Martin-Baker - Ejection Seat History

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 11. 10. 2016
  • A brief video showing some of the history behind Martin-Baker and the Ejection Seat.
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 382

  • @orangelion03
    @orangelion03 Před 5 lety +91

    I worked for the competition for several years, McDonnell-Douglas Escape Systems. My boss was a former M-B engineer. There was a rivalry, of course, but both of our companies, as well as a few others at at the time, kept our eyes firmly on the task of providing the safest possible means of aircrew escape. Though ours and several other companies contributed to the development and advancement of the technology, in the West at least, M-B led the way. Thanks for sharing these films of your early days.

    • @MarkHud1963
      @MarkHud1963 Před 4 lety +4

      @@theoonyoutube Not so unfortunately, although MB supply 70% of the worlds Airforces Requirements, Collins Aerospace have just been awarded the contract to supply most USAF aircraft with the ACES 5 Seat, also Russia and China make their own seats too (Some may say that the Chinese Seats are very familiar to a well known UK design 😜)
      .

    • @Puleczech
      @Puleczech Před rokem

      Thanks for the work you have done!

  • @kristoffermangila
    @kristoffermangila Před 2 lety +12

    "The End (but not of the pilot)"... that cracks me up! 😄 😄!
    But seriously, thank you Martin-Baker, for a piece of technology that saves a lot of lives, and for inspiring one of the coolest rides in an amusement park around the world.

  • @nervo6321
    @nervo6321 Před 4 lety +122

    Only in Britain would you test ejection seats wearing a suit and tie ...

    • @ottomanfred2473
      @ottomanfred2473 Před 4 lety +6

      The English were always classy .🙂🇬🇧👽

    • @ottomanfred2473
      @ottomanfred2473 Před 4 lety

      @JZ's Best Friend sorry I am not trying to open up any wounds, I ment classy as in dress, fashion. 👽

    • @suffern63
      @suffern63 Před 3 lety +4

      I hope they had a decent cup of tea ready when they returned to the mess.

    • @davidparsons452
      @davidparsons452 Před 3 lety +2

      Standards, old boy ...

    • @trooperdgb9722
      @trooperdgb9722 Před 3 lety +3

      And polished shoes, of course!

  • @alantoon5708
    @alantoon5708 Před 3 lety +8

    Just the other day your seats saved the lives of two U.S. Navy pilots who had to eject from their T-45. On the same day, two saved from a Hawk T.1.
    One of the ejections from the T-45 was at a very low altitude. The jet was on one side of a road....the seat was on the other side of the road.
    Great work, M-B....

  • @gazza2933
    @gazza2933 Před 4 lety +72

    An escape system that has saved the lives of thousands of military aircrew WORLDWIDE.
    How the hell, can anyone give this a 'thumbsdown'!
    "Martin Baker".... I salute you! 👍🏻

    • @GlideYNRG
      @GlideYNRG Před 4 lety +1

      52 of the miserable sods... must not have received their ties...

    • @Bialy_1
      @Bialy_1 Před 4 lety

      "How the hell, can anyone give this a 'thumbsdown'!" and how you can thumbsup movie where they failing to mention who invented this escape system?
      "The modern layout for an ejection seat was first proposed by Romanian inventor Anastase Dragomir in the late 1920s. The design featured a parachuted cell (a dischargeable chair from an aircraft or other vehicle). It was successfully tested on 25 August 1929 at the Paris-Orly Airport near Paris and in October 1929 at Băneasa, near Bucharest. Dragomir patented his "catapult-able cockpit" at the French Patent Office"
      oh he was not a british... now i get it...

    • @leifvejby8023
      @leifvejby8023 Před 4 lety +1

      Russian hatebots will hate anything

    • @JohnyG29
      @JohnyG29 Před 3 lety

      @@Bialy_1 One can propose any idea, and the catapult system wasn't a great idea. I think the Germans first used ejection seats, but they were very primitive. It was the British who were instrumental in developing safe, effective and reliable ejection systems in the post-war era. They are still word leaders.

  • @TheCatBilbo
    @TheCatBilbo Před 5 lety +67

    The blind was a genius solution: protecting the face; restraining the head AND firing the charge. Others might have messed about with toggles and buttons to fire the seat, really difficult in an emergency. The blind meant you had to have your face protected and head restrained before anything else could happen.

  • @StonyRC
    @StonyRC Před 5 lety +97

    You have to hand it to those brave pioneers that tried out early ejection seats! Balls of pure titanium.

    • @rosshilton
      @rosshilton Před 4 lety +3

      StonyRC I was thinking EXACTLY the same.

