130 - Ton Colossus Takes The Air (1949)

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  • čas přidán 22. 08. 2024
  • Full title reads: "130 - Ton Colossus Takes The Air".
    Filton airfield, Bristol, Avon.
    MV Brabazon on airfield. SV Pan Bristol Brabazon aircraft. SV Engines and wing. SV Tail unit. CU Bill Pegg with two other men. SV Engine showing contra- rotating props. SV Engineer examining nose wheel. SV Pan Test Pilot William Pegg and engineers walking towards Brabazon. CU Brabazon showing name. SV Bill Pegg climbs ladder and enters aircraft. MV Brabazon on end of runway. MV Bill Pegg looking from cockpit window. SV No 1 engine being revved up. MV No 1 engine going. No 2 engine being started. MV Bill Pegg at window. SV Brabazon taxiing out. Pan SV Types looking on. MV Brabazon starts West-East taxi test down runway. MV People looking through wire fence. MV Travel shot Brabazon taxiing down runway. LV Crowd sitting on roof top watching. MV Towards Brabazon taxiing down runway. SV Pan nose of aircraft as it taxis down runway. LV Towards and pan Brabazon taxiing down runway. Front wheel lifts then undercarriage. Aircraft climbs steadily away. MV Back view aircraft climbing away from runway. LV People sitting on rooftop watching. LV Brabazon in flight. Side view. MV Side view Brabazon in flight. LV Three-quarter view Brabazon on final approach. LV Brabazon over runway. Touches down and taxis along runway, past fire wagon. MV Brabazon moving slowly along runway.
    FILM ID:1423.1
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Komentáře • 792

  • @billsmith7254
    @billsmith7254 Před rokem +42

    I was in Kingsbury Primary School on that day. All the children were herded out in the playground. I can still remember seeing it fly overhead.

  • @kevinmalone3210
    @kevinmalone3210 Před 2 lety +432

    It looks as if it's taking off in slow motion. Impressive size.

    • @stephenbrookes7268
      @stephenbrookes7268 Před 2 lety +18

      It kind of was by today's standards.

    • @RealPlatoishere
      @RealPlatoishere Před rokem +9

      @@stephenbrookes7268 nah but for that time it was impressive

    • @stephenbrookes7268
      @stephenbrookes7268 Před rokem +7

      @@RealPlatoishere It was a typical horse designed by committee. Out of date before the ink was dry on the drawings.

    • @calvinnickel9995
      @calvinnickel9995 Před rokem +5

      @ Steven brooks it wasn’t out of date. The Constellation Starliner would make its first flight 7 years later and only be in service for one year before regular jet service started replacing it.
      The problem was no market. The British Empire was shrinking and no airlines had the cash or passengers to justify it. Airliners like the huge Stratocruiser lost a lot of money because of how expensive they were to purchase and operate.

    • @stephenbrookes7268
      @stephenbrookes7268 Před rokem +4

      @@calvinnickel9995 You have literally described the conditions of being out of date. You couldn't even spell my name correctly when it is written down. What other examples of idiocy would you like to display?

  • @sandhopper99
    @sandhopper99 Před 2 lety +463

    My father worked on the Brabazon after working on Beaufighters during the war. My grandfather was Site Agent for Laing on the new Filton Brabazon hanger. There was a combined staff trip to Clevedon. My father went and my grandfather took two of his daughters one of whom became my mum. Her sister married another Laing guy and in 1968 he arranged for me to also join Laing as the start to a 54 year career in construction. We had the famous Brabazon picture in our living room for years.

    • @drew65sep
      @drew65sep Před 2 lety +19

      Tip of the cap to your father...the world owes a lot to that particular generation.

    • @jwaustinmunguy
      @jwaustinmunguy Před 2 lety +6

      Dad had pictures of the Beau on the same album page as the Mosquitos he was training on at No. 51 OTU. I wouldn't be a bit surprised if the course syllabus had some trips in the Beau as they had some of the older radar sets in them. Training was thorough in those days and he spoke of using several different sets on the course.

    • @user-od1xf1ig3u
      @user-od1xf1ig3u Před 2 lety +9

      Вы замечательный человек,если с такой теплотой поведали нам о своих предках !Спасибо!

    • @bernielomaxsmustache7204
      @bernielomaxsmustache7204 Před 2 lety +1

      Built a piece of crap

    • @alaaino
      @alaaino Před 2 lety +5

      Thank you for the so warm story

  • @3funke
    @3funke Před 2 lety +50

    I saw the Brabazon overfly Liverpool around 1950 or thereabouts, my father worked at RAF Hooton Park at the time and told me to look out for it, it flew over around midday quite a sight for a young 9/10 yo lad.

  • @davidr9991
    @davidr9991 Před 2 lety +168

    I lived in Filton Avenue , Bristol at the time of the engine tests . As a 3 year old I was terrified by the noise of the engine tests . One of my earliest memories .

    • @joemag6032
      @joemag6032 Před 2 lety +4

      Just curious, which were louder, the engines or the props ?

    • @davidmicalizio824
      @davidmicalizio824 Před 2 lety +6

      @@joemag6032 props

    • @joemag6032
      @joemag6032 Před 2 lety +3

      @@davidmicalizio824 , thanks for responding.

