solely responsible for the B-2's existence? You mean to tell me the country that developed nuclear weapons, fire-and-forget (unlike the Fritz X) gliding AShM's (ASM-N-2 Bat, struck the escort ship Aguni from 20mi away, also Azon), the fucking B-29, etc. had technical and practical expertise with flying wing bombers by 1945?
      Shock and horror.
      Yet when you tell a wehraboo that Von Braun plagiarized all of Goddard's work, you get a 1000 word schizo-post that borders on genocidal.

    • @wingren13
      @wingren13 Год назад +17

      ayy hi kav!
      and yea the feelings i would have in that position
      'i freaking told you so'
      to the quote
      'i now know why i was kept alive all these years' to see his dream come true

    • @rockzs74r
      @rockzs74r Год назад +23

      @@satagaming9144 yeah many of those Bozzo believe that

  • @cowboyvalley
    @cowboyvalley Год назад +1544

    My uncle worked on the YB-49. He was called out of retirement to work on the B-2. He told me because so much of the technology for the YB-49 was needed for the B-2, was the reason they called him back so many years later. That, and he already had clearance.

    • @dylanjohnson4624
      @dylanjohnson4624 10 месяцев назад +50

      That’s badass. My grandpa worked on the b-1 bomber after serving in Vietnam.

    • @user-lv7ph7hs7l
      @user-lv7ph7hs7l 9 месяцев назад +78

      @@dylanjohnson4624 Cool. My gramps made decorative concrete blocks that you occasionally see in the city, pretending to be art or a place to sit but failing at both.

    • @mattm.5436
      @mattm.5436 8 месяцев назад +7

      How long would he have been retired for after he was “called back” ? Certainly not a 30 year gap as with the YB-49 and the B-2.

    • @blockstacker5614
      @blockstacker5614 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@user-lv7ph7hs7l My grandpa was a steel mill foreman who was killed on the job.

    • @wennwenn1422
      @wennwenn1422 5 месяцев назад +11

      my ancestors grew crops 😂

  • @lemonzest8650
    @lemonzest8650 Год назад +895

    It's so sad to see stories where inventors/innovators had ideas too far ahead of their time and didn't have the necessary tools/steps to make it reach its full potential. Thankfully this one had a happy ending with Northrop seeing his "flying wings" realized.

    • @nathanteach7266
      @nathanteach7266 Год назад +8

      could use it today with jet engines and better shape for passenger airlines, and then use it like a boomerang to save on fuel.....
      Reply

    • @Ihavpickle
      @Ihavpickle 11 месяцев назад

      It wasn't that far

    • @tohro6969
      @tohro6969 11 месяцев назад +9

      @@nathanteach7266 I thought about that too but maybe the ones we have are more efficient in terms of person per flight? I definitely would like to see the skies with these planes however.

    • @koalabanana1998
      @koalabanana1998 10 месяцев назад

      @@nathanteach7266 there is actually a prototype flying wing airliner called the Delft Flying-V

    • @dawid12301d
      @dawid12301d 6 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@koalabanana1998 I doubt flying wings will ever make it as passenger airliners due to a simple fact that they are significantly more expensive to build, operate and maintain. No airline will risk tons of money on something like that. It's kinda similar to Concorde story which was an marvelous machine that offered many advantages, killed by the lack of profit in a long run.

  • @tiadaid
    @tiadaid Год назад +4669

    It's heartwarming how the people involved in the B2 requested top secret clearance for Northrop just to give him vindication. They could have not cared, but they did it anyway.

    • @boreddeffy
      @boreddeffy Год назад +42

      Lol 'congrats'

    • @urbypilot2136
      @urbypilot2136 Год назад +686

      Considering that many of the knowledge they used is founded on the experiments that the company's founder did, I think it would've been impossible for them not to care. Those men stood on the shoulders of a giant, and they knew they had to honor him while he was still alive.

    • @stefanschleps8758
      @stefanschleps8758 Год назад +128

      Maybe its because they know that "we stand on the shoulders of giants".
      Peace

    • @stefanschleps8758
      @stefanschleps8758 Год назад +29

      @@urbypilot2136 Great minds think alike! Exactly!

    • @tomelmore8431
      @tomelmore8431 Год назад

      ....oh yes - and even MORE heartwarming to know that Truman Administration Secretary of the Air Force Stuart Symington got HIS pockets full trashing the B-49 - and sticking the nation with the untenable B-36. Thank the stars above that THAT comic pile of junk never had to actually go to war....

  • @SpacerZVEVO
    @SpacerZVEVO Год назад +5368

    It's actually so heartwarming how NASA & USAF let Northrop know his dream wasn't dead, showing him the B-2 model and designs

    • @Thesnakerox
      @Thesnakerox Год назад +494

      And that model and those designs would then go on to become one of the coolest looking aircraft of all time in my opinion

    • @killercards7733
      @killercards7733 Год назад +259

      @@Thesnakerox and one of the best bombers to ever be created.

    • @ghomerhust
      @ghomerhust Год назад +237

      "hey old man, let me show you something that i think you're going to like......"

    • @garibay711cod
      @garibay711cod Год назад +28

      Isn't the B2 known as the Northrop ?

    • @stickpge
      @stickpge Год назад +135

      @@garibay711cod no but its made by northrop's company, the B2's nickname is spirit

  • @boostio2720
    @boostio2720 Год назад +337

    Them showing the inventor of the flying wing the top-secret prototype to show him it was possible really warms my heart

    • @bluedistortions
      @bluedistortions 3 месяца назад +10

      One of the only nice things I've heard the military complex do.

    • @christophrufle9303
      @christophrufle9303 2 месяца назад

      D'ont forget the Horten brothers, They started the investigation in flying wings in the 1930tis...

    • @Attaxalotl
      @Attaxalotl 26 дней назад +1

      @@christophrufle9303 So did Jack Northrop. The XB-35 was being built before the Ho-229 was even drawn up.

    • @Battalionkitchen
      @Battalionkitchen 25 дней назад +2

      Northrop started Avion, specifically to develop the flying wing concept, in 1927. The Hortens made an amazing hobby glider though

  • @bluesteel1199
    @bluesteel1199 Год назад +565

    With the B 21 Raider's reveal, I imagine the YB 48 looking down from aviation heaven beaming at its more successful child, the B 2 spirit, grandchild, the B 21.

    • @starsiegeRoks
      @starsiegeRoks Год назад

      ​@@kingsofthegridiron man, you must be a miserable person to be around.

    • @wolfrainexxx
      @wolfrainexxx Год назад

      @@kingsofthegridiron Heaven literally means "from the sky to the stars and beyond," and last time I checked, space was real you f***ing flat earther.

    • @informationoverload2487
      @informationoverload2487 Год назад +5

      Ok but that won’t happen for at least 20 more years. Alot can happen in that span of time.

    • @informationoverload2487
      @informationoverload2487 Год назад +1

      @@kingsofthegridironMy favorite fairy tales are the big bang theory and Stephen Hawking being an actual human being instead of a computer controlled AI that was replaced with uglier and uglier versions as time went on. To give the appearance that he was actually alive. When he was done spouting all the sciency bs they wanted it to they discarded the voicebox and the wheelchair and burried the mannequin.

