I understand the Germans obtained a P-38, P-51, and P-47 during the war. Perhaps others too. I'd like to see a video on their impressions of captured allied aircraft if any such records exist.
@thomaskositzki94243 жыл бұрын
These documents exist for sure! They tested captured equipment extensively as any good army does. They even had a squadron which traveled from airfield to airfield to have frontline pilots inspect/test the captured planes themselves. Can't find any links right now, because I totally forgot the name of the squadron. :/
@michaelinsc97243 жыл бұрын
I'd really like to see videos on this too, as well as from the American, British, and Soviet perspectives please.
@rolandmittermayr36153 жыл бұрын
@@thomaskositzki9424 Was called Wanderzirkus Rosarius.
@jpjpjp4533 жыл бұрын
Luftwaffe Test Pilot: Flying Captured Allied Aircraft of World War 2 by Hans-Werner Lerche is a book you'd like to read.
@jpjpjp4533 жыл бұрын
@@thomaskositzki9424 From Wiki-Zirkus Rosarius (also known as the Wanderzirkus Rosarius) was an Erprobungskommando-style special test unit of the Luftwaffe, specifically of the Luftwaffe High Command, tasked with testing captured British and American aircraft, all of which were repainted in German markings. The purpose of testing allied aircraft was to discover any strengths or vulnerabilities in their design or performance. This information was highly useful in enabling German service personnel to develop tactics designed to counter strengths and exploit any vulnerabilities. The unit was formed by Theodor Rosarius in 1943 and was part of the 2.Staffel/Versuchsverband Oberbefehlshaber der Luftwaffe (second squadron of the Experimental Unit of Luftwaffe High Command). The Zirkus also toured operational airfields showing Luftwaffe pilots the captured aircraft and training them in techniques to counter these aircraft. The Zirkus Rosarius seemed to have merited the use of its own Geschwaderkennung ("wing code") of "T9", with a few of the unit's aircraft coming from KG 200, which already used the "A3" identification code of that wing.
@darthcheney74473 жыл бұрын
Take this from someone who spent 20 years working with Japanese, they will never admit their product is inferior in any way. So this does not surprise me.
@TheTW113 жыл бұрын
I was about to make the same comment. I too have spent over 20 years working with the Japanese and you are spot on.
@TheSiprianus3 жыл бұрын
@@TheTW11 I've spent over 20 years working with the Japanese and I also approve of this comment.
@OsborneCox.69.4203 жыл бұрын
i've spent 150 years working with the Japanese and can also confirm.
@mitchelloates94063 жыл бұрын
Well, I spent 20 years US Navy enlisted, and 22 years working for the US truck subsidiary of a certain German auto manufacturer - no matter which nation you're talking about, or if it's a corporate, political, or military hierarchy, in a situation where comparisons like this are being made, you often end up with just two choices - you can be honest - or you can keep your job....
@smellyfella50773 жыл бұрын
@William Mulvaney I had a 1981 Toyota SR5 pickup...most dependable vehicle I've ever owned, that 22R 6-cylinder was a damn good engine....1.5 million miles on er' and was still going strong before I got T-boned in a intersection and the pickup was totaled.
@marksedin49093 жыл бұрын
I'll be happy to translate documents from russian if you need
@zerko27873 жыл бұрын
Hiho! Oh yes ... pls Military Aviation. Soviet views on German aircraft, and what to learn from it, would be great!
@reyverde88203 жыл бұрын
We could share the work... if you don't mind
@Paraphen3 жыл бұрын
I'd offer to do so for Latin but... you know...
@rkl7l7rr723 жыл бұрын
Me to
@SP-sy5nq3 жыл бұрын
@@Paraphen just in case we need to look over medieval flight attempts?
@ShortThrowShifting3 жыл бұрын
It's incredible to me that Losigkeit was inadvertently revealing how the Americans would eventually counter Japanese aircraft, and they failed to recognize this beforehand, instead demanding that he conform to their dogfight rules as if that's what the enemy would do. I can imagine the shock in their chain of command when the first reports of the Americans using Boom 'n' Zoom tactics prevailed. What a way to squander a massive tactical advantage. Mind you that doesn't even begin to encompass the other pitfalls and shortcomings of the IJAF.
@richardschaffer55883 жыл бұрын
It’s not incredible that the IJAFs were slow to realize that they needed to work out tactics to counter Losigkeit’s tactics the RAF did it in the Battle of Britain too. Change is had , you first must admit weakness. That’s always a bitter pill for me personally but obviously necessary when facing an existential problem.
@Darkron93 жыл бұрын
This brings to mind a presentation at the Planes of Fame air museum some 25 or so years ago. The speakers were American pilots who flew Hurricanes for the RAF. When the pilots flew against the 109, the Hurricane has a distinct maneuverability advanrage. The 109 pilots learned to boom and zoom the Hurricanes. When the Hurricanes were sent to the Far East, they thought they would have the maneuverability advantage they had against the German aircraft. After suffering several losses, the Hurricane pilots "became" the German pilots and started using boom and zoom against the Japanese aircraft.
@randallreed90483 жыл бұрын
The discussion about the German pilot--with extensive combat experience in Europe--not playing "by our rules" seems to echo the Japanese Imperial Navy and their habit of discarding naval wargame results that ran counter to the beliefs and expectations of the highest ranking officers. For any of these "test" situations--in ALL armed forces-- these events could make or break careers and reputations. In aviation and shipbuilding, huge monies were at stake based on an inevitable series of assumptions and educated guesses about future combat that could be years in the future. If I was flag rank, I would be anxious about any of these so-called "tests" and their built-in biases.
@josephstabile91543 жыл бұрын
"Pride goeth before the fall", writ large. It never fails (hubris, that is)...
@afre33983 жыл бұрын
A big part of the picture was also the "Akutan Zero" It was found intact by the Americans in July 1942. This was the first air worthy Zero the Americans get their hands on. And it helped them alot
@daszieher3 жыл бұрын
"...if we're being optimistic" Ah, yes. The interservice cameraderie and mutual support!
@reggiekoestoer15113 жыл бұрын
Asking the RAF for Spitfires would be easier than that...
@KEHT923 жыл бұрын
@@reggiekoestoer1511Again, really? Spitfires are too overrated...
@kittyyuki15373 жыл бұрын
@@KEHT92 He's probably not shilling for Spitfires, but rather demonstrating lack of interservice cooperation via the obsurdity that is it would easier for the IJA to request an enemy nation for their latest fighter (Spitfires at the time for the RAF in this instance) than for the IJN to lend their evaluation aircraft to their peers over in the army.
@KEHT923 жыл бұрын
@@kittyyuki1537 Yes, I kinda oversaw it. Thanks for correcting. But the thought isn't that false: I mean the navy and the army almost fought each other... There'd been intrigues and false statements that made problems to one or another person from the army or the navy...
@reggiekoestoer15113 жыл бұрын
@@kittyyuki1537 My deepest thanks to you. Well explained.
@kiwihame3 жыл бұрын
Superb overview. Not at all surprised by any of that. It was interesting that they weren't open to picking up on the huge hint that Lösigkeit was trying to give them. Your enemy will fight according to the strengths of his plane, not the strengths of yours. Great collaboration guys. Well done!
@user-njyzcip3 жыл бұрын
The IJA and IJN were so obsessed with their own ideas sometimes I feel like they were oblivious to how modern warfare works. That Kantai Kesen idea by the navy, for example...
@advorak85293 жыл бұрын
@@user-njyzcip It is a bit like a cavalry charge - or waves after waves in the Russian style. Or a Banzai charge.
@jerry23573 жыл бұрын
A serious case of NIH syndrome.
