My favorite is a tie between the B-26 Marauder and the B-25 Mitchell. Got a lot of fond memories of playing with models of both of them when I was a kid. My beat-up old Marauder model was missing the landing gear, so I thought that was where the bombs were dropped from.
I have to say B-17 because I'm an American and the Flying Fortress is THE iconic US bomber of WWII. But honestly my favorites are the US B-24 Liberator and the British Lancaster
Halifax from the British (was my 1st WW2 bomber scale model), B-25 from the USAAF (I'd like to build one sometime, maybe the B-25G) and Do 217 K from Germany (my 1st WW2 German scale model).
I had a Halifax Bomber as 1:72 Modell when I was a kid. It was one of my favorite airplane and I was a bit disappointed that it was so rarely known and mentioned in documentaries, literature and pop culture. Nice to see that it is mentioned here.
My grampy was a bomb aimer for the halifax mk3 bomber during ww2, he flew out of 153 squadron South Yorkshire and unfortunately on his last sorty was shot down over worms Germany in 1945, he was a pow for a few months until the end of the war but did survive. He was the best and bravest man I've ever known, he sadly passed away about 15 years ago but not a day goes by that I don't think about him. So halifax will always be my favourite.
Just thinking. As well as the flak, imagine also your bomber being targeted and attacked by a night fighter armed with its cannons and machine guns, raking that narrow metal fuselage, with no warning. It's a terrifying thought.
The Radial Engines are so impressive for their rumble and I can imagine hearing say a flight of 100 aircraft coming through the sky from a distance ...on the ground that would be terrifying knowing what is coming , the Rolls Royce merlin is almost like a whisper and smooth by comparison , but in all fairness that Merlin engine , was cowled in an airframe ... none the less , these are impressive aircraft and living pieces of History. MCGA Make Canada Great Again !! 💪🏻 🇨🇦
Where I live in rural North Yorkshire there was dozens of RCAF airfields around me. Wombleton is probably the best preserved but they were every 20 miles or so. Very brave men (and women).
Many years ago I went to an air show in Cunderdin an West Australia. I met a bloke called Tom Scotland who was selling his autobiography "Voice from the Stars", he flew 60 missions in Halifaxs and Liberators as a pathfinder out of Italy in 1944 -45. Good book, he gave me a signed copy and a CD with photos.
Notice the oil projection on the ground after the start up. Keep in mind that most of WWII aircrafts had oil tanks worth dozens of gallons, and, had to be replenished at every sorties.
Great video of one of WW2's workhorses and unsung hero. Interesting that both the Lancaster and Halifax did not carry belly defensive armaments and relied solely on the tail gunner.
The thing I most notice about engines of the era : vibration. The Napier Sabre was the worst so I'm told. 24 cylinders compared to the Merlins12 Noe you'd think that with 24 cylinders some of the vibration would be kinda smoothed out But apparently not. Even with full rubber mountings it was still a monster. How on earth could you ever keep such a bag of nuts and bolts tight. The maintenance manuals must have been works of pure fiction. 100hr checks sure ,. But I'm guessing that sometimes without rhyme or reason in the 101st hour it would suddenly shed a top hatful of components and stop dead - seized solid, Never to run again just a guess thd Napier powered th+e Typhoon fighter - bomber
The early marks of the Halifax were poor it wasn't untill the mark III that the Halifax was on par with the Lancaster. However, if you had to bail out of your bomber over enemy territory the Halifax was the aircraft to be flying.
The Bristol aero engines were amazing. Their engineering prowess lead the most outstanding engines of the war…. The Centaurus and Sabre, who efficiency eclipsed all others. No one else mastered sleeve valves and whilst there are examples of poppet valves engines with similar nrs that’s only achieved with far more boost, methanol, water injection. The Bristol group were rare in that they could build and power their own aircraft and legacy that included the engines for Concorde and Harrier jets.
I think it is because of the videos frame rate, which makes it look like if it was low. The props are spinning with more than 60 rotations per second and we just see 60 frames a second, which causes an optical illusion. Later in the video the props appear spinning strangely which is definitely a sign that it’s the frame rate which makes it look this way.
What's your favorite WW2 bomber? Halifax or Lancaster? Or something else? I would love to hear your own thoughts!
My favorite is a tie between the B-26 Marauder and the B-25 Mitchell. Got a lot of fond memories of playing with models of both of them when I was a kid.
My beat-up old Marauder model was missing the landing gear, so I thought that was where the bombs were dropped from.
The Mosquito.
I have to say B-17 because I'm an American and the Flying Fortress is THE iconic US bomber of WWII. But honestly my favorites are the US B-24 Liberator and the British Lancaster
Absolutely spot on. The Germans managed to make a very effective night fighting force.
Halifax from the British (was my 1st WW2 bomber scale model), B-25 from the USAAF (I'd like to build one sometime, maybe the B-25G) and Do 217 K from Germany (my 1st WW2 German scale model).
