Synthetic Fuel - Germany's REAL Wonder Weapon in World War II ('25 - '45)

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  • čas přidán 16. 05. 2024
  • Synthetic Fuel - Germany's REAL Wonder Weapon in World War II ('25 - '45)
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Komentáře • 310

  • @binaway
    @binaway Před měsícem +125

    In 1945 my father, a POW, walked past the remains of a large synthetic oil plant. He described as like a plate of black spaghetti. A pile of blackened and bent pipes over a kilometer long. The bombers had completely destroyed it.

  • @jimslancio
    @jimslancio Před měsícem +130

    Germany also devoted a lot of industrial might to fixing atmospheric nitrogen into ammonia for fertilizer and explosives.

    • @kenergixllc527
      @kenergixllc527 Před 5 dny +2

      Not much in Germany the last several decades.

    • @russellking9762
      @russellking9762 Před 13 hodinami

      They also devoted a lot of industrial might and much needed manpower into carrying out the holocaust as well.

  • @0Zolrender0
    @0Zolrender0 Před měsícem +94

    A great informative video. I also loved that you narrated this yourself and didn't use AI. Respect mate.

    • @stephenhosking7384
      @stephenhosking7384 Před měsícem +11

      Yes, his accent is much better than AI!

    • @ristube3319
      @ristube3319 Před 9 dny

      It’s nearly unintelligible.
      I hate AI voiceovers, but I can understand them.

  • @aurorathekitty7854
    @aurorathekitty7854 Před měsícem +69

    In Europe during WW2 oil was in such short supply alot of private vehicles use wood gas to run. It's a very simple yet effective technology. I want to eventually build a wood gasifier myself and get an engine to run off it.

    • @Steve-mk6rq
      @Steve-mk6rq Před měsícem +6

      Try pyrolysis .. Diesel from plastic which is %80 processed gasoline.

    • @billwilson-es5yn
      @billwilson-es5yn Před měsícem +2

      ​@@Steve-mk6rqNot gasoline but ethylene.

    • @SweatyFatGuy
      @SweatyFatGuy Před měsícem +5

      I make ethanol from cattails, run my cars on it, and when I get to where I can make enough the trucks will run on it as well. Wood gasifiers clog engines with soot and ash, its worse than the carbon deposits left by gasoline. Gasifiers work, but they are down on power, do not transition well with throttle changes, so using them in a stationary engine such as a generator would work better than a vehicle. You still have to clean it often, but it does work and its relatively simple to do it.
      Ethanol leaves everything inside the engine and fuel tank very clean, no varnish or carbon left over. Plus you can run high compression with it, one of the Pontiac 455s in my summer daily drivers has 13:1 compression, another has 11.5:1 with iron heads which would require race gas to not flatten the upper connecting rod bearings.
      Germany used ethanol to power their jet aircraft, the Me262 and He162 both used ethanol fuel. The panzers could run on multiple fuels, not just diesel.
      There are a few ways to run diesel engines on other fuels, the one I find most amusing is hemp seed oil. Once the oil is pressed and cooked out of the seeds, they can be used to produce ethanol, so hemp lets you make two fuels. Takes a lot of hemp seeds to make fuel though, they are quite small.

    • @828enigma6
      @828enigma6 Před 29 dny +2

      I think Japan also used wood gas powered vehicles during the war. Don't know what process was used.

    • @SweatyFatGuy
      @SweatyFatGuy Před 28 dny

      @@828enigma6 there were also trucks that ran on coal using the same process. Any fuel that will smolder with low oxygen can be used in a gasifier.

  • @finallyfriday.
    @finallyfriday. Před měsícem +123

    My grandfather was a doctor of chemical engineering who worked on this program in ww2.

    • @autodidact537
      @autodidact537 Před měsícem +3

      And we should care because....?

    • @EJisArete
      @EJisArete Před měsícem

      @@autodidact537 He has good genetics.

    • @finallyfriday.
      @finallyfriday. Před měsícem +69

      @@autodidact537 Because you're watching this CZcams video which shows the subject means something to you, like the rest of us.... or you're just trolling.

    • @daveweiss5647
      @daveweiss5647 Před měsícem +18

      ​@autodidact537 how about you just be nice to people?

    • @castrogonzalez614
      @castrogonzalez614 Před měsícem +14

      @@autodidact537Because it’s interesting.

  • @jacqueslefave4296
    @jacqueslefave4296 Před měsícem +58

    This same process was used by South Africa for decades to get around sanctions under apartheid. In fact, they improved it and the United States seriously looked at it during the 1973 Arab oil embargo.

    • @Rustedinmyshackleferd
      @Rustedinmyshackleferd Před měsícem

      Right…let me guess africans landed on the moon too right? Or did they come from a space colony in the nigglity galaxy according to the we waz kangz and qwangz crowd 😂😂😂

    • @danielkemp4860
      @danielkemp4860 Před měsícem +2

      SASOL still produces 160000 barrels a day, making us (South Africa) one of the worst CO2/GHG producers 😂

    • @Michael-CharlesAust-ee5oo
      @Michael-CharlesAust-ee5oo Před měsícem +3

      While on horseback in Wyoming Lindsey Williams saw a man locking up the oil wells telling him it was government order.

    • @jacqueslefave4296
      @jacqueslefave4296 Před měsícem +9

      @@danielkemp4860 Good, CO2 makes great plant food, greenhouse experiments have shown that even small increases in atmospheric CO2 dramatically improves plant growth and fruit/vegetable crop yield.

    • @chevy1221
      @chevy1221 Před 17 dny +5

      @@jacqueslefave4296 yes, if we can reach 800-1000ppm plant growth speed will literally double. Would probably sole world hunger for good, truly incredible that no one talks about this.

