Swedens WW2 Radial Engined Fighter - FFVS J22

Фильм және анимация

One of the lesser known WW2 fighters to reach production, the FFVS J22 is overshadowed even by its own company in the Flygvapnet, but was nevertheless a notable, and interesting design. Although often considered to be an all round average fighter, the story of the J22 is far from average - here is its story.
Consider supporting us on Patreon: / aviationdeepdive
Join our Discord community: / discord
Donations to support the channel: www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted...
Sources:
• Maintaining Neutrality...
• How Did This Swedish P...
• Swedish SAAB J-21 warbird
• Aircraft stories - win...
mustang.gaetanmarie.com/articl...
www.thisdayinaviation.com/tag...
opposite-lock.com/topic/17862...
www.avrosys.nu/aircraft/Jakt/...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:...
www.tagesanzeiger.ch/duesenje...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frid_W%...
aeroscale.net/news/saab-j-
21a#:~:text=Apart%20from%20the%20downright%20auxiliary,undercarriage%20and%20a%
20pusher%20engine.
www.airvectors.net/avj21.html
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daimler...
www.tagesanzeiger.ch/duesenje...
www.militaryfactory.com/aircr...
www.airvectors.net/avj21.html
opposite-lock.com/topic/17862...
plane-encyclopedia.com/cold-w...
plasticfantastique.com/projec...
www.historynet.com/the-saab-j21/
www.wired.com/2009/01/jan-13-...
www.secretprojects.co.uk/thre...
flygplanshistorik.se/21/21_2.h...
www.ipmsstockholm.se/home/saa...
academic-accelerator.com/ency...
0:00 - 2:48 Introduction
2:49 - 3:37 Channel Update/Blacklisting
3:38 - 6:22 Swedens Aviation Situation
6:23 - 7:45 Aircraft Proposals
7:45 - 10:12 Seeds of a New Fighter
10:13 - 14:17 Design Stages
14:18 - 18:06 Construction & Prototype Stage
18:07 - 24:01 Service Life
24:02 - 26:39 Conclusion

Пікірлер: 160

  • @aviationdeepdive
    @aviationdeepdiveАй бұрын

    Feel free to join our Discord community! - discord.gg/WCevgcufwJ Consider supporting us on Patreon: www.patreon.com/AviationDeepDive

  • @swedihgame

    @swedihgame

    Ай бұрын

    7:15 the pictures are flipped so "B17" is the B18 and "B18" is the B17 11:16 That is a gloster gladiator not a "Fiat G50"

  • @Niinsa62
    @Niinsa62Ай бұрын

    I read somewhere a long time ago there was a fan club of this aircraft in America. The aircrew of an American bomber that had been damaged and was trying to reach neutral Sweden to make an emergency landing. To stay in the air, they had dumped everything heavy overboard after they left Germany and reached the Baltic Sea. That meant guns and ammo. Unfortunately, before they reached Sweden, they were attacked by a lone German fighter. They could do nothing to defend themselves, so things looked kind of grim. All they could do was look at the German fighter as it made a pass firing at them, and then climb away to slow down, make a turn, and come back firing at them. Only he didn't come back, because as he was slow and turning, a Swedish fighter opened up on him. A J22. He didn't shoot the German down, but he scared him away. The J22 pilot had seen what was going to happen, and had been going full throttle, engine temperature be damned, and had managed to place himself in a good position to do something. And then the J22 escorted the American bomber to Sweden so they could land there. The J22 pilot met them afterwards, and his surname was Smith, oddly enough. Apparently, he was a brother or cousin or something of famous SAAB test pilot Claes Smith. Smith is not a common surname in Sweden. That American bomber crew formed The J22 Fan Club, American Chapter. Maybe not the fastest or bestest fighter ever, but it was there, when it was needed! :-)

  • @damienmaynard8892

    @damienmaynard8892

    Ай бұрын

    There was another incident where a heavily damaged B-17 only had fuel enough to reach Sweden from Northern Germany or Poland. No Germans pursued them but they were intercepted by Swedish fighters. They were warned over the radio to turn away or be fired upon. They replied "We know!" and kept going. This happened twice more. The fighters dropped back and opened up - way too far behind. The B-17 radioed to them "You're shooting too far back".. the Swedes replied "We know!".... the B-17 crew landed safely and were interned for a month or so, in comparative luxury, until the war ended. Sense, sensiblity, timing, training and knowing when to seize an opportunity or to ignore the immediate result and think long-term. It's the man as well as the machine which makes a good stridspilot.

  • @arudegesture

    @arudegesture

    Ай бұрын

    @@damienmaynard8892 Sad to say this is most likely a myth. The same story exists about allied bombers flying over Sweden, being warned over the radio that if they don't turn around AA batteries will open fire. Then when the AA batteries do open fire they're firing too low, which precipitates the same conversation. "You're firing too low!" "We know!" One thing that DID happen was Swedish fighter pilots from time to time engaging German planes near the coast of Denmark and then flying back to Sweden. There are several accounts of this given by pilots themselves. And, of course, Sweden did fire on and, in some cases, brought down a handful of German planes who took a shortcut across Swedish airspace.

  • @user3141592635

    @user3141592635

    Ай бұрын

    I have the very old name of Bo, My oldest son Björn, the younger one Bengt, and my former wife Bodil, haha. No one can compete on that in oldish names from the 700's or earlier, haha. Maybe Bengt is more modern, a bit.

