During the making of this video, for some reason my brain decided that every time I want to say/write He 162 (as in, the jet), it will be He 172 (as in, the biplane). I think I fixed it when it happened, but in case you find a stray prototype biplane, please return it to Heinkel.
The rational decision would have been to surrender to the West after DDay, but failing that the He 162 was a valid choice let down due to poor engines and the pace of Germany's defeat.
exactly. one wonders why the stargazers of the Dritte Reich didn't fixate on cheap, easy, multitudinous in 1933---e.g., the Volkswagen. let's ask Marx and Freud why.
Proposals in mid September, first kill of an Allied aircraft mid April. The problem is that desperation was a year too late to influence outcomes. Not well documented (in terms of assessment) are the He 162 gun runs on allied ground units traveling in road columns. The glue factory would have been available for early production... In the existing program, the greatest waste IMO was development and production of modified aircraft assets for youth training, resulting in zero pilots trained prior to war's end.
@@egay86292 In the case of the Volkswagen that was an existing design that Porsche pulled out of his files when Hitler put out the call for such a vehicle. It needed a very few tweaks to get into quick mass production. There were no such existing designs for small, cheap, reliable, easy to fly jet fighter planes to pull out of a filing cabinet.
Haha. Heinkel had similar projects already finished in the drawer and did some very minor stuff to make them the HE162. You cant just design a new aircraft in 2 weeks. Check out Heinkel P 1073.
I remember seeing a Salamander at a museum when I was a child and being fascinated. Such a beautiful aircraft, that thankfully was never put to much use by the Luftwaffe. I recall Eric Brown being particularly fond of it's handling characteristics, but ironically saying it would be unforgiving for inexperienced pilots.
As a former glider pilot, I obviously love the 162. I think it would have inherited the Bf 109's position as mainstay front-line single-engine fighter, despite its very short legs, if - and only if - its problematic engine could have developed its potential. And potential, the engine surely had, if one looks at its "offspring"; the SNECMA Atar family of engines. However, luckily for the free world (including us Germans), the Nazis misjudged their chances at the game of war and it all came to an end shortly after.
I have a real problem with many of Browns quotes and comments. He like Galland simply sold themselves to any media willing to give them money for a few minutes of air time later in life. Also Brown has relatively little combat experience making his views less skilled than many others in that one aspect. However he did fly more types than just about anyone else having one of the most prolific flying careers possibly in history.
I wouldn't say he had relatively little combat experience. The guy served on a jury rigged aircraft carrier in the Mediterranean prior to the allies achieving air superiority and earned a medal for his success. I think he also flew a few bomber escort missions as well.
@@TheAtomicEwok He didn't serve a full tour of duty in a combat role. That's an important distinction. Jury rigged aircraft carrier? Many merchant ships were converted to escort carriers and the US even used two paddle wheelers converted to flattops to qualify just about all naval aviators on the safety of Lake Michigan.
All things considered, the HE 162 had an excellent advanced designed canopy, it had a tricycle landing gear, an ejection seat (for obvious reasons) and winglets (common on modern jetliners). For a desperate last gasp aircraft it wasn't all that bad. Didn't the Arado 234 use 4 BMW 003 engines vs two Junkers Jumo 004s?
It also had absolutely despicable construction built by slave labor, and performance worse than the me 262. And when you have 1 plane against 15 enemy ones, as Germany did at the end of the war, an extra 150 mph on the enemy planes become irrelevant, you are going down. Nothing Germany could have done would have removed the Soviet juggernaut coming at it, regardless of the allies, which, don't get me wrong, played a crucial, indispensable part in the victory. Like cogs in a watch, take one out, it doesn't run, so as all the allies in WW2.
@@MaticTheProto Nope, the plane was a cheapo version of the me 262. With the build quality and materials proposed quite a few of them would have disintegrated in the air. So no, it's your comment that is irrelevant. The plane was a POS.
@@phoenix211245 first of all you haven’t studied the matter. 1. The He 162 used less than half the fuel than the Me 262 per mission. THIS WAS THE DRIVING FORCE BEHIND THE SPEER MINISTRY PUSHING THE He 162. There simply wasn’t going to be enough fuel to run Me 262. 2. The sea level full thrust endurance of the He 162 was barely 30 minutes but this equates to 2 1/2 hours at 33,000 feet 10,000 m. Increases in fuel tank age in wings and fuselage Increased the sea level full thrust during to 40 minutes. So the He 162 was not too short ranged. 3 The speed of the He 162 was 522mph with the BMW 003E at its thrust setting of 800kg but this engine had a 32nd over speed that delivered a thrust of 900 kg and could get the aircraft to 560 mph. The 003A version of the Ar 234 did not have this feature as far as I know. 4 The use of forced labour of the He 162 that’s saw Service is doubtful. Early versions are usually assembled by normal labour. 5 162 should’ve been built by the Tegofilm moulded plywood. This was a hit curing process that produced three-dimensional shapes. Bombing of the Togo film factory led to a chemically cured glue being used. Not only was this less strong, but sometimes corrosive to the wood. The loss of the film production facilities is actually caused the cancellation of the TA154. Apart from those construction floors, the aircraft blacked and major vices
They need to make a spec-reproduction of the He 162, like they did with the 262. The Volksjager is just as important in aviation history as everything else from that era. You did an excellent job with your presentation here, as with all of your videos. Well done.
Agreed 100%, but the 162 was very difficult to fly and killed experienced test pilots. It would require modifications for greater stability: Maybe a lengthened fuselage and wingspan, which would change its appearance. A better choice might be to fit a small jet engine to a Me 163. This aircraft had excellent flying characteristics, all the way from 500mph to landing.
I wonder if modern CAD and computerized mathematical simulations could crunch the numbers, and be accurate enough to give us some insight into the possible capabilities of the He-162, had it been fully realized to the design specifications and numbers that Germany had envisioned? With the required engines, skilled pilots, fuel availability, and such.
Converting to jet engines immediately solved two problems for Germany. Jet engines don't rely on (not available) high octane fuel and require a lot less man hours to built than piston engines. And by that I mean A LOT, remember that 500-600 number for the BMW 003, the DB 605 of the Bf-109G required 2500-3000 man hours, and I don't know if the supercharger, gearbox and variable pitch propeller are included in this number. And considering the lifespan of a German fighter in 1945 a short engine life might not even be that much of a problem.
@@shaider1982yup. Unfortunately many (mostly American) armchair historians only seem to be aware of the short life span and as usual they aren’t asking any deeper questions as to why
also as a gun platform the Me262 brought four heavy cannons to the fight while being capable to run away from most fighters with decent success rate. Given the strategic problem were the bombers and normal fighters could get entangled by the Allied fighters along most of the way Germany needed a weapons platform capable to wreck 4 engine bombers while avoiding getting into dogfights with escorts. The main problem Germany started to have by 42/42 is that on the production and manpower side they would lose, hence the refuge into tech as force multipliers was the only option if you are a genocidal regime and do not or in case of the Soviet Union cannot sue for peace.
The He 172 was possibly the first aircraft to be fitted with an ejector seat. Rather rudimentary. Just like the entire airplane. It was a 30mm cannon cartridge sighted under the pilots seat. This was a priority due to the engine intake being directly above and behind the cockpit. A good-looking aircraft with a lot of potential. Excellent presentation as always. Thank you.
German gearheadedness Achilles foot: always bigger, always more complex---"Look, Ma, see what I've spent 6 months building this time!" meanwhile, on the other side of the Urals...
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I have really grown to love cut away models at museums. They help a lot in showing how things work and are a great illustrative tool for youtubers :) Nice Video, as always
I just love the look of what's badically a glider with a spare jet engine glued on top. Many early jets looked janky, the Yak-15 for instance being a Yak-3 with the propeller replaced by a jet. But the 162 is just something else.
The Germans considered integrating the engine to the centre of the fuselage but this would need a long intake duct and exhaust duct. Both were heavy and the intake duct it was feared would cause instability for the engine. Eventually long intake ducts were tested in flight with extensions on me 262 proving that the concept could work. On the 162, They also wanted to keep the exhaust and intake well away from the ground for safety reasons and reasons of runway injestion.
Its incredible that from design to prototype to mass production in a matter of months for a totally new radical jet fighter with 300 produced is a pretty amazing feat.
As with so many German technical developments from the war, if the circumstances surrounding it had just been completely different, it might have made an impact. But then again, had the circumstances indeed been completely different, they would probably never have developed a plane like this at all.
