I would also point out that the recording *in no way reveals* how LOUD it is, they are absolutely incredible. Very mellow, but louder than you can possibly imagine.
More than half a century ago, when I was in high school, we had a "science" assembly in the gym that was conducted by a former science teacher from our school. Maybe it was NSA or NASA or something (we had a lot of these things in Maryland in the 1960s), I can't recall. Well the "finale" of his demonstration show was a ram jet that he had mounted to a stand. He gave his patter and then he set off that jet and it went on for about 10 seconds. I think my ears bled. It was the loudest noise (in a gym, no less) that I have ever heard in my life before or since. After the screaming had died down, we walked out of the gym VERY quietly. I passed my principal on my way out. He had a look of fire and brimstone on his face. Needless to say, former science teacher was never invited back.
Es ist immer wieder faszinierend was der menschliche Geist hervorbringt, erschreckend jedoch wofür die Dinge verwendet werden. Diese Geräusch hat viele Menschen vor langer Zeit in Angst und Schrecken versetzt. Technisch ist es an Einfachheit in der Konstruktion ein Hammer.
Duddel Bag ( Brumm Käfer), nannten es die Engländer als im Sommer '44 als die ersten V-1 Flugbomben mit diesem Antrieb über Südengland und London auftauchen. Militärhistorisch muss gesagt werden das dieses Gerät die erste funktionierende "Cruise Missale" der Weltgeschichte war.
Da stimme ich Ihnen zu. Es ist halt so. Wenn der Mensch Waffen entwickeln kann, ist er unheimlich kreativ. Wobei ich natürlich nicht vom reinen Triebwerk spreche.
German ingenuity at its finest 💪 The jet engine was developed simultaneously by the British too, but the german ones were far better, their planes significantly faster too, and it was a coaxial jet engine, compared to the british one. Frank Whittle said he respected his co-inventor
As a science class helper I had to start up a desk top size pulse jet at the end of class I disliked it very much because it was so ungodly LOUD !! You can’t wait to shut it off !!!
...indeed, it sucks its own flame backward into the engines combustion chamber to reignite the following load of ignitable fuel/air mix. In fact, that's the way it works. 👍🍻🤘
@@kweetniet1103 no it’s not. It’s not sucking its own flame. Pulse engines on each cycle push hot gases out of even the intake. The hot gas that remains in the chamber is what ignites the fuel air mixture . The atomised fuel ignites when contacting the hot gases Not flames. It’s not sucking the flame back in. That’s an illusion due to the wave of a vacuum being formed after each ignition:
I used to build little pulsejets and scrapyard-turbines back in the 90s, but I always dreamed of building an Argus replica ... I drew up a quarter scale version using miniture reed-plates decades ago, but never got round to actually building it (no idea if would work directly scaled down, but should be close). I'm amazed no one ever did it as far as I know.
A V1 killed my grandmothers aunt and cousin during the war. I think the v1 was far more scary than the V2, although the V2 made a much bigger explosion and crater. When you heard the V1 engine stop, you knew it was going to drop down somewhere close by.
They had about the same mass of high explosive but because of its velocity, the V-2 tended to bury itself in the ground before exploding, so the V-1 did more damage.
@@TheRealNeill It's crazy if they used the same power of explosives. I've seen both a v1 and a v2 at the imperial war museum in London, and the v2 is fkn huge lol. Over my local park there was a manor house that was damaged from a v2 that landed maybe 400 meters from the house. It apparently caused a crack all the way up the house from top to bottom at that distance. There is a small crater still remaining (about the size of a doodlebug crater) but the huge crater from the blast was filled in back in the early 50's I believe. I saw a huge crater on a Patrick Lancaster video in Russia where a Ukrainian tochka u rocket had hit a farmers field and i think it was a similar size to the craters the v2's used to make.
Yeah I think the V1 was more of a psychological weapon then a destructive one. It obviously packed a punch but same as the Stukas air siren it scares the living crap out of anyone hearing it
Die Grundlage aller Abgasgeladenen 2 Takt Motoren ❤😁👍. Sehr schön,das sich jemand mit dem Pulsstraltriebwerk befasst und es der Öffentlichkeit zugänglich macht 😁.
