Unusual Luftwaffe Aircraft Of WW2 | Nazi Germany Aviation | COMPLETE SERIES | Rare footage

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  • Опубликовано: 17 фев 2023
  • Cutting-Edge and innovative German Aircraft of WW2. The complete series, narrated by Eric Winkle Brown, the test pilot that flew almost 500 different aircraft. a close look at German aircraft of WWII, such as:
    Messerschmitt Me 323 Gigant
    Arado Ar 232 Millipede
    Blohm & Voss BV 141 Sidecar
    Focke-Wulf Fw 189 Owl
    Arado Ar 234 Blitz
    Dornier Do. 335
    Blohm & Voss Bv P.163
    ...And more
    The Second World War was a time of great innovation in the field of aircraft design, and no country contributed more to this than Germany. German aircraft designers were at the forefront of developing new technologies and designs that helped to give the Luftwaffe a significant advantage in the early years of the war. In this video, we'll take a look at some of the most innovative German aircraft of WW2.
    Messerschmitt Me 323 Gigant
    The Messerschmitt Me 323 Gigant was a massive transport aircraft that was developed in the late 1930s. It was designed to carry troops and equipment, and could also be used as a bomber. The Me 323 was powered by six engines, and had a maximum speed of 285 km/h. It was capable of carrying up to 130 fully equipped soldiers, or a payload of up to 20 tons.
    One of the most impressive features of the Me 323 was its ability to operate from rough, unprepared airstrips. This made it an ideal aircraft for supplying German troops in remote areas. However, the Me 323 was vulnerable to attack, and many were destroyed by Allied fighters during the war.
    Arado Ar 232 Millipede
    The Arado Ar 232 Millipede was a transport aircraft that was designed in the mid-1930s. It was intended to replace the Ju 52, which was the primary transport aircraft used by the Luftwaffe at the time. The Ar 232 was powered by two engines, and had a top speed of 360 km/h. It could carry up to 6 tons of cargo or 30 soldiers.
    One of the most innovative features of the Ar 232 was its ability to operate on skis, which allowed it to land on snow and ice. This made it a valuable asset for the German military during the harsh winters on the Eastern Front. However, the Ar 232 was also vulnerable to attack, and many were destroyed by Allied fighters.
    Blohm & Voss BV 141 Sidecar
    The Blohm & Voss BV 141 Sidecar was a reconnaissance aircraft that was developed in the early 1940s. It was designed to have an asymmetrical layout, with the pilot and observer sitting in a pod on one side of the aircraft, and the engine on the other. The BV 141 was powered by a single engine, and had a top speed of 375 km/h.
    The asymmetrical layout of the BV 141 was intended to give the observer a better view of the ground, and to make the aircraft less vulnerable to attack. However, the design also made the BV 141 difficult to control, and it was not as successful as the designers had hoped.
    Focke-Wulf Fw 189 Owl
    The Focke-Wulf Fw 189 Owl was a reconnaissance aircraft that was developed in the mid-1930s. It was designed to have a twin-boom layout, with a pusher propeller at the rear. The Fw 189 was powered by two engines, and had a top speed of 360 km/h.
    Dornier Do. 335
    The Dornier Do. 335 was a German heavy fighter aircraft that was developed during WW2. It had a unique push-pull engine layout, with two engines mounted on the centerline of the aircraft. This design gave the Do. 335 excellent speed and maneuverability, and it was capable of reaching speeds of up to 765 km/h. The Do. 335 was heavily armed, with two 30mm MK 103 cannon and two 20mm MG 151 cannon, and was designed to take on Allied bombers. However, production of the Do. 335 was limited, and only a few were ever used in combat. Despite its limited use, the Do. 335 remains an important example of German aircraft innovation during WW2.
    Arado Ar 234 Blitz
    The Arado Ar 234 Blitz was a German jet-powered reconnaissance bomber aircraft developed during WW2. It was one of the first jet-powered aircraft to enter service, and had a top speed of 742 km/h, making it one of the fastest planes of its time. The Ar 234 was designed to be a versatile aircraft, capable of carrying out a variety of missions, including reconnaissance, bombing, and ground attack. It was heavily armed, with four 20mm MG 151 cannon and one 13mm MG 131 machine gun. However, production of the Ar 234 was limited, and only a small number were ever used in combat. Despite its limited use, the Ar 234 was a groundbreaking aircraft, and helped to pave the way for the development of jet-powered aircraft in the years that followed.
    #aircraft #luftwaffe #messerschmitt
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Комментарии • 288

