The Most Chilling Plane of WW2

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  • Опубликовано: 13 окт 2024
  • Piloting a P-61 Black Widow was both an electrifying and daunting mission. As the first American aircraft built specifically for night fighting, its futuristic design and cutting-edge technology seemed light years ahead. Unlike the conventional single-engine fighters, this beauty showcased raw power and ingenuity with her sleek twin-boom design and central fuselage pod. Yet, the thought of dogfighting as an interceptor in the night sky's darkness was enough to chill any pilot to the bone.
    Clocking in at over 350 miles per hour, the Black Widow could tear through the night sky, powered by her twin Pratt & Whitney R-2800-10 Double Wasp engines, each unleashing 2,000 horsepower. This was a technical marvel never before seen in World War 2 combat aviation.
    Armed to the teeth, she boasted four 20-millimeter Hispano M2 cannons and four .50 caliber machine guns in a dorsal turret, making her a flying fortress. If that wasn’t enough, the top-secret SCR-720 microwave radar tucked under her nose made her a predator in the darkness.
    Every curve and detail of the P-61 Black Widow screamed defiance. Her black-painted form vanished into the night, visible only to those unfortunate enough to fall into her radar’s grasp.
    New pilots felt a cold shiver down their spines at the thought of braving the perilous night skies over Europe and the Pacific. But once they took the controls, it became clear: with her advanced radar technology and pitch-black paint job, the Black Widow reigned supreme. She quickly earned her reputation as one of the safest planes to fly and one of the most lethal foes in night combat, even being able to shoot down enemy planes without ever making visual contact…

Комментарии • 437

  • @outersketcher
    @outersketcher Месяц назад +97

    When I was a kid, I put together the Revell Model of the Black Widow. Two months later, the wings had been broken off and it spent the next three months as a submarine, complete with gun turret, in the bathtub.

    • @olmanzomby7718
      @olmanzomby7718 Месяц назад +6

      I had a Revell Model of a P-61 as well. She was a beauty to look at and put together!

    • @timtheskeptic1147
      @timtheskeptic1147 25 дней назад +4

      Revell kits have gone down drastically in quality over the last 20 years.
      But I also built this kit and it was unique and fun.

    • @silverstar4289
      @silverstar4289 24 дня назад +5

      Adapt, improvise, overcome.

    • @timtheskeptic1147
      @timtheskeptic1147 24 дня назад

      @silverstar4289 I love the attitude, but you can't polish a turd.

    • @ExtremelyAverageMan
      @ExtremelyAverageMan 23 дня назад +1

      *P-61 Bathtub Widow*

  • @johnwillis4706
    @johnwillis4706 Месяц назад +126

    My dad flew B-17's over Europe during WWII. As the war in Europe wound down he was re-assigned to a fighter training in Dec.1944. He trained to fly the P-61 and after training he flew them in the European theater for the 414th until the war ended. After the war he returned to his profession as an electrician. In 1961 he got wind that the air Force were surplusing the P-61-A, B and a few S models. He went to Richards/Gabouer air base where they were being sold, basically as scrape, and found his old plane there a P-61 S, her name was "Mysterious Mary", and he bought her for the princely sum at that time, of $5500. Stripped of her guns and other "secret" equipment. Dad worked on her for years and years getting her ready to fly again. Dad passed away twelve years ago without getting her ready. I've been working on her since and I'm getting close. I have to get all the Lexan glazing made. I'm shooting for July 4th, 2025 for her first flight.

    • @clarencemcglynn114
      @clarencemcglynn114 Месяц назад +4

      Bravo good 👍 sir,best of luck with this endeavor! Sounds like a large undertaking. Sounds typical, take off the military gear,understandable, yet leave her unflightworthy. Not understandable.

    • @Steven-sy6nu
      @Steven-sy6nu Месяц назад +2

      I hope you get it done. Kudos.

    • @loyalUSguy
      @loyalUSguy Месяц назад +2

      Good luck. That will be a great to see her fly! Or even just see her looking like she could fly. Would definitely look better with the armament, tho, historically, that is.

    • @vpreggie
      @vpreggie Месяц назад +2

      That’s quite an undertaking. How many flying P61s are around nowadays?

    • @bluskytoo
      @bluskytoo Месяц назад +1

      Amazing , good luck to you sir ! 👍🏻

  • @bermudaguy5003
    @bermudaguy5003 2 месяца назад +56

    Thanks for this! My Dad flew the P-61 during WWII. His "birds" name was Moon Light Sonata, his name Lester Vohs. The picture of his plane is hung on the wall beside me which also includes The Distinguished Flying Cross & Thunderstorm Project patch. I hope someone who knows him, or his crew might enjoy reading this. I will save this video to refer to occasionally.

  • @DeFaltaver2
    @DeFaltaver2 2 месяца назад +90

    This airplane is seared into my mind at an early age! My family lived in Long Beach in 1944 and my mother would fix a picnic lunch on my Dad's day off from welding at Shell Oil and drive to the airplane factories in LA. We were parked near one building next to a large runway covered with high netting when a factory door opened and this scary, shiny black bomber came out with props turning., it looked like a giant P-38!! I never forgot the feeling I had that the enemies were going to be in for it for sure!!

