When you turn a bomber into the first jetliner - 707

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  • Опубліковано 1 лют 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 356

  • @soulman4292
    @soulman4292 3 роки тому +271

    You forgot the quote !!!!!
    Tex Johnston was asked “just what in the hell do you think you were doing?!?” By management, and his response “selling airplanes”
    If that isn’t some thug life shit, I don’t know what is.

    • @the11382
      @the11382 2 роки тому +4

      I mean, he did absolutely sell the plane.

    • @soulman4292
      @soulman4292 2 роки тому +7

      @@the11382 Hell yea he did! Tex also explained that it was 0G maneuver, and he was well within the tolerances of the aircraft, and that it was perfectly safe. The chairman of Boeing at the time said “listen, we know that, you know that, but the public may not, and we just don’t want you to do that again.”
      The late 50’s, and early 60’s were a wild fuckin time. That shit would absolutely not fly today.

    • @UnitedStatesOfficerMarine
      @UnitedStatesOfficerMarine 2 роки тому

      @@soulman4292 I think my reason why its because of the wings of the plane itself why? small turboprop planes like the Cessna plane can do that, same for the airforce jets itself, it is really interesting on how we learn so much.

  • @AaronShenghao
    @AaronShenghao 3 роки тому +195

    Consider at the time, Comet's flaw was not well understood and many consider it's design was weak. So the 707 marketing stunts is perfect.

    • @vincentmaddux2302
      @vincentmaddux2302 3 роки тому +6

      The Comet design live on as the bases of the RAF Nimrod

    • @damienalford9938
      @damienalford9938 3 роки тому +5

      @@vincentmaddux2302 the nimrod is retired

    • @vincentmaddux2302
      @vincentmaddux2302 3 роки тому +4

      @@damienalford9938 I know, I was just pointing out the Comet DNA went on as a military plane

    • @Sacto1654
      @Sacto1654 3 роки тому +6

      Correct. The problem was that the de Havilland engineers had to go with the lightest plane possible due to the somewhat underpowered jet engines actually made the plane more vulnerable to metal fatigue. The results of the Comet I crash investigation was the reason why the 707, DC-8 and Tu-104 all went with rounded windows on the side of the fuselage.

    • @keithammleter3824
      @keithammleter3824 3 роки тому +4

      @@Sacto1654 : Utter nonsense. rounded windows had been standard on Boeing pressurised transports for years before the 707 or the Comet disasters. And on the wartime Lockheed Constellation. And the reason is that for sufficient strength the weight is less. There is nothing inherently bad about squared off windows - its a matter of competent engineering. All doors on pressurised airliners are square and they do not fail.
      This business about Comets and square windows was fluff put out by technically ignorant journalists who figured it was a good story they could sell to equally ignorant public.
      The Comet 1 had several crashes until permanently grounded for various reasons - faulty engine air intake design, incorrectly specified radio antenna that couldn't take the pressure differential, an inadequate riveting method, etc. All these fatal flaws were due to it being designed and engineered by incompetent inexperienced fools. It wasn't a case of other manufacturers benefitting from the Comet mistakes, it was a case of the Comet designers being too dumb and stupid to use what was already known by others.
      Finally, there was not A Comet crash investigation, there were about 10 of them (a couple of crashes reinvestigated when more debris was found), with some key findings kept secret until 2015.

  • @sir_dragonfly7287
    @sir_dragonfly7287 3 роки тому +142

    The most successful early jet airliner by far.

  • @jeremyortiz2927
    @jeremyortiz2927 10 місяців тому +1

    Which eventually evolved into the long lasting C, RC, KC, EC, WC, and OC-135s. From 1999-2001, I was a Guidance and Control technician in Omaha, NE and worked on nearly every operational 707 airframe remaining in the USAF. If I remember correctly, the "youngest" aircraft we had was built in 1964. Unfortunately, the turbojet engines damaged my hearing so badly, I was transferred into a 'desk' job (I wasn't happy about it at the time, but Intelligence was a much better career field overall. Thanks for the video. I'll definitely check out the KC-135 video next. Hopefully I'll see a few I worked on. ✌️✈️

  • @ingvarhallstrom2306
    @ingvarhallstrom2306 3 роки тому +88

    One of the ballsiest moves in aviation history. He risked, if not his life so his entire career within the company. He was lucky they didn't sack him on the spot. Balls, I say...