  • @Dronescapes
    @Dronescapes  Год назад +26

    Click the link to watch more aircraft, heroes and their stories, missions: www.youtube.com/@Dronescapes

    • @conlethbyrne4809
      @conlethbyrne4809 Год назад +2

      ❤️

    • @louisbettermann
      @louisbettermann Год назад +2

      @@conlethbyrne4809 11¹1¹¹

    • @conlethbyrne4809
      @conlethbyrne4809 Год назад +1

      @Louis Bettermann It was a delight to see these two war birds brought back to life also important to aviation history as other planes stood on the shoulders of Me109 & F190 to compete against them. Also, a reminder of our past which must not be forgotten for its unique ability to inspire even today's generation. Excellent program & many thanks, Slainte

    • @johnpages4627
      @johnpages4627 Год назад +1

      je répond quelle avance techniques qu'ils avaient ceux du troisièmes RECHT !

  • @topquark6242
    @topquark6242 Год назад +98

    I get excited any time I see an interview with Capt. Eric Brown. Awesome man.
    Capt Brown once landed a Vampire with no landing gear on a rubber sheet spread across an aircraft carrier. You should do something on that.
    My father was a fighter/test pilot and was always smuggly proud of flying over 45 different types. Capt. Brown did ten times more.

    • @jerribee1
      @jerribee1 Год назад +13

      It's amazing how he remembers so many details, considering the number of aircraft he flew, and from so long ago.

    • @Dronescapes
      @Dronescapes  Год назад +5

      Did you watch his biography on the channel? ruclips.net/video/PSRAdZzRycc/видео.html

    • @oxcart4172
      @oxcart4172 Год назад +4

      What's his name?

    • @Dronescapes
      @Dronescapes  Год назад +4

      Eric Winkle Brown…

    • @conlethbyrne4809
      @conlethbyrne4809 Год назад +3

      Capt. Brown is something special & so is your Dad ❤️

  • @walteralter9061
    @walteralter9061 Год назад +10

    Amazing quality footage, great interviews. Nice job.

  • @michaelmarks5012
    @michaelmarks5012 Год назад +10

    This is amazing content! Glad that I subscribed.

  • @HerbertDuckshort
    @HerbertDuckshort Год назад +7

    Great to see Capt. Brown. A flying legend.

  • @meruliouslacrimens5154
    @meruliouslacrimens5154 Год назад +4

    My nephew loved this as he made an airfix kit of the blom & voss bv 141. He said he was amazed it was ever built, let alone fly.

  • @Pu-nishant
    @Pu-nishant Год назад +1

    Such a quality Video, Thanks for making it.

  • @RevMikeBlack
    @RevMikeBlack 7 месяцев назад +1

    Any conversation with Eric Brown is worth watching.

  • @miketwomey4923
    @miketwomey4923 Год назад +4

    It was just so amazing to hear these veterans speak and tell us the stories. I have been a fan of WWII aircraft since I was a kid I loved finding out about some of the planes that I have never heard about before...

    • @Dronescapes
      @Dronescapes  Год назад +2

      Thank you. you should really enjoy E. Brown's playlist: ruclips.net/video/PSRAdZzRycc/видео.html

  • @schwarzermann3651
    @schwarzermann3651 Год назад +8

    The Arado 234 , for me one of the beautiest dynamicst Plane of WW II 😍

  • @salvagedb2470
    @salvagedb2470 Год назад +11

    Bonus of a vid with Eric Winkle Brown , The 163 was the first I have seen on it even in animated form.

  • @ImSpun13
    @ImSpun13 Год назад

    Love the Growling Sidewinder music. Nice touch.

  • @mikechevreaux7607
    @mikechevreaux7607 6 месяцев назад +2

    WW2 Japanese Had Some Very Advanced Experimental Planes.

  • @walteralter9061
    @walteralter9061 Год назад +9

    What was your source for the historic footage? Do you use an archive service or ferret the footage out yourselves from govt libraries? Much of it I've never seen before and I've seen a lot of WWII air war stuff.