    • @dotdashdotdash
      @dotdashdotdash Před 2 lety +12

      nobody vandalising statues in Bristol in those days

    • @bincamir1
      @bincamir1 Před 2 lety +3

      @@dotdashdotdash out of topic!

  • @olliegueret4348
    @olliegueret4348 Před rokem +24

    Pathe always had unique clear crisp footage of the early twentieth century! Class!!!

  • @richardschindler8822
    @richardschindler8822 Před rokem +94

    Built with NOT one computer. A thing of beauty.

    • @GreatDataVideos
      @GreatDataVideos Před rokem +16

      Lots of slide rule usage though. Amazing engineering.

    • @lovegarbage
      @lovegarbage Před rokem +12

      Plenty of slide rules.

    • @brandwilbll
      @brandwilbll Před rokem

      Lots of planes were built without a computer, they sucked. You sound like a luddite. "they don't make cars like they used to, they put all these computers in them." yeah, they're safer, faster, better gas mileage, better handling, better braking; what more do you old timers want? Go fly on a plane back in those days and you were taking your life in your hands. Now it is the safest form of travel. Thank god we put computers in these things to help us fly them.

  • @leokimvideo
    @leokimvideo Před rokem +157

    Thank god someone did count the rivets

  • @cassiocm
    @cassiocm Před 2 lety +144

    For a second, I thought it was going to stall on take off. So smooth!

    • @theborg5981
      @theborg5981 Před rokem

      Same. At or just soon after

    • @nk7155
      @nk7155 Před rokem +3

      Yeah. 160 mph is pretty slow for a plane that size.

    • @startingbark0356
      @startingbark0356 Před rokem

      @@nk7155 nah, usually larger aircraft are slower

    • @nicholai1008
      @nicholai1008 Před rokem +5

      @@startingbark0356 Larger aircraft don’t usually fly slower. They often have to fly faster, because they are heavier and they need to generate more lift. The reason this plane is probably able to takeoff and fly so slow is because it has little payload and is particularly light.
      A 767 can takeoff at 108kts when it weighs 90,000kgs, but it can only takeoff at 170kts at 190,000kgs. That’s the exact same plane and the only thing that changed was the weight.

    • @startingbark0356
      @startingbark0356 Před rokem

      @@nicholai1008 no, they bigger they have more drag

  • @memonk11
    @memonk11 Před rokem +15

    This is one of those many aircraft that should have been preserved. It would be a sight to see.

  • @Slartibartfast69
    @Slartibartfast69 Před 2 lety +114

    Unfortunately it was out of date before it even flew. Jet propulsion was the future.

    • @tallthinkev
      @tallthinkev Před 2 lety +7

      It could have made as a transport aircraft, with a few small-ish mods.

    • @wrightmf
      @wrightmf Před 2 lety +8

      I'm thinking with the Brabazon it was too much of a leap forward in aircraft size. Boeing developed airliners but not too big, eventually achieved the 747 when engine technology, the high bypass, and other technologies. But wait Britain did put in service the Comet first commercial jet liner. Unfortunately learned lessons of structural design the tragic way. However, it seems that aircraft like the Brabazon and the Vickers all had embedded engines which limit improving the overall design. 737 and Airbus with engines mounted below wings can accomondate new high bypass engines.

    • @brettv8
      @brettv8 Před 2 lety +2

      @@wrightmf Regarding Comet - Round cornered windows vs squared, so obvious in hindsight..

    • @davidjones332
      @davidjones332 Před rokem +3

      @@brettv8 Unfortunately the "square window" story is a myth. The error was a late decision not to use bonded windows but to rivet the window frames in. The airframe was not strong enough to cope with having hundreds of holes drilled in it, and that started the cracks that led to an explosive decompression. The Comet 4 had round windows because it had to be seen to be different from the Comet 1.

    • @crazyleyland5106
      @crazyleyland5106 Před rokem +2

      I thought the Boeing Stratocruiser was a comparable aircraft, much more successful than the Brab, and that was piston powered.

  • @Coppermiltac
    @Coppermiltac Před 6 lety +866

    The propellor sound is, to use a modern phrase, truly awesome and I would think unmistakable. Great film footage.

    • @katoikatio4663
      @katoikatio4663 Před 2 lety +1

      Ini kerana is

    • @funnyrabbitflyer6855
      @funnyrabbitflyer6855 Před 2 lety +3

      Right? Counter-rotating props in this video sound distinct from anything ive heard in person.

    • @dartmaster501
      @dartmaster501 Před 2 lety +1

      Turboprops.

    • @dartmaster501
      @dartmaster501 Před 2 lety +8

      @@funnyrabbitflyer6855 CONTRA-rotating. Counter-rotating props are separated, like on the Chinook or Osprey.

    • @bobsage6312
      @bobsage6312 Před 2 lety +4

      I heard that when airborne and the sound terrified me as a very young boy. Totally unmistakable, just as Concorde was later on.

  • @keegan773
    @keegan773 Před rokem +7

    The village of Charleton was demolished to extend the runway for the Brabazon.
    In the jet age the aircraft was already obsolete and never came into service.

  • @Bikewithlove
    @Bikewithlove Před 2 lety +181

    Notice the great care taken by the pilot in demonstrating the airplane well within its limits and never losing sight of the fact that it’s not all about him. It amazes me how any flight organization can allow the kinds of out-of-control personalities to fly air shows, who ultimately cause terrible catastrophes. The way this pilot flies is how it’s done.

