SLAM - America's Big Stick & Doomsday Weapon

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  • čas přidán 11. 05. 2024
  • Just before ICBM's became the de facto delivery system of choice, the US created what could be called the doomsday weapon of the cold war.
    It was deemed so dangerous that the same government that commissioned it, cancelled it before it went into production. This is the story of Project Pluto and SLAM the unstoppable nuclear-powered cruise missile it created.
    Patreon / curiousdroid
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    Kosmonaut, Muhammad Tauha Ali, Pascal Hausammann, Florian Hesse.
    Also Alan Johns
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    AMIR BLACHMAN
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    And a big thank you to all our other Patreon supporters.
    Presented by Paul Shillito
    Written and Researched by Paul Shillito
    Images and Footage
    US Dept of Defence, USAF
    Intro Music by
    Mike Mullen BMI
    www.positrosmic.com
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 4,1K

  • @ungertron
    @ungertron Před 5 lety +1260

    SLAM - a terrifying doomsday weapon so bad it made ICBMs look good.

    • @alexcarter8807
      @alexcarter8807 Před 4 lety +11

      Xtian death cult embodied.

    • @sto2779
      @sto2779 Před 4 lety +61

      Exactly ICBM are angels compared to SLAM which no missiles should be. The only thing that was terrifying thing about SLAM is that to radiate people while traveling on air.. talk about extreme efficiency, scientist back them knew a thing or two about efficiency.

    • @seand.g423
      @seand.g423 Před 4 lety +12

      @@sto2779 yeah... "efficiency..." like the old Chlorine shells...

    • @vitusyu2009
      @vitusyu2009 Před 4 lety +3

      ungertron 2020, might have to send one to Tehran.

    • @gumunduringigumundsson9344
      @gumunduringigumundsson9344 Před 4 lety +13

      Just remember when you see those good modern clubs from fifty miles away turn your head away cuz your eyelids are not nearly thick enough to prevent blindness. And exposed skin will get snd to third degree burns but if youre luky and its a large Hydrogen fusion bomb you'll have just over a second to find some shade quick cuz the lethal gamma rays that will pass through brick walls will not reach peak brightness until about a second or two after the initial nuclear fission detonator's nuke being immediately drowned in the much bigger fusion chain reaction (Keanu Reeves and Morgan Freeman 4tw!) and no need to duck and cover.. unless you are in the goldilocks zone from the blast but the dust will take care of anyone in it anyways and those downwind. Its a mess and who's going to clean up after that party. Thats the big teachers question who's stick they meant when they named the most terrifying thing man ever almost made.. so far. HL hf. Love. 🎩👍🦋

  • @taofledermaus
    @taofledermaus Před 5 lety +2308

    It's funny how scientists at that time were trying to use atomic power for everything.

    • @fjakavazda1298
      @fjakavazda1298 Před 5 lety +159

      Is this what you wanted to say? I'm not sure anymore haha

    • @PCReboot
      @PCReboot Před 5 lety +36

      dID YOU POST THIS HAHA

    • @4d4Spl
      @4d4Spl Před 5 lety +64

      When CZcams went down for awhile the other night - SkyNet was booted.

    • @SDesigns2023
      @SDesigns2023 Před 5 lety +14

      is this what you meant to say????????? You just trying to be some top commentator or something? Trying to prove some point?

    • @alejandromendoza4324
      @alejandromendoza4324 Před 5 lety +26

      Came from your video

  • @craigwall9536
    @craigwall9536 Před 3 lety +67

    The movie "The Lost Missile" was based on this concept. Chilling.

  • @Slarti
    @Slarti Před 4 lety +473

    Doomsday weapon? "Gentlemen you can't fight in here, this is the war room!"

    • @mattbartley2843
      @mattbartley2843 Před 4 lety +17

      "Of course, the whole point of a Doomsday Machine is lost, if you *keep* it a *secret*! "

    • @Slarti
      @Slarti Před 4 lety +1

      @Zombobo Smith I saw some of Steve Martin's attempt at Clouseau and I cringed. Steve Martin does not have the depth that Sellers had partly because Sellers was himself a deeply flawed man and this came through in a subtle manner in his acting.

    • @Slarti
      @Slarti Před 4 lety

      @Zombobo Smith if you like Sellers I recommend his part playing Clare Quilty in a Kubrick film I cannot mention the name of because of stupid CZcams algorithms.

    • @drewthompson7457
      @drewthompson7457 Před 4 lety +6

      For some of Sellers other movies, try "The Mouse that Roared" and "Being There".

    • @_Coffee4Closers
      @_Coffee4Closers Před 4 lety +3

      One of the funniest lines of all time.

  • @alannitz9919
    @alannitz9919 Před 5 lety +325

    Site of nuclear testing ground called jackass flats. That made me chuckle.

    • @ctdieselnut
      @ctdieselnut Před 4 lety +6

      The joke writes itself. Lol

    • @thegrumpypapa9849
      @thegrumpypapa9849 Před 4 lety +12

      Funny name but they had to change the name when Bill Clinton became president. It was found out that he had the same nickname for crooked hillary.

    • @nerblebun
      @nerblebun Před 4 lety +6

      @Alan Nits: Jackass Flats was named in the 1800's, long before nuclear weapons existed. Pioneers & Prospectors named that particular stretch of Nevada because of the herds of wild donkey's living there.

    • @bogdog999
      @bogdog999 Před 4 lety

      You can still see the test site on Google Earth at 36 deg. 49' 46.00''N and 116 deg. 08' 30.00"W

    • @jzk3919
      @jzk3919 Před 2 lety

      I think the name was not given in the 20 but in the 18th or 19th century. Covered wagons, pulled by teams of donkeys and mules...etc.

  • @CozyHi
    @CozyHi Před 5 lety +278

    Nice to see that Paul not only narrates the videos but he ALSO writes them and researched the information thoroughly

    • @jonzilla4074
      @jonzilla4074 Před 5 lety +1

      Whoa

    • @Anvilshock
      @Anvilshock Před 5 lety +3

      Except when it comes to pronunciation of foreign names. Then all bets are off.

    • @DrWhom
      @DrWhom Před 5 lety +1

      Or grammar. Or spelling.

    • @Pinhead101
      @Pinhead101 Před 5 lety

      Or quality of footage

    • @DrWhom
      @DrWhom Před 5 lety +7

      Original footage is of variable quality, he can't help that.

  • @BXJ-mi9mm
    @BXJ-mi9mm Před 5 lety +250

    "The government decided it was just too provocative and dangerous…" 11:47
    Now just think about how much the government has done and this is where it drew the line!

    • @michaelseely378
      @michaelseely378 Před 4 lety

      Ol

    • @77Avadon77
      @77Avadon77 Před 4 lety +3

      Right, scary

    • @thefloridamanofytcomments5264
      @thefloridamanofytcomments5264 Před 4 lety +20

      The soviets gave two flight crews cancer trying to fly their response to this device, mistakenly thinking it was still being produced by the US. Really sad actually.

    • @BXJ-mi9mm
      @BXJ-mi9mm Před 4 lety +1

      @@thefloridamanofytcomments5264 Give me some evidence.

    • @heyboy33333
      @heyboy33333 Před 4 lety +16

      @@BXJ-mi9mm Are you saying its impossible to believe that the Soviets would put their own people at risk in experimenting or producing weapons and nuclear power?

  • @ChallengerNetwork
    @ChallengerNetwork Před 3 lety +86

    What's even deadlier than an atomic cruise missile, is Paul's taste in fashion. ❤

    • @nathanchildress5596
      @nathanchildress5596 Před 2 lety +3

      The shirts are from MadCap, they sponsor his channel and, to be fair, they actually have some really nice tasteful clothing too.

