Please see the description before commenting on: Pronunciation, Boston, Bellanca, or your reason some other entity was the "real" driving force behind North American. It's likely that it's already addressed there.
With Fokker in Teterboro, being the NYC area, it would have been good to mention the Dutch roots of America's largest city, originally called New Amsterdam. With the very colors, including the colors of the NY Mets coming from the Dutch flag. Then at the end, it was capped off quite abruptly. We're talking about the aerospace company which flew the first human beings to the Moon. While in parallel, they flew the X-15, which led to the Space Shuttle. And then there were their majestic bombers which were descended from the B-25, culminating in the Mach 3 XB-70 Valkyrie, and the B-1 Bone. Going back to what Anthony Fokker accomplished back during WWI, there one of his most famous inventions was figuring out a way to shoot machine guns without destroying your own propeller, the interrupter gear. And I'm not sure why you opted to not mention Knute Rockne by name, the coach immortalized in the Ronald Reagan movie about winning one for the Gipper. The man who popularized the forward pass ironically dying while choosing to travel by air. Great video. And in the future, we can expect a more comprehensive doc which covers these other huge accomplishments which were Anthony Fokker's legacy. He was on the losing side of WWI. But with his if-you-can't-beat-em-join-em strategy, Fokker ended up on the winning side of WWII, Korea, Vietnam and the Cold War. Victory all the way to the Moon. Apollo 8 reached the Moon... the Lunar Sphere of Influence, on the 29th anniversary of Anthony Fokker's death.
Fun fact of the day: Holland isn't actually the name of the Netherlands, it refers to 2 provinces IN the Netherlands which used to be a single province named Holland, now named Noord Holland and Zuid Holland.
I would be interested in seeing a video about the differences in airspeed, climb rate and range between a standard issue fighter and the same model / engine converted to photoreconnaissance. Did they tune the engine for better performance at certain expected altitudes at the expense of poorer performance at others? Was the difference enough to make catching them significantly difficult?
I don't believe I have ever before heard a TH-cam creator say "but that's a story for another video--which I don't plan on making." Actually, I respect that.
I have been a Fokker Aircraft employee between August of 1977 and April 1996 in the Netherlands, and although I switched to IT after that, my heart is still in aviation. I thought I knew everything there is to know about Anthony Fokker, because there was a time that his history was more or less folklore over here, but I never heard of what Greg uncovers here. Great stuff, and I learned something this morning! Thank you!
Brief as they are, every story has a delightful " to be continued" standard that keeps me coming back for more. When reading NACA information, I hear it in Greg's voice. Haha !
@@Pikilloification I agree, but, personally, I have been called pedantic far too frequently for the infraction of being knowledgable to not brand it as a badge of honor. Therefore, I use it as that and recognize those I refer to in that manner as not being afraid to jump down rabbit holes of knowledge. If you are making this distinction, I would imagine that you may have experienced the same. I meant it as nothing but a badge of honor and recognition.
You know I would absolutely not mind watching a full 3 hour deep dive into a particular aircraft or company's history. That stuff is fascinating to me, and id love to see it. And i think that sort of highly detailed technical exploration is where your channel shines. I don't think you have to worry about keeping the video short, just saying. I think most of us are here for the long haul anyway!
So interesting. Had no clue about the Fokker link to North American. I remember feeling sad in the 1990's when Fokker closed down (Fuselage was made in Shorts, N. Ireland), but to know that the core of the mans business was actually Stateside, and produced the holy grail, has cheered me up immensely.
The simple fact that he was able to get all those planes and a train load of equipment out of Germany is a amazing feat in and of itself! I can’t even begin to imagine what that must have cost him? But it really shows his ability for organizing and logistics and those two things are absolutely needed when running any kind of large business operation of any kind but especially aircraft manufacturing! Just look at Kelly Johnson he also was great at that!
I mention this tentatively because this era is not my area of expertise: but what makes Fokker's feat even more improbable is that immediate post-war Germany, infrastructure-wise, was significantly broken.
Anthony Fokker actually specified the amount of bribe money he had to pay to pull this off. I don't recall what it was but it sounded like a lot, and it was paid in Dutch money because German currency had collapsed.
@@donaldelfreth553 Yes that provides some difficulties, but the chaos probably made something like this possible in the first place, as well as being a situation where people are far more likely to take bribes and look the other way. Look the other way for a considerable amount of time judging by the kit transported!
@@donaldelfreth553, no. Germany in 1918 was starving but not destroyed. The war was fought to the end beyond its borders, which is a difficulty for many. Fokker literally lived in von Richthofen's Flying Circus, and was a close friend of Goering, their new chief. The main difficulty: one had to flee quickly, as in time commissions came to Germany to return to the owners from Belgium and France their property stolen by the Germans. And at the same time destroyed the aviation. Aviation technologies nobody needed them, except the USA, where they wanted to get the other part of innovations, French, Italian, British already in the USA.
@@donaldelfreth553 Another difficulty, now little looked at: there were severe restrictions on the entry of Germans into the United States. How fortunate that Fokker is Dutch and Schmüd was born in Austria.
In 1967 my family attended the EAA fly-in in Rockford, IL where we saw a North American P-64 perform acrobatic feats for the crowd. The plane had started life as a NA-68 built for the Royal Thai Air Force, but was instead transferred to the Army Air Corps and re-designated P-64, even though it was only used as an unarmed advanced trainer.
Greg's choice of images are illuminating. For one to bring Inglewood home to us he showed a downtown shot (18.52) of a movie theatre, screening then, the movie "The Story of Dr Wassell". On a whim I checked it out.... Greg leads us to strange places. Cheers from Australia
Great video as usual - fascinating content and great history lesson. You didn't go into any detail into HOW EXACTLY NAA/GM managed to design a plane in 6 months and put it into production so fast - that is an amazing achievement in itself. Sloan gives some indications in his autobiography, but the management skill of the company was awesome - comparable perhaps to the Manhattan Project at the same time/slightly later. In one of your other videos you show a comparison of price between your fave plane P-47 and the P51D, which was half the price for similar performance.
