My grandfather flew 66 operational missions in a Lancaster Mk X. He was partway through his second tour, when he was shot down, on his 26th birthday, while supporting breakout operations from Normandy. His plane took a hit in the port wing that made a hole the size of a bathtub between the engines, and disabled both engine 1 & 2. They took a second hit in the fuselage, about 10 feet in front of the tail, disabling the tail control surfaces. Most of the crew bailed above 1500 feet, but the pilot, Howie (I don't remember his last name), and my grandfather, stayed in the bomber to try and get the tail-gunner out. He'd been trapped by the second hit, Howie kept the plane in the air as long as possible, while grandpa got the door open and the gunner out. The tail-gunner was next to bail, followed by grandpa and then Howie at about 800 feet. Everybody managed to get back to friendly lines, except the tail-gunner, who was captured and spent the rest of the war in a POW camp. Howie and my grandfather, Reg Swartz, were awarded the Bar to their DFC's by King George VI, in Buckingham Palace, in March of 1946. His medals and uniform are part of the permanent collection of the Elgin Museum, in St Thomas, Ontario.
@kenchesnut44254 ай бұрын
Can't imagine what was going through his mind those last few minutes trying to get the gunner out...The Greatest Generation...❤
@colinobrien38064 ай бұрын
i have an interest in war history and aircraft so i stood on the beaches in normandy for a holiday , i sat in a glider that the paratroopers used to get towed by the dc3s , i said a prayer on omaha beach for brave guys like your grandfather that helped liberate europe ... sadly history is repeating itself and unless someone stops russia we might havve to do the whole lot again ...respect to the raf and the allied bomber crews that saved us ... not many people appreciate the sacrifice those guys made ..they should visit the field full of gravestones in normandy and they might understand
@blakeedwards17304 ай бұрын
@@colinobrien3806i want to go to normandy soooo baddd
@blumobean3 ай бұрын
Try to honor his memory. I try to be a good man because I was raised by the best.
@corjaytaylr62423 ай бұрын
N8
@JJbm42333 ай бұрын
It’s amazing to see that KZbin can actually provide us with such high-quality historical documentaries. These documentaries often disappear in the age before the Internet.
@spannaspinna3 ай бұрын
I assure you YT had nothing to do with it
@capnthepeafarmer2 ай бұрын
Back in the pre-internet times, you would buy the VHS set of the documentaries you liked.
@baileyantonengpei78609 ай бұрын
Man I love this doc series ! Almost 3 hours ? What’s not to love !?
@Anglo_Saxon18 ай бұрын
Yeah,the full series was first aired on uk telly about 5 years ago.I agree they're quality documentaries 👍 There's 3 series' (22 episodes).
@steveanderson47686 ай бұрын
Because it truly beats what is on TV in the networks, all they can produce is garbage
@wmffmw9 ай бұрын
The real limitation is experienced Pilots who understand tactics. U.S. Pilots flew as teams and learned to kill enemy aircraft regardless of their performance. The tactics changed with experience and advancements in Aircraft. I flew the F4E Phantom II. Taught by an Instructor who instructed me to think outside the box.
@eltontonge41867 ай бұрын
Did you write that with a crayon ?
@tedleavell93225 ай бұрын
Excellent documentary! Well done Brits
@cacornhusker294027 күн бұрын
Bouncing Bombs in WWII?? That's gotta be The Epitome of thinking "out of the box", but to follow thru with the engineering, Manufacturing/design of custom Lancasters, pilot training, logistics etc for something that may not work is simply amazing and mind boggling to learn about it 50+ years later.....Man I love History and Kudos to the Historians and Team who produce these vids. Thanks for Preserving History with Top Notch Productions.
@tashigaden78363 күн бұрын
this is an outstanding documentary! thank so so much made available for everyone 🙏
@RandomDudeOne9 ай бұрын
Yes the Zero was a top of the line plane when it was first introduced. But, the technology was advancing so quickly at the time, two years later it wasn't so great.
@cigarsgunsanddiesel80329 ай бұрын
if they had self-sealing fuel tanks they would have been better!
