Why Stuka? Luftwaffe Focus on Dive-Bombing Explained

2024 ж. 11 Мам.
45 189 Рет қаралды

Why did Germany go with dive-bombers? While the Junkers Ju 87 is the quintessential "Stuka" from World War 2, what were the main motivations of the Luftwaffe to adopt a force of dive-bombers in the 1930s? Let me take you back in time and explore the discussions that resulted in the Luftwaffe of 1939.
- Check out my books -
Ju 87 Stuka - stukabook.com
STG-44 Assault Platoon - sturmzug.com
German Panzer Company 1941 - www.hdv470-7.com/
Achtung Panzer? Zur Panzerwaffe der Wehrmacht - panzerkonferenz.de/
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- Sources -
Bergs, Christoph and Bernhard Kast, STUKA - The Doctrine of the German Dive-Bomber, Military History Group, 2022. - stukabook.com
Bergs, Christoph, "Die Entwicklung der unmittelbaren Luftunterstützungsstrukturen der Luftwaffe im Zweiten Weltkrieg" in Reiß, Ansgar (Hrsg), Achtung Panzer? Zur Panzerwaffe der Wehrmacht, Veröffentlichungen des Bayerischen Armeemuseums Band 19, Military History Group, 2022. - panzerkonferenz.de/
Boog, Horst, Die deutsche Luftwaffenführung 1935 - 1945 - Führungsprobleme, Spitzengliderung, Generalstabsausbildung, DVA 1982.
Corum, James, The Luftwaffe - Creating the Operational Air War 1918 - 1940, Lawrence 1997.
Diest, Wilhelm, "Die Aufrüstung der Wehrmacht" in Diest, Wilhelm et al. (Hrsg). Das Deutsche Reich und der Zweite Weltkrieg - Band 1, DVA 1979.
German Military Archive: Various (serious inquiries contact me).
Homze, Edward, Arming the Luftwaffe - The Reichs Air Ministry and the German Aircraft Industry, 1919-1939, Lincoln 1976.
Völker, Karl-Heinz, Die deutsche Luftwaffe 1933 - 1939 - Aufbau, Führung und Rüstung der Luftwaffe sowie die Entwicklung der deutschen Luftkriegstheorie, DVA Sttuttgart, 1967.
Wehner, Jens, Technik können Sie von der Taktik nicht trennen - Die Jagdflieger der Wehrmacht, Campus: 2022.
- Timecodes -
00:00 - Dive-Bombers
00:39 - Planning, Rearmament, Preparing For War
05:49 - Developing an Air War Plan
10:42 - Benefit of Hindsight
- Audio -
Music and Sfx from Epidemic Sound

Пікірлер
  • The concept of dive bombing has a good bit of merit, but the idea of making your medium and heavy bombers capable of doing it is madness

    @MildyHistorical@MildyHistorical23 күн бұрын
    • The He 177 was out of pocket, but the versatility of the Ju 88 definitely contributed to it doubling as a dive bomber.

      @moblinmajorgeneral@moblinmajorgeneral23 күн бұрын
    • @@moblinmajorgeneral He 177 - see Lord HardThrasher😁 worth every minute

      @volkerkalhoefer3973@volkerkalhoefer397323 күн бұрын
    • [sad french noises]

      @MarktheRude@MarktheRude22 күн бұрын
    • Medium dive bombers such as the Soviet Pe-2 were reasonably effective, when used by both USSR and Germany (I don't know about other countries to comment on them), but their dive was usually much more shallow the Stuka's.

      @nobody4248@nobody424821 күн бұрын
    • @@nobody4248 yeah that’s true, although tbh I’d consider something like the Pe-2 more similar to something like the ground attack variants of the BF 110 than to like the Ju 88 tbh

      @MildyHistorical@MildyHistorical21 күн бұрын
  • I love how it basically boils down to "cost vs effect" like most other weapons. But I guess the propaganda bits later help in that too

    @legoeasycompany@legoeasycompany24 күн бұрын
  • I think you have to also consider the human factor- the major proponent of dive bombing was Ernst Udet- he was giving demonstrations on the technique in the early 30's. Whereas the strategic proponent at the time was Walther Wever- and he was never able to truly show what effect strategic bombing could achieve, being killed in a crash in 1936

    @MrDdaland@MrDdaland23 күн бұрын
    • Wever’s death did not change the trajectory of the LW in any significant way. The main decisions were in the works before, as was the doctrine. The 1936 and 1940 version are basically the same. Udet might have been a proponent, yet his arguments (and those of others) are in the video. Also, the LW went into Poland with 350 Ju 87 vs 1200 bombers - so the focus is clear.

      @MilitaryAviationHistory@MilitaryAviationHistory23 күн бұрын
    • @@MilitaryAviationHistory What I dont get is why didnt they go for a dive bomber version of the Bf 110? Rather than make the Ju 88 bigger and THEN try to turn it into a dive bomber, that was not a fast bomber not a dive bomber, good aircraft, just a compromised design. Put a couple SC500s on the Bf 110, add some sort of dive break, done... SKG 210 would do something similar, but not quite there yet.

      @trauko1388@trauko138823 күн бұрын
  • I'll recommend that Stuka book. Lots of interesting aspects of how to attack, from what direction, altitude, and so on.

    @grizwoldphantasia5005@grizwoldphantasia500526 күн бұрын
  • 7:14 Whether you are right or wrong Chris, THANK YOU for bringing references into KZhead! I am fine with Synthesis, Antithesis, Thesis. You read what has been written, instead of simply talking off the cuff like most do. This is a valuable channel to fund!

    @user-nn3jk5ms2m@user-nn3jk5ms2m20 күн бұрын
    • thank you !

      @MilitaryAviationHistory@MilitaryAviationHistory19 күн бұрын
  • For a future video, perhaps you could do a comparison of the development of dive-bombing by the Americans, Japanese, and British.

