@@warrenblum3104 You mean the chinese made russian radial of the Federal German FW-190...!? Sounds nice to me, too... Only idiots wish they were born back in wartimes. Should be the same morons swaggering about freedom while watching vintage fighter planes.
@@Dokker62 I didnt write that. Merely stated the planes merlin's or allison engines had a great sound and sometimes the announcers at air shows interrupt the beauty of the sounds
What do you mean it gave you chills? its just a normal airplane sound, doesn't even sound like the stukas. More likely civilians died by the allied planes, for example when they fire bombed children and women in dresden.
THIS -190 is a replica built in the late 2000s by Flug+Werk in Germany. The engine is a P&W R-2800 on a special mount. Hence the slightly "odd" appearance of the cowling because it is larger than the original BMW, as well as the Chinese engines used in other Flug+Werk -190s.
To think that these amazing warbirds were once considered , cutting edge technology .... aviation was practically still in it's infancy and pressurized aircraft was still in the test phases .... total respect to the many men & women that flew during this conflict . I had the very good fortune to experience first hand what it might have felt like as a waist gunner , on board a B-17 , Flying Fortress named " Sentimental Journey " a few years back . It gave me a tiny sense of what these brave young men & women endured during bombing missions . Aviation history is simply fascinating , thanks for the share , great vid !!!
Me and my son visited PoF in Chino Cal., back in 1992. Steve Hinton came out to greet us and to welcome us to the museum. He was very enthusiastic and such a great person.Later on I learnt the he flew most of the warbirds at that location. Some people make the best of everything in life....Best wishes to him and that wonderful place..!
At the 2:17 time mark with yellow cockpit ID letters "CD" is "Betsy's Biscuit Bomber", an all original C-47B built in 1943. It was flown from Paso Robles California making whistle stops along the way over a months time. It flew to Duxford England, coming by way of the Greenland route. The aircraft is part of the Estrella Warbirds Museum collection here in Paso Robles California USA. This aircraft's last U.S. missions were flying the Berlin Airlift, it was sold to Israel and was later purchased back from the Israeli Air Force and refurbished/preserved. There is a hand painted Hebrew language sign on the lavatory door that roughly translates to, "The only replacement for a Dakota, is another Dakota". The plane was a military transport it's whole life and never converted for civilian use. It still has all of it's original equipment to include flight controls, radios, navigator gear, paratrooper jump seats, the large desert sand shields atop each engine nacelles and the gear used for towing combat gliders in Europe during WWII.
You ALWAYS do such a phenomenal job with the video's you make!! Thank you for this GREAT footage. It's always nice to hear the roar of Radial Engine's and of course the V-12's. Keep up the great work my friend. Looking forward to seeing more from ya. 👍👍(I hope you're at the Reno Air Race's this year!!)
My dad was in RAF Bomber Command in the Far East in WW2. For a time he had an American pilot who fortunately had been a Barn Storming pilot in the 30s. One day they couldn't land the Hudson at the aerodrome, so were forced to pancake into the Selaper(?) River with my dad still signalling on the radio. Two guys climbed into the life raft and were spun away down river. Dad and the Yank dived into the river and swam to the shore where they were met by three or four Ghandi lookalikes, who, very politely, insisted on holding umbrellas over the heads of these sodden airmen as they escorted them to the railway station. En route they told them that the river was full of crocodiles! Oh, the other two guys were picked up later. Love to hear the old propellors - always rush out of doors to watch our Battle of Britain Memorial Flight when I hear those engines.
Dang I love those p-38's.. the others.. spitfire, me 109, p 51 there nice to.... But my heart has always belonged to the p 38.. ever since I first saw one fly in my youth.. Fabulous! Thanks for the share... and please carry on!
i live near geneseo NY. we have a yearly airshow. every year a C47 (w7) drops paratroopers at the airshow. W7 is a combat survivor. this year i took my wife and 8 year old son for a ride on that C47. the DC3 you are seeing is actually a C47. C47 was the army air-force designation for their varaiant of the DC3. it had cargo doors large enough to accommodate a jeep and strengthened floors vs. the civilian DC3 and the navy used the designation R4D. basically they share the same air-frame...... best airplane ever built, hundreds still in regular use today.
@@ad356 I agree completely....I dare say...arguably the most significant aircraft to date. Others have set other hight marks...but will they be flying near a century?
