Death of the Luftwaffe | Fatal Mistakes Made By Nazi Germany And The Me 262 Jet Aircraft

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DroneScapes

DroneScapes

10 ай бұрын

Some of the reasons behind the death of the Luftwaffe, from the appointment of Ernst Udet, to his demise, and the many strategic errors made by Nazi Germany.
The Luftwaffe, the German air force during World War II, suffered a significant decline and eventual demise as the war progressed. Initially, it emerged as a formidable force, displaying impressive technological advancements and tactical superiority. Led by skilled commanders such as Hermann Göring, the Luftwaffe played a crucial role in the early victories of the German war machine.
During the early stages of the war, the Luftwaffe's Blitzkrieg strategy demonstrated devastating effectiveness, with a combination of dive bombers, fighters, and tactical bombers wreaking havoc on enemy forces and infrastructure. This dominance was most notable during the invasion of Poland, the Battle of France, and the early phases of the war on the Eastern Front.
However, the tide began to turn against the Luftwaffe as the war progressed. Several factors contributed to its decline. The first was the inability to sustain its initial technological edge. While the Luftwaffe initially possessed superior aircraft, including the renowned Messerschmitt Bf 109 and the versatile Junkers Ju 87 Stuka, technological advancements by the Allies gradually narrowed the gap. Allied forces developed more advanced aircraft, such as the British Supermarine Spitfire and the American P-51 Mustang, which surpassed their German counterparts in terms of speed, range, and firepower.
Another critical factor was the depletion of experienced pilots. The relentless air battles and high casualties took a heavy toll on the Luftwaffe's pilot ranks. The German pilots, who were initially highly skilled and experienced, were gradually replaced by less-experienced and inadequately trained recruits. This loss of skilled manpower diminished the Luftwaffe's effectiveness in combat.
Furthermore, the strategic bombing campaign by the Allies severely hampered the Luftwaffe's ability to project air superiority. Bombing raids targeted German airfields, production facilities, and infrastructure, resulting in the destruction of aircraft and key logistical support. The famous Battle of Britain fought primarily in the skies over England in 1940, was a turning point, as the Royal Air Force successfully defended against Luftwaffe attacks, ultimately preventing the planned German invasion.
The Luftwaffe's decline also resulted from the failure of the German military's overall strategy. Hitler's decision to engage in a two-front war by invading the Soviet Union while still fighting the Allies in the West stretched the Luftwaffe's resources and capabilities to their limits. The vast distances and harsh conditions of the Eastern Front presented enormous logistical challenges, forcing the Luftwaffe to divide its forces and focus on multiple theaters simultaneously. This dispersion of resources weakened the Luftwaffe's ability to concentrate overwhelming force in any one area.
By the later stages of the war, the Luftwaffe was further crippled by fuel shortages, limited production capabilities, and a lack of strategic vision. The air force struggled to adapt to changing circumstances, and its diminished operational capabilities were unable to counter the Allies' overwhelming air superiority.
#luftwaffe #aircraft #airplane

Пікірлер: 1 400
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes 10 ай бұрын
Click the link to watch more aircraft, heroes, and their stories, and missions: www.youtube.com/@Dronescapes
@F4Insight-uq6nt
@F4Insight-uq6nt 10 ай бұрын
All Wars are Fake.
@cryingfish2488
@cryingfish2488 10 ай бұрын
😅😅😅
@Lethgar_Smith
@Lethgar_Smith 9 ай бұрын
Thank God mistakes were made. Can you imagine if the Nazis had deployed their ME-262 sooner and had developed an atomic bomb first and combined them with their V-2 rockets? A dark and disturbing world locked in a death spiral into barbarism and total collapse in less than a hundred years. Thank God evil is, more often than not, pretty stupid.
@martiehensley4452
@martiehensley4452 9 ай бұрын
shame you did not show any thing about the Haunebu MK 1,2,or 3
@Aziz-he7ok
@Aziz-he7ok 9 ай бұрын
​@@martiehensley4452😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😅
@biercenator
@biercenator 10 ай бұрын
My Dad flew B26s out of Sardinia. He almost never spoke of it, but did once tell a story of encountering the ME262 late in the war. They had an escort of Thunderbolts, and when the jets came at them out of the sun they hit two bombers and the fighters were right on their tail in pursuit. At the bottom of the dive, the jets put their noses up and flew back through the formation taking out two more bombers, while the Thunderbolts were down below circling, circling, circling to gain altitude. Meanwhile the jets had to return to base to refuel. We didn't get along well, but he had courage all his life.
@rbilleaud
@rbilleaud 10 ай бұрын
The fighters eventually found an effective way of dealing with the 262s by following them to their airfields and knocking them out as they tried to land. Didn't much help the bombers when they were airborne, but by reducing their numbers, fewer and fewer were available to intercept.
@michaelw6277
@michaelw6277 10 ай бұрын
Sounds like the P-47 pilots were going for kills rather than protecting the formation. Their job was to chase them away, not follow them down.
@jimsregaturntableshifijukebox
@jimsregaturntableshifijukebox 10 ай бұрын
@@martinbrode7131 what's that to do with living under Nazi rule? Or does your tiny brain make no distinction? 😂😂😂
@hakaraiakorakoropiha1982
@hakaraiakorakoropiha1982 10 ай бұрын
God bless him for his services, we owe him and many like him for our freedom lol
@hakaraiakorakoropiha1982
@hakaraiakorakoropiha1982 10 ай бұрын
My namesake fought with the "28 Maori Battalion" in Crete, never returned to New Zealand
@tedlogan4867
@tedlogan4867 10 ай бұрын
One of the things the United States did that virtually no other nation did, was quickly identify outliers, overperformers, particularly in aerial combat, pull them out of combat, and promote them to instructors. The theory was that it was more valuable to identify the best pilots early, and leverage their skills and experience to train as many as possible to be competent right out of flight schools. This is why American Aces have so many fewer victories than their counterparts on both sides. Those aces were pulled from front line combat and pressed into service as tacticians and trainers. Meanwhile, in all other air-services, the aces were left to attrition, while the training and tactics never changed or adapted to the emerging technology.
@richardvernon317
@richardvernon317 10 ай бұрын
British rotated pilots in and out of the training posts as well.
@covercalls88
@covercalls88 10 ай бұрын
It was very true about top US pilots pulled out of combat for training duties. And it was very difficult for them to return to active combat duties usually taking about two years . By then it was late 44 or early 45, and much of the air to air combat was over.
@tedlogan4867
@tedlogan4867 10 ай бұрын
@@richardvernon317 I'm quite certain the U.S. Air Corps, as well as the Navy, pulled the top pilots and kept them in instructor roles. There wasn't a rotation if I'm not mistaken. You'll see Nazi aces with thousands of sortees, while the American counterparts had a few hundred at most. Erich Hartman flew over 1400 missions for example.
@nickmitsialis
@nickmitsialis 10 ай бұрын
in addition, for the most part, the Allies did NOT have a 'target rich environment' (exceptions existed like in Malta);
@benwysocki5443
@benwysocki5443 10 ай бұрын
My dad had a similar experiece.. He graduated at the top of his class, flying B25s and Liberators. He never flew in combat. They gave him a commision and made him an instructor.
@joeklejko1391
@joeklejko1391 10 ай бұрын
Couple of years ago, I met a WW2 veteran at a McDonald's and he said was a navigator on a B-17. I shook his hand and thanked him for his service.
@mikeryan7468
@mikeryan7468 10 ай бұрын
What did he think of your fucking hair
@ksmith249
@ksmith249 10 ай бұрын
WW2 Veterans are few and far between, these days. When I was a kid in the 1960s, you couldn't throw a stone without hitting one. I ran into a Vietnam Veteran today. I commented that "I thought that the Vietnam guys were all "laying down" by now. (He did not take offense, as he knew what I meant...) and he told me that he would be 75 this year. That is a pretty ripe old age for somebody who did not have to survive a war. I was in awe...
@bg147
@bg147 9 ай бұрын
That was sweet.
@MrLanternland
@MrLanternland 9 ай бұрын
@@ksmith249 So it goes...
@TheKilo0123
@TheKilo0123 9 ай бұрын
I could listen to Capt. Brown, all day. His expertise and experience is truly amazing.
@howlr747
@howlr747 9 ай бұрын
He was the greatest aviator to come out of WW2. German speaker, he interviewed the German High Command. Sunk on board a carrier. Developed carrier landings, landed a Mosquito on a small carrier, Flew more aircraft types that anybody else- only pilot to have tested all the German aeroplanes and reported on them, and stayed in Germany rebuild German industry. Nobody will ever have his breadth of experience.
@luckyguy600
@luckyguy600 9 ай бұрын
When he thought the Me 262 was the best airplane that makes them 'very scary' Thank goodness the German Airforce and leadership shot themselves in the foot. A win is a win, no matter how you get there. Our guys were good. Very good.
@silasfatchett7380
@silasfatchett7380 9 ай бұрын
@@howlr747 He flew more types of aircraft than anyone ever. A record that is unlikely ever to be broken.
@lioncurlew
@lioncurlew 8 ай бұрын
​@@howlr747I think he still holds the record for Carrier landings and take offs.
@sc6512
@sc6512 2 ай бұрын
You may already have, but if not, his book "Wings on my sleeve" is a great read.
@kenzeier2943
@kenzeier2943 25 күн бұрын
1. Lack of long-term strategic planning. 2. Lack of an early long-range bomber. 3. Lack of coordination between service branches. 4. Lack of natural resources (aluminum). 5. Lack of a structured, long-terms pilot training program. 6. Lack of top management of production throughout the war. 7. Top management’s inability to delegate and accept the advice of experts.
@kennethlane3896
@kennethlane3896 24 күн бұрын
Thank you for this list. It is right to the point. I was trying to put it all together but this says it all.
@at1970
@at1970 9 ай бұрын
One of the best descriptions I’ve ever heard of the luftwaffe was as a too small a blanket on a cold nite. It keeps getting pulled back and forth to try to cover more bed than is possible and eventually gets torn apart.
