Spruce Goose: The LARGEST Plane Ever Made!

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  • Опубліковано 9 вер 2024
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    The Spruce Goose is an aviation icon that started off as a sensible but incredibly ambitious wartime aircraft project, driven by one man’s passion. But the only reason it ever got to fly is because that passion became an obsession.
    Today, we'll look at how Howard Hughes developed and maintained the H-4 Hercules over a period of decades, the history of seaplanes and flying boats, and why the Spruce Goose will be forever be remembered as a truly classic aircraft.
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    Below you will find the links to videos and sources used in this episode.
    SOURCES
    -----------------------------------------------------
    • Flight of the Spruce G...
    • HOWARD HUGHES FLYING B...
    • The Howard Hughes Archive
    • Howard Hughes - H-4 He...
    • "Size 36" The first p...
    • Flying Boats 1930`s - ...
    • The Boeing 314: Pan Am...
    • China Clipper: Pan Am'...
    • The Battle of the Atla...
    • (1/12) Battlefield I: ...
    • Boeing Model 314 Clipp...
    • De Havilland Mosquito:...
    • Henry Kaiser Think Big
    • Howard Hughes - Decade... v
    • Hughes H-1 Racer Test ...
    • Sky High: The Story of...
    • HAC Hughes Aircraft Co...
    • TA-1 First Flight
    • Boeing Model 307 Strat...
    • The Cessna Caravan: On...
    • The Spruce Goose's Mai...
    • Airport | Shell Histor...
    • China Clipper: Pan Am'...
    • First Flight of the se... v
    • How the US Started Cod...
    • Impact of World War II...
    • Evergreen Museum: Movi...
    • The Spruce Goose and i...
    • Antonov AN-225 cargo t...
    #Mentourpilot #pilot #aircraft #plane #airplane #sprucegoose

КОМЕНТАРІ • 800

  • @MentourNow
    @MentourNow  Місяць тому +33

    Go to ground.news/mentour to get worldwide coverage on Boeing, aviation safety and more. Subscribe through my link for 40% off unlimited access this month.

    • @jarvisjohns
      @jarvisjohns 29 днів тому +4

      21:51 this is obviously an AI-generated picture. I figured that this channel was better than that and only wanted to share truth and not fabrication.

    • @splifstar85
      @splifstar85 28 днів тому

      Soviet Union’s supplies through the “land lease” amounted to about 5% of the total equipment and other supplies used for the war…
      So as much as the western propaganda tries to claim that they had any significant role in the war against the brown plague - it really didn’t..
      (I mean Standard Oil also supplied the Luftwffe with kerosine at the same time)
      And the only reason why the Normandy landing took place is because the Soviets were about to crash the na.. is and the Americans wanted to occupy at least some part of Europe…
      That is why for the long 3 years (1941-1944) all the calls to the British and Americans to open the second front fell on deaf ears… coz in reality they actually wished that the Germans won 🤷‍♂️

    • @Premier-Media-Group
      @Premier-Media-Group 28 днів тому +1

      Thank you for not pitching BetterHelp for this episode!

    • @kurtvanluven9351
      @kurtvanluven9351 27 днів тому

      Can't turn trees into a transport. What is your take on Melvin Dummar, and the fuss over Howard's will?
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Melvin_Dummar

    • @31terikennedy
      @31terikennedy 24 дні тому

      @@splifstar85 How many Lend Lease trucks were provided?

  • @SueBobChicVid
    @SueBobChicVid Місяць тому +562

    Kind of a throwback to see you on the sofa. Brings back memories of the dogs.

    • @user-ql6qg7bh3p
      @user-ql6qg7bh3p 29 днів тому +19

      Same crappy sofa too😂 mentour hasn't sold out!

    • @radudeATL
      @radudeATL 29 днів тому +66

      And It’s a lovely sofa. It’s just missing the classic red and green pillows…

    • @user-ql6qg7bh3p
      @user-ql6qg7bh3p 29 днів тому

      ua-cam.com/video/FQN8UTLLU0M/v-deo.htmlsi=C1yNdDiKlDdOF3h0 the spruce moose😂

    • @sylviamckenna8687
      @sylviamckenna8687 29 днів тому +47

      Need a doggie cameo in next video!!

    • @zakkhan3270
      @zakkhan3270 29 днів тому +12

      Bro those videos were the best

  • @TiptronicSS
    @TiptronicSS 29 днів тому +258

    I like the "house" setting, it's like "grandpa, tell us a story" setting. 😄 feels natural to me like the early videos.

    • @MentourNow
      @MentourNow  29 днів тому +74

      Great! I was filming it from my vacation home in Sweden.. it’s very rural

    • @TiptronicSS
      @TiptronicSS 29 днів тому +19

      @MentourNow I love it! I prefer it over behind the desk video's. Which are fine, but this is more relaxed (for both 😄) More recording from Sweden!

    • @logic.and.reasoning
      @logic.and.reasoning 29 днів тому +2

      Time for a green screen... 😅

    • @vanzell1912
      @vanzell1912 29 днів тому +5

      In the end , Hughes was a debilitated, senile wreck. This often happens to those who are handed everything- including access to any woman one chooses. He led an interesting but sad life.

    • @cherriberri8373
      @cherriberri8373 29 днів тому +6

      ​@@vanzell1912 yeah everyone goes senile before death. Shocker. But sure, use the guy to try and reinforce your judgemental and petty world views, why don't you.

  • @danielbarreiro8228
    @danielbarreiro8228 29 днів тому +105

    And why would ships traditionally moored on the 'port' side? Because before they had central rudders, ships had steering oars hanging out from one side which had to be kept away from the pier to avoid entangling or breaking it. That oar was known as the 'steer board'. One side of the ship became the 'steer board side' and the other the 'port side'' and later became 'starboard' and 'port'.

