Allow us to thank War Thunder for sponsoring today's video! Be sure to click our link: playwt.link/simplehistory2024 to receive a massive bonus pack across all platforms, including multiple premium vehicles! It’s available for a limited time only, so be quick!
Can you do a video about the history of the pistol and its evolution from flintlock to the 20 bullet mag full auto glock? It would be really cool to see all the weird designs between the ages
This aircraft is literally why I'm alive. Gramps somehow survived ww2. 8th/12th/15th AAC, 301St Bombers, 419th sq. Msgt, 2 BS. He worked for Sperry after his service.
On the topic of returning after ridiculous damage taken, Ye Olde Pub was a B-17 that lost all but 3 feet of its left tail elevator, had 1 engine down, 1 engine at half power, and a third engine that would occasionally turbocharge itself and nearly rip itself of the wing. It also had lost the tail gunner and had all but 1 of its MGs either freeze or run out of ammo. It actually did return home due to a German fighter pilot (Franz Stigler) that saw the state of the bomber and decided he couldn't shoot it down, and escorted it over the Atlantic Wall. True story, it's in the book A Higher Call
Well done Simple History, well done. I really liked this cross section of the B-17 Flying Fortress, one of the most legendary aircraft of the Second World War. Despite the heavy losses it still remained a well-regarded bomber.
One of my favourite aircraft along with the Spitfire. PS: A B-17 actally starred in the James Bond movie Thunderball with the Fulton man recovery system.
Does anyone remember the series, "Amazing Stories" from the mid-80's? There was one episode about a ball turret that got stuck, with the landing gear destroyed, which means if the plane landed, the belly gunner would become paste on the runway. So he draws a picture of the plane, with wheels, goes into a trance, and... It was one of the episodes I remember pretty clearly. That was a great show...
And the episode was probably bullcrap, since crews were trained for situation: the first thing they did was getting the gunner out the ball turret, then detach it before landing.
@@alm5992 I looked it up. It was called, "The Mission". It was directed by Steven Spielberg, and starred Casey Siemaszko, Kevin Costner and Kiefer Sutherland. I remember the story, but not who was in it... I might have it on VHS. I think I recorded both seasons. I should look...
Yes! In fact I rewatched it last year, wondering if I would find it dumb decades after I watched it and loved it when it was new. Turns out, I still loved it.
From the 1950's-'70's, Seventeens were used as Retardant Tankers by American Natural Resources Agencies to fight wildfires. As a firefighter on the Sequoia National Forest in 1976, I had the treat to see one of these very nimble ships in action. Our crew was straddling a ridge, trying to keep the fire--thankfully not a terribly aggressive one, but aggressive enough to require the Seventeen's hammer blow. This ridgeline was very exposed, steep, with a significant crag looming up on the outboard and downhill edge. The Seventeen had to make its salvo strike just so, to get a symmetrical spread on the ridge's apex. She came down very low, no more than 150' above, flying downhill at a very steep angle, and her drop really did HAMMER that ridge. She came close ENOUGH to that crag/pinnacle, and in a split second, shot upnose on a dime, veering in a bank so tight, it almost looked beam-ends, and was probably safely 500' or more above the ambient terrain, in a few short seconds, to return to base for another load. Thanks to this Seventeen, this fire now had NOWHERE to go. She was flying like a small airplane a quarter of her size! I believe that by 1980, the Seventeens were retired by the fire services.
Watching this video brought back flashbacks from the recent mini series "Masters of the Air." Yes, the series was far from perfect but it did give us a good glimpse into what flying was like in these super fortresses.
Hello, my friend. I’m military and have been for 32 years and counting. I entered through ROTC. I started Second Lieutenant. I went off to the first Gulf war after two months in. I’m one of a small group of men who did not get PTSD from it. It was a pretty easy war. I became a Ranger and went to Africa in the Black Hawk Down attacks . I got a Purple Heart and another on on another tour in Africa propelling from Black hawks. I have seen a lot, but any solider who have been through one tour has. I am now a high ranking officer. Starting Will it turn it being in her over three decades will do that.