    @EdwardRLyons@EdwardRLyons23 күн бұрын
  • Hey, something I would love to hear about in future is the development and progression of avionics equipment during the war. It gets left out a lot but I think there's a lot of cool history there, and nobody talks about it.

    @NoahsBox@NoahsBox23 күн бұрын
  • Thanks Chris, as usual, another great explanation !

    @andrewpinner3181@andrewpinner318122 күн бұрын
  • Insightful analysis. Enjoyed this!

    @lancethompson6839@lancethompson683916 күн бұрын
  • Why not Stuka? It seems fairly obvious in the 1930s that dive bombing was the best way to get a bomb on target, but I suppose that's just me though. Years of watching MAH and MHV probably contribute to that recognition.

    @robertsantamaria6857@robertsantamaria685723 күн бұрын
  • Another great video as always Bismarck!

    @arsenal-slr9552@arsenal-slr955213 күн бұрын
  • The USN and Japanese navy made good use of dive bombers. They played a huge role in the Pacific theater.

    @bigtoad45@bigtoad4523 күн бұрын
    • Arguably the IJN figured out carrier strike operations to the highest level. Jonathan Parshall, author of Shattered Sword, said it wasn't until 1944 that the USN could match the IJN carrier air group operational speed and efficiency of launch, positioning and recovery.

      @fazole@fazole22 күн бұрын
    • @@fazole Suspecting a fellow Seth, Bill and regular Jon enjoyer?

      @Tuning3434@Tuning343422 күн бұрын
    • Dive bombers were definitely not unique to Germany. Germany's focus on the for land warfare is unusual. The Japanese and Americans (as well as the British, who mostly had dive bombing as a secondary function of aircraft) generally focussed on dive bombers as an anti-ship platform not for their use to support land battles.

      @88porpoise@88porpoise22 күн бұрын
    • @@88porpoiseSweden also developed dive bombers for anti shipping

      @thurbine2411@thurbine241116 күн бұрын
    • @@fazole But the IJN never figured out damage control. And it was very telling. That and underway replenishment was pioneered by the US, and has since been a cornerstone of naval operations. But really, the war in the pacific boiled down to the same war in Europe. Production of war materiel. The US could and did just keep pumping out equipment and personnel, and the axis just could not keep up. Japan was never going to win, just like Germany was never going to win. Germany attacking the USSR and Japan attacking the US were both strategic decisions that were probably inevitable, but spelled the end. The USSR (with the help of the west) took care of Germany. And the US (with the help of the allies) pretty much put paid to the Japanese. Even without the atomic bombing of the Japanese homeland, Japan was beaten well before that. But just like the Germans, they just had to fight to the end instead of realizing they were not going to win, and suing for peace early where they could have perhaps done better post war. Human ego has cost more soldiers lives than any other single factor.

      @jeromethiel4323@jeromethiel43239 күн бұрын
  • A very small correction - 50m x 50m is more like 150feet, not 100

    @teenybopper777@teenybopper77723 күн бұрын
    • ....which is pretty much the same in METRIC feet.

      @jm9371@jm937123 күн бұрын
    • @@jm9371 what the hell is a metric foot?

      @teenybopper777@teenybopper77723 күн бұрын
    • @@jm9371 bro what are you talking about

      @unbindallgaming7556@unbindallgaming755622 күн бұрын
    • ​@@teenybopper777 50 m = 164 feet.

      @r0ky_M@r0ky_M22 күн бұрын
    • @@r0ky_M I know

      @teenybopper777@teenybopper77722 күн бұрын
  • I am in luck. I have both books :) Very nice Video. For me the why behind developments of tanks/Aircraft/Ships etc. is the most interesting part of learning about them.

    22 күн бұрын
  • This is a good and interesting video - I'd never thought about the prewar German analysis of the cost effectiveness of bombing, nor been aware that the Ju-87 wasn't originally, doctrinally intended for battlefield strike. However, given the title, I was surprised *not* to see anything about the wider... seeming *obsession* with the tactic in other prewar and WWII German aircraft design. Sure, make the Ju-87! It's a great implementation of a great idea! But they stereotypically required that every bomber design, and some non-bombers, bolt on an ersatz "dive bombing" capability - which in practice delivered "practically level gentle glide bombing". The Ju-88 is the star of this show. Adding strength and equipment to the Heinkel 177 to pull out of a 60 degree dive, well, you could make the argument that given how badly they mismatched the strategic situation, anything that kept He-177s from getting built helped Germany overall. Spending months adding useless racks and sights to the ME 262, at the time the purest interceptor in the world? Ultimately, A H be crazy - fortunately he was very bad at a lot of things and making aircraft development decisions is one of them. But the Ju-88, which was conceived as defending itself through speed, but then got hacked up by the dive-bombing requirement into "only" a thoroughly decent bomber... I still recall a particular post : alternatehistory dot communication ju88-divebombing-question.245475 which ends with a pretty convincing argument that a Ju-88 which didn't have to pivot to dive-bombing would have been more capable and survivable, cheaper, started production much sooner, and been available in much greater numbers - a collection of changes that would, at minimum, have delivered an easy German victory in the Battle of Britain. "Why did they try to make everything dive bomb?" might be a worthwhile future companion to this.

    @HypoceeYT@HypoceeYT18 күн бұрын
  • A straightforward discussion on the rationale behind the dive bomber as influenced by the technical and material limitations of the time. How it figured into the whole Blitzkrieg concept seems to have been like rolling high stakes dice, as if betting on a band of sprinters to win an endurance race. If the knockout punch is not fully successful early on, you find yourself at a disadvantage quickly, at least in relative terms. Pardon my honest impressions, but I've never understood how either Germany or Japan, with their limited geographical size and resources, ever believed their war efforts would ultimately succeed. I'm glad it's history.

    @wkelly3053@wkelly305319 күн бұрын
    • They didn't believe America would mobilise as much as it did. Which in all fairness nobody did. And in the case of Germany they didn't have a good opinion of the soviet union's strengh.