I didn't go into that stuff, because this was an Origins video. On the subject of favorite airplanes, either I have no favorite, or a lot of favorites, I can't really pick one.
Thanks for another great video! As a kid in the 50's and 60's, our dad was an industrial engineer working for Autonetics, a division on North American, in Anaheim, CA, which then got merged into Rockwell Corporation. Autonetics did navigation hardware for many projects, including the Minuteman missiles. I was in boot camp when we got word Rockwell's new fighter lost the competition with the Mc Donnell Douglas F15. Dad and 400 other engineers were laid off within 2 weeks. Nearly 10 years later, dad still resented it when I went to work for MDC. Life is strange.
When the military industrial consolidated strange path for the employees of those who got eaten by & buy. Some did well and some suffered. seems like a sift from being manufactured based where they were based to customer = Pentagon where Congess held the purse strings > lobbying. You were at the mercy or luck of.
This is amazing Business / Aviation / Military history! It's honestly far deeper down the rabbit hole than I'd prefer, but it's SO well done I had to watch all of it. I loved the P-51 as a teen WW2 nerd, and the snapshot of Fokker's yacht was superluminal 💙
@Greg’s Airplanes and Automobiles As a lifelong aviation enthusiast from the Netherlands, Fokker has always had a special place in my heart. I thought I knew much of the companies history (including the American branch and the repercussions of the crash that killed the football coach), but you pleasantly surprised me with this video. Who would have thought there was a direct link between the Mustang and Fokker. Never too old too learn, so thank you for that fantastic insight!
I never knew this could be so damn fascinating...! Your photo choices don't simply illustrate events, but are super tasty and compelling. You know exactly what makes the topic interesting, and your enthusiasm and presentation communicate it so effectively.
Hi Greg, great video. A little background on myself, fellow ALPA Pilot and Anthony Fokker fanboy. Tony, a high school dropout, was to my knowledge one of aviation most financially successful early pioneers. I read that he filled his sailboat with cold hard currency, precious stones and gold and sailed it to the Netherlands from post armistice Germany. Subsequently was in effect gifted NVF (FOKKER HOLLAND) .Prior to the stock market crash of 1929 he sold of 40% of Atlantic aircraft to GM for 8 million dollars ( over 1.3 billion in today's dollars) whilst gaining the exclusive European sales and production rights to the dc2 and derivatives. Also his first wife was the niece of Hermann Goering (a close friend) along with Donald Douglas senior and Charley chaplain. And finally, yes the lineage is clear, Boeing to this day holds the type certificate to the Fokker super universal.
Excellent, Greg, as usual. I enjoyed the corporate twists and turns, and the irony involved in the birth of the P-51 is hard to miss. Among the photos in my dad's collection is a head-on view of a parked P-51, so all you really see is the prop spinner and the landing gear, but dad liked to fly fast - that's why he went into experimental test-flying - and I wouldn't be surprised if he flew a Mustang or two at some point after the war. The video resonates with me personally, as well, as my first real stick time was in 2011 - a birthday gift from my son in the form of a half-hour in the front seat of a T-6. The Navy version was designated SNJ, and dad would certainly have flown one or more of those in advanced training before he was assigned to VF-19 and transitioned to the F6F before the squadron shipped out to the Pacific and their combat tour in 1944. I've since flown a Cessna 172 for a couple hours cross-country, but it's the T-6 experience that has really stuck with me. Dad went to work for McDonnell Aircraft after the war (his badge # was 78), and stayed there until he was killed on a test flight in 1951, on his 35th birthday.
Thx for sharing, incl sad ending at the end. it does seem of the many pioneers of aviation, beyond the recognized heroes most are underappreciated / unnoticed. so it, goes, that's the way History is written. When it takes a Team to bring success.
If anything, I think there’s a bit of a neat parallel, in that the Fokker VII was so feared not because it was a superior performer, but because it was simply possible for a pilot to _use_ the performance already there without killing themselves The P-51 wasn’t a “leaps and bounds” performer, but it combined a capable airframe with one that was readable and useable by the average pilot.
Hands down Greg's most thrilling and entertaining video, I know of. Less technical, more accessible. Usually enthousiastic comments from aviation connoiseurs. This one is geared towards a broader public of curious, should be massively advertised by TH-cam algo. I watched it in one go, and would have kept on for a lot more. Genuine story telling talent at work there. Great naration, with that low, soothing voice. The stuff of top tier documentaries, Netflix or better.
The irony of the North American being a GM company who's product, The P-51 Mustang, was one of the inspirations for one of their competitors most successful lines of cars. The Ford Mustang.
That last photo brought back a memory. Around 1968 I was at RAAF Richmond. A CAC Sabre flew down the strip than flew vertically until it was out of sight. Very beautiful airplane.
What an illuminating video! I did not know any of this background to North American and the Fokker influence. Very impressive video, with a terrific use of archive materials.
I'll never forget the year at the Reno Air Races when I meet Ed Horkey. He was kind enough to take time to talk about the P-51 design with me as we toured the pits. Even then in the late 90s he was sharp as a tack and was able to explain the technical details to me in laymens terms that i could follow. I remember one thing he pointed out. Nature is the best place to find laminar flow. He used an example of the cross section of a specific fish. Also he seemed to impress upon me that the laminar flow wing was not as big a contributor to the mustangs performance as was the meredith effect from the cooling system design.
Yes, in those days, wind-tunnel models could achieve significant laminar flow while production aircraft couldn't. The virtually perfect wing profile required was beyond mass production techniques of the day. Even with a perfect wing profile, something as small as bug strikes or rain droplets are enough to disturb laminar flow. The main advantage of the P51's wing profile was that its cross-section was relatively fat farther back (widest point roughly 40% from the front) which allowed significant fuel storage inside it. This helped give the Mustang its legendary long range. Many other aircraft, the Spitfire, for example, had relatively narrow wing cross-sections with the widest point closer to 25% of the cord. This left less room for fuel and, indeed the Spitfire didn't store any fuel in the wing.
For years racing plane designers had sought to eliminate conventional radiators to reduce drag. North American realized the radiator could be a source of thrust which compensated for its drag. Spitfires with their boxy underwing radiator did use a 2 dimensional venturi to reduce drag, but nothing like the full up ducted radiator on the P-51.
