EXCELLENT description of the Penemunde rocket complex. Tino as military + historian + movie maker you are presenting the historical and technical facts of this site. I haven't seen any like this before and explained it in the way you did. Thanks very much.
Absolutely agree with you re the destruction of V.I.P Historical sites such as Peenamunde Post WW2. We have an absolute duty to keep places like this intact so future generations can see for themselves.
Brothers war was the best wartime movie of all time in my eyes I'm a paratrooper and how you portrayed the soilders interaction with there buddy's so took me back and made me think how good my time was thanks TIno the movie should be on the box office
@@WW2HistoryHunter I will be stalking around Europe for 4 to 6 weeks:-) I'll shoot you an email in a couple of days when I have something that resembles a plan.
I am absolutely fascinated by these, (any) of the historical German landmarks. To explore, amongst the remains and the fact that a lot of these sites still exist 70 + years later. Although the buildings and structures have long been destroyed, the foundations, and debris of their construction eerily lay scattered on site to this day. You make a most valid point, it was at these sites at that time, technical advancements were discovered that have forever changed the world, most notably the foundation for space exploration. The importance of these advancements are valid, and therefore hold historical value, this has nothing to do with choosing "sides" or that the atrocities committed during this war should be shadowed, or forgotten. Thank You Sir, for sharing your well documented, and onsite coverage of the Penemunde rocket complex.
tino is awesome facts and narrative of the TRUTH not propaganda like other's that spew hatred and b.s. thank you for you're dedication and hard work tino 👍
Somehow your knowledge and keen eye for detail has me enjoying this series far more then any high end documentary I've ever seen. No special effects just facts and adventure. Love it mate, awesome work you are doing and remember, there's always a hole behind you
Hello from Nebraska! Thank you for this great video and all your hard work to bring your videos to us! My Mother was born in Bonn, Germany and met my Father during the war. Now that I am old and she is gone, I so wish I had learned more about Germany from her.
My brother I hear you, there were so many things I wish I could go back and ask my great-grandmother and grandmother but you know the folly of youth, you just dont think that way when you are young. I am glad I made it a point to sit and talk with my mom the last years she was here, and hear her stories. But maybe its time for you to visit Germany yourself and see?
@@tinostruckmann Thank you for your reply. I would love to go to Germany and to visit Bonn where my Mother was Bonn. In all honesty that would be the only thing that I might consider getting an Airplane for as I am not to keen on air travel. But there is so much history there and all of Europe as you know. Thankfully I have the web to learn and see these places. You do a wonderful job and I really appreciate all you do to bring these videos to us! All the best.....
First of all, thank you for yet another interesting and captivating video Tino! It hurts my heart to see such an important place demolished beyond any recognition. Apollo-program and all that came after that are direct results of that place.
Even here in America we destroy history other than what we already know but the second nuclear reactor the Chicago pile 2 was blowin up and buried as well, and Kurt Dibners reactor outside Berlin is just decaying in the forest
Tino I really hope you get a role as presenter, With Control over content, on a large production WWII DOC series. Something like "WWII - Uncovering the true extent of Nazi technology with Tino Struckmann". Been studying WWII my whole life, Finding someone who is truly educated and takes the time to tell the real story is refreshing. And you cover things in depth and visit the actually sites. If you ever expand this series (which I hope you do). I shoot and edit video, and I'm a drone pilot. Let me film for you. Would love to go to every WWII historical site possible. Seriously nothing I would rather do. And I must say again as many others have EXCELLENT work. YOU filming alone WHILE commentating is on par dare I say not better than most WWII doc's in existence. Please Continue this content and make 100's of more videos. Great surprise to see a new upload in the series today iv been waiting! Happy Easter!
I'm a huge fan of learning about nazi technology and I've never came across such a detailed on ground research. Thank you Tino. Please keep doing this. I wish more mainstream history channel carried could do this. Your channel is a gem. :-)
One of the many things I enjoy is the scene overlay with black and white pics or movies that bring the people back to life in the very place Tino is showing us. Seem less and Highly artistic - reminds me of the opening scene in Titanic.
Thanks Tino, you have done a fantastic job producing this presentation. Your talent and knowledge never ceases to amaze me. Your work should be taken up by mainstream TV.
About 8 years ago, I worked at a dry cleaners in my city. An elderly couple came in regularly, and the wife was very friendly and asked for me each time they came. The couple was 98 year old Georg von Tiesenhausen and his wife, he a rocket engineer at Peenemunde. At 98, he drove he and his wife around in their little red Toyota Corolla; he didn't speak much, but was very polite. I always enjoyed visiting with his wife when they came. Their son was a teacher at a high school in the city. Georg died in 2018, and I so wish I had interviewed him. I was able to ask his wife very few questions, and I regret not asking more. I wonder today if she is still living.
Now that is the sad part of life, those fascinating people we should have spoken to much more, so many of them pass unnoticed. It is so very important for everybody to speak to those older generations and learn something. Thank you for sharing that story.
@@tinostruckmann Over the past few years since von Tiesenhausen's death, I have thought of phoning his wife to see if she would chat with me. She was 89 at the time I met them, and would now be nearly his age when we met. Von Braun's home during his work in the United States is just a few miles from me as well.
@@koba2348 seriously you should and you should do it today because you never know at that age if she's around tomorrow maybe she would like to talk and maybe she would like to share some of the photos from back then which would be amazing let me know how that goes
I've read so much about Penemunde and the rocket programs that were based in that facility. It was so great to see the physical campus that I've read about for so long. I would LOVE to take a metal detector all over the Pennemunde ruins. Thanks again,For giving me the images to go with what I've read. After this,I want to watch your video on Hans Kammler
It must take you days and days or weeks even to do the amount of research and fact finding to produce these videos for us. Never mind visiting and filming. Nice ! Thanks so much for sharing.
Always informative, always interesting. Your historical adventures are vitally important as the years roll by and the memories fade. It's a unique UA-cam site, thank you...
The TV system for the guided missile was designed by Walter Bruch, who later went on to design the PAL colour TV system in the 1960s, which became the european standard. Less well known is his first CCTV system which was used at Pennemunde to monitor launches, because film cameras, near to a launch, would often be destroyed along with their film, when a missile malfunctioned. The CCTV used a Bruch designed camera near to the launch, feeding a monitor in the control bunker, where a synchonised cine camera recorded the results. This might be worth following up, as a 'sideband' technology, indicating other dangerous experimental work. The camera was a brilliant design using largely the same valve, (tube), throughout, apart for the video tube. The coal dust warhead, was basically a fuel-air explosion weapon. Thanks again for another excellent informative piece.
Best ever on peenemunde and all those special weaponsi only read about. It is very difficult to see even being there. thank you for this wonderfull document!
I quite agree with you on the destruction of historic places, and how this location created developments we still enjoy. I also like to point out that the vast majority of the scientists and technical staff that worked on the MANHATTAN project received at least a portion of their education in Deutschland. The mad dash for the assets of that country wasn't just in this location. The Russians would even go into ruins and if there were a solid brick, they chiseled them out and sent them to Russia. Yet they were forbidden to touch any Zeiss optics manufacturing plant, its employees, or their families.
I actually think there would be a good special in what the Russians knew towards the end, they had a much better idea of what they wanted then we may think. I look forward to my visit to the Russian archives.
@@tinostruckmann From what I have seen, you are a sensible man and I hope that you keep in mind that the Russian Archives are more heavily edited than a high school yearbook.