@@danielledykgraaf6483 Wonder how many modern airlines were founded on the back of world's most dependable aircraft the DC3 Dakota AND STILL DOING SO!!!
To the good people at POF, the Mustang MK 1 looks to be well cared for and the classic Allison exhaust note.... sublime. It is especially nice that she proudly were's the uniform of RCAF 414 Sqdn " Black Knight" . " City of Sarnia " Squadron motto " Totis Viribis " With all our might. The crowning touch is to see the Maple Leaf on her port side. Thanks for the great video. Cheers.
Airplanes still amaze me! I've only flown a Piper Cub! I have been on plenty of commercial prop and jet planes,...since the 1950's, on. I managed to get to Mach .98, once,...as a passenger.
This video showed me that every Mustang is beautfiul(I didn‘t like early versions like P-51/Mustang Mk In and P-51A/Mustang Mk II). Like I said this video opened my eyes to the beauty of the early Mustang versions. Thank you for posting this video about these beautiful machines! Have a nice das and stay safe!
So nice seeing propeller driven aircraft with the proper prop wash. So tired of seeing props that look static or in slow motion in flight and on the ground. That's what adds to the grace of a propeller driven aircraft. Thank you for posting and God Bless from Florida.
@@hopelessnerd6677 I feel your pain about the propellors. When I was a child I used to hate seeing Western movies where the 35mm cameras and projectors made the wagon wheels look like they were spinning backwards. I guess every generation needs something trivial to gets its tits in a tangle about.
That P-51 next to the FW190 is an early Allison engined "A" model. You can tell by the air intake on top of the cowl. This must be one of the very few "A" models that survived the war. Many of them were scrapped by the middle of WW2.
@@hugosimonsen6340 Hey dumb ass !!! The P51A was a winner when first introduced !!! There was NO faster fighter or any other plane THEN !!! They hit 400 MPH as an example the first ones in England were 30 MPH FASTER than the THEN CURRENT shitfire Mk V !!!!! Mustang A hit 400 MPH @ 20,000 Ft Shitfire Mk V 368 @ 10,000 FT !!! See RAF MUSTANGS here on You TUBE to see what the Brits thought of their new fighter via the BBC !!!!
PoF puts on a helluva show year after year. Hellcats & Zeros, Saberjets & MiGs, even Fokker Tripes and Sopwith Camels going at it. Spits, Sea Furies, Bearcats, Tigercats, Skyraiders, even Peashooters. What's not to love?
The "Mustang" w/ the allison engine is I believe an A36 formerly of the Champlin collection. They had a unique dive-brake system where a "fence" extended from the top of each wing in order to slow the a/c while diving.It was complicated and if this a/c once was so equipped, probably has been deactivated.
Martha Vaughan No, this one is definitely an A model, it’s the only true A model still flying and has been owned by the Planes of Fame air museum for many many years. Most of Champlin’s museum aircraft are now with the museum in Seattle with the exception of the FW-190 D13 that is owned now by Paul Allen’s museum.
It's amazing to think that in just 20 years from now, most of these warbirds will have been flying 100 years! Hopefully they fly another 100 for future generations to see and admire.
The best thing about PoF museum is that most of the aircraft there aren't static, they actually fly! They also keep these old warbirds in beautiful condition, as seen here in the video
Those planes wouldn't be flying without Redbull sponsoring them.... I hated it at first, too, but then realized that it was financed by Redbull entirely... MILLIONS of dollars of my money? You bet your arse my name is going on it...
Beautiful job done by PoF to fit the R-2800 under the cowling of the 190. It is noticeable, but still on first glance looks original. To bad "Lefty's" P-38 is in Europe, I always enjoyed her ringing whistle doing her routine and flying the Pylons at Reno. I see the "Connie" in the background, Resto underway yet? Great selection on the vid, always a pleasure - Thanks!
@@garynew9637 At one period it did. But the R-2800 was added due to its reliability, ease of maintenance, parts availability & many with zero hours on them, the switch was made.
+Lonewolf SWE Not counting Buchons, there are only three flyable Bf-109s in North America and one of those is fitted with an Allison. It's unlikely any DB engined examples will fly far from their home museums because of operating costs.
Best video, no music just the sound of those beefy engines of Mercedes Benz, Rolls Royce, Packard, Pratt Whitney. Those engines mostly carbureted except for the MB that were fired injected, served it's purpose even without today's computerized engines that we have in our cars that suddenly won't start or display "check engine" light on and other maladies that require to plug an OBD tester under the dashboard to get the engine codes. None of them existed during those times, yet these planes performed and delivered us to either victory or defeat.