@Wardads18 ай бұрын
It was at the acme of its development with little room for further improvement
@dindodayao62388 ай бұрын
Yes Mitsubishi engines are superb I own an old car that have a Mitsubishi SATURN 4G32 chain type w/side drop Webber's still roars like a monster!!
@Banthisyoutube-zs6sx8 ай бұрын
@@dindodayao6238i drove a 91 mirage i got as a hand me down from my parents minimal maintainence as my dad wasn't really a car guy and money was tight growing up......300k miles and no major repairs besides a starter.......and a new 5 speed manual that came off a 2nd hand parts dealer. Would probablly still start after sitting dor 10 years if i went and pit a new battery in her.
@Chironex_Fleckeri4 ай бұрын
@@dindodayao6238I believe the engine for the Zero was designed and produced by Nakajima.
@dennismerlijn74594 ай бұрын
There is a saying here in holland: when the ships were made of wood and the men of steel. I have so much admiration for the ww2 allies and disgust for the current woke generation who think that a simular conflict can not happen again.
@blumobean3 ай бұрын
I 100% agree. I simply can't stomach a man with no pride or backbone. My mother was more manly than the average youth man today. She was all woman but tough when she needed to be.
@rammuchewicz80459 ай бұрын
Your presentation segment on the M-16 failure rate, leaves the impression that Colt was somehow responsible. Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara and his cadre of collegiate whiz kids, decided that they were collectively smarter than designer/engineer Eugene Stoner. Whereas Stoner's specifications called for use of the newer conical propellant, the whiz kids changed it to ball powder that was already in supply. Stoner likewise specified chrome lined chambers and bores, that the whiz kids discarded thinking it to be an unnecessary extravagant expense. Just those two government overrides, to ball powder and non-chrome lined chambers and bores. produced carbon fouling that adhered to the interior of the weapon, thus creating a jammomatic suicide machine. AK-47s at 100yds. were far more effective over American troops armed with bayonets at the end of a M-16 stick. I would suggest that our current cultural self-destruction again sources directly back to the collegiate theoretical universe.
@piotrd.48509 ай бұрын
Also remember, that Army was like "yeah, nice.... can we make it stronger buullet?" ?
@itzjcee5579 ай бұрын
Great comment about McNamara and his whiz kids!
@rammuchewicz80459 ай бұрын
@@piotrd.4850, Its original configuration was 7.62 x 51. there was a change to 5.56 x 45 as thinking embraced the idea that casualties would remove more of the enemy from the field. Dead is dead, but wounded require assistance. The initial first appearance in the field was satisfactory with SOG units, who named it a "meat axe". After about 200 yds. the round would begin to keyhole or rotate end over end, due to a loss of gyro-stability, the rearmost weight of the boat-tail bullet begins to overtake the front. Producing varied results such as impacts in the thigh exiting a shoulder. 5.56 gave more firepower than 7.62 in a standard load-out by weight.
@IcelanderUSer9 ай бұрын
Current self destruction is the fault of DJT 100%. Wake the fk up.
@jnovikoff0019 ай бұрын
Reminds me of Alaska Airlines who wanted a more profitable door plug where the Boeing disign was orininally for an emergency exit. I prefer the emergency exit.
@boraxediagnostics3 ай бұрын
Loved every second of this documentary
@rdee7423 ай бұрын
This was probably the most interesting production I've ever seen. Absolutely amazing.
@raymondj87689 ай бұрын
Brilliant Video thanks for the Upload !!!!!!
@foundnotlost3 ай бұрын
Thank you Lillian xxx
@blackcreekorganicfarm2969 ай бұрын
Shoigu reminded the west yesterday of the kalisnikov Which was interesting
@kevinvilmont60618 ай бұрын
That gentleman loves his country and his dad. I can’t imagine what it would cost to build that airplane
@jasonvaliant17019 ай бұрын
This was a great video !
@paulohenriquearaujofaria73069 ай бұрын
Fine documentary
@InservioLetum8 ай бұрын
Very cool documentary, thanks for sharing this. 👍
@warfarenotwarfair56553 ай бұрын
Too bad it's completely fake 🤣.