Been waiting for this!! Tino you are doing an absolutely amazing job here but where are we actually going ? Were they looking to create something bigger..Yes but they ran out of time!! Something happened in late Autumn 44 that really scared the Allies and and its in regards to all this its patently clear now that the Germans were decades ahead of us in weapons concepts and research and that in itself must have worried us incredibly especially when we found what we did at the end of the war im not suprised that they story about all this was re edited and redacted out of sheer embarrassment and and the realisation that a nation has to keep more than up to date on all that stuff at its peril!! Great video and quite frankly im pissed i missed the live Q&A !! Take care and keep Soldiering on pal DG
Shining Bright! This clearly demonstrates the advancement of technology! I have always wondered what role IBM played! Besides the IMB selectra to follow data! MWM
This is a tremendous account about Peenemünde, so thorough and detailed. I share your dismay at the loss of so many historical buildings. One thing though, and I could be wrong but the original Wachhaus is still there by the car park. It's now a cafe/ souvenir shop, on the other side is an original admin block. When I first went there 13 years ago the barracks and canteen where still standing and were only recently demolished. They had been used by the Russians and later by the NVA. I live just over the the river(Peene) from there. Anyway, thanks a lot for showing a lot of things I didn't know still existed.
Thank you, that is the other guard house for the power and oxygen plant. It is there still and still an ice cream plant lol I had my breakfast ice cream there lol The destroyed one was for the entrance to the facility itself and the Luftwaffe site.
Well that saved a guys sunday! Tino, so very exciting yet again, man i wish i could see it in person 😉 Cant get enough, well presented, we can surely feel your dedication trough the screen👍👍 Good job once again, now the next release cant come quick enough, excited to lern more about the Henge🙏 Thank you Tino
@@tinostruckmann Quite welcome ... I enjoy all your stuff for one reason or another ,, Even when you said *(bring me my Panzer)* just pickin on you ,, You have to admit it did sound funny !
I prefer to be there digging and showing what is actually there. to many graphics sometimes gets in the way of the experience.. thank you so much for saying so
Did you notice that the rest of the electric wires at the workshop ruines and teststand 7 was made with (cheap) silver shiny aluminium cores, thats because copper was too rare and expensive for use in static locations and must have been saved for the submarine electric engines, planes, ships generator sets and the rockets themself... (you cant use aluminium core cables in mobile applications as airplanes / rockets etc...due to fragility)
Fascinating video here.I once read somewhere that a Luftwaffe test pilot,Hans zissner,said that,while flying a shuttle,witnessed what appeared to be a nuclear explosion over Ludwigslust,south of Luebeck.Earlier,there is some speculation that a primitive 'dirty bomb' was used to make a Soviet rifle division vanish during one of the Kursk actions.Perhaps the war aim of the allies was to apprehend technology more than anything
More than likely a fuel & air mixture bomb. They produce the same sort of burns as nuclear flash. It is not just the temperature but the sheer amount of heat (calories) radiated out by such ordnance which can, even at a distance, causes the skin to detach and hang lose on the body (it melts). So personally I discount accounts like these as miss attributions. Of cause, that doesn’t mean to say all such accounts should be automatically dismissed as non nuclear. Still, had any type of nuclear device been used in an open war theatre, I’m pretty certain we would have come to know about it. Perhaps Tino will be elucidating further in the up coming episodes.
I visited Peenemunde shortly after it had been declared open for visitors, many years ago, from Denmark. They only had a few items present by that time. A model V2 built with some original parts, a wax mask from a dead officer, and a plate with signatures from former workers. And some modern planes. I think it closed after that for some years?
By the way it might be important to note that the V-1 was a type of jet engine and not a rocket. To be a rocket it much carry its own oxidizer. The V-1 was a pulse jet engine. It basically just ignited fuel and used that Ignition pressure to propel the craft.
Go there when you can. I had a visit there with the same guide, and yes, the guy is awesome with an unbelievable knowledge. You can also make out the make out traces from the takeoff strips of the ME 163 that was also tested there.
Hey this is great I've seen 3 of your war movies and now this thankyou Tino at least you tell it like it is with no favouritism, cheers from down Under mate keep up the good work.
Thank you my friend, I try, I always thought that was the hallmark of a good historian to not take sides but provide the information for you to make up your own mind.
@@tinostruckmann mate I have been through about 7 of your documentaries so far and they are bloody excellent ,how long did it take ??, . I had no idea of half of the stuff you showed well nearly half, I have heaps of documentaries and yours are the best for just cruising along and checking stuff out , getting information from the past and chucking it all together for a good doco , and the most important thing is you know the mainstream crap is not true and you went out and found out for yourself, thanks mate, keep it up and stay safe.
The whole area is forbidden to enter by the way, there are hundreds of unexploded bombs in the ground. Those depressions in the ground are all bomb craters:)
The air raid shelters are exactly like those used on the Ho Chi Minh trail ! 6ft in diameter concrete sewer pipes figured into an H pattern, very very effective in surviving the B52 strikes !
@@tinostruckmann No need to be! It’s always well worth the wait! WW2 is by far my favorite subject and always awesome to get your prospective. Thanks again!
Making a V-2 rocket was actually cheap once it was mass produced in Nordhausen. The plan was 900 rockets a month, they achieved around 400-500, using prisoners with technical training. A mass produced V-2 rocket cost a fraction of a Messerschmitt Bf-109, and the most expensive weapon by far was the Tiger tank which cost close to a million RM. The V-2s at Peenemuende were hand-built, one at a time, industrial production required a completely different procedure.
Amazing stuff Tino ! I am slowly but surely catching up and will be current on all episodes. I wasn't able to join the live Q & A like I planned, but replayed on my commute after work. Great great stuff :-)
@@tinostruckmann Enjoy the local eateries in Europe. I've only experienced world travel through stories by friends and family. I tend to pay attention when they start talking desserts. Apparently we can't do it justice. On your next trip to TN maybe you could send me some San Francisco clam chowder. I ate my fill of this when I lived there. Nothing better ! Safe travels.
As always absolutely Amazing video. It's frightening to think that, if Germany was that close to creating a Nuclear warhead, and place it in a second generation V2 that had the capability of reaching America, and indeed allied countries, it might be a very different world.
Well they were working on the A9/10 to reach America, some people like von Ardenne and several others claimed it was tested, but until I see all the possibly launch facilities I will reserve judgment on that. And im going in a month
This yap prof went to tojo min of war in 38 th he says what i hold in my hand equals 25 tons of coal tojo talks to the emperor and says this guy iscrazy he wants to bomb a city with coal banzai ronadamn
@@simonjohnston9488 sorry. The Germans exploded 3 Atomic or Nuclear bombs. First test at Borkum Island on the Baltic. Second and third tests on the Army training area a couple of miles east of Ohrdruf south of Weimar. Now Ohrdruf had a forced Labour camp. The last test half incinerated dozens of the camp prisoners a couple of miles away. Now Eisenhower only ever saw one Concentration Camp. He and Patton saw those half incinerated bodies and realised the risk during their tour. Patton later was based at or near Dachau post war BUT was not there when liberated. Germany could make a nuclear bomb, but had no means to use it on USA mainland
Yet Again Tino all i can say is So very very interesting and i thank you for your research and pain staking persistence. I also Agree with the comment you made regarding the fact that what took place during WW2 has shaped the world we live in and we have to pay homage to all responsible no matter what side they were on. I have always maintained that we owe Nazi Germany a thanks for the road systems we in the rest of the world enjoy/ are frustrated with every day as with out the forethought they had we would not have the freeway systems and alike we have today. And now i see we owe so much more to the pioneers of the time.