  • @bjornh4664

    @bjornh4664

    Ай бұрын

    There's a Swedish family with the surname Smith with Dutch roots, the name originally having been Smit. ETA: By pure chance, I happened to meet a member of the Smith family mentioned above, but there's no known relation to the Smith pilots.

  • @TzunSu

    @TzunSu

    Ай бұрын

    It sounds like you've mistaken this for the incident where JA37s supported and covered a SR-71 mission that had blown an engine in 1987.

  • @nomennescio4604
    @nomennescio4604Ай бұрын

    About the Pratt & Whitney engine. They way I have heard it told, apparently the Swedes were perfectly aware they were nicking it. What they did was start an account on P&W's behalf, make an assessment of what should be an acceptable sum of reimbursement per engine, AS IF there was an actual agreement in place, and deposited the sums there. And what then happened after the war was that a Swedish delegation went to P&W, and as a total surprise to the P&W people presented the situation, with yay amounts of pirated engines produced, but also this fat back account with payment for P&W set aside, should they want. It is then to the very great credit of P&W that that absorbed this surprising new information, and swiftly came back with the purely symbolic one dollar claim, and besides they expressed their great satisfaction that the Swedes had chosen their engine as their best option in a time of national emergency.

  • @bodan1196

    @bodan1196

    Ай бұрын

    Considering that the Bofors 40mm anti-aircraft cannon was manufactured in the 10th of thousand, without a licens... I think that the one dollar was an nice compromise. In a larger picture so to speak. I have actually heard, somewhere, the proposition that the two "infringes" were concidered, by the governments, to balance out each other. Though unlikely true, it would be... comforting(?) if it were. No?

  • @TzunSu

    @TzunSu

    Ай бұрын

    @@bodan1196 Where did you hear that the Bofors was produced outside of licensing agreements? Both the allies and axis paid licensing fees to Sweden during the war.

  • @bodan1196

    @bodan1196

    Ай бұрын

    @@TzunSu While I can't name from which books, papers or from which historical documentaries I have formed my "knowledge" on this, I find my recollection of having read and seen the information in trustful media, undoubtful. I have the recollection of having seen an interview with a person who was involved with the swedish TwinWasp project, who after the war also was present when the licensing issue were brought up, and the licence were "adjusted" with a shrugg and towards the 40mm. While Wikipedia is not an inerrant source, there is a, perhaps tenuos, mention that it was, on the swedish page. That licening fees were payed to Sweden, does not mean that there were in all instances.

  • @FW190A8UW

    @FW190A8UW

    Ай бұрын

    @@TzunSu No, it was pirated. Bofors sued the american government after the war and got compensation-

  • @bodan1196

    @bodan1196

    Ай бұрын

    @@TzunSu Search for _Aeroseum TwinWasp_ and you will find a short video about the swedish TwinWasp. (I didn't search for it. The algorithm presented it to me.) The US did have a license for the Bofors 40mm, to manufacture for their own use. The US did however lend-lease, and give manufactured guns to other countries, which they did not have a licens to do. This breach of terms of licens, was the "thing" that was used to balance the reverse engineered TwinWasp. So we were both right, just not completely so. Be well.

  • @finntastique3891
    @finntastique3891Ай бұрын

    A big respect to Swedish aeronautical engineers; J 22, SAAB 29 Tunnan, 32 Lansen, 35 Draken, 37 Viggen and 39 Gripen.

  • @kentnilsson465
    @kentnilsson465Ай бұрын

    One thing of note, Swedens armed forces didnt have much when the war broke out, but the Swedish army and airforce gave what little they had. One third of the fighters went to Finland and also much of the armies artillery, machine guns , AT guns and AA guns and ammo of course. Total value of what was given during the Winter war 39/40 was 500 million SEK, which was 50% of Finlands budget total or military total cost. Either, doesnt say which in my sources, but either way, a lot