    • @gianpaolonogarole5631
      @gianpaolonogarole5631 3 роки тому +6

      It was not a dangerous stunt, as a barrel roll is not linked to high structural forces...so, no problem for that aircraft, but managers were a little bit pissed anyway ;)

    • @shukriwafiq5220
      @shukriwafiq5220 3 роки тому

      @@gianpaolonogarole5631 not dangerous huh? bet you can't do it if you're him

    • @bBersZ
      @bBersZ 3 роки тому +1

      @@shukriwafiq5220 You could be taught how to preform a 1g barrel roll within.. a very short time.

    • @gianpaolonogarole5631
      @gianpaolonogarole5631 3 роки тому +3

      @@shukriwafiq5220 what a stupid and useless reply 🤦‍♂️

    • @sule.A
      @sule.A 4 місяці тому

      Tell that to the he 162 that broke apart doing a barrale roll​@@gianpaolonogarole5631

  • @jamesm.ledford9012
    @jamesm.ledford9012 3 роки тому +11

    On October 13, 1968, my 22nd birthday, I was waiting to board a Continental 707 for my flight home from Danang, South Vietnam. I just finished my 13 months on the DMZ with A Co. 3rd Tank Bn. 3rd Marines. As we waited on the tarmac, 122 rockets started impacting around us. The pilot had the engines running and was reading out the manifest to board. He threw his papers up into the air and yelled, "get on board if you are coming!". We piled on board. They shut the boarding door and he took off. It was monsoon and heavily over-clouded. As I tried to fasten my seatbelt, I was upside down, and a stewardess went flying by me. After we settled down out over the South China Sea, the pilot got on the intercom and told us that we had just been in a barrel roll to avoid an incoming Vietnamese transport plane. Of course, we took off without clearance. The stewardess broke her arm but everyone else was okay. He commented that the 707 could do almost anything a fighter plane could do. I believed him!

  • @badguy1481
    @badguy1481 3 роки тому +80

    The "story" I heard while working as a rep at Boeing: The 707 fuel tanks could not withstand inverted flight for very long. Reason: they either had no fuel pumps or the fuel pumps, inside the tanks, would gravitate and the engines would flame out. SO...as a result...the barrel roll had to be accomplished with a 1G constant pressure on the aircraft (and the tanks). As a result that's what Tex did. Not so easy a task to accomplish without a "dress rehearsal" and a very accomplished pilot.

    • @gort8203
      @gort8203 3 роки тому +9

      Actually, a barrel roll is always conducted under positive G. I've done hundreds of them in jets and never pulled less than 1G. If you had zero G on the airplane it would simply roll on its axis and not fly a helical flight path describing a barrel.

    • @badguy1481
      @badguy1481 3 роки тому +5

      @@gort8203 Hey...I've done MANY barrel rolls, myself. And there's GOOD barrel rolls...and there's BAD barrel rolls. In this case if he did a BAD barrel roll and lingered too long, upside down...and the engines shut down...you BET that could have been defined as a "BAD" (non 1G) barrel roll.

    • @gort8203
      @gort8203 3 роки тому +5

      @@badguy1481 Yes, that would be a very bad barrel roll, but then you are the Bad Guy. I don't think Tex would have even contemplated stopping and pushing inverted while rolling the Dash 80. My point of course, is that keeping positive G during barrel roll is normal and is not difficult.

    • @soccerguy2433
      @soccerguy2433 3 роки тому +1

      Delete your comment. Its beyond wrong.

    • @badguy1481
      @badguy1481 3 роки тому

      @@soccerguy2433 How? and Why?

  • @dillongamer1131
    @dillongamer1131 3 роки тому +15

    One of the best airliners of its time
    Only like 5 secs in and the animation already looks

  • @muhazreen
    @muhazreen 3 роки тому +13

    0:44 **does perfecc barrelroll**
    Boeing CEO : You could've done that sooner
    707 Pilot : I want to understand the customer **vocal singer start yelling AAAAAAAAAAA**

  • @serge7633
    @serge7633 3 роки тому +4

    I've flown B707 back in 1972 until 1978. Thanks for sharing mate. Excellent work mate. Keep it up :)

  • @darrenwalters6339
    @darrenwalters6339 3 роки тому +26

    The comet was way ahead of its time and was pushing the limits of 1940s technology on its own. Sadly that came at a cost so others could catch up and learn from its mistakes. Was the first passenger jet liner to cross the Atlantic from London to jfk to
    Funny how you pronounced de Havilland 😂