@PabloPagues3 жыл бұрын
Exactly what I thought. Then the americans designed highspeed fighters to counter japanese doctrine. They had a glance at the future, an early warning but i can see why it was difficult at the time to see that. The japanese had the better planes if compared with americans or russians. At that point in time, they were correct in their judgement.
@Dimension20103 жыл бұрын
Hint? He was simply terrible for not even doing things relevant to the test. It was About the difference in dogfighting capability of the fighters, not tactics, certainly not some merging and passes. Most people could get bored from that pretty soon. It's more interesting how he even got the embarrassing idea. Totally a waste of time or anything with nothing can be learnt from.
@MilitaryAviationHistory3 жыл бұрын
*Hey all, hope you enjoy this video and found this evaluation as interesting as me. Big thank you to supporter/viewer QAZ for making the translations.* Editing this video was one big challenge, thanks to multiple loud and violent 'disagreements' with Adobe Premiere If you see some rough edges, just look away. I won and that's what counts. *Corrections* 06:17 - I say Type 79 Fighter, it is of course Type 97 as written (Stupid German number twist) - Thank you to Andrew & Petros for pointing it out
@alexkorman11633 жыл бұрын
If you could find the documents about it, would you ever cover the Japanese copy of the An/M2 .50 cal?
@michaelinsc97243 жыл бұрын
Many thanks to QAZ!!!!
@TactWendigo3 жыл бұрын
I haven't seen you do anything on the P-38 Lightening, I've been listening for awhile and I was curious if either I've missed it or if you haven't done it, is it something planned for the future?
@dansotelo2283 жыл бұрын
Wow! This as a history nut, was an eye-opener into a can of worms... I had no idea Germans were asking Japan for their opinion on the performance of the 109. I know very much how they shared technical information on all other types of fighters including the ME-262 but had no idea about the early 109 & Japan. I really appreciate this type of history.
@stay_at_home_astronaut3 жыл бұрын
This was a very good video.
@briangreen17813 жыл бұрын
"And the army could borrow it... If they were feeling optimistic." 😆 It's like asking for a backrub from your ex.
@timonsolus3 жыл бұрын
Your ex would happily give you a back rub - with sandpaper gloves! 😆
@spindash643 жыл бұрын
The difference is that your ex probably cared about you for at least one singular moment in the past
@augustosolari77213 жыл бұрын
Easier for them to get a model of the spiftfire or Mustang...
@daszieher3 жыл бұрын
Depends on how you treated your ex.
@LupusAries3 жыл бұрын
@@daszieher or how psycho your ex was/is......
@Rammstein0963.3 жыл бұрын
Fun fact, when the allies first encountered the KI-61 "Tony" I think it was, supposedly they thought the Japanese had gotten their hands on a license to build 109's due to the similar appearance.
@thanakonpraepanich42843 жыл бұрын
Yeah, the Japanese Army Air Corp kept Hien so closely guarded that the Navy did not know the plane existed until the Doolittle Raid where it flew the first combat mission. It almost got shot down by Navy Zeroes who though it was American escort fighter. The first nickname of Ki-61 was Mike, not Tony, thanks to Dolittle speculating it was a licensed built Me-109. And I think it was IJN papers that though it was a licensed built Macchi C.202. OSA got that paper and made the same mis-identification leading to Tony reporting nickname. Now if the temperamental Ha-40 engine did not ate water pumps, bearings, cooling hoses and gaskets like they were fuel during the plane's debut in Rabaul campaign. Almost 200 intact air frames were left on the island because nobody can get the engine to start.
@johnreed94352 жыл бұрын
They also thought it was the macchi 202, hence the name Tony
@timonsolus9 ай бұрын
@@thanakonpraepanich4284: The Japanese Army should have kept all their Ki-61s (with unreliable liquid-cooled Ha-40 engines) for the defence of the Japanese home islands, and relied on the radial-engined Ki-43 and Ki-44 in their overseas bases.
@jeffk4649 ай бұрын
@olus They converted the ki-61 into the ki-100 which was a great fighter. Japan licensed an old version of the 109 engine and their version was supposed to be very unreliable, which seems backwards. The ki-61 with a reliable higher power version of the 109 engine would probably have been very effective.
@timonsolus9 ай бұрын
@@jeffk464 : The Italians also failed to make a reliable copy of the DB 605 engine.
@zacharyleao25263 жыл бұрын
I just like that the German pilot was some sort of WW II Maverick, breaking all the rules of JAAF TOPGUN
@stevekaczynski37933 жыл бұрын
He was flying as he would have in Europe and utilising the virtues of the 109.
@carsonm72923 жыл бұрын
@@stevekaczynski3793 And giving free insight into how Western aerial combat theory was evolving, for that matter-yet the Japanese insisted that he play by their rules, as if the Americans would be so compliant!
@psychohist3 жыл бұрын
Sounds like Losigkeit knew what he was doing. In WWII, air fights were always within visual range, so the first to spot the enemy had a big advantage. The Bf 109's strongest feature was likely its small size, making it less likely to be seen first. This feature lent itself to hit and run tactics, which ultimately all the top WWII aces from all the combatants ended up using.
@randallreed90483 жыл бұрын
For that matter, ALL the top aces in WW1 made the majority of their kills by shooting down their victims from above and behind. Dogfighting, as such, was for losers and pilots with death wishes.
@markmitchell4503 жыл бұрын
Well how are you going to fire at something you can't see So your comments are not exactly smart Planes where rated on the rate of climb and break off left or right and the speeds at various altitudes All planes had there optimum operating windows and advantages or disadvantages
@riazhassan65703 жыл бұрын
@@markmitchell450 And that, of course, is the right answer. There was no perfect fighter for all aspects of combat. They all had some areas of weakness or shortfall and some of advantage. This was faster at this altitude, that at that: this could dive better, that could turn better, etc. Pilot competence, using one’s own strengths and exploiting the other’s weakness, was the crucial factor in the contest
@Marc-zi4vg3 жыл бұрын
The 109's advantage (at a time) is that it was light and had a powerful engine, and is very slippery in the air (at a time) meaning that it could retain...some call it speed, momentum, but most called it energy, something the pilots knew and weaponized it and form another version of dogfighting called "energy fighting".
@bobuboi46433 жыл бұрын
@@randallreed9048 orr?. For people who's planes excel at dogfighting and would rip apart in high speed dives?.
@capnrotbart3 жыл бұрын
Absolutely fascinating! It is so rare to hear about these kinds of comparisons between different craft. Perhaps you could make a mini-series about these sorts of comparison flights, you are already two episodes in anyway.
@MilitaryAviationHistory3 жыл бұрын
Would love to but unless original documents are in German or English, I am highly reliant on others to provide me with translations (like here with QAZ) which takes a lot of their time and it is not reasonable for me to ask them to put together one after the other :)
@timothycampbell4953 жыл бұрын
The test reports of the RN's Eric Brown and Grumman's Corkey Meyer would be excellent resources if you decide to do any direct comparison videos.
@alan68323 жыл бұрын
@@MilitaryAviationHistory The Ki-27 was proved or disproved in combat with planes that performed in ways that were quite similar to the 109E7, those being P-40 and Spitfire. So we have plenty of hindsight with which to assess the validity of their assertion that the Ki27 could defend itself against such aircraft. The loss ratio should be conclusive.
@jamesrussell77603 жыл бұрын
@@alan6832 The Flying Tigers, flying P-40s, were deadly against the Ki-27s and even the Ki-43s, so long as they used Boom & Zoom tactics.
@glenchapman38993 жыл бұрын
@@jamesrussell7760 It was one of the great strengths the US and other allies brought to the war. Ability to adapt to situations and develop successful tactics very quickly.
