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History of Technology 9.7: The Technology of War–Airplanes 39 Views


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Description:

The improvement of aircraft during World War II permanently changed the nature of modern warfare. We do kind of wish we still painted cool sharks on all our planes, though.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:03

Tanks and machine guns weren't the only machines to evolve [tank and machine gun pictured]

00:07

during World War II. Airplanes also took a huge leap forward. Hmm, do planes leap? We'll [plane leaps in]

00:13

have our Shmoop researchers look into that. Technically, the Wright brothers

00:16

took the first flight in 1903, but planes had a long way to go. In World War I, [Wright Brothers' plane falls]

00:22

planes for mostly used for espionage and were barely considered weapons. They [spy plane flying]

00:26

were still made of wood, so we can see not being particularly keen on flying

00:30

them into battle. Flying in a burning plane is kind of a drag. Between the wars, [wooden plane catches fire]

00:35

most of the world's powerful nations had been improving their plane designs. By the [people design plane]

00:38

time war broke out, wooden-winged biplanes had disappeared in favor of steel-winged [wooden plane replaced]

00:44

monoplanes. Bombs were more powerful, and plane-mounted machine guns were more

00:49

deadly. Plus, there were a whole lot more fighter planes in the air. Even more than [planes fight]

00:52

the technology, people had been developing the strategy surrounding air

00:56

warfare. They called it strategic bombing. This was the idea that you could crush a [plane strategy developed]

01:01

country's fighting will by bombing their home cities and countryside. Yeah, that [bombing diagram]

01:06

means purposely killing civilians. It was a new idea in warfare, and it made the [war photos]

01:11

whole thing bigger, uglier, and more inescapable. You know the term "total war,"

01:15

meaning that the war infiltrated every aspect of civilian life? Well, planes and [planes eat breakfast with person]

01:20

their giant bombs made World War II just that. Here's a little example. When

01:24

the Allied powers bombed the German city of Dresden toward the end of the war, [Dresden bombing pictured]

01:27

they dropped 3,300 tons of bombs filled with napalm.

01:30

The bombs started a fire so large it became a firestorm, which sucked oxygen

01:35

from the surrounding city and got up to about 1800 degrees. Streets melted. It

01:40

killed 25,000 Germans. War was no longer just for soldiers. In the effort to

01:45

prevent farmers from being able to fly over cities, anti-aircraft war got more [plane destroyed]

01:49

serious, especially in Britain. The fighter pilots who shot down German

01:53

bombers coming from London became cultural heroes. Well, the front lines [war photos]

01:56

were effectively right above them all. Exciting? Yes. But Buckingham Palace

02:01

confirmed that it also royally stunk. By the end of the war, the most important [war planes over England... queen is not amused]

02:06

development in planes had occurred: the jet engine. Well, the first operational [jet engine developed]

02:09

fighter jets were built by the Germans, and if they'd had the money, fuel, or

02:13

industrial capability to make lots of them, well then World War II might not

02:17

have gone so well for us. Of course, Americans jumped on the jet engine band

02:20

wagon pretty fast, and it was an American jet that first officially broke the [American jet pictured]

02:25

sound barrier in 1947. In a decade or so, propeller planes were totally out. It's

02:30

okay, propeller planes. Even the mullet will come back in style someday. [propeller plane grows obsolete]

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