Canada's Nuclear-Armed Cold War Interceptor: the story of the McDonnell CF-101 Voodoo

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  • čas přidán 30. 06. 2024
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    When Soviet or unidentified aircraft approached Canadian airspace in the 1960s and 70s, they were met by an iconic cold war interceptor. Armed with both conventional and nuclear weapons, they were a formidable foe in their day. It served to support NORAD and protect the Northern approaches into the North American heartland during the height of the Cold War. Although it was neither designed nor built in Canada, the reliable Voodoo remains a Canadian Cold War icon and was well loved by its ground crews and pilots.
    0:00 Introduction
    0:29 McDonnell F-101A development
    1:06 F-101B Interceptor
    3:11 Canada becomes involved with the Voodoo
    4:15 The Nuclear question
    5:08 Comparison with contemporaries
    5:36 Operational History
    8:04 Legacy and Retirement
    8:48 Conclusion
    Music:
    Denmark - Portland Cello Project
    Aircraft Mentioned:
    Avro CF-100 Canuck
    Avro CF-105 Arrow
    Convair F-106 Delta Dart
    McDonnell Douglas CF-18 Hornet
    Research Sources:
    www.rwrwalker.ca/caf_voodoos_d...
    www.rcaf.museum/history/rcaf-...
    Clearwater, John M. Canadian Nuclear Weapons: The Untold Story of Canada's Cold War Arsenal. Toronto: Dundurn Press, 1998. ISBN 1-55002-299-7
    Milberry, Larry. Canada's Air Force at War and Peace, Volume 3. Toronto: CANAV Books, 2000. ISBN 0-921022-13-1.
    McDonnell CF-101 Voodoo; Canada's Nuclear-Armed Sentinel
    #Voodoo #CanadianAerospace #PolyusStudios
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 291

  • @davidkillens8143
    @davidkillens8143 Před 3 lety +64

    I was stationed in Comox when the Voodoo was doing it's job. Since the nuclear Genie was the property of the US, it had US military security, and thus, a lot of USAF armed guards surrounding the QRA and weapons depot. I witnessed one incident when one unwary civilian took a shirt-cut across of stretch of grass beside the QRA, harsh instructions were issued, the guns came out, he had to lay prone on the ground, and within seconds three vans roared up and discharged a LOT of armed guards. It was as serious and real as it could be.
    But it was very cool to see, at the weirdest hour, two Voodoos roar out of the QRA and do a maximum performance takeoff, going out to meet Russian bombers sniffing around our coast.
    The Voodoo did not have the capability of it's younger sibling, the Phantom, but it could match it in raw performance. Since Comox lay in the route of any aircraft transiting to Vietnam, we had a lot of weird aircraft transiting, including many Phantoms. Kerosene cowboys being what they are, we had the occasional side-by-side drag race, Voodoo versus Phantom, and the Voodoo always won that race into the sky.
    We used to sit at the end of the runway, and it was a thrill to see them stage for takeoff, come closer and closer, lift off, retract their gear (you could tell, the landing lights went out), and hold about 50 feet of altitude until they reached the end of the runway (right over our heads), then pull up and just plain disappear into the sky. And yes it was LOUD.
    Good times, and a wonderful beast.

    • @mlesmar
      @mlesmar Před 3 lety +8

      David Killens Cool story David! I was stationed in Comox when they placed a voodoo on that pedestal at the entrance to the base (1992). Sure was a different base by that time than the one in your story.

    • @raynus1160
      @raynus1160 Před 3 lety +1

      Great post. Thanks for sharing.

    • @buckbuck4074
      @buckbuck4074 Před 3 lety +1

      My dad took us to a airshow when i was young. I remember this fighter specifically cause it was so loud.

    • @canbest7668
      @canbest7668 Před 3 lety

      Thanks. Great post

    • @TheWolfsnack
      @TheWolfsnack Před 3 lety

      I remember getting a tour of a Voodoo in a hanger back in 64 or 65 when I was in Air Cadets.....it was pretty impressive. I recall that there were also a couple of Bomarc missiles that looked like they could be fired within moments.

  • @lb9007
    @lb9007 Před 3 lety +82

    I was raised with the sound of Voodoo's AB's near the runways at C.F.B. Bagotville. This seeded the dream of being a military pilot which I became and served 23 years. Thanks for this awesome video of a great airplane

    • @poochie49
      @poochie49 Před 3 lety +3

      I recall fishing in the Laurentide Park of Quebec one day and a few of these aircraft ripped across the sky just above me. Wow, what a noise. Scared the shyt out of me.

    • @davidrichter9164
      @davidrichter9164 Před 3 lety +2

      Thank you for your service.

    • @guenthermichaels5303
      @guenthermichaels5303 Před 2 lety

      What did you fly? and when?