That's the difference with the allied cutting edge technology. The Germans were desperate and willing to run the risk of pushing unmatured technology into servicento find an edge. While the Allies had the time and resources to develop systems into maturedom or leave them be as what that had would be good enough for the job. Plus the fact the German design did not have it's original government anymore to guard it as a state secret, while the Allied projects did have it.
@@barthoving2053 agreed. The Brits imo are largely forgotten or ignored but were just as advanced as Germany in jets though didn't feel the Need to use them on the front. Even then the MK3 meteor was in service, not Mk1 or mk2 but mk3 and the mk4 was close to coming off the assembly line which was even better wing and engine design so faster and capable of doing those speeds and manouvers.
@@mitchellcouchman6589 the meteor was in service a month after the 262 and again it was a mk3 not a Mk1 or mk2. The engine design though not used today was a design that was actually very good for the era. It could produce more power with a less complex construction. The reason it's not used today is it was technologicaly limited in how far it could be improved apon while the German engine design got better and overtook the Whittle engine later
@@mitchellcouchman6589 total output technically yes but the power generation for thrust and energy retention was far better. Meaning it could maintain speed better at all altitudes and regain it in a fight
I was visiting the Planes of Fame museum in Chino, CA ad had the privilege of meeting an elder Germane gentleman named Harold Bauer. He was there to see their Henkel 162. He said he was part of a squad ferrying 162s to a Scandinavian country (I don’t remember, I believe it was Finland) to hand over to Luftwaffe pilots already stationed there. He as shot down by several Mustangs as he was taking off. He said the planes flew beautifully, it was fast and handled very well. He pointed out that, with the engine on top just behind the cockpit, making ejecting impossible. He also said that many of them crashed, not so much because they were challenging to fly, but because they were sabotaged by the slave labor that built them! Missing screws, improper amount of glue, etc. means these planes had a tendency to fly apart in flight.
I've always loved Alice from WTYP's description of the 162 "You can see how well it worked because it's sitting here in a british air museum" Edit: My mistake, I mixed this up in my head with Alice's quote about the Maus heavy tank, "You can see how well it worked because here it has Russian drawn all over it"
Thank you very, very much Chris. Do you remember when the He 162 Voljsjäger expansion pack for Secret Weapons of the Luftwaffee came out in 1992? I think it immediately became my favorite plan in the game. I loved that my "cockpit" had exposed wires here and there and holes in the instrument panel with no instruments or switches. I recall that limited ammo and a less than robust airframe were interesting challenges. I think that (in that game) the throttle was a bit more responsive than the Me-262 or perhaps I'd adjusted after flying the 262 and the P-80 Shooting Star. Thanks for jogging my memory.
Oh that brings back memories... played that game up and down, although I prefered the Horten IX/Go 229 for its futuristic design. 1992... now I feel old. P(
@@VenlyssPnorr I loved the campaign. Twice I managed to an Me-163 pilot through 24 missions. Then on the final mission I settle onto the field and go bumping along until the right wing tip gently drifted to the ground as I came to a stop and... BOOM!!! The plane exploded and I was killed. I suppose it beats being dissolved inside your flight suit.
It was actually a brilliant design…British test pilot Eric Brown, who was charged with testing the captured German aircraft…praised its performance, though cautioned that it had some structural weaknesses.
Allied and Soviet post-war examination and test-flights of the Heinkel 162 confirmed what its German test pilots already knew. While not exactly a death trap to fly, the 162 was not a good jet plane to fly. The Jumo 004 jet engine mounted over the fuselage for ease of manufacture and ease of maintenance. It sounded like a great idea. But as a result of the weight being on top of the fuselage and not centered within the fuselage, the 162 was not well-balanced. Sudden tight movements to left or right could throw the aircraft into spin, difficult to recover from and deadly at low altitude. The flexible rubber fuel cell contained enough fuel for only 30 minutes of flight. Given the need for at least ten minutes return flight, the pilot had very little actual flying time available to him. If he was not careful, he would run out of fuel and crash. The stubby wing He-162 did not fly well as an unpowered glider, although interestingly, glider versions of the 162 were constructed as trainers. Armament comprised typically two, MG151 20mm cannons. Heinkel intended the 162 to carry two MK108 30mm cannons and reputedly a number were fitted with 30mm cannons. Information is scant but reportedly the 162 frame was not strong or rugged enough for two 30mm cannon. That said, the 162, despite its diminutive size, possessed ample room for the pilot due to its circular cross section, widest at the cockpit. An acrylic molded bubble canopy provided excellent vision although lacking armored glass protection. Best of all, the 162 featured an ejection seat, crucial for pilot survival given the large jet engine was right behind him. Combat reports of the He-162 remain sketchy and unverified to this day. It is highly possible that a He-162 shot down a British Tempest fighter bomber in late April 1945. Another vague report has a He-162 confronting an American P-51D Mustang in an inconclusive encounter. The He-162 remains an interesting near-end of war Luftwaffe combat entrant and one can only guess at, "What if?" had the 162 been introduced into combat perhaps three or four months earlier. And if the 162 could have been introduced in the autumn of 1944, could it have made any meaningful contribution against the Allied bombing offensive against Germany? The German RLM (Reichsluftsfahrtministerium) crafted 162 production on the basis of a consumer mass-produced disposable product, to be manufactured in large quantities as fast as possible and as cheaply as possible manned by remaining Luftwaffe pilots and possibly large numbers of 17-year old German young men gathered up and hastily trained on glider versions in mere weeks and then thrown in the crucible of fire high in the skies over Germany.
Due to the engine intake location the HE-162 used one of the first ejection seats. Unlike earlier attempts like the Do-335 the HE-162 used a explosive cartridge to blow the seat and pilot clear of the aircraft.
It's not as weird as you think. The Americans developed the F-107 with the inlet right behind the cockpit too, although the engine was in the fuselage. It was highly advanced at the time (1956) but lost out (just) in a fly-off to the F-105 "Thunder Chief" and never was taken into production. BTW. "Shivers me timbers"?? Shouldn't you be watching Drachinifel?🤣🤣🤣
@herptek with their reputation, somehow I don't think crew survivability was high on the nazi's list of priorities especially when things got desperate.
Ok, if I may say so, I have been watching this channel for a long while now. I found this channel and was hooked on the history and the details you add for context. That said, I find Bo Time Gaming, found that channel funny and relaxing.... Then you join in and now when I watch your channel, I hear can't help but chuckle every time. Thank you for the history, and thank you for the great laughs with Bo and the guys there too.
Thanks for highlighting one of my favourite WW2 aircraft (I still have the t shirt 😜). I don't know what it is that has kept my interest and fascination for this aircraft going since childhood. Despite the problems with manufacture, airworthiness and handling issues, if it were possible, I'd love to see one fly, but realistically, unlikely. Two years earlier and I believe it would have had a much greater effect. Great video
Ignoring for a moment the insanity of last-ditch weapons, this plane is one of my favorites from the entire period. It’s so cute-looking (don’t look at the dorky engine, though), especially with its red arrow pointing forward. It also looks inherently modern - the A-6 comes to mind - with its rounded nose, bubble canopy, and thin wings.
Really great reading about the two jet engines toward the end of WW! First time I have discovered the history of the H162. Thanks for your presentation,
I read Eric Brown and his critique of the Salamander. Yes, he liked it. I do think he was aware that the tail control services would disintegrate in certain twisty turns scenarios, and in fact happened to another pilot at an air show in the Forties despite his counsel to be careful with it.
I read a article written by a young test pilot of the He-162 which recounted some of his experiences. As I remember he was to young to be a fighter pilot. Later on he emigrated to the USA & became a pilot in the US Navy flying the EC-121 radar aircraft
I read Wollenwaber's (JG1) autobiog, who flew the 162. He quite liked it, but said it had a fatal flaw. At lower speeds, if you turned too much using the rudders, the plane would just flip over suddenly & dive, needing a lot of height to recover. This flaw was due to jet flow interacting with rudder & turbulence during turns. It killed many pilots. It was due to the rushed development: not enough wind tunnel testing that would have spotted this design flaw, & possibly allowed a solution to be engineered (maybe the butterfly tail..?) Wollenwaber was a skilled & experienced pilot who got early access to the 162 & mastered it. He showed its aerobatics to sceptical JG1 pilots who were terrified of it's death-rate, to try & convince them it was airworthy! It needed very careful & skillful handling, & thus was a failure in its designed role. It wouldn't have helped Luftwaffe 46...