    • @craigpennington1251
      @craigpennington1251 Před 2 lety +9

      Yes, arrogant egos cause a lot of grief.

    • @margaretross9150
      @margaretross9150 Před 2 lety +14

      "There are old pilots and bold pilots, but no old, bold pilots."

    • @nigelwilliams9307
      @nigelwilliams9307 Před 2 lety +9

      He could have at least done a barrel roll.

    • @Beezlie727
      @Beezlie727 Před 2 lety +16

      It wasn't an air show. It was a maiden flight. Notice the announcer was even uncertain that it was going to take off rather than simply taxi again.

    • @Bikewithlove
      @Bikewithlove Před 2 lety +3

      @@Beezlie727 - Same rule applies: don’t crash the plane.

  • @Saa42808
    @Saa42808 Před rokem +8

    I have a great respect for the engineers who designed these aircrafts without a computer.

  • @johne7100
    @johne7100 Před rokem +11

    I saw it flying over the Craigantlet hills near Belfast. I would have been 4 at the time. From our house across the valley from Stormont it was just a line in the sky as it turned towards us, but I could see the nacelles on its wings. That's all the memory I have, just that dark line with the lumps on it, but anything I see or read of it is still thrilling. Long ago now.

  • @madmeh2929
    @madmeh2929 Před 2 lety +105

    Saw a doc on this about 20 years ago. The plane landed so softly the pilots actually had a light on the panel that told them when the wheels touched down. I believe it flew for a few years. Since it was so comparably slow (and took so long to cross the ocean) the interior still followed the concept of a “cruise ship of the skies”, and couldn’t economically compete with faster competing aircraft.
    Too bad it wasn’t preserved in a museum, as was the Spruce Goose. Sadly out of date before or just after it took off.

    • @nigelwilliams9307
      @nigelwilliams9307 Před 2 lety

      What symptoms?

    • @billhosko7723
      @billhosko7723 Před rokem +1

      JFC... another passive/aggressive KAREN...

    • @beeble2003
      @beeble2003 Před rokem +2

      "The plane landed so softly the pilots actually had a light on the panel that told them when the wheels touched down."
      That doesn't make sense. Any plane lands as hard or as softly as the pilot puts it onto the ground. Many planes have a weight-on-wheels sensor which, for example, prevents deployment of reverse thrust while in flight. Probably the maker of the documentary misunderstood this.

    • @straightpipediesel
      @straightpipediesel Před rokem +9

      @@beeble2003 No, wing aspect ratio and wing loading are major factors in how smoothly an aircraft lands. Basically when an aircraft has a lot of excess lift available, lift tends to bleed off slower, and the pilot has better trajectory control of the aircraft during the landing maneuver and therefore can land softly.

    • @tryarunm
      @tryarunm Před rokem +1

      I was wondering just that, how practical she would have been for regular commercial air travel. But as a luxury liner she must have been super comfortable.
      I wonder many for built, which airlines flew her and for how long.

  • @harryschaefer5887
    @harryschaefer5887 Před 2 lety +24

    It reminds me of a "Constellation", a plane I was always excited to see overhead when I was a kid.

    • @letoubib21
      @letoubib21 Před 2 lety

      Good, old Connie didn't even weigh the half of that Brabazon colossus ...

    • @jrt818
      @jrt818 Před 2 lety +1

      @@letoubib21 But it was profitable.

    • @letoubib21
      @letoubib21 Před 2 lety

      @@jrt818 I like the Connie, too. She was a very good plane *. . .*

    • @jfh9209
      @jfh9209 Před rokem +2

      The Constellation and the Brabazon both had a tapering fuselage, beautiful but more expensive to build.

  • @beeble2003
    @beeble2003 Před rokem +16

    For comparison with modern planes, the Brabazon was as long as a Boeing 767 (180ft), but had a much larger wingspan (230ft vs 150).

  • @Fourth4Element
    @Fourth4Element Před 4 lety +765

    Wow the engineers did a fantastic job

    • @jerrybennett7856
      @jerrybennett7856 Před 2 lety +17

      No computers. Just slide rules and hand drawn blue prints. All those 1.5 million rivets bucked be hand.

    • @rsc9520
      @rsc9520 Před 2 lety +1

      @@jerrybennett7856 It's amazing!

    • @kimdiez2681
      @kimdiez2681 Před rokem +3

      @@jerrybennett7856 That inpresses me more than this generations cell phones.

    • @jerrybennett7856
      @jerrybennett7856 Před rokem +1

      @@kimdiez2681 me too.

  • @steven2212
    @steven2212 Před 4 lety +367

    Stunning and amazing aircraft. Great history here.

  • @noelanderson703
    @noelanderson703 Před 2 lety +20

    Love the sound of those contra-props

  • @richardwest6358
    @richardwest6358 Před rokem +2

    Living in Bath at the time I was lucky enought to see this big beast on many occasions

  • @missiontent111
    @missiontent111 Před 2 lety +121

    My grandmother was in the Red cross at the time the Brabazon was due to appear at a local air show. She and a considerable number of other medical personal were held on standby at a nearby location in readiness for what was considered a possible disaster situation in the event of the aircraft failing in flight. I believe we have her notes on the deployment in her Red Cross log book.