    • @RichardLionheart12
      @RichardLionheart12 Před rokem +1

      I really love this missile I hope US makes it again to show to Putin that it will wreck Russia in milliseconds or seconds.

  • @douglasjohnson4382
    @douglasjohnson4382 Před 5 lety +109

    I had a college math teacher who worked on this guidance system.
    He and a team of other mathematicians had to develop a two dimensional equation that described the terrain under the flightpath.

    • @michaelscarn7375
      @michaelscarn7375 Před 2 lety

      @@Jock-mj4zd with a shit load of arguments I suppose

    • @BillAnt
      @BillAnt Před 2 lety

      Bet he had a "glowing career" from all that radioactivity. :D

    • @JozefLucifugeKorzeniowski
      @JozefLucifugeKorzeniowski Před 7 měsíci

      just avoid exponents. simple input output functions.

  • @JohnDoe-on6ru
    @JohnDoe-on6ru Před 5 lety +478

    "limited by how long you could keep the crew up there"
    That's easy, just make nuclear-powered crewmen!

  • @danpatterson8009
    @danpatterson8009 Před 4 lety +16

    I read about the SLAM project years ago in Smithsonian magazine. They had to figure out a way to keep the fuel elements separated during assembly, but then have the spacers somehow disappear later on so that the elements could move around. The solution was mothballs, which would sublime slowly. Aside from the technical creativity, it's interesting to see the amount of resources allocated to this project (the apprehension of nuclear annihilation will do that for you), and when it was made to work, that someone in authority had a Wile E.Coyote moment and asked "For heaven's sake- what are we DOING??" But I would stop short of calling the cold war "hysteria", because the threat was and is quite real. The menagerie of weapons-development programs of the 1950s were attempts to develop a credible deterrent that would not rapidly become obsolete and yet would not be threatening enough to prompt an enemy to strike first. The variety of approaches was driven by generous budgets and rapid advances in technology. The result has been our inheritance of a nuclear balance of terror that is stable enough that we can indulge in the luxury of not thinking about it too much.

    • @unverifiedbiotic
      @unverifiedbiotic Před 3 měsíci

      My thoughts exactly in regard to throwing around the word "hysteria" in cotext of the threat that the USSR represented - communist ideological infiltration was a fact, everything in this murderous, inhuman system is perfectly tailored to capture the minds of naiive youths who don't understand how much freedom and prosperity they'd loose if they got their way.

  • @derekmred865
    @derekmred865 Před 3 lety +75

    The Whole Point of the Doomsday Machine is Lost if You Keep it a Secret!"

    • @adspur
      @adspur Před 3 lety +1

      It’s a deflection tactic.

    • @robertromero8692
      @robertromero8692 Před 3 lety +8

      "Vy didn't you tell ze world!"

    • @peterkuykendall3636
      @peterkuykendall3636 Před 3 lety +4

      Animals can be bred and SLAUGHTERED.

    • @robertromero8692
      @robertromero8692 Před 3 lety +5

      @@peterkuykendall3636 Turgidson: Doctor, you mentioned the ratio of ten women to each man. Now, wouldn't that necessitate the abandonment of the so-called monogamous sexual relationship, I mean, as far as men were concerned?
      Dr. Strangelove: Regrettably, yes. But it is, you know, a sacrifice required for the future of the human race. I hasten to add that since each man will be required to do prodigious...service along these lines, the women will have to be selected for their sexual characteristics which will have to be of a highly stimulating nature.

    • @peterkuykendall3636
      @peterkuykendall3636 Před 3 lety +2

      @@robertromero8692 Let’s get into those mineshafts post haste

  • @JettQuasar
    @JettQuasar Před 5 lety +578

    Powering a supersonic missile with a thermonuclear reactor... what could possibly go wrong?

    • @EvelynDayless
      @EvelynDayless Před 5 lety +78

      I believe making things go wrong was the point.

    • @ddegn
      @ddegn Před 5 lety +27

      *Edit: This reply was mostly sarcastic. I don't think fission reactors should replace jet fuel. Many people are missing the "/s" marker for sarcasm. (No big deal, I don't always read comments carefully myself.)*
      I thought "thermonuclear" refers to fusion bomb/reactor. In contrast a fission reactor is not nearly as dangerous. Fission reactors are so safe, they should be used in airlines since jet fuel is getting so expensive. /s

    • @JettQuasar
      @JettQuasar Před 5 lety +33

      Powering a supersonic missiles with a nuclear reactor and arming it with thermonuclear warheads... what could possibly go wrong? (it just sounds better the way I first phrased it)

    • @seththomas3418
      @seththomas3418 Před 5 lety +12

      Funny enough they did get Nuclear engines to work but aside from the other problems was a radioactive contrail which they never did figure out how to solve.

    • @ddegn
      @ddegn Před 5 lety +13

      @Jet Quasar "sounds better the way I first phrased it"
      I agree. But what am I to do? I see a CZcams comment which could have an error so I'm compelled to show how smart I am (by acting dumb and replying). I don't think I'm the only one cursed with this affliction.
      BTW, I up voted your original comment when I first read it.

  • @BurstNibbler
    @BurstNibbler Před 5 lety +235

    Great research, content, presentation and topics. Congratulations for making a far better channel than pretty much everything on TV!

    • @d1agram4
      @d1agram4 Před 5 lety

      TV?

    • @WarpedPerception
      @WarpedPerception Před 5 lety

      I agree... However this is what TV used to be in the 80's, now this is TV.

    • @Staromil
      @Staromil Před 5 lety +1

      Kinda futuristic device from like 1950 or something. This cathode RAY tube run the whole society for half a century. More powerful than any nuclear reactor, yet it fit in people's living rooms, kitchens, even cars. Imagine that. So advanced, nobody can figure out how it was made back in the day. C.D. should make a video.

    • @dotnet97
      @dotnet97 Před 5 lety

      It isn't a particularly high bar to do better than TV tbh.

    • @desertstormwar1463
      @desertstormwar1463 Před 5 lety

      THE PALM BAY FLORIDA FBI BOMB SQUAD WITH THE ST JOSEPHS CATHOLIC CHURCH OF PALM BAY FLORIDA STATED1994 U. S. . PRESIDENT CLINTONS NAME BEFORE THEY TACKLED ME IN BOMB GEAR FOR THE PRESIDENT OF IRAQ AND THE PRESIDENT OF RUSSIA and took me to COURT FOR BLASPHEMY 3 times in 12 months AT IRAQ HOSPITAL ON WMD TREATY ACTIVE DESERT STORM WAR
      THE NAVY SEALS DID NOT TEACH ME HOW TO SHOOT A GUN or ESCAPE SALLY from the NCIS OF THE U. S. NAVY LEATHER HOSPITAL BED STRAPS WO BAG OVER MY HEAD FOR THE FORMER PRESIDENT OF IRAQ AND PRESIDENT OF RUSSIA
      BECAUSE I AM MD OF WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION ACTIVE Navy SEAL TEAM 6 DEVGRU WHO WROTE FEDERAL HIPAA LAW WHICH REMOVES RIGHT TO BARE ARMS FOR 6 MONTHS ACTIVE DESERT STORM WAR 24 years

  • @ibnomat
    @ibnomat Před 3 lety +35

    "I suppose I could part with one and still be feared …" ―Professor Farnsworth on his doomsday devices

  • @lovelessissimo
    @lovelessissimo Před 3 lety +12

    Can you imagine being a simple farmer in Siberia and one of these blows by you doing Mach 3 only a few hundred feet over your head?
    True terror.

