BRIGHT SIDE I go on planes probably about twice a year to Czech Republic and I’m going to Adelaide in south Australia (I live in Australia) but if you catch a flight from Brisbane to Los Angeles, you’ll definitely go across the Pacific Ocean
Last October. Went from Hartford CT, on the east Coast USA to London England, via Dublin Ireland, and back. The planes and a tracking feature that would show us where we were and I did notice we went pretty close to Iceland along the way. I figured the path had to do with the curve of the earth.
*On the go?* Here is a brief description: - Planes don’t fly over the Pacific Ocean because planes take the polar route because it is shorter and it is much speedier! Compared to travelling across the Pacific Ocean! - Don't forget the earth isn't flat which means if you travel in a straight line in line with the equator it is much longer! - Moreover, you don't want an emergency landing in the middle of nowhere, so it much safer to travel near land but also avoiding airports on the way! Hope this helped you, and enjoy your day! Love you all! If I get it wrong I am sorry I just summarised what I heard from the video! ❤️
doggy adores Ridiculous. You only take the polar route when your desired destination is over the poles, and next to none are. Anchorage is stop over and fly over area for most of Asia. Get yourself Flightradar24 app and take a look. The video was correct
Correction: "how to turn a 30 second lie into a 9 1/2 minute video", as planes do fly over the Pacific. Which took me only needing to look at one flight tracking webpage to prove.
You mean..."...30 seconds of MISINFORMATION into a 9 1/2 minute ridiculous rant..." But hey, we clicked on it, so he got his penny...lazy people will do ANYTHING to avoid working for a living...
@@AlecPorter-nj9xl Recall an interview with Graham Chapman recalling a tour with Monty Python. As they flew west over the Great Lakes, Terry Gilliam, as he looked down, remarked, Look at that! A whole bunch of water! So imagine...
I flew LAX to Tokyo non-stop. 11 1/2 hours in a luxurious 747 wide body in 1986. I remember them bringing hot towels out for everyone to freshen up during the flight.
well you specialize keeping people in the air, while this guy specializes in videos if there was a subscription for pilots than youd probably be well known =D
@@champ8605 who said anything about the earth being flat. Why can't you answer my questions with explanations or if you are really clever explain with practical demonstrations. I am only questioning the cult that we were all born into that we are hairless monkeys living on a spinning ball with water stuck to it flying through the universe at 450,000mph. I prefer to question everything and assume nothing. You obviously accept everything that you are told to be true. Proof proof proof not theories.
@@bobryan535 they don't tilt the nose down because the earth is very massive and the jets of an aircraft are not strong enough to overcome the earth's gravity. Also, the earth is a ball, and from mathematics we know that a circle is just an infinite amount of perpendicular lines drawn to the centre of the circle. The aircraft follows these lines and therefore is always "dipping" automatically.
I live in Hawaii and often travel to Guam, Japan, and the US mainland and I can say without a doubt, planes DO fly over the pacific ocean without any problems.
Mary Anne Honolulu- Sydney Honolulu- Melbourne Honolulu- Brisbane Honolulu- Wellington Honolulu- Auckland Honolulu- Tokyo Honolulu- Seoul Honolulu- Manila Honolulu- Taipei Honolulu- Bangkok Honolulu- Suva Honolulu- Kuala Lumpur Honolulu- Los Angeles Honolulu- Seattle Honolulu- San Diego Honolulu- San Francisco Honolulu- Anchorage Honolulu- Beijing Honolulu- Shanghai Honolulu- Hong Kong Honolulu- Singapore
My wife is from the Philippines and we go back there every four years or so. We normally take the faster Alaska route, which takes us to Manila, usually stopping in either Taipei or Hong Kong. One year we took the "scenic" route, across the Pacific with a stop in Hawaii. It was longer, but a more interesting trip. Due to technical problems with the aircraft, we got to stay in a hotel in Honolulu for a day. Yes, they do fly over the Pacific, but it's not the preferred route.
Not unless they are headed to the Hawaiian, Polynesian, etc.Islands. For example, a flight from Seattle to Tokyo goes over Aleutian Straights, unless there is a weather or traffic issue. My husband is an International Commercial Captain for 30+ years. Prior to this he flew fighters in the USAF. He knows his stuff. The major point the narrator is attempting to convey is that THE EARTH IS ELLIPTICAL, wider around the middle; Thanks
@@1234567mrbob depends on your origin and destination, there are something like 100 flights per day just to/from Australia alone and the States, and they go near Tahiti and Hawaii, that would be the preferred route for flying to the Southern Hemisphere. Same for New Zealand, standard route.
Famous quote “I didn’t have time to write you a short letter so I wrote you a long one instead.” For those who don’t understand the implication, it’s that it takes time and effort to write in a concise and efficient matter. Why write in 10 words what you can write in 5?
I flew from Melbourne (Australia) to LAX last month and back to Sydney. I crossed the Pacific, the date line, and the equator twice in a 10 day period. Just saying
@@Frenchy78ify Yes, I'm a former GED teacher. Of course you know which body of water you're flying over, but it takes a lot of skill to determine that. You look out the window.
There are MANY airlines that fly directly over the pacific ocean. I, myself am a flight attendant and I have flown directly over the ocean. Airlines such as Fiji Airways, Qantas, Air Canada, Hawaiian Airlines, Air New Zealand all have similar routes to connect pacific cities to other well known long haul cities. The flight crew can manage to fly without being around an airport for a good amount of time but it is a safety measure to be nearby an airport by at least a 100KM radius.
@@GermanAviation Isn't the truthful answer to this question that it's simply a shorter route to head toward the top of the globe. With the world essentially being sphere, its shorter to head north than belting a straight shot across the pacific??
I’ve actually flown this route many times, from Osaka to Honolulu. Literally crossing the pacific. We apply a special requirement called ETOPS where we can fly along routes with the nearest airport can be 3 hours away… in our case it was midway island as en route diversion airport should there be an emergency
ETOPS is a certification for models of aircraft which came about when airplane manufacturers went from four to three to two engines on their aircraft. It involves certifying engine reliability and that the plane can fly for a certain numbers of minutes on one engine. Other requirements involve crew training and sometimes additional backup hydraulic and electrical systems.
To put it into layman’s terms, its the same like before you go for a long road trip with your car. Surely before heading out you service or at least check the oil, tyres and everything. And plan where are you going to stop and refuel or if repairs are needed. That’s basically the idea of ETOPS
@@TheFalconJetDriver well, there were several cases when passenger aircrafts experienced shutdown of ALL engines and had to glide to land. One was the cross Canada flight where the poorly educated people didn't put enough fuel into the plane. Another also Canadian plane on a transatlantic flight when they lost fuel due to a leak and had to glide down to Azores for emergency landing. Once a 747 all 4 engines stopped working due to the plane flying into the volcanic ash cloud. Also the flight from LGA that landed on the Hudson river in NY/NJ border, but that flight only lasted a few minutes, since they didn't climbed very high before both engines were damaged by birds.
I work for an airline & I send planes over the Pacific often. We might take the “Alaskan” or “Russian” route or we might not. It depends on the winds and turbulence mostly. We also need overflight permits from Russia that can take about a week to get. In the winter, a lot of the airports in AK aren’t ideal conditions, so we’ll go over the Pacific to use HI, Midway, Guam, etc. in case of emergency. You could read about ETOPS rules for airplanes over the Pacific & Atlantic if you’re interested.
@@dreamthedream8929I’m not familiar with the route, but you can pretty much fly anywhere with 180 ETOPS. I think there is a NAT track that goes SW from Europe that you could use. I believe that the FAA prohibits flying over Venezuela though. You could find suitable ETOPS alternates whether you went North or South of Venezuela. There are some in West Africa if going South.
