The Ace No One Could Hit

  Рет қаралды 1,046,529

Yarnhub

Yarnhub

Күн бұрын

Hit join to become a member and get exclusive perks / @yarnhub
Check out our exclusive merch yarnhubstore.com
Join us on Discord / discord
00:00 The Flying Knight fights the enemy
02:05 Juutilainen attacks the soviet bomber formation
05:07 Another call of duty
06:22 Low fuel doesn’t stop Juutilainen
07:26 La-5 is back for epic battle
08:49 A vertical dive…
09:53 Back at the base
On June 30, 1944, Finnish Flying Knight Ilmari Juutilainen expertly engaged a Soviet P-39. Despite the enemy's attempts to escape, Juutilainen's precise shooting downed the plane, which crashed into a village below. Juutilainen immediately joined his squadron's pursuit of fleeing Airacobras.
The next challenge came from a formation of Yak-9s leading hundreds of Pe-2 bombers, escorted by La-5 fighters. Despite the odds, Juutilainen and his squadron charged into the fray, shooting down several Yaks before turning their attention to the bombers. The enemy defenses forced them off the attack run, causing Juutilainen to engage in a dogfight before the bombers dropped their payloads.
Rejoining the battle, he spotted a new threat: a large formation of Pe-2 bombers, IL-2 ground attackers, and La-5 escorts. Low on fuel, Juutilainen and his team made the risky decision to engage. After a tense dogfight with an evasive La-5, Juutilainen targeted an IL-2 Sturmovik, shooting it down before being pursued by the La-5.
The final confrontation with the La-5 resulted in Juutilainen triumphing once again, utilizing a clever energy trap to bring down the enemy. Returning to base running on fumes, Juutilainen and his squadron remarkably suffered no losses, with Juutilainen himself achieving 6 victories in one day, without a single scratch on his plane from enemy fire.
Yarnhub uses the Unreal® Engine. Unreal® is a trademark or registered trademark of Epic Games, Inc. in the United States of America and elsewhere. “Unreal® Engine, Copyright 1998 - 2023, Epic Games, Inc. All rights reserved.”

Пікірлер: 1 500
@Yarnhub
@Yarnhub 11 ай бұрын
We know the markings are not correct. We have to do this for monetization purposes and to make sure the video doesn't get deleted on some platforms. If we had more members we could worry less about monetization, so please help by joining our memberships kzfaq.info/love/-f2WBfSCZiu0bOBydjot3wjoin or buy some great merch !yarnhubstore.com
@jamesdelong16
@jamesdelong16 11 ай бұрын
First
@WarhammerLamenter
@WarhammerLamenter 11 ай бұрын
Will never understand the reason to why we need to censor history but hey at least it can still be shown
@thatonetanker1436
@thatonetanker1436 11 ай бұрын
Awesome vid guys! Keep it up, your dedication is so unreal, releasing these amazing videos constantly every Friday, I don’t understand how you legends do this.
@mayonnaise9967
@mayonnaise9967 11 ай бұрын
5th
@mayonnaise9967
@mayonnaise9967 11 ай бұрын
4th*
@smigoltime
@smigoltime 11 ай бұрын
You should do one about Lt. Sarvanto and the famous "3 minute job". The day a lone Fokker D.XXI in Winter War shot down 6 DB-3s under 4 minutes simultaneously setting a world record for the fastest ace in a flight.
@olafkwiatkowski3785
@olafkwiatkowski3785 11 ай бұрын
oh hi smigol
@TheGrace020
@TheGrace020 11 ай бұрын
YOOOOO SMIGGA :DDD
@pabloteixido2155
@pabloteixido2155 11 ай бұрын
That sound awesome. Hi smigol.
@aviationdeepdive
@aviationdeepdive 11 ай бұрын
I have a video on this topic :)
@dark-terrain-yt3598
@dark-terrain-yt3598 11 ай бұрын
Wasn't the world record some Pakistani pilot who downed 5 in a minute?
@arnonart
@arnonart 11 ай бұрын
as a finnish citizen i appreciate your efforts to brings stories from this part of the war. i believe he held a world record for many years.
@LostShipMate
@LostShipMate 11 ай бұрын
Which world record out of curiosity?
@Tuulos
@Tuulos 11 ай бұрын
@@LostShipMate He's the highest scoring non-German pilot of all times is the only one I can find.
@pacus123
@pacus123 11 ай бұрын
He was a Nazi through and through. He got his kicks out of murdering women and children who he believed were inferior to him. Is that something you really feel proud of?
@stalinnotballen7592
@stalinnotballen7592 11 ай бұрын
🇫🇮🇫🇮🇫🇮🇫🇮🇫🇮🇫🇮🇫🇮flag
@DocLeQuack
@DocLeQuack 11 ай бұрын
@@Tuulosand no German should wish for anyone other but a Finn to challenge us.
@ristinritarit
@ristinritarit 11 ай бұрын
Few facts about Ilmari Juutilaine: Top scoring non-German Ace of World War 2 94 Confirmed aerial combat victories. 1 of the 4 recipients that received Mannerheim Cross twice. Was a brother of Aarne "The Terror of Morocco" Juutilainen, CO of JR/34 (infantry Regiment 34), the same regiment where The Legenday Sniper, Simo Häyhä served during Winter War. His last flight was in F-18 Hornet in 1997, at age of 83.
@iiberlin
@iiberlin 11 ай бұрын
It's quite astonishing that this man was not only the ace he was, not getting hit a single time, but also that he was related to Aarne and led Simo as well.
@anilkumarsharma9905
@anilkumarsharma9905 10 ай бұрын
4:51 ea sports
@Stoddardian
@Stoddardian 5 ай бұрын
The Axis powers had the biggest badasses of the war. Period.
