DeHaviland Mosquito TseTse carried a 6 pounder. Fact is the Mosquito was superior to the JU 88 in every respect. It was faster, the bomber carried more bombs than the bomber versions of the 88, did I mention it was faster? Mossies served as fighters, bombers, fighter bombers, photo recon, night fighters, pathfinders, specialist pin point bombers, torpedo bombers, and the Tse Tse variant which was specifically designed to kill shipping of destroyer tonnage and down... And was VERY good at it.... The point is, the Ju 88 was not the best multirole aircraft of WWII, as the Mosquito did it all... and did it better....
The Ju-88 was one of the planes Royal Navy test pilot, Eric 'Winkle' Brown said that stood out over other planes in everyone's inventory. It was a true winner.
Ju 88 Rs and Gs could outurn and outclimb mosquitos, could absorb more damage, could withstand higher Gs because of the tough airframe designd for dive bombing and was unrestricted in aerobatics. Its landing gear was longer and tougher which was good for the muddy improvised airfields at the eastern front. It could carry more payload. It was less vulnerable to weather, frost, saltwater because it wasn't made out of wood. Which is also the reason why baeufighters were used over the Atlantic and not mosquitos for maritime patrol. There is more to an aircraft than just speed.
@@HaVoC117Xbollox 😂😂😂😂 So having all that suggested quality you claim is better when you can’t even get close to the Mozzy? I’m not getting into technology but if you care to look at equivalence you’ll find you’re reaching and reaching badly and Udet blowing his brains out gives us a pointer too if you care to read on….🇬🇧
@@mastathrash5609 ye i still haven't menaged to even grind to early jets.Props are more fun in my opinion then jets,you can have real fights and nut just spam misiles
"You fly an Me109 to get the girls, a Ju88 to come home to them" Along with the Beaufighter & Mozzie [even the Me110], one of my period favourites....cheers from Canberra AU.
Carefully designed annular radiators could using the heat of the water actually produce thrust that counteracted the drag. They were used in the avro lincoln and shakelton among others. And of course the 190 D and ta 152
That was true of pretty much all radiators used during WW2, annular or not. And I believe it's also true of the ducting they used for cooling on some radial engine installations, such as on the Sea Fury. Without the use of the Meredith Effect, you're essentially losing several tens of mph, so pretty much everyone used it, and it was well-known, having been discovered in the 1930s.
I'm noticing how most of my favourite WW2 aircraft are two engined. Like you I love the Ju-88. For the USAAF it is the B-25 and the P-38 while the RAF it is the Mosquito along with the Beaufighter.
@bigblue6917 PBY Catalina, my beloved. The mission in WaW where you crew a PBY rescuing sailors from the drink is a core memory and what got me into military history to begin with as a young teen.
13:11 there was a factory in Elsass as well. During WWII the buildings of the car maker Mathis in Strasburg were used for the production and repair of motor engines.
5:09 - That one rests in peace in the Air Force Museum in Dayton, Ohio. During WWII it belonged to the Royal Romanian Air Force and it was dedicated to surveillance/reconnaissance. I had the pleasure to take many photos of it, from all directions.
Theres also one in the uk (Nightfighter version) that was part of a elaborate operation by a disillusioned group of Luftwaffe pilots who purposely defected to the allies and gave them a way to jam the Ju-88’s radar
@@prowlus - One of the three members of the Luftwaffe crew did not want to defect, he had to be tied, or kept at gunpoint, by the other two. By the way, the Ju-88 which is in Dayton, Ohio, was also a result of a defection. The Romanian pilot (an NCO, not officer) took off from Ukraine, crossed over Black Sea and Turkey and landed in Cyprus (at the end, with an escort of 4 Hurricanes). The British already had the plane you mentioned, so they offered the other to the Americans, as a gift.
The circular radiators were very well protected from flak and machine gun fire from the rear. It was expensive and had more drag but could be relatively small and light because of the prop air flow.
There's another reason to use them - you could incorporate them into what the Germans called a "Power Egg" (Kraftei). This "power egg" could be built and replaced as a unit, making the design, repair and maintenance of airplanes easier. Check out the Avro Lincoln and Shackleton for a couple of examples.
I got into MLB only recently, and I like what the O's are delivering right now, but the moment I started following them more closely, they suddenly started stuttering, with even Gunnar losing his streak. Here's to a good push after the All Star weekend!
A couple points: 280 mph at altitude during BoB made Ju-88 somewhat difficult to intercept, esp. by Hurricanes, unless they had an altitude advantage. Ju-88S presented same problem, as it was flying at approx. Mosquito altitudes & speeds. Ju-88G nightfighter was, per "Winkle" Brown, at 400 mph at altitude, " a very fast lady," definitely in Mosquito territory, popular with crews 'til the war's end, and significantly faster than P-61. Ju-388, with BMW801 T/TJ engines, would have posed a serious interception problem, HAD there been significant production.
The Ju 88 was no mosquito. It was over I.5 as heavy and for most of the war had less power. Only with the Jumo 213A and Jumo 213E was there some parity and even then I don’t know if they receive the MW50 system
@@chrissmith2114 the NF version didn't typically carry bombs, and certainly not 4000lbs - only a handful carried that much. The Ju-88 series could carry up to 3000kg (6600lbs), although only 1400kg (3100lb) internally. That's still more than most Mosquitos could carry internally (2000lb). I'm a big Mosquito fan boy, but facts matter.
@@wbertie2604 Struggling to think why a night fighter would carry bombs ? Would expect it to carry radar and lots of guns. Mossie could carry almost same bomb load as USA B-17, which wasted weight carrying crew of 10 and all those guns when the Brits already told them that daylight bombing was suicide no matter how many guns you had. Brits had to explain that heavy bomber referred to the payload not the weight of the aircraft.
The thing about the annular radiators was the concept of the "Kraft-Ei" (Power-Egg) which made powerplant interchangeability a thing. So aircraft designers could then choose from various powerplants that all had the same basic form factor. Not a bad concept honestly.
Lesson 1: multi-role capabilities are a good thing. Lesson 2: being a decades-long Baltimore Oriole's fan I can say the experience has been until recently, like waking up everyday with a headache. However, it's good to know that they still have the capacity to disappoint.
