The Mysterious Plane That Made 127 Kills Without Ever Being Seen
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- Опубліковано 25 гру 2024
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The first operational U.S. aircraft specifically designed as a night-fighter was the P-61 Black Widow. Created in 1940 by Northrop Aviation, in collaboration with the British Royal Air Force, the P-61 was also the first aircraft designed to use radar.
With its mysterious appearance and name, the Black Widow ruled the night in the waning months of World War 2. It would even collect the last confirmed air-to-air kill on the last night of the war...
As images and footage of actual events are not always available, Dark Skies sometimes utilizes similar historical images and footage for dramatic effect. I do my best to keep it as visually accurate as possible. All content on Dark Skies is researched, produced, and presented in historical context for educational purposes. We are history enthusiasts and are not always experts in some areas, so please don't hesitate to reach out to us with corrections, additional information, or new ideas. -
My memory of this plane was as a five year old living in Long Beach CA in 1944. Mom and Dad would fix a lunch on Dad's day off and we would pile into the car and park outside the airplane factories almost every weekend and watch the new planes coming out of the factories. One weekend, the doors opened and out came the most spectacular airplane we'd ever seen - it was shiny black with two engines and looked like a giant P-38. The propellers were turning and the sunlight shining through the overhead camouflaged netting and those yellow, spinning prop tips will never be forgotten!! It was better than any movie I had seen and still is imprinted in mind to this day at 83 years old!.
Theres something primal about this plane that just tickles my brain. It just looks like a predator
That's an awesome story, thanks for sharing that!
🫡
I love that story! Congratulations!
👍💙You lucky SOB; I was not born until 11-- 44, one of the best years to have been born; to have lived thru the 50s & 60s as a juvenile & young adult when America was a great place full of happy people looking forward to a prosperous future. Now, the USA is a dismal country with unhappy people & I have had to leave, for my own sanity. I feel sad.
very cool thank you, My father survived B-24s over Europe and was shot down on his last mission, he made it back and was then on his way to the Pacific to fly P-61s from Okinawa. He said the A-bomb saved his life.
My grandpa was a gunner on a P-61 in Europe. He was shot down over Germany in April, 1945. It was never confirmed if he was hit by flak or if he hit a tree, but he saw the bailout signal and bailed out successfully with the rest of the crew. Unfortunately the pilot went down with the plane and never made it. He landed on the roof of a barn and broke his leg. Luckily it was in occupied territory, and the British 10th Scotts Guard picked him up and brought him to the nearest field station, located at a place called Bergen Belsen, recently liberated 3 days prior…
I wish I was born sooner so I could talk to him about his experiences. Luckily my dad heard them, but only late at night at the American Legion Post, where he had to drag my grandpa back home for dinner. Can’t imagine being raised by that generation. Incredible men.
@@My_Fair_Lady Yup... "if he was hit by flak or if he hit a tree," is the kind of misstatement a reality-confused ChatGPT would make.
Unlikely to be a tree, more likely a German night fighter from behind since the P 61 was rather slow.
@@softeky I agree that getting hit by flak vs hitting a tree are two completely different things. You would certainly know if were getting shot by flak, let alone getting hit by it. That’s just what my dad told me, which was told by his dad 30 or so years after the initial event. All I know that can be said for certain is that something happened with their plane extremely fast, the bailout light turned on, and he parachuted out. My guess is that they were flying low in the dark and his plane clipped something, but then again he had enough time and elevation to be able to bail out and parachute. Maybe he was shot down by an enemy plane, maybe it was flak. I can only speculate and tell you what my dad told me.
@@barrierodliffe4155 That is definitely a possibility, but this also happened in April of 1945. At that point of the war the Luftwaffe was essentially annihilated, so I find that unlikely.
I'm 70 and my father saw combat in the Pacific and three of my uncles saw combat in Africa and Europe. My Uncle Carl was a POW for 18 months and when his stalag was liberated by the Soviet Army he only weighed 85 lbs. My father would talk about how badly the Japs treated the Chinese and Filipinos more than anything else. He said the people would come out in small boats and want to buy the ships garbage. The Captain asked the crew if they wanted to give up some of their rations and the crew voted to give away their food and go on short rations till resupply. So yeah, I was raised in the company of heros who never thought they did anything special.
My father was a flight officer in the 418th squadron of the 5th Air Force in 1943 and 1944 in the Pacific theater. He operated the radar in both the P-70’s and the P-61’s in addition to being the navigator in B-25’s operating out of New Guinea. My dad flew 101 combat missions! When he passed away in 2014 at the age of 96, I received his military papers and the log of his 101 combat flights detailing what airplanes in which he flew on which dates. It is a family treasure. Occasionally, I would ask him to tell me stories about his combat experiences. He always claimed he was not a hero and was just lucky to make it back alive. Many of his buddies in the squadron were not so lucky. He always spoke fondly of the Black Widow and was proud of his plane’s air support for McArthur’s return to the Philippines. I wish he was still alive to see this wonderful video on the P-61.
