"In Germany, or in Europe we're only allowed to go 550 km/h, and that was _of course_ the fastest I ever was", he said, while mischieviously grinning...
@JonRattleheadАй бұрын
@@tommasochiarandini6920 I was going to point out the same thing lol
@renegadeflyer2Ай бұрын
You wouldn't expect him to stare at the air speed. It's a complex aircraft. He is busy, what what would yo expect? 🤣
@Leviathan268Ай бұрын
@@renegadeflyer2 Ohhh I'm sure he knows exactly how fast he's flow... 550kph and not a lick above that 😉
@pablopeter3564Ай бұрын
Ofcourse he was grinning mischieviously. What did you expect him to do ?
@BarchenhundАй бұрын
😉
@Arkeo36Ай бұрын
"It's an HONOR to fly this aircraft." I believe him.
@studentaccount34511 күн бұрын
That line and his delivery gave me chills.
@chrismair816111 күн бұрын
The Dark Hole in the Nose of the Propeller Hub has a 20 mm Cannon. This was the first mass produced Fighter to have a Cannon in 1938. Machine guns are fine but..Range and Punch of 1 single round?
@mensch10664 ай бұрын
Seeing a 109 and a Hurricane peacefully taxiing near one another at Biggin Hill was a nice peace of footage.
@GLC-1979Ай бұрын
German pilot pointing and saying " Pull up a little farther so I can get this gun on you pal" ...
@j.b.macadam6516Ай бұрын
Yeah, I noticed that too. Very cool!
@CliffWalker-yd8ubАй бұрын
Yeah! Peace.
@cannonfodder43765 ай бұрын
200 hours of maintenance per flying hour. Given its rarity and value, I would expect nothing less. And as he said, flying such a historical treasure would be the greatest honor. A good interview.
@brianx2504Ай бұрын
This was my question after watching. What would need to be done after a single hour of flying? That seems like a huge amount of work and effort to fly for only 1 hour. Are mechanics changing oil, plugs, and going through every mechanical part after every single flight?
@MichaelOnRockyTop29 күн бұрын
@@brianx2504 I also want to know if it was like this during the war. If so, there would have been a lot of sitting ducks unavailable to scramble for incoming bomber formations.
@axelackens215728 күн бұрын
As I understand it, the maintenance-intensive nature of the engine and the rest is rather "easier" to replace because the original engines are quite rare these days.
@stuffffuts348023 күн бұрын
@@MichaelOnRockyTop Definitely not during the war, given that back then they were considered much more expendable (and many WERE expended) and there was a whole logistics structure catering to the entire fleet compared to now
@roybrowning655215 сағат бұрын
This "Emily" type of 109 was mostly used during the Battle of Britain in 1940/41.
@pablopeter3564Ай бұрын
I loved when Volker Bau said "It is a honour to fly this aircraft", these are words of a proud pilot.KUDOS ¡¡¡¡¡
@roybrowning655215 сағат бұрын
...and judging by his own words, it wasn't too easy to fly it, especially during the take-off. Too many rookies lost their lives because of that.
@notmenotme614Ай бұрын
2:40 I read a quote by a 109 pilot that said “if you can safely takeoff in a 109, chances are you’ll survive the rest of the flight and walk away from the the landing”.
@user-dr1qo5fv9fАй бұрын
Thank you, from a 55yr old American. Since as long as I can remember, I have loved WW2 history. My favorite program when I was very young was The World At War series. I have ALWAYS LOVED the ME109 It's my favorite aircraft out of all the WW2 planes. Thank you very much for your videos.
@DerOrsoАй бұрын
Wow, that last pass. I've never heard a Bf-109 whistling before
@SheriffsSimShackАй бұрын
thats the supercharger intake doing some fine music
@perverttАй бұрын
Courtesy of the device marked "lader" at 1:47.
@Triple_J.1Ай бұрын
This is the most distinctive sound the -109 makes.