@beez70053 ай бұрын
Great documentary
@yomommaahotoo2649 ай бұрын
In all fairness you can't have factories without access to natural resources like oil to begin with. We in America had oil, Japan and Germany didn't.....in fact, that's why the war started to begin with.
@brianmoncion67239 ай бұрын
Now we a F1 race there. My message got deleted. I was saying it was political alliances with the German run Baku refinery and export that really hurt the German war machine. For lack of going into detail that's it.
@gagamba91989 ай бұрын
_'In all fairness you can't have factories without access to natural resources...'_ True. _'like oil to begin with.'_ Not true 'to begin with' . The most important resource for factories was coal. This was true for not only for Germany and Japan but also UK and US. Coal was king back then. How was coal Japan's most important resource? In 1936, it provided 51.4 per cent of Japan’s energy needs, serving both industry and households. Firewood and charcoal accounted for 18.6 per cent of Japan’s total energy consumption, mostly for household use. Electric power provided most of the rest of Japan’s energy, at 21.3 per cent. Depending on the season, hydroelectric power provided up to 78% of electricity and the remainder came from coal. (Had Japan built more reservoirs coal's use in generating electricity could have been reduced greatly.) Hydroelectric power provided 25 per cent of Japan's industries' energy whilst coal powered 71.2 per cent of Japanese industrial operations. Petroleum accounted for only 7.9 per cent of Japanese energy use, but, since this was *largely for military use* , it had disproportionate strategic importance. By 1940, coal had become even more important, supplying 66.1 per cent of Japan’s energy needs (civilian, industrial, agricultural, and military), while electric power provided 16.2 per cent, firewood and charcoal 10.7 per cent, and petroleum only 7.0 per cent. Companies like Toto, a maker of ceramic products which is energy intensive production, switched from oil to heat its kilns to coal and coal gas. Other than Japan's military, who consumed oil? The merchant and fishing fleets, though some of the merchant fleet still used coal in whole or in part. When war with the US began, much of Japan's fishing fleet had its operational range significantly reduced and many fisherman were drafted. This lack of manpower affected many other industries as well as skilled workers were inducted by a military that did not consider the consequences to industrial productivity. Coal was important to the entire economy yet during the '40s coal was mined by men too old to induct, women, children, and forced labourers from Korea as well as POWs. Certainly vehicles relied on petroleum products such as gasoline and diesel, but Japan had only 0.5% of the vehicles the US had. Rationing began in 1938 and by 1941 almost no fuel was available for civilian vehicles except trucks, which numbered 77,000. Gasoline for civilian use fell 66% between 1938 and 1941 _before_ Japan bombed Pearl Harbor. Even public buses were were converted from diesel and gasoline to coal and charcoal. Railroads were powered by coal (intercity routes) and electricity (intracity routes). Commercial airline service barely existed; Japan Air Transport carried 70,000 passengers in 1938, many of whom were military officers and government officials. Civilian aviation was a niche business sector. Coal was also the source for chemicals such as nitrates and ammonia for use as fertilisers and industrial feedstocks. This began with the Haber process and then the alternative Casale, Claude, and the Mont-Cenis processes. Hydroelectric dams also can be used for nitrogen fixation, i.e. converting into ammonia or related nitrogenous compounds. Both Japan and Germany had large deposits of coal (as did the US and UK). In Japan significant reserves were in Kyushu and in Hokkaido and smaller reserves in the Ube and Joban areas of Honshu. Japan lacked coking coal, needed for steel, in the amount needed to build all the munitions the militarists wanted, which is why it grabbed North China. By 1940 more than half of Japan's steel went to munitions. Oil replaced coal's importance in industry _after_ WWII, starting with the US (in 1949 iirc) and expanding to other industrialised countries in the '50s and '60s. _'in fact, that's why the war started to begin with.'_ I think you put the cart before the horse. Japan and Germany could have continued to buy resources just like everyone else. If we look at 'peacetime' Japan's oil imports of 1936 (before the military took over the economy), we find Japan was importing less than 30 million barrels from the US. Yet even this total was inflated due to the 1934 law requiring oil importers to maintain a 6-month stockpile in Japan. (Japan built an oil stockpile exceeding 50 million barrels, estimated to be two years' civilian consumption, before 1940.) The average price of oil in 1936 was $1.09 per barrel (and ranged from $1.02 to $1.18 per barrel from 1937 to 1941), meaning that Japan's oil bill ranged from about $32 million to $40 million. But the militarists took over and military solutions were the answers to all problems.
