Note: In case you couldn't tell, the UFB is satire to be as comedically evil as possible while still fighting on the winning side of each war, even if it means fighting other evil countries/political groups. I've had some people actually take this seriously, and say some nonsense like "this is actually pro-nazi propagana". Unfortunately for my next video, I am going to have to ship the UFB off to a fictional world, mostly because I don't want to continue this series into modern politics, if I am already having this much problems with 100 year old political landscapes. Also to Note: The fabric stretched over the wings and the groove I refer to for the fuselage in the video are DIFFERENT. This is because many wings were still using fabric, as well as some control surfaces into the later 30s for my next design :)
@@messier82acPretty impressive for the GT Motors corp to hide those practically completely, I’d say for the next plane we could just rip a set of them wings off aye? Maybe a inverted gull wing? The Lion does look like the He112 but biplane ngl
Definitely check out Rex's Hangar if you don't already. Great content on the early decades of aviation. I love how at the time noone had any idea what they were doing and were just throwing things together.
Most interwar biplanes (like the Hawker Fury or the Fiat CR.32) actually still had fabric covered wings that were painted for that iconic silver look. The ridges result from the ribs being visible under the stretched fabric. When planes transitioned to all-metal wings in the 40s, many still had fabric covered control surfaces.
Hey! I try to mention it, but the "corrugation" and the fabric stretched on the rib were supposed to mention different structures, as one was on the empennage and is referenced to "save weight" in my readings. I don't think I specified that they were distinct, so I apologize for any confusion! I will definitely include what you said in my next video, however, as fabric control surfaces will still be a thing :)
My guy, your production quality skyrocketed. I chuckled every couple seconds, your sense of humor shares a single braincell with mine. Clearly, the refrigerator business helped propel you forwards. Here's to many more wars so you can truly blossom into a one man airborne terror personified.
I think you still could have designed a plane for the 20s, specifically as an export model for any of the following clients: 1) Latin America, who witnessed the potential of airpower over Europe and wanted a piece of the action. 2) Chinese warlords, who all wanted their own air forces to get a leg up on their rivals...and deter the growing threat posed by Imperial Japan. To suit these clients' needs, the emphasis would be on low cost, low maintenance, easy operation from poor quality airstrips (down to random patches of semi-flat ground), and ease of piloting, while being...not top-tier but competitive performance-wise, and offering the added benefit of not being worn-out milsurp like most of the wartime planes being sold off second-hand by the victorious Entente. What you'd probably end up with is basically an improved version of the Hawk. Alternatively you could borrow a page from Germany's playbook and say that, during the Great Depression, GT Motors developed a "courier aircraft" that TOTALLY wasn't a fighter with its guns taken off to sell on the civilian market...with suspiciously similar aircraft showing up in the hands of mercenaries fanning the flames of war abroad...
@@messier82ac Glad you think so. One additional recommendation I'd make for this: use a radial engine. These were usually preferred by developing countries' air forces at the time due to being more rugged and requiring simpler maintenance (no radiators or coolant lines to worry about, just an oil cooler). Maybe even consider making a seaplane conversion as well, as seaplanes were pretty popular in the developing world where purpose-built airports were few and far between. Planes I would look to for inspiration include the Bristol Bulldog, Fiat CR.20, Boeing F2B, and Curtiss P-6, and any number of different seaplanes from that era too since the interwar period was the golden age of the seaplane and flying boat. After the 30s, WWII saw the construction of many airbases able to handle large aircraft all across Europe, Asia, North Africa, and the Pacific, making it possible to operate large land planes from places one couldn't before, and with that came the death knell of the commercial seaplane and flying boat except in certain remote areas.
Messier, You must play Children of a dead Earth!!! CoaDe , the module editor is incredible!! fission reactors, propulsion systems, coilguns, railguns, lasers and even missile and ammunition payloads. One of the most realistic depictions of combat in space!, really an underrated gem among simulators/games of this genre, I really wish Dev would go back to keep developing it or make a successor!
Anyone else imagining the future of this channel? This is the type of channel that gets subscriber counts > 1 or 2 million Keep up the brilliant work, man. I've seen how channels like yours grow. It's all at once, through a wildly popular series. This? This is it, mate. Easiest subscribe of my life. Edit: Second easiest. GM Sceptic can't be beat.