    • @Badhands55
      @Badhands55 2 месяца назад +4

      Same here- when I was a little kid I remember our teacher telling us her husband flew one in the war

    • @johnwillis4706
      @johnwillis4706 2 месяца назад

      The P-61 was not a bomber, it was a night fighter.

    • @Perkinator104
      @Perkinator104 2 месяца назад +5

      ​@@johnwillis4706Yeah, but it's built similar to a bomber. Twin engines, lot's of glasswork, multiple crew members.

  • @michaelwilson9483
    @michaelwilson9483 2 месяца назад +25

    I was in the 421st Tactical Fighter Squadron in the late 80s and early 90s. This plane is their namesake, the Black Widows.

  • @simongee8928
    @simongee8928 2 месяца назад +26

    In early WW2, Britian had the Bristol Beaufighter in the night fighter role. Equipped with radar, four 20mm Hispano cannon & six .303 machine guns, it did good service along with the later DeHavilland Mosquito.

    • @slingshotjohnny1
      @slingshotjohnny1 Месяц назад

      Thank you for not misusing the word "caliber" like this schmuck!

  • @spaceted3977
    @spaceted3977 2 месяца назад +120

    I made a Model of the Black Widow when I was a Boy and I really like the Aircraft.

    • @rodshop5897
      @rodshop5897 2 месяца назад +20

      I was thinking nearly the same thing myself. 1/48 scale from Monogram, right? I still have that model, almost 45 years later.

    • @robinwykoff1321
      @robinwykoff1321 2 месяца назад +10

      That takes me back to the 60's, I built many aircraft models back then.

    • @jamesknight4633
      @jamesknight4633 2 месяца назад +7

      I had that model also. I think it got blown up,with firecrackers

    • @MikeS-um1nm
      @MikeS-um1nm 2 месяца назад +6

      @@rodshop5897 YUP! With the diorama instructions by Shepperd Paine?

    • @rodshop5897
      @rodshop5897 2 месяца назад +4

      @@MikeS-um1nm I don't remember that part, but it was and is a cool model.

  • @chopper5371
    @chopper5371 Месяц назад +6

    Always will admire the P-61.

  • @davebowrin7361
    @davebowrin7361 2 месяца назад +23

    When I worked at the National Air and Space museum Udvar Hazy Center. They have a Black Widow on display. #1 a former pilot of the Black Widow came there. The aircraft is very unique and larger than what I imagined it to be. But it always got ALOT of attention from visitors and it was a favorite of the museum. 😊😊😊

    • @mhollman8650
      @mhollman8650 2 месяца назад

      Just visited the girl!!
      Beautiful restoration

    • @kerrymehaffey6257
      @kerrymehaffey6257 16 дней назад

      Mid Alantic Air Museum, Reading Pa. Is restoring a P-61 to airworthy condition.

  • @proteusnz99
    @proteusnz99 2 месяца назад +66

    The P-61 was an all-weather interceptor, not a dog fighter. Night fighting was stalking then a quick kill, not prolonged manoeuvring. It had to be big to accommodate the valve technology radar, and needed a long development period. However, you can’t help wondering whether a nightfighter conversion of the Martin B-26 (which used the same R-2800 engines) might not have reached the same goal quicker. The early planning for the Douglas A-26 included a nightfighter option.
    The lateral control was interesting using spoilers with the small ailerons there mainly to provide pilot feel. The P-61C was among the first fighters to use airbrakes (rather than dive brakes)
    But the P-61 had such an interesting shape.

    • @cabanford
      @cabanford 2 месяца назад

      It's all run by politics (means moron politicians), with zero emphasis on any sort of logic or clear thinking

    • @jacktattis
      @jacktattis 2 месяца назад +5

      And it never had the performance of the Mosquito

    • @danzervos7606
      @danzervos7606 Месяц назад

      I have read in a couple of British published book that the P-61 was the most maneuverable plane in WWII with its spoilerons. It also was noted for its intrusion ability to attack ground targets under night or limited visibility conditions. The turbo supercharged version was about 50 mph faster but was not available in time for the war. However the plane's top speed was adequate to intercept enemy planes that would not be operating at war emergency speed when they didn't know there were being targeted.

    • @jacktattis
      @jacktattis Месяц назад

      @@danzervos7606 Nothing of that in Gunston Combat Aircraft only that it had early success
      Mike Spick Fighters is scathing

    • @jacktattis
      @jacktattis Месяц назад

      @@danzervos7606 Most manoeuvrable I do not think so.

  • @googleeyeseyes4033
    @googleeyeseyes4033 2 месяца назад +43

    The last series built were capable of 430 mph with the originals at 366 level flying.

  • @BradyWark-kb1qt
    @BradyWark-kb1qt 2 месяца назад +33

    P-38 Lightning on steroids! Definitely would not want to be on the receiving end of that airframe!

    • @Kimoto504
      @Kimoto504 2 месяца назад +2

      During the day you'd probably be fine. Sure this beast can't out turn standard fighters. During the night? No thanks.