@terencenxumalo11595 ай бұрын
good work
@MWM-dj6dn9 ай бұрын
VERY BEAUTIFUL AND WONDERFUL... CHARMING DOCUMENTARY
@EdwardTilley9 ай бұрын
Brilliant Documentary!
@dindodayao62388 ай бұрын
I have an old car that have a Mitsubishi SATURN 4D32 engine chain type w/ sidedrop Webber's and still roars like a monster!!!
@johnriley92147 ай бұрын
The 4D32 engine was a diesel ,therefore no Webers!!!
@jamesortiz53883 ай бұрын
My buddy found some webers and put them on an old school Ford Ranger that gave the truck a stronger top end and it had the suspension for the curves.
@AboveGroundArmament7 ай бұрын
Great work!
@elchicano1875 ай бұрын
EUROPE BETTER BE STEPPING IT UP!
@DennisFreitas-bn7nh5 ай бұрын
TOO LATE!
@dennismerlijn74594 ай бұрын
There is a saying here in holland: when the ships were made of wood and the men of steel. I have so much admiration for the ww2 allies and disgust for the current woke generation who think that a simular conflict can not happen again
@edbogus3 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed this video! Taught me not just about Chinese e-vehicles, but also Chinese railroads, food, hotels, factories and nice people! Great job 😁👍
@2112user7 ай бұрын
And now we produce nothing.....
@cordelllitus26306 ай бұрын
hello
@figo007tv5 ай бұрын
@@cordelllitus2630from the other side?
@JuanPassiveMenis3 ай бұрын
You do know semiconductor production is popping off right now, look at Texas and California.
@patrickhale4243 ай бұрын
Exactly, we've turned into a service oriented economy. Outsourcing the majority of production to overseas factories. And the corporations here are squeezing what's left of the middle class into poverty. Wages have fallen and corporate profits have soared. Home ownership is impossible for the majority of Americans. Homelessness and drug addiction is increasing along with the amount of incarcerations
@markhuckercelticcrossbows78873 ай бұрын
we produce homes for those lovely people, which we are now not allowed to talk about, with getting arrested!
@ianhigh43549 ай бұрын
The Lancaster was undoubtedly a suburb aircraft and had capabilities that were unique at the time. However, I have always believed that it was used incorrectly. It was used to do things that could have been just as easily been done by other aircraft, using it to destroy entire cities just to make sure that SOME of the militarily significant targets in that city were hit. Britain should have diverted the majority of it's aircraft production to the plane that could hit targets, and hit them hard. The De Haviland Mosquito was cheaper, quicker to build and only need two Merlins instead of four. It's speed at all flight levels meant it could actually find and hit targets with a good chance of escaping unscathed, it only had a crew of two, needed significantly less maintenance and plane for plane could probably do more damage than a Lancaster when comparing where bombs actually landed. Harris fought the introduction and production of the Mosquito in favour of the 'heavies' when a much smaller force of Lancasters could have been used only for operations that no other aircraft could achieve, the Dam Busters Raid being one and dropping of Tallboys being the obvious other. Lancasters were also ideal as support for army land forces, providing carpet bombing of enemy defensive lines as the 8th Air Force did in Operation Cobra and the Lancaster itself did on D-Day and for Operation Plunder. Using them as city-busters was, to my mind, a waste of an exceptional aircraft. Nearly 600 heavy bombers, including over 300 Lancasters, were used in August 1943 to attack Peenemunde with mixed results where a raid by 500 Mosquitos would have been devastating. Even in 1944-45 most Lancaster raids actually relied on Mosquito pathfinders to locate and mark the targets, especially after the introduction of OBOE, due to the need for Lancasters to bomb from high altitude to avoid being shot down.
