My father is the Air Force captain talking between 15:42 - 15:45. He received his master's from Stanford in 1956. He was promoted to captain and set to Los Angeles. He'd go on to work on the Atlas, Corona, YF-12a/SR-71, MOL, and F-15. He retired a Full Colonel in 1979.
And I see you with a baby in the avatar, meaning that likely his integrity and prowess, some of those genes are coursing through humanity. This strengthens us all.
Military projects now: Congress fights for 2 years After 5 years company says they need more money After 8 years congress says it's too expensive Project final finishes with 2 units produced Project is never put into mass production
We'd get better results if impeding nuclear holocaust and being the victim of an effective preemptive strike was on the table. Nowadays...no one's worried about that, they don't see it as credible or they have awesome bunkers and don't GAF.
It could be that the only projects we get to hear about are the failures. I'd like to think we have a handful of secret aircraft/weapon systems that have been developed in the last 10 years.
My uncle worked as an OIC in charge of various systems at Vandenberg in those early days. He left with me his tool box, lots of stories of when they worked to get new and existing Missiles to fly properly. Many 24 hour days were spent. Frayed nerves. Little or no time off was allowed. It was hard work. There were a few neat stories that survived the years. He once told me that they would hold a cigarette with a pair of needle nose pliers…light the cigarette and then walk into one of the white clouds of LOX (a good long distance away from any equipment or a rocket) and watch the cig quickly vanish into flames. Today that would never be allowed.
Of course, back then, LOX was the only missile fuel developed...and that was the key to the greatest handicap of those missiles, to include Thor: Their response time. Liquid oxygen-based rocket fuel was non-storable and very hazardous. It would take hours to prepare a missile for launch *after* a launch command was given, which gave the other side a chance for the element of surprise. The contemporary Soviet missiles suffered from the same handicap. Later, a storable liquid fuel was developed which gave the missiles that used it a better response time, though the hazard was still there (just think about the Titan-II that blew up in Arkansas in 1980, when a tech dropped a socket that breached the missile's fuel tank). At the same time, they developed solid propellants for other models of missiles (think Minuteman and the later Peacekeeper), which really served the purpose of improving response time and mitigating the preparation hazards. But I digress. Regarding Thor, from accounts and footage I had seen of that missile, it was dubious at best, marred with extreme difficulties in both its development and its deployment. When fired, there seemed to be a 50/50 chance of it blowing up *on the ground.*
I just read your comment and you know why they wouldn't allow something like that with the lox is because this country has turned into a bouch of pussy and whinps
@@aloysiusbelisarius9992 It was a V-2 clone test for American aerospace engineers, build us a better longer range V-2 and this is what they came up with. It was a good training program.
This missile was placed right on the Soviet border, in Turkey. This scared the hell out of the Soviets, and they retaliated by placing missiles in Cuba, and damn near started World War 3. A year after the Cuban Missile Crisis, the US removed the Thor (and Jupiter) missiles in Turkey. Only fair..and some say this was the agreement to end the Cuba crisis.
Yea I love how America always portrayed the soviets as the aggressors there, yet even as a commie hater like I am I don’t see how they couldn’t see how and why the soviets wouldn’t do something in retaliation.
So … the real cause of the Cuban missile crisis is clear. The Soviets were threatened but they cannot place the same threat in return to ensure there is a deterrent. 🙄
In reality it was not the “cuban” missile crisis, it was the Turkish missile crisis…. when we studied this incident in high school of course the fact of the atlas ICBMs in Turkey was never mentioned…
The engineering, effort, pace of advances that went in to producing items like these was awesome. Despite that, I find the matter of fact and almost nonchalant way that the deployment of weapons that would almost certainly end humanity as we know it is talked about in this 'cartoon' to be bone chilling.
Yes you can see ICBMs thousands of miles down their launch trajectory, in the Twilight evening. For some reason lots of ICBMs were launched from Vandenberg, Ca. In the evening. It was mesmerizing!
Vandenburg is both far away from most of humanity and has a retrograde/polar arc. So… it fits many more of the launch conditions. Also… if a rocket fails. There’s only America from Cali to hawaii to pick up any high tech super classified stuff
Remember mid 1960s when they fired the atomic Canon vertically..just find out how high it would go it left a flourscent trail going up could be seen in Arizona where we were
I will say this, I am always very bemused by the cartoons the US armed forces used to include in basically all of the these movies… especially loved the smarmy smirk that the drum-headed contractors head. Eisenhower would have been hopping mad at the military industrial complex smirks…
The same Eisenhower who created the MIC in the first place by centering US defense policy around nuclear weapons? The only reason he complained about the MIC in his farewell speech was because Kennedy and Johnson hammered him as soft on defense after Sputnik; he did it out of spite, not conviction.
