GERMAN V-2 ROCKET TESTS AT WHITE SANDS NEW MEXICO 2535

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  • Опубликовано: 15 окт 2024

Комментарии • 150

  • @nonovyerbusiness9517
    @nonovyerbusiness9517 7 лет назад +32

    Very informative and very detailed instructions for launching your own backyard V-2.

  • @pmculp
    @pmculp 3 года назад +12

    My dad worked at Los Alamos from I1943 to 1945. He witnessed the Trinity blast and after the war he worked at White Sands Missile Proving Range. He was disabled in the mid-50’s and passed away in the mid-70’s. He would never talk about what he did. He was a civilian worker who was classified as a critical worker due to his electrical knowledge.

  • @5Andysalive
    @5Andysalive 3 года назад +5

    Kinda fun correlating this transport 7:20 with the Saturn V being rolled out to the pad.

  • @windwizard100
    @windwizard100 4 года назад +21

    My Dad was involved with this project. He was head of the metorology department of the Army.

  • @HypermarketCommodity
    @HypermarketCommodity Год назад +3

    I love that you can see the development from this to today's launchpads.

  • @jhorne18
    @jhorne18 4 года назад +11

    When I worked at WSMR 2002-2009 I periodically went down to the blockhouse ("ARMY" written across its face) and saw all those old cables in their sluices still in place. There was one of the old V-2s standing right next to a gantry. A lot of the old equipment is still there, too.

    • @assassin40oz
      @assassin40oz 2 года назад +4

      I was there from 2014 to 2017 we cleaned out lots of equipment from the Navy blockhouse. Still lots of cool stuff out there even today,just gotta poke around the desert to find it.

  • @robertgrant7643
    @robertgrant7643 6 лет назад +8

    lol the guy at 13:46.... is like "WTF you shootin around, boy?"

  • @StreuB1
    @StreuB1 4 года назад +22

    10:48 "Last minute adjustments are made..." with a file. lol

    • @richardroush6938
      @richardroush6938 4 года назад +4

      imagine... a time when humans had to adjust the product of a machine to ensure perfection.... now nothing a human does is accepted as perfection until checked by a machine.....

  • @jsl151850b
    @jsl151850b Год назад +1

    *THANKS!* The watermark is better than the clock.

  • @cowboy87smith3
    @cowboy87smith3 3 года назад +4

    I have a good friend who's mother was Wernher von Braun's personal security well he was stationed at White Sands Missile Range. After her mother passing she donated the ID bags to The Alamogordo Space Museum.

  • @PeterGenovese
    @PeterGenovese 7 лет назад +44

    My grandfather worked on these V2's at White Sands.

    • @api9mm
      @api9mm 6 лет назад +1

      is he still around?

    • @ELPIOJOBOLUDO
      @ELPIOJOBOLUDO 6 лет назад +2

      What did he think about working with Nazi scientists approved by the US Govnt.

    • @Beamshipcaptain
      @Beamshipcaptain 6 лет назад

      UNREPENTANT Nazi Scientists. They were war criminals, given a "get out of jail free" card by the United States Government. OUT GOVERNMENT. Does that sound like "Government of, by and FOR the People"?!

    • @erikhertzer8434
      @erikhertzer8434 6 лет назад +11

      Russell Anderson : if we didnt use their expertise, the Russians would have sailed ahead of us in missile and space technology...we would have been in a weakened state and never gone to the moon....

    • @bjorntorlarsson
      @bjorntorlarsson 6 лет назад +1

      That's cool! Does he have any souvenirs? Any piece of "junk" from a V2 or its ground support stuff.

  • @DrFrankensteam
    @DrFrankensteam Год назад +1

    This looks like a high school shop class film! 😂 “How to Launch a V2”

  • @artatme
    @artatme 4 года назад +29

    We, the Germans, had already dimensioned test bench 7 in Peenemünde in 1938 for the model A9, A10 rocket. Two stages with a range of 5,500 km. It was the so-called America rocket.