I hope your dad's materials eventually wind up in the WWII museum in New Orleans.
Thanks for this video. My dad was a radar operator in one flying out of New Guinea. He spent a lot of time at the Mid Atlantic Air museum. He was a principal organizer for the Night Fighters association up until they disbanded due to so many members passing away. He joined them in 2004 and has been in Arlington Cemetery ever since. I have a model of that plane hanging in my office for decades.
What Group was your father in? Mine was in the 41st in New Guinea and the Philippines.
@@dennisburdue5052 547th I think. Sadly anyone who could confirm that has passed away. He probably knew your dad.
My father trained in a P61 as a radar operator for the Korean War. He was one of the first EWO's, and flew 38 missions in Korea, I think mostly in the P61. After that, he was a B52 Squadron commander in the 60's, helping maintain the "Nuclear Umbrella". By the time I was 6, I had been inside a B52, and seen a bunch of the newest aircraft up close. Exciting childhood.
I built a model of this aircraft back in the late 1960's. I had never heard of it, nor seen any data on or about it. At the time, finding stuff out meant a trip to the library, and my local library was not very good. It wasn't till the world wide web started growing that I found even a little info on this plane. Thanks for covering this topic, and shedding a little light on this amazing airframe and its stories.
bumped into the same restrictions when i was building a diorama with the monogram model in the early 80s.
Yeah, the instructions gave a tiny little blurb, like 2 sentences in the beginning, but there was nothing of substance. It gave all the dimensions and specifications, but nothing about when or where it was deployed, how many were made, or any of that info. It was a very sexy model though.
yes i did too in the 70s, could never get much info on it though, now i see why
I had a P-61 model in the early 90s with the “Time’s a Wastin” decal set. It was cast in black plastic and I tried so hard to keep it looking clean and having to paint it by some of the glue squeezed out of some of the seems and I smudged it wiping it off. I finally went with the OD green paint scheme with the white nose.
I've built this model a couple of times because it was always my favorite plane.
I loved how it looked.
One of the odd problems they ran across was the paint. Initially they painted them flat black which would seem intuitive. But they found out that when the plane was lit by searchlights the flat black paint would literally glow around the edges of the plane. It turned out that the gloss black paint eliminated the problem. I always loved this plane. Imagine, a fighter the size of a medium bomber.
The P-61 being restored at the Mid Atlantic Air Museum is in a hangar next to a B-25 and they really are nearly the same size. They've been working on it for almost 30 years and it's beginning to look like it may fly in the near future. I live about an hour away hope to be there to see it.
I get what you're saying. Same thing happened to a religious building I wont name. It's in a prominent position in an Australian city and when the locals heard it was being built they put in objections. One objection was to not have it's outer granite facade as polished. It had to be an unpolished mat finish. Needless to say it lights up like a Christmas tree. too bad
I always thought the Grumman F7F Tigercat was a sexy looking plane that should have been a dedicated night fighter.
There's even a stranger, as in non-intuitive, story I read about this. When low-observable paint schemes were being tested, the winner was found to be a pink hue!! This was quickly squelched under the immediate reaction that, "Our pilots won't fly pink airplanes!!"
Barry Ervin
I was a member of Mid Atlantic Air Museum and used to go there once a month to volunteer. Joined back in late 90’s when I lived about 45 minutes away and even worked the airshow numerous times at the field. Watching everything that went into piecing this puzzle back together and the story of the museum procuring the aircraft is incredible. It’ s been about two years since last there but seeing that P-61 on it’s landing gear, man that beauty is big. You anyone reading this take time to go to this museum, it’s a great place and you will get to see what will be the only flying P-61 in the world, it’s incredible and their WWII air show is tops in the country.
One of the most famous uses of the P61 was in the raid at Cabanatuan where over 500 POWs were liberated. The P61 was used as a distraction so the Japanese guards wouldn't see the raiders crawling through the grass toward the camp.
Is that the one the movie. The Great Raid
was based on? I've seen the movie several times but never known the P-61 was involved.
Also I didn't know they were on the drawing board in 1940
Yes it was.
Great Book...
I remember reading about that in the book Ghost Soldiers. Very gripping read. Cant recommend that book enough.
@@roryschweinfurter4111he raid from the movie great raid which was the raid at Cabanatuan took place in early 1945. The P-61 was introduced in 1944.
Interesting fact left out of this video:
During the incredibly daring and incredibly successful rescue of 513 POW's from a Japanese prison camp in the Philippines in 1945, a P-61 Black Widow was used.
The 121 Army Rangers and Filipino guerillas had to crawl across hundreds of yards of open ground to reach the camp, with out being detected. Headquarters was radioed, and they sent a P-61. The Black Widow did aerial stunts and acrobatics low level just outside of the camp, distracting and mesmerizing the guards so the Rangers could slip in.