  • @twostep1953
    @twostep1953 Před měsícem +51

    After the oil embargo of the 1970's, the U.S. government became interested in how Germany did it - and hired my professor of History of Germany (Austrian immigrant parents) to translate the German documents. But I think they lost interest before they ever figured it out.

    • @binaway
      @binaway Před měsícem +12

      If I remember correctly it took 11 tons of coal to make 1 ton of fuel.This required the opening old abandoned mine. The nearly free labor from POW's to mine the coal, dad being one, helped minimize the costs.

    • @johnkanji8588
      @johnkanji8588 Před měsícem +6

      The USA already had a synthetic fuel facility in Texas 1950s.

    • @billwilson-es5yn
      @billwilson-es5yn Před měsícem +8

      The US Government decided it would be faster and cheaper to drill more oil wells.

    • @chriscarbaugh3936
      @chriscarbaugh3936 Před měsícem +4

      Really its an exhaustive and intensive, costly and wasteful endeavour that produces poor quality fuel.

    • @ViceCoin
      @ViceCoin Před měsícem +1

      Big oil took care of it.

  • @davidtaylor4832
    @davidtaylor4832 Před měsícem +33

    During the 1920's and 1930's Britain was producing petrol from coal, it was called Coalene.

    • @RomoloGessi31
      @RomoloGessi31 Před měsícem +11

      It isnt the same process. Coalene was a aromatic mix derived from coal distillation. FT process is a sinthesis of CO and H2 that produce alkan not camcerogen as aromatics

  • @kenergixllc527
    @kenergixllc527 Před měsícem +48

    Fischer Tropsch is a process for many things. For synfuels, the product is a very waxy synthethic crude which has to be cracked to be useful.
    Germany actually decided to use a process which operated at much higher pressures and used the sulfur contained in coal as the catalyst

    • @kenergixllc527
      @kenergixllc527 Před měsícem +5

      Fischer Tropsch reaction is how methanol is made as well.

    • @billwilson-es5yn
      @billwilson-es5yn Před měsícem

      ​@@kenergixllc527They might use that process to convert CO2 into methanol and methane.

    • @dennisfox8673
      @dennisfox8673 Před měsícem +3

      I can’t recall which specific process it was (possibly F-T?) but the allies used a process very similar to the German ones, but rather than make liquid fuel from coal, they used to improve crude refining to produce more of the desired fractions of fuel-especially aviation gasoline.
      I was a flunky geologist in the oilfield 20+ years ago who was also a history buff, and not a chemical engineer so the details are a tad fuzzy.

    • @kenergixllc527
      @kenergixllc527 Před měsícem +3

      @@dennisfox8673 The process Germany did use was used to hydrocrack Vacuum gasoil by Standard Oil pre WWII, built in Baton Rouge. FT uses natural gas reformed into syngas. The hydrogen and carbon monoxide go through a tubular reactor to make a very waxy syncrude which has to be cracked into refined products such as gasoline, diesel, etc...

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 Před 6 dny +2

      ​​@@kenergixllc527The other process you are thinking of was coal hydrogenation AKA the Bergius Process. It could use the iron sulfide in the coal, but also external copper, nickel, or tin oleate catalysts to directly hydrogenate pulverized coal suspended in recycle oil and subjected to high temperatures and hydrogen pressures. Fischer-Tropsch and Hydrogenation didn't compete, they were complementary. Hydrogenation made up the majority of production and produced good gasoline. Fischer-Tropsch produced moderate quality gasoline, good quality fuel oil, diesel, and kerosene, as well as waxes, industrial alcohols, organic acids, varnishes, etc. Fischer-Tropsch waxes were amenable to cracking into good quality gasoline components.

  • @davidkinney4486
    @davidkinney4486 Před měsícem +18

    IG farben was the innovator of both synthetic fuel, as well as developing synthetic rubber. During the pre-war period of the 1920s, IG Farben linked up with their business partner, U.S Standard Jersey Oil. Working together both companies have benefited from each other: such as the the American solution for the production of synthetic rubber tires, of which later on was vital for the war effort.

    • @pearlygeoff3837
      @pearlygeoff3837 Před měsícem +2

      Also developed the fuel for use in high compression engines.

    • @davidkinney4486
      @davidkinney4486 Před měsícem +2

      That's correct: it was Standard Jersey Oil that developed high-octane aviation fuel, as well as the production of lubricants.

  • @foxhoundms9051
    @foxhoundms9051 Před 10 měsíci +127

    Insightful video on an under appreciated aspect of WW2. Amazing how quickly technology advances during total war. Too bad it isn't that way during peacetime.

    • @EdMcF1
      @EdMcF1 Před měsícem +7

      But what might have been developed without bombed factories, killed workers, waste on military spending? We cannot tell, hence the broken window fallacy of Bastiat. Computers and biotechnology developed astonishingly fast in the late 20th century and continue to do so.

    • @Ralphieboy
      @Ralphieboy Před měsícem +1

      We still spend more on military than any other budget point...we are just not actively at war (at the moment)

    • @foxhoundms9051
      @foxhoundms9051 Před měsícem +1

      @@Ralphieboy yeah and it's a waste of our money

    • @Ralphieboy
      @Ralphieboy Před měsícem

      a form of welfare for corporations, engineers and communities with defense plants or military bases.

    • @foxhoundms9051
      @foxhoundms9051 Před měsícem +2

      @@Ralphieboy welfare, another waste of money

  • @stevenamartin
    @stevenamartin Před měsícem +14

    As a young man I remember the meme that the oil companies secreted the synfuel process. The problem was that combustion engines just won’t run on coal, so the Germans found that using immense amounts of it to make engine combustible synfuel while slow, expensive and toxic that it could supplement the fact that they never captured the oil fields needed to power the Wehrmacht.