Great video Greg! I lived in Columbus Ohio and was familiar with the North American/Rockwell plant at Port Columbus airport. That plant produced P-51’s in the war years. The last project there before shutdown was the nacelles for the B-1 Lancer.
So one of the chief scourges of Hitler's Luftwaffe was born from a seed planted by the man whose airplanes had been the hard core of the Kaiser's air force. That's irony for you.
Good piece! Just on a trivia note; the American football coach killed in the 1931 Fokker tri-motor crash was Knute Rockne subject of the1940 bio-pic in which Ronald Reagan utters his immortal line,"Get one for the Gipper!".
I'm glad someone finally mentioned Knute by name. Before his untimely death in the plane crash, he was quite well known. By analogy, he might be called the Charles Lindbergh of football.
Greg: For a time, I was an assistant to the physicist who developed the throttle-back optimization scheme for the Atlas rocket, a NAA vehicle developed in California. Funny that NAA moved to Inglewood for its lower cost of doing business (19:06). Nowadays, manufacturers have been fleeing California for decades due to aggressive taxation & regulation, which has decimated the industrial base. Forty years ago GM had two huge manufacturing plants in the LA metro area. They're gone now, along with many others.
@@RedXlV - Tell me about it. But there's one good thing about that. There's no shortage of people (mostly Chinese, here in SoCal) who have more dollars than sense, and are glad to pay big bux to live here. Go figure. I guess they like the idea of the state controlling every aspect of life. So, those of us who are fixing to escape can sell, buy elsewhere (just about anywhere is less insane than this Marxist hellhole), and have some coin left over.
Another great video, Fokker, North American, Rockwell, and finally Boeing. What an interesting aviation evolutionary journey with so many great airplanes along the way. Now I know why the Ford Tri-motor is so similar to the Fokker.
I loved this one! I know much more about the period 1909 - 1965 than most people, yet had no idea of Fokker's involvement in the US aircraft industry outside of a couple of transport aircraft. Excellent job, digging all this up and putting it together.
A short add regarding Fokker (Netherland) in the mid - late 1930‘s: Fokker built a quite successful fighter, the D. XXI and a heavy 2 engined fighter, the G.I. The trainer you mentioned built under license was a Bücker Bü 181, developed and built by Clemens Bücker at Rangsdorf (near Berlin), license built by Fokker and Zlin in Czechoslovakia during the war. BTW Zlin built several versions post war, Z. 181, Z.281 and Z.381, their only difference was the engine used. Zlin sold a license to Egypt, where they built the Heliopolis Gomhouria in several versions, again a Bü 181 with different engines for different subtypes, the last one using a Continental C-145 engine. Fokker‘s first successful airplane built post war was a trainer, the S. 11.
very interesting - thanks. One notable Fokker was the trimotor (exact model ?) named "Southern Cross" flown by Kingsford Smith, Ulm and Warner, making the first flight across the Pacific, from Oakland California to Brisbane Queensland, via Hawaii and Fiji, in 1928. The original aircraft was restored and now displayed near Brisbane airport.
Great video, I hadn't associated North American with the B-25 and the F-86 even though I did know it but I am just a little disappointed that the XB-70 Valkyrie wasn't mentioned. A picture of it on the cover of one of my college textbooks drew me into my love of aircraft.
The XB-70 Valkyrie is still one of the most visually striking and impressive aircraft ever built...I dare say even more so than the SR-71. I always felt it should have gone into limited production..5 or 6 operational ones would have been good to have in the inventory...
@@GregsAirplanesandAutomobiles I grew up speaking English and I lived and worked for decades in English speaking countries so I'll take that challenge quite happily.
In English you will often hear foreign names mispronounced when pronouncing them correctly sounds too similar to a 'swear' or 'cuss' word. Fokker is one of these words.
@@billbolton That must be a *very* new type of squeamishness. No-one had a problem with correctly pronouncing Fokker in any of the English speaking countries that I lived in from the 1970s through to the early 2000s.
Greg, thank you for your amazing videos, no other TH-camr goes into this much depth on specific aircraft. Mentioning systems and how they work. It’s super interesting!
Topic Suggestion: A forgotten aircraft that was built by North American Aviation in the late 40s through the early 50s was the AJ-Savage, a carrier based twin engine medium bomber, and the first US Navy aircraft designed from the ground up for the nuclear strike mission role.
Excellent content as always Greg, very interesting and thanks for posting. A very minor correction that doesnt affect your presentation at all is the relative size of the Netherlands (41543 km2) vs Oaklahoma (177847 km2) makes Oaklahoma only 4.3 not 21 times bigger. But your point is valid 🙂
Thanks, I made the mistake there of confusing Holland with the Netherlands, which is ironic because as I said earlier I am aware of the difference. Oklahoma is 23 times bigger than Holland, about 4 times bigger than the Netherlands.
What a pleasant surprise this was, I really thought I knew everything there was to know about the P-51 mustang and its origins and you proved me wrong as you said in the beginning of the video. Excellent stuff
Thanks for another super interesting video Greg! I was unaware of this particular part of Fokker's history on how it formed the roots of the North American Aircraft Company. Somewhat related, this summer we saw the first flight of a rebuilt Fokker D.XXI here in The Netherlands.
Many thanks Greg! I've thoroughly enjoyed several of your videos, and after leaving this comment I'll be going to Patreon to become a supporter. On a strictly personal note, as a NAvion lover and former owner, I would have loved to hear a reference to North American's entry into civilian aviation immediately after WW II, but it probably wouldn't have been a good fit with this video. Thanks again!
Don't forget the North American NAVION for general Aviation. Looked a lot like the p-51, and was the best flying plane I ever flew. RYAN aircraft bought the Navion in 47/48 and continued to build it under the Ryan Brand .
It's interesting, I had just listened to a video from Rex's Hangar discussing the history of Douglas and he lightly covered that plane crash involving the football Coach. Very interesting to get the full context of that considering Douglas was a friend of Fokker.