Aerodynamically it was seriously great. It was the first aircraft to utilize the "area rule" principal. When the prototype did 562 mph luftwaffe officials were stunned. It was faster than the ME-262 and it had just one weaker engine. The second generation 162 would have been seriously great. It would have had engines with 50% more thrust, swept wings, v-tail and probably the revolutionary Mauser 213 rotary cannon
Germany had lost the war before the first generation 162 reached service in any number that could have made a difference. It was also recognised as difficult to fly for novice pilots, which, realistically, was all Germany had left. A second generation162 was cloud cuckoo land. Nice idea, never going to happen.
Funny every other opinion holds that it was much slower and where do you get Area Ruling from? it looks like it was anti-area ruled. From the front of the canopy to mid chord of the wing the cross sectional area is all over the place. Was there some gamer’s _expert opinion_ voiced somewhere?
@@givenfirstnamefamilyfirstn3935 The prototype did 562 mph, the top speed of the ME-262 was 540 mph. The production 162 was a little slower because it had the wingtip extensions and cannons. The benefits of "area rule" was discovered in Germany in 1944. The fuselage of the 162 thinned out between the wings therefore it was "area ruled"
@@shawns0762 Where did you read this? It looks like nonsense, where is the fuselage tapered, it plainly is not. Is this from some wehraboo fantasy factual fabrication?
Great vid as always. I really like the aircraft. It has a modern look that has aged well. This is all skin deep though. Pain in the arse to manufacture and field and I think the most serious problem was that it was very difficult to fly, and it was slated to be used by young inexperienced pilots thrown in as a last ditch effort to try and turn around an already lost war. Like the other German jet designs, they were perhaps a bit ahead of their time, but let down in reality by the situation in which they were built. A collapsing state with manufacturing and material supply problems.
The French used them for several years after the war to introduce pilots to jet aircraft. The main gear and tires were from the me 109. The nose wheel was the tailwheel from a ju-88. Several years ago, a fuselage was restored in France with the gear retract mechanism operational. It was on you tube. I think one should be made flyable.
The He 162 could never have regained air superiority with the inexperienced pilots who were expected to fly it. It would have been a death trap for them - but the same would have been true, whatever aircraft they'd been issued with.
But ironically, in the hands of an _experienced_ pilot, the He 162A was actually a really good airplane to fly. I believe Eric "Winkle" Brown, called by many the British equivalent of Charles "Chuck" Yeager, said the He 162A in the hands of an experienced pilot could have been a formidable fighter.
While Eric Brown remembered the He 162 fondly, he described it thus: "... it was no aeroplane to let embryo pilots loose on, and it would have demanded more than simply a good pilot to operate it out of a small airfield".@@Sacto1654
@@Sacto1654 that’s as maybe, but how many pilots would have had the rare skills of Eric Brown or Chuck Yeager, precious few I would have thought. Apparently Albert Speer was of the opinion that it would have caused the wholesale slaughter of the inexperienced pilots who would have had to fly the thing
@@Sacto1654 Not wishing to get into a bunfight here, but Winkle Brown was flying combat missions off HMS Audacity, the Royal Navies first escort carrier while Chuck Yeager was still serving as a mechanic. Winkle Brown, as a test pilot, flew more aircraft types than any one else in history, and performed more carrier landings than anyone else in history, essentially he showed how to do it. No insult intended to Chuck Yeager here, rather suggesting that Chuck Yeager could be considered the US equivalent of Winkle Brown, rather than the other way round 🙂
The same was true of some of the late-war aircraft the Japanese developed, technologically advanced but rushed into service as desperation measures, hoping to stem the tide of the allied advance. In both the German and Japanese situations, the arrogance and intransigence of their leaders resulted in it being a case of too little, too late. In Germany's case, it was the insistence that the ME-262 be capable of bombing, thus delaying its operational debut by almost a year that kept it from being a true game-changer. On the Japanese side, if they had concentrated their efforts earlier on some of the fantastic fighter designs, before the material shortages made it impossible to field these aircraft in any meaningful numbers, it would have been more difficult for the Pacific campaign, and the special attack units might not have been formed at all
What about the acidic plywood adhesive they used that caused mid-air, catastrophic falling apart? 1st Grp JG 1 at Rostock lost 13 aircraft of which only 3 were shot down. With a flying time of only 30 minutes, deadstick landings also caused fatalities. 120 were delivered, 200 were awaiting delivery and 600 were half-built by the end of hostilities.
I recall hearing that the adhesive that was used was not the intended one. The Allies had destroyed the manufacturing source for the original adhesive.
The glue never failed in any of planes it was used in. The crashes were caused by poor construction by slave workers.Most of the pilots that few it loved it.
Had the 162 been concived and built a year before it might have had a significant effect on the war. It's still one of the most advanced aero designs of the war and my favorite fighter, even if it didn't contribute much if anything to the war effort. With modern manufacturing methonds and a little CAD/CAM modeling to make it a touch more docile, it would make a fantastic light sport jet.
You're videos have always been excellent, but your recent videos have been especially good. Would you consider doing a video on the do335? It's been an aircraft that interested me since I first saw it as a kid, the unique design and curved cockpit reminded me of something out if Star Wars.
Was it a rational choice? - Yes. A cheap means of sudden air superiority would assist the ground forces considerably. The 3rd Reich still loses but not in May ‘45. Was it too late? - Yes, but worth a try. Was it a pipe dream? - No. The Me 163 rocket showed what German technology could achieve. Was it a disgraceful waste of resources? - No. It’s not in the same class as the Maus Tank or V-3 super gun. Good video! 😊
Vielen dank Christoph aus Grossbritanien - deine videos sind echt toll und deine einsicht und begeisterung für die thema ist 🎯 Fwiw - ich wohnte in Wesel (Flüren) als Englisher kind in 86-91 und ein video über varisty/die zerstörung Von Wesel wäre sehr interresant und auch sehr traurig 🥺 Deine Geshichte ist “on par” mit drachinifel und “we have ways of making you talk” - James Holland 👍🏻
One thing you never mentioned was that, over the winter of '44 to '45, those pilots who tested it were no older than 18. Most died. As to the utility of the aircraft, it was what America, would call a "point defense," fighter - intended for use in the immediate area into which it was launched. It's soeed and short endurance would have suited it for this role (if enough could have been be made.) I sometimes wonder if, had the Anericans had such an aircraft, if I could be based on escourt carriers to defend against Japanese, suicide pilots and boats.
If you haven't done a video on the subject already, I'd like to know how they turned the P-51 into a long-range escort fighter. Was it aerodynamics? Or just cramming more fuel tanks onto it? Did it pay a price in combat performance for its long range?
It was an interesting approach to a problem that was not going to be solved at that point in time. A year or two earlier, and there would have been time to develop the aircraft properly. And even then it likely wouldn't have changed the outcome of the war.
It's the same with most things Germany did during the war, too little too late. Like how "peoples rifle" concept of arming your second line troops with automatic weapons was a good idea; just came too late, in far too limited numbers and could never solve the Tiger in the room: the manpower shortage
The problem that the Luftwaffe faced was not that they ran out of aircraft, but that they ran out of pilots and fuel. Fuel shortages limited pilot training and created a compounding effect that meant that even if the He162 had been a true technological marvel it would have made little difference. The fact that it was often built with slave labour and low quality materials - I believe that the glue was a particular concern - alongside being far from beginner friendly meant that the aircraft could never succeed
I remember seeing the Heinkel 162 in the Imp. War Museum in London, many years ago, during my one actual visit to London, except transfer in Heathrow, to go north to Newcastle
Just by optics it looks lile a miniture version of an A10. In comparison to the ME262 the concept looks like the F16 compared with F15. Iike the Salamander for its design features (Area Rule, Canopy, tricycle landing gear, ejection seat, jet) But it had serious quality issues and limitations from its building material (wood). Fine for a Mosquito, but with jet powered panic fighter? It had potential, but came far too late to make a difference.
A very good and succinct analysis. Certainly too little and too late but interesting nonetheless. And my local air museum (2.5 km walk away) has a very nice example on display!
As usual you got most right (not that I mean you have got anything wrong) the basic problem with the plane, was the political environment, Hitler did not consider that germany could lose the war, before it was far to late, these projects should have been put ind place much earlier. This was an area where the allies, har a much more realistic awareness. Supermarine developed the Spitfire mark 4 (the first prototype Spitfire with a Griffon engine - it had if I remember correct a top speed of 756 km in 1942 (ok with out guns and all that stuff)) but at the time the max speed of the Spitfire was 657 km and that was the brand new mark 9. The English decided not set it into production, as the plane they had could do the job, and the new engine (the Griffon) was untested. (They changed their mindes later but that another story) . What's on paper is not always the best ! - I would love to hear your assessment of the rumour that I have heard, that the british secret service, was ordered to stop all attempts to kill Hitler, as he was considered better alive than dead to the allied war effort !!!