@yellowprime8491
@yellowprime8491 5 ай бұрын
​@@Stoddardian while Finland was an ally with Germany against the USSR, they were not formally part of a the Axis Powers. Also notable Finnish Jews and refugees were safe from the Nazi's.
@BoxStudioExecutive
@BoxStudioExecutive 4 ай бұрын
@@Stoddardian No, just the biggest criminals
@AlreadyTakenTag
@AlreadyTakenTag 11 ай бұрын
It's amazing that the last aircraft Ilmari Juutilainen flew was an F-18 Hornet.
@deanfirnatine7814
@deanfirnatine7814 11 ай бұрын
So awesome he got a chance to fly one of those
@jordanbrydon3809
@jordanbrydon3809 11 ай бұрын
thats actually nuts
@Revener666
@Revener666 11 ай бұрын
He did not pilot the F-18 though.
@fieldkitchen
@fieldkitchen 11 ай бұрын
When we flew back to Canada in 1992 Juutilainen’s son was the pilot on the flight to Copenhagen. Was able to go to the cockpit to discuss. Month later he sent his father’s autographed photo in the mail.
@17MrLeon
@17MrLeon 10 ай бұрын
@@Revener666 ok then its not as amazing
@thatonetanker1436
@thatonetanker1436 11 ай бұрын
A great story from the Finnish side of WWII, something not often told. 🇫🇮
@budgietube1895
@budgietube1895 11 ай бұрын
True
@ohioxboxcollection4838
@ohioxboxcollection4838 11 ай бұрын
@@user-yn3wp2ux7wthe soviets lied about nearly everything.
@AsrielDreemurYT653
@AsrielDreemurYT653 11 ай бұрын
@@user-yn3wp2ux7w coping after 80 years, pathetic.
@user-yn3wp2ux7w
@user-yn3wp2ux7w 11 ай бұрын
@@AsrielDreemurYT653 спасибо за ответ... самое время . архивы открыты , все можно посчитать... тем боее это 1944 год , опыт советских летчиков на высоте.. а у финнов старая техника , в том числе и самолеты
@MRtapio5
@MRtapio5 11 ай бұрын
​@@user-yn3wp2ux7wputinist spotted
@jacobzehner2004
@jacobzehner2004 11 ай бұрын
another forgotten tale. The Finn’s thank you guys for making these. 🇫🇮
@deanfirnatine7814
@deanfirnatine7814 11 ай бұрын
Everybody loves the Fighting Finns, well except the Russians, lol.
@connorbranscombe6819
@connorbranscombe6819 11 ай бұрын
@@deanfirnatine7814 The Germans were also kinda unhappy in 1945.
@villekyllonen1118
@villekyllonen1118 11 ай бұрын
bot
@artos9406
@artos9406 11 ай бұрын
@@connorbranscombe6819 I think Germans had more problems in homeland
@Snake-ms7sj
@Snake-ms7sj 11 ай бұрын
@@deanfirnatine7814 The Finns were beating the Russians in ground battles like 10-1 kill ratio until the Russians overwhelmed them by sheer mass of numbers that the Finns couldn't match.
@finntastique3891
@finntastique3891 11 ай бұрын
Ilmari Juutilainen was the highest scoring fighter ace of WWII outside Germany, with 94 confirmed kills.
@infernalstormrider
@infernalstormrider 3 ай бұрын
He had pretty tough brother also . Marokon Kauhu perkele 🇫🇮
@Soap.--
@Soap.-- Ай бұрын
wild how 100 pilots with most air victories are all german though, 103 with over 100 and no other nation had a pilot who reached the 100 mark
@user-tj3cy8kd7l
@user-tj3cy8kd7l 3 күн бұрын
as Ilmari utilainen was named after the war. In general, it is worth noting that in 1943, when the Finnish Air Force was able to renovate its aircraft fleet, fighter groups (LeLv) had a kind of hodgepodge of different cars from Brewsters, P-40, Hurricanes, captured Soviet I-153 and I-15 and captured French "Morans" given by the Germans. This whole set of flying rarities was already irrelevant for the second half of the war. which shows that Ilmari Utilainen was, to put it mildly, a little objective ace. Most of his victories of this period are not confirmed, and in some cases they look like outright fantasy, because the Finnish pilot issued victories when there was not even a hint of a fight from the Soviet side. Of course, he had real successes, but their number is clearly not 94. At the same time, the example of Utilainen should not mislead that all Finnish pilots were outright liars
@blazerayanami5979
@blazerayanami5979 11 ай бұрын
The thing that I like the most about this channel is that it shows stories from all the countries involved in WW2. Americans, British, Soviets, Germans, Japanese, even the Finns! That's amazing. Better than most mainstream channels that only show stories about the Americans. Keep it up, Yarnhub!
@courtlandstavley6178
@courtlandstavley6178 11 ай бұрын
Man gotta say the Finns in WWII had some absolutely badass heroes in the air and on the ground.
@juhawallden8630
@juhawallden8630 11 ай бұрын
AND at sea too. ☝️ For example, how capt. Pirhonen sank the flagship of the Baltic red fleet would make a heck of a video.
@starwarzchik112
@starwarzchik112 11 ай бұрын
Finland is like the one morally ambiguous badass character who the entire fanbase loves.
@cowboybob7093
@cowboybob7093 11 ай бұрын
@@starwarzchik112 I agree with you about badass that everyone likes. Morally ambiguous for its alignment in WW-II? USSR / Stalin invaded Finland. Finland aligned with the Axis when it invaded Russia. That's pragmatic, not morally ambiguous. Freaking Russia, by far the largest country, no good ports, _invade!_
@andro7862
@andro7862 11 ай бұрын
@@cowboybob7093 USSR invaded Finland in the Winter war in 1939, but in 1941, it was Finland that invaded the USSR.