    • @1873DoubleBlue
      @1873DoubleBlue Před 2 lety +1

      As a lifelong aviation fan I still very clearly recall a quiet day at my family cottage in Magnetawan ON. I was around 17at the time and was absolutely thrilled to hear the sound of jet noise in the usual quiet of our lakeside solitude. I ran to the open field area by the road just in time to see two 101's go ripping by at around 500 feet. It absolutely made my weekend. I had never before or since seen that. I assume they were 425 ac flying out of CFB North Bay. I usually saw the mighty 101 at the CNE Air show in Toronto where those hardlight afterburners hit hard and often unevenly. The Warlock team made many appearances there and I enjoyed every one of them. Long live the One O' Wonder in the memories of us lucky enough to have witnessed it.

    • @mdu2112
      @mdu2112 Před 27 dny

      Cadet, camp élémentaire.à Bagotville, 1982 Les afterburners le soir, c'était incroyable!

  • @CeBagutte
    @CeBagutte Před 3 lety +72

    Always love learning about Canadian history!

  • @ant-1382
    @ant-1382 Před 2 lety +9

    To say the Voodoos were loud is an understatement. When they took off, always in pairs, and hit those afterburners. Every window pane in The Comox Valley rattled.

  • @cossack4444
    @cossack4444 Před 3 lety +25

    As someone who has always been more interested in older piston driven warplanes, thank you. You're video on the CF-100 Canuck and their deployment drew me in and now I've grown a great appreciation for post WW2 and cold war era aircraft. Every video since then I've ravenously consumed.
    Thanks for shinning a spotlight on this and other aircraft/projects that are so often underappreciated and overlooked. Keep up the outstanding work!

  • @freerbx793
    @freerbx793 Před 3 lety +7

    This is an absolute goldmine of history for canadian aviation. Glad I found this.

  • @springtime1838
    @springtime1838 Před 3 lety +34

    In America the F-101B is almost forgotten glad someone is remembering them
    In the 80s Canada was really the Only ones with a official modern Air Defense Aircraft in the CF-18 we just had what ever Aircraft Fighters we laying around and the more famous F-106A in the ANG

    • @calvinnickel9995
      @calvinnickel9995 Před 3 lety +7

      Well... the CF-18 only came on in 1983 and the F-106 I believe was retired in 1988 from the ANG. Pretty sure you had F-15s at Elmendorf the whole time.

    • @springtime1838
      @springtime1838 Před 3 lety +6

      @@calvinnickel9995
      To be fair and I do live in Anchorage the F-15 Was on Northern Air Defense in the 80s but Plan A for US Air Defense was Upgraded F-16A's the F-16A ADF with AIM-7 for the ANG and probably later Using "Older" F-16C Blk 32s with AIM-120 but the Cold War Ended

    • @mikemontgomery2654
      @mikemontgomery2654 Před 3 lety +3

      Yeah, that’s not true at all. The F-15 was really coming online and actually fed the Voodoo their lunch during exercises at Cold Lake. The USN also had the Tomcat.

    • @ILSRWY4
      @ILSRWY4 Před 10 měsíci +1

      It was almost forgotten because there is good reason to forget it. It never live up to what it was intended, air superiority. It couldn't fulfill the TAC roll because it lacked the ability to carry a variaty of weapons. It suffered from Engine stalls that never really was fully fixed, it suffered from the dreaded and deadly pitch-up phenomenon that was never fixed but only masked by a warning system. Could only fire two non-guided nuke rockets and two IR missiles at one time, a lot of airplane for just two missiles and 2 rockets. It suffered from USAF production Holds because of the issues. The USAF finally cutting its losses and accepting the 101 as an air interceptor and photo-rece. As described in the book "F-101 Voodoo: Mcdonnell's Heavyweight Fighter" and I quote "It was a deeply flawed aircraft" The only good thing that came from the F-101 was the F-4 Phantom, as all the problems were ironed out on the phantom.

  • @janetyeoman1544
    @janetyeoman1544 Před 3 lety +4

    My dad was RCAF, lived in Bagotville and North Bay many years. There’s a black Voodoo gate guard at CFB North Bay. The Bomarc missle was downtown for years until the USAF wanted it back. The silo base is still there just beside the highway. A CF100 is still at the downtown park.

    • @cjmanson5692
      @cjmanson5692 Před rokem +1

      According to what I've found, the black Voodoo gate guard at North Bay is the sole EF-101 Electric Voodoo.

  • @DavesRocketShop
    @DavesRocketShop Před 3 lety +18

    Fond memories of being on parade when these did a fly past. They came towards us from behind the spectators who all ducked as one when they roared past! We saw them coming.

    • @carmium
      @carmium Před 3 lety +1

      My teen buddy Mike was at the Abbotsford Airshow when a couple of 101Bs zoomed overhead. He said they headed north in a climb when *BOOM!* one of the planes exploded, completely disintegrating. Happily, two 'chutes popped open, so I presume pilot and backseater saw all the fire warning lights go on and punched out just in time.

  • @benstapley6077
    @benstapley6077 Před 3 lety +23

    I was wondering if you were going to do a video the Voodoo. Glad you did!
    Too bad we didn't get a "Made in Canada" fighter, but the Voodoo was a good fighter and filled what we needed at the time.

