Germany's Podracer-esque Bomber: Blohm & Voss P 170

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  • Опубліковано 26 чер 2023
  • In this video, we talk about the Blohm & Voss P 170 , a proposed schnellbomber (fast bomber) design that (I think) strongly resembles the podracers from Star Wars. We talk about what the general concept of schnellbombers were supposed to be. We also talk about potential advantages and disadvantages of the P 170's strange design and why it would never be accepted or made in any capacity. Finally, we take a guess at how the P 170 would have performed if it had been made.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 750

  • @michaelpettersson4919
    @michaelpettersson4919 Рік тому +699

    We got free coffee at my work. I doubt that whatever Blohm & Voss offered their employees was legal even at the time...

    • @BartoszDudziak
      @BartoszDudziak Рік тому +82

      Never heard of Pervitin?

    • @mikeyratcliff3400
      @mikeyratcliff3400 Рік тому +29

      Of course! And someone has access to herr gorbubbles stash !

    • @griffg55
      @griffg55 Рік тому +12

      More likely BEER.

    • @LastGoatKnight
      @LastGoatKnight Рік тому

      Meth? It was issued to soldiers so I wouldn't be suprised

    • @redtsar
      @redtsar Рік тому

      Bet they were on Pervitin or chocolate with methamphetamine

  • @HootOwl513
    @HootOwl513 Рік тому +342

    If Kelly Johnson had designed it, there would be semi-circular winglets outboard of the end nacelles...
    If Jack Northrop had designed it, the fuselage would be shorter, cockpit forward, and the powerplants reversed to be pushers.
    If Nikolai Polikarpov had designed it, he would have been ''reassigned'' to the Gulag.

    • @grandcrowdadforde6127
      @grandcrowdadforde6127 Рік тому +14

      >> hey! don"t knock the Gulag! they got some great work out of the crinimal Tovarischs!

    • @realhorrorshow8547
      @realhorrorshow8547 Рік тому +8

      @@grandcrowdadforde6127 Zeks, gulag prisoners - certainly "58s" political prisoners - were forbidden from addressing camp staff as "tovarisch" or referring to themselves as "Bolsheviks".

    • @grandcrowdadforde6127
      @grandcrowdadforde6127 Рік тому +3

      @@realhorrorshow8547 >> i was being sarcastic!

    • @jehoiakimelidoronila5450
      @jehoiakimelidoronila5450 Рік тому +3

      That's an honest way to put it. Give that one design to others and you got a different one from each designer

    • @12b_engineer
      @12b_engineer Рік тому

      @grandcrowdadforde6127 why double space all the words? Makes you look like you got a stutter or something.

  • @jerrybailey5797
    @jerrybailey5797 Рік тому +276

    Got to admit Blohm and Vost built some fascinating weird planes 👍

    • @Zerzayar
      @Zerzayar Рік тому +2

      ​@@jzsbff4801"Mustard". 😉

    • @ricardodavidson3813
      @ricardodavidson3813 Рік тому +12

      They were definitely creative, and most of their designs from "outside the box" actually worked.

    • @WarblesOnALot
      @WarblesOnALot Рік тому +2

      G'day,
      Designed, certainly..., and they built some
      Oddball Concepts.
      But they
      Never
      BUILT any
      3-Engined
      Semi-Tailless
      (Schnell)
      Bomber.
      (bummer...).
      The
      MOST
      Correct
      Answer, was
      Of
      Course...;
      The
      DeHavilland
      Mosquito...
      Such is Life,
      Have a good one...
      Stay safe.
      ;-p
      Ciao !

    • @jerryjeromehawkins1712
      @jerryjeromehawkins1712 Рік тому +2

      Cutting edge... especially considering the year of development.

    • @miguelcastaneda7257
      @miguelcastaneda7257 Рік тому

      Gotta admit nazies though we're evil built cool stuff and we're snappy dressers

  • @oscarjonesxxx2893
    @oscarjonesxxx2893 Рік тому +13

    German engineers - "lets see, what kind of bomber platform and we produce that will be really different. Hold my beer while I show you my idea."

  • @allanparisien7976
    @allanparisien7976 Рік тому +30

    There's a game I used to play called Crimson Skies...one of the planes was called a Curtiss-Wright P2 Warhawk.
    Amazingly similar!

    • @mst3kguy754
      @mst3kguy754 Рік тому +1

      Yeah, my thoughts exactly. Cool game on PC. The X-Box-Game i have never played.

    • @KryptLynx
      @KryptLynx Рік тому +2

      Llooks like Crimson Skies devs took all wacky aviation live ideas and put them into the game.
      it is not the first airplain from the game I recognize

    • @seanmccann8368
      @seanmccann8368 11 місяців тому +1

      That was a brilliant game, I remember my sons playing it as kids.

    • @Mr.McWatson
      @Mr.McWatson 5 місяців тому +1

      That game is still my favourite game of all time. Everything about it was just awesome. Would pay serious money for a modern version... They also used Henschel's Hs P.75 as the secret fighter you steal in that one mission.

  • @LudosErgoSum
    @LudosErgoSum Рік тому +33

    One caveat you totally forget to mention and a strong reason TO NOT MAKE the design, is that each frame uses up THREE ENGINES which could be used to build three fighters of which Germany desperately needed to fight the Reich from bomber raids. The three engine design is pretty much why the project would never take off (quite literally) because those resources are too precious to the war effort at that point.