@cowboybob7093
@cowboybob7093 11 ай бұрын
@@andro7862 Thanks, Finland a-ok
@l.a.raustadt518
@l.a.raustadt518 11 ай бұрын
Being of Finnish and German heritage love your channel.Farther/Uncle WW2 vets, Mother Finnish heritage born on the 4th of July in northern Minnesota. Learned history first hand and love to learn more. Taught to respect past and make a better future.
@sisko5751
@sisko5751 7 ай бұрын
You should definitely study the Holocaust, Dachau, Auschwitz, Triblinka health camps, one of the children's concentration camps - it was named after the city of Salaspissky - Existed 18 kilometers from the city of Riga near the city of Salaspils from October 1941 to the end of the summer of 1944. The camp became famous because of the detention of young prisoners in it, who then began to be used for blood sampling for wounded German soldiers, as a result of which children quickly died.You can google it on Wikipedia. You should find out what your grandparents fought for - you should be very proud of them.😂😅
@timoharkonen9154
@timoharkonen9154 11 ай бұрын
I had the honor to meet Ilmari just before he passed away 1999. Still remember that day to met Finland's ace of aces🇫🇮
@Creamypie626
@Creamypie626 11 ай бұрын
To score kills make you an ace, to survive the war without getting shot down will make you a legend, to be able to survive a war without receiving a single hit on your plane makes you a legend among legend.
@MutheiM_Marz
@MutheiM_Marz 7 ай бұрын
Or 352 kills and serving till 1970.
@timppao4664
@timppao4664 4 ай бұрын
Well sayed🫡
@Phantom-qr1ug
@Phantom-qr1ug 11 ай бұрын
Got another story from the Continuation War I wouldn't mind seeing you cover; that of Orvar Nilsson, one of the most decorated and highly regarded Swedish volunteers of the Second World War. Born on 20 April 1919 in Söndrums, Sweden, Nilsson quickly turned to military life, being an officer cadet in Karlberg by November 1939, at the start of the Soviet invasion of Finland. Seeing himself as having a duty to the Finnish people, Nilsson left the Swedish Army and enlisted with the Swedish Volunteer Corps (Svenska Frivilligkåren, a military force comprising 3 battalions made up of Swedish volunteers (alongside a handful of Norwegians and Danes) who fought with the Finns against the Soviets), seeing action from early January 1940 untill the war's end in March the same year, having been promoted to Översergeant (equivalent to Second Lieutenant). Following the end of the Winter War, Nilsson returned to Sweden, rejoined the army and eventually became a Löjtnant (Lieutenant) at Hallands Regemente (I 16). However, with the Continuation War still burning in Finland, by early 1943 Nilsson again fought alongside the Finns in battle, joining the Swedish Volunteer Company (Svenska Frivilligkompaniet, a company-sized unit of Swedish volunteers that were part of the Swedish-speaking Finnish regiment IR 13), taking part in the extremely fierce battles of Svir and the Karelian Isthmus, including the famed Battle of Tali-Ihantala, between 1943 and the end of the war in September 1944. During this time, Nilsson served as the company's commander, leading from the front and being wounded a number of times in battle, earning him great respect from his comrades, Swedish and Finnish alike. After the end of the war in September 1944, Nilsson returned to Sweden. Upon rejoining the Swedish army, he served as an officer and instructor at the Infantry School between 1946 and 1949, before seeing service as a Major in the Imperial Guard of Ethiopia between 1950 and 1953. During this time, he led Ethiopian troops in combat during the Korean War as part of the nation's contribution to the United Nations coalition during the war. After this, he once more returned to Sweden, continuing his service as a Major into the 1960s, where he would deploy overseas as part of the UN peacekeeping mission in Cyprus as the first two battalions' reserve commander. in 1967, he was promoted to Lieutenant Colonel, continuing to serve untill 1974. All in all, throughout his long career in times of war and peace, Lieutenant Colonel Orvar Nilsson would be awarded a number of medals and orders in recognition of his valor, including: - Knight of the Finnish Order of the White Rose -Finnish Freedom Cross of the Second Class with Sword -Swedish Volunteer Cross During his later years, he helped author the historical biography "Finland at War" by Schildts, alongside writing his own works which details his experiences of the war, these being "Small Pawn in Big game" (Liten Bricka i stort spel) and "When Finland's cause became mine" (När Finlands sak blev min). In addition to this, Nilsson worked as an advisor on the historical war film "Tali-Ihantala - The Battle of Finland" (2007) as well as being the chairman of the Swedish Volunteers' Memorial Association. He passed away on 21 December 2008 in Halmstad, Sweden, aged 89 years old.
@johncoyne2995
@johncoyne2995 11 ай бұрын
On a slightly different note,I was able to visit the Finnish Air Force museum a few years back and bought a signed print showing Hans Wind shooting down a Russian fighter. He was the number 2 Finnish ace and also won the Mannerheim cross twice
@Alastor-1929
@Alastor-1929 11 ай бұрын
I love these finnish stories! Hello from finland🇫🇮
@frankwang6715
@frankwang6715 11 ай бұрын
Exactly the stories we needed. The small battle, the small countries, the stories that media don't talk about.
@beatnik6806
@beatnik6806 10 ай бұрын
And not exactly that small fights. Soviets always struck with might and huge numbers. And Finland had hundreds of times less soldiers and hundreds times less equipment so they did pretty damn good.