    • @randytaylor1258
      @randytaylor1258 Před 2 lety +2

      I won't say that the bird was loud but at airshow, doing circles, they needed to light the lower afterburner so those little wings could keep the bird in the sky. Magnificent show at 50 feet. Thanks for a great piece on a much-ignored star

  • @nickschmitz841
    @nickschmitz841 Před 3 lety +9

    When I was training at the Air Cadet summer training center at CFB Trenton, I believe there was a CF100 Canuck and a CF101 Voodoo parked on opposite ends of the parade grounds. I always enjoyed getting up in the morning to go to the parade grounds and you would see the sun shining on these two iconic aircraft of the RCAF.

    • @TheWolfsnack
      @TheWolfsnack Před 3 lety

      I recall as an Air Cadet in the 60's visiting Comox getting a tour of the CF101 and being able to look into the cockpit

    • @StudeSteve62
      @StudeSteve62 Před 3 lety +1

      There was a stillborn effort to get that CF-100 from the Trenton cadet compound flying again, using spare parts from a former pylon display Clunk. The Trenton one had never been demilled. Alas the project went nowhere...

    • @darrinramey6764
      @darrinramey6764 Před 3 lety +1

      During morning parade at HMCS Quadra we would usually hear the two Voodoos from CFB Comox a few miles away take off for their morning flight. Their afterburner sound would shake the snares of the band's drums and it would sound like a drum roll.

    • @nickschmitz841
      @nickschmitz841 Před 3 lety +1

      @@StudeSteve62 I never knew she was air worthy, I had been told all the CF100s on display had had their spars cut so they could never fly again. I do remember she was looking good for her age too.

  • @MarchHare59
    @MarchHare59 Před 3 lety +11

    A very fair, accurate and well-researched history of the CF 101 Voodoo. Bravo!

  • @markthibault8579
    @markthibault8579 Před 3 lety +6

    Nice job! I'll always remember two noisy Voodoos opening the Abbotsford Airshow back in the early 80s. Also, one of our treasured flying club members has the distinction of having flown every Voodoo in the Canadian inventory. His name appears on the CF-101 sentry proudly on display at the Abbotsford Airport if you're ever in the area.

  • @TekuJames
    @TekuJames Před rokem +1

    My grandfather flew these planes back in the day. He was stationed at Bagotville, Comox, and Cold Lake. It's a pleasure learning more about the aircraft that is part of so many stories. Great video

  • @StudeSteve62
    @StudeSteve62 Před 3 lety +4

    Saw one of these yesterday, 101006 at London, Ontario. 006 was the last Voodoo ever to fly.

  • @MichelVaillancourt
    @MichelVaillancourt Před 3 lety +13

    This was always a favourite at the Shearwater Airshow, BITD. Low pass, go vertical, light the afterburner and it felt, to a very young me at the time, like the very earth shook as it disappeared from view into he firmament.

    • @u2mister17
      @u2mister17 Před 3 lety +1

      Boom....BOOM
      I watched those disappearing acts at Lockbourne around '65. Impressed the hell out of me.

    • @mcorvin9029
      @mcorvin9029 Před 3 lety +1

      Those Shearwater Airshows & Voodoo Demos there were fantastic!!! I grew up in Dartmouth watching T-33s, Trackers, and lovely lumbering Arguses turn final from our yard, Seakings whirring by. Having A Voodoo ‘sneak up’ behind the crowd at the show from the harbor side and hit burners as they pulled up at show line, the double thump hitting you in the chest, was glorious! The RAF Vulcan demo one year was amazing, tho when I asked one of the guys in back how he liked it when the skipper did low level like that he said dryly “not that much”. Was lucky one year to prowl the ramp, camera in hand, after show close & get some great Kodachrome shots as a participant (w Bluenose Soaring Club). If you’re visiting Halifax don’t miss Shearwater Aviation Museum & Atlantic Canada Aviation Museum (that has a Voodoo)

    • @robertpearson8798
      @robertpearson8798 Před 2 lety

      They did exactly the same thing at the Hamilton International Airshows in the early 80’s, flying in from North Bay, Ontario for the shows.

  • @Chuck59ish
    @Chuck59ish Před 3 lety +2

    I'm proud to say that I was a Voodoo Medicine Man at 416(AW) Sqn from 1982 to 1984. As an Aero Engine tech I was there when the forward engine mounts broke and needed replacing. The 416 aircraft was orginally a project of the squadron pilots and they used car paint from the local Canadian Tire store, every time it flew the leading edges would have to be repainted. In 1983 416 won the NORAD trophy for the best reaction times beating out the F-106s and the F-16s the Americans were flying at the time.

    • @stanrogers5613
      @stanrogers5613 Před 2 lety +1

      At least you knew more-or-less what was wrong when things went wrong. That fire control system, on t'other hand, was mostly a matter of hoping that the boxes liked each other on that airframe at that time of the year and were pleased by the offerings you gave it. (I do not miss the avionics of that period at all.)