  • @richmcgee434
    @richmcgee434 Рік тому +78

    Oh, so that's what inspired that one Crimson Skies plane. I always wondered if it was based on something real, but never thought to look at bombers - the game made it a heavy fighter.

    • @DeetexSeraphine
      @DeetexSeraphine Рік тому +3

      The P2 Warhawk, yeah, tiz less the spitting image and more a bolt-for-bolt copy.
      Gloriously powerful, if slow, though...

    • @dorsk84
      @dorsk84 10 місяців тому +3

      I just saw this vid and this is exactly what I was thinking.

    • @thewritinglefty4889
      @thewritinglefty4889 10 місяців тому +1

      As soon as I saw it I got serious nostalgia so that's the plane!!!

    • @tristikov
      @tristikov 10 місяців тому +1

      Came here to see if someone had already mentioned this lol

  • @jimfinlaw4537
    @jimfinlaw4537 Рік тому +57

    Blohm and Voss had some of the wierdest designed aircraft that never made it past the drawing board. This shnell bomber is certainly no exception. There was another Blohm and Voss design where this plane was piloted from a pod at the wingtip. The second pod at the opposite wingtip served as a gunners station. Not sure how this odd aircraft would have flown. It appears that many of Blohm and Voss's designs were rather unique and ambitious.

    • @nox5555
      @nox5555 Рік тому +6

      Thats what you get when you order aircraft from a shipyard,,,

    • @williamzk9083
      @williamzk9083 10 місяців тому

      @@nox5555 Blohm and Voss brough Hamburger Flugzeugbau.

  • @marcusmoonstein242
    @marcusmoonstein242 Рік тому +62

    Remember that the British Mosquito was basically a "schnellbomber" and it was arguably one of the most successful planes of the entire war. This proves that the problem in this case clearly wasn't in the idea, it was in the execution. A lightweight tri-motor fast bomber could have been a fantastic idea if it had been executed more conventionally, with the two outboard engines mounted mid-wing rather than on the ends and a conventional tail.

    • @GooseOfYork
      @GooseOfYork Рік тому +6

      The Soviet Pe-2 "Peshka" was a pretty good schnellbomber as well, as far as I know

    • @peceed
      @peceed Рік тому +5

      But wing tip mounting has its advantages. It makes much lower interference drag, and propellers counters vortex formations. It also makes wing construction lighter - it is a flying wing approximation.

    • @rbilleaud
      @rbilleaud 11 місяців тому

      I think the Italians might disagree with you on that score and could give you multiple examples of their own more conventionally designed tri-motors that were less than successful.

    • @GooseOfYork
      @GooseOfYork 10 місяців тому

      @@rbilleaud that's because the sm79 was outdated by ww2 standards when it came out, and was very slow despite its triple engine design.

    • @RundSchneemann
      @RundSchneemann 9 місяців тому +1

      When the Mosquito appeared, Hermann Göring said "that's what I keep asking for!"

  • @timbrwolf1121
    @timbrwolf1121 Рік тому +137

    Something you didn't mention is that plane would have been weird to fly. The initial g forces would be opposite of a normal aircraft as the tail cockpit swings the other way around the CoG. Then It would immediately reverse to the g forces applied to the whole plane. I imagine it would be highly discomforting

    • @BlackMasterRoshi
      @BlackMasterRoshi Рік тому +13

      Plus bad roll rate.

    • @timbrwolf1121
      @timbrwolf1121 Рік тому +28

      @@BlackMasterRoshi someone needs to do an analysis of the g forces santa would sustain in a dogfight.

    • @keithammleter3824
      @keithammleter3824 Рік тому +13

      Not true. Turn radius is always far greater than the wingspan, so from the point of g-forces it makes little difference. I imagine it would seen a bit odd to fly at first, as a touch of rudder would give you a sideways sensation. Not a problem though. At one time our local bus company bought busses that had the driver's seat about 5 m forward of the front wheels. I asked a driver if it seemed odd after driving a normal cab-over bus. He said, yes, until he had turned 2 or three corners and was then used to it.

    • @t.c.2776
      @t.c.2776 Рік тому

      @@keithammleter3824 yes, but wouldn't this design ten to "swing" the tail like a weight on the end of a string in a hard turn or bank and increase the G-force?

    • @kristianhartlevjohansen3541
      @kristianhartlevjohansen3541 Рік тому +1

      I look and my 1st thought is “… hmmm outside engine failure on takeoff” 😨

  • @anzaca1
    @anzaca1 Рік тому +20

    The deHavilland Mosquito was arguably the only successful Schnellbomber.

    • @Schlipperschlopper
      @Schlipperschlopper Рік тому +5

      Dont forget the Arado turbojet Blitzbomber

    • @anzaca1
      @anzaca1 Рік тому +1

      @@Schlipperschlopper I didn't. The Arado was almost exclusively used for recon. The few times it was used as a bomber, it proved almost incapable of hitting anything.
      Compared to the Mosquito, which was well-known as being very accurate.