    • @earlworley-bd6zy
      @earlworley-bd6zy 11 месяцев назад +7

      YB-49

  • @bernardli9514
    @bernardli9514 Год назад +1997

    As everyone today in the drone industry is designing or building flying wings, that we still use Jack Northrop's equations for stability of a flying wing from half a century ago. He deserved to have seen it all.

    • @rockzs74r
      @rockzs74r Год назад +135

      I would really love to see a biopic about Jack Nortrhop. His rise and fall and the movie ends with him seeing B2 prototypes.

    • @0Asterite0
      @0Asterite0 Год назад

      The ones he stole from the nazis?

    • @urbansnipe
      @urbansnipe Год назад +28

      I dont understand why his name is jack when its actually john? Anyone else know??

    • @royalblue2229
      @royalblue2229 Год назад +68

      @@urbansnipe it was a common nickname for John (I know it doesn’t make sense). Like Bob for Robert or Dick for Richard.

    • @nonpartisangunowner4524
      @nonpartisangunowner4524 Год назад

      @@rockzs74r ruclips.net/video/MkhziQF0AiI/видео.html

  • @DARKWIZRDDUDE
    @DARKWIZRDDUDE Год назад +1652

    Somehow flying wings seems like such a futuristic things and its wild when your reminded its a an almost 90 year old concept

    • @werkgalaxy
      @werkgalaxy Год назад

      It isn't it's just golden paint applied to dogshit. Same as how all western products are especially today. Randoms serve dogshit and a typical westerner consumer slurps it all up joyfully...

    • @JWQweqOPDH
      @JWQweqOPDH Год назад +167

      And electric cars are like 130 years old.

    • @CATel_
      @CATel_ Год назад +44

      Oh god the grammar

    • @CATel_
      @CATel_ Год назад

      @@JWQweqOPDH ay w h a t

    • @Palmtop_User
      @Palmtop_User Год назад +68

      Computers are in a similar vein, some of the earliest mechanical designs never built go back to 1830s. The first built go back to the 1940s before the invention of even the transistor

  • @dpm2937
    @dpm2937 Год назад +439

    That's why I love games like Ace Combat. They see stuff like this and think: Yeah lets make a flying superfortress out of it

    • @sohankopparapu5206
      @sohankopparapu5206 Год назад +20

      Don't forget Halo, though I don't understand why the longsword has a tail. Don't think they would need it.

    • @sethderby9033
      @sethderby9033 Год назад +28

      just beat ace combat 7 and came here to same something similar 😂😂

    • @frankiefierro7129
      @frankiefierro7129 Год назад +14

      I was just thinking that it reminded me of the arsenal bird

    • @sohankopparapu5206
      @sohankopparapu5206 Год назад +3

      @@frankiefierro7129 Is that the giant flying aircraft carrier?

    • @frankiefierro7129
      @frankiefierro7129 Год назад +4

      @@sohankopparapu5206 Yeah, the drone carrier

  • @dodoubleg2356
    @dodoubleg2356 Год назад +193

    The fact that this iteration or the current B-2 can fly w/out a vertical OR horizontal stabilizer is engineering genius!! 👍👌✌️😉

    • @dmitryche8905
      @dmitryche8905 Год назад +8

      in Germany, the brothers Hortons built airplanes like a flying wing back in the 30s, see f.e. Horton Ho229, the first flying wing with jet engines.

    • @maximkovac2000
      @maximkovac2000 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@dmitryche8905 They also did it without computers. If the computer system on a B2 fail it crashes. The 229 doesn't have that problem

    • @huguesh294
      @huguesh294 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@maximkovac2000 yeah it's a pity the Horten designed were completely left out of this video, they are the real geniuses

    • @BobThomas123
      @BobThomas123 4 месяца назад

      Did the horten ever fly?​@@huguesh294

    • @nguyentandung42
      @nguyentandung42 3 месяца назад

      It’s always Germans and being decades ahead in technology. They really shouldn’t have lost if their leader wasn’t an fumbling idiot.

  • @Character_Limit
    @Character_Limit Год назад +2126

    that little ominous sound effect when the B2 is revealed was a nice touch, sent chills down my spine. Can't even imagine what Northrop must have felt like seeing his dream become a reality.

    • @lofdraws7006
      @lofdraws7006 Год назад +66

      They just look like slits in the sky. So ominous

    • @harshvardhan4771
      @harshvardhan4771 Год назад +16

      This scene was the first time I myself experienced what the memes describe and mean when they say "heavy breathing ___".

    • @MrMarinus18
      @MrMarinus18 Год назад +55

      The B2 "spirit" is one of the best named US aircraft. It just fits perfectly with it's almost alien form and unnatural flying charitastics.

    • @jb-sq2lm
      @jb-sq2lm Год назад +2

      @@MrMarinus18 characteristics? I cant found that word in wiktionary

    • @rankoyomimusic
      @rankoyomimusic Год назад +4

      ​@@jb-sq2lm 英語の勉強はどうでしょうか?

  • @slingshot1961
    @slingshot1961 Год назад +3693

    Why the airforce didn't keep at least one for a museum is beyond me. They were already built. I would have loved to see one.

    • @BobBob-zu2dt
      @BobBob-zu2dt Год назад +211

      it never left testing and both aircraft in the airforces possession blew

    • @patrickstewart3446
      @patrickstewart3446 Год назад +354

      If it had been a decade later NASA likely would kept one around for research and probably would’ve retired it.

    • @thefisherking78
      @thefisherking78 Год назад +52

      Air Force*
      --career officer and pedant

    • @CHRF-55457
      @CHRF-55457 Год назад +99

      You could ask why the Navy didn't keep around their conventionally powered supercarriers.
      Although, for the air force's case, they basically broke every single one of the planes during testing. Didnt feel like building more of a failed aircraft

    • @crapisnice
      @crapisnice Год назад

      i will drop a bomb in your house, so i will make a museum afterwards

  • @YonsuKu
    @YonsuKu Год назад +74

    One would never mistake the earlier flying wings for being anything else than the predecessors of the B2 Spirit due to their overwhelming resemblance. However, the video's title, as well as the narration made it seem as if they were lost in history.
    That made the reveal of the B2 at the end of the video all the more satisfying. I could almost feel Northrop's emotions...

    • @PhoenixFires
      @PhoenixFires Год назад +4

      They were more or less lost to history in that the military had lost interest in wing designs for over 2 decades before asking for a stealth-capable bomber.

  • @heatheramp
    @heatheramp Год назад +17

    My grandfather was one of the engineers who worked on this. At the time you designed your part, machined your part and then installed it. I have a picture of the first (it looks like the jet) flight take off with my grandfather, mother, his cousin and his cousin's daughter watching. It broke his heart when they were ordered to destroy the planes and all the scale prototypes.

  • @TheEDFLegacy
    @TheEDFLegacy Год назад +1259

    I was going to mention when you said that the flying wings were all scrapped, I was like "...What about the B-2?" That ending gave me goosebumps. Glad to see that the original inventor of the flying wing got to see its final form.

