The N-1: The Soviet Moon Rocket

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  • čas přidán 16. 05. 2024
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Komentáře • 1,6K

  • @megaprojects9649
    @megaprojects9649  Před 3 lety +66

    Check out Squarespace: squarespace.com/megaprojects for 10% off on your first purchase.

    • @estraume
      @estraume Před 3 lety +2

      Hi Simon and script writers! You should make a video about the potential Yellowstone super-volcano geothermal power plant that could have supplied energy to the whole of USA for thousands of years. www.nationalgeographic.com/science/2018/08/news-yellowstone-supervolcano-geothermal-energy-debate-iceland-hawaii/

    • @frankboyd7993
      @frankboyd7993 Před 3 lety +6

      Squarespace...the company that will kill your website if they disagree with your opinion.

    • @goatbacon2977
      @goatbacon2977 Před 3 lety +1

      Hey if you keep doing 2 vida at a time, I will enjoy that. Bonjour Weewee

    • @user-cw1pf3vk6f
      @user-cw1pf3vk6f Před 3 lety +1

      Ok I have to write here a small follow up, because the story wasnt completed. Also it would be great if you could do more research on this topic and do small follow up video.
      Soviets actually planed from the start, 12 N-1 rockets for the USSR moon mission. Out of those twelve, only last two (so no. 11&12), was meant to actually go to the moon and out of those two, no.11 was just meant to do crewed moon orbit and no.12 was meant to be actual landing.
      They had No.5 rocket actually about 90% built and No.6 about 40%. Their scientific tactics was building-while-honing, which meant they've calculated that by rocket number 5, they will get (by trile and error) all the errors fixed, since funding wasnt the issue back then. When no4 exploded, they've found the cause (which was in no1 initially to connect all those engines correctly so everything can work as singular thrust) and incorporated fixes into no5. All subsequent launches were meant to be unmaned except last two, in which they will test various aspects of the vehicle and mission.
      But after no.4 government pulled the plug by unknown reasons (even that no5 was almost finished and scheduled for launch) and all of the remaining rockets were dismantled.
      Please check all this that Ive wrote and dig a little deeper.
      Btw, lovely videos in any case,
      Cheers

    • @marcbeebee6969
      @marcbeebee6969 Před 3 lety +2

      Simon I saw a #mig video.... I just want that video and you know it. Algedly.

  • @SpecialEDy
    @SpecialEDy Před 3 lety +852

    The Soviets were like me in Kerbal Space Program:
    "I haven't researched 2.5m or 3m engines yet, let me just slap 30 of these smaller engines on there".
    "Oh it blew up, add a few more struts and relaunch"

    • @DarthRagnarok343
      @DarthRagnarok343 Před 3 lety +57

      The smaller rocket nozzles have a smaller internal pressure than larger ones, making them more reliable and safer. The flip-side is of course you need more of them which means more chances for something to go wrong. The soviets made some really nice big engines too.

    • @M3PH11
      @M3PH11 Před 3 lety +27

      it always needs more struts

    • @Blubbstock
      @Blubbstock Před 3 lety +23

      space "engineers": just put 2000 mini engines on a 2000 ton steel pyramid and you are ready to go

    • @robsmith3940
      @robsmith3940 Před 3 lety +29

      SpaceX: Hold my beer

    • @slopedarmor
      @slopedarmor Před 3 lety +16

      new spacex rocket will have even more engines on the first stage, 31 I think?

  • @heatherhutchinson3625
    @heatherhutchinson3625 Před 3 lety +457

    Next on megaprojects: Simon Whistler's CZcams channels empire

    • @reggiep75
      @reggiep75 Před 3 lety +53

      And his magnificent face rug that even Brian Blessed fears!

    • @CMDRSweeper
      @CMDRSweeper Před 3 lety +14

      You forgot to add "Megaempire" to it :D

    • @danhaworth6967
      @danhaworth6967 Před 3 lety +10

      "allegedly" 😉

    • @patrickjordan2233
      @patrickjordan2233 Před 3 lety +21

      @@danhaworth6967 aLEGENDly? Lol

    • @Faldrian
      @Faldrian Před 3 lety +7

      I would be interested in their workflow, as Simon is definitely not writing / preparing those episodes by himself (you can see him remarking some parts in the script in one episode, so we has not written it himself). :)

  • @RedPuma90
    @RedPuma90 Před 3 lety +701

    Surplus NK-33 engines actually survived the cold war in a warehouse somewhere. When they where rediscovered the american engineers wouldn't believe their performance specs, they just sounded too good to be true. Turned out that the sovjet engines where far ahead of the american kerolox engines because the Russians had solved the problem of metal corrosion in oxygen rich environments with their superior metallurgy. The ancient engines where subsequently bought by an american rocket company, fitted with modern electronics and flew again on american rockets. One of the most interesting trivia stories ever I think.

    • @davidbunner6708
      @davidbunner6708 Před 3 lety +130

      The Soviets got the propulsion Nazis; we got the guidance ones. They could always put up bigger payloads; but, our guidance was always better.

    • @thomaslawrence2210
      @thomaslawrence2210 Před 3 lety +46

      The first stage had 28 rockets motors initially. The third launch failed because the engines all put a slight swirl in the exhaust. One was insignificant but 28 put an unexpected torque on the rocket, causing it to spin. To fix this, 2 more rockets were added and angled to produce a counter torque. This worked on the fourth test, but other problems caused it to fail. A fifth test might have been successful, but we will never know.

    • @darkpepsi
      @darkpepsi Před 3 lety +17

      Orbital ATK (before Northrop Grumman bought them) used those rocket engines for their stage rockets for resupplying missions for the ISS.

    • @Flying_GC
      @Flying_GC Před 3 lety +25

      @Adi Adiani you can't spell let alone make sense. This, is the truth.

    • @tylerharry6319
      @tylerharry6319 Před 3 lety +52

      Fun fact relating to this: The Americans were scared that due to the Soviet Union collapse, that their rocket parts would be sold and their rocket scientists would be poached by rival countries to the US like Iran. So the US employed a shit ton of soviet scientists and went to buy up a bunch of their engines once we saw their specs. The US built the RD-180 engine based off of the RD-170 the Russians designed. We took their engine and applied a bit more modern reverse engineering in 2000, and now the Atlas launch vehicle from ULA uses it.