I had a Halifax Bomber as 1:72 Modell when I was a kid. It was one of my favorite airplane and I was a bit disappointed that it was so rarely known and mentioned in documentaries, literature and pop culture. Nice to see that it is mentioned here.
My grampy was a bomb aimer for the halifax mk3 bomber during ww2, he flew out of 153 squadron South Yorkshire and unfortunately on his last sorty was shot down over worms Germany in 1945, he was a pow for a few months until the end of the war but did survive. He was the best and bravest man I've ever known, he sadly passed away about 15 years ago but not a day goes by that I don't think about him. So halifax will always be my favourite.
Im surprised you didn't take a spin over to CFB Trenton and comment on the Halifax they have restored and on display. It's very much worth your time.
Bomber command losses were huge during WWII, the courage it took to climb into any bomber during the war is amazing!
The US 8th Air forces losses were terrible too!
@@cookudysu90 Yes they were, flying missions into Germany was a dangerous proposition!
Just thinking. As well as the flak, imagine also your bomber being targeted and attacked by a night fighter armed with its cannons and machine guns, raking that narrow metal fuselage, with no warning. It's a terrifying thought.
What a treat! Thank you Matsimus.
The Radial Engines are so impressive for their rumble and I can imagine hearing say a flight of 100 aircraft coming through the sky from a distance ...on the ground that would be terrifying knowing what is coming , the Rolls Royce merlin is almost like a whisper and smooth by comparison , but in all fairness that Merlin engine , was cowled in an airframe ... none the less , these are impressive aircraft and living pieces of History. MCGA Make Canada Great Again !! 💪🏻 🇨🇦
Where I live in rural North Yorkshire there was dozens of RCAF airfields around me. Wombleton is probably the best preserved but they were every 20 miles or so. Very brave men (and women).
Many years ago I went to an air show in Cunderdin an West Australia. I met a bloke called Tom Scotland who was selling his autobiography "Voice from the Stars", he flew 60 missions in Halifaxs and Liberators as a pathfinder out of Italy in 1944 -45. Good book, he gave me a signed copy and a CD with photos.
British war machines are so iconic
Seeing a cut away as it is rotating, seeing the sleeve valves moving, is mesmerizing.
best mates dad did 2 tours flying them nos 462 and 466 squadrons for australia. flying out of driffield. loved the halifax. got a dfc in one.
Thanks for this video. I knew of the Halifax, but didn’t know too many details. My grandfather helped to build Lancasters in Ottawa.
Notice the oil projection on the ground after the start up. Keep in mind that most of WWII aircrafts had oil tanks worth dozens of gallons, and, had to be replenished at every sorties.
I've been a ww2 aviation nerd most of my life and this is the first time I hear details of an (allied) engine other than a Merlin variant, very cool.
You almost got me with the first clip 😂
I was about to scream that's an Avro Lancaster
Great video of one of WW2's workhorses and unsung hero. Interesting that both the Lancaster and Halifax did not carry belly defensive armaments and relied solely on the tail gunner.
Now that there was cool. Nothing quite like some thumping, 100 octane leaded gas engine music to my ears.
The thing I most notice about engines of the era : vibration.
The Napier Sabre was the worst so I'm told.
24 cylinders compared to the Merlins12
Noe you'd think that with 24 cylinders some of the vibration would be kinda smoothed out
But apparently not. Even with full rubber mountings it was still a monster. How on earth could you ever keep such a bag of nuts and bolts tight.
The maintenance manuals must have been works of pure fiction. 100hr checks sure ,. But I'm guessing that sometimes without rhyme or reason in the 101st hour it would suddenly shed a top hatful of components and stop dead - seized solid, Never to run again
just a guess
thd Napier powered th+e Typhoon fighter - bomber
The Handley Page Hampten. The weird little bomber
Halifax doesn’t get the same attention as the Lancaster but it actually had a better chance of survival especially later versions
Looks like that was taken at Pratt and Whitney Lethbridge
Pte Bloggins was here
I forgot to do this for the last few weeks
The early marks of the Halifax were poor it wasn't untill the mark III that the Halifax was on par with the Lancaster. However, if you had to bail out of your bomber over enemy territory the Halifax was the aircraft to be flying.
That is something else 👍👍👍👍👍
You should check out the book A Canadian military history by Desmond Morton.
The Bristol aero engines were amazing. Their engineering prowess lead the most outstanding engines of the war…. The Centaurus and Sabre, who efficiency eclipsed all others. No one else mastered sleeve valves and whilst there are examples of poppet valves engines with similar nrs that’s only achieved with far more boost, methanol, water injection. The Bristol group were rare in that they could build and power their own aircraft and legacy that included the engines for Concorde and Harrier jets.
I thought that was you I saw you in Nanton.
why its spinning so slow
I think it is because of the videos frame rate, which makes it look like if it was low. The props are spinning with more than 60 rotations per second and we just see 60 frames a second, which causes an optical illusion. Later in the video the props appear spinning strangely which is definitely a sign that it’s the frame rate which makes it look this way.
😎👍
Hi
👍😎🍺🍩🪖🛩️🛩️