@robertwillis4061
@robertwillis4061 9 ай бұрын
Yes that's a good point. Trying to do too many different types of aircraft. Cut down the different models and produce more
@catherineharris4746
@catherineharris4746 9 ай бұрын
Great analogy!👍
@erichalverson9248
@erichalverson9248 3 ай бұрын
40:52
@pkfryer
@pkfryer Ай бұрын
A sh#tty, j#zz stained blanket with the blood of a million innocent women and children on it
@robwernet9609
@robwernet9609 Ай бұрын
That's as good an analogy as I've ever heard.
@hughgordon6435
@hughgordon6435 10 ай бұрын
Winkle was my dads CO at Lossiemouth, not only a great flyer, also a dammed fine commander, but by far ( to his men) a really nice guy!
@thelonious-dx9vi
@thelonious-dx9vi 9 ай бұрын
Wow. He sure comes across pretty awesomely here. It's incredible that he a) was the actual guy who flew the German hardware, b) is on the record with his direct experiential insights, c) does it so well and eloquently.
@damianousley8833
@damianousley8833 7 ай бұрын
The german jet lead with the me262 was shadowed by the Gloster Meteor. The British had a good test bed in the first jets with the Meteor. The Meteors service life was considerably longer in peacetime and the ME 262 service life faded very rapidly and was replaced quickly by newer second generation jets
@mydogs9900
@mydogs9900 6 ай бұрын
😂
@pashakdescilly7517
@pashakdescilly7517 3 ай бұрын
Winkle Brown seems to forget about the Meteor. It flew very soon after the Me262 and entered combat service very soon after it.
@rustyheckler8766
@rustyheckler8766 10 ай бұрын
What caused it to fail? Easy answer, Germany was fuel starved by 1941. Though they weren't completely without fuel/gas but it was a trickle by that time, no longer able to do large scale combined arms blitz maneuvers.
@foxtrot312
@foxtrot312 10 ай бұрын
Great point. Which also resulted in flight training reduction. Less fuel available = less hours to fly.
@terry_willis
@terry_willis 10 ай бұрын
Good. If Hitler won, everyone reading this would never have been born.
@chrisburn7178
@chrisburn7178 9 ай бұрын
And fuel available was of poor quality which hampered the performance of engines, particularly the jets.
@Leon-bc8hm
@Leon-bc8hm 3 ай бұрын
All their aces were in the air 24/7 until they died or indeed had no fuel.
@denis8087
@denis8087 2 ай бұрын
I agree but also disagree . I think Germany was the most powerful military force back then . Only thing don’t matter who you are you cannot win by fighting giants on 3,4,5 fronts .
@cra0422
@cra0422 10 ай бұрын
I've always felt that the Luftwaffe, like the rest of military in Nazi Germany, was geared towards a short war. It's equipment and operational doctrine was based around air superiority over the battlefield and providing tactical air support for the ground troops. The problem with that while the Luftwaffe could do excellent against neighboring countries (Poland, Denmark, the Low Countries and France), they didn't have the necessary reach to be effective against more distant opponents.
@klaus-peterborn1370
@klaus-peterborn1370 10 ай бұрын
It was expected in Germany the war will end in two years but general winter made it impossible. That is why the attack against the Udssr goes to the south. They need the oil and metall from the Kaukasus. The irony in it was, they passed Stalingrad, that was not defendet at this time. Later this town was the beginn of the end.
@tarijohn1924
@tarijohn1924 10 ай бұрын
If you dig into the inner circle of Nazism,they were preparing for a long war and what happened to their disadvantage was that the war came early. Germany had hoped there'd be no conflict till at the earliest,1945.
@petertansey
@petertansey 10 ай бұрын
If it weren't for a few key battles one for the allies we would all be speaking German today. The Germans were far off and ahead in tech luckily Hitler wasn't all that great a tactician and he wouldnt listen to the greatest so he failed his army luckily he got greedy in Russia and the Americans joined and he made more mistakes... It could have been much much different.
@dustylover100
@dustylover100 10 ай бұрын
The biggest mistake the Germans made was the lack of an independent air force.
@sistagalsistagal8136
@sistagalsistagal8136 10 ай бұрын
Germans staying true to old methods whilst using new technological advancement. TYPICAL OF GERMANS. THEY JUST DO NOT LIKE CHANGE!!!
@brucewilliams1892
@brucewilliams1892 9 ай бұрын
At 12:15 - the Luftwaffe did drop a magnetic mine, into tidal water in Kent. RN specialists were able to make it safe, recover it, and study its tecchnical content. And thus ships could be 'degaussed' to make them unlikely to trigger such mines. Ouvry and Baldwin were the two heroes who worked on the unknown mine.
@ohgosh5892
@ohgosh5892 9 ай бұрын
Also the amazing Halifax magnetic mine 'trawler'. It had an enormous electromagnet fitted around the whole fuselage and main wings, when energised, could trigger magnetic mines. The Halifax was the Land Rover of heavy bombers.
@christopherwebber3804
@christopherwebber3804 9 ай бұрын
@@ohgosh5892 There was a Wellington version, but I hadn't heard of a Halifax version.
@christopherwebber3804
@christopherwebber3804 9 ай бұрын
Yes that was a stupid move. The Germans deployed the magnetic mine in small numbers to begin with, allowing time for the British to develop counter-measures. They should have waited and deployed them en masse, which would have had a huge impact on British coastal shipping.
@MegaDeansy
@MegaDeansy 9 ай бұрын
Just googled Captain Eric 'Winkle' Brown - wow !. His lists of achievements and feats is endless, a very impressive man !. As a fellow Edin-burger I salute you, sir - RIP !
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes 9 ай бұрын
One of the greatest pilots, if not the greatest, that ever lived. We will soon release some old Betacam footage that was never seen before, adding to his endless legacy.
@robbiepiacun767
@robbiepiacun767 9 ай бұрын
He should have been knighted for recognition of his accomplishments
@rogerhayes2117
@rogerhayes2117 8 ай бұрын
They reckon that no pilot will ever again fly as many aircraft types as Capt Eric Winkle Brown. At some point or another, he flew every aircraft in service especially axis machines (German, Italian and Japanese) after the war, as High Command were interested in his appraisal of them.
@larryrodgers7309
@larryrodgers7309 Ай бұрын
​@@rogerhayes2117 Is this roger Hayes of the 25th Inf.Div.
@Ed-ig7fj
@Ed-ig7fj 9 ай бұрын
What a thorough and enlightening video. I would note that the Komet rocket plane had a nose cone of cast steel to act as armor, in conjunction with the slab of Lucite we see in the video footage. The device used to move a Komet on the ground was called a Schleppwagen. We even use "shlep" in English meaning to lug or carry something. I think that tow trucks in Germany are also called this. Test Pilot Opitz was an extraordinary glider pilot, and after the war he moved to America where he taught gliding and competed in gliding events in various parts of the U.S.A. Finally, Hannah Reitsch was interviewed whilst in her seventies, and you can see that the spark for flying is still burning brightly within her. You can find the interview on this platform. --Old Guy
@leneanderthalien
@leneanderthalien 9 ай бұрын
The me 163 had no armor: you forgott this thing did weight less than 2tons…
@alwayslearning8365
@alwayslearning8365 9 ай бұрын
The allies were incredibly lucky that Goring was in charge of the Luftwaffe. His pride and ignorance were of great benefit to the allied war effort.
@Belfreyite
@Belfreyite 7 ай бұрын
Exactly. He rode roughshod over Donitz denying the Kriegs Marine a bigger fleet including Carriers.
@hiha2108
@hiha2108 7 ай бұрын
He was heavily addictet to Morphine...
@tobiolopainto
@tobiolopainto 7 ай бұрын
"heavily" is a good pun. @@hiha2108
@johncox2865
@johncox2865 7 ай бұрын
We were also very fortunate to have Hitler on their side.😂
@johnathanh2660
@johnathanh2660 6 ай бұрын
While this is true, it overlooks the fact that the allies had a similar problem. Goering stayed in post because of his personal loyalty to Hitler, his history and status in the party (member #34, if memory serves) and being a war hero. But being a WW1 pilot doesn't give you the skills to lead a military service! With the US, they were very swift to remove poorly performing officers. Within the UK slightly less so. They tended to be re-assigned out to the Far East. I personally think Leigh-Mallory is over-rated. And the loss of pilots & aircraft which were needed in the desert war and the far east to 'mushrooms and rhubarbs' was nearly criminal.
@JPGoertz
@JPGoertz 10 ай бұрын
A very excellent and knowledgeable documentary. Thank you. Unified technology development and procurement, strategic bombing capacity (instead of a fascination with dive bombing), sufficient pilot training / experienced pilots and resources were what was missing. Thank you!
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes 10 ай бұрын
🙏👍
@markgranger9150
@markgranger9150 9 ай бұрын
Strategic bombing did not work on the Germans how would it have worked for them. Today the Air force has the 1 bomb 1 hit mentality instead of drop a thousand and maybe hit something. The lack of range for their fighters was probably the biggest reason they failed.
@ReflectedMiles
@ReflectedMiles 9 ай бұрын
My father used to say how in awe he and others were of the ME262 in its early forays into combat. They actually had no idea what it was at first, but quickly learned that they had zero chance competing against it when it was just a question of speed. However, it had a lot of disadvantages as well, quite a few of them pointed out in this video, and the P-51 guys, at least, learned in time to take advantage of its lack of good control of its speed, which turned into also not having good control of its maneuverability when it really needed it, and the Allied pilots would take advantage of that vulnerability.
@EllieMaes-Grandad
@EllieMaes-Grandad 10 ай бұрын
Magnetic mines were dropped on the UK coastlines, but they were effectively countered.
@douglemay7989
@douglemay7989 Ай бұрын
Well, they stopped working when they got wet.
@rscott2247
@rscott2247 9 ай бұрын
One of the problems with the Luftwaffe command was trying to get one aircraft to do too many multirole actions. Gooring or Milch demanded that the medium bombers like the Ju88 be used in the dive bombing role. So as a result the wings needed to be strengthened which added more weight and reduced its speed. Another problem with production is that Hitler waited till 1943 to put Germany's war machine on a 24/7 full time basis.