Living in LA right now I wish there were some nasty German driving instructors here actually teaching people how to damn well drive on these roads lmao.. Thank you for coming by
@@tinostruckmann You are not alone there mate i think the whole world feels like that more often than we would like to admit to. Just watched latest installment and another enthralling update . You make me feel like im right there with you on this quest (wish i was) and the deeper you dig the more i personally hang for the final result. Keep up the great work mate from all of us who follow you here in Australia and ( don't mean to speak for the rest of the world ) but i will.... everyone else.
I was waiting on this video. You always teach me so much and do it with humor which just makes it funnier. I learned so much about the v-rockets. I also would love to know what the hell that building was. If it was the factory.
Thank you so much for saying so I do try I'm afraid that humor may come out more this year LOL I'm sure the building is mapped out somewhere it's way too big to have been a secret it just doesn't seem to match up with anything according to the maps with the aerial photos I will ask the curator of the Met Museum when I go back next month
@@tinostruckmann if you can find anything about it will you do an update video? I would just love to know. If anybody can find out about it I believe it's you. Not to much pressure. Lol. Can't wait for more because I got about 15 more videos to binge on. Guess I will just have to watch them again. I really enjoy the Q&A ones. Have a great day sir.
@@nickcox3497 It took me 16 hrs to catch up --- lol there may be a time where I will either respond of edit new episodes, but its the least thing I can do, or try to do for all of you who bother write me:-)
According to chapter 6 of “Das Geheimnis der deutschen Atombombe” by Edgar Meyer and Thomas Mehner the Peenemünde power plant consitsed of two turbogenerators of 12 MW each. The steam was supplied by four boilers which burned a total of 256 tons of coal per hour. If correct, these figures translate to a plant efficiency of less than 12% which is ridiculously low- I'd expect a plant efficiency of 20-25% for a plant of that vintage (the plant was built between 1939 and 1942 so was modern). This suggests to me that those four boilers supplied steam for far more than just those two turbogenerators. Question is, for what purpose(s)- heating? Heating what exactly? Power generation? Power generation for what? And where were the other turbogenerators located if not in the power plant itself?
Analogue computers. There seems to have been a LOT of work in this field going on pre WW2, all over the place. The concept is the basis for all the "automatic pilot' trials and actual use in aviation at the time. It was also not a heavily-guarded secret, with there even being cartoon references to "George", the "auto-pilot"( a sort of skinny, robot-looking character) in the RAF. The US Army fielded analogue computers for long-range artillery late in the war. The rudiments came from earlier gunnery calculators, which were essentially rotary slide rules, sometimes even mounted on the individual artillery pieces. They became necessary because the serious guns were capable of firing their projectiles on a trajectory that took them to the limits of the atmosphere, and the gunners needed to be able to account for not only high-altitude, high-speed winds, but even the rotation of the planet, such were the flight times and characteristics involved. These considerations also applied to naval and coastal guns. This is why most serious armies have teams of meteorologists; not to predict "infantry weather" (constant, heavy, near-horizontal rain), but to feed data to the gunners. By the end of the war, the US was fielding ELECTRONIC gunnery computers and also using really big static ones to develop very accurate firing tables for the gunners. Analogue computers stayed around for a long time. Aviation buffs will be aware that the "terrain-following" capability of the General Dynamics F-111, was achieved using very compact analogue computers. These were transistorized devices that were only replaced a few years before that entire aircraft series was retired. The problem with "digital" computers is that the real world is ANALOGUE. Thus, external data must first be ACCURATELY be converted to digital form, then, correctly-written code is used to process the data and THEN, it has to generate an output that will work in an analogue world. All of which takes TIME. In the days of vacuum-tube DIGITAL computers, this took a LOT of time, relatively speaking. It also took up a LOT of space and electricity. Side trivia: The Liquid Crystal Display was the result of an early 1960s requirement for a vibration resistant, compact display for battlefield computers mounted in armoured fighting vehicles. Once that technology was established, it was advanced at spectacular speed. Look a little deeper into the screen for your desk or lap-top machine. Then there was the Light Emitting Diode. The ones I remember from the mid 1970s were pretty fragile and came on one colour: RED. By the end of that deacade, buy the magic of Chemistry, we had green and yellow ones. BLUE was THE goal, but it took until the early 1990s for that to happen. Once you had Red, Green and Blue LEDsof carefully-tuned hues, the LED video screen was a reality. Consider the huge video screens used at major sports and and musical events. These monsters are not one big monolith, but made from addressable modules bolted together in site and wired to a prescribed recipe, depending on aspect ration and resolution, etc.. And it ALL comes from observation and imagination coupled with serious research. So, I would imagine that our Teutonic cousins were also well aware of the possibilities for enhanced calculation speeds. Did they also have a development programme for large electronic computers?
Always wanted to go to Peenemunde. My father photographed it from a Mosquito in August 1943. Also the V1 site at Yvrench in France in October that year, which I have been to.
@@tinostruckmann Yes, I have around ten souvenir photos from 540sqn sortie N904 on 20 August 1943 after the bombing on 17/18 August. I gather that they were less important photos that he managed to sneak out of RAF Medmenham so I am not sure that they will tell you very much. My father was Australian and returned home in 1944 to continue service with the RAAF.
The greatest importance that Penemunde has is that it wasted lots of resources that Germany could have used attacking the allies. We should be thankful for that.
I've seen a few of your movies, thank you for your entertaining work, nice job! You make a very scary German officer. We wouldn't have gotten to the moon if it wasn't for Werner Von Broun.
@@tinostruckmann I was thinking it was time for Hollywood to do a proper remake of 12 O'clock high, of course you would be perfect to play the character of a Luftwaffe fighter squadron commander. Of course things and the workings in Hollywood are way different from when my Dads Cousin played Tarzan from 1955-1960, so we had a family member in the movie business as well, however Cousin Gordy got discovered totally by accident because of his build from growing up as a lumber Jack in Oregon.
The buildings in the woods. Not knowing where on the peninsula you were, could that building be one of the two hydrogen peroxide generation plants on the site? It would explain the deep concrete channels and the need for larger space for pipes and storage? And thank you for visiting a site and showing what is left. I am glad that it is no more. Such scientific discoveries based on the deaths of so many is a hard pill to swallow and there are those that would glorify it for the wrong reasons, there is enough of that as it is.
That is entirely possibly, it was a little strange all large facilities on the maps are to the North of the road and these were to the South. I am still looking through maps, but I am going back out there, and will have a meeting with the museum curator and pick his brain for more and missing info.
@@tinostruckmann I have a RAF recce photo of the site pre-bombing, you probably already have it, but shows buildings to the south. It shows one of the peroxide plants as being in a circular compound toward the estuary (can't really see it on google maps today). If you could work out where you were on the map it could eliminate some of the options as to the buildings you found.
