Great, informative clip. However I had to break off watching it. The background music was too hectic/frantic and too loud when compared against the narrator's voice. Perhaps lower the volume of the music and choose a less intrusive style of music for the next one? Thank You.
The video mixes the statistics. To compare something to another something, the terms need to be expressed in the same units. Here, we get passenger quantity, gallons per minute, gallons per mile, and vague references to speed. Which plane is better? In terms of what? What is the cost? These things can be expressed with tables and explanations. But that's not what we find here.
Talking about carbon emissions sadly misses the factual details regarding jet fallout. NASA has analyzed jet exhaust, and their list takes up two pages with two columns of fine print on each, listing the contents. There are seven known carcinogens in the list. The jet engine requires 16.8 metric tonnes of atmospheric gasses in order to combust one tonne of Jet A fuel. This produces 17.8 tonnes of highly polluted fumes per tonne of fuel consumed. There are so many jets in the air 24 hours a day, that the entire atmospheric envelope is contaminated by jet fallout, and since the atmosphere is 73% nitrogen, there are a great deal of nitrogen compounds in the emissions which are made into nitric acids on descending through moist air. The high temperature of jet exhaust is also seriously interfering with the climate. The stratosphere is around minus thirty to minus fifty degrees C, and the jet exhaust is near two thousand degrees C. Heat is the primary driver of weather. Jets are an environmental disaster of the highest magnitude! ethermail
Not a good video…music too loud, it drawns spoken words. Make your mind, gallons per second or per mile? Airlines use “pounds” to express volumes! You say how many travellers can a plane carry, but what is their reason to travel? Pleasure? Crowd Venice and make locals furious? Why people don’t stay home and do some work around their house?
Great, informative clip. However I had to break off watching it. The background music was too hectic/frantic and too loud when compared against the narrator's voice. Perhaps lower the volume of the music and choose a less intrusive style of music for the next one? Thank You.
Thanks and will do
Great info , horrible background sound
Thanks
The video mixes the statistics. To compare something to another something, the terms need to be expressed in the same units. Here, we get passenger quantity, gallons per minute, gallons per mile, and vague references to speed. Which plane is better? In terms of what? What is the cost? These things can be expressed with tables and explanations. But that's not what we find here.
Will do in next one thanks
The dramatic music together with the background music of the original video (I suppose) or what ever you mixed up there works terribly together
Thanks for comment
@@skywatch333 Maybe try a re-upload without the music and I will watch it and like it
video editing is good and thanks for this amezing info.
@@MidnightMysteries2.0 thanks 👍
Whats up with the background music....terrible
Thanks for comment noted
Talking about carbon emissions sadly misses the factual details regarding jet fallout. NASA has analyzed jet exhaust, and their list takes up two pages with two columns of fine print on each, listing the contents. There are seven known carcinogens in the list. The jet engine requires 16.8 metric tonnes of atmospheric gasses in order to combust one tonne of Jet A fuel. This produces 17.8 tonnes of highly polluted fumes per tonne of fuel consumed. There are so many jets in the air 24 hours a day, that the entire atmospheric envelope is contaminated by jet fallout, and since the atmosphere is 73% nitrogen, there are a great deal of nitrogen compounds in the emissions which are made into nitric acids on descending through moist air.
The high temperature of jet exhaust is also seriously interfering with the climate. The stratosphere is around minus thirty to minus fifty degrees C, and the jet exhaust is near two thousand degrees C. Heat is the primary driver of weather. Jets are an environmental disaster of the highest magnitude! ethermail
Thanks for this
Not a good video…music too loud, it drawns spoken words. Make your mind, gallons per second or per mile? Airlines use “pounds” to express volumes! You say how many travellers can a plane carry, but what is their reason to travel? Pleasure? Crowd Venice and make locals furious? Why people don’t stay home and do some work around their house?
Thanks for comment