No…no you were not. Aside from the fact I can tell by your poor attempt to name drop a few conflicts and operations, it is more than overwhelmingly obvious that you have little to no military experience…especially as an officer…much less that of one who has been in for “32 years”. An officer of flag rank would be a graduate of almost all of our in service staff & command, advanced, and joint service and other miscellaneous specialty schools…not to mention….have held multiple posts as a commander at different levels and as a staff officer at different levels. You would at the level you are now (at 30+ years) be involved at the JCS and combatant command level and correspond with political leaders. Your writing and grammar skills are that of a sub high-school level. Your words sound like a 7th grade assignment. A quick view of your profile also shows your videos of Louie, your cat. I can see your legs and in another video- hear your voice. On behalf of ALL VETERANS- stop telling people you are a veteran. Stop telling people that you are serving and have served for 32 years. By the way- the Gulf War, was not “an easy war”. No war is “easy”. Do something with your life.
They haven't been completely grounded. It was due to an air to air crash at an airshow I believe and since I know of and have been lucky enough to see one flying after extensive inspections
War Thunder… 2 years of gameplay and still suffering at 5.0…something about the game keeps me going though, possibly that big juicy “Target destroyed” notification…god ain’t that satisfying
My great grandpa was a tail gunner did 30 mission staff seargant plane was called baby buggy II. It was number 2 cause first one went down. My grandpa is the only living member left from his crew and not one of them was over 19 during their missions
That's so amazing video. Believe it or not Yugoslav air force had B-17 G in their air force. There are two versions of that story. One story says that it landed on Sombor airfield on April 30th 1945. And it was there a couple days. After that it was sent to USSR. The other story says that it was there on Sombor airfield, and the markings were repainted to have Yugoslav markings. It was in service for one year, and after that it was retired. There is a rumor that the B-17 G is in depths of Belgrade's museum of aviation, along with Yugoslav P-38 Lighting. What is true from these two things, that's a good question. My suggestion is that you make a video of life inside the B-29 (you can correct me if you haven't made that video).
Some USAAF bombers were shot down near my grandma's childhood village in Hungary. She said that there was a short little gypsy guy among the Americans who got caught by the local law enforcement forces (csendőrség, something like Gendarmerie in France or Carabinieri in Italy). My grandma didn't know than that the "small gypsy guy" was actually a latino.😂
The airworthy B17s were grounded due to an AD about Wing Spar fatigue cracking. But most are still flying because the AD added another inspection to the checklist. Plus the FAA babies warbirds quite a bit. Source: A&P that really loves WW2 aviation
Went to an airshow near my area, and saw one of the few flight-capable ones up close and personal… had I the $850/ticket I would have gone up!! But ohhhh man, what a beautiful bird!! It ever comes my way again I’ll save for that ticket and head on up just to say I did it!
Had a great grandfather they flew one of these in WW2. He was shot down twice first time he was captured by the British and held for a couple day because they thought he was a spy and the second time he was captured by Germans and spent a few months in a camp till the end of the war.
2:38 O yes, it's one of my favorite games, but it's too hard to grind, needs years and years, real money also are needed to spent if you want to progress a bit faster and believe me sooner or latter most of people will put some money! (I got 2000+ hours and I had put around 150 euros)
Allow us to thank War Thunder for sponsoring today's video! Be sure to click our link: playwt.link/simplehistory2024 to receive a massive bonus pack across all platforms, including multiple premium vehicles! It’s available for a limited time only, so be quick!
Cheese
War Thunder is the best war game ever made
Ww
your war thunder is what is gonna bring you down!!!!....to much pub man
/Da's/ /bût/ 😂. What kind of boots are they, and who's Da?
Can you do a video about the history of the pistol and its evolution from flintlock to the 20 bullet mag full auto glock?
It would be really cool to see all the weird designs between the ages
It would be the first 20 hour Simple History video! 😁
@brj_han they would probably only show wierd designs and the important guns
@@brj_hanso it would be less but i found the joke funny so please dont get angry at me idk what im doing
What?