    • @Bialy_1
      @Bialy_1 Před 4 lety +1

      "those brave pioneers that tried out early ejection seats! " like for example this Romanian guy Anastase Dragomir that tested and patented it in France in year 1929?

    • @trooperdgb9722
      @trooperdgb9722 Před 3 lety +5

      The Martin-baker companies two test "pilots" were Benny Lynch and then WTH (Doddy) Hay. There is an excellent (though dated) book about Doddy Hay called "The Man in the Hot seat" which covers the transition from "gun" seats to Rocket seats nicely... The first Rocket seat test was not only zero/zero (no airspeed, no altitude) but also...No aircraft! He launched up a set of guide rails. Yep.. great big balls!

    • @trooperdgb9722
      @trooperdgb9722 Před 3 lety +1

      There is an interesting piece of film of an unassisted escape test from one of the V-Bombers.... out of a hatch just forward of the nose gear ... As an old skydiver I can tell you that looked just as scary... the speed the aircraft was going must have made a clean exit very difficult... he very nearly "counted rivets" along the bottom of the aircraft. (The story of the V bombers escape systems..or lack thereof, is a pretty awful one...the two pilots had ejection seats...the three crewmen down below did not. James Martin proved that seats could be fitted for those crewmen...but the project to fit them was cancelled apparently on cost grounds. )

  • @markstengel7680
    @markstengel7680 Před 5 lety +25

    Great aircraft accessories. Mom & dad installed this in my bed for school. Made it through college.

  • @garethessex
    @garethessex Před 5 lety +97

    7,545 lives were saved by their seats between 1946 & 2016.

    • @XavierAncarno
      @XavierAncarno Před 5 lety +7

      I wonder how many inches (pilot height) were lost

    • @dashcam26
      @dashcam26 Před 5 lety +6

      @@XavierAncarno Spine compression. I think you were only allowed 3 ejections and were grounded.

    • @x-man5056
      @x-man5056 Před 5 lety +3

      @@dashcam26 Neil Armstrong ejected from the LEM trainer and went strait back to work like no big deal.

    • @chriswilde7246
      @chriswilde7246 Před 4 lety +8

      @@dashcam26 I would think after Three, an airforce would be proper pissed off if you had lost more than Three high performance aircraft too! Lol

    • @garethessex
      @garethessex Před 4 lety +2

      @JZ's Best Friend I recommend you read "Doddy" Hay's book "The Man In The Hot Seat". He was the first person to test the Martin & Baker ejection-seat at zero speed/ zero altitude.

  • @erictaylor5462
    @erictaylor5462 Před 5 lety +36

    4:15 So many hundreds of tests had to be performed because the thing was just so much fun to ride. Hell, they turned it into a carnival ride later.

    • @jimlyon7276
      @jimlyon7276 Před 4 lety +5

      When I worked on Lightnings the bang seat velocity was up to 80 ft/s & the parachute was in a horse shoe shape @ the pilot's back & he sat on his P.S.P./ Personal Survival Pack which compressed less than a parachute thus doing less damage to the spine. Every time you used a "bang seat" it shortened your spine by 1/2". Three ejections & you were off fast jets !

    • @1tonyboat
      @1tonyboat Před rokem

      We had a display seat rigged on a flat trolley so we could take it to displays ( raf wattisham) it had a very small air bottle rigged to it so you could strap a air cadet in ,etc,, and let them try .i believe the bottle had about 18/20 psi in it which was just enough to raise the seat 12ins or so when the handle was pulled ...great fun.

  • @ChrisCooper312
    @ChrisCooper312 Před 5 lety +46

    Martin Baker still have two of those Meteors that are used for ejection seat testing, right up to testing the seats for the F35s.

    • @craighudson8555
      @craighudson8555 Před 3 lety +2

      We have used 9 of them over the years. The current ones are Mk7.5s as they are Mk7s with Mk8 tails (bigger) and engines.

    • @ashokiimc
      @ashokiimc Před 3 lety

      @@craighudson8555 we? are you a MB employee?

    • @stevetheduck1425
      @stevetheduck1425 Před rokem

      As an aircraft modeller, that Meteor Mark 7.5 was hard to build, unless you had a number of kits to work from.
      But that's how it was back then; sometimes, it was necessary to 'cut-and-shut' two planes to make a certain Mark, such as with many airliner kits.

  • @alanshepherd4304
    @alanshepherd4304 Před rokem +1

    I always chuckle at the jolly music they play on these newsreels from the 30's 40's and 50's😂😂😂🇬🇧

  • @ColKorn1965
    @ColKorn1965 Před 5 lety +11

    The smiles on the men testing the seat on the tower let you know they were enjoying their work

    • @kristoffermangila
      @kristoffermangila Před 2 lety

      Year later, amusement parks now has a super-sized version of that test rig for lots of people to feel what these Martin-Baker employees felt like.
      Thanks Martin-Baker, for saving lots of fighter pilots, and inspiring one hell of an amusement park ride!