  • @AnthonyOMulligan-yv9cg

    @AnthonyOMulligan-yv9cg

    23 күн бұрын

    Very True Every Swede Had An Affection For Finn's

  • @DIREWOLFx75
    @DIREWOLFx75Ай бұрын

    When the war started in September 1939, Sweden had at most ammo for around 2 hours. And at worst, for less than 15 minutes. The big problem was that when Sweden tried to start rearming in 1935, it was already too late, vast majority of suppliers were already busy producing things for their own nations. The navy was old, but not quite obsolete, as their focus would be on using the coastlines to stay defensive and hit anything getting close, no gallivanting around and risking the big ships. The army was mostly old, to some extent on the edge of obsolescence, but also with some level of modernisation, mostly thanks to the Germans circumventing the Versaille diktat by setting up the Landsverk company in Sweden, developing mostly tanks. Now, the AIRFORCE however? In 1939 most of it was painfully obsolescent or even outright obsolete. And it wasn't big either. And Sweden had not a single manufacturer capable of massproduction of high performance aircraft engines, nor any designer with experience creating one. Sweden purchased a small number of planes from Germany. They were not however capable of getting any of the "latest'n'greatest", just some minor upgrades in overall capability, like getting a few Ju-86 high altitude recon/bombers. Sweden went to USSR. And COULD have gotten a quite decent deal for I-16s there, which would have been a clear improvement on existing planes. But because the Soviets refused to also sell bombers, Sweden crashed the deal, very stupidly. Sweden went to JAPAN even. And almost concluded a deal that would have been amazing for Sweden. Deliveries of the Mitsubishi Zero starting the same time they started delivering them to the IJN. And COMPLETE license rights for everything needed to build a Zero, with especially the engine and cannons as well as the alloy used in the airframe being extremely important as Sweden at time completely lacked the expertise and knowledge for those areas. This would also come with both deliveries and licensing for a bomber, possibly more than one, but i've never been able to find out which one. However, due to the fighting with USSR, there was no way to get any deliveries overland, as the optimal solution would have been to send them via the Sibirian railroad. And during the negotiations, the war in Europe had started, which made transport by sea exceedingly dangerous. There was more negotiations regarding a possibility of buying only the blueprints and licensing rights, but with USAs increasing sanctions against Japan heralding a future war, Japan became much less enthusiastic about potentially giving away secrets without getting enough in return, so their asking price for blueprints and licensing ended up simply too high for Sweden. Sweden purchased aircraft from USA. And before barely any had been delivered, USA broke the contract. At least SOME of the engines had arrived, and this was used to reverse engineer and make an improved version of the engine a few years later. So, what did Sweden actually get in numbers? From the only place selling and available. Italy. A bunch of Reggiane 2000. And, as a result of a privately organised collection drive, also a bunch of Fiat Cr.42.

  • @antonsamuelsson1317

    @antonsamuelsson1317

    Ай бұрын

    That with the zero, search j-19 Saab it was the blueprint and everything was finished in september 39

  • @DIREWOLFx75

    @DIREWOLFx75

    Ай бұрын

    @@antonsamuelsson1317 J-19 is NOT the Zero. It is perfectly possible that it was inspired by it, but as far as i know, none of the Swedish designers had ever seen the Zero before designing it. So, the similarity is most likely coincidental. But no, Sweden actually negotiating for the actual Zero, is another thing. If they could have managed a functional deal for delivery, Japan would literally have started its own production at around 50-100% higher than historical, and delivered half of the first 400 to Sweden. There was also talk about getting access to more of Japans engines, and at the time, Japan was one of the world leaders for radial engines, which would have been an exceptional bonus for Sweden, especially as Sweden did not have the issues with poor manufacturing precision that ruined the actual performance of the Japanese engines.

  • @WolfHeathen

    @WolfHeathen

    Ай бұрын

    True. We didn't become a great air force power until the mid-50's when we had the fourth largest air force in the world. The reason for why Saab AB is so massive in the aerospace and defense industry today is pretty much only because the US cancelled that contract and the Swedish government had to rapidly develop their own technologies.

  • @TzunSu

    @TzunSu

    Ай бұрын

    And then we went back to the Italians after the war, buying up a ton of their old surplus planes. My grandfather was in the air force from 42 until his retirement, he lost a *lot* of friends when those shitbuckets went down. They routinely found random junk, tools clothes wine bottles etc, inside the fuselage and wings.

  • @Blackadder79
    @Blackadder79Ай бұрын

    Minor error at about 5:20, it is referred to the transfer of aircraft from Haparanda to Malmen, presumably Malmen air base near Linköping, but the map zooms in to the town of Narvik, Norway.

  • @aviationdeepdive

    @aviationdeepdive

    Ай бұрын

    I have absolutely no idea how that happened. It is a good looking town, however!

  • @Blackadder79

    @Blackadder79

    Ай бұрын

    @@aviationdeepdive Well, there is a bar in Narvik called «Malmen», so that might be the source of the mix-up 😉

  • @jameshall1300
    @jameshall1300Ай бұрын

    Great video overall. One small point, at 11:15, you show a picture of a Finnish Gloster Gladiator, but refer to it as a Fiat G50.

  • @aviationdeepdive

    @aviationdeepdive

    Ай бұрын

    Ah yeah, silly mistake, good catch

  • @svenskenh644

    @svenskenh644

    Ай бұрын

    And you state that Arboga is east of Stockholm when it indeed is located west of Stockholm

  • @Cptnbond
    @CptnbondАй бұрын

    The newspaper headline (April 10, 1940) reads, 'Germany demands strict neutrality by Sweden' - in other words, do not get involved in the Nazi war. With the weak military capability of the Swedes, no wonder they obeyed.

  • @Rbajter

    @Rbajter

    Ай бұрын

    Also, in order to be regarded as neutral you could not be seen as a threat, so the military could not become too strong.

  • @annoyingbstard9407

    @annoyingbstard9407

    Ай бұрын

    And all the money they made supplying the Nazis with everything they needed helped….

  • @satanihelvetet

    @satanihelvetet

    Ай бұрын

    @@Rbajter That was most likely not a significant reason to hold back in the growing forces. Time, economy and lack of industrial resources was enough obstacles.

  • @glandhound

    @glandhound

    Ай бұрын

    40% of the steel that nazi germany produced between 1933 and 1945 was done with swedish ore. they had a working relationship which went a long way for sweden to remain neutral.

  • @satanihelvetet

    @satanihelvetet

    29 күн бұрын

    @@glandhound Yes and not forget the railway trafic with german soldiers through Sweden. But Sweden also worked with the allies, mostly secretly.