Good job from Simple History for making another B-17 Flying Fortress video.
Sarcasm?
Yeah, the other videos didn’t focus solely on the aircraft. This one does, which is pretty cool.
This aircraft is literally why I'm alive. Gramps somehow survived ww2. 8th/12th/15th AAC, 301St Bombers, 419th sq. Msgt, 2 BS. He worked for Sperry after his service.
On the topic of returning after ridiculous damage taken, Ye Olde Pub was a B-17 that lost all but 3 feet of its left tail elevator, had 1 engine down, 1 engine at half power, and a third engine that would occasionally turbocharge itself and nearly rip itself of the wing. It also had lost the tail gunner and had all but 1 of its MGs either freeze or run out of ammo. It actually did return home due to a German fighter pilot (Franz Stigler) that saw the state of the bomber and decided he couldn't shoot it down, and escorted it over the Atlantic Wall. True story, it's in the book A Higher Call
Just finished that book 12 days ago
Sabaton made a song about the incident.
Well done Simple History, well done. I really liked this cross section of the B-17 Flying Fortress, one of the most legendary aircraft of the Second World War. Despite the heavy losses it still remained a well-regarded bomber.
I love the look of the B-17b. It just looks so sleek
Same, it looks sleek but it looks 1920s ish unstable.
@terrenceshibata2983 yeah that's true
I love the fact that your sponsor is relevant to your content, so few channels have that.
I’m seeing one fly next week, Sally B a truly magnificent B-17 used in the film Memphis Belle
One of my favourite aircraft along with the Spitfire.
PS: A B-17 actally starred in the James Bond movie Thunderball with the Fulton man recovery system.
Those ball turrets really remind me of Attack of the Clones
Does anyone remember the series, "Amazing Stories" from the mid-80's?
There was one episode about a ball turret that got stuck, with the landing gear destroyed, which means if the plane landed, the belly gunner would become paste on the runway.
So he draws a picture of the plane, with wheels, goes into a trance, and...
It was one of the episodes I remember pretty clearly. That was a great show...
Not many are going to remember 45+ years ago.
And the episode was probably bullcrap, since crews were trained for situation: the first thing they did was getting the gunner out the ball turret, then detach it before landing.
@@alm5992 I looked it up. It was called, "The Mission".
It was directed by Steven Spielberg, and starred Casey Siemaszko, Kevin Costner and Kiefer Sutherland. I remember the story, but not who was in it...
I might have it on VHS. I think I recorded both seasons. I should look...
@@n.a.4292 It was a Spielberg fantasy, probably developed for the series.
In order for the ep to work, he had to be stuck in there, lol.
Yes! In fact I rewatched it last year, wondering if I would find it dumb decades after I watched it and loved it when it was new. Turns out, I still loved it.
Love it! another awesome piece of history made "simple". Keep pressing on!
B sevwenteen bowmber
-AVGN
Bee seventaen bawwwwmer
"What were they thinking?!"
Danke!
The best B-17 animation video on YT with top notch graphics and data!
From the 1950's-'70's, Seventeens were used as Retardant Tankers by American Natural Resources Agencies to fight wildfires. As a firefighter on the Sequoia National Forest in 1976, I had the treat to see one of these very nimble ships in action. Our crew was straddling a ridge, trying to keep the fire--thankfully not a terribly aggressive one, but aggressive enough to require the Seventeen's hammer blow. This ridgeline was very exposed, steep, with a significant crag looming up on the outboard and downhill edge. The Seventeen had to make its salvo strike just so, to get a symmetrical spread on the ridge's apex. She came down very low, no more than 150' above, flying downhill at a very steep angle, and her drop really did HAMMER that ridge. She came close ENOUGH to that crag/pinnacle, and in a split second, shot upnose on a dime, veering in a bank so tight, it almost looked beam-ends, and was probably safely 500' or more above the ambient terrain, in a few short seconds, to return to base for another load. Thanks to this Seventeen, this fire now had NOWHERE to go. She was flying like a small airplane a quarter of her size! I believe that by 1980, the Seventeens were retired by the fire services.