An excellent design, the Germans had clearly made the concept forward adaptable, being able to take different kinds of engine and deal with much higher speed in the later versions. The S3 variant was clearly a force to reckon with, speed being on par with the Mosquito. At the RAF museum Cosford there is a Ju-88G, I visited the museum and it's quite a place for those interested in the German Luftwaffe having a Me 262, Me163, the Fritz X guided bomb and all sorts of experimental rockets to name a few of the exhibits.
The Ju 88 at the RAF museum in Cosford is a different night fighter variant, the R-1. Basically a middle ground between the C series and G series. As for surviving G series aircraft, only one comes to mind and it is a G-1 in the Technik Museum Berlin, altho it still is missing its wings.
The Ju 88 is a classic tale of theory meets reality. To me it reinforces the idea that the two main categories of combat aircraft are fighters and targets. Thank you for the video 👍
I assume the night fighter variant having "guns slightly tilted upwards" is in reference to the "Schräge Musik" setup, that actually had almost vertically installed guns inside the fuselage. This isn't referring to the forward facing guns in a pod under the fuselage that is shown in the photo. Tilting these under the fuselage mounted guns slightly up would result in hitting your own nose...
Yes, the SM cannons were aft the canopy facing up , 45 degrees, which I beleve is the default angle, yet likely pilots could have things changed for personal choice , like nearly all the armament options. Some crew removed the cannon from the cabin/cockpit area for more room in the cabin.
Just subbed. Decent narration. As a fan of the twin engine airframe the Ju-88 is my favorite German aircraft for versatility, reliability and longevity. It doesn't quite edge out my favorite, the Beaufighter and then the Mossy. And it would have been interesting to see what the F7F Tigercat could have achieved for the USN if had made it into production in time. The sound of the F7F (YT has a couple vids) is gnarly.
I wish there was more news on various reconstruction efforts. All articles I found were a bit long in the tooth - mostly in Norway it seems (guess the cold preserved them there?). Could be there's more updates on social media, but I don't use it. EDIT: I suppose one "variant" you missed was the Ju-88 as being the larger part of the "Mistel" combo: there the 88 became one giant bomb/missile.
The US took one Ju 88 back to the states, and they where much impressed by it's general performance and versatility. The only downside for the crew where that the more stuff you put into the airframe, the cramped cockpit became more cramped.
From the encyclopedia "Weapons and warfare": -It would be pointless to describe the Ju88 as a war-winning aircraft because Germany lost the war. But no aircraft did more , in all kinds of mission and on all fronts, to stave off defeat.
HardThrasher loves to over-state aircraft shortcomings and use questionable comparisons to make marginal points that weren't practical given the timeline. Most of his points are clearly pro-British aircraft and designed to low-key troll non-British aircraft.
@@shannonterry4863if only the philosophy and characteristics of german plane design were tested against enemy aircraft to see if they were better or viable... Oh wait
@@shannonterry4863hardtrasher, I have tried to listen to a couple of his videos. Can't do it. Too bombastic, bias, and vulgar. Like a punk shock-jock professor at a community college. His presentation overshadows any good research or points he could make. This is a far superior channel. Sir, thank you for your mature work.
Hmm, had De Havilland's been a German furniture company, & Hugo Junker's aircraft factories worked alongside RR, would their lethal Vulture engine have had it's neck wrung any earlier? : )
@@johnhagemeyer8578 Both of them were fast in the early to mid part of the war, Hurricanes had trouble catching the JU-88's unless they had their radarwarning early scramble and could head them on.
@kingnorlen 110 was fast x2 db601s but could not turn inside fighting. The Fast bomb er was just that, but it couldn't defend itself against a single engine fighters that could catch it. They need fighter cover to properly do their jobs.
@@johnhagemeyer8578 110's were attackers, which is why they flew lowlevel flights and got caught. The JU-88's however were used as strategic bombers, and if u didnt know their tactics ( i suppose u do ) they were climbing towards England, leveled out while bombing, then headed in a shallow dive back to the French coast and occupied airfields. No singleengined fighter could catch them unless they had the early warning systems by radar, and fight them before they leveled out. The Heinkel HE-111's were slower however.
The plane’s ability to cook Schnitzel with Spatzle was classified and like the gun stabilizer on the Sherman, none of the crews were trained on the procedure, fearing that the allies might find out and replicate it. So the world will never know how that would have worked out.
You fail to mention that a significant fraction of the design and Modifications towards the Junkers 88 Production was done with the input of one Eduard Heinemann ( US Citizen of German birth) , loaned to Junkers by Douglas Aircraft in the USA. (He was also on the team that designed the A-20 Havoc , A-26 Invader and, Post-war - the A4D - redesignated later to A-4 - Skyhawk jet, which was also a very succcessful "Jack of All Trades".)
Can you do a video on the Do 17 and a video on the FW 200? Ever since playing Their Finest Hour: The Battle of Britain computer game as a kid I've had an odd fascination with the DO 17. There's not a lot of videos, documentaries, or books on the DO 17. Which is fair as it really only served in the first half of the war and it was kind of a piece of junk 🙂.
Interesting video. The JU 88 was probably the most capable bomber the germans had. Like a cross between a Blenheim and a Mosquito. Also the best night fighter they fielded. What was it with Udet and his dive bombing fetish? That drunk wanted everything with wings to be able to dive bomb. Even the He177.
@@drstrangelove4998 obviously the plane invented the Rubik's Cube but it was kept hidden as a military secret and then credit was given to a human chosen at random
Other good multi-role aircraft of WW2 were the British de Havilland Mosquito which performed as a fast bomber/strike aircraft, reconnaissance, and night fighter, and the US Lockheed P-38 Lightning that was used as a general fighter as well as a highly effective fighter-bomber, a night fighter, and a long-range escort fighter when equipped with drop tanks. The P-38 was also used as a bomber-pathfinder, guiding streams of medium and heavy bombers, or even other P-38s equipped with bombs, to their targets. Used in the aerial reconnaissance role, the P-38 accounted for 90 percent of American aerial film captured over Europe. Although it was not designated a heavy fighter or a bomber destroyer by the USAAC, the P-38 filled those roles and more. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lockheed_P-38_Lightning en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Havilland_Mosquito
Under any video about one of the german schnellbomber types there is a comment like this which is coping for the Mosquito. Why can't you people accept that one of many plane videos on this platform is solely about a specific german plane ? Just type De Havilland Mosquito into UA-cams searchfield and you get what you want.