Excellent research. Enjoyable video. You questioned why Ford got out of aviation. I understand from reading "The Arsenal of Democracy" , the reason Henry Ford wanted to get out of aviation, was that Edsel Ford really wanted to get into aviation in a big way, and Henry wanted Edsel to focus on the automotive and truck business. Which was too bad, because of Edsel's production concepts, by the end of the war, the Willow Run Ford factory was completing a four engine heavy bomber every 42 minutes with very few items on the air trial punch list to be repaired before delivery. Also Edsel was terminally ill by the later 1940's, so the dream of Ford Aviation died with Edsel. Take care. I look forward to more of your videos.
One of your best. Despite my many books on North American, they always begin after Kindleberger took the reins. The connection to Fokker is fascinating. Great video.
Perfect timing Greg. I just happened to be piddling around with the Harvard at our museum and wondering how North American managed to pull off the P51.
1/2 hour fly by... i always feel like Greg has something still left in the chamber when he's done. That's why i always come back. Knowledge is endless, but comprehensible ❤
I was excited to hear information of the GA-43. I had originally learned of it from the book Scale Airplane Drawings: Volume 1 from Paul Matt. I was intrigued by the early airliner's design, it had an interesting combination of modern (for the time) and anachronistic features. I'm glad to hear more of the story.
There is another principal happening for the P-51. Roy A. Liming lofted this aircraft using numeric methods that had major impacts on lofting around the world. I learned my trade from Liming's book "Practical Analytic Geometry with Applications to Aircraft" he published in the 1944. This book has copies of the actual lines and lofting plates used to design the p-51.
Excellent info.. From the triplane that ruled the skies of Germany in WWI, to the P-51, that helped the Allies win WWII in the skies again over Germany, is a strange twist of history.
Interesting backstory in the company name origins. My grandfather & his brother worked @ NAA during the war effort on the Mustang & trainers in SoCal. I had no idea that Fokker aviation origins in engineering led up to the best Fighter NAA produced * P51 in all its design variants .
I read a magazine article many years back that claimed Ford secretly sent a team of engineers into a hangar one night to measure every aspect of a Fokker Trimotor and this was supposedly the genesis for the Ford Trimotor.
@@kenneth9874 A lot of leading edge engineering went into the Spitfire wing. Whats so interesting is the performance difference, which was negligible, between the Spitfire mk1 wing and the Bf109e wing despite being so different.
This is a great video, I have also wondered where NA came from our if nowhere. It's ironic that the two best American interceptors of WW2 are from companies founded by a Russian and a Dutchman. Severski and Folker.
Please see the description before commenting on: Pronunciation, Boston, Bellanca, or your reason some other entity was the "real" driving force behind North American. It's likely that it's already addressed there.
The comment about Fokker was both hilarious and depressing. Curse you bad-word bot!
With Fokker in Teterboro, being the NYC area, it would have been good to mention the Dutch roots of America's largest city, originally called New Amsterdam. With the very colors, including the colors of the NY Mets coming from the Dutch flag.
Then at the end, it was capped off quite abruptly. We're talking about the aerospace company which flew the first human beings to the Moon. While in parallel, they flew the X-15, which led to the Space Shuttle. And then there were their majestic bombers which were descended from the B-25, culminating in the Mach 3 XB-70 Valkyrie, and the B-1 Bone.
Going back to what Anthony Fokker accomplished back during WWI, there one of his most famous inventions was figuring out a way to shoot machine guns without destroying your own propeller, the interrupter gear.
And I'm not sure why you opted to not mention Knute Rockne by name, the coach immortalized in the Ronald Reagan movie about winning one for the Gipper. The man who popularized the forward pass ironically dying while choosing to travel by air.
Great video. And in the future, we can expect a more comprehensive doc which covers these other huge accomplishments which were Anthony Fokker's legacy.
He was on the losing side of WWI. But with his if-you-can't-beat-em-join-em strategy, Fokker ended up on the winning side of WWII, Korea, Vietnam and the Cold War. Victory all the way to the Moon. Apollo 8 reached the Moon... the Lunar Sphere of Influence, on the 29th anniversary of Anthony Fokker's death.
Fun fact of the day: Holland isn't actually the name of the Netherlands, it refers to 2 provinces IN the Netherlands which used to be a single province named Holland, now named Noord Holland and Zuid Holland.
I would be interested in seeing a video about the differences in airspeed, climb rate and range between a standard issue fighter and the same model / engine converted to photoreconnaissance. Did they tune the engine for better performance at certain expected altitudes at the expense of poorer performance at others? Was the difference enough to make catching them significantly difficult?
It’s great to meet the Fokkers
I don't believe I have ever before heard a TH-cam creator say "but that's a story for another video--which I don't plan on making."
Actually, I respect that.
I have been a Fokker Aircraft employee between August of 1977 and April 1996 in the Netherlands, and although I switched to IT after that, my heart is still in aviation. I thought I knew everything there is to know about Anthony Fokker, because there was a time that his history was more or less folklore over here, but I never heard of what Greg uncovers here. Great stuff, and I learned something this morning! Thank you!
Thanks, it's nice to hear from someone who was there. It was a sad day when Fokker ended production of the F100.
Greg never fails’ to deliver.
First big airplane was an F27. I have a special place in my heart for the ugly fokker
It’s just a game Fokker
@@ndenise3460'Ugly'? You cad! 😉
Not just a technical expert, but a master of narrative storytelling as well.
Brief as they are, every story has a delightful " to be continued" standard that keeps me coming back for more.
When reading NACA information, I hear it in Greg's voice. Haha !
If Greg does not do the narration of Audio Books he is missing his calling.
Greg is easily the best on TH-cam for this type of content.
I think Greg makes the kind of videos HE would like to watch. THANK YOU GREG!
@@tomw9875he reminds me of some of the better teachers I had when I was in school.
Folker, Folker???? you've got to watch out for u toob "standards" I suppose
@@paulnutter1713 never attack someone for bad pronunciation because it means they learned it reading, something we should all do more of.
True, since there isn’t anyone else doing this type of content. His standards and level of detail push this into its own genre.