I have been waiting for this since the first one came out, the plane looks great my man. I just got a computer good enough to actually play the game myself so this is great inspiration. One other thing, it’s only been a day and as I’m watching this it’s at 4K out of the 5k like goal so I’m betting we see an episode three! Hopefully sooner rather than later
Interwar aircraft were ridiculously small. I went to the Southampton aviation museum many years ago and the Supermarine racing float plane was disassembled on the floor as they needed to reposition it in the museum. My god, me as a teenager would never have fitted into the cockpit, it was absolutely tiny, and so sparse. I thought it was a 1/2 scale model at the time but learning it was the real thing peaked my interest in interwar aviation.
Thanks for explaining everything about the engine and materials and technology of the time period. Also the chaika wings look magical, its so sad we didnt see them on more planes.
Even the Flyout community realized the benefits of making fuselage wings, while the SimplePlanes community’s been doing this for years. But still, y’all can make so much cooler looking craft a lot easier
POV when you forget the most important part of a warplane. Without the guns… it’s just a biplane💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀
I'm thoroughly disappointed that you didn't cover the aircraft used in the failed coup of 1925. From what I hear, Bo's personal squadron was nearly decimated while defending the palace from Zeppelin attacks.
Wow I missed the premiere because for some reason youtube is unsubing people and there's a glitch or "error" that stops you from subbing because now there's a limit to how many people you can subbing to. Wtf man, but other than that cool shit dude keep it up
... you know, ive always wondered about how engine power increased over time, I hadnt even considered fuel refinement processes becoming more controlled and oxygen enriching additions. Neat.
Note: In case you couldn't tell, the UFB is satire to be as comedically evil as possible while still fighting on the winning side of each war, even if it means fighting other evil countries/political groups. I've had some people actually take this seriously, and say some nonsense like "this is actually pro-nazi propagana". Unfortunately for my next video, I am going to have to ship the UFB off to a fictional world, mostly because I don't want to continue this series into modern politics, if I am already having this much problems with 100 year old political landscapes.
Also to Note: The fabric stretched over the wings and the groove I refer to for the fuselage in the video are DIFFERENT. This is because many wings were still using fabric, as well as some control surfaces into the later 30s for my next design :)
Getting based with this one😂
proppunk
Nah, double down on it and watch people lose their shit over fiction. It's funny.
That Opal Manta's Tail gate looks like a maw to hell..
Too bad. Maybe you could do something like hoi4 does where they rarely mention some of the more gruesome or unethical parts of WW2?
A warplane without any armament? REVOLUTIONARY!!!
I forgot to mention it, but if you look closely in the nose, there are two 10mm machine guns
@@messier82acPretty impressive for the GT Motors corp to hide those practically completely, I’d say for the next plane we could just rip a set of them wings off aye? Maybe a inverted gull wing? The Lion does look like the He112 but biplane ngl
The plane is the wepone
@@gudnisnaer8171 *Hirohito drip starts playing*
@@messier82ac Quick question; can you make lasers in flyout? And if so, i dare you to make a laser jet :3
I'm really happy you didn't skip interwar designs, it's such a neglected era
Definitely check out Rex's Hangar if you don't already. Great content on the early decades of aviation. I love how at the time noone had any idea what they were doing and were just throwing things together.
Came for the aviation content. Stayed for the top tier satire.
Most interwar biplanes (like the Hawker Fury or the Fiat CR.32) actually still had fabric covered wings that were painted for that iconic silver look. The ridges result from the ribs being visible under the stretched fabric. When planes transitioned to all-metal wings in the 40s, many still had fabric covered control surfaces.
Thanks! I was thinking the exact thing when the 'corrugations' were mentioned.
Hey! I try to mention it, but the "corrugation" and the fabric stretched on the rib were supposed to mention different structures, as one was on the empennage and is referenced to "save weight" in my readings. I don't think I specified that they were distinct, so I apologize for any confusion! I will definitely include what you said in my next video, however, as fabric control surfaces will still be a thing :)
This man deserved the massive growth
just like GT Motors deserving the massive profit growth!
🤑
Salute to the Glorious Immortal Leader o7
o7
o7
o7
o7
o7
My guy, your production quality skyrocketed. I chuckled every couple seconds, your sense of humor shares a single braincell with mine. Clearly, the refrigerator business helped propel you forwards. Here's to many more wars so you can truly blossom into a one man airborne terror personified.
I was expecting AI to iteratively design a Biplane - I was pleasantly surprised by an explanation of 1930's design constraints
Bro is getting more and more unhinged and I'm all here for it
Heavy is the head that wears the crown.