    • @MentourNow
      @MentourNow  29 днів тому +21

      Awesome fact!

    • @molybdomancer195
      @molybdomancer195 26 днів тому +14

      I checked this with the OED and you are right. So many explanations of word origins online are wrong so I always check

    • @SukhdevSingh-ge5rj
      @SukhdevSingh-ge5rj 23 дні тому +4

      🕯️🕯️🕯️🕯️ starboard side and port side 😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊💡💡💡💡💡💡💡💡💡

    • @calvinnickel9995
      @calvinnickel9995 21 день тому +1

      Thanks!
      I knew the origins of starboard but I had no idea that that was the reason for port. Makes sense.

    • @jehoiakimelidoronila5450
      @jehoiakimelidoronila5450 18 днів тому +2

      I assume that steer board is right side because almost everyone is right-hand dominant. Makes sense. Thanks for the info, man. The things we learn everyday 😄

  • @diablouser
    @diablouser 29 днів тому +122

    My father worked for Hughes Aircraft. He was employee number 32 or 33. He graduated from Carnegie Tech as a Aircraft structural engineer. He had numerous involvements with Howard himself, including related to the Spruce goose, the lead engineer for the structural design of the fuselage. he also was the Hughes representative at Fairchild when they built the wings and tail section of the twin engine recon aircraft. He taught Howard structural engineering one night in Howards kitchen, and said that it was scary how fast he picked up the ideas. After that overnight session, you couldn’t pull any wool over his eyes on structural design.
    My mother was the secretary for the production manager to Hughes Aircraft . Howard paid for their honeymoon when, almost without any warning, he sent five people to do the design for the flying boxcar for another company. When my father was in New York working on the reconnaissance job, my mother couldn’t get to New York from LA because she had two cats. Hughes put her, the cats and a servant on a i’m a railroad carriage.
    He had numerous other interactions with Hughes until he finally resigned about three months before World War II ended. To do that he had to get permission from Hughes to resign and Hughes flow him from New York to LA and put him up with the cottages at the I forget the name of it restaurant hotel in Hollywood.

    • @2nd2nun702
      @2nd2nun702 28 днів тому +10

      My great uncle was Glenn Odekirk. I don't know if he even had an "employee #" but if he did it would have been 1 or 2 as he was Howard's right hand man. I'm afraid to tell you that your story sounds very exaggerated which for whatever reason is very common when it comes Howard Hughes. It seems like many people have some story to tell.

    • @bradkane793
      @bradkane793 27 днів тому +6

      @@diablouser I worked for Hughes employee #108331. I was a supervisor of an employee that was taken out of the lab to go to Long Beach because he knew how to remove the H-4 wings for transport to Oregon

    • @Razmatschannel
      @Razmatschannel 27 днів тому +2

      How old are you???

    • @stianby
      @stianby 16 днів тому +2

      Well. Living in a fantasy world are we?

    • @dipling.pitzler7650
      @dipling.pitzler7650 15 днів тому

      These Memories are worth to be put in a book!

  • @RubyS.1
    @RubyS.1 29 днів тому +98

    This is a nice little treat for a Monday morning

  • @connielentz1114
    @connielentz1114 Місяць тому +123

    I saw the spruce goose as a child and my sense of its size may have been affected by my own small size but it seemed massive. For some reason years later when I saw the Vasa, also made of wood, it made me think of the Spruce Goose

    • @lordlundin6495
      @lordlundin6495 28 днів тому +7

      I got to touch the Vasa - with gloves. The perks of being blind are few, but I'll take my wins where I can. Luckily back then I had enough vision to appreciate it visually as well.

    • @wiredforstereo
      @wiredforstereo 21 день тому +1

      It's still massive.
      But it is also beautiful in a way no other plane is.

  • @gregorymeyer1798
    @gregorymeyer1798 29 днів тому +36

    I grew up and lived in Long Beach the first 34 years of my life, and the spruce goose was a regular part of life. Most schools had field trips to see it and many families went on a regular basis. I always thought it was awesome.

    • @MentourNow
      @MentourNow  29 днів тому +8

      Very cool!

    • @neilkurzman4907
      @neilkurzman4907 16 днів тому +2

      Many decades ago, I drove to Long Beach to see the Spruce goose, and the Queen Mary

  • @bradkane793
    @bradkane793 29 днів тому +84

    I worked at Hughes Aircraft and my wife was an FA at Pan Am. So you incorporated both of our heritage in this video. Thanks

    • @sqwk2559
      @sqwk2559 28 днів тому +4

      That’s not heritage, that’s experience.

    • @bradkane793
      @bradkane793 27 днів тому +3

      @@sqwk2559 the most experienced airline. Lol

  • @AutoReport1
    @AutoReport1 29 днів тому +63

    Hughes may not have produced any series airplanes, but they did produce helicopters which are still being produced by three companies today - Boeing (Apache and Little Bird), MD Helicopters (the commercial models spun off by Boeing after acquiring McDonnell Douglas), and Schweizer RSG.

  • @MarkJoseph81
    @MarkJoseph81 29 днів тому +128

    I've sat in the cockpit pilot's seat of THIS airplane. It is in the Evergreen Air & Space Museum. You can, too!
    It is truly something to behold... I can't type it all out here. You have to make the trip to go see it in person for yourself. (While you're there, there's also MiGs and an actual SR-71!)

    • @dvines972
      @dvines972 29 днів тому +9

      Me too... so fun to see that plane. We love visiting the Evergreen Air & Space Museum.

    • @willykang1293
      @willykang1293 29 днів тому +4

      Many different aircrafts out there, that’s why I think there’re not enough time to gain all the infos in that museum in just one day.🤔

    • @kristensorensen2219
      @kristensorensen2219 29 днів тому +2

      Are you a pilot?
      I need to go see this stuff in person too!