    • @Sophocles13
      @Sophocles13 3 года назад +1

      And then the Americans got fed up with your antics and spanked you're butt all the way back across Europe : P

    • @DMSL101DM
      @DMSL101DM 3 года назад +1

      @@Sophocles13 , nope - the Soviet Union defeated Nazi-Germany.

    • @georgerobartes2008
      @georgerobartes2008 Год назад +4

      Its lucky , we the British destroyed the Luftwaffe in 1940 and began the strategic bombing of Germany then isn't it ?

    • @mrn689
      @mrn689 Год назад +1

      @@georgerobartes2008 Was soll es bald seit ihr Geschichte und wir zeigen wider wie Zukunft funktioniert während ihr in die Steinzeit geht!
      Viel Glück
      Souverän ist wer über den ausnahmezustand entscheidet ihr seid es nicht!

    • @HypermarketCommodity
      @HypermarketCommodity Год назад +1

      ​@@georgerobartes2008 You just got lucky the last two times, let's see what the third one brings.

  • @NOBOX7
    @NOBOX7 6 лет назад +9

    any body els remember watching shows at school and this kinda music would nearly blow the walls off our 300lb tv

    • @ginkumpow3726
      @ginkumpow3726 6 лет назад +5

      TV? More like a clackity 16mm projector that keept going out of sync with the film.

  • @DDDelgado
    @DDDelgado 3 месяца назад

    This vid is repeated on your channel, yet still great to watch

  • @gsauto8588
    @gsauto8588 4 года назад +9

    They used these, actually made them there and used them for practice, and for research throughout the 60's and 70's. My dad was the only one there who could read binary fluently and would tweak fuidance systems on experimental new missles and of coarse the rc drones used for target practice.
    WSMR was extremely important to the US as all missles even the big boys; ICBM's were tested and used for training there.

  • @richardlandgrebe4917
    @richardlandgrebe4917 6 лет назад +7

    My dad was stationed at white sands during this time period

  • @non-human3072
    @non-human3072 2 года назад +2

    Amazing no accidents during filling ..all by hand..

  • @otiebrown9999
    @otiebrown9999 6 лет назад +5

    Excellent detail in these videos.
    An incredible success.

    • @kevhund
      @kevhund 4 месяца назад

      Details? This guy has them. ruclips.net/video/EgiMu8A3pi0/видео.html

  • @richardkudrna7503
    @richardkudrna7503 9 месяцев назад

    In my opinion, perhaps the most astounding achievement in the V2 was the Seimens (or was it Tekefunken) gyro guidance analog system. Able to withstand the tremendous vibration and G loading of launch yet provide an astoundingly small hit error. I recall that Iraqi engineers in 1990 couldn’t match the hit error with modified SCUD.

  • @wat8437
    @wat8437 4 года назад +6

    i cringed when they packed the glass wool without breathing protection

  • @WildBillCox13
    @WildBillCox13 2 года назад +3

    That smoke trail, tho . . . wheee! Calling that test shot a "guided missile" is generous as Santa Claus.

    • @euledereulen
      @euledereulen 2 года назад +3

      the wind blows the trail to a wonky form. the rocket itself obviously did not follow that path.

  • @bryanh1944FBH
    @bryanh1944FBH 11 месяцев назад

    With a trajectory like that which is shown at 15:49, how is a impact point even approximated?

  • @pvught390
    @pvught390 2 года назад +9

    German weapons
    German design
    German cars
    German engineer
    German knowhow
    Amazing !

    • @rodrigomeneses5900
      @rodrigomeneses5900 Год назад +1

      They lost both wars

    • @pvught390
      @pvught390 Год назад +1

      @@rodrigomeneses5900What does this have to do with war ?

  • @racerd3801
    @racerd3801 5 лет назад +11

    It,s very interesting when you watch films of the Germans launching V2s that they never had that much equipment in place to do the same thing.

    • @markreeter6227
      @markreeter6227 5 лет назад +5

      Germans used rollaway gantries on special trucks/trailers and other mobile launch support equipment which were pulled away out of danger in case a V2 blew up on the ground or immediately after airborne. There is YT video posted showing all their mobile launch support vehicles/equipment in use for a launch - a film captured after the war.