@Eonymia3 жыл бұрын
8:22 "oh no, he is using hit-and-run tactics, utilizing the strengths of the plane. That's illegal. I'm sure this will never happen again."
@MrBejkovec3 жыл бұрын
Meanwhile in 1945: „Oh well...kuso!“
@drcovell3 жыл бұрын
I do Cybersecurity work, including testing websites for weaknesses. After I (always) break in, the usual coder response is “Who would think to do that.” Same shit, different day/dumbass (SSDD)! There’s a new chat expression for IM. 🤣
@user-hr1uw4cj2z3 жыл бұрын
yeah Americans surely will NOT use this tactic right?
@brianrogers73603 жыл бұрын
Gen. Claire Chenault: Hold my beer
@GameDevNerd3 жыл бұрын
Stop taking away our advantages! Hey, he's comitting a war crime! 😂
@franciscomoutinho13 жыл бұрын
IJA: "NO!!! You have to use the tactics we expect you too!" Losigkeit: "Bf-109 goes Brrrrrrrrr."
@spitefulwar3 жыл бұрын
BF-109 laughed at their suffering. :D
@kumaflamewar65243 жыл бұрын
I kind of wish they'd had the chance to evaluate the bf 109f, if common mythology is to be believed it was one of the most loved variants
@MajinOthinus3 жыл бұрын
@@kumaflamewar6524 The F was good, but the G was great.
@AHBdV3 жыл бұрын
When you want to asses how well the Bf-109 is in a turning dogfight, then it is useless if the pilot only dives away constantly. Sure, he knows the Bf-109 shouldn't do that with Hurricanes and Spitfires, and probably immediately understood he shouldn't with the Japanese planes either. But for understanding the strengths and weaknesses it is important to also do things you normally wouldn't. Otherwise you don't get objective data.
@Nightdare3 жыл бұрын
@@AHBdV Then again, the disregard for 'boom and zoom' tactics, and focus on dogfights came back to bite the IJN in the ass when the US upgraded their Wildcats to Hellcats
@yaragi3 жыл бұрын
Thanks to QAZ for his contribution, stuff like this is much appreciated by so, so many viewers and your audience in general, there's a limitless number of them for every one that leaves a comment about it. Cheers to all & stay safe!
@MilitaryAviationHistory3 жыл бұрын
Agreed, QAZ did a fantastic job
@yaragi3 жыл бұрын
@@MilitaryAviationHistory My apologies for forgetting to mention: So did you!
@rickglorie3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, it shines a light on the japanese/german collaboration also, and confirms the difficulties between army and navy in Japan. Fascinating.
@davidness84773 жыл бұрын
This all breaks down the average citizens perception of war history tempered by each nations media and including influencial citizens input. Of special interest to me is the how and why role of International Bankers in all of this. Loans before, during and after must have kept these competing nations economic and politically challenged for many years. Just think of the inflation influence alone, not to mention the psychological stress on the citizens.
@davidhimmelsbach5573 жыл бұрын
@@davidness8477 Inflation crushes the pain of loan repayment. At a national level, with fiat currency issuance, International Bankers are a nullity. They are NOT used. The printing press is used, instead. In the post-war world, the US taxpayers totally subsidized external loans. Alien nations were NOT paying the freight. If you think so, then you've flunked logic and economics 101. Most foreign nations are ROTTEN credits -- and would be paying 2% and more PER MONTH for all credit extended. As sovereign powers, they are NOT required to pay back their loans -- and normally -- they don't. Even the US dis-honored re-payment in gold after WWI. And the USSC backed the government 100% when they screwed American creditors. The gold clause was the reason why the original interest rate was at ROCK BOTTOM during the war. Without it, the interest coupon would've had to double. [ In the American Civil War the Federal government (the North) had to pay ~15% for its borrowings. Such debt had no gold clause, of course. ] { International Bankers only had meaning -- at the level of sovereign states -- when the gold standard was operative. }
@demos1133 жыл бұрын
My gratitude to QAZ for all the work he did for this! :-)
@matchesburn3 жыл бұрын
7:51 Japanese: "No! No! No! Stop fighting like that. Fight like how we want you to fight! No more energy fighting and hit-and-run tactics!" [A few years later] Losigkeit: "Tried to tell you so."
@20chocsaday3 жыл бұрын
Dont forget, there are such things as rituals / rules in fighting. Think of Judo, or the Marquis of Qeensberry. How long would it have been since the adjudicators were alone in a cockpit and it was 'Kill it before it kills me".
@nigelchurchill75633 жыл бұрын
Too bad the americans obliterated the germans using the exact same tactics
@KoalaTContent3 жыл бұрын
@@nigelchurchill7563 If I recall correctly it was mostly the overreaching battle of Britain that put the most strain on the Luftwaffe
@UsoundsGermany3 жыл бұрын
@@KoalaTContent Plus losses on the eastern front... Luftwaffe had happy days early on, but from 43 onwards Russian airforce recovered, also lots of planes lost at Stalingrad not only transports
@irohnick3 жыл бұрын
@@nigelchurchill7563 too bad the germans had the most takedowns in the history of aviation alltogether on both Bf109 and Fw190 aircraft and that the only reason others gained aerial superiority was because of logistic problems and possibly outnumbering by the end of it (as aviation can't do shit if the ground counterpart of the armed forces are fucking up)
@onyourkilllist68803 жыл бұрын
*_“Damn you Losigkeit! Why won’t you turn with me!”_*
@jakeb67033 жыл бұрын
Sound like warthunder pilots lol
@onyourkilllist68803 жыл бұрын
@@jakeb6703 😂🤣😂
@naamadossantossilva47363 жыл бұрын
The guy had years of experience fighting the best pilots in Europe.The japanese should be thanking him for all that condensed wisdom.
@reggiekoestoer15113 жыл бұрын
Pretty much me in every Warthunder game with my Zero
@Dimension20103 жыл бұрын
“I'm only here just to perform my own test”
@earthenjadis81993 жыл бұрын
8:32 - "It's pointless because his tactics are different." And here's a reason why Japan lost their war against the USA.
@kameronjones71393 жыл бұрын
Ironically the usa used his tactics of hit and run to devastating effect
@SilverforceX3 жыл бұрын
Moreso the USA had working radar and cracked JP communication code, so they could see forces 180 NM away at sea, and could find out what the JP plans were in advance. On top of this, a massive economic and production advantage.
@christianl.e.l173 жыл бұрын
The real reason: more resources.
@dulguunjargal11998 ай бұрын
@@christianl.e.l17 The Japanese not Changing Tactics to represent it aswell
@zlatanclovecic1944Ай бұрын
@@christianl.e.l17 Not only more resources. The more flexible thinking was also very important. On the contrary, the Japanese officers tended to always stick to the plan even if it was obvious the plan is completely wrong and the situation rendered the plan useless.
@bificommander74723 жыл бұрын
IJA: Eh, what are we gonna need a high altitude interceptor for? B29: Look out below!
@Warmaker013 жыл бұрын
Hindsight's 20-20. High altitude bombers was not a Japanese army concern in 1941 when the testing of the Bf109E was done in Japan. The Imperial Japanese Army was neck deep in fighting in mainland China who had no real high altitude bombing capability. Also, the IJA envisioned itself campaigning in Far East Asia against Chinese, Russians. The army favored expansion in China and against Russia.
@josephstabile91543 жыл бұрын
@@Warmaker01 And lo, that philosophical trend line brought them to the "Boulevard of Broken Dreams"... To loosely paraphrase a liquor commercial: Keep thinking, my friends... BTW, wasn't Tokyo bombed in '42 from low altitude, and scorched in '45 from same? Ignoring taps on the shoulder from the grim reaper is never wise.