I love this channel so much because of how unafraid Greg is of getting SUPER pedantic and in-the-weeds with history. Thank you, sir.
Pedantic? More like knowledgeable I'd say...
@@Pikilloification I agree, but, personally, I have been called pedantic far too frequently for the infraction of being knowledgable to not brand it as a badge of honor. Therefore, I use it as that and recognize those I refer to in that manner as not being afraid to jump down rabbit holes of knowledge.
If you are making this distinction, I would imagine that you may have experienced the same.
I meant it as nothing but a badge of honor and recognition.
Sometimes pedantic works just fine!
You know I would absolutely not mind watching a full 3 hour deep dive into a particular aircraft or company's history. That stuff is fascinating to me, and id love to see it. And i think that sort of highly detailed technical exploration is where your channel shines.
I don't think you have to worry about keeping the video short, just saying. I think most of us are here for the long haul anyway!
So interesting. Had no clue about the Fokker link to North American. I remember feeling sad in the 1990's when Fokker closed down (Fuselage was made in Shorts, N. Ireland), but to know that the core of the mans business was actually Stateside, and produced the holy grail, has cheered me up immensely.
I'm addicted to Greg's Airplanes and Automobiles 😊
I can quit watching Greg whenever I want!
@@rich7787 Yeah, I tell that to myself as well.😉
Greg for President of the USA, he would have the place flying like a breeze in a year.
Haha
The simple fact that he was able to get all those planes and a train load of equipment out of Germany is a amazing feat in and of itself! I can’t even begin to imagine what that must have cost him? But it really shows his ability for organizing and logistics and those two things are absolutely needed when running any kind of large business operation of any kind but especially aircraft manufacturing! Just look at Kelly Johnson he also was great at that!
I mention this tentatively because this era is not my area of expertise: but what makes Fokker's feat even more improbable is that immediate post-war Germany, infrastructure-wise, was significantly broken.
Anthony Fokker actually specified the amount of bribe money he had to pay to pull this off. I don't recall what it was but it sounded like a lot, and it was paid in Dutch money because German currency had collapsed.
@@donaldelfreth553 Yes that provides some difficulties, but the chaos probably made something like this possible in the first place, as well as being a situation where people are far more likely to take bribes and look the other way. Look the other way for a considerable amount of time judging by the kit transported!
@@donaldelfreth553, no. Germany in 1918 was starving but not destroyed. The war was fought to the end beyond its borders, which is a difficulty for many.
Fokker literally lived in von Richthofen's Flying Circus, and was a close friend of Goering, their new chief. The main difficulty: one had to flee quickly, as in time commissions came to Germany to return to the owners from Belgium and France their property stolen by the Germans. And at the same time destroyed the aviation. Aviation technologies nobody needed them, except the USA, where they wanted to get the other part of innovations, French, Italian, British already in the USA.
@@donaldelfreth553 Another difficulty, now little looked at: there were severe restrictions on the entry of Germans into the United States. How fortunate that Fokker is Dutch and Schmüd was born in Austria.
In 1967 my family attended the EAA fly-in in Rockford, IL where we saw a North American P-64 perform acrobatic feats for the crowd. The plane had started life as a NA-68 built for the Royal Thai Air Force, but was instead transferred to the Army Air Corps and re-designated P-64, even though it was only used as an unarmed advanced trainer.
Well Fokk me! I never knew that.
Greg's choice of images are illuminating. For one to bring Inglewood home to us he showed a downtown shot (18.52) of a movie theatre, screening then, the movie "The Story of Dr Wassell". On a whim I checked it out.... Greg leads us to strange places. Cheers from Australia
I wish this was a three hour video, so that every thing could be covered. Great job fitting a huge amount of information in just 30 minutes.
Thanks, it could have been. The Eddie Rickenbacker part of the saga and effects of the F10 crash alone could have added another hour.
This is the most awesome airplane-nerd channel ever!
Great video as usual - fascinating content and great history lesson. You didn't go into any detail into HOW EXACTLY NAA/GM managed to design a plane in 6 months and put it into production so fast - that is an amazing achievement in itself. Sloan gives some indications in his autobiography, but the management skill of the company was awesome - comparable perhaps to the Manhattan Project at the same time/slightly later. In one of your other videos you show a comparison of price between your fave plane P-47 and the P51D, which was half the price for similar performance.
I didn't go into that stuff, because this was an Origins video. On the subject of favorite airplanes, either I have no favorite, or a lot of favorites, I can't really pick one.
Thanks for another great video! As a kid in the 50's and 60's, our dad was an industrial engineer working for Autonetics, a division on North American, in Anaheim, CA, which then got merged into Rockwell Corporation. Autonetics did navigation hardware for many projects, including the Minuteman missiles. I was in boot camp when we got word Rockwell's new fighter lost the competition with the Mc Donnell Douglas F15. Dad and 400 other engineers were laid off within 2 weeks. Nearly 10 years later, dad still resented it when I went to work for MDC. Life is strange.
When the military industrial consolidated strange path for the employees of those who got eaten by & buy. Some did well and some suffered. seems like a sift from being manufactured based where they were based to customer = Pentagon where Congess held the purse strings > lobbying. You were at the mercy or luck of.
This is amazing Business / Aviation / Military history! It's honestly far deeper down the rabbit hole than I'd prefer, but it's SO well done I had to watch all of it. I loved the P-51 as a teen WW2 nerd, and the snapshot of Fokker's yacht was superluminal 💙
A bunch of Aviation history I'd never heard. Thanks Greg!
Most underated TH-cam channel
@Greg’s Airplanes and Automobiles As a lifelong aviation enthusiast from the Netherlands, Fokker has always had a special place in my heart. I thought I knew much of the companies history (including the American branch and the repercussions of the crash that killed the football coach), but you pleasantly surprised me with this video. Who would have thought there was a direct link between the Mustang and Fokker. Never too old too learn, so thank you for that fantastic insight!
Read Wagner's book 'Mustang designer'. I can send it to you. There's a lot of detail in there from Schmued about this very thing.
And my Dutch aviation hero is Koolhoven. Since 1913. Fokker the organizer, Koolhoven the engineer, the visionary.
