Nicely done, and a very neat synopsis of vastly dispirit concepts of what won wars, and what eventually won this war. Thanks. Enjoyed that very much and have shared.
It would have undergone considerable "clean-up" in development - akin to the remarkable war time transformation of the ugly duckling HP Halifax into a very capable heavy by conflict's end.
It had a much longer span wing, much higher wing area (15%) and higher aspect ratio 15% and wing area (20%) than Stirling so it wouldn't have had the Stirling's problems such as needing a high angle of attack and low service ceiling.
Yes, there's a specific look to those inter-war big aircraft. It extends to the French and Russian designs if you mask off the nose and cockpit. I think it reflects the demands on contemporary technology to make such a size of beast airworthy. Metal spars bracing the structure against the stresses of mostly-level flight. The change in look into WW2 (Rounder fuselage section, deeper wings) reflect improved technology, but also bracing teh craft for harsher manoeuvres, and against being shot at.
A very good video on an oft overlooked design! I hope you consider doing the he177 to there arent really any dedicated videos on it and despite its bad reputation it did have some relatively good success especially in the baby blitz where it did much better than planes like the do 217 and the ju 188 according to what ive read
Thank you, this is the first time I learned in more depth about this aircraft. Its simple straightforward design is indeed convincing - although a tricycle gear would have been an obvious improvement (same could be said e.g. for the Short Stirling). I liked also the context of German bomber doctrine and its tie-ins with top military personnel that you provided.
The Do 19 had a longer span wing (114ft) versus 99ft for the Stirling. Also higher wing area 1724 sqft versus only 1460 sqft for the stirling and higher aspect ratio. It would have had non of the Stirlings shortcomings. Had it have been developed it could have had 1100hp Jumo 211A engines or DB601A1 engines by 1939 or the Bram 323 if the others were in short supply and grown to 1450hp of the Jumo 211J and even the1700hp of BMW 801. -What they got was the Fw 200 which couldn't handle more than ther 550kg Bram 3232 engine, leaked a tail turret, was slow. With the Do 19 the Luftwaffe and German Navy would have had the maritime reconnaissance bomber they needed, even help bismark as well as a way to hit Soviet factories in the Ural mountains. The Fw 200 would then do what it did best, be a better transport than the Ju 52.
@@Schlipperschlopper The He 177A did not enter service till 1943 (officially it was 1942 but it was useless) and its engines were not reliable till the latter part of 1943. The He 177 was simply too late. The Do 19 or Do 89 could have been in service in 1940. The He 177B was the 4 engined version. The He 277 was a heavily redesigned version with new cockpit. In his autobiography He 1000 Ernst Heinkel recounts how he begged the outage to make the He 177 as a 4 engine aircraft and to remove the dive bombing requirement. By 1942 the StuVi 5B slide bombing sight and Lotfe 7 computing bombsight made dive bombing irrelevant and the requirement was removed
If developed as a low production rate aircraft, perhaps at the expense of the Do 17 and Do 217 the Do 19 would have replaced the Fw 200 in the long range reconnaissance bomber role. With the ability to take the Jumo 211 or DB601 it would have been much faster and also much better armed than the Fw 200 with a tail turret. It had a much better chance of evading or defeating the Sea Hurricanes and Wildcat/Martlet fighters that were used on escort carriers allowing it to take greater risks and targeting information for the U-boats. Fw 200 were deadly in 1940-1941 and became deadly again in 1943 with their new Lotfe 7 bomb sights (eg when they level bomber accurately 3 merchant ships from 15000ft. ) -This would have left the Fw 200 to do what it be best be a transport (desperately needed in North Africa and Stalingrad) -It also would have been able to bomb Soviet Ural factories in 1941 and 1942 using the DB601A engine which had good altitude performance. -An opportunity missed.
@@aviationdeepdive The Stirling prototype wasn't even the same scale as the production aircraft i'v made a video about talking about Shorts will i see the S23 on here in the near future?
The German tendency toward over-engineering seemed to hamper them often. The He.177 is a perfect example of this. The Do.19 could possibly have been a viable bomber with the intended 4-engine configuration.
There wasn't 'over engineering' in the He 177 it had difficult requirements to meet. In fact the claim that Germans "over engineer" is pretty much cope by those who couldn't understand how a sophisticated device could be mass produced cost efficiently. -In the case of the He 177 the high command of the Luftwaffe decided in 1937 that they couldn't afford 4 engine bombers, only tactical bombers that could directly support German ground forces were essential. The nightmare scenario for German military planners at the time was a simultaneous French, Polish invasion with the British and Czechs even joining in. In that context only 2 engines aircraft would bee useful in preventing a land invasion. Dive bombers were particularly valued. Note that German planners did not imagine having control of the French and Norwegian coasts nor was a need to bomb Russian factories beyond the Urals seen as necessary hence the Ju 89 and Do 19 were cancelled. -Eventually the value of a 4 engine bomber began to be appreciated and it was though that a 4 engine bombers was affordable only if it perform tactical roles like precision dive bombing. -Hence the He 177 was expected to be a long range bomber as well as carry our 45 degree dives. It had to be able to carry a 1 ton bomb load 3300 miles. -A two engine design was neccesary to deal with aeroelasic issues when diving as well as to give improved aerodynamics to meet the range requirement. -It didn't help that the Jumo 222 was delayed and the DB606 and DB610 had to be chosen. -The reality is the allies didn't get 2500hp engines going till 1943 (eg the Centaurus in the Warwick) and the R-3350 and both were troublesome. -Obviously the Germans should have settled for a 4 seperate engine design in 1940 but at the time the Lotfe 7 bomb sight wasn't available.
Good video, although I don't agree with the implicit premise that Germany should've developed a strategic bomber. Anglophone histories decry the lack of a German strategic bomber, but the German planners were probably right. With strong potential enemies on her immediate land borders, Germany could lose a land war long before strategic bombing had any effect. Thus the emphasis on tactical air. Additionally, Germany was chronically short of labour and many strategic materials. They drastically reduced the planned mechanization of their army for this reason. These constraints militated against a strategic bomber program too. Finally, if a war with the USSR or Britain went long enough for strategic bombing to be relevant to the outcome, then Germany was going to lose anyway.