@LG-io5uq
@LG-io5uq 11 ай бұрын
Okay, but the plane’s flip was so smooth. The quality of these animations astounds me every time
@timixl00
@timixl00 11 ай бұрын
Man i love these makes me feel so proud of my country. ( there is many good stories from the finnish air force during war time, hope to see more of them someday)
@pacus123
@pacus123 11 ай бұрын
They make you proud of your country? Your country was a fascist vessel state that murdered women and children because you believed they were inferior to you. Yup, that's something to really be proud about
@mdemian1968
@mdemian1968 11 ай бұрын
Unreal that Finland was on paper an ally of Germany, flying BF 109s, against Soviets flying American Airacobras. WWII is seriously complicated. Insane.
@max1mum_vel0c1ty9
@max1mum_vel0c1ty9 11 ай бұрын
I was momentarily confused about that lol
@mdemian1968
@mdemian1968 10 ай бұрын
@@yrjomatilainen8412 I know the Finns are not fans of Russia to this day. During the war various countries allied with Germany against the USSR, which the Nazis cultivated and counted on. At Stalingrad this backfired on them big time, as the non German forces were the weakest link in operation Uranus, for various reasons. Less well equipped and less motivated.
@user-pf3kv4bv5s
@user-pf3kv4bv5s 9 ай бұрын
However, surprisingly, Finns treat Russians better than Ukrainians.@@mdemian1968
@williammorris584
@williammorris584 8 ай бұрын
“Co-Belligerent”. Cooperated without ever having a formal treaty. Enough of a distinction to remove the Finns from the requirement for unconditional surrender, and so they were not occupied.
@RoyalMela
@RoyalMela 7 ай бұрын
Only thing that makes it complicated is Germany. They were an ally of Soviets from 1939 to 1941. Then they betrayed and attacked Soviets. That put Finland in weird position. Soviets were always Finnish enemies, but Germany turned from ally to enemy for Soviets. Finland had to get planes from every possible nation, when war seemed close so they had leftover planes from who knows where. They had british, dutch, italian, american, czechoslovakian, swedish and french planes. Later in the war when Germany attacked, Finland was drawn into war again, and Germany provided planes to Finland.
@johngennari2899
@johngennari2899 7 ай бұрын
Finland's air force has been using a swastika ever since it was founded in 1918, shortly after the country became an independent nation and long before Nazism devastated Europe. Until 1945 its planes bore a blue swastika on a white background - and this was not intended to show allegiance to Nazi Germany, though the two nations were aligned. While the symbol was left off planes after World War Two, a swastika still featured in some Air Force unit emblems, unit flags and decorations - including on uniforms until recently.
@Yarnhub
@Yarnhub 6 ай бұрын
We would have preferred to represent it accurately but we can't for monetization reasons on some platforms
@LancelotChan
@LancelotChan 11 ай бұрын
It's so nostalgia to see the "stall tactic" being employed by the Finnish ace! I used that often back in my time in Warbirds, luring enemies with low energy state to climb with me till they stall then I go back down on their tail, gun blazing. Of course it's a risky move and I could end up being shot from behind during the climb. Thus that shows the audacity of the protagonist in this story!
@Cycle_5
@Cycle_5 11 ай бұрын
I employed the same tactics in WB :D. Ki-84 was particularly effective. As Juutilainen would say it: "It climbed like a home sick angel". "jaybrd"
@LancelotChan
@LancelotChan 11 ай бұрын
@@Cycle_5 You're right! I flew KI84 mostly in the game Warbirds because it climbs so good that saved me hourly fee to get to the right altitude to fight. :D
@masafarmi7709
@masafarmi7709 7 ай бұрын
Zeroes used this trick on F4 Wildcats in Pacific also, until F6 came out.
@jeremyfox1511
@jeremyfox1511 11 ай бұрын
The more stories I watch about the Finns, the more I respect and admire them
@phazedscrubs
@phazedscrubs 11 ай бұрын
The flyby noise of the aircrafts fascinates me so much, I can never get enough of it.
@danielimpett1277
@danielimpett1277 11 ай бұрын
I bloody love you guys, you always throw us into the emotions, actions and heroics like no other.. I cant imagine watching one of your videos and not wanting to subscribe so I can see the next story, I subscribed about 2 minutes into a pretty old video because of how much I was loving it. You guys rock, can't wait for the next one 🤘
@raikouxd7091
@raikouxd7091 11 ай бұрын
The animation just keeps getting better
@AuntyAlbert
@AuntyAlbert 11 ай бұрын
Finnish stories are just too good to pass up. Thank you for uncovering these stories
@user-tj3cy8kd7l
@user-tj3cy8kd7l 3 күн бұрын
as Ilmari utilainen was named after the war. In general, it is worth noting that in 1943, when the Finnish Air Force was able to renovate its aircraft fleet, fighter groups (LeLv) had a kind of hodgepodge of different cars from Brewsters, P-40, Hurricanes, captured Soviet I-153 and I-15 and captured French "Morans" given by the Germans. This whole set of flying rarities was already irrelevant for the second half of the war. which shows that Ilmari Utilainen was, to put it mildly, a little objective ace. Most of his victories of this period are not confirmed, and in some cases they look like outright fantasy, because the Finnish pilot issued victories when there was not even a hint of a fight from the Soviet side. Of course, he had real successes, but their number is clearly not 94. At the same time, the example of Utilainen should not mislead that all Finnish pilots were outright liars
@dhaniynr.2714
@dhaniynr.2714 11 ай бұрын
I believe that all countries have their own stories of victory, but there are still many stories that have yet to be told. good job yarnhub, because of you, i can see any pov from ww2 itself.