  • @keithammleter3824
    @keithammleter3824 3 роки тому +2

    I went to an airshow over 50 years ago, organised by a glider club. There were lots of gliders, Cessnas, and other small single prop aircraft on display, a helicopter giving rides etc. The local airline based at the capital city 150 km away sent over a Fokker F28 (mid sized T-jet airliner) - a brand new one they had recently purchased. It amazed the crowd - pilot threw it around the sky like a dog-fighting fighter jet, though he didn't quite get it upside down. I remember the commentator saying something like "Captain so and so and his co are enjoying themselves with this one-time opportunity - they can't do this with passengers on board - the passengers would vomit and/or black out."

    • @jimmyohara2601
      @jimmyohara2601 3 роки тому +1

      F-28 awesome Dutch made jet aircraft. those have extended to F-100. Fokker made F-27, F-50, F-80 too, all of which are used in OZz & P.N.G 😁🙂.

  • @jcole1679
    @jcole1679 3 роки тому +9

    They literally teach us about this guy in the US airforce. Cautionary tale or role model... I'll never know.

  • @commerce-usa
    @commerce-usa 3 роки тому +65

    The Comet was an amazing aircraft. Boeing was wise to learn from it and wait to build a better and safer aircraft. Sometimes being first to market isn't going to Guarantee success.

    • @keithammleter3824
      @keithammleter3824 3 роки тому +1

      The only thing amazing about the Comet is the multiple fatal flaws designed into it by a totally incompetent set of designers working in a company with zero relevant experience.
      Boeing learnt nothing from it - they had heaps of relevant experience to draw upon and used quite different construction methods and design features.

    • @jimmyohara2601
      @jimmyohara2601 3 роки тому +1

      Safer ?? safer than what ?? that's SAFE & good. Comet 01 was No good & flawed 😐🤪

    • @77ice11
      @77ice11 3 роки тому +5

      @@keithammleter3824 again wrong.
      Metal fatigue concept was known but not properly handled by everybody back then in the air industry until...investigations on Comet crashes revealed what was happening.
      Boeing and McDD always praised that de Havilland encountered those struggles and they just has a benefit on 1) know-how, technology and manufactoring and 2) accordingly increased the size of their planes (more passengers) to meet US market needs.

  • @alkatiawri3741
    @alkatiawri3741 3 роки тому +15

    this airplane i think has to be the biggest gamble ever taken by any aviation company in history!!!!

    • @vincentmaddux2302
      @vincentmaddux2302 3 роки тому +5

      the 747 was the next biggest and it too treated to sink the company. There uses to be a billboard outside of Seattle that said"would the last one to leave Seattle ,turn the lights out" in reference to the risk Boeing took

  • @csigouin1
    @csigouin1 3 роки тому +3

    The Der Her Van Comet? Nice...

  • @vustvaleo8068
    @vustvaleo8068 3 роки тому +4

    Kenny Loggins's Danger Zone can be heard playing from beyond the heavens when he pulled the stunts. ✈

  • @davidgrisez
    @davidgrisez 3 роки тому +5

    When I was young the Boeing 707 was the first model of jet airplane that my family traveled on from Los Angeles to Cleveland. In the 1960s American Airlines called their Boeing 707s the Astrojet. During the 1960s the Boeing 707 was a very popular jet airplane.

  • @aurorajones8481
    @aurorajones8481 3 роки тому +6

    Capt: Ok we are leveling off at 40 thousand feet... raise of hands, who wants me to do a barrel roll!? Anyone?! *tap tap tap* is this thing on?

  • @SomeRandomYouTuber_
    @SomeRandomYouTuber_ 3 роки тому +125

    If the 707 was a fighter jet it would be pretty good at flying

    • @SG_AvgeekRailfanner
      @SG_AvgeekRailfanner 3 роки тому +11

      One time a 707 did a barrel roll and lost 3 engines…

    • @王维建
      @王维建 3 роки тому +1

      But there was one time a Boeing B-707 drops bombs

    • @SomeRandomYouTuber_
      @SomeRandomYouTuber_ 3 роки тому +2

      @@王维建 Found&explained- Never built

    • @王维建
      @王维建 3 роки тому +1

      @@SomeRandomUA-camr_ well i know, just imagine if it really was built

    • @ceoofconfusion100
      @ceoofconfusion100 3 роки тому +2

      @@王维建 imagine how many passenger 707 that get shot down becuase they get mistaken as b-707s