    • @Schlipperschlopper
      @Schlipperschlopper Рік тому

      @@anzaca1 untrue, but there were only very few missions flown with the Arado Blitz and only very few planes available at all due to turbine shortages. They waited for the stronger BMW 018 turbines that later became the french Snecma Atar) The old Jumos were not quite up to the task.

    • @SBT300
      @SBT300 10 місяців тому

      ​@@SchlipperschlopperAnd that's another reason why you can hardly call it successful...

  • @gideonsgate9133
    @gideonsgate9133 Рік тому +92

    The main problem I can see is the weight at the end of the wings. It would most likely result in a roll rate that is measured in minutes not seconds.

    • @scullystie4389
      @scullystie4389 Рік тому +24

      I could see some sort of interesting German overengineering to help with that, such as a complex auto throttle to induce engine torque as a roll rate booster.

    • @unvaxxeddoomerlife6788
      @unvaxxeddoomerlife6788 Рік тому +9

      More of a problem for a fighter. Bombers in WWII weren't exactly maneuverable.

    • @riconui5227
      @riconui5227 Рік тому +5

      The weight overall would be a problem. Wing-tip engines would call for a more robust wing, and the third landing gear puts on the pounds. And the issue of the pilot being that far behind the CG. Interesting concept though.

    • @HotelPapa100
      @HotelPapa100 Рік тому +4

      In a bomber that's a feature, not a bug.

    • @thingamabob3902
      @thingamabob3902 Рік тому +3

      you could have put the actual engines in mid-wing and just a connecting rod toward the end, so the propeller would be on the end doing its job regarding the vortexes and the main weight more toward the center, reducing the need to strenghten the outer wings. Also I don´t believe the rudders would have caused problems since many tailless aircraft designs ( not the flying wing ones obviously, the Rutan planes, SR-71 etc. ) had such rudders at or near the wings ... except not at or near the center of gravity which lessens their effectivity.

  • @kksmith244
    @kksmith244 Рік тому +15

    The pc version of Crimson Skies had an inspired version of this. That game and Il2 1946 made me fascinated with prototype/never were planes.

  • @peepsbates
    @peepsbates Рік тому +10

    Ah yes, the Warhawk from Crimson Skies.

  • @robbierobinson8819
    @robbierobinson8819 Рік тому +51

    Definitely B&V getting deeply into weird designs. What a horror to land with all that fuselage in front of you. I would like to build an RC model to see if it would actually fly.

    • @DrHundTF2
      @DrHundTF2 Рік тому +4

      Someone else said they saw a video of an RC model so it may already exist

    • @comethiburs2326
      @comethiburs2326 Рік тому +7

      any RC will fly, since they make 1000+hp per ton. now replicate the power to weight ratio of the thing... i've seen bricks and non aerodynamic objects fly because foam is just a cheatcode.

    • @kristianhartlevjohansen3541
      @kristianhartlevjohansen3541 Рік тому +2

      @@comethiburs2326 oh the +real+ cheat code is “wing area grows by square, weight grows by cube” 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @qdaniele97
      @qdaniele97 Рік тому +1

      Well, in larger planes the tail section tends to be the safer one so... 😅

    • @sandman93449dm
      @sandman93449dm Рік тому

      I would like to see that!

  • @beejay7665
    @beejay7665 Рік тому +17

    This aircraft has some beautiful lines; thanks for making this “what-if” video. With regards to vertical fin placement, Burt Rutan’s series of canard wing, pusher prop kit planes (the VariEze and LongEZ, etc) put the vertical surfaces out on the wingtips. Beautiful planes, and, like Blohm & Voss, Rutan designed some groundbreaking asymmetric and unconventional airframes. Now I’m going to find the video of the RC version one of your other viewers mentioned!

    • @robertwarner5963
      @robertwarner5963 Рік тому

      A key difference with Rutan's Long-Eze canard is that main wing tips are swept well aft of the center-of-gravity, giving the outboard rudders significant leverage. This also positions those small vertical fins far enough aft that they can contribute to yaw (heading) stability. Finally, on Long-Eze, rudders only deploy outboard, making them drag-rudders ... similar to B-2 flying wing bomber.

    • @beejay7665
      @beejay7665 Рік тому

      @@robertwarner5963 Robert; I’d forgotten they only deflect outward. I thought that was a great design feature, to double as speed brakes. I never made it to Oshkosh for any of the fly-ins, would love to chat with the builders

    • @terraplane1116
      @terraplane1116 10 місяців тому

      The Handley Page HP75 Manx had the same wingtip rudders, in a pusher configuration.

  • @comentedonakeyboard
    @comentedonakeyboard Рік тому +4

    While loosing the war, Germany still won the weirdest Aircraft Design Award 🏆

  • @SomeOrdinaryJanitor
    @SomeOrdinaryJanitor Рік тому +20

    this is a really cool design i don't think that gets talked about enough. same with some of the other Asymmetrical designs that Blohm und Voss came up with, like the P.163, or their asymmetrical flying boats.

    • @flatcapfiddle
      @flatcapfiddle Рік тому

      I'm convinced these asymmetric designs where the inspiration for another Star Wars craft. The B Wing

  • @scootergeorge7089
    @scootergeorge7089 Рік тому +36

    More accurately, the Luftwaffe concentrated on shorter range, twin engine aircraft better suited to the roll of tactical bombing in support of land forces. And they may have concluded an unescorted long range bomber would be vulnerable to enemy interceptors as was the case with USAAF bombers before the P-51 came along.