The story is incredible. The book Ghost Soldiers (author Hampton Sides) is amazing. The movie (The Great Raid, 2005) is also good, if you aren't a reader. Though note that a P-61 isn't used in the movie for obvious reasons.
what are the obvious reasons?
My granddad worked on the .50 cal turret system and trained the gunners on how to use them. Before that, he taught gunners for B-17s, B-24s, and later B-29s.
I’m glad one of these P-61s is being restored to airworthiness in my home state of Pennsylvania it looks great so far . The aircraft still has probably another half a decade or so left in its journey back to the air. It’s located in Reading PA at the Mid-Atlantic air museum.
It sure has taken along long long time. I wonder what's holding this iconic aircraft up so long? I do understand parts etc are difficult to obtain but so are those for the XP-82 twin mustang but it's done as is another B-29. CNC technology in machine work one with plans can make dam near any WWII aircraft now. I just really really want to see a P-61 fly again as that would be absolutely amazing. I fly an R/C P-61 currently and dam that's one bad ass looking bird.
@@warrenchambers4819 The aircraft they recovered was from a mountain in SE Asia somewhere. It was something like 75-80 completely gone. That cant help. They have a website where you can read the planes history if you google it
I remember being a Kindergarten age kid in the '80s and the brochure said they expected it to be flying by the mid 1990s. Clearly things hadn't gone so well... but I'd rather it be right than rushed and crash...
I am from Reading Pennsylvania, I heard from on of the people at Mid-Atlantic air museums that p-61 my fly in the 2022 wwii weekend.
I love seeing the progress they've made every year. Hope I'm there to see it fly again!
My dad was in the Air Force while this plane was still in service and he absolutely loved it, he was a ground radar operator.
My dad also tracked some of the first jets on radar
My dad flew B-29s in Korea. When he returned in 1953, and before he transitioned to B-47s, he did some ferry work, flying various aircraft around the world. One of the ferry missions in his logbook was to take a P-61 to Eglin AFB in Florida. When i asked him about it, he told me that the aircraft was likely going to be used for weapons testing--as a target. He wasn't absolutely certain about that, but I later read an account which seems to confirm that--Donald Lopez, a famous air force fighter & flight test pilot wrote in his memoir that he was stationed at Eglin at about that same time, and that lots of decommissioned WWII-era planes, including P-61s were among the targets for testing of new missiles.
@@tomterific390 I never knew they had b 29s in Korea mostly the b 17 and twin mustang
@@lollardismontop1026 By the time WWII ended, both the the B-17 and the B-24 were obsolete, and had both been replaced by the B-29. Even before the Army Air Force became the U.S. Air Force, almost all '17s & '24s were in the scrap yards. The few that remained in service were used as target tugs, targets themselves as drones, air-sea rescue aircraft, and as squadron hacks-essentially routine utility operation, like delivering the mail and doing beer runs. I know there were some in theater--some of my Dad's old Kodachrome slides from 1953 show B-17s in the background at Kadena, but they have no gun turrets. As far as I know none were used in front line operational combat roles. And yes, Twin Mustangs were in Korea, but just a handful, for the simple reason that there weren't that many even in existence--less than 300 were produced in total, and the Air Force top brass viewed the potential Russian threat in Europe to be more important than the "police action" in Korea, so most foreign based F-82s, like most B-50s, were held back from Korea in case the Soviets got frisky in Europe.
My father flew the Black Widow in combat missions in the Pacific.
Fun fact the YF-23, competitor for the F-22, was nicknamed the Black Widow 2 after this amazing aircraft!
Had to google it, great looking jet!
They even painted the hour glass in red on the belly, but ticked off the top brass.
The hourglass wasn't intentional, they painted the tips of doors red as a safety measure, and when they closed the doors it became an hourglass.
@@bedlamite42 but the brass didn't see it that way.
What kind of arse do u have to be to demand that a small diamond shape gets overpainted?
My mother's neighbor flew B-25s under Chenault in China. He told us a P-61 downed two zeroes stalking him that he never saw. The pilot contacted him and asked him to confirm the kills before they were shot down. When he agreed his saw two flashes.
We may be? some how in relation? Gramma worked for all these makers with clearances, several "Gramps" fought in all theaters, "I SUSPECT" as first EWO's from PBY's in the Battle for the Atlatic all the way all Allies! and the frence?
My dad was in Chennaults 14 Air Force and spent most of his time at Kunming air base. I discovered his cache of war photographs and other things when I was about 6 years old. He had taken pictures of all of the planes that were on the base and prominent among them were many photos of the P-61 Black Widow. A magical beast to a 6 year old.