Not really, no. It was a fairly good theory when it first came out. However, aircraft design and engine power were changing dramatically during the 1935-1945 timeframe. Fighters kept getting faster and faster; at least relative to bombers. Hence, time itself rendered the concept of little value.
Hmm.. How did the Germans say "Ju 88"? "Jay Yoo" (the letters) would be "Yot Oopsilon", so I doubt they'd be saying "Yot Oopsilon Acht und Achtzig" 😁 It would probably be "Yoo Acht und Achtzig". Or "Yoo Acht Acht".
German, 59. "Ju" is pronounced in German almost like the English "you". "88" is actually always(!) pronounced as "acht'n achtzig". The German "und" is therefore slurred into an "n sound", similar to the English "and" in "rock'n'roll". In aircraft types, the number is pronounced as a whole number and never as individual digits. (Only exception: "Boing 707"("Boing sieben null sieben")) P.S. The letter "y" is hardly ever used in modern German, except in borrowed foreign words. In medieval scripts, however, it is very common. P.P.S.: "Yot Oopsilon" is "BSG"("BadSimpleGerman"), similar to "BSE("BadSimpleEnglish")😄!
@@michaelneuwirth3414 Well, yeah. the "Yot" and "Oopsilon" were aimed at Americans. 🤣 . Unlike German, "u" in English can be pronounced in two or three different ways. Writing "Upsilon" would have been ambigious - is that the "u" in "butt", the "u" in "burn" or "fur" (which is more like an "e", if you think about it), or the "u" in "lute"?
@@michaelneuwirth3414 Actually.. Just thought of something else. So how would you say "Ju 288"? "Yoo Zweihundertachtundachtzig"? Surely they'd shorten it to "Yoo Zwei Acht Acht", or at least "Yoo Zwei Achtundachtzig" ? 😁
You'd think with the Ju-88 having trouble with dive bombing, the Germans would have learned better than to make the He-177 have dive-bombing abilities.
Eh ... It's a real stretch to imagine a Ju-88 as a fighter. Night Fighter yes - but Day Fighter - no. The Mosquito wasn't a Day Fighter either - it was an Intruder. Have either one of those aircraft take on a true Day Fighter and they'd likely be shot down. You never know - you could beat anything if you got a jump on it - but if both aircraft saw each other at a distance - no. The True Day Fighters should win. As to Torpedo Bomber - the He-111's routinely flew as Torpedo Bombers. Hell - B-26's were used as Torpedo Bombers at Midway. The real factor there - is crew training more than the aircraft. I've seen Skyraiders fitted with several Torpedoes. The only use of Sky Raiders as Torpedo Bombers I know of was Torpedoing the Hwachon Dam (where they carried only one). .
I said it a million times Germany should have stopped most of the stupid aircraft and focused on the JU 88 it was a great bomber and bomber destroyer. And attack aircraft. The ME262/ME109/ME110/JU88 /HS335 which unfortunately for the Germans was never put into production that and the 262 and the FW190/ME109 and the HS335 would have devastated our bombers luckily for us they had too many projects and not enough resources. One word for the Luftwaffe consolidation. Only build proven weapons until you regained or got respite from the bombing. I’m hoping I got the 335 I’m pretty sure it was a Henshel . Oh well point is they had good aircraft but always we’re trying for something new. That’s great to be innovative but not when you’re LOSING the war consolidation on proven air craft. And use all the resources possible on proven equipment when you are in dire straits.
German nightfighters faced a number of problems one of which was the Mosquitos night intruders flying over Germany whose job it was to hunt the hunters. A little story which may interest you is something the Royal Air Force did to keep the German nightfighters away from the bomber stream. The RAF had a number of radio operator who spoke fluent German and the would broadcast to the nightfighters on the same wavelength telling the pilot that the voice they had been listening too was not German but British. They were told not to listen to the "British" voice as they were trying keep you away from the enemy bombers and were told to fly to a different area. The German radio operators did try to convince the crew that they were the real radio operator and not to listen to the other person, but many of the crews got confused and many did follow the new voice where a Mosquito night intruder was usually waiting for them. Some years before I came across this story I did read the biographer of the radar operator of a Mosquito who did not know of the RAF "Germans" and assumed these Germans aircrews were keeping away from the fighting. The Germans did set a trap for the RAF radio operators as one night they switched from male to female radio operators. The problem was that they RAF anticipated the move and quickly switched their own operators from male to female.
You may be interested in reading about the RAF 100 (bomber support) Group. They did that and more and some did have German, or German ancestry/speaking, crews. Some changed their names to more anglo sounding ones in case of being captured.
The Junkers was a truly remarkable aircraft, interesting that you say that it was 2 Germans that went to America to study and learn certain aspects of aircraft design and construction from the Americans,came back to Germany and applied their aquired knowledge to the Ju- 88 project! Whereas i had always read that America design engineers were hired to do the job? Wonder wbich version of the story is correct, i would guess your version is closer to home, considering all the anti German sentiment shortly after WW- 2!
Germany pre war was very interested in the dive bomber concept, at heart being a tactical, ground support force as part of bltizkrieg rather than a strategic one. They even tried to have a dive bombing ability for the HE-111. I think the JU-88 was even equipped with a dive bomb dive recovery device that could, after the bombs were released, pull up and climb back up to altitude. Another German aircraft principal used in many of the bombers was crew location. The policy for mutual support, and other reasons, it was decided to locate the crews in a large cockpit area rather than have the gunners, and other crew scattered around the aircraft like the US AAF and RAF. The night fighter had the armament of the 'C' model but could be equipped with the 'Schrange Musik' (jazz music) which was two, or more, 20mm guns pointing about 75 degrees firing upwards, aimed by a special sight. The forward firing guns used tracer in the ammo mix the 'Jazz' guns did not. A favorite tactic was to fly under the bomber, especially Lancasters, and aim at the wing between the engines where fuel tanks were. The RAF bomber crews were confused by why their bombers would suddenly burst into flames with no tracers seen.