Warum nutzte die V1 keine 2 Takt Motoren? Scheinen ja billig zu sein. Bei 4 Takt Motoren schmelzen die Auslassventile. Beim 2 Takter müsste die Schlitze an einer Stell liegen, wo der Kolbenring schnell drüber rutscht, sodass der und der Kolben zumindest nur kurz im heißen Abgaß-Strom liegen. Unterdruck vom Auspuff und Überdruck vom Fan spülen dann die letzte Hitze raus.
@@DuDarfstMichSiezen genau. Nagel mich nicht drauf fest,aber bis zu dem Zeitpunkt, als Kaaden den Resonanzkörper für sich und die 2 Takt Motoren entdeckt hat,waren die 2 Takter nicht "schwach" auf der Brust,aber eben lang nicht so Leistungsfähig.
the sound is scary sure , what scared the people of Britain the most was when the sound stopped , it meant it reached its destination and would plummet
Vor 70 Jahren haben mein Vater & Onkel Harald diese Triebwerke gebaut fuer Antrieb der Fessel flugmodelle. Im Grossraum Fulda war der Laerm oefters zu hoeren.
I had the little "toy" Dynajet ". I ran it on petrol. Tried Propane gas later. It worked but not too well. It was fun but we need one of these beasts !
Sehr geiler Nachbau, vor allem das Klappenregister 😀! Hab mal sowas in Klein gebaut, aus der "Hobby", wenn das einem noch was sagt 👍 Lausitz ist leider zu weit von mir, kommt doch Mal auf den "Brazzeltag" nach Speyer mit dem Ding 😀😀😀!! Da geht's auch so ab 😉
Der Sound einer V1 ist einfach Unschlagbar. Im Flugmodell einmal live miterlebt. Die Vögel in der Umgebung hatten so eine Panic, das sie per Sturzflug in der der Hecke Schutz suchten.
Crazy rocket man has me used to one touch operation! This video reminds me how much science goes into the art and that Mr Maddox is the absolute master of the craft!
@@A.G.798 Das weiß ich leider nicht, aber eigentlich hatte er mit Sprengstoff nix zu tun. Er war Elektriker, habe letztens sein Helm mit den 2 Blitzen gefunden.
Sorry that your Opa didn't receive our return deliveries. The problem is that they didn't all go to the same place - Dresden, Hamburg, Essen, Munich, the returns were a little more "widespread" than your London trips...perhaps your Oma remembers them better than Opa does?
Cool, das ist Geschichte und ich kannte jemanden der das mit gemacht hatte,später sogar Modelle mit einzelnen und doppeltes Triebwerk ausgestattet. Die sind dann auch immer mit ihren Modellen auf Schows geflogen ...
Herrlicher Krach !! Die Ringflammen am Anfang sind ja wohl Spitze. Später dann im kontinuierlichen Lauf sieht man die Frequenz, mit der der Schub zu- und abnimmt. Die Flamme schießt erst durch und fächerst sich weiter hinten auf, dann kommt sie näher und expandiert schließlich unmittelbar hinter der Mündung. Dadurch entsteht dort Unterdruck, der die nächsten Verbrennungen wieder normal ablaufen läßt, bis dann das ganze sich wiederholt. Die Verbrennung beginnt sich selbst zu blockieren - zumindest auf dem gezeigten Betriebspunkt. Aus meiner Sicht müßte der Konus schlanker und das Endrohr entsprechend kürzer sein, damit nach hinten der Widerstand geringer wird. Für das Flammenspiel gibt es jedenfalls 10 Extrapunkte.
Love the juxtaposition of beer, III Reich pulsejet, and leaf-blower starting apparatus.
Right out of Monty Python.
thats just an average german day out ;p
A Makita no less lmao
The two trolls make it even more absurd.
@@notaboutit3565This Makita Leafblower is Made in Germany.
@@jederwieerwillabersojanuni3087 At the Dolmar factory?