  • @eurovnik
    @eurovnik Před 5 měsíci +25

    Great video.
    Allied strategic bombing of synthetic fuel plants was highly effective, unlike the area bombing of cities favoured by Harris.
    The Strategic Bombing Survey states "in attacking Germany's synthetic oil plants, the Allies selected an existing bottleneck and sought to draw it tighter."
    An unforeseen benefit of targeting German synthetic oil plants was that they were often colocated with other chemical plants. Coincidental damage to those plants further damaged German war production.
    Once the synthetic fuel industry had been bombed sufficiently to cripple supply internal combustion engine vehicles, the allies began to target other transport infrastructure, principally railways. The ensuing damage meant that German divisions struggled to detrain anywhere near Normandy to counterattack after D-day.
    Phillips O'brien's book "How the war was won" is excellent on this topic.

    • @JeffreyWilliams-dr7qe
      @JeffreyWilliams-dr7qe Před měsícem

      What. Did we use Tomahawk missiles with GPS?

    • @tpxchallenger
      @tpxchallenger Před měsícem +2

      It was still area bombing. Air forces lacked the precision to hit individual factories under wartime conditions without air supremacy. Same with rail infrastructure. Not until late 1944 when the Allies could hit individual trains using fighter bombers was it possible to effectively disrupt the German rail system. Rail track is quickly repairable.

  • @chriscarbaugh3936
    @chriscarbaugh3936 Před měsícem +9

    Thank you for a very interesting and informative video. You touched on a few important points. I think we need to add that the German fuels, particularity aviation fuels where of a lower octane, which can and did severely limit aero-engine performance. The German synthetic aromatic fuel could give good performance, but only at low air temps and at fuel-rich mixtures. Even as early as 1940 there were shortages of high performance fuels for fighters such as CV2B, which the DB601N was designed for. The C3 was substituted throughout the war. C3 had a very high boiling point, meaning when it contaminated the engine oil (frequent on direct injection engines) it would cause rod bearing failures. The general lack of octane meant that German engines needed a bigger capacity to keep up with the Merlin and even the Alison and later they needed Nitrous Oxide (GM1) and Methanol Water injection MW50 to increase knock resistance to allow the engines to run higher levels of boost for more power, but these were limited in usage times and really just a band aid fix on a good engine design hampered by poor fuel.

  • @ottovonbismarck2443
    @ottovonbismarck2443 Před 10 měsíci +31

    Very good !
    It wasn't all about fuel. Fischer-Tropsch synthesis helped a great deal in producing synthetic butter/margarine. IIRC, upon introduction in the 20s, it was primarily used for calories.

    • @DerSchleier
      @DerSchleier Před 10 měsíci +9

      Veritas. Synthetic oil too. Synthetic oil lubricant was used within/on all panzer/sturmgeschutz variants while Allied factions used common non-transparent grease/oil lubricants.

    • @TheWizardGamez
      @TheWizardGamez Před 7 měsíci +1

      i dont think they seriously made people eat that shit

    • @ottovonbismarck2443
      @ottovonbismarck2443 Před 7 měsíci +3

      @@TheWizardGamez They actually did.

    • @andrewallen9993
      @andrewallen9993 Před 4 měsíci +11

      @@TheWizardGamez You purchase hydrogenated oil of all types all the time in your supermarket nowadays :)

    • @murrayterry834
      @murrayterry834 Před měsícem +4

      rockefellar medicine and food development.

  • @Ausf.D.A.K.
    @Ausf.D.A.K. Před 10 měsíci +7

    I love this subject, thank you for your work !

  • @kristinarain9098
    @kristinarain9098 Před 10 měsíci +14

    I've always wanted to know about this subject. Thank you ❤

  • @creightonleerose582
    @creightonleerose582 Před měsícem +8

    Great presentation on an important detail...
    -In the vid, I dont recall any mention of the Germans SynFuel/SynBenzene being made from rather low grade Silesian Lignite, or 'brown coal' as its known. Which is the lowest grade of coal, made from decomposition, compaction & concentration of ancient peat bogs over vast spans of time. Lignite coal bearing a lower return & fuel octane rating of total fuel gained VS. the initial mass of physical coal investment in the process. Additionally, the totality of fuels used in the manufacturing process must be factored into end BTU capture, transformation/ sublimation, synthesis or REcapture rather....
    Oft times, depending on the scientific process & end-user technology employed, which Germany had virtually led @ the time as scientific pathfinders, is still one step >> forward >>..But then 1-1/2 steps transport >> that mass tonnage of raw materials to varying fuel processing facilities, steel mills & other assorted types of manufactorums within a "Just In Time" type of delivery structure(s)...Via road or rail road lines in near constant repairs, compromised/captured, totally destroyed, or consistently re-routed road or rail networks......
    -But if thats all scant natural energy resources youve got, then that & the combined power of national/collective/personal/corporate ingenuity is what a oil-poor nation is forced to use as a matter of course I suppose?
    Great vid W&H!....;)

  • @billevans7936
    @billevans7936 Před 10 měsíci +8

    Excellent Video

  • @MrNaKillshots
    @MrNaKillshots Před 9 měsíci +15

    I didn't know about this aspect. Unbelievable, that they were barely protected.

    • @danlowe8684
      @danlowe8684 Před měsícem +11

      They were very well protected. This is why their production numbers stayed high, as cited in the vid. We were dropping bombs from five miles high in order to avoid the flak guns. Any bomb that landed within a mile of its target at this altitude was considered accurate. In addition to altitude, obscured navigational aids, night conditions, wind, clouds, smoke from incendiary bomb fires, flight patterns for flak evasion - many things that made accuracy suffer. The Germans also had radar vectored fighters that were highly effective. The plants would be hit and cause damage, but they weren't decimated. But we are talking about bombing raids with 1000+ planes so it was essentially carpet bombing.