The January 88 was to some extent ruined by the dive bombing concept and made the aircraft slow and heavy. About 1942 the stub 5B slide bombing sight meant that dive bombing was no longer necessary for accuracy. The Lotfe 7 had a similar effect. Dive brakes were removed after 1942. But the dragon weight added never went away.
30 planes a day - at least the nazis had a sense of humor! The biggest aircraft plant in the world at the time, Willow run, was able to produce a brand-new B-24 every 63 Minutes - so basically 24 planes a day. When your factories are being blown to bits by those mass-produced B-24's it a little difficult to achieve those numbers.
Author does not understand the upward firing cannon installation. "Slight upward tilt" is quite wrong. He doesn't know what they are. Sadly, a quick look at a cut-a-way would allow understanding.
TY. On guns of the JU 88' 7.7 mm is news to me, on anything German built . 7.92 mm the "normal prewar and early war " then up to the 13 mm MG which was a better MG than the Browning .50 cal. in every measure was....dropped for 20,mm and later 30 mm. auto cannons. Amazing the USAAF did so well with mainly just the million Brownings. Weapons progress moved much faster for the Luftwaffe, as auto cannons seemed more popular in Europe. Then the ADEN gun seems to hold for 20 years after the war. No one is dropping their auto cannons, so we are at a plateau in design needs. Missiles never did nullify cannons, and likely never will, IMO.
Browning was could have more than twice the ammo of 20mm cannons and was very effective, you needed trained aircrew to make the most of 20mm cannons, and after halfway point of war Germany was struggling for aircrew and newbies being sent as cannon fodder.
@@chrissmith2114 Yes, I agree. Deflection shooting is not for newbisch pilots, and it is more deadly to bombers, than fighters. In hindsight , I think they were looking for exploding shells, which the respected Browning .50 could not do too any great effect, or the more powerful 13 mm.
The Ju-88...
The STUG of the sky.
Well said.
Yeap… they could do everything but win a war😂
Damn neonazi propagandists
DeHaviland Mosquito TseTse carried a 6 pounder. Fact is the Mosquito was superior to the JU 88 in every respect. It was faster, the bomber carried more bombs than the bomber versions of the 88, did I mention it was faster? Mossies served as fighters, bombers, fighter bombers, photo recon, night fighters, pathfinders, specialist pin point bombers, torpedo bombers, and the Tse Tse variant which was specifically designed to kill shipping of destroyer tonnage and down... And was VERY good at it....
The point is, the Ju 88 was not the best multirole aircraft of WWII, as the Mosquito did it all... and did it better....
@@alganhar1 Younger
@@alganhar1 ok
The Ju-88 was one of the planes Royal Navy test pilot, Eric 'Winkle' Brown said that stood out over other planes in everyone's inventory. It was a true winner.
The DeHaviland Mosquito was better in every way, and he would probably have agreed with that
Ju 88 Rs and Gs could outurn and outclimb mosquitos, could absorb more damage, could withstand higher Gs because of the tough airframe designd for dive bombing and was unrestricted in aerobatics.
Its landing gear was longer and tougher which was good for the muddy improvised airfields at the eastern front.
It could carry more payload.
It was less vulnerable to weather, frost, saltwater because it wasn't made out of wood. Which is also the reason why baeufighters were used over the Atlantic and not mosquitos for maritime patrol.
There is more to an aircraft than just speed.
@@alganhar1 ...aber nicht german, right?
@@alganhar1100% and it’s not even close 😂😂😂
@@HaVoC117Xbollox 😂😂😂😂 So having all that suggested quality you claim is better when you can’t even get close to the Mozzy? I’m not getting into technology but if you care to look at equivalence you’ll find you’re reaching and reaching badly and Udet blowing his brains out gives us a pointer too if you care to read on….🇬🇧
Gaijin should introduce S,G and P models into the game instead of Top Tier planes
Indeed, instead of Top tiers That take $$$ and or 10,000 years to grind. And cost a prohibitive amount of in-game credits to run.
@@mastathrash5609 ye i still haven't menaged to even grind to early jets.Props are more fun in my opinion then jets,you can have real fights and nut just spam misiles
But that won’t make them money so they won’t
@@lampshade6967 true,but they are will run out of new vehicles eventualy
Ju 88 P is my favorite. 2500 capability along with (I think) the guided bomb capability would make it interesting at 3.0
"You fly an Me109 to get the girls, a Ju88 to come home to them"
Along with the Beaufighter & Mozzie [even the Me110], one of my period favourites....cheers from Canberra AU.
Also the hard hitting Bristol Beaufighter . This one was so lethal ,the Japs nicknamed it " Whispering Death".✌️✌️
And you write comments like a Tiefflieger. 😅
The Beaufighter never gets enough love
Loftwafow doesn't exhists, it spells LuftVaffe as correct !
Carefully designed annular radiators could using the heat of the water actually produce thrust that counteracted the drag. They were used in the avro lincoln and shakelton among others. And of course the 190 D and ta 152
Meredith effect !
Long nose was prone to over heating!!!
That was true of pretty much all radiators used during WW2, annular or not. And I believe it's also true of the ducting they used for cooling on some radial engine installations, such as on the Sea Fury. Without the use of the Meredith Effect, you're essentially losing several tens of mph, so pretty much everyone used it, and it was well-known, having been discovered in the 1930s.
...how much thrust and drag are we talking about there, Bucky
The P51 radiator scoop was an excellent example of this application,
Gotta love the ju-88
I'm noticing how most of my favourite WW2 aircraft are two engined. Like you I love the Ju-88. For the USAAF it is the B-25 and the P-38 while the RAF it is the Mosquito along with the Beaufighter.
..if vs 111 & 17....Ja?
I second that motion!!! 🤠👍
@bigblue6917 PBY Catalina, my beloved. The mission in WaW where you crew a PBY rescuing sailors from the drink is a core memory and what got me into military history to begin with as a young teen.