    • @shoora813
      @shoora813 Před 2 lety

      When you are stupid enough to push you opponents, you may squeeze off him Burevestnik and Status-6.

    • @wardywards8831
      @wardywards8831 Před 2 lety

      You wouldn't feel terror... You'd just die of the sound shockwave

    • @lovelessissimo
      @lovelessissimo Před 2 lety

      @@wardywards8831 you'd see the plane first, followed by the blast.

  • @YHBW1001
    @YHBW1001 Před 5 lety +166

    The ingenuity involved in such insane projects never ceases to amaze me. Consider what could be achieved if this engineering creativity was used for peaceful or benign projects.

    • @beenaplumber8379
      @beenaplumber8379 Před 4 lety +16

      The only reason for this disparity was political. This kind of research got the funding. The Cold War was real, and it was terrifying. We did irrational things.

    • @screamosux
      @screamosux Před 4 lety +7

      If every ounce of corruption could be removed from humanity, it could happen. But so long as it exists, there will always be a foreign threat that must be managed and dealt with.

    • @MrDlt123
      @MrDlt123 Před 4 lety +6

      Not profitable.

    • @Jdalio5
      @Jdalio5 Před 4 lety +4

      Theres no profits in peace...only war

    • @iron60bitch62
      @iron60bitch62 Před 4 lety +1

      You don’t have to make things safe with their military weapons that’s why peacetime nuclear is so difficult

  • @ianmacfarlane1241
    @ianmacfarlane1241 Před 5 lety +257

    A lot of channels are going overboard with 'scary Halloween'.
    As far as scary goes, I don't know if I've ever seen anything as scary as this weapon system.

    • @jgedutis
      @jgedutis Před 5 lety +1

      Two words Tzar Bomba

    • @ianmacfarlane1241
      @ianmacfarlane1241 Před 5 lety +19

      @@jgedutis Hmmm.....not sure about that tbh.
      This thing could have theoretically delivered multiple nuclear strikes, while flying around for months on end spewing out radiation, before crashing in a radioactive plume.
      Tzar Bomba has the advantage in that we know what the yield is, but I'm not sure which is more scary.

    • @davidhyland3833
      @davidhyland3833 Před 5 lety +9

      Project Pluto could kill far more people than the Tzar Bomba.

    • @imthefuckinglizardking4590
      @imthefuckinglizardking4590 Před 5 lety

      @@davidhyland3833 really depends on the areas where they strike with missiles you drop the tsar bomba in NY and your probably going to kill alot more people than a few strikes in less populated areas of Russia

    • @Gantradies
      @Gantradies Před 5 lety

      *shudders* cary enough to make the 50's US military/Government Blanch, even

  • @davefil6102
    @davefil6102 Před 4 lety +10

    love seeing the b-52 in its old colors. walked around them for 6 years back in the 80s, the good ole days.

  • @davidduffy6685
    @davidduffy6685 Před 4 lety +6

    Having watched this episode a number of times, it’s one of your best, if not your best. Well done!

  • @fb5601
    @fb5601 Před 5 lety +575

    This is definitely from an era when atomic energy was the solution to everything.

    • @HespersQuest
      @HespersQuest Před 5 lety +12

      Seems they disabled the script

    • @dreamingblue3939
      @dreamingblue3939 Před 5 lety +2

      Beat me to it lol

    • @ccost
      @ccost Před 5 lety +2

      @@dreamingblue3939 same!

    • @Innomen
      @Innomen Před 5 lety +27

      Because it is every bit as much as enslaving carbon is, literally times 1000. (Yay energy density.) . Basically humanity discovered fire 2.0 and decided to more or less be ignorantly terrified of it.

    • @kosmosXcannon
      @kosmosXcannon Před 5 lety +12

      @@Innomen not to mention the waste can be easily isolated and not constantly be in our atmosphere.

  • @williamsheil
    @williamsheil Před 5 lety +459

    Sometimes you just have to recognise how lucky this civilisation has been in the past and hope that luck continues.

    • @rlguerrero2263
      @rlguerrero2263 Před 5 lety +2

      Indeed.

    • @MuggsMcGinnis
      @MuggsMcGinnis Před 5 lety +9

      Maybe this sort of thing is why we see no other technologically advanced species in our galaxy.

    • @l.l.9806
      @l.l.9806 Před 5 lety

      @@MuggsMcGinnis also why mars is a wasteland

    • @Attila_Meszaros
      @Attila_Meszaros Před 5 lety +5

      @Funk Enstein Correct me if I'm wrong, but didn't the current administration just provide Saudi Arabia, home of the true radical Islam and 15 of the 9/11 highjackers, with nuclear weapon technology?

    • @thefloridamanofytcomments5264
      @thefloridamanofytcomments5264 Před 4 lety +1

      Attila Meszaros you’re wrong about giving them nuclear weapons, yes.

  • @Sammyjeans1
    @Sammyjeans1 Před 4 lety

    Great video. I love this guys delivery and basically the whole curious droid series. One of the best things on CZcams!

  • @mukraker1
    @mukraker1 Před 4 lety +6

    Fascinating! I thought your presentation was really well done and enjoyed it thoroughly. Thanks.

  • @Rulo6000
    @Rulo6000 Před 5 lety +1258

    it feels like cristmas everytime this channel uploads something

  • @raymondkoonce5827
    @raymondkoonce5827 Před 5 lety +41

    One of the things I enjoy about your channel is that I was a young Air Force officer and fighter pilot when your "Big Stick" was being developed. Turns out I never heard anything about it, or several other things you've brought to light. Well done, Paul.

    • @BruceNitroxpro
      @BruceNitroxpro Před 5 lety

      Well done, or "holy rat crap... what a load."

    • @raymondkoonce5827
      @raymondkoonce5827 Před 5 lety +3

      @@BruceNitroxpro You could be right. Lord knows there's plenty of rat crap on youtube, I've had the impression that this channel seems to be trying for accuracy, though. Hope I'm right.

  • @hinzuzufugen7358
    @hinzuzufugen7358 Před 3 lety +1

    Astonishing.Both the topic covered and the quality of this video, as usual. Thank you indeed!

  • @frankguardian1778
    @frankguardian1778 Před 3 lety +2

    I became aware of such development when I heard the tremendous roar of the engine several miles away. at the time I had no idea what could possibly creat such sound. Thanks for the informative presentation.

  • @Dudemon-1
    @Dudemon-1 Před 5 lety +122

    I worked with the terrain map dataset it would have used for navigation. There were *huge* errors in it, with false "cliffs" of up to 100 m elevation difference where maps quads lined up improperly. Good thing early cruise missiles were never needed, or they'd have been slamming into the ground from the errors.

    • @Slideyslide
      @Slideyslide Před 5 lety +10

      Dudemon that’s terrifying. 💀

    • @benbaselet2026
      @benbaselet2026 Před 5 lety +20

      The rate of technological development in th 40s and 50s was so incredibly fast that they must have cut every conceivable corner and safety measure... The achievements and dreams were epic but it's probably best someone pushed the brakes a bit.

    • @ptonpc
      @ptonpc Před 5 lety +16

      I remember reading years ago that the earlier cruise missiles based in the UK had a flaw that meant, if launched, they would return to their base.

    • @762rk95tp
      @762rk95tp Před 5 lety +4

      Low accuracy of early satellite based synthetic-aperture radars would have been a major problem.