    • @annoyingbstard9407
      @annoyingbstard9407 Рік тому +5

      Starting with the Spanish civil war theLuftwaffe were quite happy bombing civilian targets in just about every European country. They just weren’t very good at it.

    • @scootergeorge7089
      @scootergeorge7089 Рік тому

      @@annoyingbstard9407 Guernica

  • @alexmontgomery255
    @alexmontgomery255 Рік тому +5

    Unusual aircraft designs are one of my favorite topics and the P 170 is certainly one of the most.

    • @sandgrownun66
      @sandgrownun66 Рік тому

      How about aircraft that actually got built? Not just some marks on a sheet of paper.

    • @sandgrownun66
      @sandgrownun66 Рік тому

      @@jzsbff4801 Rare alright. Just a few doodles on a sheet of paper.

  • @Wombletronix
    @Wombletronix Рік тому +9

    Would be interesting to see a simulated view from the cockpit, very unusual. I imagine taxis and take-offs would have been, er, fun.

  • @gsamov
    @gsamov Рік тому +2

    im so glad to see this channel getting the attention that it deserves =]

  • @twistedyogert
    @twistedyogert Рік тому +7

    The German designers always made it so easy for today's sci-fi nuts to imagine what aircraft would look like in some strange alternative future that takes place in the past.

  • @MrArgus11111
    @MrArgus11111 Рік тому +14

    Dry humor is the best way to handle most of the paper B&V designs. They were bound and determined to be remembered for their contributions to the air war and they got their wish. They were definitely remembered. For a few silly aircraft and a LOT of silly drawings.

    • @neiloflongbeck5705
      @neiloflongbeck5705 Рік тому +1

      A glass of beer can also help.

    • @PunkinsSan
      @PunkinsSan Рік тому +1

      BV company was pretty known for its strange ideas but mostly that was for saving their workers to be not sent to the frontlines

    • @BV-fr8bf
      @BV-fr8bf Рік тому +3

      Weird paper B&V designs *OR* the Eastern front and a rifle, The choice is self evident. :) B&V's *other* notable project was the Battleship Bismarck

  • @Tony-pm5xo
    @Tony-pm5xo Рік тому +11

    8:11 From what I know, having vertical stabilizers in the middle or front is very bad for side slip stability. Side slip means the plane is sorta "drifting" in the air, like it's moving to its left or right. This naturally happens when the plane rolls, for example. Intuitively, you want the rear of the plane to have more resistance than the back when it's moving sideway, so while slipping the plane has a tendency to turn towards the direction it's moving and stops the slip. Like how cars counter steer in the direction it's moving to stop drifting. Having a large tail in the back creates this sideway resistance due to having a large area on the side. A plane with a mid tail like this will have a hard time pointing towards where it's going

    • @sandgrownun66
      @sandgrownun66 Рік тому

      This is nothing more than a thought in someone's head. Nothing to write a critical report about.

  • @elisekehle8520
    @elisekehle8520 Рік тому +15

    Reminds me of both a Porax 38 and a Bellbabub-22. Let's remember that the Bellbabub actually has a central rudder, so a Star Wars fantasy ship apparently adheres more closely to aerodynamic requirements than this monstrosity did.

    • @user-do5zk6jh1k
      @user-do5zk6jh1k Рік тому +2

      And the Porax 38 is based off the P-38

    • @elisekehle8520
      @elisekehle8520 Рік тому

      @@user-do5zk6jh1k in name, sure but I really don't see it. The elevator does remind me a lot of the cloakshape though!

    • @minimalbstolerance8113
      @minimalbstolerance8113 Рік тому +1

      @elisekehle8520 Was just thinking that this reminded me more of the Punishing One than a podracer.
      Edit: Soulless one, not Punishing One. Grievous' fighter, not Dengar's ship.

    • @elisekehle8520
      @elisekehle8520 Рік тому +1

      @@minimalbstolerance8113 part of that is the angle of the thumbnail. Seeing the full 3-d model i get the podracer comparison a bit better- the aspect ratio is lower than it looks in this pic, but still, I think Soulless One is more like it. You meant Soulless one, right? Grievous' ship, not Dengar's?

  • @bazza945
    @bazza945 Рік тому +7

    What were the designers smoking? It certainly wasn't tobacco.

  • @hoppinonabronzeleg9477
    @hoppinonabronzeleg9477 Рік тому +17

    Imagine getting into a PIO situation with this thing (Pilot Induced Oscillation). Would have been very odd looking forwards over the central engine, with a fin just to the side of you, and every stick input you put in backwards, or forwards, is magnified, by about 4 times what you are used to. Plus it is the elevator you are closest to so as you pull the stick backwards, expecting the nose to rise, instead it is the tail ie you that actually goes down!

    • @crabby7668
      @crabby7668 Рік тому +1

      The aviation version of the wayward shopping trolley?

  • @edwardmorriale9358
    @edwardmorriale9358 Рік тому

    At last! An aircraft I had no idea about. Thank you for a look at a fascinating idea.

  • @kitbag9033
    @kitbag9033 Рік тому +7

    J7W1 Shinden and Curtiss XP-55 Ascender had mid span fin/rudder assemblies, both of which flew.

