F.A.Q Section - Ask your questions here :) Q: Do you take aircraft requests? A: I have a list of aircraft I plan to cover, but feel free to add to it with suggestions:) Q: How do you decide what aircraft gets covered next? A: Supporters over on Patreon now get to vote on upcoming topics such as overviews, special videos, and deep dives. Q: Why do you use imperial measurements for some videos, and metric for others? A: I do this based on country of manufacture. Imperial measurements for Britain and the U.S, metric for the rest of the world, but I include text in my videos that convert it for both.
Rex have you thought of approaching Airfix for some form of sponsorship. Airfix have recently released a great 1/48 model of the Bulldog. I really think you could work well together.😊
1974ish, at a now long gone hobbyshop in the downtown of my city, a 10 year old me spent his hard earned allowance on the 1/72 Airfix bagged version of this beautiful aircraft, I remember it being my first real take your time paint it and decal it model and I still have one in my stash somewhere, except it is in a box and not as crisply molded, thanks for this one Rex.
I always disliked the older Airfix moulds and thought Matchbox had an excellent selection of 1920s biplanes to choose from not all British and much better details in the moulds
As a younker back in the early '60's an old-timer once told me about horses "If a horse looks proud to be a horse, it's probably a good'in" I've always thought the Bulldog looked proud to be a fighter, hence it is one of my favorites from the '30's. Thank you ever so much for this comprehensive dive into this beautiful aircraft. I learned a bunch about the plane and the development of the Bristol 9 cylinder radial engines of the day. Real life always seems to laugh at our own plans. Just keep on keepin' on, Rex. It's all you can do. Know we love you and certainly appreciate your fine work!
Rex: next time you're in England I highly recommend that you visit 'The Shuttleworth Collection'. A superb collection of WWI, WWII and vintage aircraft; many of which are airworthy and flown. Quite near Duxford.
You just surfaced a childhood memory for me. After trying and failing to get into the 1999 Duxford Legends Airshow my Dad and Grandad took me to Shuttleworth instead. Not only was it a dead interesting day, but just before we were set to go home an entire squadron's worth of Warbirds turned up from Duxford and spent 15 minutes circling Old Warden. It was right at closing time so hardly anyone was around to see it, but it was magic.
The Bulldog's been one of may favourite biplane fighters since childhood. It really does suit the name, that stoic stance, and not pretty but very handsome. Pleased the example at the RAF Museum at Hendon lived up to expectations when I finally saw it. And great you're back into video making. This vid is (another) great example
A man in Oregon by the name of Ed Storo has built a full-size replica of the Bulldog. It took him 24 years and had to use a Pratt & Whittney wasp engine. He first flew it on June 28, 2022. There is information on google about it.
Thank you very much for another five star "Rex class" review. The sound is nice, perhaps mostly because of your clear and well-shaped pronunciation. It's always good to look forward, and in a little while you can look forward to 200,000 subscribers, which you absolutely deserve!
Always happy to hear from a guy who is more of a plane geek than I am, and a generation younger. That means that the interest in military aviation history will live on.
Glad to have you back Rex. I watch a lot of aircraft videos but yours are by far the best. Best of luck with the apartment hunting and I'm glad your health is better. Cheers mate.
I really like this channel. Lots of informative video, including video about obscure or deserving of fame planes that were overshadowed by others in their class. It's always a good day when a new video appears here! I learned much about the Bulldog today.
❤ the Channel and the new to me Aviation History. Excellent writing and the dashes of humor are worth the wait. I really like the longer videos as it gives you time to explain the smaller details. Please keep up the good work 👍
Great overview, Rex. Just three small points to make. The Bulldog marked BU-218 was one of two Mk.IIa machines sent to the Finnish by Sweden for use as trainers, iirc. Japan tested one Bulldog with a very much modified cowling, but I can't remember the Mark. Republican Spain used a few former Latvian/Estonian machines on the Northern Front )Basque Country, Santander...). One of them was photographed partially disassembled on top of a trailer after the collapse of that front. It may have been the very same machine or a different one that was displayed, stripped bare of fabric and removable metal panels, during an exhibition of spoils of war by the insurgent side. Anyways, just my two bits on the matter. Cheers.
