Red Arrows 1967 Oh so close and low !!
Вставка
- Опубліковано 4 жов 2024
- Clip used as part of a video presentation at the Red Arrows 21st season birthday party which I organised at RAF South Cerney during the Fairford IAT Airshow..
Can't believe they're now at the 50th season :)
this part was made up of the best bits from Arthur Gibsons 1967 video.
Any of that kind of stuff today would certainly result in no tea and biscuits meeting with the CAA these days.
Actually the MAA but I catch your drift
@anglovirtual you do realise MAA means Military airworthiness authority.
As for drones im glad the CAA are interested
@anglovirtual You must be a joy at parties
@@daveco4645 its also Military Aviation Authority.
@@daveco4645 - drone scare is a thing though, harmless hobbyists are treated like terror suspects in some places
Ah yes, the 60s.
When the pre-flight briefing consisted of 'remember to go around the 12ft pole'
The Gnat was a beautiful aeroplane for The Reds. It had a fantastic rate of roll and it's 45 degree sweep meant that when they were in Diamond they formed a perfect square. It was a shame that they were ageing and had to be replaced, those of us who are old enough to remember, missed them when they went.
Crap, I remember when they were called the Black Arrows with Hawker Hunters!!!
@@accobra383 really..?
I remember flying into Exeter airport in 2007, there were loads of private Hunters parked there. All gone now thanks to Shoreham 2015! Bet the Gnat is now history in private hands except very rich people in the US & other ex colonial countries!
@@accobra383 That was 111 squadron. The predecessors of the Red Arrows were the Yellowjacks, flying yellow Gnats.
@@hoppinonabronzeleg9477 - Is that right, are there no more privately owned hunters flying in the UK?
Awesome! I went to school as a kid in Gloucestershire, so saw them quite often. One of our teachers was married to an Arrows pilot, and on her birthday the team did a full routine over our school for her! That was in 1972. Prefer the Gnats to the Hawk, TBH.
I lived near Staverton Airport growing up where we had a free air show in our garden every year!!!!!
Ah the good old days, when everything had a porn soundtrack
Hi. I’ve come to repair your jet nozzles.....
@@HerbertDuckshort Oooh you'll have to do it while I'm getting my undercarriage serviced.
...and H and S was a mucky magazine.....or was that H and E?.....so hard to remember stuff these days......did I take my tablets?....am I on tablets?
@@dorsetdumpling5387 😄😄😄
@@HerbertDuckshort sir, you hit the nail on the head with that one. Is that why the pilots of the day had big droopy moustaches?
Aah! The good old pre- health and safety years...!
Yep good old years of people dying at work and catching dangerous lung diseases🙄🙄
It’s so easy to spot a twat on UA-cam, they think health and safety is a bad thing🙄🙄
@@Jabber-ig3iw You do realize you are the definition of a twat with that pansy take.
@@Jabber-ig3iw Did you not realize it was a *fucking joke?*
Who am I kidding. This is the internet. Nevermind.
@@Jabber-ig3iw Here ladies and gentleman we see a native fuckwit moron in their native habitat.
Ladies and gentleman please turn off your flash on your cameras and smartphones as we do not want to send the fuckwit moron into another triggered episode.
@@smurphy1977 Bloody snowflakes can't handle a bit of asbestos poisoning can they?! Not like in your day eh? You'd graft down't pit 22 hours a day and if you developed emphysema you'd be grateful for it. Fucking plum.
My father you recently passed away at 99 was an officer in the RAF when this was filmed and had the entire team autograph a photograph which he gave to me. I was 8. Unfortunately shortly after that show two pilots collided and were killed during a scissor cut practice. May they RIP
Amazing pilots. That music... pure gold!
you have to go to airshows in eastern europe to see this sort of thing nowadays
Which goes well...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sknyliv_air_show_disaster
@@zxbzxbzxb1 Thats what happens when you have a flight plan with errors in it and you are also denied an additional training flight to practice ... my conjecture is that the crew were pressured by the "show must go on" mentality.
That video & music was chaos!
Im hung over. Didnt need that UA-cam
Some time later, Jan 1971, still flying Gnats, the two solos hit each other head on at Kemble, during an opposition manoeuvre `Roulette'. All 4 pilots were killed, including a good friend, John Lewis. RIP guys.