@Prevailing Right - You need to take Amtrak's Pineapple Express from San Francisco to Honolulu. Just twenty hours. I don't recommend the trip. Unfortunately, Amtrak has already had a few fatalities due to outside water pressure issues causing toilet flushing safety issues.
Yes. 10 second video can answer. Almost everyone knows the arctic routes are shorter. The title is deceptive. Planes fly over the Pacific to Hawaii and Australia..
@@RYSyoutube It is flat, my uncle told his family he was going to do groceries and he never returned to his wife and son. Legend has that he fell off the earth.
In 1976 on July 4th, yes the United States Bi Centennial. I boarded a Boeing 747 with Northwest Orient and flew from San Franciso International Airport to Honolulu Hawaii, after a one hour deboarding and restocking layover, We reboarded flew over Mid Way Island (Look it up it is in the middle of the Pacific) and Landed in Tokyo the next day July 5th! The whole Tokyo International Airport was Decorated from one side to the other with Bi Centennial decorations. I had left Hawaii on the 4th and landed in Tokyo on the 5th, my Bi Centennial was over. I was a Private First Class US Army and had gotten orders to serve with the 2d United States Infantry Division and I was assigned to Camp Hovey Korea just outside Tongducheon Korea. Was a wonderful time, before cell phones and big screen TVs. I had to write home and wait for letters. I made $282 a month and was happy to be a soldier.
Having flown several times between Australia and Los Angeles and New Zealand and Los Angeles there's no choice, but over the Pacific. Closest airport passed over was Nuku'Alofa, Tonga and that was still a long way, At 38,000 ft it's usually smooth - maybe a few bumps at the inter-tropical convergence zone.
I've flown from LAX to Sydney. That's why I clicked on the video. I'm like, "They fly over the Pacific all the time". Long flight, but Australia is great.
Actually he’s not wrong. Planes don’t fly at a straight line when looking at it from a 2-d map. It’s because of the curvature of the earth. Yes planes fly over the ocean, but not straight over them. But he is wrong about the planes don’t fly straight over the pacific. It really depends on the route
@F-zero91maru Or... like in this case, says things which are actually 0% true... or 100% wrong. I mean... I think most people realize that most of the people who go to Hawaii do so on planes... so I'm wondering... do people actually NOT realize that Hawaii IS in the Pacific Ocean? What about Japan? Do people not realize that Japan is the Pacific? Singapore? New Zealand? Hong Kong? Taiwan? The Philippines? Never heard of flying from US to China or vice versa? Oh... and I left out Australia because it's possible to fly to Australia without crossing the Pacific... by going over the Indian Ocean instead.
At this moment, there are dozens, maybe hundreds, of airline flights over the Pacific Ocean. The assertion that airlines avoid the Pacific is simply not true anymore.
They also didn’t avoid it in the first place, it was because etops ratings didn’t exist that they weren’t allowed to in most cases and these days the reason planes don’t fly over the ocean most of the time has to do with flight time which he could’ve just explained by showing a map of the earth centered at the North Pole
@@mohammedalghannam6879 when is the last time you walked upside-down? Or drove upside down? Also do just 5 minutes of research on this. Check the flight time from one side of the world to the other. It's simple and easy.
To summarize: Because of the Earth’s rotation and curvature, air currents tend to flow west to east. You want the wind at your back, not at your front. It’s faster and cheaper that way. I could explain how wind works and drag this out to an eight minute forty-six second read, but nobody actually wants to hear that.
AndyRock1 That’s because of the Coriolis effect. As things move across the globe, they never move in a straight line due to the round shape of the Earth and it’s rotation. However, this is only apparent in things that cover large distances, like air, water, and planes. It’s impossible to fly a truly straight line across the globe, because you’d have to constantly be slightly turning to do that, and you wouldn’t end up at the intended destination. Flying straight to a destination (from a map view) will always look like making a large curve (from a globe view), as long as the starting and end points are far enough away. This, as Ruairi O'Donoghue mentions in another comment below, is called a great circle route. Another name for it is a geodesic. I didn’t address that, because that’s not relevant to the title. The title of the video asks why planes don’t fly over the Pacific Ocean, which only makes sense from a Western Hemisphere point of view. To a person in the Eastern Hemisphere, traveling to the Western Hemisphere is likely to be done via flying over the Pacific Ocean. Edited something because I remembered how the Coriolis effect worked. Edited it again because I remembered how the Coriolis effect worked, but better that time.
@@larry4111 Hey lets face it -- this guy will do literally anything for another video. The fact is, 90% of earths land mass, and 90% of earths people, are in the N Hemi. Most of the pacific is in the S Hemi. Does that help? They fly over the Pacific when there is a reason to fly over it. Most people would realize the answer to this question by simply examining a globe map of earth.
@ Robert Stonestreet Thank you so much for being a critical thinker! The military has been using this map since its inception to get flights and men to the correct location on our level plane we all live on. Planes never adjusted for curvature while being flown or on autopilot. Some brave civilian pilots have been open about it. This video is pure propaganda aimed at the indoctrinated masses because millions more are learning the real truth. You would have been called a lunatic if you said the earth was shaped like a ball right up until the early 19 hundreds.
Reminds of many talking heads and guests on cable news. Instead of getting to quick points, it’s a nonstop, endless ramble run on sentence including many unnecessary lists and stories. It’s refreshing to actually hear some get to the point in concise fashion.
As a New Zealander, the title of the video had me confused. I've been to the USA three times and all of them involved flying directly over the pacific.
Just checked: Almost all, but a few are going/coming from Hawaii. The rest are following the curve that he explained. Just look at the real-time global flights.
I'm gonna shorten this for all you guys: MOST flights don't go across the pacific because the Earth's curvature makes for a shorter trip by going over the Bering Sea. That being said, going to a South Pacific destination from the US will require a trans-Pacific flight.
@@robertallen6710I was corrected many times by others, and i always said thank you,you are helping me better my English,which by the way is my third language.I know some people don't like it. :)
Full List: United Airlines, Hawaiian Airlines, American Airlines, Japan Airlines, Air China, Eva Air, Alaska Airlines, All Nippon Airways, China Airlines, Air Canada, Air Canada Rouge, Air New Zealand, Qantas, Aircalin, Fiji Airways, Air Tahiti Nui, French Bee, Cathay Pacific, Asiana Airlines, Aeroméxico, Hainan Airlines, Korean Air, Singapore Airlines, Philippine Airlines, China Eastern Airlines, China Southern Airlines, Southwest Airlines, AirAsia X, Malaysian Airlines, Air Seoul, Air Busan, Air Macau, Air Niugini, Cebu Pacific, Delta Air Lines, Druk Air, Eastar Jet, Garuda Indonesia, HK Express, Hong Kong Airlines, Jeju Air, Jet Asia Airways, Jetstar Airways, Jetstar Japan, Jin Air, Juneyao Airlines, ZIPAIR Tokyo (beginning in 2020), Mandarin Airlines, NokScoot, Peach Aviation, Royal Brunei Airlines, Shenzhen Airlines, Sichuan Airways, Spring Airlines, SriLankan Airlines, Thai AirAsia X, Thai Airways, Thai Lion Air, Tigerair Taiwan, T'way Airlines, VietJet Air, Vietnam Airlines, XiamenAir Yeah, I think planes do fly over the Pacific Ocean.
I can verify that planes do fly over the Pacific. Go to Guam, and you will likely leave the states, stop in Hawaii, then go on to Guam....right over the Pacific Ocean.