I also don't necessarily agree that they 'should' have developed a dedicated strategic bomber, but a part of my main point is that they did - just really badly. They spent the man hours and materials to produce 1,169 Heinkel He 177s - an aircraft that had an identity crisis. A 'strategic bomber' that had elements of the 'schnellbomber' (the concept that the bomber should be faster than the fighter) even though it must have been known fairly early on that the 177 was never going to be faster than fighters of the time. The result was an aircraft that suffered from Schnellbomber issues, without the advantages, and Strategic bomber issues, without the advantages. Had they invested this time and effort into a more traditional route of development such as the Dornier or the Junkers, the results would have been far better, and the doctrine at least consistent. That is the extent to which my personal opinion comes into the video, the rest is simply quotes from Luftwaffe officials or sources.
The He 177 was not a bad plane per se. It was an unfortunate decision to design it as a dive bomber and therefore use a "twin engine" concept with coupled DB606 engines. These coupled engines, like their British counterparts, were extremely problematic. Converted to the four-engined He 177 B variant as planned, the He 177 could have the potential to become a nightmare for the British, as Operation Steinbock demonstrated. But it was much too late and the Allies were at the door.
Excellent, never heard of this bomber before. I wonder if Germany did build some long range bombers, could they bomb factories in the Ural mountains, and if so, to what effect ? Alot of precious fuel would be used.
This one, despite being made for the 'Ural bomber project', would ironically have not been able to fulfil it's purpose (at least initially) as it's range simply wasn't up to it. Although with some more development it probably would have been able to. The Ju 89 had a similarly poor range of 1,600 km (995 mi) but by the end of it's development cycle, it had turned into the Ju 290 with a range of 6,148 km (3,820 mi) - more than enough to reach the Urals and back. So I'm sure in time the Do 19 probably would have grown into it's requirements, but yes it would have used a huge amount of fuel.
"I wonder if Germany did build some long range bombers, could they bomb factories in the Ural mountains, and if so, to what effect ?" Little to none. Just as the Soviet bombing raids against Germany in -41 and -42 were barely noticed, the same or even worse would be true the other way around, because Germany would have just as few bombers, but these would have to fly HIGH, where most of the Soviet fighters were at their best, over predictable routes, face heavy AA fire and be no better at hitting anything than other early war heavy bombers were. And it wouldn't have been until their first failed bombing raid that Germans would even realise just how difficult it is to achieve acceptable accuracy from high altitude heavy bombers. It's one of the reasons USSR mostly quit their attempts at it, because it would simply take far too much resources both building up enough bombers AND to develop a good enough bombsight to make them worth building. Also, every heavy bomber made would mean NOT having at least TWICE as many medium bombers. To have any chance of doing anything beyond rearranging some dirt on the ground, Germany would need at least a few hundred heavy bombers. 200 heavy bombers would mean at minimum 400 fewer medium bombers. That would be a disastrous trade. Because what is often not brought up is the fact that compared to their expenses both building and flying, heavy bombers are exceptionally inefficient. While a Stuka could somewhat reliably deliver half their bombs within 20m from a target, and a medium bomber could put half their bombs within 100m of a target, heavy bombers accuracy was more like 50% within 500m of the target. For certain targets, like largescale refineries, such can be acceptable, but overall, for heavy bombers to have any real effect, you needed overwhelming numbers and air superiority. Germany had absolutely no chance of achieving either over the Urals.
Germany's Luftwaffe was a tactical air force. The three dominant designs He 111, Do 17 & Ju 88 were intended to directly support ground operations (Blitzkrieg), not strategic terror fire bombing or atomic bombing of civilian cities as the RAF Stirling, Halifax, Lancaster and USAAC B-17, B-24 and B-29 heavies did.
Strategic bombing does not necessarily equal fire bombing or atomic bombing. In this context we strictly refer to it as a method to put pressure and reduce effectiveness of an enemies industry via bombing factories, docks, railroads... etc in an enemy country. Considering that the Luftwaffe had no issue bombing civilians in the Battle of Britain, and then rocketing them with V1 bombs, this 'morality' issue isn't directly relevant to the topic. The reason Germany didn't develop long-range heavies to a large extent was because they didn't place enough emphasis on strategic bombing of enemy industry, which was a mistake, and it was too late by the time they recognised it.
No, the Fw 200 was an arguably quite successful makeshift long range maritime reconnaissance/anti-ship aircraft, but definitively not suitable as a heavy bomber. I recommend the German version of the Fw 200 Wikipedia entry. It contains a good summary of the plane's issues.
A good friend of mine once said, "You can afford anything, but you can't afford everything". Germany did pretty good keeping up with tactical aircraft production before and during WWII, but I doubt it had the additional resources to produce and maintain a viable strategic bomber force at the same time. As Abraham Lincoln once said, when he was being pressed by numerous hopeful Federal office appointees, "There aren't enough teats on the hog for the number of piglets".
@@endi3386the Germans my have made 1,000 Heinkel 177s, but they never operated anywhere near that many. Meanwhile, the Allies produced 12,731 B-17s, 18,500 B-24s, 3,970 B-29, 7,377 Lancasters, and 2371 Stirlings. That is what's called a viable strategic bomber force. The most noteworthy use of the Heinkel He 177 was its use as a cargo carrier during the Soviet siege of Stalingrad, and because of continuing engine failures, it failed in that role.
At the time the decision to cancel the Do 19 and Ju 89 were taken Germany was in a militarily precarious situation with both Poland and France much stronger and easily able to invade Germany (on their own not in unison) especially if aided by Britain. It's no good having long range aircraft to bomb beyond the Urals or interdict British Convoys mid transatlantic from almost land locked Germany if troops and tanks are rolling across the border. . The belief is that many fighters and tactical aircraft would be needed to support the German army. It turns out to be a wrong decision in the long term. The Do 19 and Ju 89 would have evolved well with refinements and Jumo 211/DB601/DB605 engines. The Ju 89/Do 19 were cancelled but it was argue that German could have 4 engines bombers if they could be made to serve as tactical aircraft. This then led to the Ju 88, Ju 288 and He 177 dive bomber requirements. In the end the Lotfe 7 computing bomb sight and the StuVi 5B shallow dive bombing sight made dive bombing redundant by 1942 as these techniques were more accurate. Fw 200 that attacked Convoy Faith in 1942 managed to get a 3 direct hits in only 5 attack runs against moving convoy ships from 15,000ft. The two runs that missed were against warships that maneuvered out of the way of the falling bombs (25 seconds fall time) -The Luftwaffe supported the German Navy very poorly. Do 19/Ju 89 would have made a huge difference in 1942 ass they attacked convoys from a safe altitude for almost a year before escort carriers came in.