Ignoring hindsight, at that stage it was worth a try. The choices boiled down to accepting defeat was inevitable, or grasping for something extraordinary. Most times the latter won't save you, but on rare occasions it might.
Desperate problems lend themselves easily to desperate solutions. No one would ever consider a project and timescale like this except as a last ditched resort. To even have a modern fighter jet in the air and ready for combat in a couple of months, at the losing end of such a destructive war, was an amazing achievement by itself.
Very informative presentation. Good issues which resembled Japanese advanced designs same time period. The issues discussion were inevitable. The Me-262 success was irrelevant to Allied offensive. The desperate origin of He-162 was the logical answer but, again, could not overcome the same issues of the Me-262. Extremely important aviation airframes in the midst of carnage.
I have always had a love for the Me-262 as it has some amazing lines and for the time, must have been extremely intimidating. My freind Larry Boyle who flew B-24’s told me of the 262 and 163 but never saw the He-162. They terrified bomber crews when first encountered. The 162 (to me) is a beautiful plane and with Hitlers obsession with bombers… just came too late and too few. Another excellent video sir. Thank you
Hello from London Ontario. I watch your channel with great interest and delight. Within driving distance of my city is Hamilton home to the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum, Brampton, which has the Great War Flying Museum and of course Ottawa which has the Canadian Space and Aviation Museum. Also, my city is home to a fantastic airshow called SkyDrive...and 530 kms to Dayton, Ohio. You should know what is there...Great video!!!
I understand the BMW engine made it a handful. I have a scale RC model of the HE 162 with a good turbine engine and its performance is outstanding. I do not really know how a scale/exact model of the HE 162 can be compared to the full size, but mine flies awesome and its very manureable while been also very stable. Only the rudder use can be naughty if tired at high speed. I only use it to creect jaw going into landing. Your documentary was good, only we disagree in the flying portion of the plane.
This aircraft was intended as a bomber interceptor, not a "dogfighter". It was fast, small and well armed for its size BUT it was not structurally strong enough to endure any violent maneuvering as one would expect if it was pitted against contemporary prop-driven single seat fighters. Too late? Absolutely! Useless? Yes, because it WAS too late. It needed a well trained pilot to handle it and they were in very short supply. Properly training new pilots would have required bases and airspace that were safe from Allied fighters. Those were basically non-existent. Lack of fuel alone would have severely limited operations. These aircraft would have ended up killing more minimally trained Hitler Youth pilots than Allied fighters would. An interesting design though and a good deal "saner" than some other last ditch German aircraft designs.
Impossible to adequately judge the plane. Only by equipping it with a reliable engine could the flight characteristics of the plane be adequately Evaluated and there just wasn’t that option. Conceptually it was fabulous with his cheap, easy fast wood construction and light weight. Fire power was a bit light. Only by building a modern replica with a decent Engine Could we really know what Potential it had
You might get an eye on the System Rott, construction by Waffen Union (former Versuchsanstalt für Strahtriebwerke Grossendorf)in late 44 early 45, a rocket plane with an additional 2- stroke engine to gain longer loitering time once in air. Unknown if even one was made, but all parts were already in place, probably in the Eschenlohe tunnel as last station of this branch of Waffen Union was stationed in wars end in Oberau Kartonnagen Fabrik.
Great video, I love the Salamander. Don't know how accurate the flight model was, but I greatly enjoyed flying it in the game Il-2. Was very maneuverable.
A good point of view on a very Interesting Topic. I myself have studied late war German jets and rocket aircraft for some years so, enjoyed this immensely. The real flaws were assuming that young Inexperienced Hitler youths could strap on a crudely constructed, tricky to fly volksjager and fight off a far superior foe in terms of sheer numbers, training, tactics, and radar.
Watching this and waiting with baited breath to get to the "Easy to Fly" section. One look at this thing and I thought "there's absolutely no way this thing is stable and easy to fly."
Since you asked 'what do you think?' I figured I'd indulge: seems like a typically incoherent attempt by late-war Germany to create more boutique platforms that are supposedly novel and high-impact, but in fact dilute the mass production of existing models that are more mature, sustainable, and have proven combat effectiveness. The very low production numbers and few recorded combat stories imply the impact of this aircraft was negligible, and likely Germany would have been better off never having started this program and could have allocated the resources towards the me262. Thankfully this pattern of German production program incoherence shortened the war.
Well. armament was also inadequate for the moment, especially considering short time to fly, which only allow like 1 attack. In general it was completely crazy idea - having same time in production excellent Me-262. Clearly plane was design by Heinkel before it was officially requested. It is pretty interesting what type of intrigues lean to such a request.
The engine problems being not part of the aircraft's design, I think it's an impressive aircraft for how absurdly low-tech it all is. It's also adorable and I love it even though I'd never dare attempt to fly one in reality
I'd love to see a Heinkel 162 and Arado 234 fly, after their kinks have been ironed out etc., etc., the Heinkel 162 looks great and I've always had a soft spot for the Arado 234....I'm sure that they'd be fun to fly with modern engines and and so on! 😍🥰😎👍🏻
One piece of constructive criticism, the stock sound effects at the start of each chapter both sounds kinda cheap and the siren one actually startled me, lol. Better to not use them at all, I think
During the making of this video, for some reason my brain decided that every time I want to say/write He 162 (as in, the jet), it will be He 172 (as in, the biplane). I think I fixed it when it happened, but in case you find a stray prototype biplane, please return it to Heinkel.
Thanks for making another one of your great 'what was this really' videos, it's so good to see a realistic view on what something amounts to.
By the way, was Me 262 Schwalbe officially called Zerstorer as it clearly was this concept?
L O L 😅
The rational decision would have been to surrender to the West after DDay, but failing that the He 162 was a valid choice let down due to poor engines and the pace of Germany's defeat.
@@ondrejdobrota7344 If so it would have been confusing because in 1940 the Me 110 was often refered to as 'Zerstorer'.
It's the best jet fighter ever designed in two weeks and a slide rule.
exactly. one wonders why the stargazers of the Dritte Reich didn't fixate on cheap, easy, multitudinous in 1933---e.g., the Volkswagen. let's ask Marx and Freud why.
Proposals in mid September, first kill of an Allied aircraft mid April. The problem is that desperation was a year too late to influence outcomes. Not well documented (in terms of assessment) are the He 162 gun runs on allied ground units traveling in road columns. The glue factory would have been available for early production...
In the existing program, the greatest waste IMO was development and production of modified aircraft assets for youth training, resulting in zero pilots trained prior to war's end.
@@egay86292 In the case of the Volkswagen that was an existing design that Porsche pulled out of his files when Hitler put out the call for such a vehicle. It needed a very few tweaks to get into quick mass production.
There were no such existing designs for small, cheap, reliable, easy to fly jet fighter planes to pull out of a filing cabinet.
Haha. Heinkel had similar projects already finished in the drawer and did some very minor stuff to make them the HE162. You cant just design a new aircraft in 2 weeks.
Check out Heinkel P 1073.
I remember seeing a Salamander at a museum when I was a child and being fascinated. Such a beautiful aircraft, that thankfully was never put to much use by the Luftwaffe.
I recall Eric Brown being particularly fond of it's handling characteristics, but ironically saying it would be unforgiving for inexperienced pilots.
a good fighter follows the inputs of its pilots and is thus, by nature, unforgiving to mistakes or ham-fisted handling.
As a former glider pilot, I obviously love the 162. I think it would have inherited the Bf 109's position as mainstay front-line single-engine fighter, despite its very short legs, if - and only if - its problematic engine could have developed its potential. And potential, the engine surely had, if one looks at its "offspring"; the SNECMA Atar family of engines.
However, luckily for the free world (including us Germans), the Nazis misjudged their chances at the game of war and it all came to an end shortly after.
I have a real problem with many of Browns quotes and comments. He like Galland simply sold themselves to any media willing to give them money for a few minutes of air time later in life. Also Brown has relatively little combat experience making his views less skilled than many others in that one aspect. However he did fly more types than just about anyone else having one of the most prolific flying careers possibly in history.
I wouldn't say he had relatively little combat experience. The guy served on a jury rigged aircraft carrier in the Mediterranean prior to the allies achieving air superiority and earned a medal for his success. I think he also flew a few bomber escort missions as well.