  • @Ralph2
    @Ralph2 Před 4 měsíci +2

    It has a Jules Verne look about it. It's the window placements and the streamlined shiny hull. Beautiful.

  • @chrisparkes
    @chrisparkes Před 2 lety +10

    You can see some of the same aesthetics in the Comet. What a lovely design.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Před rokem +1

      I think this is a more attractive design than the comet- the comet’s square vertical stabilizer didn’t match the rest of its curvy aesthetic.

  • @guskuratlejr9228
    @guskuratlejr9228 Před 2 lety +58

    Much respect for building her with hardly the technology that everyone is used to these days!

    • @sailormanoyster1849
      @sailormanoyster1849 Před rokem +1

      Concorde soon followed on

    • @kimdiez2681
      @kimdiez2681 Před rokem

      Technology has ruined this world already and will control your soul one day if you dont put your trust in Christ Jesus.

  • @laverdajota8089
    @laverdajota8089 Před 2 lety +28

    School kids sitting on a roof enjoying the event, can you imagine the headlines today .
    Near tragedy , as children put the lives at risk at air display , parents arrested for neglect.

  • @lisakingscott7729
    @lisakingscott7729 Před rokem +5

    I love the shape of airliners from that era, very similar to the Constellation. Note how Bristol engineers used round windows, but De Havilland screwed up the otherwise much more advanced Comet by using square ones!!! The Comet's first flight was 2 months before the brabazon, but once the windows were fixed, lasted many decades.

  • @johnmorris7815
    @johnmorris7815 Před rokem +3

    Some of the comments on here absolutely begged belief? The Brabazon had eight engines, one for each of its four contra rotating props, it was not in any way stalling as it flew, 160kts is pretty much flat out for an aircraft of that time, it’s failure was due to the fact that in 1949 jets had been flying for 6 years, this aircraft was abandoned for that reason and although it took a few more years before jet passenger aircraft flew, the Bristol company’s next attempt was the Britannia, a turbo prop aircraft that was ahead of its time for about 10 days before everything without jets were obsolete. That was the pace of progress at that time, 1949 piston engine aircraft that could nearly make London New York, 1969 Concorde M2.00 at 65,000’

  • @mwales2112
    @mwales2112 Před rokem +5

    It doesn't take off, the earth just backs away....

  • @SMGJohn
    @SMGJohn Před 2 lety +20

    This plane had maximum take off weight of 131 tons, whereas Boeing 747 had 300 tons when she made her maiden flight in 1969.
    Bristol Brabazon was very much a plane of the early 40s, and came too late to do anything, the age of jet was coming, to put things into perspective, Soviet Tupolev Tu-95 from 1952 had almost 200 ton capable take off weight, and was a turbo prop design as well, Bristol Brabazon never stood a chance.

    • @JS-fe8sx
      @JS-fe8sx Před rokem +6

      The B36 went into service a year before this video had a loaded weight of over 200 tons, but was superseded by the B52. Lightly loaded, it could fly high enough that MiGs could not reach them during the Korean War.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Před rokem +1

      Indeed.

    • @encinobalboa
      @encinobalboa Před 7 měsíci

      Brabazon was obsolete before she was built. Lockheed Constellation was already in airline service for fours years. Surely, the committee could see this??

  • @simon_k4551
    @simon_k4551 Před 4 lety +407

    That nose gear took a pounding.

  • @lifelongbachelor3651
    @lifelongbachelor3651 Před rokem +4

    the great british empire. modernised the whole world.

  • @RuiPlaneSpotter
    @RuiPlaneSpotter Před 4 lety +152

    Thanks for the video!

  • @bertkilborne6464
    @bertkilborne6464 Před 2 lety +53

    It makes me sad that so many of these great planes became obsolete just as they test flew the prototype.

    • @austindarrenor
      @austindarrenor Před 2 lety +4

      The British had at one time ruled the seas but suffered so many setbacks in aviation. Like this Barbazon, only one was built because nobody wanted it. The Comet, Concorde, VC-10 and Trident were commercial failures because of the competition from Boeing and Douglas (besides the Concorde, Boeing was smart and bailed from its SST pgm). Not a single country in Western Europe aside from the UK bought the British made jets but instead went with the American.

    • @peterpiper482
      @peterpiper482 Před 2 lety

      The Spruce Goose also!

    • @scottdowney4318
      @scottdowney4318 Před 2 lety

      @@austindarrenor You know there must have been good reasons for that. fuel use, size, costs, the same things that people make decisions about today, perhaps politics, government and private.

    • @scottdowney4318
      @scottdowney4318 Před 2 lety

      @@peterpiper482 Imagine the spikiness of that guy, likely a big turn off.

    • @austindarrenor
      @austindarrenor Před 2 lety +2

      @@scottdowney4318 True enough. And the 707 was just an incredibly well made airplane put thru every test under the sun. Also I believe that the demands put on Vickers and Hawker Siddely by BOAC and BEA made their jets unattractive to foreign airlines. And the fast American built Convair Coronado suffered its terrible demise for its fuel consumption just to get there ten minutes earlier.

  • @capunkmelky
    @capunkmelky Před 2 lety +16

    Teknologi yang canggih pada masa itu.
    Suara teriakan anak-anak penuh kegembiraan ketika menyaksikan atraksi pesawat terbang.

  • @jwaustinmunguy
    @jwaustinmunguy Před 2 lety +4

    Sound is reminiscent of the B-36 which had six contrarotating props.