Looking at the world from the northern poles makes us and eurasia seem a lot closer than I thought we were….. oceans apart is what I always thought about eurasia. It almost looks like we’re one country from this point of view. Awesome documentary.
amazing. The map at the beginning explains the launches well. If you don't see the projection on a map, you think it crosses the entire Atlantic when it passes over Canada.
The expression "one-of" (not one-off) is a product of that time; the engineer draws something and sends the print down to the shop with a note reading, "make me one of these and we'll see if fits."
My father whom, as a person, was an assxxole... worked on Thor in the RAF and served during the Cuban missile crisis in Driffield east Yorkshire. He told stories of how they constantly kept the state of the missile ready for launch during the said crisis. I was ten months old at the time and therefore if it had gone hot... would have been a dead baby.
The W49 warhead for the Thor, Atlas, Jupiter, and Titan I ballistic missiles was a W28 Y1 warhead (B28 nuclear bomb) with internal power systems removed. This had a yield between 1.1 and 1.4 mt.
I have some general question about all these fantastic material. Who was it made for once? Who had to know all this by watching the movies except everyone already involved? Or was is documentation for the future? And, when did all this become approved to release? Are they still making these kinds of movies with todays military project for some educational or other purposes? Cheers
No we have a new program for education Joe BlowMe not our president and Obama the lying cheating scumbaggery yes folks this is what treasonous evil-doers look like. And by their actions all should know their crimes.
I've watched documentaries on all this stuff my whole life. My biological father was an Air Force pilot. I spent from 1984 to 1992 around Edwards Air Force Base. Our biological father worked at Edwards Air Force Base and Groom Lake aka Area 51. Growing up in the shadows of the Above Top Secret Clearance world gave me a great life.
2 years and 9 months, this is how long it took to develop a ballistic missile from idea to industry. No computers, no 3D printers, only paper and wooden models. But with the use of a completely new untested cryogenic fuel technology. Presently, this is how long it would take to develop this rejected reserve tank, provided that it was a development version.
It depends a lot on how high priority a project is. In the 1950's developing new nuclear delivery systems was at the top of the priority list for the US. In the 2020's, the covid vaccine was urgent, which is why it was also developed in a very short time.
"The first generation of Thor missiles were rushed into service, and design mistakes resulted in a 24% launch failure rate. The competing Jupiter missile saw more use, but both were quickly eclipsed by the Air Force's long range ICBM program, which could be fired from US soil. *By 1959, with the Atlas rocket well on its way to operational status, both Thor and Jupiter programs became obsolete as delivery vehicles*, yet continued to be built and deployed until 1963 for political reasons and to maintain aerospace industry employment. The missile's lasting legacy continued as the Thor and later Delta families of space launch vehicles used boosters derived from the initial Thor missile, and continued on into the 21st century"
They did it in only 50 days! And in less than 3 years it was operational overseas. Amazing. The optimism and can do attitude...we desperately need it back.
Cool video! Great information. I had always heard about the Thor being a dud - but it had its own successes. Then it was sacrificed for 'world peace' during the Cuban Missile Crisis. I didn't know that the IRBM, ICBM, SRBM's each coincided with the various types of aircraft used for nuclear deterrence. Thanks for posting this.
Those Thor missiles based in the UK would have been duds if the Cuban missile crisis hadn't ended when it did as the UK was running out of liquid oxygen.
@@neiloflongbeck5705 by the fall of 1962, Atlas was fully deployed, so I'm not sure that the inability to launch all the floors would have made much difference if war had started worldwide.
They designed this thing in 7 weeks. With parallel bars, T-squares, clutch pencils, and slide rules. Not only that, but these engineers were contemporaneous with the guys who did Gemini and Apollo. They left a legacy that’s hard to follow.
I saw lots of Thor ICBMs launched at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California in the early 1960s as a 11\12 year old! Interesting in only a few minutes they were thousands of miles down range over the Pacific ocean and could Still be seen.
