Which Country had the Most Effective Bomber Planes in World War 2

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024

Комментарии • 4,6 тыс.

  • @TheFront
    @TheFront  4 года назад +604

    Not das Stuka, you say? The Mosquito, you say? You know what, you're probably bloody right, but we want to know why. Jump in our Discord server and talk our scalps off. discord.gg/qt68efP

    • @oldpsboy
      @oldpsboy 4 года назад +10

      I love Soviet union army so I say I love its plans

    • @TheRedAirOn
      @TheRedAirOn 4 года назад +9

      Das stuka!!!

    • @pammotorsport9743
      @pammotorsport9743 4 года назад +30

      I watched another doco, where they said if the allies had built only mosquito bombers they would have been more effective and lost far fewer air crew.

    • @dovidell
      @dovidell 4 года назад +7

      @Marshall Georgy Zhukov-Hero of the Soviet Union - knowing this chap , he'll choose the Matilda Mk 1 tank as the best of the best !!!!!!!

    • @dovidell
      @dovidell 4 года назад +6

      @@pammotorsport9743 the other side of the coin is probably , if the Germans would have had the FW 190 a few years earlier ....

  • @Hakair_2
    @Hakair_2 4 года назад +2385

    Nobody:
    American engineers: see that bunker over there, make it fly

    • @HarryKnuttsachs
      @HarryKnuttsachs 4 года назад +123

      Testing phases: *Jackass theme plays*

    • @Theinatoriinator
      @Theinatoriinator 4 года назад +27

      @osp80 yeah, an armature engineer caught a denotator problem that would cause premature detonation when the pilots were still on board. Pilots were needed to take off, unfortunately nonene listened to the armature. Flying over airspace a random radio comms interfered with the detonator, safeguard prevented it from causing detonation, at least they thought. the armature told Joseph Patrick Kennedy Jr. jfks older brother to get off that plane as fast as possible. 15 minutes after the prevented interference a solenoid overheated igniting the explosives. That was going to be Joseph Patrick Kennedy Jr. last flight anyway. He was going to go back home, get discharged and try for president but he saw this opportunity and after hearing from his family jokingly one of these time your going to get killed, he took the volunteer mission. Joseph Patrick Kennedy Jr. died August 12, 1944 August 12, 1944 (age 29) due to an explosion part of Operation Aphrodite.
      "earthquake" bombs and the advance of Allied troops had already stopped construction on the site, to house V-3 cannon, by 30 July. In the end it turned out to be in vain.
      Edit: RUclips censored part of it due to me saying explosion, and death in part of the same comment.

    • @whathappenswhen3017
      @whathappenswhen3017 4 года назад +3

      @osp80 Why havent I heard about this before? Sounds neat :D

    • @patricksedler9697
      @patricksedler9697 4 года назад +6

      I know, look up the b-36 peacemaker, it was a post ww2 bomber and was MASSIVE.

    • @galahad3195
      @galahad3195 4 года назад +4

      @@patricksedler9697 big enough that it could have dropped B-17 fuselages as bombs from its bays. Absolutely beautiful.

  • @lostinpa-dadenduro7555
    @lostinpa-dadenduro7555 4 года назад +2811

    When Americans see a vehicle or a plane the first thing we think is “How many .50 cals you think we can put in there?”

    • @mellothejello3285
      @mellothejello3285 4 года назад +239

      Us Americans are just like fuck it and let’s put .50 cals where ever we can stuff them in

    • @TheSandersh
      @TheSandersh 4 года назад +98

      They’re worse with ships and 40mm bofors and 20mm Oerlikon...so many aa barrels

    • @laszlogman2545
      @laszlogman2545 4 года назад +108

      Hell yeah 😎 Why use a rifl caliber to poke holes when you can saw it off with a 50?

    • @laszlogman2545
      @laszlogman2545 4 года назад +65

      Why poke holes with a 303 when you can Saw with a 50😁?

    • @danielmocsny5066
      @danielmocsny5066 4 года назад +55

      Well, if France, England, Poland, the USSR, etc. had had enough .50 BMGs mounted on everything that flew or rolled, they could have stopped the Stukas early.

  • @LittleMacscorner
    @LittleMacscorner 3 года назад +265

    Random interesting fact: The B-29 was the first Aircraft to to use analog computers. The turrets each had one for spotting and making correction automatically for wind-speed etc... There was ONE fire control station and all guns could be maneuvered from there. and fired separate or at once.

    • @coco_killua3057
      @coco_killua3057 3 года назад +13

      Interesting fact:
      Germany built the First jets in ww2. The me262 and the AR47 (some others), it was the reason why we have our Military jets now. But it was built to late in the war.

    • @LittleMacscorner
      @LittleMacscorner 3 года назад +6

      @@coco_killua3057 Yep, I now. The Me262 was the Major one. We brought a crap ton of Nazi Rocket and Jet Scientist back to the U.S., gave them immunity to any war crimes, and put them in charge of our rocket programs to ensure Russia didn't get ahead of us with the German Scientist they captured. I always found computers to be the big winner, though, and the Allies were well ahead in that regard.

    • @partygrove5321
      @partygrove5321 3 года назад +25

      @@coco_killua3057 Both the US and the UK had operational jets at the end of WW 2

    • @partygrove5321
      @partygrove5321 3 года назад +1

      Yet Star Wars had B-17 type manned ray gun turrets for space battles.

    • @seancurran6727
      @seancurran6727 2 года назад +6

      @@LittleMacscorner As great as it was, the ME262 was a fighter, not a bomber. Out of contention in this context.

  • @harryrimmer6830
    @harryrimmer6830 3 года назад +426

    The B25 should have been included in this top 10 list. It was a highly effective aircraft in a variety of roles. The Mosquito, however, definitely should have been the winner. The Stuka was only effective for one primary role early in the war, while the Mosquito performed every role asked of it, superbly, throughout the war.

    • @billthehat6973
      @billthehat6973 3 года назад +27

      agreed- as well as the A20 - the Germans were terrified of it. Came in low and fast , packing 6 50 cals in the nose and dropped 500 lbs bombs very accurately. They were also tough. They had to be due to their frequent role as ground attack below 1,000 feet. Friend of mine's father flew them in Europe. He saved all the flak shrapnel , which he could hear rolling around in the fuselage as they flew home, and saved some of it in a shoe box, which the family still has.

    • @tszirmay
      @tszirmay 3 года назад +3

      @@billthehat6973 The Boston was the bomber and the Havoc (both A20) was an intruder and night fighter.

    • @timpreston459
      @timpreston459 2 года назад +17

      The Stuka did fine against defenceless civilians as soon as there were any fighters about they were shot down like flies

    • @alastair9446
      @alastair9446 2 года назад +12

      @@timpreston459 A tank is a defenceless citizen, okay? Any bomber is shot down like flies against fighters.

    • @jimfarrar4925
      @jimfarrar4925 2 года назад +9

      I believe the Doolittle Raid was B25 Mitchell. Excellent bomber

  • @apacheattackhelicopter8410
    @apacheattackhelicopter8410 3 года назад +642

    Him “the Stuka dive bomber is the best”
    Me in my head “but can it carry an atomic bomb?”

    • @NokotanFanCentral
      @NokotanFanCentral 3 года назад +21

      Atomic bombs are really expensive, not to mention the B-29’s fatal flaw

    • @welkingunther5417
      @welkingunther5417 3 года назад +43

      @@NokotanFanCentral But...giant, beautiful KABOOM though...

    • @asolomon7402
      @asolomon7402 3 года назад +23

      @@NokotanFanCentral what is it’s fatal flaw I only see positives to it.

    • @NokotanFanCentral
      @NokotanFanCentral 3 года назад +1

      @@asolomon7402 there ruclips.net/video/TuKceC2Nxbo/видео.html that explains it

    • @sharkguy2781
      @sharkguy2781 3 года назад +22

      @@NokotanFanCentral The B29 had no fatal flaws. It’s American which automatically made it better than any foreign planes and it is fucking awesome because they are responsible for two cities into radioactive pancakes so I don’t want to hear your bullshit

  • @endlesswaffles6504
    @endlesswaffles6504 3 года назад +634

    The Dauntless deserves a mention too for its role as a dive-bomber in the Pacific.

    • @endlesswaffles6504
      @endlesswaffles6504 3 года назад +21

      @@jaystreet46 some of the planes listed were early war and eventually replaced. The Dauntless was very effective while in service.

    • @pbjman5809
      @pbjman5809 3 года назад +4

      @@jaystreet46 You could say the same thing about the Stuka, and most other planes really

    • @0159ralph
      @0159ralph 3 года назад +18

      Turned the tide at Midway, Coral Sea and gave The IJN hell at Guadalcanal. I would like to find out the tonnage of ships it sank in the Pacific....

    • @awes0men0b0dy9
      @awes0men0b0dy9 3 года назад +7

      @@jaystreet46 the helldiver is ugly and weird the SBD is way better known etc

    • @jamesm.5749
      @jamesm.5749 3 года назад +1

      That’s the one used for the Doolittle raids over Tokyo?

  • @billd.iniowa2263
    @billd.iniowa2263 4 года назад +597

    I think that due to the varied roles that bomber planes had, you can't pick a single overall bomber. You need to split them up. Heavy, medium, light, fighter-bomber, torpedo plane. I also think the B-25 Mitchell deserved at least a mention. But I am very fond of this medium bomber so my bias is showing.

    • @Mondo762
      @Mondo762 4 года назад +18

      Same here. Doolittle's Raiders certainly made the B-25 famous. Good pick.

    • @TheFront
      @TheFront  4 года назад +42

      Totally agree with splitting them up!

    • @thorswrath9151
      @thorswrath9151 4 года назад +16

      I would make an argument for the b-26 as it had a very high sortie rate and the absolute highest survival rate of all allied bomber aircraft.

    • @cudathehawgjetfixer7520
      @cudathehawgjetfixer7520 4 года назад +10

      @@hillbillyscholar8126 Wrong, the B-26's where adored by their crews, and yes it was difficult to learn how to fly but when the pilots got past the difficulties then they loved them. I had the chance to talk with a group of B-26 Veterans while volunteering at the Airmans Heritage Museum at Lackland AFB, and each and everyone of those men praised the plane, some flew others after the War and wanted to get back to the Marauders over their new steeds.
      So your claim is pure false on aircrews hating the plane, it was the rookie pilots that could not handle the high performance Marauders, Jimmy Doolittle was called to inspect the B-26's at MacDill Air Field when all of the rumors about the plane and he crushed them, when he did his check out flight, on take off he shut down the #1 engine and flew the circuit and landed the plane with one engine then said "There is nothing wrong with the plane, matter of fact it's the best plane I ever flew!" and when he took over the 8th AF in England his personal plane WAS a B-26 Maraudar.

    • @patrickgriffitt6551
      @patrickgriffitt6551 4 года назад

      @@hillbillyscholar8126 you are correct. You said was not loved. Never said hated. Splitting hairs on both sides here.

  • @garyfleming5156
    @garyfleming5156 3 года назад +63

    The Mosquito was pretty good with superb speed as it had 2 Rolls Royce engines and it packed a pretty effective punch. So, she gets my vote.

    • @alastair9446
      @alastair9446 2 года назад

      But could it drop its bomber accurate. Like right on a tank right next to your troops without hitting htem.

    • @alganhar1
      @alganhar1 2 года назад +11

      @@alastair9446 No aircraft of WWII could do that, not even the Ju 87 you seem to have a hardon for.
      As for accuracy, yes, it actually *could*. Operation Jericho for example was a raid designed to break prisoners out of a Gestapo Prison and required bombs being placed to break open the outside wall and the prison itself. Mosquitos were also used to target specific buildings. Several Gestapo Headquarters were targeted this way. In 1943 during the 10th Anniversary of the Nazi's taking power Mosquitos destroyed the main Berlin Broadcasting station while Herman Goring was giving a speech, taking his speech off air.
      Had you ever actually bothered reading some of the service history of the aircraft you would not have even bothered to type that line....