    • @pauldavidson6321
      @pauldavidson6321 4 года назад +5

      If it wasn't hidden very well they'd first get a visit from a photo recce Spitfire or Mosquito then a couple of hundred Lancasters to take the shine off their day .

  • @diedertspijkerboer
    @diedertspijkerboer 2 года назад +3

    I'm a bit surprised that the plane that searched for the remains of the rocket wasn't a biplane 😉

  • @kiliandrilltzsch8272
    @kiliandrilltzsch8272 3 месяца назад

    "John well be making a video about them V" 2's. can you compose a little tune so it aint to quiet all the way through" "You want me to compose a true classical banger which will be enjoyed centuries from now" "what?... go on I guess"

  • @ms7703
    @ms7703 2 года назад +3

    My grandfather was killed in the Dachau concentration camp shortly after the SS Sturmbannführer von Braun visited the slave factory and demanded an increase in V2 production. Some people remember SS von Braun as the author of the lunar mission. Especially Americans.

    • @jasonwiley798
      @jasonwiley798 Год назад +2

      He didn't care which country he worked for. " I just send the missiles up, where the come down is not my problem"

    • @ms7703
      @ms7703 Год назад

      @@jasonwiley798 Al-Qaeda & HAMAS do the same. And don't call it work. They also "send the missiles up" and children they kill is no problem. For them.

    • @theodorTugendreich
      @theodorTugendreich 3 месяца назад

      That´s war, especially in reverse gear. What happened to him? Did he fall of a watch tower?

  • @Beamshipcaptain
    @Beamshipcaptain 6 лет назад +19

    Before CGI. The Flat Earthers need to see this!

    • @Beamshipcaptain
      @Beamshipcaptain 6 лет назад

      I see no need for childish namecalling. An optical printer cmbines foreground and background elements onto one piece of film. The drawback is generations of picture quality is lost with each element added to the film, with the tell-tale Matt-boxes for traveling mattes. For instance, look back at the SPFX for the film CONQUEST OF SPACE (1955), and then RETURN OF THE JEDI, and view the differences. Douglas Trumbull did the SPFX for 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY, which I also saw exactly 50 years ago in CINERAMA in Manhattan. They did not even get the look of Earth correct. We got that correct a few months later, if you recall if you were around then like we were, when Apollo 8 left Earth for trans-lunar orbit. It was epoch-making. They read from the book of Genesis as they swung round the moon. It was right after Nixon got elected. Unlike Kennedy (and I remember when he was shot in Dallas) Nixon had no interest in space exploration, only WAR. Don't you remember? Where were you 50 years ago, sleeping?

    • @Beamshipcaptain
      @Beamshipcaptain 6 лет назад

      An optical printer is a device consisting of one or more film projectors mechanically linked to a movie camera. It allows filmmakers to re-photograph one or more strips of film. The optical printer is used for making special effects for motion pictures, or for copying and restoring old film material.
      Common optical effects include fade outs and fade ins, dissolves, slow motion, fast motion, and matte work. More complicated work can involve dozens of elements, all combined into a single scene.The first, simple optical printers were constructed early in the 1920s. Linwood G. Dunn expanded the concept in the 1930s, and during World War II he was commissioned by the United States armed forces' photographic units to design an optical printer that could be ordered as a stock item like a camera. Development continued well into the 1980s, when the printers were controlled with minicomputers. Prime examples of optical printing work include the matte work in Star Wars (1977), which I saw for my 16th birthday, May 25th, 1977. You are telling me you are so completely undiscerning, you cannot tell the dirrerence between SP FX and Real, which means you are not an expert. I am, and I have a degree in software engineering.

    • @michael.forkert
      @michael.forkert 3 года назад

      What you do not see because you’re all blind, is that Wernherr von Braun was a Nazi who destroyed half London with his rockets, or if you prefer missiles. The American government simply invited him to found NASA.

