The Most Impressive Aircraft In The World Of Aviation | The Flying Bulls

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  • čas přidán 10. 02. 2019
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    The P-38 Lightning by Lockheed might be one of the most impressive aircraft in the world of aviation. With its unconventional twin tail, it was commonly used during the Pacific War. The twin Allison engines with 1,600 horsepower make the P-38 the perfect warbird for long distances due to its ability to fly higher and faster than other fighters built around the same time. Between 1941 and 1945 more than 10,000 aircraft were produced. Today, the P-38 is a very rare model and appears to be priceless. It comes as no surprise that no efforts and costs were spared to save and restore those treasures.
    On July 31st, 1944 the famous author and pilot Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (“The little Prince”) set off in Corsica for an expedition to the South of France in his Lockheed P-38, from which he never returned. The story surrounding the disappearance of the famous author is still being explored today. However, the discovery of pieces of the aircraft suggests that the plane was shot down on that day.
    An incident in 1942 paved the way for the discovery of one of the few remaining Lightnings. In July 1942, a P-38 fleet set off from the United States to England. However, due to bad weather conditions, six of the pilots had to turn around before they reached Iceland and make a forced landing on the icy island of Greenland. Five of the airplanes are now covered in a 100m thick layer of ice. In 1992, one of the aircraft was rescued. Today, it is known as the “Glacier Girl” and operates in the United States.
    The only P-38 in Europe, and one of the only ones that is still being used, is owned by the Flying Bulls and can be found in Hangar 7 in Salzburg. It is one of the most treasured exhibition pieces and brightens the entire Hangar with its perfectly polished skin. More than four years had to pass until the perfectly restored P-38 was finally shipped from the United States to Hamburg in one piece. On May 10th, it moved into the Hangar 7 where it can still be admired today.
    Today it can be said that the Flying Bulls’ P-38, registered N25Y (an American registration), is one of the most beautiful and well-maintained Lightnings worldwide - a graceful aircraft both on the ground and in the air. Its twin Allision V-12 reciprocating engines with turbochargers allow the almost 8 ton aircraft to reach 670 km/h and a height only modern jets can normally reach. The P-38 is unique in all aspects and considered a unique beauty by many admirers.
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Komentáře • 53

  • @mopar21
    @mopar21 Před 5 lety +40

    Thank you Red Bull for preserving History.

  • @paulhansen7667
    @paulhansen7667 Před rokem +18

    My father served on a destroyer (DD403) in WW2. He said the P38 was the only fighter that they could always recognize flying overhead. Some other allied fighters got shot down chasing German planes above their convoys.

    • @sammuller1784
      @sammuller1784 Před 3 měsíci

      Awesome, except they are considered interceptors, not fighters

    • @thekindpenguin7497
      @thekindpenguin7497 Před 2 měsíci +1

      ​@@sammuller1784 it fulfilled many roles, but it was a Fighter at the end of the day

  • @sandburrhill8193
    @sandburrhill8193 Před 5 lety +27

    My grandpa started working on these before WW2 and retired from Lockheed working on the SR-71. Even into his 90s he kept up on aerospace development having witnessed the full arc of airpower's coming of age.

    • @ryanr775
      @ryanr775 Před 2 lety +1

      Really! Same as my grandpa started in Lockheed on the P-38 and also finished there after the SR-71. In Burbank right!?

    • @sandburrhill8193
      @sandburrhill8193 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ryanr775 yes

    • @cannabislife1688
      @cannabislife1688 Před 7 měsíci

      My Uncle flew them for the 475th Satan’s angel, during WW2 and shot down multiple Japanese Zeros making him an Ace pilot.

  • @2steaksandwiches665
    @2steaksandwiches665 Před 2 lety +7

    Amazing. My great uncle got shot down and died in one of these. Special place in my heart. RIP.

    • @blaumupi
      @blaumupi Před rokem

      For me, it also became a special machine very in early life, because my father, as a young man, was harassed (but not shot at) by a Lightning while walking in Germany. Because of my father's exciting story, the P-38 has taken on a special significance for me.