    • @alastair9446
      @alastair9446 7 месяцев назад

      @TheFatAmericans1 And your points relates to the argument how?

    • @alastair9446
      @alastair9446 7 месяцев назад

      @@alganhar1 No, aircraft could do that? Then how did dive bombers sink Japanese aircraft carriers at Midway? That's a pretty small target moving fast. Dive bombing was the most accurate form of bombing in ww2, would you want to dive bomb in a wooden plane who's glue came lose in SE Asia?

  • @hillbillyscholar8126
    @hillbillyscholar8126 4 года назад +722

    B-25 should have been included. Many variants and very effective overall.

    • @lairdcummings9092
      @lairdcummings9092 4 года назад +93

      My uncle flew B-25s. He and he crew were credited with the destruction of an IJN destroyer, broken in two by a successful skip-bomb attack.

    • @hillbillyscholar8126
      @hillbillyscholar8126 4 года назад +22

      @@lairdcummings9092 WOW!!! Thanks for sharing and have a Happy Fourth!

    • @gunfighterfd
      @gunfighterfd 4 года назад +51

      the B 25 not only was the 1st to attack Japan, they were the swiss army knife of the Medium bombers, some even had a 75mm cannon mounted in the nose.

    • @lairdcummings9092
      @lairdcummings9092 4 года назад +25

      @@gunfighterfd or enormous racks of .50 caliber machine guns... Absolutely devastating in the surface attack role.

    • @samuelgirard1407
      @samuelgirard1407 4 года назад +14

      Jimmy Doolittle's Raiders!! 30 Seconds over Tokyo!! 👍

  • @justice9775
    @justice9775 4 года назад +474

    is no one gonna talk about the RAF put "happy xmas adolf" on a big bomb

    • @GoatMan-dl5ds
      @GoatMan-dl5ds 4 года назад +64

      America once gave back the friendship medals gifted to them by Japan by strapping them to the bombs they dropped in the Doolittle raid

    • @westernstar.roadtrain7246
      @westernstar.roadtrain7246 4 года назад +5

      It’s was a secret for adolf

    • @kimoibrahimo448
      @kimoibrahimo448 4 года назад +7

      That big bomb was a 4000 lb bomb

    • @colinsimon777
      @colinsimon777 4 года назад +5

      It was a surprise party

    • @fubarace1027
      @fubarace1027 4 года назад +2

      Makes me think of that picture of an A-1H with a toilet bowl strapped onto a bomb rack to be dropped on Vietnam.

  • @rodgeyd6728
    @rodgeyd6728 3 года назад +202

    Stuka before the De Havilland Mosquito !!!!
    YOU FOR REAL?
    THE LIST OF THE MOSSIE'S ACHIEVEMENTS IS ENDLESS.
    A TRUE CLASSIC .

    • @rodgeyd6728
      @rodgeyd6728 3 года назад +17

      @Justus Immelmann ME 262, remarkable aircraft. But nowhere near as versatile as the Mosquito, Hitler's biggest mistake was not making it a bomber or fighter bomber as intended.
      To me the Mosquito was the best and most versatile piston aircraft of WWII.

    • @thegreatseprano9918
      @thegreatseprano9918 3 года назад

      Both the Stuka and Mosquito have long lists of achievements and they were both very good in their own right.

    • @ravenmoon5111
      @ravenmoon5111 3 года назад +16

      @@thegreatseprano9918
      Mosquito was vastly superior

    • @pouletbidule9831
      @pouletbidule9831 3 года назад +4

      @@ravenmoon5111 ask rudel about that

    • @ravenmoon5111
      @ravenmoon5111 3 года назад +10

      @@pouletbidule9831
      I read the book. He was an amazing pilot and he obviously loved the Stuka.
      The IL-2 Sturmovik was, to me, the superior aircraft. It was so much like the A-10 in that it was heavily armored and a monster at ground attack.
      The Mosquito was fast, surprisingly durable and has a terrific combat record. It’s wooden design actually gave it light weight and great strength.
      It was so impressive that Hitler ordered it be copied, but the factory that was making the glue was bombed and that ended the effort

  • @tamer1773
    @tamer1773 3 года назад +98

    The problem with the Stuka that British pilots quickly exploited was its weak tail section. When Spitfire and Hurricane pilots concentrated their fire on the Stuka's tail they were almost guaranteed a kill even with the comparatively low powered .303 round.

    • @alastair9446
      @alastair9446 2 года назад +7

      The biggest problem was that Germans lost air superioty. And Stuka wasn't even suppose to go up against fighters. I more of a lost ditch effort to defend yourself.

    • @tamer1773
      @tamer1773 2 года назад +4

      @@alastair9446 No dive bomber was supposed to go toe to toe with dedicated fighters. But planes like the Douglas SBD and Curtis Hell diver were more heavily armored than the Ju-87 and stood a better chance, but they still needed fighters for protection since they were lightly armed and relatively slow in horizontal flight. If you look at the relatively delicate tail structure of the Stuka it makes a very tempting target for a pursuing fighter.

    • @alastair9446
      @alastair9446 2 года назад +1

      @@tamer1773 Well my understanding of the battle mid way is that dive bombers only got through because the torpedo bombers attacked first and pulled the fighters low. The figher could not climb fast enough to catch the dive bombers. All the torpedo bombers were shot down so it looks like even American bombers didn't stand a chance.

    • @tamer1773
      @tamer1773 2 года назад +1

      @@alastair9446 They were supposed to coordinate the attack so that the fighters, torpedo planes and dive bombers got there at the same time. It didn't happen because of radio trouble and it was early in the war and such coordination is difficult at the best of times. Torpedo Squadron Eight was destroyed because they had no fighter cover and they had to fly slow, straight, and level on their torpedo runs making them easy targets for the IJN fighters and shipborne anti-aircraft fire. In the later stages of the battle the various fighter and bomber squadrons were better able to coordinate leading to better results.

    • @roybennett9284
      @roybennett9284 2 года назад +1

      Too right 8+303 verses one 7.92machine gun.poor tail gunner

  • @georgewillett9112
    @georgewillett9112 4 года назад +170

    “Dee eee havilland” 💀💀 its just De Havilland after Geoffrey De Havilland. Also you didn’t mention the fact that the mosquito was made almost entirely out of wood.

    • @g8ymw
      @g8ymw 3 года назад +6

      Robots struggle with plain english

    • @geoffreygreen7322
      @geoffreygreen7322 3 года назад

      hello
      i was mentioned

    • @themilkyounevergot8700
      @themilkyounevergot8700 3 года назад

      Hence the name “Wooden Wonder”

    • @aaronh6776
      @aaronh6776 3 года назад +1

      You don't need to worry about interceptors if you can just outrun them *taps head*

    • @DonVigaDeFierro
      @DonVigaDeFierro 3 года назад +2

      Germans were jealous that the British despite not having a lack of materials made such a wonderful wooden plane.

  • @marcuswardle3180
    @marcuswardle3180 4 года назад +177

    No Wellington! A plane that was the backbone of the RAF Bomber Command in the early war. It could take enormous punishment and still survive.

    • @spetsnatzlegion3366
      @spetsnatzlegion3366 4 года назад +30

      War thunder devs: oh cool, a survivable plane? Bet that would go into the game well
      Also the devs: *make the Wellington and Lancaster break if you look at it the wrong way*

    • @russianoldschoo48
      @russianoldschoo48 4 года назад +2

      Clearly haven’t played war Thunder lol

    • @allangibson8494
      @allangibson8494 4 года назад

      Except the ones that didn’t (they were very vulnerable to incendiary ammunition).

    • @Count_Gustav
      @Count_Gustav 4 года назад

      That is why Wellington designated only as "night Bomber"

    • @MaxwellAerialPhotography
      @MaxwellAerialPhotography 4 года назад +1

      Yes and it was never very good at it’s job. Being numerous is no guarantee of being good.

  • @danielwong5099
    @danielwong5099 4 года назад +58

    What a pity that you don't mention Ju-88. It's German's backbone in medium-bomber ,meanwhile played a crucial role in night fighters. One of the most versatile plane in its era.

  • @jimdavison4077
    @jimdavison4077 3 года назад +46

    Never mentioned the Handley Page Halifax which reached squadrons before the Lanc. While it was forced to use RR Merlin engines eventually it got the radials designers wanted and became a loved and trusted work horse for Bomber command.

    • @landochabod7
      @landochabod7 2 года назад +7

      Yeah they built almost as many Halifaxes as they did Lancasters (6000+ to 7000+), but it seems largely forgotten by now.
      Also weird to avoid mentions of the Ju-88, which was produced a lot more than the He-111.

    • @chitlika
      @chitlika 2 года назад +2

      Disdainfully called Halibags by Lancaster crews

    • @liliyaurk1671
      @liliyaurk1671 4 месяца назад

      Exactly what I said.

    • @jimdavison4077
      @jimdavison4077 4 месяца назад

      @@chitlika Canadian and Australian crews love them and preferred them over the Lank. It only stands to reason crews would develop a loyalty to what ever ship they flew. After all you counted on it to get home during every mission. Lots of room for praise for just about all the war birds from the era.

  • @trevoncowen9198
    @trevoncowen9198 4 года назад +829

    “The Stuka was very vulnerable to fighters” ig he never played war thunder

    • @pfcsantiago8852
      @pfcsantiago8852 4 года назад +122

      In 'real' life the Stuka couldn't climb for shit.

    • @lixuskzomxfm
      @lixuskzomxfm 4 года назад +104

      Even in War Thunder it's really vulnerable, ridiculous firepower, climb rate and turn rate

    • @sentientcapitalism3889
      @sentientcapitalism3889 4 года назад +68

      I’ve literally shot down a Stuka with a Swedish heavy bomber

    • @Dan86130
      @Dan86130 4 года назад +32

      @@sentientcapitalism3889 said by the fbi sounds legal

    • @sentientcapitalism3889
      @sentientcapitalism3889 4 года назад +7

      TheFireCreeper yessir

  • @dsw-fb8mp
    @dsw-fb8mp 4 года назад +186

    If the Stuka was in there, then so should have been the Douglas SBD Dauntless. This is the plane that won the Battle of Midway and the Battle of Midway was the turning point of the Pacific war! It was a great dive bomber. It was an easy plane to fly and the pilots all loved it.

    • @junocrusader5860
      @junocrusader5860 4 года назад +5

      Under appreciated

    • @kieranlillis7121
      @kieranlillis7121 3 года назад +1

      Stuart was a true vertical dive bomber. Both were good but stuart served from first day to the last and was more versatile.look af HUR he used the canon mounted stuart to devastating effect.

    • @galier2
      @galier2 3 года назад +4

      @@kieranlillis7121 Who is Stuart? :-)

    • @tomstevenson161
      @tomstevenson161 3 года назад +5

      I would also vote for the old ‘Slow But Deadly’

    • @dsw-fb8mp
      @dsw-fb8mp 3 года назад +3

      @@galier2 I agree with you. I don't know the Stuart.

  • @nonautemrexchristus5637
    @nonautemrexchristus5637 4 года назад +87

    Love how for every other bomber he gives it a nice intro, and when the Lancaster comes around he flips over to "blowing civilians limb from limb"
    Cheers for that one

    • @jacobkingsford5209
      @jacobkingsford5209 4 года назад +13

      He was wrong, the Lancaster burned it's victims to death with 18 canisters of 256 incendiary bombs, after blowing of the roofs of every house on the street with a cookie

    • @maddmatt55
      @maddmatt55 4 года назад +16

      Liberty Prime - Unfortunately he is in many ways correct. This was as a result of the controversial tactics of ‘Bomber’ Harris. The debate still rumbles on but the tactic of area bombing was used and did kill many civilians, however they started it with the ‘Blitz’ in England which killed many thousands of British civilians!! There’s a Brit expression, If you play with the big boys in the playground don’t be surprised when you get a bloody nose!’

    • @dougreid2351
      @dougreid2351 4 года назад +16

      Unfortunate and uncharacteristic editorializing. This is the opposite of objective reporting/documentation. Please refrain from such in the future. It's cheap and unprofessional.