  • @Ravenforce3
    @Ravenforce3 Před 3 lety +231

    Minor clarification for those who don't know: the pogo Simon mentioned that showed up during Apollo 13 happened in the center engine of the second stage. It had nothing to do with the famous accident.

    • @brentgranger7856
      @brentgranger7856 Před 3 lety +11

      That's what I was thinking, too. I considered clarifying that myself, but I saw your comment. If only that could've been the only glitch for the Apollo 13 mission.

    • @sammorgan31
      @sammorgan31 Před 3 lety +17

      For those who still don't know, the famous malfunction of Apollo 13 was a stray spark from a stirrer in an oxygen tank. Sparks in pure oxygen are very bad.

    • @5Andysalive
      @5Andysalive Před 3 lety +1

      I knew what he meant but i never heard that early cutoff being connected with Pogo.

    • @xxManscapexx
      @xxManscapexx Před 3 lety +5

      Glad someone cleared this up.

    • @jacksons1010
      @jacksons1010 Před 3 lety +9

      Apollo 6 (AS-502) suffered severe pogo oscillations, but the rocket survived - barely. Pogo remained a problem on the Saturn V at least thru Apollo 17, although each incident produced improvements that lessened the severity. The final Saturn V (Skylab I) had severe vibrations that damaged the payload, but I'm not sure if those were caused by pogo or aerodynamic forces.

  • @SUNRISE-ADVENTURES
    @SUNRISE-ADVENTURES Před 3 lety +544

    I would LOVE to see one on the VAB [vehicle assembly building] That NASA uses!!!

    • @Katniss218
      @Katniss218 Před 3 lety +12

      Same!

    • @tokyosmash
      @tokyosmash Před 3 lety +3

      Big facts

    • @benjammin1304
      @benjammin1304 Před 3 lety +14

      Destin from smarter every day did a tour of a rocket assembly plant a couple months ago. I can't remember which company but I think it was somewhere in Alabama. Super interesting shit.

    • @evilben3810
      @evilben3810 Před 3 lety +3

      vertical assembly building*

    • @michaelputnam2532
      @michaelputnam2532 Před 3 lety +4

      Compare the NASA's VAB with SpaceX's High Bay. Construction times, size, cost, capability, number of rockets produced per year (these will need to wait a few months, but should be interesting)

  • @avpostbox
    @avpostbox Před 3 lety +74

    Having a background in studying airspace back in USSR I have heard from the guys related to the industry that N1, perhaps, could be working if Korolev would live longer, not only because he was smarter, but he seemed to have some power to be convincing and knew how to insist on things the way he wanted them and he exercised this skill not only with inferiors but superiors as well. N1 was meant to be a vehicle not only for the moon but also as a lorry to transport parts (I guess like 5 pcs) for assembling a rocket for Mars on the orbit. But after he had passed, things were not going exactly in a beneficial way, mostly due to some "political" things in the industry. Well... there are "but's" as it was mentioned in the video.

    • @aladik2010
      @aladik2010 Před rokem

      the moscow Nazis KILLED UKRAINIAN Korolev in 1966, and moscow katsap Mishin took his place.
      Which the !!! 8 !!! years he destroy space industry built by UKRAINIAN Korolev.
      And only in 1974 Mishin was dismissed with shame and the UKRAINIAN Glushko came to rake all the shit after the katsap.

    • @bigianh
      @bigianh Před měsícem

      The amazing thing is America thought they were in a space race with the whole USSR when in fact the politburo couldn't have cared less they treated Korolev with derision until they saw the headlines from the wester press after Gagarin's flight into space. Korolev achieved everything he did by shear force of personality and essentially blagged the soviet space program. I have no doubt had he survived the N1 would have made it to lunar orbit at the least. Towards the end of his life he did finally start to get some recognition though always behind closed doors he is the only person who was sent to the gulags who received the Order of Lenin and last time I checked he was one of only two people to receive it twice. The only time he publicly received any acknowledgment he received a state funeral with Leonid Brezhnev (General secretary of the USSR) as one of his pallbearers he is interred in Red Square mausoleum next to Uri Gagarin and Vladimir Komarov.

  • @FrenchSpaceGuy
    @FrenchSpaceGuy Před 6 měsíci +9

    If I may, here are some factual errors I'd like to correct on the short portion about the N-1 description:
    6:38 - The N-1 had 5 stages (6 including the LK), not 4. The 4th stage did not make it to the Moon.
    6:41 - The Bloc G which performed the TLI was not the last stage. It was Bloc D.
    6:50 - The Bloc D was in charge of the Moon orbit insertion.
    7:15 - The center 6 engines did not participate to the control of the rocket. It was the outer 24 engines which did.
    8:27 - The 3rd stage is not called Bloc 5, it's Bloc V. The cyrillic letter V, not the roman number 5 like in "Saturn V". All the N-1 stages have the first letters of the cyrillic alphabet: A, B, V, G, D and E. And as akready said, Bloc V was not the last.
    8:53 - Bloc G and an NK-21 engine, not an NK-19.
    9:00 - It was the Bloc D which made the manoeuvers around the Moon, and it did not have the same engine. It was an RD-58.

    • @noahezer9295
      @noahezer9295 Před měsícem

      Tim Dodd, The Everyday Astronaut, made a great video on the history of Soviet rockets and rocket engines and also the stories on each rocket family. From the early V-2-like rockets to rockets like the N-1, Energia and even diverting to non-Soviet rockets like Antares and Atlas. I highly recommend him.

  • @collinriley4976
    @collinriley4976 Před 3 lety +23

    You mentioned N-1 was one of the largest non-nuclear explosions. Two others I know of were the USS Mt Hood AE-11 and the Halifax explosion December 6, 1917 (which author Laura McDonald listed as the largest non-nuclear explosion in her book “Curse of the Narrows”). (I served on a sister shop of the Mt Hood in 1965-66, and found some references to that explosion in old files in the ship’s office where I worked.) A video on the subject of largest non-nuclear explosions would be interesting.