    • @robertwarner5963
      @robertwarner5963 Рік тому +4

      Yes, Shinden and Ascender both flew, but they both also suffered multiple problems with stability and control.

  • @SomeOrdinaryJanitor
    @SomeOrdinaryJanitor Рік тому +5

    there was another one with that mid mounted stabilizers. the Kalinin K-12 was a projected tailless bomber that had a semi-flying wing design.

  • @mabbrey
    @mabbrey Рік тому +1

    fantastic looking

  • @guilletous89
    @guilletous89 Рік тому +2

    Crimson Skies took inspiration of this plane with the Warhawk. What a lovely game.

  • @rollfpeters5159
    @rollfpeters5159 Рік тому

    Nicely explained --thx rollf

  • @bernardwills9674
    @bernardwills9674 Рік тому +6

    I'm guessing pilot vision for take off and landing nixes this design right off the bat?

    • @PunkinsSan
      @PunkinsSan Рік тому +3

      If it doesn't had any periscope it would be big problem for sure

  • @thomascarmichael6760
    @thomascarmichael6760 10 місяців тому +1

    Despite your conclusions on the design, there was a r/c model of the aircraft built and flown at an event in New York State a few years back. The name of the builder escapes me at the moment but the plans for it are available on E-Bay. Therefore there was some soundness in the design. In fact there are a number of Bhlom & Voss designs that have been built as r/c models. I personally have 2 sets of plans for the B&V 208 and the B&V 215. You never know what will or won’t work until you try it!

  • @clouddog2393
    @clouddog2393 6 місяців тому

    Very interesting and the models were excellent . Let's hope the model companies realise more of the fascinating Bloom und Voss aircraft in kit form .

  • @MGB-learning
    @MGB-learning Рік тому

    Great video

  • @mauser98kar
    @mauser98kar Рік тому +1

    I now need Deiselpunk 1930-1940s-esque version of pod racing.

  • @MartinG8199991
    @MartinG8199991 Рік тому +7

    I think the rudder position is thought to be improved by being in the thrust line of the engines, making the rudder more effective for its size.

    • @robertwarner5963
      @robertwarner5963 Рік тому +3

      Yes but .... its short distance aft of the center-of-gravity limits its leverage.

    • @kennethrodmell9006
      @kennethrodmell9006 Рік тому +2

      It would have been a pig to get out of a spin.

    • @sandgrownun66
      @sandgrownun66 Рік тому

      It's been rumoured that Unicorns are aerodynamically unstable too.

  • @markalton2809
    @markalton2809 2 місяці тому

    Blohm und Voss are my favourite aircraft company, such imagination, such an iconic style.

  • @Crazy_Talk96
    @Crazy_Talk96 Рік тому +3

    This looks like General Grievous's star fighter

  • @DUKE_of_RAMBLE
    @DUKE_of_RAMBLE Рік тому +1

    I made this goofy bastige a couple years ago in Simple Planes! Was really fun to build. I even stayed true to the camo by having it bi-colored. Sadly, I never uploaded it, as depression got the best of me and murdered my motivation/desire to do things I enjoy.
    Anyways... Nice to see this bird get a video made about it by someone! Well done.👍

    • @PhantomP63
      @PhantomP63 Рік тому +1

      Must have been cool! Hope you’re doing better now. Wouldn’t wish that feeling on anyone.

    • @DUKE_of_RAMBLE
      @DUKE_of_RAMBLE Рік тому

      @@PhantomP63 Fun indeed! Especially when I slung a Pak 40 (75mm) HE cannon under each wing ☺️ _(instead of the rocket pods)_
      And thank you. Headed to the cabin tomorrow, so 🤞 that will be a helpful escape!
      I've said the same, that I don't wish depression on even my worst enemy! 😣
      Sucks a bit extra for those of us where it's genetic, and not a temporary thing. Just taking it a day, a week, a month at a time. 🙃
      Take care

  • @coastalbbq1
    @coastalbbq1 Рік тому +1

    Rutan Long EZ has wingtip rudders but many other differences. Thanks for the video. I'd never heard of this A/C design.

  • @matthewbittenbender9191
    @matthewbittenbender9191 11 місяців тому +2

    It's important to note that many twin engine aircraft of this time had opposing rotating propellers to balance out the torque. Notably the p38 lightning which was an oddball of its day as well and turned out to be one of the most successful aircraft in WW2. Considering the timing of its development coinciding with jet engine development, it would be interesting to know if this design could have been adapted to jet engines and what kind of performance that may have yielded.

  • @kiwidiesel
    @kiwidiesel Рік тому

    Wow that's a seriously cool machine

  • @whyalwaysme2522
    @whyalwaysme2522 10 місяців тому

    Beautiful design and engineering

  • @terminusest5902
    @terminusest5902 Рік тому +2

    Miles developed some atypical wing structures. Like the Miles M.39B Libellula. One feature was a swept wing. Also s forward canard wing. The Italian SAI-Ambrosini SS.4 had an unusual wing setup.
    And the Curtiss XP-55 Ascender.

  • @DrJoy-cw7lt
    @DrJoy-cw7lt Рік тому

    Well done. Subscribed.