    • @MarkJoseph81
      @MarkJoseph81 29 днів тому +3

      @willykang1293 There's not... I know... because I literally spent the entire day there - from the minute they opened, until 5-10 minutes past closing! 😄
      And I went to almost every building, but we rushed through the final chunk because they were closing.
      I took over 1000 photos! 😄

    • @cayman9873
      @cayman9873 29 днів тому +4

      Saw it many times next to the queen mary in long beach. Hughes was a unique man. Thanks howard for many amazing things. This plane, glomar explorer. I sat in the captains seat several times in awe.

  • @martentrudeau6948
    @martentrudeau6948 29 днів тому +24

    In the 1980's I saw the Spruce Goose in Long Beach, Ca, it was impressive. Hughes wood technology ideas would eventually succeed with companies like Trus Joist who manufacture wood "I" floor joists and other products. Hughes was interesting, an oil man, aviator, movie director, aircraft designer, manufacturer and more than this.

  • @bens4446
    @bens4446 18 днів тому +3

    I saw it in Long Beach when I was little. I couldn't understand why something so marvelous and perfect had only been allowed to fly one brief flight, and then had been hidden away and left to languish. The adult world never seemed stranger to me.

  • @Mentaculus42
    @Mentaculus42 29 днів тому +24

    It should be mentioned that this aircraft pioneered the use of power boosted control surfaces. There were technical developments for this aircraft that were new for this time period.

  • @road2somewhere1
    @road2somewhere1 29 днів тому +26

    I visited the Evergreen Air Museum and found it amazing how all of the other aircraft were so completely dwarfed by it. After spending time observing all of the other aircraft I had the strange sensation that it wasn’t even there. It was as though it was part of the whole structure of the building. Being a woodworking hobbyist I found the wood structure and joinery fascinating too. It’s worth a visit.

  • @Monotoba
    @Monotoba 25 днів тому +13

    I actually met an old man who had been an engineer on the Hercules project. After we spoke for a few hours about aviation, he excused himself for a few minutes and returned with a concept drawing of the HK-1. He gave it to me and I charished for years before losing it to a house fire. In that fire I also lost a historic issue of Radio Electronics, and Altair 8800, and many model aircraft I had built growing up. The concept drawing had the signatures of many of the engineers and I was told that when the project ended, everyone who had worked on the project took all the momentoes they could carry because they all knew they had worked on something extremly special.

  • @gonetoearth2588
    @gonetoearth2588 29 днів тому +13

    Your series on historic planes is better than high cost production on television. These are exceptionally well-made short documentaries. Love your analysis of accidents as I’m a pilot however I really love the series of these historic planes and keep the videos coming! Thx petter

  • @Sailit143
    @Sailit143 23 дні тому +2

    When I used to work for McDonnell Douglas Helicoper, I used to work in Bldg 15, which was the building where the Spruce Goose was built in Culver City, CA when Hughes developed the property. The building was constructed using the same lamination techniques. At one time it was the biggest free standing structure in the world. The building is now owned by Google.
    I loved this video. Please keep them coming.

  • @kenbrown2808
    @kenbrown2808 29 днів тому +49

    I have, indeed been to visit the Spruce Goose, it bears mentioning that the museum she lives in was in its own way the product of an aviation lover whose businesses ran into trouble, yet took a loss in his business to be sure the museum stayed alive. and it has a lot more of aviation and space exploration represented than just the Goose.

    • @muddobber6863
      @muddobber6863 29 днів тому +4

      I've been there as well. It's a nice complex.

    • @Derkiboi
      @Derkiboi 29 днів тому

      ​@@muddobber6863and next to a building with a 747 on top of it. Such a strange place

    • @CheckSixAviation
      @CheckSixAviation 29 днів тому

      @@DerkiboiThat would be the museum’s water park.

    • @Derkiboi
      @Derkiboi 29 днів тому +1

      @@CheckSixAviation correct, I've been there. All of the 4 slides go through the 747

    • @markpirisky2281
      @markpirisky2281 28 днів тому +3

      @@CheckSixAviationthe museum doesn’t actually own the water park fyi. It is run by a separate company.

  • @davidbeattie4294
    @davidbeattie4294 27 днів тому +15

    I personally consider it a huge success. Hughes managed to create a unique and groundbreaking aircraft under war time conditions in a remarkably short time frame. The fact that the need for it disappeared is not the fault of Hughes.

  • @HeadbangerTomcat
    @HeadbangerTomcat 28 днів тому +2

    I was fortunate enough to have visited the Spruce Goose back in 1984, when it was still in Long Beach, California, in its giant display dome, next to the RMS Queen Mary ocean liner. Very impressive.

  • @wiredforstereo
    @wiredforstereo 21 день тому +2

    On of the things that struck me about seeing it in person is its beauty and shape. No other plane is as smooth and refined. It is remarkable.

  • @tamasbodnar1729
    @tamasbodnar1729 29 днів тому +31

    I had the privilege of going inside this aircraft when it was at Long Beach and these pictures don't do it Justice this things a building with wings.

  • @asheler1
    @asheler1 29 днів тому +8

    I have seen the Spruce Goose many times and sat in the cockpit at least twice. I live only about an hour away from the Evergreen Aviation Museum.

  • @IvanSerbinenko
    @IvanSerbinenko 28 днів тому +6

    Funny story, was still a PPL Student when I was on a Cross Country flight with my Instructor from BC, Canada to California. One of our over night stays was McMinnville Oregon, right across the airport was this Air and Space museum, we thought it'd be cool to check out before we went to the hotel. Imagine the shock we had when we realized the Spruce Goose was at the museum. Was an awesome experience, tons of pictures, funny how those things just happen

  • @thomasmontoya302
    @thomasmontoya302 29 днів тому +17

    I appreciate you making this on holiday!