@@TheAtomicEwok He didn't serve a full tour of duty in a combat role. That's an important distinction. Jury rigged aircraft carrier? Many merchant ships were converted to escort carriers and the US even used two paddle wheelers converted to flattops to qualify just about all naval aviators on the safety of Lake Michigan.
All things considered, the HE 162 had an excellent advanced designed canopy, it had a tricycle landing gear, an ejection seat (for obvious reasons) and winglets (common on modern jetliners). For a desperate last gasp aircraft it wasn't all that bad. Didn't the Arado 234 use 4 BMW 003 engines vs two Junkers Jumo 004s?
Yes, the Ar 232C.
It also had absolutely despicable construction built by slave labor, and performance worse than the me 262.
And when you have 1 plane against 15 enemy ones, as Germany did at the end of the war, an extra 150 mph on the enemy planes become irrelevant, you are going down.
Nothing Germany could have done would have removed the Soviet juggernaut coming at it, regardless of the allies, which, don't get me wrong, played a crucial, indispensable part in the victory.
Like cogs in a watch, take one out, it doesn't run, so as all the allies in WW2.
@@phoenix211245 so to sum it up the plane was surprisingly good and all you said is irrelevant? :)
@@MaticTheProto Nope, the plane was a cheapo version of the me 262. With the build quality and materials proposed quite a few of them would have disintegrated in the air. So no, it's your comment that is irrelevant. The plane was a POS.
@@phoenix211245 first of all you haven’t studied the matter.
1. The He 162 used less than half the fuel than the Me 262 per mission. THIS WAS THE DRIVING FORCE BEHIND THE SPEER MINISTRY PUSHING THE He 162. There simply wasn’t going to be enough fuel to run Me 262.
2. The sea level full thrust endurance of the He 162 was barely 30 minutes but this equates to 2 1/2 hours at 33,000 feet 10,000 m. Increases in fuel tank age in wings and fuselage Increased the sea level full thrust during to 40 minutes. So the He 162 was not too short ranged.
3 The speed of the He 162 was 522mph with the BMW 003E at its thrust setting of 800kg but this engine had a 32nd over speed that delivered a thrust of 900 kg and could get the aircraft to 560 mph. The 003A version of the Ar 234 did not have this feature as far
as I know.
4 The use of forced labour of the He 162 that’s saw Service is doubtful. Early versions are usually assembled by normal labour.
5 162 should’ve been built by the Tegofilm moulded plywood. This was a hit curing process that produced three-dimensional shapes. Bombing of the Togo film factory led to a chemically cured glue being used. Not only was this less strong, but sometimes corrosive to the wood. The loss of the film production facilities is actually caused the cancellation of the TA154. Apart from those construction floors, the aircraft blacked and major vices
Very cool hearing the historical context behind the He 162. I never really knew much about it before
They need to make a spec-reproduction of the He 162, like they did with the 262. The Volksjager is just as important in aviation history as everything else from that era. You did an excellent job with your presentation here, as with all of your videos. Well done.
Will said great video
Agreed 100%, but the 162 was very difficult to fly and killed experienced test pilots. It would require modifications for greater stability: Maybe a lengthened fuselage and wingspan, which would change its appearance. A better choice might be to fit a small jet engine to a Me 163. This aircraft had excellent flying characteristics, all the way from 500mph to landing.
I wonder if modern CAD and computerized mathematical simulations could crunch the numbers, and be accurate enough to give us some insight into the possible capabilities of the He-162, had it been fully realized to the design specifications and numbers that Germany had envisioned? With the required engines, skilled pilots, fuel availability, and such.
@@MrAndyBearJr Somebody ought to make a modern reproduction!
Class it under the US "experimental" category.
Cheapest way into the warbird fraternity.
@@raypurchase801 Now that is one aircraft I would love to see fly.😀👍🏻
Converting to jet engines immediately solved two problems for Germany. Jet engines don't rely on (not available) high octane fuel and require a lot less man hours to built than piston engines.
And by that I mean A LOT, remember that 500-600 number for the BMW 003, the DB 605 of the Bf-109G required 2500-3000 man hours, and I don't know if the supercharger, gearbox and variable pitch propeller are included in this number. And considering the lifespan of a German fighter in 1945 a short engine life might not even be that much of a problem.
Very true. The problem for the Germans was that they did not have access to high temperature alloys hence the high failure rate.
@@shaider1982yup. Unfortunately many (mostly American) armchair historians only seem to be aware of the short life span and as usual they aren’t asking any deeper questions as to why
also as a gun platform the Me262 brought four heavy cannons to the fight while being capable to run away from most fighters with decent success rate. Given the strategic problem were the bombers and normal fighters could get entangled by the Allied fighters along most of the way Germany needed a weapons platform capable to wreck 4 engine bombers while avoiding getting into dogfights with escorts.
The main problem Germany started to have by 42/42 is that on the production and manpower side they would lose, hence the refuge into tech as force multipliers was the only option if you are a genocidal regime and do not or in case of the Soviet Union cannot sue for peace.
The He 172 was possibly the first aircraft to be fitted with an ejector seat. Rather rudimentary. Just like the entire airplane. It was a 30mm cannon cartridge sighted under the pilots seat. This was a priority due to the engine intake being directly above and behind the cockpit. A good-looking aircraft with a lot of potential. Excellent presentation as always. Thank you.
German gearheadedness Achilles foot: always bigger, always more complex---"Look, Ma, see what I've spent 6 months building this time!" meanwhile, on the other side of the Urals...
I have really grown to love cut away models at museums. They help a lot in showing how things work and are a great illustrative tool for youtubers :) Nice Video, as always
The proper term would be musea the Latin plural for museum. Stadium, stadia same thing
I just love the look of what's badically a glider with a spare jet engine glued on top. Many early jets looked janky, the Yak-15 for instance being a Yak-3 with the propeller replaced by a jet. But the 162 is just something else.
We sometimes forget that those were truly pioneering days for jets. They were making it up as they went.
The Germans considered integrating the engine to the centre of the fuselage but this would need a long intake duct and exhaust duct. Both were heavy and the intake duct it was feared would cause instability for the engine. Eventually long intake ducts were tested in flight with extensions on me 262 proving that the concept could work. On the 162, They also wanted to keep the exhaust and intake well away from the ground for safety reasons and reasons of runway injestion.
The outline was later copied by the A10
Its incredible that from design to prototype to mass production in a matter of months for a totally new radical jet fighter with 300 produced is a pretty amazing feat.
As with so many German technical developments from the war, if the circumstances surrounding it had just been completely different, it might have made an impact. But then again, had the circumstances indeed been completely different, they would probably never have developed a plane like this at all.
That's the difference with the allied cutting edge technology. The Germans were desperate and willing to run the risk of pushing unmatured technology into servicento find an edge. While the Allies had the time and resources to develop systems into maturedom or leave them be as what that had would be good enough for the job.
Plus the fact the German design did not have it's original government anymore to guard it as a state secret, while the Allied projects did have it.
@@barthoving2053 agreed. The Brits imo are largely forgotten or ignored but were just as advanced as Germany in jets though didn't feel the Need to use them on the front. Even then the MK3 meteor was in service, not Mk1 or mk2 but mk3 and the mk4 was close to coming off the assembly line which was even better wing and engine design so faster and capable of doing those speeds and manouvers.
@@mitchellcouchman6589 the meteor was in service a month after the 262 and again it was a mk3 not a Mk1 or mk2. The engine design though not used today was a design that was actually very good for the era. It could produce more power with a less complex construction. The reason it's not used today is it was technologicaly limited in how far it could be improved apon while the German engine design got better and overtook the Whittle engine later
@@mitchellcouchman6589 total output technically yes but the power generation for thrust and energy retention was far better. Meaning it could maintain speed better at all altitudes and regain it in a fight
@@mitchellcouchman6589 no it's nothing like that at all. Live in your delusional German delusion mate. You've got plenty of company
I was visiting the Planes of Fame museum in Chino, CA ad had the privilege of meeting an elder Germane gentleman named Harold Bauer. He was there to see their Henkel 162. He said he was part of a squad ferrying 162s to a Scandinavian country (I don’t remember, I believe it was Finland) to hand over to Luftwaffe pilots already stationed there. He as shot down by several Mustangs as he was taking off. He said the planes flew beautifully, it was fast and handled very well. He pointed out that, with the engine on top just behind the cockpit, making ejecting impossible. He also said that many of them crashed, not so much because they were challenging to fly, but because they were sabotaged by the slave labor that built them! Missing screws, improper amount of glue, etc. means these planes had a tendency to fly apart in flight.