Bravo 👏 👏 👏! That was an awesome presentation! Just when I thought I have info to share with you, you not already know about it, but you have even more information to share on your videos than what I knew about. Because we both have probably held Secret Security clearances (or above) in the past, we can't share everything we know, but I am glad that I did get to do what I have got to do even though I can't share it with others. I must say that your favorite rocket is neat. I kind of like it myself. I wonder if you like it because it "almost" looks like something an amateur rocket enthusiast could afford? I say "almost", but I am probably deceiving myself about the cost or ease of making. Even though it's smaller than the V2, it would still take the same levels of craftsmanship to complete and the tooling to make just one would be more than my life savings (I don't have any. Lol). I guess I like it, because with my mechanical as a former draftsman that worked briefly on a nuclear missile prototype program, I see it as a work of art (even though its end purpose was not a good one). My fondest memory was getting a phone call from John Glen once, but I will not elaborate about that here. I'm really looking forward to seeing the new photos, videos and findings you have obtained related to "The Hinge". Sincerely, Craig S. (Aquantenance of Leadbeater. Lol :) )
@@tinostruckmann Lol :) Yes, it would be possible to make a replica (as a full size museum quality display piece). As for the solid fuel thing, I know you are kidding (FAA wouldn't like that. Lol :). The movie "Astronaut Farmer" comes to mind. There are some large scale rocket fans in the West that do have self-designed liquid engines that have gone pretty far up. They have to do it in a special place and get special permission. Anything is possible in life, it just depends on your priorities. This is off topic, but I used to live close to Wright Patterson Air Force Base Museum. One day, a graphic illustrator was there measuring the Mig-15 that ended up there after Lt. "No Kum-Sok" a North Korean pilot defected from North Korea to South Korea with it. It was then transferred to Wright Pat. The illustrator asked me to help him measure part of the plane. I had to get over the Velvet rope to get to it. 30 years later, I crossed paths with "No Kum-Suk" which goes by the American name of "Kenneth Rowe" now. We said "hello" to each other, but I didn't get to introduce myself to him (but, I knew ahead of time that I might bump into him at that particular location if I continued to work there for any period of time). He used to be a professor at Emmery-Riddle University. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/No_Kum-sok I did make a 3-1/2+ foot tall V2ish looking static display rocket of my own dimensions once. I will have to email you a photo of it, if I can find the original photo. Take care.
This is amazing the Germans were so far ahead just a pity they couldnt get there act together....Russia and America were the winners here as they grabbed all the tech and proto types thank you Tino for this it was so amazing.
Hi,...I had a look at your videos, but couldnt quite find the one on the coal/cold dust bomb? you mentioned at 44:46 does anyone know anything about it please??
Aye Tino you said something about a detonation in the neighbourhood of Ludwigslust and the ruins of the former luftwaffe airfield are maybe still there (probably worth visiting)
I am going to, I was there last year but the area is enormous and without a coordinate it means a lot of walking. But I will go back and approach from a different direction.
I agree with you on the great/horrible inventions, but as far as your use of the U.N. emoji characters @ the end of your reply.....You really really want the U.N. to administer the whole planet look how good the W.H.O. worked out for Covid 😆 thats rich, NO GLOBAL GOVERNANCE!!!
@@oceanhome2023 Absolutely true just happened to have viewed "Patton" & when he said that it really really dawned on me how correct / and prophetic his words would ring true till this day.
@@nickb7906 I am an artist and the United States Flag and the United Nations Flags next to each other means let All people on earth work together for a positive life on Earth.. 👍👍🗽🗽🍀😎
@@tinostruckmann I can see this being picked by discovery or another network for that instance. I would say your work rivals Mark Felton's and could easily make it onto terrestrial television.
EXCELLENT description of the Penemunde rocket complex. Tino as military + historian + movie maker you are presenting the historical and technical facts of this site. I haven't seen any like this before and explained it in the way you did. Thanks very much.
Thank you so much for saying so I truly appreciate it I hope to bring you lots more
If you ever put together a DVD series of your work I would love to purchase it Sir
@@lastbluesplayer EXCELLENT IDEA ¡ It deserves to be kept in my collection of WW II films.
@lastbluesplayer⁰ppp0000p0ppp00p000p
I consider myself a WW2 history freak, and these videos are absolutely gems. Thank you for making this content.
Thank you so much I am trying:-)
Absolutely agree with you re the destruction of V.I.P Historical sites such as Peenamunde Post WW2. We have an absolute duty to keep places like this intact so future generations can see for themselves.
That was just another great episode. Thank you for sharing.
Brothers war was the best wartime movie of all time in my eyes I'm a paratrooper and how you portrayed the soilders interaction with there buddy's so took me back and made me think how good my time was thanks TIno the movie should be on the box office
Loving it , just loving it :) Thanks for sharing.
Hello my brother you know you and I are doing something somewhere this year I'm coming back in less than a month
@@tinostruckmann Are we ? Let me know a little bit in advance then as there are so many projects and so few days :)
@@WW2HistoryHunter I will be stalking around Europe for 4 to 6 weeks:-) I'll shoot you an email in a couple of days when I have something that resembles a plan.
@@tinostruckmann Ok
@@WW2HistoryHunter lp
One of your best yet!!!! Amazing research, photos, videos and details! Thank you !!!!!
Thank you I'm only just beginning
I am absolutely fascinated by these, (any) of the historical German landmarks. To explore, amongst the remains and the fact that a lot of these sites still exist 70 + years later. Although the buildings and structures have long been destroyed, the foundations, and debris of their construction eerily lay scattered on site to this day.
You make a most valid point, it was at these sites at that time, technical advancements were discovered that have forever changed the world, most notably the foundation for space exploration. The importance of these advancements are valid, and therefore hold historical value, this has nothing to do with choosing "sides" or that the atrocities committed during this war should be shadowed, or forgotten.
Thank You Sir, for sharing your well documented, and onsite coverage of the Penemunde rocket complex.
tino is awesome facts and narrative of the TRUTH not propaganda like other's that spew hatred and b.s. thank you for you're dedication and hard work tino 👍
Lord knows I am trying...
Truly amazing technology, so advanced for the times. Totally amazing !
wait wait there is more lol
Somehow your knowledge and keen eye for detail has me enjoying this series far more then any high end documentary I've ever seen. No special effects just facts and adventure. Love it mate, awesome work you are doing and remember, there's always a hole behind you
Glad you enjoy it! thank you - well I cant afford the special effects so I just have to stick to actual history:-)
So much lost history. Such a shame. Thank for your Videos Tino, great Boots on the ground footage!
Thank you
Brilliant show, thank you for putting in so much effort...
So nice of you to say so i try , thank you.
Hello from Nebraska! Thank you for this great video and all your hard work to bring your videos to us! My Mother was born in Bonn, Germany and met my Father during the war. Now that I am old and she is gone, I so wish I had learned more about Germany from her.
My brother I hear you, there were so many things I wish I could go back and ask my great-grandmother and grandmother but you know the folly of youth, you just dont think that way when you are young. I am glad I made it a point to sit and talk with my mom the last years she was here, and hear her stories. But maybe its time for you to visit Germany yourself and see?
@@tinostruckmann Thank you for your reply. I would love to go to Germany and to visit Bonn where my Mother was Bonn. In all honesty that would be the only thing that I might consider getting an Airplane for as I am not to keen on air travel. But there is so much history there and all of Europe as you know. Thankfully I have the web to learn and see these places. You do a wonderful job and I really appreciate all you do to bring these videos to us! All the best.....
First of all, thank you for yet another interesting and captivating video Tino! It hurts my heart to see such an important place demolished beyond any recognition. Apollo-program and all that came after that are direct results of that place.
Even here in America we destroy history other than what we already know but the second nuclear reactor the Chicago pile 2 was blowin up and buried as well, and Kurt Dibners reactor outside Berlin is just decaying in the forest
@@tinostruckmann It's a shame!