@josephstabile91543 жыл бұрын
Ref the 1945 Perry Como hit: "(A Hubba-Hubba-Hubba) Dig You Later"...
@matchesburn3 жыл бұрын
@@Warmaker01 "High altitude bombers was not a Japanese army concern in 1941" ...They kinda knew about the IJN plans and that they'd soon potentially be at war with America (although, even worse, they actually thought that that would avoid a protracted war and lead to America suing for peace or something... anyone that would've known even the slightest bit about American culture and politics knew that wasn't going to work out - and the few that had the guts to try and make that known were quickly told to be silent by higher ranking superiors). They knew we had B-17s then and there. They should have been concerned.
@jamallabarge26653 жыл бұрын
The Japanese bombed civilians in China. They must have watched the action below and wondered if their homeland would be so attacked.
@cynicalmedic2523 жыл бұрын
Would love to eventually see a follow up video on the Japanese Army Air Service's evaluation of the Fw 190 A-5 they managed to get.
@rustyshackleford60693 жыл бұрын
You just know that because of War Thunder lol
@Circa883 жыл бұрын
@Faaiz Ahmed Rabbani true. I first learned about the Japanese BF-109 after seeing it in war thunder and doing research on it.
@Tarepa_3 жыл бұрын
In a Japanese book I have, it says as follows: "In Japan, they have tested the speed and acceleration of captured American aircraft (P-51C, P-40E) and imported German aircraft (Fw 190). In the spring of 1945, at 5,000 meters above Fussa, Ki-61, Ki-84, Fw 190, P-51C, and P-40E lined up in a horizontal line and began flying at full speed in unison. In the first few seconds, it was the Fw 190 that took the lead. However, three minutes later, the P-51C overtook it, and the Ki-84 and below closed the gap with the Fw 190. When we stopped after about five minutes, the P-51C was far away, followed by the Ki-84 and the Fw 190 at about the same position, the Ki-61 a little later, and then the P-40E."
@bartbernard61273 жыл бұрын
@@rustyshackleford6069 I just know of War Thunder because of this thread.
@tianyizhang22053 жыл бұрын
@Faaiz Ahmed Rabbani War Thunder isn't always right, they didn't tell you that Japan never actually got the Heavy Tank No.6.
@AdurianJ3 жыл бұрын
Sweden was relatively close to buying the Zero but then the Air Force developed and built the J22 in house instead
@jayklink8513 жыл бұрын
Realistically speaking, were the J22's 13.2mm rounds as devastating as video games, like War Thunder, make them out to be? I wonder the foot lbs/kgs of pressure is
@fowlergaming51403 жыл бұрын
@@jayklink851 from what i understand they were on par with polish 14.4 in terms of velocity
@jayklink8513 жыл бұрын
@@fowlergaming5140 Roger that! Just looked it up, 1006 meters per second (14.4mm)👍
@damienmaynard88923 жыл бұрын
Delivery was the issue at the time.... Still, the J22 was more impressive in the air than on paper!
@damienmaynard88923 жыл бұрын
@@jayklink851 The Italian 13.2mm had a pretty good punch so, since the Swedes had Reggiane's in or entering service, the indigenous weapons should have been made to be equal or improved.
@brenthopley8743 жыл бұрын
Hi Chris, just stumbled across your youtube channel and having spent 50 years in both the civil and military aviation industries (the latter for the most part in uniform) and being a keen aviation historian myself, your presentations are among the best online I've seen. They are well presented, generally very well researched and very informative. Thanks for making the effort to educate us about aviation history.
@F0KK3RM4N3 жыл бұрын
Definitely enjoy these types of videos, really get into the minds of those from different perspectives to see what they focus on the most
@MilitaryAviationHistory3 жыл бұрын
Exactly! thank you
@rusvietdog53383 жыл бұрын
Interesting analysis of the Japanese’s perspective on the Bf-109. I really do enjoy the comparisons of each country’s aircraft especially on their strengths and weaknesses. Good video and awesome job!
@MilitaryAviationHistory3 жыл бұрын
Thanks, yes, I agree, it's always itneresting to see how the same piece of kit is rated differently across services and countries
@_AnanasIEgenJuice_3 жыл бұрын
Imagine bringing a plane all the way from Germany to Japan along with a skilled pilot and then telling him how he should fly his plane against the japanese fighters.
@darreng7453 жыл бұрын
The Japanese rarely considered how their opponents would react, preferring to assume that their opponents would act as how they predicted or how they themselves would have reacted.
@_AnanasIEgenJuice_3 жыл бұрын
@@darreng745 Yea, that was what I was going for
@LipziG3R3 жыл бұрын
But that is the point of an evaluation and comparison. They don't want to learn how the German plane doctrine and tactic works - They want to compare their planes against the German ones while applying their own doctrine - Which was mostly dogfighting. It is no use to compare the BF-109 "gun and run" tactic to the Japanese one, of they won't use their planes that way. They wanted to learn something about the German flight characteristics to maybe find something they could implement on their planes to improve their performance within their own doctrine. If you don't comply with the simulation you're useless, no matter how well the plane performs or how good the pilot is. You just can't compare 2 planes in specific scenarios if one plane does something entirely different, than the other. That's like trying to compare the acceleration of 2 cars for 0-100km/h but one driver does some tight turns to show how stable the car is in a turn - It's nice but not useful for a specific comparison.
@_AnanasIEgenJuice_3 жыл бұрын
@@LipziG3R Learning about different doctrines sounds like a better use of time to me than wasting time looking into specific flight characteristics of a plane you never will meet on the battlefield. If they had seized that chance of actually learning about run and gun/boom and zoom, then that could possibly have helped them against faster US fighters. A lot of flight characteristics could probably have simply been learned by paper. Weight, power, wing loading, wing profile etc.
@danielwhyatt32783 жыл бұрын
Yeah, that’s certainly a very bold and cocky move there by the Japanese pilots. That wasn’t going to last long.
@jayklink8513 жыл бұрын
Brilliant video! Thanks for spending, I'm sure a lot, of time at the archives researching this video, and others like it. Love the topic, Bismarck is the last vestige of military aviation, Discovery Wings, History Channel and Military channel have gone the ways of the dinosaur.
@MilitaryAviationHistory3 жыл бұрын
Cheers, Jay
@iain0753 жыл бұрын
Well said sir. Informative, nicely produced and superbly researched.
@martijn95683 жыл бұрын
''Discovery Wings, History Channel and Military channel have gone the ways of the dinosaur.'' It really depends what you are looking for IMO. Especially the OG Discovery Wings/Great Planes was a fantastic program.
@jayklink8513 жыл бұрын
@@iain075 He does his homework!
@jayklink8513 жыл бұрын
@@martijn9568 You're correct sir! Disc Wings programs were aired on the 'Military Chan', you know "Wings of the Luftwaffe/Red Star"; unfortunately however, the Military Channel was converted to "American Hero Channel", which like the current History Channel, is a bit crappy. Although occasionally they run the OG military content.
@mbryson28993 жыл бұрын
This video is a good example of why I enjoy this channel so much. New details to flesh out history of which I was only vaguely aware. QAZ is the kind of viewer I really appreciate, sharing knowledge with us, using skills on our behalf to our benefit. :)
@Weisior3 жыл бұрын
Dude beats Japanese in dogfight using hit n run tactics Japanese: wait, thats illegal
@AHBdV3 жыл бұрын
The Japanese pilots were using the same tactics against the slower Chinese fighters.
@Ares-jx4ep3 жыл бұрын
@Justin Illhardt Most victims do.
@sarrumac3 жыл бұрын
@Justin Illhardt Ok target.
@m.steward91463 жыл бұрын
ZLY: Brilliant analysis. But the Japanese were interested in performance data, not Losigkeit's aggressor squadron bullshit.