Probably not sabotage, but just idiot SS overseeing the operation imposing unrealistic quotas and timelines.
My favorite detail of the 162 are the "Lippisch-Ohren" wingtip devices!
As far as I know they were added to reduce stability because of a Dutch rolling problem.
I've always loved Alice from WTYP's description of the 162 "You can see how well it worked because it's sitting here in a british air museum"
Edit: My mistake, I mixed this up in my head with Alice's quote about the Maus heavy tank, "You can see how well it worked because here it has Russian drawn all over it"
Does WTYP mean: "Well there's your problem"?
yup @@Ramzi1944
@@kosmokat111 Thank you
Like who owns the only running Tiger I?
That means literally nothing
Thanks!
Thank you very, very much Chris. Do you remember when the He 162 Voljsjäger expansion pack for Secret Weapons of the Luftwaffee came out in 1992? I think it immediately became my favorite plan in the game. I loved that my "cockpit" had exposed wires here and there and holes in the instrument panel with no instruments or switches. I recall that limited ammo and a less than robust airframe were interesting challenges. I think that (in that game) the throttle was a bit more responsive than the Me-262 or perhaps I'd adjusted after flying the 262 and the P-80 Shooting Star. Thanks for jogging my memory.
Oh yeah, it and the P-80 were my favs in that game :D
Oh that brings back memories... played that game up and down, although I prefered the Horten IX/Go 229 for its futuristic design. 1992... now I feel old. P(
What a game. That dynamic campaign in which you could set flight groups and assign your own pilots to fly the AI planes was so far ahead of its time!
@@RoBlackW Oh yeah! The Gotha! That was huge fun to fly! Really fast and so silky smooth.
@@VenlyssPnorr I loved the campaign. Twice I managed to an Me-163 pilot through 24 missions. Then on the final mission I settle onto the field and go bumping along until the right wing tip gently drifted to the ground as I came to a stop and... BOOM!!! The plane exploded and I was killed. I suppose it beats being dissolved inside your flight suit.
Excellent and interesting video and you handled the concept very well!
Great video! I must say, that is the smoothest transition to channel sponsor I've ever seen, well done!!
Thanks :)
Excellent summary again Chris Thankyou .Gives a valuable insight into this very interesting machine.
Love the care you take with sources & accuracy in your videos.
Many congrats !! Your channel is by far the best in english for WWII Air Forces and battles
@Gregs Airplanes is excellent too--far more in-depth, goes into endless detail.
It was actually a brilliant design…British test pilot Eric Brown, who was charged with testing the captured German aircraft…praised its performance, though cautioned that it had some structural weaknesses.
It was a lovely looking aircraft and a miracle aircraft given the time from design to roll out..
Allied and Soviet post-war examination and test-flights of the Heinkel 162 confirmed what its German test pilots already knew. While not exactly a death trap to fly, the 162 was not a good jet plane to fly. The Jumo 004 jet engine mounted over the fuselage for ease of manufacture and ease of maintenance. It sounded like a great idea. But as a result of the weight being on top of the fuselage and not centered within the fuselage, the 162 was not well-balanced. Sudden tight movements to left or right could throw the aircraft into spin, difficult to recover from and deadly at low altitude.
The flexible rubber fuel cell contained enough fuel for only 30 minutes of flight. Given the need for at least ten minutes return flight, the pilot had very little actual flying time available to him. If he was not careful, he would run out of fuel and crash. The stubby wing He-162 did not fly well as an unpowered glider, although interestingly, glider versions of the 162 were constructed as trainers.
Armament comprised typically two, MG151 20mm cannons. Heinkel intended the 162 to carry two MK108 30mm cannons and reputedly a number were fitted with 30mm cannons. Information is scant but reportedly the 162 frame was not strong or rugged enough for two 30mm cannon.
That said, the 162, despite its diminutive size, possessed ample room for the pilot due to its circular cross section, widest at the cockpit. An acrylic molded bubble canopy provided excellent vision although lacking armored glass protection. Best of all, the 162 featured an ejection seat, crucial for pilot survival given the large jet engine was right behind him.
Combat reports of the He-162 remain sketchy and unverified to this day. It is highly possible that a He-162 shot down a British Tempest fighter bomber in late April 1945. Another vague report has a He-162 confronting an American P-51D Mustang in an inconclusive encounter.
The He-162 remains an interesting near-end of war Luftwaffe combat entrant and one can only guess at, "What if?" had the 162 been introduced into combat perhaps three or four months earlier. And if the 162 could have been introduced in the autumn of 1944, could it have made any meaningful contribution against the Allied bombing offensive against Germany?
The German RLM (Reichsluftsfahrtministerium) crafted 162 production on the basis of a consumer mass-produced disposable product, to be manufactured in large quantities as fast as possible and as cheaply as possible manned by remaining Luftwaffe pilots and possibly large numbers of 17-year old German young men gathered up and hastily trained on glider versions in mere weeks and then thrown in the crucible of fire high in the skies over Germany.
Any records of pilots ejecting, or otherwise exiting the plane during a flight? The proximity of the air intake shivers me timbers..
Due to the engine intake location the HE-162 used one of the first ejection seats. Unlike earlier attempts like the Do-335 the HE-162 used a explosive cartridge to blow the seat and pilot clear of the aircraft.
@@Anlushac11If the plane is supposed to be expendable then pilot survivability comes up as something of a concern.
It's not as weird as you think. The Americans developed the F-107 with the inlet right behind the cockpit too, although the engine was in the fuselage. It was highly advanced at the time (1956) but lost out (just) in a fly-off to the F-105 "Thunder Chief" and never was taken into production.
BTW. "Shivers me timbers"?? Shouldn't you be watching Drachinifel?🤣🤣🤣
@herptek with their reputation, somehow I don't think crew survivability was high on the nazi's list of priorities especially when things got desperate.
@@roykliffen9674 Various Navies fly aircraft too. Just saying :-)
Ok, if I may say so, I have been watching this channel for a long while now. I found this channel and was hooked on the history and the details you add for context. That said, I find Bo Time Gaming, found that channel funny and relaxing.... Then you join in and now when I watch your channel, I hear can't help but chuckle every time. Thank you for the history, and thank you for the great laughs with Bo and the guys there too.
Thanks for highlighting one of my favourite WW2 aircraft (I still have the t shirt 😜). I don't know what it is that has kept my interest and fascination for this aircraft going since childhood. Despite the problems with manufacture, airworthiness and handling issues, if it were possible, I'd love to see one fly, but realistically, unlikely. Two years earlier and I believe it would have had a much greater effect. Great video
Excellent analysis of an unusual machine, thanks.
Ignoring for a moment the insanity of last-ditch weapons, this plane is one of my favorites from the entire period. It’s so cute-looking (don’t look at the dorky engine, though), especially with its red arrow pointing forward. It also looks inherently modern - the A-6 comes to mind - with its rounded nose, bubble canopy, and thin wings.
watch "Brazil."
Really great reading about the two jet engines toward the end of WW! First time I have discovered the history of the H162. Thanks for your presentation,
I read Eric Brown and his critique of the Salamander. Yes, he liked it. I do think he was aware that the tail control services would disintegrate in certain twisty turns scenarios, and in fact happened to another pilot at an air show in the Forties despite his counsel to be careful with it.
I read a article written by a young test pilot of the He-162 which recounted some of his experiences. As I remember he was to young to be a fighter pilot. Later on he emigrated to the USA & became a pilot in the US Navy flying the EC-121 radar aircraft
So what did he say
Thanks Chris, just saw this, great overview, thanks also for all your great work !
Thank you for the great video this is really helpful as I wondered how many were flown. Have you done a video on people who may have flown the plane.
I love it, because it's absolutely bonkers!😂 I made a kit of one when I was a kid and there is just something about it 👍 great video 😉
Well done! Very informative. Thank you for shedding light on this little known mystery jet. Danke!
I read Wollenwaber's (JG1) autobiog, who flew the 162. He quite liked it, but said it had a fatal flaw.
At lower speeds, if you turned too much using the rudders, the plane would just flip over suddenly & dive, needing a lot of height to recover. This flaw was due to jet flow interacting with rudder & turbulence during turns. It killed many pilots.
It was due to the rushed development: not enough wind tunnel testing that would have spotted this design flaw, & possibly allowed a solution to be engineered (maybe the butterfly tail..?)
Wollenwaber was a skilled & experienced pilot who got early access to the 162 & mastered it. He showed its aerobatics to sceptical JG1 pilots who were terrified of it's death-rate, to try & convince them it was airworthy!