    • @2steaksandwiches665
      @2steaksandwiches665 Před rokem +3

      @@blaumupi Maybe the American pilot was just messing with him? I grew up with a lot of World War II veterans and none of them relished killing. In fact they would tear up talking about it.

    • @blaumupi
      @blaumupi Před rokem

      @@2steaksandwiches665 Hello! I did not want to judge the US Piot in general! German pilots also shot at civilians.
      The pilot of the P-38 lost sight of my father and searched for him for a long time. No idea what his intention was? Maybe bad intentions, maybe just curiosity? But it was not so rare that, especially in 1945, people working in the fields and cows were shot at. Possibly it was also out of "boredom" of not finding targets after a long flight?
      Nevertheless, I love the beautifull P-38!

  • @marciano98
    @marciano98 Před 5 lety +11

    Damm! I'd think it would be amazing to fly for Red Bull! looks so cool!

  • @MurraydeLues
    @MurraydeLues Před 5 měsíci +1

    Saw Lefty with White Lightning at Reno in 82. Most unusual in that not only did he race it, he also performed an aerobatic display as well. So happy to see it still flying.

  • @bighaasfly
    @bighaasfly Před 5 lety +8

    Always been such a gorgeous aircraft. Love it!

  • @Grak70
    @Grak70 Před rokem +1

    The sound of this aircraft making a low pass is like nothing else. I love it.

  • @aaronanderson7619
    @aaronanderson7619 Před 5 lety +2

    Such amazing metal work. Gorgeous

  • @blaumupi
    @blaumupi Před rokem +2

    a beauty AND a beast! Wonderfull plane!

  • @Pilotc180
    @Pilotc180 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Lefty and the Lightning; Lefty flys with the angels and N25Y sadly left the USA; thanks for the memories

  • @argonwheatbelly637
    @argonwheatbelly637 Před rokem +2

    My two favorite planes.

  • @Sondeln-xz7fl
    @Sondeln-xz7fl Před 3 lety +1

    AMAZING

  • @coreym9555
    @coreym9555 Před 5 lety +1

    Wow this is so amazing. Wow👍

  • @homeairplane
    @homeairplane Před rokem +2

    Wow amazing..

  • @robertthomas3777
    @robertthomas3777 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Great footage.
    🦘🇦🇺👍

  • @HayilAl-Qadhaafi-ws9of
    @HayilAl-Qadhaafi-ws9of Před rokem +3

    This was so deadly that German pilots nicknamed it 'der Gabelschwanz-Teufel' or fork-tailed devil.

  • @manny2ndamendment246
    @manny2ndamendment246 Před 5 lety +1

    Classic fighter

  • @merlincultofficial3235
    @merlincultofficial3235 Před 7 měsíci

    Absolutely my favorite plane from history second is the a-10 and third is the spitfire

  • @BlahKDubstep
    @BlahKDubstep Před 2 měsíci

    I can imagine it being much faster without the 50’s in it’s nose. Beautiful aircraft!

  • @brookeshenfield7156
    @brookeshenfield7156 Před měsícem

    Interesting that they have plated over the air intake scoops under the trailing edges of the wings.

  • @MrsLiederlover
    @MrsLiederlover Před 2 měsíci

    Excellent video.
    Due to the very long flights made by USAAF P-38s in the Pacific "theater", (civilian) aviation pioneer Charles Lindbergh was sent to a squadron as a consultant on long-range flight techniques.
    The pilots had been instructed in the US to reduce Cruise Prop RPMs to a minimum of "X". Lindbergh either already knew, or immed. figured out that pilots needed to reduce cruise rpms to a lower setting "Y", to achieve a better/longer maximum range. This might have saved numerous pilots from ditching.
    What cost some pilots their lives in Europe, maybe also in the Pacific, was the complexity of managing the original Allison engines: too many engine controls to adjust while in combat.
    Allison then designed an engine which had an auto function, possibly auto fuel mixture control (?) for different altitudes and manifold pressure settings?
    This auto function gave pilots more time to check their "6 o' clock" and other areas for "bandits." Some British pilots also flew the P-38 iirc.