    • @WinVisten
      @WinVisten Год назад +97

      YB-49: "THIS ISN'T EVEN MY FINAL FORM! ...I'll be back. And you'll shit your pants when I am."

    • @ItzChickenYall
      @ItzChickenYall Год назад +11

      @@WinVisten BAHAHAHAHAHHAHA 😂😂😂

    • @unifiedhorizons2663
      @unifiedhorizons2663 Год назад +8

      B-2 I can carry 6 nukes

    • @FireAngelOfLondon
      @FireAngelOfLondon Год назад +2

      @@unifiedhorizons2663 Not 6, 16 B83 bombs or another type I cannot recall. It can also carry 20 cruise missiles; at the moment these cannot be nuclear as the aircraft lacks the wiring to communicate with, and therefore arm, any US nuclear cruise missile. However I imagine the wiring could be installed in a day or less if the design work has been done. I have not seen an authoritative source on whether the work has been done to prepare the B-2 to accept wiring for nuclear cruise missiles but I would be very surprised if it hasn't.

    • @PrograError
      @PrograError Год назад +1

      @@FireAngelOfLondon i have the feeling that might be a classified info... if judging by the rate of design and production and the doctrine of the period... it's very likely it's planned as such... therefore plausible of space for such wiring... but then B2 is a "delivery truck" for bombs ain't it?

  • @aikendrum4734
    @aikendrum4734 Год назад +373

    I was at the Farnborough airshow a few years ago. A single B-2 did a flyover. Against a clear blue sky it ... looked like a weirdly silent low budget special effect.

    • @DrWhom
      @DrWhom Год назад +74

      it's funny how reality can look like a badly done special effect

    • @JebHoge
      @JebHoge Год назад +43

      It's neat how the B-2 almost disappears when it's edge-on to a viewer on the ground.

    • @PappyGunn
      @PappyGunn Год назад +37

      Well I can tell ya it's not low budget.

    • @ShiftyMcGoggles
      @ShiftyMcGoggles Год назад +9

      similar feeling when I saw the last flight of the vulcan...Until the match cone caught up!

    • @isaiahc8390
      @isaiahc8390 Год назад

      This world is rapidly passing away and I hope that you repent and take time to change before all out disaster occurs! Belief in messiah alone is not enough to grant you salvation - Matthew 7:21-23, John 3:3, John 3:36 (ESV is the best translation for John 3:36) if you believed in Messiah you would be following His commands as best as you could. If you are not a follower of Messiah I would highly recommend becoming one. Call on the name of Jesus and pray for Him to intervene in your life - Revelation 3:20.
      Contemplate how the Roman Empire fulfilled the role of the beast from the sea in Revelation 13 over the course of 1260+ years. Revelation 17 confirms that the beast is in fact Rome. From this we can conclude that A) Jesus is the Son of God and can predict the future or make it happen, B) The world leaders/nations/governments etc have been conspiring together for the last 3000+ years going back to Babylon and before, C) History as we know it is fake. You don't really need to speculate once you start a relationship with God.
      Can't get a response from God? Fasting can help increase your perception and prayer can help initiate events. God will ignore you if your prayer does not align with His purpose (James 4:3) or if you are approaching Him when "unclean" (Isaiah 1:15, Isaiah 59:2, Micah 3:4). Stop eating food sacrificed to idols (McDonald's, Wendy's etc) stop glorifying yourself on social media or making other images of yourself (Second Commandment), stop gossiping about other people, stop watching obscene content etc. Have a blessed day!

  • @franswiggidy
    @franswiggidy Год назад +80

    I had forgotten about the B2 stealth bomber. What a story.

    • @loschwahn723
      @loschwahn723 Год назад +4

      build on german dishes by horton brothers - the testdesigns were build in wood, the sabotage were build by nuts and bolts

    • @peterson7082
      @peterson7082 Год назад +1

      @@loschwahn723 nonsense

    • @BobThomas123
      @BobThomas123 4 месяца назад +6

      ​@@loschwahn723not really. Northrop pioneered it. Although horten made it first. Northrop never saw the horten. But he built a flying wing anyways

    • @BrapBrapDorito
      @BrapBrapDorito Месяц назад +1

      @@BobThomas123Northrop had flying wing prototypes in the air before the hortons.

    • @BrapBrapDorito
      @BrapBrapDorito Месяц назад +1

      @@loschwahn723Not really, Flying wings were in testing before any Horton aircraft were captured. If you knew anything about the aircraft, you’d know the only real similarity the 229 and the B2 share are visual.

  • @robertlebras3005
    @robertlebras3005 Год назад +14

    I've never seen a squadron of B-35s even digitally. That was very cool.

  • @julianrandall4232
    @julianrandall4232 Год назад +861

    Jack Northrop lived to see his work commemorated in one other way too. In 1971 palaeontologist Doug Lawson discovered the first fossils of a new type of pterosaur at Big Bend in Texas. There were two species represented by the fossils, and the larger of the two was 50% larger than anything known before, with a 40-foot wingspan. Lawson named the genus Quetzalcoatlus, after the Aztec feathered serpent god, and to the giant flyer he gave the species name Quetzalcoatlus northropi.

    • @JeiHS
      @JeiHS Год назад +35

      thats a hard to spell one

    • @vahe2391
      @vahe2391 Год назад +49

      Quetzalcoatlus northropi was the bigger of the two Quetzalcoatlus species found by Doug Lawson. The slightly smaller species of Quetzalcoatlus was recently named in Lawson's honor as Q. lawsoni. A third pterosaur species was also found at Big Bend, the short-snouted Wellnhopterus brevirostris. Quetzalcoatlus, like other pterodactyloid pterosaurs, has the same wing planform as the Northrop flying wings, and the British built a flying wing named after the pterodactyloids, the Westland-Hill Pterodactyl. People should remember that pterodactyloids were the pterosaur group designed to fly with the elegant efficiency of birds and bats by dispensing with the long tail.

    • @julianrandall4232
      @julianrandall4232 Год назад +15

      @@vahe2391 Thanks for that. I didn't know about the third species, but I'm glad to see Wellnhofer commemorated. I have his book, and that's how I knew about Lawson's story: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Wellnhofer

  • @BookCrux
    @BookCrux 11 месяцев назад +2

    I literally teared up at the end. These were tears of relief.

  • @BurlyMammoth
    @BurlyMammoth 5 месяцев назад +1

    Your production value is unparalleled. It is that simple.

  • @slavtrooper3851
    @slavtrooper3851 Год назад +280

    the fact that this look so much like the b-2 spirit just tell how advanced of a concept it was

    • @furinick
      @furinick Год назад +30

      It think it may have been partly accidental, at some point they prob noticed it was less visible on radar, and when the need for a stealth bomber popped up booom they had the thing, still really cool how the design from that era got so relevant recently

    • @alexander1485
      @alexander1485 Год назад +20

      an analog B-2.

    • @jackryan4313
      @jackryan4313 Год назад +24

      Wanna talk about something being super advanced for the time? The SR71 blackbird was and still is a ridiculous feat of engineering. And it was designed with fucking pencils and paper

    • @gokulkrishm51
      @gokulkrishm51 Год назад +2

      @@jackryan4313 Was about to comment that, haha!