It needed very careful & skillful handling, & thus was a failure in its designed role. It wouldn't have helped Luftwaffe 46...
Aerodynamically it was seriously great. It was the first aircraft to utilize the "area rule" principal. When the prototype did 562 mph luftwaffe officials were stunned. It was faster than the ME-262 and it had just one weaker engine.
The second generation 162 would have been seriously great. It would have had engines with 50% more thrust, swept wings, v-tail and probably the revolutionary Mauser 213 rotary cannon
Germany had lost the war before the first generation 162 reached service in any number that could have made a difference. It was also recognised as difficult to fly for novice pilots, which, realistically, was all Germany had left. A second generation162 was cloud cuckoo land. Nice idea, never going to happen.
@@gwtpictgwtpict4214 They lost the war way before that, they were doomed when Roosevelt decided to arm the Russians
Funny every other opinion holds that it was much slower and where do you get Area Ruling from? it looks like it was anti-area ruled. From the front of the canopy to mid chord of the wing the cross sectional area is all over the place. Was there some gamer’s _expert opinion_ voiced somewhere?
@@givenfirstnamefamilyfirstn3935 The prototype did 562 mph, the top speed of the ME-262 was 540 mph. The production 162 was a little slower because it had the wingtip extensions and cannons. The benefits of "area rule" was discovered in Germany in 1944. The fuselage of the 162 thinned out between the wings therefore it was "area ruled"
@@shawns0762 Where did you read this? It looks like nonsense, where is the fuselage tapered, it plainly is not. Is this from some wehraboo fantasy factual fabrication?
Great vid as always. I really like the aircraft. It has a modern look that has aged well. This is all skin deep though. Pain in the arse to manufacture and field and I think the most serious problem was that it was very difficult to fly, and it was slated to be used by young inexperienced pilots thrown in as a last ditch effort to try and turn around an already lost war.
Like the other German jet designs, they were perhaps a bit ahead of their time, but let down in reality by the situation in which they were built. A collapsing state with manufacturing and material supply problems.
The French used them for several years after the war to introduce pilots to jet aircraft. The main gear and tires were from the me 109. The nose wheel was the tailwheel from a ju-88. Several years ago, a fuselage was restored in France with the gear retract mechanism operational. It was on you tube. I think one should be made flyable.
I remember reading that the undercarriag retraction mechanism was hydraulic, but extension was by spring
Maybe make a copy like someone did with the 262
The He 162 could never have regained air superiority with the inexperienced pilots who were expected to fly it. It would have been a death trap for them - but the same would have been true, whatever aircraft they'd been issued with.
But ironically, in the hands of an _experienced_ pilot, the He 162A was actually a really good airplane to fly. I believe Eric "Winkle" Brown, called by many the British equivalent of Charles "Chuck" Yeager, said the He 162A in the hands of an experienced pilot could have been a formidable fighter.
While Eric Brown remembered the He 162 fondly, he described it thus: "... it was no aeroplane to let embryo pilots loose on, and it would have demanded more than simply a good pilot to operate it out of a small airfield".@@Sacto1654
@@Sacto1654 that’s as maybe, but how many pilots would have had the rare skills of Eric Brown or Chuck Yeager, precious few I would have thought. Apparently Albert Speer was of the opinion that it would have caused the wholesale slaughter of the inexperienced pilots who would have had to fly the thing
@@Sacto1654 Not wishing to get into a bunfight here, but Winkle Brown was flying combat missions off HMS Audacity, the Royal Navies first escort carrier while Chuck Yeager was still serving as a mechanic. Winkle Brown, as a test pilot, flew more aircraft types than any one else in history, and performed more carrier landings than anyone else in history, essentially he showed how to do it. No insult intended to Chuck Yeager here, rather suggesting that Chuck Yeager could be considered the US equivalent of Winkle Brown, rather than the other way round 🙂
Great video, Chris...👍
Thanks for sharing Chris 👍
Another excellent video Chris. Keep up the outstanding work!
The same was true of some of the late-war aircraft the Japanese developed, technologically advanced but rushed into service as desperation measures, hoping to stem the tide of the allied advance. In both the German and Japanese situations, the arrogance and intransigence of their leaders resulted in it being a case of too little, too late. In Germany's case, it was the insistence that the ME-262 be capable of bombing, thus delaying its operational debut by almost a year that kept it from being a true game-changer. On the Japanese side, if they had concentrated their efforts earlier on some of the fantastic fighter designs, before the material shortages made it impossible to field these aircraft in any meaningful numbers, it would have been more difficult for the Pacific campaign, and the special attack units might not have been formed at all
Great content, format and presentation. Love it.
What about the acidic plywood adhesive they used that caused mid-air, catastrophic falling apart? 1st Grp JG 1 at Rostock lost 13 aircraft of which only 3 were shot down. With a flying time of only 30 minutes, deadstick landings also caused fatalities. 120 were delivered, 200 were awaiting delivery and 600 were half-built by the end of hostilities.
I recall hearing that the adhesive that was used was not the intended one. The Allies had destroyed the manufacturing source for the original adhesive.
The glue never failed in any of planes it was used in. The crashes were caused by poor construction by slave workers.Most of the pilots that few it loved it.
whoops.
Awesome video, the forerunner of our F-16, a simple jet with a single engine.
Thanks for the video and the book recommendation.
Thank you for a very informative and professional video.
Had the 162 been concived and built a year before it might have had a significant effect on the war. It's still one of the most advanced aero designs of the war and my favorite fighter, even if it didn't contribute much if anything to the war effort. With modern manufacturing methonds and a little CAD/CAM modeling to make it a touch more docile, it would make a fantastic light sport jet.
You're videos have always been excellent, but your recent videos have been especially good. Would you consider doing a video on the do335? It's been an aircraft that interested me since I first saw it as a kid, the unique design and curved cockpit reminded me of something out if Star Wars.
Thanks very much, really happy to hear it. I will have a look at the Do 335, probably Q3/4 2024
@@MilitaryAviationHistory Thanks so much I'll be looking forward to it, and to every video in-between👍🏻
Was it a rational choice? - Yes. A cheap means of sudden air superiority would assist the ground forces considerably. The 3rd Reich still loses but not in May ‘45.
Was it too late? - Yes, but worth a try.
Was it a pipe dream? - No. The Me 163 rocket showed what German technology could achieve.
Was it a disgraceful waste of resources? - No. It’s not in the same class as the Maus Tank or V-3 super gun. Good video! 😊
Vielen dank Christoph aus Grossbritanien - deine videos sind echt toll und deine einsicht und begeisterung für die thema ist 🎯 Fwiw - ich wohnte in Wesel (Flüren) als Englisher kind in 86-91 und ein video über varisty/die zerstörung Von Wesel wäre sehr interresant und auch sehr traurig 🥺
Deine Geshichte ist “on par” mit
drachinifel und “we have ways of making you talk” - James Holland 👍🏻
Desperation led to innovation and lots of them. I just wish the Horten could have flown because that looks like an amazing aircraft.
Minute 14:30 - ist die Beschriftung nachträglich von den Allierten angebracht worden? "kortrallieren"?
One thing you never mentioned was that, over the winter of '44 to '45, those pilots who tested it were no older than 18.
Most died.
As to the utility of the aircraft, it was what America, would call a "point defense," fighter - intended for use in the immediate area into which it was launched. It's soeed and short endurance would have suited it for this role (if enough could have been be made.)
I sometimes wonder if, had the Anericans had such an aircraft, if I could be based on escourt carriers to defend against Japanese, suicide pilots and boats.
I have a flying model of this, and the pitch change on throttle change is crazy.
Consider twins flying on one engine, far bigger moment and no big deal, I didn’t even use rudder trim (🦵did mountain cycling).
If you haven't done a video on the subject already, I'd like to know how they turned the P-51 into a long-range escort fighter. Was it aerodynamics? Or just cramming more fuel tanks onto it? Did it pay a price in combat performance for its long range?
It was an interesting approach to a problem that was not going to be solved at that point in time. A year or two earlier, and there would have been time to develop the aircraft properly. And even then it likely wouldn't have changed the outcome of the war.
It's the same with most things Germany did during the war, too little too late. Like how "peoples rifle" concept of arming your second line troops with automatic weapons was a good idea; just came too late, in far too limited numbers and could never solve the Tiger in the room: the manpower shortage
@@Salesman9001too little, too late late and to many crazy things all at same time.
I'm really not a fan of many jets out there, but I will say this is perhaps the only one from WW2 that I could agree actually looks good.