@aurorapaisley74533 ай бұрын
superb
@GunMetalEngineer9 ай бұрын
Arguably browning should be up there with colt and kolashnikov
@gbear10059 ай бұрын
maxim first
@phann8608 ай бұрын
Not arguably but top, a war changing inventor.
@charlescorris346917 күн бұрын
Very good…
@kevinfoster11389 ай бұрын
Would it be in bad taste for Mitsubishi to build a sports car and name it Zero??
@GranMarquez10 күн бұрын
The real limitation is experienced Pilots who understand tactics. U.S. Pilots flew as teams and learned to kill enemy aircraft regardless of their performance. The tactics changed with experience and advancements in Aircraft. I flew the F4E Phantom II. Taught by an Instructor who instructed me to think outside the box. ..
@STEVENDOUGLASSWILLIAMORCHARD6 ай бұрын
WE SHOULD BE HUMBLED BY SUCH EFFORTS
@tedleavell93225 ай бұрын
Yes
@MAGACAT5 ай бұрын
ALL CAPS FTW WOOT
@marblox9300Ай бұрын
AND to top it off the Japanese ZERO was the best looking fighter plane of WW2.
@ButINowant2Binfluencer6 ай бұрын
That woman’s great uncle 43:49 would be proud of her.
@crashcrain9 ай бұрын
I never actually understood the Japanese Zero even being a War Veteran until i watched the show in Grand Junction Colorado about 10 yrs ago. The Zero has a nimble way to achieve speed, then turn on a dime which would firce any enemy to over shoot from almost any attack angle. Hats off to Mitsubishi, what a incredible plane. Had the pilots been better trained to fly such a fighter the war may have been different.
@20chocsaday9 ай бұрын
A very long while ago my father let me play with a Duralamim tube. It had been formed like blown plastic and was closed by a screwon cap. Both parts were almost like foil. But unlike foil it was rigged. Again, unlike foil if I bent it, I could not get it back. Instead it broke in this child's hands.
@EdwardEmmick9 ай бұрын
In fairness, midway was hard on Japan. They lost not only carriers but most of their trained and experienced pilots. Never could replace them.
@scottessery1003 ай бұрын
10:14 duralumin, strong, hard, lightweight alloy of aluminum, widely used in aircraft construction, discovered in 1906 and patented in 1909 by Alfred Wilm, a German metallurgist; it was originally made only at the company Dürener Metallwerke
@BKKNOW13 ай бұрын
Thanks, you saved me a Google search.
@MWM-dj6dn9 ай бұрын
A wonderful channel that deserves the best regards, appreciation, admiration and pride. It provides accurate and useful information. I thank you for all the beautiful words and sincere feelings for your distinguished posts. I wish you continued success and all the best. My utmost respect and appreciation
@HomesteadViewin6 ай бұрын
There is a fully restored and flying Lancaster in Alberta Canada.
@stuartwilson73927 ай бұрын
The massive drop in production by the end of January 1945 had nothing to do with the bombing campaign but with the final Soviet Winter offensive that captured, often entirely intact, most of the German heavy industry on the Eastern Front.
@xandervk23715 ай бұрын
Not true. The heavy industry was concentrated in the Ruhr basin.
@BaveMage2 ай бұрын
My grandfather was blessed with coke bottle eyesight in the time of WW 2. He worked the oilfields of Oklahoma and did his part of pumping out the oil needed to make it happen. His younger brother jumped into France and then on to Germany. Disturbing things he saw as he moved to his objective.
@professortill85929 ай бұрын
Manufacturing scholars completely ignoring W. Edwards Deming’s influence on Japanese quality control? How did they skip that?
@karlhombaker38944 ай бұрын
I understand that the Japanese erected a statue of him.
@hardrockuniversity72838 ай бұрын
Just bought a new 1911 last month. 10mm for bear protection though (Montana).