  • @maartineriksson
    @maartineriksson Před 4 lety +6

    Fun fact: the SAAB J21 was the first plane in serial production with an ejection seat as standard (due to its pusher configuration). That seat was built by Bofors.

  • @waldothegreat100
    @waldothegreat100 Před 6 lety +221

    I have tie from them. You got if you had to use their seat to get out. I did in 1973 from an F-4.

    • @technowarriorstv
      @technowarriorstv Před 6 lety +32

      Oleg Molot im glad you made it out ok did you use the ripcord or the lower ejection handle btw welcome to the martin baker tie club

    • @tonkerdog1
      @tonkerdog1 Před 5 lety +5

      Glad you got out ok. Where ere you?

    • @johnboats9075
      @johnboats9075 Před 5 lety +4

      why the hell did they make you cover your face. for safety or the fear that the pilot might panic?

    • @donatchinson8438
      @donatchinson8438 Před 5 lety +8

      Did you give a bottle of VO to the man who packed your chute?

    • @technowarriorstv
      @technowarriorstv Před 5 lety +15

      @@johnboats9075 older seats used that to protect your face from the windblast and to keep you in the correct position for Ejection

  • @koliloaloa
    @koliloaloa Před 5 lety +11

    My father worked for Martin Baker as a toolmaker at the beginning of the war. They had a prototype fighter that out performed the Spitfire but they couldn’t go into immediate production so they didn’t get the contract and instead went into producing parts for other aircraft inproduction.

    • @dugclrk
      @dugclrk Před 5 lety

      But did it look as good?

    • @bruceinoz8002
      @bruceinoz8002 Před 4 lety +2

      @@dugclrk Martin Baker MB5, as it ultimately became was a serious hot-rod; big and with a serious engine. Eclipsed by the arrival of jet aircraft. Looked like a P-51 Mustang on steroids.
      See here: www.destinationsjourney.com/historical-military-photographs/martin-baker-mb5/

    • @trooperdgb9722
      @trooperdgb9722 Před 3 lety +1

      And the Martin Aircraft companys test pilot was Valentine Baker. He died trying to save the MB-5 prototype after an engine failure ...Martin changed the name of the company as a tribute to him.

    • @cambridge123456789
      @cambridge123456789 Před 2 lety

      @@trooperdgb9722 You're thinking of the MB-1

    • @trooperdgb9722
      @trooperdgb9722 Před 2 lety

      @@cambridge123456789 Thanks!

  • @jrose3638
    @jrose3638 Před 3 dny

    Jolly good show chaps! I must say I enjoyed that moving pictures show immensely.

  • @constantinadellopoulou3725

    What an astounding documentary film! Brilliant! I'm so happy I came across this YT channel!

  • @rambler241
    @rambler241 Před 5 lety +11

    Excellent - a unique piece of military history.

  • @PointyTailofSatan
    @PointyTailofSatan Před 4 lety +5

    I wonder if anyone on the ejection test rig ever hit the bell at the top? DING! lol

  • @itsjohndell
    @itsjohndell Před rokem

    USAF Grad of the Martin-Baker Club, bit hard on the old back now but I'm here to say it 50 years later. Thank You!

  • @mattscrane
    @mattscrane Před 3 lety +1

    superb video, so glad it wasn't relegated to the dustbin

  • @farangkinok
    @farangkinok Před 4 lety +2

    Fantastic piece of history, Thanks !

  • @johnp139
    @johnp139 Před 5 lety +20

    I like how all of those company “volunteers” were wearing neckties.

    • @mk84ldb
      @mk84ldb Před 4 lety +1

      Love British documentaries; everything is so stiff upper lip.

  • @richardracine9055
    @richardracine9055 Před rokem +1

    Ejectee 3506 here. Thank you Martin-Baker Aircraft Co.Ltd.

  • @Name-ps9fx
    @Name-ps9fx Před 6 lety +34

    That mustache though...surprised it didn’t allow him to fly away on his own!

  • @user-nj9hw1tf2q
    @user-nj9hw1tf2q Před 4 lety +1

    Many thanks for you amazing history report.

  • @alanjm1234
    @alanjm1234 Před 5 lety +14

    An interesting read is "The Man in The Hot Seat" by Doddy Hay, one of Martin Baker's test pilots.

    • @stewartw.9151
      @stewartw.9151 Před 5 lety +2

      This video shows none of the difficulties he encountered and the injuries he suffered! As I recall his tests were with the first rocket powered seats for faster aircraft than are dealt with here.