    • @slavtrooper3851
      @slavtrooper3851 Год назад +2

      @@jackryan4313 sure, but this had the chance to change moder aviation. It's like the Ekranoplan, a concept so advanced it could not be within reach of the mid 20th century. I wonder though what could we do now if we only had the right stimulus

  • @MrPurpleEYE
    @MrPurpleEYE Год назад +922

    This is one of my new favorite stories, Northrop spent so many years heartbroken, and couldn't understand why he lived for so long. Until he finally was given vindication by the next generation who truly saw the potential in his idea.

    • @crapisnice
      @crapisnice Год назад +6

      best genocide history ever, disney will make a movie based in these splendid people

    • @JM-zg2jg
      @JM-zg2jg Год назад +12

      BoycottFacebook/Meta
      It has stifled our social media, gaming and VR progress for years. All the while destroying our self images, politics and privacy.
      We have nothing to lose, and everything to gain.
      Time to log out and stay that way. Let’s all watch it die together.

    • @MrPurpleEYE
      @MrPurpleEYE Год назад +28

      @@crapisnice Ideals are peaceful, history is violent.

    • @crapisnice
      @crapisnice Год назад

      @@MrPurpleEYE ideas are pointless aggregations and people are lazy, and its the present what is violent and what you should care about

    • @MrPurpleEYE
      @MrPurpleEYE Год назад +37

      @@crapisnice Then why are you here watching war history videos and leaving troll responses on strangers comments?

  • @SatelliteYL
    @SatelliteYL Год назад +9

    Really heartwarming hearing that Northrop got to see his dream fulfilled. I couldn’t even imagine what he must’ve felt… having a dream, having it fail so painfully over the years, then living with that pain for 3 decades. 3 decades! And finally at the end of his rope after living so unsatisfied, one day his dream is suddenly fulfilled. How tumultuous his emotions must’ve been, arguing with himself for those 30 years about what he could’ve done, and one day everything is solved and concluded. Powerful.

    • @FalconWindblader
      @FalconWindblader 19 дней назад

      The pain of coming up with something wayyyyy ahead of its time & having spent soooo much time trying to make it work with insufficient or even inferior tools. had he been born 20 years later, he might have been actively involved in the development of a flying wing that would actually work & getting mass-produced, with almost all of the problems that held his ideas back being solved by a thing called a computer, or as it became known in later age, avionics.

  • @siggevibes
    @siggevibes 10 месяцев назад +4

    That ending was very touching, how happy he must have been to finally witnessed his dream materialized.

  • @JJadx
    @JJadx Год назад +916

    i can't imagine what he felt when he saw that his life long dream was anything but useless.
    I hope other key engineers and workers got a chance to see what they contributed to too.

    • @robmausser
      @robmausser Год назад +98

      Any smart engineer will know that even doing something that doesn't end up working out is never a fruitless purist in the quest for knowledge. Knowing what won't work is just as valuable as what will.

    • @vulpes7079
      @vulpes7079 Год назад +21

      In a way, he was too ahead of his time. Although I have to say, it's probably impossible to tell how much weight did his company's advertisement to civilian audiences held

    • @chouseification
      @chouseification Год назад +16

      this ^^ I remember growing up knowing about the flying wing tests back in the 40s-50s, but we hadn't seen any in recent years, besides some futuristic "what if" sketch in Popular Mechanics, etc. Then when stealth bomber was revealed, a lot of us went "aha"... it hadn't been abandoned, it had just gone black in recent applications.

    • @pixytorres7117
      @pixytorres7117 Год назад

      He did nothing, all the technology was stolen by the Nazi Germans,same think with the nuclear weapons.

    • @vulpes7079
      @vulpes7079 Год назад

      @@pixytorres7117 stolen from the Germans in a program that began in 1941?
      Nazi Germany also didn't even have a working design for a nuclear weapon, they couldn't enrich enough uranium

  • @gkam44
    @gkam44 Год назад +356

    I am 78 years old, and the son of a AAF flying crew chief, who knew what the flying wing was. In 1947 I was playing with my brother when I looked up and saw it. It was low, and went almost over the house. A few weeks ago I looked it up and it really DID fly over my house, in the only long trip it took. Later I was stationed at Edwards AFB, where our bomber was the XB-70.

    • @zsmusic8708
      @zsmusic8708 Год назад +7

      As a KC-135 Crew Chief, I'm jealous

    • @uku4171
      @uku4171 Год назад +3

      Damn, that's cool

    • @BELCAN57
      @BELCAN57 Год назад +2

      The XB-70 is one of my two favorite aircraft, the other being the B-36 Peacemaker.

    • @highviewbarbell
      @highviewbarbell Год назад +1

      @@BELCAN57 a true man for the culture. Those are my two favorites too

    • @iBeerus-
      @iBeerus- Год назад

      what a story!

  • @wolfynautious7415
    @wolfynautious7415 Год назад +3

    I grew up in Barstow, CA during the '50s. Barstow is about 50 mi. south of Edwards Air Force base where some secret aircraft are tested. I can remember these aircraft flying overhead. I was sad to hear that none of them were kept for display.

  • @XRP747E
    @XRP747E Год назад +1

    Beautifully made. Thank you.

  • @WonderfulAircraft
    @WonderfulAircraft Год назад +682

    I'm with Northrop, I really do think flying wings/blendid wing body aircraft hold so much potential that remains untapped. Yes, there are numerous challenges to overcome with this type of aircraft, but developing cutting edge technologies is all about overcoming challenges. And the B-2 has, and continues to show that a flying wing is not only possible, but advantageous in many ways. I'm very glad Northrop got to see the B-2 before he passed. He's a legend of the aviation world and the B-2 is a ongoing reminder of that.

    • @Director_Orson_Krennic
      @Director_Orson_Krennic Год назад +39

      And a lot of those remaining hurdles appear to have been tackled by the B-21 Raider, then next-gen flying wing stealth bomber from Northrop planned to replace the B-52, B-1, and B-2 in service eventually with a gradual phase-out towards the B-21

    • @HowIsAsh
      @HowIsAsh Год назад +12

      Hydrogen fuel aircraft are going back to the flying wing iirc

    • @jj4791
      @jj4791 Год назад +6

      There is a way to make them work. They have the inherent problem that they need a positive pitching moment for stability, and flaps create a negative moment, so they cannot utilize flaps, therefore their lift coefficient is about half or a third that of conventional aircraft, meaning the flying wing must be twice as large for the same payload and same landing speed and T/O/Landing distance. Therefore the flying wing actually has a lot of drag due to being substantially larger. Though it will cruise at a lower CL due to the additional wing area, meaning lower induced drag. There is a way to counter this negative pitching moment, and allow large flaps on a flying wing, its not in textbook's, and ill never disclose it. ;P
      Besides, the newest propulsion tech doesn't even need wings. Its Green.