    • @sersoft_corp
      @sersoft_corp Před 5 lety +1

      Lone pube czcams.com/video/U4kQROAhR90/video.htmlm5s

  • @numgun
    @numgun Před 5 lety +174

    Out of all the weapons mankind can develop, this is probably the scariest one.
    *Multiple nukes, dropped one by one as it passes over enemy territory.
    *Mach 3 at low altitude, obliterating everything with its non-stop sonic booms and shockwaves.
    *Spewing radiation and poison over everything it flies over.
    *Being able to do the above two things possibly for months, causing immense devastation, even without the nukes.
    *And to top it all off, it can crash land once its fuel has been spent in enemy territory, exposing and leaving its highly contaminated and radioactive nuclear reactor to desolate the surrounding area for decades, if not centuries.
    Thank goodness they never finished that thing. This is an actual true end-of-the-world weapon. Absolutely horrific.

    • @SanjanaRanasingha
      @SanjanaRanasingha Před 5 lety +5

      Just the comment I was looking for!

    • @causwayspeedway
      @causwayspeedway Před 5 lety +3

      Agreed.. this terrifying weapon was never to be ( thank God!!!) and what if there were two or three?? Certainly this end-of-the-world weapon prolly brought the Russians to the negotiation table more than any one(?) weapon.

    • @tusing7780
      @tusing7780 Před 5 lety +13

      The most terrifying part is that it could do all of that for *months* without stopping. Can you imagine? Entire communities would die of radiation poisoning and fear the sound of the scramjet for months on end.

    • @SanjanaRanasingha
      @SanjanaRanasingha Před 5 lety +6

      @@tusing7780 that's terrifying even to think of... you could make a whole movie just out of the big stick! Like people would know when to hide when the big stick is about to go over... etc etc

    • @tusing7780
      @tusing7780 Před 5 lety +7

      It would make an amazing movie! Depressing, but amazing. Perhaps a group of survivors that sacrifice themselves to bring the scramjet down, tracking its path, knowing they will die of radiation etc.

  • @ArgosySpecOps
    @ArgosySpecOps Před 4 lety +62

    9:23 this most likely what went wrong with the Russian "Skyfall" hypersonic missile that just melted down the other day.

    • @sto2779
      @sto2779 Před 4 lety +5

      Russian's like to play the classic game called "russian roulette"... America is just gunna go back to its backyards and pull out it's good old mama "SLAM-Dunk" with an updated version for the year 2020.

    • @dorjedriftwood2731
      @dorjedriftwood2731 Před 3 lety +1

      Not all hypersonic missiles are Nuclear.

  • @jaythompson5102
    @jaythompson5102 Před 2 lety

    This is my new favourite channel. Awesome narrator and great scripts.

  • @Elthenar
    @Elthenar Před 5 lety +212

    The fact that even in the coldest part of the cold war, the US had enough sense to retire this program is a good sign for humanity. Both sides put up with a lot of shit from each other but this would have been one of those things that couldn't be ignored. Kind of like the missiles in Cuba/Turkey.

    • @christosvoskresye
      @christosvoskresye Před 5 lety +3

      To borrow a line from Nanki-poo: "Modified rapture!" We had enough sense to pull back reluctantly from genocide, but only after looking into it really hard for decades, weighing our options carefully, and spending millions to develop the genocide option. And, of course, we're currently voiding all those treaties as quickly as we can, because we want more genocide options NOW.

    • @augustlandmesser1520
      @augustlandmesser1520 Před 5 lety +4

      Noup, US left that program in favour of ICBM systems 10:53 -nothing to do with favour in humanity.

    • @ralfiasz
      @ralfiasz Před 5 lety +2

      christosvoskresye The more fearsome tools we have, the lesser chance for a genocide.

    • @augustlandmesser1520
      @augustlandmesser1520 Před 5 lety +3

      Yep, the MAD doctrine... the madder - the better...survival guaranteed... every madman mad as bat would agree...

    • @juliakendall3134
      @juliakendall3134 Před 5 lety

      Yeah well we still have nukes in Turkey and they never left lol

  • @CompleteAnimation
    @CompleteAnimation Před 5 lety +44

    This is literally the first time I've ever heard of this project! Thanks for teaching me something new!
    As for the project itself, I don't like the idea of a flying nuclear reactor, but I do like the idea of a non-stop flying object.

    • @IbakonFerba
      @IbakonFerba Před 5 lety +2

      Isn't there a solar powered NASA drone that could theoretically fly nonstop?

    • @pauldooling2101
      @pauldooling2101 Před 5 lety +1

      jodudeit
      {{ non-stop flying object }} I'm...kinda' ...hopin ' ...
      that they can hook one up to Hillary 's Ass ...
      before she tries to run again ...
      *Solve A > LOT< of problems all the way around I think

    • @sheevone4359
      @sheevone4359 Před 5 lety

      Exactly my thoughts as well

    • @calvingreene90
      @calvingreene90 Před 5 lety

      I hope Hillary runs again it will burn through a lot of democrat cash for absolutely no gain for the democrats.

    • @airgunnut9489
      @airgunnut9489 Před 5 lety

      Thunderbirds Fireflash thunderbirds.wikia.com/wiki/Fireflash

  • @ultramegatrion
    @ultramegatrion Před 4 lety +188

    If they were able to accomplish this back then, imagine what the're hiding from the public NOW ......

    • @adler830
      @adler830 Před 4 lety +26

      Orbital laser platforms and high-velocity rod launchers. When i first saw it in Call of Duty, I was like "dang, that's the tech military would be interested in".
      Just like with Jules Verne novels, first in the popular fiction, then in real life.

    • @charleshetrick3152
      @charleshetrick3152 Před 4 lety +17

      Fortunately now it’s a lot easier for information to leak out about top secret projects.

    • @adudewithabetsyrossflag8125
      @adudewithabetsyrossflag8125 Před 4 lety +6

      Area 51: am I a joke to you?
      Edit: the next day:
      Me: sees storm Area 51 stuff
      Also me: Dangit

    • @charleshetrick3152
      @charleshetrick3152 Před 4 lety +1

      Area 51, Care Of GWITHER26.
      Mostly?

    • @fryncyaryorvjink2140
      @fryncyaryorvjink2140 Před 4 lety +9

      Makes you wonder if we're really stuck technologically or theres a bunch of secret stuff. Still no fusion or warp drives, etc. I guess most advancement has been in computers in this relative peacetime since ww2. Crazy how far we came last century though!

  • @flailmail7069
    @flailmail7069 Před 4 lety

    You have the coolest videos. Keep up the hard work, very professional.

  • @TheExoplanetsChannel
    @TheExoplanetsChannel Před 5 lety +172

    Great video as always

    • @desertstormwar1463
      @desertstormwar1463 Před 5 lety +1

      THE NAVY SEALS DID NOT TEACH ME HOW TO SHOOT A GUN BECAUSE I AM MD OF WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION ACTIVE Navy SEAL TEAM 6 DEVGRU WHO WROTE FEDERAL HIPAA LAW WHICH REMOVES RIGHT TO BARE ARMS FOR 6 MONTHS ACTIVE DESERT STORM WAR 24 years

  • @Tiisiphone
    @Tiisiphone Před 5 lety +152

    As if ICBMs were not scary enough.

  • @phillipbailey70
    @phillipbailey70 Před 4 lety

    Absolutely fascinating stuff! When it got to 8:20 and the details of its materials and assembly I knew I had to leave a comment... 😎 Thank you...

  • @ChuckHickl
    @ChuckHickl Před 4 lety +7

    So much incredible technology was created after WWII which I assume was due to so many countries involved having incredible amounts of research going on to support the war effort. The SR71 was, in my humble opinion, one of the greatest feats of engineering that made it from the drawing board into actual production and implementation. Amazing what the scientists were able to come up with in this era, no challenge too tough to tackle. Hell, it led to us going to the moon.