  • @dstarling61
    @dstarling61 29 днів тому +29

    I am privileged to live 10 minutes away from the Evergreen Aviation Museum, in McMinville, OR, where the Goose resides. What an amazing piece of engineering and craftsmanship. If you are ever in the area, definitely check it out.

    • @dstarling61
      @dstarling61 29 днів тому +3

      If you do visit, there is an Airshow in McMinnville every Labor Day weekend!

    • @ImpmanPDX
      @ImpmanPDX 29 днів тому

      Spend a day at Evergreen at the museum and water park. Then go to Pearson/Murdock in Vancouver the next!

  • @bendelmundo6061
    @bendelmundo6061 25 днів тому +1

    I had a chance to see it in Long Beach before it was moved to it's current home. It truly was an amazing piece of engineering that helped kick off my interest in Aerospace and the Engineering field and I hope it continues to inspire every kid that sees it.

  • @unsivilaudio
    @unsivilaudio 29 днів тому +13

    OMG You covered it! This is my favorite plane ever built.

  • @cidertom
    @cidertom 29 днів тому +22

    This last weekend was the last flight of the Hawaii Martin Mars, another huge flying boat. Not as big as the Goose, but huge.

    • @MentourNow
      @MentourNow  29 днів тому +14

      I saw the last takeoff! Fantastic aircraft

    • @rghunt3221
      @rghunt3221 29 днів тому +3

      I just missed its arrival at Victoria International, I had just left on a tiny little 737...

  • @attorneyrobert
    @attorneyrobert 29 днів тому +4

    I had a chance to visit the Spruce Goose and visit the cockpit in 1990 when it was in Long Beach. My father, who was present when the first flight took place (he worked at Los Angeles Harbor in San Pedro) was there also. It was impressive to walk around inside of.

  • @HaysClark
    @HaysClark 25 днів тому +4

    It definitely is worth seeing in person, and you can get tours to go inside and sit down in the cockpit. It's incredible how dozens of fighter jets are on display under the H-4 and it just dwarfs them. It's one of those things that is so big it is hard to appreciate even when viewing it in person. The museum is on par with the National Air and Space Museum in DC and you can easily spend all day just looking at planes, helicopters, space craft and watching an IMAX film. You can easily fly into Portland and drive to McMinnville, OR. There is also an wonderful indoor waterpark next door which included a retired cargo 747.

  • @carstenvalentin8493
    @carstenvalentin8493 26 днів тому +1

    I visited The Spruce Goose in Los Angeles Harbour in 1981 ....... Amazing plane

  • @VinceVDC
    @VinceVDC 29 днів тому +3

    I lived in Oregon when the Goose was moved. It was shipped down the Willamette River on barges. The tail barely fit under several of the bridges.
    The Evergreen Aviation museum prides itself on maintaining the air worthiness of all of the planes in its collection. The Goose dwarfs all of the other aircraft in the collection. It's an hour south of Portland and worth the drive.
    I hope to make it to the museum on a day to the engines are tested.
    The television show Leverage featured the Goose in one of their episodes.

  • @MissElisabeth
    @MissElisabeth 27 днів тому +1

    My grandfather saw the Spruce Goose fly when he was in med school down in California after WWII. I've seen it in person in Oregon and can't even fathom how impressive it would have been to see it fly in person.

  • @nickma71
    @nickma71 29 днів тому +8

    I watched the Aviator and thought it was very well done. The movie ends with the flight of the Hercules. I appreciate the history shown here including flying boats and the connections. Also, the modern "Hercules" is also an after thought to most people, despite the durability and very long use. That is the C-130 in US terms. Nowhere near the size, similar by name only to honor Hughes.

    • @malcolm20091000
      @malcolm20091000 29 днів тому

      Interesting. I thought Lockheed built the C130. Was it really named Hercules to honor Hughes?

  • @leahholland6272
    @leahholland6272 29 днів тому +5

    Great weekend to highlight a flying boat... saw the srpuce goose years ago in the museum...
    This weekend saw the Martin Mars Hawaii flown to Victoria for retirement into the BC Aviation Museum

  • @wildflashback1979
    @wildflashback1979 29 днів тому +13

    Flying boats are my favourite type of plane. Hands down

    • @paullaurencesweeney5255
      @paullaurencesweeney5255 29 днів тому

      I am terrified of flying and actively avoid this mode of transport. However, I would use a flying boat and pay handsomely for it if necessary.

    • @alexturnbackthearmy1907
      @alexturnbackthearmy1907 22 дні тому

      @@paullaurencesweeney5255 Sadly they died out when airports actually got better then a strip of dirt in most places...unless in some special cases, like firefighters plane. But i dont think you can get to those.

  • @TheKaptainkraig
    @TheKaptainkraig 18 днів тому +1

    I got to sit in the pilots seat of the H4 back in 2014. The Evergreen air and space museum was by far the best aviation museum I've visited. Definitely worth the 4 hour drive from Seattle.

  • @chrisvickers7928
    @chrisvickers7928 29 днів тому +1

    In 1959 my dad drove us out to Victoria Airport just north of the city of Victoria to show us the Mars flying boats sitting on the tarmac still painted in grey. Four of them were eventually converted into water bombers operating out of Sproat Lake on Vancouver Island. Last night the last of these four, the Hawaii Mars, made it's last flight from Sproat Lake to Patricia Bay just north of Victoria where it will be stored as a museum piece. It's last flight overflew much of the east coast of Vancouver Island accompanied by the Snowbirds aerobatic team. The last leg took it over Victoria and right over my house at low level. Damn it was loud. I can't imagine how loud the Spruce Goose would have been if it had ever flown overhead.