What? Yes, you would be able to see them for quite some distance, but not that far. Even at the altitude of the ISS, you still wouldn't be able to see one at 1,000 miles down-range; never mind thousands of miles.
You should look it up. The US Air Force listed the maximum speed for the original Thor that was listed at over 11,000 mph! iCBMs are incredibly fast. Currently, ICBMs lunched from the continental US can hit Moscow in about 25 minutes.
Mutually Assured Destruction was such an upbeat topic back in the day, it's like they are talking about it over breakfast cereal with the kids. I'm waiting for Walt Disney to chime in on explosive yields.
I've a older brother and he's been in college for about 18 years and for all that couldn't understand the word ballistic, he kept thinking it mend self guided instead of it being like a bullet or artillery shell and follows a simple arch pattern, he kept thinking it had to have some fancy computer to fly
The launch facility areas still exist in Great Britain, no buildings just the concrete runways from the where storage shed locations too the launch location pad and exhaust trenches. Appears they had multiple missiles at each individual site.
Wow, the differences in thinking back then compared to now. This is sort of horrifying when you really get down to thinking what these missiles were designed to do!!
Imagine if human beings were smart enough to invest in peace rather than war. It is always the other countries fault, yet we have never been without war for thousands of years!
@@uberkloden yes and no: since there’s no shortage of fake entirely conceptual money on demand, for all sorts of elite agendas, I can only conclude that the elite WANT vast numbers of folks in poverty.
Interesting the Douglas company was notified on Dec 23, 1955 and it signs the contract 5 days later. Pretty quick turnaround. No stuffing around there.
Interesting, nobody mentions the b-58, sure it's from '59? On the other side, "Titan missile"? Wasnt Titan not operational fron 62 onwards? I am confused & have to do some reading, I'm more than probable wrong...
It's sad, to think of the absolutely amazing advances we made in the early and mid 1900's, with machines that not only performed incredibly well, but many STILL do today, and most were invented and made in just months, while today, it takes YEARS if not decades to produce machines that barely work more than a few years without requiring rebuilding or replacing, cost overruns are damn near required, and the final product often doesn't even meet the original requirements!!
In fairness the tech then vs now is entirely different. Let’s just take the missile systems. In the 50’s and 60’s accuracy was measured in miles, today it’s measured in meters. Yes old mechanical systems lasted however they are only so good.
You see the failures because they make the tabloid front pages (and most of them are fabricated, in any case). You don't hear about the successes because "US Air Force continues to improve technology you'd never be able to understand on time and on budget" doesn't generate clicks.
@@jamesharding3459 probably because the Air Force hasn't completed ANY technological advance on time or anywhere close to on budget since the 70's. Hell, that almost certainly WOULD make headlines. As for advances we couldn't understand, you must be speaking for yourself.
The introduction gives a terrific exposition of how the US and its allies had the USSR completely encircled and vulnerable to nuclear attack from nearly any point of the compass. It's instructive to remember that until the USSR launched Sputnik they had no credible way of hitting the continental US. Even after that, the number of Soviet ICBMs available was miniscule. The Cold War in the US in the 1950s was a massive beat up.
You are a fool, what about the forced annexation of half of the European countries Russia held at end of WW2, Russians enslaved war ravaged countries. You think the hate and suspicion of Russia is a fantasy? And now Putins doing it again!
This video is calling these missiles a deterrent. At the time our major cities also had a DEFENSE system against Russian bombers.Nike and Nike Ajax. Seems there was a lag between development of offense missiles and the needed defensive missiles. “Star Wars”? You may find scattered remnants of Nike sites around some cities. Cleveland for example has a large concrete Block House that housed computers that were part of this defensive system. The military personnel barracks are still visible on the property.
The current fastest ICBM is the USA LGM-30 Minuteman. The US Air Force lists its speed at over 17, 000 mph. Yep many times the speed of sound. Thats why ICBMs can travel intercontinental distances in minutes, not hours.
The Minuteman missiles are now series3. If you want to believe the capabilities have reduced because it makes you feel better, you just do that! If needed they will fly. 1 missile with 4 reentry warheads minimum. Submarines carry half of US nuclear arsenal if you believe releases.
My father is the Air Force captain talking between 15:42 - 15:45. He received his master's from Stanford in 1956. He was promoted to captain and set to Los Angeles. He'd go on to work on the Atlas, Corona, YF-12a/SR-71, MOL, and F-15. He retired a Full Colonel in 1979.