Just came across your channel - very surprised it took me this long. Excellent videos - you have done amazing job on these
One of the most detailed and original doncumentary on special programs in WWII Germany.
Thank you I am trying
Tino I really hope you get a role as presenter, With Control over content, on a large production WWII DOC series. Something like "WWII - Uncovering the true extent of Nazi technology with Tino Struckmann". Been studying WWII my whole life, Finding someone who is truly educated and takes the time to tell the real story is refreshing. And you cover things in depth and visit the actually sites. If you ever expand this series (which I hope you do). I shoot and edit video, and I'm a drone pilot. Let me film for you. Would love to go to every WWII historical site possible. Seriously nothing I would rather do. And I must say again as many others have EXCELLENT work. YOU filming alone WHILE commentating is on par dare I say not better than most WWII doc's in existence. Please Continue this content and make 100's of more videos. Great surprise to see a new upload in the series today iv been waiting! Happy Easter!
He actually has tried to work with history channel in the past but the shot his ideas down
I'm a huge fan of learning about nazi technology and I've never came across such a detailed on ground research. Thank you Tino. Please keep doing this. I wish more mainstream history channel carried could do this. Your channel is a gem. :-)
One of the many things I enjoy is the scene overlay with black and white pics or movies that bring the people back to life in the very place Tino is showing us. Seem less and Highly artistic - reminds me of the opening scene in Titanic.
Thanks Tino, you have done a fantastic job producing this presentation. Your talent and knowledge never ceases to amaze me. Your work should be taken up by mainstream TV.
My pleasure! but here I can take my time and be true to the subject lol
That guy was great. Really enjoying and getting into this series.
Thank you:-)
About 8 years ago, I worked at a dry cleaners in my city. An elderly couple came in regularly, and the wife was very friendly and asked for me each time they came. The couple was 98 year old Georg von Tiesenhausen and his wife, he a rocket engineer at Peenemunde. At 98, he drove he and his wife around in their little red Toyota Corolla; he didn't speak much, but was very polite. I always enjoyed visiting with his wife when they came. Their son was a teacher at a high school in the city. Georg died in 2018, and I so wish I had interviewed him. I was able to ask his wife very few questions, and I regret not asking more. I wonder today if she is still living.
Now that is the sad part of life, those fascinating people we should have spoken to much more, so many of them pass unnoticed. It is so very important for everybody to speak to those older generations and learn something. Thank you for sharing that story.
@@tinostruckmann Over the past few years since von Tiesenhausen's death, I have thought of phoning his wife to see if she would chat with me. She was 89 at the time I met them, and would now be nearly his age when we met. Von Braun's home during his work in the United States is just a few miles from me as well.
@@koba2348 seriously you should and you should do it today because you never know at that age if she's around tomorrow maybe she would like to talk and maybe she would like to share some of the photos from back then which would be amazing let me know how that goes
@@tinostruckmann She is alive as far as I can tell, I will give her a call today. I would like to make a video interview
@@koba2348 I think that is a wonderful idea
Another Awesome video. Really enjoy the journey, searching, and history lessons of your videos. Well, well done.
I've read so much about Penemunde and the rocket programs that were based in that facility. It was so great to see the physical campus that I've read about for so long. I would LOVE to take a metal detector all over the Pennemunde ruins. Thanks again,For giving me the images to go with what I've read. After this,I want to watch your video on Hans Kammler
I totally agree! well I am going again soon and was planning on a bit more time with a detector too. One day you should visit.
Excellent as always, happy Easter Tino, and thank you for your hard work and passionate presentation 👍
Thank you kindly! I appreciate it
It must take you days and days or weeks even to do the amount of research and fact finding to produce these videos for us. Never mind visiting and filming. Nice ! Thanks so much for sharing.
You are correct I dont really get out much except for the day job lol
Thanks are definitely in order…. Thank you!
By far best series and Presenter on UA-cam
Thank you so much I really appreciate you saying so:-) I hope more people will see it that way in the future
Great video and testament to the Peenemunde team. Many have passed but their genius lives on.
Together with the vile morality
Thank you, well they got us to the moon:-)
Well the world have been short on that for a very long time, but I do miss Civalry
Always informative, always interesting. Your historical adventures are vitally important as the years roll by and the memories fade. It's a unique UA-cam site, thank you...
The TV system for the guided missile was designed by Walter Bruch, who later went on to design the PAL colour TV system in the 1960s, which became the european standard. Less well known is his first CCTV system which was used at Pennemunde to monitor launches, because film cameras, near to a launch, would often be destroyed along with their film, when a missile malfunctioned. The CCTV used a Bruch designed camera near to the launch, feeding a monitor in the control bunker, where a synchonised cine camera recorded the results. This might be worth following up, as a 'sideband' technology, indicating other dangerous experimental work. The camera was a brilliant design using largely the same valve, (tube), throughout, apart for the video tube.
The coal dust warhead, was basically a fuel-air explosion weapon.
Thanks again for another excellent informative piece.
Thank you so much for adding to that, I was always wondering if not von Ardenne was involved in some of those developments?
Keep exploring 👍
Stay safe 👍
Thank you, I will
Best ever on peenemunde and all those special weaponsi only read about. It is very difficult to see even being there. thank you for this wonderfull document!
Glad you enjoyed it! you are most welcome and lots more to come
Amazing stuff you find regarding history. Great work
Much appreciated
Quite nice Tino. Thank you for putting so much effort into this series.
Glad you enjoy it!
Thanks for your time and excellent work Tino!
My pleasure! I am glad you like:-)
I quite agree with you on the destruction of historic places, and how this location created developments we still enjoy. I also like to point out that the vast majority of the scientists and technical staff that worked on the MANHATTAN project received at least a portion of their education in Deutschland. The mad dash for the assets of that country wasn't just in this location. The Russians would even go into ruins and if there were a solid brick, they chiseled them out and sent them to Russia. Yet they were forbidden to touch any Zeiss optics manufacturing plant, its employees, or their families.
I actually think there would be a good special in what the Russians knew towards the end, they had a much better idea of what they wanted then we may think. I look forward to my visit to the Russian archives.
@@tinostruckmann From what I have seen, you are a sensible man and I hope that you keep in mind that the Russian Archives are more heavily edited than a high school yearbook.
Keep doing what your doing, As always love you work an great pride you show. Happy Easter an stay safe
Thank you! Will do!
Yay!!! A new video, I can't wait to watch!
Happy Easter 🐣
Yay! Thank you! sorry for the late reply
Thanks again Tino, another fascinating episode ! looking forward to the next one.
Glad you enjoyed it
@@tinostruckmann Really did, thanks Tino 👍
Been waiting for this!! Tino you are doing an absolutely amazing job here but where are we actually going ? Were they looking to create something bigger..Yes but they ran out of time!! Something happened in late Autumn 44 that really scared the Allies and and its in regards to all this its patently clear now that the Germans were decades ahead of us in weapons concepts and research and that in itself must have worried us incredibly especially when we found what we did at the end of the war im not suprised that they story about all this was re edited and redacted out of sheer embarrassment and and the realisation that a nation has to keep more than up to date on all that stuff at its peril!! Great video and quite frankly im pissed i missed the live Q&A !! Take care and keep Soldiering on pal DG
NASA before NASA, great documentary thanks a deeep dive! Love it.
Shining Bright! This clearly demonstrates the advancement of technology! I have always wondered what role IBM played!