    • @SoundEffectsFactory
      @SoundEffectsFactory Před 4 lety

      Just bought the book, thanks for the recommendation

  • @becomematrix
    @becomematrix Před 5 lety +20

    Here these pilotes get a quick release intercom cable while headphone jacks in 2019 are still capable of destroying your laptop if you trip on them.

    • @becomematrix
      @becomematrix Před 5 lety

      MichaelKingsfordGray test pilotes

    • @becomematrix
      @becomematrix Před 5 lety +4

      MichaelKingsfordGray what’s your problem?

    • @tomfisher9089
      @tomfisher9089 Před 5 lety +1

      They want that to happen. Buy another $$$$

  • @lostboy8814
    @lostboy8814 Před 4 lety

    Hello Mr Cholmondley Warner.....Hello Greyson.......Just love the narration,bravo.

  • @momfredmommsen4543
    @momfredmommsen4543 Před 2 lety

    I was a Martin-Baker Ejection Seat Specialists at the German Air Force.I was from 1961 -1964 at the Fighter Sqadron 72(Jagdgeschwader 72) in Leck.I Hope,them Peaples remember me .Thanks and best Greetings from Corporal Krueger.

  • @gazza2933
    @gazza2933 Před 3 lety

    Brilliant conception!!

  • @Nghilifa
    @Nghilifa Před 3 lety +2

    He must have had serious back problems later in life. The early ejection seats didn't have solid rocket boosters to propel the seat, they only had cordite charges which were basically enlarge shotgun shells. The acceleration was much more abrupt and damaging to the spine compared to the zero-zero seats we have today.

  • @marknewell7160
    @marknewell7160 Před rokem

    I am proud to have worked at Martin Baker in 1995. It was an interesting company to work for and the employees, many of which were ex military had many interesting stories to tell. The test rig was right behind my office. The sound of the rockets firing made me jump every time.

  • @Zuloff
    @Zuloff Před 5 lety +7

    The old gunpowder bomb seats. A single high impulse explosion got you out of the jet and damaged a lot of spines. That was one big reason to go to a rocket seat. Stretched the ejection out just long enough that it reduced compression spinal fractures.

    • @gpernot
      @gpernot Před 5 lety +1

      21 Gs.... Not good for the disks!

    • @philgiglio7922
      @philgiglio7922 Před 5 lety

      @@gpernot...and you'd be 1/2 inch shorter.

    • @chrisaskin6144
      @chrisaskin6144 Před 4 lety +3

      Before rocket packs were introduced, a three cartridge system was installed. Upon pulling the firing handle, this directly initiated what was known as the primary cartridge which was located in the top of the ejection gun. The ejection gun comprises of two telescopic tubes within a third outer tube. The outer tube is bolted directly to the cockpit floor and bulkhead. And when an ejection is initiated it will stay with the stricken aircraft. When the primary cartridge fires it fills the gun with hot pressurised gas which expands and causes the two inner tubes and therefore the seat to rise. The outer gun has two housings each containing a secondary cartridge, when the action of the inner tubes rising exposes the first of the secondary cartridges, the hot pressurised gas ruptures a disc on that cartridge and fire's the explosive contained within. This boost's the impetus, and when it's risen enough to expose the second secondary cartridge that adds even more, but effectively 'modulating' the speed of the ejection to be as kind as possible to the pilot's spine. The introduction of the rocket pack retained the three cartridge system, but the pack was fired by means of a cable fastened to a static point. When the seat was fired it rose up the guide rails until the static line reached the end of it's travel thus firing the rocket pack, which boosted the pilot well clear of the aircraft.

    • @stevetheduck1425
      @stevetheduck1425 Před rokem

      Every early ejection seat (except the ones tested in Britain in the late 1920s with springs and an arm to throw the seat away from the plane) had a small explosive driving the gun.
      The German WWII seats apparently used an explosive similar to a 20mm cannon shell, and could throw a seat and occupant (usually a dummy) out and over the tail of a Junkers Ju87 Stuka with that (old films of these tests are findable on youtube).
      Later telescoping tube guns used a number of small explosions to drive the seat with less G over more time (the ones I saw in the 1970s and 1980s hade five of these), and the tilting rocket pack had pairs of rockets that fired in sequence to gain the greatest separation from the aircraft with the least G over enough time to avoid most injuries.
      It's still not a good idea to eject more than about two times, even with careful medical checks.

  • @taggartlawfirm
    @taggartlawfirm Před 5 lety

    Thank you for your service

  • @1tonyboat
    @1tonyboat Před rokem

    Having fitted many ejection seats during my RAF career. I was at the Lowestoft air show when the Harrier pilot had to eject and was still surprised at how quick things happened ..