@williammaxwell1919
@williammaxwell1919 9 ай бұрын
The DE high command insistance that their planes were multi-functional in their rolls that resulted in these planes not being able to carry out any roll with competence, not too dissimilar to many sectors of our economy that requires that employees are competent in ALL tasks undertaken by those professionals in their discipline/industry while discarding those who specialise in particular aspects of their discipline /industry are overlooked /discarded by employers due to the assumption that such individuals are a liability to the employer, rather than an asset that compensates for the minimal skills of a generalist
@christopherwebber3804
@christopherwebber3804 9 ай бұрын
Well that may or may not be true... read Richard Overy's book. He says the German economy was about to collapse when they went to war, as they didn't have enough foreign exchange and the government couldn't pay its debts. So in some ways, they were already at full stretch. in 1940 they had to basically temporarily disband some divisions to send the soldiers to work in the factories. They had a shortage of labour (especially skilled labour) and materials and may not have been able to work much harder at that time. They were only able to keep producing late in 1944 by making things out of spare parts, so when they broke down, they couldn't be fixed.
@markgranger9150
@markgranger9150 9 ай бұрын
The Germans were producing more fighters at the end of the war than the beginning. After Poland and France Luftwaffe put units in reserve.and made.up losses in production put army units in reserve and did not go into war time production until 43-44. There was not a shortage of money but they could.not support the cost of 24/7 production. When they got free slave labour they could afford to go to wartime production. When thinking about mistakes or making changes in strategy results come back the same, like if Hitler had not interfered with the 262 it would have changed the out come of the war. I don't think it would have changed the out come but it would have gone down in a different way. Little changes at the beginning can make a huge difference in the end. One of the mistakes or oversights may be a better term, was the failure to increase the range of the 109. Simple drop tanks would have changed the Battle of Britain. The lack of strategic long range bombers were not as big of an oversight than no drop tanks. Strategic bombing was not as effective as the allies hoped, after bombing Germany to rubble they were producing more fighters at the end. Britain could not be bombed into submission and even if they could reach the U S I don't think they could have made us give up. The Luftwaffe had high standards and superior aircraft and training they changed their tactics from day to night bombing due to losses. The planes could be made up pilots and crews not so much. The Germans rotated their pilots and crews they were given leave and did there time as instructors. The Luftwaffe ended the war the way the British came in, pilots having a dozen hours of flight time going against seasoned vets. No matter what the Luftwaffe did it was going to lose it was just matter of time
@alexhayden2303
@alexhayden2303 6 ай бұрын
They didn't have the Dakota!
@kevcaratacus9428
@kevcaratacus9428 4 ай бұрын
I'm sure I read something about the DC ( can't rem the no) did more than all the bombers and fighters towards winning the war due to all everything it carried, men supplies , everything needed to keep the war going forward the unsung hero of ww2 . I don't know if that's true . But I definitely read it or heard it , Ive read and watched so many documentaries, series about ww2, I can't remember if it was an opinion or a fact ,
@paulforester6996
@paulforester6996 3 ай бұрын
After finding out my grandfather was captured in the Battle of the Bulge in WW2 I looked stuff on WW2. I concluded the nazis were self sabotaging and wouldn't have ruled for that long. We should never forget the lessons of the past. RIP grandpa and all the people who protected us in that time. I will remember.
@SNP-1999
@SNP-1999 4 ай бұрын
The last documentary on the Me 163 was also highly informative. While being an efficient fighter aircraft, it had the nasty tendency to literally disolve a pilot if the acidic fuel leaked into the cockpit ! This happened at least once to an unfortunate pilot during test trials. Another nasty habit was when the detachable undercarriage bounced back too high into the starting plane, bringing it down immediately to a deadly crash landing in a ball of flame.
@antoinemozart243
@antoinemozart243 10 ай бұрын
Two main reasons : the Luftwaffe lost half of its plane during the France campaign which meant a defeat against Britain. They never caught up. The stupid tendancy from Hitler to name an incompetent like Goering and keep him for political reasons despite complete failure. A bunch of courageous pilots named at high responsibilities without having a single competence in the job. The most famous figure beeing Udet.
@joopsciarone2813
@joopsciarone2813 8 ай бұрын
Wow what an inside about aircraft development etc both in germany and with the allied command. as an airline employee in Auckland NZ, I met Sir Douglas Baden. And only years later I came to realise who he was talking to friend of mine. I learned a lot since. I met him because someone had to assist him going to the lavatory as he had both his legs missing. It was his eyes that i will never forget and his hand on my shoulder in appreciation. What a man! John Sciarone Auckland NZ.
@FT-64
@FT-64 10 ай бұрын
Lots of great information here. It's really unfortunate that the digital filtering used on the original film footage is so over-processed.
@michaelstandring5580
@michaelstandring5580 9 ай бұрын
Agreed. All the original footage has been stretched to fill the frame making everything look strange. It’s a crying shame.
@MC202zipper
@MC202zipper 9 ай бұрын
Outstanding stuff: nice WWII footage and interesting interviews, keep them coming! Bravo!
@joshuameader8898
@joshuameader8898 10 ай бұрын
Thanks for replaying these great aerocinema shows
@JL-qe5gl
@JL-qe5gl 9 ай бұрын
Interesting seeing the early ME262 tail dragger torching the field, and the bird cage over the jet intakes; I’d never seen that footage before.
@finncarlbomholtsrensen1188
@finncarlbomholtsrensen1188 10 ай бұрын
Herman Göring stopped the double coupled engine intended for Heinkel 177, to make it extremely streamlined, surface cooled and faster than any of the contemporary fighters, because he knew from first hand that it would be impossible to handle in the field! But even in the field a German crew could change an engine on the 262 in half an hour, so the short lifespan was only a question of spares.
@markgranger9150
@markgranger9150 9 ай бұрын
The dual engine He 144 was a better bbq than a bomber. Bombers get shot down a new bomber would not have helped the short range Luftwaffe fighters. The time it takes to replace a spit or P.51 spark plugs was as long as it took to replace an engine on a 109. That gave the Germans the ability to keep the planes they had in the air.
@damianousley8833
@damianousley8833 6 ай бұрын
@markgranger9150 Only between 5000 and 8000 Junkers Jumo 004 engines were ever made. With a planned service life to scrap of 25 hours and in actual use 12.5 hours. That means the British Meteor Rolls Royce centripetal engines at 100 to 125 hours before major overhaul not scrapping meant that they were worth 10 Jumo engines each or even more. That is 500 to 800 RR engines in service life equalled the entire production of Jumo 004 engines in service life. The later centripetal RR engines pushed the Meteor to above the ME 262 top speed of 540 mph in level flight. Frank Whittle was correct to initially push for production of the simpler, more rugged, and easier to produce centripetal engines than axial jet engines. Unfortunately, both the Meteor and ME 262 were fuel guzzlers, and this limited the combat radius of the fighters. So they were never destined to meet in aerial combat.
@lenyfreeman3807
@lenyfreeman3807 10 ай бұрын
Interesting how the Japanese also had bitter rivalry between the Army and Navy.
@knoll9812
@knoll9812 10 ай бұрын
Pretty much every country. RAF refused to release planes to close the Atlantic gap even as ships were being sunk.
@singaporesling6112
@singaporesling6112 10 ай бұрын
@@knoll9812 True but with regards to Japan's rivalry it was a war within a war with was based on rival houses in Japan's past.
@1982nsu
@1982nsu 10 ай бұрын
When it came to the procurement of aircraft Germany and Japan were polar opposites. The German navy had no authority to obtain aircraft of it's own whereas the Japanese Navy had free reign to order the aircraft it wanted.
@1982nsu
@1982nsu 10 ай бұрын
@@singaporesling6112 Spot on.👍
@bdleo300
@bdleo300 Ай бұрын
Same as USA actually.
@aestradarespeto
@aestradarespeto 9 ай бұрын
Me-262 uses also R4M non guided missile and with it improved the shooting down ratio of allied bombers. It was capable of launching 24 of them at 450m range, and when spreaded in a bomber formation produces the break of that formation and the growth of the distance between bombers. This effect led to lower the capability of cal.50 machine guns to accomplish their rules, avoiding a concentrated fire support. R4M it was not as sophisticated as Rhurstal X4, but avoid the need of guiding the missile. Also, with a working proximity fuse and a better designed warhead, it would be a formidable weapon.
@harleyme3163
@harleyme3163 7 ай бұрын
rockets..... the very word missile denotes its guided... but the american had rockets too only promblem the nazi's had was ignition.....1/4 of em just b;ew up on the wing.... disterous for a jet
@dwwolf4636
@dwwolf4636 3 ай бұрын
Even unguided it upped the kill rate by ~4x.
@LostInMarxism
@LostInMarxism 3 ай бұрын
​​@@harleyme3163Citation? Or I call hogwash. Many fail to know N.S.D.A P., from 1942 through the end of their war, suffered from munitions sabotage. Some laborers were sabotaging Luftwaffe munitions during production process. Surviving Luftwaffe veterans uniformly speak of such in their memoires. Read on.
@mikedearing6352
@mikedearing6352 8 ай бұрын
Spot on, it's mostly all about the pilot, the ground team , planning and support, we had all that mattered most and had effective leadership in these critical areas, the axis had no chance
@josephmcrae3515
@josephmcrae3515 3 ай бұрын
Dad, a B17 flight engineer saw a lot of 262’s August 5, 44, to January 45. I’ve read extensively about the 262, it was a failure because it used gasoline instead of jet fuel. When the 262 throttled back it would quit running and they couldn’t restart. We figured it out followed them home to destroy them.
@nightjarflying
@nightjarflying 2 ай бұрын
Not impressed by your extensive reading. Gasoline was used for the on board two-stroke starter engine. The Junkers Jumo 004 jet engine however used J-2 as its standard fuel [synthetic fuel produced from coal] or a type of diesel oil. Note that aviation gasoline was not desirable due to its high rate of consumption & would not have been used unless no other choice was available. The 'flame out' was not caused by the fuel used, it was due to rough handling of the throttle - restart was possible but you need altitude.
@Mawyman2316
@Mawyman2316 2 ай бұрын
@@nightjarflying give the man a break, a single article or too is quite extensive.
@nightjarflying
@nightjarflying 2 ай бұрын
@@Mawyman2316 An extensively wrong article or two then
@Mawyman2316
@Mawyman2316 2 ай бұрын
@@nightjarflying you missed my sarcasm I take it? And I wouldn’t know either way but articles and random googling do tend to have their error rates
@nightjarflying
@nightjarflying 2 ай бұрын
@@Mawyman2316 stupidity & sarcasm by a stranger look the same in 'print' without the conventional sarcasm indicator
@SNP-1999
@SNP-1999 4 ай бұрын
What an excellent documentary, in particular the second one with Eric Brown RN, arguably the most experienced pilot in the British armed forces, if not in the whole world. I think that he flew every single British, American and German aircraft of his generation as a highly proficient test pilot.