Though like the video says the routes do fly over airports just in case of emergency You definitely find the USA to AUS routes zigzag a little bit just to pass over pacific islands
Roll tide Roll then what you're saying is this video is made by a f-wit that creates titles as click bait and tries to manipulate people to earn money through a monitorised channel. Otherwise why title the video as he did. End of story.
You are so right. The airlines never let you forget it. Over the years we have lost meals due to business decisions, are now being charged for luggage, along with a slew of many regulations and fees that we never had before. The seats have gotten closer and closer together as a result of "business" decisions on the part of the airlines. And the staff are cockier than ever especially the agents behind the ticket counters.
They are trying to explain some parts so other people can understand. They also go to a different subject and compare it to the main subject. If you pay attention and listen closely, they are talking about the main subject.
dinoripper123 No it is not. If you’re video is over 10 minutes long you can choose to put multiple ads on it and get more money. First of all that doesn’t mean longer videos automatically earn more money, a 5 minute video with one ad will generate the same amount of money as a 30 minute video with one ad. Second this video is only 9:23 seconds long so it can only have one ad on it.
Easy to forget as I smash my knees into the seat ahead while simultaneously bruising both sides of my pelvis with the armrests on my just-too-narrow seat and wonder why they don't space these chairs out just a bit more.
@@taoist32 A school is not a business, its funded by force of the government from homeowners. There is no business out there that has the right to force you to buy their product. Its a government service.
Bottled water second biggest scam on the people of earth. Global warming was the first. Original data from 1934 we were the hottest ever recorded and no cars. Ok some cars. We have been basically cooling ever since. More likely ice age
Peter ok, calm down. I am commenting on the content within the video, not the title. The narrative in the video is talking about a flight between the US and Japan going over Alaska and how it relates the the curve of the earth. The narrator even made a point to say that flights from northern to Southern Hemisphere will go over the Pacific Ocean. So if you want to deal in facts then stop fixating in the misleading title and actually listen to the videos content.
@Peter well the dude did mention that flights from the States to Australia flies over Pacific. Criticising the video is one thing but holding onto the title and scream about it like that makes you very much childish.
In 1960 I had the privilege of flying nearly straight across the Pacific. It was a military C-121 (Super Connie ). We made stops at Hawaii, Midway, Wake, and Guam on the way to Tokyo. Incredible aircraft!!
Was it a military chartered Flying Tiger airlines by chance? If so, I did the same trip in 61 as a military brat going to Korea. We made stops in Hawaii and Wake, in fact, we were broke down on Wake for a couple until spare parts could be flown in. I remember the Mae West vests (we had in-flight engine problems) and meals out of carboard boxes. Noisy, vibrating, fire belching smoking engines. Quite the trip. I was 6 years old.
Not a real explanation. Great circle are used ANYWHERE on flys. The answer is that most of the Pacific is in the SOUTH, but only 10% of earth land area and population is in the south. So 90% of flying is on the North
When I was in the Army I was stationed in Hawaii. When we deployed to Iraq in June, we flew from Hawaii to Alaska, over the very North of Canada, into Germany to Kuwait then Iraq. When we flew over Northern Canada, we saw icebergs (in June). Pretty cool.
Gamble Family 45107 Proof and science please, then explain why heliocentric science predicts astronomical events to the day and often minute, and does so decades into the future. And has for many decades, even centuries in some cases. You know like eclipses, comet returns etc. A flat earth is a fairy tale with no proven science whatsoever. If you base flat earth on bible, books and verses please.
Eddie Lap Lap Oh the antarctic thing again. Commercial planes no because it is a frozen continent but many have been there to see the penguins. Expeditions available. You are not a morgile, great wall of ice are you. If so show pics of the great wall in all hemispheres or the armada stopping you 😂
She was just humoring you boy ...tip avoid milfs once theyve had a babys head through them u wont even touch the sides …they need black or multiple or the fists
@@Sedgie-Tube I flew from Fiji to LAX, and there were Aussies on the plane who were flying from Australia to L.A. Anyway, we spend 14 hours (I think) over the Pacific Ocean.
@@todeotodeo140 The entire route is over land? Wow. My guess is that you were over PARTS of the Pacific over half the time or more. Did you fly directly east over the bulk of the Pacific? No, you did not. I get that.
Yup. He specifically mentions that in the video. Poorly named video. He contradicts himself when he says something to the effect that "IF you're flying to Australia, you have to fly over the pacific"
When was the last time you were on a plane? Where did you go?
A year ago I went to Jamaica on a plane
I went over the pacific ocean. You're a liar.
BRIGHT SIDE I go on planes probably about twice a year to Czech Republic and I’m going to Adelaide in south Australia (I live in Australia) but if you catch a flight from Brisbane to Los Angeles, you’ll definitely go across the Pacific Ocean
Tokyo
Last October. Went from Hartford CT, on the east Coast USA to London England, via Dublin Ireland, and back. The planes and a tracking feature that would show us where we were and I did notice we went pretty close to Iceland along the way. I figured the path had to do with the curve of the earth.
*On the go?*
Here is a brief description:
- Planes don’t fly over the Pacific Ocean because planes take the polar route because it is shorter and it is much speedier! Compared to travelling across the Pacific Ocean!
- Don't forget the earth isn't flat which means if you travel in a straight line in line with the equator it is much longer!
- Moreover, you don't want an emergency landing in the middle of nowhere, so it much safer to travel near land but also avoiding airports on the way!
Hope this helped you, and enjoy your day! Love you all! If I get it wrong I am sorry I just summarised what I heard from the video! ❤️
So the earth isn't a globe after all?
doggy adores
Ridiculous. You only take the polar route when your desired destination is over the poles, and next to none are. Anchorage is stop over and fly over area for most of Asia. Get yourself Flightradar24 app and take a look. The video was correct
@@etxsports5836 came here for this, all the evidence points it is not
Jesus Christ here come the flat earthers lol
This helped cuz I’m lazy as heck
Quick answer: can't land in emergencies, and the spherical shape of the earth makes it more efficient to go across alaska
Thanks
You mean the flat shape?
Young Bakugo bro leave
@@VGNAL i'm just bullshitting lol
It's more efficient because it's shorter.
This video could also be titled “How to turn 30 seconds of information into a 9 1/2 minute video.”
Correction: "how to turn a 30 second lie into a 9 1/2 minute video", as planes do fly over the Pacific. Which took me only needing to look at one flight tracking webpage to prove.
You mean..."...30 seconds of MISINFORMATION into a 9 1/2 minute ridiculous rant..." But hey, we clicked on it, so he got his penny...lazy people will do ANYTHING to avoid working for a living...
i came here for this comment
And make the viewers feel like a child
Jokes on you... this video is actually being live streamed as it’s never actually been completed.
I have flown many times from Vancouver bc to Sydney Australia. 14 hours of nothing but ocean , it’s amazing and scary
I flew from Sydney to LA it's crazy how big the ocean is
@@AlecPorter-nj9xl
Recall an interview with Graham Chapman recalling a tour with Monty Python. As they flew west over the Great Lakes, Terry Gilliam, as he looked down, remarked,
Look at that! A whole bunch of water!
So imagine...
Definitely want to fall asleep during that trip!
@@zlcoolboy I used to LOVE when there was no wifi. You could kick back and watch movies. No one could reach you
I flew LAX to Tokyo non-stop. 11 1/2 hours in a luxurious 747 wide body in 1986. I remember them bringing hot towels out for everyone to freshen up during the flight.