      @matthiuskoenig3378@matthiuskoenig337811 күн бұрын
    • @@matthiuskoenig3378 IMO, the "nobody did" comment is not really accurate, unless you are speaking primarily about people in Europe and Japan who did not or could not understand, or who were prevented from understanding the vast array of opinions in America. There were plenty of people in the U.S. who realized what was coming and what would be needed, even if grudgingly, but the pacifist movement dominated the media coverage, so Germany and Japan bought it, partly because it was what they wanted to believe and partly because they were directed by ignorant and arrogant officials who would literally eliminate anyone in their circle voicing more rational and informed opinions. There were privileged Germans and Japanese like Isoroku Yamamoto who spent time in the U.S. before hostilities began and profoundly assessed what the U.S. was capable of. Those people entered hostilities with trepidation and believed it to be a great risk in the long term. I believe it is more accurate to say that plenty of people within the Axis knew the risks and were simply forced to accept them while their leaders recklessly plodded forward.

      @wkelly3053@wkelly305311 күн бұрын
    • Read The Wages of Destruction for Germany and Hirohito's War for Japan. It'll go a long way to helping you answer your questions about how Germany and Japan thought they could win.

      @rainyvideos3684@rainyvideos368410 күн бұрын
  • I think to build on your points from this video, OKW didn't fully expect the complete collapse of France in 1940, and were left with alot of aircraft that weren't operationally capable of achieving Seelowe (pretty sure this is somewhat proven, although it could always be argued). While maintaining operational success through the end of 1941, the lack of manpower in the east left the Luftwaffe trying to maintain local air superiority/local support to the Heer, and the increase in need for fighter cover in the West more or less left the Luftwaffe somewhat pidgeon-holed into continuing to maintain/develop these requirements, given the limited resources available(?). If any of you haven't subscribed to Christoph's Channel here, please do! He has been a great content producer over the years, and is a great person to follow!

    @Vtarngpb@Vtarngpb23 күн бұрын
  • Dive bomber make quite a bit of sense if you have local air supremacy. Dive bombers also work for anti shipping roles if equipped with AP bombs. Although other means will have to be used to get dive bombers to the ships.

    @alexandercorbett3095@alexandercorbett309523 күн бұрын
  • That's a fascinating array of books behind you, maybe we should have an update video on all your aviation books, nicht nur den Englische Buecher aber auch die auf deutsch.

    @TheBrakpan@TheBrakpan21 күн бұрын
  • Always a pleasure...stay well

    @MrElliotc02@MrElliotc0223 күн бұрын
  • excellent content. Thank you.

    @andrewcoley6029@andrewcoley602923 күн бұрын
  • I think if you consider that their strategic win condition was basically to have quick and decisive victories and avoid attrition wars, the dive bombers were a very important part of that equation. You cannot really execute the movement war doctrine if you cannot effectively disrupt enemy communications and movement. It's just that once the nature of the war changed, the original concept behind the dive bombers was no longer relevant. The key point is, if they didn't have the dive bombers for the first part, would they ever even reach the point where the lack of heavy bombers becomes a key issue.

    @romaliop@romaliop23 күн бұрын
    • A broken bridge is broken both ways.

      @b1laxson@b1laxson20 күн бұрын
    • @@b1laxsonyes but some bridges will still be better to break than to let the enemy use them until you maybe take them. Of course you wouldn’t destroy all bridges if they are vital to your future advance

      @thurbine2411@thurbine241116 күн бұрын
  • very interesting, thank you

    @lisa-azrabroad4137@lisa-azrabroad413723 күн бұрын
  • super interesting! i wonder now what the statistics look like for ju87 strike targets. I had always assumed they were only for CAS.

    @unbindallgaming7556@unbindallgaming755622 күн бұрын
  • Whooooooooooooo! Notting. Love your work btw :))))

    @Duckfisher0222@Duckfisher022223 күн бұрын
  • I just yesterday started flying ju87 B-2 model in enlisted, and it instantly became my favorite. It's quite balanced and effective in my opinion, even allowing me to have a brawl with enemy fighters if needed. I use it mostly to bomb tanks and enemy clusters, but sometimes also just to create mayhem on some areas just to slow down enemy while giving hints to friendlys where the enemy might be lurking. It's not the fastest or most maneuverable, but it sure can give devastating hits on enemy with it's 250kg bomb, 4 x 50kg bombs and the machine guns can make hefty damage too especially against lightly armored vehicles. Overall it's very effective plane in the game, and if it's any indicator to why it was so beloved by many pilots and feared by so many opponents, I can clearly see why, as it's not unusual for me to get like 1 tank and 10-16 soldiers out with a single run. Excellent plane for rookie pilots still learning the basic tricks of flying.

    @normoloid@normoloid20 күн бұрын
  • Fantastic video.

    @schooljs1@schooljs122 күн бұрын
  • Love the footage of the Ju-86s. An interesting aircraft with some interesting operational history (what intercept at 42,000 feet?).

    @charlesaugust8671@charlesaugust867119 күн бұрын
  • One of the last remaining Stukas is in the Chicago Museum of Science and Technology. I went there with my young German exchange student and said "Wow... that's a Stuka!"... and she didn't know what I was talking about... haha. I guess that is probably a good thing.

    @commandermudpie@commandermudpie4 күн бұрын
  • Sehr interessantes Video - v. a. das herausarbeiten des "Missverständnisses" über CAP vs. Interdiction Missions beim Stuka. 👍 Btw.: das schwarze Buch von der Panzerkonferenz gibt es leider kaum in Bibliotheken in DE (bzgl. Verfügbarkeit für die Forschung usw.) - nicht mal in der Nationalbibliothek in Leipzig. Könnt ihr zumindest da vielleicht ein Exemplar als Beleg hin schicken? :-) (Die sammeln ja auch dt. Publikationen aus dem Ausland - weil ja in London erschienen)

    @einbucherwurm8039@einbucherwurm803923 күн бұрын
  • Fun fact the norden bomb site was actually not that good. It was the 2nd string in terms of performance for american sights, what it was one of the most successfully marketing campaigns in history. Using heavy lobbying they were able to get it "top secret" classification even though there was no reason for it, simply so they could then use that to stop competitors releasing how much better their sights were. This combined with a large add campaign in print and radio media basically forced the USAAF to adopt the sight, in spite of its lackluster performance.