  • @FRIEND_711
    @FRIEND_711Ай бұрын

    I absolutely love your videos, please work hard on them. You really put a lot of details most would not even look at which i love.

  • @aviationdeepdive

    @aviationdeepdive

    Ай бұрын

    That’s very kind, Thankyou!

  • @neiloflongbeck5705
    @neiloflongbeck5705Ай бұрын

    The converted torpedo boats used as blockage runners were the Gay Viking class had been ordered from Camper and Nicholson of Gosport and Northam by the Turkish Navy just before the start of WW2. They were powered by three 1000hp Paxman VRB 16 cylinder engines. The Turks had ordered 8 of these boats and three saw service with the Royal Navy as MTBs and the other 5 became fast merchant men (Gay Viking, Masted Standfast, Hopewell, Nonsuch and Gay Corsair) and crewed by officers from Ellerman Wilson and crewmen off Hull trawlers. These boats could cruise at 20 knots, with a max speed on 23 knots, at 17 knots they had a range of 1200 miles. Look up Operation Bridford to find out more on their service.

  • @mellertid

    @mellertid

    Ай бұрын

    There's a novel by Evert Lundström "Kullagerkriget" focused on this, not sure it was translated to English. Iirc it's mediocre.

  • @TheLateBird7
    @TheLateBird7Ай бұрын

    I fell in love with this small but tough fighter when I visited the Swedish Air Force Museum last year. Great video!

  • @aviationdeepdive

    @aviationdeepdive

    Ай бұрын

    Oh awesome, must have been cool to see it in person

  • @madzen112
    @madzen112Ай бұрын

    Must say that Sweden had a really impressive lineup of 2nd tier fighter aircraft during the war years!

  • @bodan1196
    @bodan1196Ай бұрын

    Small note: @7:13. The pictures and narration is mixed up. The name B-18 was said when the B-17 (one still flies) was shown, and vice versa. The B-17 is single engine, and the B-18 is twin engined.

  • @jankarlsson5358
    @jankarlsson5358Ай бұрын

    Wow! So nice video🥰💕Thank you❤️I'm swedish 😃and I live near Sweden's best preserved airfield from the Second World War "krigsflygfält 16" Brattforsheden in Värmland. Everything preserved as a museum. A nice place where I usually fly radio controlled airplanes.

  • @johncashwell1024
    @johncashwell1024Ай бұрын

    @9:47 - "...illegal..." would be the wrong term. As an attorney, I come across the misuse of this word often. Legally speaking, "illegal" refers to criminal law. Whereas, in this case, the Swedes created copies of engines that were protected under patents. Patent law is a mix of common law (from higher Court decisions), legislation &, depending upon jurisdiction, some administrative law and civil law. In Sweden's case, the reproduction of engines that were protected under US & Foreign Patents without first paying for or gaining permission for the use of the patents from the patent holder made them liable for that unauthorized use. Liability is the exclusive purview of civil courts. In criminal law one is guilty or not guilty & in civil law one is liable or not liable.

  • @n176ldesperanza7
    @n176ldesperanza7Ай бұрын

    Outstanding presentation--well done.

  • @Bourne246
    @Bourne246Ай бұрын

    Thanks for introducing this very interesting aircraft

  • @unidentifiedbones
    @unidentifiedbonesАй бұрын

    Excellent video. Subscribed as a result of watching. Thank you.

  • @06colkurtz
    @06colkurtzАй бұрын

    Well done. this is an excellent video that tells an interesting story very well. Good job.

  • @petesheppard1709
    @petesheppard1709Ай бұрын

    Outstanding video; great aviation history! The J22 sounds like a sweet ship--it certainly looks good.

  • @Mattiniord
    @MattiniordАй бұрын

    Svedinos J22 that is being restored to flying condition by Warbirds of Sweden is alive and kicking. But it has been moved to Aeroseum, a Museum and Aviation expirence center in Gothenburg. Aeroseum lies in an Cold war underground hangar by Säve airfield, the former home of F9, the first unit to be outfitted with the J22 in late 1943. Therefore visitors can come and see how the work progresses on the J22. They started out with the metal framework but little of the original wood for the hull and wings. What remained was not useable anymore. However, Warbirds of Sweden had a stroke of luck. Remember that furniture manufacturer that produced all the wooden components? When asked if they could help out, they had a look around and lo and behold, in their storage they found drawings and all the original moulds that had been used to shape the beechwood panels! Thankfully someone way back when had made sure to store these, maybe thinking that maybe they might become useful someday. The company would never make anything like that ever again, but just by preserving those moulds did an extremely important service to swedish aviation history. So now the aircraft will be clad in newly produced beechwood panels, made using the original moulds, which frankly is mindblowing. After all, there was really no need for the company to keep those moulds, but keep them they did. If you want to see the the work on what will hopefully become a fully flying FFVS J22, come to Gothenburg and visit Aeroseum.

  • @aviationdeepdive

    @aviationdeepdive

    Ай бұрын

    That's incredible! And great to hear, thanks for sharing that!

  • @TzunSu
    @TzunSuАй бұрын

    Very interesting to see you mention the Swedish help for Finland during the war. My gramps flew as a Swedish volunteer in Finland, as a radioman.

