The Fritz X was mainly used against ships with quite a success. Another example is the All-Wing the Horten 229 that with the devolopment of new materials is that father of the stealth aircraft. This means that the stolen blueprints were kept in a safe, until the americans managed to create the stealths, and we know the rest. When you see this kind of technology, you can answer the question why Germany is forbiden to build fighters; the allies're afraid of the deutsches. Very good video!
TRUE nothing NEW since nazi scientists, atleast notmuch...
OR real secretweapons are kept in REALGOOD hidingplaces, i think most U.F.O sightings are really manmade "somekind" space/air crafts???
Must be thatway, cause over 1000 nazi scientists went to usa after ww2. Didnt took long till nazi scientists completed A-bomb for U.S etc... 1st A-bomb tested were made in germany, atleast its outerior
@88Phobos BTW; my grandpa said that, the UFO, (flying disc) could fly, but not fast enough, as well as not high enough, plus that it could NOT carry anything with it, or else it would not evin leave the ground...
So that was NO option, ((evin not with modern jetengines))
rockets dont work, because a rocket cannot stop & start, so then you keep going higher and higher till the rocket is done.
A other problem was flying forward in a straight line, with other words,
Now I know were the US got , sorry stole, most of 'their' inventions.
The American B2 stealth bomber... the Germans designed it. Werner Von Braun, the German genius of NASA built the first rocket as Nazi - the V2. Messerschmidt 262 was the first jet fighter plane - we can go on all day. Absolute brilliant and all this happened already nearly 70 years ago - German brilliancy - US copy cats.
... even the German contributor to the project gave up for the second try. Without the radio controlled guidance system it is highly unlikely that they would be successful with even a stationary target and the bomb being dropped at 2500 feet. The German bombardier in 1940s dropped the bomb from approximately 20,000 feet and the success rate was very high.
Did anyone watch National Geographic Channel Canada this weekend? Nat. Geo. was doing a special weekend series on weapons of destruction. One doc was on the Fritz X. The doc. was a remake of a replica Fritz being launched from a B-25 Liberator. Hot shot pilot and co-pilot thought they were going to hit the target from 2500 ft. bullseye first try, nope. Then a second try, nope again. I don't think they had a functioning remote control system that the Fritz X had.... CONT'D
Yes, but only used in 1945 and not against Germany. Already before, in 1943 Germany has developed the first guided gliding bomb ever, the Fritz X. And not only guided bombs, but also guided missiles, cruise missiles etc.. and in an incomparable variaty - the basis for post-war developments.. if you like it or not.
There was a simple cure used in the war to defeat this bomb, radio jamming. Without radio contact with the bomb you had a dumb bomb. This was the weak spot of every guided bomb till pulse coded laser guidance.
Yes, that's right.. just the enemy wasn't prepared on it at first. The same problem had the guided torpedos. For example the German "Zaunkönig" later on could be distracted by the American jammer called Foxer.. but further developments like the torpedo "Geier" weren't sensitive on this system anymore. Nothing lasts forever.. a high data encryption for example might be outdated already with some years. Everything is in progress.
@19hobbes : The Allies overclaimed on the effectiveness of the countermeasure they used against the German ASMs. Still, with such defense, the Germans continued to hit enemy ships in the Med. In the end, what you should ask is that if 70 years ago, the German ASMs, seeing limited service, proved so lethal, destroying 1 battleship, badly damaging another 2 (Littorio and Warspite), plus sinking or damaging cruisers, destroyers and other vessels, think of what a modern-day supersonic ASM can do.
thanks goodness they never thought of using the X4 rocket in reverse to the Fritz X. Imagine 50 operators launching at a B17 formation, pick an aircraft, put the dot on it. goodbye Young Americans.
That was at a time when there was no transistors, only bulky electron tubes. I would love to know how they managed to build such small remote guidance systems at the time.
Indeed the German were outnumbered and outgunned, but never outclassed. This was superb technology, stolen from them, forbiden to research after WWII, and put into practice by the americans, british and ruskis today. Amazing!!
@rdx506 There's a wide range of weapons, where the German research was the prime target of the americans after WWII. Besides the Fritz X, you have the German rockets and its scientists, as another example. The weapons found were shipped to the US and the scientists were kidnapped under operation "paperclip", since the German had no rights because of the unconditional surrender of the German politicians. The soviets did the same.
At the end of WW2, the Germans experimented with a Henschel Hs 293 which had an integrated bomb camera: Hs 293 D version; about 260 units has been produced, but it has never been deployed..
Only later on, imperialist thief USA only used this technology in the 50ies during the Korean War.. America sucks, get over it.
And which US American tv-guided bomb do you mean? :) If it existed, I'm pretty sure it never saw combat as well as the HS 293 D which is much older.