  • @pastorrich7436
    @pastorrich7436 Před 3 lety +9

    Good show! Interesting, informative and entertaining. The Voodoo was a favourite performer at the Abbottsford International Airshow and I am thankful to have been there from 1978 on to see them fly. I also enjoyed seeing the Oregon Air National Guard Redhawks at airshows as well. Fond memories of *simpler* days gone by.

    • @GrimReaper-wz9me
      @GrimReaper-wz9me Před 3 lety +1

      Thank you for your comment.
      I remember being just blown away by the 4 ship 409 Sqn Nighthawk’s display @ Abbotsford 1982 (last year for their 4 a/c demo I believe), AND the 4 a/c F-4C Demo Team at the CFB Moose Jaw annual airshow.
      BOTH teams REALLY FLEW their spectacular a/c to thrill the crowds.
      Now? Official demo teams flying solo displays that last ~ 8 to 11 minutes?
      Cheers!

    • @genechronister7085
      @genechronister7085 Před 3 lety +1

      Our farm was on the American side of the Abbotsford airport. Allways enjoyed the airshow! Including the f 104 that crashed one year

  • @engineco.1494
    @engineco.1494 Před 3 lety +5

    Great video! There used to be a cf 101 on display at the municipal airport in my area. My grandfather worked for Avro Canada on the Arrow project.

  • @beverlychmelik5504
    @beverlychmelik5504 Před 3 lety +3

    I got to see a Canadian F-101 demo at March AFB back in the late 70's.

  • @gabesnooks3549
    @gabesnooks3549 Před 3 lety +5

    Great video! Lots of good information, delivered in a easy to digest manor!

  • @shadowsniper3342
    @shadowsniper3342 Před rokem

    My old man grew up listening to the sounds of 416 taking off doing training drills. we still got one on display at the now decommissioned base in Chatham

  • @guarenchafa4912
    @guarenchafa4912 Před 3 lety +3

    Great job Brad.... very well done!

  • @paddy1952
    @paddy1952 Před 2 lety +2

    Excellent video. I was at Abbottsford when a Voodoo crashed. Sadly, the Nav, who survived, died in a light twin years later. Great old machine all the same.

  • @ryanvargas4889
    @ryanvargas4889 Před 2 lety +2

    What a beautiful experience that must have been for the pilots flying over the Arctic in a machine like this.

  • @trentswinarchuk3881
    @trentswinarchuk3881 Před 3 lety +1

    loved the video! excited to check out all your other videos as Canadian history is important to me

  • @kodagnome
    @kodagnome Před 3 lety +5

    polyus you make some of the best and most inspiring videos on youtube in my opinion, I hope that after you're done with content about canadian aerospace that you wil keep making vids

  • @chrislea1000
    @chrislea1000 Před 3 lety +2

    Hey! Another great vid. Great to see what our friends were doing back then, love from The UK

  • @raynus1160
    @raynus1160 Před 3 lety

    Great video - thanks again for these excellent, informative, and accurate features. Bravo.

  • @k.s.333
    @k.s.333 Před 8 měsíci

    Early 80's I was a very young kid at an airshow in Hamilton, while in one of the hnagers one of these made a low flyover before the airshow commenced and remember jumping up and down in "shock and awe".

  • @subdawg1331
    @subdawg1331 Před 3 lety +1

    another awesome video thank you once again

  • @namiheiisono3680
    @namiheiisono3680 Před 2 lety

    In 86 at Namaeo air show voodoo was decommissioned, piliot flew east then came from west 3 minutes later 500 ft from over our heads well over mach!!! Big boom!! Piliots sitting on wings almost fell off from shock!!! Been my favourite plane ever since!!! The story of a voodoo pilot who came across an sr71 who tried to race it, he wasn’t susdesfull it against an f18 on a flat I think this old plane would kick its but’!! A true muscle car of old fighters!! Go voodoo!!’ 😃

  • @m.pearce3273
    @m.pearce3273 Před 5 měsíci

    I was so darned Proud to have seen and met many pilots of this incredible intercept fighter the CF-101 Voodoo's Scream overhead, burned solidly in my brain.
    This also brings fore to my memory of a Plasma Ball I witnessed over Prince George BC where the CFB Baldy Whews A Radar Site (closed in the late 70s) but back then when UFOs buzzed us they would call to CFB Cold Lake Alberta and 2 CF 101 Voodoo's were there so quick I saw both. It helped this ball of plasma was not in a real hurry. Pilots saw it took pics of but could not lock radars on it.
    Thanks for this most memorable super Canadian Call to regain the pride in our broken Nation is the first Best thing we can do to help the Nation to heal despite of our governance ❤❤

  • @brockzinck8664
    @brockzinck8664 Před 3 lety

    Great video! Excellent production.

