Royal Marine Reacts To JAS 39 Gripen: How Sweden Built The World's Best Non Stealth Fighter Jet

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  • Опубликовано: 12 май 2024
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Комментарии • 430

  • @Kent.
    @Kent. Месяц назад +155

    SAAB didn't start with cars, it's a airplane manufacturer that started to make cars in 1947 after the WWII. Svenska Aeroplan Aktie Bolaget, SAAB. Swedish airplane corporation. The cars are gone since 2011.

    • @Kiren129
      @Kiren129 Месяц назад +1

      ??? General Motors bought SAAB Automobile in the year 2000 and didn’t get permission by SAAB technology to use the griffin or the name SAAB. So the cars have been gone since 2000. Check your info.

    • @dbtest117
      @dbtest117 Месяц назад +6

      @@Kiren129 GM produced saab cars with the name saab. G-M was interested in Saabs IP after they actively made it hard for the brand to survive. There were buyers afterwards but G-M refused to sell for many years.

    • @Daniel_Kani
      @Daniel_Kani Месяц назад +2

      @@Kiren129 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saab_Automobile read

    • @WolfHeathen
      @WolfHeathen Месяц назад +8

      @@Kiren129 Technically, the SAAB cars were still in production until 2014. They were manufactured as an EV brand with the Saab name. It was purchased by NEVS (National Electric Vehicle Sweden) who manufactured the electric Saab 9-3. However, they lost a trademark dispute with the weapons and fighter jet manufacturer portion of SAAB and had to change the name and had to manufacturing Saab cars under the brand "NEVS".
      In 2014, it was sold to the now infamous Evergrande Group (the chinese company that had to liquidate everything in 2021, resulting in its founder going from a net worth of $45+ billion to losing his billionaire status in just 6 years).

    • @Niinsa62
      @Niinsa62 Месяц назад +3

      @@WolfHeathen Agree. But the car story might not end here. The factory in Sweden is still alive, and has a car ready for production, the Emily. The new owner is a Canadian company, EV Electra. The cars will not be using the SAAB name, though. Because they don't own the name.
      A clarification perhaps. SAAB is the mother company, making fighter aircraft since 1937. They also made cars from after WW2 to 2000, when they sold off the car manufacturing business to General Motors. But General Motors were allowed to market the cars under the SAAB name, even if SAAB no longer had anything to do with those cars that GM built. Well, it was still the same factory in Trollhättan, Sweden, that built the cars. But that was no longer a SAAB facility, it was GM owned. And when GM in 2011(ish) sold off the SAAB car manufacturing business to the next in line (complicated story), the agreement between SAAB and GM about GM being allowed using the SAAB name on cars, didn't mean GM had the right to sell the name to anyone else. Basically, when GM sold off that car brand, the right to use the name SAAB for the cars ended. So "a trademark dispute" is not really correct. The trademark was never GM's to sell, so they didn't sell it, and it stays with the original company, SAAB, which has kept building aircraft, and lots of other defence stuff, all the time. Like submarines, combat boats, radars, anti-tank rifles (Carl Gustaf, and AT4), and whatnot. And since the channel is run by a Royal Marine, he most likely have trained using laserdome-like training equipment made by SAAB. SAAB is one of the larger defence companies in Europe. The cars were always just a side show.

  • @lordAvatar
    @lordAvatar Месяц назад +103

    One thing that was mentioned but not really explained. It can land and take off from paved roadways and rearm and refuel in like 15 minutes by 5 guys in a truck, (4 conscripts and 1 trained tech). It's really designed for distributed defense warfare.

    • @Johmpa
      @Johmpa Месяц назад +24

      Indeed. The thinking was pretty much that if Sweden got invaded by an aggressor (i.e. Russia) the first thing that will happen is that every major airfield will be destroyed by long range weapons.
      Which is why the Gripen can land on rough roads in the woods and rearmed in ten minutes by a tech and a few conscripts. All the stuff needed to rearm the plane are stored in pods mounted on a couple of flatbed trucks.
      There is a fun story about a wargame where a Gripen pilot had some time on his hands and decided to rearm and refuel his plane by himself. He could do it in 20 minutes.

    • @lordAvatar
      @lordAvatar Месяц назад +3

      @Johmpa Yeah, but a land invasion of Sweden is really unlikely. You have to assume they'll be fighting in the Baltic and in Finland, maybe Northern Norway, but the logistics would be shit for any invading army up there.

    • @ugvadugvaw
      @ugvadugvaw Месяц назад +4

      @@lordAvatarUnlikely, yes. But not unlikely that airbases and airports would be hammered with long distance missiles every now and then, makkng them very difficult or impossible to use for the air force. Landing and taking off on dispersed runways (a long enough stretch of highway) is just a small aspect of the doctrine-not that unique. Having everything needed for re-arming, refueling and crucial maintnance, including personell in a truck that can move around, the key. An F35, F16 or Eurofighter needs a lot more pampering and a much larger apparatus to fly mission after mission.

    • @DNA912
      @DNA912 Месяц назад +6

      One of the most overlooked capabilities of the Gripen. This specific ability is what makes it stand out from the rest of the competition

  • @jimmyandersson9682
    @jimmyandersson9682 Месяц назад +108

    Looks like Eurofighter, what you should say is that Eurofighter looks like Gripen :) Gripen was first shown 1987 and Eurofighter 1994. I guess you could also argue that both are similar to Viggen, first flown 1968. The main characteristic would be the delta wing, borrowed from Draken, 1955 :)

    • @WolfHeathen
      @WolfHeathen Месяц назад +19

      Interesting fact: it was the Draken that created the infamous "Cobra maneuver" seen in the Top Gun movies where they tilt the airplane almost 90 degrees up in order to brake super quick and end up behind the enemy.

    • @DominikusTV
      @DominikusTV Месяц назад +1

      Except that Eurofighter is a twice as heavy two engine aircraft.

    • @perwestermark8920
      @perwestermark8920 Месяц назад +6

      ​@@DominikusTV Except "looks like" does not care about the weight, unless one plane is directly fat...

    • @andrewwmacfadyen6958
      @andrewwmacfadyen6958 Месяц назад

      Except the aerodynamic prototype precursor of the Typhoon the Ba EAP was actually flying in 1986

    • @bengtstaffas8398
      @bengtstaffas8398 Месяц назад +1

      Viggens first flight occurred in feb 1967

  • @kiptanoi4422
    @kiptanoi4422 Месяц назад +44

    Sweden does not need stealth..... "One Gripen pilot knocked down five F-16 block 50+ during close air combat in Red Flag" " 3 F-15C’s from the USAF were intercepted by a Gripen acting as an aggressor. The result was 2 F-15’s shot down and one managed to escape due to better thrust/weight."