I'm very impressed, the sound is incredible.
i love you videos
ja bayerisch ist schon was schönes
That has to be one of the greatest and most haunting sounds ever. The deadly drone of a pulse jet.
My grandparents used to talk about the buzz bombs over London. I’ve been fascinated with this sound since
Now we've got lawnmower engines
I would also point out that the recording *in no way reveals* how LOUD it is, they are absolutely incredible. Very mellow, but louder than you can possibly imagine.
it was called a doodle bug and the most frightening bit was when it cut out and there was complete silence just before the explosion.
see "Brazil" movie.
Taking "hold my beer" to an entirely new level... 🍺
More than half a century ago, when I was in high school, we had a "science" assembly in the gym that was conducted by a former science teacher from our school. Maybe it was NSA or NASA or something (we had a lot of these things in Maryland in the 1960s), I can't recall. Well the "finale" of his demonstration show was a ram jet that he had mounted to a stand. He gave his patter and then he set off that jet and it went on for about 10 seconds. I think my ears bled. It was the loudest noise (in a gym, no less) that I have ever heard in my life before or since. After the screaming had died down, we walked out of the gym VERY quietly. I passed my principal on my way out. He had a look of fire and brimstone on his face. Needless to say, former science teacher was never invited back.
Es ist immer wieder faszinierend was der menschliche Geist hervorbringt, erschreckend jedoch wofür die Dinge verwendet werden. Diese Geräusch hat viele Menschen vor langer Zeit in Angst und Schrecken versetzt.
Technisch ist es an Einfachheit in der Konstruktion ein Hammer.
Es benötigt viele Anstrengungen, um ein EINFACHES funktionierendes Produkt zu entwickeln!
Duddel Bag ( Brumm Käfer), nannten es die Engländer als im Sommer '44 als die ersten V-1 Flugbomben mit diesem Antrieb über Südengland und London auftauchen. Militärhistorisch muss gesagt werden das dieses Gerät die erste funktionierende "Cruise Missale" der Weltgeschichte war.
Da stimme ich Ihnen zu.
Es ist halt so.
Wenn der Mensch Waffen entwickeln kann, ist er unheimlich kreativ.
Wobei ich natürlich nicht vom reinen Triebwerk spreche.
German ingenuity at its finest 💪
The jet engine was developed simultaneously by the British too, but the german ones were far better, their planes significantly faster too, and it was a coaxial jet engine, compared to the british one.
Frank Whittle said he respected his co-inventor
As a science class helper I had to start up a desk top size pulse jet at the end of class I disliked it very much because it was so ungodly LOUD !! You can’t wait to shut it off !!!
The frequency of the camera and jet is awesome with the way it looks like the exhaust flames are getting sucked into the jet
...indeed, it sucks its own flame backward into the engines combustion chamber to reignite the following load of ignitable fuel/air mix. In fact, that's the way it works. 👍🍻🤘
@@waldundwiesenandi4079no that’s not how it works.
@@damedusa5107 thats literaly how a puls jet works...
@@kweetniet1103 no it’s not. It’s not sucking its own flame. Pulse engines on each cycle push hot gases out of even the intake. The hot gas that remains in the chamber is what ignites the fuel air mixture . The atomised fuel ignites when contacting the hot gases Not flames. It’s not sucking the flame back in. That’s an illusion due to the wave of a vacuum being formed after each ignition:
A magnificent replica! Great job and even better with good beer 🍺 👍
replicating a Nazi bomb power unit?
Germans use them as beer heaters, because they like drinking warm beer 🤢
We're going start this pulse jet...hold my beer 😁
@@PeterNGloorGerman, the vast majority weren't members of the Nazi party 😎
"Nazi bomb power unit"🤡 bruh its a pulse jet engine, calm tf down @@PeterNGloor
Really cool to see the rolling shutter show the phases of the exhaust. Pretty neat!