@ericreid81117 ай бұрын
Thumbnail looked like a bunch of penguins. Or maybe that's just me
@todx157 ай бұрын
i see it to😂😂😂
@battlefieldkille5 ай бұрын
nah man u arent alone lmao
@williamcase4264 ай бұрын
YOU'RE A PENGUIN
@terriec8083 ай бұрын
@1:42:57 Colt did work his employees HARD but look what they got in return! Because we all understood reality.
@ColonelEagle4 ай бұрын
Good to see Jonathan Ferguson, Keeper of Firearms and Artillery at the Royal Armouries Museum in the U.K. (which houses thousands of iconic weapons from throughout history).
@johnhenderson1319 ай бұрын
34:15 Regarding the Kamikaze Pilots, I assume it took less time to train them since they didn’t need to teach them how to land the aircraft, just how to takeoff! If you need to resort to sending your young men on suicide attacks then it’s time to say enough! Great fascinating documentary series!
@jy92917 ай бұрын
To a large extent, the gunpowder is what makes, (or breaks), the gun.
@1stpogo9 ай бұрын
That these historians actually believe that the US Navy threw away 3 squadrons of torpedo planes on purpose is beyond the absurd.
@millermike57399 ай бұрын
Take a look at Afghanistan. Haha
@EdwardEmmick9 ай бұрын
They couldn't have planned it as they almost could not even locate them. Fog of war.
@soci0path3 ай бұрын
Its almost like Blackrock
@I-DIG-IT-CT9 ай бұрын
i love how here, it's a matter of fact that production output is vital in winning modern warfare. I guess no one in the government watched this when they passed all that ukraine war funding.
@barrycomer36889 ай бұрын
Pretty sad we still need to do this.
@WarnockRafferty9 ай бұрын
Sad we still need to do what?!?
@richbrockmeier39229 ай бұрын
Indeed. Sadly, war is big business today. Biggest business in the free world is weapons manufacturers.
@nlknok779 ай бұрын
I'd rather live my life without any war
@nlknok779 ай бұрын
@@WarnockRaffertymaking ammunition for war .... Kinda what this is about. Where did you go to school?
@zAlaska9 ай бұрын
How? GM has gone all electric
@nicholaspayne3493 ай бұрын
Give em the beans Joe.
@metalextras3 ай бұрын
Now you know why Mitsubishi is the only Non-US company allowed to build F-Fighters under license...
@davidnorth34117 ай бұрын
The scrape steel Japan was buying from the US shortly before Pearl Harbor was at its highest level , an importance to give a pondering if you are not expecting an extreme turn of events during peacetime .That was a real blunder
@jamesforresternewone44239 ай бұрын
Can U please keep uploading more documentarys like this please
@clevelandexplorer22216 ай бұрын
What happened to the Wellington? :o I never hear of it, my understanding is it was superseded by the Lancaster. Sorry if I missed it being mentioned I'd love to know more about that plane given the little information I can find
@asullivan40479 ай бұрын
Interesting/informative/entertaining. Excellent still-motion photography/maps enabling viewers to better understand what the orator is describing. Special thanks to guest speakers making this presentation more authentic and possible. Viewing this from the comfort of my computer room. Along the " Space Coast " 🚀 of Florida🐊🐊🐊 . wishing viewers a safe/healthy/prosperous ( 2024 )🌈🎉😉.
@xinniethep00h9 ай бұрын
Can you see rocket launches from your house?
@angelofmusic4777 ай бұрын
You can have as many factories to built the war machine but if there is no fuel, those machine will be as good as a rusty paper weight. Why the USA and USSR came up tops is because these two countries has their own fuel, resources and the means to produce large quantity of war machines and personel to operate them.
@archawasoontornsima84655 ай бұрын
❤❤❤❤❤
@salimabdatfouz76587 ай бұрын
This documentary had 190 ads, be ready for them in this 2hours and 50 minutes. The normal KZbin ads that you can scip after 5 seconds. However some you can't scip which were like 13 seconds.
@charlesmaybank63239 ай бұрын
I absolutely love stuff made in Japan..from hobby stuff to cars ...yes Biuld a zero 😮
@Banthisyoutube-zs6sx8 ай бұрын
As a scale modeller thwir hobby supplies and kits are way better then their american counterparts but their models are being supplanted by companies like dragon out of china. But it still has its place if i am looking for a decent kit thats not as indepth as say a dragon kit tamiya is still a solid vhoice for when i don't feel lile making 30 road wheels for a panzer that have 12 parts per wheel.....yes that is literally how many parts are in a dragon panzer 4 road wheel.