    • @macjonte
      @macjonte Месяц назад +12

      The Gripen E has very small radar pickup and has spoofer so it looks more like interference as I understand it?

    • @jarpa153
      @jarpa153 Месяц назад +12

      The new model E also has new radar technology that can send out signals from the wingtips so that a plane looks like three planes in the enemy's radar

    • @FlankerB3
      @FlankerB3 Месяц назад +3

      @@jarpa153 that's not radar. thats radar spoofer.

    • @PaRadiZer
      @PaRadiZer Месяц назад

      @kiptanoi4422
      "Sweden does not need stealth...."
      Interesting then how the Swedes (and everyone else) are pursuing stealth fighters these days. And stealth drones, stealth ships (for instance Sweden's Visby class corvettes), and so on..

    • @johanlassen6448
      @johanlassen6448 8 дней назад

      Literally never happened bro. You are just regurgitating an old myth.

  • @hachimaki
    @hachimaki Месяц назад +25

    I've heard a rumor that apparently the reason why cars have heated seats is because saab first created them for their pilots so they didn't have freeze their butts off during winter flight exercises.

  • @JonGretarB
    @JonGretarB Месяц назад +138

    I think the F35 cost $44,000 per fligh hour. F16 costs $22,000 per flight hour and the Gripen about $4,700. It was a major requirement for development and allows for much more training.

    • @lordAvatar
      @lordAvatar Месяц назад +6

      The E model costs more than an F35A... granted the operating cost really eats that up quickly.

    • @JonGretarB
      @JonGretarB Месяц назад +20

      @@lordAvatar yeah true. The E model is on par with F35 in avionics and EW capabilities and would almost be considered 5th gen if it was stealth as well. And thus it has a 5th gen pricetag.
      But these operating costs is a huge benefit for a small nation. Means you can train a pilot for 10 hours at the same cost as one hour in a F35. And when looking at the russian air force you can clearly see what happens when you have a nice plane but can´t afford to let your pilots train in it.

    • @lordAvatar
      @lordAvatar Месяц назад +12

      @JonGretarB yeah, I mean just to be complete, the price is an economy of scale issue. So many orders for F35s have allowed them to ram up production and bring the unit price down. So I imagine if the scaling was similar, the F35 would be much more expensive.

    • @JonGretarB
      @JonGretarB Месяц назад +2

      @@lordAvatar yeah and that is not going to change. Even if everyone wanted Gripens then Saab has no way of ramping up and matching the manufacturing capabilities of a US air defence manufacturers.

    • @lordAvatar
      @lordAvatar Месяц назад +4

      It's much more of a defensive system than the F35s, it's range isn't great, and its ground attack capability isn't amazing (I hear).
      Any NATO partners may be required to join NATO OPs, which may be offensive in nature, which makes the F35 more attractive... granted, if your country gets invaded by Russia, I'd love a main fleet of Gripens. Through a few F35s in there, it would be nice as well.

  • @jamestown12345
    @jamestown12345 Месяц назад +61

    Saab's slogan is literally, "Born from Jets".

    • @MickeSmed
      @MickeSmed Месяц назад +11

      Yes, the name SAAB is originally an acronym for "Svenska Aeroplan Aktiebolaget".

    • @algotn
      @algotn Месяц назад +3

      @@MickeSmedwhich for those interested roughly translates to "Swedish Aeroplanes Stock Company"

  • @Alsicufe
    @Alsicufe Месяц назад +17

    J = Jakt = Hunt
    A = Attack = Attack
    S = Span = Reconnaissance
    39 = Model number
    Gripen = Griffin = Model Name

    • @thomash3716
      @thomash3716 Месяц назад +3

      And the Griffin is the symbol on the logo of SAAB 😀

    • @Alsicufe
      @Alsicufe Месяц назад

      ​@@thomash3716 Well, yes and no. SAAB went into an agreement using Scanias Logo for their cars/brand as a joint thing.

    • @henrikl1394
      @henrikl1394 Месяц назад

      @@Alsicufe And No, Griffen is the weaponshield of Malmö city.

    • @Alsicufe
      @Alsicufe Месяц назад +1

      @@henrikl1394 and Scania in Latin means "Skåne" which is exactly where they started.

    • @Alsicufe
      @Alsicufe 17 дней назад +1

      @thomash3716 to make it clear, Scania and SAAB went in 1969 with eachother and 1974 the SAAB started using Scanias griphin. Scania known as Scania Vabis has been using the Griphin since 1901.

  • @frankymr2
    @frankymr2 Месяц назад +38

    The euro was shaped after this and not the other way around . This plane was designed way before the euro.

  • @RaXXha
    @RaXXha Месяц назад +72

    204 is a lot, but during the cold war we had over 1000 aircraft in the swedish airforce. 😅

    • @donaldnoell5378
      @donaldnoell5378 Месяц назад +9

      Actually you had over 3,000 in total. But that was total through out the cold war. Active is a different story

    • @WolfHeathen
      @WolfHeathen Месяц назад +4

      In the 50's we had the fourth largest air force in the world. Granted, we also killed about 600 pilots every year because of our design work so we paid a heavy price for the technology we developed. Per 100,000 flight hours, our pilot death rate was six times higher than that of the US air force.

    • @danielandersson7485
      @danielandersson7485 Месяц назад +3

      ​@@WolfHeathen That's why they're drinking grogg in Valhall at this very moment

    • @samueljohansson3325
      @samueljohansson3325 Месяц назад +6

      ​@@WolfHeathennot every year, Jebus.
      Between 1946 and 1989, 547 people died in total.

    • @Tabacish
      @Tabacish Месяц назад +4

      ​@@WolfHeathenNo, that wasn't because of the design, it was because of the training. They flew incredibly aggressive...

  • @danielandersson7485
    @danielandersson7485 Месяц назад +32

    1:16 That's like hearing someone say "I thought they only sold McFlurry's, but I never knew McDonald's also made burgers" 😁

  • @clausjensen5658
    @clausjensen5658 Месяц назад +18

    As a Dane , we often enjoy some jokes and banter with and about our nordic neighbours and vice versa. But Swedish weapons! Outstanding and deadly!

    • @andersjjensen
      @andersjjensen Месяц назад +3

      Anyone who has ever fired a Carl Gustaf can attest to that. It will positively obliterate whatever you point it at. The only downsides are that everyone in the same post code will know your position.... and you should not fire it on a too full stomach if you want to keep your calories where you need them.