Geez….I can’t imagine in the Battle Of Britain where this bomber gets butchered badly by Hurricanes and Spitfires. Remember the BF-109s can’t cover their bacon the whole way.
A flawed assumption is made. That Germany would have benefitted from heavy bombers. Consider the fact of the Soviet bombing raids against Germany in 1941 and 1942. Yes, the ones most people have never heard of, because they achieved almost nothing, because USSR did not have enough heavy bombers to do more than slightly scratch the paint for Germany. Without the tactical bombers in the numbers they had them, Germany would not have been capable of winning the early campaigns in Poland and against France. Then what good would having a few hundred heavy bombers done them? None what so ever. Because Germany would not be able to maintain a large enough heavy bomber fleet to do anything more useful than what their medium bombers already achieved historically. And every lost aircraft would be more than twice as big of a loss. Losing air superiority would also affect heavy bombers just as badly as medium bombers. Because as already shown above by the example of the Soviet heavy bombers, the idea of "the bombers always gets through" is completely false, just as Douhet's doctrine of winning wars through terrorbombing has been clearly shown to be false. . Regardless, it was interesting to see someone try to look at the Do-19.
It's a mistake to try and extrapolate a single variable from Soviet operations and try to apply that to Germany at the time. There are so many thousands of variables at play that that comparison is not relevant. The claim that Germany would not have been able to win the early campaigns without tactical bombers is also a little too black and white. it is interesting that you pick the Soviet Union as an example, a country famous in WW2 for having essentially no strategic bombers. The Pe-8 is really the only one, and only 93 were produced. It was not suggested to get rid of every tactical bomber and replace it with strategic bombers, but it has been suggested that the lack of a reliable, sizeable strategic bomber force significantly harmed Germany. Losing air superiority would also certainly not affect heavy bombers as bad as tactical bombers, because by their nature tactical bombers fly lower altitude against tactical targets, and are thus far harder to defend and more vulnerable. High altitude formations are much harder to reach, and also significantly easier to defend for fighter escort. I don't think anybody is suggesting that Germany would have won the war or anything like that (that was over as soon as the US joined the party), but just that the the lack of a strategic bomber force meant that they could never put a huge amount of pressure on enemy industry, whilst Germany always had a huge amount of pressure on hers. Also keep in mind, the quotations are give are not necessarily my opinions - they are excerpts from letters and conversations from Luftwaffe officials or sources.
@@aviationdeepdive "it is interesting that you pick the Soviet Union as an example, a country famous in WW2 for having essentially no strategic bombers. The Pe-8 is really the only one, and only 93 were produced." And over 800 TB-3, getting old by WWII, but still definitely in use. And thousands of Il-4 that were medium bombers, but also used for strategic missions. I picked USSR because it was the most directly comparable. "The claim that Germany would not have been able to win the early campaigns without tactical bombers is also a little too black and white." It's simple fact. Germany was heavily reliant on having lots of support from the airforce during 1939 and 1940. And to get enough heavy bombers to be able to do ANYTHING useful, you need several hundred. And even being gracious about it, for every heavy bomber, you lose two medium bombers. Or even worse, more than 4 times as many light bombers like Stukas. "It was not suggested to get rid of every tactical bomber and replace it with strategic bombers" And? Germany had great difficulty maintaining enough aircraft operational even as it was. "but it has been suggested that the lack of a reliable, sizeable strategic bomber force significantly harmed Germany." Yes, by people that pretends that you can just switch out, the same way they argue that Germany should have just gone with an equal number of Tiger tanks instead of Pz-IIIs and Pz-IVs. Heavy bombers require 3 times the support infrastructure of medium bombers, while actually doing much less damage per plane, due to the lower accuracy and fewer missions flown over time. "Losing air superiority would also certainly not affect heavy bombers as bad as tactical bombers, because by their nature tactical bombers fly lower altitude against tactical targets, and are thus far harder to defend and more vulnerable. High altitude formations are much harder to reach, and also significantly easier to defend for fighter escort." What fighter escorts? Germany had NOTHING that would be suitable to fly as heavy bomber escorts. And yes it would affect them as badly, because they would be even more vulnerable while taking off and landing, while they would be spotted on radar even earlier, negating that advantage during the attack. "but just that the the lack of a strategic bomber force meant that they could never put a huge amount of pressure on enemy industry, whilst Germany always had a huge amount of pressure on hers." Yes, but here, once again we have the critical part of this concept. That the German industry was put under pressure SOLELY because the wallies employed THOUSANDS of aircrafts in doing so. And even with that HUGE amount of resources employed, the actual damage done to the German INDUSTRY was fairly low most of the time, while the amount of losses taken to the wallies bomber forces were MAJOR. Don't forget, several times, it was considered whether keeping up the bombing campaign was worth it at all or not. The ONLY REASON that the wallied bombing campaign was not stopped several of those times was because it was the only excuse the wallies had to tell Stalin they were DOING something. The amount of resources used by the wallied bombing campaign overall far FAR exceeds the amount of damage they caused to the German industry. It wasn't until 1944 when Germany was already essentially defeated and wallied conducted their "wipe cities from the map" raids that their effects on German industry became actually severe and worth the effort. Don't forget, German industrial production INCREASED all the way up to 1944. And most of the time, when industry was hit, the machinetools were too massive to take critical damage, so unless a bomb struck tools bullseye, sometimes they could be back in function just hours later and at worst it rarely took over two weeks to repair them. Oh no, this is why strategic bombing overall is a BAD idea. Because it's not the industry you're bombing, you're terrorbombing the people. The industry can also be hidden away, as the Germans did with a lot of critical production, making them exceptionally difficult to destroy or even find in some cases. There has been many simulations gamed out to test, where the wallies do not invest in heavy bombers. 8 or 9 times out of 10, Germany is defeated faster. Strategic bombing is more emotional than effective.