Dang, the B-17 could be a very cool lego set!
The house from "up"
Nah a flying studio apartment
Ikr
Definitely
Definitely
Nah is like a flying bus
Got to fly in one. Then called my grandpa who flew them in WWII. Have one in a tattoo piece on my arm in his honor.
My grandfather was a gunner for the B-17 near the end of the war. He never really talked about it but would say he was very thankful when it ended.
Can you guys do a cross section on the He-111 or the B-25 Mitchell?
Waiting for this vid for years
Watching this video brought back flashbacks from the recent mini series "Masters of the Air." Yes, the series was far from perfect but it did give us a good glimpse into what flying was like in these super fortresses.
I love your channel bro! 😎👍
flying in a B-17 whilst in combat is probably safer than flying in a modern Boeing plane.
Honey wake up simple history uploaded!
Hello, my friend. I’m military and have been for 32 years and counting. I entered through ROTC. I started Second Lieutenant. I went off to the first Gulf war after two months in. I’m one of a small group of men who did not get PTSD from it. It was a pretty easy war. I became a Ranger and went to Africa in the Black Hawk Down attacks . I got a Purple Heart and another on on another tour in Africa propelling from Black hawks. I have seen a lot, but any solider who have been through one tour has. I am now a high ranking officer. Starting Will it turn it being in her over three decades will do that.
No…no you were not. Aside from the fact I can tell by your poor attempt to name drop a few conflicts and operations, it is more than overwhelmingly obvious that you have little to no military experience…especially as an officer…much less that of one who has been in for “32 years”.
An officer of flag rank would be a graduate of almost all of our in service staff & command, advanced, and joint service and other miscellaneous specialty schools…not to mention….have held multiple posts as a commander at different levels and as a staff officer at different levels. You would at the level you are now (at 30+ years) be involved at the JCS and combatant command level and correspond with political leaders. Your writing and grammar skills are that of a sub high-school level. Your words sound like a 7th grade assignment.
A quick view of your profile also shows your videos of Louie, your cat. I can see your legs and in another video- hear your voice.
On behalf of ALL VETERANS- stop telling people you are a veteran. Stop telling people that you are serving and have served for 32 years.
By the way- the Gulf War, was not “an easy war”. No war is “easy”.
Do something with your life.
5:43, just realized it's a reference from a mobile game called "Turret Commander" by Kylinworks Software. Nice game.
Got to go inside a B-17G in Chino, CA air museum, very cramped inside. hit my head 3x before I learned to hunch when walking in there...
Ad ends at 4:26
They haven't been completely grounded. It was due to an air to air crash at an airshow I believe and since I know of and have been lucky enough to see one flying after extensive inspections
Warthunder support this video, but they made the B17 a paper plane even destroyed by inferior planes.
do the b29 next please
War Thunder… 2 years of gameplay and still suffering at 5.0…something about the game keeps me going though, possibly that big juicy “Target destroyed” notification…god ain’t that satisfying
Matle presents: Beee 17 balmer.
The airmen who flew and serviced these planes were truly Masters of the Air…
Good job with video, entartaining, very usefull informantion, nice!
Thank you, very good show.
First war thunder sponsor that mentioned the game modes
im currently addicted to this game lol im in rank 3 german. perfect timing i was looking for some b17 action and history.
Let’s go simple history video??!!??😊
My great grandpa was a tail gunner did 30 mission staff seargant plane was called baby buggy II. It was number 2 cause first one went down. My grandpa is the only living member left from his crew and not one of them was over 19 during their missions
That's so amazing video.
Believe it or not Yugoslav air force had B-17 G in their air force. There are two versions of that story. One story says that it landed on Sombor airfield on April 30th 1945. And it was there a couple days. After that it was sent to USSR. The other story says that it was there on Sombor airfield, and the markings were repainted to have Yugoslav markings. It was in service for one year, and after that it was retired. There is a rumor that the B-17 G is in depths of Belgrade's museum of aviation, along with Yugoslav P-38 Lighting. What is true from these two things, that's a good question.