    • @chrislong3938
      @chrislong3938 Před rokem +1

      Check out the footage of the S.S. John Burke in the Pacific!
      The Mt. Hood incidentally was named during a period in the U.S. Navy when they had a good sense of good gallows humor by naming all their ammo ships after volcanoes!

  • @alklazaris3741
    @alklazaris3741 Před 3 lety +65

    Legend has it when renovating a building they found the android Simon plugged into a corner. Discovering that Simon could work without sleep and didn't need to be shutdown when charging, the team immediately put Simon to work making videos.

  • @theangelbelow88
    @theangelbelow88 Před 3 lety +149

    "Success is nice, but explosions are nicer" - Michael Bay... Maybe

    • @jrfish007
      @jrfish007 Před 3 lety +6

      Allegedly

    • @flatplant
      @flatplant Před 3 lety +2

      @@jrfish007 but also really

    • @richardmillhousenixon
      @richardmillhousenixon Před 3 lety +5

      A failure is only a failure if you do not learn from it. -someone, somewhere, probably.
      Besides, that isn't an explosion, that's just a Rapid Unscheduled Disassembly.

    • @jeromecabarus6893
      @jeromecabarus6893 Před 3 lety

      BIGGEST FIREWORKS EVER SEEN!!!!

    • @Jeffrey314159
      @Jeffrey314159 Před 3 lety

      @@richardmillhousenixon Did Elon Musk say that before or after his rocket blew up landing on that ocean platform

  • @wesselbonnet2561
    @wesselbonnet2561 Před 3 lety +78

    Simon: “... the N1 had more thrust than the Saturn V.”
    Korolev’s ghost: “Ba-da-boom-boom-disshhhh!”

    • @benn454
      @benn454 Před 3 lety +1

      Saturn V was bigger. It's a size of the tool vs. motion of the ocean situation.

    • @richardmillhousenixon
      @richardmillhousenixon Před 3 lety +1

      @@benn454 yeah? My 2014 Ford Focus is significantly larger than a Ducati Panigale, but the Ducati still makes over 70 more horsepower than my car despite the Ducati's engine displacement being almost 900 cc _smaller_ than the engine in my Focus. Size and power are two different things.

    • @benn454
      @benn454 Před 3 lety +4

      @@richardmillhousenixon Way to take a dumb dick joke way too seriously. Good job.

    • @Cenentury0941
      @Cenentury0941 Před 3 lety +13

      At least the Saturn V lasted more than 90 seconds lol.

    • @CraigS1124
      @CraigS1124 Před 3 lety +6

      Yes it did have more thrust, but it did not work, so that point is mute.

  • @jnichols3
    @jnichols3 Před 3 lety +5

    There is a great postscript to the N-1 saga. The surplus engines that were supposed to be destroyed were saved by engineers who hid them for decades. The irony is that being built by the USSR during the cold war for the space race, they ended up being further developed into the engines that propelled the American Atlas III space launcher. The Atlas III was a direct desendant of the Atlas ICBM thats main purpose was to deliver nuclear weapons to the USSR. The upgraded engines are still used in the Atlas V. The Atlas V is basically new and replaces the earlier ATLAS ICBM derived series boosters.

  • @starbomber
    @starbomber Před 3 lety +26

    "We need to put something in space, Laika! Wanna become a hero of the soviet union?"
    Laika: "Blyat..."

    • @lukestrawwalker
      @lukestrawwalker Před 2 lety

      Laika was a Moscow stray dog IIRC... Think it was Moscow. Laika means "Barker" in Russian LOL:) OL J R :)

  • @samiraperi467
    @samiraperi467 Před 3 lety +38

    13:21 Missed a chance to quote Marvin the Martian and say "Earth shattering kaboom".

    • @skyden24195
      @skyden24195 Před 3 lety +9

      Where's the kaboom? There was supposed to be an Earth shattering kaboom. The Plutonium Q-38 explosive space modulator! That creature has stolen the space modulator!!!
      Delays, delays...

    • @lukestrawwalker
      @lukestrawwalker Před 2 lety +1

      @@skyden24195 Eludium Q-36 Explosive Space Modulator... Eludium is next to Unobtanium on the Periodic Table... OL J R :)

    • @skyden24195
      @skyden24195 Před 2 lety +1

      @@lukestrawwalker ah.. thanks. It's been a while since I've seen the cartoon.

  • @danhaworth6967
    @danhaworth6967 Před 3 lety +52

    Minor nitpick, nitrogen tetroxide is an oxidiser, not a fuel.. other than that, awesome video 👌😊

    • @prusak26
      @prusak26 Před 3 lety +2

      Beat me to it!

    • @vanberg3625
      @vanberg3625 Před 3 lety +2

      yep, the Fuel part would probably have been UDMH (Unsymetric Dimethyl Hydrazine)

    • @vast634
      @vast634 Před 3 lety +1

      Even nitrogen tetroxide can be burned as fuel ... with fluorine

    • @efulmer8675
      @efulmer8675 Před 3 lety +2

      @@vast634 Everything can be burned with flourine. Especially if you mix it with some chlorine into chlorine triflouride! Then you get a wonderful fuel that is hypergolic with everything, especially test engineers.

    • @lukestrawwalker
      @lukestrawwalker Před 2 lety

      @@efulmer8675 Yeah SAND is even a fuel with that stuff... LOL:) OL J R :)

  • @dianehansen5552
    @dianehansen5552 Před 3 lety +6

    Now, I know a ton about these rockets - having lived through that era and followed every scrap of information - I just HAD to watch this video because you put things so succinctly.
    Well done as always.

  • @sirius4k
    @sirius4k Před 3 lety +62

    So, Sergei and Valentin were basically Farnsworth & Wernstrom. (Futurama)

    • @MrDragunovich
      @MrDragunovich Před 3 lety +1

      And another soviet rocket scientist Mikhail Yangel was basically G-man from Half-Life. Just search his photos.