@rconger3843 жыл бұрын
P40s under claire channault's flying tigers held their own against Japanese fighters in China. It was all about zoom and boom and winning.
@RonJohn633 жыл бұрын
Great thanks, QAZ!
@jpgabobo3 жыл бұрын
Great Video. Interesting connection to the Ki-44 bias. Thanks for all the work you put into these projects. Love learning about these beautiful machines. (and give Premiere a kick for me when its not looking!)
@johnscarpa51163 жыл бұрын
Fantastic. I am suspect from the words used by the Japanese to describe the 109's performance that there was a little bit of pride influencing their evaluation.
@Jens-Viper-Nobel9 ай бұрын
It was, and to some extent still is, a degree of viewing themselves as superior in all respects to the rest of the world. For example, Their navy worked on the assumption that they could entice any enemy into a final and decisive battle in which the "superior" Japanese force would anihilate the enemy with it's superior tactics and bravery. More surprisingly, they never adhered from that belief despite being mauled heavily in the time since Midway. Even Yamamoto succumbed to this "victory fever" as they dubbed it themselves after the war, though he had the better understanding of knowing that if the Americans would have time and opportunity to get into full industrial gear and arming up, there would be little that Japan could do to stop them from destroying Japan. To be honest, a lot of this victory fever most likely stemmed from the fact that ever since it's formation, nobody had ever succeeded in attacking and conquering the Nippon. So at some point down the road of history, they became convinced that no nation on earth would ever be able to defeat the determined and brave Japanese soldier, and their tactics and strategies were far superior to that of any and all other countries. A contradiction in terms that becomes even stranger when considering the fact that the so called kamikaze wind that destroyed the attacking fleet several hundred years earlier was in fact a sort of divine luck as it was realised that if that storm had not occured, Japan would indeed have been unable to claim that they had never been successfully invaded when WWII came around. But it became a doctrin engraved in the overall mindset of all Japanese that Japan simply could not be conquered or even attacked on it's own soil., thus further expanding into the belief that the Japanese people as a nation of people were superior to all other people on the earth.
@tomhart8379 ай бұрын
THEY STILL DO WHICH IS WHY THEIR WORD FOR FOREIGNER IS "GAIJIN" WHICH ALSO MEANS "BARBARIAN". THE VICTORY dISEASE CAME FROM THE EASE THAT THEY OVERRAN THE EUROPEANS AT THE START OF THE WAR. PARDON THE CAPS, TOO LAZY TO RETYPE@@Jens-Viper-Nobel
@randallreed90483 жыл бұрын
Very nice piece of exposition! I now k ow that after 60 years of studying WW2 on all fronts, I know very little about Japanese Army aviation and its aircraft. They had some very nice aircraft and I am left with wanting to know more. Thank you so very much!
@peckbrian25469 ай бұрын
Thank you, QAZ!! This is fascinating. What a service you have provided to us all!
@stacyobrien17293 жыл бұрын
I love listening to all of the facts, especially the little known ones, that you present. My family thinks I'm nuts but I can't help learning these facts from the war, thanks for your hard work!!
@wingy2523 жыл бұрын
I don't know how I got hooked on the subject but it's been a passion of mine to learn about since I was 13 now I'm 27 😆
@capthawkeye80103 жыл бұрын
"Aileron damage" on landing refers to ground-looping incidents. The Bf109 was very punishing in a crosswind, and had a narrow wheel base.
@deckape7143 жыл бұрын
That was fascinating, Thank you Bismarck and QAZ
@edwardpate61283 жыл бұрын
During this same time period the Flying Tigers flying the P-40 were dominating the Ki-27 and Ki-43 in China using the kind of hit and run tactics the German pilot was using with the 109.
@luckymacy7453 жыл бұрын
Excellent history lesson. I can’t recall ever getting this much detail on the 109 trials by the Japanese. The quotes from the pilots are ‘priceless’. Thanks to the supporter who brought this forward and thanks for sharing with us on KZbin. Looking forward to your next entertaining aviation history lesson!
@ovk-ih1zp3 жыл бұрын
Thanks QAZ, great work on an under represented but fascinating subject. Big thumbs UP!
@AhnkoCheeOutdoors3 жыл бұрын
I really enjoyed this episode. I have always been extremely interested in Japanese military aviation history. My father was a veteran of WWII fighting in the SW Pacific theater, so I inherited his interest in WWII history. I forgot how early the Ki-44 development was inaccurately remembering it as a post Pearl Harbor design. I remember my father telling me the Ki-44 was more a "drag-racer" with great straight-line performance, but not a great handling "sports car" like the Ki-43. That's another thing I find interesting, that the BF-109 was not tested against the Ki-43 which I believe was already in production. I would have liked to see that comparison. Back to the Ki-44, my dad once talked to a pilot of a F4U Corsair who returned from a mission barely surviving an encounter with an experienced pilot in a Ki-44. The Corsair was a very capable "hot rod" in it's own right, but on this one occasion this American was running scared because he had great difficulty getting this Ki-44 off his tale. The Corsair pilot told my dad that he was used to fighter Zeros, and easily pulling away from them, but he had to resort to using his water-injection to loose this Ki-44. Dad said the Ki-44 was not the best dogfighter the Japanese produced, but it was one of few planes that B-29 pilots feared. As a side note I had an uncle who was a pilot for the IJA who flew various planes during the war, but his favorite was the Mitsubishi Ki-46 a surprisingly quick and agile twin engine plane originally designed for reconnaissance, but later mounted with cannons, and used against US B-29 bombers. I remember my uncle having burn scars on his face with a google shaped clear complexion around his eyes from the one time he was shot up while piloting a Aichi E13A , with his engine catching on fire but he survived to fly another day. My dad and my uncle were at the battle of Lingayen Gulf, but on opposite sides. They became great friends after the war. This uncle became in English teacher after the war. He was very meek and soft-spoken, his facial scars the only thing indicating his involvement in the war. Thank you again for your very informative, and interesting videos.
@martijn95683 жыл бұрын
''That's another thing I find interesting, that the BF-109 was not tested against the Ki-43 which I believe was already in production.''', I too would have loved to hear that.
@KanJonathan3 жыл бұрын
There should be some Ki-43 pre-production models back then. IIRC the Ki-43 prototype got a lot of debugging works to be done.
@lesforan76953 жыл бұрын
I love it when former enemies become friends.
@khairulhelmihashim2510 Жыл бұрын
great story!
@bawneff51333 жыл бұрын
From an American perspective, this is such great history. The language barrier really hides some amazing details between Germany and Japan that is I'm sure largely absent from much of the history scholarship done in and by Americans or other English speakers. Thank you!
@carlbradshaw70643 жыл бұрын
Great video. New info about the Me109 test and the interservice rivalry affecting the Army vs. Navy designs. Great stuff.
@fredmaughan56693 жыл бұрын
Thank You QAZ! Chris has a fresh, original perspective on so many things. And he backs that up with unimpeachable sources. BRAVO!
@Bepppe3 жыл бұрын
The person translating from Japanese is a hero, many thanks!
@kamikaze20099 ай бұрын
maybe it was not a real person but it's AI translated? lol
@martinsaunders79258 ай бұрын
Taking 1940 technical Japanese and translating using AI? Not yet.
@topturretgunner3 жыл бұрын
General Claire Chennault after some study realized how to use the advantages of the early Curtis P-40 (dive speed) in what became known later as the "Boom and Zoom technique against the Japanese. The P-40 while it was a good turning aircraft and had a high roll rate especially at or below 15,000 feet was no match in a turning dogfight against the lighter Japanese airplanes. The Luftwaffe pilots in North Africa developed a healthy respect for the British P-40's below 15,000 feet the Curtiss was a match for the Bf-109 and in the hands of a skilled Brit the P-40 often won the fight below 15,000 again as the P-40 did maneuver well and had a good roll rate. The Boom and Zoom practice was picked up by the US Navy and Marine Corp to great success in the South Pacific theater as well.