Both John Lewis and John Haddock were my instructors on the JP course at Syerston. Great memories- great guys, such a waste.😔
Thanks for that Rod, I was a Halton Apprentice (96th) with John, and met him at BZN a week or so before his crash. All a long time ago now, but seems like yesterday I was chatting to him under the wing of a VC10.
@@rodthebass My late dad operated out of Syerston during the War. He was a Lanc pilot with 49 Sq.
I love the cheesy music. They were proper hooligans of the skies back then.
The red arrows displays at the British F1 grand prix’s at Brand Hatch in the 70’s up to the mid 80’s were just bonkers by today’s safety standards. When doing the dual display section of the display, the two aircraft would pass over the grandstands at about 100ft, then drop to about 50-60ft above the track to do the high speed passes. It was stunning to watch but it would have been carnage if something went wrong.
It was the also the same when the British Airways Concorde and the Vulcan bomber flew over the track very low (by today’s standards) and climbed away near vertical with the afterburners lit up, the sound shook everything and everybody. Windows were smashing, pint glasses vibrating off of tables and women and kids screaming.
Fabulous. I remember as a kid a Lightning crushing my chest with a low pass !
That all sounds fricken amazing.
Sounds great!
That's nothing. I remember a red arrows pilot grabbing the beer out of my hand without even blowing the froth off. And he paid for it too. THAT was a low pass.
@@joschmoyo4532 bro u made my day
As a young boy growing up in the 60’s, we used to watch the ‘Reds’ training over Cardigan Bay. Awesome then, awesome now! Still the best in the world.
And they got Ron Burgundy to play his Jazz flute to the display, Amazeballs!
ok
lol
@@Jin-Ro ayyyy it's the lil dic
tator from the lil peninsula
Holy mother of incredible insanity that take off!
I have witnessed the Arrow Gnats doing this and also Javelins on excessive take offs. Just as low.
Those take-offs were amazing!!
Get yourself to Scampton in spring time and watch them practise their formation take offs. Quite good !
Big up for the old RAF Church Fenton Displays, those were the days before being placed 3 miles away from the action.
Absolutely i went to many Church Fenton Airshows...one highlight being the 1975 Lightning display which finished with very high speed left to right pass at low level followed by a high rate roll climb out that literally tore a cloud apart.
Me too very fond memories of Church Fenton displays … the Lighting version of vertical take off full after burners and the sky literally cracked open 😊
1960's tech with 1960's video editing and Jazz flute. Nice!
surely, you mean ....... Niiiiiiiice??? 😉
I REALLY DON'T CARE what.othrrs say THESE ARE THE BEST , (GREATEST) in the world They are DEFINITELY 2nd to NONE!!!!
I remember being at the 1977 British GP and being seeing the way the Red Arrows being so low they left their smoke in the grass… ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Yeah they still had gnats when I was a kid and though they were choreographed, they were flying by the seat of their pants. It was really something to see. The gnat was a beautiful little aeroplane, it's a shame we don't still have them. I bet the running costs would be a little more palatable. Sweet little bird 👍✌️☮️❤️
I was a civy driver at RAF Cranwell and they asked for a volunteer to take a tanker down to North Weald to refuel the Red Arrows. I volunteered and from memory it was a Bank holiday 1967. I was a way 3 days, 1 day to get there, 1 day at the display and 1 day to get back. The tanker was on a S type Bedford with a petrol engine. Not very fast hence a day to get there and a day to get back.
I was lucky enough to see the red arrows perform locally in Southport and it was gorgeous very talented chaps. Can’t lie❤
Fabulous. THATS LOW FLYING!!
That clip of the Gnat (Ray Hanna?) following the undulation of the runway brings new meaning to "terrain following".
Aaah the good old days before health and safety! Lol pretty amazing video! 😁👍
Low flying as well as following the contours of the runway. That’s the puppy. 😀
FOD clearing before the start of the air display obviously!
I thought I would be the only one to pick that up, yup now that’s true nap of the earth flying, I’ve heard of many reasons why it’s called “nap” of the earth, I even think Wikipedia has it wrong (no surprises there) I heard of even pilots “& wiki” saying it’s called nap as it’s designed to catch the enemy off guard by flying under the radar n popping up at the last second when making your attack, thereby catching the enemy off guard (napping). I’ve argued with ppl who say it’s not nap it’s map of the earth flying, meaning u follow the lowest contours of the map/environment. The REAL meaning of NAP of the earth is that NAP stands for Near As Possible, that’s what many RAF pilots have told me so nap of the earth flying or abbreviated sometimes to N.O.E. & that’s good enough for me.