  • @EneTheGene
    @EneTheGeneАй бұрын

    Some more info about Salwen's victories in the winter war; 17th of January 1940: I-152 (Finnish literature often refers to the I-15bis as the I-152) destroyed with witness present at Kuolajärvi lake at approx. 12:00 1st of February 1940: SB-2 destroyed with witness present 70 kms north of Rovaniemi after 10:30 20th of February 1940: SB-2 shared destroyed with second lieutenant G. Karlsson with witness present and SB-2 damaged at Vaala at approx. 09:10 Data from the 2006 book Ilmavoitot osa 2/Aerial victories part 2 by Kalevi Keskinen and Kari Stenman

  • @vladratzen7319
    @vladratzen7319Ай бұрын

    Great work, well done. Thanx a lot.

  • @user-xn4gf9ll3y
    @user-xn4gf9ll3yАй бұрын

    I always look forward to your videos. You cover aviation subjects that even the most hardened aviation enthusiasts would miss.

  • @aviationdeepdive

    @aviationdeepdive

    Ай бұрын

    That means a lot!

  • @jonashellsborn7648
    @jonashellsborn764827 күн бұрын

    A note on the landing gear from a Flygvspnet history book: it was dire times and ppl worked in parallell to come up with innovative solutions. One such was using a clockwork spring as power plant for the landing gear mechanism. One prototype was made. It hastily disassembled itself on first trial. So mgmt sort of lost interest.

  • @garyhooper1820
    @garyhooper1820Ай бұрын

    Thanks , like the content on lesser know , but part of aviation history . That's why I subscribed here .

  • @garrickmartin7707
    @garrickmartin7707Ай бұрын

    Very interesting, thanks. Sweden enjoys a well deserved reputation for innovation and quality and the J22 is a good example. Cheers.

  • @nicce12
    @nicce12Ай бұрын

    Excellent video, thanks!

  • @eue073
    @eue07327 күн бұрын

    In 1986 or 87 I was helping out resquing a J22 from a former airforce training ground on the east coast of Sweden. I think its the one at Svedinos.

  • @hakanaxlund7951
    @hakanaxlund7951Ай бұрын

    great video, thanks!

  • @40over86
    @40over86Ай бұрын

    Well done. Thanks!

  • @gambanteinodal1246
    @gambanteinodal1246Ай бұрын

    Very interesting! Great film! Subscribed!

  • @steffenb.jrgensen2014
    @steffenb.jrgensen2014Ай бұрын

    Excellent video on an excellent plane. The P&W Twin Wasp IMHO also is an excellent engine. Strong, reliable and available - a true workhorse of WWII.

  • @yeet7747
    @yeet774714 күн бұрын

    Ängelholm mentioned!!!! Fun fact there is a J22 at the airmuseum in Ängleholm that is being restored!

  • @yeet7747

    @yeet7747

    14 күн бұрын

    i wrote this comment before watching the whole video. I am a fool

  • @oscgra9416
    @oscgra9416Ай бұрын

    Realy good video as always!

  • @aviationdeepdive

    @aviationdeepdive

    Ай бұрын

    Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @williamzk9083
    @williamzk9083Ай бұрын

    The FFVS J22 had a credible speed of 350mph consider the PW R-1830 double row radial's limitations. It's similar to the Australian Wirraway which had the even less suitable single row CW R-1820. It should be noted that the Me 109G1 was entering service with a speed of 400mph and the Fw 190A3 with a similar speed in early 1942.

  • @pRahvi0
    @pRahvi0Ай бұрын

    A very interesting video. The Swedish aircraft have always fascinated me.

  • @JH-lo9ut
    @JH-lo9utАй бұрын

    15:00 AGA is well known in Britain for gas cookers (for some reason), but the fancy gas stove is really a sideline product of theirs. AGA were (still ar are) a large industrial conglomerate specialized in acetylene- and propane-gas equipment. The company grew out of an extremely profitable patent on the automatic, acetylene-powered lighthouse, wich were sold worldwide.

  • @bodan1196

    @bodan1196

    Ай бұрын

    The inventor of the patented device, Gustaf Dahlén, was awarded a Nobel Prize for it. It was considered to have save many, many lifes over time.

  • @Maring0418
    @Maring0418Ай бұрын

    The guy went all the way with pronouncing Swedish words!! Very good and very well made documentary as always 🙂

  • @aviationdeepdive

    @aviationdeepdive

    Ай бұрын

    Thankyou!

  • @Spey_Phantom
    @Spey_PhantomАй бұрын

    at 6:11, that s a What If scale model of a Swedish Zero, built by DizzyFugu.

  • @jonathanhudak2059
    @jonathanhudak2059Ай бұрын

    Great documentary on this cool little indigenous fighter! It's a neat aircraft and I even have a 1/72 scale model kit of it. Just subscribed to your channel 👍

  • @satanihelvetet
    @satanihelvetetАй бұрын

    Great video and a very interesting subject! A litle additional information: The macineguns mentioned as 7.9 mm in calibre was actually in 8x63 mm (8 mm cartridge m/32), even if the bullet diameter was the same as the german 7.92 mm. The m/22 mg was a Swedish variant of the .30 AN/M2 from FN, that was a variant of the Browning m/1919. The mentioned "cannon" was international known as the 13.2 mm FN Browning. In Sweden the designation was "auto cannon" due to the use of ammunition with mainly high explosive projectiles.