@bdleo300
@bdleo300 Ай бұрын
Far from excellent, just another Mickey Mouse television bs
@MrReymoclif714
@MrReymoclif714 10 ай бұрын
Ural Mountains were the long range target that was untouched by Germany!
@robbierobinson8819
@robbierobinson8819 9 ай бұрын
Sorry to start with a grumpy comment: as in so many videos, the subtitles detract from all the hard work done to gather visual material. After the audio gets Goering's name correctly pronounced, the subtitle has it as Gehrig!😬 This apart, an excellent video with extremely good use of in flight footage of the aircraft. Very informative, and I would love to see a comparison of the Me262 and the Meteor.
@sergecashman4822
@sergecashman4822 10 ай бұрын
Heh. It's a Robot II camera. It can be synched with a machine gun or a cannon, that's why the cables. Very interesting to see it mounted on the head like a go pro. A lot of WW2 air combat footage comes from these cameras.
@benperry835
@benperry835 10 ай бұрын
Anyone else think these dronescapes videos are a bit off? They all seems to be clips of other people's content mashed together and the theme changes throughout the video. Just seems bizarre....
@markmark63
@markmark63 10 ай бұрын
24:20: ME262. Growing up in the UK we were taught at school that Germany and UK developed the gas-turbine jet engine independently in parallel. In a recently uncovered post-war interview However, Hans Von Ohain revealed that their early development program was entirely based on Whittle's 1930 Patent.
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes 10 ай бұрын
Do you have a reference to that interview? What we know for sure is that he initially denied having access,. Later he admitted to have had partial access to Whittle’s work, but his assistant confirmed he actually had full access to Whittle’s work, including drawings. He indeed credited Whittle as the inventor in his book. This details aside, given that Whittle’s work was delayed by roughly 5 years, his accomplishments eclipse Von Ohain’s, as Whittle’s engine could have had a working engine in 1934/1935, and probably even 1933 had he been supported, especially financially, like Von Ohain did
@ingowalkerling5141
@ingowalkerling5141 10 ай бұрын
Whittle and v. Ohains designs are completely different. You are right, that there were developed parallel, but with different technical properties. Von Ohains design origins from an axial machine concept and Whittles from a radial one. Today only axial concepts survived in jet engines, while general gas turbines are in both design concepts. When Whittle and von Ohain met after the war, they found out, that Whittle began earlier than v. Ohain, but v. Ohain was first with a working machine. And the design of the axial type engine is much easier to construct with multiple stage compressor and turbine modules. Whittle had serious problems to get the thrust he needed from his radial design. On the other hand Whittle was a long time a lonely fighter for his idea, who got no support from the RAF or the DOW. Noone there saw the potential of his idea. V. Ohain had nearly unlimited resources from Heinkel and the Heereswaffenamt, but suffered on an early, deadline to deliver results. So he had to stage some of the first tests to convince Heinkel to go on. And he was right.
@leneanderthalien
@leneanderthalien 9 ай бұрын
@@ingowalkerling5141axial turbo jet are much more difficult to built than centrifugal compressors turbo jets, because axial compressors need much more parts who need perfect alignment and use high quality steel, centrifugal compressors are cast aluminium, and a single burning chamber is very difficult to maintain stable burning whi is much more reliable and effective with multiple burning chambers
@user-zr8eg6cj4l
@user-zr8eg6cj4l 9 ай бұрын
They also "borrowed" a truckload of design inspiration from Jack Northrup.
@DeirdreMcNamara
@DeirdreMcNamara 6 ай бұрын
Of course it was!
@MrPossumeyes
@MrPossumeyes 10 ай бұрын
Thanks, man. Been interested in the Komet since a young feller. You filled in some gaps. Appreciated.
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes 10 ай бұрын
Glad I could help!
@paulbrogger655
@paulbrogger655 2 ай бұрын
If you're interested in the Komet, check out the Greg's Airplanes channel for his series on that rocket-plane.
@merryhunt9153
@merryhunt9153 9 ай бұрын
I read a book once about the German program to develop rockets. At one point, after much effort, forced labor and suffering, Hitler shut down all work because he had a dream that the program would never succeed. Remember that in WW2 history you have to factor in a madman.
@SteveAubrey1762
@SteveAubrey1762 10 ай бұрын
It's fortunate Nazi Germany had the leaders it did. It would have been really rough if they had had leaders of similar quality as those of Great Britain & the United States. I suppose the same could be said of Japan aswell.
@Commander-McBragg
@Commander-McBragg 10 ай бұрын
After watching this, I still think it boils down to the allies having greater numbers as opposed to tactical or technical mistakes on the Nazis part.
@theashpilez
@theashpilez 10 ай бұрын
The war of the factories.
@bacon1564
@bacon1564 10 ай бұрын
I'd say especially the material aid to the USSR, their numbers wouldn't have meant as much without the ability to arm, feed and transport them. I do agree that it is easy to scoff at "foolish" mistakes post hoc. Especially when there could have been other political/tactical considerations and unknowns at the time that someone on the outside doesn't have to contend with years later.
@joeyjamison5772
@joeyjamison5772 10 ай бұрын
“Infantry wins battles, logistics wins wars.” -General John J. Pershing
@srgmiller340
@srgmiller340 10 ай бұрын
@@joeyjamison5772 And Bombing German war factories help slow down the production process and the removal of supplies guns and troops from the frontlines
@Kerrington_John
@Kerrington_John 10 ай бұрын
The Allies also were technically more developed. Documentations like this one are built on myths. The Germans did have some few, cutting edge technology, but it was all neither fully developed or coming 1944/45 and in few numbers. Tiger (I) II, Me262, U-boat XII, V2, StG44 all that things were technically very poor developed and broked down very often.. It would have need around 10 years of more development. But the Allies also were developing such weapons. So, Germany was good, but not good enough.
@sailordude2094
@sailordude2094 2 ай бұрын
This one was really good, great interviews, thanks!
@Herschel-kk6wr
@Herschel-kk6wr 5 ай бұрын
The photo is of an outdoor factory tjat was concealed in the forest in Bavaria, near the Danube. Diggers still turn up parts to this day.
@Red72618
@Red72618 10 ай бұрын
No Strategic Bomber and no Better Leadership in the Luftwaffe
@Dackah
@Dackah 9 ай бұрын
One of my retired colleagues was a pilot in the Royal Navy based at Lossiemouth when Eric Brown was I believe the station commander. One day while on parade, he tried to salute Eric with his sword, but accidently damaged and ripped Eric's uniform. The man was less than pleased, telling Nigel "that will cost you a new greatcoat!"
@stanzanossi
@stanzanossi 8 ай бұрын
Your colleague was lucky he was not in the Russian Airforce! If a Russian pilot ripped the coat of his superior, he would be castrated and his testicles would be stuffed into his mouth while he was still alive! Maybe you can understand why the Russians kicked the Nazi's asses when they were stupid enough to invade their country!😮
@rodneywells4640
@rodneywells4640 9 ай бұрын
I love war birds of all ages This was so in-depth an educational I really enjoyed it Thank you for putting in time to creat this documentary
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes 9 ай бұрын
👍🙏
@AndyJarman
@AndyJarman 10 ай бұрын
Not a single mention of Stalingrad and the dire lack of fuel, or the woefully inadequate number of available pilots.
@DataWaveTaGo
@DataWaveTaGo 10 ай бұрын
At 1:40 "...boxes with coils..." Georing was referring to the radio/radar equipment used on German night fighters.
@foxtrot312
@foxtrot312 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for expounding on that. Very insightful
@jimfinlaw4537
@jimfinlaw4537 10 ай бұрын
The Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress bombers were not the only bomber threat the Americans possessed. There was no mention of the Consolidated B-24 Liberator bombers, which also threatened the Fatherland and could carry more bombs than a B-17.
@B52Stratofortress1
@B52Stratofortress1 10 ай бұрын
They were mostly equivalent types. B-24 was built in larger numbers, had a longer range and had a bigger payload. B-17 was a much more survivable airframe when damaged, had superior defensive armament from the E variant onwards and was easier to fly especially when damaged. Each type had its own niche, and the US production capacity was not negatively affected by producing two similar but different types in large numbers.
@jimfinlaw4537
@jimfinlaw4537 10 ай бұрын
@@B52Stratofortress1 Yes, I am fully aware of the B-24 Liberator and its contributions to the war effort in Europe. My father flew a B-24D as a co-pilot in Operation Tital Wave where they bombed the Nazi Synthetic Oil Refineries at Ploesti in Romania on 1 August 1943. This was the infamous low level raid where many American bombers were lost. My father was assigned to the 512 Bomb Squadron, 376th Bomb Group, 12th Air Force stationed at Bengasi, Libya in North Africa. Unknown at the time there were two German spies at the base that had tipped off the Germans about the upcoming raid. The Germans at the target area were already fully alert with fighters and flak batteries just waiting for the B-24's to attack. There were several B-24's lost on this mission due to fighters and flak. Even my father's B-24D Liberator was hit over the target area shortly after bomb release when an 88-mm flak shell went clear through the right wing and punctured a fuel tank. Fortunately, my father was cross trained as a flight engineer on Liberators. He transferred as much fuel as possible out of the damaged fuel tank to conserve as much fuel as possible. The flight engineer was busy helping the ball turret gunner at the time because his ball turret had jambed due to desert dust getting inside the electric motor. Once fuel transfer was complete, my father resumed his co-pilot duties. He pulled the mixture controls back beyond limits from what the tech orders recommended to conserve even more fuel. My father had all four engines running on the verge of detonation. They maintained good airspeed depite the damaged right wing and were not harassed by enemy fighters. By the time they landed at their alternate air base in Italy, all four engines were junk from overheating, but the plane got them home safely despite the damage to the right wing. The mission proved to be a disaster and my father suffered from PTSD after watching several bombers being shot down around the target area and knowing there were no survivors.
@salvagedb2470
@salvagedb2470 10 ай бұрын
Always an Odd one that , the B24 never got the Lime light its Boeing cousin did , they built I think 18,000 of them ..