@@JohnWilson-nu1sq I had some of Grammas post war aviation pics with her and her husband, all in so cal, one husband was J Turpin allegedly a pow from the Japs. all test planes "I suspect" as they had ground crew mentioned with names in her pics. she was on the Concord to London and the 747 to China after Nixion cut the deal.
people complaining about the way you speak ... ignore them, I hear you just fine. Furthermore, your delivery is unique and distinctive. I appreciate that. Thanks for bringing up an article about one of my favorite aircraft of all time. I didn't know that it was too slow to catch other aircraft like the Me410, pity that they hadn't made it faster. I also found it interesting from reading the comments that the flat black paint glowed around the edges when illuminated by search lights and the gloss black didn't, very interesting thanks and HT to "Yeah it's me" in the thread
The P-61has been one of my favorite aircraft ever since I built a model of one as a child. I read and watch videos about them every time I can.
My Pops was an engine mechanic and just loved them
That is so cool!
Loved who, the Nazis? Geez. That’s crazy.
@@JT-in5le he obviously means the plane genius. Also I get sarcasm but that wasn't even an attempt to add anything to the conversation piss off
Shawn Young ‘‘twas a joke, my man”. Easy sailor...put the gun down
@@JT-in5le ahh that's 100 percent my bad can't take common sense for granted nowadays everyone's looking to get offended over something. Well thank you for clearing that up for me and sorry once again. Enjoy youre evening
My Dad a mechanical engineer for General Electric was involved in the radar controlled turret design for the Black Widow I
@David Vance Schenectady
thanks to your dad i can use that forward turret in dog fights in war thunder lol, his legacy is alive, the 4 cannons are legendary.
Did not know it was radar controlled. I thought the radar was just to help home in on targets
@@sheeplord4976 The turret could be could be fired by the gunner in the 2nd seat (behind the pilot) in the forward cockpit, he had a reduced sized radar screen, could also be fired by the ro in the rear facing bubble at the back of the gondola, both positions had swiveling gunner's seats.
@@mychaldbeausoleil3043 do you mean to say the gunner and radar operator were trained to aim the turrets solely from looking at the targets position on the radar display?
The 4 machine gun blister on top made it badass !!
That was a good video. My dad was the navigator radar man in a P 61 in the later part of the war in the Pacific theater. When I was a youngster I thought the P 61 was really neat but my favorite was similar in design. The P 38 was my dream machine. Ya know how it is when you're a kid. I would dream about flying in them and my dads' stories would bring life to those dreams. I'm sure glad he made it home especially since I wouldn't be here if he didn't. My brother was/is the WWII baby and I was born in the fifties. I really enjoyed dads' stories but as you can imagine mom hated them. I understand now. Oh well. I sure miss dad. He was a good man.
Worked for a guy in the early 70s that was an AA gunner on a merchant ship. He was in a Philipine harbor on an ammo ship but they couldn't fire at Japanese night raids for fear of hot shell casings possibly getting into the cargo area. So they watched as enemy aircraft fell flaming over the harbor due to P61 patrols. He said he would buy a dinner for anyone whom he met that served in P61s.
P-61 was one of my favorite WWII fighters, and there's not much out there in the way of documentaries on it. Thanks for posting this!
Would say the P-38 has always been one of my favorates of all time - this craft is a P-38 on roids
There isnt much footage/pics or stats for 3 reasons...
1: It was brought into combat too late for WW2.
2: It was so overated, and underpowered etc, it didnt do anything worth talking about.
3: The RAF Mosquito NF IV
Reminds me of when de Havilland Mosquitoes did a prison break.
Very epic, Jack Northrops designs are amazing
Fokker G 1 was his template then...
if you love the P61, you should read 'Queen of the Midnight Skies' by my dad, Garry Pape. I grew up watching my dad study everything about this plane - so many amazing memories
That P61 has to be one of my favorite aircraft. Awesome Dark Skies for the break down information of how important this beautiful thing was.
My father was an armorer for the P61. He loved that plane. I must have built a dozen or more models as a kid. The squadron insignia was designed by Walt Disney Studios (547th NFS). The first time I saw the Widow at the Smithsonian I literally had tears in my eyes. But the damn Enola Gay blocks getting a good picture!!! I did make a contribution in dad’s name to NAAM towards restoration and in return received a credit card piece of unusable skin from the aircraft. It’s a cherished piece.
Armorer in what way??
He serviced the 20mm cannons and .50 Caliber machine guns.
Curiously, the P-61 at the USAF museum sits adjacent to Bockscar, the B-29 that dropped Fat Man on Nagasaki.
Poor thing can’t catch a break!!
@@butchs.4239 What's so curious about it !! Get a life ..
Great video! My father was a radar mechanic in a Night Fighter squadron and he kept the radar systems on P-61's operating.
My grandad served as a crewmember on P-61s until the war ended in Europe. He was transferred to B-29s in the Pacific as a "flying sergeant".
One of my high school teachers was a P-61 mechanic in Europe. He would occasionally fly in the jumpseat on missions they were not expecting contact.
My Dad was a Aircrew in the back seat and became a Naval Flight Officer, he met my Mom while training on the Black Widow in Vero Beach Naval Airstation back in the day.