THANKS to your Father
Lucky man to have such great experiences to look back on and be proud.
And I see you with a baby in the avatar, meaning that likely his integrity and prowess, some of those genes are coursing through humanity. This strengthens us all.
Best comment ever
My condolences on your childhood 😅 I bet it was an A* upbringing though.
Oh, to be an aerospace engineer in 1956!
I'm STILL waiting for my damn flying car.
If you have the new HP slide rule and know what it is for.. youre hired!
That would have been the ultimate cool job.
Now! that's what you call hands on engineering
It would've been cool to make and play with wooden toys (mockups). Simulations in a computer are not as fun!
This is the only way to protect our precious bodily fluids.
Only zombies believe that human murder machines protect them...
Not watching OF is the best I can do
and the animated figures at the beginning, where the role models for Roger Ramjet😂😂
Military projects now:
Congress fights for 2 years
After 5 years company says they need more money
After 8 years congress says it's too expensive
Project final finishes with 2 units produced
Project is never put into mass production
We'd get better results if impeding nuclear holocaust and being the victim of an effective preemptive strike was on the table. Nowadays...no one's worried about that, they don't see it as credible or they have awesome bunkers and don't GAF.
Yet ppl always make money on it
You left out the corrupt politicians and their oligarch buddies getting rich........
It could be that the only projects we get to hear about are the failures. I'd like to think we have a handful of secret aircraft/weapon systems that have been developed in the last 10 years.
RIP Zumwalt
My uncle worked as an OIC in charge of various systems at Vandenberg in those early days. He left with me his tool box, lots of stories of when they worked to get new and existing Missiles to fly properly. Many 24 hour days were spent. Frayed nerves. Little or no time off was allowed. It was hard work. There were a few neat stories that survived the years. He once told me that they would hold a cigarette with a pair of needle nose pliers…light the cigarette and then walk into one of the white clouds of LOX (a good long distance away from any equipment or a rocket) and watch the cig quickly vanish into flames. Today that would never be allowed.
Of course, back then, LOX was the only missile fuel developed...and that was the key to the greatest handicap of those missiles, to include Thor: Their response time. Liquid oxygen-based rocket fuel was non-storable and very hazardous. It would take hours to prepare a missile for launch *after* a launch command was given, which gave the other side a chance for the element of surprise. The contemporary Soviet missiles suffered from the same handicap.
Later, a storable liquid fuel was developed which gave the missiles that used it a better response time, though the hazard was still there (just think about the Titan-II that blew up in Arkansas in 1980, when a tech dropped a socket that breached the missile's fuel tank). At the same time, they developed solid propellants for other models of missiles (think Minuteman and the later Peacekeeper), which really served the purpose of improving response time and mitigating the preparation hazards.
But I digress. Regarding Thor, from accounts and footage I had seen of that missile, it was dubious at best, marred with extreme difficulties in both its development and its deployment. When fired, there seemed to be a 50/50 chance of it blowing up *on the ground.*
I just read your comment and you know why they wouldn't allow something like that with the lox is because this country has turned into a bouch of pussy and whinps
@@aloysiusbelisarius9992 It was a V-2 clone test for American aerospace engineers, build us a better longer range V-2 and this is what they came up with. It was a good training program.
@@rtqii Well, no debate there, it was an evolving science; and Thor/Atlas/Redstone were just part of that evolution.
This missile was placed right on the Soviet border, in Turkey. This scared the hell out of the Soviets, and they retaliated by placing missiles in Cuba, and damn near started World War 3. A year after the Cuban Missile Crisis, the US removed the Thor (and Jupiter) missiles in Turkey. Only fair..and some say this was the agreement to end the Cuba crisis.
Yea I love how America always portrayed the soviets as the aggressors there, yet even as a commie hater like I am I don’t see how they couldn’t see how and why the soviets wouldn’t do something in retaliation.
So … the real cause of the Cuban missile crisis is clear. The Soviets were threatened but they cannot place the same threat in return to ensure there is a deterrent. 🙄
@@hushpuppykl - In a word, yes. Specifically, the Jupiter missiles in Turkey, quite close to the Soviet border.
That's right. JFK asked the Russians to keep the deal secret so he doesn't look "soft on Commies".