I’m an airline pilot and the Pacific Ocean is my highway. How did this guy get 30 million subscribers?
well you specialize keeping people in the air, while this guy specializes in videos if there was a subscription for pilots than youd probably be well known =D
As an airline pilot how often do you tip the nose to follow the curvature plus how does the plane remain level going round a ball just curious
@@bobryan535 a flat earther. Did you finish primary school yet little buddy?
@@champ8605 who said anything about the earth being flat. Why can't you answer my questions with explanations or if you are really clever explain with practical demonstrations. I am only questioning the cult that we were all born into that we are hairless monkeys living on a spinning ball with water stuck to it flying through the universe at 450,000mph. I prefer to question everything and assume nothing. You obviously accept everything that you are told to be true. Proof proof proof not theories.
@@bobryan535 they don't tilt the nose down because the earth is very massive and the jets of an aircraft are not strong enough to overcome the earth's gravity.
Also, the earth is a ball, and from mathematics we know that a circle is just an infinite amount of perpendicular lines drawn to the centre of the circle. The aircraft follows these lines and therefore is always "dipping" automatically.
I live in Hawaii and often travel to Guam, Japan, and the US mainland and I can say without a doubt, planes DO fly over the pacific ocean without any problems.
well duh, how else are they gonna get you from Hawaii to the mainland. It is not that far from california
@@Sunshine.LeBron23 about 2500 miles. California and Maine are about the same distance from California to Hawaii.
I've flown from Auckland to LA I can assure you that you see nothing but ocean except for Hawaii.
@@Kalikus808 not that far
12/7/1941 japan didnt fly over alaska to hawaii.
“It’s easy to forget that an airline is a business.” Is it? I’m usually reminded when I pay for tickets, checked bag, in flight meals and movies.
Right? Like...oh man traveling by plane is so cheap fun and convenient...i forget im getting bent over and robbed.
I get reminded that it's a bussnius when my wallet is gone
I seem to recall being treated like cattle too, but maybe that's just on United.
I'm certain they deliberately make everything harder for people
Agreed, not a business. Are you going to eat those peanuts?
"It's easy to forget that an airline is a business." You're right. I always thought airline companies are charities.
😂
Lol
😂😅😂
Brightside has never been very bright
right! 😂
LA -Hawaii
LA-Japan
LA-China
LA-Australia
Shall I go on..?
Please do!!
Mary Anne
Honolulu- Sydney
Honolulu- Melbourne
Honolulu- Brisbane
Honolulu- Wellington
Honolulu- Auckland
Honolulu- Tokyo
Honolulu- Seoul
Honolulu- Manila
Honolulu- Taipei
Honolulu- Bangkok
Honolulu- Suva
Honolulu- Kuala Lumpur
Honolulu- Los Angeles
Honolulu- Seattle
Honolulu- San Diego
Honolulu- San Francisco
Honolulu- Anchorage
Honolulu- Beijing
Honolulu- Shanghai
Honolulu- Hong Kong
Honolulu- Singapore
Houston to Honolulu
Houston to Tokyo
Houston to Beijing
Houston to Sydney
Houston to Hong Kong
Houston to Manila
Sydney to Santiago de Chile
LA- New Zealand too
They do fly across the Pacific. All the time. Everyday. Hundreds of them.
My wife is from the Philippines and we go back there every four years or so. We normally take the faster Alaska route, which takes us to Manila, usually stopping in either Taipei or Hong Kong. One year we took the "scenic" route, across the Pacific with a stop in Hawaii. It was longer, but a more interesting trip. Due to technical problems with the aircraft, we got to stay in a hotel in Honolulu for a day. Yes, they do fly over the Pacific, but it's not the preferred route.
Right?!
Not unless they are headed to the Hawaiian, Polynesian, etc.Islands. For example, a flight from Seattle to Tokyo goes over Aleutian Straights, unless there is a weather or traffic issue. My husband is an International Commercial Captain for 30+ years. Prior to this he flew fighters in the USAF. He knows his stuff. The major point the narrator is attempting to convey is that THE EARTH IS ELLIPTICAL, wider around the middle; Thanks
just checking flightradar24, seems like it's night over Pacific, yet more than 40 planes are airborne over the ocean.
@@1234567mrbob depends on your origin and destination, there are something like 100 flights per day just to/from Australia alone and the States, and they go near Tahiti and Hawaii, that would be the preferred route for flying to the Southern Hemisphere. Same for New Zealand, standard route.
this guy would have no issue reaching an extremely high word count if he was writing an essay
You would write boring essays... learn to add some related and interesting details like him is good
Famous quote “I didn’t have time to write you a short letter so I wrote you a long one instead.”
For those who don’t understand the implication, it’s that it takes time and effort to write in a concise and efficient matter. Why write in 10 words what you can write in 5?
@@seanhartman6496 You guys are the same people who dont read books because "they're too long"
He would go off topic though.
@@-Extra_Lives I don't read books because idiots wrote them! Hey, try reading a Chiltons Auto Manual. See how smart you are?
I flew from Melbourne (Australia) to LAX last month and back to Sydney.
I crossed the Pacific, the date line, and the equator twice in a 10 day period.
Just saying
You didn’t watch the video nematode!
You flew over WATER, you don't know for a fact which ocean or sea you flew over ;)
@@Frenchy78ify Huh?
@@wrightflyer7855 can you read ?
@@Frenchy78ify Yes, I'm a former GED teacher. Of course you know which body of water you're flying over, but it takes a lot of skill to determine that. You look out the window.
There are MANY airlines that fly directly over the pacific ocean. I, myself am a flight attendant and I have flown directly over the ocean. Airlines such as Fiji Airways, Qantas, Air Canada, Hawaiian Airlines, Air New Zealand all have similar routes to connect pacific cities to other well known long haul cities. The flight crew can manage to fly without being around an airport for a good amount of time but it is a safety measure to be nearby an airport by at least a 100KM radius.
Victor Prasad we don’t care
@@GermanAviation Isn't the truthful answer to this question that it's simply a shorter route to head toward the top of the globe. With the world essentially being sphere, its shorter to head north than belting a straight shot across the pacific??
@@MrDeodorizer especially if you're flying from America to Australia. Go north because it's shorter
Right, I think this applies to America specifically. I think foreign airliners probably don't care as much.
@@robertd3037 I care🙃
Australia, New Zealand & Hawaii: *nervous coughing*
I'm in Australia from NZ and like I'm a little nerves
Again, watch the video. He specifically mentions this.
I live in Hawaii. I’ve never been on a plane 😂
Don't forget Micronesia lol
we don't get nervous over anything in aus
This video is me trying to fill word count for my exams.
😂
Microsoft word count at 100,000,000,000! 🤣🤣
Seeeeeeriously!!!
I did not understand a thing he is saying, must be language barrier
I surely hope you are smarter than the person who made this video.
I’ve actually flown this route many times, from Osaka to Honolulu. Literally crossing the pacific. We apply a special requirement called ETOPS where we can fly along routes with the nearest airport can be 3 hours away… in our case it was midway island as en route diversion airport should there be an emergency
Aviation mech on 737 and i came here for this answer. but i guess we can let everyone else assume.
ETOPS is a certification for models of aircraft which came about when airplane manufacturers went from four to three to two engines on their aircraft. It involves certifying engine reliability and that the plane can fly for a certain numbers of minutes on one engine. Other requirements involve crew training and sometimes additional backup hydraulic and electrical systems.
To put it into layman’s terms, its the same like before you go for a long road trip with your car. Surely before heading out you service or at least check the oil, tyres and everything. And plan where are you going to stop and refuel or if repairs are needed. That’s basically the idea of ETOPS
ETOPs = Engines Turn or People Swim. 🤣🛫I have crossed the Pacific many times.