    • @mydogbrian4814
      @mydogbrian4814 Před 3 lety

      - That show was s lame. Cant belive it was created by the Simpsons team.

    • @richardmillhousenixon
      @richardmillhousenixon Před 3 lety +3

      WERNSTROM!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @sirius4k
      @sirius4k Před 3 lety +6

      @@mydogbrian4814 That's like... your opinion, man. It was awesome. Better than Simpsons, actually.

    • @oldfrend
      @oldfrend Před 3 lety

      @@sirius4k at its best it was profane poetry. it just didn't reach that level as often as i'd have liked.

  • @dannydaw59
    @dannydaw59 Před 3 lety +27

    The N1 was more complicated than the Saturn V. More things that can go wrong.

    • @guillermohoffmann8417
      @guillermohoffmann8417 Před 3 lety +3

      then ...they went wrong LOL

    • @user-pm9jh3ge5q
      @user-pm9jh3ge5q Před 3 lety +7

      N1 is not a lunar rocket, this rocket is for flights to Mars. besides everything, it was brought to perfection, the problem of accidents was the engine, but it was replaced with another one and the rocket was fully ready for a successful launch, but there was an order to close the project and destroy the rocket and documentation.

    • @Inversed
      @Inversed Před 3 lety

      My thoughts exactly. 30 first stage engines + fire extinguisher next to each one + all the plumbing + KORD engine control system that was supposed to keep the engines in balance - the complexity is just insane.

    • @shoora813
      @shoora813 Před 3 lety +2

      N1 program was severely underfunded, while America put all the chips on Apollo. Quite frankly, fate of (self proclaimed by Kennedy) “race to the moon” was predetermined.

    • @martinhughes2549
      @martinhughes2549 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Inversed Except the first stage did fly successfully almost to burnout, the engine shut down was however too violent and sheared a fuel line causing an explosion. It was an all up testing approach. Failures where expected, the problems would be ironed out after every flight. It sort of worked out like that. The flight planned for 1974 had a high chance of success, but by 1974 it was too late.

  • @whatitbescottyb3699
    @whatitbescottyb3699 Před 3 lety +92

    In Soviet Russia, it's 5th time's the charm, though you only get 4 attempts.

    • @jedutam
      @jedutam Před 3 lety

      in US USA .. 11 Starship attempts but ZERO sucess :D .. so ok .. this is video about begining .. However, to the US attempts from the beginning, it is necessary to add all the failures and explosions in Germany from World War II .. because Von. Branun engine has been used from the V2 for decades

    • @Wayoutthere
      @Wayoutthere Před 3 lety +5

      @@jedutam You are catastrophically stupid.. It doesn't matter how many Starships blow up, it matters how fast the improvements are implemented and what NASA/Roscosmos takes 10 years, SpaceX does in 3.

    • @Ragedaonenlonely
      @Ragedaonenlonely Před 3 lety +2

      @@jedutam Hah, offended Russian. Typical.

    • @cameronh3260
      @cameronh3260 Před 3 lety +3

      @@jedutam Dumbass....what about starhopper, SN5, SN6, and SN8-SN11 were all successfully flown until the landing part....

    • @EricKlien
      @EricKlien Před 2 lety +2

      Falcon 9 successfully landed on a drone ship with its fifth attempt. The announcer even said "The 5th time's the charm."

  • @thetruenolan6655
    @thetruenolan6655 Před 3 lety +9

    Speaking of giant rockets... I know it was never actually built, but a video on the immense US "Sea Dragon" rocket would be a GREAT story just because of the technical specifications!

  • @tfaltermeier
    @tfaltermeier Před 3 lety +16

    NTO is actually the oxidiser. The corresponding fuel is hydrazine. Which is just as nasty.

    • @ColdWindPhoenix84
      @ColdWindPhoenix84 Před 3 lety +4

      There are 4 different fuels that fall under the hydrazine title, I'm actually really curious which one was going to be used. N2H2, MMH, DMH or UDMH. I'm sure it course the Soviets wouldn't be using Rocketdyne's proprietary Aerozine 50.

    • @ColdWindPhoenix84
      @ColdWindPhoenix84 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Boof_dQw4w9WgXcQ awesome, thank you.

    • @kirkkerman
      @kirkkerman Před 3 lety

      @@Boof_dQw4w9WgXcQ yeah the rival rocket was supposed to be part of the same "Universal Rocket" system as the Proton, and would have used the same fuels.

  • @jacobbuxton932
    @jacobbuxton932 Před 3 lety

    So happy to see a video done on this!! Not many good ones out there like this!

  • @ksturmer5388
    @ksturmer5388 Před 3 lety +2

    Gotta say, your channel is absolutely brilliant, very well written and also, quite fun to watch!! Thanks for the extra education whilst Lockdown has been on. Keep this up! Fantastic stuff!

  • @Soundwave3591
    @Soundwave3591 Před 3 lety +44

    1:21 "One worked really well, and one didn't"
    Rudol von Stroheim: "GERMAN SCIENCE IS THE WORLD'S FINEST!"

    • @KonradTheWizzard
      @KonradTheWizzard Před 3 lety +4

      You do realize that both the engines of Saturn V and those of N-1 are descendants of the V-2 - right? Which itself was developed by a series of trial and error, not pure scientific calculation. So, German engineering lead to the success of Saturn V, the failure of N-1, and the enduring success of Progress (the Russian work-horse of a rocket). While German science merrily went on to calculate particle scattering on neutron stars.
      But what does Erich von Stroheim have to do with any of this?

    • @Desrtfox71
      @Desrtfox71 Před 3 lety +8

      @@KonradTheWizzard While this is true to some extent, the Saturn V was the result of the work of more than 400,000 people in the US. The F1 motor was several generations separated from the V2 (didn't even use the same fuels for example), and only certain parts of the Saturn V had any German engineering heritage at all. The Command capsule, moon lander, computer systems, etc. had no German legacy at all. People who claim that the Saturn V or N1 were the result of German engineering are missing the vast majority of the work done, and IMHO, missing the point nearly entirely.