If you are picky. There is mot a s on anyway. Like multiple Sheep. Also Maths has an S except in Rwdneck Hillbilly USA attempted but failed English.😢😢😢😢😢
This is good looking aircraft. Did I hear the man say 150 mph@ 20,000 foot ceiling? Those pilots were tough. It's cold weather up there especially in on open cockpit and thin air... Thanks for sharing. I think I'll put together an R/C model. Cool. J. Michigan.
Amazing the small numbers ordered… Like 2 for Thailand and an initial 5 for Latvia. Compare this to the2000+ frontline interceptors in USAF service in 1960
Baders story is inspiring... on the surface. How he was not Court martialled for so recklessly destroying an RAF aircraft after being challenged to fly aerobatics (on a completely stupid dare) escapes me. He didn't want to look like a wimp? Well..sorry, but Officers are meant to show maturity and judgement,..neither of which were even vaguely evident in that incident. And then, at Colditz, he prevented the repatriation of his Batman (a medic entitled to be returned home as a non-combatant) condemning THAT young man to several more years of incarceration. Sorry.. that sours the image too much for me... Officers are meant to LOOK AFTER the "troops".
I’m not sure any accurate bio of Bader tries to portray him as a pleasant human being. There are various anecdotes out there of his abrasive and arrogant persona. However, pig headedness and stubbornness are virtues in a war if not at the dinner table. BTW, my father worked at Miles (Woodley aerodrome) before joining Bomber Command to fly Lancs and Bader’s famous exploit was still a talking point where his reputation as a reckless idiot had become somewhat tempered by his subsequent heroics.
From what I recall.. Bader was part of an aerobatics team flying the Gloster Gamecock, which was slower and more agile than the Bulldog. They would regularly do slow rolls on the deck as part of their routine. When they transitioned to the Bulldog it recognized that such maneuvers would be dangerous in the Bulldog since it was heavier and faster than the Gamecock. Bader was at a different airfield and was teased about being reluctant to do what he was previously famous for, and after lunch he decided to show them all, with the results which we know. As an aside, many years later, he hit a stone wall taking off during Spitfire training (forgot to put the prop into fine pitch) and ended up bending his metal legs. He mused that if he hadn't lost his legs the first time he would have had to have them removed that day. Apparently that was the second Spitfire he had wrecked - after the first one he'd been promoted, and time the Station Commander summoned him to his office, where he was informed that he was being sent off to command a squadron. He reminded the Station Commander that he had just wrecked a Spitfire, and now he was being promoted again. The Station Commander replied not to worry, his new outfit flew Hurricanes.
Excellent informative video on one of my favourite biplanes. Thank you. It is sad that there are no flying examples left, given that so many were built and distributed so widely.
Bader's story can be found in "Reach for the Sky". I've read it more than once. Written by Paul Brickhill in 1956. A movie of the same name, with Kenneth More.
I had no idea that the US was testing British made aircraft way back then! These are those little points not often mentioned. And why I love this channel Would have been interesting if it had panned out
The U.S. bought one example to test against the Boeing F4b. They crashed the Bulldog almost immediately (at Anacostia Field, across the river from National airport), and bought a second example. The F4b won the contract.
G'day, Yay Team ! I, too, used to believe in the Legend of Douglas Bader being an Admirable example of a British Bulldog... Even crediting the Brickhill-polished version of Bader's notorious "Big Wing" Thing - making some Hypothetical form of "Sense" of the concept. (Beyond, in Bader's estimation, giving himself, personally, an enhanced chance to tell a big mob of Followers to, "Git BEHIND...! Keep in your Place ; Do as you're told, When you're told, BECAUSE You've Been bloody well TOLD, Damn y' !" Or, Words to that effect.... While also boosting his personal chances of being able to find, and attack, some Enemy Aircraft ; the better to compete with the Kill-Tallies of the more actively engaged 11-Group Pilots - whom he deeply envied, while having 60 devoted and dutiful Underlings available, behind him, to cover his Glorious little Arse for him, while he pranced about "At the Head of the Column"... And I also uncritically used to admire the accounts of Bader constantly "baiting" the Guards when he was a POW..., to better express his brutal British Imperialism ; and put the "German Scum" in their "proper place". As a child & adolescent, so I was taught to look at Bader's doings, and to Lionise him, and regard him as being Inspirational... In 1981 (?), at the last ever Schoefields Airshow they flew Bader out to be the Guest of Honour, and I met him there ; briefly, with me making no impression on him, & him being clearly busy "pressing the flesh" and enjoying being feted by thronging crowd of Hero-worshippers..., of whom I was indeed one. After the Airshow, on my return to work as a Student