@wacloshАй бұрын
It sounds better than Spit
@SteveMrWАй бұрын
Probably because we are used to hearing Merlin engined Buchon (109's)?
@patrickreid3061Ай бұрын
That engine installation is so clean and uncluttered. Wonderful
@PaddyPatroneАй бұрын
Saubere fragen, saubere antworten ❤. Top!
@kleinerkrieger786014 күн бұрын
@@PaddyPatrone Ich sehe die 109er und auch die 262 oft hier fliegen.... Ich arbeite direkt unter der Einflugschneise vom Manchinger WTD. Wunderschön 😍
@TehCheezManАй бұрын
Oh my word. 200 hours of mechanic/labor time per hour of flight time on that 109! Insane! Was that a supercharger whistle I heard at the end? Beatuiful, absolutely beautiful aircraft.
@notsureyouАй бұрын
Yup :-)
@catsooeyАй бұрын
That’s about the same ratio of cleaning for every hour my father spends in the kitchen.
@syproful29 күн бұрын
Should have atleast shown the mechanics in this video. They are atleast as important.
@advo105329 күн бұрын
It looks like a shark in the sky, so angular.
@fritz4345Ай бұрын
A Bf 109 Pilot tough me to fly. He never talked about the war but he mentioned once that they lost 1 to 2 young pilots a week while he was training them.
@dacat8171Ай бұрын
Yes, the directional stability during takeoff was a major issue. The plane belongs to an era when there were no bidirectional runways, but rather round airfields where unstable planes could tangle around until they became airborne.
@tritopАй бұрын
The young ones rarely came back from 1st mission, when one came back, they had to clean the cabin I was told in the 70th at August-Euler-Flugplatz ( that was in 44/45 )
@confederatenationalist7283Ай бұрын
Even according to experienced German pilots the 109 was considered a death trap during later WW2.Way outclassed by the combination of allied opposition like Spit MkIX and XIV, Tempest and Mustang. Willi Hielmanns words in his book Alert in the West went along the lines why do we continue to build the thing and send pilots up in it with the FW190 D9 online and in service.
@busterdee822829 күн бұрын
I worked with a man who was in his 70s at the time. Pax River MD used to contract a P-51 as part of the Test Pilot school orientation. I knew the Merlin sound and would run to the parking lot to watch it, but he always beat me there. It turned out that, during WW2, he had attended an 'experimental' accelerated pilot training program. It was cancelled when it was determined there would be no pilot shortage. He said many students died just in taxi training and counted himself lucky to have been switched to combat engineer, making the 'second wave' D-Day landing.
@vladiwest24 күн бұрын
@@dacat8171 The problem is with the torque of the rotor, not with the uneven runway.
@Talwyn22Ай бұрын
That roaring whistling at the end. Absolutely fabulous
@SwagdonaldzАй бұрын
please give mr volker bau thanks from us for his wonderful insight!
@michaelguerin564 ай бұрын
Thank you Christoph, Volker, Airbus and the Museum. This was an excellent and highly informative video.
@gravfielddriveАй бұрын
The sound during the low pass makes the hair on the back of your neck stand on end. Very Cool!
@wayneantoniazzi2706Ай бұрын
About 20 years ago I watched a TV interview with a Luftwaffe veteran, a Bf-109G pilot in fact. Volker reminded me of what that Luftwaffe vet said about flying the 109: "During takeoffs and landings the aircraft required 100% of your attention, 99% wouldn't do. But once you were off the ground it was actually easy to fly." Great video! Thanks!
@ohanailo66819 күн бұрын
This was a great broadcast of an interview with a Test pilot who has experience with both, WW II era aircraft and modern fighter aircraft. Appreaciate the insight of his experience. Thank you and Aloha. 🌺🌼🌴❤️🇺🇲
@JPR3DАй бұрын
Volker Bau is ice cold, super cool dude and it seems like he knows he's living the dream. What a gorgeously preserved airplane, I didn't think something could ever look better than factory new. Are those engine mounts polished? Incredible.