  • @Dan.d649
    @Dan.d649 2 роки тому +2

    When Tex got called into Bill Allen's office on a Monday morning, he knew he was to go head to head with his big boss that particular moment. The chance he took to barrel roll that airplane left Bill Allen furious at first. It was not that he was going to be fired, but it did create a stir to begin with. After he was told what he thought he was doing, Tex simply answered back, "I was selling airplanes", and then Bill's response was, "You know that and we know that, but just don't do it anymore" was just a little something that Tex Johnston had up his sleeve, and to keep selling airplanes to customers. He was one of the best pilots around and he did take some hell from Bill Allen. The menuver was concidered to be the "highlight" for the Boeing company in a positive way. Believe it or not.

  • @jeromewagschal9485
    @jeromewagschal9485 3 роки тому +18

    That plane was so futuristic for the times...And nowadays planes still bear a resemblance...

    • @tonyromano6220
      @tonyromano6220 3 роки тому +2

      Resemblance? It could fit right in today.

  • @keithammleter3824
    @keithammleter3824 3 роки тому +6

    At 2:51 the narrator says airlines couldn't understand the need for jets. Not true. By then they were getting pretty sick of the high maintenance costs and frequent failures inherent in a large 4-engine piston engine airliner. E.g., 4 engines each 28 cylinders means 224 spark plugs to fowl up. Given a typical plug MTBF of around 1000 - 2000 hours that means an engine miss-firing and a fire risk every few flights. The USAF had the same problem, driving them to jets. Changing all plugs after every flight was acceptable in wartime, but not in peace time.
    Also, jets are smoother and quieter. Aircraft are noisy things, but if you have never flown on a large multiengine piston engine aircraft, you don't know what noise is.

    • @jimmyohara2601
      @jimmyohara2601 3 роки тому +1

      smoother & quieter than what ?? that's smooth & quiet, compared to large piston engined aircraft. pointless to add ER dude 😐

  • @uus4938
    @uus4938 3 роки тому +8

    I'm not a pilot, but the animation looks like an aileron roll, not a barrel roll. Very cool video, thanks. +1

  • @austinmaxi
    @austinmaxi 3 роки тому +3

    1:45 rofl, the what? "Derhurrvan" never heard them called that..ever 😂

  • @swiper1818
    @swiper1818 3 роки тому +8

    Qantas used to barrel roll their 707's during training flights

  • @curbowman
    @curbowman 10 місяців тому +1

    Don't miss the 1965 movie "Boeing Boeing" with Tony Curtis and Jerry Lewis. Curtis plays a man who has three women, all of them flight attendants on piston airliners. Since those flights are slow, he can manage to sleep with one while the rest are travelling overseas. But then they get assigned to the new jets, and suddenly the girls can do their trips in hours instead of days! The result is hilarious!!

  • @soccerguy2433
    @soccerguy2433 3 роки тому +2

    As a KC-135R Instructor that was some great footage at the end

  • @BGTech1
    @BGTech1 3 роки тому +35

    The plane that brought us into the jet age

    • @luigiweegee7152
      @luigiweegee7152 3 роки тому +14

      Actually the comet did bring us to the jet age but the 707 was the first successful jet aircraft.

    • @myusername3689
      @myusername3689 3 роки тому +3

      @@luigiweegee7152 The comet 4 with round windows and pressurization was pretty decent but the boeing 707 had already came so this comet upgrade wasn’t anywhere near as successful.

    • @luigiweegee7152
      @luigiweegee7152 3 роки тому +2

      @@myusername3689 yea the first comet had design flaw which lead to 2 crashes over the ocean,the 707 learned from the comet and became more successful.

  • @jimsvideos7201
    @jimsvideos7201 2 роки тому +1

    Tex had just the right voice for a "watch this" on the radio.