  • @-C.S.R
    @-C.S.R 2 месяца назад +65

    My grandpa flew the P-61 in the Pacific! He only had the greatest things to say about the Black Widow.
    🫡🇺🇸

    • @ProtoType99468
      @ProtoType99468 2 месяца назад +11

      the Allies owe a debt that cannot be repaid to the brave men who crewed the Black Widow

    • @kerryholcomb6781
      @kerryholcomb6781 2 месяца назад +6

      Dad was crew chief on a 61 with the 427th in the CBI. They too loved the 61.

  • @danhammond9066
    @danhammond9066 2 месяца назад +23

    Due to the logistics of a night intercept, They could not get more than 1 kill a night. And most missions resulted in a no joy, or they did not see a target. And the enemy did not fly that many night missions anyway. And the effectiveness of night missions was quite low as well.
    So we did not even have to intercept them. In a lot of ways this plane was a proof of concept more than an effective deterrent. But it looked cool. Most German aircraft in late WW2 were as fast or faster than the P61. So as the P61 is supposed to get behind and track its enemy by radar and creep up behind the target, well you can see how that would be a bust. So they went to the pacific to be used against Japan which had slower aircraft. But again Japan's night bombings were mostly nuisance raids. They did not warrant and entire plane designed just to stop them. It was designed to stop German night raids but was too slow for its intended role.

    • @theicmn
      @theicmn Месяц назад

      Late war Black Widows were faster too.

  • @craigpennington1251
    @craigpennington1251 2 месяца назад +5

    You've got to feed all those horses. This was a large aircraft & has a mean vicious bite. Love these My #4 favorite of WWII. Hope to see one fly before I leave. Outstanding aircraft.

  • @Charles-Windsor88
    @Charles-Windsor88 2 месяца назад +17

    Little known fact : The helical radar was found to be an effective pie warmer and was much appreciated by the crews on extended loiter missions

    • @kerryholcomb6781
      @kerryholcomb6781 2 месяца назад +1

      Not really....

    • @Youtuber-k2p
      @Youtuber-k2p 2 месяца назад +2

      So they had a few spare pies, climbed outside the plane and took the cowling off, placed the pies down, the radar operator then kept reporting steak and mushroom kamikazes.

  • @AndyD070568
    @AndyD070568 2 месяца назад +21

    366 mph is not quick enough to catch a V1 flying bomb. The only planes fast enough in 1944 were the Hawker Tempest and the De Havilland Mosquito. Later Griffon engined spitfires, P47 Thunderbolts and the P-51 were also capable. Not forgetting the world's first jet fighter the Gloster Meteor which caught them with ease.
    Also ironic that the P61 was replaced by the Mosquito which predated the P61 by 3 years.

    • @scottterry1659
      @scottterry1659 4 дня назад

      I belive the p61 was not intended to go after the v1

  • @GunstockBayA90
    @GunstockBayA90 2 месяца назад +43

    The greatest mission of all for all Black Widows, was 'Hard To Get' she flew over Cabanabutuan prison camp as a distraction to allow Bull Simon and Rangers to sneak up to the camp. The surviving Japanese described the P61 as a frightening, unwordly insect

    • @MrTopgun624
      @MrTopgun624 2 месяца назад +4

      Wrong war. Bull Simon led the raid on the deserted POW camp of Son Tay in Vietnam.

    • @MikeS-um1nm
      @MikeS-um1nm 2 месяца назад +3

      I read about that. I forget the book title. Didn't the plane fly around the "other" side of the prison camp, as a distraction, while the Rangers belly crawled up close? I wanted to finish that book but I was house sitting for someone, found it on their bookshelf, read some of it while I babysat their pets. I always meant to pick the book up, but forgot the title.

    • @GunstockBayA90
      @GunstockBayA90 2 месяца назад +2

      @@MikeS-um1nm i think it is ghost soldiers, 👻

    • @MikeS-um1nm
      @MikeS-um1nm 2 месяца назад +1

      @@GunstockBayA90 Thanks!

    • @GunstockBayA90
      @GunstockBayA90 2 месяца назад +1

      @MrTopgun624 Bull started somewhere, and WW2 was it. They pulled him out of retirement for SonTay, which turns out to be a raid on foreign mercs. We were told it was a ' rescue attempt ' read up a little more. I did

  • @userbosco
    @userbosco 2 месяца назад +12

    I built this model back in the early 70s,wish I could have seen one up close.

    • @johnfazio8106
      @johnfazio8106 2 месяца назад +1

      Check out the Mid Atlantic Air Museum in Radin, Pa. They're restoring one. When it's done it'll be the only one flying. She's beautiful

    • @johnfazio8106
      @johnfazio8106 2 месяца назад

      Oops! Reading, Pa.

  • @WoodWizardrybyColin
    @WoodWizardrybyColin 2 месяца назад +8

    Black Widow was an awesome night fighter cool looking aircraft too

  • @seanmalloy7249
    @seanmalloy7249 2 месяца назад +19

    The video makes no note of the fact that the four dorsal .50s were in a turret intended to be operated by the radar operator for defensive purposes, but this was found to be impractical, so the turret was either locked firing forward under control of the pilot or removed completely.