@tyvernoverlord53633 жыл бұрын
The later war P-40's were nearly very much an American produced "Heavy Zero" though. The Tomahawk/Kittyhawk/Warhawk -40 Family put in a lot of work during the war and many pilots who own it today really like how idiot proof it is in how rugged a plane the design actually is.
@cyclingnerddelux6983 жыл бұрын
Lovely episode! I really get the sense that there was a difference in thinking in terms of how fighter aircraft should be employed. I must say, I expected to hear Japanese criticism of the BF 109’s lack of endurance.
@quentintin13 жыл бұрын
well it was not tested for acquisition, but for comparative performance testing, so the range issue was not a factor, also it was tested by the Army, which is to my understanding that they had a slightly lower emphasis on planes range than the Navy
@cyclingnerddelux6983 жыл бұрын
@@quentintin1 Excellent points!
@timonsolus3 жыл бұрын
The Japanese Ki-27 had an even shorter range than the Bf 109E.
@mackfisher44873 жыл бұрын
Quas, Thank you for translating these documents. Amateur historians have a difficult time not being able to read primary source information, your work helps everyone who's interested. Thank You
@myronplichota79653 жыл бұрын
Many thanks to you and Mr. Translator for this amazing presentation. I had no idea that such tests took place. The pilot reports appear to be very honest. It is interesting that in the Bf-109 v Ki-27 contest, both pilots were dissatisfied with their kill potential. An unsurprised Ki-27 pilot could defensively turn tighter than the Bf-109 and/or do vertical stuff, making a difficult target for the attacking Bf-109, but a Ki-27 is ill-equipped to bounce a Bf-109. I remember reading in Hans-Ulrich Rudel's book "Stuka Pilot", that he managed to shoot down attacking Soviet fighters with his forward guns in low-level turning combat (which resticts the opponent's vertical options, lest s/he smash into the ground). Like the Ki-27, the Ju-87 had a low wing loading by Western WWII standards. Despite the pointy tips on the Ju-87 wing planform, the stall/spin characteristics were excellent. The Aichi D3A Val dive bomber was also a dangerous opponent at low altitude in the Pacific theatre. I suspect that the disastrous Ju-87 losses in the Battle of Britain were due to training that 1) totally relied on fighter cover and tail gunners for defense 2) forgot the Dicta Boelcke 3) ignored newly-learned rotte/schwarm doctrine Rudel barely survived WWII because he figured out on his own how to prevail flying the Ju-87 in a 1vX situation with or without fighter cover. I don't recall him pissing and moaning about lack of fighter cover or lousy tail gunners. These days, A-10 Warthogs can carry Sidewinders in case there is serious opposition. The WWII Samurais failed to comprehend the rotte/schwarm teamwork concept, preferring the WWI single-combat approach. That is why "inferior" P-40 and F4F squadrons that used teamwork tactics racked up superior kill ratios. I would rather be discussing cross-country thermal soaring in gliders, but you've got to start somewhere :)
@2854Navman3 жыл бұрын
Very informative, thoroughly enjoyed it. Thanks for the work both to you and QAZ!
@bryangrote87813 жыл бұрын
Learned a lot from this video. Very interesting comparisons and also foreshadows what the Japanese Army pilots would face vs the the Flying Tigers about 6 months after these tests. The Bf-109E is a good analog for the P-40B/Cs used by the Tigers as other than the inferior climb rate of the P-40s they have similar performance in top speed up to 15000’ as well as similar dive speed, roll, and turn rates and the “hit and run tactics” used by the German pilots are also similar to those later used by the Tigers. Also liked the coverage of the Ki-44. The “Tojo” is usually a forgotten and under-rated fighter (apparently even by the Japanese themselves according to the documents discussed here.) I wonder if the Ki-44 had been used vs the Flying Tigers instead of the K-27s and Ki-43s if the Tigers would had much less success. If so I also wonder if that would that have led Japan to an earlier transition to faster but less maneuverable fighters and to “boom and zoom” vs turn fighting tactics?
@echodelta21723 жыл бұрын
They did employ some Ki-44s against them but didn't have as much success.
@mirado87383 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the translation QAZ and for bringing it to us MAH. For me it was new information that I never thought about but also think it is very intersting^^
@Riccardo_Silva3 жыл бұрын
It looks like japanese were not accustomed to, call it, DACT training. No one was, back in those days. On the other hand, when they understood the limitations of their training methods, their opinion on Ki44 capabilities changed drastically. Exceedingly interesting video! Great!
@Krusesensei3 жыл бұрын
What is DACT training?
@rustyshackleford60693 жыл бұрын
Leaving a reply so I also get notified if someone explains what it is. Guessing it’s Downed AirCraft Training? Doesn’t sound right though...
@craigmcculloch43423 жыл бұрын
Dissimilar Air Combat Training
@gosquidgo13 жыл бұрын
@@Krusesensei dissimilar air combat training. Dogfighting other types of aircraft other than the one that you’re flying.
@Riccardo_Silva3 жыл бұрын
@@rustyshackleford6069 🤣😂Dissimilar Air Combat Training! Ask Top Gun pilots! 😂🤣😂
@Token_Civilian3 жыл бұрын
Great job QAZ on the translation to make this video possible. More like this one MAH! Great vid.
@jwenting3 жыл бұрын
Interesting comparison. I can understand how they were frustrated with Losigkeit, but he was flying the aircraft the way it was intended to be flown, and pretty much how the Japanese could expect most Americans and other allied pilots to fly against Japanese fighters of the same generation, so maybe they should have heeded him some more and have him instruct some of their instructors. Might have made the Japanese harder to kill for American pilots once they got their Hellcats and Corsairs.
@thefellathathuntsvatniks3 жыл бұрын
Yeah. There is just a good news and bad news: The good news is for the Army, while bad news for the Navy. The Army is more prepared to the upcoming American tactics more than the Navy did. If not for German pilots like Losigkeit that participated the simulated dogfight, the outcome will be the same as the Navy. Unfortunately, the Japanese still lose the war. Still that's why Japanese Army pilots are more formidable ones than the Navy pilots who didn't even get a chance to evaluate German planes due to the myth of the Japanese Zero superiority. And in terms of tactical aerial formation, the Army is more superior to Navy due to the fact of the same foreign pilots introducing them to Schwarm formation. Whereas the Navy relied on a Vic formation. Sadly even for a Japanese boom and zoom fighter pilot, the Americans began using planes superior to that of the Japanese can make during the war, making all of their tactics useless
@matchesburn3 жыл бұрын
@@thefellathathuntsvatniks IJA: "We learned a lot from that Losigkeit fellow. Should we inform the Navy about our findings." IJA [pure disdain]: "Let them figure it out for themselves."
@thefellathathuntsvatniks3 жыл бұрын
@@matchesburn Few years later... Army: Thank you Losigkeit! I owe you one. Navy: *nOoooo!! yOU cAn'T jUst diVe oN Us aNd jUst zOoM awAy! ThIs iS cOwaRDicE!*
@midgetman42063 жыл бұрын
@@thefellathathuntsvatniks it makes me wonder what they would think of modern air combat and it's missiles
@j.mangum76523 жыл бұрын
You are spot on about the...optimism that the IJA could borrow a H 112 from the IJN because I just watched a vid on the rivalry the imperial army and navy had for each other. Rivalry is too kind a description for what they had for each other. They literally wouldn't piss on the other if one was on fire. Their competitiveness and lack of cooperation was a little known but a significant detriment to Japan losing the war.