Nurse at RGH Concord, where (at that time) 75% of the Patients were Veterans ; and I (proudly) mentioned that I'd actually met, spoken with, and shaken the hand of the great Douglas of the Bader family... And as luck had it, I was nursing 3 ex POWs among the 8 Patients assigned to me that day, one had been at Changi and the other two were RAAF who'd been held by the Germans...; a Spitfire Jockey who'd pancaked in France on a Rhubarb after Flak stopped his engine, and a Navigator who'd been with the RAF in a Liberator over Italy at night (out of north Africa, I think...?). Anyway, apparently it was their last trip of the Tour, they were discussing what to do next - to extend their Tour or take the Leave & go their separate ways ; when the Liberator exploded. I asked if it was Flak, but he said not - saying that afterwards the ones who like him had been wearing their Chutes (I think 3 of them ?) were of the opinion that it "Must have been sabotage...". I don't think that he, or me, in 1981 had yet heard of Schragemusik...; but a Nightfighter sidling up underneath and pumping Cannon-Shells into the Wing-Tanks between the Engine-Nacelles..., that would have resulted in the No Warning "WhhoOOOOMPH !" Which he described... But the salient point was that he wound up being in a POW Camp, in Winter, at night, standing in Snow, on Parade ; being Counted & Re-Counted, All the bloody night, Until Douglas bloody Prima-Donna Bader Had finally Bin-Recaptured with his Stumps rubbed red raw after Staging one of his Pointless mindless Unauthorised hopeless "Escape Attempts". (All of which were refused permission to try, and any assistance with doing - by the Camp's "X-Committee" which assessed & approved, or vetoed, any and all proposals for trying to escape... The Pommies were playing War by their Beaurocratic Rules, and it was to be properly planned and thought-out, and run through a Cost/Benefit Analysis, and if it was a stupid idea then it was Shitcanned. And ALL of Bader's Hare-brained Crackpot Madcap schemes Were Declined by His own Chain of Command). According to the bloke who was in a Luftstalag with Bader, who'd spent a night being counted and recounted in the Snow, bashed and battered with Riflebutts for hours at an end..., and in the opinion of the other two ex-POWs and the other 3 non-POW WW-2 Veterans who were in my Bay that day... Douglas Bader was a selfish arrogant lying Bullshit Artist, who cheerfully got a lot of people killed while trying to make himself look like a Hero when he led a Squadron and Wing..., and then he was perfectly happy to cause everybody else in the POW Camp to be counted and beaten in the Snow, all night, while he Acted out his psychotically Delusional "Escape !" Fantasy and otherwise Massaged his throbbing Overweaning Ego. I felt very greatly Priviledged to have been there to witness Veterans' Oral History Shitting all over the Propagandistic Drivel which I had Bin-raised up to Revere... Douglas Bader turns out to have been a proper Prize Turd of a Human... As it happened, in all truth. Apparently. According to the people who were there At the time. Such is life, Have a good one... Stay safe. ;-p Ciao !
Kenneth Moore played a brilliant Douglas Bader (pronounced "Bahder") in the film "The Battle of Britain". Moore and Bader actually met during filming for Moore to study Bader's walking style, and how he entered aircraft cockpits. According to some, Bader was a bit of a feisty character in real life.
service ceiling = 29k feet - did they have breathing equipment? and aspiration? hmmmm, I like your video and I the Bulldog I remember building this kit in the 70s
Good to have you back. "Too Long"??? Nah mate, nah. Just right, but would enjoy more on this plane (and so many others you cover) as it's good stuff at the Hangar!
I agree. The Hercules is a beauty and a beast. I can imagine a modern copy of lightweight construction and use turboprop powerplants... Hughes was ahead of his time. Thanks for sharing, J. Michigan.
Hi Rex, another great video. Keep them coming.. just one question., any idea why the aircraft shown at the 13.26 and 18.54 mark has differing tail and fuselage numbers. No biggie of you don't know, just something I noticed. Hi from Australia.
what a shame. no one liked bader. his big wing idea with mallory was one of the greatest blunders of the british in WW2. awesome video as ever though chap :)
Never noticed any audio issue you thought you might be having. When one gets ingrossed in such an interesting video the brain gets a bit of tunnel vision and blokes out "things" that don't related to or aren't pertinent to the video. Eg, I am watching this in bed cira 0230 and until you mentioned the audio issue I hadn't notice my wife snoring loudly beside me. I was that ingrossed with your narration that everything else stop existing. True story Rex and *Thank You* for the video and it's excellent as always. 👍 Good luck hunting for that elusive and now rare beast..... _accomodation._ I hope you can get something appropriate and affordable soon. 🤞
Beautiful aircraft - worth some manufacturer producing an r/c foamie? I'd buy one - just to look at. P.S. Always thought Bader crunched a Gamecock while stunting, I could be wrong, wasn't there! : )
F.A.Q Section - Ask your questions here :)
Q: Do you take aircraft requests?