@roybrowning655214 сағат бұрын
I would have loved to hear Volker give his opinion of the difference you feel when you step down from a 109 and get on a 262 jet... as he flies both models. !
@markwhitaker3673Ай бұрын
Christ-what a gorgeous plane, and that supercharger whine... My favorite WW2 airplane, by a longshot. I am not surprised by the maintenance requirements to preserve and keep it airworthy- long may it fly. Thanks so much for sharing -cheers
@roybrowning655214 сағат бұрын
In fact, all of us fans of vintage planes are really lucky to be able to watch, listen to, and download these beautiful videos of WW2 as if we were back in time to those days. I'm 80 now and since the mid-50s all i could do to admire these beauties was to collect all newspaper clippings or magazines I could find, but I had to wait DECADES till VHS videorecorders came up just to have B&W poor quality images of old wartime newsreels... When KZbin was born I got the enormous pleasure of getting color footage with this high definition. It was worth waiting so many years to finally be gifted with these wonders.
@mickfryar612013 күн бұрын
Great video! The pilot is very proud and humble. An honor to fly such a rare, piece of aviation history.
@petekadenz9465Ай бұрын
Fascinating. A wonderful machine made with German engineering.
@HartmutJagerArt14 күн бұрын
Too sad that it, and all other 'wonderful machines' were (and are) made for killing people ! -
@RC-li1gbАй бұрын
Hats off to Volker for sharing the details of what is without question a great experience, and also to Chris for helping fans of aviation & history gain understanding as well as satisfy our curiosity.
@avp5964Ай бұрын
"It's an honor to fly this aircraft." Thank you Volker, I for one really appreciate it. Thank you Chris good questions great video.
@wouterkellerman4458Ай бұрын
First time ever i hear that whistle, oh my word goose pimples!!❤❤❤❤
@danconnolly2341Ай бұрын
Nice but not F4U quality whistling ;)
@MrBBaronАй бұрын
Thanks for this video. The 109 was one of my favorite fighters of WW 2.
@miketeeveedub5779Ай бұрын
Truly an historic aircraft - glad to see it still flying and looking absolutely immaculate! I also appreciate the fact it has the original DB-605 engine, unlike some of the other flying variants with their alternate powerplants. A Merlin V-12 in a Me-109 just rubs me the wrong way. BTW - I hear that most airplane pilots don't make good helicopter pilots and vice versa, as they're two different flying experiences. Good to see Volker breaks that mold.
@grantm6514Ай бұрын
6:10 "However, you need some force on the _cyclic_" - you can get the pilot out of the helicopter, you can't get the helicopter out of the pilot 😂😂
@Britcarjunkie29 күн бұрын
Well....... The HA-1112 (Spanish built BF-109) was fitted at the factory with either a Hispano-Suiza 12Z, or a Rolls Royce Merlin: alternatives to the DB-605, but still original to the aircraft that they went into.
@martijn956828 күн бұрын
@@grantm6514I’m glad I’m not the only one that caught that😅
@firvidaАй бұрын
8:18 that sound is so beautiful ❤️🔥
@billnervo4736Ай бұрын
YES! THE 109 JUST LOOKS LIKE A FIGHTER,ALWAYS LOVED THIS MACHINE...
@emlynkhelicopter6975Ай бұрын
Great questions! And great to hear directly from a professional.
@Bravo065 ай бұрын
Fantastic, thank you so much. As someone who absolutely adores the aircraft, this was a treat!
@pablopeter3564Ай бұрын
Thanks for this video. Clear cut questions and clear cut answers.
@Mr.McWatsonАй бұрын
6:52- Well. I'm pleased to see my bouncy landings in the 109 in IL2 are not that abnormal
@argentinianspotterАй бұрын
What a great aircraft, I just finished a scale Bf 109K-4 from Trumpeter. Can't have too many 109s!
