Cool! Your videos are great! Quick & close up in general it would be great if you stopped on the info plaque so we could pause it & read whatever aircraft history they provide for each... I'm curious what the origins are on them...
An outstanding example of a Heinkel HE 111 bomber. Glad to see it being preserved indoors. Our museum in Dayton also has an HE 111, only ours was manufactured in Spain after WWII and ironically its powered by two Rolls Royce Merlin engines. It was on display outside in our airpark, but the elements took their toll on the airplane and it was removed from public display and placed in storage awaiting restoration.
The Americans used it for a while and were going to ship it back to the USA - but the boat was full - it stayed in the UK and probably avoided getting scrapped. It's looking a little sad and missing lots of parts now.
@@melburns4378 It was diassembled and moved multiple times between 1946 and 1976 and it's no wonder items were lost or stolen. It was in the scrap area at Farnborough and pulled back out.
Hello...you are right about the fact that Hitler was evil....BUT ....the airplanes of war of all nations were design to kill people....how many civilians were killed and the world goes on and NO ONE is going to remember....
Great footage - a classic bit of history.
Thank God for the Brits and their love of preserving history.
We should have saved a few Halifax bombers and a Stirling.
@@davidwebb8877 and a Ju 88. and warspite, Bismarck still being there but difficult to reach
I’ve been inside this plane when visiting the museum, many years ago
what a wonderfull bird german quality !
Cool! Your videos are great! Quick & close up in general it would be great if you stopped on the info plaque so we could pause it & read whatever aircraft history they provide for each...
I'm curious what the origins are on them...
Thanks for your comment, all right, will do for my next shooting then (or add text on the screen if I couldn't for some reason)
An outstanding example of a Heinkel HE 111 bomber. Glad to see it being preserved indoors. Our museum in Dayton also has an HE 111, only ours was manufactured in Spain after WWII and ironically its powered by two Rolls Royce Merlin engines. It was on display outside in our airpark, but the elements took their toll on the airplane and it was removed from public display and placed in storage awaiting restoration.
What did the RAF do with the hdl131 top turret--not to mention the armament?
Magnífico
I’m curious how this came to be at the museum
The Americans used it for a while and were going to ship it back to the USA - but the boat was full - it stayed in the UK and probably avoided getting scrapped. It's looking a little sad and missing lots of parts now.
@@melburns4378 It was diassembled and moved multiple times between 1946 and 1976 and it's no wonder items were lost or stolen. It was in the scrap area at Farnborough and pulled back out.
A great plane👍✈️ and yet hard to imagine these planes murdered innocent people and Hitler thought nothing if it... Hitler waa evil👹
Hello...you are right about the fact that Hitler was evil....BUT ....the airplanes of war of all nations were design to kill people....how many civilians were killed and the world goes on and NO ONE is going to remember....
Ok pal, because no American planes murdered innocent civilians.