  • @Arthion

    @Arthion

    Ай бұрын

    Fabrique National were quite nifty in being able to design a high-explosive fragmentation shell that small. The FN Browning 13,2 really blends the line between HMG and autocannon.

  • @danhubert-hx4ss
    @danhubert-hx4ssАй бұрын

    Excellent vid. We had some very good designs in the twenties-early thirties but most were ignored by our politicians. Buying Bristol Bulldogs instead of ordering larger numbers of Jaktfalken is a particularly sad story.

  • @christopherboyle1479
    @christopherboyle1479Ай бұрын

    In Australia, similar strategic circumstances led to the hurried design and construction of the CAC Boomerang, which also used the P & W R-1830 and is very similar in appearance, layout, and general performance to the J22. The Boomerang was started a year or more earlier, and used the wing of the NA-16, which was already being built under licence in Australia. As there are flying examples of both aircraft, would it not be wonderful for an air show to bring them together somewhere, somehow? The pilots of each type praised its flying characteristics, particularly turning performance. That was the thinking of the biplane fighter era: I fear that just as the Boomerang proved inadequate against the A6M and the Ki-43, the J22 would have had no answer to the superior speed, hitting power and performance at altitude of the Bf 109 and the FW190.

  • @aviationdeepdive

    @aviationdeepdive

    Ай бұрын

    Yes, the CAC Boomerang is interesting, particularly in that it actually adopted more of the asian doctrine of turnfighting, whereas the J22 had more of the European doctrine of speed. As such, the CAC Boomerang and J22 are actually quite distinct in their performance. The J22 is a lot faster, about 50 km/h at sea level and over 100 km/h faster above 4,000 metres. However, the Boomerang was a much better turner, being just mildly less manoeuvrable than an A6M2. Both interesting aircraft. As I recall the Boomerang also once engaged a Japanese formation of bombers but was unable to secure a definite aerial victory.

  • @feppfepp
    @feppfeppАй бұрын

    Minor error: Arboga is to the West of Stockholm. Not east. At the end of the lakes leading West from Stockholm

  • @feppfepp

    @feppfepp

    Ай бұрын

    And the fighter wing North of Stockholm is f 16. Not f 19. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uppland_Wing

  • @axeldahlmark1398
    @axeldahlmark1398Ай бұрын

    Great video! One thought about what you say at 5:13, my guess is that they went by train from Haparanda to Malmen airbase in Linköping, and not Malmen in Narvik, Norway. ;P

  • @AdurianJ
    @AdurianJАй бұрын

    Today the Hangar at Bromma airport where this Aircraft was assembled is part of a shopping center called "Bromma Blocks"

  • @Umami_Sailing
    @Umami_Sailing24 күн бұрын

    It would have been very interesting to see what performance the J22 would have had with the license-built DB605 engine that was installed in the SAAB J21 a little later. With another 400 hp, it would probably have had really good performance.

  • @Spitfiresammons
    @SpitfiresammonsАй бұрын

    Great video please do the history of Mitsubishi J2M Raiden (Jack).

  • @aviationdeepdive

    @aviationdeepdive

    Ай бұрын

    I'll put that on the list!

  • @robert-trading-as-Bob69
    @robert-trading-as-Bob69Ай бұрын

    Good video, thanks for that. It's nice to know what the neutral countries were doing during WWII.

  • @martentrudeau6948
    @martentrudeau6948Ай бұрын

    Nice looking, a good fighter, and interesting construction, the Swedes made it do was supposed to do. The British used a lot of wood to build the Mosquito and the Russians built fighters out of wood too.

  • @shawns0762
    @shawns0762Ай бұрын

    Structurally it was great, along with the Spitfire, ME-109 and Wildcat. The smartest place to put the landing gear hinge points is in the fuselage.

  • @darkiee69

    @darkiee69

    29 күн бұрын

    For the bf 109 it was a practical matter. The wings were removable and the narrow track ment that it could be rolled on to railway carriages for transport, with the wings next to it.

  • @ricardojoseleivamachado3056
    @ricardojoseleivamachado305614 сағат бұрын

    Um "cruzamento" do FW-190 em Aço e Compensado, com o Trem de Pouso do ME-109.

  • @drmoss_ca
    @drmoss_ca20 күн бұрын

    Your "Fiat G.50" at 11:16 is a Gloster Gladiator.

  • @mikepette4422
    @mikepette4422Ай бұрын

    567 seems like an oddly specific number of aircraft to order

  • @1joshjosh1
    @1joshjosh1Ай бұрын

    Hey....this was pretty good.

  • @bobhamilton298
    @bobhamilton298Ай бұрын

    You mentioned that the landing gear was similar to the P40 that tucks into the fuselage. The P40 retracts its wheels backwards into the wing, not fuselage. This plane is more like the F4F Wildcat (and F3F) that tucks its wheels into the fuselage.

  • @ThePilot4ever
    @ThePilot4everАй бұрын

    Cool channel

  • @alexandremarcelino7360
    @alexandremarcelino73607 күн бұрын

    Belo avião!🌟

  • @haraldhannelius
    @haraldhanneliusАй бұрын

    You have Greece in Your profile, but You sound more like Aussie or NZ. Really impressed by Your interest in the Nordic WW2.