    • @Dronescapes
      @Dronescapes  Год назад +8

      Licensed from a producer that had access to many archives

    • @walteralter9061
      @walteralter9061 Год назад +5

      @@Dronescapes It's good quality film, some of the best I've seen of period footage.

    • @jaybee9269
      @jaybee9269 Год назад +1

      I’ve never seen most of it.

  • @petefluffy7420
    @petefluffy7420 Год назад +1

    Why are you spinning the background? (3:40, Eric Brown speaking) Does spinning the background round and round add something? If it did I certainly missed what it was, it only had me wondering why it was spinning. wondering what is was illustrating..

  • @dronepilot260rc
    @dronepilot260rc Год назад +6

    You never miss with these videos. I can see these being used in History Classes 🎉

    • @Dronescapes
      @Dronescapes  Год назад +2

      Glad you like them!

    • @tempestfury8324
      @tempestfury8324 Год назад

      Unfortunately most "history" classes today are more concerned about the so-called "white supremacy" and "patriarchy" of the United States.

  • @billyfletcher6022
    @billyfletcher6022 Год назад

    Excellent job with the subs.

  • @robertlewis7237
    @robertlewis7237 Год назад +1

    THANK YOU FOR VIDEO

  • @michaelh.9866
    @michaelh.9866 Год назад

    It is great(!) to have Mr. Brown comment on these aircraft. A privilege to have his input.

    • @Dronescapes
      @Dronescapes  Год назад

      Much more Eric Brown's wisdom at: ruclips.net/video/PSRAdZzRycc/видео.html

  • @jnorth6022
    @jnorth6022 Год назад +5

    I would be ever so happy to chat with any and all of those guys, who personally supplied these stories!

  • @oculusangelicus8978
    @oculusangelicus8978 Год назад +19

    The BV-141 was NOT a problem looking for a solution, it was a solution looking for a problem. it was a good aircraft, it was just unusual and deemed too unconventional, it flew well and it had incredible visibility, which makes it useful it just was as useful as what eventually took the spot it was trying to fit in.

    • @Dronescapes
      @Dronescapes  Год назад +3

      🙂

    • @JohnRodriguesPhotographer
      @JohnRodriguesPhotographer Год назад +4

      The FW189 was a much better and importantly versatile design

    • @joebfnl1079
      @joebfnl1079 Год назад +1

      But!. Look at this in the 21's century, it is still a viable platform!. The real question is money!. If someone has the will and the money, platforms like this might have a place in the Sun again?.

    • @Sherwoody
      @Sherwoody Год назад +1

      Although it a twin engine, I wonder if the Rutan Model 202 Boomerang was inspired by the BV-141.

    • @roypiltdown5083
      @roypiltdown5083 10 месяцев назад +1

      it also used the same engine as the FW190, and the RLM could not justify reducing the production of a much-needed fighter to allow for an observation platform, regardless of its merits - BV141 was not cancelled for being unusual (look at some of the other pipe-dreams the Nazis threw money at), but for sensible economic reasons.

  • @barrybristow4646
    @barrybristow4646 10 месяцев назад +2

    For me , most beautiful of german aircraft of WWII was the Dornier Do- 335. nothing else to be said.

  • @CaptHollister
    @CaptHollister Год назад +5

    Eric "Winkle" Brown, a test pilot's test pilot. No person in history has flown more types of aircraft. An authority on both German and Soviet aircraft based entirely on his first hand experience.

    • @Dronescapes
      @Dronescapes  Год назад +3

      Agreed! Hopefully in the near future, together with our friend and producer from Quantafilms, we will be able to publish rare interviews that have never been seen and also some priceless ones with Frank Whittle that are still in 16mm format. It's like a treasure hunt :)

  • @JohnDoe-jn4ex
    @JohnDoe-jn4ex Год назад +2

    All airplanes are fantastic. Thank you.

    • @Dronescapes
      @Dronescapes  Год назад +1

      Glad you like them! Thank you too John.

    • @roypiltdown5083
      @roypiltdown5083 10 месяцев назад

      even the Christmas Bullet?

  • @jaybee9269
    @jaybee9269 Год назад +3

    Damn, Arado produced some SLICK aircraft!

  • @Cabooseified
    @Cabooseified Год назад +47

    The BV 141 wasn't cancelled because of it's oddity, it was cancelled because the factory that was manufacturing them was hit and the Luftwaffe with its limited resources decided to focus on existing platforms.