    • @finnmacdiarmid3250
      @finnmacdiarmid3250 3 года назад +1

      @@michael.forkert That proves he is nothing more than a 3rd party, we employed his intellect just as the Germans did. Strip the Nazis of their creed, their leader, the atrocities. What you’re left with are individuals. But extraordinary individuals, capable of extraordinary awe and terror. Glad we scooped him up rather the Russians...

    • @michael.forkert
      @michael.forkert 3 года назад

      @@finnmacdiarmid3250 “We scooped him up….” , WHO? You with your family and friends, OR the US GOVERNMENT?
      General Smedley said:”Our boys were sent of to die with beautiful ideals painted in front of them. No one told them that dollars and cents were the real reason they were marching off to kill and die”.
      General Patton said: “WE DEFEATED THE WRONG ENEMY”.

  • @jsprite123
    @jsprite123 2 года назад +2

    Uhhh... nobody thought of having a parachute installed in the "warhead" that contained the measurement instruments, so that they could be better recovered?

    • @jsl151850b
      @jsl151850b Год назад

      Later tests blew the nosecone off the rocket. No longer streamlined, the main body coasted to the ground at a leisurely 250 mph. The 16mm camera fed exposed film into an armored steel receptacle.

  • @brentsrx7
    @brentsrx7 2 года назад

    That intro is amazing tho.

  • @GroovyVideo2
    @GroovyVideo2 5 лет назад +2

    In El Paso there is a V2 that U used to be able to touch next tp parade field

  • @arturasstatkus8613
    @arturasstatkus8613 2 года назад +3

    German Enginering👍

  • @jaminova_1969
    @jaminova_1969 Год назад

    3:03 Woah! Hold up there Bub! Aren't you gonna test that pipe connection for leaks 1st? No wonder so many of these things blew up on the pad!

  • @georgerobartes2008
    @georgerobartes2008 Год назад

    The narrator forgot to mention " delivering mail and nuclear warheads " . So begins the arms race .

  • @RickCarver-t1q
    @RickCarver-t1q Год назад

    These rockets didn't always go where they were supposed to. May 27, 1947 one landed in the outskirts of Juarez. Left a big hole.

    • @castlebound2010
      @castlebound2010 5 месяцев назад

      Makes you wonder why they placed the testing grounds (including the Trinity blast) near the Mexican border...

  • @andrew6978
    @andrew6978 4 года назад +2

    So insanely complicated just to deliver a HE warhead to London.

    • @jsl151850b
      @jsl151850b Год назад +1

      Had anyone on the German end done the math, they'd see that it wasn't as cost effective as conventional bombers.

  • @jasonvanengelenhoven3063
    @jasonvanengelenhoven3063 8 лет назад +2

    They said you could see Kansas City from White Sands New Mexico, that's 812.56 miles away. According to Google and Wikipedia, the amount of drop for a 812.56 mile distance would be 83 miles. The rocket went up 65 miles (18 miles less than 83 miles) How do you see something that is supposed to be 18 miles below you?

    • @ValentineC137
      @ValentineC137 8 лет назад +1

      it did say that it was at it's highest point at 15:40 100 miles above the earth

    • @DoctorShocktor
      @DoctorShocktor 6 лет назад +5

      Because like all flattards, you’re bad at math, research, and are a liar. The video says ONE HUNDRED MILES maximum altitude, not 65. So the city is EASILY seen from that distance and altitude from the missile range according to the curvature calculators. Massive fail on your part all around.

    • @rawbrob1079
      @rawbrob1079 6 лет назад

      Not true.

    • @ernesthill4017
      @ernesthill4017 Год назад

      "They said" is almost always an exaggeration

  • @BRYDN_NATHAN
    @BRYDN_NATHAN 5 лет назад +2

    You gotta have an alcohol tank on your spaceship.

  • @bubbamcgullicutty8966
    @bubbamcgullicutty8966 3 года назад +1

    Hard to believe it ran on simple alcohol. But we had nothing else.

  • @andreashutterer4740
    @andreashutterer4740 3 года назад +1

    Just watching the guy at 2:40 gives me itches....