  • @nattalarico5824
    @nattalarico5824 3 роки тому +1

    I had the Honour and the Pleasure of meeting talking to and shaking hands with Tex Johnston the Boeing Test Pilot that Rolled the first test bed 707. 👍

  • @rayhezbroham7297
    @rayhezbroham7297 3 роки тому +6

    This really set the standard of airliners today. Makes me wonder which aircraft will take is to a new standard

    • @77ice11
      @77ice11 3 роки тому

      Hello, wrong, years before (1949-1952) the de Havilland Comet set those standards.
      With regular scheduled flights between Europe, Africa and Asia.
      Boeing and McDDouglas just increased (more passengers) the size of that "concept" for US market needs.

    • @TLSFC5050
      @TLSFC5050 2 роки тому +1

      @@77ice11 not really, the 707 may not have been the first jetliner but it did pioneer most of the design features used on even modern jetliners.

    • @77ice11
      @77ice11 2 роки тому

      @@TLSFC5050 wrong. It was just bigger in capacity. Because domestic needs were higher due to the size of the country.

    • @TLSFC5050
      @TLSFC5050 2 роки тому +2

      @@77ice11 um, not wrong Boeing had the fore sight to give the 707 swept wings for better high speed performance, as well as pod engines for easier maintenance access. In the wake of the comet disaster, they came up with the idea of using fuselage tear strips and spot welded the skin to each stringer every 2 inches. Most of he structural innovations employed on the 707 are still in use to this day on airliners. The 707 was the first truly modern airliner. Passenger aircraft of today are essentially the same basic design with newer avionics and engines.

    • @77ice11
      @77ice11 2 роки тому

      @@TLSFC5050 wrong. The Comet 1 already had swept wings since the prototype in 1949.
      Engine maintenance was easily solved with many doors-access despite the four engines were buried within wings.
      Not a single claim or blame by a single technician has been recorded about difficulties on doing this job.
      Podded-engines were "invented" to calm down many passengers about not being too close to an engine in case of fire (reminescence of propellers era).
      During the tank-test done for the investigation of Comet's early crashes by sir Arnold Hall, on strong suggestion by Sir Geoffrey De Havilland, were invited Boeing and McDonnell representatives to visit the site, the tank-test and to share then how pressurised airframes would have been done from there onwards: increasing the tick of the skin and spacing less internal structure.
      Without those crashes and that test, B or McD would have encountered the same fate. Because prior to those crashes that was the way aviation industry as a whole was designing pressurized planes.

  • @scottnj2503
    @scottnj2503 3 роки тому +9

    The Tex Johnston story is an all time aviation great. The amazing thing is this happened a mere 50 years into fixed wing aviation history.🤓p.s. I'm a PilotPhotog fan, I like this type of collaboration.

    • @vincentmaddux2302
      @vincentmaddux2302 3 роки тому +2

      The KC-135 series and the 707 are some of my favorite planes. If I ever get around to building a model of the DASH-80 it will be mounted on a stand upside down!

  • @PinkRoseKiller
    @PinkRoseKiller 3 роки тому

    Ugh I caught up with videos I'm interested in and now I'm patiently waiting for the 747 version of this video. This was an amazing video, thank you for sharing it with us all.

  • @wtfsalommy3250
    @wtfsalommy3250 3 роки тому +6

    When ask by the heads of Boeing,what on earth was he thinking.
    He stated, selling airplanes.
    _lmao Murica_

  • @Michael_Michaels
    @Michael_Michaels 10 місяців тому

    Thanks for the heads-up. Totally missed this one. Great job as always! Thank you

  • @maradupras7278
    @maradupras7278 3 роки тому +2

    i think tex johnston is the official definition of "madlad"

  • @yousefbaradee9070
    @yousefbaradee9070 3 роки тому +3

    Tex Johnston is a true aviation pioneer a great pilot that has proven the manuverubility of an aircraft that revolutionize the passenger airliner industry forever RIP Tex Johnston

  • @satvikkrishna145
    @satvikkrishna145 3 роки тому +2

    The 707 and 747 were the most flexible aircraft ever.
    But a fact to be considered that the 707 stands in as the only airliner in history to ever do a barrel rol.

    • @zhardin3652
      @zhardin3652 10 місяців тому +1

      The Dash8 Q400 would like to have a talk

  • @headlightstheperson4596
    @headlightstheperson4596 3 роки тому +6

    2:33 is it just me, or does this shot of the XB-47 make it look like a happy cyclops?

  • @beeleo
    @beeleo 9 місяців тому

    This channel is always more interesting in their animation than in history's facts.

