It's always really cool to see startups like this. See the process of ignition, clearing and heating the cylinders, and ignition of the engine followed with the fuel adjustment to lean. My favorite is the air ingitions.
No, it's named after the true Spitfire, (A graceful lady who is prone to sudden acts of extreme violence). Nothing to do with the flames from the exhaust.
Do you mean spitting fuel is cool, no my dear loser lover. Spitting fuel is inconvenient. If you want Superior Engine ask about Daimler Benz. DB Engines is a Superior Engine and the worst nightmare for ally.
The Merlin engine no matter what version always flooded with fuel, if the exhausts were not there to spit the fire caused by excess fuel combustion away from the vital components the engine would explode. It was an intentional safety feature to ensure the plane, crew and pilots kept alive plus it’s how the Spitfire got its name from, where else did you think the name came from you moron
You made that up. It was originally going to be called the Shrew or Scarab, but one of the Supermarine bosses overruled the decision and named it after the nickname he gave his own daughter.
@@2shae475 listen here. Don't believe all the shit you read on the internet. Now read this and be educated: "First and foremost the name of a British aircraft had to comply with the Air Ministry naming conventions of the time. In the case of the Spitfire this was the 1932 version which specified that fighters should have names which were, “General words indicating speed, activity or aggressiveness.” Supermarine seem to have intended to use the name for the Type 224, but that design was a failure. Despite stories of little girls and company chairmen, Supermarine then applied to have the name given to their Type 300 design. The Air Ministry Certificate of Design was issued for the Type 300 on 6 March 1936 and on 10 March Supermarine wrote to the Air Ministry saying, “We refer to our conversation of this morning with A E Slater. Would you be good enough to reserve the name ‘Spitfire’ for our fighter to Specn: F7/30 (modified).” Slater replied, “It has been noted for consideration when, and if, an order is placed for this aircraft.” On 10 June another letter arrived at Supermarine confirming that the name was now approved for F7/30 (F37/34 modified). The rest is history." The name was always meant to indicate the firing of the machine guns, and not the engine exhausts or little girls or any other such nonsense.
@@Alex-ck4in it's all there and you can even Google it exact context but I'm not going to do that for your lazy ass. Go do your own search. I've done mine.
It sure is Boks Ugoks! It derived from the Rolls-Royce Kestrel V12 engine which powered the Nimrod if my memory serves me correctly. Its brother the Griffon V12 engine has a more meaty exhaust note to it but you cannot beat the unique sounds these Rolls-Royce engines make, British through & through!
as an appreciater of the internal combustion... this is just such wonderful footage. ..this and the insanity of the double wasp radial or even a good 60 second video of a cold kick start of a '70 shovelhead by some 25-year -old in Japan... we are here because we all share one love... (-:
Que maravillosa tecnologia de esos años..realmente la ingeneria jugaba un papel de alta importancia..hacer aviones de lucha en el aire..realmente impresionante..
Are any of them still flying with their original engine? Or are they replica engines made by staying true to the original? Original engines should also be respected. Because the engines are almost 80 years old.
There are probably engineers with skills and manufacture tools that we don't imagine a single person could own. They do thier silent precision work, we enjoy seeing it all complete.
You delivered exactly what you promised and that deserves a like
Agreed. I love videos like this. Simple and to the point and no clickbait
🙏
@@cwisted5308 yes 7years old video
Saw your comment scrolled up and liked cos you're correct
It's always really cool to see startups like this. See the process of ignition, clearing and heating the cylinders, and ignition of the engine followed with the fuel adjustment to lean. My favorite is the air ingitions.
Es Verdad que a Balazos ?
Si?
Lean?!?!?! I fucking love LEAN
@@raphaelventura2997 woah there buddy
DID SOMEBODY SAY LEAN
Love him or hate him, he's spitting straight fire
That fire spitting facts.
Lit AF!!
I WAS LOOKING FOR THIS COMMENT😭 you beat me to it
Love him
fax 📠
Nice....Love that sound...Noticed the way the Aircraft "lurches" forward once that prop gets going.....Made for the sky, not the ground.
Exactly, just ask Guy Martin haha
Ahm sorry to flood the pool but planes can't stay in one spot in the sky so how can we keep them in the air they have to come down at some point
@@samborambo9745 take a joke fuckstick
It heard that Morbius is back In Theatres
@@samborambo9745 Solar powered aircraft
So that's why they call it a Spitfire
b
No, it's named after the true Spitfire, (A graceful lady who is prone to sudden acts of extreme violence). Nothing to do with the flames from the exhaust.
@@Nibby12 You must be fun at parties -__-
@@Thunderbolt_1000_Siren you must be fun at math camps bozo 😌
@@Thunderbolt_1000_Siren gee, what a comeback!