    • @ablacktemplar1971
      @ablacktemplar1971 Год назад

      @@ylandrinschweitzer good

    • @robertwhite1303
      @robertwhite1303 Год назад +1

      Did you know my brother Ward White when he was the project manager for the B2?

  • @onebridge7231
    @onebridge7231 Год назад +516

    J. Northrop’s research and design from the 40’s was relied upon for B2 as even some of the old wind test studies were reviewed and flight characteristics/problems studied as they built the B2. I’m glad he lived to see it in person. Looking forward to seeing the B21 Raider when it’s unveiled.

    • @chriswoodbury747
      @chriswoodbury747 Год назад +34

      Interestingly enough, the B-2 flight system will not allow a pilot to put it into the kind of spin that crashed YB-49 No.2. In other words, the automation tells the pilot: Don't do that; it's a really bad idea! ;-

    • @JurisKankalis
      @JurisKankalis Год назад +17

      The only reference in the entire video given to the true inventors of the flying wing - german aero engineers brothers Horten (look up Ho-229) - in the form of a remark "... and although Northrop wasn't the first one to invent the flying wing" -- seems unfair. Otherwise stunningly animated and well researched (well, for the american part) video. Greetings from Latvia.

    • @eveei
      @eveei Год назад +11

      @@JurisKankalis I agree, but isnt the video "What Happened To Flying Wings?" In America's POV the Germans had lost so their equipment was nothing more than extra research for their own in a way

    • @onebridge7231
      @onebridge7231 Год назад +9

      @@JurisKankalis The Horten Brothers are famous in America too. Some engineers rebuilt their design on a documentary I watched. Either Boeing or Lockheed Martin, I can’t remember, but it was a very cool documentary.

    • @solus48
      @solus48 Год назад +14

      @@JurisKankalis but the Horten brothers didn't design the first flying wings. Early tailless and flying wing designs date to the 1910's and during the 1920's British, German, and Soviet engineers all worked on the concept. The Horten brothers didn't design their first glider until 1933.

  • @Trashloot
    @Trashloot Год назад +1

    I really love the look of the video. Great job :D.

  • @rodgersdeloriea4959
    @rodgersdeloriea4959 Год назад

    I have great hopes for this channel. Bravo! Keep working! I am your biggest fan.

  • @Official_Kezzie
    @Official_Kezzie Год назад +1049

    Flying wings are an underrated part of aviation history.
    The story of one man’s drive single-handedly creating the modern stealth bomber’s grandfather will forever be in the aviation hall of fame
    Edit: No, the Horten bomber didn’t inspire the B2. ‘Nuff said.

    • @EdgyNumber1
      @EdgyNumber1 Год назад +37

      His drive was not to design a stealth bomber. His drive was to design an efficient aircraft bomber. The 'stealth' requirement appeared years after he left the company. Of that post-war period, the Avro Vulcan came closer but still used a vertical stabiliser at the rear and a leading fuselage.
      Delta wing and flying wing type aircraft were a continuation of captured German technology.

    • @BrapBrapDorito
      @BrapBrapDorito Год назад +77

      @@EdgyNumber1 Flying wings were not a continuation of German aircraft, the first real full scale tailless flying wing prototypes flew before the Germans flying wings were even proposed.

    • @martijn9568
      @martijn9568 Год назад +12

      @@BrapBrapDorito To be fair the Horton brothers did do experiments with flying wing gliders during the interwar years, but the top nazi officials didn't really about it.

    • @kutter_ttl6786
      @kutter_ttl6786 Год назад +50

      @@EdgyNumber1 Jack Northrop flew his first flying wing, the N-219H, flew in 1929. By 1934 he was aware the Horton brothers were experimenting with tailess designs and his first tailess plane, the N-1M, was introduced in 1940 and flew in 1941. Any benefit from captured German research didn't occur until after the war.

    • @noobus571
      @noobus571 Год назад +36

      The Ho 229 was not designed for stealth, and the B-2 was designed with no knowledge of the Ho 229

  • @VentiVonOsterreich
    @VentiVonOsterreich Год назад +285

    Hearing the synth music start playing at 11:12 with the story of Northrop witnessing plans for the B2 Bomber felt like a guy who was born in the late 1800s literally had a first glimpse of 21st century military technology, it's kinda touching

  • @user-qm3ji1yl3q
    @user-qm3ji1yl3q 4 месяца назад +1

    This story is beautiful thank you for sharing it

  • @AgricultureTechUS
    @AgricultureTechUS 2 дня назад

    Completely captivating! Always something new to learn.

  • @foxhound24
    @foxhound24 Год назад +286

    Each time Mustard uploads I’m reminded how the wait is so worth it for this amazing quality.
    Thank you mustard.

  • @thefilodough8066
    @thefilodough8066 Год назад +634

    Always wondered if the arsenal bird from Ace Combat 7 was based on a pre-existing aircraft or not.

    • @mr.crazyshadow
      @mr.crazyshadow Год назад +90

      Was looking for an AC fan

    • @dylandevlin2102
      @dylandevlin2102 Год назад +50

      @@mr.crazyshadow same here when I saw the thumbnail I instantly thought of the arsenal bird

    • @PrograError
      @PrograError Год назад +19

      more of a concept i'd say... IIRC there was a concept of a similar plane of a mothership, that and the 747 aircraft launcher...

    • @galm2pixy666
      @galm2pixy666 Год назад +5

      @@mr.crazyshadow yeah me too

    • @dylandevlin2102
      @dylandevlin2102 Год назад +1

      @@PrograError I heard about that

  • @hillgallagher3043
    @hillgallagher3043 6 месяцев назад +1

    Sir ur videos are informative and knowledgeable. Its amazing

  • @abdulsamadzakria9912
    @abdulsamadzakria9912 21 день назад

    Very well written and spoken. Good job done.

  • @TheSharmanova
    @TheSharmanova Год назад +505

    Many of said it; I want to say it: Your videos are among my favourite things. The painstaking effort you must deposit into the animations are worth it, Mustard. It’s an aesthetic that sparks this unmatched realism AND dream-like imagination. Like seeing a future that didn’t happen but was made and unwrapped for the viewer all shinny and new. Thank you for your work. It’s a joy to watch.

    • @MustardChannel
      @MustardChannel  Год назад +59

      Thank you for the awesome compliments :)

    • @williamjordan5554
      @williamjordan5554 Год назад +2

      Many have*

    • @thebigbonk
      @thebigbonk Год назад +1

      @@MustardChannel i always get giddy whenever i see a new mustard video, im came back today to rewatch it lol

  • @donaldbadowski290
    @donaldbadowski290 Год назад +894

    Sadly, you are never going to take a commercial flight on a flying wing, because airlines and the NTSB insist on passive stability. A traditional aircraft with a body, wings and tail can accomplish that with trim to the horizontal stabilizer. A flying wing can't. It requires constant computer correction based on sensor data. If that system goes down, the aircraft is a death trap. Military aircraft allow the crew to eject, but commercial doesn't have that option.

    • @goldleader64
      @goldleader64 Год назад +66

      And yet: Boeing.