@@DIREWOLFx75 You've taken this extremely far, I don't need to remind you again that I've quoted Luftwaffe officials and sources, and my personal opinion barely comes into it. Part of the reason why your points don't stand up to scrutiny is because the Luftwaffe DID invest in the resource and manpower intensive infrastructure to maintain and upkeep a strategic bomber force, they just did it in the worst way possible - by mixing doctrines. Over 1,000 Heinkel He 177s were built, an aircraft that had significant design features chosen because of a romanticised ideal of a 'schnellbomber'. At that point in time, there was not a chance in hell that such an aircraft could outrun modern fighters of the day, but they went with it. Not with developments of the Do 19, or the Ju 89, but with the He 177. The simple fact is you act as though as it wasn't done by the Germans, but it was - just terribly ineffectively. By mixing doctrines, their single long range strategic bomber was horrendously ineffective, and so has largely been forgotten. You don't seem to understand that you are not arguing with me, you arguing with the points raised by Luftwaffe officials and the authors in the sources, not me. Apart from the points I've raised above, I don't feel a particular way about how much of a resource gambit strategic bombing is. The main point is, you act as though it would have been a bad idea for the Germans idea to invest in it, and perhaps it was, because they did - and they did it with an aircraft that was far inferior to any 'could-have-been' more standard design. One other point, you said the Germans had nothing that could fly as a fighter escort, but this is just mixing in even more incompetence from the Luftwaffe. The Focke-Wulf Fw 187 was proposed for this very job, and had performance that matched similar fighters of the time with twice the range - so this point is null.
Good example of tunnel vision and not doing what is needed with limited resources. A theme throughout the video is military commanders focusing on their own commands' needs. The close support of ground units. The completely ignored what they were familiar with, the critical supplies needed to project power against them by their opponents. They knew that interdiction bombing against the far behind the lines the supplies and production facilities of their opponents. Crippling them was Adolph Hitler who thought of himself as a great military commander but he never grew beyond the little corporal from the WWI trenches. This is evident with Goering's response 'The Fuhrer does not care how big my bombers are he just wants to know how many”. So they were micro manged by an incompetent leader. They knew that in 1935 the US had flown the B-17 bomber and that their own territories could be hit by heavy, long range combers. The US was reeling from the Depression and could not afford a fleet of B-17s. So they built a minimal amount to keep the design active and worked the bugs out of the design. Before the US was dragged kicking and screaming into the war some B-17s were shipped to England. Several short comings were found in combat. That in the climate of the European theater failures do to freezing were identified and dealt with. One problem can be seen looking at photos of the early B-17s with soon after models. The waist gunners positions need to be changed. They were directly opposite of each other and the gunners got into each other's way. So the open gun positions were staggered. With an incompetent leader inter command squabbling put an almost stop to heavy bomber development. So when they needed heavy bombers there was not to scale up production of as the US and great Briton had.
@@edwardcnnell2853 And both were key to the development of the B-29 and B-32 (and subsequent B-36) as they taught the U.S. how to build really big aircraft and the required engines.
Good stuff ADD. When are you going to do a deep dive into why the Bf-109 was chosen over the He-100 what with the He-100 being better armed, better engine, faster (110kph faster!) and a higher ceiling than the equivalent Bf-109E1? Was it all down to Willi being far more fluent in Nazi than Heinkel? Note that Wikipedia's reason is nonsensical. Even if Heinkel was chosen to produce bombers and Messerschmitt fighters, it still makes no sense that Messerschmitt produces an inferior fighter. Perhaps naively, I would have thought that building the better fighter is what you might do if you actually wanted to win a war.
I strongly disagree. The He 100 had an *"evaporative cooling"* that is absolutely not suitable for any warplane. The Daimler-Benz DB 601 was also chosen for early Bf 109 marks. Since the motor cannon didn't work in the Bf 109 in the early stages of the war, it wouldn't have been worked in the He 100 either. Speed isn't everything. The wing loading was far too high, worsening maneuvrability. The He 100 was a small, pretty , sophisticated and fast speed record plane - that's it. Eventually the Fw 190 had the development potential that the Bf 109 lacked.
Nicely done, and a very neat synopsis of vastly dispirit concepts of what won wars, and what eventually won this war. Thanks. Enjoyed that very much and have shared.
Appreciate that a lot, thankyou!
Looks like a cross between a Whitley and a Stirling... and just as homely as either!
It would have undergone considerable "clean-up" in development - akin to the remarkable war time transformation of the ugly duckling HP Halifax into a very capable heavy by conflict's end.
Was going to say it looks like the son of a Whitley that was rogered by a Stirling! lol
It had a much longer span wing, much higher wing area (15%) and higher aspect ratio 15% and wing area (20%) than Stirling so it wouldn't have had the Stirling's problems such as needing a high angle of attack and low service ceiling.
looks like a 4 engine Whitworth .
Armstrong Whitworth Whitley, looks like.
Yes, there's a specific look to those inter-war big aircraft.
It extends to the French and Russian designs if you mask off the nose and cockpit.
I think it reflects the demands on contemporary technology to make such a size of beast airworthy.
Metal spars bracing the structure against the stresses of mostly-level flight.
The change in look into WW2 (Rounder fuselage section, deeper wings) reflect improved technology, but also bracing teh craft for harsher manoeuvres, and against being shot at.
But flying straight!
Yes, after it'd had a furtive behind the hangar 'rendevous' with a Halifax.
A very good video on an oft overlooked design! I hope you consider doing the he177 to there arent really any dedicated videos on it and despite its bad reputation it did have some relatively good success especially in the baby blitz where it did much better than planes like the do 217 and the ju 188 according to what ive read
Very nice informative early aviation video!
Thanks for sharing!
Very, very interesting. 'Glad for sake of sharing knowledge you three shared with us this morning.
excellent documentary
Thank you, this is the first time I learned in more depth about this aircraft. Its simple straightforward design is indeed convincing - although a tricycle gear would have been an obvious improvement (same could be said e.g. for the Short Stirling).
I liked also the context of German bomber doctrine and its tie-ins with top military personnel that you provided.