    • @RobZajac
      @RobZajac Год назад +1

      They didn't say oddity. They said unconventional. Which is what explained for no reason lol. But what u think bout rest of the film?

    • @EddieLingenfelder
      @EddieLingenfelder Год назад

      11111

    • @stanleybest8833
      @stanleybest8833 Год назад

      Germany gave a green light to crackpots.

    • @seffbones5655
      @seffbones5655 Год назад

      That’s literally the story for every nazi aircraft, kinda sad the best planes in the world were made by the most horrendous government

    • @giorgofotopoulo2350
      @giorgofotopoulo2350 11 месяцев назад +1

      0:45 smth they say oddity

  • @zofe
    @zofe Год назад +1

    T-33, Fouga-Magister and F-104 also had large wing-tip tanks.

  • @davidlafranchise4782
    @davidlafranchise4782 Год назад +1

    Why didn't the video delve into "possibly the best military transport of the era" . Which was the Arado 232 "B" model. Built with 4 Bramo 323 motors and had larger wings. Only 10 built, according to Wikipedia.
    But video completely ignores it and switches subject.

  • @RickOAA
    @RickOAA Год назад

    Interesting observation of the fuselage bouncing, not the wing tips.

  • @kurtschlesinger8257
    @kurtschlesinger8257 Год назад

    Nice MAN

  • @lokischildren7862
    @lokischildren7862 Год назад +3

    Eric brown a legend

  • @randym4121
    @randym4121 Год назад

    Just a small criticism concerning the 141...you got your port and starboard mixed up: Port wine is red, the port navigation light is red. The word "left" has four letters in it, as does the word "port."

  • @Otokichi786
    @Otokichi786 Год назад +2

    Bv 141 "Sidecar"
    FW 189 "Uhu"
    Ar 234 "Blitz"

  • @aerostaraircraftsanctuary604
    @aerostaraircraftsanctuary604 Год назад

    What is or was a felt vebo? (the person who ran up the engines of the BV 141 at the airfield? Some sort of mechanic or ground personnel ?

  • @xchrisx84x10
    @xchrisx84x10 Год назад

    I wonder if the Ar232s would've had the same over heating issues at first due to cowling and air flow issues?

  • @tonyelberg7814
    @tonyelberg7814 Год назад +2

    winky baby is a dead set legend, thanks for this, bloody excellant

    • @jaybee9269
      @jaybee9269 Год назад

      Yeah, no one called him that!

    • @tonyelberg7814
      @tonyelberg7814 Год назад

      @@jaybee9269 I just did, if you don't like it here's a quarter tell someone who cares🤣🤣🤣, what a thing to pick on 🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @trance9158
    @trance9158 10 месяцев назад

    Loved the Horten brothers designs

  • @raymondyee2008
    @raymondyee2008 Год назад +1

    Why did we miss this on "Secret Weapons Over Normandy" and "Blazing Angels 2"?

  • @rogerkay8603
    @rogerkay8603 Год назад +3

    Eric "Winkle" Brown - what a life the guy had, great bloke.

  • @justfly7730
    @justfly7730 Год назад +5

    He is the Stig for aircraft.

  • @finncarlbomholtsrensen1188
    @finncarlbomholtsrensen1188 Год назад +4

    On he other hand, it took a skilled crew ½ an hour to replace a jet engine, even in the field.

  • @jeroensbirdingphotos5436
    @jeroensbirdingphotos5436 Год назад

    Where is this museum?

  • @glencrandall7051
    @glencrandall7051 Год назад +5

    Most interesting. No telling what aircraft innovations Germany could have come up if they hadn't been fighting a war.

    • @B61Mod12
      @B61Mod12 Год назад +2

      War tends to drive and accelerate technological innovation.

    • @ursus9104
      @ursus9104 Год назад

      German aviation technology influenced all Air Forces to this day. It’s remarkably how the German science could excel in the middle of a war with shortages of everything.

  • @pablonylos8022
    @pablonylos8022 Год назад +4

    Wiele z tych pomysłów, po wojnie doczekało się realizacji w samolotach tworzonych przez aliantów. Ciekawy odcinek. Super kanał. Są napisy pl. 👍

    • @EllieMaes-Grandad
      @EllieMaes-Grandad Год назад +1

      It's an English-speaking site . . .