A: I have a list of aircraft I plan to cover, but feel free to add to it with suggestions:)
Q: How do you decide what aircraft gets covered next?
A: Supporters over on Patreon now get to vote on upcoming topics such as overviews, special videos, and deep dives.
Q: Why do you use imperial measurements for some videos, and metric for others?
A: I do this based on country of manufacture. Imperial measurements for Britain and the U.S, metric for the rest of the world, but I include text in my videos that convert it for both.
Fokker D.XXI, G.I and the S,14
Avia-B534
Day 2 of asking for Rex to do in-depth video on the Spitfire
F4u Corsair
Rex have you thought of approaching Airfix for some form of sponsorship. Airfix have recently released a great 1/48 model of the Bulldog.
I really think you could work well together.😊
Never apologise for one of your videos being "too long" .... there is no such thing on this channel. :-)
Indeed - This was a cracking good review of a superb but sometimes now overlooked aeroplane
History docs are better off being long and covering everything, instead of short and unable to cover everything.
Yea, we are grateful for that
@@Mamorufumio So very well said.
"there is no such thing on this channel."
I STILL have not had the time to watch those 3 and 4 hour vids...
10:15 "Bristol was the underdog..." Very clever! Another nicely done video. Thanks!
*_"...tranquilized mouse..."_*
Now THOSE are two words I never expected to hear together in the same sentence...😊
{Great video...👍}
Clearly you're not a vet. 😅
@@smythharris2635>>> If you mean _"veterinarian,"_ true...😊
Need to read up on more studies that use mice. 😊
I never saw a Bulldog fly, but arrived at Farnborough in time to see the wreckage being cleared up in 1964. So glad it was eventually restored.
1974ish, at a now long gone hobbyshop in the downtown of my city, a 10 year old me spent his hard earned allowance on the 1/72 Airfix bagged version of this beautiful aircraft, I remember it being my first real take your time paint it and decal it model and I still have one in my stash somewhere, except it is in a box and not as crisply molded, thanks for this one Rex.
I always disliked the older Airfix moulds and thought Matchbox had an excellent selection of 1920s biplanes to choose from not all British and much better details in the moulds
26 minutes of Rex's Hangar on a Monday WOOOOOOO
Eh dude....its TUESDAY.🤣🤣🤣
@@jaws848I just woke up when it was uploaded, okay?
Its Tuesday lil bro
@@highgeneralkage2748 i was being sarcastic...lighten up..🤣🤣🤣
@@highgeneralkage2748 you slept an entire day away?
Rex! You're back! Good to see you posting again, my friend. Hope all is well with you.
As a younker back in the early '60's an old-timer once told me about horses "If a horse looks proud to be a horse, it's probably a good'in" I've always thought the Bulldog looked proud to be a fighter, hence it is one of my favorites from the '30's. Thank you ever so much for this comprehensive dive into this beautiful aircraft. I learned a bunch about the plane and the development of the Bristol 9 cylinder radial engines of the day.
Real life always seems to laugh at our own plans. Just keep on keepin' on, Rex. It's all you can do. Know we love you and certainly appreciate your fine work!
Rex: next time you're in England I highly recommend that you visit 'The Shuttleworth Collection'. A superb collection of WWI, WWII and vintage aircraft; many of which are airworthy and flown. Quite near Duxford.
You just surfaced a childhood memory for me. After trying and failing to get into the 1999 Duxford Legends Airshow my Dad and Grandad took me to Shuttleworth instead. Not only was it a dead interesting day, but just before we were set to go home an entire squadron's worth of Warbirds turned up from Duxford and spent 15 minutes circling Old Warden. It was right at closing time so hardly anyone was around to see it, but it was magic.
@@fix0the0spade
An excellent outcome! 😁
I'm definitely going to Shuttleworth!
I can second this! Some fascinating stuff there, and all of it is in flying condition. Absolutely fantastic place.