Besides the IMB selectra to follow data!
MWM
This is a tremendous account about Peenemünde, so thorough and detailed. I share your dismay at the loss of so many historical buildings.
One thing though, and I could be wrong but the original Wachhaus is still there by the car park. It's now a cafe/ souvenir shop, on the other side is an original admin block. When I first went there 13 years ago the barracks and canteen where still standing and were only recently demolished. They had been used by the Russians and later by the NVA. I live just over the the river(Peene) from there.
Anyway, thanks a lot for showing a lot of things I didn't know still existed.
Thank you, that is the other guard house for the power and oxygen plant. It is there still and still an ice cream plant lol I had my breakfast ice cream there lol The destroyed one was for the entrance to the facility itself and the Luftwaffe site.
@@tinostruckmann Thanks for the answer.
Well that saved a guys sunday! Tino, so very exciting yet again, man i wish i could see it in person 😉 Cant get enough, well presented, we can surely feel your dedication trough the screen👍👍 Good job once again, now the next release cant come quick enough, excited to lern more about the Henge🙏 Thank you Tino
Thank you so much for saying so, maybe one day when I start doing tours. I can drag you out there so you can see it for yourself.
@@tinostruckmann That would be epic!🙏😃😃
Another great episode. Stay safe. Thank you.
Thanks, you too!
Another Great one Tino.. Thank you. Happy Easter dude
Glad you enjoyed it thank you brother
@@tinostruckmann Quite welcome ... I enjoy all your stuff for one reason or another ,, Even when you said *(bring me my Panzer)* just pickin on you ,, You have to admit it did sound funny !
War is the mother of invention. A true saying . I didn't even know less than one percent of this what I eye opener to say the least.
Very interesting video herr von Struckmann, better than the 'Nazi megastructures' episode, keep up the good work!
I prefer to be there digging and showing what is actually there. to many graphics sometimes gets in the way of the experience.. thank you so much for saying so
Did you notice that the rest of the electric wires at the workshop ruines and teststand 7 was made with (cheap) silver shiny aluminium cores, thats because copper was too rare and expensive for use in static locations and must have been saved for the submarine electric engines, planes, ships generator sets and the rockets themself... (you cant use aluminium core cables in mobile applications as airplanes / rockets etc...due to fragility)
Fascinating video here.I once read somewhere that a Luftwaffe test pilot,Hans zissner,said that,while flying a shuttle,witnessed what appeared to be a nuclear explosion over Ludwigslust,south of Luebeck.Earlier,there is some speculation that a primitive 'dirty bomb' was used to make a Soviet rifle division vanish during one of the Kursk actions.Perhaps the war aim of the allies was to apprehend technology more than anything
I have a copy of his report, and I will be going to all the supposed test locations in about a month
@@tinostruckmann wow, I'm really looking forward to that. I just found your channel and I'm really happy I did.
More than likely a fuel & air mixture bomb. They produce the same sort of burns as nuclear flash. It is not just the temperature but the sheer amount of heat (calories) radiated out by such ordnance which can, even at a distance, causes the skin to detach and hang lose on the body (it melts). So personally I discount accounts like these as miss attributions. Of cause, that doesn’t mean to say all such accounts should be automatically dismissed as non nuclear. Still, had any type of nuclear device been used in an open war theatre, I’m pretty certain we would have come to know about it. Perhaps Tino will be elucidating further in the up coming episodes.
@@Nuts-Bolts oh you can be sure of that I am only just beginning :-)
I visited Peenemunde shortly after it had been declared open for visitors, many years ago, from Denmark. They only had a few items present by that time. A model V2 built with some original parts, a wax mask from a dead officer, and a plate with signatures from former workers. And some modern planes. I think it closed after that for some years?
By the way it might be important to note that the V-1 was a type of jet engine and not a rocket. To be a rocket it much carry its own oxidizer. The V-1 was a pulse jet engine. It basically just ignited fuel and used that Ignition pressure to propel the craft.
It carried liquid oxygen on board ?
Ths is very interesting. Would love to see that museum. First of your videos I've seen, and am now a subscriber.
Welcome aboard my new friend, I will start to arrange tours to all the various sites, so hopefully soon.
Superb!I wish I could see it on my own! Great job Tino!
One day maybe you can!
Go there when you can. I had a visit there with the same guide, and yes, the guy is awesome with an unbelievable knowledge. You can also make out the make out traces from the takeoff strips of the ME 163 that was also tested there.
Hey this is great I've seen 3 of your war movies and now this thankyou Tino at least you tell it like it is with no favouritism, cheers from down Under mate keep up the good work.
Thank you my friend, I try, I always thought that was the hallmark of a good historian to not take sides but provide the information for you to make up your own mind.
@@tinostruckmann mate I have been through about 7 of your documentaries so far and they are bloody excellent ,how long did it take ??, . I had no idea of half of the stuff you showed well nearly half, I have heaps of documentaries and yours are the best for just cruising along and checking stuff out , getting information from the past and chucking it all together for a good doco , and the most important thing is you know the mainstream crap is not true and you went out and found out for yourself, thanks mate, keep it up and stay safe.
Best info I have ever heard thank you amazing. 👍
You are so welcome Im glad you liked it
For the last 20 minutes you did what I dream about doing at Peenemunde
Come with me next time!
The whole area is forbidden to enter by the way, there are hundreds of unexploded bombs in the ground. Those depressions in the ground are all bomb craters:)
@@NorceCodine you just have to learn how to float :-)
The air raid shelters are exactly like those used on the Ho Chi Minh trail ! 6ft in diameter concrete sewer pipes figured into an H pattern, very very effective in surviving the B52 strikes !
Been waiting for this!! Thanks Tino!
So have I sorry for the wait
@@tinostruckmann No need to be! It’s always well worth the wait! WW2 is by far my favorite subject and always awesome to get your prospective. Thanks again!
Great video thank you Tino
Making a V-2 rocket was actually cheap once it was mass produced in Nordhausen. The plan was 900 rockets a month, they achieved around 400-500, using prisoners with technical training. A mass produced V-2 rocket cost a fraction of a Messerschmitt Bf-109, and the most expensive weapon by far was the Tiger tank which cost close to a million RM. The V-2s at Peenemuende were hand-built, one at a time, industrial production required a completely different procedure.
Spontaneously disassembled itself....with force....oh that's great I'm going to use it!
Amazing stuff Tino ! I am slowly but surely catching up and will be current on all episodes. I wasn't able to join the live Q & A like I planned, but replayed on my commute after work. Great great stuff :-)
Thank you so much, I am trying to keep up and get some new videos out before I travel again:-)
@@tinostruckmann Enjoy the local eateries in Europe. I've only experienced world travel through stories by friends and family. I tend to pay attention when they start talking desserts. Apparently we can't do it justice.
On your next trip to TN maybe you could send me some San Francisco clam chowder. I ate my fill of this when I lived there. Nothing better !
Safe travels.
First time watching, and you got a follow, very interesting.
Great information. I’ve learned a lot and enjoyed the video. Thank you
Another quality job
Tino great job on this tour of Peenemunde. I was there about 4 years ago and did not find half of what you did!
Come with me next time:-)
Good docu., thanks!
Excellent, I loved it !!!! One of the most interesting ones on UA-cam.
Glad to hear that! I am trying to bring you all something interesting and there is a lot of history out there.