  • @69bobr
    @69bobr Před 5 lety +33

    I may have been hypnotized by his shirt! 😵

    • @loddude5706
      @loddude5706 Před 5 lety

      Had to replay the beginning, missed half the narrative first time around due to 'shirt flash' - Boom! Nice one Paul : )

    • @NJ-wb1cz
      @NJ-wb1cz Před 5 lety

      I also get hypnotized by his shit

    • @desertstormwar1463
      @desertstormwar1463 Před 5 lety

      THE PALM BAY FLORIDA FBI BOMB SQUAD WITH THE ST JOSEPHS CATHOLIC CHURCH OF PALM BAY FLORIDA STATED1994 U. S. . PRESIDENT CLINTONS NAME BEFORE THEY TACKLED ME IN BOMB GEAR FOR THE PRESIDENT OF IRAQ AND THE PRESIDENT OF RUSSIA and took me to COURT FOR BLASPHEMY 3 times in 12 months AT IRAQ HOSPITAL ON the 1995 IN FORCE WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION TREATY ACTIVE DESERT STORM WAR
      THE NAVY SEALS DID NOT TEACH ME HOW TO SHOOT A GUN or ESCAPE SALLY from the NCIS OF THE U. S. NAVY LEATHER HOSPITAL BED STRAPS WO BAG OVER MY HEAD FOR THE FORMER PRESIDENT OF IRAQ AND PRESIDENT OF RUSSIA
      BECAUSE I AM MD OF WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION ACTIVE Navy SEAL TEAM 6 DEVGRU WHO WROTE FEDERAL HIPAA LAW WHICH REMOVES RIGHT TO BARE ARMS FOR 6 MONTHS ACTIVE DESERT STORM WAR 24 years

    • @Seamus322
      @Seamus322 Před 5 lety +1

      @@desertstormwar1463 -Off our meds, are we?

  • @alexoftheway8169
    @alexoftheway8169 Před 5 lety +132

    Cool vidio. A genuinely scary peice of technology from the 1960's. One wonders what scary machines lurk in the shadows of secrecy in the here & now if the US was capeable of this so long ago.

    • @Garganzuul
      @Garganzuul Před 5 lety +7

      One can make sewage pumps run backwards almost anywhere, poisoning the drinking water of entire nations.

    • @nightofthunder5509
      @nightofthunder5509 Před 5 lety +1

      try the tr3b and aurora

    • @adept151
      @adept151 Před 5 lety +1

      Ten years or so later the USAF was having a mech service it's bombers. Delicate enough to pick eggs out of cartons and lift a model up gently without harming the woman.
      It was considered inefficient and retired.

    • @projectmanagement2356
      @projectmanagement2356 Před 5 lety +8

      @@Garganzuul Sewage and clean water lines run on separate pipes you idiot.

    • @ben_jamin160
      @ben_jamin160 Před 5 lety +1

      this video makes me feel sad to be human as the bomb is created to do one thing only and thats to kill as many people as possible in one explosion. its the sadest moment in humans history. its disgusting really.

  • @justinsullivan5063
    @justinsullivan5063 Před 4 lety +4

    Another good segment, as always. At once I always admired the ingenuity of such weapons and of course was simultaneously appalled that people would consider building such a thing. We are VERY, VERY lucky that cooler heads always prevailed. In the 90s I worked with our more conventional ICBM capability and I was always very proud of it - the ultimate deterrent. The recent news from Russia just brings it all back.. They build weapons because they think we have such a thing or some advantage (whether we do or not) and then of course we have to trump that, etc. etc. It's like an enormous Poker bluff.

  • @tomcharter4127
    @tomcharter4127 Před rokem

    You're great man. I love your videos. I bet you didn't think you'd be getting a million views. Congratulations!

  • @bozhijak
    @bozhijak Před 5 lety +8

    Air and space magazine did an article years ago on SLAM. They called it "The Flying Crowbar". The nastiest weapon ever devised.

  • @LangHvitSkyKriger
    @LangHvitSkyKriger Před 5 lety +30

    This is definitely from the era when nuclear power was seen to be the solution to all man's problems.

    • @Garganzuul
      @Garganzuul Před 5 lety +4

      It is a solution in the sense that we would have no more problems.

  • @MrJetexjim
    @MrJetexjim Před 4 lety

    Another great piece Paul. Very good.

  • @BT59
    @BT59 Před 4 lety

    Very good video. Can only imagine what's still tucked away

  • @Datan0de
    @Datan0de Před 5 lety +7

    From a technical standpoint, this is absolutely fascinating! On the other hand, it's also terrifying and in canceling the project they made the right call for the right reasons.

  • @sweaterwearingsquirrel9302
    @sweaterwearingsquirrel9302 Před 5 lety +17

    Guy just finishes stacking the thousands of rods into the core... someone yells “Jenga” and kicks it over...

    • @joeshmoe9978
      @joeshmoe9978 Před 5 lety

      Sweater Wearing Squirrel . D'OH!! 😵

  • @Mesos92
    @Mesos92 Před rokem

    Great video that details the engineering that other videos skim over. The infrastructure just to test it is an impressive feat on its own.

  • @robstone9745
    @robstone9745 Před 4 lety +1

    Really great, really informative, thank you.

  • @iancarpenter441
    @iancarpenter441 Před 5 lety +9

    Thank you for this. I knew about the project, but this is the most detailed explanation that I've currently seen!

  • @casey19660
    @casey19660 Před 5 lety +190

    Ummm why is Russia now bragging about it's nuclear powered cruise missile if the USA already did this back in the 50s

    • @2muchofyou
      @2muchofyou Před 5 lety +13

      @Firsthgyhgyhuy Lastujhujhuj actually russia may not have the best way of managing their peoples happiness but they have balls of steel and also do space 10x better than america did... first satalite first animal first man best rocket motors and if you say 'yea but the moon' ill say show me the flag ? Unproven just like 9/11 'wasn't ' an inside job....
      At least russians sacrifised themselves when chynoble blew up

    • @2muchofyou
      @2muchofyou Před 5 lety +8

      I should add though that even though communism is more efficient its not the way to go. Although you wouldn't end up with trump

    • @2muchofyou
      @2muchofyou Před 5 lety +4

      @Firsthgyhgyhuy Lastujhujhuj big day for you understanding this stuff. Its ok go to sleep

    • @2muchofyou
      @2muchofyou Před 5 lety +3

      @Firsthgyhgyhuy Lastujhujhuj your statement means shit and needs proof reading. Yikes

    • @2muchofyou
      @2muchofyou Před 5 lety +3

      @Firsthgyhgyhuy Lastujhujhuj being "cocky" over what? The observation usa eats Russian shit when it comes to space? The fact usa didn't even get themselves into space as nazis
      Did it for them.
      And the only thing you can comment on is my grammatical mistakes maybe because that is all you have to troll with.
      One thing that is impressive is the tarain tracking system that sounds 100 times better than a tesla lane tracking. But yawn because 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣fukwit

  • @93SA10
    @93SA10 Před 3 lety

    This is such an interesting channel. Love it!!!

  • @hinzuzufugen7358
    @hinzuzufugen7358 Před 3 lety +3

    And yes, the guidance technology reminded me very much of the Tomahawk cruise missile. That was the precursor.

  • @convictjoe
    @convictjoe Před 5 lety +15

    BTW Paul you're doing a great job with your channel. Thank you :)

  • @chasewimpy
    @chasewimpy Před 5 lety +64

    Channels like this make me have hope for the future.

    • @fulanitoflyer
      @fulanitoflyer Před 5 lety +6

      He´s talking about a nuclear powered doomsday missile... channels like these make me have little hope for the future...