    @tando6266@tando626623 күн бұрын
    • Another great example of FDR's corruption.

      @naamadossantossilva4736@naamadossantossilva473623 күн бұрын
    • Hmm, that's new to me, but quite believable. Very interesting.

      @clazy8@clazy823 күн бұрын
    • Of course you give no sources for your claims. Furthermore, an ad campaign for a top secret military device in print and radio media to "force" the USAAF to adopt it, is total bullshit. That came only after the sight was already known to some degree, late in the war, when tactics of both the USAAF and the Navy had changed away from pinpoint attacks anyway.

      @MrLBPug@MrLBPug23 күн бұрын
    • Source?

      @garysarratt1@garysarratt123 күн бұрын
    • They seem to have decent results using it for med-altitude bombing in the clearer skies over the Pacific. Mission to Rabaul documentary shows B-24s bombing ships in Simpson Harbor. However, maybe that was just war propaganda. At any rate, the terrible weather in Europe in WW2 significantly degraded the effectiveness of the precision bombing campaigns and how much of that is also attributable to flak or bombing mistakes?

      @fazole@fazole22 күн бұрын
  • Excellent video , explaining the German military economic and technological constraints which lead it to their focus on dive bombing. Basically more accurate bangs for the buck. Interestingly the British MAP initially followed a similar strategy just look at the mad original specification for the Manchester and Halifax. Like the Heinkel 177 the Manchester was to dive bomb hence two engines and to be launched from a catapult, totally mad. Fortunately common sense took over, and they converted it to Lancaster with minimal impact on engineering machine tool requirements. I always wondered why Heinkel never did the same to get to the 277, quicker.

    @DC.409@DC.40921 күн бұрын
  • The emphasis on bombers during WW II on both sides is a rather strange concept without the ability to place your bombs where you want or need to. Neither the allies nor Germany had very good bomb sites and the necessary amount of bombs needed to take out a single bridge was kinda crazy in those days, also causing a large amount of ancillary damage and deaths. There's just so many factors in trying to hit a target from a moving plane that having a single bomb from a Stuka that could hit its target was better than dozens of bombs from a large bomber aircraft hitting everything but your target. It really was a smart idea by the Germans to create the Stuka. Albeit a dangerous one for the pilot, it was effective. And scary.

    @johannjohann6523@johannjohann652311 күн бұрын
  • @MilitaryAviationHistory >>> Great video...👍

    @Allan_aka_RocKITEman@Allan_aka_RocKITEman20 күн бұрын
  • Suggestion: discuss bomb racks sometime

    @jckluckhohn@jckluckhohn23 күн бұрын
    • I love a good discussion about racks

      @FoxWolfWorld@FoxWolfWorld23 күн бұрын
  • Perhaps I have missed them since I’m new to your channel but have you ever made any videos regarding field maintenance of aircraft, bombers or tactical in World War II or the Cold War? excluding your work on Gripen and Swedish distributed operations.

    @AtomicPalm@AtomicPalm22 күн бұрын
  • How does the Ju 87 stack up against the Il-2 or the Fairey Battle? Also the U.S. had the A-36 for a while...was that any good, and why'd we stop using it?

    @delta5297@delta529721 күн бұрын
  • I would also note that most other nations are looking at having a large strategic bomber force to level a city per night as deterrent against war, if Germany had started going all in on strat bombers means likely intervention way sooner though I'm unsure if anyone at the time thought that

    @sadtimes6002@sadtimes600214 күн бұрын
  • I would love to hear about how the Spanish Civil War experience influenced this. My understanding is that Stukas were effective there (in the absence of enemy fighters) - did that lead to German over confidence in their effectiveness on the Western front?

    @rkc62@rkc6214 күн бұрын
  • I know from Military History Visualized that the Prussians/Germans frequently talked about strategy while in all essence talking about operations instead [operations being in between the strategic and the tactical realms]. Does your differentiation of "strategic effect" from "just strategic bombing raids" indicate that this was what was going on with Luftwaffe doctrine as well? It certainly seems as though taking out a bridge that is a chokepoint by a railroad marshalling yards or destroying a power station will have effects on an on-going campaign as opposed to completely destroying the enemy's "will to fight" or whatever other stuff the Douhet types wanted.

    @mensch1066@mensch106626 күн бұрын
    • The main emphasis for Germany at the time (and historically for the region in its multitude of duke and kingdoms) is a fast war, hence the near immediate focus on the operational level. The provision to mount strategic raids as air effect are included in LW thinking, the scope of L.Dv.16 is fantastic in this regard - however there is a recognition that the effect is delayed by an period of +4-8 weeks. Hence for the operations Germany wants to run (and does esp. early war), the focus on battlefield interdiction is in line with the overall war plans.

      @MilitaryAviationHistory@MilitaryAviationHistory23 күн бұрын
  • I had plastic & metal Stukas toys & detailed collectors.They are in my Xbox 360 & PC games.

    @RobertHunt-tn4jz@RobertHunt-tn4jz18 күн бұрын
  • It's often the way of things that the seemingly obvious reason isn't the real reason for something. Just look at how many people still believe the reason for the 100ft wing span of the RAF bombers was the hangar doors.

    @neiloflongbeck5705@neiloflongbeck570523 күн бұрын
  • Ernst Udet was heavily into aerial acrobatics (and alcohol) and erroneously thought such flying technique would be good for the Luffwaffe ..now I will go watch the video.

    @r0ky_M@r0ky_M23 күн бұрын
    • Germany was pari passu developing the "Uralbomber" under the direction of Walther Wever. His death in an air crash on June 3, 1936 meant the end of the project.