The fire paired with the start sound of the Merlin engine is just one of the best sounds.
Unless of course you are part of the Luftwaffe in 1940
US ARMY:
*M1-Garand_ping.mp3*
US ARMY AIR CORPS:
*P-51_Merlin_engine.wav*
It was actually the USAAF, United States Army Air Force
Also I know everybody has said but the A-10 brrrrr
There are no words ... it's just .... 👌😍😍😍😍
Totally agree, pure beauty 👍
I agree
🤣
Totally
Do you mean spitting fuel is cool, no my dear loser lover. Spitting fuel is inconvenient. If you want Superior Engine ask about Daimler Benz. DB Engines is a Superior Engine and the worst nightmare for ally.
This is one of the most beautiful machines ever built
It's even can destroy tanks
I agree!
How does a video of a spitfire spitting fire entitled 'spitfire spitting fire' get 5 down votes?
What was you expecting?
One has to wonder about the mentality of some people Alexander!!
Probably wasn’t long enough for them.
It was the Germans that downvoted it.
Because people were expected an Me109 behind it to cause the spit fire.
because it's british 🤮
That is indeed a spitfire spitting fire. The guys who chose the name are the most straight-forward individuals on earth.
I used to work on an old dive boat. Our aircompressor was the starter from a spitfire that had been modified, way cool
I love how standard operating procedure is for it to be on fire.
Not standard, it's overprimed
From an era where men were proper men
Imagine there is a stuka squadron coming towards you and your engine catches fire. Bruh.
The Merlin invariably "spits fire" when starting due to flooding with petrol! Perfectly normal 😁
The Merlin engine no matter what version always flooded with fuel, if the exhausts were not there to spit the fire caused by excess fuel combustion away from the vital components the engine would explode.
It was an intentional safety feature to ensure the plane, crew and pilots kept alive plus it’s how the Spitfire got its name from, where else did you think the name came from you moron
Stukas are sitting ducks for a spitfire, ME-B109's and FW-190's would be more scarier.
"The little spitfire"
Said the manufacturer's chairman about his daughter
"Over Priming" is dangerous, but the fans love it.....
Never expected that the name "Spitfire" would fit a plane so much
Yea but old aircrafts used to do it but it just fits with spitfire perfectly
What a beautiful piston driven bird, just love that sound when it fires up.🍻👍🇨🇦
This beat was strait fire 🔥 Going in my Lit playlist rn 😤🙌🏻
This plane has bars for days
this plane was straight SPITTIN
The Spitfire : THEY DON'T CALL ME "SPITFIRE" FOR *NOTHIN!*
Back, when a under one minute video are more informative, than an one hour.
00:17 The hollow echo of the pistons starting to pound is music
Rickroll...
Real asmr.
YO!! Thanks for the idea, definitely gonna sample
"Submarine my arse!"
- A very wet British pilot
The algorithm always brings us together, morning chaps
How's corona there?
A Merlin stack fire is always presaged by that funny noise.
A man walked into a bar and the bartender said
"What would you like?"
The term "Spitfire" refered to the 8 x .303 Browning's located in the wings. When they spat fire, the enemy went down.
You made that up.
It was originally going to be called the Shrew or Scarab, but one of the Supermarine bosses overruled the decision and named it after the nickname he gave his own daughter.
@@2shae475 listen here. Don't believe all the shit you read on the internet. Now read this and be educated:
"First and foremost the name of a British aircraft had to comply with the Air Ministry naming conventions of the time. In the case of the Spitfire this was the 1932 version which specified that fighters should have names which were,
“General words indicating speed, activity or aggressiveness.”
Supermarine seem to have intended to use the name for the Type 224, but that design was a failure. Despite stories of little girls and company chairmen, Supermarine then applied to have the name given to their Type 300 design.
The Air Ministry Certificate of Design was issued for the Type 300 on 6 March 1936 and on 10 March Supermarine wrote to the Air Ministry saying,
“We refer to our conversation of this morning with A E Slater. Would you be good enough to reserve the name ‘Spitfire’ for our fighter to Specn: F7/30 (modified).”
Slater replied,
“It has been noted for consideration when, and if, an order is placed for this aircraft.”
On 10 June another letter arrived at Supermarine confirming that the name was now approved for F7/30 (F37/34 modified).
The rest is history."
The name was always meant to indicate the firing of the machine guns, and not the engine exhausts or little girls or any other such nonsense.
@@2engjnr2 that was so much talk just to say nothing about the conception of the name
@@Alex-ck4in it's all there and you can even Google it exact context but I'm not going to do that for your lazy ass. Go do your own search. I've done mine.
@@2engjnr2 Why should i believe this shit on the internet?
Thank you for the vid and not being clickbait! Deserves a sub and a like
Many thanks, Happy Christmas!