@jimfinlaw4537
@jimfinlaw4537 10 ай бұрын
@@salvagedb2470 Actually 18,482 B-24 Liberators were built in the United States during the war. It was the most produced American military aircraft of WWII. Its true, when the Davis wing on a B-24 became damaged, it lost efficiency very quickly. As for the B-17, it was never really designed as a strategic bomber when it was first designed in 1937. It was intended to destroy battleships, which is why it could not carry a larger payload like the B-24 Liberator. At that time, the U.S. military felt the battleship was the biggest threat to the United States and Boeing designers developed the B-17 based on that premise. What it lacked in bomb carrying capability it had to make up for in shear numbers when it was used as a strategic bomber. My father later became an instructor pilot in B-17's when he was stationed at MacDill Field in Tampa, Florida. One of the B-17's he flew in the Training Command was the famous B-17F Memphis Belle when it was assigned to the 483rd Bomb Squadron as their training aircraft after it had completed its War Bond Tour in the United States. My father was assigned as their instructor pilot. Today, the Memphis Belle has been restored to factory new condition and is on permanent static display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton, Ohio.
@MickCampin-jp9kb
@MickCampin-jp9kb 10 ай бұрын
And of course the Afro Lancaster could carry more bombs and could fly further than a B17
@calebwilliams7659
@calebwilliams7659 9 ай бұрын
As mentioned in the video's description not having enough fuel to run the planes was ultimately the end. If your planes can't get off the ground the only thing they're good for is strafing run target practice by your enemy. As Goring famously said, "I knew the war was lost when I saw P-51 Mustangs flying unhindered over Berlin".
@AnthonyTolhurst-dw1nc
@AnthonyTolhurst-dw1nc 9 ай бұрын
“The jig was up”?
@kevcaratacus9428
@kevcaratacus9428 4 ай бұрын
I think it was also Goreing who said he could be called Meyer if Berlin was ever bombed. In 1940 the RAF bombed Berlin..
@asullivan4047
@asullivan4047 7 ай бұрын
Interesting and informative. Excellent photography job enabling viewers to better understand what/whom the orator was describing. Special thanks to veteran pilots sharing personal information/combat experiences. Enabling historians to replicate those diaries/memoirs. For viewers to better appreciate the actual fierce air battles & manufacturing of air crafts. A loud shout out to the disillusioned leadership in Berlin. Disillusioned Hitler 😈 & Goring 😈 for making the Luftwaffe a catastrophic failure. Lucky break for the allies. Had there been 50 ME 262 fighter jets 50 experienced pilots to fly them. All along with plentiful high octane fuel. The allied bombers might have been destroyed???
@tarijohn1924
@tarijohn1924 10 ай бұрын
There shouldn't be any big or long thoughts concerning German strength on every field. You cannot win when you go against the greatest industrial giants in the world combined, it's just not possible.
@thomashazlewood4658
@thomashazlewood4658 6 ай бұрын
That's not precisely true. Both the Soviets and the British were in dire condition. The British were at least Germany's equal in industry and the Soviets were actually superior, yet they were both facing destruction for a while. The clincher was the untouchable industries in the US that supported both. Had Germany left Japan to face the US alone, instead of declaring war on the US, it might still have beaten the Soviets, while the US expended its war efforts on Japan, alone. The British, by themselves, could not have prosecuted the strategic bombing campaign.
@roymartin500
@roymartin500 7 ай бұрын
I say I like the bf-110 and everyone says in the previous comments "that plane sucks and you should...". I still like it, I think it looks sharp plus it did serve a niche purpose. I also love the US A-10 even with all the more modern jets.
@davescott7669
@davescott7669 10 ай бұрын
Nice to see " winkle" brown, he flew more aircraft types than any previous pilot in history
@gordonfleming458
@gordonfleming458 9 ай бұрын
And more carrier landings than any other flyer
@marielarrison101
@marielarrison101 5 ай бұрын
One of the major differences in training doctrine between the US and the Luftwaffe is that the US sent it's best fighter pilots back to the states to become insructors so the next wave of pilots had learned from our best whereas the Luftwaffe kept their best pilots in the front line operational units. When these pilots were shot down and were either killed or captured their knowledge and experience was lost leaving their next wave of pilots without that knowledge.
@Brooklyn-yx7xu
@Brooklyn-yx7xu 8 ай бұрын
My dad was in ww2 and I ❤your documentaries ❤there are so informative and entertaining 👏 😄 please do a video on operation barbarossa 🎉🎉keep safe and God bless ❤️
@pierremainstone-mitchell8290
@pierremainstone-mitchell8290 10 ай бұрын
A very good documentary indeed! Well done!
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes 10 ай бұрын
Many thanks!
@nomeansno2335
@nomeansno2335 8 ай бұрын
Excellent video! As Albert Speer states in his books, the regime did not go for massproduction until 1943 for ideological reasons. Also the Me262 was not used as an interceptor for ideological reasons because defense was considered defaetistic. Herman Goering was a useless drug addict that came to his brillant mind again when the allies had him cut off drugs before his trial after the war. He probably was kept in office because AH knew from the start that there was no chance to win this anyway. Like in WWI when the Austrian Empire knew that they would not stand a chance from the beginning but would refuse to go down without a sound.
@joelashdod7712
@joelashdod7712 7 ай бұрын
I disagree. Hitler thought he was a genius and could not loose. He chose incompetents like Goring because he valued loyalty over competence, since he believed his genius could overcome any obstacle.
@Orbitalresonancefrequencies
@Orbitalresonancefrequencies 7 ай бұрын
Very true, Austria quite literally lost WW1, and if you look at their battles against the very very under equipped Russians that becomes blatantly clear 😂 it’s funny cause Italy was the same for Germany, both weren’t technologically ready for the war when it started
@johncox2865
@johncox2865 7 ай бұрын
I think you’re wrong about Hitler. He thought he could win it right up to the moment he pulled the trigger, and may have thought that would win it for him. He was totally delusional.
@DeirdreMcNamara
@DeirdreMcNamara 6 ай бұрын
@@Orbitalresonancefrequencies Far more to that war than meets the eye.
@bdleo300
@bdleo300 Ай бұрын
Total bs every word. Mass production has nothing to do with ideological reasons, nor it's the reason why Me262 was planed ro be used as f-b. Austro-Hungary knew they would not stand a chance??? They were eager to go to war.
@mlee6136
@mlee6136 7 күн бұрын
A lot of insights here, great video.
@brucehilton1662
@brucehilton1662 5 күн бұрын
Germany actually increased production of armaments in 1944 despite the allies' strong air offensive. The major positive of this campaign was that German aircraft were relocated from the eastern front to Germany to defend vs strategic bombers. Strategic bombing didn't reduce people's will to resist OR prevent them increasing their production. The cost of the allied strategic air campaign to the allies I submit wasn't worth it.
@grumblesa10
@grumblesa10 10 ай бұрын
Good overview, but a little dated regarding the 262. To their credit they didn't come out and say it, but alluded to Hitler keeping the 262 from being an interceptor. We now know that was not true. However, they very accurately pointed out that the Do-335 was not just the fastest twin-engined fighter, but the fastest piston-engined fighter period. THAT was truly a failure of the Luftwaffe. The 262 also accurately shows how deeply Hitler was fixated on trivial matters better left to O5s and O4s.
@richardvernon317
@richardvernon317 10 ай бұрын
Me-262's biggest issue was the Engines were not ready until mid 1944 (even in the limited life span versions that were produced).
@grumblesa10
@grumblesa10 10 ай бұрын
@@richardvernon317 Exactly, and with slave labor requiring extensive quality-control. Not to mention the lack of fuel.
@freemenofengland2880
@freemenofengland2880 10 ай бұрын
The only fatal mistake was invading Poland; from then onwards they were living on borrowed time. Their complete failure in the Battle of Britain in 1940 was a sign of what was to come. By the time it was necessary to take on the USSR as well as the British Empire it was Game Over. The US joining the war in 1942 was merely a "pile on".
@Zeguyfromgermany
@Zeguyfromgermany 9 ай бұрын
Mistake number two: Allowing themselves (Hitler, who else?) being successfully baited hook, line and sinker to shift focus from the British airfields and air defences in the Battle of Britain to the British cities after the more or less symbolic bombing of Berlin at 25 August 1940. Mistake number three: Attacking the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941. Until this point, Stalin had been a passive ally to Hitler, providing Germany with oil, chrome and Mangan and grain.
@markgranger9150
@markgranger9150 9 ай бұрын
The U S came in late but they were more than a pile on. Fighting on two different fronts and supplying Russia and England with materials at the same time is something none of the other countries could dream of. The russians were losing entire armies and the British Expeditionary force left France and their equipment. Europe would still be at war if the russians and British were Hitler's only enemies. It was 1941 when the U S piled on.
@garbo8962
@garbo8962 5 ай бұрын
Back in 1980 I worked with halve a dozen extremely talented German electrician & mechanics Installing a state of the art $10 million machine. None of them would admit that they are their company could make a mistake. Case in point we purchased a $5,000 pre stretched metric chain from them but it did not have a constant distance on links. They would not believe the option of our two best machnists that measured the chain so they flew a mechanic over from Germany a few days later and within a few minutes their guy said that chain was detective.
@charlesbutterfield3464
@charlesbutterfield3464 2 ай бұрын
My father was a navigator on a B17 bomber. My father described the B17 as almost indestructible. The B17 could take an enormous amount of battle damage and keep flying.
@EllieMaes-Grandad
@EllieMaes-Grandad 10 ай бұрын
Despite the u-boat threat to UK, early in the war long-range convoy air cover was held back so that explosives could be dropped all over Germany, mostly countryside apparently . . .