  • @allenmcgee6061
    @allenmcgee6061 Před 4 lety

    I was an AME instructor aid at millington TN. Martin baker seat were the thing!

  • @swimmad456
    @swimmad456 Před 5 lety +116

    Men were men and moustaches were moustaches. Great days.

    • @triplex2912
      @triplex2912 Před 5 lety +5

      swimmad456
      Great comment and very true!
      😊👍

    • @mongomoonbladder8023
      @mongomoonbladder8023 Před 5 lety +7

      The moustache that won the war 😁!

    • @dashcam26
      @dashcam26 Před 5 lety +5

      @@mongomoonbladder8023 Tally - Ho Chaps.

    • @Ryfinius
      @Ryfinius Před 5 lety +3

      hmmmf hmmf, yes yes very good. pip pip, tally ho and such.

    • @andyaim4764
      @andyaim4764 Před 4 lety +1

      There was a British harrier pilot in the Falklands war had a humongous Tashe!!!

  • @astrodoug1
    @astrodoug1 Před 5 lety +17

    "Tested extensively on dummies." Was that the original name for test pilots?

  • @johnoaker1232
    @johnoaker1232 Před 5 lety +8

    1:33 this is me tryna get out of bed in the morning

  • @benjaminperez7328
    @benjaminperez7328 Před 11 měsíci

    Thumbs up if Ward Carroll just brought you here.
    Martin-Baker. Proudly made in my hometown of Johnstown, Pennsylvania, USA.

  • @michaelslack5269
    @michaelslack5269 Před 4 lety +2

    Love the ole (period) movietone news style of this film.

  • @bulshtbnd
    @bulshtbnd Před 4 lety

    I was a firefighter in the United States Air Force. Part of our job was to know egress procedures for the F-4 Phantom, which utilized the Martin-Baker ejection seat. We had a saying, which I'm sure is widely known in a lot of circles. That saying was... "Meet your maker in a Martin-Baker!" This was due to the procedures you had to follow to safe the system. Miss one step, forget one thing and you could initiate the ejection process. If you were in the cockpit in any way, and the ejection system activated, you were going for a ride with the seat! And you were not going to fare well in that journey. Part of our training involved actually securing the ejection seat in a live scenario. Scary stuff!

  • @stephencannon3140
    @stephencannon3140 Před 5 lety +8

    One more item is for multi seat aircraft (F/A-18, F-14, F4 and dual front-back layout.....the design of the rocket motor nozzles sends one crew member out and the other the opposite direction to avoid hitting each other.

    • @petesheppard1709
      @petesheppard1709 Před 5 lety

      Also, the sequence is timed so the backseater goes first.

    • @gregbuck701
      @gregbuck701 Před 5 lety +3

      @@petesheppard1709 correct....keeps him from being burned. The pilot before flight can flip a switch that allows the backseater to initiate only his seat, but no matter what,....when the pilot pulls the handle everyone's going.......quickly.

  • @bawdydog176
    @bawdydog176 Před 4 lety

    The old Matwing hanger at NAS Oceana had painting of a cartoon vulture riding a Martin Baker. Caption read "When all else fails, fly Martin Baker". Always a treat trying to pin the things in the middle of the night with a dark blue lens in your craptastic flashlight.

  • @technowarriorstv
    @technowarriorstv Před 7 lety

    Nice shot of the ripcord

  • @waynester71
    @waynester71 Před 5 lety +2

    My grandad worked for MB/Denham in the sheet metal work shop for 38 years until retirement in 1991.. Unfortunately he died 9 months after retiring :(

  • @donaldparlettjr3295
    @donaldparlettjr3295 Před 4 lety

    If I remember correctly Lynch wasn't even an employee of Martin-Baker. He was a batsman for one of the pilots that flew but he really love the ejection so he kept on being the test dummy for a long time and many times.

  • @panther105
    @panther105 Před 4 lety +3

    Damn.....that poor guy who had to repeatedly turn that handle on the test rig a million times is the real hero in all this.....!!!

    • @1tonyboat
      @1tonyboat Před rokem +1

      It was a very big spring he was winding up ..🤣🤣

  • @pupplementarypupplements5804

    love the vintage dork 2:14 9:49

  • @tomburton8239
    @tomburton8239 Před 5 lety +7

    Wow, that’s a Group Captain risking his back at 3:13

    • @josephking6515
      @josephking6515 Před 4 lety +1

      I wonder if I could understand his banter? 🤔

  • @andressini3057
    @andressini3057 Před 4 lety +1

    Amazing! Just priceless video on how Martin Baker made it!!,just for notice but anyone could see the serial number of the spitfire that is show in the first seconds of the video??