As always absolutely Amazing video. It's frightening to think that, if Germany was that close to creating a Nuclear warhead, and place it in a second generation V2 that had the capability of reaching America, and indeed allied countries, it might be a very different world.
Well they were working on the A9/10 to reach America, some people like von Ardenne and several others claimed it was tested, but until I see all the possibly launch facilities I will reserve judgment on that. And im going in a month
They weren't remotely close to achieving nuclear reactions at very small scales, let alone weapons.
This yap prof went to tojo min of war in 38 th he says what i hold in my hand equals 25 tons of coal tojo talks to the emperor and says this guy iscrazy he wants to bomb a city with coal banzai ronadamn
@@simonjohnston9488 sorry. The Germans exploded 3 Atomic or Nuclear bombs. First test at Borkum Island on the Baltic. Second and third tests on the Army training area a couple of miles east of Ohrdruf south of Weimar.
Now Ohrdruf had a forced Labour camp. The last test half incinerated dozens of the camp prisoners a couple of miles away.
Now Eisenhower only ever saw one Concentration Camp. He and Patton saw those half incinerated bodies and realised the risk during their tour.
Patton later was based at or near Dachau post war BUT was not there when liberated.
Germany could make a nuclear bomb, but had no means to use it on USA mainland
Thanks brother I love your work this was very important stuff from Avon Ohio USA 🇺🇸 peace out God bless 🙏
YEY real America thank you my brother
Just look at the space race 🏁
Thank you for this video. I didn`t know there is still so much to see on usedom. I will make a visit after corona .
Go for it, there is no corona out in the deep woods lol -Maybe Ill see you there, Im going back next moneh
Yet Again Tino all i can say is So very very interesting and i thank you for your research and pain staking persistence.
I also Agree with the comment you made regarding the fact that what took place during WW2 has shaped the world we live in and we have to pay homage to all responsible no matter what side they were on.
I have always maintained that we owe Nazi Germany a thanks for the road systems we in the rest of the world enjoy/ are frustrated with every day as with out the forethought they had we would not have the freeway systems and alike we have today.
And now i see we owe so much more to the pioneers of the time.
Living in LA right now I wish there were some nasty German driving instructors here actually teaching people how to damn well drive on these roads lmao.. Thank you for coming by
@@tinostruckmann You are not alone there mate i think the whole world feels like that more often than we would like to admit to.
Just watched latest installment and another enthralling update .
You make me feel like im right there with you on this quest (wish i was) and the deeper you dig the more i personally hang for the final result.
Keep up the great work mate from all of us who follow you here in Australia and ( don't mean to speak for the rest of the world ) but i will.... everyone else.
Dude.. the wasserfall is one of my Favorites too!
perfect for home defense lol
Ok thanks for posting. Good luck.
Thank you looking for ward to what I can find us all
I was waiting on this video. You always teach me so much and do it with humor which just makes it funnier. I learned so much about the v-rockets. I also would love to know what the hell that building was. If it was the factory.
Thank you so much for saying so I do try I'm afraid that humor may come out more this year LOL I'm sure the building is mapped out somewhere it's way too big to have been a secret it just doesn't seem to match up with anything according to the maps with the aerial photos I will ask the curator of the Met Museum when I go back next month
@@tinostruckmann if you can find anything about it will you do an update video? I would just love to know. If anybody can find out about it I believe it's you. Not to much pressure. Lol. Can't wait for more because I got about 15 more videos to binge on. Guess I will just have to watch them again. I really enjoy the Q&A ones. Have a great day sir.
@@nickcox3497 thank you so much and you can rest assured I will figure it out and there will be a lot more videos also from there
@@tinostruckmann thanks and look forward to them. I don't know if anyone tells you but thank you for responding to your fans. That is what we love.
@@nickcox3497 It took me 16 hrs to catch up --- lol there may be a time where I will either respond of edit new episodes, but its the least thing I can do, or try to do for all of you who bother write me:-)
According to chapter 6 of “Das Geheimnis der deutschen Atombombe” by Edgar Meyer and Thomas Mehner the Peenemünde power plant consitsed of two turbogenerators of 12 MW each. The steam was supplied by four boilers which burned a total of 256 tons of coal per hour. If correct, these figures translate to a plant efficiency of less than 12% which is ridiculously low- I'd expect a plant efficiency of 20-25% for a plant of that vintage (the plant was built between 1939 and 1942 so was modern). This suggests to me that those four boilers supplied steam for far more than just those two turbogenerators. Question is, for what purpose(s)- heating? Heating what exactly? Power generation? Power generation for what? And where were the other turbogenerators located if not in the power plant itself?
Thank you for these videos. The more I watch of them, the more technology theft I'm aware of
love your videos man! thanks a lot!! wish i could join yas!!
Glad you like them! come with sometime, I will start arranging tours when we can.
another quality documentary, the unofficial museum is impressive. keep up the good work 🍻
Thanks, will do! You can count on it - I am just beginning
Analogue computers.
There seems to have been a LOT of work in this field going on pre WW2, all over the place.
The concept is the basis for all the "automatic pilot' trials and actual use in aviation at the time. It was also not a heavily-guarded secret, with there even being cartoon references to "George", the "auto-pilot"( a sort of skinny, robot-looking character) in the RAF.
The US Army fielded analogue computers for long-range artillery late in the war. The rudiments came from earlier gunnery calculators, which were essentially rotary slide rules, sometimes even mounted on the individual artillery pieces.
They became necessary because the serious guns were capable of firing their projectiles on a trajectory that took them to the limits of the atmosphere, and the gunners needed to be able to account for not only high-altitude, high-speed winds, but even the rotation of the planet, such were the flight times and characteristics involved. These considerations also applied to naval and coastal guns. This is why most serious armies have teams of meteorologists; not to predict "infantry weather" (constant, heavy, near-horizontal rain), but to feed data to the gunners. By the end of the war, the US was fielding ELECTRONIC gunnery computers and also using really big static ones to develop very accurate firing tables for the gunners.
Analogue computers stayed around for a long time. Aviation buffs will be aware that the "terrain-following" capability of the General Dynamics F-111, was achieved using very compact analogue computers. These were transistorized devices that were only replaced a few years before that entire aircraft series was retired. The problem with "digital" computers is that the real world is ANALOGUE. Thus, external data must first be ACCURATELY be converted to digital form, then, correctly-written code is used to process the data and THEN, it has to generate an output that will work in an analogue world. All of which takes TIME. In the days of vacuum-tube DIGITAL computers, this took a LOT of time, relatively speaking. It also took up a LOT of space and electricity. Side trivia: The Liquid Crystal Display was the result of an early 1960s requirement for a vibration resistant, compact display for battlefield computers mounted in armoured fighting vehicles. Once that technology was established, it was advanced at spectacular speed. Look a little deeper into the screen for your desk or lap-top machine. Then there was the Light Emitting Diode. The ones I remember from the mid 1970s were pretty fragile and came on one colour: RED. By the end of that deacade, buy the magic of Chemistry, we had green and yellow ones. BLUE was THE goal, but it took until the early 1990s for that to happen. Once you had Red, Green and Blue LEDsof carefully-tuned hues, the LED video screen was a reality. Consider the huge video screens used at major sports and and musical events. These monsters are not one big monolith, but made from addressable modules bolted together in site and wired to a prescribed recipe, depending on aspect ration and resolution, etc.. And it ALL comes from observation and imagination coupled with serious research.
So, I would imagine that our Teutonic cousins were also well aware of the possibilities for enhanced calculation speeds. Did they also have a development programme for large electronic computers?