    • @swedishgooner6339
      @swedishgooner6339 29 дней назад

      @@andersjjensenNot made for swimming tho. I nearly drowned crossing a wide stream carrying one of those bastards on my back and my AK4 in the front 😂😂

    • @andersjjensen
      @andersjjensen 28 дней назад +1

      @@swedishgooner6339 I'd imagine. But anyone whos combat plan is "we'll just play hide and seek with them until they drown themselves" will have their day ruined by 88 millimeters of "The sprit of Mjölner" in fairly short order.

  • @sircoolalot9471
    @sircoolalot9471 Месяц назад +29

    This video was decent on going through the basics of the Gripen, but I think it went off of a template of things that other jets have and compared them mainly on those points. Because of that it missed a few of the more unique features of the Gripen that make it stand out more.
    To mention a few:
    - The ability to land and take off from straight stretches of normal road anywhere in Sweden. This is a core design decision behind Swedish jets as it's assumed that the Russians would rapidly take out all airfields to try to ground the Swedish airforce otherwise.
    - Its turnaround rate from landing until they can take off for another mission is only 10 to 20min depending on the type of mission.
    - It can be served by a ground crew of just 5 or 6 people and a resupply truck, where only one of them need to be a qualified tech engineer.
    - It's a very low-cost jet to run. The actual acquisition price might not be all that impressive. The brand-new E/F version costs slightly more than an F35. Probably much because of the industry of scale that Saab doesn't have with it's much lower number of produced jets. However, the initial cost pales in comparison to the cost of running a fleet of combat aircraft for 10-20 years. The per hour flight cost of the Gripen is reportedly about $4,700, the F35 costs almost ten times more and even the "budget-friendly" F16 costs considerably more to run.
    - It's by design very modular, making repeated upgrades to the system throughout its years of service very easy to do. This is the main reason why the mentioned "Meteor" missile was first fitted on the Gripens of all jets. Obviously this relative ease of upgrades also helps with the cost of those upgrades.
    - Saab decided to forego stealth on the new E/F version of the Gripen, mainly because of the prohibitive cost hike that would've come with it. However, as was mentioned in the video briefly, the Gripen is equipped with probably the most advanced EW suite currently in use. The full capabilities of it is ofc a closely guarded secret and it's Swedish airforce policy to not set the EW module to "War Mode" even in training exercises with external participants , in order to keep its full capabilities secret. However, it's reported that it can isolate the frequency of enemy radar systems (missiles and planes alike) and jam them, and spoof radar shadows of planes that are not actually there to confuse the enemy.
    - The radar module that came with the new Gripen E/F can also rotate in order to turn in a certain direction without showing it's hand by turning the nose of the plane towards it. This also means the radar system can continue feeding radar info to outgoing missiles even after turning away from the target. I believe it's the only jet that currently has this radar capability.
    As to your surprise about the size of the Swedish airforce, a more accurate number of the Gripens currently in service is about 100. Some more are currently out of service but can be fixed up pretty quickly, and an additional couple of planes are being rented out to other countries. This is nothing though, and at the height of Swedish military capabilities during the Cold War they had upwards of 1,000 planes in service, making it the 4th largest airforce in the world at the time.
    The reason being that, with the Soviets as the only plausible big threat in the region, if you look at the map it becomes obvious how the Baltic Sea acted as a huge moat between Sweden and the USSR. Getting the much larger Soviet military on to Swedish territory would reasonably be quite difficult in the event of a war. Therefore the Swedish military doctrine for defending itself was to make sure that the USSR couldn't get control of the Baltic Sea. Sweden at the time spent a lot on it's navy, it had big artillery pieces along much of the Swedish Baltic coast and Gotland island, and most of all it invested in a ferocious airforce that would make the Soviets think twice before trying it.

    • @Shiftry87
      @Shiftry87 Месяц назад +3

      Yeah i got that feeling aswell as this video pretty mutch just scimmed over the basics of the aircraft without really going into anything that makes it stick out from the rest.

  • @hrafnatyr9794
    @hrafnatyr9794 Месяц назад +37

    Saab actually does not make cars anymore, the business was shut down back in 2012 (missed by many).
    However, in addition to the JAS 39, they also manufacture civil aircraft.
    They also make submarines (the stealth submarine that "sunk" the USS Ronald Reagan at a 2006 war game without being detected). In addition, the Swedish stealth corvettes known as the Visby class as well as the attack and landing ship combat boat CB90.
    Was that all? Nope 😉
    They also own the famous artillery manufacturer Bofors, so besides cannons they produce anti-tank weapons such as the "Carl Gustaf" recoilless grenade launcher, the AT-4 anti-tank weapon (both used successfully in Ukraine).
    In addition to all this, various high end radar-, surveillance- and battle control systems 🙂😉😁

    • @matsv201
      @matsv201 Месяц назад +1

      Technically saab stop producing cars in 1997, the Saabs after was Opels with saab badges and.. a bit of styling.. well.. a lot of styling.

    • @adamhlali8106
      @adamhlali8106 Месяц назад +6

      @@matsv201Considering the fact that GM was supprised when they visited Saab and found out they had developed a new radio without GMs knowledge, saying that Saab cars are rebadged Opels is just wrong.

    • @matsv201
      @matsv201 Месяц назад

      @@adamhlali8106 to be fair. It was a radio controll panel. Not the whole radio

    • @filipdahlberg4420
      @filipdahlberg4420 Месяц назад +1

      Don’t forget missile systems like anti ship missiles

    • @dbtest117
      @dbtest117 Месяц назад +1

      @@matsv201 It's rather the other way around.

  • @nocturne7371
    @nocturne7371 Месяц назад +17

    I'm not sure, but since I was a kid in Sweden in the 70s I have always thought of SAAB as the company that made out fighter jets and had the cars as sort of a side business that benefitted from the R&D they did for the airplanes. So it's weird for me hearing that someone is surprised that they "also made jets", to me it's the other way around "they also made cars".

    • @TheFrewah
      @TheFrewah Месяц назад +3

      Samma för mig

    • @kentsundell3751
      @kentsundell3751 10 дней назад

      It's because the first saab car was made by flight engineers

  • @Killerpixel11
    @Killerpixel11 Месяц назад +20

    Saab doesn't just make aircraft, they also make a bunch of things that go boom and are very commonplace; the NLAW, AT-4 and Carl Gustaf are all Saab products. They also make smart artillery shells and collaborate in a bunch of missile systems (IRIS, Meteor, Taurus, GLSDB)

    • @matsv201
      @matsv201 Месяц назад +2

      Well. Technically most of those things are made by Bofors that is s subsidery to saab

  • @toddjames99madcatmkll20
    @toddjames99madcatmkll20 Месяц назад +11

    as a Canadian, we (meaning our government)
    decided to go with the F35 instead. it did come down to the Gripen and the F35 after eliminating the Super Hornet from the competition. I personally think we should have 2 types of fighter aircraft and have a mix of Gripens and F35's in separate roles.