    • @Youtuber-k2p
      @Youtuber-k2p 2 месяца назад +2

      .40 calibre.

    • @tobyrobson2939
      @tobyrobson2939 2 месяца назад

      @@RUclipsr-k2p Lol. NO! 🤣

    • @dnaylor2484
      @dnaylor2484 2 месяца назад

      unacceptable buffeting in the air-stream during rotation of the turret has also been sighted as a reason for removal... the "reporter" reconnaissance aircraft models i think were built without them...

    • @hertzair1186
      @hertzair1186 2 месяца назад

      The problem with the turret was that it interfered with airflow over the tail if the turret moved around

  • @brianperry
    @brianperry 2 месяца назад +39

    John Cunningham, piloting a Mosquito..said, as he injected Nitrous oxide into his twin merlins while approaching .( They will never catch me at this speed)... FW 190 nuisance raider from behind.... Hit by a hail of canon shells and bullets it crashed into the channel... Thats how good a 'Mossie' was...Fast, very fast and well armed..The Black Widow wasn't in the same league...

    • @kahlrhoam6769
      @kahlrhoam6769 2 месяца назад +4

      It was mission spec’d for ‘loitering’.
      Different tasking.

    • @GentlemensWatchServices
      @GentlemensWatchServices 2 месяца назад +1

      Met John Cunningham a number of times. Quite chap.

    • @mikewatts1450
      @mikewatts1450 2 месяца назад +1

      The Mosquito Night fighter was unbeatable even without it's nose gun's it still had it's belly cannons my father was always impressed 😉👍!

    • @davidriggs4451
      @davidriggs4451 23 дня назад +5

      I’ve always wondered why they kept designing and developing new combat aircraft when they should have just concentrated on building Mosquitos.

    • @kahlrhoam6769
      @kahlrhoam6769 23 дня назад

      @@davidriggs4451; Likely because, the Nazis & Imperial Japanese kept engineering ‘faster, more lethal, more efficient’ aircraft.
      There may be other reasons, but, gotta keep up with those despotic jones’es!

  • @dude126
    @dude126 2 месяца назад +30

    The real need for these aircraft was years before they were available.

    • @slingshotjohnny1
      @slingshotjohnny1 Месяц назад +1

      Well, isn't that pretty much every next-gen weapon or weapon system?

    • @dude126
      @dude126 Месяц назад

      @@slingshotjohnny1 certainly, and especially during wartime.

  • @johnjohnsn7633
    @johnjohnsn7633 2 месяца назад +3

    The Lockheed P-61 "Black Widow" night fighter was the aircraft used by the U.S. Army Rangers in their raid on the Japanese Prisoner of War Camp in Cabanatuan, Philippine Islands. This raid was memorialized in the 2005 film "The Great Raid". During the actual raid , a P-61 overflew the camp to distract the Japanese guards from the Rangers low-crawling up to the edge of the camp to begin their attack. Though the producers wanted a P-61 to accurately recreate that part of the raid, there were no flying examples available for the filming. A Lockheed A-29 Hudson was substituted for the correct P-61.

  • @StaciArdmore
    @StaciArdmore 20 дней назад

    I'm an aviation, and World War II history buff. I had never heard of this aircraft before. Thanx for posting!

  • @stubryant9145
    @stubryant9145 2 месяца назад

    Was privileged to have an older friend and fellow ham operator who had been a radar operator in these in the CBI theater. Wish I could have visited with him more. He was my dad's generation. I thoroughly enjoyed the many men I got to know who served in WW2. I got a couple stories out of him, but he never got very specific about particular missions other than mentioning having to fly through the Himalayas as I recall.

  • @richardcall7447
    @richardcall7447 2 месяца назад +16

    One of the P-61's downsides was that it couldn't be carrier based. The Navy had to develop the F6F Hellcat into a night fighter by mounting a radar on one wing.

    • @trappedinkalifornee
      @trappedinkalifornee 2 месяца назад +4

      Not to mention the radiation the pilot and co-pilot were subjected to from the rotating magnetron radar…..kind of like flying inside a microwave….

    • @mikegirard4388
      @mikegirard4388 14 дней назад

      The Navy had the F7F late in the war and used it as an attack plane in Korea. There’s 2 restored F7F flying at the museum in Colorado Springs. See them flying around regularly.

    • @thudor1
      @thudor1 6 дней назад

      They did the same thing to the Chance-Vought F4U Corsair, right?

    • @trappedinkalifornee
      @trappedinkalifornee 6 дней назад

      @@thudor1 uh….no

  • @MichaelCampin
    @MichaelCampin 2 месяца назад +24

    The UK used a variety of nightfighters from 1940 from the Boulton Paul Defiant, Bristol Beaufighter and of course the De Havilland Mosquito, as usual P61 too little too late

    • @tobyrobson2939
      @tobyrobson2939 2 месяца назад +3

      The Mosquitos that saw wartime service were both faster and more manoeuvrable than the p61 too...

