P-80-Shooting-Star
Documentaries
•
15m
The Lockheed P-80 Shooting Star marked a turning point in American aviation—the U.S. Army Air Forces’ first operational jet fighter, designed and flown within a staggering 143 days in 1943. But how did it truly compare to its contemporaries, like Germany’s Me 262 and Britain’s Gloster Meteor? And what legacy did it leave behind?
In this episode, we explore the full story of the P-80, later redesigned the F-80, from its wartime development and missed combat debut in WWII, through its postwar service in Europe and Korea. We break down its design advantages and limitations, including its reliable J33 engine, straight-wing handling characteristics, and the tactical realities that shaped its role in the Korean War.
Up Next in Documentaries
-
December 7th (1943)
December 7th (made in 1943) is a striking manifestation of its time, a feature-length docudrama about the bombing of Pearl Harbor that is often at cross purposes with itself in the message it means to convey.
Gregg Toland, the brilliant cinematographer fresh off of Citizen Kane, The Little Foxes ... -
Speeding Up Your Business - 1922
The location of the story is the Postal Service, at the central sorting station at the foot of Bay Street in Toronto. Conveyors are featured assisting the sorting and movement of mail, with the employees working to the pace of the conveyors. The implication is that this technology might have broa...
-
Harrier - The Jump Jet
From Cold War hover rigs to the dust-stripped battlefields of Afghanistan, the Harrier Jump Jet redefined the boundaries of combat aviation. Developed by British engineers with the revolutionary Pegasus engine, the Harrier became the world’s first operational fixed-wing V/STOL aircraft—capable of...