The wife and I are planning on moving to Ca. at some point in the next few years. I'm going to try to be at as many of these shows as I can. We don't have anything like this in east Tn.
Hate to break the news to you. But many are fleeing the People’s Republic of Kalifornia. And they are moving to Tn. Cost of living is much cheaper. Many move as soon as they retire. They have to because they can’t afford to live there.
Red 13 I have a former team mate who retired from law enforcement. He lives in Corona. He said as soon as his son graduates from high school they are moving. He said Tn is their top pick.
Incrível como essas máquinas voadoras ainda mechem com nossas emoções a ponto de fazermos viajar no tempo. O som dos motores é fabuloso, uma fonte de energias renováveis pro nosso cérebro 👍🇧🇷
There is a 190 in New Zealand. It crashed on landing at the Classic Fighters Omaka 2015 air show - it ground looped and wiped the undercarriage off and damaged the engine when the prop hit the ground. It went into the repair shop at Omaka and was back in the air for this year's CFO. It's a great sight and sound when it's up and flying.
I use to run to the local mini mart back in the 70s as a kid and buy those balsa planes and for what, 50 cents, a little more for the biplane, and had a great time until it eventually ended up in a high tree. I can only imagine taking part in something like this. I mean where do you go from here? I would say "You won."
During the Mustang Mk. I's successful combat initiation, North American's president Howard "Dutch" Kindelberger pressed the newly redesignated U.S. Army Air Forces (USAAF) for a fighter contract for the essentially similar P-51, 93 of which had passed into the USAAF when the Lend-Lease contract with Britain ran out of funds. The Mustang IA/P-51 used four 20 mm Hispano wing cannon in place of the original armament, a combination of four wing-mounted .30 caliber (7.62 mm) M1919 Browning machine guns and four .50 caliber (12.7 mm) M2 Browning machine guns, two of which were mounted in the wings, while the second pair was mounted in the "chin", or lower engine cowling, and synchronized to fire through the propeller. No funds were available for new fighter contracts in fiscal year 1942, but General Oliver P. Echols and Fighter Project Officer Benjamin S. Kelsey[4] wanted to ensure that the P-51 remained in production.[5] Since appropriations were available for an attack aircraft, Echols specified modifications to the P-51 to turn it into a dive bomber. The contract for 500 A-36A aircraft fitted with bomb racks, dive brakes, and heavier-duty wing, was signed by Kelsey on 16 April 1942,[6] even before the first flight of the first production P-51 in May 1942.[7] With orders on the books, North American Aviation (NAA) began modifying the P-51 to accept the bomb shackles which had already been tested in a "long-range ferry" program that the RAF had stipulated.[8] Engineering studies totaling 40,000 hours and wind tunnel testing with a ⅛-scale model were completed in June 1942. Utilizing the basic P-51 airframe and Allison engine, structural reinforcing "beefed up" several high stress areas and "a set of hydraulically operated dive brakes were installed in each main wing plane".[9] Due to the slightly inboard placement of the bomb racks and unique installation of four cast aluminum dive brakes, a complete redesign of the P-51 wing was required.[6] A-36A production line at NAA Inglewood, October 1942. The first A-36A (42-83663) was rolled out of the NAA Inglewood plant in September 1942, rapidly going through flight testing with the first flight in October, with deliveries commencing soon after of the first production machines. The A-36A continued the use of nose-mounted .50 in (12.7 mm) machine guns along with wing armament of four .50 in (12.7 mm) caliber machine guns. The USAAF envisaged that the dive bomber would operate mainly at altitudes below 12,000 ft (3,658 m) and specified the use of a sea level-rated Allison V-1710-87, driving a 10 ft 9 in (3.28 m)-diameter three bladed Curtiss-Electric propeller and delivering 1,325 hp (988 kW) at 3,000 ft (914 m).[10] The main air scoop inlet was redesigned to become a fixed unit with a larger opening, replacing the earlier scoop which could be lowered into the airstream. In addition the A-36 carburetor air intake was later fitted with a tropical air filter to stop sand and grit being ingested into the engine.[6][11] The USAAF later ordered 310 P-51As, which were essentially A-36s without the dive-brakes and nose mounted weapons, leaving an armament of four wing-mounted 0.50 in (12.7 mm) Browning machine guns.[12] An Allison V-1710-81 1,200 hp (895 kW) was fitted and used the same radiator and air intake as the A-36A. The P-51A was still fitted with bomb racks although it was not intended to be used primarily as a fighter-bomber and the racks were mainly used to carry drop tanks.[12][13] Operational history
c.200 of those complete 20mm wing gun "kits" were stored away at Dayton. Remembered by crew chiefs in Korea/Japan from 1950< Serepticiously transported as "Parts" to those sites... THIS after seeing how well NAVY Skyraider 20s were received by N.Korean and Red Chinese troops and tanks! Over even EIGHT .50s of the Jugs in combat, there... SPADS were still prized in Vietnam The A-10 of that war! 20 Mike Mike is still a top choice, today! J.C.