      @josemercado3063@josemercado306320 күн бұрын
    • Don't forget the drugs as well !!

      @jamesharmer9293@jamesharmer929320 күн бұрын
  • Interesting video. Just a note: 50 meters is 164 feet so a bit bigger than your conversion. :)

    @Uncle_T@Uncle_T22 күн бұрын
  • So, Germany's mid-1930s' decision to focus on dive-bombers was a decision born of scarcity. Scarcity of military-age manpower (thanks to the catastrophic casualties of WWI), thinness of the industrial base, and lack of critical resources. So, smaller airplanes, with 2-man crews, using precision strikes to accomplish strategic objectives. By contrast, the U.S., with something like 40% of the world's war-making potential, developed heavy bombers with large (10-man) crews. BUT, the UK and France had some of the same problems in manpower and industrial base than Germany had. Instead of dive-bombers, they developed (or purchased abroad) light bombers with small crews instead. For example, the Fairey Battle had a crew of 3, as did the Martin Maryland and the Douglas Db-7. The Breguet 690-series had a crew of 2. Those light bombers shared a problem with Ju 87s --they could not operate effectively in the face of effective fighter opposition. However, these light bombers could fill multiple roles, while the Ju 87 was somewhat of a one-trick pony.

    @RANDALLBRIGGS@RANDALLBRIGGS23 күн бұрын
    • Interesting observation, but I would argue that RANGE was the biggest factor by far why the US went for large bombers like B17 in the '30s, something that was not that restricting for the UK and France. The US always expected war to stay our of the nation, and to be fought abroad in the Pacific and South-Asian holdings. France bomber forces have been on a very tight shoestring budget all the time, and where expected to be multi-purpose, where light and medium bombers would serve as recon planes too.

      @Tuning3434@Tuning343422 күн бұрын
  • Great video, though 50m x 50m is over 150 feet by 150 feet, but your point is well taken not a small target, but industrial building size.

    @at1cvb417@at1cvb41721 күн бұрын
  • "Sniper" is a mistranslation - I noticed this in the Stuka book as well. In German, I believe the term "Scharfschütze" is used for both the specialist role called "sniper" and also the wider role called "sharpshooter". If I understand the Stuka doctrine correctly, it's " a sharpshooter among the bombers".

    @airbornecigar537@airbornecigar53715 күн бұрын
  • this also fits with the demand of the luftwaffe to include the dive bombing capability into the JU-88s

    @alepaz1099@alepaz109923 күн бұрын
  • Great vid! Thanks! (The plant over/behind your right shoulder looks like a D’deridex war bird.) Just sayin. 😆😎👍🖖

    @DeaconBlu@DeaconBlu23 күн бұрын
  • So, to help fulfill its strategic doctrine, Germany meticulously develops and hones an essentially dedicated tactical instrument--the Ju-87... Why am I not surprised that the Stuka quickly defaulted to its tactical role, especially as Germany went on the defensive.

    @josephstabile9154@josephstabile915423 күн бұрын
  • Dive bombers make perfect sense if one is planning a war of rapid movement but your artillery is largely horse drawn.

    @johnwarr7552@johnwarr755215 күн бұрын
  • The earlier Seversky-designed bomb sights manufactured by Sperry were "precise" compared to early devices of the same type, but accuracy was still rather casual. That's why bombers flew in formation and dropped salvos on the target area--high-altitude level accuracy bombing lacked accuracy. To make sure of hitting something important, a squadron or more of bombers flew in a formation intended to saturate the target area with enough bombs to get at least one on target. Bombing from 5000 feet altitude would have made bombing more accurate--but at that altitude enemy anti-aircraft fire was expected to be devastating to the bombers. Bombing from high altitudes was supposed to render anti-aircraft fire ineffective. Every solution causes more problems. Bombing accuracy was just one additional problem. American Marines had a different set of circumstances during their Banana Wars--their bombers were single-engine biplanes that could only carry a small bomb load. Hitting the target was one issue and the second issue was avoiding enemy fire. The few bombs carried by light carrier-based bombers had to be placed precisely and bombing a native fort from high altitude using a single light bomber with the fort in close proximity to Marines required a high-angle dive and a rapid escape beyond the range of enemy gunfire. A thousand-plane raid by bombers carrying ten tons of bombs each just wasn't possible for the Marines. That need to develop combat effectiveness with limited logistics also kept the Marine sniper program from the Great War alive for use during World War Two--unlike the Army, Marines couldn't rely on field artillery and having mass quantities of machine guns and mortars. I liked the characterization of the dive bomber as the "sniper among bombers."

    @alancranford3398@alancranford339816 күн бұрын
  • Thank you for another incredible video. I think you nailed it with tonnage over precision or precision over tonnage. In our modern world we need precision because the other option is beyond the budget of most countries. I guess these were the first drones. (I do not in any way detract from the bravery of the pilots). The vast tonnage of bombs that failed in carpet bombing and it's real effect are questionable.

    @stephenmanning1553@stephenmanning155322 күн бұрын
    • They had a wonderful effect on the jew, who was keen on destroying White Christian European culture. So carpet bombing Montecassino was a military stupidity? Who cares? it was destroying the ur-European Benedictine Abbey there which counted, and destroyed she was. Oh, and spearheading the bomber waves was a B-17 whose call number ended in 666. You really can´t make that up!

      @javiergilvidal1558@javiergilvidal155818 күн бұрын
  • Compares well with the recent Soviet episode.

    @UncleJoeLITE@UncleJoeLITE15 күн бұрын
  • Does the Skyraider, A-10 and Tucano in their times, all serve the same tactical purpose as the Ju-87?