In reality it was not the “cuban” missile crisis, it was the Turkish missile crisis…. when we studied this incident in high school of course the fact of the atlas ICBMs in Turkey was never mentioned…
I love how they have the guys they're interviewing "snap" their heads to the camera direction starting at @4:07
I know right lol wtf was that
You just don't see that enough these days 🤣
Reminds me of those old dating videos.
We need at least five people to read this six line script.
ok
It’s a very Tim and Eric-esque style of filming.
The engineering, effort, pace of advances that went in to producing items like these was awesome. Despite that, I find the matter of fact and almost nonchalant way that the deployment of weapons that would almost certainly end humanity as we know it is talked about in this 'cartoon' to be bone chilling.
Yes you can see ICBMs thousands of miles down their launch trajectory, in the Twilight evening. For some reason lots of ICBMs were launched from Vandenberg, Ca. In the evening. It was mesmerizing!
Remember late 1960s when they fired the atomic cannon straight up and it left that florescent trail in sky going up....and going down
Vandenburg is both far away from most of humanity and has a retrograde/polar arc. So… it fits many more of the launch conditions. Also… if a rocket fails. There’s only America from Cali to hawaii to pick up any high tech super classified stuff
Remember mid 1960s when they fired the atomic Canon vertically..just find out how high it would go it left a flourscent trail going up could be seen in Arizona where we were
I will say this, I am always very bemused by the cartoons the US armed forces used to include in basically all of the these movies… especially loved the smarmy smirk that the drum-headed contractors head. Eisenhower would have been hopping mad at the military industrial complex smirks…
In the mid-50s, that was high-tech animation.
It's a small IRBM after all...
The same Eisenhower who created the MIC in the first place by centering US defense policy around nuclear weapons? The only reason he complained about the MIC in his farewell speech was because Kennedy and Johnson hammered him as soft on defense after Sputnik; he did it out of spite, not conviction.
Nuclear Vault: This is an excellently produced documentary. Thanks for sharing this!
Imagine being a aerospace engineer in 2022, things u could never imagine, air force vet, unbelievable
Epic snap-to at 4:18....total Blue Steel Magnum skill
Had to see a chiropractor after that joint there lol!!
Love these videos. Always interesting.
4:09 the men doing the “Look-At-The-Camera-When-It’s-Your-Turn-To-Speak” gave me a little giggle 😂
Back in the good ole days when military briefings were done with a cartoon….lol
It’s nice that these are coming back now. What a time to be alive.
Oh what a relief it is 😅
Looking at the world from the northern poles makes us and eurasia seem a lot closer than I thought we were….. oceans apart is what I always thought about eurasia. It almost looks like we’re one country from this point of view. Awesome documentary.
Guess you did not have access to a globe in life.
10:47 love the comparison of an ICBM nuclear weapon being compared to a toddler taking his first steps!
amazing. The map at the beginning explains the launches well. If you don't see the projection on a map, you think it crosses the entire Atlantic when it passes over Canada.
Could you put in a time for when your talking about?
The cartoon contractors look... merchant like
Really cool to see how engineers used to design things before software came along.
Totally...
Slide rules, drafting tables, and good old fashioned brains.
📐 ✏️ 📝 🧠
The expression "one-of" (not one-off) is a product of that time; the engineer draws something and sends the print down to the shop with a note reading, "make me one of these and we'll see if fits."
My father whom, as a person, was an assxxole... worked on Thor in the RAF and served during the Cuban missile crisis in Driffield east Yorkshire. He told stories of how they constantly kept the state of the missile ready for launch during the said crisis. I was ten months old at the time and therefore if it had gone hot... would have been a dead baby.
As you may recall the Cuban Missile Crisis, engineered by Russia’s Khrushchev, came to an end after the US removed these Thor IRBMs from Turkey.
Those were Jupiter IRBMs very close designs. Russians did drive a fair bargain.
Man, why can't the military give us cartoons and head-swinging super close-up personnel nowadays?
The Cult of the PowerPoint has taken over
Government Contractor Cartoons lower morale.
I agree. The Millennial loves nothing more than cartoons and copious amounts of CGI. (served with Hot Pockets and Mountain Dew of course…)
@@nigel900 The boomer sitting and whines about the generation they raised and blame everyone else for their incompitence
@@manletopia4801 It’s Gen-X, dingus. Stop your whining and learn your abc’s…
Yes.....lets not ever have to hear that sound out of anger and let peace remain.....