  • @cheongyei
    @cheongyei 3 роки тому +6

    1:45 narrator says "De Hallivand" --dopey a/f

  • @karbengo
    @karbengo 3 роки тому +4

    The return of the Hell-A-Van.

  • @godsowndrunk1118
    @godsowndrunk1118 3 роки тому +2

    My parents were watching the races at Seward Park that day......Tex Johnston's barrel roles still remain part of the family Lore.

  • @802Garage
    @802Garage 3 роки тому

    Phenom. Great quick story telling and editing.

  • @gianpaolonogarole5631
    @gianpaolonogarole5631 3 роки тому +9

    It was not a 707, but the 367-80 (simply called "Dash80"). It was also smaller as the serial production 707 that came later....

  • @leekyo1502
    @leekyo1502 3 роки тому

    That 707 barrow row is why that Boeing is now being the biggest jet manufacturer is the world.

  • @UnitSe7en
    @UnitSe7en 3 роки тому +2

    "Barrel roll!" "Barrel roll." "It was a barrel roll!"
    Shows an aileron roll.

  • @George_M_
    @George_M_ 3 роки тому +7

    If it can take falling a thousand feet in turbulence, it can do a barrel roll.

  • @waywardscythe3358
    @waywardscythe3358 2 роки тому

    My grandfather worked in Boeing as an electrical flight test engineer at that time. He was one of the very few people who knew something would happen at Seafair. Tex asked him if the avionics would work upside down. the reply was "yes of course they will". As an aside, when going up on test flights he'd sit on a small stool at the workstation and the former fighter pilots made a game of trying to knock him off his stool with their flying. they didn't manage it very often.

  • @florin-titusniculescu5871
    @florin-titusniculescu5871 3 роки тому +6

    designed by hand, built by hand, it still holds, for today's big jetliners are all esentially just beefed up 707s

    • @jimmyohara2601
      @jimmyohara2601 3 роки тому +1

      yes indeed. B-727, B-737 are
      bi/twin & tri engined B-707's. built on/from the same template. 😁

  • @sriinda4803
    @sriinda4803 Рік тому +1

    THIS PLANE CAN DO A BARREL ROLL!?

  • @sorosaltgaming
    @sorosaltgaming 3 роки тому +5

    Fun fact: its an aileron roll

  • @quillmaurer6563
    @quillmaurer6563 3 роки тому +2

    This story is Peppy Hare's aircraft marketing strategy.

  • @gmsniperx3623
    @gmsniperx3623 3 роки тому +4

    Imagine being a passenger 😱😱😱 - Matthew Cox

    • @BlueSky-ub4fx
      @BlueSky-ub4fx 3 роки тому

      Well.. since it is a 1 g manouver, you wouldn't even notice.

    • @gmsniperx3623
      @gmsniperx3623 3 роки тому +2

      @@BlueSky-ub4fx True!

    • @BlueSky-ub4fx
      @BlueSky-ub4fx 3 роки тому

      @@gmsniperx3623 ...except, he looks out the window 👀

  • @psykology9299
    @psykology9299 3 роки тому +1

    My dad's uncle used to fly the gutted 707's up from the coast in land for fitting and he barrel rolled one as well, the altitude drop was huge (I can't remember how much he said by)

  • @Kevin-bg3wu
    @Kevin-bg3wu 2 роки тому +1

    Tex was a genius aviator. He maintained 1 g of force on the plane in each position during the barrel rolls. Would almost feel the same as flying straight on the inside.

  • @cskvision
    @cskvision 3 роки тому +1

    Tex Johnston the best badass Boeing test pilot ever

  • @spacehaxx2225
    @spacehaxx2225 3 роки тому +2

    Just that one particular story about the special version for Qantas (and the historical London-to-Australia "Kangaroo Route", was it called?) is pretty interesting too, IIRC. Lots of world history wrapped into that.

    • @olsmokey
      @olsmokey 3 роки тому +1

      I remember being at school in Melbourne back then. We were all led out into the yard to watch the first 707 do a circuit of the city and suburbs. I had no idea what that plane was at the time. Got a sore neck...

  • @connormclernon26
    @connormclernon26 3 роки тому +2

    I’ve seen this airplane more times than I can count

  • @obelic71
    @obelic71 3 роки тому +3

    Remember The unmodified early NATO airframes (E3 and KC135 etc.etc.) of the 707 are only now being retired !
    The modified airframes (CFM and modern cockpits) have still decades to go and will even be further updated!
    They expect that a "707" airframe will reach its centenial birthday in 2057!