This man is turning into the martincitopants of flyout, and im here for it
I think you still could have designed a plane for the 20s, specifically as an export model for any of the following clients:
1) Latin America, who witnessed the potential of airpower over Europe and wanted a piece of the action.
2) Chinese warlords, who all wanted their own air forces to get a leg up on their rivals...and deter the growing threat posed by Imperial Japan.
To suit these clients' needs, the emphasis would be on low cost, low maintenance, easy operation from poor quality airstrips (down to random patches of semi-flat ground), and ease of piloting, while being...not top-tier but competitive performance-wise, and offering the added benefit of not being worn-out milsurp like most of the wartime planes being sold off second-hand by the victorious Entente. What you'd probably end up with is basically an improved version of the Hawk.
Alternatively you could borrow a page from Germany's playbook and say that, during the Great Depression, GT Motors developed a "courier aircraft" that TOTALLY wasn't a fighter with its guns taken off to sell on the civilian market...with suspiciously similar aircraft showing up in the hands of mercenaries fanning the flames of war abroad...
I should've thought of this... I like it
Part 1.5 confirmed?
@@messier82ac Glad you think so.
One additional recommendation I'd make for this: use a radial engine. These were usually preferred by developing countries' air forces at the time due to being more rugged and requiring simpler maintenance (no radiators or coolant lines to worry about, just an oil cooler). Maybe even consider making a seaplane conversion as well, as seaplanes were pretty popular in the developing world where purpose-built airports were few and far between.
Planes I would look to for inspiration include the Bristol Bulldog, Fiat CR.20, Boeing F2B, and Curtiss P-6, and any number of different seaplanes from that era too since the interwar period was the golden age of the seaplane and flying boat. After the 30s, WWII saw the construction of many airbases able to handle large aircraft all across Europe, Asia, North Africa, and the Pacific, making it possible to operate large land planes from places one couldn't before, and with that came the death knell of the commercial seaplane and flying boat except in certain remote areas.
Messier, You must play Children of a dead Earth!!! CoaDe , the module editor is incredible!! fission reactors, propulsion systems, coilguns, railguns, lasers and even missile and ammunition payloads.
One of the most realistic depictions of combat in space!, really an underrated gem among simulators/games of this genre, I really wish Dev would go back to keep developing it or make a successor!
Ya
Messier 82- (8:16) "How does it feel to you when you are cast with another cylinder block, interlinked?"
Me- "Interlinked"
What's sad is that those reddit UFB comments are real people.
Eh it's reddit after all, what do you expect from those neckbeards?
16:46
"hey flight lead can you hear anything?"
"WHAT?"
The narration plus the meme-footage is absolutely amazing.
looks like a 60's magazine concept pretty cool
Finally pt2
i saluted to the glorious leader, bo, just like you shall too!
Straight up edging in Flyout, and let's just say, my cockpit
Jesus Christ, your planes are always incredible, but this is on a new level
Maybe GT's refrigerator business will help Jimmy become slimmer by storing his food in refrigerators instead of eating them
yes pt2!! i have been waiting so long
btw sick plane
Found your channel from part 1 of this, and enjoy all your other content, but please continue this series in particular!
6:39 opel manta jumpscare (I love the opel manta)
Anyone else imagining the future of this channel?
This is the type of channel that gets subscriber counts > 1 or 2 million
Keep up the brilliant work, man. I've seen how channels like yours grow. It's all at once, through a wildly popular series.
This? This is it, mate. Easiest subscribe of my life.
Edit: Second easiest. GM Sceptic can't be beat.
this weeks been terrible but this has vastly improved my week
I have been waiting for this since the first one came out, the plane looks great my man. I just got a computer good enough to actually play the game myself so this is great inspiration. One other thing, it’s only been a day and as I’m watching this it’s at 4K out of the 5k like goal so I’m betting we see an episode three! Hopefully sooner rather than later
Interwar aircraft were ridiculously small. I went to the Southampton aviation museum many years ago and the Supermarine racing float plane was disassembled on the floor as they needed to reposition it in the museum.
My god, me as a teenager would never have fitted into the cockpit, it was absolutely tiny, and so sparse. I thought it was a 1/2 scale model at the time but learning it was the real thing peaked my interest in interwar aviation.
I'd say an early late thirties jet plane would be cool but the obvious next step is a proper WW2 Fighter.
Babe wake up, Messier 82 dropped part II of Simulating 100 Years of Fighter Plane Evolution Using Endless Wars
Nice Video man Keep up the good work
This series is great, I love how the sarcasm flies over so many heads, it's like the starship troopers effect
ENDLESS WAR!!! 🦅🦅🦅 RAAAHHHH 🔥🔥🔥
Holy shit its ham himself
LYING building technique is really a piece of information I need for my next flyout build. Thanks!