@@TheFalconJetDriver well, there were several cases when passenger aircrafts experienced shutdown of ALL engines and had to glide to land. One was the cross Canada flight where the poorly educated people didn't put enough fuel into the plane. Another also Canadian plane on a transatlantic flight when they lost fuel due to a leak and had to glide down to Azores for emergency landing. Once a 747 all 4 engines stopped working due to the plane flying into the volcanic ash cloud. Also the flight from LGA that landed on the Hudson river in NY/NJ border, but that flight only lasted a few minutes, since they didn't climbed very high before both engines were damaged by birds.
I work for an airline & I send planes over the Pacific often. We might take the “Alaskan” or “Russian” route or we might not. It depends on the winds and turbulence mostly. We also need overflight permits from Russia that can take about a week to get. In the winter, a lot of the airports in AK aren’t ideal conditions, so we’ll go over the Pacific to use HI, Midway, Guam, etc. in case of emergency. You could read about ETOPS rules for airplanes over the Pacific & Atlantic if you’re interested.
But how does ETOPS work for the popular madrid-bogota route?
@@dreamthedream8929I’m not familiar with the route, but you can pretty much fly anywhere with 180 ETOPS. I think there is a NAT track that goes SW from Europe that you could use. I believe that the FAA prohibits flying over Venezuela though. You could find suitable ETOPS alternates whether you went North or South of Venezuela. There are some in West Africa if going South.
@@daniell9087 why do they prohibit flights over Venezuela 🤔
It's Flat....Gleason map
@@giovonnipistiola5140 Can't comments on it. Look into astrophysics and particle physics. It's clean and green
LA to Sydney non-stop. Every day. Across the Pacific. Every day.
Vancouver to Australia
@Prevailing Right - You need to take Amtrak's Pineapple Express from San Francisco to Honolulu. Just twenty hours. I don't recommend the trip. Unfortunately, Amtrak has already had a few fatalities due to outside water pressure issues causing toilet flushing safety issues.
Maybe if you actually watched the video you would know he mentions the straight flight to Australia...
Pamela Bonaparte also Vancouver to Auckland... seems this guy didn’t look up any flight routes before making his little misinformed video
just swim, bud
Planes do actually fly over the Pacific ocean, when they go to Hawaii, Fiji, Guam, the Philippines, Indonesia, and Australia.
He said straight across. Never mind the thumbnail lol
Yeah obviously 😐
Of course they do, the vodeo title is bullcrap/clickbait
And New Zealand
Last time I looked to book a flight from Melbourne to Illinois, it was gonna take me along the ring of fire route. 🤷♂️
It's because the Earth is not how they say it is.
Exactly
Extremely long winded and torturous. Just go direct to the point.
Longer videos = more commercials, better metrics = more $$$
Almost everyone knows the arctic routes are shorter. The title is deceptive. Planes fly over the Pacific to Hawaii and Australia.
Yes. 10 second video can answer. Almost everyone knows the arctic routes are shorter. The title is deceptive. Planes fly over the Pacific to Hawaii and Australia..
@@vicostea Sunt retardati si in SUA, nu doar in RO, stai linistit :))
"Tortuous" Lolololol!
*”Alaska: at least it’s better than sinking”*
*J U N E A U I N A L A S K A*
@Cyberdemon Mike *Sinks in Venice, Italy*
Alaska or bust
Then it'll be *Alibts,* not Alaska.
I just uploaded a video of a cart going in circles it’s really funny please watch😇
*Next video* : Why Boats Don't Sail Over Bikini Bottom.
Lol
😂🤣
NinjaPubg321 RBLX unfunny bad execution
lol
THERES A WHOLE GAME CHAT IN HERE
Flew from LA to Auckland. Got to say that I saw a lot of water when we were flying.
no planes over the pacific:
Hawaii: am I a joke to you
Ocean
mahalo iā ‘oe (thank you)
That what I was thinking, how about Fiji no planes there I guess? How about the WWll? Theres no flight from California to Australia?
@@justaguy9776
I don't think planes had that much range at that time.
LA to Sydney too
“our planet isn’t flat now-“
*was it flat before?*
It sure ain't round lol
Caleb is that a joke? please tell me you are joking
@@RYSyoutube It is flat, my uncle told his family he was going to do groceries and he never returned to his wife and son. Legend has that he fell off the earth.
he said, "our planet isn't flat, now is it?" which implies that it's not...
DJango Unchained oh, you right. my bad
brightside: why planes don't fly over the pacific ocean
hawaiian airlines: hold my lei
Lol
Los Angeles to Sidney is 15 hours over the middle of the Pacific.
Mariqueen lol
Accept the fact that earth was FLAT
Mariqueen Facebook moms: hahahahahhaha
In 1976 on July 4th, yes the United States Bi Centennial. I boarded a Boeing 747 with Northwest Orient and flew from San Franciso International Airport to Honolulu Hawaii, after a one hour deboarding and restocking layover, We reboarded flew over Mid Way Island (Look it up it is in the middle of the Pacific) and Landed in Tokyo the next day July 5th! The whole Tokyo International Airport was Decorated from one side to the other with Bi Centennial decorations. I had left Hawaii on the 4th and landed in Tokyo on the 5th, my Bi Centennial was over. I was a Private First Class US Army and had gotten orders to serve with the 2d United States Infantry Division and I was assigned to Camp Hovey Korea just outside Tongducheon Korea. Was a wonderful time, before cell phones and big screen TVs. I had to write home and wait for letters. I made $282 a month and was happy to be a soldier.
Having flown several times between Australia and Los Angeles and New Zealand and Los Angeles there's no choice, but over the Pacific. Closest airport passed over was Nuku'Alofa, Tonga and that was still a long way, At 38,000 ft it's usually smooth - maybe a few bumps
at the inter-tropical convergence zone.
It is a super smooth passage generally. I loved flying on the now-retired 747 where they have a snack bar at the back.
I just flew over it last week! Dallas to Sydney, Australia non stop! Fifteen hours and forty seven minutes!
I wouldn’t say there is no choice, you can fly over Africa/Europe and Asia instead
@@erikaschlemmer8062 from Sydney Australia to Vancouver Canada 19.75 hours , i felt the flight will never ends
I've flown from LAX to Sydney. That's why I clicked on the video. I'm like, "They fly over the Pacific all the time". Long flight, but Australia is great.
“Why planes don’t fly over the Pacific Ocean?”
Because the planet is a thicc boi
F-zero91maru they do. This channel is trolling you
Actually he’s not wrong. Planes don’t fly at a straight line when looking at it from a 2-d map. It’s because of the curvature of the earth. Yes planes fly over the ocean, but not straight over them. But he is wrong about the planes don’t fly straight over the pacific. It really depends on the route
@F-zero91maru Or... like in this case, says things which are actually 0% true... or 100% wrong.
I mean... I think most people realize that most of the people who go to Hawaii do so on planes... so I'm wondering... do people actually NOT realize that Hawaii IS in the Pacific Ocean? What about Japan? Do people not realize that Japan is the Pacific? Singapore? New Zealand? Hong Kong? Taiwan? The Philippines? Never heard of flying from US to China or vice versa?
Oh... and I left out Australia because it's possible to fly to Australia without crossing the Pacific... by going over the Indian Ocean instead.
@@seanmccormack3735 flights to honolulu seem to be irrelevant
Hawaiian Airlines: *Am I a Joke to you?*
According to this bloke, you can't get there by air
@@oldjagman Alexandria Ocasio Cortez doesn't want you to get there by air either.