  • @fluffycat087
    @fluffycat087 Před 5 lety +3

    Glad to see the blind has gone and relying on the pilot to get protrusions out of the way. Great vid, thanks.

  • @angelowo100
    @angelowo100 Před 3 lety

    Thank you very much...

  • @johnhodges8264
    @johnhodges8264 Před 4 lety +1

    "If you ever you ever use a piloted ejetor seat...." priceless!!!

  • @kodiak64
    @kodiak64 Před 4 lety +1

    I read they still have one of those torture chamber style test rigs on the go at a facility in Northern Ireland. People would pay to have a go on that... after signing a waiver in case they get crushed vertebrae.

  • @interman7715
    @interman7715 Před 5 lety +15

    Old Lynchy was a gutsy chap lol.

    • @peterk2455
      @peterk2455 Před 5 lety +4

      Think of Helmut Schenk, had to eject from prototype HE280, while being towed by two Bf 110s, to test an experimental pulse jet engine, while snowing ,in an untested experimental ejection seat. Bernard Lynch did have the advantage of a magnificent 'tache.

    • @josephking6515
      @josephking6515 Před 4 lety +1

      He also was the first to test a Zero Zero seat by activating it while sitting on the ground. There was a book about him and the seats and damned interesting it was. He deserved a knighthood for services to saving military lives. Guess they are all reserved for pollies and millionaires.

    • @gavinhudson5251
      @gavinhudson5251 Před 4 lety

      @@peterk2455 I read somewhere that German ejection seats when tested were known to be back breakers.

  • @wakebearn2039
    @wakebearn2039 Před 2 lety

    Ending really gets me

  • @AdrianJayeOnline
    @AdrianJayeOnline Před 4 lety

    I've been there, very interesting place, used to look after there telephone, clocks and clocking machines in the 80's and 90s

  • @allandavis8201
    @allandavis8201 Před 5 lety

    Some of the buildings shown as being at Farnborough are still there today, most of the Airfield has changed beyond belief but some of the most historical ones have been retained. Went to an former eastern block airfield back when the wall had first come down, they were still using a tower/seat test rig for pilot training, they even showed us how it worked, and wondered why we didn’t want to try it out!!!!?????!!!!
    The Martin baker seats were later fitted with both a face blind and a seat pan handle, just in case G forces were at a to high +/- level that prevented use of either of the black and yellows fitted.

  • @stephencannon3140
    @stephencannon3140 Před 5 lety +1

    A lot of aircraft also have a slight protrusion off the top of the head rest which is also where the main parachute is stored. If for some reason the canopy doesn’t jettison the crew member can literally push the seat and shatter the canopy for a safe ejection.

    • @petesheppard1709
      @petesheppard1709 Před 5 lety +2

      ALSO, if you've noticed a line or strip around some canopies, it's an explosive strip to shatter it when the seat is fired.

    • @tomfisher9089
      @tomfisher9089 Před 5 lety +1

      You mean like in Top Gun??

  • @petebutt
    @petebutt Před 5 lety

    The blower tunnel was at Boscombe Down!

  • @weytogoman
    @weytogoman Před 4 lety +2

    I was a seat plumber in the early 70's.

  • @jayfmiller
    @jayfmiller Před 5 lety +4

    Before they built ejection seats, MB designed and built aircraft. If your are interested, do a search for "Martin-Baker MB-5"

    • @jayfmiller
      @jayfmiller Před 5 lety +1

      In the early 90's a friend and I built a 1/4 scale of the MB5 and Martin Baker was great about providing some details. It is a shame it never saw service before WWII ended in the ETO. Two of the design features to accommodate battle damage were the landing gear mechanism and the way many of the skins were attached by twist type fittings and easily replaced. The landing gear were "default down" and brought up by a large cylinder mounted on an angle behind the cockpit. The engine was coupled to a geared case that permitted two counter-rotating propellers that improved the performance. We used a glow engine on our model with a single 4-blade prop because the cost of a custom gearbox was just too expensive.

    • @Paladin1873
      @Paladin1873 Před 5 lety +2

      @Glen Towler Yeah, it looked like a cross between a Mustang and Spitfire. Piston engine aircraft design at its apogee.

  • @bjjace1
    @bjjace1 Před 3 lety +2

    Aviation owes the Brits a lot. Inventing the jet engine and the ejection seat.

  • @yeboi4994
    @yeboi4994 Před 4 lety +1

    Awesome

  • @brianbannon3091
    @brianbannon3091 Před 4 lety +1

    James Bond had one of these in his Aston Martin. Not available in the lower trim levels though.