Since 1939, as you can see. (source: wehrmacht-history(DOT)com)
Henschel Hs 293D
Anti-ship Missiles
The Henschel Hs 293D was a anti-ship missile Designed and developed by Henschel und Sohn in 1939 under the leadership of Dr.-Ing. Herbert Alois Wagner.
The Henschel Hs 293D was intended to be deployed against Allied shipping.
Continued development of the standard Henschel Hs 293 A-1 led to the development of the Henschel Hs 293D which had an enlarged nosecone, to allow for the installation of a Tonne A nose camera, other modifications included Yagi aerial, which was fitted at the rear of the missile. The entire television guidance system was put together by Fernesh GmbH, under the guidance of Dr Weiss.
- Once more case that USA copied German WW2 high tech. Most came out after WW2. V1 -> "Loon" etc..
Radar: Germany developed first ready to use radar detection in 1934, England followed in 1935 using different wavelength. Clearly espionage.
A-bomb? Once more greetings from Germany! Such a bomb could only be detonated using infrared fuses, those, which only Manfred von Ardenne invented. The Allies got it from submarine U 234, besides enriched uranium. The other when invading Germany.Otherwise it'd have been thrown on Germany if USA had it.Germany couldn't use it anymore..
...as well as the world's first nerve gas (Sarin, Tabun, Soman).. Tons of it had been produced and a big part was thrown after the war in the North Sea. USA and Russia started their own production then.
After a GERMAN prototype was received, W. A. S. Butement, Edward S. Shire, and Amherst F.H. Thompson[1] proposed the radio frequency proximity fuze concept in a memo to the British Air Defence Establishment in May 1940.
The Germans started their own independent research in the 1930s but the programme was cut in 1940 likely due to the 'fuhrer directive' (Führerbefehl) that, with few exceptions, stipulated all work that could not be put into production within 6 months was to be terminated to increase resources for those projects that could (in order to support operation Barbarossa). It was at this time that the Germans also abandoned their magnetron and microwave development teams and programs.
Many other advanced and experimental programs also suffered. Upon resumption of research and testing by Rheinmetall in 1944 the Germans managed to develop and test fire several hundred working prototypes before the war ended.
The P-51 Mustang was a simple propelled aircraft, good, but look up which aircrafts Nazi Germany had. Horten Ho IX (jet fighter, coal coated -> stealth effect; Northrop B2 greets you), Me 163 (rocket fighter), Me 262 (jet fighter)... and so on, I can't mention here everything, so get informed.
The Horten IX may have been stealth (It wasn't really, but that's neither here nor there) but it was also nigh un-flyable. The Me 163 barely had enough endurance to reach the bombers it was intended to shoot down and had an annoying tendency to kill its pilots and the Me 262 had a thing for burning out its engines in less than tree hours
The Fritz X was mainly used against ships with quite a success. Another example is the All-Wing the Horten 229 that with the devolopment of new materials is that father of the stealth aircraft. This means that the stolen blueprints were kept in a safe, until the americans managed to create the stealths, and we know the rest. When you see this kind of technology, you can answer the question why Germany is forbiden to build fighters; the allies're afraid of the deutsches. Very good video!
marienfeld07 2 months ago
TRUE nothing NEW since nazi scientists, atleast notmuch...
OR real secretweapons are kept in REALGOOD hidingplaces, i think most U.F.O sightings are really manmade "somekind" space/air crafts???
Must be thatway, cause over 1000 nazi scientists went to usa after ww2. Didnt took long till nazi scientists completed A-bomb for U.S etc... 1st A-bomb tested were made in germany, atleast its outerior
(that ball-looking, seaminestyle A-bomb.)
88Phobos 3 months ago
@88Phobos
the A bomb was allready made, and in Germany, a few hundreds to be precisely.
just like the B52 and the B1 bombers,
and my grandpa claimed to have flown in a F17 ((exactly the one of these days)),
But the one of my grandpa couldnt shoot with guns, because he did not have guns...
O and by the way,
the A-10 warthog, was called, Heinkel-Kameleon by the germans in ww2, only 7 were build and put into action on the Russian front...
a few A-bombs were used in Russia to!!!
Weibkoln 2 months ago
@88Phobos BTW; my grandpa said that, the UFO, (flying disc) could fly, but not fast enough, as well as not high enough, plus that it could NOT carry anything with it, or else it would not evin leave the ground...
So that was NO option, ((evin not with modern jetengines))
rockets dont work, because a rocket cannot stop & start, so then you keep going higher and higher till the rocket is done.
A other problem was flying forward in a straight line, with other words,
flying discs are no option
Weibkoln 2 months ago
@88Phobos The reason why we did not use the Abombs is because, we used it against Russia, and it did NOT work!!!
Instead of making the enemy stop with fighting,
the Abombs made the Russians fighting evin way harder!!!