  • @martindice5424
    @martindice5424 Рік тому +3

    Plus ground handling would have been a bloody nightmare! 😂😂

  • @HotelPapa100
    @HotelPapa100 Рік тому

    The twin fin design helps with the control issues in case of an engine failure you mentioned. You have a vertical tail in the propwash of the still operable engine, making it more effective.

  • @greghardy9476
    @greghardy9476 Рік тому +3

    Spins would have been brutal, being so far back.

  • @loganb7059
    @loganb7059 Рік тому

    “Why can’t you just be normal?!”
    Blohm & Voss: _screeches_

  • @Kimdino1
    @Kimdino1 9 місяців тому

    Re. Schnellbombers. It is ironic in that it was the British who made the concept work VERY well during WW2 with the DH Mosquito.
    It is also interesting to note that since WW2 we have moved away from the heavy bomber idea & more toward the schnellbomber concept (aided by various detection avoidance strategies).

  • @PunkinsSan
    @PunkinsSan Рік тому +7

    Fun fact.
    On YT there is few vids of flying RC models. That means this plane could fly somehow

    • @oscarjonesxxx2893
      @oscarjonesxxx2893 Рік тому +3

      Nuts, you can fly a rock with enough horsepower on a FV aircraft.

    • @PunkinsSan
      @PunkinsSan Рік тому +1

      @@oscarjonesxxx2893 that a true. Most of the looked pretty similar to that what you said.

  • @billietyree2214
    @billietyree2214 Рік тому +3

    Our Cavalry and Infantry Generals who were in charge of the Army Air Force made the same stupid mistake with the Brewster Buffalo that Corporal Adolph Mede with the 262, they loaded them down till they couldn’t fulfill their intended function. Our Generals insisted on loading the Buffalo with self sealing tanks and armor, which the Zero wasn’t burdened with and Hitler insisted that the 262 was a bomber.

    • @agdgdgwngo
      @agdgdgwngo Рік тому +2

      People seem to massively overrate how difficult adding bomb racks to the 262 was. As for the Buffalo, I don't think being lighter could have saved it. It's really cool an charismatic plane, the Finns had success with it, but against poorly coordinated early Soviet types. Be interesting to know if those had the self sealing tanks and armour or not.

    • @tastethecock5203
      @tastethecock5203 Рік тому

      ​@@agdgdgwngoEarly Soviet planes had an armor plate behind the pilot, about 7-8mm

    • @HootOwl513
      @HootOwl513 Рік тому

      The Brewster F2A was a Navy fighter, so those above-mentioned gentlemen would've had no input. But the [Navy] Bureau of Aeronautics did load it down with silly stuff like pilot armor, more MGs, self-sealing fuel tanks, flotation devices [ping-pong balls], tailhooks, and all of that did slow it down. Finns stripped that stuff off and kicked VVS' a$$ with the Buffalo. [But, yes the Surface Navy thought they were Top Dogs before LtCmdr Genda, Minoru, IJNAS proved them wrong,]
      The late Fuehrer of 3rd Reich Germany was only ever a Lance Corporal. [Never an NCO]. He did have a chance at promotion, post-war, by going undercover to spy on a weird political workers party for the German Army, but he blew it by buying their line of guff, and adding his own fiery rhetoric. They liked it so well they made him their Fearless Leader.

  • @neillangridge862
    @neillangridge862 Рік тому +2

    Thank you for a great video on yet another German design I had not heard of. I think the reason having the rudders behind the engine pods ls to improve the rudder authority by putting it in the slipstream of the prop just like most single engined aircraft. There is no doubt, as you say, the poor test pilots would have had their hands full if it had been built. It's yaw characteristics would have been interesting. I would hat to have tried to side slip it into a field.

  • @steveshoemaker6347
    @steveshoemaker6347 Рік тому +1

    Excellent video my friend......
    Old Navy Flying Shoe🇺🇸

  • @michastasiszyn2874
    @michastasiszyn2874 Рік тому

    There is also the issue that this plane uses 3 very valuable BMW 801's, with not even double the payload of a FW190 fighter-bomber. The FW190 fighter-bombers can also be pressed into fighter roles in a pinch, something this plane cannot do.
    The Romanians asked for BMW 801's to upgrade their IAR 80's. This excerpt from wikipedia says it all:
    "But, as always, the Germans were unable to supply the engine as every example coming off the line was needed for installation in a German airframe. Licensed production was likewise out of the question, the engine production was in the midst of being ramped and the demand was so great that not even one set of jigs could be spared. "

  • @cpfs936
    @cpfs936 Рік тому +1

    The stress on that wing would be ridiculous!

  • @rutabega2039
    @rutabega2039 11 місяців тому

    One of the reasons multi-engine bombers tended to have twin vertical stabilizers is that it improves ground handling because the stabilizers are in line with the back thrust from the engines. At high speeds this doesn't matter because the airflow past the fuselage gives plenty of bite to a single vertical stabilizer, but when taxiing the airflow is too slow so having the engine thrust directly hitting the stabilizers helps the plane turn. On the PV170 having a standard central stabilizer would have been a problem because it would have been so far back from the center engine; the two stabilizers behind the outer engines would have been even more effective for ground handling because they were so close to the engines.