  • @billotto602
    @billotto602 Před 6 dny

    What an incredible video. Thank-you.

  • @mikebon8352
    @mikebon8352 Před 10 měsíci +24

    Oil was the bottleneck... for Germany to winn the war...
    Also for Japan... after cuttoff and Pearl Harbour... it invaded Indonesie/Dutch Indies with Royal Shell ...
    All Carbon based wars... ww1 and 2... first mainly on coal: production and mobilty... WW2 it shifted more towards Liquid carbon based.. but still it depended heaily on coal... less than WW1...

    • @SteppesoftheLevant
      @SteppesoftheLevant Před 9 měsíci +4

      Yeah. Now today in ukraine, war over natural gas pipelines

    • @titanicisshit1647
      @titanicisshit1647 Před 7 měsíci

      @@SteppesoftheLevant what???are you saying russia is invading Ukraine so they don't have to pay them pipeline transit rights?

    • @TheWizardGamez
      @TheWizardGamez Před 7 měsíci +5

      @@titanicisshit1647 they won with the nord stream pipelines. and then they promptly got blown up

    • @autodidact537
      @autodidact537 Před měsícem

      Why are you telling us something we already know?

  • @curtiscarlson8958
    @curtiscarlson8958 Před měsícem +2

    Quite informative. Thnaks.

  • @ricksadler797
    @ricksadler797 Před měsícem +3

    Great video thank you

  • @joeambaye8681
    @joeambaye8681 Před měsícem

    Thanks for this fascinating topic👍

  • @AckzaTV
    @AckzaTV Před měsícem +8

    My grandson was a civil engineer in 1930s Germany and he worked on these programs

    • @PrezVeto
      @PrezVeto Před měsícem +11

      I assume you mean your grandfather. Or you're a ghost. 👻

    • @piercehawke8021
      @piercehawke8021 Před měsícem +2

      ​@@PrezVetogood catch

    • @tf9623
      @tf9623 Před 14 dny +3

      Dang - how old are you then? About 142?

    • @quintonrichards2088
      @quintonrichards2088 Před dnem +1

      Back to the future before Back to the Future

  • @russellnixon9981
    @russellnixon9981 Před 10 měsíci +3

    As always very interesting

  • @simonmcowan6874
    @simonmcowan6874 Před 33 minutami

    That was amazing, thank you.

  • @melgross
    @melgross Před měsícem +9

    Yes, synthetic fuel was a very good technology. But, it was far more expensive than other fuels. If it weren’t for war needs, where cost is less important, it would never have been practical. As far as Goring is concerned, several historians have said that he was too incompetent to be put in charge of anything.

    • @johnanita9251
      @johnanita9251 Před měsícem +2

      Nah, I disagree with the remark about the Reichsmarchal. But in WW I, the German government obtained gold from seawater. It was expensive, but it was done out of sheer desperation. The same applies to synthetic oil.

    • @melgross
      @melgross Před měsícem +5

      @@johnanita9251 you can disagree, but others who know far do believe that. I agree with them. He lacked interest. He had a short memory. He was far more interested in his accumulation of wealth and art, etc. He was appointed because he was a war hero and loved by the masses. But not because he showed competency in any particular area. He was wrong in almost every decision he made.

    • @robdove4105
      @robdove4105 Před 14 dny +2

      @@melgross he was also addicted to morphine, which likely only made those issues worse.

    • @Eric-kn4yn
      @Eric-kn4yn Před 7 dny

      ​@@robdove4105goering could run his toy trains vunderbar

  • @FlorinSutu
    @FlorinSutu Před měsícem +5

    From the video, it would result that the Germans started the industrial stage in/after 1936.
    I read a Romanian magazine printed in 1935, it was mentioned there that two plants were already launched in that year.

  • @pearlygeoff3837
    @pearlygeoff3837 Před měsícem +3

    Aircraft engines made by Ford and General Motors. Opel 'Blitz' 3 ton trucks made by General Motors.

  • @justinhaslam-lucas8711

    An overdue insight. Cool

  • @ctdiamond83
    @ctdiamond83 Před 18 dny

    Good BGM choice. "Simple & Effective"

  • @mcd3379
    @mcd3379 Před 20 dny +2

    The figures for oil consumption in 1938 show that Germany had no hope against the US - America's level of industrialisation and oil consumption was at a level that the Third Reich economically could not match.

  • @molanlabexm15
    @molanlabexm15 Před měsícem +7

    If this is in the German tech tree for a game I’m researching it.

    • @peti7021
      @peti7021 Před měsícem +3

      well it is on a game called Hearts of Iron

  • @bagpipe6417
    @bagpipe6417 Před 10 měsíci +6

    Highly interesting.

  • @andrewmacgregor8717
    @andrewmacgregor8717 Před měsícem +3

    Interesting 🤔. Can you adjust your audio? It sounds muffled; not crisp. (and no, it's not my settings. all other videos I've listened to today are just fine)

  • @DanielBelzil
    @DanielBelzil Před měsícem +3

    Fischer-Tropsch fuel is superior in every way to petroleum fuel. Can make it from coal or biomass.

  • @tech42long35
    @tech42long35 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Fantastic and Amazing.. This is INCREDIBLE information and very facinating. Great video

  • @datvik7187
    @datvik7187 Před měsícem +10

    i'm drinking an Energy drink, and despite this, the narration and the soft aural music is making me fall asleep.

  • @DerekCully
    @DerekCully Před měsícem +1

    By chance anyone familiar with the background music composer/source?
    Thank’s in advance

  • @halbouma6720
    @halbouma6720 Před měsícem

    I was recently watching another video where they're discovering Germany's sunken war ships have a lot of synthetic fuel in them which will be really bad for the marine life (compared to just bad for regular fuel lol) when it eventually starts to leak out. The legacy of WWII still continues. Thanks for the video!