    @billsmart2532@billsmart25329 күн бұрын
  • i like that MAD logo spoof

    @wingren13@wingren1323 күн бұрын
  • Part of the reason the Allies didn't develop Dive Bombers might be because of their emphasis on Fighter Bombers - Soon kitted out with RP-3 rockets for pretty precise ground attack? Interesting insight into the Luftwaffe's thinking - Cheers Chris

    @babboon5764@babboon576423 күн бұрын
    • They had dive bombers but for navy, Douglass dauntless. It was well regarded but there's no point once you start developing missiles and guided bombs.

      @gjfwang@gjfwang23 күн бұрын
    • The lead times alone for aircraft development rule that out. Developing aircraft like the Stuka involves making decisions in the early-mid 1930s, whereas aircraft rockets weren't really considered until the middle of the war, and didn't enter service until the last couple of years.

      @forcea1454@forcea145423 күн бұрын
    • The USAAF did not favor dive bombers because they believed the attack profile left the aircraft too vulnerable to ground fir. They tested and developed them early but decided not to field them in numbers.

      @gort8203@gort820323 күн бұрын
    • @@gort8203 Interesting statement, considering how much the US Navy came to rely on them against dense AA targets.

      @Tuning3434@Tuning343422 күн бұрын
    • @@Tuning3434 You must realize that the Navy had a different operational environment that required hitting moving ships with armor piercing bombs.

      @gort8203@gort820322 күн бұрын
  • hey Chris what is your favourite stuka?

    @karimhammam9105@karimhammam910523 күн бұрын
  • The Italian Ba.65 doesn't count?

    @mikhailiagacesa3406@mikhailiagacesa340623 күн бұрын
  • Is that the Tintin book The Black Island on the poster behind?

    @crevicenematode1484@crevicenematode148421 күн бұрын
  • It seems the Stuka dive bomber was a very clever precursor to things like FPV drones and cruise missiles, and even GPS guided artillery munitions. So this discussion is interesting, especially in view of the current war in Ukraine, or indeed any modern war. It's pretty obvious that precision is way more important than any kind of carpet bombing. With the possible exception of cluster munitions, which are something in the middle. The Russian way and equavilant of carpet WWII bombings, is very slow and inefficient. Places like Grosny and Bachmut makes this very obvious. And the whole USA bombing campaign in Vietnam has to be considered the ultimate failiure.

    @andersgrassman6583@andersgrassman658311 күн бұрын
  • Hi mate. Lack of resources meant a mania for pinpoint attacks. Hence the ridiculous stipulation that the Ju 88 should be able to dive bomb (which ruined it’s original specification as a schnell bomber) and made the He 177 a complete fiasco. Precision is great. But it is no substitute for true strategic depth and resources. Plus - the Luftwaffe was wedded to the traditional German strategic policy of Befelgunskrieg . It was a separate airforce (like the RAF) but still an army support arm with an army operational philosophy. Bit weird but.. Well - Nazis so there you go…

    @martindice5424@martindice542423 күн бұрын
    • Was just about to write somethin simmular. You saved me the efford.

      @noahwail2444@noahwail244423 күн бұрын
  • What if they had built a few thousand more Stukas instead of 1,100+ bombers? Would that have enabled them to create more of the conditions for strategic effect? Maybe not the by-then obsolete Ju-87, but some new development. After all, we now rely on precision over tonnage and it seems to work reasonably well.

    @thomasherbig@thomasherbig23 күн бұрын
    • Would be an absolute suicide mission. Not only are you right in the teeth of short ranged AA guns that ring important targets, you're making interception wayyy easier when they don't have to climb to your altitude.

      @frostedbutts4340@frostedbutts434022 күн бұрын
  • Dive bombers and bilingualism= kinky😮all the best lads and lassies from sunny Troon 😊

    @gorbalsboy@gorbalsboy23 күн бұрын
  • Ju87 found itself in serious trouble in the face of AA and enemy fighters ( got terribly decimated in the Battle of Britain and were withdrawn) Air superiority was essential as was a highly skilled pilot for precise dive bombing tasks...the verstile FW190 could achieve what the 87 could do and much more.

    @r0ky_M@r0ky_M22 күн бұрын
  • The German planners didn't know how ineffective large bombers would be in the early war. They got lucky choosing tactical bombers that were extremely effective.

    @neilwilson5785@neilwilson578523 күн бұрын
    • And then they wasted tons of resources on those heavy bombers anyway,because they too caught the Douhet bug.

      @naamadossantossilva4736@naamadossantossilva473623 күн бұрын
  • could the experience obtained during the spanish civil war have influenced their conclusions?

    @techedeligre@techedeligre22 күн бұрын
  • Take out.. bridges? I thought it was the V-2 rocket that was supposed to take out bridges :P

    @variszuzans299@variszuzans29923 күн бұрын
  • Its fair to call the tactical employment reactionary, but isn’t it reasonable to say that the most effective use of the limited resources was to limit breakthroughs and help soften key targets?

    @youngbloodbear9662@youngbloodbear966219 күн бұрын
  • While the Germans weren't the only ones to make use of dive bombing, they stood out in having some medium bombers designed with that in mind. I can't recall any Japanese or American medium bombers that had dive bombing capability designed into them.

    @Warmaker01@Warmaker0122 күн бұрын
  • I think you can make a very cogent argument that the Allied tactical Airforces, like 2 TAF, had a much greater impact than anyone had expected and when used to target Nazi transport and oil, were at least as effective as the strategic bomber forces. But to use it they had, as you said, to get the strategic conditions right. Thus there wasn't anything wrong conceptually with diving bombing and precision attacks, the execution was lacking. And then Udet went bonkers and tried to make *everything* dive bomb....but that's a whole other thing

    @HardThrasher@HardThrasher23 күн бұрын
  • Original concept does not matter. Use matters. The F-14 Tomcat was conceived as a stand-off fighter to protect the carrier. It became a fighter-bomber used to deliver PGM and dumb bombs. The P-47 was conceived as an escort fighter. It became a CAS fighter-bomber.