That's how it got the name spitfire
Actually it was more to do with the calibration of the guns
It was to be called the 'Shrew' originally but the head of Vickers wanted the name Spitfire. Mitchell did not like the name.
Bruh it feels so strange that their called spitfires because of the guy who named it’s daughter and not because it spits actual fire
Spitfires are one of the coolest planes
It lives up to its name
The sound touched my heart man😘.
That Merlin V12 is the greatest piece of wartime engineering ever created. It sits alongside the BMW Aero V12 and the Packard 42 Liter V12
Is it rotary?
It sure is Boks Ugoks! It derived from the Rolls-Royce Kestrel V12 engine which powered the Nimrod if my memory serves me correctly.
Its brother the Griffon V12 engine has a more meaty exhaust note to it but you cannot beat the unique sounds these Rolls-Royce engines make, British through & through!
0:10 Uranus when you eat Extra Hot Chili foods.
Homie sure can spit, best rhymes I’ve heard all year.
Because its name is literally a “SPITfire”
as an appreciater of the internal combustion... this is just such wonderful footage. ..this and the insanity of the double wasp radial or even a good 60 second video of a cold kick start of a '70 shovelhead by some 25-year -old in Japan... we are here because we all share one love... (-:
Ты пьяный брат?
Eminem's been real quiet since this dropped
1940s afterburners look sick
and I always thought the "fire" part was about bullets...
Finally a rapper that doesn't mumble
That's a very powerful engine to carry the entirety of Britain.
Of always the languages on the world my man woke up and choose to spit fire
Thats slick tea sipping Britt birdy wiped out all Stuka, dang it.🙄
The Spitfire in its natural habitat.
Something about ww2 planes
just big heavy mean loud, exhaust belching juggernauts. I can smell the grease through my screen. Awesome.
Ladies and gentlemen - the sound of victory!
It's nice to see that not all titles are clickbait. Thanks :)
Now we know why they are called "Spitfire"
Spitfire litterally doing spitfire things
these are some bars 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Pov : This has been recommended to you
"Spitfire spits fire"
*HM, YES, THE FLOOR HERE IS MADE OUT OF FLOOR*
I well never get bored from this engine voice iam ready to listen to this engine all the day
Bro a Spitfire spitting fire? That’s fire 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
Damn man, Spitfire spitting facts of why old planes are still powerful
that's how any war movie should start, spitfire starting up
When you see a video less than a minute, you know its legendary...
This thing literally SPITS FIRE!
Like it or not he spittin straight fax
Missed the chance for "Spitfire spitting fire, while Spitfire plays"
That seems appropriate.
My god that sound - incredible
It's amazing to see past videos 6or more years old
This might be a typical Merlin engine starting up, but this engine is anything but typical. Thx for the eargasm
Que maravillosa tecnologia de esos años..realmente la ingeneria jugaba un papel de alta importancia..hacer aviones de lucha en el aire..realmente impresionante..
Spitfire✔️
A spitfire spitting fire✔️
10/10 got what was promissed
How did i get goosebumps? Awe inducing
It’s in the name for a reason but I love the fact that it’s a 27liter Merlin v12 that’s like huge
That plane spitting facts
It is spitting fire, by the looks of it.
he do be spittin tho
Замечательная машина! Звук - просто музыка!
Spitting facts, that spitfire did in fact spit fire
Spitfire as the name suggests. The plane spits fire
It's a spirfire George, it spits fire
The algorithm has blessed us yet again
In the early days you did heat an engine with open flames.
That spitfire takes his name way to serious 🤣it actually spits fire
Finnaly, he did what he promissed to.
Neat!! I heard the reason why the pipes are angled backwards is to glean another 5 mph of speed from the thrust of the exhaust.
To think that this used to fly in group is just a dream.
Now we need spitwater spitearth and spitair
Such a beautiful bird...
You may not like him, but he's spitting fire
“Supa hot fire-I spit that.”
A spitfire. Literally.
Who would've thought that spitfires spit fire
Finnaly lives up to its name.
Oh, the V12 glory!
Spitfire is just living up to the name
I love 2strokes engine sounds
Title delivered. Perfection
Living up for its name
Are any of them still flying with their original engine? Or are they replica engines made by staying true to the original? Original engines should also be respected. Because the engines are almost 80 years old.
Aircraft engines need to be overhauled after heavy use, no way it still has original parts after 80 years
There are probably engineers with skills and manufacture tools that we don't imagine a single person could own. They do thier silent precision work, we enjoy seeing it all complete.
@@kshysztof9649 wut
The amount if petrol needed for this and also for it to fly will absolutely spit fire in pocket too
Spitfire do be spittin' fire
she didn't spit fire, she spit straight facts
Should put a huge board saying "this is completely normal"
Bro's spitting fire rn.