    • @SkyFangKing
      @SkyFangKing Před 3 lety

      The VAB could hold 4 Saturn V fully built, a true Megaprojects.

    • @KonradTheWizzard
      @KonradTheWizzard Před 3 lety

      @@Desrtfox71 I whole heartedly agree with you.

    • @Soundwave3591
      @Soundwave3591 Před 3 lety

      @@KonradTheWizzard it's called a shitpost, based on the common (and hyper-simplified) trope that the reason NASA got to the moon first was because of Von Braun and the Nazi rocket scientists captured/recruited after WWII. IE, German Science.

  • @mr88cet
    @mr88cet Před 3 lety +4

    Excellent video!
    Just to make sure nobody’s confused, the “pogo” oscillations on Apollo 13 were not a huge deal, and were not what required its lunar mission to be aborted. That abort was caused by a crack in wiring insulation inside a liquid oxygen tank.
    However, Apollo 6, which was the second (unmanned) “all-up” test of a Saturn V, did suffer *severe* pogo oscillations that very nearly aborted the entire mission. It then suffered two failures in its second stage, but did finally achieve most of its mission objectives.

  • @xxManscapexx
    @xxManscapexx Před 3 lety +41

    Simon annoys me because I'm also bald with a beard, but while he looks slick I look like a serial killer.

    • @bigdmac33
      @bigdmac33 Před 3 lety +1

      :-D

    • @ScepticGinger89
      @ScepticGinger89 Před 3 lety +1

      Still better than looking like a very young grandpa which is how I look when I haven't shaved my head in two months or so.

    • @dirkdonger2887
      @dirkdonger2887 Před 2 lety

      Chicks dig the serial killer look

  • @evillemike2009
    @evillemike2009 Před 3 lety +1

    What makes these things is the great writing together with Simon's ever-improving presentation. It's a lot of work, done well.

  • @sowhat249
    @sowhat249 Před 3 lety +7

    Simon didn't mention it, but the engine of the N1, the NK33, was used on the American Antares 100 series, and is still used on the Russian Soyuz 2.1v. The USSR was convinced the N1 would work, so they built stockpiles of prebuilt engines for on demand availability. Spoiler alert: the N1 failed, but the engines on their own were engineered beautifully, so much so, some were bought by the US, and were used in smaller configurations on future rockets, like the Antares 110, 120 and 130 (which last flew in 2014), and in Russia on the current Soyuz 2.1v. The US used them up, and Russia is running on empty. The Antares 200 series is powered by an RD-181, and the future Soyuz 2.1v will be powered by RD-193, both coming from a family of engines engineered from the NK-33.

  • @scottmcintosh4397
    @scottmcintosh4397 Před 3 lety +22

    N-1.....
    The "N" means NYET!!!
    🌘 🚀💥🔥😲

  • @chrisdoe2659
    @chrisdoe2659 Před 3 lety +25

    I'd love to see one on the Space Shuttle. It was arguably a flawed concept from the beginning, and it didn't come close to reaching its goal of providing cheap, safe access to space. That being said, it was extremely ambitious and the end result was still a technological marvel despite its issues.

    • @rikvermar7583
      @rikvermar7583 Před 2 lety +5

      well said, the shuttle wasn't to blame for the 2 disasters - it was what was strapped to it that caused the disasters - but people don't see that or the other 133 successful missions

    • @lukestrawwalker
      @lukestrawwalker Před 2 lety +1

      @@rikvermar7583 The shuttle was a SYSTEM... as it turned out, a flawed, brittle system that had outlived its usefulness for what it cost. Later! OL J R :)

    • @rikvermar7583
      @rikvermar7583 Před 2 lety

      @@lukestrawwalker thankyou for your completely useless bit of info

    • @jesusramirezromo2037
      @jesusramirezromo2037 Před rokem +1

      @@rikvermar7583 Can't blame the boosters, since the shuttle was so badly designed that it needed it

    • @vvvvvv-op7jb
      @vvvvvv-op7jb Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@lukestrawwalker soviet N1: 4 missions 4 failed
      space shuttle: 135 missions 2 failed
      big difference

  • @ostrichbean
    @ostrichbean Před 2 lety +10

    "We don't want to hear about this. We want to hear about the giant Soviet version that blew up loads of times"
    I think that applies to most things

  • @leokimvideo
    @leokimvideo Před rokem +27

    Incredible rocket that ended up making some fancy bus shelters

    • @wpatrickw2012
      @wpatrickw2012 Před rokem +2

      Not true, one made a very fancy garden shed 🙃

    • @concept5631
      @concept5631 Před 10 měsíci

      Never would've expected a Thomas Toy channel to be here.

  • @tony22745
    @tony22745 Před 3 lety +5

    Simon, - love your Megaprojects videos and make a point of watching the Squarespace content to provide support. Thought the N1 program was a bit unfair on the Soviets in general and Mishin in particular. Whilst its true that none of †he (early) launches made it to space, the miracle is that the thing flew at all. Please bear in mind †hat the Saturn 5 program had †he benefit of †he US's enormous engineering infrastructure behind it, and could test components like engines etc on the ground before letting them loose on a real rocket. The Soviet's didn't have anything like that support and so had to "Iron out the kinks" in the machine "on the fly" as it were. That is why its worth mentioning that the four flights which were attempted were the first of a program of something like 12 - 14 before they even attempted a manned flight. Had the program not been cancelled (By Breshnev?), there was every chance it could have gone into service as a working vehicle after the bugs had been eliminated, - who knows? To my mind its something of a miracle that the thing flew at all, let alone working perfectly at an early stage in its development, after all staying aloft for 90 seconds (and travelling how far?) was a much better record than many of the early American rockets of considerably less power. Had Korolev lived there was every chance it would have succeeded.
    Best regards
    Martin Langley

  • @zam6877
    @zam6877 Před rokem

    I really enjoyed this...I just binged on two videos on this subject...each adding to the story...thanks!

  • @--enyo--
    @--enyo-- Před 3 lety

    I really like these paired videos that explore very similar (or competing) projects.

