Bill this was your best episode as a presenter. Well spoken. Seth your editing has improved significantly. John you continue to be a excellent guest speaker. I truly enjoy the three guys sitting in the bar talking. Thank you.
@mkt60603 ай бұрын
Yup I usually don't have the time to listen al the way through the longer videos, but I listened all the way through this one, because I kept learning new things.
@PalleRasmussen3 ай бұрын
Every video with Jon is a treat.
@LordJuan43 ай бұрын
For real, Seth and Bill (and any of the other guests) are amazing hosts in their own right and I tune in for every episode, but Jon really is a pleasure to listen to
@johnresto16032 ай бұрын
@@LordJuan4Jon is great. I tried to listen and watch anything with him.
@briankorbelik2873Ай бұрын
@@LordJuan4 I love everyone that I've seen on this "show". I've been reading WW2 books since the 1960' and the newness and the quantity of these just keeps getting better. I'm very thankful to all who appear when I watch the podcast on youtube. I know that it's not the pacific war, (I love "Sister Sara" CV-3, and "Old Yorky", CV-5, and the USS Seawolf), but/and I'd love to find a great discussion on the Battle of Kursk as well.
@Titus-as-the-Roman3 ай бұрын
Thanks again. Ugaki was an enlightening read, Vice Admiral Chūichi Hara is another good read, how accurate I can't say, it sounded good.
@unbreakable76333 ай бұрын
My father, a signalman on the USS Hornet (CV 12), was with Task Force 58. One of his jobs was a plotter in the Combat Information Center (he also manned a radar station and radio as other jobs he was trained for) and the Hornet time and again served as the flagship. He told me that Admiral Mitscher was a good guy; he also liked Clark but thought Halsey was an arrogant behind. When I bought a Japanese car once, all he said was, "They tried to drop bombs on me." When he was very old and visiting my sister in San Francisco, she asked him if he wanted to go see the Hornet, which was docked there as a museum ship; he said, "I've seen it."
@tbm3fan9133 ай бұрын
Ah, he should have come by. I've spent 26 years as a volunteer restorer and he would have been treated as royalty once all knew he was a WWII crewman. In my early years around 2001 while restoring the Pilot House, there was a docent who was a helmsman on her during WWII. Then he disappeared maybe because he liked to bring a six pack with him and store it in the volunteer lounge to drink during the day. Maybe Admin had something to do with it. However, if he was down when I was there he always asked me to have a beer with him.
@dianeduffcroop815812 күн бұрын
When both of the ships that my father served on we're in town, we thought he'd love to go down and see them. But his reply was essentially the same as your father's. Maybe it just brings back too many memories, and many of them bad.🇺🇲⚓️🙏💯💖
@markterribile69483 ай бұрын
Full frontal nerdity--I love it!
@billgrider44483 ай бұрын
I look forward to each & every episode. Thanks!
@davidbonnici87863 ай бұрын
Love your work and thank you for all you guys do. Keep us in the loop for when you present in person I keep missing you. I visited New Orleans for the incredible WW2 museum in February and Fredericksburg for the Pacific War museum a year ago based on your work.
@gregcollins76023 ай бұрын
Fantastic Torpedo Tuesday. I could have nerded out for another hour just on the night fighter and radar development. It's always fun when the 3 amigos are together. Has anyone ever noticed the patterns on Jon's shirts make it difficult to determine his range and course?
@jammininthepast3 ай бұрын
Thank you Gentlemen, I value and enjoy your excellent work.
@cragnamorra3 ай бұрын
Another absolutely superb episode. One of the things I've most enjoyed about this channel is how you bring out so many of these lesser-known (to many, even "unknown") but very significant operations. To even relative aficionados who've read a lot of Pacific War history and are quite familiar with the "big" battles (Marianas, Leyte, Iwo, etc), it's easy to form a general - perhaps even subconscious - false impression of "not that much happening" in between those intense, costly, but relatively short events. You guys are really highlighting the CONTINUOUS daily grind of arduous combat operations, with the very important implication that these sailors and aircrew are ENTERING the big battles like Leyte Gulf already fatigued and ground down from weeks or even months of hard fighting without let-up. Fantastic job.