It's not rolling shutter, camera actually has global shutter, framerate is pretty close to engine frequency so it oscillates
I used to build little pulsejets and scrapyard-turbines back in the 90s, but I always dreamed of building an Argus replica ... I drew up a quarter scale version using miniture reed-plates decades ago, but never got round to actually building it (no idea if would work directly scaled down, but should be close). I'm amazed no one ever did it as far as I know.
A V1 killed my grandmothers aunt and cousin during the war. I think the v1 was far more scary than the V2, although the V2 made a much bigger explosion and crater. When you heard the V1 engine stop, you knew it was going to drop down somewhere close by.
V2 was a balistic missile, you did not hear it until it exploded.
@@Some_Guy6 Yeah sorry about that, I mean when you heard the v1 engine stop lol. Edited now though
They had about the same mass of high explosive but because of its velocity, the V-2 tended to bury itself in the ground before exploding, so the V-1 did more damage.
@@TheRealNeill It's crazy if they used the same power of explosives. I've seen both a v1 and a v2 at the imperial war museum in London, and the v2 is fkn huge lol. Over my local park there was a manor house that was damaged from a v2 that landed maybe 400 meters from the house. It apparently caused a crack all the way up the house from top to bottom at that distance. There is a small crater still remaining (about the size of a doodlebug crater) but the huge crater from the blast was filled in back in the early 50's I believe.
I saw a huge crater on a Patrick Lancaster video in Russia where a Ukrainian tochka u rocket had hit a farmers field and i think it was a similar size to the craters the v2's used to make.
Yeah I think the V1 was more of a psychological weapon then a destructive one. It obviously packed a punch but same as the Stukas air siren it scares the living crap out of anyone hearing it
Die Grundlage aller Abgasgeladenen 2 Takt Motoren ❤😁👍. Sehr schön,das sich jemand mit dem Pulsstraltriebwerk befasst und es der Öffentlichkeit zugänglich macht 😁.
Warum nutzte die V1 keine 2 Takt Motoren? Scheinen ja billig zu sein. Bei 4 Takt Motoren schmelzen die Auslassventile. Beim 2 Takter müsste die Schlitze an einer Stell liegen, wo der Kolbenring schnell drüber rutscht, sodass der und der Kolben zumindest nur kurz im heißen Abgaß-Strom liegen. Unterdruck vom Auspuff und Überdruck vom Fan spülen dann die letzte Hitze raus.
@@ArneChristianRosenfeldt googel mal Walter Kaaden und Wernher von Braun.
@@DuDarfstMichSiezen kurz bevor der Auslassschlitz schließt, fließt Abgas zurück und erhöht den Druck.
@@DuDarfstMichSiezen genau. Nagel mich nicht drauf fest,aber bis zu dem Zeitpunkt, als Kaaden den Resonanzkörper für sich und die 2 Takt Motoren entdeckt hat,waren die 2 Takter nicht "schwach" auf der Brust,aber eben lang nicht so Leistungsfähig.
@@DuDarfstMichSiezen Zwang auf dem Drehmoment Maximum zu stehen. Roller haben deshalb Gummiband CVT.
Love it!. Drinking beer whilst getting that beast to run!. 🙂🍺
Hold my beer and watch THIS!
...original german. 😂❤
Way up there on the list of wildest sounding engines/motors.
Manche Dinge sind einfach nur cool. Echt ein geiles Teil. Danke für den Clip!
great video, but my grandpa who is from london is hiding under the table when this video plays
the sound is scary sure , what scared the people of Britain the most was when the sound stopped , it meant it reached its destination and would plummet
cool toy! Is it louder than a Top Fuel Dragster?
I love the flame circles.
Klasse!! Toller Sound!!
Wahnsinn... Gänsehaut pur 😮😊
Absolut genial.
Vor 70 Jahren haben mein Vater & Onkel Harald diese Triebwerke gebaut fuer Antrieb der Fessel flugmodelle. Im Grossraum Fulda war der Laerm oefters zu hoeren.
I had the little "toy" Dynajet ". I ran it on petrol. Tried Propane gas later. It worked but not too well. It was fun but we need one of these beasts !
Absolutely amazing.
Boy, it looks cold there.