@shawnadams19653 жыл бұрын
Tub of Sauerkraut... check! So now that I watched the video, very informative and interesting. I'd like to thank QAZ for making it possible!
@yt.6028 ай бұрын
Translating technical documents and evaluations is a real skill, especially when the cultures are quite different. Really good vid with loads of interesting information.
@jroch413 жыл бұрын
Thanks to QAZ for translations! Good episode. Vergiss' nicht das Kraut!
@GumboGalahad3 жыл бұрын
I really like when material comes from original contemporary sources. Hindsight is always 20/20 so when you can learn what people thought of this at the time as opposed to historians writing about it years later is always a big plus for me. Thanks to QAZ and to you for bringing this to light. Subscribed.
@weissrw13 жыл бұрын
Great video!!! I had no idea of the variety of fighters the Japanese had just in the Army. Add the Navy and they must have had a bunch. I also really liked that the German pilot was not going to play pretend this and pretend that -- he just flew to win.
@seeingeyegod3 жыл бұрын
yeah they had a lot of great stuff but seemingly could never decide on one aircraft to mass produce, and then add that to the famous rivalry and animosity between the army and navy.
@fishdroid3 жыл бұрын
This video is a good example of why I love this channel. Your attention to detail is very good, and I always learn so much it is amazing. I have been a self-taught student of military history since I was in the 5th grade, consuming books on the subject at a rate that my parents probably could not really afford. I was very excited to learn that your translation of Japanese original materials. As you said, that kind of detail is not found in many videos, and is much appreciated by consumers as myself. Great job Chris!
@Sakai0703 жыл бұрын
Definitely surprised with the ki-44 comparison, figured the 109 would have been at least measurably superior. Also surprised at no Ki-43 comparison.
@modrysokol3 жыл бұрын
You did a very excellent and in depth study of all the various comparisons between German and Japanese aircraft. Also many thanks to your supporter for making the translations. Keep up the good work!!!
@nicolatesla94293 жыл бұрын
This is very intetesting! Makes me wonder if there are still evaluation documents available about the Fw190 and Me410 that were sent to Japan.
@johnreed94352 жыл бұрын
I believe it was the 210 that was sent there
@jony6633 жыл бұрын
I was unaware of the comparison and found it fascinating
@hissingoose3 жыл бұрын
Japan: “you can’t use boom and zoom tactics, that’s not our style” P-38: “ok, I’ll take my ball and go home... just kidding”
@bobuboi46433 жыл бұрын
The p-38 could not dogfight, would rip apart if it went in a dive, couldn't energy fight. Doubt it's ever winning against a ki-44 or ki-61.
@DamnedSilly3 жыл бұрын
@@bobuboi4643 You're high. The P-38 could out climb and out dive most anything the Japanese built as well as being at least 75 mph faster than either that you mentioned and had a ceiling 6-8 thousand feet higher than either. It out gunned the 44 and was comparable to the 61. It didn't dogfight, it bounced. In the Pacific theater, the P-38 downed over 1,800 Japanese aircraft, with more than 100 pilots becoming aces.
@Chiller013 жыл бұрын
Fascinating video. The first hand direct comparisons between the Bf109E and various Japanese types was a rare glimpse at the state of the Japanese Army air capabilities prior to the onset of their aggressive expansion.
@EK-gr9gd3 жыл бұрын
Would be an interesting video, why Germany never built a medium range fighter, like the Hawker Tempest. Even the Fw190D-9 had a maximum range of just ~ 1.200 km.
@johnappleby4053 жыл бұрын
Original and interesting material just what makes this channel so good
@newfangledcypher53093 жыл бұрын
Love your content, appreciate your sources!
@charliedontsurf3343 жыл бұрын
This was really interesting. I remember reading somewhere the many allied pilots mistook the Ki-61 the improved Ki-60 for the Me 109.
@beemeratt3 жыл бұрын
There’s a reason it’s Allied nickname for the Ki-61 was “Tony”. They thought it may be a Macchi C 202. The liquid cooled engine just made it look very similar.
@jacobtanner4863 жыл бұрын
“How dare he energy fight instead of dogfighting our paper planes, this man has no honor”
@alanrogers70903 жыл бұрын
Wonderful show today. Thanks, especially to QAZ for his translation skills. The testing of various aircraft has been talked about before, but here we see a slightly different point-of-view, ie the Japanese evaluating their present and future aircraft against an ally's best fighter. I fully agree about the Ki-27. Where it was in use, it did not typically see "front-line" enemy aircraft. It was in the field in numbers, so, keep it, for now, but keep developing those other aircraft as well. A very good presentation. Perhaps you can revisit this episode with Justin Pyke, for his input?
@xxdomoxxkunxx3 жыл бұрын
Would you be interested in doing a video of the He-51 compared to other fighters during the Spanish Civil War? I feel like the Spanish Civil War was an interesting moment in time as outdated equipment got tossed into a grinder and every nation has to relearn what they thought they knew about warfare
@earlyriser89983 жыл бұрын
This was an awesome comparison. Thanks to viewer QAZ for translation.
@pashalis883 жыл бұрын
You should do a video about the FW-190A4 and the Ju87,how it came in Japan ( i think , but I'm not sure this happend during wartime)what are the conclusions that the Japanese make with what airplanes they compare them. Also you must make a video about the BR.20 and how Italy sold them to Japan in the early stages of sino-japanese war (before the production of Ki-21 bomber ) keep the good work
@dmflynn9623 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the video. The Japanese and German opinions of the comparisons of their fighters was interesting. It is even more interesting to consider that the opinions were not made with the hindsight that we have today. The video was clear, concise, and objective. I appreciate hearing your opinions, too. The little "digs" here and there have been fair, too. I, too, was surprised that the Japanese did not compare the Ki-43 inasmuch as it was the main Army fighter at the time. I would expect that it had a tighter turning radius and better climb rate, but slower speed and dive rate, and that most pilots would have preferred the 109.
@iskandartaib3 жыл бұрын
Interesting that the Ki-43 wasn't tested against the Bf109, given that it was in widespread service.
@bernardwills96743 жыл бұрын
I can only suppose they had a rough idea how they stacked up but were more uncertain about the other aircraft
@_Wiseguy73 жыл бұрын
Same. I was also wondering the same thing considering it was the army's best fighter in service at that time.
@fishingthelist40173 жыл бұрын
The Oscar would win based on the parameters of the test because it was a superior dogfighter, provided Losigkeit was kept far away from the airfield. Perhaps the reason they tested the Ki44 instead of the Ki43 was because the 44 was a newer design that broke away from the Army doctrine of maneuverability at all costs. They could have wanted to show that the unpopular fighter was a match for the great Bf109, and thus a great fighter in itself. Whatever the reasoning, the Shoki did become popular with pilots after the tests.
@_Wiseguy73 жыл бұрын
@@fishingthelist4017 I understand that, you'd think they would like to know how the ki-43 would compare to the bf-109 and user that as a benchmark.
@miquelescribanoivars50493 жыл бұрын
Ki-43-I wasn't much of a leap performance wise when compared to the Ki-27 so the evaluation would had been similar except the climb rate and top speed would be somewhat closer.
@R3dp055um3 жыл бұрын
Excellent stuff! Very well done, and most interesting. Thanks to the gentleman who did the translations.
@christopherflack76293 жыл бұрын
Would love to see you do a version of this on the ME262
@joellamm52663 жыл бұрын
He already did one and an "inside the cockpit" episode too
@firstduckofwellington68893 жыл бұрын
@@joellamm5266 I think he means a video similar to this one, looking at the Japanese "reaction" to the Me262(reaction as they never acquired one.)