  • @rooftopvoter3015
    @rooftopvoter3015 Před 3 lety +1

    Always love the British films; everything in it is so proper and ''British.''

  • @francisschweitzer8431
    @francisschweitzer8431 Před 4 lety

    As a former USAF CREW CHIEF that spent some time on B-52 recovery.... the Martin-Baker seats used to scare the hell out of me.

    • @josephking6515
      @josephking6515 Před 4 lety

      Was it the up ejecting ones or the down ejecting ones? Guess you wouldn't be keen on sitting in the latter on the ground. 😨

  • @bruceinoz8002
    @bruceinoz8002 Před 4 lety

    I seem to recall that those completing a successful ejection were awarded membership of "The Caterpillar Club". I was called that in honour of the silkworms that made the silk fibres used in the parachutes.

  • @alanhardman2447
    @alanhardman2447 Před 5 lety +6

    The M-B pitch man looks like "Q", as in Ben Whishaw of the latest James Bond movies. Must be his grandpa...

  • @somethingbrite8484
    @somethingbrite8484 Před 5 lety +4

    Those accents. Goodness me didn't we all speak such wonderful English back then?

    • @somethingbrite8484
      @somethingbrite8484 Před 5 lety +1

      @MichaelKingsfordGray My word! What sort of issues do you have that you get your knickers in such a twist over such an innocent observation?

    • @stevetheduck1425
      @stevetheduck1425 Před rokem

      Yes, we did, didn't we? I find the old 'telephone voice' coming back to me as I write. Such fun.

  • @stuartgarfatth1448
    @stuartgarfatth1448 Před 5 lety +7

    I recommend to those interested in the story of Martin-Baker ejection seats to read the book, 'Man in the hot seat', by Doddy Hay. He was a flight surgeon who tested the seats using himself as the 'pilot', with some startling results at times, a very very courageous individual..

    • @stewartw.9151
      @stewartw.9151 Před 5 lety

      I read that book many years ago. As I recall he was testing rocket powered seats in the 1950s, perhaps for zero-zero ejections. He was insanely brave - or perhaps just insane! - and in fact was injured and hospitalised when his stomach muscles were ruptured through the rocket being way too powerful at first.

    • @trooperdgb9722
      @trooperdgb9722 Před 2 lety

      LOL He wasn't a flight surgeon. He was a (retired) RAF Physical Training Officer (who had been an Air Gunner in WW2) . As an RAF PTO he was involved in military parachute training (still run by the RAF in the UK) and had competed for Britain in one of the very early (possibly the first) World Parachuting Championships...

  • @andyaim4764
    @andyaim4764 Před 4 lety +5

    Hard to believe they wouldn’t allow WW1 pilots to use a parachute as the top brass erroneously thought it would promote cowardice.

    • @trooperdgb9722
      @trooperdgb9722 Před 3 lety +1

      That was only ONE reason. Those early Parachutes (The German Henicke (sp?) and the British Guardian Angel type) were heavy and relatively bulky. More importantly noone had developed a freefall rig...so those early ones relied on static lines. Any attempt to exit a spinning or out of control aircraft would have had little chance of a clean deployment.

  • @stephencannon3140
    @stephencannon3140 Před 5 lety +3

    Even with modern technology the concept and procedures for a safe ejection haven’t changed much. Head up straight, feet against the bottom of seat and flat on the floor. Pull handle and away you go. I can’t speak for older models but some and probably most have a garter that anchors to the cockpit floor. The other part is attached to the lower legs of the pilot. Basically a high tech blood pressure cuff that fits against the calf and is velcroed to adjust for different size pilots and aircraft. The concept is anchor to the deck, attach the leg restraints to the strap. When you eject the leg restraints pull your feet against the forward bottom edge of the seat. This action forces the feet and legs to the seat to eliminate the knees and lower legs hitting the dashboard on the way up.

    • @gpernot
      @gpernot Před 5 lety +1

      One detail: the seat does not go immediately. There is a delay of couple of seconds to allow for the canopy to go and to avoid collision with it. Modern seats can actually go through the canopy which is then "fragilized" by pyrotechnic devices.

    • @MarkHud1963
      @MarkHud1963 Před 4 lety

      The latest MB Seats have pilot retention all built in so that the harness pulls the pilot into the seat first and head, arm and leg restraints all activate before the seat leaves the cockpit, activation to parachute deployment is under 2 seconds now, my brother works for MB developing these systems.

    • @1tonyboat
      @1tonyboat Před rokem

      I had to check loads of seats doing ¬before flights ¬ on Phantoms (54 sdn} and lightings {111 sgn ) many times upside down in the cockpit .......those were the days ..