    @hlynnkeith9334@hlynnkeith933422 күн бұрын
  • One of the most hazardous jobs you could have in this war. Loss-rate was terrible. The success of some aces make you oversee the fact that most pilots were young, inexperienced and soon dead. They gave them drugs.

    @ulrichbehnke9656@ulrichbehnke965615 күн бұрын
  • So, what was the US doing during this period concerning dive bombing? All you need to know can be found if you watch the 1941 movie "Dive Bomber" with a star-studded cast and Errol Flynn in the lead role. Yes, I do watch too many war movies.

    @outlet6989@outlet698922 күн бұрын
  • Hmmm let me look into that book you signed for me.....

    @bensmith7536@bensmith753622 күн бұрын
  • @9:12 you say 50x50 meters is 100x100 feet. As far as i know it should be 150x150 feet.

    @waltergurke4560@waltergurke45607 күн бұрын
    • that is correct

      @MilitaryAviationHistory@MilitaryAviationHistory7 күн бұрын
  • Why dive bombing? As a veteran WW 1 Goering really wanted his pilots to know what it feels like to "tap that".

    @b1laxson@b1laxson20 күн бұрын
  • nice

    @noelblack8159@noelblack815923 күн бұрын
  • From the man who wrote the book!

    @jckluckhohn@jckluckhohn23 күн бұрын
  • It has always seemed to me that it didn't really matter what kind of aircraft Germany built, or how good (or otherwise) they were, they couldn't build enough of them. 300-odd Stukas becomes irrelevant in the context of what happens in the skies by 1943.

    @PaulInPorirua@PaulInPorirua22 күн бұрын
    • But a 1943 scenario was not envisioned in 1936

      @javiergilvidal1558@javiergilvidal155818 күн бұрын
    • @@javiergilvidal1558 Not the point. We're talking here as to whether it was a good idea for Germany to have focussed on dive bombing. It doesn't matter. They had a 300 bombers on a raid air force in a 1,000 bomber world.

      @PaulInPorirua@PaulInPorirua18 күн бұрын
    • @@PaulInPorirua No. The 1000 bomber world only began (just began) to come true in May 1942 over Cologne, and the symbolic/propaganda/magical number "1000" was only arrived at by scraping the bottom of the barrel with substandard Whitleys and Hampdens, and just adequate Wellingtons -none of which was any more powerful than the German twin-engined aircraft. Aim was horrible, and the military/economic effects were negligible -although the psychological blow of Cologne is not to be neglected. Seven hundred-plus strong forces of really destructive bombers (Lancasters, Halifaxes, and, to a not so great an extent, Stirlings) were a true reality from 1943 onwards. This has nothing to do with the conflict hypotheses Germany was working on as from 1938. Germany was strategically weak in 1914, and could only afford a knock-out blow. The blow failed, and she was stuck in a hopeless long-term war. Germany was even weaker in 1939, and we all know what followed. The Germans could never have envisaged in 1936-onwards the tidal wave of destruction that would befall their country seven years later

      @javiergilvidal1558@javiergilvidal155818 күн бұрын
  • In hindsight, it would have been better to put a radial engine on the Stuka as it is much more robust.

    @patrickwentz8413@patrickwentz841323 күн бұрын
  • Literally the first Stuka mission of WW2 is indicative of the sort of effect Germans werer going for. It was to bomb Polish outpost guarding the border bridge at Tczew, to facilitate capturing ther bridge intact. (BTW, Poles managed to blow up the bridge, so that particular mission ended in failure)

    @ewok40k@ewok40k22 күн бұрын
  • Stuckas were envisioned as cute tiny bombers, and not the evil CAS.

    @leftnoname@leftnoname22 күн бұрын
  • German dive bomber doctrine was designed for operational effectiveness.

    @nowthenzen@nowthenzen22 күн бұрын
  • The Norden bomb sight was terrible quite a lot of evidence as well as videos covering this.

    @TheClanAdventures@TheClanAdventures22 күн бұрын
  • 9:10 50 x 50 meters would be closer to 164 feet for our American friends.

    @silverjohn6037@silverjohn603716 күн бұрын
  • 👍👍👍!!!

    @conceptalfa@conceptalfa23 күн бұрын
  • The reason for the Stuka makes sense tactically, but why did the Germans continue to “demand” dive bombing capabilities in planes like the JU88 and more importantly, the HE177?

    @TR4Ajim@TR4Ajim23 күн бұрын
    • But didn't all planes have to dive in and fly close to their targets to be able to hit anything anyways? Even the Americans had to dive and fly close to the ground when they tried to take out a North Vietnamese factory or bridge with a bunch of F-105 Thunderchiefs or F4 Phantoms, and they suffered high losses to Anti-aircraft guns as a result. And that led to the creation of laser guided bombs so the americans did not have to fly close to their targets to knock them out, and that took away the risk of losing an expensive aircraft to anti-aircraft guns.

      @nattygsbord@nattygsbord22 күн бұрын
    • @@nattygsbord an aircraft being capable to provide ground support with bombs is not the same as an aircraft designed from the outset specifically to be able to “dive bomb”. For example the B-25 became a very capable “skip-bomber” against ships, but that capability was never part of its intended design requirements.

      @TR4Ajim@TR4Ajim22 күн бұрын
    • I wonder where the hell that "dive-bombing capability" story for the He 177 came from. Nowhere did I find provision in the airframe for dive brakes, for example, and no references for He-177 dive bombing trials seems to be available. Bombs safely locked within the huge internal bomb bay would simply not fall away from the aircraft, unless a special swinging frame like that of the Ju-87 was provided for EACH bomb. But, apart from such contraptions being awfully awkward and impossibly complicated, no pictures of the Greif´s bomb bay exist indicating any intended provision for them. I think what is meant by "dive bombing" with a Greif is putting the bomber in a shallow dive from well far-off the target in order to increase speed and release the bombs in a relatively horizontal attitude, combined with high speed. That was effectively done in the "Steinbock" operations, with notable success. "Dive bombing" is so indelibly associated with the crazy head-on plunges of the Stuka that people are led to believe that the Germans were so stupid as to expect a heavy bomber to do the same.