@lowersaxonАй бұрын
I only do 1/72 scale due to space consumption. I have 36Bf 109‘s (31 built): C, E4, E7, F2, F4, G2, G4, G5, G6, G10, K 0:15 4. Airfix, Revell, Jo-han, Italeri, Matchbox, Mastercraft, Froc, Fine Molds, AZ Models, InTech, Ncore, Plastyk, Heller, Tamiya, Linek, Kora, Hobby Boss. German Luftwaffe, Spanish National Airforce, Italian Regia Aeronautica, Israeli Airforce.
@momotheelder7124Ай бұрын
Thanks for providing this material. I often asked myself, why are there no interviews with modern 109 pilots? Thanks again for rectifying this. It is invaluable to scholars of historic aviation.
@taimermega6447Ай бұрын
My favorite WW2 airplane , it is so beautiful and the engine sounds like magic
@lyndoncmp575114 күн бұрын
It's not beautiful. The Spitfire was beautiful (and sounded better). This plane is many things, but it's not beautiful. The Fw 190 looks more beautiful.
@achdumeinegueteАй бұрын
You could see how it wants to spin over when starting. Just like War Thunder sim (me hitting the next barn). Great job! This is one of the most facinating videos about the 109 I've ever seen! 🥰
@WHJeffB29 күн бұрын
Excellent interview!! Quite the experience I'm sure... Volker Bau, Klaus Plasa, Rick Volker and a few other present day 109 pilots are lucky guys. You have to a pretty impressive pilot to fly one of these aircraft, as well as to be trusted to fly one by the owner.
@JH-hh5jmАй бұрын
It's my dream to fly in a WW2 warbird, I don't even care which one at this point, they're all so rare and special. What a cool job this guy has
@suprliteАй бұрын
It can be done in Russia.. But maybe not so feasible for westerners these days..
@sylvaleader15 күн бұрын
In the UK there 2 seat conversions of the Spitfire, Hurricane, Mustang and (Spanish merlin powered) 109s. They each cost about £3000 for a 20 minute flight - where the passenger is allowed to take control for a few minutes.
@IamMagPieАй бұрын
What a great video. Getting goosebumps from the sounds. Herr Bau seems like a true gentleman.
@pathardage1880Ай бұрын
Wonderful episode. Thank you.
@Marcomelandri594Ай бұрын
Une légende. Pour moi c'est l'avion le plus emblématique de touts les temps avec ces défauts et qualités. Son design inspire robustesse, invencibilité et il semble capable de travesser un mur et continuer à voler. Les 2 canons sur le capot fessaient trembler les adversaires et dans les filmes les réalisateurs adorent faire des ralentirs sur l'image de ces canons crachent le feu. Bref sa rareté fait le reste... Je croise la rue je vois un spitfire (j'exagère bien sûr) mais pour voir un BF109.... Je ne sais pas où le voir en réalité tellement c'est rare et précieux...
@julianneale6128Ай бұрын
Fantastic information, and video. Your usual high standard is great. Thank you both for speaking English, as It really helps people like me to properly understand the conversation.
@ralfbeckmann6167Ай бұрын
Danke für den tollen Einblick.
@Anarcho-harambeismАй бұрын
God i love keeping these old things alive, its so cool lol
@wolfganggugelweith8760Ай бұрын
Fantastisches Flugzeug! Bei uns in der Halle liegt noch ein DB-605 Motor. LG aus Linz an der Donau! 🇦🇹😎👍🏔🍺💙🍀🍺🐺
@gscheidhaferlvomdienst6864Ай бұрын
Wieso "liegt" ?😅
@wolfganggugelweith8760Ай бұрын
@ Weil er leider nicht fliegt. Ist ein Motor aus einer bauchgelandeten Me-109 bei Linz an der Donau und er wurde nach dem Krieg in einer jetzt ehemaligen Kaserne vergraben mit einem JU-52 Sternmotor. Darüber hatten wir beim Morgensport öfters Beachvolleyball gespielt. Beide sind in einem bemerkenswert guten Zustand von außen her. Laut einem Piloten aus dem Hangar 10 auf Usedom wäre der DB-605 so um die 200.000 Euro wert in unrestauriertem Zustand. Wenn man daneben steht wirkt der schon ziemlich groß und schwer.