  • @patricklemire9278
    @patricklemire9278 Před měsícem +2

    Good video. I think the real wonder weapon was the Panzerfaust. It allows a novice to destroy a tank for $40.

    • @martinwarner1178
      @martinwarner1178 Před 23 dny +2

      True, got to be a brave man though, to use it.

    • @Eric-kn4yn
      @Eric-kn4yn Před 7 dny +1

      ​​@@martinwarner1178und frau und Kìnder HJ.

  • @ryandavis8245
    @ryandavis8245 Před 6 dny

    See this is things that should be taught in schools it’s brilliant

  • @Embassy_of_Jupiter
    @Embassy_of_Jupiter Před 16 dny

    5:13 their gymnastics are kind funny how they try to salute without slapping Göring

  • @user-ke8if6ri9r
    @user-ke8if6ri9r Před měsícem +2

    I really enjoy videos about History. I've gotten comments from friends about my fascination with Germany during WWII. Brilliant scientific and engineering progress tied to horrific political motivation.

    • @BasementEngineer
      @BasementEngineer Před 6 dny

      user: In fact it was wonderful motivation! Just imagine, the gains of labour went to the workers who created it, not to international bankers who skim the cream off the work of others.

    • @stevedelvecchio1783
      @stevedelvecchio1783 Před hodinou

      Than you would be interested in the funding and financing Germany received from wall street and American corporations to wage such a horrific war. JP Morgan and his General Electric , Henry Ford, and Standard oil all invested heavily in the Nazi government constructing power plants and munitions factory's all over very Germany. There was an aviation fuel additive in the 30s that was needed for high altitude flights called Tettra ethol. Germany wouldn't have an Air Force without it and only 2 companies in the world at the time had the means to acquire it. one of them was Standard oil of NJ. WW2 could have prevented with an embargo..but embargos don't make money..

  • @leemday5731
    @leemday5731 Před 4 měsíci +2

    Love this guy he sounds like a james bond baddie !

  • @MoreFormosa
    @MoreFormosa Před 29 dny +3

    Germany, Japan and Great Britain all ran vehicles, cars, buses…. etc from a wood gas generator attached to the vehicle. Japan continued using wood gas powered buses long after the war and you can see restored models driving people around at some Japanese car/truck shows. It’s amazing how little wood is necessary to produce enough gas to drive a 40 person bus many miles without having to add extra kindling into the burner tank.

  • @user-nd5eq6yb9s
    @user-nd5eq6yb9s Před měsícem +2

    GermanyS TECHNOLOGICAL PROWESS WASNT SECOND TO ANYBODY OF THAT ERA , TO HAVE THIS MUCH TECH YOU HAVE TO INVESG IN SCIENCES AND MANUFACTURING NOBODY IN THE WORLD HAD DONE THIS TO THE SAME LEVEL GERMANY HAD

  • @jeffyoung60
    @jeffyoung60 Před měsícem +5

    The Leuna synthetic fuel plants were a frequent target of the U.S. 8th Bomber Air Force based in England. Synthetic oil costs more to produce than natural petroleum. But in Nazi Germany's case, cost didn't matter. The German War Machine desperately needed petroleum, at whatever cost. While obtaining natural petroleum supplies from places like Romania and the oil fields in the Russian Caucasus, Germany invested in synthetic oil production to ensure its own domestic supply.
    Today the Holy Grail to producing synthetic oil cheaper than natural petroleum remains the storylines of science fiction. Some scientist discovers the revolutionary catalyst and process to cheap synthetic oil. Yet the world's oil producing national governments and the oil corporations will spend tens of millions of dollars to buy the formula so it can be suppressed. Failing that, the inventor is subject to clandestine assassination plots. The premise is the revelation of cheap synthetic oil will crash national economies and bring global economic catastrophe. Hence the ends justify the means and the formula and its inventor must never see the light of day.

    • @michaelcanty4940
      @michaelcanty4940 Před měsícem

      Leuna was the site for a process to produce nitrogen in World War One. In 1917, the Leunawerke began producing nitrogen. Nitrogen was critical for the production of explosives and fertilizer. The chemist Fritz Haber won the Nobel Prize for the process.

    • @Eric-kn4yn
      @Eric-kn4yn Před 7 dny

      Oil is on the way out I think peak oil.

  • @damianousley8833
    @damianousley8833 Před 4 měsíci +4

    Unfortunately, synthetic fuel was a lot more expensive than natural petroleum products after refining. The demand for coal in Germany for industry could not meet demand for industry let alone synthetic fuel production and coal production fell towards the end of the war.

    • @emperorvader283
      @emperorvader283 Před 4 měsíci +2

      Germany had enough Coal for 170 years. It wasn’t a lack of supply, it was just too difficult and expensive.

    • @damianousley8833
      @damianousley8833 Před 4 měsíci +4

      @emperorvader283 What I was saying was they couldn't dig enough of it up or transport it. There was a coal supply shortage in the last three years of the war. Funny that slave labourers replacing skill and trained miners couldn't produce the same volume or more of coal when said miners were sent to die or be maimed on the eastern front. The allies bombing the hell out of the rail system and canals made transporting coal very difficult, so even if the Germans had constructed more synthetic fuel plants, it wouldn't have increased the supply of petroleum fuels.