  • @joel91473
    @joel91473 3 роки тому +4

    Im but sorry what was his pronunciation of De Havilland

  • @XIndependent77
    @XIndependent77 2 роки тому

    Can’t wait for the 747 video!

  • @kenfeldmanLA
    @kenfeldmanLA 3 роки тому +1

    The swept, flexible wings and under wing engine pods came from Boeing's experience with the B-47. It is definitely NOT from the B-29 derived KC-97, which had neither swept wings nor engine pods. Over 1000 were delivered (1010) not 110.

  • @momoneyinvesting
    @momoneyinvesting 3 роки тому +1

    Nice Starfox reference 👍

  • @themusicalpilot1382
    @themusicalpilot1382 3 роки тому +2

    I love your channel and your videos, but why can no one say De Havilland correctly haha

  • @marcusluciani1620
    @marcusluciani1620 3 роки тому +4

    I like Found and Explained's topics bit the accuracy in his videos always leaves me questioning how much this guy knows. Not a barrell roll and pronunciation of DeHavilland are obvious issues. Always a few in each F&E video.

    • @FoundAndExplained
      @FoundAndExplained  3 роки тому

      Gotta wonder if it’s deliberate. A mistake or two leads to a comment which makes the video perform a lot better. In this case? Who knows ;)

    • @marcusluciani1620
      @marcusluciani1620 3 роки тому +2

      @@FoundAndExplained Geez I hope you're not deliberately putting errors in. Credibility is important mate, even though it's UA-cam. Is that a short term gain that will undermine your channel in the long run? Up to you I guess... Thanks for replying.

    • @bop3752
      @bop3752 3 роки тому +2

      @@FoundAndExplained docking your credibility for a bump in the algorithm with intentional errors is extremely off-putting and borderline scummy.
      This is the kind of stuff why I (and I’m sure many others) rarely watch your videos. By no means are they a credible source, they always feel poorly researched. I’d rather research something myself than waste my time watching a F&E video about it.

  • @thelettuceconsumer
    @thelettuceconsumer 3 роки тому +3

    So *thats* what happens when you program “Do a Barrel Roll” into a plane!

  • @tonyromano6220
    @tonyromano6220 3 роки тому

    Wow! I had no idea that thing was so agile!

  • @ThiagoBouzan
    @ThiagoBouzan 3 роки тому +4

    60 years later passenger planes still have the same lines

  • @flailios
    @flailios 3 роки тому

    9:48 VH-EBC is a rego I recognised imediately from plane spotting in Sydney. It's now an Airbus 330. 🇦🇺

  • @camerond9885
    @camerond9885 3 роки тому +1

    My great uncle was on that -80 when it flew a roll over the lake.

  • @mathewcaldwell2945
    @mathewcaldwell2945 3 роки тому +1

    Tex was just having fun.

  • @Andrew-gv4bh
    @Andrew-gv4bh 3 роки тому

    That's history. Nice!👍🙂

  • @RookFox
    @RookFox 3 роки тому +3

    That pilot was insane doing a barrel roll with this

    • @sledgeoc
      @sledgeoc 3 роки тому +3

      It is a one g maneuver and perfectly safe, everybody knows that.

    • @RookFox
      @RookFox 3 роки тому

      @@sledgeoc I mean with how he did it without anyone expecting it

  • @zackcraxyt4525
    @zackcraxyt4525 Рік тому

    Aviation investors: Woah We didnt knew that the 707 can do Barrelrols
    Boeing CEOs: We neither....

  • @user-iz3gv5vo6b
    @user-iz3gv5vo6b 3 роки тому

    Great intro Boys and Girls! Keep up the good work.

  • @dentalnovember
    @dentalnovember 3 роки тому

    I love to visit the dash 80 prototype at the Udvar Hazy Smithsonian air and space museum.

  • @James-May
    @James-May 3 роки тому +2

    I think you meant B-47, with the podded engines and swept wing...

  • @mutantryeff
    @mutantryeff 3 роки тому +1

    Was there a Boing 717 or why not? Most of my early flying days were on the 727.