Glad you enjoyed it, felt I had to go a bit more in depth to the politics as it's sort of the central factor in the whole story of the aircraft.
Thank you. Great video. Even if the first picture of the Ju 89 shows a Ju 90.
I would call it the German Short Stirling!
Believe it or not it is actually quite a bit bigger I have both in 1/72 model form.
The Do 19 had a longer span wing (114ft) versus 99ft for the Stirling. Also higher wing area 1724 sqft versus only 1460 sqft for the stirling and higher aspect ratio.
It would have had non of the Stirlings shortcomings. Had it have been developed it could have had 1100hp Jumo 211A engines or DB601A1 engines by 1939 or the Bram 323 if the others were in short supply and grown to 1450hp of the Jumo 211J and even the1700hp of BMW 801.
-What they got was the Fw 200 which couldn't handle more than ther 550kg Bram 3232 engine, leaked a tail turret, was slow. With the Do 19 the Luftwaffe and German Navy would have had the maritime reconnaissance bomber they needed, even help bismark as well as a way to hit Soviet factories in the Ural mountains. The Fw 200 would then do what it did best, be a better transport than the Ju 52.
@@williamzk9083 Well Germans developed the Heinkel Greif and with 2 later conventional radial engines it was reliable and modern too...
@@Schlipperschlopper The He 177A did not enter service till 1943 (officially it was 1942 but it was useless) and its engines were not reliable till the latter part of 1943. The He 177 was simply too late. The Do 19 or Do 89 could have been in service in 1940.
The He 177B was the 4 engined version. The He 277 was a heavily redesigned version with new cockpit. In his autobiography He 1000 Ernst Heinkel recounts how he begged the outage to make the He 177 as a 4 engine aircraft and to remove the dive bombing requirement. By 1942 the StuVi 5B slide bombing sight and Lotfe 7 computing bombsight made dive bombing irrelevant and the requirement was removed
Very interesting and informative video.
Thanks for sharing your experiences with the subject concept.
🙈🙉🙊 😎 🇺🇸
Thanks and new to me. 👍
The 3 that were being built could have been adapted to long range Recon. I wonder how that might have effected operations on the eastern front.
If developed as a low production rate aircraft, perhaps at the expense of the Do 17 and Do 217 the Do 19 would have replaced the Fw 200 in the long range reconnaissance bomber role. With the ability to take the Jumo 211 or DB601 it would have been much faster and also much better armed than the Fw 200 with a tail turret. It had a much better chance of evading or defeating the Sea Hurricanes and Wildcat/Martlet fighters that were used on escort carriers allowing it to take greater risks and targeting information for the U-boats. Fw 200 were deadly in 1940-1941 and became deadly again in 1943 with their new Lotfe 7 bomb sights (eg when they level bomber accurately 3 merchant ships from 15000ft. )
-This would have left the Fw 200 to do what it be best be a transport (desperately needed in North Africa and Stalingrad)
-It also would have been able to bomb Soviet Ural factories in 1941 and 1942 using the DB601A engine which had good altitude performance.
-An opportunity missed.
Looks like a Short Stirling
Huh, I didn't see that before but you're right!
@@aviationdeepdive The Stirling prototype wasn't even the same scale as the production aircraft i'v made a video about talking about Shorts will i see the S23 on here in the near future?
looks a bit like the Short Sterling if hatched a couple years early
I thought it looked a lot like the Sterling - both the cockpit and the steep angle on the ground.
@@jeffp3415 with a Whitley tail tacked on. Those make me laugh because they always appear to be flying down hill.
Dornier started his career with Zeppelin and ended at NASA.
Why did the turret require a second man to rotate it, that sounds difficult to coordinate? How about foot peddles to slew it around?
The German tendency toward over-engineering seemed to hamper them often. The He.177 is a perfect example of this. The Do.19 could possibly have been a viable bomber with the intended 4-engine configuration.
There wasn't 'over engineering' in the He 177 it had difficult requirements to meet. In fact the claim that Germans "over engineer" is pretty much cope by those who couldn't understand how a sophisticated device could be mass produced cost efficiently.
-In the case of the He 177 the high command of the Luftwaffe decided in 1937 that they couldn't afford 4 engine bombers, only tactical bombers that could directly support German ground forces were essential. The nightmare scenario for German military planners at the time was a simultaneous French, Polish invasion with the British and Czechs even joining in. In that context only 2 engines aircraft would bee useful in preventing a land invasion. Dive bombers were particularly valued. Note that German planners did not imagine having control of the French and Norwegian coasts nor was a need to bomb Russian factories beyond the Urals seen as necessary hence the Ju 89 and Do 19 were cancelled.
-Eventually the value of a 4 engine bomber began to be appreciated and it was though that a 4 engine bombers was affordable only if it perform tactical roles like precision dive bombing.
-Hence the He 177 was expected to be a long range bomber as well as carry our 45 degree dives. It had to be able to carry a 1 ton bomb load 3300 miles.
-A two engine design was neccesary to deal with aeroelasic issues when diving as well as to give improved aerodynamics to meet the range requirement.
-It didn't help that the Jumo 222 was delayed and the DB606 and DB610 had to be chosen.
-The reality is the allies didn't get 2500hp engines going till 1943 (eg the Centaurus in the Warwick) and the R-3350 and both were troublesome.
-Obviously the Germans should have settled for a 4 seperate engine design in 1940 but at the time the Lotfe 7 bomb sight wasn't available.
The two man gun team sounds about as effective as the two man Bolton Paul Defiant
Good video, although I don't agree with the implicit premise that Germany should've developed a strategic bomber. Anglophone histories decry the lack of a German strategic bomber, but the German planners were probably right. With strong potential enemies on her immediate land borders, Germany could lose a land war long before strategic bombing had any effect. Thus the emphasis on tactical air.
Additionally, Germany was chronically short of labour and many strategic materials. They drastically reduced the planned mechanization of their army for this reason. These constraints militated against a strategic bomber program too.
Finally, if a war with the USSR or Britain went long enough for strategic bombing to be relevant to the outcome, then Germany was going to lose anyway.
I also don't necessarily agree that they 'should' have developed a dedicated strategic bomber, but a part of my main point is that they did - just really badly. They spent the man hours and materials to produce 1,169 Heinkel He 177s - an aircraft that had an identity crisis.