  • @niharranjan2196
    @niharranjan2196 Před 2 lety +19

    Inventions at its best. Engineers did great at that time. All need to appreciate that.

  • @garryferrington811
    @garryferrington811 Před rokem +2

    What a nice job reprinting this ancient 35mm film. Generally with a piece of footage this old, you get a one-light 16mm print with glaring bromide streaks, never mind dirt, splices, and scratches. Even the sound, albeit of course limited, is clear.

  • @haroldhumerickhouse8731
    @haroldhumerickhouse8731 Před 2 lety +37

    I can’t believe I’ve never heard of this aircraft, and I thought I knew them all. What a Goliath and the sounds of the engines! Amazing.

    • @USS-SNAKE-ISLAND
      @USS-SNAKE-ISLAND Před 2 lety +2

      Same here.

    • @georgebarnes8163
      @georgebarnes8163 Před 2 lety +5

      there was no mention of the aircrafts unusual engine setup, 8 engines for 4 props, another forgotten giant is the Short Belfast turboprop of which only 10 were made for the RAF.

    • @peteryoungs4201
      @peteryoungs4201 Před 2 lety +3

      I have to wonder how many aircraft we may never hear of.

    • @S500-
      @S500- Před 2 lety

      Its A Psycholigical fact , if a Person Think He Know All Infact They Know Nothing , Im Criticise Anyone , i Read This.

    • @Fastvoice
      @Fastvoice Před rokem

      @@georgebarnes8163 No, it had 8 props. 4 clockwise, 4 counter-clockwise - each with its own engine. You can see them at the beginning of the video.

  • @overbank56
    @overbank56 Před rokem +5

    A "sleek beast"! Love the sound of those engines

  • @Gervie007
    @Gervie007 Před 2 lety +3

    Squadron Leader Jim Murray RNZAF flew the Brabazon once on Aug 25 1951 with W Gibb, R Ellison amd J Howman. Filton -Belfast return 4.50hrs.
    Jim was at Filton test flying the new Bristol Freighters for the RNZAF and had the amazing opportunity to fly the largest aircraft in the world.
    Jim was a 43 op Bomber Command veteran taking part in the Tirpitz raids in Norway in 1942, the 1000 bomber raids and many ops to Tobruk and Al Alamein flying Halifaxes for 10 Sqn.

  • @davidsheppard1362
    @davidsheppard1362 Před rokem +3

    It was a time when we were proud to be British. Of course I still am.

  • @carsten9168
    @carsten9168 Před 2 lety +18

    The Brabazon was using a 4-engine, 3-blade 'contra-rotating propeller' which though noisy, enhanced air intake, produced more power but with fuel efficiency. The US and British aircraft engineers never mastered the problems with the rotary shaft systems. The Russians however overcame that with 4-blades and produced the legendary Tupolev TU-95 'Bear', a huge, long range, swept-back wings, turboprop strategic bomber aircraft in 1952. It is still being used (after many upgrades) by the Russian Air Force even after 70 years !

    • @gingernutpreacher
      @gingernutpreacher Před 2 lety +6

      Eight engine's look it up if you don't believe me

    • @rayjames6096
      @rayjames6096 Před 2 lety

      The US never tried to produce a counter rotating prop engine for airline use so there was no reason to master the engine.

    • @cnfuzz
      @cnfuzz Před rokem +4

      The Russians had captured German engineers for the contraprop engines dev ,without them the tu95 would not have flown

    • @johneyton5452
      @johneyton5452 Před rokem +2

      The tu95 geared hunbs are so noisy they can be detected by submarines.

    • @frankd7905
      @frankd7905 Před rokem +1

      Clearly there were 8 engines as could be seen by the start up of a set of engines and the 8 air intakes per wing. Don't really have to look things up just have to observe. Sad that the aircraft was not saved. Lots of man hours painstakingly spent in producing it. Sad when it was destroyed. Much the same as the Avro Arrow in Canada. Easier to tear something apart than to put it together.

  • @yerfillinois8254
    @yerfillinois8254 Před 2 lety +35

    To have such technology in 1949, was genius.

    • @jensahlers
      @jensahlers Před 2 lety +4

      Stimmt.

    • @sirmalus5153
      @sirmalus5153 Před 2 lety +7

      A bit old fashioned though by that time and a dead end.

    • @johnmunro4952
      @johnmunro4952 Před 2 lety +7

      She was obsolete before she even flew. Technology was moving at an incredible pace in those days.

    • @billhosko7723
      @billhosko7723 Před rokem

      @@sirmalus5153 Thanks KAREN...

    • @billhosko7723
      @billhosko7723 Před rokem

      @@johnmunro4952 Thanks KAREN...

  • @steventurner8428
    @steventurner8428 Před rokem +5

    A British spruce goose, one only but this thing actually flew

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Před rokem

      The spruce goose flew too, but only once!

  • @omnacky
    @omnacky Před rokem +3

    And then they made the SR-71 15 years later

  • @HomeAtLast501
    @HomeAtLast501 Před rokem +12

    Beautiful bird, beautiful take-off, beautiful landing.

  • @scottowens1535
    @scottowens1535 Před rokem +9

    A excellent job of handling something that was in full stall. As stated it should have been doing 250 , at 160 it's amazing how in the video you can see him correcting with the stall condition he could feel... Applause!!