    • @TheFrewah
      @TheFrewah Месяц назад +9

      Had you bought Gripen, you would have more runways than planes since it doesn’t require a dedicated runway. An 800m long freeway will work.

  • @pugsbella
    @pugsbella Месяц назад +16

    a lot of ex fighter pilots say this would be a better option for ukraine than the f16, these can be used on improvised runways while the f16 with its extra large intake need a clean paved runway

    • @johanlassen6448
      @johanlassen6448 8 дней назад

      They are wrong.
      1) Ukrainian planes are literally operating as we speak. F-16 would be no different.
      2) JAS-39C is not available in any significant numbers.
      3) Training for JAS-39C is limited.
      4) Payload and weapons variety for JAS-39C is too limited.
      Not a good option except in the fantasies of people who want to seem like they have esoteric knowledge.

  • @lennartwahlberg1547
    @lennartwahlberg1547 Месяц назад +2

    To the editor: How can you think you're an expert on Gripen. When you don't even know who is the manufacturer.

  • @Perisa79
    @Perisa79 Месяц назад +8

    In my understanding the "non stealth" is a truth with a modification, so to speak... Because The Gripen have an ability to for ex "spoof" (I think its called) It can, make it's radar profile look like either something else than a airplane, or it can also make it look like it is a pack of Gripen..

    • @koerel
      @koerel Месяц назад +2

      It's also becomes a little bit more stealthy than many other planes simply by being tiny and being single-engined.

    • @TheSingularNextuz
      @TheSingularNextuz Месяц назад +8

      -Sir, why is there a flying whale on the radar?
      -Ask the Swedish airforce.

  • @AlbinHulden
    @AlbinHulden Месяц назад +10

    When they built the Eurofighter they had JAS as a model!! Jas is the best nonstealth build fighter! its cheaper and very easy maintaind plane! and doesnt need an airfield to start or land! as we have usual roadbases in Sweden! as our thinking and training is more for Defence/gerilla war!

  • @TENGILL
    @TENGILL Месяц назад +6

    I love how he says it looks like the Euro Fighter, not knowing it was based on the 39 Gripen. :P

  • @Cid_1
    @Cid_1 Месяц назад +20

    The Gripen is such a great aircraft. I think a lot more countries would buy them if it wasn't for already having agreements with US, which has suffered a lot of delays and extra expenses. When there are war times most countries don't want to hear that the planes they have ordered will be delayed by several years, and some countries have only received 3 planes of the 15+ they ordered. So It wouldn't surprise me if we see some of the wealthier countries start ordering Gripens as well.

    • @user-kq5ke5yb6k
      @user-kq5ke5yb6k Месяц назад +2

      To be fair, the number of American planes ordered by the US itself, as well as by many allies, is massive.

  • @jamesgeorge2852
    @jamesgeorge2852 Месяц назад +7

    In Canada we were supposed to take delivery of our f-35s almost 8 years ago our government dumped tons of cash into the program as we all know Thier still ironing out bugs we were looking at the grippen and in my opinion we should have gone for it we would have saved alot of money and got an amazing aircraft to upgrade our old f-18s

    • @everypitchcounts4875
      @everypitchcounts4875 Месяц назад

      Canada just recently decided to go with F-35. Canada is towards the bottom of the F-35 delivery wait list because Canada took so long. The merge has a great episode talking about Canadian air force.

  • @DavidStuart-by5ur
    @DavidStuart-by5ur Месяц назад +3

    FYI the JAS predates Eurofighter by around 6 years (first flight), so really Eurofighter looks like the JAS, not the other way around

  • @RaXXha
    @RaXXha Месяц назад +10

    SAAB is short for Svenska Aeroplan AktieBolaget which literally translates to "Swedish Aeroplane corporation". They made aircraft for the swedish airforce long before they started making cars, and if we’re honest, they were always better at making aircraft and weapons (although the cars where also great). These days they make Fighter jets, Anti Aircraft missiles, Anti Tank Weapons (the AT4 and Carl Gustaf Recoiless rifle might be familiar) and submarines.

    • @rikardottosson1272
      @rikardottosson1272 Месяц назад

      AB is Plc and Ltd, the company consists of shares - I.e not sole trader or partnership - and offers limited liability, but even after it IPOs, it’s still an AB, there is no fancier suffix.

  • @nomennescio4604
    @nomennescio4604 Месяц назад +2

    The BAE collaboration to market the plane is not current. It lasted a while, but it turned out the BAE plugged the Eurofighter hard, and not the Gripen system. So the agreement really did nothing, and then ended.
    It's one of these things - the Gripen has made som minor sales around the world, but missed all the big contracts it has competed for, so far.
    Still, that is the biggest export success of a Swedish fighter aircraft ever. It's at least comparable to the sales of its "grandad" Draken in the 50's-60's. Because its "daddy" Viggen, marketed in the 70's and 80's never sold a single airframe outside Sweden. That despite Viggen being a legendary aircraft receiving a loot of recognition - in retrospect. When it was an actual alternative, all potential sales were just crushed by the US. Which is largely the situation with Gripen as well.

  • @joacimholgersson2730
    @joacimholgersson2730 Месяц назад +4

    the eurofighter was in the nato exercise now with jas....the eurofighter pilots laugh at the jas....later the eurofighters was outrunned by the jas and all eurofighters was finish + a coupel of f16 and raptors.

    • @johanlassen6448
      @johanlassen6448 8 дней назад

      It is hysterical how delusional you Gripen fanboys are. You need to separate your fantasies from reality bro.

  • @rikulappi9664
    @rikulappi9664 Месяц назад +2

    The EW suite, a top radar and the networked data sharing approach makes Gripen pretty equal to the other best in the Eest. It arguably ranks in the top 3 by most if not all measures not counting passive stealth.

  • @Lahtrif
    @Lahtrif Месяц назад +2

    JAS 39 Gripen have its history from SAAB Draken and SAAB Viggen so it’s not from Eurofighter. So Eurofighter have taken the Deltaving from SAAB

  • @Johmpa
    @Johmpa Месяц назад +4

    I think a main reason why countries may opt for say american fighters instead of the Gripen, even when the Gripen as a platform makes more sense, is that you are buying much more than just the planes. You're signing on to a long-term partnership involving supply chains and people for decades.
    Since tying yourself up like that is a big commitment, you might as well do with a nation that thus may be inclined to offer you other partnerships down the line.
    And there's the scale of production to consider as well. For instance, on paper the Gripen is by far the best plane to send to Ukraine against Russia. The Gripen was quite literally designed to be a plane for a small nation to defend itself against a Russian invasion. But since few but Sweden operate it there aren't enough Gripens to give them. By contrast, there's tons of F-16s out there.