@@marcs990 . I don’t miss a trick. I’m ex RAF myself. Always loved the Gnat too. Had it’s moments with the Fly By Wire system as a few Pilots found out..
Stunning footage...the Arrows were truly breathtaking with the Gnat..
When I visited Scampton visitor centre some years ago there was a Gnat on display outside the Reds hanger, which visitors were allowed to wander round full of Hawks being serviced. The gnat is tiny compared to the Hawk. I think the Gnat was painted yellow, the yellowjacks being the RAF display team prior to the Reds. I regret not seeing the Firebirds 56 sqn EE Lightning display team, more important things like girlfriends took priority at the time!
I would dearly have to have seen the Firebirds a bit before my time as were the Blue Diamonds who were based a stones throw from where i live at RAF Leconfield.
An era when Air Force was about charm, style, personality and hotshot aviators.
Much better & daring than today's boring Red Arrows displays
Taking of like that made the Folland Gnat look like Swallows or Swifts, small birds, especially the wing configuration, high on the fuselage or when ducks glide.
Ah the Gnat, such a lovely aircraft.
1977 I remember it well, I was stationed at Wittering at the time
@@StephenDavey-f7s this was 1967
Remember these air shows well. Folland Gnat back in those days.
Hot shots!
Folland Knat was an astonishing little jet.
These were the original Danger Men!
The Yellowjacks Gnat G-MOUR is still on the register in private hands. Based at North Weald.
When we were young we knew no fear
ps: the soundtrack is what makes this so special.
I loved the idea of weight saving in the Gnat. Why fit dive brakes when you can just use the main gear doors?
How well I remember them flying like this. I worked as a civilian clerical assistant at RAF Kemble, Gloucestershire when The Reds were stationed there. We got to see them practising almost every day during our lunch hours. I loved the Folland Gnat; they were far more daring in those days (no safety regulations). I was so upset when they were moved to RAF Scampton. I rarely see them nowadays but usually get a glimpse when they perform at RIAT each year as RAF Fairford is only about 10 miles from where I live in Cirencester. They are the best in the world!!!
Amazing aircraft. Saw them flying across the rooftops in Portsmouth as a child
That is very early in the Red Arrows careers: five planes and no white stripes.
Just the Yellowjacks re-painted!
The little swept-wing Folland Gnat jet trainer as used in the 1991 movie " Hot Shots ! " a parody on Top Gun ...
Closer to the ground than the motorcycle display team. Nice!
Used to live near RAF Shawbury, and they’d fly over our house in Grinshill during practice flights, awesome👍👍
I was driving to Shrewsbury on the A53 one summers afternoon when the Red Arrows suddenly appeared above the hedge, taking off from RAF Shawbury, parallel to the road. It literally brought the traffic to a standstill, everyone pulled over onto the verge to get out and watch as they practiced a display.
Is that Ron Burgundy on the jazz flute?
Gnats still flying at North Weald...just up the road
Remember watching a pan English Electric Lighting do a similar very low runway fly past at an RAF air show for the RAF back in the 1980’s. We the crowd were kept safe standing behind a rope very close to the runway.
The Gnat was a beautiful aircraft.
Fookin Hell, imagine the health and saftey nazi in the RAF watching this today his piles would have burst.
The music on the video dates the film!
It’s 55 years ago ffs.
Ron Burgundy is crushing it, 😄
The wonderful, beautiful, Folland Gnat. And boy are they low going down that runway. Little Rissington?
Yes it was Little Ris.
The famous hump in the runway being used to great effect! Oh, the Sundays I spent there hoping for the weather to clear... so many memories triggered by this short clip..
The Folland Gnat was a much better aerobatic aircraft being smaller and able to roll in well under 1 second.
Reminds me of the "Hot Shots" movie.
Best of the best... They are really so close
Super impressive!
Groovy Baby
Seeing the folland gnats reminds me of hot shots 1 😂
Those look similar to the planes they used in Hot Shots.
How odd the rest of the film is no longer available on youtube - or anywhere else for that matter....
I have the full Arthur Gibson-John Edwards 6 minute vid that this was taken from Ill try and upload it shortly. Title will be Red Arrows 1967 -Arthur Gibson
I've uploaded it -heres the url. ua-cam.com/video/-08q9IGM614/v-deo.html
Enjoy
Kudos to the cameraman
Damn! The were low
Love the editing 😍
Great video, thanks for sharing.