@richardbeard55933 ай бұрын
Thank yall for all yall do bring out the heroes in this war... This is the first time I've heard or seen of this engagement. Thank ya for bringing it out.. Continue ya good work and may God's blessings be upon yall...
@orl22223 ай бұрын
Old boomer hispano here. My father joined the US Navy on Dec 8th 1941 in Denver Colorado. He was a CeeBee that was under heavy fire during the battle of the Marinas, as he landed with the first wave of marines building aid stations. I'm glad you have covered the Navy in the pacific. Most people don't know, but on June 6th 1944 the armada to invade the Marinas left Pearl. It was the largest fleet ever assembled. This event never gets the coverage that The D day landings did.
@paulrugg16293 ай бұрын
Again, a most informative episode about a subject not often presented in the world of pac history. These guys are in the weeds on a subject not often visited.... Thank you guys
@salonicah3 ай бұрын
Thanks for the great information, from Guadalcanal,
@richardbennett18563 ай бұрын
Cheers! Feel free to chime in, anytime. Stay cool, mate.
@bobnewby91293 ай бұрын
I'm really liking the trend toward longer shows. I'll take all you have to give!
@douglaskillock35373 ай бұрын
Great to see Jon back on board. A relatively restrained shirt by his standard but contrasts nicely with the legendary wallpaper
@christopherqueen31943 ай бұрын
An Essex class carrier being commissioned every other month! Wow! Steve Rogers: “I can do this all day.”
@KennanKlein3 ай бұрын
Thanks for another great episode. I think it's really cool the video interludes. Thank you so much for what you do!
@MadLudwig3 ай бұрын
Great episode gents! I don't recall having read about or seen any video production on these raids. Very informative and interesting. Thanks!
@lafouche3453 ай бұрын
The big 3 ……. always a treat !
@xbubblehead3 ай бұрын
At 80 years of age, I still have trouble wrapping my head around how short a time it was between the Doolittle Raid and the surrender of Japan. It's about the same length of time between the start of the Covid-19 pandemic and now.
@peterallman84743 ай бұрын
@@xbubblehead those were exactly my thoughts. I was already shaking my head at the logistics of that ship-building schedule (at the same time building aircraft, artillery, tanks, munitions etc., etc.) when it became the theme of the conversation. And all this going on, if to a lesser extent, in Japan, Russia, Germany, Britain too.
@RonJohn633 ай бұрын
@@peterallman8474 it required _years_ of preparation by industrialists who deeply understood both manufacturing and logistics (even before the Two Ocean Navy law).
When I was a kid, I was fortunate that my family lived on the north side of a lake in Minnesota with a dock that also had a sitting bench. In the summer, when the wind was from the south, it was such a gently magical experience to sit on the bench at night and look at the moon as it traversed the southern sky. I like this Japanese custom you mentioned, to take the time to just sit under the stars and appreciate the autumn moonlight. Best wishes from Minnesota. :)
I really enjoyed your comments. But I have to say I'm very conflicted about the Japanese people. Here is a race of people that can turn a phrase has a very poetic existence, yet back in World War II you even had the same poetic existence inability to turn a beautiful phrase. But then I look at what Japan did in the Pacific and I'm appalled that's where I'm conflicted.🇺🇲⚓️🙏💯💖
@robertwatson93593 ай бұрын
I know you have a list of stories that you have not covered that you value, but my Dad was on a Destroyer Escort, USS Barber, not many stories from that ship, they picked up sailors from the water of two Destroyers while on the coast of le Shima, USS Twiggs and USS Hadley. He recounted the stories, saying we knew what was going on, the kamakazes were raining havoc on the US Fleet and felt the threat they represented. There were many DEs sunk from attacks and they delivered the underwater swimmers to clear or scout landing beaches before the invasion fleets came in. He said his service did not have mush effect on the war but many did. The flyers and sailors they picked up had a different opinion of his service..
@73Trident3 ай бұрын
Great episode as usual guys. Thank you for this wealth of information that you share with us.
@gchoquette2993 ай бұрын
I really appreciate your telling the under told history of the Pacific theater. Keep up the good work.