@David-nx2vm
@David-nx2vm 10 ай бұрын
to suggest that aerial ASW was sacrificed in favor of bombing ground targets on the continent is inaccurate. It’s true that German submarines had considerable success from 1939 through early 1942, but that’s not because the UK and US ignored the threat or diverted resources elsewhere. Aerial ASW was at its embryonic stage in 1939 and the UK and US were feverishly developing capabilities while using what they had to counter the threat. By mid-1942, the USAAF fielded units and technology dedicated to aerial ASW, including airborne depth charges, magnetic anomaly detection, microwave radar, and others the Germans never figured out. The RAF was actively engaged in aerial ASW before that but with mixed success. And, remember they were fighting the Battle of Britain at the same time, so I will excuse them if they were somewhat distracted. B-18 and B-24 aircraft were purposely equipped for long range aerial ASW and their crews were organized and trained for this mission - they were not poached to perform other missions. Moreover, aerial ASW was carried out in earnest well before the USAAF and RAF began the coordinated bombing campaign over the Continent in 1943. The U.S produced 12,500 bombers in 1942, and over 28,000 in 1943. There were plenty to go around. The ASW mission was not a bill-payer for the bombing mission on the Continent. It’s true that the aerial ASW crews preferred hunting submarines in the offense rather than performing convoy escort in the defense but whether performing offensive or defensive ASW missions, they were performing robust and effective aerial ASW with dedicated aircraft and purpose-trained crews. German Admiral Doenitz acknowledged it himself in a June 1943 memo.
@EllieMaes-Grandad
@EllieMaes-Grandad 10 ай бұрын
@@David-nx2vm Thank you for the details, but my statement is not inaccurate. The denial of VLR aircraft to convoy work is mentioned a number of times in literature on the Battle of the Atlantic, but only mentioned, not expounded at length. Yes, by 1942 good sense had prevailed, as well as availability in quantity. It was at the introduction of LR and VLR when the attack role was chosen instead of the defensive. The Battle of Britain in SE England was not a distraction from convoy escort, even if some pilots transferred to fighters at that time. By 1942, certainly 1943, B17s and B24s were doing the job in large numbers. I referred to the early war period, when much knowledge about effective ASW was being learned. There was no 'poaching' of USAAF aircraft from missions over the continent. By the time they got going, sensible allocation of production had been effected. Looking from a U.S. perspective as you appear to do, perception of 1939/41 events is probably less sensitive than my own, the British perspective. PS Don't forget the use of Icelandic bases - UK forces went there (including my father) long before U.S. ones did . . .
@richardvernon317
@richardvernon317 10 ай бұрын
@@EllieMaes-Grandad Black Sky ASW doesn't Work!!! RAF Coastal Command tried it in early 1943 over the Bay of Biscay. They put as many aircraft as they could over the bay as possible in two one week periods and sunk jack shit. Lost aircraft to navigation failures and accidents as well. As for the VLR Liberator, the British had them in 1942!!! they got used as Transport Aircraft and Churchill used one as his personal transport.
@EllieMaes-Grandad
@EllieMaes-Grandad 10 ай бұрын
@@richardvernon317 I was referring to the first few years of WW2.
@richardvernon317
@richardvernon317 10 ай бұрын
@@EllieMaes-Grandad First Year, what Coastal Command had was good enough range wise, what they didn't have was the sensors or the weapons that worked. Where Aircraft really started to make a mark was mid 1942, but that was short lived because of Metox. Only in May 1943 did the aircraft start to rack up the kills because the weapons and sensors (plus intelligence) became really effective. You actually had more chance of hitting something important in Germany for number of hours flown than finding and sinking a U-boat before mid 1942. Plus anyhow, Bomber Command spend a lot of bombs and effort in attacking stuff in France in 1941 and 42 like German Warships.
@boszdekler5304
@boszdekler5304 10 ай бұрын
Most people seem to be unaware the Germans actually lost the battle for The Hague in 1940. Losing a stunning 125 Ju 52 transporter planes and damaging 47 more. The losses were so heavy they had to bomb Rotterdam to force Dutch surrender. Losing that many airplanes probably had it's effect on the Battle of Britain that followed soon after.
@dongilleo9743
@dongilleo9743 10 ай бұрын
The high loss of German transport planes and paratroopers in the Netherlands would have had a significant effect on any potential invasion attempt of England. The German airborne troops would have been a vital part of any invasion. There was no way Germany could rebuild it's transport aircraft and paratrooper numbers so quickly. The German air assault on the island of Crete in May, 1941 saw another devastating loss of transport aircraft and paratroopers. At that point, the production of transport aircraft had to take a back seat to the large number of fighters and bombers Germany needed. When the German 6th Army became encircled in Stalingrad in November 1942, the Luftwaffe didn't have the transport aircraft to keep it supplied.
@dipling.pitzler7650
@dipling.pitzler7650 9 ай бұрын
Of course the Netherlands played a great role in defeating the enemy, that is why in an act of kindness the Dutch authorities and vast parts of society were so keen to offer their collaboration in every field imaginable. LOL
@boszdekler5304
@boszdekler5304 9 ай бұрын
@@dipling.pitzler7650 Sadly that is also true. But that does not include the Dutch armed forces. The Dutch that joined the SS or commi ted serious collaboration were not from the army but mainly from the police and other civl services.
@dipling.pitzler7650
@dipling.pitzler7650 9 ай бұрын
@@boszdekler5304 Every country has its blind spots and as the past can not be altered it only matters how to deal with these in the future, but for this a honest retrospective and less bragging is needed.
@boszdekler5304
@boszdekler5304 9 ай бұрын
@@dipling.pitzler7650 only trying to honour the people that fought a very unequal battle and achieved much more than expected. Not their fault the Germans succeeded in occupying the country.
@theguy455
@theguy455 4 ай бұрын
Meanwhile the German army was still using some horses to pull artillery. When an American POW saw this he knew the Allies would win. He was right.
@ingowalkerling5141
@ingowalkerling5141 10 ай бұрын
During the Battle of Britain there was a lack of long range fighters which could protect the Ju 87 and bomber squadrons. The Luftwaffe was always a part of combined warfare and in this role airbases were situated near the front. That was additionally the reason, the Luftwaffe had no strategic bombers. The main purpose was support for the ground troops and an completely different design as the RAF or the USAF. The Kriegsmarine and the Luftwaffe had no connections in combat operations (only reconnaisance), since the big ships were leading a war against the supply lines of the allies with single ships (Handelsstörer) and mainly submarines. In this documentation the German tactics and strategies were analysed with the view of US and GB properties.
@rscott2247
@rscott2247 9 ай бұрын
What a waste of such dive bombers if they weren't given sufficient fighter escorts during operation Sea Lion. IMO, Operation Sea Lion at that point time with the Kreigsmarine losses was a strategic mistake along with Luftwaffe fighters having insufficient range.
@markgranger9150
@markgranger9150 9 ай бұрын
The lack.of range was.a problem but radar was what stopped the Luftwaffe. Early warning a lone won't win a war but it will keep the other side from catching n you on the ground.
@iainhowe4561
@iainhowe4561 9 ай бұрын
@@markgranger9150 - Radar is half of the story, though. The whole package was managing to combine radar and spotters with the HQ plotting rooms to make proper command and control of the Squadrons a reality. The Germans could get radar working, but they frankly didn't believe that the integration piece was doable by the RAF, because the Luftwaffe couldn't manage it.
@knoll9812
@knoll9812 10 ай бұрын
The second half of this video doesn't relate to the title. It be longs in s separate video
@foxtrot312
@foxtrot312 10 ай бұрын
I thought the same thing. Great content however
@ottovonbismarck2443
@ottovonbismarck2443 10 ай бұрын
This video has turned out to be a gem ! One point considering the Me-262 and its delay due to Hitler wanting a bomber: Utter nonsense ! How long would it have taken the design and construction team (of which Willy Messerschmitt himself wasn't even a part) to come up with a simple bomb rack ? The answer is Monday moring before the 9.30h (Ersatz-)coffee break. You have a working bomb rack lying around an tell the apprentice to come up with a solution. 262 was delayed due to a lack of working engines. Junkers (of which Hugo Junkers wasn't a part of either) had massive initial production problems. And due to the mentioned "life-time issues" they could never keep up once the 262 went operational. Interestingly, the first test unit to test and operate the 262 under combat conditions was a recon unit, IIRC along with some Ar-234. They flew some missions over Normandy in summer 1944. Pilot conversion training was done on the spot since designated 262 pilots were usually already very experienced. Most pilots found the conversion to 262 easier than from one prop to another. All issues in mind ! Also, 262 wasn't hit that hard by the overall fuel shortage because it didn't use high octane fuel but a sort of diesel. That said, fuel was available, it just couldn't be transported to where it was needed.
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes 10 ай бұрын
Thank you
@bergssprangare
@bergssprangare 10 ай бұрын
Not that easy.. Taking 2 x 500 kg bombs change the whole weight balance.. Fuel tanks have to be moved around .
@stuarthart3370
@stuarthart3370 9 ай бұрын
It's been written that the scrap time for an ME 262 engine was about 25 hours. Winkle Brown spoke to Galland after the war ended and was informed that the real figure for the aircraft engine was 10 to 12 hours. Sheesh that would allow for only a few sorties then straight into the recycling bin. Wow!
@mikeharris7780
@mikeharris7780 8 ай бұрын
I read that conversion training was quite challenging for fighter pilots but easier for ex bomber pilots as they already had multi engine experience and alot more training hours than the fighter pilots did.
@ottovonbismarck2443
@ottovonbismarck2443 8 ай бұрын
@@mikeharris7780 Not really if compared to bomber pilots converting to Bf109. 109s had the bad habit of killing unexpecting and newbie pilots on take-off. The high torque flipped the aircraft over if you weren't careful with stick and rudder; that's something a twin-engine wouldn't do to you. There were certainly other issues with 262 and rookie pilots. Speaking of which: I have no idea if there were any newbies on 262 or if they were all conversion pilots. I've read an account of a 109 instructor (an NCO) who was training a former bomber pilot (rank captain, hundreds of missions, knights cross and the lot). The captain "knew it all" and was almost killed on his first take-off. He was lucky, but 109 probably killed more novice pilots than the USAAF. I've once came across a number of 50% pilot/aircraft losses due to accidents within the Luftwaffe; that's including every aspect, not only training issues.
@richpontone1
@richpontone1 10 ай бұрын
The problem was overworked. They went full on the Invasion of Poland, then the battle of France, the Battle of Britain, then the Mediterranean, and the Invasion of Crete, then the Operation Barbarossa, Malta, the battle in the Mediterranean again, then the defense against Allied bombers against the Reich, etc. By the Invasion of Normandy, they were a spent force. At that time of the Normandy Invasion, the Allies could field 5,000 fighters and bombers, the Germans only 200. The Germans had to field 40 percent of their fighters against Allied bombers destroying Germany itself and the rest against the Soviets who field several thousand fighters.