@pokefan-ix7sh
@pokefan-ix7sh 11 ай бұрын
Eino Ilmari "Illu" Juutilainen was a fighter pilot of the Ilmavoimat, and the top scoring non-German fighter pilot of all time. The top flying ace of the Finnish Air Force, he led all Finnish pilots in score against Soviet aircraft in World War II, with 94 confirmed aerial combat victories in 437 sorties. He achieved 34 of his victories while flying the Brewster Buffalo fighter. One of the four double recipients of the Mannerheim Cross 2nd Class, Juutilainen was born in Lieksa, and died in Tuusula. His brother was the Finnish Army Captain Aarne Juutilainen, nicknamed "The Terror of Morocco".
@Kuutti_original
@Kuutti_original 7 ай бұрын
Also Simo Häyhä or better known "the White Death" fought under his command. (Highest scoring sniper in any war 505-542 confirmed kills in a bit over 100 days)
@bruh-xp9zf
@bruh-xp9zf 11 ай бұрын
I couldn't help but be sad about how little-known you are for how great your video quality is. Keep it up!
@danmc7815
@danmc7815 6 ай бұрын
Ilmari Juutilianen also had a brother, Aarne, known as the Terror of Morocco for what he did while in the French Foreign Legion. Aarne also fought during the Winter War(s) for which he too was considered a Finnish hero. Their family knew how to raise bad azz men.
@MH-ny7oq
@MH-ny7oq 11 ай бұрын
Once Juutilainen explained on the interview, that other airforces trained pilots to hit the enemy plane. Finnish pilots practised to hit the specific part of the enemy plane. Good video, thanks.
@michaelbenjmitchell1
@michaelbenjmitchell1 9 ай бұрын
It is also in a small part due to Finland being a nation of marksmen with Finns at a early age learning to shoot and that training comes in handy whatever profession they take in the Military. They are so good they can shoot the nuts off of a fly while it in in flight over a mile away.
@zeyadtamir9018
@zeyadtamir9018 11 ай бұрын
i swear i started watching this channel from 2022 and i've never been disappointed
@vice-grip
@vice-grip 11 ай бұрын
My great grandfather served in the 22nd pursuit squadron along with some other notable people in Royal Hellenic Air Force during the Second world war when the Germans invaded. He was one of few to serve in the Hellenic Air force and hailed from a military family. He piloted a Polish PZL 24 fighter. He was based on an airfield in Thessaloniki, Greece. He assisted in shooting down an Italian Bomber in November 2nd, 1940. He didn’t make it to the last 28 planes of Greece’s Air force.
@indrahaseo
@indrahaseo 11 ай бұрын
8:45 what a perfect headhammer maneuvers just like redbaron!
@praatman
@praatman 11 ай бұрын
Fantastic! Thanks for making this video of llmari Juutilainen. He was one of the best!
@user-tj3cy8kd7l
@user-tj3cy8kd7l 3 күн бұрын
as Ilmari utilainen was named after the war. In general, it is worth noting that in 1943, when the Finnish Air Force was able to renovate its aircraft fleet, fighter groups (LeLv) had a kind of hodgepodge of different cars from Brewsters, P-40, Hurricanes, captured Soviet I-153 and I-15 and captured French "Morans" given by the Germans. This whole set of flying rarities was already irrelevant for the second half of the war. which shows that Ilmari Utilainen was, to put it mildly, a little objective ace. Most of his victories of this period are not confirmed, and in some cases they look like outright fantasy, because the Finnish pilot issued victories when there was not even a hint of a fight from the Soviet side. Of course, he had real successes, but their number is clearly not 94. At the same time, the example of Utilainen should not mislead that all Finnish pilots were outright liars
@D4rkn3ss2000
@D4rkn3ss2000 11 ай бұрын
I originaly learned about great WWII ace pilots like Ilmari Juutilainen from the Strike Witches anime 😂 In all seriousness. What a great pilot. Not even a scratch on his plane.
@Darjeeling__
@Darjeeling__ 11 ай бұрын
Eyyyy same here! Oddly enough, was my first (modern) anime.
@jounisuninen
@jounisuninen 11 ай бұрын
I recall Juutilainen got some hits from Soviet AA -guns but I´m not sure.
@zahnstein1083
@zahnstein1083 9 ай бұрын
Großartiger Flieger und furchtloser Krieger. Ein Vorbild für die Verteidiger Finnlands .
@RogueAce93
@RogueAce93 11 ай бұрын
Awesome take on Finland’s ace of aces, guys! Keep it up with these amazing aviator stories! They deserve to be known!
@csbanki
@csbanki 11 ай бұрын
Finnland could fill a museum with it's legends, respect! Thank you Yarnhub for these incredible videos!
@Itapirkanmaa2
@Itapirkanmaa2 11 ай бұрын
His collar patches are post-war in the clip, signifying a sotilasmestari. The wartime lentomestari would either have had just one sword, pointing upwards, or the sword added to an ylivääpeli (one rank below lentomestari) markings. In 1952 all the remaining lentomestaris in service would be made sotilasmestaris so that the rank would be the same across the branches.
@J4NTT3R1
@J4NTT3R1 11 ай бұрын
Absolutely beautiful work! Also this sounds amazing! Greetings from Finland!
@Hilversumborn
@Hilversumborn 11 ай бұрын
Ilmari’s brother also deserves a video.
@Yarnhub
@Yarnhub 11 ай бұрын
Yes. We're thinking about that one....
@bighobo7745
@bighobo7745 11 ай бұрын
Anyone known by the nickname "terror of Morocco" probably has a story or two to tell..
@juhawallden8630
@juhawallden8630 11 ай бұрын
​@@bighobo7745 well... he was sacked from the Finnish army for misconduct, so he decided to join the French Foreign Legion, was deployed to Morocco and saw serious action there.... and THEN it starts to get really crazy.😂
@janmale7767
@janmale7767 10 ай бұрын
The Fins are a remarkably resilient people ,fighting the mighty Soviet union with such tenacity and marshall vigour!