@CaptainCraigKWMRZ4 ай бұрын
Learning punctuation and spelling is a great hobby too. 😂
@btpcmsag2 ай бұрын
In the 1960's the term "Made in Japan" was synonymous with low quality, cheaply made junk, but that diminished steadily until by the mid- '70s, when Japanese products gained a steadily more respectable reputation, with Nikon, Honda, Seiko, Toyota, Yamaha and others leading the way. I had a friend who dropped his Mamiya Sekor 500DTL SLR 35mm camera on a ski slope, and left a request for a lost item with the lift management. 6 months later after the thaw, he was notified it had been found by some hikers. He got it back, and it STILL WORKED!!
@IbuAhmad-j6o8 ай бұрын
The company war😁
@Blakk_Hole8 ай бұрын
I l9ve how many times this documentary has been re-posted lol
@elel96402 ай бұрын
I love how they talk about the way Japan production contracts as if it's not EXACTLY HOW THE US GOVERNMENT contracts their designs😂😂😂
@Greenfling5 ай бұрын
I’ve been watching your channel for just a couple months. I absolutely love it! I’m going to subscribe to KZbin premium because of your channel,, and in turn subscribe and support your content.
@everydaycompress42599 ай бұрын
colt making 1500 firearms a day "cheap" "reliable" ..? my guy COLT AINT CHEAP !!
@kurtlee31987 ай бұрын
let alone the japanese aircraft designers that went and designed super bikes, being that they also glide thru the air like fighter planes
@daklakdigital36912 ай бұрын
MOST OF THE TALKING HEADS WEREN'T even better horn when their grandparents got married.
@stephenanderle54228 ай бұрын
I vote for a defective fuse.
@parasdewan9188 ай бұрын
My father fighting over Burma used to say that the Japanese zeros were significantly inferior to the spitfires and would dive and duct away low to escape while hurricane were quite easily overcome by zero.
@lornespry6 ай бұрын
Well, yes and no. There is the matter of when, where and the evolution of tactics. When the Japanese were attacking Darwin in northern Australia, Spitfires were hurriedly rushed to the area to deal with AM6 Zero escorts to the bombers. Within a relatively short time, the Spitfire formation was seriously mauled.
@redtobertshateshandles2 ай бұрын
Zero was a dogfighter.. The others were scream past and fill him with lead fighters.
@robertsproule45839 ай бұрын
It will Always in All Ways Be Sad... Go Lancaster!!!
@mickvonbornemann38249 ай бұрын
I don’t recall them mention that AVROE also had a shadow factory in Canada as a safety guarantee & they were the best of all the Lancs, because they also armed with .50BMGs, not just .303s
@henrysantos1218 ай бұрын
*MatatanRibirin H-S* *Amazing documentary very well done ✅*
@larbranca2 ай бұрын
Shinkansen (新幹線) means "New main line", not "Bullet Train" or anything like that...
@ondrejliptak1319 ай бұрын
At 2:02:58 the cost is estimated about 300-500USD. This is most likely decimal error. The gun can be produced at 30-50USD or even less in low cost countries. And there were surplus guns sold in nineties for 7USD a piece :)
@nobilesnovushomo587 ай бұрын
The Blitz and Avro city ruin tactics were the same. Neither targeted civilians but critical infrastructure for the war effort.
@supadupahilton68484 ай бұрын
Hey, At 2:32:50 in the video, they mentioned "de bapt" or " de backed"? ..tried running it through a UK to American English translator. It made a burning smell and stopped working. Anyone have any idea what that is? - Thanks.
@btpcmsag2 ай бұрын
It seems to me she says, "debauched," as in corrupted - by getting him drunk and/or seduction.
@zAlaska9 ай бұрын
Those old fashioned machines cannot be built any longer. TSMC does it all without a pilot in the missing cockpits, safe flying VR seated on the ground even half a world away.