@@revantii +1
But! I do like a few Do's now we're on the sea(underpowered diesels they may be) 😃
13:11 there was a factory in Elsass as well. During WWII the buildings of the car maker Mathis in Strasburg were used for the production and repair of motor engines.
5:09 - That one rests in peace in the Air Force Museum in Dayton, Ohio. During WWII it belonged to the Royal Romanian Air Force and it was dedicated to surveillance/reconnaissance.
I had the pleasure to take many photos of it, from all directions.
Theres also one in the uk (Nightfighter version) that was part of a elaborate operation by a disillusioned group of Luftwaffe pilots who purposely defected to the allies and gave them a way to jam the Ju-88’s radar
@@prowlus - One of the three members of the Luftwaffe crew did not want to defect, he had to be tied, or kept at gunpoint, by the other two.
By the way, the Ju-88 which is in Dayton, Ohio, was also a result of a defection. The Romanian pilot (an NCO, not officer) took off from Ukraine, crossed over Black Sea and Turkey and landed in Cyprus (at the end, with an escort of 4 Hurricanes). The British already had the plane you mentioned, so they offered the other to the Americans, as a gift.
"rests in peace"?
really?
Those traitors were resüonsible in part to the bombing of Dresden and the many civilian deaths!@@prowlus
The recon plane is supposed to take pictures of you, not the other way around. ;)
The circular radiators were very well protected from flak and machine gun fire from the rear. It was expensive and had more drag but could be relatively small and light because of the prop air flow.
There's another reason to use them - you could incorporate them into what the Germans called a "Power Egg" (Kraftei). This "power egg" could be built and replaced as a unit, making the design, repair and maintenance of airplanes easier. Check out the Avro Lincoln and Shackleton for a couple of examples.
I got into MLB only recently, and I like what the O's are delivering right now, but the moment I started following them more closely, they suddenly started stuttering, with even Gunnar losing his streak. Here's to a good push after the All Star weekend!
IHYLS's self-deprecation and sense of humour made my day 😅
A couple points:
280 mph at altitude during BoB made Ju-88 somewhat difficult to intercept, esp. by Hurricanes, unless they had an altitude advantage. Ju-88S presented same problem, as it was flying at approx. Mosquito altitudes & speeds. Ju-88G nightfighter was, per "Winkle" Brown, at 400 mph at altitude, " a very fast lady," definitely in Mosquito territory, popular with crews 'til the war's end, and significantly faster than P-61. Ju-388, with BMW801 T/TJ engines, would have posed a serious interception problem, HAD there been significant production.
The Ju 88 was no mosquito. It was over I.5 as heavy and for most of the war had less power. Only with the Jumo 213A and Jumo 213E was there some parity and even then I don’t know if they receive the MW50 system
That wasn't a production aircraft. Production examples had a max speed of 344mph, much slower than contemporary Mosquito NFs
@@wbertie2604 Mossie could carry 4000 lbs of bombs, Ju-88 2000 lbs
@@chrissmith2114 the NF version didn't typically carry bombs, and certainly not 4000lbs - only a handful carried that much. The Ju-88 series could carry up to 3000kg (6600lbs), although only 1400kg (3100lb) internally. That's still more than most Mosquitos could carry internally (2000lb).
I'm a big Mosquito fan boy, but facts matter.
@@wbertie2604 Struggling to think why a night fighter would carry bombs ? Would expect it to carry radar and lots of guns. Mossie could carry almost same bomb load as USA B-17, which wasted weight carrying crew of 10 and all those guns when the Brits already told them that daylight bombing was suicide no matter how many guns you had. Brits had to explain that heavy bomber referred to the payload not the weight of the aircraft.
The thing about the annular radiators was the concept of the "Kraft-Ei" (Power-Egg) which made powerplant interchangeability a thing. So aircraft designers could then choose from various powerplants that all had the same basic form factor. Not a bad concept honestly.
Lesson 1: multi-role capabilities are a good thing. Lesson 2: being a decades-long Baltimore Oriole's fan I can say the experience has been until recently, like waking up everyday with a headache. However, it's good to know that they still have the capacity to disappoint.
I second both of these 🤣 Hyde has been impressive so far, I hope he keeps working the farm system
Beautiful aircraft.
I like the story of the Mosquito tetse using its 57mm autocannon to shoot the wing off a Ju-88
Gotta love heavy fighter dogfighting in ww2.
An excellent design, the Germans had clearly made the concept forward adaptable, being able to take different kinds of engine and deal with much higher speed in the later versions.
The S3 variant was clearly a force to reckon with, speed being on par with the Mosquito. At the RAF museum Cosford there is a Ju-88G, I visited the museum and it's quite a place for those interested in the German Luftwaffe having a Me 262, Me163, the Fritz X guided bomb and all sorts of experimental rockets to name a few of the exhibits.
The Ju 88 at the RAF museum in Cosford is a different night fighter variant, the R-1. Basically a middle ground between the C series and G series. As for surviving G series aircraft, only one comes to mind and it is a G-1 in the Technik Museum Berlin, altho it still is missing its wings.
cool video man
Superb Subject ,
Metric is most appreciated!
Just found your channel. love what I'm seeing so far.
there also was an hi-altitude recon version, that inspired the creation of the U-2.
The Ju 88 is a classic tale of theory meets reality. To me it reinforces the idea that the two main categories of combat aircraft are fighters and targets.
Thank you for the video 👍
Douglas A-20 was built in two halves as well.
Hey there! Another good video and metric is always appreciated.
? 'cause 1 meter = Nazi-Napoleon-EU? ;-P
@@dallesamllhals9161 No you Goof;) Some just have it easier with metres.
I assume the night fighter variant having "guns slightly tilted upwards" is in reference to the "Schräge Musik" setup, that actually had almost vertically installed guns inside the fuselage. This isn't referring to the forward facing guns in a pod under the fuselage that is shown in the photo.
Tilting these under the fuselage mounted guns slightly up would result in hitting your own nose...
I believe they were around 45 degrees, it looks like that on the pic I saw so I´m not certain ofc.
Yes, the SM cannons were aft the canopy facing up , 45 degrees, which I beleve is the default angle, yet likely pilots could have things changed for personal choice , like nearly all the armament options. Some crew removed the cannon from the cabin/cockpit area for more room in the cabin.