  • @grahamjohnbarr
    @grahamjohnbarr 2 месяца назад +13

    The first Model I ever made when I was about 10 years old. I made it because a Pilot who was stationed at the Townsville Garbutt Aerodrome North Queensland Australia, told me that a Black Widow had crashed on Mount Spec. It has never been found.

    • @cyclingdiabetic9573
      @cyclingdiabetic9573 2 месяца назад +1

      Plane crashes can leave very little evidence in some cases.

    • @guzziguy1000
      @guzziguy1000 2 месяца назад +3

      I made the same model when I was about that same age. Thought it was such a grand aircraft for my age. It reminded me of the P-38 so much. 😎

  • @michaelpalerino5276
    @michaelpalerino5276 2 месяца назад +15

    My dad was a radar technician in the 415th

  • @ThorandSharon
    @ThorandSharon 2 месяца назад +2

    Great, informative, and interesting video on one of World War 2's most iconic night fighters! Thanks for posting.

  • @Jules_73
    @Jules_73 2 месяца назад

    My grandpa was a tailgunner in a Black widow in the pacific during ww2. I’ve still got his bomber jacket and all of his books from the war.

  • @vantamplin7574
    @vantamplin7574 2 месяца назад +1

    Well made video, coherent, clear with coordinated audio. Great job with creating this video.

  • @Twirlyhead
    @Twirlyhead 2 месяца назад +2

    All those chills - you'd think it would have a heater.

  • @kerryholcomb6781
    @kerryholcomb6781 2 месяца назад

    My Dad was the crew chief on a 61, with the 427th NFS in the CBI. He loved the Blackwidow....as did their pilots. In their unit, most chose to remove the top turret to give 10-15 mph more airspeed, plus there was really no need for the turret on a nightfighter.

  • @darylnelson3026
    @darylnelson3026 2 месяца назад +11

    It was British tec. that made this plane possible. The radar could be small enough to fit in a aeroplane because of cathode ray tube gave to the Americans by the British

  • @phoboskittym8500
    @phoboskittym8500 2 месяца назад +6

    The BlackWidow II the YF-23 unfortunately never made it to production in the 90's , it would have been the best fighter ever made.

  • @MrDino1953
    @MrDino1953 2 месяца назад +143

    So in the beginning it was described as sleek and fast but at the end of the video, the narrator admits it was sluggish and out-dated, left in the dust by an Me 410, a plane that itself was plagued by design problems. Replaced in Europe by the Mosquito and relegated to the Pacific where it had almost nothing to do. Sounds like a bit of a dud really.

    • @gt6hudson
      @gt6hudson 2 месяца назад +26

      Yes, but as its American it's the world's best.... if you ignore the wooden wonder Mosquito

    • @Ngatimozart1
      @Ngatimozart1 2 месяца назад +14

      ​@@gt6hudsonIt wasn't as good as the Mosquito NF and I don't think it was much better than the Beaufighter NF which the USAAC operated in the ETO.

    • @foreverpinkf.7603
      @foreverpinkf.7603 2 месяца назад +23

      So many mistakes, inaccuracies and empty ramblings. What a pity.

    • @ralphscholz9533
      @ralphscholz9533 2 месяца назад +22

      Tech advanced so much during the war that, as with almost everything in WWII, what was state of the art at the beginning was almost obsolete at the end. War has a way of doing that, specially with military tech.

    • @AndyD070568
      @AndyD070568 2 месяца назад +13

      ​@@ralphscholz9533The P61 came out 3 years after the Mosquito and still got replaced by it!

  • @paladin5163
    @paladin5163 26 дней назад

    Thanks for that, the P-61 rarely gets a mention.

    • @13christbane
      @13christbane 12 дней назад

      because it had little or no impact

  • @Snow_Arc
    @Snow_Arc 2 месяца назад +1

    One sick fighter, had a copy hanging from the ceiling when I was young

  • @steveshoemaker6347
    @steveshoemaker6347 2 месяца назад +4

    My kind of aircraft.....Thank you.....
    Old F-4 II Pilot Shoe🇺🇸

  • @nicktozie6685
    @nicktozie6685 2 месяца назад +2

    It was a good night fighter, formidable weapons up front.

  • @peterconrad6135
    @peterconrad6135 2 месяца назад +20

    no thank you, I'll have a Mossie: DeHavilland Mosquito.

    • @tonykerrison1983
      @tonykerrison1983 2 месяца назад +3

      Or even a night-fighter version of the Bristol Beaufighter, which operated until 1942, & whose record shows it was anything but 'clumsy'. This is an extended advert for another 'wonderful' American aircraft that was built to bring down 'heavy bombers' - of which the Germans & Japanese had none. IFF requires the target aircraft to be squawking its identity, otherwise, - its pot luck.

    • @shannonterry4863
      @shannonterry4863 2 месяца назад

      ​@@tonykerrison1983I liked your comment for your Bristol Beaufighter commentary. It was a well designed airframe and adapted well in a "right place, right time" era. It's my favorite "unsung" hero aircraft of the war. It was an outstanding design given its adaptability.
      The rest of your comments are bollocks. Many designs entered the war late and were marginally effective due to the fact that the mission they were designed for lost relevance or had ceased to exist. That came across pretty clearly in this video concerning the P-61.
      You're comment about this being another pro-american video is silly and your father smells of elderberries.