    • @pablonylos8022
      @pablonylos8022 Год назад +1

      @@EllieMaes-Grandad ok, but you have pl subtitles. cool.

    • @DariusZ-jf4nd
      @DariusZ-jf4nd 7 месяцев назад +1

      Rzeczywiście, i wielu ludzi tego nie wie.

  • @caeserromero3013
    @caeserromero3013 Год назад +2

    If they'd given me one of those BV 141's I'd be like: "Where's the rest of it?" 🤣

  • @donscheid97
    @donscheid97 Год назад +3

    German engineers were very good at getting out of the box and then making a bigger one.

  • @mugsnvicki
    @mugsnvicki Год назад +1

    AIrfix made models of these. I have them! Cool.

  • @mikechevreaux7607
    @mikechevreaux7607 6 месяцев назад

    WW2 Had Some Good Advanced Ones Also.

  • @joebfnl1079
    @joebfnl1079 Год назад

    To this day, the Arado 232 is still a viable platform for rough field and STOL operations?

  • @Aengus42
    @Aengus42 Год назад +1

    You've already shown this, surely!

  • @markrowland1366
    @markrowland1366 Год назад +17

    Before the massive numbers of the American Dakota's, the first to be profitable without Airmail contracts, the Foker trimotor had the record for the most takeoffs and landings. Gold mining in Australian New Guinea. There were few places for roads, even now. With thousands of tonnes to be flown bach and forth, hundreds of flights flew to the ports every day. Sixty fleets were operated. My neighbour hid barrels of mercury and other things from the Japanese.

    • @thorick590
      @thorick590 Год назад +3

      That's a really impressive record. I didn't know they they were that widely used. By then though, I'm not sure if Fokker was a Dutch company returning to Fokker's homeland of the Netherlands ?

    • @YouHaventSeenMeRight
      @YouHaventSeenMeRight Год назад +3

      @@thorick590 Fokker went to Germany during WW I to build his aircraft there. At the end of the war (1919) he returned to The Netherlands to continue building aircraft. But he moved to the US, got naturalized and opened an aircraft factory there in 1923 (Atlantic Aircraft Corporation). That company built the Trimotor, (aka F.VII) but his American adventure didn't last long and he returned to the Netherlands in the late 1920's. He then had some modest success with his Dutch airplane company. He returned to New York in 1937 and died there in 1939. Atlantic Aircraft Corporation was acquired by General Motors and eventually became North American Aviation in 1934 (though Fokker was not involved after 1931). This company became part of Rockwell and that is now part of Boeing.

    • @thorick590
      @thorick590 Год назад +1

      @@YouHaventSeenMeRight thanks for the detailed history. I didn't know whatever became of Fokker and I certainly didn't expect this ! An aside, I made my original comment because the title of this video seemed to concern German aircraft and I didn't think that the Trimotor was a German aircraft.

    • @YouHaventSeenMeRight
      @YouHaventSeenMeRight Год назад +2

      @@thorick590 Indeed. Even during WW I Fokker was a Dutch national, who just happened to have opened a factory in Germany. The Fokker F.VII was designed by him in his American factory, but he also manufactured it in his Dutch factories. Maybe its a case of thinking that Fokker was German because of his first WW output (he had to open the factory in Germany because The Netherlands were neutral during WW I, so he couldn't have produced anything over here for the German war machine). He was such a minor player after WW I that most people forgot to look into his background. BTW: Fokker Aircraft in The Netherlands was active as a company until early 1996, when they declared bankruptcy. They mainly made small and medium passenger aircraft at the time. The company spawned several spin-off companies that still operate under the Fokker name though. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fokker

  • @brucejenner4800
    @brucejenner4800 Год назад +5

    Hey, vorsprung durch technik, remember? If the powers in Germany in the second world war used all the amazing advances in technology wisely, history would be so completely different. Opting to use the Me-262 as a fighter-bomber was a catastrophic decision. Look at the Tiger one, a tank that totally outclassed any allied effort, but was so complicated as to be hopelessly unreliable. Look at the MG-42, the best machine gun in the war, so good in fact, its still used, and chosen today, only with a few minor modifications. Yes, history is a fickle thing, hey, maybe in a parallel universe.................NIGHTMARE!

    • @jaybee9269
      @jaybee9269 Год назад

      Good point. But at the end of the day the U.S. alone had at least 10 times the production capacity of Germany…including Austria and other territorial additions.