    • @crasharr
      @crasharr Месяц назад +2

      Sure, there are alot of F16's about but in recent times the US has become a somewhat less than rock solid partner to many of its allies and with the upcoming elections being quite forboding I wouldnt be surprised if the Griphen might be on more countries radar than you think.

    • @potatis1272
      @potatis1272 Месяц назад

      The problem with sending Gripen to Ukraine is that Sweden will be without total aerial defence. No other country has enough of Gripen so they could offer 20-30 something planes.
      And a modern highly active fighter is several times more expensive than the f16 witch was made in abundance, giving f16 to Ukraine makes much more sense, since it'll be a joint mission of many instead of Sweden giving away one third of it's entire fighter jets.

    • @johanlassen6448
      @johanlassen6448 8 дней назад

      No the reason is because JAS-39 simply does not perform as advertized. SAAB:s marketing has always been disingenuous and more focused on scoring points among internet fanboys than impressing actual airforces.

  • @TearofOblivion
    @TearofOblivion Месяц назад +2

    Canada is most likely interested because of two things 1. Cost it has an overall low cost for just about anything including maintenance 2. Environment northern countries have a different climate and freezing on the ground is common US aircrafts need extra stuff and time to handle this, Canada is also a northern country. I have heard that the base maintenance in Alaska can be a nightmare.

  • @TheApilas
    @TheApilas Месяц назад +2

    SAAB (Svenska Aeroplan Aktiebolaget) was founded 1937 by the Bofors group as a specific company for airplane manufactoring
    1948 their first jetplane flew the J29 "Flygande Tunnan" (translated: Flying Barrel)
    1952 Saab 32 Lansen mainly a attack/recon later on used as EW plane
    1955 Saab 35 Draken fly for the first time and in 1960 it breaks as the first Swedish plane Mach 2
    1967 Saab 37 Viggen is tested in air for the first time
    1971 Saab 37 is delivered to the Swedish air force
    1988 JAS 39 Gripen is test flown for the first time. Soon the A/B/C and D versions were delivered to the Swedish Airforce.
    2017 JAS 39 Gripen E is flown the first time

    • @lennartwahlberg1547
      @lennartwahlberg1547 Месяц назад

      J21R was the first jet powered aircraft from SAAB. J21 converted from prop to jet.

  • @Akmarillion
    @Akmarillion Месяц назад +2

    You really should do a check on the Meteor missle, it's quite the story of European collaboration and it's super lethal

  • @johanlahti84
    @johanlahti84 13 дней назад

    for comparison. the gripen has a flight cost of $8.000/Hour, while the F35 costs $30.000-40.000. but the manufacturing cost is about the same if i recall correctly

  • @ingvartorma9789
    @ingvartorma9789 Месяц назад

    SAAB was from the beginning only an aircraft manufacturer and it started in 1937. It was during the final stage of the World War, 1944-1945, that Saab - Swedish Aeroplan Aktiebolaget - decided to start manufacturing cars as a complement to aircraft manufacturing. Which today no longer exists.
    Today, Saab produces a wide range of products that contribute to the military defense of Sweden. Everything from the well-known Gripen fighter aircraft, to the Giraffe radar system and the GlobalEye reconnaissance and guidance system, submarines and surface ships such as the Gotland class and the Visby class to name a few

  • @mwtrolle
    @mwtrolle Месяц назад +2

    Gripen is absolutely fantastic.

  • @just42tube
    @just42tube Месяц назад +1

    What you think SAAB stands for:
    Saab AB (originally Svenska Aeroplan Aktiebolaget, lit. 'The Swedish Aeroplane Corporation', acronym SAAB)

  • @matthewschneider8075
    @matthewschneider8075 Месяц назад +1

    I think I heard that stealth aircraft generally have a high operational cost partly because of the radar absorbing coatings they have to apply to the aircraft. That and the designs aren’t that aerodynamic because of the nature of stealth designs.

    • @SiriusBigbadda
      @SiriusBigbadda Месяц назад

      And when developments in radar technology lets the enemy pick up your stealth fighters, the Gripen will already have updated its modular EW suite.

  • @KenMcGeachy
    @KenMcGeachy Месяц назад +2

    Our Canadian government was "considering" the Gripen to replace our old cf18s. It kind of made sense considering how vast and rugged so much of our country is. But the fact that our government had already invested big money (for Canada) in the joint development of the f35, no one legitimately thought we would end up buying anything but the new American plane.

  • @mickedavis3503
    @mickedavis3503 Месяц назад +11

    Definitely AI voice. It's predecessor was Saab 37 Viggen and not ""Vaigen" like the voice said.

    • @matsv201
      @matsv201 Месяц назад

      Also.. "flag" motor...

  • @eyedee12345
    @eyedee12345 Месяц назад +1

    To point out. It is not a mix or any copy of the F16 nor the Eurofigther. They are just childrens compared. The Gripen goes way longer back.

  • @genericusername5909
    @genericusername5909 Месяц назад +1

    Saab is an abbreviation (in Swedish) for Swedish Aero Inc and they made aircrafts before they made cars

  • @DrenoshGaming
    @DrenoshGaming Месяц назад

    2 things, I would love it if you did a video on the Eurofighter, plus more specially the "pirate" ir search and track system, 20 years old ish and still one of the best out there.

  • @Bullinatorn
    @Bullinatorn Месяц назад +1

    Saab has been making weapons, equipment and military vehicles for a long time and they are very good.

  • @konzack
    @konzack Месяц назад +1

    I think it is a Swede speaking British English, articulating every syllable. I have seen and heard similar sounding Scandinavian promotional videos before AI.

  • @therealperegrine
    @therealperegrine Месяц назад +1

    He didn't know the "Swedish Aeroplane Corporation" made airplanes, hehe.
    SAAB is kinda known for planes, they've made some of the best fighter planes, like the mentioned J35 Draken. :P
    I would argue they translated JAS wrong, the A is "Attack", so, attack. ;P

  • @kiekokat3678
    @kiekokat3678 Месяц назад

    Yes you should do a video on missiles!!! Especially with the new testing on Hypersonic missiles.. hypersonic missiles could change the thought processes behind a Navy fleet and war in general..