@20chocsaday9 ай бұрын
With jam on it.
@andreperreault1549 ай бұрын
I am A Canadian . I lived in Malton Ontario . The Avro Valcan looks to Me like the Avro Arrow Built in Malton Ontario Canada. By McDonald Douglas
@r.p.46838 ай бұрын
Canada also built 430 Lancaster, the Avro should also have been featured
@Michael-mg3lo4 ай бұрын
Wondering how our military mass production facilities would look like on the inside of a facility.
@michaelhband9 ай бұрын
👍👍👍
@JZillaRageS2 ай бұрын
So I saw the thumbnail and was like why are there so many penguins standing there............😅😮 🐧
@AR-cz8lk9 ай бұрын
Where's Bomberman jelly bomb as seen on thumbnail?
@nunya___3 ай бұрын
20:20 The ZERO was not the best fighter because it didn't protect the pilot (the most valuable part of the plane). It had, _zero_ armor.
@jz70068 ай бұрын
Coming to a factory near you
@acaciomadeira51477 ай бұрын
If they attack we will see how accurate their ballistic missles are
@timurdjumaniyazov81238 ай бұрын
So much ideas about manufacturing but indeed this revelation of how to hijack someone's technologies
@TrevorThorne-d8y9 ай бұрын
Keenly observe the dressing of soldiers
@NoName-md5zb6 ай бұрын
As a professional cod player i can confirm this is accurate.
@tylerjustuspaige5 ай бұрын
What is that theme song at the beginning from? it sounds like the theme music for the 34th americas cup. I've been trying to find that song for a while, does anyone know what stock music was used or where I can find it
@velcro82996 ай бұрын
AK 47, the VLC of the rifle world.
@11B30Inf9 ай бұрын
1:55:47 Lord of War...Of all the weapons in the vast Soviet arsenal, nothing was more profitable than Avtomat Kalashnikova model of 1947, more commonly known as the AK-47, or Kalashnikov. It's the world's most popular assault rifle. A weapon all fighters love. An elegantly simple 9 pound amalgamation of forged steel and plywood. It doesn't break, jam, or overheat. It will shoot whether it's covered in mud or filled with sand. It's so easy, even a child can use it; and they do. The Soviets put the gun on a coin. Mozambique put it on their flag. Since the end of the Cold War, the Kalashnikov has become the Russian people's greatest export. After that comes vodka, caviar, and suicidal novelists. One thing is for sure, no one was lining up to buy their cars.
@jedi101013 ай бұрын
12:42 holding the paper near the middle compared to near the corner doesn't help, noh? LOL
@poorwindow99418 ай бұрын
Mahigpit na ipinag bbawal ng dyos ang panalangin na pakunwari, mga paulit ulit. Mga aral ng mga walang alam kundi tradition. Maawa kayo sa mga kaluluwa dahil lang sa kinikita nyo.
@Strydr81059 ай бұрын
Boy do i wish FDR was in charge today!
@waikukujk8 ай бұрын
M16 problems 💯 % ammunition related
@nobody65468 ай бұрын
🎯👍🏽🏆. Very Well: Organized/ Detailed/ Presented AND Entertaining! Question???When from Colt, S&W, etc., and early manufacturing- did they have INTERCHANGEABLE Barrels?? Could they “Un-Screw” , or take it THAT far apart for Cleaning? Or.. IF anything damages the Barrel- were you out of Luck? Only asking; I have between : 8”, 10” and 10 “ interchangeable barrels.. back then? Or were they Solid 1 piece poured? NRN. God Bless. 👴🏽NoBody. PS?-,Well I’ll say it - MY FAVORITE MAN’S fragrance? HOPPER #9 !!
@leeburgess-zl7ce9 ай бұрын
KZbin knows how to ruin a great historical documentary. An advertisement every 5 mins took away my enjoyment of watching.
@jessehachey27325 ай бұрын
Whine whine whine 🙄
@btpcmsag2 ай бұрын
Apparently they've eased up 6 months later, for I've only seen 2 ads in the entire 3 hours' duration. 2:08:23