My grandfather used to meet up with a group of old men in the mornings to have coffee and shoot the breeze. I got to go with him a handful of times, and there was a guy in this group that was about 10 years older than the others. I was really into planes at the time and I had found out that he had been in WWII. I asked him what he did in the war and he said he had flown P-61 night fighters. I shut up and just listened; he told stories about how dangerous it was. More importantly, he told one story about being attacked by planes without propellers. His crew had been one of the first to encounter the ME262 jet fighter.
The last WW II veteran that I personally knew was a Black Widow pilot in the Pacific. I recall him saying how he loved the power of the two R2800 engines that allowed about any maneuver with ease. Harry passed away in 2010.
Despite their immense weight (the heaviest propeller fighter planes ever), Northrop P-61 Black Widows had impressive single-engine performance due to their being aerodynamically-clean.
One of my favorite models I ever built as a kid.
Yea me too my dad got me a revel kit we built it in the build we deleted parts of the engines and replaced them with some toy car motors ran the wires internal to the weapon bay and put a 9v battery in it then we rigged a tether on the ceiling so it could fly in circles
I made this model airplane when I was a kid. It was my father's favorite, since we made it together. I gave it to him when I finished it. He gave it back to me six months before his death. It is currently on shelf in a cabinet in my bedroom.
Blessed be his memory always friend. Shalom.
My grandpa was the gunner in a black widow over the Pacific in the war. I still have his bomber jacket as well as all the books and documentation from his training. Really cool stuff!
The P-61 was also used for the first manned ejection seat firing test. I read an article about it in Air and Space Magazine as a kid in the late 80's/early 90's.
The P-61 is one of my favorite warbirds, such style, tech, power and one hell of a gorgeous plane.
I’m 35 now, and this has been my favorite Allied plane since I was a child. Thanks for the video.
I remember going to the national air and space museum and geeking all over this plane, my parents where so confused lol
AF museum was the first time I ever knew this thing existed, after seeing a massive fighter the size of a b25 then reading about how badass it was, its been my favorite ww2 plane ever since
It is my favorite. Sooooo cool looking.
My father was an aviation torpedoman in the Pacific during World War II. He said he got to see these planes a few times. He was a big fan. I remember him telling me about them when I was a boy as we built a model of one together.
My dad was a Cpl in the 51st Combat Military Police (77th ID). One of hundreds of tasks while on Okinawa during that battle was to transport one of the crew of a P61 along with reconnaissance footage to another location. I had never heard of the plane before he talked about it in the 70s and 80s. He referred to it as the P61 Night Fighter. This one was outfitted with recon camera equipment. He also saw prints and blowups from the missions and I was probably more impressed by his take on the film used.
Grandfather flew on one in the pacific and specifically over “the hump.” Understanding was that he was reactivated after the war during the insurrection in Pakistan.
A P-61 squadron flew off the same strip as my Dad's P-38 group at Lingayen,Luzon,PI.They did a great job of stopping the nightime bombing raids.
I feel like this plane had to have been the inspiration for the ARC-170 from star wars. The designs are eerily similar. This is a cool concept. If the design could have been adapted to turbine engines and aerodynamics adjusted at bit, I could see thing surviving through the Vietnam Era.
A jet powered black widow... Now that's something I would love to see.
It was the inspiration.
@@mr.capythebara9384 de Havilland vampire is essentially that
Yes arc 170 does look like this
I don't suppose there are many model builders here who remember or, for that matter, know of François Verlinden, but he is (was?) a master model builder back in the 80s. He was almost the inventor of the drybrushing and shading techniques which are now commonplace among model builders. He was also the first to make lifelike, almost photographic looking diorama's. A genius of his craft. In one of his books, I found a diorama depicting a model of the P61 Black widow. To me, it was such a odd-looking, not to say ugly, plane with that double level canopy and strange bulbous nose. Still, it looked the part in its night black livery. Impressive! Really intriguing, not in the least because it was shown without much background information.It was the diorama which impressed me most and the one I still remember today, even if all those beautiful books were ditched when i lost interest in model building. Nice to find a video on the subject here.
I played this video at 75% playback speed and could understand the narrator.
For efficient time management, I often increase the playback speed of videos. Not for this show, though. I wonder how the old TV show 'Dragnet' would sound at 1.5X speed...
I understand it fine, must be my ADHD.
@@katherineberger6329 (A.D.D. club!👍)
Yes the audio sound like it has been speed up and you have to slow it down to 75% speed to sound normal again and to hear what is being said...
I use close caption to read it lol
Watching the video at 0.75 speed actually slows the narration down enough to understand it. Winning!
The narrator himself should slow down to 0.75.
At .75 it sounds like he just finished a bottle of Gentleman Jack
It does work but he sounds a little drunk
Imagine being on a routine night bombing mission with no concerns at the time, when suddenly your aircraft is struck by 20mm cannon HE shells from an enemy you never had any idea was there, that was for all intent and purpose invisible to you. Would have to be discouraging, assuming you survived.