Ian Cypes 😂😂😂
i’m australian and ive been on heaps of planes (never had turbulence) so i’m not worried
Chrisworld 👏👏👏😂🤣👍
Thank you for including BOTH measurement systems (metric and imperial) in your videos!
At this moment, there are dozens, maybe hundreds, of airline flights over the Pacific Ocean. The assertion that airlines avoid the Pacific is simply not true anymore.
Yes. Exactly... cause I live in hawaii. Lol which was me flying over the pacific.
@@specialagentweener1073 no according to this guy you didn't. The plane made a left in Alaska and flew over the bridge to get to Hawaii.
@@markydee48 totally lol
They also didn’t avoid it in the first place, it was because etops ratings didn’t exist that they weren’t allowed to in most cases and these days the reason planes don’t fly over the ocean most of the time has to do with flight time which he could’ve just explained by showing a map of the earth centered at the North Pole
Yeah how do you fly to hawaii
New Zealand airlines: *are you sure about that?!*
Yes I am very sure.
Says the guy who clearly didn't watch the video.
Air New Zealand
Thank you
Thanos, the video is inevitable. Watch it.
I like how they try to make this seem like this is the narrator’s channel. It’s a corporate channel owned by the same people who own 5 Minute Crafts.
conspiracy
Hence the dork narrator failing miserably at being funny with his pre-written bad jokes
Flat earth lol
Seth I wish I had a little more girth!😱😂
earth is flat period!
I live in Australia and I've flown over the Pacific dozens of times on commercial flights
Almost forgot the earth was round there for a second
Oh wait but its not
You and 10,000 other wackos
@@lukesahlin1019 yes it is
You probably were next to a flat earther
@@mohammedalghannam6879 when is the last time you walked upside-down? Or drove upside down? Also do just 5 minutes of research on this. Check the flight time from one side of the world to the other. It's simple and easy.
To summarize: Because of the Earth’s rotation and curvature, air currents tend to flow west to east. You want the wind at your back, not at your front. It’s faster and cheaper that way. I could explain how wind works and drag this out to an eight minute forty-six second read, but nobody actually wants to hear that.
Plz do
Dude, that's not even close to answering why we don't fly in straight lines across the surface of the globe.....
AndyRock1
That’s because of the Coriolis effect. As things move across the globe, they never move in a straight line due to the round shape of the Earth and it’s rotation. However, this is only apparent in things that cover large distances, like air, water, and planes. It’s impossible to fly a truly straight line across the globe, because you’d have to constantly be slightly turning to do that, and you wouldn’t end up at the intended destination. Flying straight to a destination (from a map view) will always look like making a large curve (from a globe view), as long as the starting and end points are far enough away. This, as Ruairi O'Donoghue mentions in another comment below, is called a great circle route. Another name for it is a geodesic.
I didn’t address that, because that’s not relevant to the title. The title of the video asks why planes don’t fly over the Pacific Ocean, which only makes sense from a Western Hemisphere point of view. To a person in the Eastern Hemisphere, traveling to the Western Hemisphere is likely to be done via flying over the Pacific Ocean.
Edited something because I remembered how the Coriolis effect worked. Edited it again because I remembered how the Coriolis effect worked, but better that time.
Thanks, you save my 8mins
It's called a great circle route. The shortest distance between two points on a sphere.
I guess you've never flown from Los Angeles to Sidney, that flight definitely goes over the Pacific Ocean.
I have, and sadly, economy. About 14 hours cramped up, same old view out the window...The Pacific Ocean...No, it wasn't a bad flight at all.
*Best of Luck*
Same with Hawaii
He does point that out. But you have to sit through 4:44 to get there.
@@larry4111 Hey lets face it -- this guy will do literally anything for another video. The fact is, 90% of earths land mass, and 90% of earths people, are in the N Hemi. Most of the pacific is in the S Hemi. Does that help? They fly over the Pacific when there is a reason to fly over it. Most people would realize the answer to this question by simply examining a globe map of earth.
Check out the flight on Gleasons map, and it all makes perfect sense. Especially the flights from Japan to Europe.
@ Robert Stonestreet Thank you so much for being a critical thinker! The military has been using this map since its inception to get flights and men to the correct location on our level plane we all live on. Planes never adjusted for curvature while being flown or on autopilot. Some brave civilian pilots have been open about it. This video is pure propaganda aimed at the indoctrinated masses because millions more are learning the real truth. You would have been called a lunatic if you said the earth was shaped like a ball right up until the early 19 hundreds.
💯💯💯
Better yet, buy a globe.
@@JoeSmith-op6qf And a piece of string . . .
Never have i heard someone say so much and yet nothing at all.
Trump ?
Reminds of many talking heads and guests on cable news. Instead of getting to quick points, it’s a nonstop, endless ramble run on sentence including many unnecessary lists and stories. It’s refreshing to actually hear some get to the point in concise fashion.
Agree. Felt like he never actually reached a conclusion.
Ha
Its because its propaganda for flat vs globe debate. They don't want anyone knowing true nature of reality
Wrong, there's over a hundred commercial airlines over the Pacific Ocean right now.
5:08.
As a New Zealander, the title of the video had me confused. I've been to the USA three times and all of them involved flying directly over the pacific.
Just checked:
Almost all, but a few are going/coming from Hawaii. The rest are following the curve that he explained. Just look at the real-time global flights.
I'm gonna shorten this for all you guys:
MOST flights don't go across the pacific because the Earth's curvature makes for a shorter trip by going over the Bering Sea. That being said, going to a South Pacific destination from the US will require a trans-Pacific flight.
👍🏼🤣
"it's easy to forget airlines is a business"
What. It's hard to forget.
Especially if you’re flying Southwest
Airline is a business.
Airlines are a business.
@@valevisa8429 I seen what you're talking about...😁
@@robertallen6710I was corrected many times by others, and i always said thank you,you are helping me better my English,which by the way is my third language.I know some people don't like it. :)
Brightside: “why planes don’t fly over the ocean”
Air New Zealand, Qantas: “wut?”
And Hawaiian
And Fiji
And United, delta and American.
Drew Castronovo ik aye
Full List: United Airlines, Hawaiian Airlines, American Airlines, Japan Airlines, Air China, Eva Air, Alaska Airlines, All Nippon Airways, China Airlines, Air Canada, Air Canada Rouge, Air New Zealand, Qantas, Aircalin, Fiji Airways, Air Tahiti Nui, French Bee, Cathay Pacific, Asiana Airlines, Aeroméxico, Hainan Airlines, Korean Air, Singapore Airlines, Philippine Airlines, China Eastern Airlines, China Southern Airlines, Southwest Airlines, AirAsia X, Malaysian Airlines, Air Seoul, Air Busan, Air Macau, Air Niugini, Cebu Pacific, Delta Air Lines, Druk Air, Eastar Jet, Garuda Indonesia, HK Express, Hong Kong Airlines, Jeju Air, Jet Asia Airways, Jetstar Airways, Jetstar Japan, Jin Air, Juneyao Airlines, ZIPAIR Tokyo (beginning in 2020), Mandarin Airlines, NokScoot, Peach Aviation, Royal Brunei Airlines, Shenzhen Airlines, Sichuan Airways, Spring Airlines, SriLankan Airlines, Thai AirAsia X, Thai Airways, Thai Lion Air, Tigerair Taiwan, T'way Airlines, VietJet Air, Vietnam Airlines, XiamenAir
Yeah, I think planes do fly over the Pacific Ocean.
"long story short which is not my forte" you can say that again
I don't even think breathing is his forte. 😆
Lol exactly
...and he will..repeatedly.