Love the Series
Thanks for explaining everything about the engine and materials and technology of the time period. Also the chaika wings look magical, its so sad we didnt see them on more planes.
All hail Bo! (Pls don’t give me a ‘free vacation’)
Love your videos on stealth designs and this series. Keep it up.
Flyout truly is the plane of all time
Another banger vid!
Finally, part 2
I love the noticeably more unhinged nature of this video compared previous ones, I hope it only gets more incomprehensible from here!
YES YES YES, love this series, made me buy flyout
MORE MESSIER MORE EPICCCC
(Seriously tho love the vids, but remember to rest if u ever need too, luv ya mate :3)
FOR LIBERTY! FOR SUPER EART- I mean THE UFB
Even the Flyout community realized the benefits of making fuselage wings, while the SimplePlanes community’s been doing this for years. But still, y’all can make so much cooler looking craft a lot easier
hooray part two!
All I hear when I heard radio is:
“THERES A HOLE IN YOUR LEFT WING!”
Dude the Westland F.7 being mentioned made my day, love that thing 😭
FINALLY A NEW EPISODE
Fantastic detailing on this one dude! keep up the good work, and take all the time you need, we aren't going anywhere lol.
This is my dream RUclips channel to watch , history with humid and memes
This plane look so cool. I can't wait to see how it become obsolescence the moment war begin.
That montage (propaganda trailer) towards the end has me absolutely hyped for a movie/game that will never exist
FINALLY, YOU'RE BACK!!!!
You have no idea how happy I am to see another one video in this series got uploaded!
Can’t wait for the next plane
That is an extremely credible interwar biplane. Looks great.
I genuinely love interwar biplanes
I truly hope Half-life sound effects never go out of fashion. Always brings a smile to my face.
6:57 si vis pacem para bellum is the company motto
It would be interesting if the next fighter had a nose-mounted machinegun, or cannon, like the P-39D, i always wanted to see someone try it!
A great fighter for the great Federation Of Bo!
YES ANOTHER ONE
we eating good tonight gentlemen
POV when you forget the most important part of a warplane. Without the guns… it’s just a biplane💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀
Great video!
GT Motors could have included an enclosed canopy while keeping it a biplane
I can’t wait to try and make my own planes in this
I'm thoroughly disappointed that you didn't cover the aircraft used in the failed coup of 1925. From what I hear, Bo's personal squadron was nearly decimated while defending the palace from Zeppelin attacks.
Wow I missed the premiere because for some reason youtube is unsubing people and there's a glitch or "error" that stops you from subbing because now there's a limit to how many people you can subbing to. Wtf man, but other than that cool shit dude keep it up
4:23 Messier82 makes the worst joke ever, asked to leave RUclips immediately
This is actually a pretty funny video
Please can you make a video where ai makes a plane and then creates your flight
path/combat scenarios? Love your vids, thanks so much!
PART TO LESSS GO
This man basically made a mini Merlin and stuck it in a biplane😂
Shits finna ZOOM.
WOOOOOooOOOoOo WE'RE BACKKKKKKK
... you know, ive always wondered about how engine power increased over time, I hadnt even considered fuel refinement processes becoming more controlled and oxygen enriching additions. Neat.
i love the intro sound but JOABBYYYY
Putitinyourass
Sensitive imagery? Satirical opinions? WHOOO!
Kinda look like a race car I love it
Wonderous early morning post
Honestly though given the geography I can totally see them desinging and fielding a mercenary air corps in the spanish civil war
nice bro
GT Motor Corporation should look into entering health care…
Yeah, I really need to learn how to model things in Flyout one of these days. 🤔
Oh boy I do enjoy the totally unrelated Decisions of the UFB that could never be replicated in real life😀
I had to pause netflix for this
FINALLYYYY
You should do a video on 6th generation fighter plane designs!
Here one of my prediction for the next episode
A modified P-36 Hawk or P-40 Warhawk looking plane
Bo fought on the side of north Vietnam against the US lmao 5:44 and won
REAL
16:10 Never realized you had the Sus-Jerma face in your decals list lmao
in thrust we trust💪
Love the UFB’s trailer for their aircraft, but won’t they also need a good tank to fight with?
That ad at the end is scarily similar to the ADF ads I get lol.
10:45
DID I HEAR A ROCK AND STONE
Please continue.