@Titus-as-the-Roman3 ай бұрын
The story that goes with Secretary Stintson's removal of Kyoto from the bombing list is also interesting. Was watching a Documentary on the Chaos Theory/Butterfly Effect when mathematicians used that story as an analogy, it was the reason Nagasaki was eventually chosen for the 2nd A-bomb.- Guys I knew that Flew would call that Cluster-Puck over Tokyo as "Fly Soup"
@DalonCole3 ай бұрын
i come for Jon’s shirts i stay for the content
@davidbonnici87863 ай бұрын
I come for Jon’s wallpaper. 😂. And stay for the content.
@carrabellefl3 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@pablolugo26153 ай бұрын
As always great information, knowledgeable and entertaining.
@timbrown148126 күн бұрын
Love your trade mark shirt Jon! Looking forward to another great presentation. Seth, you and Bill being so much to my education on WW2 topics. Thanks much.
@petervandyk71733 ай бұрын
Tuesday has become my favourite day, since you guys started this brilliant series. Thanks for yet another great episode. T.G.I.T. 😁
@rohan1970b3 ай бұрын
Bill mentioned (26:15) that they were still building mechanical driven fighter based radar in the early 2000's. I served in the Air Force from 91-97 as a radar technician. However, mine was ATC. We had ASR that was mechanical and PAR that was electronic so it was very slow in adapting, but if you've been in, it's not surprising.
@antonrudenham32593 ай бұрын
@@rohan1970b The RAF's Op Blackbuck to bomb the runway at Port Stanley during the 1982 Falklands war used Vulcan bombers fitted with a nav radar based on the H2S of WW2 vintage.
@rohan1970b3 ай бұрын
@@antonrudenham3259 Yes, and the new PAR I worked on was actually from the 60's. :)
@DanColley-qy3wi3 ай бұрын
Hellcat Ns were a picnic to fly when compared to what the pilots of today's single-seat fighter pilotshave to deal with.(eg. F15 and F16) Taking NOTHING from those Hellcat drivers. They did AMAZING things with the small toolbox they worked from. I feel obligated to add that you guys are doing a tremendous job. Your programming serves to fill in blanks were info is lacking. Example : I knew that there were "some" raids on Tokyo in this time frame, but there is a dearth of any printed or electronic data that I have any access to. Today was a VERY informative day. Thank you.
@ernietheattorneycom15 күн бұрын
New subscriber here, thank you gents for this important history. Lest we forget....
@OMMgreenshirt3 ай бұрын
Good morning gentlemen, I awoke to see the clock showing at 4:02am here in Oregon and said to myself, "It's time!" so up with my first cup of coffee listening in. I am very excited to hear what is next due to my father being aboard USS Bunker Hill (CV-17) at that time. He was a signalman "skivvy waver" at the Flag Boards station.
@unclemikedoyle3 ай бұрын
You and me, both. My grandfather was a Bosun aboard Bunker Hill. He never talked about Okinawa (or any of the actions he was in), but the photo of the crew on the pier in front of her hung front and center in his den.
@unbreakable76333 ай бұрын
My father was a signalman on the USS Hornet (CV 12), which was also with Task Force 58. And I was glad to find this video.
@SoonerDan773 ай бұрын
I never cease to be amazed at how much of a damage piñata the Saratoga was. It's probably the unluckiest ship to survive the war.
@sethparidon86543 ай бұрын
Damage pinata. I really like that one.
@warwatcher913 ай бұрын
Only Intrepid and Birmingham really come close.
@Rocketsong3 ай бұрын
As a converted Battle-cruiser Saragoga had better torpedo protection than the newer carriers. Good thing for her given how much of a torpedo magnet she was.
@Perfusionist013 ай бұрын
I realize that these videos are prepared quite some time before air date, but could Jon speak to the Japanese Judy dive bombers and their crews? These were quite the "carrier killers" late in the Pacific war. To my knowledge it was conventional bombing from Judys that got the Princeton, Franklin and Bunker Hill among other victims. Also, could Bill address the story that the Japanese were able to board and examine the wreck of USS Darter off Palawan. Reportedly, the radar and signals equipment had been destroyed, but the recovered information about the USN IFF systems that allowed the Judys (and others) to get closer to the carriers. Thanks again for producing such a fine series of video podcasts.