Great film as usual...20.54 looks like part of a kubelwagen door....
Always wanted to go to Peenemunde. My father photographed it from a Mosquito in August 1943. Also the V1 site at Yvrench in France in October that year, which I have been to.
Outstanding, I am going there next month. I have to ask, do you have any of those photos?
@@tinostruckmann Yes, I have around ten souvenir photos from 540sqn sortie N904 on 20 August 1943 after the bombing on 17/18 August. I gather that they were less important photos that he managed to sneak out of RAF Medmenham so I am not sure that they will tell you very much.
My father was Australian and returned home in 1944 to continue service with the RAAF.
@@guyh9992 if you feel like sharing them so I can share them with the rest of the world I would at least love to see them:-)
@@tinostruckmann I've sent them to your Hotmail address.
The greatest importance that Penemunde has is that it wasted lots of resources that Germany could have used attacking the allies. We should be thankful for that.
I do agree, those could have been spent better but hindsight I guess....
Really great video!
Thank you! more to come
I've seen a few of your movies, thank you for your entertaining work, nice job! You make a very scary German officer. We wouldn't have gotten to the moon if it wasn't for Werner Von Broun.
Playing the super bad guy as an actor is just more fun:-) thank you brother:-)
@@tinostruckmann I was thinking it was time for Hollywood to do a proper remake of 12 O'clock high, of course you would be perfect to play the character of a Luftwaffe fighter squadron commander. Of course things and the workings in Hollywood are way different from when my Dads Cousin played Tarzan from 1955-1960, so we had a family member in the movie business as well, however Cousin Gordy got discovered totally by accident because of his build from growing up as a lumber Jack in Oregon.
The buildings in the woods. Not knowing where on the peninsula you were, could that building be one of the two hydrogen peroxide generation plants on the site? It would explain the deep concrete channels and the need for larger space for pipes and storage?
And thank you for visiting a site and showing what is left. I am glad that it is no more. Such scientific discoveries based on the deaths of so many is a hard pill to swallow and there are those that would glorify it for the wrong reasons, there is enough of that as it is.
That is entirely possibly, it was a little strange all large facilities on the maps are to the North of the road and these were to the South. I am still looking through maps, but I am going back out there, and will have a meeting with the museum curator and pick his brain for more and missing info.
@@tinostruckmann I have a RAF recce photo of the site pre-bombing, you probably already have it, but shows buildings to the south. It shows one of the peroxide plants as being in a circular compound toward the estuary (can't really see it on google maps today). If you could work out where you were on the map it could eliminate some of the options as to the buildings you found.
Spectacular Work re veal ing the truth!
Shine Bright!
MWM
Yes! Thank you! just beginning
Wow! Amazing. I never saw any man on the scene video of this place.
Glad you enjoyed it!
The V-1's warhead was much more than 500 kg; it was 850 kg of Amatol-39, later Trialen. V-2 had 1000 kg of Amatol.
Brilliant as usual!
why thank you kindly
Congratulations for your great work from Portugal.🇵🇹😎
Thank you very much! I appreciate it. say hello to everybody there from me.
Bravo 👏 👏 👏! That was an awesome presentation!
Just when I thought I have info to share with you, you not already know about it, but you have even more information to share on your videos than what I knew about. Because we both have probably held Secret Security clearances (or above) in the past, we can't share everything we know, but I am glad that I did get to do what I have got to do even though I can't share it with others.
I must say that your favorite rocket is neat. I kind of like it myself. I wonder if you like it because it "almost" looks like something an amateur rocket enthusiast could afford? I say "almost", but I am probably deceiving myself about the cost or ease of making. Even though it's smaller than the V2, it would still take the same levels of craftsmanship to complete and the tooling to make just one would be more than my life savings (I don't have any. Lol). I guess I like it, because with my mechanical as a former draftsman that worked briefly on a nuclear missile prototype program, I see it as a work of art (even though its end purpose was not a good one).
My fondest memory was getting a phone call from John Glen once, but I will not elaborate about that here.
I'm really looking forward to seeing the new photos, videos and findings you have obtained related to "The Hinge".
Sincerely, Craig S. (Aquantenance of Leadbeater. Lol :) )
Thank you so much brother ... You know maybe we could build a replica Wasserfal and fly it? .. not sure why but why not? It had solid fuel....
@@tinostruckmann Lol :) Yes, it would be possible to make a replica (as a full size museum quality display piece). As for the solid fuel thing, I know you are kidding (FAA wouldn't like that. Lol :). The movie "Astronaut Farmer" comes to mind. There are some large scale rocket fans in the West that do have self-designed liquid engines that have gone pretty far up. They have to do it in a special place and get special permission. Anything is possible in life, it just depends on your priorities.
This is off topic, but I used to live close to Wright Patterson Air Force Base Museum. One day, a graphic illustrator was there measuring the Mig-15 that ended up there after Lt. "No Kum-Sok" a North Korean pilot defected from North Korea to South Korea with it. It was then transferred to Wright Pat. The illustrator asked me to help him measure part of the plane. I had to get over the Velvet rope to get to it. 30 years later, I crossed paths with "No Kum-Suk" which goes by the American name of "Kenneth Rowe" now. We said "hello" to each other, but I didn't get to introduce myself to him (but, I knew ahead of time that I might bump into him at that particular location if I continued to work there for any period of time). He used to be a professor at Emmery-Riddle University. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/No_Kum-sok
I did make a 3-1/2+ foot tall V2ish looking static display rocket of my own dimensions once. I will have to email you a photo of it, if I can find the original photo.
Take care.
fantastic, informative as ever,did you discover what the huge complex was that you GPS tagged ?
This is amazing the Germans were so far ahead just a pity they couldnt get there act together....Russia and America were the winners here as they grabbed all the tech and proto types thank you Tino for this it was so amazing.
Thank you - more to come
Hi,...I had a look at your videos, but couldnt quite find the one on the coal/cold dust bomb? you mentioned at 44:46 does anyone know anything about it please??
I think its the one with the Uboat underwater rocket tests
Aye Tino you said something about a detonation in the neighbourhood of Ludwigslust and the ruins of the former luftwaffe airfield are maybe still there (probably worth visiting)
I am going to, I was there last year but the area is enormous and without a coordinate it means a lot of walking. But I will go back and approach from a different direction.
Imagine what mankind could do if All people worked together for a better Earth...🌏🌍🌐🌎🗺️🇺🇸🇺🇳🇺🇸🇺🇳🌄🌅
Patton said it perfectly and it was in the movie “ Next to War all other human endeavors pale in comparison !”
I agree with you on the great/horrible inventions, but as far as your use of the U.N. emoji characters @ the end of your reply.....You really really want the U.N. to administer the whole planet look how good the W.H.O. worked out for Covid 😆 thats rich, NO GLOBAL GOVERNANCE!!!
@@oceanhome2023 Absolutely true just happened to have viewed "Patton" & when he said that it really really dawned on me how correct / and prophetic his words would ring true till this day.
@@nickb7906 I am an artist and the United States Flag and the United Nations Flags next to each other means let All people on earth work together for a positive life on Earth.. 👍👍🗽🗽🍀😎
What UN Emoji?? I dont use any of them I do old fashioned smiley faces only :-)
Quality as always.
Thank you so much for saying so
@@tinostruckmann I can see this being picked by discovery or another network for that instance. I would say your work rivals Mark Felton's and could easily make it onto terrestrial television.