I'm from Russia, old.
I never knew this could be so damn fascinating...! Your photo choices don't simply illustrate events, but are super tasty and compelling. You know exactly what makes the topic interesting, and your enthusiasm and presentation communicate it so effectively.
One of your best Greg. I think I've watched it 3 times now. I love the background
1:25 Thanks for that tip. I got a beer before continuing the video 🍺
Paddy, I'm looking out for you.
Holy.... never thought North American and its planes were German origin. This is indeed a very interesting and quality vid.
More on Ed Schmued; He also designed the F-86, F-100, the P-82, Twin Mustang, and later for Northrop, the T-38/F-5. Love your channel.
Hi Greg, great video. A little background on myself, fellow ALPA Pilot and Anthony Fokker fanboy. Tony, a high school dropout, was to my knowledge one of aviation most financially successful early pioneers. I read that he filled his sailboat with cold hard currency, precious stones and gold and sailed it to the Netherlands from post armistice Germany. Subsequently was in effect gifted NVF (FOKKER HOLLAND) .Prior to the stock market crash of 1929 he sold of 40% of Atlantic aircraft to GM for 8 million dollars ( over 1.3 billion in today's dollars) whilst gaining the exclusive European sales and production rights to the dc2 and derivatives. Also his first wife was the niece of Hermann Goering (a close friend) along with Donald Douglas senior and Charley chaplain. And finally, yes the lineage is clear, Boeing to this day holds the type certificate to the Fokker super universal.
Thanks Mark, that's a great post.
Greetings …We are Guaranteed to learn something new every time Greg’s Channel has a new Video… Thanks Greg…
Thanks, I hope I don't let you down on this one.
Excellent, Greg, as usual. I enjoyed the corporate twists and turns, and the irony involved in the birth of the P-51 is hard to miss. Among the photos in my dad's collection is a head-on view of a parked P-51, so all you really see is the prop spinner and the landing gear, but dad liked to fly fast - that's why he went into experimental test-flying - and I wouldn't be surprised if he flew a Mustang or two at some point after the war. The video resonates with me personally, as well, as my first real stick time was in 2011 - a birthday gift from my son in the form of a half-hour in the front seat of a T-6. The Navy version was designated SNJ, and dad would certainly have flown one or more of those in advanced training before he was assigned to VF-19 and transitioned to the F6F before the squadron shipped out to the Pacific and their combat tour in 1944. I've since flown a Cessna 172 for a couple hours cross-country, but it's the T-6 experience that has really stuck with me. Dad went to work for McDonnell Aircraft after the war (his badge # was 78), and stayed there until he was killed on a test flight in 1951, on his 35th birthday.
o7
Thx for sharing, incl sad ending at the end. it does seem of the many pioneers of aviation, beyond the recognized heroes most are underappreciated / unnoticed. so it, goes, that's the way History is written. When it takes a Team to bring success.
If anything, I think there’s a bit of a neat parallel, in that the Fokker VII was so feared not because it was a superior performer, but because it was simply possible for a pilot to _use_ the performance already there without killing themselves
The P-51 wasn’t a “leaps and bounds” performer, but it combined a capable airframe with one that was readable and useable by the average pilot.
Hands down Greg's most thrilling and entertaining video, I know of. Less technical, more accessible. Usually enthousiastic comments from aviation connoiseurs. This one is geared towards a broader public of curious, should be massively advertised by TH-cam algo. I watched it in one go, and would have kept on for a lot more.
Genuine story telling talent at work there. Great naration, with that low, soothing voice. The stuff of top tier documentaries, Netflix or better.
Wow, thanks.
The irony of the North American being a GM company who's product, The P-51 Mustang, was one of the inspirations for one of their competitors most successful lines of cars. The Ford Mustang.
Yes, Ford could take advantage of the fact that nobody really knew the Mustang as essentially a G.M. product.
That last photo brought back a memory. Around 1968 I was at RAAF Richmond. A CAC Sabre flew down the strip than flew vertically until it was out of sight. Very beautiful airplane.
Fascinating. I knew Fokker built planes in the U.S, but had no idea that was the origin of North American.
What an illuminating video! I did not know any of this background to North American and the Fokker influence. Very impressive video, with a terrific use of archive materials.
I learned a lot with this video. I had no idea that North American had that lineage.
Greetings, this is Maurice, always happy to see your new videos!
I'll never forget the year at the Reno Air Races when I meet Ed Horkey.
He was kind enough to take time to talk about the P-51 design with me as we toured the pits.
Even then in the late 90s he was sharp as a tack and was able to explain the technical details to me in laymens terms that i could follow. I remember one thing he pointed out. Nature is the best place to find laminar flow. He used an example of the cross section of a specific fish. Also he seemed to impress upon me that the laminar flow wing was not as big a contributor to the mustangs performance as was the meredith effect from the cooling system design.
Yes, in those days, wind-tunnel models could achieve significant laminar flow while production aircraft couldn't. The virtually perfect wing profile required was beyond mass production techniques of the day. Even with a perfect wing profile, something as small as bug strikes or rain droplets are enough to disturb laminar flow.
The main advantage of the P51's wing profile was that its cross-section was relatively fat farther back (widest point roughly 40% from the front) which allowed significant fuel storage inside it. This helped give the Mustang its legendary long range. Many other aircraft, the Spitfire, for example, had relatively narrow wing cross-sections with the widest point closer to 25% of the cord. This left less room for fuel and, indeed the Spitfire didn't store any fuel in the wing.
The Spitfie did eventually store fuel in the wings.
For years racing plane designers had sought to eliminate conventional radiators to reduce drag. North American realized the radiator could be a source of thrust which compensated for its drag. Spitfires with their boxy underwing radiator did use a 2 dimensional venturi to reduce drag, but nothing like the full up ducted radiator on the P-51.
Great video Greg! I lived in Columbus Ohio and was familiar with the North American/Rockwell plant at Port Columbus airport. That plant produced P-51’s in the war years. The last project there before shutdown was the nacelles for the B-1 Lancer.