I've always heard that the Messerschmitt 110
was the first specifically designed night fighter
He called it a Nighttime fighter jet at 2:10 and it threw me out of it.
Love you videos bro. Keep them up.
I made a model kit of this aircraft in the early 1980s as a child. My favorite propeller-powered aircraft is the Focke Wulf 190 D. When I assembled the kit for the black widow it captivated my imagination and I consider it to be a beautiful aircraft. Great video. Peace!
This plane has always been one of my favorites, as it sits in my top three favorites of all time. (P-38 Lighting, A10 Warthog, and of course the P-61)
Great taste in aircraft !
You could add the Fokker G1 and Fokker D23
You and I have the same favorites. Maybe its something about twin engine planes.
I was searching a documentary about this one just yesterday, great timing.
Lol so was i
And the only ones I found were from the 1940's
Looks like your FBI Agent is looking out for you 😂😂😂
@@davido9208 yes this is basically the only recent one available.had to search it cause it's so op(op if you can play your role, or get the bast of the capability of the craft) in warthunder; even if this channel only get sponsored by gaijin for crossout, for some strange reasons...war thunder would be such a better choice for this channel...
"TIMIMG" you say. lol
This is my all time favorite aircraft of WWII. I first built a model of this airplane in the early 80s.
One thing the presenter did not mention was the use of retired p61/f15 reporters as fire bombers in the western US. But then again a lot of retired WWII aircraft were used in that role. At one time the boneyards in the south west were totally littered with airframes.
This thing is my favorite prop powered combat airplane of all time. It's beautiful like a dancer but punches like a heavyweight.
Not a patch on the DH 98 Mosquito !!
My dad was with the 419th Night Fighter Squadron known as the Black Spiders. He flew the P-61 on many combat missions out of New Guinea. RIP dad.
Hey just a fun tidbit the photo you used in your thumbnail is actually my grandfather flying his black widow. After his death one of his buddies from way back when reached out to our family because he took that photo of my grandpa flying and had the negatives. I just really love that one of the most used pictures of the black widow is my grandpa and wanted to share ❤
One of my favorite planes of WW2.
If the commentary was spoken a bit slower we might understand it.
You can reduce the speed of the video by clicking the settings "cog" if you want
At 2:07, the guy dressed in a suit, smoking a pipe, and talking to his engineers is Leroy Grumman, of Grumman Aircraft Co.! In 1994 Grumman Corp., builder of, among other aircraft, theF4F Widlcat and F6F Hellcat, the Grumman Goose and Mallard seaplanes, A-6 Intruder, E-2 Hawkeye, F-14 Tomcat, EA-6B Prowler, and the Apollo Program Lunar Module that landed on the moon, merged with Northrop Corporation to become the current Northrop Grumman (NGC). Grumman Aircraft Corp always had a strong movie department and over the years has been a good source of historical footage used in documentaries and movies.
Thanks for posting. My grandfather worked at Northrop from 1940-1986, I always have had an interest in all Northrop aircraft as a result.
The twin boom design makes the night fighter look like a P-38 Lightning on steroids.
My father-in-law, Edward Cwalinski, served in the Army during WWII, and was stationed in Hawaii at Ft Shafter. He was present at the attack on December 7th, 1941. Actually, he served from 1936 through 1959. In his momentos collected during the war he ended up with the squadron flag of the 418th Night Fighter Squadron that served in the Pacific. Frank Sheldon's name is on the flag, along with a P-61 over a red circle in the center of the white background (Silk Japanese flag). The locations that the 418th Night Fighter Squadron were also listed on the flag. Manila, Kwajalein, Guam, Okinawa, Hickam Field, Saipan, Clark Field, and Atsugi, Japan. I donated the flag to a privately owned military museum near Royse City Texas. Formally called "FUBAR motor pool" , but was changed to "Military Heratage Museum of North Texas" to satisfy the snowflakes that complained about the former name. If there was a way I could attach a photo of the flag, I would do it here. I'll gladly provide a photo to anyone who wants it, but I'll need your email or cell phone to text it to you.
Barry Litchfield
Would love to see it..
Pisonpb@aol.com
Love this aircraft....Doesn't get the recognition it deserves..
My fav aircraft, thanks for covering it :)
Thanks! Enjoyed this one!
A beautiful airplane! The Lady In the Dark shall always remain on of my favorite planes! Thanks for remembering her! So many people forget this plane ever existed and we'll sadly never see this plane fly again. Thank you Dark Skies for not forgetting the Lady In the Dark!
To Northrop, I hope you never forget! Why have so many forgotten the Lady's bite? Why is she never spoken of except by the few? Even D.C. only had a mere model to remember! They forgot Project Thunderstorm! They forgot everything you did in WW2! Well we won't forget all you did!