    • @dougreid2351
      @dougreid2351 4 года назад +4

      At 09:12 you have incorrectly identified a different silouette as the Mosquito. I'm not sure which one but it is definitely not the Mosquito.

    • @royronson3275
      @royronson3275 4 года назад +4

      maddmatt55 Definitely controversial and horrible. But war is horrible and brutal, and with a total war like WWII it’s hard to apply normal moral standards to decide what was right and wrong. The British were doing what they felt was necessary to defeat their enemy and this included brutal tactics, but this was no different than any other country during the war. They did some awful things, like bombing civilians. But clearly nowhere near as terrible as the atrocities committed by Germany, who were the perpetrators of the war after all.

  • @thecommenter9678
    @thecommenter9678 3 года назад +52

    B-24 and Lancasters are my two favorites, simply because of the split tail... allowing the dorsal turrets to fire direct aft.
    This means you have the dorsal, tail and belly turrets all able to cover direct aft. which makes for a savage combo.

    • @micko11154
      @micko11154 3 года назад +1

      Good point, I never considered that before!
      Cheers!

    • @bobkonradi1027
      @bobkonradi1027 2 года назад

      As for bombers, there's the B-29 and "other." Enormous (for the day) bomb loads, and very long distance capability put it in a league, a world, all its own.

  • @bonbin6053
    @bonbin6053 4 года назад +192

    Lol “it’s in America so everything is supersized anyway” true

    • @virgilepatricot2507
      @virgilepatricot2507 4 года назад +10

      They must be compensating for something ;)

    • @Wasattsi
      @Wasattsi 4 года назад +10

      Virgile Patricot OR, that’s also supersized like the rest.

    • @DARisse-ji1yw
      @DARisse-ji1yw 4 года назад +5

      Which is why this is in English instead of German....

    • @zkittlezthabanditt604
      @zkittlezthabanditt604 3 года назад +9

      Naw, it's the rest of the world that's _undersized_

    • @amazononedayshipping2627
      @amazononedayshipping2627 3 года назад +1

      @@virgilepatricot2507 ?

  • @Drademdar
    @Drademdar 4 года назад +283

    Most effective have to be "De Havilland DH 98 Mosquito", Mostly because where most of the other planes only could do a couple of different tasks each, the "Mosquito" was practically a swiss army knife with wings. Besides, at least for me, it's the most beautiful WW2 plane ever.

    • @deanmilos4909
      @deanmilos4909 4 года назад +17

      Beauty is a subjective thing but from all of this bombers I would still say that the mosquito was the best one

    • @thomaszhang3101
      @thomaszhang3101 4 года назад +7

      You can say the same for Ju88. It is produced more than any other Luftwaffe bombers and it can do literally anything, including being a fighter.

    • @keithwalker2712
      @keithwalker2712 4 года назад +23

      and a mozzy carred the same bome load as the b17

    • @ronnelson7828
      @ronnelson7828 4 года назад +15

      At about 9:10 in this video they introduce the Mosquito but the silhouette shown is of a Mitsubishi "Betty" bomber. ?????

    • @TheFront
      @TheFront  4 года назад +9

      It is certainly a pretty craft, and if I could go back in time, I would have included it both this video and our video on fighters.

  • @cg9121
    @cg9121 4 года назад +254

    There is a difference between an “attacker” and “Bomber.”

    • @markhorton8578
      @markhorton8578 4 года назад +1

      Please explain.

    • @Gary91511
      @Gary91511 4 года назад +33

      @@markhorton8578 Low altitude attacks. Capable of bombing, but not carpet bombing. Most likely equipped with precision weapons like front facing cannons and or rockets.

    • @stastu6484
      @stastu6484 4 года назад +16

      This guy has no idea what he is talking about. He should stick to star wars

    • @Robert53area
      @Robert53area 4 года назад +28

      @@stastu6484 he's not exactly wrong th il2 stormovich actually even has it in its name. It russian for attacker.
      Which is why it was made by illusiyan arms.
      Tupolov made bombers.
      The ju87, mosquito and il2 are attackers not rrally bombers very distinct difference in roles. As CAS is their role.
      Bombers are defined as 2 variant tactical and strategic. Strategic are high altitude and target industry, factories and refinery to slow down production.
      Tactical bombers usually target formations, bridges or naval vessels. The list lumps them all together which limits what is actually defined as bombers.
      Because according to this the thunderbolt would be a bomber as it destroyed more tanks on the western front than ju87s did.
      The PE3 would also be considered a bomber as it was instrumental in the eastern front as a heavy fighter that targeted German trains and supply convoys

    • @Gary91511
      @Gary91511 4 года назад

      @@stastu6484 me, mark, or the narrator?

  • @lancerevell5979
    @lancerevell5979 3 года назад +86

    No mention of the Douglas SBD Dauntless dive bomber, that helped scuttle the Japanese carriers and battleships. Britain's Wellington, Halifax and Sterling bombers gave great service. The G4M Betty was Japan's navy bomber (landbased) while the Japanese Army had a different bomber.

    • @kryts27
      @kryts27 2 года назад +1

      I agree about these aircraft too

    • @fahrradmittelfranken8207
      @fahrradmittelfranken8207 Год назад

      I think it's a mistake to discuss all these different types of bombers in one video. Should have a video for level bombers, one for naval bombers and one for ground attack bombers.

    • @paulspillier708
      @paulspillier708 Год назад +1

      You could add the Swordfish to that list. The attack at Taranto harbour. The Norway campaign. The Bismarck to its credit before the USA entered the war. It looks obsolete. but it was quiet affective.

  • @daveanderson3805
    @daveanderson3805 4 года назад +377

    The Junkers JU 88 should have gotten a mention In many ways almost as remarkable as the Mosquito Otherwise a good video

    • @qball1of1
      @qball1of1 4 года назад +42

      Better in every aspect than the He-111, I was surprised it wasn't mentioned.

    • @TheFront
      @TheFront  4 года назад +28

      Agreed, and thanks!

    • @Xenophaige_reads
      @Xenophaige_reads 4 года назад +18

      I would have replaced the stuka with the JU 88 or JU188 personally. Huge fear factor but obsoleted as soon as it met even early monoplane fighters like the hurricane.

    • @williamprince1114
      @williamprince1114 4 года назад +4

      Agreed ..... it was a more successful design then the Japanese Betty Bomber.

    • @wez123123123
      @wez123123123 4 года назад +1

      The marketing department was definitely rushed on that name ....

  • @johnangier506
    @johnangier506 3 года назад +115

    The Stuka as I understand it was easy meat after the first year or so of the war. As you said it was then withdrawn from many areas. Perhaps you are correct for the beginning of the war. To me the best and most versatile overall was the Mosquito.

    • @alastair9446
      @alastair9446 2 года назад +4

      Yes, but the Stuka is not fighter and should not be targeted in the first place. The Germans fighter should be defending them. What makes them so effective is their abilty to drop bombs accurate. THey even had a automatic pull up from a dive in case the pilots blacked out.
      Play some air combat sim with old aircraft and you will see how diificult it is to drop bomb accurate. Divie bombing makes very accurate bombing. Just look at the battle of midway, those were dive bombers that did the damage, the torpodo bombers wre all shot down.

    • @alastair9446
      @alastair9446 2 года назад +3

      It was because the germans lost air superioty. The job it was suppose to do it did well. It wasn't suppose to figh fighters.

    • @slipslider9048
      @slipslider9048 2 года назад +2

      And I’m sure there’s no patriotic bias in any of the comments from British armchair historians 😂

    • @williamcornish3175
      @williamcornish3175 2 года назад +6

      Germany's best Stuka pilot Hans Ulrich Rudel would have loved to argue your point this plane was ineffective after 1940.

    • @thomasstyan2066
      @thomasstyan2066 2 года назад +1

      @@slipslider9048 Guilty as charged. But then aren't we all biased?

  • @zg4705
    @zg4705 4 года назад +207

    Nobody:
    The Front: "bommah"

  • @alexanderwalden4552
    @alexanderwalden4552 2 года назад +19

    B-29 was so advanced for its time. Gotta be top five at the very least. It was fast, it was tough, it could fly high, it had a good defensive armament, it could take a beating, they even had pressurized compartments. That was a game changer for the pilots.

    • @mgytitanic1912
      @mgytitanic1912 2 года назад +1

      The B29 was awful. It kept catching fire, it had endless trouble with it's defensive armament. Only the cockpit was pressurized. It couldn't fly that high, which is why it was never it used in Europe. It couldn't take that much punishment either.

    • @ronalddavis
      @ronalddavis 2 года назад +1

      until it caugt fire

    • @28pbtkh23
      @28pbtkh23 Год назад +1

      All true comments in this thread. The B29 was cutting edge design, had the most modern technology, but was rushed into service before many of its faults had been ironed out. Many crew lost their lives on what was an unproven aircraft, and we should remember their sacrifice. Ultimately though, this was the aircraft that ended the war in Asia and the Pacific. Many Allied POWs owe their lives to the dropping of the bomb.

    • @miguelflugelman3278
      @miguelflugelman3278 Год назад +1

      Unreliable, its engines caught fire easily as their components were made of magnesium , which was very flammable. The computer controlled armament never worked properly, was difficult to mantain by its unprepared ground crews.Its development cost more than the Manhattan project.

    • @hashteraksgage3281
      @hashteraksgage3281 8 месяцев назад

      Not at all, it was expensive flying trash. Ever wondered why it wasn't used over Europe?

  • @vladimirdragonov
    @vladimirdragonov 4 года назад +508

    Americans: Hey look buddy, I'm an engineer. That means I solve problems, not problems like "What is beauty?" Because that would fall within the purview of your conundrums of philosophy. I solve practical problems, for instance: how am I going to stop some mean Messerschmitt from tearing me a structurally superfluous be-hind? The answer, use a .50 cal, and if that don't work... Use more .50 cal, Take for instance this heavy caliber twin mounted lil' old number designed by me, built by me, and you best hope... Not pointed at you.

    • @dovahkiin1210
      @dovahkiin1210 4 года назад +51

      Meet the Engineer?

    • @suleyman9199
      @suleyman9199 4 года назад +17

      @@dovahkiin1210
      Yes

    • @tregaming07
      @tregaming07 4 года назад +29

      Dovahkiin12 No, it’s meet the .50 cal

    • @suleyman9199
      @suleyman9199 4 года назад +5

      @@tregaming07
      Nice

    • @wingwong186
      @wingwong186 4 года назад +8

      I like the take of the TF2 engineer, nice one

  • @tommason6714
    @tommason6714 4 года назад +259

    Should we not consider overall effectiveness of an aircraft for its historical events, such as the Lancaster's dam buster raid?

    • @hardlyworking1351
      @hardlyworking1351 4 года назад +18

      Sinking of the Tirpitz also

    • @tommason6714
      @tommason6714 4 года назад +5

      @JTS80 *B-29 😂😂 just one of em

    • @tommason6714
      @tommason6714 4 года назад

      @JTS80 class bomber, the death rate was horrendous though. Brave men 🤝

    • @McDuffee01
      @McDuffee01 4 года назад

      the effect of the only partial succesful raid was only temporarily...

    • @TheFront
      @TheFront  4 года назад +8

      I didn't know about this particular operation. Very, very cool.

  • @Ophiria
    @Ophiria 4 года назад +79

    I would have mentioned the North American B-25 Mitchell

    • @smokey1255
      @smokey1255 4 года назад +6

      I may have my aircraft backwards but the B-25 was most useful in specialized roles. It was a great plane but couldn't carry the paloads when necessary. One mission made it worth the cost cost of the entire production: the Tokyo raid. It boosted American morale and it reminded Tokyo yhat you can run but you cannot hide. Their sense of invincibility was knocked down a few notches when it needed to be.. Excuse the spelling, I seem to be losing my sight.

