I remember a neighbour of ours a couple of decades ago who flew night fighters in the German air force during the war. He stated that just hearing Mosquitoes were in the area was enough to cause a shiver of terror up his spine.
Towards the end of the War, when the Luftwaffe had few remaining night fighter's, to attack the Mosquitos; the German crews couldn't even get a daytime rest, as hoards of Mosquitos dominated the Skies round the clock, and bombed their planes and Barracks on the Airfields too. It was reffered to as the Mosquito terror.
Guess where the Sitka spruce plywood came from....Mosquito Lake, Queen Charlotte Island BC Canada. Boeing still owns large stands of Sitka spruce there
@@ronmailloux8655 The plywood was stamped with MOSQUITO LAKE .....hmmmmmmmmmmmmmm Side note, I have 20' plus lengths of milled Sitka spruce....maybe someday I will do a wood plane! last one was aluminum.
@@flyinguy123 Fraser Mills was quite the lumber and plywood mill during and after the war. During ww2 raw logs were sent there and processed into timber and plywood . The plywood was then sent off back east or over seas for manufacturing.
At present, one of the large markets for sitka spruce is in the field of manufacturing guitars. One Canadian guitar company has it's own Sitka orchard.
@@ronmailloux8655 My mom worked doping the canvas at the Downsview Ontario DeHavelland plant. She said some nights she would come home woozy from the fumes. They didn’t wear the safety gear then that they do now.
For most versatile, I would include the Pe-2 and A-20. While neither was exceptional as a night fighter like the Mosquito, the A-20 did serve early on and eventually gave way to the P-61. The Mosquito has to be the greatest multi-role aircraft of WWII followed by the Ju-88.
Tucked away under a pile of rubbish in an old hanger being demolished, the moulds and many other items were found. Anyone who has built a model aircraft from balsa wood knows how weak it is, but sandwiched between layers of plywood it's an ideal 'filler'. I wonder where they got it from ? Lastly, it's so nice to hear an American not slagging off our tiny islands smaller than Texas. Great stuff mate - buy you a pint ?
It wouldn't have been the "wooden paddle" but the "plank padlle" or the "pine paddle" because in all its nicknames the noun and adjective started with the same letter.
Impressive light bomber, lethal fighter once they dropped their load, got rid of the weight. Country carpenters turned from chairs and tables into aeronautical craftsmen.
There was a drama TV series in the UK, called Pathfinders, in the 1970s I think. Then there is the David McCallum and Suzanna Nieve movie, Mosquito Squadron.
A wonderful documentary, though it's a great pity that the narrator was not English, as the pronunciation of some of the key words like Salisbury Hall and the like really do grate on English ears! lol can that be re-dubbed?
My grandfather was a navigator on Mozzies. He was in a pathfinder squadron. He didn't say much about his wartime experience other than dropping his cookies (4000lb incendiary bombs) over Germany. It is a beautiful aircraft and their is no better sound than a couple of Merlin engines.
Should of shown the actual attack in the Fjord they had Beaufighters with them. Absolutely nail biting. Love the aircraft along with Typhoon. Good job 👏i see you did show action. Absolutely awesome clips as well.
How about the Mossies that were painted in Civilian colours / decals , and flew regular Night trips to 'neutral' Sweden, with Top Secret paper's, Gold Coins, ( to payfor their High Class Ball Bearings ) usually supplied to the Nazis. And brought back, Downed Allied air crews, smuggled from occupied Norway ,to Sweden. The most important passenger, was Danish Atomic Scientist, Niels Bohr, who flew to Britain, and eventually, joined the international group of scientists, who built the first two Atomic Bombs ( Operation Manhattan ) in America. Top That !
What a pain in the ass the Mosquito must have been to the enemy. With its introduction nothing was unreachable or untouchable. Shipping, long distance targets, high accuracy bombing, anti-shipping, night fighter and at a pinch, fighter. People often compare the Mosquito and the P38. Its unnecessary. The former was designed as a bomber that could do many other things, the latter was designed as a fighter. If I had to fight WWII with only three aircraft, I'd choose the P51, the Mosquito and the Lancaster. The P51 for it's versatility as a fighter and long-range ability, the Mossie for it's versatility as stated, and the Lanc for its ability to carry pretty much any payload.