@joellamm52663 жыл бұрын
@@firstduckofwellington6889 oh ok thx
@christopherflack76293 жыл бұрын
@@firstduckofwellington6889 yes that’s exactly what I meant I did think of editing the comment to say that. Cheers. Excellent name btw first Duke Duck.
@pickeljarsforhillary1023 жыл бұрын
And 163.
@billchessell82133 жыл бұрын
A completely new take on the bf109 and Japanese aircraft, of which I know little. Fascinating. Thank you.
@rimshot22703 жыл бұрын
The Japanese later developed the Kawasaki Ki-61 Hien or "Tony" fighter which closely resembled the Bf. 109, but was in some ways, superior. Only the Corsair and the Mustang gave it serious trouble.
@MrBejkovec3 жыл бұрын
For the P-38 in the New Guinea theater the Tony was also no match at all tho.
@bryangeake58262 жыл бұрын
@@MrBejkovec ..in boom and zoom tactics!! In a close in turning fight, as with the Me 109, the P 38 was inferior! The K 61II, with the more powerful DB 605 derivative that had been refined and made to work (the Ha 140 was that engine, but was too undeveloped for general service and then the factory got bombed, so no Ki 61II were put into serious service) would have restored balance to that duel, and with the P 51 I think; but that never fully occurred.
@deltavee23 жыл бұрын
Thanks, Chris for another interesting video (they all are!) and also *thanks to QAZ for the translation.* This viewer/subscriber absolutely enjoyed the work of you both. I had no idea that Japan was using some German engine technology. The Japanese were genteel and courteous in their assessments as is their cultural bent but there was no mistaking the analysis after the politesse was rubbed off. Would have been a different war if they were flying 109s against Wildcats and Lightnings, I dare say. Yes, the P-38s made their point in Europe but the Wildcats...hmmm. And somehow I don't see 109s landing on carriers with that unfortunate undercarriage. They'd all be good for one flight and that's all she wrote. Guess what I'm going for in World of War Planes! The 61 if it's available and the 60 hopefully. Cheers from Canada
@noahwail24443 жыл бұрын
Very interesting. I think the short range of the 109 would be a problem to the japanese, their other planes flew very long distanses. Many thanks to QAZ for the translations, I am shure a lot of people learned a lot here. I would realy like to se what the germans ment about the planes they captured from the allies in flying order.
@firemochimc3 жыл бұрын
Yeah Zeros with droptanks i think had some of the longest range of any fighter in 1941.
@martijnb58873 жыл бұрын
That was what I was thinking too. But range was probably less an issue for the army than for the navy.
@martijn95683 жыл бұрын
@@martijnb5887 Maybe, but Southeast Asia is still very big. Probably similar in size to Eastern Europe and western Russia. I'm nut sure how well the ground in Southeast Asia is for the development of airstrips.
@timonsolus3 жыл бұрын
The Japanese Ki-27 had an even shorter range than the Bf 109E. Although the Ki-44 had much longer range.
@samadams22033 жыл бұрын
Very neat, I love learning about cooperation/learning experiences between different cultures and systems.
@sergionuno3 жыл бұрын
Captain Aramaki "That troublesome guy, It´s pointless because his tactics are diferent". Wile talking about a pilot with combat experience, in many scenarios. Well...if you are expecting, for the enemy to act the way you want...you will probably get killed.
@kimhannibaljensen69683 жыл бұрын
in 1941 at the testing the Japanese had been at war with both the USSR (1932-1939) and China (1937-). The Japanese pilots have lots of combat experience which the Americans quickly feelt. So why should they ask a stranger to train their pilots or start using a different tactic when their own until then had been a success ??
@Tallus_ap_Mordren3 жыл бұрын
My impression was that they were not doing training of pilots, they were testing the characteristics of the aircraft. So, if the German pilot wasn’t flying within the test parameters, the DATA acquired was USELESS. Garbage In, Garbage Out. I had a similar experience in my fencing class in high school. I was one of only two left-handed fencers on our team. The star fencer of our next opponent team, M, was left handed, slow, but with excellent technique. My coach instructed both of us left-handers spar against our starters to get them used to fencing against M. Several times during practice, he had to admonish me, “No, stop fencing like Jeff, fence like M!” I had instinctively fallen into my normal patterns, not the slower, deliberate technique M used. When I diverged from the training instructions, I was actually making the training of my team mates less effective.
@echodelta21723 жыл бұрын
@@kimhannibaljensen6968 Because the Chinese and Russians were trained worse and had completely different tactics and equipment than the US. By mid-42, the Japanese were getting steamrolled by the US. Because they refused to learn.
@kimhannibaljensen69683 жыл бұрын
@@echodelta2172 In 1941 the Japanese pilots were some of the best trained and most experienced pilots in the world, equipped with planes that was on par with and often better than their European counterparts, their tactics fit their equipment and was tested in combat. From December 1941 to mid-1942, the Japanese overran the British, Dutch and Americans. Their luck ran out (mostly because the Americans broke their code and later because the allies planes and equipment became better than the Japanese's). So in 1941 when the tests took place, the Japanese have no reason to doubt their equipment, their tactics or their pilots and therefore no reason to try to imitate the Europeans. Hinsight is just not a good argument that anyone should have done anything else. And that was my point.
@jamesricker39973 жыл бұрын
They did get killed He warned them about how vulnerable their aircraft were to boom and zoom tactics, they didn't listen
@cleverlaziness3 жыл бұрын
bf109 will always be my favorite warbird, it just looks sooo good and performed pretty damn well!!
@MadRat703 жыл бұрын
Germans: "We have something special to sell you." JapaneseArmy: "So sorry, N-I-H" (not invented here)
@supergreg723 жыл бұрын
Amazing work. Big thanks from Canada!!!!!!!!!!
@paulwallis75863 жыл бұрын
"....Tactical rules...?" Too bad if the enemy isn't playing by those rules.
@harv54253 жыл бұрын
Excellent video. thank you for the translation Qaz
@walrus40463 жыл бұрын
Sorry I'm right out of sauerkraut, else I'd let you have some lol Very interesting topic thanks and also to the translator. Great stuff!
@fishingthelist40173 жыл бұрын
Liberty cabbage.
@benmacklin35313 жыл бұрын
Thanks QAZ! You are a gentleman and a scholar.
@Dwargwarf3 жыл бұрын
So they tested the E Series in 1941 wasn’t that the year of FW190 introduction and first service year? Wonder how they would have reacted to that beauty
@aggnesswang-spzabt50233 жыл бұрын
Japanese technicians tested a Fw190 A-5 for real, there are photographs.
@alessiodecarolis3 жыл бұрын
In 1941 started to being in service a better version, the F, but it had an inferior armament, only two mg and a 20mm cannon, all in the nose, was more manovrable and faster than the E
@robertthompson12543 жыл бұрын
I enjoy the insight you give. You opened the door of the How and why of country's Decisions on flight warfare Thank you
@peterlizdas37033 жыл бұрын
Very interesting presentation of some fairly arcane aspects of military aviation history.
3 жыл бұрын
Very nice Video. Interesting to hear about the Japanese perspective on this plane
@plumahoplita3 жыл бұрын
indeed a good comparison
@arifuretabeatz4563 жыл бұрын
Don't forget at the forefront of Japanese strategic panning is the restrictions of raw materials. The ki 27 may not be the better plane, but you can actually make more of them, they are less complicated, their pilots prefer their flight characteristics and they are cheap to build. Training pilots takes time and money as well.
@emperorjulian21593 жыл бұрын
Primary sources - that's what I love, no third hand Urban legends on TV. That's why this channel and MHV/nV are greatest ways to take knowledge from if you have no time to read a whole book in 30 minutes of free time a day.