The Gnat jacket by Folland 😉
Brilliant. I love it. Thanks for uploading this.
Aha- surprised you've only just noticed it. I uploaded it 8 years ago🤣
@@rodthebass there's a mountain of content to get through on UA-cam! ;-)
The editing made almost feel animated
I actually saw them when I was a kid. We were on holiday and the were flying nearby. thinking back later I remember my late dad mentioning who they were and had only started that year.
Some of this is at Little Rissington.
Did readers know that the aircraft sounds for Thunderbirds were recorded there. Apparently the most useful sound wasn't an aircraft but a machine used to start aircraft so I assume that was Thunderbird 2.
I grew up seeing these and others at airshows,these there is something a miss with them,I use to watch them doing cows the isle of wight as it fell around my birthday I always get really emotional seeing them,but now I feel as though the spark has gone there always seems to be problems I was going to see them at Bournemouth airshow and didn't go they had a birdstrike they are loosing their spark which is so sad to see
Big contrast to the modern day thinking of oh its raining we will stay on the ground instead attitude.
It saves the snowflake CO from having to use the (in)famous phrase " he died doing what he loved best".
Let's take a moment to recognize Ron Burgundy on the jazz flute
I remember these red arrow jets going over our house in 1967 as a kid you could see the pilots white helmet they were that low..I think they were called Nats.
Pilot Officer Smith, a bit low on that session, sharpen the response up hmmm? Yessir.
Back wn the red arrows where fun 😄
World's best air acrobatics team.
Awesome mate! 👍✈️
Ray Hanna was team leader back then and he liked to fly super low.
I was at Brighton as a kid and one of them hit a yacht between the piers and had to eject.
Look up Spitfire under bridge flown by Hannah
Ray Hanna....
I remember this appearing in a video with Raymond Baxter.
I used this piece as part of a compilation video put together for me by the SSVC (anyone remember them). I used it at the Reds 21st birthday party that I organised at RAF South Cerney, along with a giant cake. 700 people attended in the mega giant marquee.
Very cool
The 2 dislikes are inverted pilots.....
Or maybe jealous Blue Angels pilots!
1:35 Hats of to the cameraman, who was not far off having no head, yet alone a hat.
I could be wrong but aren't you meant to say "not far off losing a hat, yet alone your head" because losing a head is luckier than losing a hat.
Ron Burgundy approves of the music choice.
I forgot the Red Arrows used to fly the Gnat aircraft. Have there always been 9 aircraft in the team? As only 5 were seen in the film, just wondered if that's how they started.
As far as I know, there's always been 9. Their predecessors, the Black Arrows hold the record for having a 22 ship formation, flying the Hawker Hunter.
@@nicksykes4575 Cheers Nick. 22 Hawker Hunters in formation must have been a great sight to see.
There was a story, and I know not if it were true.
That if a particular fuse was removed, the Gnat would roll a lot quicker.
So the fuse was removed.
I'm sure I heard one of the pilots telling this story in a documentary. Actually the story he told was even better. I believe that once this practice came to light the top brass said the fuse had to be put back in, but the pilots saw they hadn't stipulated that it had to be a functioning fuse, so the pilots simply inserted a blown fuse and carried on as before. Ahhh the good old days.
The Gnat .. I believe the aircraft here ..
Remember well the little red gnats at Gaydon 1966.!
Spectators advised not to stand in front of these mad buggers😅
As tight as a Gnats chuff !!!!
Groovy! 🤙
great team
If the Reds minimum height was 35ft at the time, it must have been measured from 10ft above the fin!
They wouldn’t be able to fly that low today,too dangerous!
Well technically it would be no more dangerous than it was back then.
Folland Gnats. For the plane-spotters out there.
Air shows were different in the 1950's-70's; I should know: my dad was a USAF fighter pilot, career 1951-1983, and thru his early specific position, knew many of the Thunderbird pilots over successive teams during the 60's-70's. But for me as a military brat/plane nut, they were so low you could count rivets, how many fingers on one hand, and my fave....the smell of JP-4. Awwww....the sound and smell of freedom.
"I should know" how big headed does that sound lol
@@soilentgreen7 - You'll have to forgive him, he's a yank ...... self-deprecation is an entirely alien concept.