    • @tonykerrison1983
      @tonykerrison1983 2 месяца назад +1

      @@shannonterry4863 You're entitled to your opinion, - as am I. That's democracy & free speech.😶

    • @shannonterry4863
      @shannonterry4863 2 месяца назад +1

      @@tonykerrison1983 It's all good, mate. The "clumsy" comment about the Beaufighter was definitely uncalled for in the vid. The USAAF continued to operate Beaufighters as night fighters in Europe even after the P-61 became available. That was a clear indication of confidence in the effectiveness of the aircraft on hand in carrying forward with operations.

  • @GreenmanXIV
    @GreenmanXIV Месяц назад +1

    John Randall and Harry Boot, developed the Cavity Magnetron, at the University of Birmingham. Probably the greatest invention of WW2. Also the Bristol Beaufighter was fitted with radar in 1940.

  • @dennisswartz4937
    @dennisswartz4937 2 месяца назад

    My great uncle flew one of these. His squadron never left the US. None went to Europe because it was considered not capable enough to fight there. Even my uncle said so, but he also said that when they would get up on a target they could rip it apart.
    Side note, the Mid Atlantic Air Museum in Reading, Pa has one they recovered years ago and have been rebuilding to flying status. Check them out.

  • @noelwarner1235
    @noelwarner1235 5 дней назад

    Coolest and most underrated WW2 aircraft.Also a cool model to build.The Air Force museum in Dayton Ohio has a p61.A great thing to see one in person,I dont know if any are still flying.

  • @douglaskennedy7836
    @douglaskennedy7836 2 месяца назад +11

    The p61 did alot of dark ops! That to this day are classified! My Dad did not come home untill 1947. What he knew he took to the grave with him in 2008!

    • @bermudaguy5003
      @bermudaguy5003 2 месяца назад +1

      Same here Doug, my Dad did not talk about his activities during WWII. Decades later after he died I found out he became involved in dangerous undercover work during the Cold War post WWII.

  • @t.versteeg3723
    @t.versteeg3723 2 месяца назад +1

    I still have a model of the Black Widow. Made that as a kid, painting it matt black, ofcourse.

  • @animalyze7120
    @animalyze7120 5 дней назад

    TheP-38 and P-61 are my 2 favorite planes from the War, though I do enjoy building all the different planes. Something about the twin boom fighters that just calls out to you.

  • @bobd1805
    @bobd1805 2 месяца назад +2

    Well done. Too bad it came so late in the war. My dad was one of the first Navy night fighters flying Grumman F6FN 's off the Yorktown in VFN-76 in 1944. He worked closely with the MIT Radiation lab boys developing the radar in Quonset Point Naval Air Station RI.. He never scored a night kill. His only CAP night intercept turned out to be an Australian PBY.200 miles from the fleet He slid under the bogey and identified it blotting out the stars he backed off the throttle very slowly to avoid a backfire from his R2800 engine so he would not get hosed by the PBY blister gunners. He flew mostly with the day fighters doing strikes on Japanese held islands. However one of his night missions to Chi Chi Jima was featured in an episode of "Night Fighters " on the History Channel. It was there where he caught a bullet to the shoulder that put him out of the war. He made it safely back to the carrier. Its a shame there is almost no information on Axis night fighters.

    • @bobd1805
      @bobd1805 2 месяца назад

      Dogfights: Deadly Nighttime Duels (S2, E9)

  • @user-ki3dj9pu9y
    @user-ki3dj9pu9y 2 месяца назад

    I got to get in one of these at an airshow when i was a kid, super awesome experience

  • @silverstar4289
    @silverstar4289 24 дня назад

    I can imagine the stir of confidence of the spectators during the nighttime flyover. A plane u seen at night. No doubt they felt the war was won with this sorcery.
    I am sure there was quite a buzz in the beauty shops and water coolers for those who were there.

  • @rodneyharding1668
    @rodneyharding1668 2 месяца назад +25

    How can the DeHavilland Mosquito be referred to as clumsy 😮😂!!!!!

    • @kiwihib
      @kiwihib 2 месяца назад +2

      Exceptionalism.

    • @timtheskeptic1147
      @timtheskeptic1147 25 дней назад

      In that context I choose to interpret "clumsy" as "very sensitive controls and not a plane for rookie pilots."

  • @David-ic4by
    @David-ic4by Месяц назад

    A really, really cool, super interesting and overall ineffective boondoggle of an airplane.

  • @dlwaterloo2221
    @dlwaterloo2221 2 месяца назад +15

    Mattie Black? Wasn’t she one of the Rockettes?

  • @roadrunner4404
    @roadrunner4404 2 месяца назад

    New to me but what a great lesson in history. Jets soon phased out all those magnificent radials.