@Paul-zf8ob3 ай бұрын
You 3 are perfect as a group! Have learned so much.
@jesscarver98823 ай бұрын
Bill, thank you for the 9/11 video.
@JohnLane-h4r3 ай бұрын
Entertaining as always thanks 😊 for your service to those who were there off shore on the ships and aircraft…….truly the greatest men our country ever had in service to its citizens
@marchuvfulz3 ай бұрын
Great vid. The discussion of the US Navy buildup highlights our remarkable industrial mobilization, but even more amazing to me is the human mobilization--all of those ships needed officers, pilots, and crews, and all of those people had to be recruited, trained, and deployed after Dec. '41. Think of the investment in schools, training facilities, instructors, etc., to get to this point. Pretty astonishing when you think of it.
@rangerlongshot3 ай бұрын
The thing that astounds me the most is what we did with logistics and building infrastructure as we crossed the Pacific. Everything single thing and every person and every nail or can of Spam had to come from 6000-8000 miles away. It's mind boggling.
@Rocketsong3 ай бұрын
The numbers stagger the mind. For example, we had 20,000 aviators killed in training accidents alone, during WWII.
@josephnason87703 ай бұрын
My dad had 760 hrs of stick time before his first combat mission on Kanoya March 18 1945 from Wasp, which was bombed the next day along with Franklin. This agrees with your 600 hr. figure at 39:17.
@slimeydon3 ай бұрын
Great episode guys, and Jon, I love the contrast of that shirt with that wallpaper.
@craigplatel8133 ай бұрын
While the planes weren't designated as F/A, in January of 1945 squadrons started to be designated as VBF. At the start of the Okinawa campaign there were 6 squadrons assigned to TF-58 that were designated as VBF. A good book concerning the high percentage of new pilots is twilight warriors by Robert Gandt who was one of those new pilots assigned to airwing 10 during the Okinawa campaign.
@warwatcher912 ай бұрын
Robert gandt was born in 1939.
@jeffreymartin84483 ай бұрын
They can take a story like this, perhaps mundane in the Hollywood vein, and make it absolutely enthralling and electric. Master historians. Including you too Capt. Toti !
@ThePlebicide3 ай бұрын
Excellent work Gentlemen
@jammin43723 ай бұрын
Love when John is on👍👍
@m.r.donovan87433 ай бұрын
Another fantastic lecture from all three of you. The world is learning from you. I'm praying that history does not have to repeat itself.
@FlyingDutchmanPodcast3 ай бұрын
Okay I’m really enjoying this . I’m an airplane guy post WWII but this channel has opened my eyes to a whole new area of interest. Thank you
@denniswiemer723 ай бұрын
Thanks again for another great episode. So looking forward to the Franklin show.
@EricByrd-ex2pc3 ай бұрын
Great episode - the slow build! Spruance’s patience and planning are always astonishing. He and Grant overlap in many instances. Parshall lives in Minneapolis, and I’ve wondered if he stops in at Magers & Quinn, a local bookstore whose naval history section is deeper than you would expect. Lots of Naval Institute Press titles.
@ziggle3143 ай бұрын
Thanks for the note on the bookstore. I live in the Minneapolis area and am looking for good local bookstores to patronize.
@EricByrd-ex2pc3 ай бұрын
Midway Books, in St Paul, is another good one for WW2, and for anything really. A deep collection - the booksellers have very fine taste.
@toroon3 ай бұрын
Just want to say . Well done!!!
@uberduberdave3 ай бұрын
I wish I had the luxury to sit through these two to three hour episodes, but I don't. I have take them in 20 to 30 minute pieces in between household chores and other activities. Even so the excitement generated by learning a new episode is out only wanes at the end. I always discover details about wartime events I thought knew fairly well, and I'm always left wanting more. I first stumbled upon these podcasts about a year or so ago, and binge watched until I ran out, much like binge watching a favorite TV show on Netflix or the like. Now I must wait what seems for ever until the next episode comes out. I truly wish all of you the best of health, so you will continue the podcasts for years to come. Life would go on without them, but I would be seriously less enjoyable.