    • @jeremywinton8978
      @jeremywinton8978 Před 5 lety +3

      Then go watch cat videos

    • @fulanitoflyer
      @fulanitoflyer Před 5 lety +1

      whatever

    • @Pique147
      @Pique147 Před 5 lety +4

      But videos like this make me despair. Because after the catastrophic event for mankind that was WW2, they then went full-pelt into the insanity of projects like these. I mean, WW2 didn't kill enough so let's build something that could kill more than the entire war in one single launch. That aspect of human nature is fuckin scary.

    • @epicab2092
      @epicab2092 Před 5 lety +1

      @@fulanitoflyer so you're saying videos like everyday bro by Jake Paul is more entertaining to watch than this ? I feel this is better than 90% of the content on CZcams

  • @jackac3394
    @jackac3394 Před 5 lety

    Very well done video and complete technical story piece (no missing finer points). Also had some video footage I had never seen. Thanx.

  • @exact1044
    @exact1044 Před 4 lety

    Always a pleasure to learn, keep up the great work

  • @Kneedragon1962
    @Kneedragon1962 Před 5 lety +31

    One extreme irony of this, is the nuclear bomber program put young aeronautical engineers, who had no training or experince, in charge of trying to build a smaller & lighter nuclear reactor. That gave us the molten salt Thorium reactor. 50 years later, the only reason we still use Uranium not Thorium as our main nuclear fuel, is Uranium reactors give us Plutonium, which we need for hydrogen bombs. The lightweight reactor designed for the nuclear bomber, is in every possible way, a better & safer system.

    • @blackwall619
      @blackwall619 Před 5 lety

      Kneedragon1962
      How?

    • @Kneedragon1962
      @Kneedragon1962 Před 5 lety +7

      Black Wall - That's not the subject, and properly answering would take more than a hundred words...
      It's not a self sustaining reaction, which can run away and produce a nuclear explosion. Or a melt-down, a 'China syndrome' like Fukashima or Chernobyl. Fission happens because of a gun, which is powered by the electricity your plant generates. If anything goes wrong with the reactor you switch off the gun, and the reaction stops instantly.
      Next the molten salts start to cool, and after a short period of time, they're no longer molten, so a break in the loop will not result in leakage. The chance of radio-active coolant spilling into the environment, virtually zero.
      Then there is the issue of nuclear proliferation. I would hesitate to say you can't make plutonium and other heavy elements & isotopes this way, but it's not the way you'd choose to do it. There's also the question of Rube Goldberg mixtures, and Thorium reactor that also gets some old uranium fuel rods and powders them, and stirs the mixture into their cooling salt. That will also give some more energy, but you're going back into the nuclear mess that Thorium was supposed to get you out of... Now policing those Rube Goldberg machines, inspecting them and telling the international atomic energy commission that the people's republic of Utopia are not making hydrogen bombs and you can prove it, that all gets extremely hard when you have a mixed thorium/ uranium cycle... and some of the resulting waste is really nasty stuff, even by the standards of nuclear waste...
      As long as you go pure Thorium, not mixture, then they're a better mouse-trap.
      Then there's the question of how much Uranium there is, v how much Thorium there is. And odd thing, when you find rare earths for magnets and super-conductors, (like used in big wind turbines) you have to extract your precious rare earths from all this nasty shit Thorium.... The two are found together. And Thorium is about 12 ~ 20 times more common & plentiful than Uranium. It's not quite common in the way titanium oxide is (that shit is everywhere!) but it's not what you'd call rare.

    • @gregparrott
      @gregparrott Před 5 lety

      Kneedragon1962 Some videos purport the benefits of Thorium reactors. Others downplay their suitability. Many decades have passed since the first Thorium reactors were developed. Yet to my knowledge, only India still has an active Thorium research program. WHY? Plutonium production is a poor rationale, as there's no shortage of plutonium production to preclude dozens of countries from building Thorium reactors IN ADDITION TO 'conventional' ones.

    • @Kneedragon1962
      @Kneedragon1962 Před 5 lety

      Gregory Parrot - I'm pretty sure China has a Thorium reactor program. At this point it's 'experimental' but they're very interested. For one thing, they have masses of Thorium (like tens of thousands of tons of it) that's an unwanted bi-product of their rare earths program. They'd LOVE to find a use for it.... At the moment it's pollution.
      The history of why Thorium has been overlooked, that's a long and complicated story, and a lot of the blame falls on Nixon, who wanted to reward his Republican friends in N California, and saw absolutely no reason to give research money to Democrats in S Cali, because they were not about to stop opposing him no matter how much government money he gave them...
      The 'reason' nobody does it that way, is because nobody does it that way. If it was better, surely they'd be using it, right? The whole project couldn't have been stopped over something as dumb as Nixon's cost-benefit appraisal - partisan politics, could it? Yeah, it could....
      The Uranium cycle people absolutely don't want Thorium to come into the picture and spoil their game. So they produce a lot of slightly misleading and inaccurate fluff to downplay it. Mostly the information is accurate, but the way they present it is deliberately misleading.
      For one thing, there's no such thing as a standard molten salt reactor. You can make one which uses pure Thorium (which I am cheering for) or you can make some kind of mixture, with molten salt and Thorium, but also some crushed up 'spent' uranium fuel rods, and that gives you all the pros & cons of the whole fast-breeder cycle... As long as you stay with pretty much pure Thorium, you really can't make nuclear weapons from it. Or let's say maybe you could, perhaps, but it's a horribly inefficient way to do it. And the mixed reactor types do produce some really nasty waste....

    • @gregparrott
      @gregparrott Před 5 lety

      Even assuming your Nixon explanation is the primary motive for the U.S., it does not explain why so many other nuclear capable countries have not pursued it in the intervening decades. So, I assume there's more to it.

  • @DavidCowie2022
    @DavidCowie2022 Před 5 lety +7

    This is a developed weapon in Charles Stross's story "A Colder War." It's set in an alternative world where the Soviets have Cthulhu (or near equivalent) penned up in Chernobyl.

  • @theambivalentps2bloke60
    @theambivalentps2bloke60 Před 4 lety +4

    It seems fitting that your wore the most incedious loud shirt for this video... on another note, love your content

  • @nicomas2471
    @nicomas2471 Před 4 lety +1

    omg 15 seconds in and i'm dying "bombers with a backbone of sac" this is gunna be a great voice over :D

  • @MrXoury
    @MrXoury Před 5 lety +17

    Just from the perspective of the time this came out of, that has got to be one of the most terrifying weapons.
    An unstoppable machine flying at hypersonic speed for weeks or months that's only purpose is to salt the earth.

    • @stickysquirrel2116
      @stickysquirrel2116 Před 5 lety +3

      Having this deployed even today would be catastrophic.

    • @jwenting
      @jwenting Před 5 lety

      The idea was to crash it into a final target location after the last bomb had been ejected. There was little point to keep it flying and contaminating large areas as there wasn't really thought to be much left after the bombs had been dropped that was worth anything militarily or economically.

  • @RDDPro
    @RDDPro Před 5 lety +8

    Wow! I never knew about these nuclear powered missiles. Amazing how much we were able to accomplish 70 years ago without modern supercomputers.
    This is a terrifying weapon especially how it could be used as a vengeance device in a MAD situation.
    Cheers

  • @danshearer7627
    @danshearer7627 Před rokem

    I got to walk around the site for about 6 hours. Not much is there anymore, but it was so cool to see the site the tests were done.