  • @jonathanvince8173
    @jonathanvince8173 2 месяца назад +9

    The Radar was supposed to been put in a Mosquito but they were used in the war duties. All very strange but it did shoot down a 110 a 111 and a190 which was impressive but as used late in the war could not shoot down a 163 a 410 or a 262 as too fast and agile. It was built too late for the war so many were built and then scrapped.

  • @rogerauger7766
    @rogerauger7766 День назад

    Amazing! I had never heard of this remarkable plane until now. Thanks for enlighteng me. :)

  • @leeshackelford7517
    @leeshackelford7517 2 месяца назад +3

    My foster father loved flying it.....

  • @strikezero01
    @strikezero01 2 месяца назад +2

    she wasn't a stealth plane not even a fighter, but on that era, she is.

  • @brucechristiansen0
    @brucechristiansen0 2 месяца назад +1

    Tremendous firepower !

  • @Longfellow-i6g
    @Longfellow-i6g 2 месяца назад +4

    Excellent video....finally a doc. that has relative footage and nothing erroneous ...thank you !!....so what was the gunner's role ???

    • @Longfellow-i6g
      @Longfellow-i6g 2 месяца назад

      @@Kneon_Knight the pilot fired the guns as per the video and documentation....so one would be wrong to assume that....take your sarcasm elsewhere ...BTW I see your channel is about nothing....I"m not surprised ..bully much ???

    • @Longfellow-i6g
      @Longfellow-i6g 2 месяца назад +1

      @@Kneon_Knight Well"" one"" would be wrong...if you had read the documentation you would discover that the pilot did indeed fire the guns'......please take your sarcasm elsewhere...I see you have a channel entitled ''A Channel About Nothing''....that doesn't surprise me one bit...!!!

  • @saultube44
    @saultube44 Месяц назад

    The first Stealth airplane fighter, very interesting for the WW2 time

  • @zachboyd4749
    @zachboyd4749 Месяц назад +1

    Of the 706 produced, there are only 4 Black Widows left in the world:
    P-61B 42-39715: captured during the Korean War, on static display at the Beijing Air and Space Museum in Beijing, China.
    P-61C 43-8330: on static display at the Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center of the National Air and Space Museum in Chantilly, Virginia.
    P-61C 43-8353: on static display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright-Patterson AFB in Dayton, Ohio.
    And last but certainly not least, P-61B 42-39445: currently under restoration to complete flying status by the Mid-Atlantic Air Museum in Reading, Pennsylvania. In a few more years, we’ll see a Black Widow slip the surely bonds of Earth once more…

  • @TreelDuck
    @TreelDuck 12 дней назад

    The P-61 must have taken some of the ideas from Fokker back in the day, because the Dutch already had a similar aircraft at the start of WW2 called the Fokker G-1.

  • @coloradobrad6779
    @coloradobrad6779 Месяц назад

    My favorite model. Beautiful.

  • @donxz2555
    @donxz2555 2 месяца назад +4

    No wrong ! It was of course the Mosquito- so fast the PR version carried no guns.

  • @pigdroppings
    @pigdroppings 2 месяца назад +3

    By far the most important planes of WW2 ..... were the ground support planes.

  • @johndyson4109
    @johndyson4109 2 месяца назад +4

    The proximity fuse pretty much won WWII in ways.. Developed by the BRITISH... NORTHROP has ALWAYS been my favorite aircraft company and aircraft impliments...Unfortunately the Black Widow was kinda to late to be a big advantage in the war..

  • @briancooper2112
    @briancooper2112 2 месяца назад +9

    One is being restored.😊

  • @garcia83viz
    @garcia83viz 26 дней назад

    Basically a giant bat, armed with machine guns... hunting metal moths.

  • @afterburner2869
    @afterburner2869 11 часов назад

    A few years ago I saw this pretty woman in maybe her early to mid twenties and she had a P-61 Black Widow tattoo on her shoulder. I thought that was an unusual tattoo for a young woman to have so I asked her about it. She said it was in honor of her grandfather that flew one in WW2 and she was surprised that I knew what aircraft it was. Very cool tattoo I told her.

  • @nickatkinson5692
    @nickatkinson5692 26 дней назад

    Hyperbol, good platform, performed well.

  • @Paul-h2x1k
    @Paul-h2x1k 2 месяца назад

    How many of these planes are still flightworthy? It's a beautiful plane and one of my favorites.

  • @boomhaur626
    @boomhaur626 2 месяца назад

    lol the "Black Widow" is the night version of the P38 lightning (was absolutely FEARED in the African Theater of WW2)

  • @JimIAmDaniels
    @JimIAmDaniels 2 дня назад

    Mosquito has to be the ultimate fighter bomber when sub hunting had a 57m anti tank gun all strapped to a wooden air frame lol.

  • @Steve_Farwalker
    @Steve_Farwalker 2 месяца назад

    Just 20 minutes ago I took one of these out with my BF-109K in War Thunder with an inside turn.

  • @jh2309
    @jh2309 20 дней назад

    Awesome plane. Was one the of best planes of the war just doesn't get the credit it deserves. I would love to own.