  • @ashleylaw
    @ashleylaw 4 года назад +1

    100 miles up in just 3 minutes 40 seconds....
    Yet they say it took 19 hours to reach the ISS just the other week ? 19 hours ?

    • @ashleylaw
      @ashleylaw 3 года назад +1

      @Thane Mac2 No cure for dumb. But there is room in the hospital....brandnewtube.com/watch/YOKOQHxXtQXi8YB

  • @michaelreed9652
    @michaelreed9652 3 года назад +4

    Sogar heute sind die deutschen lngenieure die besten der Welt.

  • @RC-Flight
    @RC-Flight 3 года назад +3

    At 13:31 that commandant who looks out of the building looks awful evil and sinister. The way he looks over his shoulder looks very suspicious. He looks like hes up to no good! I swear he looks just like Snidely Whiplash!!!!!

    • @assassin40oz
      @assassin40oz 2 года назад +1

      I think that was colonel Harrold turner

  • @webcrawler9782
    @webcrawler9782 5 лет назад

    luckily the rocket didn't come down in Australia

  • @lazosv1
    @lazosv1 4 года назад

    V-2 was guided??

    • @leonardocai7394
      @leonardocai7394 4 года назад

      Yes, the rocket had a giroscope for checking and correcting the trajectory

  • @Anonomush_oranges
    @Anonomush_oranges 6 лет назад

    At 13:46 I think they captured Dracula himself and brought him back,

  • @michaeltaylor8835
    @michaeltaylor8835 4 года назад

    Whats with the music

  • @stratostatic
    @stratostatic 3 года назад

    I guess they never considered a parachute..

  • @johnhopkins6260
    @johnhopkins6260 5 лет назад

    "guided" vs. "ballistic"?

  • @ELPIOJOBOLUDO
    @ELPIOJOBOLUDO 6 лет назад +1

    At 6:34 of the video, did anyone notice the idiot putting out his cigarette and then dumping it on the ground next to the missile? WTF

    • @tu-95turbopropstrategicbom55
      @tu-95turbopropstrategicbom55 6 лет назад +3

      ELPIOJOBOLUDO it seems silly, but remember there was no fuel or explosives in the rocket at that time. It's perfectly safe minus the cancer you get 50 years down the road.

  • @frankkroondijk586
    @frankkroondijk586 2 года назад

    gasses are venting, lets smoke a cigarette next to it: ruclips.net/video/l6aI4fh69rQ/видео.html

  • @kevinmcfadin2141
    @kevinmcfadin2141 5 лет назад +1

    Nazi were so close to the atom bomb with that and von Braun the allies would have had a very bad day .

    • @jasonwiley798
      @jasonwiley798 Год назад

      Nazis weren't close at they never got started.

    • @wombatwilly1002
      @wombatwilly1002 Год назад

      They were no where near an atomic bomb

  • @richardkudrna7503
    @richardkudrna7503 9 месяцев назад

    I wonder if at each launch whether anyone gave a silent prayer to the men that died building these under the cruel SS factory conditions.

  • @josephastier7421
    @josephastier7421 6 лет назад

    3:54 Top secret Nazi tuned inlet manifolds for better top-end power.

  • @murataksu135
    @murataksu135 5 лет назад +6

    Stolen project

    • @michaelslack5269
      @michaelslack5269 5 лет назад

      No not stolen...spoils of war moron.

    • @MrJm323
      @MrJm323 5 лет назад +1

      von Braun and team were happy to be "stolen" -- by the Americans. ....A lot of lesser technicians were not so happy to be taken to the Soviet Union.

    • @wombatwilly1002
      @wombatwilly1002 Год назад +1

      Would you rather the Russians have their hands on it?

  • @chrisnewman7281
    @chrisnewman7281 2 года назад

    First or a business buy a set of metric spanners

  • @josephastier7421
    @josephastier7421 6 лет назад

    15:30 "iou"

  • @fernandohernandez8633
    @fernandohernandez8633 2 года назад

    .

  • @psycleen
    @psycleen Год назад +1

    low lying fruit

  • @thefuture12
    @thefuture12 4 года назад

    24 p HD