Unrivaled Influence: The Douglas DC-3's Impact on Aviation

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 28 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 34

  • @AntiqueAirshow
    @AntiqueAirshow  Рік тому +9

    Thanks for everyone who watched and commented on my first upload of this video. Unfortunately, there were a few mistakes that made it through editing that needed to be rectified. These have been fixed and the video reuploaded 👍👍✈✈

  • @monsieurcommissaire1628
    @monsieurcommissaire1628 Рік тому +3

    I've loved the DC-3 since childhood, when I built countless models of them in various scales. This was probably my favourite of your excellent videos so far. Wonderful aircraft. Really lovely too, one of the most beautiful aircraft ever. The soundtrack, particularly from those 2 14-cylinder P&W radials, must've been awesome, too, but then I've got a soft spot for Pratt & Whitney radials; their fine products kept my dad aloft and alive in Korea. He said they were really loud and had a lot of spark plugs. I love the sounds they make myself.
    I got a bit of a thrill seeing the aerial shot of a DC-3 above Le Plus Grand Paquebot du Monde: Normandie! It appears that she is arriving at New York Harbor on her maiden voyage.

    • @AntiqueAirshow
      @AntiqueAirshow  Рік тому

      Thank you 👍✈️ It is a lovely aircraft, nice clean, sleek lines. It would be some soundtrack. A few years back they assemble 15 or so in England to commemorate the D-Day landings and Berlin Airlift. Now that would have been quite the sight and sound. Magnificent. That is really interesting.
      That is a wonderful shot.

  • @allangibson8494
    @allangibson8494 Рік тому +2

    You probably should have covered the Russian Li-2 and Japanese Showa / Nakajima L2D as well.
    One Li-2 is still operational in Europe (it was used as a parachute aircraft in the 75th anniversary D-Day celebrations).
    The DST and DC-3 had structural differences in the fuselage - the DST had a line of windows in the cabin roof to provide light to the upper sleeper berths.
    The early DC-3’s and DST’s had the passenger door on the starboard side where the later C-47’s had it on the port side and the C-53’s had doors on both sides of the rear fuselage…
    The Li-2 can be identified by the engine cowlings (due to having shutters fitted for cold weather operations), cargo door shape (because they didn’t receive the design package for this), the wood stove in the cabin and about half of them had a turret in the place of the astrodome behind the cockpit.
    The Japanese L2D versions had an extra cockpit window behind the pilots for the navigator. L2D’s with wooden wings were also built.
    The DC-2 1/2 was a civilian CNAC DC-3 that was damaged in China by a Japanese air raid - this happened in mid 1941 before the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor.

    • @AntiqueAirshow
      @AntiqueAirshow  Рік тому

      Yes I definitely could have covered them in much more depth, but sometimes it is hard to fit everything in. Perhaps it would be best to do a separate video on them so I can go into detail about the two versions. Would be quite interesting. 👍✈️

  • @calsurflance5598
    @calsurflance5598 8 місяців тому +1

    Excellent history lesson on one of my favorite aircraft.
    I did not hear a mention of the C-41. The first DC-3 purchased by the US Government became General Hap Arnold’s personal transport. Only 1 was built with this designation.
    I had the opportunity to fly in this aircraft about 35 years ago while working at the Fresno airport.
    I believe it is now at an aviation museum in Texas.

    • @AntiqueAirshow
      @AntiqueAirshow  8 місяців тому +1

      Thank you 👍✈️.
      It wasn't covered in this video, but you can find it in my video on the DC-2: ua-cam.com/video/mCfWaM1I7tg/v-deo.htmlsi=fHb3zyQ5n_NCiAm8&t=464
      Awesome that is very cool 👍✈️

  • @Hcb37
    @Hcb37 Рік тому +3

    No worries, better to make the fixes and repost. Most people don’t understand the amount of work that goes into these relatively short histories.