So for America we thought it would turn into the same problem, therefor we did not use it anymore...
My grandpa told, that we putted Abombs on airfields with orange roof above it,
and the Americans knew, sothat they did NOT trew bombs on the A-bombs!!!
Weibkoln 2 months ago
Made in Germany! watch?v=kjQR-BV9HIc
Wieland1985 3 months ago
Now I know were the US got , sorry stole, most of 'their' inventions.
The American B2 stealth bomber... the Germans designed it. Werner Von Braun, the German genius of NASA built the first rocket as Nazi - the V2. Messerschmidt 262 was the first jet fighter plane - we can go on all day. Absolute brilliant and all this happened already nearly 70 years ago - German brilliancy - US copy cats.
ebutpeter 4 months ago 2
... even the German contributor to the project gave up for the second try. Without the radio controlled guidance system it is highly unlikely that they would be successful with even a stationary target and the bomb being dropped at 2500 feet. The German bombardier in 1940s dropped the bomb from approximately 20,000 feet and the success rate was very high.
camlpg 5 months ago
Did anyone watch National Geographic Channel Canada this weekend? Nat. Geo. was doing a special weekend series on weapons of destruction. One doc was on the Fritz X. The doc. was a remake of a replica Fritz being launched from a B-25 Liberator. Hot shot pilot and co-pilot thought they were going to hit the target from 2500 ft. bullseye first try, nope. Then a second try, nope again. I don't think they had a functioning remote control system that the Fritz X had.... CONT'D
camlpg 5 months ago
The allies developed the same sort of thing with the AZON bomb.
WimpBastard 7 months ago
a bomb sight made this obsolete you simply drop the bomb on the target to win the war.
datzfast 7 months ago
too bad the planes that carried bombs were so easily shot down or these guided bombs could have been troublesome
datzfast 7 months ago
amazing considering this is during WW2
fenderkicker 8 months ago
Well i never ,they had thoes things back then.
umfums 8 months ago
@thelleht
Yes, but only used in 1945 and not against Germany. Already before, in 1943 Germany has developed the first guided gliding bomb ever, the Fritz X. And not only guided bombs, but also guided missiles, cruise missiles etc.. and in an incomparable variaty - the basis for post-war developments.. if you like it or not.
hatebreederish 9 months ago
There was a simple cure used in the war to defeat this bomb, radio jamming. Without radio contact with the bomb you had a dumb bomb. This was the weak spot of every guided bomb till pulse coded laser guidance.
19hobbes 9 months ago
@19hobbes
Yes, that's right.. just the enemy wasn't prepared on it at first. The same problem had the guided torpedos. For example the German "Zaunkönig" later on could be distracted by the American jammer called Foxer.. but further developments like the torpedo "Geier" weren't sensitive on this system anymore. Nothing lasts forever.. a high data encryption for example might be outdated already with some years. Everything is in progress.
hatebreederish 9 months ago
@19hobbes However, you had to know what frequency the radio guidance was using.
BossHiggs 9 months ago
@19hobbes : The Allies overclaimed on the effectiveness of the countermeasure they used against the German ASMs. Still, with such defense, the Germans continued to hit enemy ships in the Med. In the end, what you should ask is that if 70 years ago, the German ASMs, seeing limited service, proved so lethal, destroying 1 battleship, badly damaging another 2 (Littorio and Warspite), plus sinking or damaging cruisers, destroyers and other vessels, think of what a modern-day supersonic ASM can do.
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RhdajWdjjkk 1 year ago
thanks goodness they never thought of using the X4 rocket in reverse to the Fritz X. Imagine 50 operators launching at a B17 formation, pick an aircraft, put the dot on it. goodbye Young Americans.
warp65 1 year ago
That was at a time when there was no transistors, only bulky electron tubes. I would love to know how they managed to build such small remote guidance systems at the time.
Kaulstoessl 1 year ago
Indeed the German were outnumbered and outgunned, but never outclassed. This was superb technology, stolen from them, forbiden to research after WWII, and put into practice by the americans, british and ruskis today. Amazing!!
marienfeld07 1 year ago 21
@marienfeld07 "Never outclassed???" what about America's T.V. guided bombs??!!! No class there???
rdx506 10 months ago
@rdx506 There's a wide range of weapons, where the German research was the prime target of the americans after WWII. Besides the Fritz X, you have the German rockets and its scientists, as another example. The weapons found were shipped to the US and the scientists were kidnapped under operation "paperclip", since the German had no rights because of the unconditional surrender of the German politicians. The soviets did the same.
marienfeld07 10 months ago
@rdx506
At the end of WW2, the Germans experimented with a Henschel Hs 293 which had an integrated bomb camera: Hs 293 D version; about 260 units has been produced, but it has never been deployed..