Thank you for mentioning one of my favorite little known and barely remberd plains. It did show up late to the party and never got the refinement it should have. If you would the mk17 you mentioned is another great plain quickly decommissioned and worth rembering as one of the last wooden combat plains in service.
Plane
I discovered that this was one of the types based and operated from my local airport (Hurn, Dorset, UK) during the war. Always loved the design, since i first saw it (as an Airfix model back in the 70's)..
The P-61 achieved about the same number of kills in Europe as in the Pacific. The turbocharged P-61C was not deployed. It had a top speed of 430 mph at a higher altitude than the P-61A or B. At least two British books claim that the Black Widow with its innovative spoilerons was the most maneuverable fighter in the war. There is a claim that a P-61 engaged three FW-190s and downed two of them, the third escaping. The P-61 was used for intruder attacks and could carry 4 x 1600 lb bombs on shackles under the wings. During the Battle of the Bulge the Black Widow was about the only plane that could fly in the foul weather - but there was a shortage of planes.
My dad was in an air recon unit that operated out of liberated German airfields in WWII. Many times, they shared the airfields with P-61 Black Widows. I have a picture of my dad standing under the fuselage of one. At 5'8", he stood perfectly upright. They were large planes. He told me they would shake him out of his bunk when they landed in the wee hours of the morning. For that reason alone, he wasn't a fan of sharing the airfields with them.
My father was a radar technician in a P-61 squadron. He said his craft had no turret with quad .50. He said the turret would cause buffeting. Most aircraft that retained the turret would keep if locked forward. His squadron would chase German aircraft that would come in at night to drop mines (usually) into harbors like Antwerp, Belgium, which the allies were struggling to clear to open supply lines closer to the front.
During the 80s, the Mid-Atlantic Air Museum recovered a P-61 from a mountaintop in New Guinea which crashed there during WWII. They tore it completely apart and have been dutifully rebuilding it ever since. Hardly any remain, so the project has been slow. Their quality of work is fantastic though
Yes, "The Widow's Web" online shows the progress they've been making with this aircraft. Considering the condition in which they found it, they've so far done an amazing job of bringing her back to life.
ARC 170 Starfighter is designed after this aircraft.
Both are awesome fighters in their own right
Arc*
@@duncanmcgee13 ARC** It's an acronym, Aggressive ReConnaissance
Juan Cruz Marolda The Starfighter was a great research aircraft. Lousy warplane.
@@SvenTviking starfighter here was mant as in a Star Wars starfighter, not the real plane starfighter
Ive had a diecast model of this ever since i was a kid
I had a model of this plane when I was a kid. One of the most badass-looking planes of the war, it's always been a favorite.
Same here. Dad painted blue sky and clouds on the ceiling so I could hang them flying!
I just finished the book "Night Fighter" it is written by a British radar operator in WWII. The most impressive fight he was involved in was one where they chased a Heinkel, never got into a position to fire on it, the German pilot was just too good. It crashed trying to get away, the Mosquito chasing them wasn't ready to that close to the ground. So a kill was awarded without a shot being fired!
I believe this plane is actually the first purpose-built night fighter. The HE 219 Owl for example was designed before used successfully as a night fighter.
The P-61 was the only aircraft from the Allies that was designed, and built from the wheels up as a Night Fighter, whereas the HE-219 was the only enemy fighter designed from the wheels up, as a Night Fighter. Japan also fielded a puropose built Night Fighter: The Nakajima Irving, as well.
@@johnosbourn4312 No, the HE 219 wasn't built from the outset as a night fighter. It came from 'projekt 1060', a multipurpose design that was intended to be either a heavy fighter, recon plane or torpedo bomber. The Nakajima J1N was initially built as a bomber escort fighter.
Not to mention the Baeufighter and me110
@@ThatGuysProject And? Neither of which were purpose-built night fighters - you know, the point of the original comment?
@@ThatGuysProject neither were built specifically as nightfighers.
My foster mother showed me a black widow sitting in a field, covered blackberry bushes near the airport in Santa Rosa california, that was 24 years ago, ive looked for it many times since, i nener saw it again, i hope it is being restored somewhere
I was in California in 84 to 88 and I wish I had known about this
The Wright Patterson AF Museum in Dayton Ohio has one on display - awesome looking!
There are only 4 known to exist. One at the one of the Smithsonian, one at Wright Patt. museum in Dayton. One at Mid continent and the final one in China. Rumors of more in China, but nothing confirmed. It is possible, my Dads plane, as were others of the 427th were left behind at wars end.
I have a nice model of one of these in my man cave. Even has a three man ground crew doing maintenance on some removable cowls and panels.
The Monogram (now Revell) kit is a pain in the ass but a model builder's rite of passage due to its difficulty and sheer availability. The other is the Monogram/Revell F-14.
Monogram 1:48 scale. My best effort out of dozens. Built it back in the late 70s. Probably 200 hrs painting and assembling.
Wish I had pics
I have a Revell model of this to build...