The Bulldog's been one of may favourite biplane fighters since childhood. It really does suit the name, that stoic stance, and not pretty but very handsome. Pleased the example at the RAF Museum at Hendon lived up to expectations when I finally saw it.
And great you're back into video making. This vid is (another) great example
A man in Oregon by the name of Ed Storo has built a full-size replica of the Bulldog. It took him 24 years and had to use a Pratt & Whittney wasp engine. He first flew it on June 28, 2022. There is information on google about it.
ruclips.net/video/JMEgVR6Uj0Q/видео.html
Footage of it in flight.
Thank you very much for another five star "Rex class" review. The sound is nice, perhaps mostly because of your clear and well-shaped pronunciation. It's always good to look forward, and in a little while you can look forward to 200,000 subscribers, which you absolutely deserve!
Excellent book, "Reach for the sky", depicts the Douglas Bader history. Highly recomended.
A rather shallow account that leaves out a great many pertinent, yet uncomplimentary, facts about Bader.
@@trooperdgb9722 Of course it would; it's his official biography.
@@Skorpychan Is it though? there are several Biographies out there. Stil...a good point!
Bader wrote off an aircraft by stunting. He should never have been in the RAF after that.
@@trooperdgb9722His fellow officer prisoners couldn't stand him.
Always happy to hear from a guy who is more of a plane geek than I am, and a generation younger. That means that the interest in military aviation history will live on.
That plane just LOOKS right. I bet it was a blast to fly
I love how the Bulldog's tailfin has a "thumbs up" shape. Good vibes!
I just got this as a 1:48 scale kit from Airfix !! I feel even more excited to build it now knowing the history behind it. Fantastic video as always
"... as Finland is somewhat frosty" understatement of the century! 😂
Glad to have you back Rex. I watch a lot of aircraft videos but yours are by far the best. Best of luck with the apartment hunting and I'm glad your health is better. Cheers mate.
I still remember when young the last flying Bristol Bulldog that flew at RAF Henlow and Old Warden. Was always an impressive joy to see.
It's good to see you back and a great subject to choose
So glad to see a new video, especially for what it means about your recovery.
This is an excellent return to the fray Sir! Good work.
(Bader is pronounced: "Bahder" not as in Vader.)
Thanks. So, I've been reading that wrong for near 6 decades? Figures ...
Right on time for Airfix' new released 48th scale model :D
3:33 Close formation flying must have caused a fair few mishaps.
Excellent vid. Thank you for posting.
I really like this channel. Lots of informative video, including video about obscure or deserving of fame planes that were overshadowed by others in their class. It's always a good day when a new video appears here! I learned much about the Bulldog today.
Welcome back Rex! I had no idea that this aircraft even existed. Thank you for the content 🍻
Good to hear there are survivors. Take your time, we will still be here.
❤ the Channel and the new to me Aviation History. Excellent writing and the dashes of humor are worth the wait. I really like the longer videos as it gives you time to explain the smaller details. Please keep up the good work 👍
Great video as always, hope you're getting everything sorted out with the move and job.
Thanks for posting!
lt is so nice to see you back making excellent aircraft videos again......Thanks you for this awesome video my friend.....
Old F-4 II Pilot Shoe🇺🇸
A Ed Nash and rex release on the same day....im i heaven
Great overview, Rex.
Just three small points to make. The Bulldog marked BU-218 was one of two Mk.IIa machines sent to the Finnish by Sweden for use as trainers, iirc. Japan tested one Bulldog with a very much modified cowling, but I can't remember the Mark. Republican Spain used a few former Latvian/Estonian machines on the Northern Front )Basque Country, Santander...). One of them was photographed partially disassembled on top of a trailer after the collapse of that front. It may have been the very same machine or a different one that was displayed, stripped bare of fabric and removable metal panels, during an exhibition of spoils of war by the insurgent side.
Anyways, just my two bits on the matter.
Cheers.
If you are picky. There is mot a s on anyway. Like multiple Sheep. Also Maths has an S except in Rwdneck Hillbilly USA attempted but failed English.😢😢😢😢😢
Nice looking plane! Great vid for the afternoon slump at work 😅
Great to hear from you again. 😅The video is up to your usual standards, Rex.No worries.Greg in Southern Ontario Canada 🇨🇦. 😊.