  • @evilchaosboy
    @evilchaosboy Рік тому

    I like it. It prolly wouldn't ta worked very well, but it sure looks neat! It wasn't mentioned, but it looked to me that from wing tip to wing tip, it seemed exceptionally wide. If I'm correct, that would be another disadvantage. Good show!!

  • @joeminenna2783
    @joeminenna2783 Рік тому +2

    The B&V aircraft make me think of the outside-of-the-box designs of Burt Rutan.

    • @johncasteel1780
      @johncasteel1780 Рік тому

      Except that the EZs in their various iterations were successful.

  • @PunkinsSan
    @PunkinsSan Рік тому +3

    I remember there was video game where you could fly something like this. Wacky but fun game

    • @VictorGarciaR
      @VictorGarciaR Рік тому +7

      Crimson skies maybe?

    • @jtjames79
      @jtjames79 Рік тому +4

      ​@@VictorGarciaRI was going to say the same thing.
      I had the board game. Good stuff.

    • @PunkinsSan
      @PunkinsSan Рік тому +3

      ​@@VictorGarciaRexactly that

    • @tommaguzzi1723
      @tommaguzzi1723 Рік тому +2

      Beat me to it

    • @dabbinghitlersmemes1762
      @dabbinghitlersmemes1762 Рік тому

      kerbal space program
      the p 170 is the kind of whack you make in KSP.

  • @martindice5424
    @martindice5424 Рік тому

    Gotta love Herr Doktor Voght!
    Genius and lunacy.
    Such a thin line between the two.. 😂😂

  • @uuzd4s
    @uuzd4s Рік тому

    I've flown "Scale" and "Funfly" Radio control A/C for a long time. One of our best "events" is the Warbird fly In. If you've got a scale Warbird, bring it weather it 's airworthy or not. Blohm & Voss were a favorite among R/C'ers who wanted something different other than a P-51, Spitfire, ME 262 or Corsair. It's one thing that R/C'ers do pretty well and that is to build all the weird, one off or drawing board A/C that never became popular. This A/C is fascinating and though I've never seen a model of one, I'm sure there's one out there somewhere that's flown at least once ! (flying a R/C airplane once is easy, anybody can do that . . flying it twice is the hard part ; )

  • @andrearisso4792
    @andrearisso4792 Рік тому +1

    In case of failure of one of the wingtip engines, the other wing tip engine can provide enough airflow on the rudder behind it to counteract the turning tendency. Likely, this was not possible if the rudder was placed in the tail.

  • @dialNforNinja
    @dialNforNinja Рік тому +2

    Your logo is so cool~!

  • @justinhart8652
    @justinhart8652 Рік тому +7

    Imagine if this was a six engine plane with three rear mounted pusher engines

    • @karlbark
      @karlbark Рік тому +1

      "Heavy" man 😉

  • @mycatistypingthis5450
    @mycatistypingthis5450 Рік тому +1

    Blohm & Voss really wanted dieselpunk to become a thing.

  • @stevenhershman2660
    @stevenhershman2660 10 місяців тому +1

    Blohm & Voss thought outside the box.

  • @silverdale3207
    @silverdale3207 Рік тому

    I had a microlight with the odd tip rudders on it, no tail but a canard at the front as an elevator. It was called a Pterodactyl, the tip rudders basically just induced yaw. It was an odd thing to fly and I was pleased to sell it and get something more conventional.

  • @mentorofarisia371
    @mentorofarisia371 Рік тому +1

    The model @6:15 has all 3 props rotating in the same direction, based on the spiral paint on the spinners. :) And yes, the mechanicals of controlling the rudders would have been bad - cables up the fuselage, then out the wings, then back thru the engine nacelles. No fly-by-wire back then.

  • @M4xFr4gg
    @M4xFr4gg Рік тому +1

    Wait, this plane was in Crimson Skies! I had no idea this was a real design

  • @AB-bw5yc
    @AB-bw5yc Рік тому

    Pretty cool. The do335 is still my favorite ww2 aerial oddity

  • @anm10wolvorinenotapanther32
    @anm10wolvorinenotapanther32 Рік тому +2

    Although it does look like a podracer, it reminds me more of General Grievous' "Soulless One" starfighter based on the Belbullab-22 which were often used either as a heavy fighter or tactical bomber.

  • @davidgifford8112
    @davidgifford8112 Рік тому

    The vertical rudder positions make sense. Frequently, at the time, rudders were placed directly behind engines. This ensured optimum authority for minimum surface area of rudder. The benefits being lighter weight and minimised drag.

  • @SebaztienHawke-ci5hm
    @SebaztienHawke-ci5hm Місяць тому

    0:27 I designed something like this as Concept Art for a steampunk game (without knowing about this design)… pretty cool. The 40s-50s was a great time to be in aerospace.

  • @dareka9425
    @dareka9425 Рік тому

    Oh, c'mon. My easily-distracted habit is kicking in. I'm trying to finish my first Blender model of a plane for 3D printing and Yotuube showed me this beauty.

  • @trentweston8306
    @trentweston8306 10 місяців тому

    I love the far out designs of WW2 the Triebflügel is my favourite by far but this is amazing as well.

  • @coredog64
    @coredog64 Рік тому +1

    The vertical stabilizers being so close to the wingtip engines would have the potential for additional control authority via the high speed (if somewhat dirty) air coming from the propellers.