@JohnnySmithWhite-wd4ey3 ай бұрын
Some carrier skippers refused to use the SB2C aboard their ships . They used the F6F as fighter bombers.
@TheFUZEMAN3 ай бұрын
One vote for keep talking! 😊 Another informative, entertaining high quality video!!!
@briancooper21123 ай бұрын
Again another great episode!
@BernardMann-nf1ks3 ай бұрын
Another great episode thanks my brothers
@maximillianvermontsuperbik26243 ай бұрын
You guys, just keep getting better and better, thank you.
@OMMgreenshirt3 ай бұрын
Awesome episode and thanks for the teaser of starting "Operation Iceberg" next week.
@NathanPoe-h7f3 ай бұрын
My Great Grandpa was on the Franklin. Only thing I remember him talking about is climbing up the uptakes to get out of the ship. Looking forward to that episode. He didn't talk about it much. There is a great book called Inferno by Joseph Springer that is pretty excellent talking about the ordeal of the men on the ship, its quite shocking. Awesome episodes, always enjoy the channel.
@unbreakable76333 ай бұрын
My father served on the USS Hornet (CV 12) and was on its deck to witness the Franklin get hit. He said it was the worst thing he saw in the war.
@jesscarver98823 ай бұрын
Tuesday is truly the best day of the week! Bill Seth Thank you guys!!
@kepple833 ай бұрын
I agree Tuesdays are the best day
@timandellenmoran12133 ай бұрын
Hi, great job on the Navy, Marines, Army. Could you do a reminder that a lot of our carrier pilots received training on the Great Lakes. Also, if you have not, and I am saying this from a point of not knowing if you may have already done so, mention the role that the Coast Guard played in the Pacific. Thank you.
@jliller3 ай бұрын
An episode on the Coast Guard would be great. In particular, LORAN was introduced during the war as a navigational system in the Pacific and would remain in use until 2010. The stations were operated by the Coast Guard.
@wkbigfish3 ай бұрын
Another great episode. As Bill says…”See you again next week”. Wouldn’t miss it. Thanks
@rayschoch58823 ай бұрын
I don't know that they had radar direction yet, but when the 3rd/5th fleet attacked Formosa/Taiwan in the run-up to Leyte Gulf in October, 1944, my dad's F6F-5 took 3 25mm hits raiding an airfield, including 1 to the engine. The squadron history says they were 40mm, but A) that was an uncommon caliber for Japanese AAA; and B) not even a Hellcat would likely stay together if it took 3 40mm hits. I've seen photos of the mangled plane after it landed, and while it managed to get dad back to the Lexington, it was deemed "unrepairable" and pushed over the side after a bit of cannibalization of guns and parts. Low-altitude runs against the Japanese could be lethal by this point in the war, and even more so by mid-1945.
@christopherj.osheav58073 ай бұрын
50° 27' 0.0036'' N and 30° 31' 23.9988'' E Gentlemen, Well done. Another poignant trip down memory lane. Keep those cards and letters coming. Thank you. V/r - IB An American in Ukraine (2019 - Present)
@stephanshemenski63483 ай бұрын
I was an ET from 1979 until 1992 and had extensive exposure in my uncle's TV repair shop prior to joining the Navy and realized that the small screen you described was a CRT vacuum tube used in oscilloscopes. It was the same diameter and with sweep circuits in the display it could provide the pilot with the information he needed to locate the home in and destroy the enemy aircraft. Incidents, my 1st radar, the AN/FPN-63 PAR had mechanical movement of the waveguide to cause the rf beam to sweep back and forth or up and down as needed to produce a glide path and center line for ATC to guide a plane into to land
@billechols71363 ай бұрын
Great show gentlemen.
@scottjohnson1363 ай бұрын
Gentlemen, once again well done!
@Jon.A.Scholt3 ай бұрын
The best thing about Tuesdays!
@therealuncleowen25883 ай бұрын
I wish I'd known half as much about the war in the 80s growing up as I do today. I'd have tried to find out what every middle aged man in my hometown had done in the war. I didn't and I have no idea today. Even if they didn't want to talk about it, I wouldn't have pressed them, and I'd liked to have just said thank you.