  • @jeffstanley4593
    @jeffstanley4593 Před 5 lety

    Pulling that shield down over the face prevents anything like " what is this button for"?

  • @djmech3871
    @djmech3871 Před 5 lety +5

    Bernard Lynch reminds me of Colonel Crittendon from Hogens Heroes. 👍🏻

    • @Paladin1873
      @Paladin1873 Před 5 lety

      Yes, another Englishman named Bernard - Bernard Fox.

  • @matthayward7889
    @matthayward7889 Před 4 lety +12

    The question is: how much bigger did they have to make the drogue chute to compensate for Lynches massive brass balls?
    Thank god for the engineers and test pilots

    • @mashiniwami
      @mashiniwami Před 4 lety +1

      Doddy Hay had them made out of steel. Read "Man in the Hot Seat".

  • @hakanl2585
    @hakanl2585 Před 4 lety

    I talked with a person many year ago that had contact with Martin-Baker. He claimed that they had three engineer and seven layers in there staff.

  • @RainmanStorm-jy1fp
    @RainmanStorm-jy1fp Před rokem

    Have you ever seen a movie pilot who uses the ejection seat to parachute himself out from a falling airplane? We are sure you know what we are talking about. The parachuted chair was a previous design of what we call today’s ejector seat.
    Anastase Dragomir was the one who invented the famous “catapultable cockpit”. All his life, Anastase Dragomir worked in France in different aircraft factories. This was the time when he managed to create a system responsible for saving the passenger’s lives in case of unexpected accidents.
    In 1929, they tested their invention on an airport from Paris, following another one in Romania. Both of his tests were successful.

  • @joebush1663
    @joebush1663 Před rokem

    Who knew that Terry Thomas was an ejection seat test subject before he went into acting?

  • @MisterWileyOne
    @MisterWileyOne Před 4 lety

    CZcams algorithm working overtime for me today!

  • @bonesshed.
    @bonesshed. Před 2 lety

    @10:00 to @10:28 And so it came to pass. Awesome bits of kit. Todays seats are marvel of engineering.

  • @9Apilot
    @9Apilot Před 5 lety +3

    Wow.. that first seat definitely wasn't zero-zero.

  • @glennfryer1539
    @glennfryer1539 Před 3 lety

    Remember Microfilming Martin Baker drawings back on the mid 70’s ... AO size drawings reduced to 35mm film ...

  • @anthonyfrost2530
    @anthonyfrost2530 Před 4 lety +1

    as my sister lived in Farnborough i went to many of the air shows , I remember one where you could be fired up in an ejector seat , they used a static vertical ramp with I assume compressed air , like being fired out of a large air gun ....those men had guts to test it with rockets, wooooo!

    • @johnrainer8996
      @johnrainer8996 Před 4 lety

      Yep, I remember such a thing at Finningley airshow. I wish I'd had a go now!

    • @chrisaskin6144
      @chrisaskin6144 Před 4 lety

      As an armourer at Church Fenton, I remember us borrowing the 'gas operated' ejection seat from Finningley for an open day.

  • @ronjon7942
    @ronjon7942 Před rokem

    If that engineer at 3:00 was any more understated…personally I’d find that reassuring, I just really appreciate the British.

  • @BIG-DIPPER-56
    @BIG-DIPPER-56 Před 8 měsíci

    Well done old boy!

  • @centamangila1217
    @centamangila1217 Před 8 měsíci

    "Eject-o Seat-o!"
    -Roman Pierce

  • @MajSolo
    @MajSolo Před 5 lety

    aaah I would have liked to see all the other seats devloped later from the same company,.

  • @Danny-zi6xw
    @Danny-zi6xw Před 2 lety +1

    "THE END...
    But not of the pilot!"

  • @jodelboy
    @jodelboy Před 6 lety +2

    this is fucking gold

  • @THYCR3AT0R
    @THYCR3AT0R Před 3 lety +1

    4:09 Imagine being told to wear formal clothes and a tie to your test dummy job

  • @dks13827
    @dks13827 Před 3 lety

    That guy has guts !!!

  • @johnp139
    @johnp139 Před 5 lety

    Nothing about the “sticky clips”?

  • @alaindep
    @alaindep Před 4 lety +1

    where is the seat ????

  • @koliloaloa
    @koliloaloa Před 5 lety

    dugcirk, probably given it’s performance itwould have had similar lines.

  • @nzgunnie
    @nzgunnie Před 3 lety

    These early seats only got you out of the aircraft, you still had to separate yourself from the seat, then manually deploy your own parachute.

  • @gavinhudson5251
    @gavinhudson5251 Před 4 lety +1

    I say, I have a frightfully good moustache.