    • @jimmyohara2601
      @jimmyohara2601 3 роки тому +1

      there was a B-717. I seen & been on one in P.N.G 😁

  • @GreenNeonLine
    @GreenNeonLine 2 роки тому

    I have heard of both because I am into aviation but even before I knew a douglas was a plane and they made the famous DC9 DC11 which were good planes

  • @RJRyukyu
    @RJRyukyu 3 роки тому +1

    'Do a barrel role!'
    -Peppy Hare,1997
    -F&E, 2021

  • @HellenicWolf
    @HellenicWolf 2 роки тому

    AWESOME.

  • @wanderduck3
    @wanderduck3 3 роки тому +2

    That's technically an aileron roll. A barrel roll is different.

    • @ace_trace_2237
      @ace_trace_2237 3 роки тому +2

      He did a barrel roll, using the elevator to keep 1g, as the fuel pumps wouldn’t work inverted

  • @sciencefun1884
    @sciencefun1884 3 роки тому +3

    Pilotphotog and explained cool dude ❤️

    • @PilotPhotog
      @PilotPhotog 3 роки тому +2

      Thanks! It was great working with F&E on this video

    • @emaheiwa8174
      @emaheiwa8174 3 роки тому +2

      @@PilotPhotog love your content too! 👌🏻🍻

    • @PilotPhotog
      @PilotPhotog 3 роки тому +1

      @@emaheiwa8174 thank you!

  • @TLSFC5050
    @TLSFC5050 2 роки тому +1

    The 707: built to withstand anything except a bad pilot

  • @sineapfel1971
    @sineapfel1971 3 роки тому

    Can't believe how those videos don't have millions of views. Just such great content. Keep on going. Love it.

    • @FoundAndExplained
      @FoundAndExplained  3 роки тому

      Working on it! a lot of the channels with millions of views have the pleasure of being around for three or more years! i'm still a newbie :)

    • @sineapfel1971
      @sineapfel1971 3 роки тому

      @@FoundAndExplained definitely true, but one of the best for sure!

  • @dathowl9873
    @dathowl9873 3 роки тому

    In my mind 1:00 into the episode.
    "This is going to be a good one..."

  • @yellowrareo8044
    @yellowrareo8044 3 роки тому +1

    Yes.

  • @lowercherty
    @lowercherty 3 роки тому +2

    90% of its design and most of the development was taken from the KC 135. Douglas was the one who laid it all on the line with the DC 8.

  • @owenarneson7798
    @owenarneson7798 3 роки тому +2

    I’ve actually seen this exact plane in person it’s In museum in Washington DC

  • @MrSupercar55
    @MrSupercar55 3 роки тому +1

    I’d sure hate to be onboard whilst it was doing that barrel roll. Might end up spilling food and drink all over the cabin.

  • @lightningwingdragon
    @lightningwingdragon 3 роки тому

    "Have you heard of Boeing, or have you heard of Douglas?"
    Everyone in the comments: We've heard of both, duh!

  • @randomrazr
    @randomrazr 3 роки тому +1

    isit difficuklt to make /learn nimations like this

  • @alexanderandersson4093
    @alexanderandersson4093 3 роки тому +1

    Looks like a mustard video

  • @justinnielsen8756
    @justinnielsen8756 2 роки тому

    Watching this right as the final 747 is coming off the production line. 12/6/2022. Sad day for aviation enthusiasts.

  • @roarkm.o.banjonjeffries3713
    @roarkm.o.banjonjeffries3713 3 роки тому

    I'm curious if Boeing is done that again I'll have to look that up very impressive

  • @fedomandez
    @fedomandez 3 роки тому +3

    Boeing in the past:
    Barrel rolls and transonic dives
    Boeing now:
    Crashing due to faulty MCAS and lacking training

    • @datathunderstorm
      @datathunderstorm 3 роки тому

      Did a Boeing 707 ever break the sound barrier - albeit accidentally? Dying to know.

    • @fedomandez
      @fedomandez 3 роки тому +2

      @@datathunderstorm in 1991 a 747 reached M0.98 in a dive.
      It was caused by a failed Inertial navigation system

    • @77ice11
      @77ice11 3 роки тому

      😂 exactly.
      Plus, it is the most (statistically) unrealiable plane constructor regarding the balance "planes built VS crashes due to technical failures".

  • @jamesb.9155
    @jamesb.9155 Рік тому

    That barrel roll was all over the news for years I imagine. i even heard about it when I was growing up.

  • @nikiplay8775
    @nikiplay8775 3 роки тому +2

    So are you the mustard guy?