@archer-0251
@archer-0251 11 ай бұрын
Another great video. My only complaint is the censorship... in History that shouldn't exist.
@Yarnhub
@Yarnhub 11 ай бұрын
Please check the pinned comment
@AppleHistoryGuy
@AppleHistoryGuy 11 ай бұрын
I would love it if Yarnhub did a video on the Monchy 9 of Newfoundland. 9 men of the Royal Newfoundland Regiment positioned at Monchy-le-Preux during the Battle of Arras in 1917 hid behind shrubbery and defended the town from a German force anywhere from 200 - 300 men strong for 11 hours to prevent a German break through. I think it is a very cool and very underrated battle that sounds like the plot of a movie.
@michaelfrench3396
@michaelfrench3396 11 ай бұрын
Every time you guys post a video, I find myself thinking wow that's their best one yet! This is no exception. It's a great video! It's been a pleasure to watching you guys grow and get better and better at your craft. Keep up the great work! Have a great weekend!
@D_Antagonist
@D_Antagonist 11 ай бұрын
That dogfight at the end....... perfect 💯
@Spitfiresammons
@Spitfiresammons 11 ай бұрын
Well Interesting Finland war ace story I would love to hear more Finland aces story. fantastic story Yarnhub
@estellemelodimitchell8259
@estellemelodimitchell8259 11 ай бұрын
Holy moly, the last dogfight with the Cobra maneuver could have been a scene out of Top Gun Maverick!
@gr0bbelaar
@gr0bbelaar 11 ай бұрын
This should be viewed with Säkkijärven Polka in the background for best effect.
@hansvonmannschaft9062
@hansvonmannschaft9062 11 ай бұрын
I love the fact that you begin the narration as if you were doing an introduction, but nope, you never stop! You don't go back in time, or pause to add info nobody asked for, no no, you begin with the main subject, and follow through. Man, I wish everyone in every channel did this, instead of teasing, and then wanting to create suspense or something. Oh and by the way, where was the cat on this one? 😺😀 Thanks a ton for another great vid! Keep up this amazing job you guys are doing!😀👍🏼
@Yarnhub
@Yarnhub 11 ай бұрын
Thank you. He's there towards the end !
@hansvonmannschaft9062
@hansvonmannschaft9062 11 ай бұрын
@@Yarnhub You're very welcome! And found him, resting on the grass near the runway haha!
@pavehawk10
@pavehawk10 11 ай бұрын
@@Yarnhubdo the Uss Laffey next
@manuelyanez1511
@manuelyanez1511 11 ай бұрын
True ace. What an incredible story. He was not only capable, he was also precise and focused, a true hero for Finland. What a man, what a story.... Thank you.
@golenkopavlo
@golenkopavlo 2 ай бұрын
I don't believe that Gustav bf109g can outcome La-5 in vertical maneuver.
@varunprakash6207
@varunprakash6207 11 ай бұрын
The amazing last aircraft llmari Juutialinen flew was on F- 18 Hornet ...The ace no one could Hit Wow amazing animation 👌 by Yarn Hub team 👏 voice 🎤 over semma
@abhaykhanka5995
@abhaykhanka5995 11 ай бұрын
the graphics are better than some hollywood productions
@International_Corn
@International_Corn 11 ай бұрын
"U can't C me" -John Cena "You can't hit me" -Ilmari Juutilainen
@timelwell7002
@timelwell7002 6 ай бұрын
Great video. We don't get to hear much about what happened to Finland in WW2. Finalnd was forced to seek help from Nazi Germany when Russia invaded - hence the Finnish Air Force having ME109s, supplied by the 3rd Reich.
@-hazelnutcoffee-
@-hazelnutcoffee- 11 ай бұрын
Another great story from my great homeland :)
@tolambertucci
@tolambertucci 11 ай бұрын
i love this channel, thanks for animating this incredible storys
@pacus123
@pacus123 11 ай бұрын
Well at least you got this right. These are just stories. They are not grounded in any reality. They made for fantastic propaganda but didn't change the outcome of the war. A reminder, the Nazis lost!
@eberhardroosmets835
@eberhardroosmets835 6 ай бұрын
Juudilainen's plane was not hit by any enemy bullets! But the air defense hit his plane with a few bullets..He himself said that he actually has 128 aerial victories!
@wolfganggugelweith8760
@wolfganggugelweith8760 11 ай бұрын
Our Finish allies were very good pilots! Greetings from Linz Austria 🇦🇹 Europe!
@brandongaines1731
@brandongaines1731 11 ай бұрын
It's all too easy to forget that most of the Axis' boots-on-the-ground during WWII were simply fighting to defend their homelands. Thanks, @Yarnhub, for helping us to keep that perspective!
@samik83
@samik83 11 ай бұрын
The animation and attention to detail is off the charts. Even the pilot was modeled to his real likeness. Google ilmari Juutilainen and it looks just like him.
@Yarnhub
@Yarnhub 11 ай бұрын
Thanks for noticing:)
@frankwaugh1894
@frankwaugh1894 8 ай бұрын
Magnificent video. Well done on an ace that very few people are familiar with.
@nathandeal9703
@nathandeal9703 11 ай бұрын
This was amazing! Please do more stories like this from other forgotten fronts of this war!
@bartman2519
@bartman2519 11 ай бұрын
the cinematography on yarnhub has improved tenfold
@GEU1164
@GEU1164 11 ай бұрын
I think the Finnish side of WW2 is definitely one of the most interesting sides
@davidcolley7714
@davidcolley7714 11 ай бұрын
The Finnish side of the war is the same as the Nazi side of the war, both lost and Russia still has part of Finland to prove it
@hb9145
@hb9145 9 ай бұрын
@@davidcolley7714 It was all pragmatism, like how Britain, France and the US became allies with the country that invaded Finland, not to mention Poland with Hitler. At least Finland declared war against their former ally in 1945.