  • @leo2a7dk
    @leo2a7dk Месяц назад

    The F-20 Tigershark is a development of the P38 Talon trainer. A fast and nimble little plane. And of course you have seen it before. That is the P38. It was the planes that Maverick, Iceman and their squad shot down in TOP GUN......

  • @Sailor_91
    @Sailor_91 15 дней назад

    They used Design ques from the F-5 tiger and the old jas 37 viggen.

  • @nils-peterwihlney8732
    @nils-peterwihlney8732 Месяц назад

    I am Swedish and I think the reason why Canada might be interested in Gripen, which is Swedish for Griffin, might be because we have similar weather being part of Scandinavian. Gripen is probably designed to handle similar weather conditions and winters to those in Canada and thus it would work there. The low cost and maintenance might just be an added bonus.

  • @Niinsa62
    @Niinsa62 Месяц назад +1

    About that prototype crashing. Not good, but there were some things about it that looked good. See how the aircraft is largely intact, even after hitting the ground with the left wingtip? Pretty sturdy design! And the cockpit was intact, and the pilot alive. Rumour has it, that he actually didn't get that elbow injury in the crash, but rather during the pretty no-nonsense extraction from the wreckage that the emergency rescue team performed on him. The aircraft ended up upside down, and there was fuel everywhere, so they didn't want to waste time removing him carefully. 🙂

    • @hemligx-sson8202
      @hemligx-sson8202 Месяц назад

      Several f22 prototypes also crashed as well as f35 prototypes.

  • @Cody38Super
    @Cody38Super Месяц назад +10

    The F-20 Tigershark was a Northrop built F-5 Tiger with the F-16's engine. It came with two little 8,000 pound thrust turbines as the F-5. It was actually a really good little plane, but no one was interested. There were 4 made, and one of them was given to Chuck Yeager at the end of the program.

    • @captin3149
      @captin3149 Месяц назад +1

      It was a rival project to the F-16, but the military went for the much more expensive F-16. Not really a horrible decision, but the F-20 was close in performance to the F-16 while being much cheaper

  • @skepsis4314
    @skepsis4314 28 дней назад

    One of the biggest strength is Gripens ability to land on roads (dispersed airfields) so they don't have to rely on airfields that is the first things to be hit in a war.

  • @costiqueR
    @costiqueR Месяц назад +1

    In fact, SAAB cars were way later developed than the planes... The USA had for Years evaluated SAAB 39.

  • @fiskmasadventures
    @fiskmasadventures Месяц назад +1

    Regarding the big proportion of fighter jets compared to the army, it has traditionally been important for Sweden to have a strong airforce in order to meet an aggressor (long-stretched country and neutrality made us vulnerable).
    The idea of how to fend of an invasion has always (since the beginning of the cold war) been to put up a "threshold effect" against the enemy - it was expected that the Swedish airforce would meet the enemy first and do what they could, but be completely annihilated within a week. After that, the invasion force would meet the Swedish navy, which was expected to be annihilated within a couple of weeks. After that, the coastal defences would become the next threshold, and lastly the army.
    The goal has always been to keep the war/invasion away from Swedish mainland as long as possible by wearing down the enemy as far out as possible, which meant that the "sledgehammer" airforce had to be dimensioned for that task.

  • @lelin70
    @lelin70 Месяц назад +2

    SAAB made aircraft way before cars

  • @segment932
    @segment932 Месяц назад

    If I remember correctly, there was a reporter that dropped his camera at the same time as the airplane crashed at the landing attempt 2 Feb 1989. Thus in the original audio for that footage you can here some one shouting "Helvetes jävlar" or F***king hell, in English.

  • @yologuy1073
    @yologuy1073 Месяц назад

    a good missile video to watch could be Sandboxx's 'America's race to field new air-to-air missiles'

  • @victorcapel2755
    @victorcapel2755 Месяц назад

    The newer versions of Gripen isn't all that cheap to buy, in large part because SAAB doesn't have the economy of scale as the US giants has, but they are substantially cheaper to fly. You can put up 3-4 Gripens for a mission for the same cost as a single F35 or 2-3 Gripens for the same cost as an F16. Over a 30 or 40 years lifespan, that does add up.

  • @colbunkmust
    @colbunkmust Месяц назад +1

    The Gripen is a fantastic plane and one that makes sense for a country like Sweden to use, but to state that it's the best non-stealth fighter when the F-15EX exists is a bit of a stretch. Gripen's greatest strengths are logistically integral to the Swedish military's defense doctrines and rapid dispersion tactics needed to preserve air power in the event of a large scale invasion from the east, but all other things being equal, in aerial performance the F-15EX is both a specialized strike fighter, and an air to air juggernaut that has tremendous advantage over Gripen.
    Edit: also the list of "interested" countries in the Gripen included some who later made the decision to purchase F-35 like Finland and Canada. Also something to note that wasn't specified in the video: Hungary and Czechia didn't actually buy Gripen for their air forces, they opted to lease them from Sweden.

  • @RaccoonLex
    @RaccoonLex Месяц назад +1

    Narrator sounds more normal on x1.25 speed, sounds like lenght of speech has been streched 20% to get longer playtime?

  • @thomashorstedt3059
    @thomashorstedt3059 Месяц назад +1

    i would love to know how the radar signature is compared to a full stelth jet

  • @AdmiralLj
    @AdmiralLj Месяц назад

    Many errors in this video, C-D are not export versions they are the upgrades for the A-B and A-C are single seaters, B-D are twin seater mostly used as trainers.
    Saab and BAE split in the early 2000's they also split up Bofors in to Balsitic (cannons) and Missiles SAAB taking the latter and BAE taking the former.
    Most likly this is written by AI as well as voiced by it.

  • @FenrisUlfven
    @FenrisUlfven 27 дней назад

    Despite the fact it isn't a stealth aircraft, Gripen (The Griffin) has a surprisingly small radar profile.

  • @isaacfairburne9981
    @isaacfairburne9981 Месяц назад +1

    If you're interested in missiles, you should start with AIM-9 Sidewinder. There's a decent video by Sideproject.

  • @bennyhana3556
    @bennyhana3556 Месяц назад +1

    The cars are more of a sideproject XD

  • @5e88e
    @5e88e Месяц назад +1

    Did not know saab made fighters? So never heard of the saab draken cobra maneuver (some think its a russian thing, it is not)

  • @ronnyhansson8713
    @ronnyhansson8713 Месяц назад +5

    SAAB is standing for Svenska Areodynamiska Aktie Bolaget (Swedis Aerodynamical Share Company ( the last two letters says that it is a company traded for in shares so ltd? Inc?)) - and after WW2 there were brainstormng what more they could produce and amng other things clothwashingmachines were a suggestion before they started making cars (and trucks, and busses i belive)

    • @Psi-Storm
      @Psi-Storm Месяц назад

      "Aktie Bolaget" is the same as the German AG (Aktiengesellschaft), meaning stock corporation.