Could you make a video about the Nakajima G10N Fugaku, please.
Just subbed. Decent narration. As a fan of the twin engine airframe the Ju-88 is my favorite German aircraft for versatility, reliability and longevity. It doesn't quite edge out my favorite, the Beaufighter and then the Mossy. And it would have been interesting to see what the F7F Tigercat could have achieved for the USN if had made it into production in time. The sound of the F7F (YT has a couple vids) is gnarly.
I wish there was more news on various reconstruction efforts. All articles I found were a bit long in the tooth - mostly in Norway it seems (guess the cold preserved them there?). Could be there's more updates on social media, but I don't use it.
EDIT: I suppose one "variant" you missed was the Ju-88 as being the larger part of the "Mistel" combo: there the 88 became one giant bomb/missile.
I love that it does so many things that it even keeps the sun off your cow.
Basically the de Havilland Mosquito is Britiain's Junkers ju 88
Maybe the Bristol Beufighter.
The Blackburn Skua is glowing example of an aircraft carrier multi-role aircraft.
F/A-18 Hornet and Super Hornet are example or multi-role carrier aircraft that actually work.
The US took one Ju 88 back to the states, and they where much impressed by it's general performance and versatility. The only downside for the crew where that the more stuff you put into the airframe, the cramped cockpit became more cramped.
source?
@@greenflagracing7067 Great Planes docomentary many years back.
@@briansteffmagnussen9078 thanks
Thank you for pronouncing Junkers and Jumo correctly!.
From the encyclopedia "Weapons and warfare":
-It would be pointless to describe the Ju88 as a war-winning aircraft because Germany lost the war. But no aircraft did more , in all kinds of mission and on all fronts, to stave off defeat.
Really informative vid, much less angry than HardThrasher's vid where he talks about them :D thanks for talking about such a pretty plane!
HardThrasher loves to over-state aircraft shortcomings and use questionable comparisons to make marginal points that weren't practical given the timeline. Most of his points are clearly pro-British aircraft and designed to low-key troll non-British aircraft.
@@shannonterry4863if only the philosophy and characteristics of german plane design were tested against enemy aircraft to see if they were better or viable... Oh wait
@@laszlosimon884 Snark really clears up any historical questions, eh what?
@@shannonterry4863hardtrasher, I have tried to listen to a couple of his videos. Can't do it. Too bombastic, bias, and vulgar. Like a punk shock-jock professor at a community college. His presentation overshadows any good research or points he could make.
This is a far superior channel. Sir, thank you for your mature work.
Do a video on the Tu-2.
What about the mistel as an extra function.
Hmm, had De Havilland's been a German furniture company, & Hugo Junker's aircraft factories worked alongside RR, would their lethal Vulture engine have had it's neck wrung any earlier? : )
FW-190 video would be great
Your videos make the flight to target in IL-2 a lot shorter thank you.
I think there was a typo on the Height given. 15'9" = 4.8m, or the guys in front of the plane are a bit short for a storm trooper.
15:10 so the Ju 88 looked calm and ready to drop bombs on the surface but was nervous inside?
That chart with all the possible (serious and not-so-serious) roles ROFL
JU-88 and the BF-110 the actual WORKHORSES of the sky when it comes to tactical groundattacks and bombings! ♥
Yes, with air superiority.
@@johnhagemeyer8578 Both of them were fast in the early to mid part of the war, Hurricanes had trouble catching the JU-88's unless they had their radarwarning early scramble and could head them on.
@kingnorlen 110 was fast x2 db601s but could not turn inside fighting. The Fast bomb er was just that, but it couldn't defend itself against a single engine fighters that could catch it.
They need fighter cover to properly do their jobs.
@@kingnorlen but nightfighting is a different story
@@johnhagemeyer8578 110's were attackers, which is why they flew lowlevel flights and got caught. The JU-88's however were used as strategic bombers, and if u didnt know their tactics ( i suppose u do ) they were climbing towards England, leveled out while bombing, then headed in a shallow dive back to the French coast and occupied airfields. No singleengined fighter could catch them unless they had the early warning systems by radar, and fight them before they leveled out. The Heinkel HE-111's were slower however.
The deal with German AC nacelle design was that it could have a radial or V12 without building 2 different versions of the airframe.
1:50 "small frame" *shows P-47*
Yeah, maybe there are better examples for that....
Yeah, P47 was giant
A Tactical Bomber pushed into the role of a strategic one - the Schnell Bomber concept couldve worked if it was not used in such deep strikes.
It did work, re, the Mosquito
this was the german Mosquito long before the Mosquito took the air
Everything? Could it cook Schnitzel with Spätzle? I think not, hah!
Spätzle were regulated too, so no, schnitzel with spätzle cooking was reserved only for messerschmidt planes
@@rafale1981 You're referring to the McDonalds treaty that was forced on Germany after world wurst 1.
Liver is the worst of the wurst.
The plane’s ability to cook Schnitzel with Spatzle was classified and like the gun stabilizer on the Sherman, none of the crews were trained on the procedure, fearing that the allies might find out and replicate it. So the world will never know how that would have worked out.
You fail to mention that a significant fraction of the design and Modifications towards the Junkers 88 Production was done with the input of one Eduard Heinemann ( US Citizen of German birth) , loaned to Junkers by Douglas Aircraft in the USA. (He was also on the team that designed the A-20 Havoc , A-26 Invader and, Post-war - the A4D - redesignated later to A-4 - Skyhawk jet, which was also a very succcessful "Jack of All Trades".)
Can you do a video on the Do 17 and a video on the FW 200?
Ever since playing Their Finest Hour: The Battle of Britain computer game as a kid I've had an odd fascination with the DO 17. There's not a lot of videos, documentaries, or books on the DO 17. Which is fair as it really only served in the first half of the war and it was kind of a piece of junk 🙂.
Interesting video. The JU 88 was probably the most capable bomber the germans had. Like a cross between a Blenheim and a Mosquito. Also the best night fighter they fielded.
What was it with Udet and his dive bombing fetish? That drunk wanted everything with wings to be able to dive bomb. Even the He177.