  • @silenttoxic707
    @silenttoxic707 Před 3 lety +40

    A great Megaproject would be a video on The Hubble Space Telescope!

    • @M3PH11
      @M3PH11 Před 3 lety +3

      The James Webb telescope would be better

    • @GryphonB
      @GryphonB Před 3 lety +1

      @@M3PH11 got too wait for it too launch and be proved first

    • @shoora813
      @shoora813 Před 3 lety

      You mean that limited(features?) edition Keyhole spy satellite?

    • @lukestrawwalker
      @lukestrawwalker Před 2 lety

      And how the shuttle nearly killed it, along with the Galileo probe to Jupiter, AND nearly cost us the Voyager "Grand Tour" of the outer solar system... Later! OL J R:)

  • @teflonpan115
    @teflonpan115 Před 3 lety +22

    This isn't as simple though. The first 10 flights of N-1 were EXPECTED to be failures by the ENGINEERS THEMSELVES. But the Soviet authorities canceled the project by the 4th flight.
    The budget of that project was 1/10 that of Saturn rocket flight. If not less.

    • @michaelputnam2532
      @michaelputnam2532 Před 3 lety +7

      A point not often made, but very critical. SpaceX is using similar logic to the Russians.

    • @alexandercarder2281
      @alexandercarder2281 Před 3 lety

      Michael Putnam that’s very interesting observation

    • @altergreenhorn
      @altergreenhorn Před 3 lety +1

      @@michaelputnam2532 Musk actually modified Soviet-Russian rocket technology

    • @michaelputnam2532
      @michaelputnam2532 Před 3 lety

      @@altergreenhorn He at least took on several of their ideas early on. He did try buying a Soviet rocket, too. I think some legacy of this is still there, but SpaceX has certainly shot past everyone else of late.

    • @ashipnerdoffical4260
      @ashipnerdoffical4260 Před 3 lety

      @@altergreenhorn while hiring only Americans...
      Fascinating. *thinking face*

  • @avejst
    @avejst Před 3 lety

    Thanks for sharing

  • @claudehall7889
    @claudehall7889 Před 3 lety

    Thank you Simon excellent video

  • @thekeytoairpower
    @thekeytoairpower Před 3 lety +19

    CCCP vs USA sugestion: Tupolev Tu-160 "B-1ski" vs Rockwell B-1 Lancer

    • @michaeldunne338
      @michaeldunne338 Před 3 lety +1

      That is a good suggestion. I remembered when the B-1 was pretty controversial, and even got cancelled by Carter (who would instead authorize the Advanced Technology Bomber and push cruise missiles), to be resurrected by Reagan in the early 1980s.

    • @longboardfella5306
      @longboardfella5306 Před 3 lety +2

      Michael Dunne I believe the B1-A was cancelled as it was a high attitude bomber but was susceptible to missiles. Reincarnation as B1-B as a low level bomber and in many ways a quite different plane. Also controversial since it's limited in use cases given limited stealth and limited fuselage life given stresses of low level flight. But still impressive. I've heard one take off at an air show. Wow!! My ears are still ringing! Id sure like to see the comparison with the White Swan

    • @thekeytoairpower
      @thekeytoairpower Před 3 lety +2

      @@longboardfella5306 I was stationed at a B1 Base (hence the screen name). Trust me when you are doing an engine running crew change and you can see the windows of your bus vibrating you come to appreciate the volume of the engines. At night you could hear the engine test stands from seven miles away.
      The B1 was sidelined for the first half of its career. It is now as much a workhorse as the B52. Honestly it's checkered past is one of the biggest problems. Because of the stops and starts in production led to the loss of parts suppliers so parts shortages are a constant problem. It is a great airframe, and it is about the most intimidating aircraft that I can think of on the battlefield. Well maybe the Warthog beats it, but it is a close second.

    • @llynellyn
      @llynellyn Před 3 lety +1

      That's two very different aircraft though, the Soviet contemporary to the B-1 Lancer is the Tu-22M Backfire (Not to be confused with the Tu-22 Blinder, a completely different aircraft with a very similar name). The Tu-160 is a much larger aircraft that exists in a class all it's own (just as the B-2 does).

    • @StrangerHappened
      @StrangerHappened Před 3 lety

      Those two planes are not really comparable, Tu-22(M) should be discussed instead.

  • @ChrisTian-ed8ol
    @ChrisTian-ed8ol Před 3 lety +12

    Soviet controller: I just lit a rocket....
    Soviet handler: So?
    Soviet controller: ROCKETS EXPLODE!

  • @stevencain8266
    @stevencain8266 Před rokem +1

    Apollo 13 may have had POGO occur; but the definitive cause of the O2 tank explosion in the Service Module was damage to the tank and contained systems when a heater was left on, thus electrical damage. When the stirring was activated, the short created by the damage that happened prior to the tank being installed to the SM was what caused the detonation. Thankfully, great work by the crew and mission control was able to get the craft and crew home and get pictures that helped in the postmortem of the SM.

  • @MrMan-zx6wm
    @MrMan-zx6wm Před 3 lety +3

    Oh how I LOVED this video!! ^^ just the way that you make these make me smile every time I watch one 😁 ( its so informational to , I mean that is the point ) but I also would like to put a consideration out there for a future video! How about the construction/story of St basil's cathedral? Ya know that one gingerbread looking Cathedral in the center of red square? Just a suggestion! But I’m gonna stop before this gets too long , love the content! :)

  • @noone.unknown
    @noone.unknown Před 3 lety +3

    Hey Simon, I would love to see an episode on Brasilia, the Capital of Brazil (duh) or Ankara. The Idea of Building an Entire City in one swoop could make for an interesting video.
    Love the Content, Keep it up. Thank You

  • @Abraxium
    @Abraxium Před 3 lety +5

    Could you do a video on Göta canal? Huge project that involved digging a channel from Kattegatt (Sweden's west coast) to the baltic in the east, was made inferior by its completion due to the introduction of the railway

  • @SizzStarr
    @SizzStarr Před 3 lety

    Amazing amazing amazing video! Very interesting i have yet to see bits of the all of the N1 explosions. What a rocket that coulda been tho! Cheers matebb

  • @AirWolfAT6
    @AirWolfAT6 Před 3 lety

    Simon, you and your team are ultra legends!