Than you! When I was a kid (1955) the FLA ANG was still flying "D's" Ocala Forest and Bombing Range... We were running a GoKart at the the abandoned USAAF Henderson Field (USF now) when one came in with oil all over the canopy. We offered up our can of gas and some rags to the pilot who was also having a radio problem.. He then opened up the cowling and found an oil line that was loose... My Dad's good old Crescent wrench saved the day... Still in my Craftsman toolbox, today.... I hope he made it home home Ok.. Last time I was there (1981) it was a RC airplane and car park... Right across from Jackson Faspray Dishwashers... The big concrete area up the street was everybody's skid pad... I should look at Google Maps... CAVU J.C.
LOVE THIS! ... course all it's missing, and this is NOT a complaint, simply my opinion .. is .. a Messerschmitt Bf 109/E or G with the inverted Daimler Benz V12. THAT would complete this near perfect symphony! LOVE IT regardless!
I know an old Farmer from Austrian/Europe who built a replica of an Arado 96 Trainer from WWII but I didn't know that there is a original still airworthy.
@@FiveCentsPlease You are right. Because of the nose of the propeller I was sure it is an Arado 96. But the propeller, the engine and the concept is from the Arado 96. It was built in Switzerland and used till 1980 in theyr airforce as trainer.
Amazing how much quieter the P-38’s are a than all the rest. Of course because their turbos were exhaust driven, that muffled the sound quite a bit. Especially compared to the radial engined, supercharged FW-190 and even the supercharged P-51’s!
Looking through the comments below No one mentioned the P - 51 B / C in British paint scheme . Until the ME - 190 moved I thought it may have been a Spitfire . Witch would be nice to see . I'm surprised that one was still flying . Great Video . Keep up the good work .
Jnl B OK thanks I got a closer look at the smaller air scoop on the belly It would have to be an Allison powered . Because I was an honorary member of the Confederate Air Force flying Museum back in the 80s . Also I've researched an there is NO surviving P - 51 A's they were the first aircraft to be called the Apache and it was designed as a Dive Bomber .
@@johnrettig1880 You are wrong !!!! USAAF Ordered 500 A36's as a DIVE BOMBER because the USAAF had money for ATTACK aircraft but not for fighters!!! This to keep the North American assembly line open after North American delivered the 620 Mustang mkI's to the Brits !!!! A36's were first calles Apaches but later they just became Mustangs !!!! USAAF then ordered the P51A as a fighter all allison Powered as that was THE only V12 Available in the USA untill Packard got the contract for 6000 Merlins for the Brits and 3,000 for the USA. That being 1942 when production got started and these Merlins were stillthe SINGLE stage supercharged version Packard built the first V1650-3 in mid 1942 and the XP51B flew in Nov 1942 and in production 1943 !!!
@@wilburfinnigan2142 How is it that I'm wrong . I simply stated that there are no surviving P - 51 -A I didn't mention anything about the production a the start . I've seen a P -51 - C in a non - flyable condition but for my experience has been most Mustangs are of the surviving D's Unless someone out there is hiding one or two that nobody knows of .
rummmmp ruuuummmp rummmp da da da da rummp rump rump rump dada dad addad rummp rump rummmp OHHHHHH the sounds. Happy birthday America.....2019....R.I.P grandpa Mstrsgt. McMaster. Your sacrifice was not in vain.
Carlos s I pulled this from the Argus 410 (the engine on the Pilatus) wiki page. “A distinctive feature is the finned spinner ahead of the propeller. This is driven by the airflow as a windmill, and used to power the actuator of the variable-pitch propeller.”