  • @stampineer
    @stampineer Před 3 lety +1

    I have many fond memories from my childhood of the Voodoo. The first would have been ~1979-81 when attending the Hamilton airshows with my dad I always was impressed with the F-101s flying from Buffalo/Niagara Falls from the US Air National Guard (I believe). They would only do a few passes, but of all the planes I saw attending those shows it was the Voodoo I remember. Later on I remember taking a vacation to see family in Nova Scotia and on the way home driving by Chatham and seeing a pair on hot alert being dispatched (likely intercepting a Bear bomber) Seeing them roar overhead was a sight to behold. It was enough of an impression I remember in my early teens building 1/48th scale model and imagining myself flying one!
    Great video! Thanks for bringing these pieces of history alive and allowing this ex-pat to teach my daughters some of my birth-country's history!

  • @bassmith448bassist5
    @bassmith448bassist5 Před 2 lety

    Don't know how I haven't seen this channel before!!!!! Excellent content and great narrative!!!! Liked and subbed immediately!!!!! Keep up the great work!!!!

  • @gs637
    @gs637 Před 2 lety

    Great review and a wealth of info... thanks

  • @gramps69cd12
    @gramps69cd12 Před 3 lety +1

    I have worked on them as an Aeronautical Mechanical Tech and ground Runup technician at CFB Chatam 1980-1984 until they closed 416 Sqn...Was a blast !!

  • @kiisu74
    @kiisu74 Před 3 lety

    This chnnel is great. You do really good work. When I was little, I loved looking at pictures of the Voodoo.

  • @khankrum1
    @khankrum1 Před 3 lety +1

    Loved watching them fly over when I was a child in the West Midlands.
    There can be no mistaking the whistle from the twin Pratt and Whitneys.

  • @kiltedscorpio
    @kiltedscorpio Před 2 lety +1

    I LOVED them at Kingsley Field in Klamath Falls, Oregon.

  • @sterlingglessing2024
    @sterlingglessing2024 Před 2 lety

    Great Vid, thanks!🙂

  • @maxtrack9008
    @maxtrack9008 Před 3 měsíci

    'We' had them at CFB Chatham, NB. What I remember most was the cyclical nature of intense flying. I recall being told there were always more voodoos flying near the end of the month because the individual pilot flight hour quotas were assessed at the end of each month. I've always found that to be strange. If I were flying a voodoo I would have thought I would be flying one at every available opportunity.

  • @thanksskeletor4812
    @thanksskeletor4812 Před 3 lety +4

    I have always loved the Voodoo

  • @zigman8550
    @zigman8550 Před 3 lety

    My uncle flew F-101 Voodoo's out of Wurtsmith SAC base near Oscoda,Michigan (just across Lake Huron from Canada) in the early 1960's in the Air Defence Command.He carried the nuclear tipped 'Genie' missle on his aircraft.He was in the 445 Fighter Interceptor Squadron.When they were sent to Vietnam they transitioned to the F-4 Phantom.He told me he always loved the sound of the afterburners kicking on in the F-101.I didn't know Canada flew them into the 1980's.Very cool!

  • @SaturnCanuck
    @SaturnCanuck Před 2 lety

    She was a beast! I remember fondly those days in the 1970s seeing them perform at the CNE airshow -- and Dude, when that afterburner kicked in you knew it!

  • @68orangecrate26
    @68orangecrate26 Před 2 lety

    Another good mini-doc...

  • @slewter9041
    @slewter9041 Před 3 lety

    I think it's super cool how u can see the panels of the plane riveted and welded together

  • @maryrafuse3851
    @maryrafuse3851 Před 2 lety

    Loved seeing the Voodoo at the Moncton NB Airport Air Shows during the early 1970's. Very loud and impressive as they broke the sound barrier.

  • @MarioVesco
    @MarioVesco Před rokem

    Wonderful!

  • @miketeeveedub5779
    @miketeeveedub5779 Před 3 lety +1

    Jet crews may have liked the Voodoos, but with the rapid advances in jet design, they were obsolete the moment they rolled off the assembly line back in the late 50s/early 60s. Case in point: The USSR's TU-95 Bear bomber pilots that were intercepted along the Canadian Arctic and west coasts would purposely fly their plane below the stall speed of the CF-101, which would force them to circle the Bears to stay with them, thus fatiguing the pilots and burning excessive fuel. That is not stellar performance for an interceptor. Glad we got the CF-18s to replace them. They were a remarkable engineering achievement for their time.

  • @GMoneyMacFresh
    @GMoneyMacFresh Před 2 lety

    The Voodoo has such an amazing profile. It just looks so good.

  • @theodorepatton887
    @theodorepatton887 Před 3 lety

    Very informative. Did not know

  • @bobcarlsson4
    @bobcarlsson4 Před 3 lety

    When I was a young kid, my Dad, my brother & I were out on a small lake fishing northeast of the 414, when 2- 101s came full on south to north just above tree top level,... we nearly capsized!