@vincentking9980
@vincentking9980 8 ай бұрын
Agreed.. Romania as well.
@RoyalMela
@RoyalMela 7 ай бұрын
@@davidcolley7714 Totally wrong. Finland was in war against Soviets. Finland were not nazis. Finns fought Soviets from 1939-40 and 1941-45. During that time Germany switched from Soviet ally to Soviets enemy. That made Finnish situation different, when Germany and Soviets went from allies to enemies.
@somnamnaa
@somnamnaa 6 ай бұрын
@@davidcolley7714 Bullshit. You completely forget the winter war, where the USA, UK and many others supported Finland and the Soviet Union had an agreement with Hitler that time. The Finns fought specifically against the Russians, no matter who is the ally. If they not fight that time, they cannot stay independent, and the fate would have been the same as baltic states.
@mhh7544
@mhh7544 11 ай бұрын
His brother, is equally legendary, company commander Aarne "terror of Morocco" Juutilainen, ex French Foreign Legionnare who during the winter war disobeyd orders to retreat, and saved the front.
@markoppelt369
@markoppelt369 11 ай бұрын
Love this channel. I am part Finnish. Its good to hear stories from another perspective.
@zaknoten7854
@zaknoten7854 11 ай бұрын
Very nicely animated man. You guys are making a lot of progress
@Kilen_BE
@Kilen_BE 11 ай бұрын
Suddenly feel the absolute emergency need to play IL2 BoS lol. Great episodes ! 👌🫶
@jillgcaceres
@jillgcaceres 11 ай бұрын
Arguably one of the most interesting fronts of ww2
@lahtipe1
@lahtipe1 11 ай бұрын
Mr. Juutilainen seems to have Mannerheim Cross 1st class on his neck on this video. This is an error, he had the Mannerheim Cross 2nd class, which was placed on chest on left side. Mannerhein cross of 1st class was given only twice, the rest were all of 2nd class.
@_sankai
@_sankai 11 ай бұрын
A fantastic vid like always. I also watch this channel daily. I don’t comment that much because I am so immersed into your videos
@jrpc453
@jrpc453 11 ай бұрын
Finally, a highlight on the Finnish air exploits of WW2. I hope you can also feature how they gave new life to the Brewster Buffalo. Thanks again for a great episode!👏
@GrybbC
@GrybbC 9 ай бұрын
I love how in the final dogfight with the LA-5 the narration of his account from the book and the animation are doing two very different maneuvers lol
@chriskinney8947
@chriskinney8947 11 ай бұрын
The animation just gets better and better, just as the quality of the content does
@Butter_Warrior99
@Butter_Warrior99 11 ай бұрын
I’ma say it, there should be an Ace Combat set in a WW2 like era.
@Kenisi1
@Kenisi1 11 ай бұрын
Some truth right here.
@AlreadyTakenTag
@AlreadyTakenTag 11 ай бұрын
As an Ace Combat player (I've played the holy trinity) I back this 100%!
@alexanderbenkendorf688
@alexanderbenkendorf688 11 ай бұрын
Go play War Thunder. :)
@Butter_Warrior99
@Butter_Warrior99 11 ай бұрын
@@alexanderbenkendorf688, Nah, I want some Belkan witch craft in my gameplay.
@Butter_Warrior99
@Butter_Warrior99 11 ай бұрын
@@AlreadyTakenTag, What’s this holy trinity? I’m only familiar with the Christian idea of it.
@Akagi_11222
@Akagi_11222 11 ай бұрын
Each video you guys make it gets better and better keep up the good work
@kontio1mk29
@kontio1mk29 10 ай бұрын
Always great to see stories about the heroes of my homecountry retold in glorious fashion! Thank you YarnHub!
@jillgcaceres
@jillgcaceres 11 ай бұрын
Finnish 109s vs Soviet AIRACOBRAS? Not something I expected…
@StaticFreighter123
@StaticFreighter123 11 ай бұрын
Oh my god!!! Another incredible Yarnhub animation!!! I love this channel thanks!!!!
@Underfeated_editzTM
@Underfeated_editzTM 11 ай бұрын
Yarnhub back with an awesome story yet again! 💪🇬🇧
@user-go5gf7yc6m
@user-go5gf7yc6m 11 ай бұрын
Не понял твоих символов, чем сильна твоя страна. Тем что несёт разрушениям горе. 🇺🇦⚔️💪👍✊ 🇷🇺🤕🪓😷🥵🥶
@robertsolomielke5134
@robertsolomielke5134 6 ай бұрын
TY for bringing light to a near forgotten front.
@adivitto2k348
@adivitto2k348 11 ай бұрын
These animations are great! Comparing these ot the older ones, this is alot greater! Good video.
@mgo95
@mgo95 11 ай бұрын
At this point warthunder needs to be like this renders. Awesome video again. Thank you YarnHub
@twolak1972
@twolak1972 11 ай бұрын
The 109 G was very underrated aircraft. Alk anyone wanted to talk about was the P51, When in reality the G was a match for any allied fighter with a Ace at the stick. Love the BF109 for its classic lean lines, great diving speed and liquid cooled engine so ahead of it's time like the Me262.