Looks like a great day out though. 🙏🇦🇺
Love how they drink some beer before igniting it. 🍻 Don't think I've ever seen anything shoot out a ring of fire before. So cool!
Beer, the best fuel ever !.
Greetings from the UK.
The most German video on TH-cam 😂
impressed by stability, how did they achieve this?
That is really cool. I saw a video of a test once, one of these attached to a biplane.
Greetings from America! Das ist wunderbar!
Isso é para novas Missões espaciais? 🎉🐸🎁🙌👍
I have an idea, let's secure our cannon to the ground with tent pegs. Brilliant Clark!
I'm always fascinated by the last-ditch fighters on the drawing board, at the war's end, that were going to be powered by Angus As 014 pulse-jets.
Mein Opa ist damit am Fahrrad dran immer zur Schule gefahren. Vorläufer zum heutigen E-Bike halt gewesen.
So freakin cool!!!!
Man I wish I could've been there!
Bravo , Klasse , Deutsche Technik !!😅
Cool pulsejet’s work.Looks like we have rocket + turbo
Bravo svaka cast ja glasam za gasni top samo napred
Beste Werkstattheizung👌
Sehr geiler Nachbau, vor allem das Klappenregister 😀!
Hab mal sowas in Klein gebaut, aus der "Hobby", wenn das einem noch was sagt 👍
Lausitz ist leider zu weit von mir, kommt doch Mal auf den "Brazzeltag" nach Speyer mit dem Ding 😀😀😀!! Da geht's auch so ab 😉
das fehlt DEFINITIV auf dem BRAZZELTAG in Speyer!
Mit so einer Lautstärke ist man leider bei Massenveranstaltungen nicht gern gesehen 🤣. #DerPulsoTriebwerker
the most frighting sound ever...the V1 Buzz Bomb.
Awesome! How many pounds of thrust?
Herrlich, erstma mitm Bierchen anstossen, dann ein V1 Triebwerk starten.
Was kanns schöneres geben?
Ist halt wie grillen 👍😂
It sounds amazing
Der Sound einer V1 ist einfach Unschlagbar. Im Flugmodell einmal live miterlebt. Die Vögel in der Umgebung hatten so eine Panic, das sie per Sturzflug in der der Hecke Schutz suchten.
😂
The people in London where in a panic when they stopped hearing the engine of the v1, a weapon designed to kill innocent civilians
Du meinst es waren Stukas ? 😳
@@Carrot-BOT auch die aber v1 hatte dieses Triebwerk auch als erster marschflugkörper
Bestes Produkt-Placement - Makita-Heissluftgebläse zum vorheizen des Pulstriebwerks !
All it needs now is the fuselage and wings plus the take off ramp!
Nice fab work too!
Good to see plenty of drinking was involved.
beer and pulse jets baby!
Beer and jets , wonderful combination.
Bob Maddox has built a few valved pulsejets. Look him up here on TH-cam. He powers all kinds of vehicles with his standard pulsejets.
Crazy rocket man has me used to one touch operation! This video reminds me how much science goes into the art and that Mr Maddox is the absolute master of the craft!
I've been a fan of Bob, for years! Quite a guy! @@nathanieljames7462
Einfach nur geil😂🤩😍👍👍👍👍
is that 200kg thrust static?..
Mein Opa hat immer Modellflugzeuge damit nach London befördert, kamen nur leider nie zurück.
Ob es daran lag, daß dein Großvater dieses "Modellflugzeug" mit Sprengstoff beladen hat?
@@A.G.798 Das weiß ich leider nicht, aber eigentlich hatte er mit Sprengstoff nix zu tun. Er war Elektriker, habe letztens sein Helm mit den 2 Blitzen gefunden.
ja, so laughable! first cruise missiles are SUCH a joke!
@AgentPipapo
🧐🤓😜😂🤣😂🤣😂
Sorry that your Opa didn't receive our return deliveries. The problem is that they didn't all go to the same place - Dresden, Hamburg, Essen, Munich, the returns were a little more "widespread" than your London trips...perhaps your Oma remembers them better than Opa does?