    • @martcon6757
      @martcon6757 Год назад

      Germany lost the war when they lost the caucus oil fields and failed to conquer Russia. No oil no hope. Neither the 252 nor the Tiger or any of the other amazing developments they made would have won them the war.

  • @reyigo69
    @reyigo69 Год назад

    Cool.

  • @johnnyx9892
    @johnnyx9892 Год назад +9

    "Focke-Wulf" would be a great name for a heavy metal band.

    • @Dronescapes
      @Dronescapes  Год назад +2

      🤔😯🙂

    • @msgfrmdaactionman3000
      @msgfrmdaactionman3000 Год назад +1

      A Germán Trans Punk band would be cool for that.

    • @oceanhome2023
      @oceanhome2023 Год назад +1

      As would BlitzKrieg

    • @StalinLovsMsmZioglowfagz
      @StalinLovsMsmZioglowfagz Год назад +1

      @@msgfrmdaactionman3000 T people are literally fkg insane w/ gen dysph. But a punk band already had that name when I was in college.

  • @salsheikh4508
    @salsheikh4508 Год назад +1

    This interview is in like 5 episodes...

  • @user-cx8lx1vi4i
    @user-cx8lx1vi4i Год назад +1

    我が国でBV141は「片ちんば」と呼称されて比較的有名な方でして、昔はエアフィクス社から71分の1スケールのプラモデルが出ていました。今はチェコのメーカーに金型が移管されて販売中ですwwwアラド234ブリッツも、香港のドラゴン社から販売されていますね(笑)

  • @robertmiller2173
    @robertmiller2173 Год назад +3

    What a fantastic program, I have thoroughly enjoyed it from start to finish! Thanks so much! Eric was such a lucky man, he got to fly so many amazing aircraft, and he is so cool.
    Heres to you Richard Voght, and to Willie Messerschmitt, Hanz Von Ohain... and many others
    All those amazing German Scientists and Engineers. And Germany is still the engineering and scientific Capital of Europe!
    It is such a shame that the empires of Britain, France, and Russia had to gang up on Germany and the Austro Hungarian Empires.....here we are in 2023 and Germany id the Economic Power of Europe!
    Imagine if we had set up an EU and a NATO before WW1, along with a Free Trade Agreement that encompassed the British, German, French Empires and colonies into a Free Trade Agreement wrapped up in a NATO like defense Agreement! If Russia behaved its self it might have been asked to join! Obviously Spain and Portugal would also be invited to join along with Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Argentina.
    Japan, Korea, and Japan would be encouraged to have their own hemisphere but also invited to join the Real UN.

  • @robertklimczak5630
    @robertklimczak5630 8 месяцев назад

    Kiedy próbowano zrobić kontynuacje z mocniejszym silnikiem okazalo się ze dostawal silnych wibracji. Porzucono kontynuację

  • @estebanjodarpozo1999
    @estebanjodarpozo1999 Год назад

    No está en castellano....solo el título...1 vez desactivados los subtítulos hala ahí lo llevas...1 docu q parece estar en español pero no lo está

  • @rolfagten857
    @rolfagten857 Год назад +2

    The ME 262 was the best one!

    • @Dronescapes
      @Dronescapes  Год назад +1

      Very nice place, but the engine was still extremely unreliable even after years of development. By the way, this is a fascination story about the jet engine. It includes an interview with Von Ohain, the father of the German jet engine and the one responsible for the 1st flight (but not the inventor): ruclips.net/video/G0T4-XG612Q/видео.html If you have not watched it, I think you will like it.

  • @KAI19772011
    @KAI19772011 Год назад +1

    @ the exploding 234s engine: no sabotage was necessary, the quality of the metal used was that bad, that you had to adjust throttle very very cautious otherwise the engine would explode, even it’s was a completely new one.

  • @vitalypopov4930
    @vitalypopov4930 Год назад

    Очень интересный выпуск👍

  • @gendaminoru3195
    @gendaminoru3195 Год назад +1

    PAPER CLIP

  • @Minong_Manitou_Mishepeshu
    @Minong_Manitou_Mishepeshu Год назад

    Should have just had that bird cage suspended on stilts over that engine fuselage nacelle. Would have looked like a stretched Dora with cool wings.

  • @john-xo9mg
    @john-xo9mg Год назад

    JU 87 the A10 of it's time, more famous than the HS 129 .