@gscheidhaferlvomdienst6864Ай бұрын
@wolfganggugelweith8760 wow. Ja, ein beeindruckender Motor. In Oberschleißheim, nördlich von München, ist die Außenstelle des Deutschen Museums. Dort ist ebenfalls ein DB 605 auf einem Motorständer ausgestellt. Trotz 35 L Hubraum ist er leichter als der 27 L Merlin. Baut doch um den Motor eine 109er. Das wäre ein Jahrzehnte Projekt. PS Ist der Motor ausgestellt und öffentlich zu besichtigen? Grüße aus Bayern
@wolfganggugelweith8760Ай бұрын
@ Ja, ich war letztes Jahr in Oberschleissheim im Museum. Habe Verwandtschaft in Ismaning und München und habe das einmal wieder mit einem Besuch verbunden. Der Motor gehört einstweilen noch dem österreichischen Bundesdenkmalamt und wir vom Militärmuseumsverein wissen noch nicht, ob wir die beiden Motoren zur Ausstellung bekommen. Einmal schaun was wird.
@gscheidhaferlvomdienst6864Ай бұрын
@@wolfganggugelweith8760 Dankeschön für die Info und schönes Wochenende
@robbabcock_Ай бұрын
Wow! Cool video. What a blast it must be to fly this old classic!
@SaniellАй бұрын
Very kind technician at Hangar 10 has told me that their G14 is flown with 1.2ATA for takeof and 1.1ATA in flight and display. They want to put as little strain on the engine as possible.
@ChristianCelinderАй бұрын
This is soooo good. Thanks to you both for stubbornly keeping it in English. So enlightening!
@CadcareАй бұрын
100% excellent interview.
@paoloviti6156Ай бұрын
Such a lovely aircraft! The M 109 is my favourite and it seems to be extremely well restored, it has to in order to fly! I envy the pilot that was is flying such iconic airplane and he is honoured to fly it. Thanks for sharing this very interesting video 👍👍👍
@huffy19494 ай бұрын
Fascinating and very well produced! Thanks so very much.
@jeremyprice679Ай бұрын
The sound is different from that of a Merlin, but just as thrilling and visceral. Great aircraft!
@roywenton1605Ай бұрын
@@jeremyprice679 absolutely a vicious sound. Would love to be in one of these things
@sundhaug92Ай бұрын
Apparently the spanish made some 109s with the Merlin after the war
@TamasLaszlo-83Ай бұрын
Superb video! This pilot is a very lucky man 😉 Bf109 is one of my favourite ww2 aircraft. 5 years ago I saw a real one in a museum. That was fantastic! This starting procedure at 05:25 would be more accurate if the ground crew cranking up the DB605 engine...😁
@Clouddddxjzjs552Ай бұрын
what a great and interesting video. i loved the questions and answers. fascinating stuff.
@dacat8171Ай бұрын
The '109' is my favorite aircraft and the DB 60X my favorite aircraft engine. 200 flight hours are not much, although flight durations on this aircraft are rather short as it is only used for static and dynamic airshow displays. Crosswind while takeoff and landing makes controlling it even more challenging.
@enoughothisАй бұрын
I heard someone liken these old prop fighters to half-tame wild stallions, that they require respect and skill to handle but if you manage to hold on they can give you the ride of your life.
@otmarvasatko5888Ай бұрын
The Bf 109 is a very sexy aircraft in terms of external graceful shapes, just like the FW 190 and Me 262 and P-51. Simply perfect engineering is reflected in the exterior.
@BleihagelАй бұрын
You can't make a plane that look sexy & edgy at the same ti... Bf 109 appears. Greatest piston warplane design ever.
@jeffk46428 күн бұрын
It was a very early war design, it became fairly outdated towards the end of the war.