  • @TheOriginalJphyper
    @TheOriginalJphyper 3 года назад +30

    I could've sworn you'd pick the B-17 or Lancaster. The Stuka was at the very bottom of the list. By mid-war the only German bomber worth a crap was the Ju-88, which you did not mention.

    • @liamgavinwells
      @liamgavinwells 2 года назад

      Why would you choose the Lancaster or the B-17 over the B-29?

    • @TheOriginalJphyper
      @TheOriginalJphyper 2 года назад

      @@liamgavinwells If you have to ask that question, then you don't know squat about WWII bombers.

    • @liamgavinwells
      @liamgavinwells 2 года назад

      @@TheOriginalJphyper the only flaw I know about the B-29 that the Lancaster and B-17 is the engine flap, so about you enlighten me and we can have a civil discussion instead of you continuing to be a jerk or have me search through 10 pages of Google to find what I'm looking for

    • @TheOriginalJphyper
      @TheOriginalJphyper 2 года назад +1

      @@liamgavinwells The B-29 was infamously unreliable. It also entered much later into the war. I'm not saying it's bad, mind you; the B-17 and Lancaster simply did more work.

    • @liamgavinwells
      @liamgavinwells 2 года назад

      @@TheOriginalJphyper fair point, but it did have a computer to help with aiming, a pressurized cockpit, more armor, and was able to fly higher thanmost aircraft of the time

  • @phillipnagle9651
    @phillipnagle9651 4 года назад +215

    The SBD Dauntless, the plane that took out four Japanese carriers at the Battle of Midway, belongs on the list and as dive bombers go, was superior to the Stuka.

    • @raysubsonic
      @raysubsonic 4 года назад +16

      100% agree on this.

    • @markdolby1436
      @markdolby1436 4 года назад +9

      @@raysubsonic What about the 'Val'? Sank more ships than any other dive bomber.

    • @yoseipilot
      @yoseipilot 4 года назад +9

      Aichi D3A 'Val' hit with 3 (250 kg) bombs on Yorktown her speed drop to 0 knots and sank a Battleship Arizona with only 4 bombs, SBD Dauntless hit with 4 (450 kg) bombs on Hiryu her speed is still fast at 30 knots (like the others carrier). So D3A Val is effective than SBD Dauntless.

    • @PoisonPrince119
      @PoisonPrince119 4 года назад +9

      True but the val numbers for the whole war include its common use as a kamikaze and in many cases sbds were replaced by newer curtis helldivers

    • @whenyoupulloutyourdickands4023
      @whenyoupulloutyourdickands4023 4 года назад +28

      @@yoseipilot you gonna ignore the other 3 carriers that were easily sunk by SBDs?
      The Akagi was taken out in a single hit from the Dauntless

  • @ashleighelizabeth5916
    @ashleighelizabeth5916 4 года назад +195

    Aircraft Designer: "So how many 50 cals do you want on the Flying Fortress?"
    US Army Aircorp, "YES!!!!!"

    • @grahamjohnson7412
      @grahamjohnson7412 4 года назад +3

      Best part is that was only a standard B-17. The crew of Old 666 upgraded theirs to 19 machine guns.

    • @tomlucas4890
      @tomlucas4890 4 года назад

      Just a thought, the MOSSIE could carry the same bomb load as the b 17 at twice the speed. Back refuel, rearm and go back out for a second sortie before the B17s came home.. We made the same mistake, build huge aircraft and giving the Germans a huge gift of scrap aluminium, instead of a simple Wooden Wonder. Ok some extra firewood when they got one.

    • @grahamjohnson7412
      @grahamjohnson7412 4 года назад +1

      @@tomlucas4890 The Mossie didn't have the same range the B-17 did (1,300 miles versus 2,000). A Mosquito would be flying on fumes trying to bomb eastern Germany (London-Berlin is 1,110 miles round trip, for example) from England. After France was recaptured that wasn't a concern.

    • @derekambler
      @derekambler 3 года назад

      @@grahamjohnson7412 Mosquito could reach Berlin no problem and act as defensive screen for bombers over Germany, shooting German nightfighters down at will.

    • @seventh-hydra
      @seventh-hydra 3 года назад +1

      @@tomlucas4890 The B-17 could actually carry twice the bomb load of a Mosquito. 4,000 was typical for long range missions but 8,000 was possible for shorter range ones, such as across the channel to Normandy.
      That being said, they're both great, but for different reasons. For a large convoy of bombers laying waste to a large area during the day, you'd want something like a B-17, armed and armored to the teeth and carrying a shitload of bombs.
      For a fast in, fast out more focused strike at night, you'd take a Mosquito. Fast as hell. Unarmed, but not a huge issue at night. Can't devastate a huge area, but anything near where the single bomb *does* hit is simply going to cease to exist.

  • @-lightningwill-6014
    @-lightningwill-6014 3 года назад +94

    We're all missing one thing, the fairey sword fish, Also we all know the mosquito is way better, had longer range, was faster, more agile, easier to repair, better armed, more bomb capacity and was insanely good

    • @matthewwade1115
      @matthewwade1115 3 года назад +5

      @@PBFoote-mo2zr probably because it did more recon, night bombing and anti-submarine ops than anything else

    • @RobBCactive
      @RobBCactive 2 года назад +3

      @@matthewwade1115 the Pathfinders used Mossies, they flew a huge number of low-level daylight precision raids, the Berlin Express and intruder night fighting too which involved loitering near enemy airfields.
      7,700 were built, there was only so much reconnaissance, the early order of 50 was switched to 30 of the night fighter variant.
      They were hard to catch.

    • @leeeastwood6368
      @leeeastwood6368 2 года назад +2

      wood have to agree with you! :-)

    • @douglasrice8201
      @douglasrice8201 2 года назад +1

      It's ironic that Guy Gibson the co 617 Dambusters Lancaster sqn lost his life flying on a Mossie pathfinder flight

    • @DidMyGrandfatherMakeThis
      @DidMyGrandfatherMakeThis 2 года назад +1

      I just love the fact that dehavilland made a wooden light bomber with the speed and flight characteristics of a front line fighter, the bomb capacity of a b17, and no guns.
      Well on the bomber variant anyway. Let's not talk about the madness that was the tetse. What could go wrong putting a 25lb field gun on a Mossie?

  • @richardwilliams6132
    @richardwilliams6132 3 года назад +42

    The B17 long range payload was 4000 lbs which was the same as a long range Mosquito. The Stuka was finished after 1940 in Western Europe,. The Mitchell was used extensively but the Lancaster was the most versatile heavy bomber of the war with long range and highest payload ie more than 5 times what the B17 could carry over Germany.

    • @damedusa5107
      @damedusa5107 Год назад +3

      Yes, b17 was not a good bomber compared

    • @santyclause8034
      @santyclause8034 9 месяцев назад

      B-17 did not fly night sorties/raids and the crew/aircraft had very low survival rates consequently. That is to say, German aces hated flying shift roster, so they kept normal 9-5 availability priority being heroes and privileged sobs. So teh B-17s were basically cannon fodder for der dumbkopfs and their easy marks

  • @kingslushie1018
    @kingslushie1018 4 года назад +31

    I think the mosquito bomber was honestly the best bomber/All purpose plane of world war 2.
    The drastic reduction of cost, the maneuverability of the plane, using abundant resources like wood, make this plane, all around fantastic!

  • @jefferydavis4090
    @jefferydavis4090 4 года назад +46

    I'm American, I love the 24 29and the 17. But vote for best bomber in the war goes to the Brits. The Lancaster hands down was the BEST!!!!!!!! It had range altitude armament and it could carry a train. It had a hell of a bomb load capacity!!!!!! When the 29 came out it had problems with its engines, an they didn't get that figured out until they came out with the B50. The Lancaster hands down THE BEST PISTON 4 ENGINE BOMBER EVER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Nicely done UK!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @stevewallace1117
      @stevewallace1117 4 года назад

      It affected the night bombing of Germany. Like the B 17, it could barely survive during the daylight.

    • @garethonthetube
      @garethonthetube 4 года назад +4

      I am a Brit and I love the Lancaster. But the B17 was similarly capable of lifting heavy loads, it's just that the loads consisted more of defensive armament. The bomb load was reduced to allow it to fly higher and faster, so it was more about how the planes were used that set them apart. The main difference was the Lancaster's huge bomb bay which allowed it to carry the really big bombs. The B29 was the only bomber capable of reaching Japan so must rank as the best but the plane's development cost was colossal.

    • @garrybragg7244
      @garrybragg7244 4 года назад

      Nope landcaster sucky sucky

    • @willykaranikolas2391
      @willykaranikolas2391 4 года назад +2

      On paper the Lancaster is an absolute freight train, but in practice it hardly ever utilized more than 1/2 it's full weight load. To fly at the same speed and altitude as the B17, the Lancaster had to forgo over half it's bomb capacity, so it effectively operated similar to a B17.
      So altough the extra bomb capacity sounds impressive, it was not utilized in most circumstances. It didn't have the same resilience and defensive armament as the B17, either.
      Cool plane no doubt, but I wouldn't give it that much praise, that bomb load mumbo jumbo is kind of a myth, and it wasnt nearly as survivable as other allied bombers.

    • @josepetersen7112
      @josepetersen7112 4 года назад +1

      The best 4 engine piston bomber ever? Dude, the B29 was a thing, and frankly, the Lancaster wouldn’t have been operable in daylight raids. The B17 was far more robust and survivable. Moreover, they generally dropped the same loads.

  • @cylerruis
    @cylerruis 4 года назад +36

    I personally feel the B-25 should be on the list due to its use in the Pacific theater.

    • @archiecroft7114
      @archiecroft7114 4 года назад +1

      It is

    • @brigadgeneralvoid2508
      @brigadgeneralvoid2508 4 года назад +4

      @@archiecroft7114 No it isn't. The one in the video is the B-24 Liberator. They look similar, but they are different.

    • @chasespeer251
      @chasespeer251 4 года назад +3

      B-25 and B-26 are grossly underappreciated aircraft

    • @TheFront
      @TheFront  4 года назад +2

      Next time, eh?

    • @loucyphers_nightmare
      @loucyphers_nightmare 4 года назад +3

      The B-25 was an extremely historical bomber, it was the first to bomb mainland Japan, you guys dissed a great bomber, plus it's the only bomber to take off from a aircraft carrier.

  • @dominicbarden4436
    @dominicbarden4436 3 года назад +60

    The Lancaster, probably most famous for being used in Operation Chastise, aka the Dam Busters.

    • @jamesstringfellow1336
      @jamesstringfellow1336 3 года назад +17

      It was also meant to drop the atomic bombs but America wanted all the glory so they had to heavily modify a b29 to carry it but a lancast didn't need any modifications

    • @sicsempertyrannis688
      @sicsempertyrannis688 3 года назад +1

      Because there RAF wasn’t in the pacific, and there was already hundreds of B-29s in the pacific, they wanted to end the war as soon as possible.

    • @jamesstringfellow1336
      @jamesstringfellow1336 3 года назад +16

      @@sicsempertyrannis688 the raf was in the Pacific and had a few bombers there that could drop the atomic bomb but America didn't, a regular b29 couldn't carry it and had to be heavily modified to carry it. America didn't really care when the war ended because Britain could have dropped the bomb months earlier than America but they wanted all the glory so refused to let the raf drop it

    • @teamrecon2685
      @teamrecon2685 3 года назад

      @James, America didn't need to appropriate any glory...they earned it many times over.
      By the way, "you're welcome".

    • @TheBucketSkill
      @TheBucketSkill 3 года назад

      @@jamesstringfellow1336 well shit, its literally the first nuke in the world. and it's ours.

  • @niravramdarie9898
    @niravramdarie9898 4 года назад +58

    Side note : South Africa was part of the allies during ww2 but we used the junkers ju 86 in our air force against the Italians.