  • @Eructation1
    @Eructation1 Před 2 lety +18

    Looked under powered. ROC after take off low, nose pitched down soon after take off to gain airspeed it seems. Remember, this was an unloaded aircraft.

    • @DoubleMonoLR
      @DoubleMonoLR Před rokem +3

      Remember, it was it's first test flight.

  • @jaymac7203
    @jaymac7203 Před rokem +4

    What a sight that must have been 😳

  • @skychief7716
    @skychief7716 Před rokem +5

    Today is the first time I’ve ever heard of the Brabazon. The only thing I know about it is what I listened to in this video.
    Nevertheless I have three comments about the Barbazon:
    1. It should have been built with jet engines and not reciprocating engines.
    2. I’m guessing here, but with its power to weight ratio I’ll bet it was extremely under powered.
    3. It was a very sleek and beautiful aircraft. For that the designers should take a big bow.

    • @saveyourbacon6164
      @saveyourbacon6164 Před rokem +1

      To be successful, the Brabazon needed to be able to pack in passengers, not like the cattle class of today, but sufficient to achieve satisfactory costs per seat mile, and to have the range to enable it to operate on long-distance sectors, and performance to enable it to achieve satisfactory turnarounds. It is doubtful if the jet engines of the time could have helped, as they had a voracious appetite for fuel.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Před rokem

      Yes, it was totally underpowered and that was a major reason for its failure. So the Lockheed Super Constellation became the "Queen of the Skies" of the 1950ies.

    • @olsmokey
      @olsmokey Před rokem

      @@NicolaW72 Then the Comet came along to be "Queen of the Skies" until it kept falling out of those very same skies. Oh well...

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Před rokem

      @@olsmokey The Comet was therefore never the "Queen of the Skies".

  • @brucestafford1813
    @brucestafford1813 Před rokem +1

    This was a beautiful piece of art.

  • @robertmatch6550
    @robertmatch6550 Před 2 lety +5

    Interesting looking plane I knew nothing about. Thank you.

  • @spaceenemiesnovel
    @spaceenemiesnovel Před 2 lety +3

    Great footage. Nice view of the past.

  • @the51project
    @the51project Před 2 lety +7

    A good example of how British designers got it completely wrong - cruised at only 250mph, at the dawning of the jet age. Luxury inside, not bums on seats. Same as the complete waste that was Concorde - the plane that helped finish UK airliner industry. Too loud to fly over land, too expensive, too small seat capacity - Jumbo jet, entirely different, and still flying. If the UK had put money into more wide body jet airliners, it would have an aircraft industry competing against the USA today - due to all the experienced workers gained in the war. And that experience passed down.

  • @suprianto6897
    @suprianto6897 Před rokem +2

    First amazing airplane🤩

  • @afterburner2869
    @afterburner2869 Před rokem +3

    That fuselage is very reminiscent of the Lockheed Constellation’s fuselage.

  • @wesinman2312
    @wesinman2312 Před rokem +2

    Great video, what a huge plane!

  • @giselo66
    @giselo66 Před 4 lety +199

    Fantastic airplane!

    • @tomsharpe2251
      @tomsharpe2251 Před 2 lety +3

      Aeroplane*

    • @Erkele
      @Erkele Před 2 lety +1

      @@tomsharpe2251 Lentokone

    • @davidsimpson9647
      @davidsimpson9647 Před 2 lety +1

      Dreadful piece of garbage!! Underperforming,underpowered,sloppy construction

    • @tomsharpe2251
      @tomsharpe2251 Před 2 lety

      @@Erkele karl pilkington

    • @mattpaulson1044
      @mattpaulson1044 Před rokem

      Only made a few flights before structural cracks manifested in wings. Hardy a great plane

  • @tonyhancock3912
    @tonyhancock3912 Před 4 lety +200

    Marvellous

  • @greattobeadub
    @greattobeadub Před 2 lety +10

    And British aviation lived happily ever after and dominated commercial aircraft building.

  • @johnnyfreedom3437
    @johnnyfreedom3437 Před 4 měsíci

    That's absolutely amazing that that Behemoth got off the ground in a little over 1500 ft! Runways today are over a mile long, This Plane would have had no problem! A little before my time though. That's a great pilot in that plane. Getting up is one thing getting safely down is another!!

  • @Whiterose-eb1no
    @Whiterose-eb1no Před 2 lety +9

    Watching this video wow what a feeling 🥰

  • @vishwassurve589
    @vishwassurve589 Před 2 lety +3

    Bravo for Efforts of scientists and technology revolution.

  • @danizweifler6061
    @danizweifler6061 Před rokem +1

    this guy knew how to land an plane.. ! // climb out did scare me quite a bit // don't even think about a take-off in hhh-conditions !!

  • @alanchantiefighterskuanlia627

    Truly awesome plane which is way ahead of its time. A flying luxury cruise ship. .

    • @borusa32
      @borusa32 Před rokem +2

      I think it was more likely significantly out of date by the time it took to the air. If it was intended to steal passengers from cruise ships that bird had already flown and flown again by 1949.