Oh nice! I love your videos 🗣️
Good to see correct map being used, not the current borders.
Good to know the Ju 88 designers didn't Lose Themselves in the aftermath of the Battle of Britain
3:55 The engine shown is upside down. Are you sure you're qualified?
That image comes from the French magazine L'Aerophile, March 1939, page 63. gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k6555167v/f28.item.zoom
Ah yes, Ju-88 best therapist i've ever had
it was exceptionally good at solving a Rubiks Cube, holding the European world record until 1956
Explain?
Wow, that’s really amazing, especially as Rubic only invented his cube in 1974 😳
@@drstrangelove4998 obviously the plane invented the Rubik's Cube but it was kept hidden as a military secret and then credit was given to a human chosen at random
Other good multi-role aircraft of WW2 were the British de Havilland Mosquito which performed as a fast bomber/strike aircraft, reconnaissance, and night fighter, and the US Lockheed P-38 Lightning that was used as a general fighter as well as a highly effective fighter-bomber, a night fighter, and a long-range escort fighter when equipped with drop tanks. The P-38 was also used as a bomber-pathfinder, guiding streams of medium and heavy bombers, or even other P-38s equipped with bombs, to their targets. Used in the aerial reconnaissance role, the P-38 accounted for 90 percent of American aerial film captured over Europe. Although it was not designated a heavy fighter or a bomber destroyer by the USAAC, the P-38 filled those roles and more.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lockheed_P-38_Lightning
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Havilland_Mosquito
poor old Bristol Beaufighter never gets remembered
Under any video about one of the german schnellbomber types there is a comment like this which is coping for the Mosquito. Why can't you people accept that one of many plane videos on this platform is solely about a specific german plane ? Just type De Havilland Mosquito into UA-cams searchfield and you get what you want.
@@wolfsoldner9029 Pardon me for suggesting other good multi-role aircraft of WW2.
@@sejembalm Don't warry. There is no conspiracy against the Mosquito.
@@wolfsoldner9029 Would it matter if there was?
Two half fuselages, didnt De Haviland vthat with the Mosquito?
Was the Lufwaffe's preference for the schnellbomber concept due to a lack of knowledge of the speed and other capabilities of rival nations?
Not really, no. It was a fairly good theory when it first came out. However, aircraft design and engine power were changing dramatically during the 1935-1945 timeframe. Fighters kept getting faster and faster; at least relative to bombers. Hence, time itself rendered the concept of little value.
To be honest many nations when the Germans started building "schnellbomber" were using slow biplanes armed with at best 4x machine gun
@@CCP-Lies Yes Sir, Yes Sir...
The Junkers 88 was the most feared Night Fighter in the early years of WW2 .
What about the de Havilland Mosquito?
The list of what it didn't do is smaller than the list of what it did do
It was absolutely vital to Finland.
They never got the dive breaks to work properly I believe so they almost never dove over 45 degrees.
Hmm.. How did the Germans say "Ju 88"? "Jay Yoo" (the letters) would be "Yot Oopsilon", so I doubt they'd be saying "Yot Oopsilon Acht und Achtzig" 😁 It would probably be "Yoo Acht und Achtzig". Or "Yoo Acht Acht".
German, 59. "Ju" is pronounced in German almost like the English "you". "88" is actually always(!) pronounced as "acht'n achtzig". The German "und" is therefore slurred into an "n sound", similar to the English "and" in "rock'n'roll". In aircraft types, the number is pronounced as a whole number and never as individual digits. (Only exception: "Boing 707"("Boing sieben null sieben"))
P.S. The letter "y" is hardly ever used in modern German, except in borrowed foreign words. In medieval scripts, however, it is very common.
P.P.S.: "Yot Oopsilon" is "BSG"("BadSimpleGerman"), similar to "BSE("BadSimpleEnglish")😄!
@@michaelneuwirth3414 Well, yeah. the "Yot" and "Oopsilon" were aimed at Americans. 🤣 . Unlike German, "u" in English can be pronounced in two or three different ways. Writing "Upsilon" would have been ambigious - is that the "u" in "butt", the "u" in "burn" or "fur" (which is more like an "e", if you think about it), or the "u" in "lute"?
@@michaelneuwirth3414 Actually.. Just thought of something else. So how would you say "Ju 288"? "Yoo Zweihundertachtundachtzig"? Surely they'd shorten it to "Yoo Zwei Acht Acht", or at least "Yoo Zwei Achtundachtzig" ? 😁
You'd think with the Ju-88 having trouble with dive bombing, the Germans would have learned better than to make the He-177 have dive-bombing abilities.
Eh ...
It's a real stretch to imagine a Ju-88 as a fighter. Night Fighter yes - but Day Fighter - no. The Mosquito wasn't a Day Fighter either - it was an Intruder. Have either one of those aircraft take on a true Day Fighter and they'd likely be shot down. You never know - you could beat anything if you got a jump on it - but if both aircraft saw each other at a distance - no. The True Day Fighters should win.
As to Torpedo Bomber - the He-111's routinely flew as Torpedo Bombers. Hell - B-26's were used as Torpedo Bombers at Midway. The real factor there - is crew training more than the aircraft. I've seen Skyraiders fitted with several Torpedoes.
The only use of Sky Raiders as Torpedo Bombers I know of was Torpedoing the Hwachon Dam (where they carried only one).
.
15:09 Was the Eminem reference intentional here orrr
If you elect Junkers 88 as your class president, he will replace the water fountains with schnapps!
You forgot to mention, also as a drone. Mistel
16:13 2.8 metres is 9 feet.
15 feet is 4.6 metres.
I said it a million times Germany should have stopped most of the stupid aircraft and focused on the JU 88 it was a great bomber and bomber destroyer. And attack aircraft. The ME262/ME109/ME110/JU88 /HS335 which unfortunately for the Germans was never put into production that and the 262 and the FW190/ME109 and the HS335 would have devastated our bombers luckily for us they had too many projects and not enough resources. One word for the Luftwaffe consolidation. Only build proven weapons until you regained or got respite from the bombing. I’m hoping I got the 335 I’m pretty sure it was a Henshel . Oh well point is they had good aircraft but always we’re trying for something new. That’s great to be innovative but not when you’re LOSING the war consolidation on proven air craft. And use all the resources possible on proven equipment when you are in dire straits.