  • @parttimetourist
    @parttimetourist 6 месяцев назад

    It does not matter what they created they lost the war 78 years ago much to the relief of many who endured years of misery and suffering
    So what is the point of raking up past events which most people would prefer to forget while others could not care less

  • @reginaldmcnab3265
    @reginaldmcnab3265 Год назад

    21:55 jettisoned reusable rockets! Nearly 80 years before space X

  • @Kopernicus67
    @Kopernicus67 7 дней назад

    One has to admire (w/o the evil or sadism) the ingenuity of the German engineers. These designs would fit right in on a 2024 reboot of Star Wars.
    But that was the problem in wartime, these fanciful designs were often solutions to problems that didn't exist. Ultimately the superior engineering pieces of the Germans were (thankfully) beat by simple Shermans, T-34s, Garand rifles and mass produced P-47, 51, B-17 and 24 aircraft.

  • @pietrocalcioli8169
    @pietrocalcioli8169 Год назад +2

    Erano molto avanti

  • @tombrunner8181
    @tombrunner8181 Год назад +1

    Long before the World War?
    Germany was in bondage to the Treaty of Versailles

  • @tkskagen
    @tkskagen Год назад +1

    As far as design, the Germans (of the time) made absolutely beautiful aircraft.
    But the Allies still kicked their tails!

  • @richpontone1
    @richpontone1 Год назад

    When you manufacture over 400 planes, you lose the capacity to build the fighters and bombers that are effective and successful.
    But here is the real problem. Germany did not have an effective four engine bomber that could destroy the Soviet heavy armament factories that out produced them in tanks, artillery, rockets, planes, and ammunition. Stalin famously said something to the effect that "Quantity is the quality that is the most effective in War".
    The reason for this is that
    German plane builder Heinckel was commissioned to come up with this but Hitler ordered him to produce such a bomber that could dive bomb like a Stuka. But this was impossible as the stress on the wings and the engines would have destroyed the plane in mid flight and so, none could be produced.

  • @silvermane1741
    @silvermane1741 Год назад

    The Germans had some weird but innovative airplanes in WW2.

  • @stephenjacks8196
    @stephenjacks8196 Год назад

    Cutting edge?

  • @markrowland1366
    @markrowland1366 Год назад +3

    A long war was expected by Hitler, who wrote the invasion of France would take three years. The joke that was the French defence, allowed him the opportunity to strike The Soviet Union two years earlier. Remember Stalin was the General who tried to invade Germany in 1922.

  • @zillsburyy1
    @zillsburyy1 Год назад +2

    too little too late and way too much fighting between the different german aircraft manufacturers

  • @barfuss2007
    @barfuss2007 Год назад

    The engine of the Ar 234 was named Jumo not Zomo 🙂

  • @ThatsMrMoronToYou
    @ThatsMrMoronToYou Год назад

    The FW-189 was in the first Indianapolis Jones movie.

  • @loishope6605
    @loishope6605 Год назад +1

    Trimotors? We had six a turning and four a burnin.
    Of course I am referring to the B-36 " Peacemaker".

    • @DABrock-author
      @DABrock-author Год назад +5

      You mean ‘Two turning, two burning, two smoking, two choking, and two unaccounted for’. 😂

  • @820hurleyj
    @820hurleyj 7 месяцев назад

    If they'd built a big bomber, they might've won.

  • @victorpalamar8769
    @victorpalamar8769 Год назад +2

    Did the Germans. develop the "America Bomber"? I have read that it was proposed along the lines of the 4-engine bomber Condor.

    • @DRAGONSLAYER1220
      @DRAGONSLAYER1220 Год назад

      I don't believe any of them got past the prototype stage. Through the course of development, Germany's fortunes turned for the worse & funding had to be diverted to more pressing needs.

  • @davidlafranchise4782
    @davidlafranchise4782 Год назад +1

    Anything with SIR Brown is worth seeing. He did get a knighthood right?? If he didn't, he should have.

  • @carlosvidal1060
    @carlosvidal1060 Год назад

    Este avión el B&V 141 de reconocimiento se fabricaron menos de 100 aparatos y se usó exclusivamente en el frente oriental. Su fracaso fué debido a usar un motor falto de potencia.