    • @Eric-kn4yn
      @Eric-kn4yn Před měsícem +2

      ​@@emperorvader283vunerlable to bombing

    • @JRyan-lu5im
      @JRyan-lu5im Před měsícem +2

      @@damianousley8833 Germany needed more chickens to lay the eggs to replace lost chickens ultimately. Even had synthetic refineries been even doubled, the point stands that it would still not be anywhere near enough to change the outcome. The war would have just taken longer and cost more lives on both sides. Barbarossa and the year afterwards was all a door breach offensive to reach the Caucuses before the national oil reserves depleted. Unsurprisingly, the year that sprung off from Stalingrad, the Luftwaffe imploded and Kursk flunked.

  • @reginaldmcnab3265
    @reginaldmcnab3265 Před 10 měsíci +11

    Fuel from coal! Black magic

    • @williampaz2092
      @williampaz2092 Před 8 měsíci

      😂🤣

    • @reginaldmcnab3265
      @reginaldmcnab3265 Před 8 měsíci

      I read that the U.S. intelligence agency during World War II thought that aliens might be helping the Germans

    • @dennisyoung4631
      @dennisyoung4631 Před 3 měsíci +1

      “… and advanced organic chemistry applied at an industrial scale.”

    • @dr.finnegan3949
      @dr.finnegan3949 Před 6 dny

      Satanic black magic, sick shit

  • @kirishima638
    @kirishima638 Před měsícem +4

    Set playback speed to 150% to make the narration bearable

  • @paulds65
    @paulds65 Před měsícem +6

    Play at 1.25 to avoid falling asleep ;-)

  • @chriswade7470
    @chriswade7470 Před 14 dny +1

    A lot of Germany’s crude oil came from Romania.

  • @Cornel1001
    @Cornel1001 Před měsícem

    Corect !

  • @dangeary2134
    @dangeary2134 Před měsícem

    Wow.
    Even back then, fuel consumption was ridiculous.

  • @leemday5731
    @leemday5731 Před 4 měsíci +5

    This allso ment that piston engine air craft like the focker wolf was unable to reach the speeds that had been designed to achieve no matter how big an engine you could put in it strangled by lower revs and lack of leaded fuel engines wore out faster which all helped Germanys defeat in 1945

    • @Eric-kn4yn
      @Eric-kn4yn Před měsícem +4

      Rush to get german jets into service speed and kerosine low grade fuel

    • @duncanmacpherson2013
      @duncanmacpherson2013 Před měsícem +5

      The fuel quality issue was another advantage to the British and American air forces who had access to high octane fuel for their Merlin engined fighters

    • @pearlygeoff3837
      @pearlygeoff3837 Před měsícem +2

      Standard oil provided the technology for 'leaded' fuel suitable for high compression engines.

    • @jimandmandy
      @jimandmandy Před měsícem +1

      @@pearlygeoff3837 Leaded gasoline already existed. It was alkylate, essentially a synthetic high octane gasoline. Leaded aviation gasoline reached a peak of 145/115 Octane rating. Today's unleaded gasoline depends on alkylate in the blend.

    • @pearlygeoff3837
      @pearlygeoff3837 Před měsícem

      @@jimandmandy Thanks for that info.

  • @aurigo_tech
    @aurigo_tech Před měsícem

    "At current rates that would last only 4.5 days" - shows the amount of reliance we have now on oil with only a marginably larger population than then. In WW2 transport and heating was provided by other sources as well. Steam locomotives ran on coal, the army often moved or transported goods by horse, heating was done by coal and wood etc. Even for normal automotive transportation like cars and trucks they invented wood-gasing engines.

  • @Unmannedair
    @Unmannedair Před měsícem +1

    Holy crap, 30 million barrels is only 4 and 1/2 days! 🤯

  • @DoyleHargraves
    @DoyleHargraves Před 8 dny

    The weight of steel in 1 battleship would be enough steel for a couple synthetic fuel plants

  • @user-iw8pg8kq2q
    @user-iw8pg8kq2q Před měsícem +3

    To foxhoundms. Remember this, in war time U can afford anything. Except defeat.😊

  • @MicrophoneMichael
    @MicrophoneMichael Před měsícem +3

    I can’t even imagine if the oil off Norway was known in the 30s

  • @leestewart72
    @leestewart72 Před měsícem +1

    Could the Germans have created bio-diesel from fish stocks in the Baltic Sea?

  • @andrerousseau5730
    @andrerousseau5730 Před měsícem +1

    What about lubricant production?

  • @davidleonard1813
    @davidleonard1813 Před 13 dny

    No idea what process was used but i know coal wal heated to get oil from it to make petrol during WW2

  • @molybdaen11
    @molybdaen11 Před měsícem +1

    In other words: Nobody was ready for ww2, including Germany.

    • @horatiohuffnagel7978
      @horatiohuffnagel7978 Před 10 dny

      Nope and they borrowed as much money as they could and were broke. They had to make it back through conquest. No choice but to go to war.

  • @danlowe8684
    @danlowe8684 Před měsícem +1

    I would think that of the one billion barrels the US consumed, much was used by merchant marines supplying the allies and a good amount ended up at the bottom of the Atlantic. The reason I say this is simply the amount of time we were involved, and the staggering quantity cited in the vid.

    • @tylersmith1468
      @tylersmith1468 Před měsícem +1

      And the US navy and USAF.

    • @danlowe8684
      @danlowe8684 Před měsícem

      @@tylersmith1468 Yes, but the RAF and HMN were both running wild, too.

  • @istoppedcaring6209
    @istoppedcaring6209 Před 7 dny

    for fuel they did need browncoal however, it is not like it came from nowhere but it is important to note that we can actually do nearly the exact same thing with the copious masses of plastic we produce constantly, those are essentially still made of oil after all, they can be turned back into it with relative ease and this could be done on an industrial scale by a country that simply refuses any new fossil fuel imports for the free market and removes most taxes and impositions on fuel but facilitates the importation of all non PVC plastics, for which they would probably get paid if played smart

  • @Eric-kn4yn
    @Eric-kn4yn Před měsícem +1

    Charchol burners used to fuel cars

  • @Winston-lf7sb
    @Winston-lf7sb Před měsícem +4

    and it was standard oil of new jersey who sent the additives needed to turn coal to gassoline.