RLM was convinced a double engine Schnellbomber is always faster then a single engine fighter.
English Mosquito and russian PE2 were also results of this idea.
This channel is like Drachnifel but for planes 😂
in a minor league sort of way
Look at all the loads of good parking in front of the luftwaffe headquarters.
Not really that big a building. It's still there, you can find it on go ogle maps.
Putting the cooler in front of the V-inline engine and a round cowling doesn't turn it into a radial engine.
I don't think anybody said it did
Do everything? Well it could not catch a Mosquito!
While Luftwaffe night fighter crews tended to prefer the Bf110 to the Junkers fighter, it was RAF bomber crews who ranked the Ju88 as far more deadly.
The 88 seems to be a lucky number for the Germans
One thing you'll never hear. The engines were overpowered 😊
That V5 is pretty shmexy.
German nightfighters faced a number of problems one of which was the Mosquitos night intruders flying over Germany whose job it was to hunt the hunters.
A little story which may interest you is something the Royal Air Force did to keep the German nightfighters away from the bomber stream. The RAF had a number of radio operator who spoke fluent German and the would broadcast to the nightfighters on the same wavelength telling the pilot that the voice they had been listening too was not German but British. They were told not to listen to the "British" voice as they were trying keep you away from the enemy bombers and were told to fly to a different area. The German radio operators did try to convince the crew that they were the real radio operator and not to listen to the other person, but many of the crews got confused and many did follow the new voice where a Mosquito night intruder was usually waiting for them. Some years before I came across this story I did read the biographer of the radar operator of a Mosquito who did not know of the RAF "Germans" and assumed these Germans aircrews were keeping away from the fighting.
The Germans did set a trap for the RAF radio operators as one night they switched from male to female radio operators. The problem was that they RAF anticipated the move and quickly switched their own operators from male to female.
You may be interested in reading about the RAF 100 (bomber support) Group. They did that and more and some did have German, or German ancestry/speaking, crews. Some changed their names to more anglo sounding ones in case of being captured.
The Junkers was a truly remarkable aircraft, interesting that you say that it was 2 Germans that went to America to study and learn certain aspects of aircraft design and construction from the Americans,came back to Germany and applied their aquired knowledge to the Ju- 88 project!
Whereas i had always read that America design engineers were hired to do the job? Wonder wbich version of the story is correct, i would guess your version is closer to home, considering all the anti German sentiment shortly after WW- 2!
Ju88 gang called
@2:45 Batman lol
Luftwaffe = [Lou-ft-wah-ff-a]
Finnish Air Force sighted: 15:59
Germany pre war was very interested in the dive bomber concept, at heart being a tactical, ground support force as part of bltizkrieg rather than a strategic one. They even tried to have a dive bombing ability for the HE-111. I think the JU-88 was even equipped with a dive bomb dive recovery device that could, after the bombs were released, pull up and climb back up to altitude.
Another German aircraft principal used in many of the bombers was crew location. The policy for mutual support, and other reasons, it was decided to locate the crews in a large cockpit area rather than have the gunners, and other crew scattered around the aircraft like the US AAF and RAF.
The night fighter had the armament of the 'C' model but could be equipped with the 'Schrange Musik' (jazz music) which was two, or more, 20mm guns pointing about 75 degrees firing upwards, aimed by a special sight. The forward firing guns used tracer in the ammo mix the 'Jazz' guns did not. A favorite tactic was to fly under the bomber, especially Lancasters, and aim at the wing between the engines where fuel tanks were. The RAF bomber crews were confused by why their bombers would suddenly burst into flames with no tracers seen.
The January 88 was to some extent ruined by the dive bombing concept and made the aircraft slow and heavy. About 1942 the stub 5B slide bombing sight meant that dive bombing was no longer necessary for accuracy. The Lotfe 7 had a similar effect. Dive brakes were removed after 1942. But the dragon weight added never went away.
30 planes a day - at least the nazis had a sense of humor! The biggest aircraft plant in the world at the time, Willow run, was able to produce a brand-new B-24 every 63 Minutes - so basically 24 planes a day. When your factories are being blown to bits by those mass-produced B-24's it a little difficult to achieve those numbers.
My favorite plane in war thunder
Easily Germany's best aircraft in ww2
I want a Batman Therapist I think it would give me a most awesome edge over the competition hahaha Oh YEAH
It wasn't a bad plane, the thing was that with the exception of dive-bombing, the Mosquito could do everything else it did but much, much better.
Author does not understand the upward firing cannon installation. "Slight upward tilt" is quite wrong. He doesn't know what they are. Sadly, a quick look at a cut-a-way would allow understanding.
The cattle in the opening photo speak to the udder madness of Hitler's Germany.
Go O's!!
TY. On guns of the JU 88' 7.7 mm is news to me, on anything German built . 7.92 mm the "normal prewar and early war " then up to the 13 mm MG which was a better MG than the Browning .50 cal. in every measure was....dropped for 20,mm and later 30 mm. auto cannons. Amazing the USAAF did so well with mainly just the million Brownings.
Weapons progress moved much faster for the Luftwaffe, as auto cannons seemed more popular in Europe. Then the ADEN gun seems to hold for 20 years after the war. No one is dropping their auto cannons, so we are at a plateau in design needs. Missiles never did nullify cannons, and likely never will, IMO.
Browning was could have more than twice the ammo of 20mm cannons and was very effective, you needed trained aircrew to make the most of 20mm cannons, and after halfway point of war Germany was struggling for aircrew and newbies being sent as cannon fodder.
@@chrissmith2114 Yes, I agree. Deflection shooting is not for newbisch pilots, and it is more deadly to bombers, than fighters. In hindsight , I think they were looking for exploding shells, which the respected Browning .50 could not do too any great effect, or the more powerful 13 mm.
Ah , two long nose Fokker Wolf engines 😂, but with adequate cooling and less boost etc !!! 😅
Couldn't lace the mosquito's boots.
Rubbish. Flew years earlier and was even more versatile.
Great analogies sir .
I repeat !
MORE CULTURE THAN PENICILLIN!