@kiowhatta1
@kiowhatta1 10 ай бұрын
The problem with the Luftwaffe was it’s short sighted conception. Any modern Air Force needs to compartmentalise it to be able to act in different roles. You need a naval Air Force Wing. A ground support wing. A reconnaissance wing. A strategic bombing wing. A fighter wing. A transport/logistics wing. A Fallschirmjäger/paratrooper wing. A domestic wing. Unfortunately for the Germans, they didn’t organise, plan or foresee the need for this type of organisation and thus tried to stretch their limited organisation to cover all these roles which it simply couldn’t.
@TalkingGIJoe
@TalkingGIJoe 9 ай бұрын
Imagine walking into a forest in deepest Germany and coming across a line up of ME262s like that today...
@user-kd2ij7te5v
@user-kd2ij7te5v 8 ай бұрын
Well, as German born in 1960 I had to understand my countries past and make sense of it. I have thought about almost every of these aspects and tried to figure how we could have won. After many, many sessions over many years I came to conclusion. There are, in my humble opinion, three reasons why we lost this war. And the third is the most convincing you will see. First, we should not have prosecuted the Judes and other “non-Arian” Germans. Before nazi power, these people have been proud members of our society contributing to all areas of society, most know for their contribution to science. Second, attacking Russia without piece on other fronts. Well. Third, starting this war to begin with. By no measure we could have won this.
@joaoleaolyrio9217
@joaoleaolyrio9217 6 ай бұрын
Führer intended to Win the War with the "blitz" . . . didn't have Power to maintain a Great War !
@kevcaratacus9428
@kevcaratacus9428 4 ай бұрын
Im english i believe If Hitler left his General's to do their jobs and not interfered Things would've been very different. The RAF was 90% destroyed and almost had nowhere left to use re taking off or landing But before finishing the job Hitler ordered the Luftwaffe to switch and bomb London and other non military targets ( citys) Giving the RAF time to relocate and build more fighters. Without them we would have lost the battle of Britain and been invaded by German troops who were ready and waiting across the channel. That was 1940 2 years before Hitler declared war on the USA. If Britain had been invaded the USA would have definitely signed agreements to not interfere with German rule in Europe. ..without British merchant navy supplying Russia with weapons, tanks, and everything else they needed Hitler would have easily defeated Russia . ..then I think German scientists would have finished their design of long range fuel cells and and created a devastating version of the V2 Built squadrons of jet fighters. Built rocket bases and other military installations on western Ireland and launched rockets at and destroyed new York Washington & with tirpitz and the others plus fuel ships crossed the Atlantic and destroyed all US factories and major city's and within a year or less the USA would have to surrender or be wiped out Leaving Germany to rule everything. ..but he did interfere and that's why Germany lost the war .
@douglemay7989
@douglemay7989 Ай бұрын
Using so much manpower to exterminate people and control populations in over run countries was costly. The rest of the World is thankful that Hitler was taking all of those drugs.
@marka7831
@marka7831 7 ай бұрын
Eric "Winkle" Brown, British test pilot, flew the Komet and said it was a totally viceless plane that flew great. He also said that he had flown several other tailless planes planes that were just plain killers.
@mrunning10
@mrunning10 7 ай бұрын
As long as the fuelers didn't blown the damn Komet up on the ground.
@mikechevreaux7607
@mikechevreaux7607 10 ай бұрын
I Don't Have The Link, But The Biggest Problems Were: Lack Of Good, Conventional, 4 Engine, Long Range Bombers; And, Neglect To Capitalize On Their Superior Jet Technology. Imperial Japanese Army Air Forces Had Similar Problems, With a Lack Of Long Range Bombers, And Failure To Develop Their Own Jet Technology.
@denvan3143
@denvan3143 10 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video; excellent information, excellent presentation. 👍🏽
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes 10 ай бұрын
Our pleasure!
@winstonsmith935
@winstonsmith935 10 ай бұрын
Battle of Britain is what failed Goring, he told Hitler it would only take a week to get Rid of the RAF, he underestimated the RAF and the Spitfires and Mosquitoes.
@joeyjamison5772
@joeyjamison5772 10 ай бұрын
Germany wasted a HUGE amount of it's resources in a failed attempt to bomb Britain into submission.
@gordonfleming458
@gordonfleming458 9 ай бұрын
Sorry no mozzies in the Battle of Britain you probably thinking of c the hurricane which was more numerous than the spitfire
@winstonsmith935
@winstonsmith935 9 ай бұрын
@@gordonfleming458 you could be right, as I’m now 82 years, doesn’t matter which plane it was , they saved Britains Ass.
@markgranger9150
@markgranger9150 9 ай бұрын
The attitude that it would only take a week was not so far fetched at the time the nasties were riding A wave of success that they could hardly believe. I am not a lover of Hitler and the Nazis, but their success at the beginning of the war gave them the attitude that they couldn't lose. Radar had been around before the war ships.used it to go through fog and to range guns granted it was not the same as the British chain home radar.tha t would give you altitude. Few people thought about using it to detect planes. Parliament wanted to see if a death ray could be made and used against aircraft. Britain being the only country to experience air bombing on it's cities. Despite the early warnings when combat between fighters happened it was the Germans who usually came out on top. The Germans would have loved to nail the RAF on the ground like the other countries that Germany took. Loses were so heavy they switched to night bombing. Goering was not up to the task of leading the Luftwaffe but you can't blame him for overconfidence in the early part of the war.
@AnthonyTolhurst-dw1nc
@AnthonyTolhurst-dw1nc 9 ай бұрын
Mossies were not a thing that affected Battle of Britain at all. They were yet to be developed into the brilliant weapon they became!
@jeffsmith2022
@jeffsmith2022 9 ай бұрын
Lack of replacement pilots and their aeroplanes...Mr. Citino is excellent, as always...
@dennisweidner288
@dennisweidner288 7 күн бұрын
4 tom1n [22:00] is an understatement Aklmot all of the German aircraft production was single or to a lesser extent 2-engine aircraft. A substantial proportion of American and British production was 4-engine heavy bombers.
@Platanis2008
@Platanis2008 10 ай бұрын
Göering is singlehandedly one of the main 3 causes of Germany's defeat...
@marcusjohnson6412
@marcusjohnson6412 9 ай бұрын
Amen to that. Screwed up at Dunkirk. Completely botched the Battle of Britain and somehow convinced everyone he could airlift all resources into Stalingrad.
@pkfryer
@pkfryer Ай бұрын
90% of germans failure was Hitler
@pkfryer
@pkfryer Ай бұрын
​@@marcusjohnson6412you sound disappointed that evil failed. Me thinks maybe you are a neonazi
@bdleo300
@bdleo300 Ай бұрын
No he is not. Just another WW2 myth.
@reginaldmcnab3265
@reginaldmcnab3265 8 ай бұрын
9:04. Because German planes had a maximum of 15 to 20 minutes air time over Britain and damage German planes were far away from their base while British planes were flying over their territory. And also the German Air Force were diverted to the campaign against Russia.
@Leon-bc8hm
@Leon-bc8hm 3 ай бұрын
This.
@dennisweidner288
@dennisweidner288 7 күн бұрын
Cpt. Brown was a great addition to the expert commentators.
@MrMalvolio29
@MrMalvolio29 10 ай бұрын
1) The Luftwaffe never seriously tried to develop the sort of four-engine heavy-bomber that would be needed across the vast distances of the Eastern Front, and, conceivably, one day against the United States. 2) Early on in the war Germany’s vast military apparatus began to run short on absolutely crucial raw materials such as fuel. 3) Bc of the early successes of dive bombers such as the JU-87 in the Spanish Civil War and in Poland, an absurd emphasis was placed on all subsequent German bombers that they too should be able to dive-bomb--this produced several “jacks of all trades,” which were competent, but *excelled* at none of the several roles they were expected to fill. 4) Germany’s Luftwaffe never had an integrated, early-warning, air-defense *SYSTEM* such as that developed by Dowding in Britain for the protection against mass, round-the clock (eventually well-escorted) fleets of bombers such as the Halifax, Avro Lancaster, and zUs B-17 Flying Fortresses carpet-bombing German cities. 5) And, finally, Germany invested far too much time, energy, resources, and effort into projects it swiftly abandoned (such as “The German Mosquito”). Even the projects that could be made to work such as the ME 262 jet (“Schwalbe”) could be produced in too small quantities, were often unreliable bc of characteristic German over-engineering; and bc of resentful slave-labour Germany was using in its underground, cramped, and dark production facilities late bc Allied bombing had destroyed most surface complexes.
@janskovjensen
@janskovjensen 10 ай бұрын
Fore engine cut altso have a inpact on the war i the Atlantic theatre
@charlesfaure1189
@charlesfaure1189 10 ай бұрын
1) is one of those tales ginned up by bad historians that continues to influence minds. The bombing campaigns against Germany took years and vast numbers of bombers and escort fighters to become effective, with enormous costs in money, fuel, and aircrew lives. The Germans didn't have the resources to maintain the force they had. Shortages kept the Bf 109 in service beyond its peak because the Germans couldn't afford to replace it. An effective heavy bomber force, not to mention escort fighters, was never an option.
@MrMalvolio29
@MrMalvolio29 10 ай бұрын
@@charlesfaure1189 , there’s no reason to bo so aggressive and insulting. I assure you: many, many historians of Weimar and pre-WWII Germany have pointed out *precisely* what I pointed out about the Luftwaffe’s lack of interest in developing a four-engine heavy-bomber. OF COURSE as the war dragged on past 1942 the shortages (WHICH I *MENTIONED* IN MY ORIGINAL POST) made it more and more difficult for Germany to succeed at this; yet if all the money and resources WASTED on “wonder weapons” and obvious OFFENSIVE weapons (such as the Sturmtiger) when Germany was clearly fighting a DEFENSIVE war after 1943 had been spent on developing a heavy bomber fleet (rather than more and more dive-bombing-capable/ground support/jacks of all trades) Germany would at least have been paying attention to their own experts, such as Walther Wever, who had said Germany would *never* have the ability to defeat the USSR in an all-out war unless it used STRATEGIC BOMBING THAT WOULD BE POSSIBLE *ONLY* IF GERMANY DEVELOPED AND USED A FLEET OF HEAVY, FOUR-ENGINE BOMBERS TO TRAVERSE THE VAST DISTANCES OF THE SOVIET INTERIOR. If Wever had not died in a plane crash before the war, perhaps Germany’s massive and fatal over-dedication to the concept of the Schnellbomber could have been forestalled.