  • @logic.and.reasoning
    @logic.and.reasoning 29 днів тому +2

    WE WANT THE CARBON GOOSE..!!!! 😊 Howard was a "special" type of person. OCD can be a helping or hindering affliction, i know. His obsessions, especially with what i believe he saw as his most complex challenge and therefore truly his "child," could be costly but extremely rewarding. Amazing man. Weird but amazing 😊

  • @masmainster
    @masmainster 29 днів тому +4

    Hughes may have been an eccentric but he had great vision and was a huge influence on air travel today. He proved his plane would fly when many said it wouldn't.

  • @AZ-if2mj
    @AZ-if2mj 24 дні тому +1

    I got to see the Spruce Goose on a field trip in elementary school. It was in a gigantic white dome next to the Queen Mary in Long Beach. It was a magical day for a kid.

  • @lawrenceedger292
    @lawrenceedger292 28 днів тому +1

    I’m glad the Spruce Goose can still be seen (and toured inside) in a museum in Oregon. I loved visiting that museum!

  • @beauradovich4346
    @beauradovich4346 29 днів тому +2

    This is a beautiful big bird. I am lucky enough to have sat in the Captain's chair of the spruce goose at it's current (and likely final) place of residence in Oregon. It is truly a massive beast.

  • @sailingmaster
    @sailingmaster 29 днів тому +2

    Flying boats were special. At least to me, they were. I learned to fly in a Grumman Goose. That was 40 years ago and I can still close my eyes and hear the roar of her radials.

    • @tin2001
      @tin2001 27 днів тому

      Never flown a real plane, but I spent many hours in a Grumman Goose on Microsoft FSX. I used to love taking off from my local airport, and flying over to a lake up in a mountain area about half an hour (flying time) away.

  • @larrybolhuis1049
    @larrybolhuis1049 29 днів тому +2

    I have sat in the Pilots seat in this plane. To say that it's BIG is just nuts, it's GINOURMOUS! The detail they went through to build it is incredible and it still looks awesome today!

  • @rswear
    @rswear 29 днів тому +3

    I have seen the Spruce Goose in McMinnville. I am not sure what was more fascinating to me, the plane itself or seeing my Dad in his late 70's being giddy like a kid getting to see it for the 1st time. I always knew he was an aviation buff, but had no idea how much it captured his imagination when he was growing up. Tho I have to admit, seeing the SR-71 setting by it caught my attention too!

  • @plastictsubasa1390
    @plastictsubasa1390 29 днів тому +1

    As a kid, trips to Long Beach were triply fun, as I could see the Spruce Goose, go next door to the Queen Mary and then visit the Long Beach Naval Shipyard where my father worked. Sadly, only the Queen remains there, though it’s good that she’s receiving some love.

  • @mikewebber4784
    @mikewebber4784 29 днів тому +3

    100% love the throw back to the older videos on the sofa. Just missing the dogs haha. Great content as always.

  • @reallyseriously7020
    @reallyseriously7020 18 днів тому +1

    I love this episode! More historical vids are always welcome. Thank you for all the fascinating info!

  • @denfool902
    @denfool902 29 днів тому +15

    Paul Allen is one of the underrated visionaries of our time. Someone that had a great heart and soul as well.

  • @ricardograf6393
    @ricardograf6393 26 днів тому +1

    I would LOVE to see a video about PANAM and his Clipper fleet back in the 30's .... Aaaahhh, the golden age of aviation!

  • @Eggasaurus_Rex
    @Eggasaurus_Rex 27 днів тому +2

    Honestly enjoyed the more informal setting. A nice change from the very professional setting we have all got used to. Maybe try it out now and then every so and often

  • @stevenslater2669
    @stevenslater2669 29 днів тому +1

    I visited McMinnville three times after reading the account of how the Spruce Goose was disassembled, transported, stored and finally reassembled at Evergreen’s facility. The aircraft is enormous. So large, in fact, it sits in a huge pit inside the museum building. Never got a chance to tour the inside of the aircraft. I guess the tours of the interior came later. The museum has lots of other planes to see - definitely worth the trip.
    If you go to McMinnville, it’s not too far from the NAS Tillamook where the Navy housed blimps during WWII. The blimps are gone and only one of the huge hangers survive. The second hanger burned down years ago. They were amazing structures, gigantic to match the scale of the blimps, with clear span construction. The first hanger (I think it is the surviving structure) took quite a few months to build as the Oregon winter when it was built was uncharacteristically terrible. The second structure was built in about a single month. Unbelievable even today.
    When we visited Tillamook there were a good number of planes on display but the hanger is so huge it seemed almost empty. And there were used parts lying all over the place, including a 3420 Twin Allison V-24 engine. Dirty, oily, & just lying there. Great stuff for a mechanical engineer on holiday.
    If your wife is with you, be sure to drive up the highway to the Tillamook Cheese factory & take the tour. You get samples. Good stuff.

  • @austinask3904
    @austinask3904 29 днів тому +2

    My grandpa's company did the wiring for the museum that it currently is stored in. I Remember going with my grandpa to work one day as a kid and seen this massive plane. It was moved in five parts. Each Wing was broken into two separate parts and the fuselage was another

  • @thomasosterloh8247
    @thomasosterloh8247 25 днів тому +2

    My dad took me to watch it fly. We lived in Long Beach at the time.

  • @JasonGillmanJr
    @JasonGillmanJr Місяць тому +8

    This seems like it might tie in well to a video on the Lun-class ekranoplane

    • @PavelKostromitinov
      @PavelKostromitinov 29 днів тому +4

      Or any other ground effect plane, come to think of it. That one is possible the most famous. but there definitely are more successful ones.

    • @JasonGillmanJr
      @JasonGillmanJr 29 днів тому +1

      @@PavelKostromitinov I can dig it!

  • @chrissmith2114
    @chrissmith2114 29 днів тому +4

    Spruce sounds like Bristol Brabazon, a very large airliner with piston engines that came into service just as jet powered airliners were coming into service. Powered by 8 × Bristol Centaurus 18-cylinder air-cooled radial sleeve-valve piston engines, 2,650 hp (1,980 kW) each paired, driving contra-props through combining gearboxes.