    • @Aviator-el1dn
      @Aviator-el1dn Год назад +65

      Not true. The YB-35 and YB-49 were both statically stable without computers, although with a very narrow c.g. range. So was the prop driven proof of concept aircraft seen in the video. The reason flying wings never became popular is that they are inherently less efficient than a comparable conventional tail design; that is why the B-47 outperformed the B-49.

    • @grmpEqweer
      @grmpEqweer Год назад +7

      I was wondering if horizontal and vertical rudders, multiple, could be used to make a flying wing more stable and more maneuverable?
      ...Mind you, Im not a physics person.
      I was thinking here about a rudder control surface for said rudders that would extend above and below the aircraft's body.
      Hypothetically, there would be 3-5 rudders on the back edge of the wing. Obviously, they would move in synchrony.
      It would give turning/stability benefits? 5 rudders might lead to really good maneuverability.
      I do note many fish species have "aft rudders" that extend above and below their "fuselage."
      Air is merely a very thin liquid... If having such a rear stabilizing shape is adaptive for fish, it might be adaptive for airplanes.
      Thus I suggest a sort of "guppy tail" rudder.
      Edit: largest guppy tail rudder at centerline. Second rudders... probably just inside or outside of the engines(as practicable) and a little smaller. Smallest rudders, other side of engines, size predicated on airframe strain.

    • @singularityraptor4022
      @singularityraptor4022 Год назад

      On point

    • @jimjam6958
      @jimjam6958 Год назад +1

      Pontification at its finest

  • @bargainbrandmilk9858
    @bargainbrandmilk9858 22 дня назад

    if i had the money i would get nebula, just found your channel not 30 minutes ago when i got home for lunch and i would love to watch even more

  • @Crush0819
    @Crush0819 7 месяцев назад

    The fact even the double propeller is in the remake to day goes to show how brilliant this man was

  • @gokulkrishm51
    @gokulkrishm51 Год назад +267

    I'm actually glad that Jack Northrop got to see the "secret aircraft under development".

    • @ledernierutopiste
      @ledernierutopiste Год назад

      He also saw one of the largest flying animal to ever existed named after him Quetzalcoatlus Northropi

    • @gokulkrishm51
      @gokulkrishm51 Год назад

      @@ledernierutopiste I can't tell if you're joking or not 😂

  • @GABlume
    @GABlume Год назад +79

    Hi Mustard
    I am a military historian specializing in strategic bombardment, currently working with the Hangar Thirteen Foundation to rebuild a Boeing B-17F in Asheville, North Carolina.
    Just wanted to say how much I enjoy your videos. You do a marvelous job and I cannot stress enough how much I appreciate you taking the time properly research and avoid sensationalizing already interesting stories. I’ve always enjoyed the B-35, and it was fun revisiting it with your amazing graphics and design.
    Keep up the good work!

  • @hush6149
    @hush6149 11 месяцев назад

    That’s such an awesome story, he made an aircraft so ahead of its time that it was too dangerous to fly but a basis for the perfect design against a problem of the future

  • @littlerayofsunshine69
    @littlerayofsunshine69 10 месяцев назад +2

    The B2 is one of the most beautiful aircraft ever produced, alongside the SR71 and the F86. They were the stuff that wet dreams were made of for a kid growing up in the early 90s.

  • @lanky2610
    @lanky2610 Год назад +188

    My grandad ejected from the AW-52, which was Britain's version of the flying wing. According to him, he got stuck in a flutter which left him completely disorientated and unable to fly. It was also the first Martin-Baker ejection in an emergency (possibly first ever, but I'm not sure of the specifics on the German ejector seats developed in WW2). Thing was, when he ejected the plane managed to glide itself down to a field. I often wonder if now we do have the computer systems that can handle rough flying, and you don't have to rely on just the instruments alone, could a design like that work?

    • @user-do5zk6jh1k
      @user-do5zk6jh1k Год назад +24

      Flying wings are very common today. Maybe not in pressurized manned designs (because a tube fuselage is a very light design for pressurization), but there are dozens of flying wing drones in military use.

    • @jordananderson2728
      @jordananderson2728 Год назад +25

      A flying wing? The B-2 flies, regularly, and bombs things, regularly.

    • @AsbestosMuffins
      @AsbestosMuffins Год назад +21

      the b-2 and presably b-21 are both stabilized by much more advanced fly-by-wire. one of the issues with the high power stalls is that other planes had the issue at the time too but the government wanted to merge northrop and grummand and had to axe the yb49

    • @noxtorism
      @noxtorism Год назад +10

      Is your grandad John Oliver Lancaster?

    • @lanky2610
      @lanky2610 Год назад +14

      @@noxtorism Yes!

  • @fone5003
    @fone5003 Год назад +82

    All my Ace Combat brothers know exactly what I'm thinking right now

  • @Supriya100kar
    @Supriya100kar Год назад

    Wow! It is so heartwarming to see that B2 story was so emotional and close to Northrop 's 💕heart! 🥰

  • @randymurphy
    @randymurphy Месяц назад

    Excellent piece !

  • @thomaszinser8714
    @thomaszinser8714 Год назад +123

    Tbh, on a related note, a video on the various eccentric Junkers designs that led up to the G-38 (and probably also the G-38 itself) would be pretty fascinating. Hugo Junkers, after all, had similar ideas of flying wing/blended wing design for long-range aircraft, although he intended it for civilian uses.

    • @ArenBerberian
      @ArenBerberian Год назад +9

      Yes and also the HO 229 and other planed german flying wings. Also worth noting success such as the Avro Vulcan, although not a true flying wing design.

  • @walterfechter8080
    @walterfechter8080 Год назад +178

    The first time I had ever seen a flying wing was in the Sci-Fi movie, "The War of The Worlds." Upon seeing that aircraft, I was truly amazed. Bravo Jack Northrop!

    • @newstartyt3700
      @newstartyt3700 10 месяцев назад +6

      Ah, when they launched the atomic bomb on the Martians, right?

    • @walterfechter8080
      @walterfechter8080 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@newstartyt3700 That's it.

  • @ronmaximilian6953
    @ronmaximilian6953 Год назад +4

    It's crazy to think that we are almost as far away from the first flight of the B-2 as that date was the date that the B-52 first flew.

  • @reggievangleason9511
    @reggievangleason9511 Год назад

    Beautiful production. 👍

  • @YellowRambler
    @YellowRambler Год назад +174

    I saw one of these aircraft flying overhead when I was very young and ran into the house to tell my parents that a airplane Flew bye that was missing its body only had a wings, I remember being told off for making things up, I was very upset at the time because nobody believed me. Every time I see a flying wing it brings back that memory. That launch plane from virgin Galactic will most likely cause the same problem, a young Child will report seeing two airplane holding hands while they are flying.

    • @oscarantoniomoreno5247
      @oscarantoniomoreno5247 Год назад +7

      Quit making things up and go to your room. 😜

    • @rogerstolt813
      @rogerstolt813 Год назад +7

      When I was about 6or7 I saw one of these fly over my home in Northern Michigan, when I told my dad about, I got the same reaction," that's just not possible,son" is what my dad told me. I never forgot that plane. After the B-2 was made public I looked up info on it and found that it was based on Northrops 1950s design, I finally knew I didn't hallucinate it. Dad was gone by then and I wouldn't have dared say "I told you so!" anyway. But at least I know.