This is good looking aircraft. Did I hear the man say 150 mph@ 20,000 foot ceiling? Those pilots were tough. It's cold weather up there especially in on open cockpit and thin air... Thanks for sharing. I think I'll put together an R/C model. Cool. J. Michigan.
Thanks!
Thank you!!!
Rex's Hangar, Ed Nash and Not A Pound all releasing videos on the same day is a lovely treat to wake up to! Keep it up😁
And ofc Greg's efforts
So happy to see Your work again, Chris.
Its amazing how much peacetime progress there was in the coming decade - from the Bulldog in 1929 to the Spitfire in 1939...
Even faster than that timeline, really, considering the Spitfire first flew in 1936.
Fly for your Life! I was given this book by a WW2 US navy pilot with the call sign Crash...Great book on the man you speak of.
great video as always! Missed your content, always a delight to see it pop up again!
Awesome video as always love the longer videos
Love the Bulldog! I recently bought two the new tooled 1/48 Airfix kits and it's a true gem!
Excellent video, as always! 👍🏻👌🏻👏🏻
Amazing the small numbers ordered… Like 2 for Thailand and an initial 5 for Latvia. Compare this to the2000+ frontline interceptors in USAF service in 1960
No such thing as a "too long" video from your good self! And a timely one as well with the release of the Airfix 1/48 Bulldog.
another half hour of aviation goodness.
Yes! Many thanks to Rex for this very informative and entertaining swoop into a fascinating plane.
Baders story is inspiring... on the surface. How he was not Court martialled for so recklessly destroying an RAF aircraft after being challenged to fly aerobatics (on a completely stupid dare) escapes me. He didn't want to look like a wimp? Well..sorry, but Officers are meant to show maturity and judgement,..neither of which were even vaguely evident in that incident. And then, at Colditz, he prevented the repatriation of his Batman (a medic entitled to be returned home as a non-combatant) condemning THAT young man to several more years of incarceration. Sorry.. that sours the image too much for me... Officers are meant to LOOK AFTER the "troops".
I’m not sure any accurate bio of Bader tries to portray him as a pleasant human being. There are various anecdotes out there of his abrasive and arrogant persona. However, pig headedness and stubbornness are virtues in a war if not at the dinner table. BTW, my father worked at Miles (Woodley aerodrome) before joining Bomber Command to fly Lancs and Bader’s famous exploit was still a talking point where his reputation as a reckless idiot had become somewhat tempered by his subsequent heroics.
My grandfather was stationed at Duxford with him. He said he was an arsehole.
From what I recall.. Bader was part of an aerobatics team flying the Gloster Gamecock, which was slower and more agile than the Bulldog. They would regularly do slow rolls on the deck as part of their routine. When they transitioned to the Bulldog it recognized that such maneuvers would be dangerous in the Bulldog since it was heavier and faster than the Gamecock. Bader was at a different airfield and was teased about being reluctant to do what he was previously famous for, and after lunch he decided to show them all, with the results which we know. As an aside, many years later, he hit a stone wall taking off during Spitfire training (forgot to put the prop into fine pitch) and ended up bending his metal legs. He mused that if he hadn't lost his legs the first time he would have had to have them removed that day. Apparently that was the second Spitfire he had wrecked - after the first one he'd been promoted, and time the Station Commander summoned him to his office, where he was informed that he was being sent off to command a squadron. He reminded the Station Commander that he had just wrecked a Spitfire, and now he was being promoted again. The Station Commander replied not to worry, his new outfit flew Hurricanes.
As always a great video on a great airplane - thank you Sir 👍
Excellent informative video on one of my favourite biplanes. Thank you. It is sad that there are no flying examples left, given that so many were built and distributed so widely.
Mark, there is one replica flying. It even has 46 hours on it. Cheers (p.s. youtube video has some clips)
As the man himself said "It's Bah-der"
Excellent video on a great aircraft
Nicely done. Welcome back. That would be "Bahder" sir, not Bayder. Keep up the good work.
Great video, Rex.
I have a ceramic plate with bulldog xD great airplane and its classic design is awesome
Great stuff as always!
You Sir - are tops!
Always one of my favorites as well.😊
I made the Airfix model of the Bulldog, I do enjoy it in my collection.
13:00 A12-1 and the other A12 numbered Bulldogs in this photo are Australian or destined for Australia
Great content as always.
Very interesting! I was hoping, however, to hear something of the type's use in the Spanish Civil War, in which I believe a few examples saw combat.