    • @RaXXha
      @RaXXha Месяц назад +1

      It's Svenska Aeroplan Aktiebolaget actually, literally "Swedish Aeroplane Corporation"

    • @jimmygadd
      @jimmygadd Месяц назад

      @@RaXXha det stämmer/thats right

  • @MrBoombast64
    @MrBoombast64 Месяц назад

    Vaigen LOL! Prunounce it like an short e. Tigershark is the one used in first Top Gun 1986 as Mig 21:s.

    • @ZedEcks
      @ZedEcks Месяц назад

      I don't understand how he can pronounce it "vaigen" when there's two G's, and then he looks at Gripen and somehow gets "grippen" out of it?

  • @nilselgenstierna3282
    @nilselgenstierna3282 Месяц назад

    Two facts about Gripen that wasn't mentioned in the video that probably are it's strongest points:
    1) The electronic warfare suite. It's all hidden under a wall of secrecy but it has a pretty good record in Red Flag as mentioned in other comments, just beaten by the F22 (but just). Germany has just ordered upgrade of 15 it's Eurofighters with the SAAB EWS. There is rumour, and I emphasize rumour, that a German Eurofighter was joined by a Gripen as a wingman without beeing detected. Sounds to be to good to be true, and probably is.
    2) Dispersed base doctrine. A Gripen can be based alone at a roadside, rearmed and refuelled by a crew of 5 of which 4 are conscripts and one is a qualified mechanic. RAF could do it with the Harrier way back but today noone in NATO can, with the exception of the Fins as long as maintain their F18s. Watch Ukraina and the Drone

    • @johanlassen6448
      @johanlassen6448 8 дней назад

      1) EW system has no record whatsoever at Red Flag.
      2) Several NATO countries to dispersed operations.

  • @cowbuzzer
    @cowbuzzer Месяц назад +1

    SAAB started out as an Aircraft company... that's why the original insignia was an airplane when it was founded in 1937

  • @DNA912
    @DNA912 Месяц назад

    2:26 a bit backwards there. 200 physicsl planes of you sum up all planes in all the models. But I see how you heard it

  • @TroffePalle
    @TroffePalle Месяц назад

    JAS stands for Jakt Attack Spaning which means Hunt Attack reconnaissance.

  • @tobiasekbom1646
    @tobiasekbom1646 Месяц назад +1

    Both Eurofighters and Rafel? Whatever they’re called.
    Are basically copies of Saab J-37 Viggen, and J-39 Gripen.
    Gripen was flying far before both of them. And it’s still better, with upgrades. 🇸🇪

    • @tobiasekbom1646
      @tobiasekbom1646 Месяц назад +1

      Oh, and Saab started as an aircraft company. The name started as something like Swedish Aerospace Corp (AktieBolag). Sa-AB.

  • @emilhermansson2071
    @emilhermansson2071 Месяц назад

    Fun fact, gripen stands for griffin the mythological creature. I'm from Sweden.

  • @janolofosterman
    @janolofosterman Месяц назад

    About the remark on the size of the airforce, Swedens airforce was said to be the fourth largest in the world during the Cold War and the aircraft “J 35 Draken” (Dragon) was probably the best aircraft (fighter?) of it’s time. So today’s figures are the result of a continuous downsizing.
    J 37 Viggen had such an incredible engine power that it could, after a very short take off, go straight up as a rocket. The idèa, still in place today, behind the Swedish planes is that they could take off and land on ordinary roads, although somewhat cleared from vegetation on the side. If you drive through Sweden you regularly find yourself on long, strait and broad roads made for that purpose.
    Refuelling and rearming is also something done from a truck with some 4(?) conscript and 1 technician in about 15 minutes. Very hard for the Russians to detect.

    • @peterrasmussen9336
      @peterrasmussen9336 Месяц назад +1

      Also, the Viggen was the only fighter ever to do a missile lock onto the SR-71, but didn't shoot it down 😂
      SAAB fighters are, and have for a long time been awesome!
      US could learn from them.

  • @johnniecalhoun5381
    @johnniecalhoun5381 Месяц назад

    You need to check out some of the videos of the Mach loop . You never know who or what may be flying through !!

  • @TheExpatpom
    @TheExpatpom Месяц назад

    The AI voice mangles the names a bit. I think the Swedes pronounce the “drak” in Draken to rhyme with crack, while Viggen rhymes with how we pronounce Wigan. Gripen is close but the Swedes make it sound a bit more like “Gree-pen”.
    And you should react to vids on the Draken and Viggen too, which I think were built to make the Soviets expect to take losses if they ever flew Bears over Sweden in wartime. I believe both types shadowed Soviet bombers back in the day in much the same way RAF Tornadoes did, and as Gripens and Typhoons are probably doing with Russian aircraft again now. Try to find a vid of a Viggen doing its party trick of a self powered three point turn on the runway using reverse thrust.
    And if you’ve already done Typhoons you might also want to react to the last of the “Euro-canard” fighters, the French Rafale. They’ve rather cleverly made a carrier version of the Rafale for the French navy, which has also been able to land and take off from the big US carriers. For me all three are pretty looking planes, as well as being pretty effective ones. Canard deltas just look cool.

  • @chugachuga9242
    @chugachuga9242 Месяц назад

    If you wan to learn more about missiles then you should start with the American Sidewinder it was the first air to air missile and is a good base line when learning about the rest

  • @Mimer6
    @Mimer6 Месяц назад

    It is not form stealth, but it can become stealth through electronics. Also create a ghost plane a bit to the side so robots go towards a target that only exists in the electronics of the enemy.
    The Gripen can land and take off from a normal road that is 800m long (takeoff distance 400M) and clear width of 16m. It can reload and refuel and be in the air in 10 minutes with 1 flight engineer 5 conscripts and 2 service trucks . So 10 miuts after landing, neither the plane nor the trucks are left and means that the enemy does not have time to attack the temporary road base.
    The engines now have almost 200,000 runing hours in total and there has not been a single engine failure.
    It can turn the radar to the side so the Gripen can fire the robot pods and fly away from the enemy but still follow the enemy and control the robot at the same time. Meteor is a jet engine powered robot that can fight enemy aircraft 100 km away, meaning they can shoot down aircraft without the enemy plane even seeing and understanding that the Gripen is nearby. The Gripen has outclassed US fighter jets in red/blue exercises. It is underway to upgrade Eurofigter with electronics from Gripen now that Sweden is also in NATO.