  • @MGlBlaze
    @MGlBlaze 29 днів тому +4

    Funnily enough, the first place I heard the name Spruce Goose was actually in the video game Crimson Skies. The aircraft features in a mission in that game and, given the alternate history leanings of the game's setting, it didn't occur to me it was also a real aircraft.

  • @eddiehimself
    @eddiehimself 29 днів тому +17

    "Hop in!"
    "But sir..."
    *cocks gun* "I said hop in..."

    • @uekernas
      @uekernas 29 днів тому +2

      “We’ll take the Spruce Moose!”

    • @android584
      @android584 29 днів тому +1

      That reference introduced a generation to the spruce goose.

  • @marybarry2230
    @marybarry2230 29 днів тому +7

    Although I knew some of the history of the Spruce Goose, your explanation of it was wonderful as usual! Especially the extras of how boarding ships and airplanes is always on the left side! Good stuff!

    • @MentourNow
      @MentourNow  29 днів тому +2

      Great that you liked it!!

  • @Oriontheaviator
    @Oriontheaviator 29 днів тому +3

    We have been on this plane and the size is next level the cockpit has steps up to the pilot seats, it has access in the wings where they would be able to work on the engines in flight

  • @kstricl
    @kstricl 29 днів тому +6

    I've heard other analysis of the Spruce Goose over the years. It's too bad Hughes never got to try retrofitting Jet Turbines are full jet engines to it - as good as the radials were, many stories I've read over the years say they were under powered and have claimed that's why Hughes never brought the Goose out of ground effect.
    Thank you for keeping this so factual and interesting at the same time.
    Edit: I found what I believe is the origin of the claims it was under powered. See comment in the replies if you care.

    • @gearhead762
      @gearhead762 27 днів тому +2

      Isnt the takeoff when a piston engine aircraft needs the most power? If it was underpowered should it have even left out of the water at all for as long as it did? Im just finding it hard to believe this was being built under a government contract for military purposes and no math was done to figure power requirements for its intended purpose. Im sure Howard and his people probably ran the numbers for all of that before the first board was ever cut or screw turned. The stories about it being underpowered are probably just that...stories.

    • @kstricl
      @kstricl 27 днів тому

      @@gearhead762 Engine type makes no difference to an aircraft on takeoff other than power to weight ratio. All aircraft need to accelerate to takeoff and this is usually when they need the most power.
      As to the stories, yes they are just that. I decided to track down where they came from and found a couple issues of Popular Mechanics from decades ago that point to the likely source. Sen. Owen Brewster said it was a "flying lumber yard" that would never get off the water. From the article, the Goose took off at just 60 mph with 15 degrees of flap, having already taxied at 80mph, so it was definitely capable of flight.
      This source was from the November 1981 issue of Popular Mechanics. I also found another interesting article from November 1977. I think both are worth a read. You can look them up on Google Books for free.
      I still think that Hughes would have loved to replace the 8 radials with four jet engines. It would have been an absolute rocket then.

    • @calvinnickel9995
      @calvinnickel9995 21 день тому +1

      @gearhead762
      Except not.
      Even in the modern days of computational fluid dynamics done by super computers on commercial airplanes that must make a profit (vs being bottomless cost-plus-fee defence contracts), we’ve produced underpowered planes.
      The Airbus A340 is a prime example of a modern underpowered aircraft. Yes, it flies, and it even flies safely. But it has large limitations in runway length, temperatures, payload, altitude (takeoff and cruising as well as climb rate), range, and engine out scenarios.
      And the root cause is the same for both of them.. lack of a suitable engine and the engines that they used were at the absolute limits of their development-meaning there was no room for growth or to account for airframe and power plant degradation over time.
      The Martin Mars was the same too. Underpowered by R-3350s, then adequately powered by the same R-4360s the Spruce Goose used.. but they were too expensive and failure prone to be used in commercial operations so it was swapped back to R-3350s. This meant that the Mars was slow and took an extremely long time to transit and took up valuable airspace for a long time over a forest fire.
      Even the mighty P6M Seamaster was underpowered. This is why Pratt & Whitney developed the J58-by far the most powerful jet engine of the time. But US Navy priorities moved away from flying boats and it was never used… instead sitting idle until the CIA needed an off-the-shelf engine with the thermodynamic power to propel a twin engine aircraft past Mach 3.

  • @lanceferraro3781
    @lanceferraro3781 14 днів тому

    Many times I prowled around, and in the Spruce Goose. It is amazing to see a DC-3 tucked neatly beneath the stbd wing, a MIG nearby, and the Goose looming over many more planes, its wings almost like a protective mother.

  • @herzogsbuick
    @herzogsbuick 29 днів тому +1

    not only did i get to see it and walk around inside last year, when i was at the Evergreen Air and Space Museum, they were bringing in an F-117 through the parking lot and into the building. so freaking cool.

  • @ronmani9476
    @ronmani9476 26 днів тому +1

    I live in Port Alberni, a city on Vancouver Island Canada. Sproat Lake is nearby and was a base for the Martin Mars flying boats (2 of them). They were converted from military craft to firefighting planes and fought many fires all over Canada. As of August 11 2024 the "Hawaii Mars" flew its last flight to a museum in Victoria B.C. The "Philippine Mars" will be flying to a museum in the USA later in september.

  • @jeromemckenna7102
    @jeromemckenna7102 26 днів тому

    I've heard about the Spruce Goose, much of my life but I never heard anyone explain why it was built and why it was obsolete when it was finished. So, thanks for the video.

  • @ginog5037
    @ginog5037 26 днів тому

    Howard Hughes was a genius! To see this beauty in person, pictures & video don't do it justice. He took "Imagination is more important than knowledge."- AE, to the next level in all his endeavors.