  • @HootOwl513
    @HootOwl513Ай бұрын

    Wait. What? [11:19] A retractable Lysander for Finland? That's new to me.

  • @kamran102
    @kamran102Ай бұрын

    Impressed by your Swedish man! 😀

  • @aviationdeepdive

    @aviationdeepdive

    Ай бұрын

    Thanks - I'm a little surprised, normally everyone just says how bad my pronunciations are 😆

  • @stephenmeier4658
    @stephenmeier4658Ай бұрын

    A (fraught and difficult) suggestion for future content...aircraft development and manufacturing in occupied & Vichy France...

  • @oleriis-vestergaard6844
    @oleriis-vestergaard6844Ай бұрын

    All through the war the wounded airplanes landed in sweden and the air crews was internet officially- in the real world the air crews came Back to england little by little but the planes stayed back , and it was quit a collection including the B-17 - B- 24 - Lancasters and Mustang and Thunderbolts .

  • @magnushallberg936
    @magnushallberg9365 күн бұрын

    Good video. However, correction F16 Uppsala not F19.

  • @HernanMendez-yg1uy
    @HernanMendez-yg1uyАй бұрын

    Seria interesante que comportamiento hubieran tenido en caso de guerra esos aviones

  • @johnreed9435
    @johnreed943525 күн бұрын

    You could slot this between the Wildcat and Hellcat and it would look like it belonged 😊

  • @Swapzter
    @SwapzterАй бұрын

    All the sources in the description points to J21.

  • @Supmah2007
    @Supmah200725 күн бұрын

    as a swede, your pronounciation of "första divisionen" is imaculate

  • @aviationdeepdive

    @aviationdeepdive

    24 күн бұрын

    Thankyou!

  • @snisksnask
    @snisksnaskАй бұрын

    Please get the maps correct. Malmen in sweden is NOT malmen in Narvik, Norway... And the picture with tyhe norwegian flag is from when the soviets freed norwegians i kirkenes, also norway, in 1944

  • @JH-lo9ut

    @JH-lo9ut

    Ай бұрын

    Kom igen...

  • @madzen112
    @madzen112Ай бұрын

    Would anything built under license, like DB601 engines fx, be a breach of neutrality?

  • @JH-lo9ut

    @JH-lo9ut

    Ай бұрын

    Not if Sweden was building for their own use. Sweden imported war materiels and weapons from both sides during the war, whatever they could get hold of... Famously, Sweden also exported raw materials and machine parts like ball bearings to both sides. I'm not 100% sure about where the lines were drawn when it came to exports. Both sides would have sanctioned each other, and put each other under mutual blockade. Breaking a trade embargo is one thing, breaking a naval blockade is another...

  • @MrSpringheel
    @MrSpringheelАй бұрын

    Hats off to Sweden, they are fantastic!!

  • @53jed
    @53jedАй бұрын

    How much was _some_ duress?

  • @OLLE3770
    @OLLE3770Ай бұрын

    15:30'ish; Arboga is west of Stockholm. But who cares... Good video. Plus for really good Swedish pronunciation. I guess you really struggled with that without having to really do so.

  • @BrianSanders-tn7pi
    @BrianSanders-tn7pi23 күн бұрын

    Hi . Its bloody annoying when organisations like KZread try to sweep historical fact under the carpet because they fear that someone might be offended.KZread, it really happened, get over it.

  • @okaro6595
    @okaro6595Ай бұрын

    Finland never had an alliance with Germany and we were it hostile to Sweden. In fact Swedish volunteers fought in the Finnish army.

  • @aviationdeepdive

    @aviationdeepdive

    Ай бұрын

    The Paris Peace Treaty judged that despite Finland and Germany's attempts to describe themselves as 'co-belligerents', they were - in fact - allies, in virtually every sense of the word, insofar as it has any meaning.

  • @johanmetreus1268

    @johanmetreus1268

    Ай бұрын

    @@aviationdeepdive The Paris Peace treaty also cited Germany as the sole invader of Poland in 1939 and failed to address things like Operation Wilfred. In reality, the Continuation war saw Finland conducting a war with the limited aim to restore the land lost in the Winter War, which is why the advance stopped well north of Leningrad. This caused much dismay in Berlin, who wanted Finland to fully commit to the defeat of the Soviets.

  • @Catastrophation
    @CatastrophationАй бұрын

    swedish zero is not something i expected to hear today

  • @Ka9radio_Mobile9
    @Ka9radio_Mobile9Ай бұрын

    🥰

  • @simonandersson824
    @simonandersson82423 күн бұрын

    If only they had a more powerfull engine to work with like R-2800 or late Merlin.

  • @neilhaas
    @neilhaasАй бұрын

    Besides the Swedish Spitfires 🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪

  • @RemusKingOfRome
    @RemusKingOfRomeАй бұрын

    Looks like the Australian Boomerang.

  • @davidvaughn7752
    @davidvaughn775222 күн бұрын

    I'm so glad that at least three of these rare specimens survive and will Be Loved by their owners or the Heritage caretakers of their people for whom they were created to protect.

  • @karoltakisobie6638
    @karoltakisobie6638Ай бұрын

    Swedish skies weren't quite incursion free. Both RAF and USAAF bombers often crashed or landed in Sweden, lots of Luftwaffe planes escaped to Sweden in 45 and Soviet planes repeatedly flew over Swedish coastline. Soviets bombed Stockholm at least once.