  • @jeromedavis8261
    @jeromedavis8261 Před 9 dny

    Great Plains syn fuel plant in Beulah North Dakota. The nations only plant of this kind.

  • @michaelanderson3096
    @michaelanderson3096 Před 4 dny

    Electromagnetic warfare = magnetrons.

  • @ristube3319
    @ristube3319 Před 9 dny

    3:27 How does Carbon Monoxide and Hydrogen make fuel?
    Isn’t carbon monoxide inflammable?

  • @andrewcarpenter687
    @andrewcarpenter687 Před měsícem +1

    The war for natural resources...who had them, who didnt, who was land locked, who was protected by water...Russia land mass alone is impressive...wild shit...

  • @sunroad7228
    @sunroad7228 Před měsícem +1

    Remove the non-stop background noise/music and re-upload the video.

  • @keithalaird
    @keithalaird Před měsícem +4

    I have a couple of comments about the German Synthetic fuel program . I get that the raw product of the two main processes was high grade kerosene at best, and the process tends towards heavier products like a diesel fuel. However, both thermal and to a lesser extent catalytic cracking weren’t unknown in the petroleum industry at the time. So I am surprised that the German chemical engineers didn’t use more of that technology. Also tetra eyethl lead was a known technology and octane improvement. Basically if you add enough lead,you can make high octane fuel from terrible feedstock. Which was basically what the US refiners frequently did before leaded gas was outlawed. Another thing that I find surprising is that the Japanese never had a major synthetic fuel program. It would have been no problem for Germany to slip a process diagram outlining the process into a diplomatic courier pouch and send it to the German embassy in Tokyo.

    • @danlowe8684
      @danlowe8684 Před měsícem +1

      I don't think Japan had the coal necessary for production. Also, American Standard Oil sold the Germans the octane boosters necessary to fly their planes.

    • @jacqueslefave4296
      @jacqueslefave4296 Před měsícem +2

      When Roosevelt banned the sale of American oil to Japan, they made a pre-emptive strike on Pearl Harbor, and invaded Southeast Asia all the way to the Dutch East Indies, where there was lots of oil and supplied them for quite a while, enabled by our "Europe First" war policy.

    • @danlowe8684
      @danlowe8684 Před měsícem

      Great point!! The thing that amazes me about WW2 is the complexity of subjects. One could argue that lack of fuel doomed Germany while another would point out that that they had plenty but couldn't supply the front lines because the horses and mules needed to haul it required 40% of supply transport space for fodder. @@jacqueslefave4296

    • @billwilson-es5yn
      @billwilson-es5yn Před měsícem +1

      US refining engineers routinely tested captured German fuels to find all were of high quality. The German companies offered the Japanese to sell them a license to use their advanced technology before the war but were turned down. In 1944 the companies sent the Japanese the blueprints and manuals for free but the submarine transporting those was sunk en route to Japan.

    • @danlowe8684
      @danlowe8684 Před měsícem

      @@billwilson-es5yn Wow!! Cool stuff, thanks!

  • @JinKee
    @JinKee Před měsícem

    Makes you wonder what would have happened if Daimler had invented the tesla electric car

  • @johnweerasinghe4139
    @johnweerasinghe4139 Před 17 dny +1

    Explains clearly why Operation Barbarossa was extremely critical to relieve Germany of the pressure from the Allied sanctions.
    If Hitler had won Barbarossa Germany would have been self-sufficient in oil, food, additional industrial capacity and manpower.
    His Luftwaffe fleets , 11 million Wermacht troops would have been intact.
    Hitler and Germany lost when Zhukov defeated Barbarossa outside Moscow on 5th December , 1941 2 days before Pearl Harbour and 6 days before Hitler declared war on America.
    Context!
    Hitler's and Nazi Germanys survival died on the Eastern Front.
    Yet no Hollywood movies. So people have no clue of the importance, scale and savagery on the Eastern Front thanks to Hitler's biggest land grab in history.

  • @vanzylbooysen4826
    @vanzylbooysen4826 Před měsícem +1

    Sasol south africa . After the war some German chemists help south africa developed sasol.

  • @soulwolf1756
    @soulwolf1756 Před 22 hodinami

    This would help lower the gas prices we have in ca 😅

  • @sailordude2094
    @sailordude2094 Před měsícem

    The Japanese Empire used coal in Manchukuo to make oil. I wonder if they used each other's methods? Probably not.

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 Před měsícem +2

      The Japanese synthetic fuels program was a poor facsimile of the German Synthetic Fuels program. They did good laboratory work on both coal hydrogenation and Fischer-Tropsch sunthesis, but totally botched the scale up. They remained heavily dependent on Low Temperature Carbonization of coal which gave a low yield of coal tar for upgrading in conventional refineries (and a glut of coke).

    • @williamzk9083
      @williamzk9083 Před měsícem +1

      The Japanese process in Manturia used calcium and coal to make acetylene which was then converted into iso octane. It was very inefficient, but it was something better than nothing. School children also collected pine tree cones which
      Have pineol which has a very high octane rating. You’ll also get this as a byproduct from paper production when using certain Woods. The Germans did share their call. Well technology, but because the Japanese didn’t build any pilot plants the plants that they did build just didn’t work. Had too many problems and only ran for short periods. You always have to build a pilot plant first so that you understand all of the issues

    • @billwilson-es5yn
      @billwilson-es5yn Před měsícem

      After WW1 all developed nations began developing processes for turning coal into motor fuel and lubricants. The US quit after Texas proved to be floating on oil. Germany developed the most advanced processes while Japan stumbled along with theirs while buying refined products from the US and Dutch East Indies. LG Farber offered to sell a license for their process to Japan but was turned down. Japan was desperate for fuel and lubricants by 1944 so LG Farber sent their blueprints and operations manuals to Japan for free. The submarine carrying those was sunk en route so Japan stayed stuck using their own crummy syn fuels.