  • @geoffreycarson2311
    @geoffreycarson2311 Год назад +1

    CAPN BROWN Said that THE GERMAN Woman Test Pilot Hanna Reik I think Her NAME WAS !!!WAS A BRILLIANT and GUTTSY TEST PILOT !!! g

    • @ritxises9542
      @ritxises9542 Год назад +1

      Hanna Reitsch, Possibly the best aviator in history...why isn't she better known? why was he born in defeated country, He set many height and speed records, some of which are still unbroken.

  • @MichaelMcKinnon-jf1yy
    @MichaelMcKinnon-jf1yy 6 месяцев назад

    The Bv-141 was a reconnaissance aircraft with a fairly decent range, but it was a solution looking for a problem

  • @ranbree1960
    @ranbree1960 Год назад +1

    the Me 234 Bliz I would Love to Fly or just to take a ride in Her. And the 335 I truly would Love to See and take a Ride In her too.

  • @geraldmiller5260
    @geraldmiller5260 Год назад

    When designing an aircraft, please do not design an ugly one!

  • @MOHAMMEDCOBRA101
    @MOHAMMEDCOBRA101 Год назад +1

    👍

  • @frankschmitt6399
    @frankschmitt6399 Год назад

    Please don’t „Nazi“ for every German developement between 1933 and 1945👍

  • @frankheels
    @frankheels 11 месяцев назад

    Damals waren wir Deutschen noch Technologiefuehrend

  • @hanspetersen-uj6gd
    @hanspetersen-uj6gd Год назад

    Interessante Bilder - aber eine grauenvolle Übersetzung!!!!

  • @ryanjones7681
    @ryanjones7681 Год назад +1

    You left out so much...
    Oh well. Was cool anyways.

  • @fandangofandango2022
    @fandangofandango2022 9 месяцев назад

    Brave Gentleman.

  • @EllieMaes-Grandad
    @EllieMaes-Grandad Год назад +24

    They didn't overwhelm the UK's RAF . . .

    • @noteimportax6477
      @noteimportax6477 Год назад

      Pft you were just lucky hitler sent almost all his forces to russia, uk was losing everywhere you lost the battle of france,you lost in the balkans,in the pacific the japs wasted you ,also you were losing in norafrika

    • @speedy761
      @speedy761 Год назад

      Yes Hitler got a bit salty after a bombing raid in germany so he started to only bomb London instead of their airfields and factories 🙈

    • @johnpaul3099
      @johnpaul3099 Год назад +3

      Lend lease

    • @EllieMaes-Grandad
      @EllieMaes-Grandad Год назад +2

      @@johnpaul3099 Only later in the war. A the start, the UK paid cash for weapons.

    • @johnpaul3099
      @johnpaul3099 Год назад +2

      @@EllieMaes-Grandad the US played a key role in sustaining the RAF

  • @frankthompson6503
    @frankthompson6503 9 месяцев назад

    Advanced technology flying saucer and flying wing's and flying jet's where advanced technology took hold on the front line against the entire world.
    Aviation fuel extremely fast propulsion rocket fuel which made the enemy cringe.
    The best engineering country in the world 🌍 was Germany.
    Flying bombs
    Flying rockets
    Flying saucer
    Flying wing
    Flying anything that flew even flying drones unmanned recconnisence vehicle

  • @jebise1126
    @jebise1126 Год назад

    germany lacked useful turbo supercharger and good unmanned turrets also radars and aiming was behind allies... not really better aircraft that allies had.

  • @petersampson4635
    @petersampson4635 Год назад

    They lost the war, but still managed to go to the moon. 🌙

    • @Dronescapes
      @Dronescapes  Год назад

      One guy contributed.mit takes a lot that one individual, including brave astronauts, and an fleet of you g engineers. By the way, you should check the average age of NASA back the . Amazingly young

  • @patrickbaillargeon8051
    @patrickbaillargeon8051 Год назад

    Last time I checked the Allies won that war and saved the world from fascism. Very little glory in war. Enough said.

  • @Flight100100
    @Flight100100 Год назад

    Planes that lost the war.

  • @parolof
    @parolof Год назад

    Blohm & Voss, is pronounced "Blohm & Foss"

    • @Dronescapes
      @Dronescapes  Год назад

      Italians have lived 100s of years listening to names such as Michelangelo being pronounced in the most ludicrous ways. Perhaps after all these centuries they got used to it.