Sir Charles Kingsford Smith the Australian Aviator used a Fokker Tri Motor when he flew across the Pacific.
Yes, and I think it was a good choice, probably the best possible choice at the time.
What a great story! Thank you Greg, for all your hard (archival) work.
So one of the chief scourges of Hitler's Luftwaffe was born from a seed planted by the man whose airplanes had been the hard core of the Kaiser's air force. That's irony for you.
Fantastic. I had no idea about this and always wondered about the background of Edgar Schmued.
Good piece! Just on a trivia note; the American football coach killed in the 1931 Fokker tri-motor crash was Knute Rockne subject of the1940 bio-pic in which Ronald Reagan utters his immortal line,"Get one for the Gipper!".
I'm glad someone finally mentioned Knute by name. Before his untimely death in the plane crash, he was quite well known. By analogy, he might be called the Charles Lindbergh of football.
Greg: For a time, I was an assistant to the physicist who developed the throttle-back optimization scheme for the Atlas rocket, a NAA vehicle developed in California. Funny that NAA moved to Inglewood for its lower cost of doing business (19:06). Nowadays, manufacturers have been fleeing California for decades due to aggressive taxation & regulation, which has decimated the industrial base. Forty years ago GM had two huge manufacturing plants in the LA metro area. They're gone now, along with many others.
Yup, the state of California is trying to kill the geese that lay the golden eggs.
Also funny to hear about lower real estate costs in California, whereas now the real estate costs there are through the roof.
@@RedXlV - Tell me about it. But there's one good thing about that. There's no shortage of people (mostly Chinese, here in SoCal) who have more dollars than sense, and are glad to pay big bux to live here. Go figure. I guess they like the idea of the state controlling every aspect of life. So, those of us who are fixing to escape can sell, buy elsewhere (just about anywhere is less insane than this Marxist hellhole), and have some coin left over.
A+ video. Seriously, you deserve a PhD in history for your work.
Thank you.
Excellent overview Greg of NAA, in a pretty convoluted history pared down into 28 minutes! Well done.
Yes, it's quite complex, I skipped a lot of the minor players but I think I managed to cover the gist of it in under 30 mins.
Absolutely fantastic video Greg, always love watching you weave such a remarkable tapestry of history!
Another great video, Fokker, North American, Rockwell, and finally Boeing. What an interesting aviation evolutionary journey with so many great airplanes along the way. Now I know why the Ford Tri-motor is so similar to the Fokker.
I'd love to watch this tonight but I can't stay up that late so I'm watching the new Perun video.
I loved this one! I know much more about the period 1909 - 1965 than most people, yet had no idea of Fokker's involvement in the US aircraft industry outside of a couple of transport aircraft.
Excellent job, digging all this up and putting it together.
A short add regarding Fokker (Netherland) in the mid - late 1930‘s: Fokker built a quite successful fighter, the D. XXI and a heavy 2 engined fighter, the G.I. The trainer you mentioned built under license was a Bücker Bü 181, developed and built by Clemens Bücker at Rangsdorf (near Berlin), license built by Fokker and Zlin in Czechoslovakia during the war. BTW Zlin built several versions post war, Z. 181, Z.281 and Z.381, their only difference was the engine used. Zlin sold a license to Egypt, where they built the Heliopolis Gomhouria in several versions, again a Bü 181 with different engines for different subtypes, the last one using a Continental C-145 engine.
Fokker‘s first successful airplane built post war was a trainer, the S. 11.
Thanks for that good info.
very interesting - thanks.
One notable Fokker was the trimotor (exact model ?) named "Southern Cross" flown by Kingsford Smith, Ulm and Warner, making the first flight across the Pacific, from Oakland California to Brisbane Queensland, via Hawaii and Fiji, in 1928.
The original aircraft was restored and now displayed near Brisbane airport.
Great video, I hadn't associated North American with the B-25 and the F-86 even though I did know it but I am just a little disappointed that the XB-70 Valkyrie wasn't mentioned. A picture of it on the cover of one of my college textbooks drew me into my love of aircraft.
The XB-70 Valkyrie is still one of the most visually striking and impressive aircraft ever built...I dare say even more so than the SR-71. I always felt it should have gone into limited production..5 or 6 operational ones would have been good to have in the inventory...
What a great program. Very informative and educational. Thank you
Another great video, Greg there is no one that gets to the nuts and bolts of a topic like you do, keep up the great work.
Come for the engineering, stay for the corporate genealogy. Thanks, Greg!
Greg's channel: come for aircraft, stay for the history lesson.
I've heard that Pierre Sprey designed it...
Thanks for your amazing work!
Good one. And Sprey himself was the origin of that rumor!
Fascinating story. I have always thought that North American's airplanes were the most "stylish".
This video essay was EXTRAORDINARY - I am not an aviation enthusiast, so the entire story of Fokker was absolutely fascinating.
I'd like to see the flying cruise ship in the logo at 4:22, that's ambition.
Dutch person here. Fokker is easy to pronounce correctly. It rhymes with docker and locker.
As soon as you can say smoke and a pancake, I'll work on it.
@@GregsAirplanesandAutomobiles I grew up speaking English and I lived and worked for decades in English speaking countries so I'll take that challenge quite happily.
In English you will often hear foreign names mispronounced when pronouncing them correctly sounds too similar to a 'swear' or 'cuss' word. Fokker is one of these words.
@@billbolton That must be a *very* new type of squeamishness. No-one had a problem with correctly pronouncing Fokker in any of the English speaking countries that I lived in from the 1970s through to the early 2000s.
David, I think you may have missed my point.
Greg, thank you for your amazing videos, no other TH-camr goes into this much depth on specific aircraft. Mentioning systems and how they work. It’s super interesting!
Topic Suggestion: A forgotten aircraft that was built by North American Aviation in the late 40s through the early 50s was the AJ-Savage, a carrier based twin engine medium bomber, and the first US Navy aircraft designed from the ground up for the nuclear strike mission role.
A very interesting story , thank you for passing it along .