@czwarty787819 күн бұрын
@@jeffk464 what? It did reach the limit of it's upgrade potential with last version, but it was never "outdated" until the end of the war, that is just not true
@bennyandersen74216 күн бұрын
@@jeffk464 Pre war design, and in later stages of the war incompetent pilots were the biggest problem, not the plane, though it was close to outdated. Focke Wolf was an better alternative.
@lyndoncmp575114 күн бұрын
Did you actually just list sexy and graceful places without mentioning the Spitfire? 😮😮😮😮
@sonoitalianofulАй бұрын
oltre i 600 km/h in aria densa avrebbe riscontrato un indurimento dei comandi sensibile. era un aereo per quote dai 4000 agli 8000 metri come massimo rendimento. fanno bene a usarlo moderatamente sono esemplari seppur ricavati dagli spagnoli molto rari. magnifico pezzo tecnologico il bf109 e in queste immagini a colori rende molto bene
@micktanguy6665Ай бұрын
Exact questions, clear answers, combined with passion. Top!
@bobbyb.6644Ай бұрын
Seems to me was flown by highest scoring Aces in History - By Far ! 👍
@jerrymcgeorge411714 күн бұрын
German (and Japanese) service doctrine was “fly until you die.” Allied air forces rotated their pilots as they had superiority in manpower reserves. It was something off a miracle for a German or Japanese pilot to survive the war.
@jean-robertlombard1416Ай бұрын
Merci pour toutes ces vidéos d'exception!
@alexfortin7209Ай бұрын
Truly the Darth Vader of WW2 fighters: aggressive look, distinctive sound and lethal. I would definitely buy one if it were possible.
@suprliteАй бұрын
The squared cockpit makes it look so mean and aggressive compared to say a spitfire or p51
@davidnash122029 күн бұрын
I saw this aircraft fly at Duxford 2015 l was immediately impressed and l thought then this aeroplane meant business purposeful and designed to fight A great interview thank you
@shermansquires397919 күн бұрын
I reckon if this interview went on for another 2 hours, I would have still seen it again. Absolutely fascinating!
@petebjerkelund5088Ай бұрын
Pretty damn wonderful! Thanks for another great slice of hands-on history.
@antusgaborАй бұрын
8:13 Imagine this sound coming from hundreds of piston engine airplanes from the sky at the same time. The air must've been vibrating on the ground.
@gta4ever3003Ай бұрын
The red 7 is back in the air after the heavy incident? Fantastic! 🎉
@damianketchamАй бұрын
Probably the best all around fighter of the war. Designed in the 30s and still a strong fighter at the end of the war.
@gkauto195920 күн бұрын
I agree; it was easy to mass produce and once you got the hang of taking off, landings came easier! It was also easy to pull the wings for transport, and easy to get hits on enemy aircraft with the centrally mounted MG's and Cannons, and that DB605! (might be a 603, who knows?) they built it deliberately upside down, putting the crankshaft above the cly heads so they could mount that motor lower and give the pilot better visibility once airborne. Yes, me thinks overall the best tool for the job of putting cannon and MG bullets into another aircraft was for its day the 109, it was small, fast, maneuverable and could fight on 87 gasoline as well! Only problem was its lack of range, but it always was designed as a point interceptor from the get.
@lyndoncmp575114 күн бұрын
No that was the Spitfire. Great in 1939. Great in 1945.
@gkauto195914 күн бұрын
@@lyndoncmp5751 Once both are in the air it always comes down to the pilot.
@damianketcham5 күн бұрын
@@lyndoncmp5751 Around 14,000 more Me-109s were produced which eclipsed the Spitfire. For two planes fairly evenly matched the 109 had the numbers.
@erickent3557Ай бұрын
Darn, he didn't say RPM and ATA, but when he says, with great seriousness, that it's an honor to fly the aircraft, that makes up for it. Indeed, and I thank Mr. Bau for his skill and professionalism to carry out such a task in honor of those who flew the 109 before him...