I think he said 400 mph . Don't forget it had engine's that were improved on . Like all aircraft they had so many different Mk i think it was up to mk16
Max speed was 415mph at 28,000 ft. It was faster than the FW-190 and bf-109. The Me-262 was considerably faster, but even so, finding a small plane travelling at nearly 400mph at 50-100ft, that had a very small radar signature was non trivial, and there were not enough Me-262s.
Air brakes on aircraft provide braking by offering resistance to the air flow, as opposed to air brakes on trains and trucks which are braking systems actuated by compressed air; isn't English a wonderful language, it is both quite flexible and quite vague at times. And, aircraft use the term air brakes for the brake systems which deploy in to the airflow since most aircraft also have brakes (usually hydraulic) on the landing gear wheels and those are usually simply referred to as brakes. And remember, English is the language where you drive on a parkway and park in a driveway.
The hope of the political prisoner. No wonder the uncle said it was his fave. WW2 aircraft. His Mom was guest of Gestapo and escaped, though I never heard a plane part.
Sorry but the story isn’t quite accurate. The plane wasn’t build in wood because of foresight in lack of metal. It was build of wood because there wasn’t any metal for an experimental air craft. There is quite a difference.
How much faster would it have been if the wings were swept back? Did the designers consider that or did they just lazily copy-and-paste other wing designs current at the time?
How much flight-tested research on swept wings was there in 1938 and 1939? How much in-service operational experience with the handling of swept wing military aircraft was there in 1938 and 1939? How well had the torsional loads on swept wings of wooden construction been tested by 1938 and 1939? Did the designers work within the existing state of the art for aircraft engineering engineering or did the designers magically divine future developments?
What planes were swept wing in 1938? to carry that much bomb load they correctly 'lazily' made what would deliver the goods, and it did. My dad always praised the mozzie when he was over in Germany fighting for our freedom, and a few of his french friends were happy they bombed the prison so they could escape. I didn't exist at the time, and do now thanks to mozzies destroying a very important rail link containing a train heading his way full of unfriendly Germans.
Churchill and the British didn't even have the decency to allow these brave Polish fighter pilots who Saved England to March in the Victory parade day in England. Because Churchill didn't want to insult Joseph Stalin. And the Most Decorated Military Unit in U.S. History was The 442nd Infantry Regiment (Japanese: And go look and see how the Americans treated them and their families. The British and Americans have no shame, indeed.
every thing we invent is a double edged sword unfortunately. The Chinese invented gunpowder to entertain, in the west we used it to make guns. Nuclear energy has the potential to supply unlimited power to the grid, or extinguish mankind in one big bang. Advanced medicine can save millions of lives or create a virus that cannot be beaten. Computer power has joined us together around the world, we can communicate visually in a split second, but AI has the power to stop civilization in it's tracks and take us back to the middle ages.
They had to withdraw the p38 from the European theatre, they couldn’t compete with the German single engined fighters, the Mosquito was much more versatile and had the lowest losses of any allied plane proving to be effective against all fighters but completely dominant in night operations. The Mosquito initially had problems in the far east which was eventually traced to problems with the composite glue. The glue was replaced and subsequently the Mosquito was available there but that theatre was mainly operated by the Americans and so was primarily p38 territory which could handle the inferior Japanese fighters.
Yhe only thing wrong with this beautiful and efficient plane is its name "Mosquito". Something more vibrant and in accordance with its characteristics would have been welcome, like "Eagle" or 'Fighting falcon" or something like that. But then again, the name "Tomcat" for the F 14 too was odd, have you ever seen a flying cat ?
Can't agree, Mosquito like the plane is aggressive through its continual attacks and to emphasis the fact after the large Canon was fitted came the added Tse Tse a sting like no other.
Are you not ashamed by seeing these pictures of the German cities it done to England but hold that slowly bringing 😅you many people who don’t want to work and you can get them away from a small island🎉
Click the link to watch more aircraft, heroes and their stories, missions: www.youtube.com/@Dronescapes
Thanks for this upload. I left a few comments. 👍
I remember a neighbour of ours a couple of decades ago who flew night fighters in the German air force during the war. He stated that just hearing Mosquitoes were in the area was enough to cause a shiver of terror up his spine.