My suggestion is that you make a video of life inside the B-29 (you can correct me if you haven't made that video).
2:31 I thought that was a parody of that one subway ad gor a sec
Some USAAF bombers were shot down near my grandma's childhood village in Hungary. She said that there was a short little gypsy guy among the Americans who got caught by the local law enforcement forces (csendőrség, something like Gendarmerie in France or Carabinieri in Italy). My grandma didn't know than that the "small gypsy guy" was actually a latino.😂
C-108 "flying fortress" was the grandpa to the AC-130 "angle of death", and no other plane besides the C-108 can really fit that role!
Pls a video about the spitfire
The airworthy B17s were grounded due to an AD about Wing Spar fatigue cracking. But most are still flying because the AD added another inspection to the checklist. Plus the FAA babies warbirds quite a bit.
Source: A&P that really loves WW2 aviation
5:44
Those M2 seems like M60
What was with the small little glass canopies on the body of the prototype? I am going to assume they are viewing ports of some kind.
Went to an airshow near my area, and saw one of the few flight-capable ones up close and personal… had I the $850/ticket I would have gone up!! But ohhhh man, what a beautiful bird!! It ever comes my way again I’ll save for that ticket and head on up just to say I did it!
Had a great grandfather they flew one of these in WW2. He was shot down twice first time he was captured by the British and held for a couple day because they thought he was a spy and the second time he was captured by Germans and spent a few months in a camp till the end of the war.
Not all Forts have been grounded. Sally B still flies today.
You should do B-24
The commemorative AF museum nearby offers flights in these still - a bit pricey to be sure.
Do you think you could make a cross section of a B-29?
Or possibly on a ship of any class?
The groundings have been lifted. I believe there are 6 airworthy B-17s left
That took serious 🏀’s to get up in that and fight. Huge ⚽️’s
A bomber for defence? Riiiiight.
Sometimes I wonder if they had to use the restroom, where would the crew had to use a bathroom while flying? If it came equipped with one
Can you make the video about the B-29 (You didn't even have a single video of it , I think?)
Wow between Blue Paw Print’s recent B-17 videos and this, we’re eating well
Very interesting
No way NO HOW am I operating that ball turret! F that!!
The top secret Nordon bomb sight didn't work.
Was this the plane in Dr. Strangelove?
B-24 next?
I wonder if they'll cover stories of Old 666 like Yarnhub did
2:38 O yes, it's one of my favorite games, but it's too hard to grind, needs years and years, real money also are needed to spent if you want to progress a bit faster and believe me sooner or latter most of people will put some money! (I got 2000+ hours and I had put around 150 euros)
When Boeing built planes that fell apart in combat after being shot, not in normal flight
One mighty Flying apartment of death
They were grounded due to a airboss's incompetence which lead to the death of 6 Men, and the loss of 1 B-17 and 1 P-63.
IL-2 -> The Flying Tank
B-17 -> The Flying Fortress.
my great grandfather flew 52 missions as ball turret gunner over germany
B-17 had a weak spot uppertail sections
Epic 2:41
The Old 666 Was a Legend!
Matel Electronics presents..BEEEEE Seventeeeen BBBOMBERRR. .
I MINUTE
I love your videos simple history
Basically this is the first ever AC-130
Yes finally
Cool
That job as turret ball is very extreme😢😢😱😱
wow
*flying fortress variants exist
Gaijin: write that down! write that down!
My grandpa flew these in the war!
Nice my grandfather was on one, he was radio/communications.
My great grandpa flew the b24 and survived the war and did 50 missions 😂
huh, so boeing has been doing dangerous planes since 1935.
i love youre vids!
Morning
This machine showed Germans what does democracy mean.
Pope is on the ground
Its in the name
Yes 🙌
32 min gang!
More adds too. 😢
My favorite bar is called b 17 and it has pictures of the beautiful aircraft everywhere
nah i say it was B-17G
Not a word about the radio equipment. NOT good.