De Havilland Mosquito: How A Wooden Plane Terrorized Nazi Germany | Gaining Altitude | Progress

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The Mosquito Reborn tells the story of a Mossie through archival footage and interviews with veteran pilots. We follow the incredible process of restoring a plane that hasn’t flown in more than 50 years. And, we’ll take to the skies with the world’s only known flying original Mosquito.

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A wonderful film, I remember seeing the now crashed British Mossie, flying with a Spitfire and Lancaster in Crich (Derbyshire England) Seven Merlin’s together - I’d love to see that again one day. Thank you for the film and thank you all for the restoration and the honour given to the flyers, the builders and designers, the deHavilland museum is a great place, if you haven’t been, go there and see the tiny field where the first prototype Mossie took off, stripped of everything to make it light enough to clear the sheds.

ianseddon
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Geoffrey DeHavilland was cousin of famous GONE WITH THE WIND actress Olivia DeHavilland! She lived to be 103, or 104 years old! AMAZING woman and her awesome amazing cousin Geoffrey DeHavilland, creator of the famous DeHavilland "Mosquito, my favorite WWII aircraft!

lieutenantdan
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As an aero, I'm fascinated by the fact that with a full bomb load, it's static margin would have been zero (0.0) because of the heavy bombs in the rear. That means the pilots have to stear constantly--no dead stick. For a WWII bomber, that would have been unheard of. So it's operational Static Margin would have been 0 to 10 percent, the same as fighters. Bombers usually would be designed with up to 20% (more like 10%) static margin for stability and controlability, but no maneuverability. At full load and zero static margin, it gave the aircraft total maneuverability at maximum load! Genius. At high gs the structural engineering, light weight wood airframe, and pilot performance comes into play. It's not a duck, don't fly it like one. My favorite plane of all time. I missed my call as one's first officer. Ironically, static margins of WWI planes like the Red Baron's had design negative static margins. It is the reason he was so successful. His static margin was negative 10% allowing him to let the plane out of control while regaining it on the down slope. Firing from up or down, he was on a partially uncontrollable flight path. We do that today in fighters and even huge aircraft. Every large or small commercial jet has a negative static margin. Pilots don't have to compensate. Computers stabilize all howdy toidy aircraft. All ac have to be dynamically stabil, meaning you can get ahead of it and have to. Static stability is not required except in undiluted gliders.

donaldblankenship
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Because it was a lot lighter and cheaper than all aluminium construction. It was also incredibly strong and gave the DH-98 Mosquito a real edge. With its two enormously powerful Rolls Royce Merlin Engines, together with its very light airframe and wing construction, it was incredibly fast, especially at ultra low level. With later models, It was easily capable of well over 400Mph and was almost as manoeuvrable as a Spitfire, but about 40 Mph faster! It was also capable of climbing at a continuous 2500fpm all the way up to 35.000 feet, so it really was an “All-rounder” and Multi-Role Combat Aircraft. Used in three main versions in the RAF, as a Fighter, a Bomber and Photographic Reconnaissance (PR). The Bomber version had an all glass nose and could carry a 1900 Kg/ 4000lb bomb load, while the Fighter variant had Eight Machine Guns, four 20mm cannon and four .303 machine guns in the nose. There was also the Photographic Reconnaissance (PR) variant, which was Unarmed, although they were used in a vast array of roles during and after WWII. It’s RAF Nickname was “The Wooden Wonder”!

pikachu
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I got a kick out of each speaker searching for a better word than "noise" regarding the Merlins. Congratulations on completing your Sweet Mossie. I smile whenever I think of a reluctant Air Ministry delighted to have been wrong about the concept.

busterdee
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Thanks very much for an inspiring and educational film about the history and development of the Mosquito.

charlesogg
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A tribute to the Canadians and DH British design with RR engines

willhovell
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That’s one amazing plane, amazing construction, great performance - just an amazing story.
As a post WW II German I’m in awe and thankful it helped beat nazi Germany ! 🎉🎉🎉

cuplove
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England. Thank you, Canada, for all you have done over the years - and still are, it seems.

jp-umfr
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The fastest machine in existence! Wow! It makes me wish I was a part of these rebuilds.

bbb
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Just Fantastic to see another Mosquito flying again.

nigelbranthwaite
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truly splended thank you guys and gals

davidhansen
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in the 80s I worked for fisher flying products in s e ohio. we built two mosquitos, one fabric covered two stroke and one all plywood with 2 4cyl 4 stroke engines. the fabric one would clime around 400 feet a min, on one engine.

airplanegeorge
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I’ve sat in the cockpit of a mossie, I’ve rebuilt a few Merlin 20s, now all I need is a flight ! Ha my great uncle helped in the design of the gypsy engine & ran the DeHavilland small engine division for a while.

alexanderduncan
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You are doing a very important job very well

gregorydahl
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Muy interesante video de este avión, me gustó desde que ví la pelicula "escuadron 633" me gustaría saber que nave lo acompaña en el vuelo al final del video, tiene la insignia de Uruguay

antoniogallo
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Sacrificed strength for speed and agility

calebshuler
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Britain had a large domestic furniture industry, well versed in lamination, in comprehensively equipped factories, well able to manufacture standardised parts. I can think of no more useful way to make use of that extensive skills base than building Mozzies.
Absolutely the best night-fighter of the war with more kills than the next two models combined. Almost the same bomb load as the B17, but could do two round trips to Berlin in the time it took the FF to do one, only exposing two crew, instead of ten.
The Amiens prison raid was an incredibly accurate low level attack, unmatched AFAIK by any other bombing raid in WW2. And finally, the safest combat plane of the war: the Mozzie brought her crew back home more reliably than any other plane on the allied side.

q.e.d.
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Fabulous ! Fabulous ! Fabulous ! I was aware of the history of the aircraft this was dedicated to Phoenix rises" Thankyou

johndavey
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Built for a night fighter role the Mosquito was a camera from the highest hights of WWII, a ground attack bomber and the first low level precision bomber. Quite a plane!

DG-wuke