Greatest aerospace industrial film EVER!
Delivered the W49 (1.1-1.45mt). Amazing.
Cheers. Just going to ask that. Not a ' bad' yield 1.45 mt, tops. They were strategic then!
It's unbelievable but super happy 😁 video !!! Thank you 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
The W49 warhead for the Thor, Atlas, Jupiter, and Titan I ballistic missiles was a W28 Y1 warhead (B28 nuclear bomb) with internal power systems removed. This had a yield between 1.1 and 1.4 mt.
4:33 the dynamic staging! Dutch angles! Someone went to film school!
I have some general question about all these fantastic material. Who was it made for once? Who had to know all this by watching the movies except everyone already involved? Or was is documentation for the future? And, when did all this become approved to release? Are they still making these kinds of movies with todays military project for some educational or other purposes?
Cheers
No we have a new program for education Joe BlowMe not our president and Obama the lying cheating scumbaggery yes folks this is what treasonous evil-doers look like. And by their actions all should know their crimes.
Cold War propaganda. This was shown in high schools, colleges, and recruitment.
I've watched documentaries on all this stuff my whole life. My biological father was an Air Force pilot.
I spent from 1984 to 1992 around Edwards Air Force Base. Our biological father worked at Edwards Air Force Base and Groom Lake aka Area 51.
Growing up in the shadows of the Above Top Secret Clearance world gave me a great life.
Amazing! To think Chevrolet was in the middle of the tri 5 chevys when this missile was in development!
Looks like there is one briefly seen in this video too. Look at 14:04
2 years and 9 months, this is how long it took to develop a ballistic missile from idea to industry. No computers, no 3D printers, only paper and wooden models. But with the use of a completely new untested cryogenic fuel technology. Presently, this is how long it would take to develop this rejected reserve tank, provided that it was a development version.
This channel is vault indeed
That's a pretty quick and agile production process - 8 months from inception to first product. I wonder if we're able to do that anymore.
It depends a lot on how high priority a project is. In the 1950's developing new nuclear delivery systems was at the top of the priority list for the US. In the 2020's, the covid vaccine was urgent, which is why it was also developed in a very short time.
This was a great video! Than you for posting it!!!!
This is my new favourite channel.
No, you
"The first generation of Thor missiles were rushed into service, and design mistakes resulted in a 24% launch failure rate. The competing Jupiter missile saw more use, but both were quickly eclipsed by the Air Force's long range ICBM program, which could be fired from US soil. *By 1959, with the Atlas rocket well on its way to operational status, both Thor and Jupiter programs became obsolete as delivery vehicles*, yet continued to be built and deployed until 1963 for political reasons and to maintain aerospace industry employment.
The missile's lasting legacy continued as the Thor and later Delta families of space launch vehicles used boosters derived from the initial Thor missile, and continued on into the 21st century"
Gotta love the 50s
They did it in only 50 days! And in less than 3 years it was operational overseas. Amazing. The optimism and can do attitude...we desperately need it back.
Clearly Lockheed Martin were not involved.
Cool video! Great information. I had always heard about the Thor being a dud - but it had its own successes. Then it was sacrificed for 'world peace' during the Cuban Missile Crisis. I didn't know that the IRBM, ICBM, SRBM's each coincided with the various types of aircraft used for nuclear deterrence. Thanks for posting this.
Thor was no dud, it was the beginning of a LONG line of boosters. From Thor-Able came Thor-Delta, which eventually became the Delta.
Jupiter was withdrawn from Turkey as a result of the Cuban Missile Crisis.
Thor and its descendants have been used to power hundreds of satellites into space, though it's finally being wound down after over 50 years.
Those Thor missiles based in the UK would have been duds if the Cuban missile crisis hadn't ended when it did as the UK was running out of liquid oxygen.
@@neiloflongbeck5705
by the fall of 1962, Atlas was fully deployed, so I'm not sure that the inability to launch all the floors would have made much difference if war had started worldwide.
CAREFULLY notice failure is a part of success. If you're not failing you're not learning. Yes, failure could be the personnel involved but not always.
Like Sherlock and deductive reasoning. In order to best determine what will succeed, we must establish with certainty what will fail.
Correction- "ballistic missile" does not mean "nuclear missile". You can use them to deliver cupcakes if you want.