Only later on, imperialist thief USA only used this technology in the 50ies during the Korean War.. America sucks, get over it.
hatebreederish 9 months ago
@hatebreederish So, tell me Dr.,did the Germans invented T.V. ??!!! The U.S. was using T.V.-guided bombs in 1944.
BossHiggs 9 months ago
@BossHiggs
And which US American tv-guided bomb do you mean? :) If it existed, I'm pretty sure it never saw combat as well as the HS 293 D which is much older.
Since 1939, as you can see. (source: wehrmacht-history(DOT)com)
Henschel Hs 293D
Anti-ship Missiles
The Henschel Hs 293D was a anti-ship missile Designed and developed by Henschel und Sohn in 1939 under the leadership of Dr.-Ing. Herbert Alois Wagner.
The Henschel Hs 293D was intended to be deployed against Allied shipping.
.....
hatebreederish 9 months ago
@marienfeld07 The U.S. was using T.V.-guided bombs in 1944.
BossHiggs 9 months ago
.....
Continued development of the standard Henschel Hs 293 A-1 led to the development of the Henschel Hs 293D which had an enlarged nosecone, to allow for the installation of a Tonne A nose camera, other modifications included Yagi aerial, which was fitted at the rear of the missile. The entire television guidance system was put together by Fernesh GmbH, under the guidance of Dr Weiss.
- Once more case that USA copied German WW2 high tech. Most came out after WW2. V1 -> "Loon" etc..
hatebreederish 9 months ago
Respond to this video...Never outclassed??!!!
How about Radar??? P-51 Nustang??? The V.T. proximity fuse???
High-Frequency Direction-Finding??? How about the ATOM BOMB???
BossHiggs 9 months ago
@BossHiggs
Nice try.
Radar: Germany developed first ready to use radar detection in 1934, England followed in 1935 using different wavelength. Clearly espionage.
A-bomb? Once more greetings from Germany! Such a bomb could only be detonated using infrared fuses, those, which only Manfred von Ardenne invented. The Allies got it from submarine U 234, besides enriched uranium. The other when invading Germany.Otherwise it'd have been thrown on Germany if USA had it.Germany couldn't use it anymore..
hatebreederish 9 months ago
...as well as the world's first nerve gas (Sarin, Tabun, Soman).. Tons of it had been produced and a big part was thrown after the war in the North Sea. USA and Russia started their own production then.
hatebreederish 9 months ago
proximity fuze (Wikipedia):
After a GERMAN prototype was received, W. A. S. Butement, Edward S. Shire, and Amherst F.H. Thompson[1] proposed the radio frequency proximity fuze concept in a memo to the British Air Defence Establishment in May 1940.
....
hatebreederish 9 months ago
The Germans started their own independent research in the 1930s but the programme was cut in 1940 likely due to the 'fuhrer directive' (Führerbefehl) that, with few exceptions, stipulated all work that could not be put into production within 6 months was to be terminated to increase resources for those projects that could (in order to support operation Barbarossa). It was at this time that the Germans also abandoned their magnetron and microwave development teams and programs.
hatebreederish 9 months ago
Many other advanced and experimental programs also suffered. Upon resumption of research and testing by Rheinmetall in 1944 the Germans managed to develop and test fire several hundred working prototypes before the war ended.
-unquote-
hatebreederish 9 months ago
The P-51 Mustang was a simple propelled aircraft, good, but look up which aircrafts Nazi Germany had. Horten Ho IX (jet fighter, coal coated -> stealth effect; Northrop B2 greets you), Me 163 (rocket fighter), Me 262 (jet fighter)... and so on, I can't mention here everything, so get informed.
hatebreederish 9 months ago
@hatebreederish
The Horten IX may have been stealth (It wasn't really, but that's neither here nor there) but it was also nigh un-flyable. The Me 163 barely had enough endurance to reach the bombers it was intended to shoot down and had an annoying tendency to kill its pilots and the Me 262 had a thing for burning out its engines in less than tree hours
chrthiel 6 months ago
@marienfeld07
Yes, no need to discuss - because it's useless by all these clear evidences.
hatebreederish 9 months ago
@marienfeld07 No question the Germans were and are superb engineers. The shame was the insane leadership.
"Stolen" Not exactly. They did lose the war after all.
Not to mention, the Americans & Brits were working on similar tech at the time.
USSBN734 5 months ago
@marienfeld07
Yes just like our atomic bombs that fall at Japan
Weibkoln 2 months ago
We need the FRITZ X against the Taliban!
freeharddrive 1 year ago
Damn, that was accurate.
Sethorion99 1 year ago
Holy Shit!!
WillyMcCoy50 1 year ago 14
@WillyMcCoy50
All matters aside, the germans definitely had the most radical weapons, way ahead of the time. Possibly the only thing to admire from them.
HurstGI 1 year ago
wow
tarek1982 2 years ago