Towards the end of the War, when the Luftwaffe had few remaining night fighter's, to attack the Mosquitos; the German crews couldn't even get a daytime rest, as hoards of Mosquitos dominated the Skies round the clock, and bombed their planes and Barracks on the Airfields too. It was reffered to as the Mosquito terror.
Guess where the Sitka spruce plywood came from....Mosquito Lake, Queen Charlotte Island BC Canada. Boeing still owns large stands of Sitka spruce there
My mother worked at West Fraser Mills in New West Minister B.C. during ww2 and probably laid down the Spruce plywood for the Mossy.
@@ronmailloux8655 The plywood was stamped with MOSQUITO LAKE .....hmmmmmmmmmmmmmm Side note, I have 20' plus lengths of milled Sitka spruce....maybe someday I will do a wood plane! last one was aluminum.
@@flyinguy123 Fraser Mills was quite the lumber and plywood mill during and after the war. During ww2 raw logs were sent there and processed into timber and plywood . The plywood was then sent off back east or over seas for manufacturing.
At present, one of the large markets for sitka spruce is in the field of manufacturing guitars. One Canadian guitar company has it's own Sitka orchard.
@@ronmailloux8655 My mom worked doping the canvas at the Downsview Ontario DeHavelland plant. She said some nights she would come home woozy from the fumes. They didn’t wear the safety gear then that they do now.
Night fighters were iconic combat fighters. None of today's electronics and surviving on the deck in the dark in enemy airspace.
Beautiful machine was the Mosquito
Overall best plane of WW2. Pity we didn't get the Hornet earlier.
The Hornet was Winkle Brown's favourite aircraft
If it was good enough for a legend, it's good enough for me.
Yeah it was a beast but came it bit late. I love the beaufighter as well it kicked arse
For most versatile, I would include the Pe-2 and A-20. While neither was exceptional as a night fighter like the Mosquito, the A-20 did serve early on and eventually gave way to the P-61. The Mosquito has to be the greatest multi-role aircraft of WWII followed by the Ju-88.
Tucked away under a pile of rubbish in an old hanger being demolished, the moulds and many other items were found. Anyone who has built a model aircraft from balsa wood knows how weak it is, but sandwiched between layers of plywood it's an ideal 'filler'. I wonder where they got it from ?
Lastly, it's so nice to hear an American not slagging off our tiny islands smaller than Texas.
Great stuff mate - buy you a pint ?
It’s not slagging off the Brits because all this content including the script is ripped off from British documentaries. Not an original word in it.
At 23:58 looks like Kåfjord , Alta, Norway against Tirpitz .
stories of chimneys taken home from the frontline was a testament to their rooftop raids
Chimney's ? I've heard of tree branches but ?
Should've been called the "wooden paddle" cause it was known for whooping ass 😆
It wouldn't have been the "wooden paddle" but the "plank padlle" or the "pine paddle" because in all its nicknames the noun and adjective started with the same letter.
I love the Mosquito more than any other aircraft. It's been that way for 50 years. 😊❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤😊
Impressive light bomber, lethal fighter once they dropped their load, got rid of the weight. Country carpenters turned from chairs and tables into aeronautical craftsmen.
👍
What amazing was its bomb load was equal to a heavy bomber lumbering along with 11 crew on board.
Max load for a Lance was 22,000 lbs (1 bomb, Grand Slam) so I doubt the Mossie could equal that however Mossies load was still impressive
I think he is talking about the light bomber called the B17 flying fortress
There was a drama TV series in the UK, called Pathfinders, in the 1970s I think.
Then there is the David McCallum and Suzanna Nieve movie, Mosquito Squadron.
Thanks!
🙏👍
A wonderful documentary, though it's a great pity that the narrator was not English, as the pronunciation of some of the key words like Salisbury Hall and the like really do grate on English ears! lol can that be re-dubbed?
Awesome plane, one of the best in WW2.
Name another, that achieved what the Mosquito did .