Excellent content as always Greg, very interesting and thanks for posting. A very minor correction that doesnt affect your presentation at all is the relative size of the Netherlands (41543 km2) vs Oaklahoma (177847 km2) makes Oaklahoma only 4.3 not 21 times bigger. But your point is valid 🙂
Thanks, I made the mistake there of confusing Holland with the Netherlands, which is ironic because as I said earlier I am aware of the difference. Oklahoma is 23 times bigger than Holland, about 4 times bigger than the Netherlands.
What a pleasant surprise this was, I really thought I knew everything there was to know about the P-51 mustang and its origins and you proved me wrong as you said in the beginning of the video. Excellent stuff
Thanks for another super interesting video Greg!
I was unaware of this particular part of Fokker's history on how it formed the roots of the North American Aircraft Company.
Somewhat related, this summer we saw the first flight of a rebuilt Fokker D.XXI here in The Netherlands.
Greg, your knowledge and dedication is impressive. Can't get enough of the content you provide. Please keep us TH-camrs fulfilled. Cheers 👍!
Fascinating history Greg! Thank you for your untiring work in this field of aviation. Please keep this kind of content coming. Cheers!
As usual, a hidden and little-known story behind the big story, I love the way of making ordinary subjects exciting
Greg knows how to bring the past to life. Brilliant, buddy.
This is absolutely fascinating. In all the years I've admired the p51 I never knew this.
Many thanks Greg! I've thoroughly enjoyed several of your videos, and after leaving this comment I'll be going to Patreon to become a supporter. On a strictly personal note, as a NAvion lover and former owner, I would have loved to hear a reference to North American's entry into civilian aviation immediately after WW II, but it probably wouldn't have been a good fit with this video. Thanks again!
Greg, this is your best video to date.
Don't forget the North American NAVION for general Aviation. Looked a lot like the p-51, and was the best flying plane I ever flew. RYAN aircraft bought the Navion in 47/48 and continued to build it under the Ryan Brand .
What a fun and engaging story. Thanks Greg!
It's interesting, I had just listened to a video from Rex's Hangar discussing the history of Douglas and he lightly covered that plane crash involving the football Coach. Very interesting to get the full context of that considering Douglas was a friend of Fokker.
I'm impressed how deep you got on that. I didn't know the Fokker connection or Edie Rickenbacker had a hand in NAA.
As an Australian love North American we even built our own variants of Mustangs and Sabres .
Excellent research. Enjoyable video.
You questioned why Ford got out of aviation. I understand from reading "The Arsenal of Democracy" , the reason Henry Ford wanted to get out of aviation, was that Edsel Ford really wanted to get into aviation in a big way, and Henry wanted Edsel to focus on the automotive and truck business.
Which was too bad, because of Edsel's production concepts, by the end of the war, the Willow Run Ford factory was completing a four engine heavy bomber every 42 minutes with very few items on the air trial punch list to be repaired before delivery.
Also Edsel was terminally ill by the later 1940's, so the dream of Ford Aviation died with Edsel.
Take care. I look forward to more of your videos.
Greg: Did you ever ask yourself, where did North American come from?
Me, an intellectual: North America, surely. Greg is slipping.
One of your best. Despite my many books on North American, they always begin after Kindleberger took the reins. The connection to Fokker is fascinating. Great video.
Those weren't Texans, those were Harvards, lol. Great video!! And for those not knowing, Havard is the name given to the Texan by Canada and the UK.
Thanks Greg. Your skills at presenting interesting, well judged, concise commentary is is perfect..
Perfect timing Greg. I just happened to be piddling around with the Harvard at our museum and wondering how North American managed to pull off the P51.
Thanks, I heard you guys have a big visitor from Germany headed to your museum. Say hi to him for me.
Fantastically detailed episode and yes, I deffo found out things I didn’t know. Thank you.
1/2 hour fly by... i always feel like Greg has something still left in the chamber when he's done. That's why i always come back. Knowledge is endless, but comprehensible ❤
I was excited to hear information of the GA-43. I had originally learned of it from the book Scale Airplane Drawings: Volume 1 from Paul Matt. I was intrigued by the early airliner's design, it had an interesting combination of modern (for the time) and anachronistic features. I'm glad to hear more of the story.
There is another principal happening for the P-51. Roy A. Liming lofted this aircraft using numeric methods that had major impacts on lofting around the world. I learned my trade from Liming's book "Practical Analytic Geometry with Applications to Aircraft" he published in the 1944. This book has copies of the actual lines and lofting plates used to design the p-51.
Wow. Excellent content Greg. Thank you for your dedication to this channel.
My dad was a self taught engineer in the fifty and sixties and did very well. Never wealthy but made a decent living.
You nailed it again. A hugely educational video.
Great story well told and yes I had also wondered where NAA came from and my favourite WWII fighter
You know Greg, I had no idea that GM owned North American until today let alone the connection to Fokker. Thanks for sharing this.
Excellent info.. From the triplane that ruled the skies of Germany in WWI, to the P-51, that helped the Allies win WWII in the skies again over Germany, is a strange twist of history.
Thank you Greg for once again giving me knowledge.
Interesting backstory in the company name origins. My grandfather & his brother worked @ NAA during the war effort on the Mustang & trainers in SoCal. I had no idea that Fokker aviation origins in engineering led up to the best Fighter NAA produced * P51 in all its design variants .
This was awesome. I had no idea that North American Aviation has its lineage from Fokker. Awesome content. The geek in me loves this.
I read a magazine article many years back that claimed Ford secretly sent a team of engineers into a hangar one night to measure every aspect of a Fokker Trimotor and this was supposedly the genesis for the Ford Trimotor.
Kinda like when supermarine sent someone to Germany to check out heinkel's wing
@@kenneth9874
A lot of leading edge engineering went into the Spitfire wing. Whats so interesting is the performance difference, which was negligible, between the Spitfire mk1 wing and the Bf109e wing despite being so different.
@@briancavanagh7048 yeah, Heinkel did a great job
Wow this was so well done and put together. Only problem was it was too short. Thank you!! 👏
This is a great video, I have also wondered where NA came from our if nowhere. It's ironic that the two best American interceptors of WW2 are from companies founded by a Russian and a Dutchman. Severski and Folker.