  • @oceanhome2023
    @oceanhome2023 Před 3 lety +46

    This SO awesome! Back when Canadians knew their history and loved their country

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Před 3 lety +6

      And had babies

    • @davidrichter9164
      @davidrichter9164 Před 3 lety +6

      Some Canadians still do.🇨🇦

    • @oceanhome2023
      @oceanhome2023 Před 3 lety +9

      @@RideAcrossTheRiver
      Like ALL Endangered species they do not reproduce well in Captivity

    • @phillmaltese757
      @phillmaltese757 Před 2 lety +2

      I live in Windsor Ontario . Sad to say we learn more about the states history more than Canadian history

    • @liamcote2944
      @liamcote2944 Před 2 lety +2

      @@phillmaltese757
      I live in Manitoba and every in every history class I was taught the same thing from grade 5-12 about the same thing word for word involving residential schools.

  • @21stcenturybohemian
    @21stcenturybohemian Před 2 lety +1

    Some jargon you should use in future videos. Bombs fall from the sky by gravity, nuclear armed missiles and rockets are equipped with warheads, not bombs. Also, the air force and commercial air industry does not use the word "crash". It uses "accidents" (usually resulting in the loss of the aircraft and potential loss of life) and incidents (usually involving damage and no loss of life). Love your work so far. Keep it up!

  • @jtsnowman66
    @jtsnowman66 Před 7 měsíci

    Very cool to see one still parked at the entrance to the Abbotsford Airport.

  • @joshuaslokum36
    @joshuaslokum36 Před 3 lety

    Loved the Voodoo
    Never forget the low pass a Voodoo made at the CFB Shearwater Airshow around 1979. Scared the crap out of everyone lol..... came from nowhere ....

  • @ElsinoreRacer
    @ElsinoreRacer Před 3 lety +1

    Summer 1980 Dayton Airshow (just a few miles from Wright-Patterson so huge military support). Was talking to an A-4 pilot who turned out to be in command of a Marine Aggressor squadron. I said it would seem a more junior officer would be sent to represent at an airshow in Ohio. Early in his career he had served as an exchange officer with the RCAF and his best friend now headed a CF-101 squadron and was flying the Dayton F-101 demonstration as a farewell to the 101. So, the Marine took the A-4 gig when his bud swore that on his low pass he would be BELOW gear down altitude. It was to be in about 10 minutes.
    The Voodoo was clean, no tanks, but son of a ...... he freaking did it. Maybe more amazing/scary was how hard he was wrapping into turns given the the Voodoo's pitch-up issues at high AOA. I always loved the 101 but that demo was amazing. Canadian comes down to the belly-button of the USAF in a 28 yr old airplane and steals the show. AWESOME.

  • @scallywag6768
    @scallywag6768 Před 3 lety

    I saw 4 Voo Doos perform at the Abbotsford airshow in the 80s. I had just finished reading a book about the Avro Arrow and I have never been so upset after reading a book. I was terribly disappointed in the events of canceling and destroying the all Canadian Arrow.
    At this time at the airshow the VooDoos were quite old and I wasn't expecting much from them. The RCAF put on a good show flying one behind the other, low level, high speed, thundering overhead exactly as the clock struck 1pm.
    Old technology at the time but still impressive and powerful.

  • @robertspence831
    @robertspence831 Před 3 lety

    What a beautiful machine. I had no idea they served that long!

  • @judgegixxer
    @judgegixxer Před 2 lety

    One of my uncles flew a Voodoo out of Comox. I remember watching him fly it in the airshow at CFB Namao in the 70's.
    Holy shit that was a long time ago. There is one on display at the Aviation museum in Edmonton now at the old municipal airport.

  • @duanepigden1337
    @duanepigden1337 Před 3 lety

    I was stationed at CFB Valdor and we had Voodoos. Great plane.

    • @duanepigden1337
      @duanepigden1337 Před 3 lety

      Before Valdor I was at CFS Sioux Lookout which was part of the Pine Tree line.

  • @Shmerpy
    @Shmerpy Před 3 lety +1

    There's one in the boneyard behind the museum at Shearwater, NS. Yours for the price of the scrap...

  • @brunoethier896
    @brunoethier896 Před 3 lety

    Nice!
    I think I saw in your video the Voodoo that's on display in my home city of Lévis (Québec)

    • @brunoethier896
      @brunoethier896 Před 3 lety

      @@polyus_studios Oh, you are correct, I found the reference and the one in my home town is on a concrete pedestal, it was installed in 1990. pilotes.quebec/forum/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=11555

  • @davidwelch7789
    @davidwelch7789 Před 2 lety

    Lived cfb Como from 1968 to1974 father was a voodoo medicine man loved watching them take off .It was jaw dropping to them take off then stand on their tail and disappear
    i

  • @Snowdog070
    @Snowdog070 Před 3 lety

    My buddy and I were canoeing on Burntroot Lake in Algonquin Provincial Park back in the day when we saw one scream overhead. We were going from our island campsite to the mainland one morning to pick blueberries when one went over us 'just above the treetops' as they say. It was a quiet day with calm waters, a perfect morning in the wilderness. To this day my buddy and I say, "The pilot had blue eyes" in reference to how low that Voodoo was and in the quiet of the wilderness the legendary noise of these things was amplified. Considering the course it was flying we thought it was going from Trenton to North Bay.