  • @jackthepirate9233
    @jackthepirate9233 Před měsícem +1

    And we complain about pollution..

  • @svenneff
    @svenneff Před měsícem +3

    I spotted Göring's belly before i spotted his face.😂

    • @lucius1976
      @lucius1976 Před měsícem +1

      Well, he was less big then todays average US citizen

  • @phillipdavidhaskett7513
    @phillipdavidhaskett7513 Před 23 hodinami

    The high caliber of the German people has been suppressed by the geography of their nation. Germans who immigrated to the United States have contributed mightily to our national success.

  • @ViceCoin
    @ViceCoin Před měsícem

    Livestock farms can harvest methane emissions and sewage runoff into biofuel.

  • @AckzaTV
    @AckzaTV Před měsícem +1

    USA needing 1 billion barrels of oil vs 50-100m for all the other countries shows how serious america was even if we didnt bring as many soldiers, we burned the most oil with the most vehicles and won the war

  • @Mrtweet81
    @Mrtweet81 Před 13 dny

    I never thought I would say this, but I miss an AI voice...

  • @janlindtner305
    @janlindtner305 Před 8 dny

    👍👍👍

  • @ak-od7mf
    @ak-od7mf Před 13 dny

    The so-called "four-year-plan" has got nothing to do with war preparations... Where did you conclude that from?

  • @SeattlePioneer
    @SeattlePioneer Před měsícem

    Das tut mir leid.

  • @Keckegenkai
    @Keckegenkai Před 23 dny

    Welcome to Disturbed Reality..

  • @weofnjieofing
    @weofnjieofing Před měsícem +4

    Germany was by far the most advanced economy in the world. The fact it took the entire capitalist and communist economies to defeat it is testament to her strength at the time

    • @billwilson-es5yn
      @billwilson-es5yn Před měsícem +6

      Germany didn't have an advanced economy before and during the war. Hitler wanted to capture the Soviet oil fields when he didn't have a way to bring the oil back to Germany. One option was to lay railroad lines while building rail oil tankers. Germany had a shortage of tank cars when the war started and couldn't take very many from the occupied countries since their economies and his occupation armies needed most of what they had. Germany wasn't able to build and operate any long distance pipelines due to having no experience with those or manufacturing the pipe, compressor pumps and operating stations. Germany couldn't use tanker trucks since that would consume too much gasoline, lubricants and tires.

  • @svenneff
    @svenneff Před měsícem +6

    It seems that the Germans barely had a chance from the start.

    • @Imperium83
      @Imperium83 Před měsícem +5

      Almost like they never wanted a war.......

    • @NathanDudani
      @NathanDudani Před měsícem +2

      ​@@Imperium83lmao

    • @andy41417
      @andy41417 Před měsícem +1

      Foreseeable doom. Ukraine a contemporary analog unfortunately.

    • @daveweiss5647
      @daveweiss5647 Před měsícem

      The reason they invaded the USSR was because the Communists were about to invade Romania which would have cut Germany off from it's main oil supply which would have made them reliant on their enemies for fuel amd they would have been defeated with out a fight, everything about living space was a lie from the west... they had to do it... history is far more complex then we are led to believe, the comment earlier about them not wanting another world War is actually true... they weren't trying to conquor the world... Czechs and Poles were literally committing genocide against ethnic Germans which is why Germany invaded them, France and UK declared war on Germany. Even after the fall of France Germany made multiple peace offering to UK which Churchill denied... the entire thing was avoidable...

    • @melgross
      @melgross Před měsícem +4

      They had virtually no chance to win the war and neither did Japan.

  • @shaunybonny688
    @shaunybonny688 Před 9 dny

    Their fuel, synthetic or not, was not as good as the fuel from America for making powerful aviation engines.

  • @redbaron9029
    @redbaron9029 Před 18 dny

    Germany was a very great nation back then.

  • @BobSmith-dk8nw
    @BobSmith-dk8nw Před měsícem +1

    The First half of 1942 - Germany was winning the war. They were only fighting Britain. If they had not attacked the Soviet Union in June - they could have put those resources into beating the British and taken the oil fields in the Middle East and Iran.
    But - in June of 1942 - instead they attacked the Soviet Union - which was selling them oil until they did that. They tried to drive all the way across to the Caucuses and on down to the oil Fields but they couldn't do it.
    How much easier it would have been to go through the desert.
    Then - in Dec. when Japan attacked the United States - they declared war on the US. They did NOT have to do that. Their Treaty with Japan was defensive - if the US had attacked JAPAN - then - they would have been required to join Japan. But - since Japan attacked the US - the Germans were under no such obligation. Hitler did it anyway.
    From then on - they were doomed.
    .

  • @Eric-kn4yn
    @Eric-kn4yn Před měsícem

    Rush to get german jets into service good speed on kerosine low grade fuel

  • @nickgold4111
    @nickgold4111 Před měsícem +6

    Germany needs to get its coal mining, coal fired power plants and synthetic fuel plants back up and going.

    • @NeovanGoth
      @NeovanGoth Před 11 dny

      Fucking no. The external costs would be staggering.

  • @marklandwehr7604
    @marklandwehr7604 Před měsícem +1

    The ethel corporation part of standard oil Sold the figure tropic process To make Synthetic fuel From the type of coal that germany had Prior to the war