      @javiergilvidal1558@javiergilvidal155818 күн бұрын
    • @@javiergilvidal1558 Nobody said the HE177 was going to deliver its bombs in the same manner as the Stuka!🙄 Aerodynamic forces alone would make that impossible. However, as you say, the HE177 was designed from pretty much the outset to deliver its bombs from a dive rather than from level flight. The Stuka, and its relative bombing accuracy, did provide a lot of impetus for the HE177 diving requirement. Early German bomb sights were pretty much crap until the Lotfe 7 site came along in 41 (based on the Norden). So Udet had pushed for the better accuracy of a diving attack in the HE177 design. Not the near vertical diving of the Stuka, but nonetheless, bomb delivery from an angle dive. At the same time, the design of the DB606 promised to deliver the necessary power requirements of the HE177 design. The smaller frontal section of this engine seemed to be a good fit to Udets diving requirements, even though from the outset that engine looked to be a maintenance nightmare (the cooling issues and fires had yet to become apparent). So if Udet had kept his 2 cents to himself, (something he should have done with many German designs), there is a good chance that the HE177 would not have relied solely on the DB606, and all its significant teething problems. It’s very possible that Heinkel would have gone instead to a traditional 4 engine design and been able to deploy the HE177 as a level bomber, using the Lotfe 7 to good effect.

      @TR4Ajim@TR4Ajim18 күн бұрын
  • That works for a short ,sharp war. But unfortunately for them they got the opposite 🤔😁

    @robertmills8640@robertmills864023 күн бұрын
  • Hi

    @lapistyr55@lapistyr5523 күн бұрын
  • It was Cheap !

    @Schaneification@Schaneification22 күн бұрын
  • Total hypothetical. How would the Stuka have failed if the Japanese had made a naval version for the war in the pacific?

    @henghistbluetooth7882@henghistbluetooth788223 күн бұрын
    • I don't think it outperforms the Japanese aircraft significantly?

      @WALTERBROADDUS@WALTERBROADDUS23 күн бұрын
    • @@WALTERBROADDUS Yes especially once you add all the extra weight for carrier ops I don't think it would be an upgrade.

      @frostedbutts4340@frostedbutts434022 күн бұрын
  • Blame Udet! Everybody else did.

    @richardvernon317@richardvernon31723 күн бұрын
  • You do love your dive bombers. Germans must like things that go down.

    @andrewmountford3608@andrewmountford360823 күн бұрын
  • What is this obsession with a 2-front war? During WW2 the allies fought all over the world, they had many frontlines. Russia had the biggest army in WW1, not wanting to fight them had to do with the numbers of soldiers they had. Not with 1 front being fine and 2 fronts randomly being horrible.

    @voswouter87@voswouter8719 күн бұрын
    • because many countries have more manpower to call upon than a single country, when you are at a manpower OR equipment disadvantage the last thing you want is to have your limited resources strained across a greater area. which is the opposite for the side that knows they have the advantage in those fields. as there is a certain level of effectual degradation of having so much assets in a single area and leaves them vulnerable to things like artillery and airpower.

      @dragonzd97@dragonzd9713 күн бұрын
    • @@dragonzd97 The focus on 2 fronts suggests that 2 fronts of 10 miles would be worse than 1 front of 100 miles. I think that's completely wrong. The WW1 fronts both in east and west where hundreds of miles long. I don't think the number mattered, or at that point even another 10 miles, but the military strength that each side had.

      @voswouter87@voswouter8713 күн бұрын
    • @@voswouter87 100 miles on one side is easier to defend than 50 miles in two though... if you think about it logistically and from a support standpoint, the defender can shift forces easier to react to things that are close to them which they would be unable to do if say they had to help the other half of the country. this entire concept is why the allies invaded italy in the first place.... to drag divisions away from the atlantic wall so their invasions there would meet less resistance

      @dragonzd97@dragonzd9713 күн бұрын
  • So in other words what you're saying is... The Stuka is ye olde kalibre? Ye olde tomahawk? Seems to me rhat it fulfils mostly the same doctrinal role aa cruise missiles tend to do in today's war. And just like todays war, they seem ill-suited for the role of strategic bombing of population centres as they have been pressed into doing.

    @moritamikamikara3879@moritamikamikara387923 күн бұрын
  • Because the Germans knew it looked badass!!!

    @trauko1388@trauko138823 күн бұрын
  • In fact, we don't need to speak English, German or any language at all. We only need to read it. 😅

    @caniconcananas7687@caniconcananas768722 күн бұрын
  • It does make sense to use dive bombers when your industry is still not fully developed and capable of producing large bombers. Most dive bombers in the 30s and 40s had external bomb payloads (despite causing drag, this meant they could carry larger bombs). With external bombs most dive bombers could carry a single bomb that was often larger than most heavy bombers carried (cuz they would carry more but smaller bombs). Stukas typically had 250/500kg bombs in the early stages of the war and would even go to 1000kg, this meant that you could have this massively powerful bomb be dropped in a extremely accurate fashion while also only using a single aircraft that used 1 engine. Heavily reducing operational costs per bomb, so you could not only have something that was cheaper and quicker to build, it could also strike bigger bombs, be more accurate and also have a lot of less impact if it got damaged or destroyed. Losing 1 b-17 would mean losing 4 engines, losing 1 Corsair would mean 1 engine lost, so for a country that, again, was still catching up in industrial power, it makes sense.

    @pennycarvalho1223@pennycarvalho122322 күн бұрын
  • 04:24 To be precise: A multi-front war is a grand-strategic problem for a WEAK belligerent like Germany. The U.S.A. had no such problem with that situation 1941-45. (Today the U.S. does have the problem due to severe cutbacks since the end of the Cold War, as the Ukraine War has revealed).

    @fars8229@fars822918 күн бұрын
KZhead