In some retro-futurist world, i'm sure there is a bakery that uses ballistic missiles to deliver said cupcakes to customers all around the country.
Hammer of war, A marvel in piece.
As Thor..Gigantor was also originally created Sentinel of wood....
That was so cool. Lost in space. Too.prince planet not so and astro boy excellent
They designed this thing in 7 weeks. With parallel bars, T-squares, clutch pencils, and slide rules. Not only that, but these engineers were contemporaneous with the guys who did Gemini and Apollo. They left a legacy that’s hard to follow.
Good to see thats older documentary film about development of IRBM , they built at deadline time .
I saw lots of Thor ICBMs launched at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California in the early 1960s as a 11\12 year old! Interesting in only a few minutes they were thousands of miles down range over the Pacific ocean and could Still be seen.
What? Yes, you would be able to see them for quite some distance, but not that far. Even at the altitude of the ISS, you still wouldn't be able to see one at 1,000 miles down-range; never mind thousands of miles.
Thousands of miles in minutes? No.
Even at Mach Two, that's about 1,200 MPH, c. twenty miles per minute.
You should look it up. The US Air Force listed the maximum speed for the original Thor that was listed at over 11,000 mph! iCBMs are incredibly fast. Currently, ICBMs lunched from the continental US can hit Moscow in about 25 minutes.
You can see man made satellites in orbit with the naked eye. You should try it. Apple has an app to help you. Look it up.
The fastest ICBM in current service is the LGM-30 Minuteman. The US Air Force lists it at over 17,000 mph
Mutually Assured Destruction was such an upbeat topic back in the day, it's like they are talking about it over breakfast cereal with the kids. I'm waiting for Walt Disney to chime in on explosive yields.
Sesame Street rendering of fallout shelter survival
I've a older brother and he's been in college for about 18 years and for all that couldn't understand the word ballistic, he kept thinking it mend self guided instead of it being like a bullet or artillery shell and follows a simple arch pattern, he kept thinking it had to have some fancy computer to fly
I live how they show as an example D.C. shoots a missed to Kansas!
Amazing We're all still alive
0:42
"An undisclosed number of 4 Missile units"
Thor
@@kitkat9648 behold, I am a hard of hearing
"...Thor missile units..."
@@davidfifer4729 behold, I am deaf
I heard it like that too.
The launch facility areas still exist in Great Britain, no buildings just the concrete runways from the where storage shed locations too the launch location pad and exhaust trenches. Appears they had multiple missiles at each individual site.
Amazing
Wow, the differences in thinking back then compared to now.
This is sort of horrifying when you really get down to thinking what these missiles were designed to do!!
A thor derived delta 1 rocket launched canadian satellite Alouettes 1 and 2 from California in1962
Imagine if human beings were smart enough to invest in peace rather than war. It is always the other countries fault, yet we have never been without war for thousands of years!
Not poor peoples fault. Always the wealthy and power hungry, those most distanced from the horrors, that plunge humanity into suffering.
In a world without Democrats or Communists peace would be the norm.
Honestly we are at peace as long as we don't use these weapons, and if they are used it won't matter anyways.
We live you guys
The first thing you seen I need that
This video is as comforting as Mac & Cheese. I don't care: I miss The Can Do America of yore.
The economic woes we feel now are connected to vast amounts of resources, USA commits towards war.
@@uberkloden
yes and no: since there’s no shortage of fake entirely conceptual money on demand, for all sorts of elite agendas,
I can only conclude that the elite WANT vast numbers of folks in poverty.
Interesting the Douglas company was notified on Dec 23, 1955 and it signs the contract 5 days later. Pretty quick turnaround. No stuffing around there.
You can still see, on Google, the footprints of Thor launch sites at a number of former RAF airfields in England.
Crazy shit done by crazy people. How we've gone so long without nuclear disaster is a miracle.
Ahh theres still some missing nukes off east coast..depth to great
Interesting, nobody mentions the b-58, sure it's from '59? On the other side, "Titan missile"? Wasnt Titan not operational fron 62 onwards? I am confused & have to do some reading, I'm more than probable wrong...
Funny were they turn there heads to talk n make it look more thorough 🔥
It's sad, to think of the absolutely amazing advances we made in the early and mid 1900's, with machines that not only performed incredibly well, but many STILL do today, and most were invented and made in just months, while today, it takes YEARS if not decades to produce machines that barely work more than a few years without requiring rebuilding or replacing, cost overruns are damn near required, and the final product often doesn't even meet the original requirements!!