My grandfather was a navigator on Mozzies. He was in a pathfinder squadron.
He didn't say much about his wartime experience other than dropping his cookies (4000lb incendiary bombs) over Germany.
It is a beautiful aircraft and their is no better sound than a couple of Merlin engines.
Should of shown the actual attack in the Fjord they had Beaufighters with them. Absolutely nail biting. Love the aircraft along with Typhoon. Good job 👏i see you did show action. Absolutely awesome clips as well.
Thanks
Someone do a proper new vid on Mossie. Nobody ever mentions "F" for Freddie. The bomber with the most missions then crashed in propganda flight.
How about the Mossies that were painted in Civilian colours / decals , and flew regular Night trips to 'neutral' Sweden, with Top Secret paper's, Gold Coins, ( to payfor their High Class Ball Bearings ) usually supplied to the Nazis. And brought back, Downed Allied air crews, smuggled from occupied Norway ,to Sweden. The most important passenger, was Danish Atomic Scientist, Niels Bohr, who flew to Britain, and eventually, joined the international group of scientists, who built the first two Atomic Bombs ( Operation Manhattan ) in America. Top That !
Very annoying with the pronunciation of place names
What a pain in the ass the Mosquito must have been to the enemy. With its introduction nothing was unreachable or untouchable. Shipping, long distance targets, high accuracy bombing, anti-shipping, night fighter and at a pinch, fighter.
People often compare the Mosquito and the P38. Its unnecessary. The former was designed as a bomber that could do many other things, the latter was designed as a fighter.
If I had to fight WWII with only three aircraft, I'd choose the P51, the Mosquito and the Lancaster. The P51 for it's versatility as a fighter and long-range ability, the Mossie for it's versatility as stated, and the Lanc for its ability to carry pretty much any payload.
Yeah Goering wss complaining every cabinet maker could build a awesome aircraft
15:35 - I am right in saying each Mozzie had two different Merlin engines, one normal and one contra-rotating, for flight control balance?
Hi, I think it's the same engine, but a different prop gearbox, to stop torque steer I suppose, regards Daz
No, the propellers both rotated the same direction.
@@barrymiscampbell6547 Hi, thanks for that, I was confused with P38 lightning! I'm such a plonker, derrrr🙄
A developmental model experimented with a contra-rotating set up but it wasn't pursued into production models.
@@barrymiscampbell6547There are at least two instances in the film clearly showing contra-rotating propellers.
“The anti-shipping formations were cunningly missed…” “the rocket elbow of the mosquito” I mean wtf…
Ch-53 if you please.
I never hear how fast it was just that it was fast whats the speed
I think he said 400 mph . Don't forget it had engine's that were improved on . Like all aircraft they had so many different Mk i think it was up to mk16
Max speed was 415mph at 28,000 ft. It was faster than the FW-190 and bf-109.
The Me-262 was considerably faster, but even so, finding a small plane travelling at nearly 400mph at 50-100ft, that had a very small radar signature was non trivial, and there were not enough Me-262s.
How are air brakes hydraulically operated?
Your thinking of air brakes on heavy trucks or other HD equipment
Air brakes on aircraft provide braking by offering resistance to the air flow, as opposed to air brakes on trains and trucks which are braking systems actuated by compressed air; isn't English a wonderful language, it is both quite flexible and quite vague at times. And, aircraft use the term air brakes for the brake systems which deploy in to the airflow since most aircraft also have brakes (usually hydraulic) on the landing gear wheels and those are usually simply referred to as brakes. And remember, English is the language where you drive on a parkway and park in a driveway.
We had cameras in our Canberra bombers in the Rhodesian Air Force.
Put the bombs in the front door😅
ONE BADASS PLANE😊
Beaufighter as well its a beast had 10 guns on it.
"We put the bombs through the front door"
punching holes in subs with the 57mm auto cannon, such fun
The hope of the political prisoner. No wonder the uncle said it was his fave. WW2 aircraft. His Mom was guest of Gestapo and escaped, though I never heard a plane part.
Totally British. Well done ole CHAP'S. Regards Albow in DOVER UK :o)
4:30 those eyebrows
Unlike the Famous Spitfire the Mosquito did it's job and brought it's pilots home to fly another sortie 😊
My Gramps flew the DH-98 Mossie in the RCAF. A real man's aircraft .