  • @GunsmithSid
    @GunsmithSid Рік тому

    Ace and Gary would have loved this!

  • @HellecticMojo
    @HellecticMojo Рік тому

    Blohm and Voss seems like those smartass kids who always had to do go weirdly extra in their school projects.

  • @wbertie2604
    @wbertie2604 Рік тому +1

    The pod racer looks like the aircraft, Lucas being a WW2 aviation enthusiast

  • @MauriceEscargot
    @MauriceEscargot Рік тому

    Kerbal Space Program has taught me the challenges of making such a design work.

  • @blairkinsman3477
    @blairkinsman3477 Рік тому

    I thought of the XB70 for big wing tip stabilizers .. that ship had “tail” fins but those were disproportionately small when compared to later twin tail supersonic fighters (F18 F14 F15 etc)

  • @sammymartin7891
    @sammymartin7891 10 місяців тому

    This design looks like one of the best candidates I've seen for swept forward wings.
    it would shift the center of gravity to the rear.

  • @alessiodecarolis
    @alessiodecarolis Рік тому

    I can only imagine what kind of nightmare would've been driving this.....thing, with a total lack of forward visibility. The RAF was able to field a real, efficient fast bomber without too problems, the great Mosquito (Ok, it was a private venture). Plus, the JU88 lost at least 100km/h when the RLM added armour, a 4th crewman and the airframe had to be reinforced for Luftwaffe 's obsession with dive-bombing.

  • @michaeltelson9798
    @michaeltelson9798 Рік тому

    The Bristol Blenheim was another example of a fast bomber that got made obsolete through engine design advances.

  • @Kualinar
    @Kualinar Рік тому

    The ruder at the wing tip can help further reduce the wing tip vortices, potentially eliminating them entirely.

  • @michaeldombrowski9193
    @michaeldombrowski9193 Рік тому

    The first time I heard of the P.170 was when Squadron listed the 1/72nd scale resin model of it in their monthly catalog just once before 2004 It sold out immediately even though it was expensive. Despite, my doubts that the plane ever flew, I dutifully added it to a book on trimotor airplanes of the world where I documented 355 types aircraft that I was working on at the time. I spent too much time trying to find a photo of the plane and finally decided that it had only ever existed on paper. Based on aircraft like the DeHaviland Mosquito which achieved a higher top speed than contemporary fighters by using multiple Rolls Royce Merlin engines with a very clean aerodynamic design, I concluded since it was meant to use 3 BMW 801D radial engines of 1,860 hp each that the designers speed estimate of 510 moh may have been feasible depending on the load. If not, certainly 470 mph.

  • @iskandartaib
    @iskandartaib Рік тому +1

    6:28 - Weight distribution - Actually, if most of the plane's weight was in the middle, the wings would need to resist more bending loads than if the weight was more evenly distributed along the span. Putting the engines at the tips would actually help, though not as much as if the engines were halfway between the fuselage and the wingtips. There is the issue of bending loads when the airplane is on the ground, but they've taken care of that by putting landing gear under the fuselage AND in the nacelles at the tip. The thing though, is - where to put the bombs? I suppose I can see them on pylons under the wings, which would help even out weight distribution even more...

    • @PhantomP63
      @PhantomP63 Рік тому

      Sort of related, but the CRJ has limitations on how much fuel can be in the fuselage tank when the wing tanks are below a certain value for exactly this reason.

  • @the_unrepentant_anarchist.
    @the_unrepentant_anarchist. Рік тому +2

    That's *almost* the coolest looking thing *ever!*
    I wonder if any model kits of it exist..?
    🤔
    🍄

  • @abryg8655
    @abryg8655 10 місяців тому

    Whenever I think I've seen all of German designs there appears new video of another unknown amazing design. The abundance of aeronautics ideas from that era is mind blowing. They had tried and tested everthing available.

  • @trace6242
    @trace6242 10 місяців тому

    Ten years ago I never would have said this, but you're not missing much when it comes to Star Wars. Just more corporatized schlock for the lowest common denominator.

  • @federicomolina6745
    @federicomolina6745 Рік тому

    Horten's ia 38 transport design flew with the wingtip rudders. But with the amount of sweepback they were actually quite far back behind the cg

  • @hagerty1952
    @hagerty1952 Рік тому

    The X-20/Dyna-Soar had vertical stabs and rudders only at the wing tips. While they never flew one (due to project cancellation) there were six airframes under construction at the time of termination. 14,000 hours of wind tunnel design showed that it was stable in subsonic, supersonic, hypersonic, all the way up to Mach 20 (which it did at reentry).

  • @lomax343
    @lomax343 Рік тому +1

    You don't mention the pilot's field of vision. Possibly because he didn't have one. I can't imagine how such a plane could be taxied, let alone flown.

  • @karlbark
    @karlbark Рік тому

    Very interesting ! 😮
    There are in fact other planes with that wingtip rudder design.
    -I thought I remembered something akin to the DH Swallow prototype but I only found: Armstrong Whitworth A W 52.
    (I also believe that Burt Rutan designed something like that).
    Cheers from Iceland 🇮🇸
    -K

  • @ShadowFalcon
    @ShadowFalcon Рік тому +1

    The only other aircraft with such a rudder placement that i can come up with, is the Long EZ, by Burt Rutan.