    • @randomstuff6355
      @randomstuff6355 4 года назад +3

      I mean, many othe countries use it as well. If the Jansa-Plan would have been initiated, the Ju-86 would have been the first plane to be used against its country of origin, since the austrian Air Force had 1 1/2 of them (i say half since one was bought without engines or internal parts since there were plans of using domestically produced controls and engines, which were basically just copied italian ones. But those ambitions quickly became rather ointless, since there was a significant emotional event called Anschluss. they were used in some sort against the germans nontheless though when Bulgaria joined the soviets. by then they were pretty obsolete though

    • @ooreoo9
      @ooreoo9 4 года назад

      tell me more about JU 86 i've never seen one

    • @VersusARCH
      @VersusARCH 4 года назад

      Yugoslavia was allied but used Bf-109s and Do-17ks against the Germans as well as SM-79s against the Italians. Go figure :).

    • @jesseab17
      @jesseab17 4 года назад

      I find the Finns air force to be very interesting. They fought using aircraft from England, France, Netherlands, Germany, USA, and I think they had some Italian types as well (although I could be mistaken). There may be other nationalities I'm missing in there as well.

  • @dserrao7188
    @dserrao7188 4 года назад +30

    I”m a little surprised that B-25 wasn’t mentioned. Of the aircraft mentioned, I would have given the most versatile to the mosquito. Although the Stuka was a good aircraft, and did contribute tremendously to Germany’s war effort, it didn’t have anywhere near the versatility of the mosquito.

    • @softballm1991
      @softballm1991 4 года назад

      Agree, but they did not mention the American B26,25 and the A-26.

    • @chrisburn7178
      @chrisburn7178 4 года назад

      Well the voiceover pronounced 'De Havilland' "D E Havilland", so it's safe to assume British wartime aircraft aren't his speciality.

  • @bedlam1314
    @bedlam1314 3 года назад +20

    I think you missed out by excluding the B-25 Mitchell. Superb and versatile medium bomber. Took off from an aircraft carrier for the Doolittle Raid, skip bombing in the Pacific, mounted a 75mm cannon for anti shipping operations and well armed and armored. Served effectively in the Pacific and European theaters of war.

    • @robbylock1741
      @robbylock1741 2 года назад +1

      Yes they didn't include the B-25 but included the Stuka which was obsolete by the start of the war? Yikes!

    • @biohita
      @biohita Год назад

      @@robbylock1741 Hans Ulrich Rudel laughs at you.

    • @robbylock1741
      @robbylock1741 Год назад

      @@biohita He's dead so not doing much laughing is he? And just because he was successful in a Stuka doesn't make the Stuka any better, the P40 was just as good if not better in the roll it played and many would still argue it was obsolete after the 1st year of the war.

    • @M1903a4
      @M1903a4 Год назад

      While the B-25 was widely employed in a variety of roles in the Pacific, the USAAF never used it in the ETO. The RAF did employ them, and the USAAF used them in the Mediterranean theater. The USAAF medium bomber in the ETO was the B-26.
      For all around best - I gotta go with the Mossie. A jack of all trades, and mastered them all. If I had to be in the heavy bomber in the ETO, I'd want it to be a B-17G. The Lanc was a great night bomber, but had puny self defense armament and was the hardest of all to bail out of. The B-17s staggered home with incredible amounts of damage, while the B-24 was fragile and prone to fires.

  • @tauron17
    @tauron17 3 года назад +2

    might have included the B-25 Mitchell, Doolittle's Raid Fame and the B-26/A-26 Marauder, but that is me.

  • @sundaygeeker
    @sundaygeeker 4 года назад +66

    I’m crying because you didn’t mention the dauntless

    • @identitydixie1061
      @identitydixie1061 4 года назад +5

      It's not a level bomber although the ju87 and IL2 are in here

    • @MrTScolaro
      @MrTScolaro 4 года назад +3

      Probably the single most important bomber in the Pacific theater

    • @darrellhall6622
      @darrellhall6622 4 года назад +7

      @@identitydixie1061 . Go tell that to the crews of Akagi, Kaga, Hyre, and Soryu.

    • @yoseipilot
      @yoseipilot 4 года назад +1

      Aichi D3A 'Val' hit with 3 (250 kg) bombs on Yorktown her speed drop to 0 knots and sank a Battleship Arizona with only 4 bombs, SBD Dauntless hit with 4 (450 kg) bombs on Hiryu her speed is still fast at 30 knots (like the others carrier). So D3A Val is effective than SBD Dauntless.

    • @MrTScolaro
      @MrTScolaro 4 года назад +4

      @@yoseipilot Aichi did not sink Arizona. The fatal blow was delivered by a Nakajima, fitted with a 16 inch shell converted to be an air dropped bomb.
      Yes the Aichi dropped Yorktowns speed to zero for about 20 minutes. That damage was quickly repaired and she then resumed speed. Since she got up to 25 knots, Yorktown was able to resume flight operations before the torpedo attack came. Without the follow-up torpedo attack, Yorktown does not sink, period. No one can claim otherwise.
      Hiryu and the other 3 (Kaga, Akagi and Soryu) were totally wrecked by the SBD's, through some of them still had engine power (Kaga lost engine power almost immediately, Akagi had her rudder disabled and she could only go in circles). All of them were abandoned and scuttled between 8 and 20 hours after they were attacked.
      Even after the torpedo attack, Yorktown was still afloat and it took a submarine to sink her.
      The Aichi Val, with its fixed landing gear, lack of self sealing fuel tanks and lack of pilot armor was very vulnerable to fighters and anti-aircraft. The SBD was much tougher, sometimes the SBD was used as emergency combat air patrol. Pilot survivability is not the least of the reasons why the SBD was far more effective.

  • @richbarr5959
    @richbarr5959 4 года назад +46

    Granted the Stuka was important as a type of flexible mobile artillery--something new at the outbreak of the war--but I have to go with the B-29.

    • @Rampant16
      @Rampant16 4 года назад +7

      People forget how special and important the B-29 was. It was a huge bomber capable of carrying a huge payload. It could also fly higher, farther, and faster than pretty much anything else. Oh, and it was produced in massive numbers. Easily the best heavy bomber of the war.
      It's development was more expensive than the atomic bomb.

    • @thorswrath9151
      @thorswrath9151 4 года назад

      @@Rampant16 the b-29 did not cost more then the Manhattan project, which was just supercede as the most expensive military project by the f-35

    • @EstonianShark
      @EstonianShark 4 года назад +5

      @@thorswrath9151 The B-29's prototype cost almost 3.4 billion. This is just the prototype.
      The Manhattan Project cost about 1.9 billion. Don't spit random facts without doing research.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manhattan_Project
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boeing_B-29_Superfortress

    • @samuelgordino
      @samuelgordino 4 года назад

      @@Rampant16 while I agree that the B29 was the best bomber, it wasn't the fastest or even the one that flew hier. The ju 86 could and did fly at hier altitudes.

    • @stevewallace1117
      @stevewallace1117 4 года назад +2

      @@samuelgordino the JU 86 did diddly-squat during World War II though

  • @jimcurt99
    @jimcurt99 4 года назад +293

    Stuka would be my LAST on this list- I'm american so I feel obligated to say B-17- but I'm going Lancaster- an AMAZING airplane - very effective

    • @HappyValley9345
      @HappyValley9345 4 года назад +10

      Uh no, I love the Stuka. Dive-bombing is so effective in that thing!

    • @danielmocsny5066
      @danielmocsny5066 4 года назад +32

      Trying to rank the bombers is difficult - not only are there different size categories, and tactical vs. strategic vs. maritime patrol etc., but technology advanced so rapidly during WWII that you also had different eras. The Stuka was highly successful early, against unprepared opponents. But it didn't remain in front-line service very long. The B-29 was the most technically advanced bomber of the war and continued to serve for years after.
      One thing all the bombers had in common was that none of them were very effective without air superiority. Even the heavily-armed B-17 and B-24 had unacceptably high loss rates when Luftwaffe heavy fighters could attack them freely.

    • @sixfootbear
      @sixfootbear 4 года назад +8

      @Greatmcwhite Lancaster.Massive bomb load capacity. Mosquito.A true multirole combat aircraft.

    • @Gazmus
      @Gazmus 4 года назад +2

      As a War Thunderer I expected the Lanc to be last place 😊

    • @averagebritishrailwaysappr5424
      @averagebritishrailwaysappr5424 4 года назад +5

      The Stuka and the IL-2 aren’t bombers, they’re Attack Aircraft or CAS. I don’t know why they are on this list, as imo a separate video should have been done about the CAS of each nation.

  • @MrT67
    @MrT67 Год назад +4

    Can't believe that the Stuka was chosen. They stopped using it over the UK pretty quickly due to high losses.

    • @eganburg
      @eganburg 7 месяцев назад

      Well it's more of a misusage by the luftwaffe. There's no functional dive bombers in the world that can be useful in a strategic bombing mission...
      Rudel and co can still got huge amount of kill in their stuka.

  • @johnross8855
    @johnross8855 4 года назад +29

    In my book, the Mossie! What other plane could go and bomb Gestapo Headquarters on three occasions and allow the prisoners to escape.

    • @dafyddthomas7299
      @dafyddthomas7299 3 года назад +2

      and was made out of wood "fast as h' ell" + was true multi role precision fighter - bomber, pathfinder and recognisance
      - also a true u-boat buster

    • @thewildybeast
      @thewildybeast 3 года назад +1

      The daylight raids on the Berlin radio stations in my opinion the best bombing raids of ww2

    • @g8ymw
      @g8ymw 3 года назад

      @@dafyddthomas7299 With the Mollins 6 pounder gun

    • @g8ymw
      @g8ymw 3 года назад +1

      @@thewildybeast On the tenth anniversary of the Nazis coming to power.
      Cut Herman Goering off mid-speech (hee-hee)

    • @sigeberhtmercia767
      @sigeberhtmercia767 3 года назад

      A single Bristol Beaufighter attacked a German Naval HQ in Paris in 1942 dropping two tricolore flags to the cheers of the French population. (See Mark Felton Productions for details.)
      But yes, I have a soft spot for the Mosquito.

  • @cz1589
    @cz1589 4 года назад +90

    Well, if you insist comparing bombers with entirely different roles, you might consider the most versatile bombers, able to do almost all of those tasks. From the axis, the Junkers 88 (not 87!) is one of the best candidates.
    Its not the perfect bomber, vulnerable defenses and less useful for long-range and strategic bombing. When you study his history, you will be amazed with its versatile nature, almost capable of doing every task, drawing the attention of the allies when they managed to capture one. Besides, it was partially designed by americans.

    • @Jd-fors
      @Jd-fors 4 года назад +1

      No way can 2 engine bombers compete.Germany even knew they needed 4 engine bombers.

    • @fyshi6226
      @fyshi6226 4 года назад +2

      @@Jd-fors Germany did mass produce the HE 177 which had 4 engines (technically)

    • @TheFront
      @TheFront  4 года назад +2

      Agree the comparison could've been done better. And perhaps the 88 should've taken the 87s place. Cheers.

    • @EstonianShark
      @EstonianShark 4 года назад

      @@fyshi6226 It had 2 engines?

    • @EstonianShark
      @EstonianShark 4 года назад

      @@Jd-fors They didn't *need* them. They required an aircraft that could directly support the troops in fighting, no need for big and sluggish 4 engine bombers to hit a tank or a concentration of troops at the front lines, etc.

  • @stevenleach9522
    @stevenleach9522 3 года назад +18

    When it comes to naval bombers - I have to say the Douglas SBD Dauntless dive bomber. I believe it is credited with sinking the most tonnage of any other naval bomber of WWII.

    • @alastair9446
      @alastair9446 2 года назад

      Yes, but did it result in an entire countries like Poland and France to be beaten in a few months where previously they could not have been beaten so quickly.

    • @sourpotatoakakonigtiger1467
      @sourpotatoakakonigtiger1467 2 года назад

      Yes you are correct in i think it was 42 or 43

    • @alganhar1
      @alganhar1 2 года назад +1

      Actually, no. The Allied Naval Bomber that sunk the most tonnage during WWII was actually the Swordfish believe it or not. For example, while based on Malta the Swordfish of 830 Squadron sunk an average of 50,000 tons of enemy shipping a month. In the Med the Swordfish was heavily used in night attacks against Axis convoys and shipping, flying at night to avoid Axis fighters.
      Dauntless got many far more impressive sinking's, like the four Carriers at Midway, but for actual total tonnage sunk it was the Fairy Swordfish.