The problem that the Luftwaffe faced was not that they ran out of aircraft, but that they ran out of pilots and fuel. Fuel shortages limited pilot training and created a compounding effect that meant that even if the He162 had been a true technological marvel it would have made little difference. The fact that it was often built with slave labour and low quality materials - I believe that the glue was a particular concern - alongside being far from beginner friendly meant that the aircraft could never succeed
I remember seeing the Heinkel 162 in the Imp. War Museum in London, many years ago, during my one actual visit to London, except transfer in Heathrow, to go north to Newcastle
Just by optics it looks lile a miniture version of an A10. In comparison to the ME262 the concept looks like the F16 compared with F15.
Iike the Salamander for its design features (Area Rule, Canopy, tricycle landing gear, ejection seat, jet) But it had serious quality issues and limitations from its building material (wood). Fine for a Mosquito, but with jet powered panic fighter?
It had potential, but came far too late to make a difference.
A very good and succinct analysis. Certainly too little and too late but interesting nonetheless. And my local air museum (2.5 km walk away) has a very nice example on display!
As usual you got most right (not that I mean you have got anything wrong) the basic problem with the plane, was the political environment, Hitler did not consider that germany could lose the war, before it was far to late, these projects should have been put ind place much earlier.
This was an area where the allies, har a much more realistic awareness. Supermarine developed the Spitfire mark 4 (the first prototype Spitfire with a Griffon engine - it had if I remember correct a top speed of 756 km in 1942 (ok with out guns and all that stuff)) but at the time the max speed of the Spitfire was 657 km and that was the brand new mark 9. The English decided not set it into production, as the plane they had could do the job, and the new engine (the Griffon) was untested. (They changed their mindes later but that another story) .
What's on paper is not always the best ! -
I would love to hear your assessment of the rumour that I have heard, that the british secret service, was ordered to stop all attempts to kill Hitler, as he was considered better alive than dead to the allied war effort !!!
Thank you very much, love you videos, greetings from Mexico
Ignoring hindsight, at that stage it was worth a try. The choices boiled down to accepting defeat was inevitable, or grasping for something extraordinary. Most times the latter won't save you, but on rare occasions it might.
Awesome video! The small little sound effects for the subject transitions were a nice touch. What sound library did you use to achieve that?
Desperate problems lend themselves easily to desperate solutions. No one would ever consider a project and timescale like this except as a last ditched resort. To even have a modern fighter jet in the air and ready for combat in a couple of months, at the losing end of such a destructive war, was an amazing achievement by itself.
Great video
You refer quite a lot to other videos, apartfrom that, very infrmative! 👍😊
Very informative presentation. Good issues which resembled Japanese advanced designs same time period. The issues discussion were inevitable. The Me-262 success was irrelevant to Allied offensive. The desperate origin of He-162 was the logical answer but, again, could not overcome the same issues of the Me-262. Extremely important aviation airframes in the midst of carnage.
damn 2 weeks to plan something like this is just crazy
They do have a head start with the P.1078 but that only goes back to July 1944 as well, barely two additional months
I have always had a love for the Me-262 as it has some amazing lines and for the time, must have been extremely intimidating. My freind Larry Boyle who flew B-24’s told me of the 262 and 163 but never saw the He-162. They terrified bomber crews when first encountered. The 162 (to me) is a beautiful plane and with Hitlers obsession with bombers… just came too late and too few. Another excellent video sir. Thank you
_"Vor dem Start muss Startmanshaft
kortrallieren ob Düse auf
S-Stellung gehfaren"_ (14:30)
Rechtschreibung hatte jedenfalls eine geringere Priorität
I am astonished at that shade tree mechanic level of workmanship (8:58) on that cable end. It meets no aircraft standard in the world…
No MODERN standard. That was typical I 1920s to 1930s aircraft
Hello from London Ontario. I watch your channel with great interest and delight. Within driving distance of my city is Hamilton home to the Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum, Brampton, which has the Great War Flying Museum and of course Ottawa which has the Canadian Space and Aviation Museum. Also, my city is home to a fantastic airshow called SkyDrive...and 530 kms to Dayton, Ohio. You should know what is there...Great video!!!
Informative video.The Heinkel He-162 was too little too late in WW2, and, for a jet fighter, had a lot of teething problems, being difficult to fly.
16:20 "Vor dem Start muss Startmanshaft kontrallieren ob Düse auf S-Stellung gehfaren" (sic) - what's the story with that?
I understand the BMW engine made it a handful. I have a scale RC model of the HE 162 with a good turbine engine and its performance is outstanding. I do not really know how a scale/exact model of the HE 162 can be compared to the full size, but mine flies awesome and its very manureable while been also very stable. Only the rudder use can be naughty if tired at high speed. I only use it to creect jaw going into landing. Your documentary was good, only we disagree in the flying portion of the plane.
This aircraft was intended as a bomber interceptor, not a "dogfighter". It was fast, small and well armed for its size BUT it was not structurally strong enough to endure any violent maneuvering as one would expect if it was pitted against contemporary prop-driven single seat fighters. Too late? Absolutely! Useless? Yes, because it WAS too late. It needed a well trained pilot to handle it and they were in very short supply. Properly training new pilots would have required bases and airspace that were safe from Allied fighters. Those were basically non-existent. Lack of fuel alone would have severely limited operations. These aircraft would have ended up killing more minimally trained Hitler Youth pilots than Allied fighters would. An interesting design though and a good deal "saner" than some other last ditch German aircraft designs.
...could have been tricky to handle, but resulted a genial device.
Impossible to adequately judge the plane. Only by equipping it with a reliable engine could the flight characteristics of the plane be adequately Evaluated and there just wasn’t that option. Conceptually it was fabulous with his cheap, easy fast wood construction and light weight. Fire power was a bit light. Only by building a modern replica with a decent Engine Could we really know what Potential it had
Well presented.
You might get an eye on the System Rott, construction by Waffen Union (former Versuchsanstalt für Strahtriebwerke Grossendorf)in late 44 early 45, a rocket plane with an additional 2- stroke engine to gain longer loitering time once in air. Unknown if even one was made, but all parts were already in place, probably in the Eschenlohe tunnel as last station of this branch of Waffen Union was stationed in wars end in Oberau Kartonnagen Fabrik.
Great video, thank you.
Great video, I love the Salamander. Don't know how accurate the flight model was, but I greatly enjoyed flying it in the game Il-2. Was very maneuverable.
"Useless or Too Late"? It's not an either-or question...
Agreed, it's a poorly formulated question on the topic.
"Yes"
A good point of view on a very Interesting Topic. I myself have studied late war German jets and rocket aircraft for some years so, enjoyed this immensely. The real flaws were assuming that young Inexperienced Hitler youths could strap on a crudely constructed, tricky to fly volksjager and fight off a far superior foe in terms of sheer numbers, training, tactics, and radar.
Watching this and waiting with baited breath to get to the "Easy to Fly" section. One look at this thing and I thought "there's absolutely no way this thing is stable and easy to fly."
I see the Cirrus Vision Jet took some cues from this.
Since you asked 'what do you think?' I figured I'd indulge: seems like a typically incoherent attempt by late-war Germany to create more boutique platforms that are supposedly novel and high-impact, but in fact dilute the mass production of existing models that are more mature, sustainable, and have proven combat effectiveness. The very low production numbers and few recorded combat stories imply the impact of this aircraft was negligible, and likely Germany would have been better off never having started this program and could have allocated the resources towards the me262. Thankfully this pattern of German production program incoherence shortened the war.
Well. armament was also inadequate for the moment, especially considering short time to fly, which only allow like 1 attack. In general it was completely crazy idea - having same time in production excellent Me-262. Clearly plane was design by Heinkel before it was officially requested. It is pretty interesting what type of intrigues lean to such a request.
Great Vid!
Very good video!
What are the big red arrows on the front if the aircraft for?
The engine problems being not part of the aircraft's design, I think it's an impressive aircraft for how absurdly low-tech it all is.
It's also adorable and I love it even though I'd never dare attempt to fly one in reality
Imagine if they had focused on centrifugal flow rather than axial flow engines.
I'd love to see a Heinkel 162 and Arado 234 fly, after their kinks have been ironed out etc., etc., the Heinkel 162 looks great and I've always had a soft spot for the Arado 234....I'm sure that they'd be fun to fly with modern engines and and so on! 😍🥰😎👍🏻
One piece of constructive criticism, the stock sound effects at the start of each chapter both sounds kinda cheap and the siren one actually startled me, lol. Better to not use them at all, I think