    • @AlanRoehrich9651
      @AlanRoehrich9651 Před 28 dny

      All Lindbergh did was use the *correct* settings as listed in the Lockheed manual. Those are "auto lean" mixture, manifold pressure set to 32", props set to maintain 1600 RPM.
      The better, smarter pilots trained themselves to use the engine controls by muscle memory without looking. So they could quickly set the props to fine pitch, set the mixture control to "auto rich", and open the throttles, in that order. They also knew to set their oil cooler and radiator doors by muscle memory without looking. They actually practiced doing those things.
      Yes, the P-38 had controls for each engine. But they were both in the same place, and operate the same way.
      You had to do all the same things in a single engine fighter. You just had to do it to only one engine.

  • @charlesburns3319
    @charlesburns3319 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you for mentioning White Lightening.

  • @speedy_comet
    @speedy_comet Před rokem +2

    If you lived in the U.S at the time especially in So-Cal then the Lightning would have been a regular sight on a daily basis or almost daily.

    • @TheMaxWhoKnewTooMuch
      @TheMaxWhoKnewTooMuch Před měsícem +1

      The planes of Fame museum (or part of it,) was in MN for a number of years, I had the opportunity to view their Lightning 2x such a gorgeous aircraft.

  • @whanngabrylsanoy721
    @whanngabrylsanoy721 Před měsícem

    I think the removal of the guns made it fast too,but u may be mistaken

  • @Ford_Raptor_R_720hp_V8
    @Ford_Raptor_R_720hp_V8 Před 2 lety +5

    *He mentioned the top speed of this one is around 400 knots* 0:36
    *that's ~460 mph*
    *then it says MAX SPEED: 760 KM/H or ~472 mph* 0:48

  • @janosvarga135
    @janosvarga135 Před 7 měsíci

    ! The most beautiful twin-engine airplane in the world!
    *Star Wars naboo style.

  • @bernardparsy9878
    @bernardparsy9878 Před 7 měsíci

    mon pere et mon grand frere ont assistes aux vols de cet appareil durant l'annee 1944 lors de la liberation en france

  • @decipherlogic
    @decipherlogic Před 2 lety

    So this is where Lefty Gardner's White Lightnin' ended up huh? Bring it back to Reno and race it again!

  • @samuelschut3297
    @samuelschut3297 Před 3 lety +1

    Faster than original p38

  • @hfdennycheng9010
    @hfdennycheng9010 Před 4 měsíci

    ON 9 SEPTEMBER, 1943. THE IMPERIAL JAPANESE ARMY AIR FORCE LEADER, 中薗盛孝. HE WAS KILLED BY A P-38G OVER CANTON/GUANGZHOU, CHINA

  • @kingcamilo
    @kingcamilo Před rokem +1

    This should be a premium in war thunder 😅

    • @sonwig5186
      @sonwig5186 Před 6 měsíci

      It's a regular in war thunder

    • @kingcamilo
      @kingcamilo Před 6 měsíci

      Saying it for the skin

  • @robertgorham3755
    @robertgorham3755 Před 4 lety +1

    A great way to spend your lottery winnings

  • @abitofapickle6255
    @abitofapickle6255 Před 2 lety

    Im hoping red bull can get their hands on a F-14

  • @divinitus3575
    @divinitus3575 Před 2 lety +1

    Flying bulls..Because Breitling forgot its roots and didn't do it.

  • @samuelschut3297
    @samuelschut3297 Před 3 lety

    Corsair divebomber us navy

  • @azspotfree
    @azspotfree Před 4 lety +1

    I wouldn't fly that thing again until you check out the valve guides and piston rings in both engines.

    • @AlanRoehrich9651
      @AlanRoehrich9651 Před 28 dny

      The smoke is an oil based injection into the exhaust.....

  • @nickatkinson5692
    @nickatkinson5692 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Great aircraft but not the fastest. The Germans managed the fastest, the Dornier Do 335 Pfeil, followed by the british Mosquito.

  • @RyanRuark
    @RyanRuark Před 3 měsíci +1

    A German flying a P-38??

    • @landsky5925
      @landsky5925 Před 13 dny

      he should marry an american woman