  • @PRAETORIANCHESHAM
    @PRAETORIANCHESHAM 3 года назад +12

    I enjoyed your video but I guess I am surprised at you choosing the Stuka as the winner. It was incredibly vulnerable to fighter attack. The Spitfire and Hurricane used to simply follow them down when they dived and shot them out of the sky.

  • @Sorarse
    @Sorarse 4 года назад +26

    If I had to go to war in any of those, it would have to be the Mosquito. As a bomber it could carry a surprising payload, and it's speed played a big part in it's low loss rate.

    • @mrexists5400
      @mrexists5400 4 года назад +1

      and it was harder to spot on radar compared to an all metal aircraft of a similar size. wood and fabric are poor radar reflectors

    • @cazadon
      @cazadon 4 года назад

      A Mosquito also had the most successful sortes of allied bombers

    • @paulm2467
      @paulm2467 4 года назад

      If it was difficult or dangerous or thought to be impossible it, inevitably, always went to a Mosquito squadron but they ended the war as the British plane with the lowest casualty rate, that says it all.

    • @patricksedler9697
      @patricksedler9697 4 года назад

      I would go with the b-29 because of its insane altitude, distance, armor, and payload.

  • @sandemike
    @sandemike 4 года назад +22

    Think the Wellington deserved a mention .It was the Dauntless that turned the tide against the Japanese at Midway.

  • @jameshunter5485
    @jameshunter5485 4 года назад +27

    The Douglas SBD Dauntless dive bomber sank more shipping in the Pacific than any other aircraft. Hero of the Battle at Midway and the Philippine Sea. Almost 6000 were built. It operated as the A-24 Banshee in the Army Air Force and provided close air support and cover for the American landings in North Africa. I would list it in any top ten list of WW2 bombers.

    • @ajalvarez3111
      @ajalvarez3111 4 года назад +6

      gsandmang - excellent points about the difficulties faced by naval aviators vs their land-based counterparts.

    • @alejandrayalanbowman367
      @alejandrayalanbowman367 4 года назад +1

      @gsandmang The reason the US had the daytime bombing role was they got lost at night.

    • @aldenunion
      @aldenunion 4 года назад

      @@alejandrayalanbowman367 Well British women needed love to.

    • @yoseipilot
      @yoseipilot 4 года назад

      Aichi D3A 'Val' hit with 3 (250 kg) bombs on Yorktown her speed drop to 0 knots and sank a Battleship Arizona with only 4 bombs, SBD Dauntless hit with 4 (450 kg) bombs on Hiryu her speed is still fast at 30 knots (like the others carrier). So D3A Val is effective than SBD Dauntless.

    • @aldenunion
      @aldenunion 4 года назад +2

      @@yoseipilot The Arizona was hit in prime location,like the HMS HOOD...That is no way to judge..

  • @johnbrowning8785
    @johnbrowning8785 3 года назад +23

    The Dauntless SBD was superior in payload, range, and survivability to the JU 87 Stuka.

    • @thephlyingphish5104
      @thephlyingphish5104 2 года назад +1

      Survivability, for sure but the R-1 variant of the stuka had a range from about hamburg to London, and could carry a 1000 kg bomb

    • @johnbrowning8785
      @johnbrowning8785 2 года назад

      @@thephlyingphish5104Beligerants made all sorts of limited run aircraft that were impracticle during the war. Very few made, over-optomized for a role that it could only carry out with no opposition, but in the Nazi case thrills the Werhaboo to no end.

    • @Uthandol
      @Uthandol 2 года назад

      @@johnbrowning8785 Ahh, the old "youre a werhaboo!" if someone doesnt agree with you. Thats todays world we live in. But, in the spirit of discourse I do not think the Stuka was techinally the strongest. It did however have a huge impact on the war and made Nazi Germanys blitzkreigs possible. The terror these planes caused was legendary. Not because they were super accurate (they were) but because of the air siren built into them. For the actual pound for pound best I would go with the flying fortress.

    • @johnbrowning8785
      @johnbrowning8785 2 года назад

      @@UthandolThey were only successful where the Nazis had aerial supremacy. They couldn't complete their mission in contested airspace, the Dauntless could.

    • @Uthandol
      @Uthandol 2 года назад

      @@johnbrowning8785 Its called combined arms tactics and it allows for specialized machines to excel in its intended area. Which the Stuka did. Now, it can be argued that combined arms warfare has strategic flaws in its doctrine and I would agree. But when it worked, the Stuka was king of dive bombers. And once more, it wasnt just the machine. It was the siren and the propaganda that accompanied it. If we are just talking mechanics then yes, the Stuka is inferior to the Dauntless.

  • @Dz73zxxx
    @Dz73zxxx 4 года назад +13

    So does torpedo bombers includes as bomber category?
    If yes, i pick my swordfish. A timeless one.
    *Sips tea

    • @cellbuilder2
      @cellbuilder2 3 года назад +1

      Bismarck: *cries from ocean bed

  • @Twirlyhead
    @Twirlyhead 4 года назад +34

    U-Boats popping up for air: they actually spent most of their time on the surface.

    • @danielmocsny5066
      @danielmocsny5066 4 года назад +7

      Yes, nearly all WWII "submarines" were really just submersibles, only able to stay submerged for a few hours at a time, then requiring many more hours on the surface running their diesel engines to recharge their primitive lead-acid batteries. The first submarines worthy of the name were the German Type XXI, designed to spend most of their time submerged. But they were developed too late in the war to have any impact, other than their influence on post-war submarine designs. (Another example of the victorious Allies copying German wonder weapon technology that the Germans themselves were not able to produce at scale in time to affect the war.)

    • @charliebasar9068
      @charliebasar9068 4 года назад +4

      @@danielmocsny5066 A lot of things that people say were the allies copying the Germans are really just things both sides had but the Germans just got there slightly earlier.

  • @mikewaterfield3599
    @mikewaterfield3599 4 года назад +43

    Goering himself remarked on the dauntless, arguably the finest dive bomber of the war. America, boeing B29, good talk.

    • @NeuKrofta
      @NeuKrofta 4 года назад +4

      Goring also said that the Italians made planes better than the Germans and actually wanted to replace the BF 109 with Italian MC 205s and Fiat G55s.. Funny how no one mentions Italy in any of these types of videos.

    • @mikewaterfield3599
      @mikewaterfield3599 4 года назад +2

      @@NeuKrofta might have something to do with the rapid fall of italy compared to the other axis powers. Italy made niche aircraft (Snyder cup?), granted excellent ones but still niche. No one mentions them due to the numbers game. When the Japanese out produced you its a good way to be forgotten. Then again somehow the F6 gets dissed and dismissed by every ones list. You know the "Ace Maker". The aircraft with the highest score card of any aircraft actually tested in the crucible of war. Maybe its be but i dont count superlatively trained Israeli eagle pilots downing 25 year out of date soviet aircraft being flown by half baked dimwits who thought god willed it as a real test. Thats more like an inevitable conclusion.

    • @NeuKrofta
      @NeuKrofta 4 года назад

      ​@@mikewaterfield3599 It isn't "niche" if they made the best planes the Axis had at the time. Isn't the whole point of a "Top 5" to highlight the best?

    • @mikewaterfield3599
      @mikewaterfield3599 4 года назад +2

      @@NeuKrofta best according to what though? kill count? win loss ratio? battlefield impact? JU87s were objectively crap dive bombers compared to their contemporaries yet look at the impact? The zero was a terrible fighter again look at the reputation. Reputations are frequently not based in objectivity.

    • @NeuKrofta
      @NeuKrofta 4 года назад

      @@mikewaterfield3599 best as in actual performance and reputation among both axis and the allies that fought against or alongside them.
      Just because you are ignorant about them, or because people don't talk about them today does not mean they weren't good or were not highly respected during the war.

  • @peterrobinson7803
    @peterrobinson7803 2 года назад +1

    Although you did show a animation of a Martin Marauder B-26, it wasn't mentioned. Had the lowest loss ratio of any Allied bomber. My step-dad was pilot of a B-26 out of England. Flew seventy-five missions, never lost a crew member, and flew all the dangerous missions that the heavies couldn't, like low and medium altitude D-Day interdictions, railyards, sub pens, bridges and coastal shipping. His ship flew 115 missions before being written off in a landing crash (he had rotated home by then). He loved that plane.

  • @deplorablemecoptera3024
    @deplorablemecoptera3024 4 года назад +13

    Honestly the B29 is pretty much the king of bombers used in ww2. It was the only truly modern bomber by the end of the war with superior range and payload to its contemporaries.
    It also had a service ceiling well above the fighters which were tasked with intercepting it, and excellent top speed which made it essentially impossible to combat.
    There's a reason that the b29 flew long after the war and well into Korea. There's also a reason why the soviets copied it rivet for rivet.
    It was an awe inspiring strategic bomber, a quantum leap beyond its rivals and adversaries, and an innovative design. The only real flaw with it is that it came off the production lines in 43 whereas the b17 and b24 were prewar planes so they participated in some of the big early battles.

    • @irinachvets6470
      @irinachvets6470 4 года назад +2

      But technically its not, because it only came very late in 1944, so it didn't really have as much effect on the outcome of WW2. So you can't call it the king of WW2 bombers. And if you meant its the best bomber built during the period of the 2nd world war then you clearly have never heard about the Arado Ar 234. Its a German wonder weapon jet bomber and basically better in every way apart from the bomb load. And it makes up with the lack of gunners in the speed department. Its cruising speed is about 750kph or 466mph. Where the B 29 is a slow, massive target making it vulnerable to flak and German late war jet/rocket powered interceptors. And its gunners become practically irrelevant when their targets are moving at 800kmph or 500mph.
      Also, about the TU-4 (the soviet re-engineered B-29). Unlike America, the Soviet Union was destroyed both physically and economically by the Nazis. So they desperately needed a long range bomber, so they re-engineered the B-29 not because it was good but because it was the only long range bomber they could get their hands on at the time. It was also produced in limited numbers because of the cost.
      So what I am saying to you is that the B-29 looks really good on paper but in reality it had a lot of flaws. And also, please do your research before putting out statements that you overheard other people saying.

    • @lennybot6902
      @lennybot6902 4 года назад

      B-17s were in the United States air force up to veitnam

  • @TheMuro22
    @TheMuro22 4 года назад +175

    Somebody in 2020: DoNt MaKe fUn Of Ww2 MiLlIoNs Of pEopLe DiEd
    Birtish ground personell in ww2: 9:41

    • @randomuser5443
      @randomuser5443 4 года назад +20

      One hell of a cookie

    • @magisterrleth3129
      @magisterrleth3129 4 года назад +51

      British soldiers have always had the best sense of humor. Here's a witty little thing written by a British soldier during WWI:
      The only way to be here is to be philosophical. We have evolved a philosophy accordingly. What do you think of it?
      If you are a soldier, you are either:
      (1) at home or (2) at the Front.
      If (1), you needn’t worry.
      If (2), you are either (1) out of the danger zone or (2) in it.
      If (1), you needn’t worry.
      If (2), you are either (1) not hit, or (2) hit.
      If (1), you needn’t worry.
      If (2) you are either (1) trivial or (2) dangerous.
      If (1), you needn’t worry.
      If (2), you either (1) live or (2) die.
      If you live, you needn’t worry: and - If you die, YOU CAN’T WORRY!!
      So why worry?

    • @izi.traveliziteq4234
      @izi.traveliziteq4234 4 года назад +2

      Hello

    • @alexanderclosson4729
      @alexanderclosson4729 4 года назад +5

      @@magisterrleth3129 I wish I could copy and paste that optimism in my notes.But I'm too lazy

    • @derrickstorm6976
      @derrickstorm6976 4 года назад +2

      Yep, definitely British ground personnel making fun of World War 2...