  • @ashwinkumar9084
    @ashwinkumar9084 29 днів тому +1

    What a fascinating story! I didn't know nothing about Spruce Goose until I saw it myself in McMinnville, Oregon in March of this year. I thought it was a super big model of a smaller plane. Couldn't believe its really capable of flying until someone told me so at the museum! Wish I can share my pics here. Also they have a B747 at this museum.

  • @frankpinmtl
    @frankpinmtl 29 днів тому

    I've been to the Evergreen Aviation Museum and been in it. It had a DC-3 tucked under one wing and an SR-71 under the other. It's huge.

  • @nioghalvfemsproblemer3734
    @nioghalvfemsproblemer3734 28 днів тому +1

    I’d never really thought much about aviation and now am obsessed! - I’m so grateful to have discovered you! Your channels are absolutely superb, your style hypnotic and it’s all done so well 💯❤✈️

  • @garrettmadams1
    @garrettmadams1 26 днів тому

    I saw the H4 a few years back at evergreen, the cutaway Wasp engine next to the H4 is really neat. I went there to see the SR-71 and was blown away with the whole collection and curation at evergreen. Well worth the trip.

  • @DjMikeWatt
    @DjMikeWatt 8 днів тому

    I already know the story of the Spruce Goose, but decided to watch your video anyway because I always learn something new!

  • @douglasdeltondo7852
    @douglasdeltondo7852 20 днів тому

    Thanks. My dad works for TWA and this gave me a good idea of what his crazy boss really was about. All I remember about him was that he had problem with never cutting his nails so they were very long and it was really strange when he met people. So I think he kind of went a little mad by the end of his life. Thanks For putting together a really perfect picture of what planet this represented.

  • @merrillkingston8807
    @merrillkingston8807 29 днів тому +1

    Yes, I not only took a detailed tour of the Hercules 4, while it was still in Long Beach, my step father actually worked on the center wing section of it. If you ever get a chance to see it in person, you'll be amazed at just how huge it is.

  • @youtuuba
    @youtuuba 25 днів тому +2

    I have had the privilege of sitting at the controls of this aircraft and touring her insides. As one of the people who donated heavily to help fund her relocation from Long Beach CA to McMinnville OR, the museum sent me a swatch of the flight control fabric, which was original and on the aircraft when it flew that one time, when they decided to replace all that fabric with unused and carefully stored 'new old stock' fabric. I have done a lot of research regarding this plane, although I don't think of myself as a true expert, but I have read all of the papers and such I can find about her.
    One thing that is often repeated about her sole flight is that, "well, she never really flew because she was in ground effect the whole time". First, that is nonsensical because she was developing lift greater then her weight, got off the 'ground' under her own power, and was under control the whole time. If that definition was good enough fro the Wright Brothers, it ought to apply to the Goose. Second, the aircraft has been repeatedly modeled in software at universities and other places, and 'flown' in simulation, and from that it seems pretty certain that she was basically airworthy. She flew, and could have flown more if Hughes had decided to then, or on possible later flights.
    Of greater concern is whether she was structurally sound for sustained flight, under the planned cargo loading, and in adverse weather, etc. Certainly the designers at Hughes thought so based on their material tests and aviation engineering talent and skill, which was considerable. Yet, during the one flight, spotters near the tail reported that the fuselage structure back there, where it is narrow, was twisting back and forth a lot. Maybe this was within design limits, maybe Hughes averted a disaster by setting it down quickly. But also keep in mind, this flight was conducted in a harbor that was not all that large, and unless Hughes took it to much higher altitude, he would run into something. A lot of "ifs".
    I encourage everyone with a love of aviation to make a trip to see the Goose at her museum; it is just a fairly short drive west of Portland, Oregon, and also not far off of the Pacific coastal highway; isolated but not too much so.

  • @kennethparris2068
    @kennethparris2068 29 днів тому

    I've seen and sat in the PIC's seat of the H-4 Hercules, AKA "Spruce Goose" in the Evergreen Aviation Museum. The Civil Air Patrol Pacific Region had an awards dinner under the flying boat's wings. Truly a memorable experience.😊

  • @dipling.pitzler7650
    @dipling.pitzler7650 15 днів тому

    That camera shot at 21:18 with the setting sun shining through the formerly Jumbo Jet Turbofan engines is amazing! Also Notice the 747 windshields used for the cockpit of the aircraft with the largest wingspan ever to be built.

  • @ImpmanPDX
    @ImpmanPDX 29 днів тому

    I've seen the Goose a couple of times. I grew up in Ventura, CA in the 80s and my dad worked as a Captain out of Pt. Hueneme. Now I live in PDX and I think next year when my daughter is old enough we'll go to Evergreen so she can hang at the water park and I can geek out on planes.

  • @myth-n-m4yhem
    @myth-n-m4yhem 29 днів тому +3

    Amazing, simply amazing 😂
    Too enthralled to eat my popcorn!

  • @karenshadle365
    @karenshadle365 29 днів тому

    Yes I've seen it! Amazing!!
    I lived in McMinnville when the Aviation
    Museum was built. It was a big thrill when the Spruce Goose was reassembled and we could see it. Most of my family has seen it too.

  • @aaron235423
    @aaron235423 28 днів тому

    I was able to go see it in Oregon early May 2024, you can sit in the pilot seat and even look outside throughout a hatch window on top, truly amazing.

  • @jonathantr4932
    @jonathantr4932 25 днів тому

    I did indeed visit the Spruce Goose when it lived in Long Beach CA, under California's largest geodesic dome, and next to the Queen Mary. What a huge beast of a plane it is! The exhibit, in the late 1980's, was designed to allow walking through and around the plane. Just enormous!