  • @kamran102
    @kamran102Ай бұрын

    You mixed up the pictures of the B17 vs B18 ;-) Interesting video otherwise!

  • @lachbullen8014
    @lachbullen8014Ай бұрын

    You have to give credit where credit is due with access to limited resources and surrounded with a likelihood of an invasion the sweets have shown at their capability to produce an aircraft where's the capability of matching The Iconic p51 Mustang..

  • @300guy
    @300guyАй бұрын

    More similar to a Swedish P-36

  • @cowtown9437
    @cowtown9437Ай бұрын

    "But by then, Europe and America were at peace, Finland had signed an armistice with the Soviet Union and Sweden was no longer surrounded by enemies, but by allies." 22:55 Where do you get this, or was it created with the sympathy of communism in mind? with the irony of time and todays knowledge

  • @aviationdeepdive

    @aviationdeepdive

    Ай бұрын

    It definitely was not created with the sympathy of communism in mind. It's just getting at the fact that at the end of the war in 1945 the 'Allies' (i.e. the name of the faction) had taken over Europe. I'm not saying that the Soviet Union was necessarily, or should have been, an ally.

  • @cowtown9437

    @cowtown9437

    29 күн бұрын

    @@aviationdeepdive I appreciate that, ADD.

  • @JohnKoenig-db8lk
    @JohnKoenig-db8lkАй бұрын

    Oh, please. At best, it was a Swedish P-36.

  • @mikepette4422
    @mikepette4422Ай бұрын

    13.2 mm are machine guns not Cannons...no matter what the Swedes might say about it.

  • @darkiee69

    @darkiee69

    29 күн бұрын

    If they can fire explosive ammo it's a cannon.

  • @Otokichi786
    @Otokichi786Ай бұрын

    "When war broke out in September 1940..."!? And what was going on in Poland the year before? Oh well, World War II didn't start for the United States until late 1941...

  • @nattygsbord

    @nattygsbord

    Ай бұрын

    The great patriotic war started in june 1941 with the invasion of russia. I do not wanna be reminded of Soviets unjustified wars of aggression against Poland, Finland, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania so I want to pretend that world war 2 did not start in september 1939.

  • @JH-lo9ut

    @JH-lo9ut

    Ай бұрын

    Germany and SU's invasion of Poland was in september 1939. Britain and France declared war on Germany the next day. However, not much fighting took place between axis and allies (except between Germany and Poland) until may 1940. During this time, Sweden's main concern was the Soviet invasion of Finland. (The intermittent period is sometimes called "the phoney war"). So, it is not right to say that the war started in 1940, but it is also not entirely wrong, from a western european perspective. What happened in 1940 was the invasion of France, the low countries, Denmark, and Norway, and Britain's retreat from mainland Europe.

  • @Bonamici
    @BonamiciАй бұрын

    💙💛

  • @fivizzano
    @fivizzanoАй бұрын

    KZread WILL NEVER GET EVER AGAIN MY KZread PREMIUM SUBSCRIPTION UNTIL IT REMOVES ALL BLACKLISTING TO DOCUMENTARIES…

  • @Hlongbridge
    @HlongbridgeАй бұрын

    You are using a lot of material from my former website about the J22. Why are you not giving me the credits for all the work that I put together? Hakan Langebro

  • @aviationdeepdive

    @aviationdeepdive

    Ай бұрын

    Sources are in the description. If your website isn't there, it wasn't used.

  • @apis_aculei
    @apis_aculeiАй бұрын

    Looks never as a FW190, in no aspect. Looks like a mix of a Curtiss P36 and a Grumman F6F Hellcat. As far as flight performance is concerned, the performance limitation above 15,000 ft altitude was already outdated at that time. Dogfights in Western Europe took place at 20,000 to 25,000 ft.

  • @scepticalwalker3984

    @scepticalwalker3984

    Ай бұрын

    The dogfights at high altitude in Western Europe were typically due to US bombers flying at high altitude to avoid light AAA. Only heavy AAA could reach them at 7000-9000m. Thus the escorts flew at the same high altitude. However, over the Mediterranean, the eastern front and in Asia dogfights took place at lower altitudes because German, Italian, Japanese and Russian bombers did not fly as high as the B-17, B-24 and Lancasters. The P-40, the P-39 Aircobra and other fighters that didn’t work well in Western Europe did very well in those theaters of war at altitudes under 6000m. The J-22 would have worked against the Ju-87, He-111 and their escorts over the Baltic, like the Soviet P-39’s on the eastern front and British P-40’s over the Mediterranean. And yes the J-22 looks very much like a Fw-190. There were several witness accounts from allied bomber crews, making emergency landings in Sweden, that they were scared by the J-22 initially believing that they were attacked by Fw-190’s.

  • @paulbriggs3072
    @paulbriggs3072Ай бұрын

    Great plane but neutrality in the face of Nazism while letting them pass through your country after invading your neighbor and brethren the Norwegians is nothing to be proud of. I admire the Norwegians.

  • @karoliwanaszko1310
    @karoliwanaszko1310Ай бұрын

    A17 to zarżnięty projekt polskiego Karasia. Masakra

Келесі