A 'strategic bomber' that had elements of the 'schnellbomber' (the concept that the bomber should be faster than the fighter) even though it must have been known fairly early on that the 177 was never going to be faster than fighters of the time. The result was an aircraft that suffered from Schnellbomber issues, without the advantages, and Strategic bomber issues, without the advantages.
Had they invested this time and effort into a more traditional route of development such as the Dornier or the Junkers, the results would have been far better, and the doctrine at least consistent. That is the extent to which my personal opinion comes into the video, the rest is simply quotes from Luftwaffe officials or sources.
The He 177 was not a bad plane per se. It was an unfortunate decision to design it as a dive bomber and therefore use a "twin engine" concept with coupled DB606 engines. These coupled engines, like their British counterparts, were extremely problematic. Converted to the four-engined He 177 B variant as planned, the He 177 could have the potential to become a nightmare for the British, as Operation Steinbock demonstrated. But it was much too late and the Allies were at the door.
Of course Germany was right in every respect of how to conduct the war. That’s why they won.😂
@@annoyingbstard9407 They'd have lost even faster if they'd followed a strategic bombing strategy.
@@Splattle101 Everyone respects a TH-cam expert. Carry on..
so much
j dont known this bomber do19
Excellent, never heard of this bomber before. I wonder if Germany did build some long range bombers, could they bomb factories in the Ural mountains, and if so, to what effect ? Alot of precious fuel would be used.
This one, despite being made for the 'Ural bomber project', would ironically have not been able to fulfil it's purpose (at least initially) as it's range simply wasn't up to it. Although with some more development it probably would have been able to.
The Ju 89 had a similarly poor range of 1,600 km (995 mi) but by the end of it's development cycle, it had turned into the Ju 290 with a range of 6,148 km (3,820 mi) - more than enough to reach the Urals and back. So I'm sure in time the Do 19 probably would have grown into it's requirements, but yes it would have used a huge amount of fuel.
Dont forget the Junkers 390 and Heinkel 277/274
"I wonder if Germany did build some long range bombers, could they bomb factories in the Ural mountains, and if so, to what effect ?"
Little to none. Just as the Soviet bombing raids against Germany in -41 and -42 were barely noticed, the same or even worse would be true the other way around, because Germany would have just as few bombers, but these would have to fly HIGH, where most of the Soviet fighters were at their best, over predictable routes, face heavy AA fire and be no better at hitting anything than other early war heavy bombers were.
And it wouldn't have been until their first failed bombing raid that Germans would even realise just how difficult it is to achieve acceptable accuracy from high altitude heavy bombers. It's one of the reasons USSR mostly quit their attempts at it, because it would simply take far too much resources both building up enough bombers AND to develop a good enough bombsight to make them worth building.
Also, every heavy bomber made would mean NOT having at least TWICE as many medium bombers.
To have any chance of doing anything beyond rearranging some dirt on the ground, Germany would need at least a few hundred heavy bombers.
200 heavy bombers would mean at minimum 400 fewer medium bombers.
That would be a disastrous trade.
Because what is often not brought up is the fact that compared to their expenses both building and flying, heavy bombers are exceptionally inefficient.
While a Stuka could somewhat reliably deliver half their bombs within 20m from a target, and a medium bomber could put half their bombs within 100m of a target, heavy bombers accuracy was more like 50% within 500m of the target.
For certain targets, like largescale refineries, such can be acceptable, but overall, for heavy bombers to have any real effect, you needed overwhelming numbers and air superiority.
Germany had absolutely no chance of achieving either over the Urals.
@@DIREWOLFx75 Good answer.
Germany's Luftwaffe was a tactical air force. The three dominant designs He 111, Do 17 & Ju 88 were intended to directly support ground operations (Blitzkrieg), not strategic terror fire bombing or atomic bombing of civilian cities as the RAF Stirling, Halifax, Lancaster and USAAC B-17, B-24 and B-29 heavies did.
Strategic bombing does not necessarily equal fire bombing or atomic bombing. In this context we strictly refer to it as a method to put pressure and reduce effectiveness of an enemies industry via bombing factories, docks, railroads... etc in an enemy country.
Considering that the Luftwaffe had no issue bombing civilians in the Battle of Britain, and then rocketing them with V1 bombs, this 'morality' issue isn't directly relevant to the topic. The reason Germany didn't develop long-range heavies to a large extent was because they didn't place enough emphasis on strategic bombing of enemy industry, which was a mistake, and it was too late by the time they recognised it.
@@aviationdeepdive Nonsense.
Never understood why the Germans never used the FW 200 as Strategic Bomber.
Its another "why" and "if" of WW2 mysteries.
Adolf Hitler was a fan of Willy Messerschmitt and Kurt Tank (at FockeWulf). Dornier and Heinkel, not so much. He took Junkers company away from him.
No, the Fw 200 was an arguably quite successful makeshift long range maritime reconnaissance/anti-ship aircraft, but definitively not suitable as a heavy bomber.
I recommend the German version of the Fw 200 Wikipedia entry. It contains a good summary of the plane's issues.
A good friend of mine once said, "You can afford anything, but you can't afford everything". Germany did pretty good keeping up with tactical aircraft production before and during WWII, but I doubt it had the additional resources to produce and maintain a viable strategic bomber force at the same time. As Abraham Lincoln once said, when he was being pressed by numerous hopeful Federal office appointees, "There aren't enough teats on the hog for the number of piglets".
But they did though, they did setup and maintain a strategic bomber force - made up of over 1,000 Heinkel He 177s.
@@endi3386the Germans my have made 1,000 Heinkel 177s, but they never operated anywhere near that many. Meanwhile, the Allies produced 12,731 B-17s, 18,500 B-24s, 3,970 B-29, 7,377 Lancasters, and 2371 Stirlings. That is what's called a viable strategic bomber force. The most noteworthy use of the Heinkel He 177 was its use as a cargo carrier during the Soviet siege of Stalingrad, and because of continuing engine failures, it failed in that role.