    • @johanlassen6448
      @johanlassen6448 8 дней назад

      There is no such thing as stealth through electronics. What you mean is electronic warfare. All modern jets can do that.

    • @Mimer6
      @Mimer6 5 дней назад

      @@johanlassen6448 What do you call it that they can disappear from the radar image when they turn it on. They have shown that they can disappear from the radar of US fighter planes. Then the Gripen is a relatively small plane so it gives less eco than many other planes. If now everyone has it, why should Eurofighters be upgraded with the technology from Gripen, now that they can, because both are now members of NATO?

    • @johanlassen6448
      @johanlassen6448 5 дней назад

      @@Mimer6 You can't disappear from a radar image, you can only spoof it by mimicking its radar return. This is possible on something like a mechanical radar, but against advanced AESA radars, it is much more difficult (especially when you are not working from a stealth platform).
      Gripen has not ever shown that it can disappear from the radar of US fighter planes. Random claims on the internet are as credible as Russian claims that they can turn US radar screens black, on par with Ramses IV claiming he personally destroyed 1000 Hittite warriors. It is propaganda, nothing more. Either present tangible evidence or GTFO with these claims.
      Gripen being small does not make it invisible to radar.
      Eurofighter is just being upgraded with an off-the-shelf self-protection jammer. The primary EW suite of Eurofighter will be its radar (ERCS Mk 2). It was also planned to happen before Sweden even applied for NATO membership.

  • @micke7109
    @micke7109 Месяц назад +2

    And JAS 39 is built with Sovjet/Russian air force in mind.

    • @laves820
      @laves820 Месяц назад +1

      JAS39 is anti-rusian

  • @BLUEYENKO
    @BLUEYENKO Месяц назад

    F-20 tiger shark was an upgrade to the F-5 with bigger radar and an F-16 engine. The US didn’t buy it so they had big problems trying to sell it overseas.

  • @AXXeYY
    @AXXeYY Месяц назад +1

    Gripen E is an new jet more or less its not only and updated version.

  • @dennislindqvist1265
    @dennislindqvist1265 Месяц назад +2

    Strange that not more countries have chosen the Gripen. Perhaps things will change radically if the undemocratic forces take over in the US.

  • @87mstockwe
    @87mstockwe Месяц назад

    Been watching for awhile just subbed....have you thought of playing Ace Combat 7? Its a good mix between realistic loadouts and fun gameplay a foot soldier would probably enjoy. Gripens are playable...

  • @christerswe2119
    @christerswe2119 Месяц назад +1

    Eurofighter came after Gripen, We (SAAB) have used delta wing before EF.

  • @Benderswe1
    @Benderswe1 Месяц назад

    front wing were there on the ja37 aswell

  • @extremedoopy9972
    @extremedoopy9972 Месяц назад

    ooo I would love to to see you react to the the F-20 Tigershark aircraft sales film and a documentary about it.

  • @wilmeroberg9794
    @wilmeroberg9794 Месяц назад +1

    The reason the Gripen doesn't sell is mainly because of 2 reasons. The first reason is that the Swedish government doesn't want to aid in the marketing of the aircraft, so SAAB are left alone to do this. The second reason is because of politics. When a country buys jets it is not because the jets they buy are good, it is because it looks good to do business with certain countries. This is why Canada chose to buy the F-35 instead of the Gripen, as you mentioned, they need to look like they have good relations with the US which leads to them buying US-made aircraft, even if they're not actually better.

    • @johanlassen6448
      @johanlassen6448 8 дней назад

      The reason Gripen doesn't sell is because it performs worse than the competition, as evidenced by literally every evaluation done to date. The rest is just you coping.

  • @NiclasHorn
    @NiclasHorn Месяц назад

    SAAB is not a car company, SAAB is a aircraft company who did build cars after ww2. SAAB = Svenska Aeroplan Aktiebolaget = Swedish Airplane StockCompany. (not clean but straight translations) Aktiebolaget = The stock company, we always short the word from Aktiebolag to AB.
    Aktie = Stock
    Bolag = Company.
    Akriebolag = StockCompany

  • @mattilindstrom
    @mattilindstrom Месяц назад +1

    Saab has produced (to my eye) some of the best looking fighter jets from Viggen to JAS. There's a nice video of a flight in JAS 39 with a test pilot with G forces from -3 to +9 at ruclips.net/video/eXaPfUs6sQw/видео.html.

  • @johnnyrosenberg9522
    @johnnyrosenberg9522 Месяц назад

    I'm not sure why the voice pronounced Viggen like that. Isn't it obvious even in English that the i in this case is a short e sound?
    Also, -en (-et for some words) in Swedish is the equivalent of ”the” in English, grip in this case means griffin, so ”the gripen” means ”the the griffin”.
    More Swedish:
    Drak😂e means dragon.
    Vigg means tufted duck.
    So there you have it, Draken, Viggen and Gripen. The dragon, the tufted duck, the griffin.

  • @george217
    @george217 Месяц назад +1

    I don't think that SAAB even makes cars anymore, but as for weapons, they own Bofors, so...

    • @niklasriva7053
      @niklasriva7053 Месяц назад +2

      car part was sold, unsure if to china? and then whoever bought it, shut it down,. China does make Volvo I think

    • @hemligx-sson8202
      @hemligx-sson8202 Месяц назад

      @@niklasriva7053It was sold to General Motors who did everything to destroy the brand, and then sold to a Chinese company.

  • @WolfHeathen
    @WolfHeathen Месяц назад

    The F-20 Tigershark was a plane that competed for US government contracts. The US never adopted it so it's been relegated to the annals of history and only 3 were ever manufactured. It is a gorgeous fighter jet, though.

  • @user-mo6qx1ed3e
    @user-mo6qx1ed3e Месяц назад

    Jakt (hunt), Attack, Spaning (reconnaissance)=JAS

  • @gangalo68
    @gangalo68 11 дней назад

    Speaker sounds like Dollar store Marlboro Man.

  • @jagserdigalltid
    @jagserdigalltid 4 дня назад

    If you look at the words first figterjet with the fronwing its the Saab 35 Draken. Then Jas 39 was just a uppdate. The rest of the word followd it. Saabb was the leader.

  • @driver288
    @driver288 Месяц назад

    SAAB made planes before they started making cars. Hence the streamlined designs. SAAB even means Swedish Aeroplane Inc. , AB is inc.

  • @Nic64L
    @Nic64L Месяц назад +1

    The reason you haven't heard more about the Gripen is politics! If Sweden had the same financial muscle as the United States, the Gripen would have been the best-selling aircraft in the world.