Kiitos, Rex.
Great video. I love the planes from this period.
A very interesting Video, as always, thx for that 🎉👍🛩️
Awesome thanks rex
Love the fighters of the era. But the sleek lines of the Hawker Hart from approximately the same era appeals to me more.
Hawker fury was the fighter version. A beautiful aeroplane.
Bader's story can be found in "Reach for the Sky". I've read it more than once. Written by Paul Brickhill in 1956. A movie of the same name, with Kenneth More.
Another great video.
I had no idea that the US was testing British made aircraft way back then! These are those little points not often mentioned. And why I love this channel Would have been interesting if it had panned out
The U.S. bought one example to test against the Boeing F4b. They crashed the Bulldog almost immediately (at Anacostia Field, across the river from National airport), and bought a second example. The F4b won the contract.
G'day,
Yay Team !
I, too, used to believe in the
Legend of Douglas Bader being an
Admirable example of a
British
Bulldog...
Even crediting the Brickhill-polished version of Bader's notorious
"Big Wing" Thing - making some
Hypothetical form of "Sense" of the concept.
(Beyond, in Bader's estimation, giving himself, personally, an enhanced chance to tell a big mob of Followers to,
"Git BEHIND...!
Keep in your Place ;
Do as you're told,
When you're told,
BECAUSE You've
Been bloody well
TOLD,
Damn y' !"
Or,
Words to that effect....
While also boosting his personal chances of being able to find, and attack, some Enemy Aircraft ; the better to compete with the Kill-Tallies of the more actively engaged 11-Group Pilots - whom he deeply envied, while having 60 devoted and dutiful Underlings available, behind him, to cover his Glorious little
Arse for him, while he pranced about
"At the Head of the Column"...
And I also uncritically used to admire the accounts of Bader constantly "baiting" the Guards when he was a POW..., to better express his brutal British
Imperialism ; and put the "German Scum" in their "proper place".
As a child & adolescent, so I was taught to look at Bader's doings, and to
Lionise him, and regard him as being
Inspirational...
In 1981 (?), at the last ever Schoefields Airshow they flew Bader out to be the Guest of Honour, and I met him there ; briefly, with me making no impression on him, & him being clearly busy "pressing the flesh" and enjoying being feted by thronging crowd of Hero-worshippers..., of whom I was indeed one.
After the Airshow, on my return to work as a Student Nurse at RGH Concord, where (at that time) 75% of the Patients were Veterans ; and I (proudly) mentioned that I'd actually met, spoken with, and shaken the hand of the great Douglas of the Bader family...
And as luck had it, I was nursing 3 ex POWs among the 8 Patients assigned to me that day, one had been at Changi and the other two were RAAF who'd been held by the Germans...; a Spitfire Jockey who'd pancaked in France on a Rhubarb after Flak stopped his engine, and a Navigator who'd been with the RAF in a Liberator over Italy at night (out of north Africa, I think...?).
Anyway, apparently it was their last trip of the Tour, they were discussing what to do next - to extend their Tour or take the Leave & go their separate ways ; when the Liberator exploded.
I asked if it was Flak, but he said not - saying that afterwards the ones who like him had been wearing their Chutes (I think 3 of them ?) were of the opinion that it
"Must have been sabotage...".
I don't think that he, or me, in 1981 had yet heard of Schragemusik...; but a Nightfighter sidling up underneath and pumping Cannon-Shells into the Wing-Tanks between the Engine-Nacelles..., that would have resulted in the
No Warning
"WhhoOOOOMPH !"
Which he described...
But the salient point was that he wound up being in a POW Camp, in Winter, at night, standing in Snow, on Parade ; being
Counted &
Re-Counted,
All the bloody night,
Until Douglas bloody
Prima-Donna
Bader
Had finally
Bin-Recaptured with his
Stumps rubbed red raw after
Staging one of his
Pointless mindless
Unauthorised hopeless "Escape Attempts".
(All of which were refused permission to try, and any assistance with doing - by the Camp's "X-Committee" which assessed & approved, or vetoed, any and all proposals for trying to escape... The Pommies were playing War by their Beaurocratic Rules, and it was to be properly planned and thought-out, and run through a Cost/Benefit Analysis, and if it was a stupid idea then it was
Shitcanned.
And
ALL of Bader's Hare-brained Crackpot Madcap schemes
Were
Declined by
His own Chain of
Command).