@ricardoalegria4064
@ricardoalegria4064 8 ай бұрын
El gran error de Alemania fue atacar a Rusia dónde fueron demolidos ahí perdieron la gerra . Con aprecio Ricardo Alegria Zambrano Popayan cauca Colombia
@joaoleaolyrio9217
@joaoleaolyrio9217 6 ай бұрын
Só tinha capacidade para Blitzkrieg, jamais uma Grande Guerra !
@johnedwards3621
@johnedwards3621 2 ай бұрын
Germany lacked essential chromium for turbines. The Nathan Price designed the axial flow engine L1000 based on steam turbines. The US saw no need to develop it. Gerhard Neumann (GE -Lynn MA) solved compressor stall. The ME 263 used guns that fired vertically, triggered by the shadow cast when they flew beneath a bomber, triggered by photo electric effect - based on Einstein’s only Nobel prize. Hap Arnold had been very skeptical of jets until Kelly Johnson and Nathan Price to visit England and ask what they thought- Their reply was “would you like to see one?” That’s how Kelly got to have complete control his Skonk works. Garrett developed the technology for turbo chargers for pressurizers. Everything was there to make a reliable jet engine
@jamesdugan3835
@jamesdugan3835 Ай бұрын
Very informative, but way too many ads
@Dronescapes
@Dronescapes Ай бұрын
thank you. By the way, if you have KZfaq Premium, you will never see an ad again. You might want to look into that option.
@giancarlogarlaschi4388
@giancarlogarlaschi4388 10 ай бұрын
The Heinkel 177 " Greif " Bomber had paired engines , not one after another ( tandem ). Then , you don't Need Speed on a dive bomb attack , you need speed brakes. Then , the Germans licensed the Italians to build the Daimler Benz Engine, it was done by Alfa Romeo ( " Tifone " ). Who are these so called " Historians " ?
@berndbrakemeier1418
@berndbrakemeier1418 10 ай бұрын
hier und auf jeder anderen amerikanischen oder britischen Quelle gibt es keine Historiker! Nur den Narrativ des Siegers! Komödie!
@bertplank8011
@bertplank8011 10 ай бұрын
​@@berndbrakemeier1418And if Germany had won,which it didnt,the situation would have been reversed...
@DataWaveTaGo
@DataWaveTaGo 10 ай бұрын
*He 177 Operations in Russia* The end of He l 77 operations in the West was by no means the end of the He 177 in Luftwaffe service. During the late spring of 1944, Kampfgeschwader l under Obstlt Horst van Riesen began converting to the aircraft, the first Gruppe moving to its operational airfields in East Prussia in May. Before the end of the month, 1./KG 1 was joined by II and III. Gruppe, and the Geschwader now comprised some ninety He l 77As, undoubtedly the most powerful striking force on the Eastern Front. Operations began almost at once, the bombers striking at troop concentrations and Soviet supply centres in support of the German army. No attempt was made to strike at strategic targets although many were within range. The bombers attacked in daylight at about 6,000 m (20,000 ft) and losses were very low. The few Soviet fighters that managed to reach the bombers' attacking altitude rarely pressed home their attacks because of the formidable defensive armament of the He 177. Also, very few He 177s were lost because of engine fires; constant modifications had ensured that troubles suffered by the coupled engine installation were reduced to a minimum. The machines that did crash due to this cause were mainly those flown by inexperienced pilots who mishandled the throttles, causing the engines to overheat. At one time, KG 1 made several pattern bombing attacks, the only time such tactics were employed by the Luftwaffe. During one such operation, von Riesen led 87 bombers in a mass attack on the railway centre of Velikye Luki. Flying in three waves, each comprising a Gruppe of some 30 aircraft, the He 177s must have been a most impressive sight. From: “German Aircraft of the Second World War” by J. R. Smith & Antony L. Kay Pages 187 to 188 Copyright 1972 ISBN 85177 836 4
@momotheelder7124
@momotheelder7124 9 ай бұрын
It is crazy to consider how quickly aircraft entered service, very soon to be forgotten due to the end of the war. Burt you make an important point about the He-177 which is not often understood-that the kinks were eventually ironed out, but time had simply run out for them to be effectively used. The B-29 had similarly serious issues, but had the luxury of time.
@markgranger9150
@markgranger9150 9 ай бұрын
The HE177 grief or as the German pilots called it the lighter like the 262 would have increased the war if they came in on.time. This theory of a better plane is silly. Which aircraft is the best? That is easy to answer; the one that is in the air, the one that flies over the other airfields at 10 feet with guns and rockets and bombs. It is that simple and the proof is the broken and burnt planes that litter the fields. That is how the Luftwaffe gained air superiority over its enemies. The Luftwaffe in fighter v fighter fights were beating the RAF but failed to gain air superiority, they could not catch the British on the ground. The 262 didn't have the ability to escort bombers. The he 177 did not have the numbers (1000 planes) and they were used on the eastern front where air combat was at medium altitude. No matter that they had a high altitude they would have been destroyed on the ground.
@DataWaveTaGo
@DataWaveTaGo 9 ай бұрын
@@markgranger9150 Thanks for repeating facts that others may not be aware of, however you should avoid presenting them in the form of 'opinion' and 'compressed personal bias". This is why I quote authoritative books verbatim.
@331SVTCobra
@331SVTCobra 7 ай бұрын
Counterpoint to early German successes: 1. The quick victory in Poland can be attributed to the fact that the Soviet Union invaded before Germany got bogged down. Poland's tactic in fighting Germany was to trade land for time, exactly how Ukraine started its defense against Putin's attack. So the "quick victory" was due to the Soviet Union as much as (or more than) any sort of blitzkrieg tactics. 2. The invasion of France was a stunning success in large part because mobile German forces broadly interpreted their orders to keep attacking. The general staff had ordered Rommel, for example, to establish a bridgehead, which he did. Then he kept going. At times the general staff had no idea where he was and they wanted to court martial him. He was so deep into France that he had his panzers roll up to French gas stations for fuel. What he accomplished was to smash enemy logistics and communication, and maneuver before the French generals could decide what to do about his last reported location. That's not really blitzkrieg so much as it's old fashioned war of maneuver.
@richardharmon647
@richardharmon647 6 ай бұрын
Poland's 7tp tank was actually superior to many of the German tanks at the time but was not used in a way that took advantage of its strength. Also France and Poland were not using tactics that were suited to repelling a blitzkrieg attack.
@michaelmorse7627
@michaelmorse7627 10 ай бұрын
The first half is an acute analysis of Luftwaffe failure. But the detailed analysis of the Me262, interesting as it is, should be exported to a different video.
@snotnosewilly99
@snotnosewilly99 10 ай бұрын
No oil.
@raypurchase801
@raypurchase801 10 ай бұрын
BIGGEST LUFTWAFFE MISTAKE: Not shooting Hitler and Goering in the head in 1938.
@markgranger9150
@markgranger9150 9 ай бұрын
Germany would not have gone to war if not for Hitler. In the start of Germany's road to world conflict,Hitler had predicted the other countries actions. He won territory without fighting. When fighting started Poland and France went better than planned. Lucky for the rest of the world his second half of his leadership was not even up to a fight with anyone. How are you going to get rid Of a guy who is popular and is on a streak?
@richardharmon647
@richardharmon647 6 ай бұрын
Your reply made me chuckle😊
@joew.7529
@joew.7529 16 күн бұрын
great video. but why... why the bad audio??
@ericerto8250
@ericerto8250 Ай бұрын
I wonder what the wright brothers would think about how important and how deadly planes have become
@user-hf7hn9rl5g
@user-hf7hn9rl5g 7 ай бұрын
Please note it was the UK that was under threat , not just England . True English cities were pounded but repelled by the Uk , people from all over the UK were involved .
@duncanmacmillan5558
@duncanmacmillan5558 3 ай бұрын
Glasgow ,Belfast Cardiff to name but a few .
@joseph-ge5om
@joseph-ge5om 2 ай бұрын
@@duncanmacmillan5558 In fact the first place Bombed by the Nazis was in Scotland And more than 200 enemy aircraft were shot down on Scottish territory. Although Peterhead was attacked more times than any other Scottish town, Clydebank suffered the greatest loss of life in one raid - the Clydebank Blitz.
@ButcherBird-FW190D
@ButcherBird-FW190D 10 ай бұрын
GREAT video, and I adore it. Noting, as to the fastest piston-engined aircraft in WWII... The M an N models of the P47-Jug hit 500mph plus on rather frequent occasion. Just an FYI.
@SeniorDrummer
@SeniorDrummer 10 ай бұрын
The “Jug” was an awesome airplane ! Huge compared to other single seat fighters of the time. I don’t doubt the 500 MPH figure you said. Pilot said they had control problems in high speed dives that we know now are compressibility issues. But the jugs best attribute was durability. They was a story of a badly shot up jug that had the misfortune of running into a German Ace, who thought he had an easy kill to add to his considerable numbers. He used up all his ammunition, shook his head, saluted and flew away without shooting it down. The pilot stopped counting at 100 holes back at base .
@nickrockz97
@nickrockz97 10 ай бұрын
@@mrwhips3623exactly. or even 13mm rounds, the germans were late to adopt the heavy machine gun and used the weak 8mm mauser until late in the conflict.
@jonathanpersson1205
@jonathanpersson1205 10 ай бұрын
The N model was also longer ranged than the P51. It came out fairly late in the war and was only used in the Pacific
@SNP-1999
@SNP-1999 4 ай бұрын
The balls up with the Me 210 was caused by Willi Messerschmitt himself, who instead of improving the Me 110 - as he had been instructed to - went totally off the board and developed a completely new aircraft full of failures - like the whole plane itself. Only the modified version Me 410 was any good, but the time and resources that had been wasted in the meantime could not be recovered.
@kenwelckle367
@kenwelckle367 3 ай бұрын
1. Germany not developing a strategic bomber. 2. It was over stretched. 3. It's pilot flown until they were killed, capture, or wounded.
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