At the time the decision to cancel the Do 19 and Ju 89 were taken Germany was in a militarily precarious situation with both Poland and France much stronger and easily able to invade Germany (on their own not in unison) especially if aided by Britain. It's no good having long range aircraft to bomb beyond the Urals or interdict British Convoys mid transatlantic from almost land locked Germany if troops and tanks are rolling across the border. . The belief is that many fighters and tactical aircraft would be needed to support the German army. It turns out to be a wrong decision in the long term. The Do 19 and Ju 89 would have evolved well with refinements and Jumo 211/DB601/DB605 engines. The Ju 89/Do 19 were cancelled but it was argue that German could have 4 engines bombers if they could be made to serve as tactical aircraft. This then led to the Ju 88, Ju 288 and He 177 dive bomber requirements. In the end the Lotfe 7 computing bomb sight and the StuVi 5B shallow dive bombing sight made dive bombing redundant by 1942 as these techniques were more accurate. Fw 200 that attacked Convoy Faith in 1942 managed to get a 3 direct hits in only 5 attack runs against moving convoy ships from 15,000ft. The two runs that missed were against warships that maneuvered out of the way of the falling bombs (25 seconds fall time)
-The Luftwaffe supported the German Navy very poorly. Do 19/Ju 89 would have made a huge difference in 1942 ass they attacked convoys from a safe altitude for almost a year before escort carriers came in.
I thought it was Milch that succeeded Wiever, not kesselring
Geez….I can’t imagine in the Battle Of Britain where this bomber gets butchered badly by Hurricanes and Spitfires. Remember the BF-109s can’t cover their bacon the whole way.
Great video. Just one niggle - disinterest means “unbiased”, not “lack of interest”.
If you look at it through half closed eyes after half a bottle of scotch, it almost looks like a Short Stirling!
A flawed assumption is made. That Germany would have benefitted from heavy bombers.
Consider the fact of the Soviet bombing raids against Germany in 1941 and 1942.
Yes, the ones most people have never heard of, because they achieved almost nothing, because USSR did not have enough heavy bombers to do more than slightly scratch the paint for Germany.
Without the tactical bombers in the numbers they had them, Germany would not have been capable of winning the early campaigns in Poland and against France.
Then what good would having a few hundred heavy bombers done them?
None what so ever.
Because Germany would not be able to maintain a large enough heavy bomber fleet to do anything more useful than what their medium bombers already achieved historically.
And every lost aircraft would be more than twice as big of a loss.
Losing air superiority would also affect heavy bombers just as badly as medium bombers. Because as already shown above by the example of the Soviet heavy bombers, the idea of "the bombers always gets through" is completely false, just as Douhet's doctrine of winning wars through terrorbombing has been clearly shown to be false.
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Regardless, it was interesting to see someone try to look at the Do-19.
It's a mistake to try and extrapolate a single variable from Soviet operations and try to apply that to Germany at the time. There are so many thousands of variables at play that that comparison is not relevant. The claim that Germany would not have been able to win the early campaigns without tactical bombers is also a little too black and white. it is interesting that you pick the Soviet Union as an example, a country famous in WW2 for having essentially no strategic bombers. The Pe-8 is really the only one, and only 93 were produced.
It was not suggested to get rid of every tactical bomber and replace it with strategic bombers, but it has been suggested that the lack of a reliable, sizeable strategic bomber force significantly harmed Germany.
Losing air superiority would also certainly not affect heavy bombers as bad as tactical bombers, because by their nature tactical bombers fly lower altitude against tactical targets, and are thus far harder to defend and more vulnerable. High altitude formations are much harder to reach, and also significantly easier to defend for fighter escort.
I don't think anybody is suggesting that Germany would have won the war or anything like that (that was over as soon as the US joined the party), but just that the the lack of a strategic bomber force meant that they could never put a huge amount of pressure on enemy industry, whilst Germany always had a huge amount of pressure on hers.
Also keep in mind, the quotations are give are not necessarily my opinions - they are excerpts from letters and conversations from Luftwaffe officials or sources.
@@aviationdeepdive "it is interesting that you pick the Soviet Union as an example, a country famous in WW2 for having essentially no strategic bombers. The Pe-8 is really the only one, and only 93 were produced."
And over 800 TB-3, getting old by WWII, but still definitely in use. And thousands of Il-4 that were medium bombers, but also used for strategic missions.
I picked USSR because it was the most directly comparable.
"The claim that Germany would not have been able to win the early campaigns without tactical bombers is also a little too black and white."
It's simple fact. Germany was heavily reliant on having lots of support from the airforce during 1939 and 1940.
And to get enough heavy bombers to be able to do ANYTHING useful, you need several hundred.
And even being gracious about it, for every heavy bomber, you lose two medium bombers. Or even worse, more than 4 times as many light bombers like Stukas.
"It was not suggested to get rid of every tactical bomber and replace it with strategic bombers"
And? Germany had great difficulty maintaining enough aircraft operational even as it was.
"but it has been suggested that the lack of a reliable, sizeable strategic bomber force significantly harmed Germany."
Yes, by people that pretends that you can just switch out, the same way they argue that Germany should have just gone with an equal number of Tiger tanks instead of Pz-IIIs and Pz-IVs.
Heavy bombers require 3 times the support infrastructure of medium bombers, while actually doing much less damage per plane, due to the lower accuracy and fewer missions flown over time.
"Losing air superiority would also certainly not affect heavy bombers as bad as tactical bombers, because by their nature tactical bombers fly lower altitude against tactical targets, and are thus far harder to defend and more vulnerable. High altitude formations are much harder to reach, and also significantly easier to defend for fighter escort."
What fighter escorts?
Germany had NOTHING that would be suitable to fly as heavy bomber escorts.
And yes it would affect them as badly, because they would be even more vulnerable while taking off and landing, while they would be spotted on radar even earlier, negating that advantage during the attack.
"but just that the the lack of a strategic bomber force meant that they could never put a huge amount of pressure on enemy industry, whilst Germany always had a huge amount of pressure on hers."
Yes, but here, once again we have the critical part of this concept.
That the German industry was put under pressure SOLELY because the wallies employed THOUSANDS of aircrafts in doing so.
And even with that HUGE amount of resources employed, the actual damage done to the German INDUSTRY was fairly low most of the time, while the amount of losses taken to the wallies bomber forces were MAJOR.