    • @xkgbciax5286
      @xkgbciax5286 Před rokem +2

      well it was when it was thought of but b4 it was a prototype it was all ready too old and anyone can see it was way underpowered just from the rollout and take off and on top of that as it was test flight so im guessing the fuel would have very lite load and only a few on board no bags

  • @sailingstpommedeterre4905

    Wow, never knew about wonderful aircraft

  • @NicolaW72
    @NicolaW72 Před rokem +5

    This aircraft (G-AGWP) was the only Brabazon ever built - it was a sensation at its time but unfortunately economically totally unsuccesful. Instead of the Brabazon the Lockheed Super Constellation became the "Queen of the Skies" in the 1950ies. The Bristol Britannia as successor of the Brabazon became years later a little bit more succesful with 85 sold copies.

  • @drew65sep
    @drew65sep Před 2 lety +4

    I'd forgotten about this one...badass aircraft. Although this audio sounds like a V-1 "Buzz Bomb."

  • @nonowayjose9159
    @nonowayjose9159 Před rokem +1

    Beyond under powered...

  • @bruceburns1672
    @bruceburns1672 Před 2 lety +13

    Very sad , Britian had the manufacturing ability , it just needed the correct design , it turned out to be the Boeing 707 , but funnily enough the prop driven Lockheed Constellation was a sales success till 1958 .

    • @bojanglesthewizard8875
      @bojanglesthewizard8875 Před 2 lety

      I believe because the range was still very good

    • @alecfoster5542
      @alecfoster5542 Před 2 lety +2

      The Constellation was a superior plane in every aspect: capacity, speed, and performance. As elegant as the Brabazon was, it was a white elephant doomed from the start.

    • @eddiewillers1
      @eddiewillers1 Před 2 lety

      Well, it sort-of had the correct design with the de- Havilland DH-106 'Comet' - which also flew in 1949.

    • @flybobbie1449
      @flybobbie1449 Před 2 lety

      @@alecfoster5542 Constellation is half the size of the Brazen, half it's length to start.

    • @philipketchell8369
      @philipketchell8369 Před 2 lety

      The Bristol Britannia did OK.

  • @ghostofdre
    @ghostofdre Před 5 měsíci +1

    It was obsolete before it even flew, this was the dawn of the jet age.

  • @davidchant5550
    @davidchant5550 Před rokem +1

    Great film of the mighty Brabazon. I have seen many pictures and have a picture of my father-in-law, an RAF instructor examining the Brabazon for possible purchase by the RAF as a long-range transport. As an Aero engineer, this film shows clearly what is wrong, she is too heavy and underpowered, a classic design by government committee failure. 100mph under design cruise speed, blimey! she looks like about to stall! From the film, the wing design also looks odd, a very high drag straight arrangement, sweep it back guys! There were many such aero design failures in the 1940s. Interesting that many of the successful aero designs were private venture, e.g. the Mosquito, Hurricane, etc.. The engines are actually 8 off, 2 coupled together to one contra prop, a fatigue nightmare. Germany tried this on the Heinkel 177 and failed. Brabazon needed jet engines, probably 6 at that weight and at that time. The problem is that after the war the country was broken in many ways including financially, and such projects were bankrupting the UK aviation industry. DH with the comet got it right in design performance, though had to learn about airframe pressurization and fatigue, though the fatal crashes were well below the airframe fatigue flight cycles...that is another story. Only the Brabazon hanger survives today and only just. I think all of us and the Nation wanted Brabazon to be a winner, and that is what makes me sad, though she does look magnificent.

  • @WarhammerWings
    @WarhammerWings Před rokem +1

    Now if they put Ghost jets in it it would have definitely been a game changer in commercial aviation.

  • @PacoOtis
    @PacoOtis Před 2 lety +5

    It was scrapped in 1953. Think of all the hopes and work and dreams that went into it.

    • @JBofBrisbane
      @JBofBrisbane Před rokem

      Plus the twelve million quid from the British taxpayers.

  • @Glen.Danielsen
    @Glen.Danielsen Před rokem +1

    Why have I never heard of this magisterial plane? 🇺🇸💛🇬🇧

  • @rattywoof5259
    @rattywoof5259 Před 2 lety +6

    They had to destroy an entire village to lengthen the runway!

    • @stephenbaker7079
      @stephenbaker7079 Před 2 lety +2

      Yes, I remember that being a Bristolian living in Lawrence Weston at the time, very close to Filton. I remember being told that the Brabazon took off in less space than first calculated making the demolition of the village unnecessary - can anyone confirm that?

  • @trevormillar1576
    @trevormillar1576 Před rokem +1

    After its second flight, they found structural cracks that meant the wings would gave dropped off if she went up again; the whole project had to be scrapped.

  • @Jabberstax
    @Jabberstax Před 2 lety +3

    What a shame we don't have the aviation or car industry we used to.

  • @brianlam1663
    @brianlam1663 Před 2 lety +1

    My Gawd!! Wort will these megnificent men end their flying machines do next!?

  • @fattymcfatso1083
    @fattymcfatso1083 Před rokem +1

    It's empty weight was only 73 tons. Impressive at the time but today's largest planes are heavier.
    Never flown commercially. Ahead of its time since it provided for luxury accomodations we see on some airlines today in which each passenger has their own personal space - the equivalent of a very small office/bedroom.

  • @olcotttheosophy
    @olcotttheosophy Před 2 lety +8

    Thanks scientists and engineers. World changed by Engineers and scientists..

  • @ichabodon
    @ichabodon Před 2 lety +14

    What a sight that must have been. To actually be there and see it.