    • @brucewestoby
      @brucewestoby Год назад +1

      Maybe you lived somewhere in Inglewood too! ?

    • @gregwaters7830
      @gregwaters7830 Год назад +3

      I saw one when I lived in LA as a child. My brother told me what it was. A Flying Wing

    • @surfernorm6360
      @surfernorm6360 2 месяца назад

      I can see why they were only around for a short time really from the story i'm thinking maybe 2 years. I saw arial photos of them at VanNuys airport in LA I assume the Northrop Plant was near there and then they were taken Edwards for testing . most people would never have heard of them, It was before most people had a TV. There may have been a story in popular science. but that would be it, the first time I saw one it was a simple print my kite. Later George Pal edited a clip of one into "War of the worlds" but that was well after they were all gone.

  • @anon73728
    @anon73728 Год назад +342

    worth mentioning Horten brothers and german flying wings, jet engines and look like B2 from the 30s and 40s, and Soviet designs from 30s, alot people independently invented these around the same time

    • @matiasfpm
      @matiasfpm Год назад +17

      And those guy came to argentina to develop more of those crazy wings

    • @Texicus_Reddicus
      @Texicus_Reddicus Год назад

      I feel like I associate flying wings with Nazi Germany more so than the united states or any other country

    • @basswarnow
      @basswarnow Год назад +33

      The idea goes back even further, an Austrian guy draw flying wings in the 1920s for the first time.

    • @calessel3139
      @calessel3139 Год назад +8

      I'd also add Alexander Lippisch.

    • @jaikumar848
      @jaikumar848 Год назад

      @@calessel3139 which plane ?

  • @iandalton2612
    @iandalton2612 Год назад +23

    Me watching this 3 hours before the B21 gets released

  • @followyourbliss101
    @followyourbliss101 Год назад

    this channel is so awesome!

  • @ReptilianLepton
    @ReptilianLepton Год назад +72

    A YB-49 (via footage provided by Northrop) has a small part in the 1953 War of the Worlds film, as the bomber that drops a nuke on a group of Martians.

    • @KunoMochi
      @KunoMochi Год назад +4

      Probably slightly as an homage and partly cause of the cool factor, the 1990s film Independence Day also had the B-2 Spirit launch a nuke at the alien ship, albeit with little to no effect due to the advanced shielding they had on their capital ships.

    • @PappyGunn
      @PappyGunn Год назад +1

      I though that was so cool when a saw the movie as a kid. Yeah man we were going to stick it to them Martiuns.

  • @carlouis1
    @carlouis1 Год назад +44

    The moment I saw the thumbnail, I was reminded of the B-2 stealth bomber. It's awesome to see how the story (and the resemblance) becomes a full circle when Jack Northrop had a chance to see the B-2 plans that are inspired by his design. It proves that there are ideas that are too advanced for a certain timeline.
    Great production work as always, Mustard! I've always been a fan of your videos; it never fails to be an engaging experience.

  • @Garfire1
    @Garfire1 Год назад

    I love your contents! Its super amazing!!

  • @DolusVulpes
    @DolusVulpes 10 месяцев назад +1

    I can see this also being a great design for spacecraft and upper atmosphere aircraft as well, and NASA seems to agree, as they've apparently been researching the viability of a bi-directional version of a flying wing for use in those conditions.

  • @SamuraiPieter
    @SamuraiPieter Год назад +31

    I love flying wings.
    I've got a 1/72 model of the German Horten Ho-229, of which 1 was built.

    • @weeklyaviation8910
      @weeklyaviation8910 Год назад

      Sorry to bother you, but I just started making aviation videos. If you are interested, you should check out my channel✈️

    • @Codzilla2181
      @Codzilla2181 Год назад +2

      3 were built 1 of which was a glider

    • @Eaggradruide
      @Eaggradruide Год назад

      The modell from Revell? I built that too :)

  • @jack1701e
    @jack1701e Год назад +45

    I'm glad John Northrop lived long enough to see the B2, finally got to see his dream in the flesh!

    • @PappyGunn
      @PappyGunn Год назад

      I dunno. He probably saw the thing and said that's no airplane. Kind of like Dekkard with that copy of Rachel.

  • @N0stalgia01
    @N0stalgia01 Год назад

    never realized he inspired the b2,always loved seeing it in generals:zero hour. My favourite aircraft of all time, so intimidating wud love to see irl

  • @fratercontenduntocculta8161
    @fratercontenduntocculta8161 Год назад +20

    Any time I feel down, I just immerse myself in early aviation. The wonder and ideas always pick me back up. I also love the era-appropriate art style you guys use!

  • @fnln3181
    @fnln3181 Год назад +54

    American aviation is incredible. My grandfather has his then Civil Aviaonics Administration mechanic's license signed by Orville Wright. I'm so proud of him.

    • @peterdemkiw3280
      @peterdemkiw3280 Год назад

      If you believe A-merican "history" everything A-merican is amazing, they single handed won both world wars despite only fighting in the last 3 months of the 4 year great war 1914-18, also A-merica invented supersonic aircraft, what I've noticed is A-mericans are full of shit, and have their own fictional history.
      Biggest threat to world peace the world has ever seen.

  • @neiln62
    @neiln62 Год назад

    I worked at Northrop while the B2 was struggling to get complete funding.
    Great video.

  • @Gio98art
    @Gio98art Год назад +1

    Watching the story unfold was nice, of course it was easy to see the military was going ahead with plans for the B2, but it's interesting to see where the B2 started. Way ahead of its time

  • @lord_scrubington
    @lord_scrubington Год назад +51

    information and presentation aside, the production value, pacing, visuals and sound design of these videos is incredible in its own right.
    The angle at which you depicted the B-2 and the soundtrack accompanying it gave me chills immediately, honestly so well done and far above the cinematography I've seen on any other documentary style content on YT

    • @crapisnice
      @crapisnice Год назад

      genocidal value as its best...

  • @Warhawk971
    @Warhawk971 Год назад +29

    I had the amazing opportunity to sit down and interview one of the lead test pilots of the YB-49, Bob Cardenas many years ago back when I was in high school. I remember him saying during the interview that he had said to his superiors that the wing that it would one day be the most advanced weapons system in the world, but only when there was an active control system that could correct the yaw oscillation.
    And man, was he spot on with that assessment

    • @ZboeC5
      @ZboeC5 Год назад

      People are going to flip when they finally see the B-21. It is literally the same exact shape as Jack Northrop saw in 1980. People forget that the Air Force changed the design criteria for the B-2 in the mid 80s to turn it into a low level penetration bomber. This forced Northrop to almost completely redesign the aircraft and this is why the tail of the aircraft is a W shape. That wasn't in the design that Jack saw and it's not on the B-21 either since we now know that stealth works better at high altitudes. The B-2 lost its contrail mitigation system in the redesign opting instead for a contrail detector that alerts the pilots to the fact they are making a contrail. This was because the aircraft was only meant to traverse the ocean at altitude and then drop down low for bombing. In a lot of ways the B-21 is going back to the original B-2 design Jack got to see and the goal is to "fix" a lot of the flaws introduced into the B-2 with the low level penetration redesign.