@Skylikesavation
@Skylikesavation 3 ай бұрын
I’ve been busy for a while and haven’t kept up with these, youtube decided to remove the watched bar on everything on this channel do I’ve been looking for where I left off. Finally found it
@alperyldrm8700
@alperyldrm8700 11 ай бұрын
Franz Xaver Freiherr von Werra (13 July 1914 - 25 October 1941) was a German World War II fighter pilot and flying ace who was shot down over Britain and captured. He was the only Axis prisoner of war to escape from Canadian custody and return to Germany apart from a U-boat seaman, Walter Kurt Reich, said to have jumped from a Polish troopship into the St. Lawrence River in July 1940.[1][2] Werra managed to return to Germany via the US, Mexico, South America and Spain, finally reaching Germany on 18 April 1941
@RookVR_
@RookVR_ 11 ай бұрын
Thank you all for bringing entertainment and education on history! Another amazing video!
@j_3d
@j_3d 11 ай бұрын
I realized that the stall dogfight part has an exact scenario with the war thunder trailer but in the trailer the sides is switched, so probably gaijin took inspiration from this story for their trailer
@flamezealous
@flamezealous 11 ай бұрын
Very engrossing; these animations bring those dogfights to life, magnificent! Wow! Could you bring us the first jet-on-jet dog fights from the Korean War; those savage aerial fights between F9s and Mig-15s?!!
@MyNameIsPops
@MyNameIsPops 11 ай бұрын
Thank you Yarnhub for another Friday of War History :) this is what I look forward to, on Friday Mornings
@endtheseaofhateg6616
@endtheseaofhateg6616 11 ай бұрын
Great video as usual. Also I have a Video idea flight 93 it’s passengers deserve remembering
@oscareugeniomacia2055
@oscareugeniomacia2055 8 ай бұрын
Great story of a finnish hero!
@TonyTorius
@TonyTorius 11 ай бұрын
Amazing as always. Any chance for a video telling the story of Luigi Gorrini - one of the famous Italian pilots that received the Medaglia D'Oro; or Otto Carius and his crew defeating an Ilyushin IL-2 with his Tiger I tank?
@ferdiagulto6048
@ferdiagulto6048 11 ай бұрын
Great job on making Eino's episode Yarnhub, outstanding as always. I hope to see more great content in the following days, keep up the good work! Maybe you can do other finnish aces like Nils Katajainen or maybe Eino's brother Aarne Juutilainen aka "The terror of Morroco" or maybe a German ace like Gerhard Barkhorn.
@frankvanaalten7
@frankvanaalten7 11 ай бұрын
Cool vid yarnhub a question can you pls make a vid about a dutch ww2 story if there any it would make me super happy if you could
@AlreadyTakenTag
@AlreadyTakenTag 11 ай бұрын
I can understand why you would censor the Finnish swastika markings. KZfaq unfortunately doesn't know enough history to tell the difference between the bad one, the religious one and the Finnish one. Sure the Finnish swastika looks somewhat like the German swastika but the meaning of the symbol is completely different (along with the reason it was adopted as the symbol)
@Yarnhub
@Yarnhub 11 ай бұрын
Yep. Please check the pinned comment. We would prefer to be historically correct.
@utrock5067
@utrock5067 11 ай бұрын
Svastika is sensitive even in gaming industry. There were already stories mostly from german side having trouble with WWII based games thus demanding censoring that simbol.
@flitsertheo
@flitsertheo 11 ай бұрын
@@utrock5067 Sniper Elite 5 said F*** you all and shows many, many swastikas.
@DirtyMardi
@DirtyMardi 11 ай бұрын
To be fair, baron von Rosen was a Swedish national socialist and the one whose symbol the swastika was. It was co-opted by FAF after von Rosen gifted them their first plane, although it wasn’t viewed as a nazi symbol at the time. Incidentally, von Rosen’s sister was married to none other than Reichsmarschall Hermann ”fatboy” Göring. Take that how you will.
@ghostcreeper243
@ghostcreeper243 11 ай бұрын
@@utrock5067 sniper elite 5: am I a joke to you
@SotGravarg
@SotGravarg 11 ай бұрын
8:43 at this moment I was just gazing at the video with a dropped jaw xD that was the best moment of the entire video!
Ace General
10:58
Yarnhub
Рет қаралды 1,1 МЛН
Samurai in a Zero
12:57
Yarnhub
Рет қаралды 959 М.
Final increíble 😱
00:39
Juan De Dios Pantoja 2
Рет қаралды 31 МЛН
ХОТЯ БЫ КИНОДА 2 - официальный фильм
1:35:34
ХОТЯ БЫ В КИНО
Рет қаралды 2,8 МЛН
Enemy's Bravery Caused German to Ask For Medal
11:12
Yarnhub
Рет қаралды 816 М.
The Man Who Beat Germany's Best Pilot, Twice!
10:48
Yarnhub
Рет қаралды 1 МЛН
War Thunder P-47D "Hell day" over Guadalcanal. Sim Mode
6:53
J.Blackthorn
Рет қаралды 3,5 М.
La-5 - The Soviet Game Changer
12:40
AllthingsWW2
Рет қаралды 168 М.
Why did US pilots love the Thunderbolt so much?
8:46
Imperial War Museums
Рет қаралды 1,2 МЛН
American Vengeance
13:04
Yarnhub
Рет қаралды 1,4 МЛН
Erich Hartmann the World's Greatest Flying Ace
7:12
Yarnhub
Рет қаралды 2,1 МЛН
5 Things You Never Knew About the Messerschmitt Bf-109
10:26
TJ3 History
Рет қаралды 964 М.
Pilot's Last Wish to See His Wife
10:18
Yarnhub
Рет қаралды 798 М.
The WW2 Aircraft that Totally Fooled the Luftwaffe
15:07
Dark Skies
Рет қаралды 335 М.
Книжка где, пончик? #shorts #сериалы #юмор
0:44
Мир Сватов
Рет қаралды 7 МЛН
Разница подходов
0:59
Павел Воля
Рет қаралды 2,2 МЛН