According to the bloke who was in a Luftstalag with Bader, who'd spent a night being counted and recounted in the Snow, bashed and battered with Riflebutts for hours at an end..., and in the opinion of the other two ex-POWs and the other 3 non-POW WW-2 Veterans who were in my Bay that day...
Douglas Bader was a selfish arrogant lying Bullshit Artist, who cheerfully got a lot of people killed while trying to make himself look like a Hero when he led a Squadron and Wing..., and then he was perfectly happy to cause everybody else in the POW Camp to be counted and beaten in the Snow, all night, while he
Acted out his psychotically
Delusional
"Escape !"
Fantasy and otherwise
Massaged his throbbing
Overweaning
Ego.
I felt very greatly Priviledged to have been there to witness
Veterans'
Oral History
Shitting all over the
Propagandistic
Drivel which I had
Bin-raised up to
Revere...
Douglas Bader turns out to have been a proper
Prize
Turd of a
Human...
As it happened, in all truth.
Apparently.
According to the people who were there
At the time.
Such is life,
Have a good one...
Stay safe.
;-p
Ciao !
Kenneth Moore played a brilliant Douglas Bader (pronounced "Bahder") in the film "The Battle of Britain".
Moore and Bader actually met during filming for Moore to study Bader's walking style, and how he entered aircraft cockpits. According to some, Bader was a bit of a feisty character in real life.
service ceiling = 29k feet - did they have breathing equipment? and aspiration? hmmmm, I like your video and I the Bulldog I remember building this kit in the 70s
Enjoyed this as always.
Looking forward to "Tin Legs" video!
Awesome video 👍 Maybe you could have mentioned its other combat service in the Spanish Civil War?
Rex being one of the good plane channels
Very cool! Thanks for sharing!
Glad you are.better!
Great vid!
Very interesting... Thanks
The Bristol Bulldog had a long sevice history with the RAF. I like its pugncious look.
Excellent video on a great plane. Have you done one on the Gloster Gladiator yet?
Good to have you back. "Too Long"??? Nah mate, nah. Just right, but would enjoy more on this plane (and so many others you cover) as it's good stuff at the Hangar!
Hell yeah, another video, long format is great
Can you please make a video about the Huges H-4 Hercules please, it’s one of the most interesting aircraft mostly because of its size
I agree. The Hercules is a beauty and a beast. I can imagine a modern copy of lightweight construction and use turboprop powerplants... Hughes was ahead of his time. Thanks for sharing, J. Michigan.
@ my name is not j Michigan and it had no turboprop engines actully large radial engines largest plane of its day
It's probably no surprise that many (including me) will find this to be a new favorite just because Rex here said it was good. 😆
Hi Rex, another great video. Keep them coming.. just one question., any idea why the aircraft shown at the 13.26 and 18.54 mark has differing tail and fuselage numbers. No biggie of you don't know, just something I noticed. Hi from Australia.
Great video as always. Did some take part in the Spanish Civil War also?
Yes.
Best channel on youtube!
what a shame. no one liked bader. his big wing idea with mallory was one of the greatest blunders of the british in WW2. awesome video as ever though chap :)
Thanks Rex
a technical question. are documents such as N.21/26 not typically pronounced with "stroke" rather than "slash" in the UK?
maybe, but he is in Australia ;P
Nothing about that replica that's been built in America the last few years? It's a fabulous job!
Thank you. Cheers
@edstoro3883 no problem, Ed!
Wait what? Someone built a flyable one?
Never noticed any audio issue you thought you might be having. When one gets ingrossed in such an interesting video the brain gets a bit of tunnel vision and blokes out "things" that don't related to or aren't pertinent to the video. Eg, I am watching this in bed cira 0230 and until you mentioned the audio issue I hadn't notice my wife snoring loudly beside me. I was that ingrossed with your narration that everything else stop existing.
True story Rex and *Thank You* for the video and it's excellent as always. 👍
Good luck hunting for that elusive and now rare beast..... _accomodation._ I hope you can get something appropriate and affordable soon. 🤞
Didn’t the Bulldog see some combat in the Spanish Civil War? With the Basque forces?
Yes they did.
I can't tell if you had any audio problems. no worries
Beautiful aircraft - worth some manufacturer producing an r/c foamie? I'd buy one - just to look at.
P.S. Always thought Bader crunched a Gamecock while stunting, I could be wrong, wasn't there! : )
What's the aircraft at the back of the hangar @13:10?
Great video