  • @julianmhall
    @julianmhall 2 года назад +6

    Correction. The Avro Lancaster could carry the largest [conventional] bomb of /any/ combatant not just the RAF. Whilst the B29 could also carry the Gland Slam 10 ton bomb it had to do so externally on the wings, whereas the Lancaster just had to have the bomb doors removed to accommodate it. The 5 ton Tall Boy bombs, which the B29 could only carry at low level for short distances, were used by Lancasters of 617 and 9 Squadrons to sink the Tirpitz in Norway.

  • @michaeltelson9798
    @michaeltelson9798 2 года назад +2

    Italian pilots flying the Stuka learned how to skip bomb vessels. This was an independent discovery like done by other nations.
    The B-24 became unstable when loaded at higher altitudes and is the reason that they flew below B-17’s during joint operations.

    • @ReisskIaue
      @ReisskIaue 2 года назад

      German pilots preferred B-24 as well as they were easier to shoot down. In joint opereations usually far more B-24 were lost then B-17, which let some B-17 crewmen say, that a B-24 was the best protection they could get.

  • @brentflora8965
    @brentflora8965 4 года назад +5

    I'm an American, but have been impressed with Britain's wooden wonder, dear ol Mossy!!!

  • @Corran51
    @Corran51 4 года назад +24

    The Stuka was only good when there was nothing opposing it, where as pretty much every other plane mentioned was designed to crack on with the mission regardless of the opposition.
    I personally think the Mosquito should be the best as it could do everything not just well but incredibly well

    • @derekwordley1837
      @derekwordley1837 3 года назад +1

      There was also a version named the Tsetse. It was an evil bugger.

    • @GurkenbauerTim
      @GurkenbauerTim 3 года назад +1

      Im sorry, does your Aircraft do
      *BRRRRREEEEEEEEEEEEEWW*
      Before killing you?
      _I don‘t think so_

    • @alastair9446
      @alastair9446 2 года назад

      Actually not, USA and UK losses for bombers were unsustainble. Only with the Mustang could they have a fighter escort and bombing became effective. But I don't think a Mosquito can bomb a tank in the middle of a battle without hitting his own troops.

  • @Strike_Raid
    @Strike_Raid 4 года назад +167

    I guess anyone who would choose the P-38 as the most effective fighter of WW-II would choose the Ju-87 as the most effective bomber.

    • @bendavy1816
      @bendavy1816 4 года назад +13

      Strike Raid I wonder if they picked odd choices so we would write comments that helps the RUclips algorithm?

    • @justinSactown
      @justinSactown 4 года назад +16

      At least u have a argument with the p-38 the ju-87 was ass compared to the il-2

    • @fyshi6226
      @fyshi6226 4 года назад +8

      @@justinSactown Well the Stuka was 4-5 years older and if im correct the germans didnt make major changes to it design over the years.

    • @Strike_Raid
      @Strike_Raid 4 года назад

      @@bendavy1816 Lol, and I fell for it..

    • @itmejac6945
      @itmejac6945 4 года назад +14

      Yeah I’d say B-29 is the best due to its near invincibility to being intercepted

  • @decothegeco
    @decothegeco 3 года назад +5

    The Russian IL-2 was actually feared by most German tank lines and even German commanders stated the the casualties and damage inflicted by IL-2 bombers made them the best dive bomber of WW2. The planes were hard to shoot down and had heavily sloped armour guarding alot of vital components including the engine, which allowed these planes to take large amounts of flak, small arms, and rifle damage in the war whilst still been able to fly.

    • @beernd4822
      @beernd4822 2 года назад

      Of the 36000 bilt 12000 were shot down

  • @paulwilson7793
    @paulwilson7793 4 года назад +5

    I think the SBD is very underrated considering how many tons of shipping it sank and it’s more than vital role in Midway. You could even go on to say it’s successor the SB2C Helldiver should’ve made the list due to it being able to carry 2,000lbs of bombs plus 8 rockets and it being the bomber trusted to help sink Yamato and Musashi.

    • @alganhar1
      @alganhar1 2 года назад

      How many tons of shipping eh? Guess that makes the Fairy Swordfish the best Allied Naval Bomber of the war, as it sunk more Axis Tonnage than any other Allied Naval Bomber INCLDING the SBD....

  • @titanflameheart8815
    @titanflameheart8815 4 года назад +85

    War Thunder Realistic Allied Players: I'm in a tank I'm safe
    Axis Players in a JU 87: *Loud Siren Noises* HA HA HA TANK GO BOOM

    • @nanerlol693
      @nanerlol693 4 года назад +1

      That's me 🤣🤣

    • @benjaminjensen3795
      @benjaminjensen3795 4 года назад +4

      I swear heavy bombers need to be buffed so bad

    • @titanflameheart8815
      @titanflameheart8815 4 года назад

      Rafael Enriquez Bruh don’t you hate when your Jumbo flips over on the B point?

    • @KILLERMEXICAN210
      @KILLERMEXICAN210 4 года назад +1

      Some guy in a chaika: haha i15 goes buuzzzz

    • @sentar_dv
      @sentar_dv 4 года назад +1

      Every Ju-87 is gangsta till it have LaGG-3 on its six.

  • @smurdock3
    @smurdock3 4 года назад +29

    I would not have chosen the Stuka, it was completely outclassed by the end of the war.
    I would go Mosquito all the way. Could carry the same weight as the B17 while flying 400+ mph.

    • @MichaelRosenblum_Emp500
      @MichaelRosenblum_Emp500 4 года назад

      @Sparky Puddins 2 add on. A mid 2 late war = loss for Germany cus of the war they are fighting... I would say the stuka inadequate though because the IL2 existed and did the same job the stuka did but better...

    • @juststeve5542
      @juststeve5542 3 года назад +1

      ​@Sparky Puddins the Stuka was cannon fodder and required other forces to keep fighters off it from the very beginning of the war. Its successes depended on good tactical use and being used as an integrated part of the blitzkrieg attacks with ground units and air dominance. It was a part of a military tactic, and a successful one at it too, but without support is was lacking.
      The moment the target had air defence, they were blown out of the sky. Germany stopped using them against Britain in August 1940 due to the heavy losses. This is only 11 months into the war (or 16 months before it even started if you're a yank!), and only the second month of the battle of Britain, which continued until the end of Oct 1940.
      The Mosquito (which first flew in 1940, its design started before the outbreak of the war) was air defence, attack, precision bomber, recon, and 6lb autocannon carrying anti-shipping terror! Arguably the most flexible plane that flew in WWII. They would use their speed, and attack on their own with no support, deep into enemy controlled territory. Twice on the same day in Jan 1943 being sent all the way to Berlin (the whole of Europe still occupied) to successfully ruin celebration radio speeches for Hitler's 10th year anniversary. Incidents which made Goring incandescent with rage. Only one aircraft was lost.
      It was used by over 20 countries and remained in service into the 1960s. It was instrumental in liberating or defending even more countries you credit the Stuka with conquering.
      For timeline comparison, the Lancaster first flew in 1941 (after the Mosquito), the B-29 in 1942. So the Mosquito _is_ one of the early war planes.
      And no, I wouldn't defend the King Tiger. Impressive as it was, it was over complex, slow/hard to produce and unreliable. I prefer the Panther, but still wouldn't say that's the best tank of WWII.

    • @juststeve5542
      @juststeve5542 3 года назад

      ​@Sparky Puddins I understand, but my point is that the Stuka was only effective as part of an integrated operation, without ground and air control it suffered serious casualties. It was cannon fodder for the entirety of the war if used alone.
      Sure they did well in the various invasions in mainland Europe, but always as part of combined operations, often against much smaller or unprepared forces, and in the case of France, who actually had better tanks than Germany at that point, and a perfectly good air force, ineptly commanded forces.
      Stukas couldn't come 30 miles over the English channel and survive. The Mosquito crossed hundreds of miles of enemy controlled Europe alone and bombed Goring in Berlin (the most heavily defended city in Europe) at the height of the war! A major propaganda strike against the man who claimed Berlin wouldn't never be bombed.
      If the video was titled "which was the most effective military tactic in WWII?" I would whole heartedly say Blitzkrieg, but I think singling the Stuka out of this and claiming it was the best bomber is akin to singling the Panzer 3 from it and saying that was the best tank of WWII.
      If you'd said the B-29 was the most effective bomber, having effectively ended the war with Japan with a couple of nukes I would be very close to agreeing with you, just criticising it for only becoming operational in 1944.

    • @treyriver5676
      @treyriver5676 3 года назад +3

      It was outclassed at the start of the war. German Combined Arms against poorly led , trained and equipped enemies covered for the JU87 in many ways.

    • @treyriver5676
      @treyriver5676 3 года назад

      @@juststeve5542 Mosquito was very versatile, and the term arguably is well used. The P38 came at the same issues from the other side starting as a Fighter then taking on all the same roles as the Mosquito as well. Bomber, Anti Ship, Night Fighter. As a fighter the P38 is better than mosquito and as a bomber maybe a little .
      The Mosquito gets a lot of credit for its 4000 lbs bomb load, which it should but it also needs to be remmered that it was 1 High Capacity bomb.. all or nothing while its more normal bomb loads were 2000 lbs often of 4x250's and 2x500's where the P38(G) had 2000 lbs load out P38(L) 4000 with various load outs from 2x 2000bs to 8x500lbs

  • @matthewmcmacken6716
    @matthewmcmacken6716 Год назад +1

    Stuka: I'm outdated before the war began!
    Also Stuka: I flew combat missions untill the end of the war!

  • @seventhson27
    @seventhson27 3 года назад +37

    The P47 Thunderbolt, in it's ground-attack roll, rained more Hell on enemy than the Stuka ever dreamed of dropping.

    • @alastair9446
      @alastair9446 2 года назад +1

      Really? France fell very quickly due to Stuka dive bombers. How long did it take USA to beat Germany with Thunderbolds and only facing 30% of the German army.

    • @plantfeeder6677
      @plantfeeder6677 2 года назад

      @@alastair9446 apples and oranges. Comparing France in 1940 with Germany, even German occupied France, is farsical.
      Thanks for the laugh.
      In reality, the P-47 could slaughter a Stuka while on it's way to bomb a Marshalling yard and blow up a bunch of trains or buildings or airfields etcetera, etcetera.
      The Stuka was only successful when the skys were clear of opposition fighters. It's psychological affect was very high though but that is more on the diabolically evil mentality of the German military than having to do with the plane itself

    • @4courtneylynn
      @4courtneylynn 2 года назад +1

      well, the P-47 Thunderbolt is considered a fighter so it cant be in the video.

    • @robbylock1741
      @robbylock1741 2 года назад +5

      @@alastair9446 the Stuka was considered obsolete by the start of WWII, France fell quickly to better ground tactics NOT due to the use of the Stuka.

    • @MrT67
      @MrT67 Год назад +1

      ​@@alastair9446Ah no. France fell because of superior German tank strategy. The Stuka also would have been pretty useless if the Luftwaffe didn't have fighter superiority in those early days. The P47 could do way more than the Stuka, even though it was technically a fighter.

  • @grahvis
    @grahvis 3 года назад +6

    I would put in a word for the Wellington, in production from 1937-1945. It served in other roles apart from long range bombing, being used for anti submarine and magnetic mine clearance.

  • @Psiberzerker
    @Psiberzerker 2 года назад +4

    The most iconic thing about the Stuka was the dive siren. To the point that Airplane! movies, and cartoons added a siren sound to planes going down, half a century later. (Even though the dive siren wasn't used all that much, even on the 1 plane it was designed for, but it made that big an impression when it was.)

    • @Psiberzerker
      @Psiberzerker 2 года назад

      American Bombers had to be ":Supersized" because of Range. We had to cross the pond just to get them to the European theatre, and they wouldn't go on an Aircraft Carrier. In the Pacific Theatre, we had to develop light Naval bombers (For example the A26 Invader) so they could go on Carriers, and cargo ships, then operate on the island airfields we could take. As always, the "Best" bomber depends on the war, and the targets. If it's an island hopping campaign to hit Japan, then a Heavy Bomber isn't going to be the best. Yes, we used a Flying Fortress to drop nukes, twice, but that's because you needed one to tote the Fatman. I'm gonna say Enola Gay, because it effectively changed strategic bombing from the World War era to the early Cold War era. It's hard to argue effectiveness against the A-bomb.