    • @AntiqueAirshow
      @AntiqueAirshow  Рік тому

      That's what I thought too. Especially considering I messed up one of the designations of the C-47 (accidentally said A7-47 instead if AC-47). I just didn't like having it wrong. Thanks, it's a bit of work but good fun 👍✈️

  • @garymorris1856
    @garymorris1856 Рік тому +1

    In my opinion, it is the most iconic aircraft in history.

    • @AntiqueAirshow
      @AntiqueAirshow  Рік тому

      Yes quite possibly. It sure was an important and significant aircraft in aviation history 👍✈️

  • @carlosallende2595
    @carlosallende2595 Рік тому +1

    I seem to recall that here in Melbourne you can still book nostalgia flights on these; not a hundred percent sure though.

    • @AntiqueAirshow
      @AntiqueAirshow  Рік тому +1

      Indeed you can. There is one that operates out of Essendon 👍✈️

  • @johnjephcote7636
    @johnjephcote7636 Рік тому +2

    I miss the daily drone of those tramp steamers of the sky as I was growing up in the 1950s.

    • @AntiqueAirshow
      @AntiqueAirshow  Рік тому +1

      That would be cool. Personally I don't think the sound of jet engine beats that of a piston engine aircraft

  • @Rural53NZ
    @Rural53NZ 8 місяців тому +1

    Great video, but you missed how in New Zealand they used them as top dressing aircraft and threw them around a couple of hundred feet off the ground.

    • @AntiqueAirshow
      @AntiqueAirshow  8 місяців тому

      Thanks, sorry about that. I try and fit in as much as possible but somethings do get missed. To be honest I've never heard about this before, that is very interesting 👍✈️

  • @mustafasfleas7342
    @mustafasfleas7342 9 місяців тому +1

    Perhaps it's only urban-legend...
    But as the legend has been passed down, the DC-3 still holds the title for greatest numbers of cargo pounds carried for the fewest pounds of fuel burned. And while so many dozens of machines have since exceeded the DC-3's cargo capacity, none are able to match its efficiency of cost per cargo pound transported.

    • @AntiqueAirshow
      @AntiqueAirshow  8 місяців тому

      That would make sense. I guess when you look at how much heavy lifting it did during the war and how long it has been in service, I'm not surprised.

  • @davidvavra9113
    @davidvavra9113 Рік тому +1

    Well done!

  • @adamconroy2146
    @adamconroy2146 Рік тому +1

    I don't know if you mentioned this, but if you did here goes again. I don't expect she was, but was the DC3 pressurised in the cab?.

    • @AntiqueAirshow
      @AntiqueAirshow  Рік тому +1

      No it wasn't. I read an interview from a group who still flies the DC-3. They stated that one of the benefits of the DC-3 is that it is a very simple aircraft, with relative simple systems (At least by todays standards). However they believed this made it a very safe aircraft even today as there was a lot less that could/can go wrong. No computers or electronics to go haywire.

  • @joeschenk8400
    @joeschenk8400 Рік тому +1

    To err is human....etc. Reupload is just as good...lots of numbers, easy to mix it up. Three thumbs up-imogi will not print!

    • @AntiqueAirshow
      @AntiqueAirshow  Рік тому +1

      Yeah it's easy, most videos have one small blooper 🤣🙃 I mixed up a designation (A7-47 instead of AC-47), something I consider needed to be corrected. Anyhow, thanks for rewatching 👍👍👍✈️

  • @OscarReyes-ud4vz
    @OscarReyes-ud4vz Рік тому +1

    No doubt! The perfect plane!

  • @JayStewart-ds9pn
    @JayStewart-ds9pn 3 місяці тому

    You need to credit Jack Frye (TWA) for his letter to Donald Douglas that started the DC-3 legacy!

  • @peregrinemccauley5010
    @peregrinemccauley5010 Рік тому +1

    This channel is the go . Great bloody research too , be damned .

  • @ashcarrier6606
    @ashcarrier6606 Рік тому +1

    Yes, it is.

  • @peregrinemccauley5010
    @peregrinemccauley5010 Рік тому +1

    For your next Heinz Tomato Soup dinner , please see Robert Morley's Australian advertisement , circa 1972 . ' Robert Morley Heinz Advertisement ' . UA-cam .