Don't forget, several times, it was considered whether keeping up the bombing campaign was worth it at all or not.
The ONLY REASON that the wallied bombing campaign was not stopped several of those times was because it was the only excuse the wallies had to tell Stalin they were DOING something.
The amount of resources used by the wallied bombing campaign overall far FAR exceeds the amount of damage they caused to the German industry.
It wasn't until 1944 when Germany was already essentially defeated and wallied conducted their "wipe cities from the map" raids that their effects on German industry became actually severe and worth the effort.
Don't forget, German industrial production INCREASED all the way up to 1944.
And most of the time, when industry was hit, the machinetools were too massive to take critical damage, so unless a bomb struck tools bullseye, sometimes they could be back in function just hours later and at worst it rarely took over two weeks to repair them.
Oh no, this is why strategic bombing overall is a BAD idea. Because it's not the industry you're bombing, you're terrorbombing the people.
The industry can also be hidden away, as the Germans did with a lot of critical production, making them exceptionally difficult to destroy or even find in some cases.
There has been many simulations gamed out to test, where the wallies do not invest in heavy bombers.
8 or 9 times out of 10, Germany is defeated faster.
Strategic bombing is more emotional than effective.
@@DIREWOLFx75 You've taken this extremely far, I don't need to remind you again that I've quoted Luftwaffe officials and sources, and my personal opinion barely comes into it. Part of the reason why your points don't stand up to scrutiny is because the Luftwaffe DID invest in the resource and manpower intensive infrastructure to maintain and upkeep a strategic bomber force, they just did it in the worst way possible - by mixing doctrines.
Over 1,000 Heinkel He 177s were built, an aircraft that had significant design features chosen because of a romanticised ideal of a 'schnellbomber'. At that point in time, there was not a chance in hell that such an aircraft could outrun modern fighters of the day, but they went with it. Not with developments of the Do 19, or the Ju 89, but with the He 177.
The simple fact is you act as though as it wasn't done by the Germans, but it was - just terribly ineffectively. By mixing doctrines, their single long range strategic bomber was horrendously ineffective, and so has largely been forgotten.
You don't seem to understand that you are not arguing with me, you arguing with the points raised by Luftwaffe officials and the authors in the sources, not me. Apart from the points I've raised above, I don't feel a particular way about how much of a resource gambit strategic bombing is.
The main point is, you act as though it would have been a bad idea for the Germans idea to invest in it, and perhaps it was, because they did - and they did it with an aircraft that was far inferior to any 'could-have-been' more standard design.
One other point, you said the Germans had nothing that could fly as a fighter escort, but this is just mixing in even more incompetence from the Luftwaffe. The Focke-Wulf Fw 187 was proposed for this very job, and had performance that matched similar fighters of the time with twice the range - so this point is null.
Looks like a Sterling.
Good example of tunnel vision and not doing what is needed with limited resources.
A theme throughout the video is military commanders focusing on their own commands' needs. The close support of ground units. The completely ignored what they were familiar with, the critical supplies needed to project power against them by their opponents. They knew that interdiction bombing against the far behind the lines the supplies and production facilities of their opponents. Crippling them was Adolph Hitler who thought of himself as a great military commander but he never grew beyond the little corporal from the WWI trenches. This is evident with Goering's response 'The Fuhrer does not care how big my bombers are he just wants to know how many”. So they were micro manged by an incompetent leader.
They knew that in 1935 the US had flown the B-17 bomber and that their own territories could be hit by heavy, long range combers. The US was reeling from the Depression and could not afford a fleet of B-17s. So they built a minimal amount to keep the design active and worked the bugs out of the design. Before the US was dragged kicking and screaming into the war some B-17s were shipped to England. Several short comings were found in combat. That in the climate of the European theater failures do to freezing were identified and dealt with. One problem can be seen looking at photos of the early B-17s with soon after models. The waist gunners positions need to be changed. They were directly opposite of each other and the gunners got into each other's way. So the open gun positions were staggered.
With an incompetent leader inter command squabbling put an almost stop to heavy bomber development. So when they needed heavy bombers there was not to scale up production of as the US and great Briton had.
Then look up the B-15 and B-19…
@@allangibson8494 Yes. The XB-19 never got past the single prototype. The XB-15 was only one prototype that was used as a cargo transport.
@@edwardcnnell2853 And both were key to the development of the B-29 and B-32 (and subsequent B-36) as they taught the U.S. how to build really big aircraft and the required engines.
Good stuff ADD. When are you going to do a deep dive into why the Bf-109 was chosen over the He-100 what with the He-100 being better armed, better engine, faster (110kph faster!) and a higher ceiling than the equivalent Bf-109E1? Was it all down to Willi being far more fluent in Nazi than Heinkel?
Note that Wikipedia's reason is nonsensical. Even if Heinkel was chosen to produce bombers and Messerschmitt fighters, it still makes no sense that Messerschmitt produces an inferior fighter. Perhaps naively, I would have thought that building the better fighter is what you might do if you actually wanted to win a war.
I strongly disagree.
The He 100 had an *"evaporative cooling"* that is absolutely not suitable for any warplane.
The Daimler-Benz DB 601 was also chosen for early Bf 109 marks. Since the motor cannon didn't work in the Bf 109 in the early stages of the war, it wouldn't have been worked in the He 100 either.
Speed isn't everything. The wing loading was far too high, worsening maneuvrability.
The He 100 was a small, pretty , sophisticated and fast speed record plane - that's it.
Eventually the Fw 190 had the development potential that the Bf 109 lacked.
@@OliverSchroeder You are not disagreeing with anyone. You are simply providing compelling reasons why the He-100 wasn't chosen.
should have just made it as a conventional 4 engine bomber
Meaningless without long range fighters. The allies learned this lesson.
Not in the inter war and early war when the soviets simply had nothing that could reach that altitude reliably to hunt it down
That is one goofy looking thing.
But looks better than the ugly Short Duckling!
It looks like that one french bomber, you know that one.
Rip off Rex’s hanger
The Nazis..... chose poorly.
Well, You know. Hitler was a Tactical Thinker and never studied Strategy at Officer Candidate School, maybe cuz he was only a big-mouthed Corporal
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walther_Wever_(general)