Cool, das ist Geschichte und ich kannte jemanden der das mit gemacht hatte,später sogar Modelle mit einzelnen und doppeltes Triebwerk ausgestattet. Die sind dann auch immer mit ihren Modellen auf Schows geflogen ...
THAT FIRE RING WAS AWESOME ! ...
Жители Лондона испытывают приступ ностальгии под этот звук ))
У них Тама есть colinfurze 😂, недает соседям покоя
А немцы, улыбаясь и попивая пивко, произносят:
"Можем повторить ..." :-))
Geil! Bringt Ihr das mit nach Füchtorf? Gruß Stefan
Have a beer before firing up the pulsejet, I love it! So German.
IMPRESSIVE ! I watched an RC plane that was propelled by this pulsejet but it was a quarter of that size
Puls triebwerk. Deswegen dieser sound 😊
отличное шоу ! какое интересное хобби у людей !!!
Kumpel hat das auf dem Dorf im wohnpark gemacht. Erst etliche fehlzündungen. Aber dann ging es ab
Everything runs better with beer!
Excellent shot!
Hey England, remember this sound?
Sehr tolles Video. Aber der Rocketman aus den Staaten ist noch verrückter.
Thats so cool
Herrlicher Krach !! Die Ringflammen am Anfang sind ja wohl Spitze. Später dann im kontinuierlichen Lauf sieht man die Frequenz, mit der der Schub zu- und abnimmt. Die Flamme schießt erst durch und fächerst sich weiter hinten auf, dann kommt sie näher und expandiert schließlich unmittelbar hinter der Mündung. Dadurch entsteht dort Unterdruck, der die nächsten Verbrennungen wieder normal ablaufen läßt, bis dann das ganze sich wiederholt. Die Verbrennung beginnt sich selbst zu blockieren - zumindest auf dem gezeigten Betriebspunkt. Aus meiner Sicht müßte der Konus schlanker und das Endrohr entsprechend kürzer sein, damit nach hinten der Widerstand geringer wird. Für das Flammenspiel gibt es jedenfalls 10 Extrapunkte.
First impression is that Wile E. Coyote will walk into view and strap it on his back.
Mega geil
Really cool in a serious way.
Looks like the thrust is very small. Was it really able to puth V-1 in the flight?
Impressive, danke!
I think you reinvented the V1 engine
PULSOJATO USADO NAS BOMBAS V1 👍👍👏👏👏👏👏👏👏 🇧🇷
the quintessence of Germans - quality work and quality beer
and of course order and cleanliness
Like the fire rings!!
DIe Flamme sieht so geil aus ey... :O
Taki dźwięk słyszeli zapewne londyńczycy kiedy rakieta V1 zbliżała się do ich miasta..🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀🚀
It was a sound they grew fond of……… when it stopped they were unhappy…….. 🇬🇧💥
looks like an awsome mens club, now to add a grill top to that jet
I remember hearing them when was little, in London.....
OH BOY
My dad was in London 1944, he heard them and saw one fly over, cut out drop and explode. The German atrocities were many.
Das ist klasse!
Nice. Any build videos?
Why does it look like it's sucking flames into it? That's amazing
That has to do with that pulse principle. It was not a jet engine with a fan that blows air in constantly.
I like it built a smaller version many years ago great fun in a aircraft radio control.
wunderbar!
SUPERB - FEUER!!!! Nan and my parents experienced these first hand in WW2 one landed 3 doors down they were in te shelter!
The spirit of Peenemunde 1944 is strong with this one... ( Werner Von Braun appoves) LOL.
Yavole ! NASA approves too !
Fantastic!!!
Any information on the provenance of this particular engine ?? Found ? Made from scratch ? Any relation to any existing designs/manufacture ?
Wow, great performance!
My kind of Fun.Interesting Fire conic rings
Aah the heady aroma of half burnt kerosene in the morning
Very cool. Beer and German made Pulsejets. That's a good day to be out.
That fact that this is in German makes this even better (even though I don't understand the language 🤭).