  • @alexnikolaienko
    @alexnikolaienko 5 месяцев назад

    Excellent work 😮 Thanks a lot

  • @RoadRallyLife
    @RoadRallyLife Год назад

    Excellent work!

  • @Oatfilms
    @Oatfilms Год назад +137

    When Mustard uploads, it’s a good day. This channel is the definition of quality over quantity.

  • @JWONG-pu8ky
    @JWONG-pu8ky Год назад +112

    What makes flying wings hard to fly is its inability to self correct instability especially in pitch. Unlike conventional aircraft where the tail section could be adjusted or optimized to balance the aircraft's pitch especially when its airspeed increases, the changes in center of lift and pressures throught the surface of the airfoil affects the aircraft pitch balance, this is why flying wings need complicated computer avionics just to balance itself and make constant corrections by applying control surfaces, this why you can often see videos of a B2 spirit constantly applying its control surfaces to maintain a level flight. With todays technology, it is possible for an flying wing airliner to be built and outperform a conventional tailed aircraft but the cost, complexity and amount of system redundencies cant outweigh its benefits. Flying wings really are incredible and defenitely a design worthy for the future of aviation

    • @starga-fr7qx
      @starga-fr7qx Год назад +8

      I doubt the cost is in the complexity or redundencies, of the plane itself, the real cost is in 1 getting a non conventional aircraft certified for safety in context of passenger transport 2 (re)training cost for the pilots 3 airport facilities that are not suited for such airplanes

    • @Vespuchian
      @Vespuchian Год назад +1

      I understand the YB-35's giant propellers provided a form of pitch stability from the sheer scale of the resulting propeller discs and the gyroscopic forces created from them, a stability that was lost in the conversion to jet power. A shame it didn't get its chance to get more testing done, potentially with turboprops.

    • @starga-fr7qx
      @starga-fr7qx Год назад

      @@Vespuchian not really, ther was barely any mass in them props to provide enough gyroscopic stability vs the actual mass of the plane. And props cause torque spin, not gyroscopic forces
      if anything a jet engine would have more gyroscopic mass since the entire engine is a spinning disk turbine..

    • @Vespuchian
      @Vespuchian Год назад

      @@starga-fr7qx That's fair. I'd heard the -35 was more stable than the -49 because of the props and must have misunderstood the reason for it.

    • @PrezVeto
      @PrezVeto Год назад +4

      @@starga-fr7qx Yes, I think a major problem for introducing flying wing passenger jets would be the totally different relationship between passenger capacity and wingspan-and therefore the necessary spacing between gates-compared to traditional aircraft. That could make a mixture of the aircraft types difficult for airports to accommodate without a less efficient overall use of potential gate space.
      The fact that the number of seats that'd fit across the width of the plane would increase as you went farther aft means that additional capacity would require ever smaller increases in wingspan, which is interesting.
      A significant downside is probably that there would be much more design work involved in producing variants of aircraft with slightly different capacities (e.g. the A319 and A321 variations on the A320). In fact it could make that sort of thing prohibitive, because you could no longer just vary the length of the tube between the wings. You'd have to change the dimensions of the whole thing. Fewer capacity variants could lead to less overall fuel efficiency for airlines as they couldn't tailor the aircraft used to each route as much.

  • @chugwaterjack4458
    @chugwaterjack4458 Год назад

    Gotta love the Mustard ID cards!

  • @SytanOfficial
    @SytanOfficial 3 месяца назад

    My step grandfather got to work on some of the stealth technology on the original B2 bomber, and while he obviously has never been able to share any intimate details about it with me, I can see the way his eyes light up and his heart races when he hears anything about it. He says that to this day, that plane and the technology on it is one of his greatest accomplishments

  • @willjones7132
    @willjones7132 Год назад +18

    The B-2 is awesome to see fly in person, especially seeing it in a steep bank.

  • @valkyrie14
    @valkyrie14 Год назад +25

    Jack's ideas along with others on his teams were so far ahead of their time. I didn't know he was able to see the plans for the B-2 before he passed away. I'm sure he was totally vindicated and lionized before he passed away. Good video

  • @Robslondon
    @Robslondon Год назад

    Fantastic video.

  • @maxwellquebec8675
    @maxwellquebec8675 10 месяцев назад +1

    Can't believe I had never heard that story. Incredible.

  • @stevenwhoward87
    @stevenwhoward87 Год назад +22

    one of my all-time favorite aircraft! Thanks for covering this. You always do the best job with these videos

  • @kevinford69
    @kevinford69 Год назад +3

    I can't say enough thanks for producing one of you splendid documentaries on the amazing YB-35 and YB-49. I have been fascinated with this aircraft (and the era) all my life. The visuals are breathtaking and I really appreciate your talent and bringing something lost to the past back to life. Again thank you for making this remarkable journey back to the 40s and getting to see a squadron of B-35 in flight. Bravo!!!!!!!!!!

  • @ItzLordeYT
    @ItzLordeYT 29 дней назад +3

    So basically the video is a really long ad for nebula

  • @dingdongsyo
    @dingdongsyo Год назад

    Incredible story re Northope finally seeing his passion come to life

  • @DanTheCaptain
    @DanTheCaptain Год назад +8

    Northrup being able to see plans for the B2 is amazing, and I can only imagine the tears of joy and the grin on his face if he saw it flying!

  • @PaulStewartAviation
    @PaulStewartAviation Год назад +14

    Great video! It's so nice that they let Northrop see the B-2 before he died! :)

  • @edutaimentcartoys
    @edutaimentcartoys 7 месяцев назад

    awesome aircraft

  • @ericoschmitt
    @ericoschmitt 4 месяца назад +2

    Hang gliders have been doing well since the 1960s, and are more advanced than ever. The key to their success was the natural washout created by sail billow, that makes the center stall before the tips, keeps them controllable and stable. Now they are carbon fiber slick blades, fast, stable and the most efficient ultralight design. Gotta love flying wings.

  • @SCHEFFyt
    @SCHEFFyt Год назад +30

    How have I never heard of this plane before?! Good job, Mustard, this was a stellar video and an eye-opening discovery

  • @hxtpl
    @hxtpl Год назад +62

    I legitimately forgot that the B-2 Spirit existed, so when I heard you say "Until he was given a glimpse into the future" and saw that haunting razor-sharp figure fade into the screen, I audibly gasped and smiled wide enough to scare people.
    Northrop has truly seen his dream come to life in its truest and most advanced final form, from an unstable, noisy piston engine bomber concept to the silent, nigh-untouchable reaper of the night sky that we all know today.

  • @jarrod6577
    @jarrod6577 Год назад +1

    흥미롭게 잘 봤어요 😊

  • @devangoad
    @devangoad Год назад

    Best ad for curiosity stream I’ve seen honestly

  • @chrisloomis1489
    @chrisloomis1489 Год назад +30

    God bless Jack Northrup ....he lived to see his dream ands the fruition of many men's lives. B-2 SPIRIT