  • @smw381st
    @smw381st Před 2 lety +3

    The B36 with 6 pusher prop engines and 4 jet engines also flew in 1949 and Max takeoff weight: 410,000 lb (185,973 kg) 205 Ton machine

    • @rayjames6096
      @rayjames6096 Před 2 lety

      B-36 first flight was in 1946, it entered service in 1948.

    • @smw381st
      @smw381st Před 2 lety

      @@rayjames6096 Ok thx for that info and a friend of mine used to work on them

  • @edwardfletcher7790
    @edwardfletcher7790 Před 2 lety

    Damn that thing is LOUD !
    Contra-rotating props make a lot of noise !

  • @mixe1
    @mixe1 Před rokem +3

    My father was born in that year. God those planes were slow :D

  • @anderikusjuadi
    @anderikusjuadi Před 2 lety +2

    Amazingly amazing!!

  • @sudarshanrajbhandari391
    @sudarshanrajbhandari391 Před 2 lety +6

    How proud they all might have been then

  • @bax545
    @bax545 Před rokem +1

    wonderfully menacing haunting sound the prop engines make - beautiful!

  • @Rayburn58
    @Rayburn58 Před 2 lety +2

    This lemon was obsolete before it even left the ground.

  • @nationalelectronicssrilanka
    @nationalelectronicssrilanka Před 3 měsíci

    பழைய காலத்தை நினைவூட்டுகிறதுகோடி கோடி இன்பம் பெறவே பாடலை டி ஆர் மகாலிங்கமும் பாடியிருக்கார். பாடல் முடிவில் அவரும் லீலா சுசிலா பாடிய ராகாலாபனையை தனியா பாடியதை திப்புவால் அப்படியே பாடமுடியுமா. மேதாவிகளின் மெட்டை மேதைகள் பாடினார்கள். நீங்கள்ளாம் யார்?மோதி சுசிலா பாடிய காணா இன்பம் பாடலை திப்பு பாடிக்காட்டட்டுமே இன்னும் நிறைய இருக்கு
    நிரஞ்சன் என்பவர் இதே நிகழ்ச்சியில் பாடினார். மதுகோபாலக்ருஷ்ணன் இதே நிகழ்ச்சியில் முன்பு செந்தமிழ்த்தேன் மொழியாள் பாடினார்.நீங்க நடுவர்களா?... புடுங்கிங்க... நீங்க என்ன புடுங்கினிங்க... நீங்க யாருன்னே எங்களுக்கு தெரியல...ஜட்ஜ்கள்ள வசந்தனுக்கடுத்ததா இருக்கவர் அன்பு ,பண்புள்ளவரா தெரியுறார். பேச்சில் உண்மையான கரிசனமும் அன்பும் தெரியுது

  • @alanpontet1671
    @alanpontet1671 Před rokem +4

    Although this was one of those behind the times technical achievements, the fuselage looks nonetheless more aerodynamic than today's airliners! Seems the smooth front end informed the Comet, after which we didn't have another smooth front end until the B787 and the A350. Although again, the engineers obviously knew what they were doing, the Brabazon looks under-powered - those props look too small for that enormous fuselage and those gigantic wings - if it doesn't look right...? Perhaps this demonstrated the limitations of propeller-driven propulsion - you have to have enormous propellers which demand greater ground clearance and longer gear legs and which present more challenges, and numerous engines because of their power limitations as compared to jet power and which soon replaced it.

    • @NicolaW72
      @NicolaW72 Před rokem +1

      Yes, this was one of the huge problems of the Brabazon: it was underpowered with its traditional propellors - you can even see it in this video how difficult it was to climb for this aircraft. For an aircraft of this size you need at least turboprops - or jet engines.

  • @Jnthnpg
    @Jnthnpg Před rokem +5

    Wingspan of Waterloo Bridge? Holy cow.

    • @kostephan9442
      @kostephan9442 Před rokem

      Either Waterloo bridge is smaller than I thought or that’s got to be a slight exaggeration…I mean that’s huge 😢

  • @amitkarn6669
    @amitkarn6669 Před 6 dny

    This is the first aeroplane which was made by our engineers on the basis of my research with the excellent remarks.

  • @mariannwatt2678
    @mariannwatt2678 Před rokem

    Slide rule and brains what a fine aircraft should have been a game changer ! Great UK avation history cheers ! Retired us a&p mechanic.

  • @davecrupel2817
    @davecrupel2817 Před rokem +1

    She would perform considerably better with modern turboprops of equivalent size.
    Or even semi-modern ones like the Kuznetsov NK-12.

    • @sablatnic8030
      @sablatnic8030 Před rokem +1

      They were actually building a mkII version with turboprops, when the project was halted.

  • @Marc1973Dez
    @Marc1973Dez Před 2 lety +2

    INTERESTING: apparently back in the day, the reporters were not that much into "hearing the machine". It would be a GOLD to listen to this beauty with no voice / music interferences. (now, the other interesting thing , at least for central American and south American, is that any beast with engine in it are called SHE in the USA. I live here in the USA for decades and still NOT able to call cars / motorcycles / planes / tractors as SHE. ) For us (foreigners , she = Barbie & Pink stuffs ).

  • @massihkheiry7411
    @massihkheiry7411 Před 2 lety +3

    With those engines was an amazing flyer