  • @jeanlevesque3988
    @jeanlevesque3988 Před 3 lety +1

    I was MP at CFS Val D’or in 1970 see it all

  • @ramspace
    @ramspace Před 3 lety +3

    A good looking machine.

  • @joebush1663
    @joebush1663 Před 3 lety +4

    Great vid! Thanks for not lamenting the loss of the greatest jet fighter ever made , the Arrow (tongue-in-cheek), like so many of these videos do ad nauseum.

  • @sirridesalot6652
    @sirridesalot6652 Před rokem

    What I find interesting about the CF-101 Voodoo is that it was examined by Canadians prior to the CF-105 and was found to NOT meet Canadian requirements and thus the CF-105 project was carried on.

    • @terrencejones9817
      @terrencejones9817 Před 10 měsíci

      Probably the A model. The F101B we got, was actually a fantastic plane. In many ways just as good as the Arrow ever would have been. I'm a massive Arrow fan, and I have almost every book published on it's development. It had a great potential, but in reality the technology wasn't ready . By the time the Arrow would have been in production, The F4 Phantom would have been as well. The F4 is superior to Arrow and vastly cheaper.

  • @Wozrop
    @Wozrop Před 2 lety

    The Voodoo always interested me. I see it all the time, we've got one in North Bay painted up in the black 414 EW livery, its just across from the airport beside some period radar sets. Still kinda crazy to think that air to air nuclear rockets not only survived design and planning but were actually produced and deployed. Nuts to think about nowadays.

  • @ASauce98
    @ASauce98 Před 9 měsíci

    The aircraft #425 from the alberta aviation museum in Edmonton is currently being disassembled and sent down to Calgary to their museum

  • @alexsmith516
    @alexsmith516 Před 3 lety +1

    There's a Voodoo in Lynx livery in Halifax alongside the highway across from the airport at the Atlantic Canada Aviation Museum. I've driven by it for years and always wondered the story behind it. Tail number on it is 416

    • @9_nein_9
      @9_nein_9 Před 2 lety

      416 was CFB Chatham, New Brunswick

  • @bchuntfish
    @bchuntfish Před 3 lety +1

    Love the look of the black electronic warfare bird.

  • @rEdf196
    @rEdf196 Před rokem

    I remember seeing many CF-101 Voodoo flybys as a kid to young adult before they were replaced by the CF-18 hornet in the mid 1980's. Today the CF-18 is likely being replaced by the F-35.

  • @oldmandoinghighkicksonlyin1368

    A video about Canada's nuclear weapons during the Cold War would be a pretty neat topic.

    • @polyus_studios
      @polyus_studios  Před 2 lety +1

      It's already on my list! Not sure when I'll get to it though

  • @Ice_Karma
    @Ice_Karma Před 2 lety +2

    Binge-watching your videos, also just subscribed. Just a tiny note: Chatham, NB, is pronounced "Chat-'um", not "Chath-um".

  • @ThyAnon
    @ThyAnon Před rokem

    There's 1 of them at the Aircraft museum in Ottawa and another in the War Museum in Ottawa

  • @edletain385
    @edletain385 Před 3 lety

    We were at an airshow on the 'Air Force' side (Namao) of CFB Edmonton. Just came out of the visiting USAF 'Spooky' C-130 gunship on the tarmac, when two Voodoos from CFB Comox came over the crowd from behind (not allowed now) and went full afterburner then climbing almost straight up, my girlfriend almost pissed herself. She liked the RAF Harrier better.

  • @tplyons5459
    @tplyons5459 Před 2 lety

    You left out the CF-101s serving at joint CAF/USAF base, Hamilton AFB. They served in USAF colors. I have many fond memories of the 101s at Hamilton.

    • @tplyons5459
      @tplyons5459 Před 2 lety

      @@dukeford8893 I was at Hamilton in 67=68 and told then they were rebadged Canadian, We had a joint base then and until I got used to it I wasn't sure who to Salute. The 101s were flown by the 84th FIS The CO was Lt Col Ed Kenney Hamilton was the HQ for the Western NORAD Region Commanded by Maj General James Winn US Army and Brig General Huge C. Ledoux CAF I might be able to double check the 101 thing but remember we lost a lot of 101's in Viet Nam. My unit supported the 12 th recon Sqd and after loosing X amount of RF-101Cs we had to scroung all the 2 seat versions from I believe Malstrmom AFB??? The RF-101C was also flown out of Udorn by the 20th TRS starting in April 66 When the 12th and 20th got down to 16 AC each they started to being in the RF-4C

  • @williamdavidwallace3904

    I worked on the flight simulator for the F104 probably starting in 1961 so there was not much gap between the CF101 and the 104.

  • @theeaselrider4032
    @theeaselrider4032 Před 2 lety +1

    At 3:37, watch the traffic going backwards on the road in the background.

  • @glockgrouptherapy
    @glockgrouptherapy Před 3 lety

    There's one on a pedastle at CFB 22Wing in my home town.