  • @hilerga1
    @hilerga1 Před 3 lety +32

    Where did the MiG-29 video go? I was watching it and super into it and then it disappeared on me. This one is good too just confused.

    • @jasonwilde197
      @jasonwilde197 Před 3 lety +5

      I just finished the video and was going to comment on it but the video has been removed.

    • @marcbeebee6969
      @marcbeebee6969 Před 3 lety +2

      Yeah crazy. Must have been Putin ;D

    • @augsdoggs
      @augsdoggs Před 3 lety +5

      Jason Wilde
      It’s cool you were able to watch it. I received multiple notifications at once that several videos were uploaded from different Simon channels, so I saved them all to a playlist and started with Toptenz. By the time it was over, the Mig video was deleted! Hopefully, the Megaprojects double post was a mistake and it’ll be reposted in a few days.

    • @charlesb.3569
      @charlesb.3569 Před 3 lety +2

      @@augsdoggs yeah I was in a similar boat. I'm assuming that one will show up again in a few days or something.

    • @OOpSjm
      @OOpSjm Před 3 lety +3

      maybe a copyright claim.

  • @FloralAndFire
    @FloralAndFire Před 3 lety +3

    Can I just say, it's been wonderful watching the progression of your beard. I don't even like beards on guys and yours is impressive.

  • @nickthompson9697
    @nickthompson9697 Před rokem +2

    Let's not forget Korolev's lasting legacy, the R7, which has had the longest service life of any rocket in history.

  • @joshshaffer2666
    @joshshaffer2666 Před rokem

    Excellent video. Thanks

  • @MarshFlyFightWin
    @MarshFlyFightWin Před 3 lety +3

    Do you think you could do a video on the Nevada-Class Battleships as both ships had interesting careers. One of which USS Nevada tried to escape Pearl Harbor, fought at D-Day , Iwo Jima, and Okinawa, and survived 2 atomic bombs. I would say that's a mega ship.

  • @RKBoyd01
    @RKBoyd01 Před 3 lety +3

    Hoover damn I can’t believe that you’ve not covered this yet!!! Loving the content though

    • @BBCharger5spd
      @BBCharger5spd Před 3 lety +1

      Simon has a Hoover Dam video ---- czcams.com/video/WdOOndVDbaY/video.html

    • @RKBoyd01
      @RKBoyd01 Před 3 lety

      BBCharger5spd thanks for that!!!

    • @RKBoyd01
      @RKBoyd01 Před 3 lety

      BBCharger5spd a mega projects specific one would be good though

  • @williamhardway6436
    @williamhardway6436 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks Simon

  • @STR82DVD
    @STR82DVD Před 3 lety

    MegaAwesomeness from Simon. Thanks man.

  • @Soundwave3591
    @Soundwave3591 Před 3 lety +66

    "we wanna hear about the Soviet version that blew up loads of times"
    "badly rushed and faced a catalog of issues"
    If not for the title of the video, I'd have to ask which Soviet machine you were referring to XD

  • @Katniss218
    @Katniss218 Před 3 lety +19

    That rocket in the thumbnail is a Kerbal Space Program stock replica of the N1 (you can tell by e.g. the exhaust plumes being identical to KS-25 "Vector" engine plumes).
    Also, the rocket was called N1, not N-1

    • @ashipnerdoffical4260
      @ashipnerdoffical4260 Před 3 lety +1

      Nice eye, I've seen plenty of ksp N1s, and I didn't even notice that.

    • @racingmhf9157
      @racingmhf9157 Před 3 lety +1

      I think it's Shadowzone's replica

    • @ltc8876
      @ltc8876 Před 3 lety

      This is tehmattguy's fantastic stock N1 replica, found here kerbalx.com/tehmattguy/N1-L3

  • @JackWaldbewohner
    @JackWaldbewohner Před rokem

    An excellent report-well done!!!!

  • @JaveyJenkins
    @JaveyJenkins Před 3 lety +2

    Mr. Whistler, great episode. Have you heard of the Sea Dragon? It didn't get built, but a lot of important tech came out of this U.S. Navy project involving underwater launches, and it would have been the first to have reusable parts. The first stage was supposed to be recovered and it had more payload than the Saturn V. Heck the Saturn would have fit inside this monster that never happened. Check it out it might be a megaproject worthy of an episode.

  • @ettorem._.g4225
    @ettorem._.g4225 Před 3 lety +6

    Can you please make a video about Brasília, the capital of Brazil! It's a planned city built in 1000 days, would be really cool to se a video about it. (1st time)

  • @pdc023
    @pdc023 Před 3 lety +4

    Suggested Topic: The relocation of Abu Simbel and 21 other ancient Egyptian temples and archeological sites to higher ground during the construction of the Aswan High dam back in the mid-1960's.

  • @jennyd255
    @jennyd255 Před 2 lety +1

    As someone who (a long time ago in the 1980's) has worked as an engineer on developing various aerospace equipment, including one with implications for the space shuttle rocketry, I found this video both fascinating, and in one small but important way slightly frustrating, when it implies that the N1 was a design Turkey!
    In reality, as I think some of the other commenters have suggested, the principle of using an array of smaller engines was in fact sound, and far superior to Von-Braun's rather crude "just hit it with a bigger hammer" approach of using a very few absolutely massive engines. The latter only won out because in an era of often rather unreliable technology, having something with fewer components meant there was less to go wrong, and hence a better chance of it all working for just long enough to achieve the goal.
    Anyone who wants a non aerospace illustration only has to think of a typical 1960's or 1970's British car, for an example of just how sketchy the reliability of typical mechanical components could be back then. Since that time we have got far better at building things which are consistent and dependable, but back then the Soviet Union, and indeed a lot of other places, didn't really understand how to do quality control properly.
    The problem is that theoretically elegant solutions like using an array of engines, require that a large number of components work together, and can be coordinated properly. This we can now achieve, but back then not so much...
    So it isn't an accident that in the present day Elon Musk uses precisely the N1 style multi-small-engine array approach with great success. The problem was mainly that in the 1960's without modern digital control systems, and well engineered reliable valves and fuel lines, it just wasn't possible to achieve a dependable automatic thrust balancing and control system.
    The N1 was, conceptually, just too far ahead of it's time. Had the soviets had better quality control, more robust components, and better control systems it seems highly likely to me, from what I know of the engineering involved, that the N1 would have been far more successful, and whilst Russia would have still lost the moon, they might, by now have been walking on Mars.