Better title: Why SOME planes don't fly over the Pacific Ocean.
Ed Ventures trueee
Ed Ventures
Exactly!
Better title.
He didn't say ALL planes though but it still can be misleading
Exactly, because many do fly over the Pacific
I flew from Australia to America 11 years over the Pacific Ocean with QANTAS.
"It's easy to forget that an airline is a business"
Really? Who has ever forgotten they are a business?
Like a plane, it went over head.
Me didn’t even know airlines were businesses thought they were just brands
@@2dheethbar مکرپتچترستلندوددددوووخهودوزدکه۵
@@حمیداسلامی-ي8ق get out
@@حمیداسلامی-ي8ق dont got to the towers please
They absolutely do. Literally every single day.
Hmmmmm, trying to figure out how a plane can get to hawaii, without flying over the Pacific Ocean...
It only flies halfway.
@@lostpony4885 halfway over the Pacific not halfway to Hawaii I hope.
Or America or Australia
I can verify that planes do fly over the Pacific. Go to Guam, and you will likely leave the states, stop in Hawaii, then go on to Guam....right over the Pacific Ocean.
The plane take a bus
VERY interesting. Thank you for this.
Australia: “Am I a joke to you?”
Same difference here I am from Hawaii
Flew from San Francisco to NZ. Right over the middle of the Pacific. and that was great circle route.
😁😁😂
@@thenakedcheese2863 me too
@@LotusProds its purposefully written in a click baity way
"A little bit of girth can go a long way"
We haven't met before, have we?
That’s what she said.
No.. We havent..
"Why planes don't fly over the Pacific Ocean"
"Actually people do fly over the Pacific Ocean to get to Australia"
Though like the video says the routes do fly over airports just in case of emergency
You definitely find the USA to AUS routes zigzag a little bit just to pass over pacific islands
He says that at about 5.14. ;-D
I used to live in Australia and I took the Pacific route to America
I live in America and I’ve gone lover it twice. Australia and china
Ikr I was born in Wales (UK) and I'm living in Australia rn
Oh yeah, I noticed this too. Thx for posting.
“That little bit of added girth can go a long way” god you sound like my ex
Oof
garfield That’s what she said.
I’ll see myself out…
garfield I was like 👀👀👀👀👀 when I heard that lol
Was anyone watching this while flying Sydney to Los Angeles wondering what this guy was on about?
Sydney to Santiago, but yeah. This video is ridiculous on so many levels.
@Roll tide Roll I watched the whole vid first, but still its entertaining to come across this video while flying over the pacific.
Melbourne to LA
@@Firelion007 Just like every flat Earth presentation ever to exist. Ever.
Roll tide Roll then what you're saying is this video is made by a f-wit that creates titles as click bait and tries to manipulate people to earn money through a monitorised channel. Otherwise why title the video as he did. End of story.
Australia to North America
Australia to South America..
99% of flight over Pacific Ocean
Same as Philippine airlines non stop from Manila(Philippines) straight to California(LAX) going through the entire Pacific ocean.
Those flights skim the pacific and pretty much fly over the North Pole. Strange route to take if you ask me.
Don't install facts in this....
Not true. I’ve been to Australia before and we went from VA-GA-LA-to New Zealand then Australia. Both ways.
Yeah, I’ve flown from Colorado to Australia and the flight was straight over the Pacific Ocean, not even going near the poles
I hope you reach 50 million subscribers
I don’t think I’ve ever forgotten that an airline is a business
You are so right. The airlines never let you forget it. Over the years we have lost meals due to business decisions, are now being charged for luggage, along with a slew of many regulations and fees that we never had before. The seats have gotten closer and closer together as a result of "business" decisions on the part of the airlines. And the staff are cockier than ever especially the agents behind the ticket counters.
Verbal diarrhea. This bloke could turn a bus ticket into "War and Peace".
HaHa .... Well said ......
Yeah, he tries to be funny and only ends up detracting from the subject matter at hand.
Radio announcer voice
Hi!
Logorrhea.
just straight to the point man, u r talking way too much and its also out of the main topic.
at what point does he go on a tangent that isn't to make a joke?
yeah but this wasn't custom made to suit your ends
Agreed
They are trying to explain some parts so other people can understand. They also go to a different subject and compare it to the main subject. If you pay attention and listen closely, they are talking about the main subject.
People usually over-explain when they lie.
New subscriber, enjoyed this, will have a binge watch now :)
This is the most convoluted explanation of a Great Circle Route I’ve ever seen.
and the term "great circle" wasn't even mentioned
Long story short: it's the shortest distance. Earth is round. Don't have to spend 10mins
He needs the video to be 10min to receive money from youtube.
dinoripper123 that’s not how that works but ok
dinoripper123 No it is not. If you’re video is over 10 minutes long you can choose to put multiple ads on it and get more money. First of all that doesn’t mean longer videos automatically earn more money, a 5 minute video with one ad will generate the same amount of money as a 30 minute video with one ad. Second this video is only 9:23 seconds long so it can only have one ad on it.
Its flat watch Eric dubay
@@luckygames2558 No.
Hawaii:*exists*
Bright side:I'm gonna pretend I didn't see that
Hawaii was my first thought when I read the video title and then searched for this comment.
7:43 or you can watch the whole video😉
Australia and NZ
@@TheBlessedMeek I guess the Japanese tourists here in Hawaii don’t exist
@@TD-ee9om I don't know what point you're making. There's no such thing as a Japanese tourist. They've never existed. So you guess right I guess
1) Opens Flightradar24 ✈️
2) Notices there are plenty of aircrafts flying over the Pacific ocean 🤨
Flights from Mexico City to Narita, Japan fly over the Pacific Ocean very close to Hawaii.
New Zealand, Australia & Hawaii:
Are you sure about that?
Congratulations, you're the 1000000th person to make the same, totally original and smart joke!
@@RyanBreaker thank you 🙃❤
@@RyanBreaker congratulations you took time out of your day to spread hate when you could of shut your mouth!
Philippines left the group
Bright Side: Why planes dont fly over the Pacific Ocean.
Hawaii: Am I a joke to you?
Hawaii is just like me
Guam island too
Meri See I took that flight as well. It went right over the Pacific Ocean.
@Meri See not a straight flight there isn't
I took a flight to Japan I had to go thru Alaska from Washington state then to Guam then to Japan just to get to Okinawa japan
great video thanks 😊
“It’s easy to forget that an airline is a business.”
You’re kidding, right?
Christopher Alston It’s easy to forget that schools are businesses, especially k-12.
Easy to forget as I smash my knees into the seat ahead while simultaneously bruising both sides of my pelvis with the armrests on my just-too-narrow seat and wonder why they don't space these chairs out just a bit more.
Christopher Alston haha
This video is aimed more for kids
@@taoist32 A school is not a business, its funded by force of the government from homeowners. There is no business out there that has the right to force you to buy their product. Its a government service.
"It's easy to forget that an airline is a business..."
No no, the cost of bottled water onboard keeps reminding me..!
Bottled water second biggest scam on the people of earth. Global warming was the first. Original data from 1934 we were the hottest ever recorded and no cars. Ok some cars. We have been basically cooling ever since. More likely ice age
@@mattlord2906 Bottled water on airplanes is expensive => Global warming is a hoax...
Are you high or something??
@@evangelospapadopoulos2292 presumably he's at 40,000 feet flying over the Pacific :p
oh god, the price of mineral water on the plane, makes me cry
Plastic water bottles.....but let's get rid of straws. LOL
Title: 'Why Planes Don't Fly Over The Pacific Ocean'.