  • @thomassterling2919
    @thomassterling2919 Před 4 lety +2

    There's a SciFi book called "Berserkers" about 2 civilizations each from a different planet. After being at war for generations, one civilization built a "berserker" which was an artificially intelligent self-replicating automaton that seeked out the enemy planet inhabitants and destroyed them and then went on to look for more. At some point the berserkers "evolved" and continued seeking out all humans on all planets since the 2 original civilizations were killed off long ago.

    • @BilgeDweller
      @BilgeDweller Před 4 lety

      Written by Fred Saberhagen, it was a series.

  • @VidweII
    @VidweII Před 5 lety +22

    So in the end the lesson was "speak softly and carry an ICBM?"

    • @seththomas3418
      @seththomas3418 Před 5 lety +1

      You could also say they went to Speak softly and carry a big stick loaded with a bunch of medium stick. ( SLBMs)

  • @markramkhelawan1580
    @markramkhelawan1580 Před 5 lety +44

    Wow. 1950s technology! Makes me wonder what they have now ?

    • @brynlpz83
      @brynlpz83 Před 5 lety +2

      US developed the first nuclear powered dolphin in 2018

    • @tulsaguy9963
      @tulsaguy9963 Před 5 lety

      Magnetic drive tech from. Alien crash!

    • @isioemuodeke2849
      @isioemuodeke2849 Před 4 lety +1

      They have nothing compared to what the Russians have! Americans just love to shout so loudly when they sing their songs.Typical of the madness that has infected them.

    • @piotrd.4850
      @piotrd.4850 Před 4 lety

      Uh....Gender studies?

    • @theflanman420420
      @theflanman420420 Před 4 lety +3

      Now we excel in PC and SJW insanity

  • @mohamedmerouane4673
    @mohamedmerouane4673 Před 2 lety

    I'm a huge fan Sir! Please make your videos longer. Thanks a lot for this Channel

  • @zorngottes1778
    @zorngottes1778 Před 4 lety +1

    Absolutly crasy but great stuff. This was a major step in aviation.

  • @fulanitoflyer
    @fulanitoflyer Před 5 lety +24

    It's like the new SLAM Russia announced earlier this year... In fact it sounds exactly the same;
    "The Russian military, he said, had developed a number of significant new military systems. One was a nuclear-powered drone submarine that could be deployed to initiate nuclear strikes around the world. Another was a new form of hypersonic missile that is much harder to detect by defense systems. Those missiles, too, could be armed with nuclear warheads.
    Most remarkably, Putin announced a new form of nuclear-powered cruise missile that also could initiate a nuclear strike. The advantage of using nuclear power for the missile is simple: Its range would be extended significantly. That extension is central to the geopolitics behind Putin’s announcements."

    • @BoloH.
      @BoloH. Před 5 lety +4

      The submarine part sounds exactly the same as the plot of the first xXx movie.

    • @chel1qa
      @chel1qa Před 5 lety +2

      so what was the reason to cancel the program?.. Russians have eventually developed their version anyway..

    • @fulanitoflyer
      @fulanitoflyer Před 5 lety

      I think the US program was beyond 50s technology and cold war geopolitics played a big role too.

    • @chel1qa
      @chel1qa Před 5 lety

      is now the time to revive it?

    • @fulanitoflyer
      @fulanitoflyer Před 5 lety +7

      To be honest I think the Russians are bluffing... And with the amount of MARVs the US have I really think its not needed.

  • @EleanorPeterson
    @EleanorPeterson Před 5 lety +4

    As usual: excellent research, content, and presentation, Paul. I love the impartiality of Curious Droid. The lack of bias is most appreciated in these bigoted, moronic, polarised times. No jingoism, no sabre-rattling, no bloody flag-waving, just facts for grown-ups. Very refreshing. Why, it's positively old-fashioned!
    :-)

  • @matthewgartell6380
    @matthewgartell6380 Před 4 lety

    One of the best channels on YT!

  • @area49g12
    @area49g12 Před 3 lety +1

    Another interesting video, love them,
    and of course another cool mod shirt, ;-)

  • @HelamanGile
    @HelamanGile Před 5 lety +3

    I'm looking to start a space program and your channel has been a big help 😀👍🏼

  • @billmullins981
    @billmullins981 Před 5 lety +36

    Those of you who were not alive and old enough to understand at the time are not capable of truly understanding what it was like back then. In school we had fire drills like everyone else and living in an area where tornadoes were common we also had tornado drills. We also had NUCLEAR ATTACK drills! Sometimes those drills were just at schools but sometimes they ran the air raid sirens. I promise you, air raid sirens are not pleasant things to hear. Growing up in Texas, most of the places I lived had an Air Force base nearby so were definitely on the Soviets' target list. Oh, and it was also a time before they outlawed supersonic flight over the continental U.S. so we got to hear the window-rattling BOOMS on a frequent basis. It was a different time.

    • @iggymorts7086
      @iggymorts7086 Před 5 lety

      Bill Mullins Duck and cover. I remember it well. Scary time to grow up in😳

    • @billmullins981
      @billmullins981 Před 5 lety +2

      @@iggymorts7086 Don't you know it, brother! I once was an office on Reese AFB near Lubbock, TX and saw the official chart for the warning sirens for various time until an attack. There were steady tones for a certain length of time and wavering tones for a certain length of time but the "warning signal" for a sneak attack was unbelievable. The warning signs of a sneak attack - and this was on an official U.S. Govt. poster, mind you - were "Bright Flash, Loud Noise". I am not kidding. The official "warning signal" for a sneak attack was "Bright Flash, Loud Noise". Unfortunately if you saw/heard the sign of a sneak attack you probably wouldn't have time to process the info, much less put your head between your knees and kiss your ass good bye. My first USAF duty station was at a base just outside Wichita, Ks. There were EIGHTEEN Titan II missile sites ringing the city. Additionally, over 60% if all the private aircraft on the PLANET were made within a half-hour drive of downtown Wichita. If the balloon had gone up there would have been a 60+ mile wide sea of glass centered on Wichita when it was over.

    • @iggymorts7086
      @iggymorts7086 Před 5 lety

      Bill Mullins “BrightFlash, Loud Noise?” Yeah that sounds about right. Thanks for the reply and thanks for your service to this country!!!

    • @Ammothief41
      @Ammothief41 Před 5 lety +1

      I'd believe it. I think that's why russia is brandied about as such a political boogeyman today. All that fear bred into kids decades ago is easy to play upon now.

    • @rogerbeckner6419
      @rogerbeckner6419 Před 5 lety +1

      @@Ammothief41 No, the kids nowadays don't care about anything except internet connection.
      Take that away and they will bawl and scream and roll on the floor.

  • @bravo0105
    @bravo0105 Před 4 lety

    Outstanding video!
    Subscribed!

  • @JozefLucifugeKorzeniowski

    This thing makes rail gun technology look like a stone age concept. Damned terrifying.

  • @coiledsteel8344
    @coiledsteel8344 Před 5 lety +8

    @ 1:45 B-36 was a monster turbo-prop/jet engine propelled plane, before B-52"s were in wide production. B-52's still used, with constant updating of components. With new engine upgrades, B-52's will keep flying into 2020s!

    • @user-do5zk6jh1k
      @user-do5zk6jh1k Před 5 lety +5

      It didn't have turboprops. The propellers were driven by pistons.

    • @judgedredd8657
      @judgedredd8657 Před 5 lety +2

      largest piston driven production aircraft ever

    • @RCAvhstape
      @RCAvhstape Před 5 lety +3

      B-52 is projected to be in service until at least the 2040s. That will make it a 90-year-old design. And it was designed when the airplane was only a 50-year-old invention and military planes had service lives of only a few years.