@NateWilliams1903 ай бұрын
I was just thinking something similar. My Dad was in the Marianas then in the occupying forces in Japan, of 2 of his friends, 1 was a B17 ball turret gunner in Europe & the other, the shooter in a .50 cal machine gun squad up the Italian boot. I wished I'd asked all of them a lot more than I did.
@therealuncleowen25883 ай бұрын
@@NateWilliams190 Thanks for sharing. To your dad and his buddies, thanks for standing up to tyranny.
@mkaustralia71363 ай бұрын
I too wish I had spoken more to our veterans. My dad and mum wouldn’t talk of it. My uncle avoided it until near his end when he recounted stories of being inserted on northern PNG ahead of the landings and then the hair raising exfiltration. His view of the (in)effectiveness of the RAAF and USAAF in their strafing of his canoe was apparently in his report back to HQ. I also had the privilege of talking to a Changi, Burma Railway and Japan based POW, after he gave his oral history to the Australian War Museum. He was by then approaching his mid 70s and had finally been persuaded to tell his story. It was subsequently published as “A Guest of the Emperor” (Russell Savage) What a generation!
@billyhouse19432 ай бұрын
Thank you… this was good.. thanks for recognizing that the Japanese are a formable foe at this time and not always just suicidal. After all it is their home land..
@alowry20023 ай бұрын
Thank you. Excellent material and so educational.
@matthewnewton88123 ай бұрын
Great episode. These fellas are my favorite guys on the whole internet. I would give anything to hang out with them and, as Seth says, “nerd out” for an afternoon. Can’t wait for the episode on Franklin! She really got whammed. Also, I’m so so so so hoping that you guys are planning on doing a couple of episodes on the British Pacific Fleet, which you mentioned once or twice today- that’s one of the very last things I ever learned about the War, one of the last gaps in my knowledge and although I know a great deal more about it now I still find it absolutely fascinating how the British were able to put together this giant fleet even after all the attrition they had suffered throughout the war. Amazing- please dedicate a few episodes to this fascinating moment in the War!!
@joeyartk3 ай бұрын
The MacArthur airfield joke was pretty good.
@lwilde3 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation. Bravo Zulu.
@bobnewby91293 ай бұрын
Yay, Jon Parshall again.
@infomericalfactory5963 ай бұрын
A show on these late war Japanese’s fighters and other military technology the Japanese developed would be great. Also one on USA radar Technology. Thanks guys this show was one of your best.
@davidlee85513 ай бұрын
Excellent! Thanks to all three.
@alganhar13 ай бұрын
You know, thats something a modified Fairey Fulmar might have actually been good at. Carrier launched Night Fighter. This is 1945, so slap one of the new Griffon engines in, add a radar, remove the MG's, put in 4 cannons, or maybe 6 .50's. Its not going to have the performance of a Corsair, but its got the advantage of a second seater who could be the radar operator, so guide the pilot to the target, which would speed up target acquisition, identification and engagement. Plus Fulmars were Fighter/recon aircraft, so they had a good range even clean, which means plenty of loiter time. It may have actually made the Fulmar useful!
@BlackHawkBallistic3 ай бұрын
Great episode as always gentleman, I can't wait for next weeks, keep up the good work
@waynesmith84313 ай бұрын
Exceptional episode of a little regarded action of the Pacific.
@thomassanchez96933 ай бұрын
My Father served on the Wasp during this time. It was nice to hear You talk about the different operations. I looked at My Dads yearbook from the Wasp and could see photos, and see how rough it must have been. Thank You!
@chuckhillier41533 ай бұрын
Much appreciated.
@cjohnson14693 ай бұрын
I've heard you say on several occasions that the U.S. could not produce materiel at the rate of late WWII levels. I agree. It would be interesting to have the reasons why detailed in a future episode if possible. Is it the complexity of the newest weaponry and time required? The dependence on other countries for the raw materials and/or technology? The will of the people to spend, commit and man these weapons? A different political climate? I've been hearing about how long it takes to turn around the mid-life maintenance on a modern nuclear carrier - years! I've enjoyed this latest episode as all the others. Thank you.