👍👍
😂🎉
I see she bears a stricking resemblance to the American connie, oops I meant the other way round
A late WW1 German fighter plane was called "Albatros" and the Mosquito may have come from the civilian aircraft of that name.
Sorry but the story isn’t quite accurate. The plane wasn’t build in wood because of foresight in lack of metal. It was build of wood because there wasn’t any metal for an experimental air craft. There is quite a difference.
How much faster would it have been if the wings were swept back? Did the designers consider that or did they just lazily copy-and-paste other wing designs current at the time?
How much flight-tested research on swept wings was there in 1938 and 1939? How much in-service operational experience with the handling of swept wing military aircraft was there in 1938 and 1939? How well had the torsional loads on swept wings of wooden construction been tested by 1938 and 1939? Did the designers work within the existing state of the art for aircraft engineering engineering or did the designers magically divine future developments?
@@scottfw7169Probably very little, since aircraft speeds had not yet reached a point where swept wings were useful.
What planes were swept wing in 1938? to carry that much bomb load they correctly 'lazily' made what would deliver the goods, and it did. My dad always praised the mozzie when he was over in Germany fighting for our freedom, and a few of his french friends were happy they bombed the prison so they could escape. I didn't exist at the time, and do now thanks to mozzies destroying a very important rail link containing a train heading his way full of unfriendly Germans.
Churchill and the British didn't even have the decency to allow these brave Polish fighter pilots who Saved England to March in the Victory parade day in England. Because Churchill didn't want to insult Joseph Stalin. And the Most Decorated Military Unit in U.S. History was The 442nd Infantry Regiment (Japanese:
And go look and see how the Americans treated them and their families. The British and Americans have no shame, indeed.
If kamikaze had this tech...
Just thinking that my country man had anidea to make a fighter, bomber war plain out of plywood? He hadto be Polish, no?
And it took Br't Ish to do it. Splendid combination ole chaps.
Composite wonder
He just said "Germanese".
The newest addition to the North Korean Air Force
your behind the times there a bit. NK are supplying arms to Russia to help them with the Ukraine war, no mozzies flying around over there I think!
So sad when our human genius is used to destroy each other.
Remember the technology came from peaceful designs.
“Diplomacy without arms is like music without instruments.” - Frederick the Great...
every thing we invent is a double edged sword unfortunately. The Chinese invented gunpowder to entertain, in the west we used it to make guns. Nuclear energy has the potential to supply unlimited power to the grid, or extinguish mankind in one big bang. Advanced medicine can save millions of lives or create a virus that cannot be beaten. Computer power has joined us together around the world, we can communicate visually in a split second, but AI has the power to stop civilization in it's tracks and take us back to the middle ages.
Only the british
still flying today now its called the A10 ?? yes
Awful computerised commentary, ruining excellent archive footage.
P 38 was faster
So ? Let me guess you a yank and will say you saved us . 😅
They had to withdraw the p38 from the European theatre, they couldn’t compete with the German single engined fighters, the Mosquito was much more versatile and had the lowest losses of any allied plane proving to be effective against all fighters but completely dominant in night operations. The Mosquito initially had problems in the far east which was eventually traced to problems with the composite glue. The glue was replaced and subsequently the Mosquito was available there but that theatre was mainly operated by the Americans and so was primarily p38 territory which could handle the inferior Japanese fighters.
Yhe only thing wrong with this beautiful and efficient plane is its name "Mosquito". Something more vibrant and in accordance with its characteristics would have been welcome, like "Eagle" or 'Fighting falcon" or something like that. But then again, the name "Tomcat" for the F 14 too was odd, have you ever seen a flying cat ?
Apt if you ask me. Stings and the most deadly of insects.
Can't agree, Mosquito like the plane is aggressive through its continual attacks and to emphasis the fact after the large Canon was fitted came the added Tse Tse a sting like no other.
Are you not ashamed by seeing these pictures of the German cities it done to England but hold that slowly bringing 😅you many people who don’t want to work and you can get them away from a small island🎉