  • @88peppercorn
    @88peppercorn 2 месяца назад

    Would like to find more info about the deployment of the P-61 as part of the Air Defense. My dad was recalled in '48 and stationed in Ladd Air base, Fairbanks, Alaska, accompanied by my mom and oldest brother. I have a picture of him (navigator) and his pilot standing next to what some have identified as an F-94. Would like to get records of flights up there with crew rosters. He didn't talk much about his role as he considered it a matter of high security.

  • @rl2699
    @rl2699 2 месяца назад +1

    Interestingly enough this plane was modeled after the P-38 Lightning

  • @richardmeo2503
    @richardmeo2503 2 месяца назад +2

    Never realized how far advanced radars were back them.

  • @TheLookingOne
    @TheLookingOne 2 месяца назад

    Was radar emission stopped while the dish was aimed back at the aircraft?
    Or did they figure the radar helped to keep the crew warm?

  • @bennettrogers7921
    @bennettrogers7921 2 месяца назад +3

    Did I hear correctly that they flew from bases on Wake island? I thought we didn’t re occupy wake until after the war.

    • @CoronadoBruin
      @CoronadoBruin 2 месяца назад

      Caught my attention, as well. Went back to confirm after I first heard it, and they did say Wake Island in July '44. Definitely a WTF moment.

    • @rickmcclellan7280
      @rickmcclellan7280 2 месяца назад +1

      In 1939 the U.S. Navy began construction of an air and submarine base; this was half completed when Wake was attacked and occupied by Japanese forces in December 1941. The Battle of Wake Island resulted in the capture of more than 1,600 U.S. troops by the Japanese.

  • @SaltRockStacker
    @SaltRockStacker 2 месяца назад

    It may not have a very high kill tally, but it had profound effects on the Axis pilots on a psychological and logistics level.
    Night attack missions were already difficult enough. Now they have to deal with this night terror prowling their flight paths.
    It was like their U-Boats got turned against them, but in the night skies against their aircraft.

    • @13christbane
      @13christbane 12 дней назад

      no it didnt. just stop with this nonsense.

  • @denesydenham1627
    @denesydenham1627 Месяц назад +2

    OOOH you liars the Mosquito was THE Night fighter the wooden wonder stealth before anybody knew what stealth was.

  • @jeffreyleonard7210
    @jeffreyleonard7210 Месяц назад

    Any comparisons between the 61 and the 38? Obvs bigger and with radar. More

  • @Stringfellow-xo6do
    @Stringfellow-xo6do 2 месяца назад +1

    Lot of fun booming and zooming on War Thunder.

  • @kevinvilmont6061
    @kevinvilmont6061 9 дней назад

    What a monster!

  • @DavidMounts
    @DavidMounts Месяц назад

    The first model plane that I built by myself was of a P-61

  • @MelbaOzzie
    @MelbaOzzie 2 месяца назад

    It would have been more accurate to point out that without the radar system, the Black Widow would have been no better or worse than any of the numerous other aircraft flying at the time.

  • @raulduke6105
    @raulduke6105 2 месяца назад +4

    Pops worked on the engines and thought it was wonderful on biak

    • @brianmee5398
      @brianmee5398 2 месяца назад

      My dad was on Biak and said the first night after the P-61s arrived they shot down the Japanese bomber that had been harassing them every night that they called “washing machine Charlie”

  • @paulbrownett3673
    @paulbrownett3673 Месяц назад

    Was the P-61 a good plane?
    The Northrop P-61 Black Widow and its Deadly Web
    Colonel Winston Kranz, director of USAAF night-fighter training, said: “The P-61 was not a superior night fighter. It was not a poor night fighter, it was a good night fighter, but it did not have enough speed.” In July 1944, just as the first P-61s were arriving in the ETO, Lt.

  • @KirkSwanum
    @KirkSwanum Месяц назад

    I made a model of one of them when I was a kid. I thought the cone shaped back window was cool.

  • @georgeshelton6281
    @georgeshelton6281 Месяц назад

    I wonder what comfort this aircraft may bring? It definitely had front, top, bottom, side, and rear armaments. Plus, it comes with a radar that can sense the enemy coming. It's definitely made for night warfare. Should it also be made for winter warfare? ➕️

  • @markpfeifer1402
    @markpfeifer1402 2 месяца назад +2

    Ineffective, but super cool looking.

  • @SusanFreese-g3x
    @SusanFreese-g3x Месяц назад

    My mother, Pauline Freese, Kotchar, then worked on these.

  • @jeremyhards1911
    @jeremyhards1911 21 день назад

    I’m sure the Black Widow has the last unofficial kill of WW2

  • @denesydenham1627
    @denesydenham1627 Месяц назад

    Bf 110 designed in 1936 nailed one of those in 1944

  • @LarryPrice-n1g
    @LarryPrice-n1g 2 месяца назад

    One bad ass aircraft.

  • @allenlovell1604
    @allenlovell1604 Месяц назад

    Very interesting plane ; I've heard of the " Black Widow ⚫️🤔😳. " However, I'd always pictured it as souped - up version of a P-38 Lightning ? " I now understand more about this fearsome plane and how it got its terrifying moniker or name !