@Triple_J.1Ай бұрын
Almost certainly they operate below the original published limits. Pilots of WWII had the ability to push beyond these limits, as the RPM was manually controlled, and not pitch governed.
@erickent3557Ай бұрын
@@Triple_J.1 I believe Mr. Bau said in the interview they operate at about 1/3 the limit, but it would've been interesting to hear the actual settings.
@toda304Ай бұрын
Thank You Volker and Chris absolutely brilliant presentation
@Lane311Ай бұрын
Love this. Thank you!
@spinnettiАй бұрын
What a beautiful restoration!
@danzatagus6025Ай бұрын
Wow! That was absolutely fabulous! Thank you so much for publishing this video!
@mikemccaffrey3093Ай бұрын
What always impresses me is how clean the start is on the fuel injected DB engines. No cloud of white smoke. Smoke on startup seems to be typical for the carbureted v-12 and radials. Beautiful airplane.
@giacomopiccaro3852Ай бұрын
When you see white smoke during start up it's oil burning, not fuel. It has nothing to do with the fuel sistem, for example the BMW 801 it's a radial engine and it has direct fuel injection, but when you engage the starter clutch, it smokes like a chimney; especially when cold, because of the oil accumulated in the lower cilinders.
@adiamondforever7890Ай бұрын
@@mikemccaffrey3093 is that smoke from unfired fuel, or more likely oil in the cylinder?
@mikemccaffrey3093Ай бұрын
Merlin and Allison V-12 all seem to blow smoke on start. Why are the DBs so clean?
@adiamondforever7890Ай бұрын
@@mikemccaffrey3093 Oil should not leak past the valve seals, and the engine needs the oil pumped before starting so oil is not on the piston, or in the cylinder. Being inverted, it has a different pre flight you were not shown. The start you saw was likely a second start, after having been previously ran. My brother had a YAK aerobatic. It had a long preflight to get the oil out of the lower cylinders, the inverted V's had all the cylinders to be treated that way. US engines, the oil leaked down the valves into the head, and the oil either fouled the plugs, or burned off. Look at a FW190a cold start. Sometimes it would take several attempts as the engine would start and die, and as the cylinders fired the smoke could be substantial. All our radial were that way, just not as well photographed. Have fun
@mikemccaffrey3093Ай бұрын
So this wasn’t a cold start? Ok that makes sense. Still a great engine in a beautiful airplane.
@FrankC321Ай бұрын
She purrs like a kitten. When Chris said, "If you want to sit in the cockpit, too bad. I bought it and it is in my private garage". Nicely done, well preserved.
@trueAcidBurn15 күн бұрын
So emotional… just amazing video and the interview🥹
@robertmize23336 күн бұрын
Very dedicated pilot. Must be an amazing experience to fly a well known aircraft. German engineers are world renown!!
@StrakinАй бұрын
Great interview! Top questions!
@RandallBriggs-s2kАй бұрын
Volker Bau's comment about using the "cyclic" is a dead giveaway that his regular job involves flying helicopters.
@whotube22029 күн бұрын
It's interesting to hear first hand about the marginal rudder authority of these comparatively early Bf 109 versions. Little wonder both that there were so many ground movement accidents and that design evolved into a larger fin/rudder (easier modification) going forward from the later G variants whilst the undercarriage (extremely difficult modification) remained essentially the same. One of your most enlightening videos!
@terrygrady76833 ай бұрын
What a beauty. Sounds great. "It's an honor to fly the aircraft".
@stanleydomalewski849714 күн бұрын
Great Video, The Plane looks Magnificent 😊! Thanks for Sharing !
@Niels_DnАй бұрын
That flyby sound gives me goosebumps 👌🏼
@Steeler-wg5zoАй бұрын
or the FW 190.....
@MrElliotc02Ай бұрын
Really great job. Thanks all around.