5:08 'None of this is to say that planes never fly across the Pacific Ocean..'
No one has seen your comment, sadly.
@@jasompinard4576 You did😃
@@toddles9: Me too, and so did you! And Toddles did too!
@@jasompinard4576 Unfortunately, you are wrong.
Jasom Pinard the thumbnail says no planes
I took a flight over the pacific when flying to Singapore we were over water the whole time
“The planet is a little bigger in the middle, just like me after the holidays “ why is that me 😂😂
If a large airliner crashes into the ocean, it will most likely disintegrate and everybody will die on impact.
@@RobbieStacks90 that made no sense and had no connection to Kylee hurkens comment
UrAverageHuman hahah oop
Zenigundam Ookie tr
Zenigundam
Ah yes this makes sense to the comment
Auckland to USA doesn't get anymore 'straight over the Pacific' i'm afraid.
Me trying to figure out how tf I flew from L.A to Auckland ‘without flying over the Pacific Ocean’ 😂
Peter this video is talking about flying mainland US to Hawaii. It’s talking about US to Japan.
Peter listen to what is being said in the video.
Peter ok, calm down. I am commenting on the content within the video, not the title. The narrative in the video is talking about a flight between the US and Japan going over Alaska and how it relates the the curve of the earth. The narrator even made a point to say that flights from northern to Southern Hemisphere will go over the Pacific Ocean. So if you want to deal in facts then stop fixating in the misleading title and actually listen to the videos content.
@Peter well the dude did mention that flights from the States to Australia flies over Pacific.
Criticising the video is one thing but holding onto the title and scream about it like that makes you very much childish.
Living in Hawaii and flying to Japan once a year had me very confused on how I get there without going over the Pacific.
2Salty 4u? Sure?
r/woooosh
Giron Creations sure?
TheDooDooBerry Take a look on the flath earth map, and you won't be surprised anymore!
Ikr
I live in New Zealand and majority of our routes are over the Pacific Ocean, the rest are over the Tasman Sea
In 1960 I had the privilege of flying nearly straight across the Pacific. It was a military C-121 (Super Connie ). We made stops at Hawaii, Midway, Wake, and Guam on the way to Tokyo. Incredible aircraft!!
Was it a military chartered Flying Tiger airlines by chance? If so, I did the same trip in 61 as a military brat going to Korea. We made stops in Hawaii and Wake, in fact, we were broke down on Wake for a couple until spare parts could be flown in. I remember the Mae West vests (we had in-flight engine problems) and meals out of carboard boxes. Noisy, vibrating, fire belching smoking engines. Quite the trip. I was 6 years old.
I made the same flight, same plane in 1969, final destitution Kempo Airbase, Korea.
I miss wake island, I've been there quite a few times on KC-10s
Did that same run in 1966! On a pan am 707 ! I was 14 , NAS air station! Guam18 months!
@@richardkilgore8922 same brother small world
It’s called great circles. It has been the standard for most flights paths. Great circles are also used by ships as the preferred path.
Not a real explanation. Great circle are used ANYWHERE on flys.
The answer is that most of the Pacific is in the SOUTH, but only 10% of earth land area and population is in the south. So 90% of flying is on the North
Turns out the video is a very long airline seatbelt ad
Cool video!
In the USAF, I flew OVER the Pacific many times. CA to Hawaii, to Guam, to Japan.
"it is easy to forget that an airline is a business" - No, it is not.
They're laying off a lot of employees to stay profitable.. that is a BUSINESS decision
Aka, maximize profit.
some people think airplanes are like a bus, just another way to travel. not everyone sees the business side of things.
When I was in the Army I was stationed in Hawaii.
When we deployed to Iraq in June, we flew from Hawaii to Alaska, over the very North of Canada, into Germany to Kuwait then Iraq.
When we flew over Northern Canada, we saw icebergs (in June). Pretty cool.
That's cool
Wow I never knew planes didn’t fly directly over the pacific. I always thought that it did. But if makes since 😊
Cliff’s Notes: The Arctic route is shorter than the Pacific route, because sphere.
Nobody flies over Antarctica. Earth is no sphere.
Eddie Lap Lap please tell me you’re joking
Gamble Family 45107 Proof and science please, then explain why heliocentric science predicts astronomical events to the day and often minute, and does so decades into the future. And has for many decades, even centuries in some cases. You know like eclipses, comet returns etc. A flat earth is a fairy tale with no proven science whatsoever. If you base flat earth on bible, books and verses please.
Eddie Lap Lap Oh the antarctic thing again. Commercial planes no because it is a frozen continent but many have been there to see the penguins. Expeditions available. You are not a morgile, great wall of ice are you. If so show pics of the great wall in all hemispheres or the armada stopping you 😂
Eddie Lap Lap is the moon a disc too?
"a little bit of girth goes a long way" - that's what she said
😆😆😆😆
Don't let em lie to you my boy...most honest women will tell ya you need length and girth to do the trick 😜
She was just humoring you boy ...tip avoid milfs once theyve had a babys head through them u wont even touch the sides …they need black or multiple or the fists
When traveling to Australia from L.A., we went west to Hawaii, then from there to Aussie. Over which body of water were we flying?
The Pacific Ocean
The video mentions this at 5:10. Watch the entire video before commenting.
You were flying beyond the Sun...
This is why flight distance is determined in nautical miles rather than statute miles
On a scale of "1 to Tool;" this guy is a hardware store.
@Jack Saindon That is the proper number of laughing so hard you cry emojis
This world is FLAT
Kliegl your joke was more than worth the agony of having clicked on this video. Thank you very much! 😂😋
Narrated by one of those guys who does all the talking in any situation at the expense of everybody else.
I'd love to pretend to have a conversation with him!
As an Aussie, we feel that flying over the Pacific ocean is standard operating practice...
I’ve travelled to the USA twice and on both occasions, the plane flew over the Pacific. No stopovers at places along the way either.
which he clearly states in the video at 04:44
@@Sedgie-Tube I flew from Fiji to LAX, and there were Aussies on the plane who were flying from Australia to L.A. Anyway, we spend 14 hours (I think) over the Pacific Ocean.
I'm Chilean and have flown around 8 times to and from New Zealand, 12 hour flight
They do.
Sydney & Melbourne, Australia and New Zealand to Los Angeles goes directly over the Pacific.
Mr71Bernard guess we meant to teleport to hawaii then
Yeah I live in Alaska, had to go to Los Angeles to get to Thailand. We definitely crossed the pacific and didn’t go BACK over Alaska.
Depends on which direction you’re flying and where to. Flights from Tokyo to San Francisco fly directly over the pacific for example.
Yes
When I fly to Tokyo from LA, we always go north up into Alaska and around that way. Not once did we fly over the Pacific
@@todeotodeo140it has changed since Russian invasion and sanctions made them ban their airspace
@@todeotodeo140 The entire route is over land? Wow. My guess is that you were over PARTS of the Pacific over half the time or more. Did you fly directly east over the bulk of the Pacific? No, you did not. I get that.
@@memoobaba Yeah, having Russia between Tokyo and LAX does present problems.
Title: "Why Planes Don't Fly Over the Pacific Ocean"
Me: ummm, they do.
Agreed! I frequently fly from LAX to New Zealand and its ALWAYS over the Pacific Ocean.
I have flown over the Pacific Ocean many times
@@hamzag9561 Ikr
@@lifebybill1326 Yeah same. I have no idea why they made this video
Yup. He specifically mentions that in the video. Poorly named video. He contradicts himself when he says something to the effect that "IF you're flying to Australia, you have to fly over the pacific"