    • @matts5247
      @matts5247 Год назад

      Literally every single movie to this day when a plane is diving in for a strafing run they insert that sound
      It’s just so badass and the average viewer doesn’t realize how unrealistic it is and it adds to the scene just making it feel so much more deadly
      All the siren is is the air intake that all planes had to help cool engines they just added a siren onto it that is hit by air the right way when it goes for a dive to make that iconic sound

    • @M1903a4
      @M1903a4 Год назад

      @@Psiberzerker We didn't use a Flying Fortress to drop nukes, they were modified Super Forts. And the B-17s were used in the Pacific from the beginning. Not particularly effective in the anti-shipping role.

  • @FIRE_STORMFOX-3692
    @FIRE_STORMFOX-3692 3 года назад +2

    Power is not only what you have but what your enemies think you have.

  • @threecedarshomestead1330
    @threecedarshomestead1330 4 года назад +13

    The Dauntless SBD US Navy divebomber, was crucial in the Pacific naval war. And if my memory serves me, it accounted for more tons of shipping than any other US aircraft.

    • @alganhar1
      @alganhar1 2 года назад

      US aircraft yes, but not Allied. That goes to the Fairy Swordfish of all things. That obsolete old biplane sunk more tonnage of Axis shipping than any other aircraft. Kind of remarkable when you think about it.

    • @stevek8829
      @stevek8829 2 года назад

      @@alganhar1 you're getting that from a web site that is a fan club. They're counting the Bismarck in which it was only a contributor and other vessels when it was only a spotter. It's notable success was Taranto. The Dauntless sank the Japanese navy-at sea.

  • @nancyfritch8415
    @nancyfritch8415 4 года назад +13

    When he talked about the landcaster you forgot to mention the dam busters

    • @kylegorman2228
      @kylegorman2228 3 года назад +3

      LANCASTER ya know, like the place

    • @dafyddthomas7299
      @dafyddthomas7299 3 года назад

      and also glossed over the use of Barnes Wallis bombs that he designed such as the Tall Boy and Grand Slam - penetration earthquake bombs. One such famous raid was a raid using Lancs and Toy Boy bombs sunk the mighty battle ship the Turpitz - tied up in heavily defended Norweagen Flord.

    • @jamesstringfellow1336
      @jamesstringfellow1336 3 года назад

      Also forgot to mention that the Lancaster was meant to drop the atomic bombs in the first place as it didn't require any modifications to do so unlike the b29

  • @chrisjoldham
    @chrisjoldham 4 года назад +9

    B-25 Mitchell; bomber, ground attack, close air support & excellent in all 3 roles

    • @dat2ra
      @dat2ra 4 года назад

      Yes, and it had a hard nose variety with six bad-ass '50's.

    • @thorswrath9151
      @thorswrath9151 4 года назад

      Also variants had a 75mm or 105mm in the nose

    • @alganhar1
      @alganhar1 4 года назад

      @@dat2ra And the FB and F variants of the mosquito packed 4 20mm Cannon and either 4 .303 or 4 .5 machineguns..... 6 nose mounted 50 cals was far from the heaviest nose mounted armament of the war.....

  • @Hawkeye2001
    @Hawkeye2001 3 года назад +6

    The B-25 was one of the most built, and used in a multitude of roles.

  • @ewok40k
    @ewok40k 4 года назад +5

    I would give honorable mention at least to 2 more extremely effective dive bombers of the ww2:
    Douglas SBD "Dauntless, most famous for turning the tide of Pacific war in 15 minutes at battle of Midway, but generally very effective ship-killer throughout the war.
    Aichi D3A "Val", responsible for quite many early allied losses in the Pacific war, only overshadowed once Japan lost air superiority.

  • @wockyslush3038
    @wockyslush3038 4 года назад +6

    US be like: "imagine only having only 1 or 2 heavy bombers instead of having 4 in combat and multiple fully built prototypes stateside"

    • @teodor9975
      @teodor9975 4 года назад

      *meanwhile in the uk*
      we'll just use 3 heavy bombers and call it a day

    • @importedemperor4397
      @importedemperor4397 4 года назад

      Large bomber small tank.

    • @wockyslush3038
      @wockyslush3038 4 года назад

      @@teodor9975 not very cash money

    • @teodor9975
      @teodor9975 4 года назад

      @@wockyslush3038 well swap places and ye would notice something similar

    • @jacobkingsford5209
      @jacobkingsford5209 4 года назад

      Having many types of bombers only hampers you. You have to retrain crew more, and parts are harder to obtain.

  • @matthewbittenbender9191
    @matthewbittenbender9191 4 года назад +17

    You missed out on the B 25 Mitchell. Many variants were made And operated in every theater of the war including Doolittle raid. On top of all that, they were a gorgeous plane to look at!

    • @junocrusader5860
      @junocrusader5860 4 года назад +1

      Let's face it.Yankee bombers could arguably fill the top 3!

    • @fkerpants
      @fkerpants 3 года назад

      "On top of all that, they were a gorgeous plane to look at!"
      Looks like I'm not alone. :) I've always had a soft spot for that bird. Plus, she was armed to the teeth.

    • @w8stral
      @w8stral 3 года назад

      They were heavy and slow. A26 was vastly superior and why it was still flying in Vietnam and not the Shitty B25

    • @fkerpants
      @fkerpants 3 года назад

      @@w8stral I can't imagine what you're talking about. Why, in the 70's I saw a couple of Mitchells do a shitbombing run once on a pair of dudes in white suits. As for being heavy and slow, well, that tends to happen when you put honest-to-Pete cannons under your cockpit. Firing artillery in flight tends to fuck with your shit.
      ruclips.net/video/cEek5IvGYKg/видео.html

  • @petermeek1572
    @petermeek1572 2 года назад +4

    Mosquito best for ordnance dropped vs times shot down. Lowest attrition rate of any fighter or bomber. Did every job it had to and did the most dangerous jobs. Just look at the raid on the amien prison, the number of V1's taken out vs ordnance dropped. And it was made of wood, carried a heavy bomber payload and only 2 crew. Germans awarded 2 kills for each shot down. Wood when metal was at a premium it was the first true fighter bomber in history.

  • @nightlightabcd
    @nightlightabcd 4 года назад +9

    I'm kind of surprised that the Liberator didn't get at least honorable mention!

  • @exseque21
    @exseque21 4 года назад +25

    Should’ve made separate videos with heavy bombers and the ground attackers...

  • @Kokoshi
    @Kokoshi 4 года назад +4

    A-26 Invader. It could strike low and fast. And was one of the last WWII bombers to serve on the front lines in the Vietnam War with the first generation FLIR (Forward Looking Infrared) system.
    A bonus round would be the A-1 Skyraider. It was developed in the war but arrived too late. But served in Korea, Vietnam, and served as the template for the attack aircraft. This led to the ultimate guardian angel, the A-10 Thunderbolt II/ Warthog.

    • @johnosbourn4312
      @johnosbourn4312 2 года назад

      The A-26A Counter Invader was never fitted with a FLIR sensor, because they attacked their targets at night under the light of LUU-2 parachute flares.

  • @nicolaspecorelli5207
    @nicolaspecorelli5207 7 месяцев назад

    I do think all things considered, despite heavy losses, the fact that the B-17’s were able to be so successful during daytime air raids, push through flak, and do all of this with little to no support from fighters early in the war is pretty remarkable.

  • @jantschierschky3461
    @jantschierschky3461 4 года назад +11

    As a German I actually have to say the mosquito is the best all round bomber. Low cost, fast, effective and it could defend itself. There is no question that the stuka was a very precise and very effective, however it only could operate in secured airspace. In general would say the ju 88 was better.

  • @jameshorn270
    @jameshorn270 3 года назад +7

    Missed the US medium bomber, the B-25 Mitchell, used in smaller short range attacks in Europe, but a major player in the SW Pacific against both ground targets and for skipping bombs into ships. Although designed for medium altitude level bombing, in the Pacific, it often attacked so low that the bombs had to be fitted with parachutes to slow descent until the bomber got out of the blast radius. Likewise, a lot of the anti shipping attacks were carried out below the masts of the targets A number of them weree fitted witadditional .50 caliber machine guns in the nose, a nasty surprise for any Japanese plane finding itself flying head on to a B-25

    • @timerover4633
      @timerover4633 Год назад

      Some of the B-25G carried 12 forward-firing .50 machine guns, besides the top turret and tail guns. The B-25G and H could also carry a 75mm tank gun for use against ships and barges. That is firepower.

  • @kebman
    @kebman 3 года назад +4

    The Stuka had air horns on them that made a crazy sound when they dove, to demoralize their targets. It often ended up demoralizing the pilot as well, as you couldn't turn it off...

  • @christophercoupe5006
    @christophercoupe5006 2 года назад +2

    For the heavy bomber class the Lancaster was in a class of its own. Its 20,000 bomb load dwarfed anything any US bomber could carry! Thus it was a very efficient use of resourses like aluminum, engines, men...

    • @maddog8621
      @maddog8621 2 года назад

      Wasn't there a thing that they had the Lancaster as a back up for the Atom bomb deployment, due to greater range or payload, but the US preferred to have an American plane?

  • @williamgarrett9479
    @williamgarrett9479 4 года назад +5

    The Stuka was totally obsolete by the time the war even started. The wheels would not even retract.

    • @bobthebomb1596
      @bobthebomb1596 4 года назад +1

      Hmmm. Obsolescent maybe, but not obsolete.
      Like the A10 today it required protection from other fighters, but it could still do its job as a CAS aircraft.

    • @jesspayne5548
      @jesspayne5548 4 года назад

      Bob thebomb well yes I could take a Cessna up with bombs and 50 cals and have a F22 flying escort and be great at CAS. There is a reason they didn’t use the Stuka after 1942

  • @Charon58
    @Charon58 3 года назад +8

    9:13 has the wrong profile for the Mosquito. The "best" bomber of the war was the B-29 (it was incredibly sophisticated and advanced) but the Mosquito was the most versatile and was incredibly effective (If you're a pilot you want to fly the Mosquito) and while you might say it was the "best" overall, like the B-29 it wasn't critical to the outcome of the war. The most important bombers were the Liberator (because it was produced in such great numbers, was very effective and was crucial in the Battle of the Atlantic) and the IL-2 (the most produced war plane in history and crucial to victory in the all important Eastern Front). The best Naval bomber was the Douglas Dauntless (not mentioned here), not because it was all that great in any one area, but because it was just a great all around plane and could defend itself against fighters if needed (pilots loved it). Honorable mention goes to the B-25 (produced in huge numbers, and flown in all theaters and by every Allied nations, including the USSR via Lend Lease, and was quite effective).

  • @joshuawhittington3329
    @joshuawhittington3329 3 года назад +12

    SBD-3 Dauntless was by far the most effective aircraft of WWII, pivotal in the Battle of Midway

  • @Mekushikurih
    @Mekushikurih Год назад +2

    Stuka was effective where there was ABSOLUTE air superiority... During The Battle Of Britain they were extremely easy targets for RAF. I believe B-17 was one of the most efective WW2 Bombers bcs it held its ground against Luftwaffe in day light raids, under heavy fire until the end of the war.

  • @dallasknight8620
    @dallasknight8620 4 года назад +7

    I love the B-17 bomber

  • @mikegray-ehnert3238
    @mikegray-ehnert3238 3 года назад +4

    You missed the whole medium bomber fleet of the USAAF. The B-25, especially in the Pacific Theater far outshines the Stuka, which was obsolete if there were any modern fighters in opposition.

  • @potatojuice5124
    @potatojuice5124 4 года назад +8

    Bruh I just discovered this channel and I can’t watch this without thinking of Star Wars