In fairness the tech then vs now is entirely different. Let’s just take the missile systems. In the 50’s and 60’s accuracy was measured in miles, today it’s measured in meters. Yes old mechanical systems lasted however they are only so good.
things are designed bad deliberately today.. so that way after one thing breaks you buy another
Always remember these are built by the lowest bidder/,subcontractor....we used to make parts for Ford and Xerox....their weapons and space divisions
You see the failures because they make the tabloid front pages (and most of them are fabricated, in any case). You don't hear about the successes because "US Air Force continues to improve technology you'd never be able to understand on time and on budget" doesn't generate clicks.
@@jamesharding3459 probably because the Air Force hasn't completed ANY technological advance on time or anywhere close to on budget since the 70's. Hell, that almost certainly WOULD make headlines. As for advances we couldn't understand, you must be speaking for yourself.
The first generation of Thor missiles were rushed into service, and design mistakes resulted in a 24% launch failure rate.
The introduction gives a terrific exposition of how the US and its allies had the USSR completely encircled and vulnerable to nuclear attack from nearly any point of the compass. It's instructive to remember that until the USSR launched Sputnik they had no credible way of hitting the continental US. Even after that, the number of Soviet ICBMs available was miniscule. The Cold War in the US in the 1950s was a massive beat up.
You are a fool, what about the forced annexation of half of the European countries Russia held at end of WW2, Russians enslaved war ravaged countries. You think the hate and suspicion of Russia is a fantasy? And now Putins doing it again!
"An undisclosed number of four..." 😅
I love how the soviets were able to achieve closed cycle technology as the west said it was "impossible".
The soviets had very hard time mastering solid fuel and digital controls, something the US had in the Minuteman and Polaris from early 1960s.
This video is calling these missiles a deterrent. At the time our major cities also had a DEFENSE system against Russian bombers.Nike and Nike Ajax. Seems there was a lag between development of offense missiles and the needed defensive missiles. “Star Wars”?
You may find scattered remnants of Nike sites around some cities. Cleveland for example has a large concrete Block House that housed computers that were part of this defensive system. The military personnel barracks are still visible on the property.
2028:
FIA: sorry boys, these engines are gonna be air only now, make it work.
4:08 - 4:52 Someone thought they were being very cool with that sequence.
One year and nine months from concept to successful flight .... difficult to believe that they were able to do that without Six Sigma training! ha ha
1:25 Why is Washington nuking Kansas City, Indianapolis, and Columbus?
THE MIGHTY THOR! 😉😁
The current fastest ICBM is the USA LGM-30 Minuteman. The US Air Force lists its speed at over 17, 000 mph. Yep many times the speed of sound. Thats why ICBMs can travel intercontinental distances in minutes, not hours.
Yep! And current accuracy is listed as a 800 ft circle after a 5,000 mile flight!!
No mention of Werner Von Braun????
And then came Minuteman! Still in service! Our most modern ICBM Peacekeeper is gone! And even it would be very old now!
The Minuteman missiles are now series3. If you want to believe the capabilities have reduced because it makes you feel better, you just do that! If needed they will fly. 1 missile with 4 reentry warheads minimum. Submarines carry half of US nuclear arsenal if you believe releases.
Dateline!
04:18
This guys been wating his whole life for this
Lol
Sputnik oct 1957.
In 1957 Valiant Thor Landed In Virginia.
Wait, why doesnt this missile have a pointy cone?
Thats freakin aladeen.
I've seen that sticker! 6:53
Back when the world was an exciting place.
It's even more exciting now. The developments even in just the last 2-3 years in data-sharing and remote targeting are frankly staggering.
Thank you. God bless american enginuity
How can I become a nuclear scientist?
ordered to deployed in 4 years hell today it takes 4 years to figure out what they want it to do!!
Yes, some problems in Air Force.
4:51 The man has the same accent as actor Harry Morgan.
Short range - nuclear artillery shells 😮
Check out these guys with the strange "Ear Wiggles" starting at 4:20....
Hilarious 👍😉
Not even the Air Force believed we went to the moon 😅
Delicious Bratwurst of Peace!
_WHY DOES HE KEEP SAYING DATE LINE??_
Makes it sound more dramatic.
DATELINE.
Don’t know why my parents named me after this…