@@genekloszewski5484 Cool. It's like a P-38 and a B-25 had a baby together.lol
Such a funky, menacing looking plane. And the black paint helped it to look deadly.
This is by far my favorite channel
This guy needs some fact checking...
The RAF developed the Bristol Beaufighter (radar equipped) into a night fighter early in 1941.
The Germans had them in 1942.
When it comes to the P-61 which was, granted, the..."only purpose-built night fighter design deployed during the war, the American Northrop P-61 Black Widow was introduced first in Europe and then saw action in the Pacific, but it was given such a low priority that the British had ample supplies of their own designs by the time it was ready for production. The first USAAF unit using the P-61 did not move to Britain until February 1944"
Oh and it was propeller driven not a "fighter jet" (time stamp: 2:09)
Makes you wonder what other crap this bloke spins...
As far as I know this video is the first comprehensive story on UA-cam about this weird looking airplane. Thx for that. More and more I think about to buy the RC Version of this hottie. 😁
Really a masterpiece of US aviation engineering 👍
When I was a kid, I was fascinated with the Black Widow. It really looked impressive. I didn't know it was at the struggling edge of technology, and that it saw such limited service. I wonder how much its presence may have discouraged axis night flights. Could the P-61 have been a victim of its own early success?
Too large too heavy too expensive too few and too late .
First time I saw a picture of this plane I said " THAT is a pursuit fighter??" Learning more about it's unique capabilities gave me a new respect for this oddball "fighter."
GREAT VIDEO NEED TO HEAR MORE OF P 61 BLK WIDOW
This is one of the coolest aircraft of WW2
Your channels are great. You can tell you put alot of time and effort into research for these videos,keep up the good work.
It is almost perfect, the many mistakes are annoying
Thank you.. I built, I think the Revell model, when I was a teenager. It hung above my bed until college.
@rogerwilco99 Only 40 aircraft! My first collection was just over one hundred aircraft. My father managed to damage and destroy some and I was chivvied into disposing of the rest.
My current collection is around 350 aircraft, with around 30 ships and the final few 1/9th scale motorcycles and a few odds and sods of other models!
I’ve always loved the P-61, something about it visually just works for me
I once met a man that was a piloted this plane. I was too young to remember much of the conversation, but he was a cool dude.
The pilots were likely proud of the Milt Caniff nose art.
Dark skies your the best teacher of ww2 AIRCRAFT!
what aabout real engineering
@@reagantumurbaatar9244 idk.
Idk about that there’s a lot of mistakes with with information
@@hybirdbeast9324 my grammar is not that great That why.
Gerber Lopez I’m talking about the channel not you.
I just love this airplane. It's a night fighter, it has radar, it has 4 20mm cannons(4x20 blaze it), it CAN have 4 .50 caliber machines. Its radar is so complicated it has a guy, just sitting in the nose, solely to work the radar. The Pilot sits in the stepped up part of the cockpit. Plus, I just love twin-boomed aircraft. They just look sexy. I used to have a model of this.... I wish I still did.
I also build this model and fell in love with the airplane. One of the coolest looking fighters of the war.
Thank you for this video. The P-61 had a magic about it, for sure. If anyone remember playing H.I.S., the P-61 was one of the most formidable planes in that game.
When i was about 11 my foster mother took me to the area where she grew up, in santa rosa california, a couple miles from the charles shultz air Museum.(Santa rosa airport).
She had taken me out for a drive in a rural area and she took me to a p-61 blackwidow sitting out in a field covered with blackberry bushes, she siad they used to play on it when she was a kid, ive looked for it since then many times, but its gone, i really hope it was restored and loved, and not scrapped
0:27 Yeah that's pretty terrifying. Imagine seeing that behind you in the black of night.
I always loved this plane, even though the top speed of the B model was pedestrian compared to other similar types. The “C” model at 430 mph top sped was what was really needed, but, again, arrive too late. With the heavy gun argument and ability to carry 6 inch rockets or four 1600 pound bombs, It could have excelled in the ground attack role, but had too much overlap with the B-25 and B-26, & The other types could do level bombing as well, since they had proper bombsight equipment.
This is the most important fighter you've never heard of.
cool plane. early 70s I had a built a small model plastic kit of it.
I recall reading how it could sneak up on enemy aircraft at night until they were close enough to see the faint glow from the exhaust- then it was too late for the enemy to avoid combat from the Black Widow's guns.
As an aside, it is pretty interesting to see large roomful of engineers drafting parts to be manufactured. I had taken drafting in HS before CAD- line thickness, consistency etc. were all important elements to be observed- all while maintaining overall cleanliness of the finished page. It was a very time consuming process, as was deciding whether to erase mistaken sections or restarting on a fresh page. I imagine how difficult it must have been to design the finished product - like individually painting pieces of a very large jigsaw puzzle so they all come together to a recognizable picture.
I made a model of this as a kid in the 70s. Definitely the wickedest looking plane of the war.