    • @bastionaudio
      @bastionaudio Před 5 lety

      And will breake in the air, yes keep it flying junk

  • @j.b.708
    @j.b.708 Před 5 lety +6

    wrap your head around how much engineering, money, and time was used to build the compressor wind tunnel for the test of the scaled-down test model reactor for less than a minute. just 1 type of test involved in the entire project.

  • @kuklkahn
    @kuklkahn Před 4 lety

    Love the videos keep them coming.

  • @KillerBill1953
    @KillerBill1953 Před 4 lety

    Excellent and informative video, as always, thanks.

  • @marbleman52
    @marbleman52 Před 5 lety +14

    This reminded me of the original Star Trek episode " The Doomsday Machine".

    • @irritated888
      @irritated888 Před 5 lety

      Or Dr. Strangelove.
      "We cannot have, a mineshaft gap"

    • @RCAvhstape
      @RCAvhstape Před 4 lety

      Star Trek was made in the 1960s, and definitely not in a vacuum. It was a product of its time for sure.

  • @sferrin2
    @sferrin2 Před 5 lety +122

    See also "Project Pluto". That was the name of the reactor program, and what this project is generally known as. "Big Stick" was the Convair missile. Vought was the designer of the missile usually associated with SLAM. (Both Convair and Vought had a design for the missile. They went with Vought.) Also, the missile design shown, with the center-body inlet was an early design. The final design had an inlet similar to Regulus 2 (also a Vought product). The ramjet produced 35,000lbs of thrust during the 5 minute test. The skin of the missile was to be 1/4" Inconel, for heat resistance, and plated with gold to help radiate heat. Also it would have carried 16 (or more) warheads. Go here:
    www.aerospaceprojectsreview.com/ev2n1.htm

    • @TheMendul
      @TheMendul Před 5 lety +1

      The drawings made me fully understand the concept. Thanks.

    • @sferrin2
      @sferrin2 Před 5 lety +7

      Funny fact: the ceramic "pencil-shaped" fuel components were made by Coors. Yeah, the beer company. :-)

    • @DSCH4
      @DSCH4 Před 5 lety +6

      Ceramics and malted milk kept Coors going during Prohibition.

    • @yourhandlehere1
      @yourhandlehere1 Před 5 lety +4

      With the money they like to spend you'd think everything the military made was gold plated.

    • @sferrin2
      @sferrin2 Před 5 lety +2

      Cheap compared to what they spend on entitlements AND you actually get something for your money instead of flushing it down the toilet. Speaking of gold, the W71 nuclear warhead of Spartan had a gold tamper to maximize X-ray production.

  • @tdwy3220
    @tdwy3220 Před 4 lety

    Very cool stuff. T here was also a manned version of that concept that went pretty far. In those days, we were afraid of "Ivan" big time. I remember having the air drill activities in schools. Hide under the desk... LOL

  • @Niki007hound
    @Niki007hound Před 4 lety +2

    This is a great, first-class, fact filled documentary, as usual. And one has to wonder, why such systems could be seriously pursued beyond the drawing board, without considering the instrinsic dangers for the operating country and all the territories it would fly over. We are still trying to find safe long-term disposal sites for radioactive nuclear waste, and some are willing to take chances flying it around over our heads. The russians having had their own accident recently with a similar system, do not seem to have learned either. A nuclear power plant could, perhaps make sense in space,, but it is certainly not a good choice for low-altitude supersonic flight.

  • @turbo911ification
    @turbo911ification Před 5 lety +14

    This shirt is so funky🍄

  • @VeritechGirl
    @VeritechGirl Před 5 lety +5

    and that's the damage by just ONE of these things.

  • @RubioRaver
    @RubioRaver Před 3 lety +1

    Always fascinating, I love how these projects have appeared to all melded into eachother in one way or another
    🙆‍♂️😅😃🔥

    • @StickTheGlue
      @StickTheGlue Před 2 lety

      The thing I like to think is that all of this stuff are things we know about, imagine what exists/in development the we don't

  • @jwgfoto5419
    @jwgfoto5419 Před 4 lety

    This is just wow! Thanks team!

  • @ne2i
    @ne2i Před 5 lety +8

    That's a nuclear powered shirt!

  • @stingray427man
    @stingray427man Před 5 lety +15

    Ramjet talks make me think about the sexy SR-71

    • @SanjanaRanasingha
      @SanjanaRanasingha Před 5 lety

      Yeah it is!

    • @bastionaudio
      @bastionaudio Před 5 lety

      And there is it ? I know it was tested but it start to fail, like at least four times, then project is likely suspended for now, Russian test infinite-range-cruise missile for over a year now, it may get in troops soon, china made some adavancements too, us i laking bihind in every hi-end tech present on the planet today, and dont get start on F-35, ZUMWALT and RAILGUN, all of the projects are far fetch, unready and really push degrading us MC too far, 800 Bn ? How funny, maybe you need 800 Trn to do something ?

    • @stingray427man
      @stingray427man Před 5 lety

      олег бурдин your comments have nothing to do with this reply comrade troll. Move along.

    • @bastionaudio
      @bastionaudio Před 5 lety

      @@stingray427man
      Dont call me comrade, COMRADE, my comment relavant because it represented as something new, but it is old, and forgotten, i know why now, because UU currently have nothing od sorts, even HYPERSONIC and regular cruise missiles are stay behind, Russian and Chineese ones, so Usasses need to CONVINCE public they still superior, i am not a troll i am telling truth, USA in deep shit but think it smell Russia swet not own shit.
      Now you gotta tell me, i am troll, US have 1000 bln military budget and already have laser, railguns and other superior tech, alredy in troops, NASA and USAF planned launch enother SPACE-CRUISER in the orbit, and US already have bases on the Moon and Mars.
      Russ-Soviets all armed with mosin rifles (some with ak-s) all their system are old and breaking down freakeuntly and so-on so-on e.t.c, (did i represent MSM (liears) thruth tellers right, RIGHT ?

  • @anthonyxuereb792
    @anthonyxuereb792 Před 3 lety

    Absolutely unbelievable, it appears a bigger undertaking than the moon landings. Full marks for this production,
    gathering all this information and presentation must take up a lot of time.

  • @Roedygr
    @Roedygr Před 5 lety +4

    The advantage of a slow delivery system is it gives you more time for second thoughts.

  • @chrisfryer3118
    @chrisfryer3118 Před 5 lety +107

    no surprises a thing designed to make masses of hot air is called a tory

  • @iritantNL
    @iritantNL Před 5 lety +64

    I think it's disturbing that people even invented the damn thing..makes me wonder what they have ready or are developing now...

    • @heronimousbrapson863
      @heronimousbrapson863 Před 5 lety +11

      ArLo W The weapon that could kill us all today is cyber technology combined with neo liberal economics.

    • @ipissed
      @ipissed Před 5 lety +4

      @@2MeterLP Yes, but Hitler taught the world a lesson. You never know what psyco idiots can come into power. Stalin was no angel either.

    • @Spagghetii
      @Spagghetii Před 5 lety +5

      Still waiting for project orion's space battleship.....

    • @pauldooling2101
      @pauldooling2101 Před 5 lety

      ipissed
      hahahahaha...nice ...'n' ~smooth~

    • @cemimo
      @cemimo Před 5 lety

      AI

  • @yousrich46
    @yousrich46 Před 3 lety +11

    Slam: " produces 150 db’s ". PS4 that hasn’t been cleaned in 4 years: " Finally! A worthy opponent, our battle will be legendary "

  • @sensory_deprivation4126
    @sensory_deprivation4126 Před 4 lety +8

    "Speak softly, but carry a BIG STICK." -- Theodore "Teddy" Roosevelt