  • @Paul_Halicki
    @Paul_Halicki 29 днів тому

    My first professional job was with Hughes Aircraft Company. Though I lived in Southern California I never made the trip down to Long Beach to see the Spruce Goose. I kind of wish I had.

  • @WarrenGarabrandt
    @WarrenGarabrandt 4 дні тому

    I had heard of the Spruce Goose before, and I always thought it was such as weird name. Now that I know it was made of wood, was extremely large, and designed to land on water, naming it after a type of wood and a large waterfowl makes it quite a hilarious name that I actually really like.

  • @davidf2281
    @davidf2281 16 днів тому

    19:42 That custom hangar with the engines poking out is quite the thing.

  • @guarami1
    @guarami1 29 днів тому +2

    I’ve been waiting a long time for your take on this airplane!🎉

  • @Kevin_M_Hall
    @Kevin_M_Hall 25 днів тому

    Been aboard twice, sat in the cockpit, stood on the seat and had my shoulders out the hatch on top of the cockpit to take pictures along both wings. Amazing to see. Was told and could visually confirm that the reason the flight was so short was that the tail was cracking off due to a design weakness. (repairs were easily visible internally)

  • @EvelioPerez
    @EvelioPerez 17 днів тому +1

    A dude with a microphone and a UA-cam account calls out one of pinnacle achievements of the aviator himself "a failure". The aircraft was revolutionary in ways you couldn't describe it to the armchair commando types. This a aircraft demonstrated many concepts that were unproven at the time and opened the skies to the behemoth airliners of today. I saw this majestic beast as it sat in a hanger in Long Beach, CA and its sheer size and sleek design took my breath away. Howard Hughes was way ahead of his time, and so was the Hercules.

    • @postal_the_clown
      @postal_the_clown 17 днів тому

      Not to mention that 100% of produced H-4's exist today. Somehow, never got to see it when I lived in L.A. But did see it at Evergreen in '08. For true fans, it certainly is a more positive "ship of dreams" than the Titanic.

    • @aliamacintyre483
      @aliamacintyre483 16 днів тому

      Everyone’s entitled to their opinion, but I personally wouldn’t call anyones gigantic, painstaking, time consuming effort a ‘failure’. That’s quite disrespectful to anyone’s effort and time.

  • @texastyrannyresponseteam794
    @texastyrannyresponseteam794 27 днів тому +3

    say what you want.. Howard Hughes brought more to the world than most.. i'm from Houston texas.. the man is a god around here.. between his aviation, oil and energy and film business endeavours.. he's more accomplished than most in history.. a brilliant engineer.. and balls of steel.. a legend for sure.. if you can't agree.. you just don't know..

  • @antonvoloshin9833
    @antonvoloshin9833 25 днів тому +1

    Fun fact that the idea of transporting huge troops numbers by aircraft wasn't dead completely. Back in 70-80's Soviet Union performed series of tests with ground effect vehicles including enormous 500-ton "KM". There was even a tiny fleet of smaller troop transports "Orlenok" ("Little eagle") in service for some time. But in the end it all died with it's general engineer Alekseev, who was a man really passionate about the the ground effect vehicles idea. So yet again one more absolutely crazy project driven by a fanatically dedicated person.

    • @calvinnickel9995
      @calvinnickel9995 21 день тому

      We transport huge amounts of troops by air all the time. C-5, C-17, C-130-as well as commercial airlines.

  • @beaker126
    @beaker126 15 днів тому

    I've been aboard her at the Evergreen Aviation Museum and got to sit in the pilot's seat. Very cool experience, and man, I can only imagine the flight engineer's workload during the piston era. So many small gauges. I can't imagine what your scan pattern would look like!

  • @Roughtek
    @Roughtek 17 днів тому

    Back in 2012 I happened to go to that museum while me and my family were driving from California up to Washington, being able to stand next to that plane and Even the small area that they let you walk into it was really cool to see.

  • @JamesTaylor-n1u
    @JamesTaylor-n1u 15 днів тому +1

    17:23 - a whisky truck! Now we're talking.

  • @user-cu8tw9wp8q
    @user-cu8tw9wp8q 12 днів тому

    The Hercules/Spruce Goose is amazing to see up close and personal! Thanks for reminding me. I have a friend who has never seen it and we have been putting together a trip to the area around where the plane currently resides. I used to go see it in its former location.

  • @kvarner6886
    @kvarner6886 29 днів тому

    I'm from Portland, Oregon (about 45 minutes' drive from where the plane is currently displayed,) and I remember going to see the Spruce Goose for the first time when I was about 9 years old in the late 90's. I think it was what started my love of aviation. It blew me away that something like that could even be built, let alone fly.

    • @Aethelgeat
      @Aethelgeat 29 днів тому +1

      Evergreen Aviation & Space Museum is hosting an airshow for Labor Day weekend.

    • @kvarner6886
      @kvarner6886 29 днів тому

      @@Aethelgeat I know! I saw that when I looked at their website right after watching this video. Unfortunately I am out of town specifically for that holiday, haha. But I am planning a visit to the museum soon!
      For some reason I vividly remember being told that the Spruce Goose was either no longer in Oregon, or was no longer available for viewing, about ten years ago; so I thought I could never see it again. I'm so excited to be wrong!

  • @PowerScissor
    @PowerScissor 29 днів тому

    If you're even in Oregon, the museum the Spruce Goose is at is amazing!
    So much Mercury, Gemini, Apollo space stuff there also.
    Really worth stopping by!

  • @copperhead7293
    @copperhead7293 22 дні тому

    I toured the Spuce Goose in the early 80s when it was on display in Long Beach, CA

  • @Lesapunbesa
    @Lesapunbesa 13 днів тому

    I love your Chanel. I Remember when I used to be your cabin crew and it feels a bit like family. Wish you all the best. Your videos are each time more interesting. Keep on rockin ❤