  • @peterascento7618
    @peterascento7618 Před 3 lety

    I was in Bagotville when these were flying - I was a Weapons Tech - guarded the Nucs

  • @chuckmoore8668
    @chuckmoore8668 Před 3 lety

    From the above picture. You can see the influence it had on the F4 phantom

  • @devinwooley3575
    @devinwooley3575 Před 3 lety +6

    Ah, now I have something to do this morning.
    Edit: First

    • @dodaexploda
      @dodaexploda Před 3 lety +2

      Second! I love that "tappy" music.

  • @gavinmclaren9416
    @gavinmclaren9416 Před 2 lety

    At 5:41 in the video you referred to CFB Namao, I think, just north of Edmonton (actually butting onto the city limits these days). It is an army base now, but was an air force base in the 60's. It is pronounced "Na-MAY-o", three syllables, emphasis on the middle syllable. I'm an Edmonton native and live about 10 minutes south of the base

  • @bikeracer6045
    @bikeracer6045 Před rokem

    Look at that! A nice 'Canadian' Interceptor. Might have been a great plane for the RCAF, but bottom line it replaced the Avro Arrow. Oh right, the 'Bomark missiles' were the replacement for the Arrow. :(

  • @Vespuchian
    @Vespuchian Před 3 lety +2

    The listed range for the Voodoo is surprising, does that include extra fuel from drop tanks?

    • @MarchHare59
      @MarchHare59 Před 3 lety +2

      Graham Baxter: The Voodoo could carry two drop tanks attached to the fuselage, aft of the rotating weapons bay. (You can see them at 0:10 ) But even without external tanks, the Voodoo had incredible range, and long range was an important feature for Canadian interceptors because aerial in-flight refueling tankers didn't enter service with the RCAF until the 1970s.

  • @bloq6758
    @bloq6758 Před 3 lety

    there is one of these at our airport in BC

  • @swright5690
    @swright5690 Před 3 lety +2

    Pretty sure one of my instructors at CFB Kingston (CFSCE) ejected from a CF 101. Last name "Hughes". I think he re-classified into comms after the ejection (1980s?). One ejection in your life is enough. Anyone have a tally of CF101 ejections/crashes?

  • @slinkyaroo
    @slinkyaroo Před rokem

    This was the generation of the idea of no more dogfighting. Carry nukes and bomber interceptor while going as fast a possible was the thinking.

  • @jimsquire9048
    @jimsquire9048 Před 3 lety +3

    The Canadian Air Force has a great history. Join up and you could fly the same aircraft your great granddad did. Now that's history. ;)

    • @MattVarnish1103
      @MattVarnish1103 Před 3 lety +1

      Well our F-18s have now served way longer than the voodoo ever did....

    • @steveharrigan7811
      @steveharrigan7811 Před 3 lety +2

      @@MattVarnish1103 Vintage Air Force, Nostalgia Navy.

    • @stephenlong8800
      @stephenlong8800 Před 3 lety +1

      The Canadian Armed Forces is notorious for being able to do the most with the least

    • @jimsquire9048
      @jimsquire9048 Před 3 lety

      @@stephenlong8800 No choice in the matter and yes I agree.

  • @21stcenturybohemian
    @21stcenturybohemian Před 2 lety

    It is a shame you cannot get higher quality footage. I wonder if it can be had from the National Archives.

  • @alexanderscratch3748
    @alexanderscratch3748 Před 3 lety

    Could you do a video on the f2h3 banshee, and btw great video

  • @edwardbreadman9473
    @edwardbreadman9473 Před 3 lety +2

    the more I hear about the history of the Canadian Warplane History since the cancellation of the CF-105 and the subsequent demise of our Military Aircraft Industry has led to our total dependance of American Aircraft. Is that a good thing ? just sayin

    • @rpm1796
      @rpm1796 Před 3 lety +1

      Read:
      ''In Retreat' Canada's Armed Forces in the Trudeau Years, by Gerald Porter.

  • @WAL_DC-6B
    @WAL_DC-6B Před 3 lety

    The McDonnell F-101 Voodoo was based on the original McDonnell XF-88 Voodoo penetration fighter (first flown on October 29. 1948).

    • @WAL_DC-6B
      @WAL_DC-6B Před 3 lety

      @@polyus_studios Good story on the CF-101! Thought I'd point out that you mentioned the XF-88 as the "VF-88." I also added the date the XF-88 first flew and that it was a "penetration fighter" (long distance bomber escort) much like other late 1940s, experimental U.S. jet fighters that never went into production such as the Lockheed XF-90 and North American XF-93.

  • @vincentlapointe8858
    @vincentlapointe8858 Před 8 měsíci

    5:43 the 425 squadron was originated in Bagotville QC. And it always been there! Never been in Alberta

    • @polyus_studios
      @polyus_studios  Před 8 měsíci +1

      No it was transfered to Namoa for a few months when they took delivery of their first 101s. It wasn’t long though, guess they didn't like Edmonton!