@andrewnlarsen3 ай бұрын
Another well done presentation again and it definitely matches up with what I have read in the past about the early 1945 carrier strikes. Two things I want to bring up is that the strikes I believe on March 19, 1945 also included impromptu strikes against the remaining ships of the Combined Fleet, which were in the Inland Sea at the time as well as the clarification that the Japanese 343 Air Group had both the N1K1 Shinden and the N1K2-J Shinden Kai (which most of the pilots flew during that deadly encounter on March 19,1945). And rightfully so the trial of USS Franklin deserves its own video. Finally the Japanese definitely gave as good as they got and it would serve as a prelude to the horrors of Okinawa.
@gnuspudguns3 ай бұрын
Y'all are awesome.
@MM229663 ай бұрын
Carrier pilots: "Cool! We're doing missions over Japan's Home Islands!" Also Carrier pilots: "Don't get shot down or have to crash land there."
@DalonCole3 ай бұрын
live watching this channel grow
@Matt-4163 ай бұрын
Excellent podcast!! Truly. Impeccable information and testimonials. The best WW2 podcast available, bar none. I do have one concern about what Captain Toti stated at 1:40:00 that the US had a higher rate of casualties than the Japanese. I can't rectify that, as Japan lost over 18,000 killed and the US lost under 7,000. Even the total US wounded barely outnumbers the Japanese killed. US lost less than 7% (28% if including all casualties), which is incredibly high. Juxtapose that with Japan losing 95% of its force.
@sethneumann51673 ай бұрын
that's a good question: what were the total US KIA/Wounded v Japanese. I have to believe the Japanese KIA was in the millions?
@sethneumann51673 ай бұрын
Duh, should have done a search 1st! The first site I found says total Japanese KIA was 2.6-3.1 million, with about 2.1 million combatants.
@Matt-4163 ай бұрын
@@sethneumann5167 Total? I was only referring to Iwo Jima. US: 27,000 total casualties out of 110,000. Japan: 18,000 killed out of roughly 19,000. Estimated total Japanese losses for WW2 are just under 2,200,000 military plus 700,000 civilians. It's all good... I also ask questions from following my thoughts.... Despite the ability for a quick Google search. Lol
@Doodle12663 ай бұрын
Excellent discussion of a subject not often discussed. Everybody knows about the B29 campaign. Navy suppression raids are forgotten.
@Cuffsmaster3 ай бұрын
great job guys
@SamAlley-l9j3 ай бұрын
Thank you Bill Seth and Jon!
@plastichistory91483 ай бұрын
Seeing Jon on here after growing up with seeing him on battle 360 and many other things is crazy. Fantastic work fellas
@scrambledganglia69463 ай бұрын
Shiden. A redesigned floatplane. Nasty suprise.
@Christopher-xn6rb2 күн бұрын
Captain Toti, You’re an Officer, gentleman and a scholar. I’m a great fan of all of these presentations. But I just have to say it. Do you know that you look and sound just like Fred Armisen? 😂 Please forgive my brash observations and keep up the outstanding work 🇺🇸
@iainharding19923 ай бұрын
Outstanding presentation! 👏👏👏👏
@ReverendScaleModeler3 ай бұрын
Another great episode as always! Have read some on this over the years but this deep-dive made me realize how serious our losses were during these raids and the effectiveness of Japanese tactics and abilities. Makes sense given the information in Richard Frank's book Downfall. Overall Japanese forces in the home islands were substantially more than planners originally thought. Japan would have been defeated but the losses on both sides in the event of an invasion would have absolutely devastating and horrendous.
@georgeburns72513 ай бұрын
Thank you for the details of the Hellcat radar. This was extremely interesting. The radars that were installed on the Dauntless dive bombers earlier, and instead of a rotating dish antenna were fitted with yagi array antennas beneath the wings would be interesting to learn about. I don’t see anything about them using Google. Also, the Avengers had an early air search radar. What were the particulars about this set? In case you have a nerd moment in a later episode.what happened to the American pilots who were shot down over Japan during there raids? Beheaded?
@sethneumann51673 ай бұрын
my first fear when discussing a British nite fighter is that it would electronics from "Lucas, Prince of Darkness"
@denniscahill96833 ай бұрын
Bill's windup is shockingly reminiscent of November-December 1944 in Europe...Hubris is deadly.