@gafrersАй бұрын
Fantastic. Legend
@samulis8275Ай бұрын
I would have loved to know what he thought about Finnish WW2 pilots who flew these from narrow and short make shift airports from middle of forrests with zero margin of error.
@lowersaxonАй бұрын
I guess he would say that the Finns had outstanding pilots. Its well known among experts.
@crixus88-Ай бұрын
Remember the Finnish pilot who never got hit?
@kimrnhof1074 ай бұрын
lovely plane - I really don't know why the spitfire is said to be the most beautiful fighter - I thinks the 109 looks great.
@VerbindungsАй бұрын
I agree. But in matters of beauty, everything is in the eyes of the beholder. I love those straight lines while I am not fond of the rounded curves.
@danconnolly2341Ай бұрын
@@Verbindungs The Spit is quite fine in appearance and performance. Great planes the two of them. Early 109's like the E and F quite the lookers.
@HartmutJagerArt17 күн бұрын
Both Look Beautiful ! Too bad that they were made for war !
@lyndoncmp575114 күн бұрын
Because the Spitfire actually IS the most beautiful. That's why it is called the most beautiful. It's not rocket science. 😊
@HartmutJagerArt14 күн бұрын
@@lyndoncmp5751...the Most Beautiful, -is Always a matter of an Individual's likes and dislikes !
@b212hpАй бұрын
Bau's helicopter time slipped in at 6:12 with "however you need some forces on the cyclic".
@GW2Vids112 күн бұрын
Genial! Als dcs Pilot sind solche Interviews sehr gerne gesehen!
@sandgroper4044Ай бұрын
Great episode . absolutely love the 109s
@schadenfreude1916 күн бұрын
In my top five favorite birds of all time. Lovely interview
@air-headedaviator1805Ай бұрын
If any of y’all have seen a 109 or similar in person, you’ll know that its *tiny.* like comparable to a modern day TBM in scale, or smaller. Something like that thats about as heavy as any other period fighter is gonna be a brisk experience to say the least! Wing cube loading of a high degree. I read a theory interview on flying the 109 years ago, probably from the same pilot! Controls are direct, it lives at the top end of speed, it changes direction like that 🫰. Its a wonder how this is the most mass produced fighter plane in history with as intense a nature as it has
@danconnolly2341Ай бұрын
Failure by the Luftwaffe RLM to source an adequate high altitude replacement in the timeframe required. FW-190 obviously an excellent fighter at or below around 20,000 feet, the BMW engine FW's struggled a bit at the higher altitudes versus allied V-12 fighters.
@StrGrpp4Ай бұрын
ITS NICE TO SEE, red 7 in good shape. that airplane has had a rough go with a few crashes
@bonose12Ай бұрын
Stunning plane and pilot Thx so much!
@benjaminglover157011 күн бұрын
Fantastic to see the 109 in the air and handled so well. The Black Devil would be smiling.
@alexhanna3921Ай бұрын
You don’t need to say…..Messerschmitt BF109……109, and any human on earth will know what you are referring too. Like 262….. Great channel my friend!
@weaseltonАй бұрын
Perfect way to answer that.
@number1genoaАй бұрын
I read somewhere that the spread of the undercarriage wheels was set so as to fit the width of a German railway flat car. In an aviation magazine a few years back there was an account from an ME 109 display pilot who was an ex world aerobatic champion. I dont remember his name but he said some of the more challenging landings required him to use every trick in his playbook. It maybe a myth but I have read that more were lost to ground accidents than combat or anti aircraft fire. Legends are created by the pilots who achieved great feats in the machines they flew the ME 109 deserves its legendary status in that regard. Matter of fact assessments of various fighters are accounted in test pilot Eric winkle Browns Books. Eric rated the three most outstanding German aircraft as the JU 88, ME 262 and FW 190 (the latter outstanding and almost perfect !) The ME 109 he rated as good workhorse but with some nasty characteristics particularly with regard to landing.
@uwemobil884728 күн бұрын
Once you are airborne - it`s fun. During the last sequence with that dive I hat goosebumps.