    • @deepujacob3419
      @deepujacob3419 Před 2 lety

      Well articulated. Good to learn from your experience.

  • @stephenlane9168
    @stephenlane9168 Před 3 lety

    Simon & production team 👌

  • @ikickbehind
    @ikickbehind Před 3 lety +14

    Please do a mega project on the battleship Yamato!

  • @ieuanbriers
    @ieuanbriers Před 3 lety +3

    Hi Mr. Whistler. I love your videos both on this, but also on your sister channels "Biographics" and "Geographics". Please could you do a video on either Brunel's Broad Gauge Great Western Railway, also his incredible engineering project the SS. Great Eastern. A leviathan of the Steam Ship, as well as other massive cruise liners, i.e. the RMS Queen Mary and the RMS Titanic.

    • @skyden24195
      @skyden24195 Před 3 lety +1

      The RMS Queen Mary would be awesome, especially, as well, because of it's roll during WWII.

  • @curlus
    @curlus Před 3 lety

    Great video!

  • @joeschmalhofer6109
    @joeschmalhofer6109 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Need to add a 3rd video on this series... of Starship.... :)

  • @Wayne425
    @Wayne425 Před 3 lety +5

    Perhaps for your next episode you could do my kitchen renovation, started two years ago and still not finished

    • @emjackson2289
      @emjackson2289 Před 2 lety

      Get some Nazi and GULAG scientists on the case

  • @Patrick-jd6ny
    @Patrick-jd6ny Před 3 lety +5

    So I know this is an odd suggestion, but I work for USPS and seriously, the US postal network is probably the most incredible and largest logistics networks in the country. It still blows my mind that we were able to develop the machines and methods and plans to move so many things so fast and reliably.
    I would strongly suggest doing an episode to show the amazing network of machines and people that drives the United States Post Office

  • @Nitanthology
    @Nitanthology Před 3 lety +2

    You should look into the Sea Dragon rocket. It was a proposed successor to the Saturn V, and had it been built it would have been so large that the 2nd stage of the Saturn V could fit into its engine and nozzle.

  • @gordonfleming4906
    @gordonfleming4906 Před 3 lety +1

    Please please please do a podcast. I love you videos but I can't watch them while driving. Your excitement and enthusiasm would make a excellent podcast that am sure most of your viewers would always listen to. How may thumbs up and we get

  • @morgansinclair6318
    @morgansinclair6318 Před 3 lety +2

    As a kid, I was, and still am, a huge space nerd, but at the time there was an extreme paucity of information on the N1. I learned about Project Orion from the 50's and 60's before I found out about the N1.

    • @lukestrawwalker
      @lukestrawwalker Před 2 lety +1

      The Soviets denied the existence of N-1 in the open press, though of course the CIA and those "with need to know" knew it existed and had the photographs from spysats and stuff way back in the 60's... it didn't really come out "in the open" with actual Soviet documentation until after the fall of the Soviet Union... Later1 OL J R :)

    • @morgansinclair6318
      @morgansinclair6318 Před 2 lety

      @@lukestrawwalker Yep, definitely.

  • @jackjackson8092
    @jackjackson8092 Před 3 lety +48

    2 vids in 2 seconds, how? Also, thanks

    • @yottamozg
      @yottamozg Před 3 lety +3

      Yeh, I'm doing my best with the simultaneous watching, but that's not working too good yet.

    • @JohnnyMrHattersmith
      @JohnnyMrHattersmith Před 3 lety +1

      Not to mention the TopTenz video he put up too.

    • @thedyingtitan1247
      @thedyingtitan1247 Před 3 lety +3

      That’s simple he pre uploaded them with them all set to go live at the same time

    • @888johnmac
      @888johnmac Před 3 lety +2

      i guess someone pressed the upload button too enthusiastically

    • @roqeyt3566
      @roqeyt3566 Před 3 lety +1

      @@JohnnyMrHattersmith and the biograpics one on Atilla

  • @jeffgassen9328
    @jeffgassen9328 Před 3 lety +1

    Love your channel! How about a video about MIR the space station?

  • @allgood6760
    @allgood6760 Před rokem

    Amazing stuff!... thank you 👍🚀🇳🇿

  • @randomix4023
    @randomix4023 Před 3 lety +20

    a famous American rocket engineer once said back in the 70s: We beat the Soviets just because our German engineers are better than theirs 😂

    • @Andrewza1
      @Andrewza1 Před 2 lety +1

      Soviets did not really use german engeneers. Korlov was all they needed. There is a reason he is buired in the red squar.

    • @randomix4023
      @randomix4023 Před 2 lety

      @General Bradley We won the war because they were very bumptious and we were very lucky. Hitler was so sure for himself and for his people that when he began the invasion to Russia he didn't feed his troops with warm clothes because he was believing that Germans were descended from Norwegian Gods like Odin, Thor etc and they were durable to cold. No kidding. Search it, it's true! Now, we all know the outcome. Moreover, 1941 was one of the coldest winters of the last decade back then. He didn't learn anything from Napoleon. 🤦‍♂️

  • @dansands8140
    @dansands8140 Před 3 lety +9

    SpaceX's Superheavy booster will have a thrust nearly 60% higher than the N1.

    • @cameronh3260
      @cameronh3260 Před 3 lety +2

      But since starship has to carry all of that landing gear to orbit and back it takes a hit to the payload mass it can carry to orbit

    • @chakraborty1989
      @chakraborty1989 Před 2 lety

      Still waiting

    • @dansands8140
      @dansands8140 Před 2 lety

      @@chakraborty1989 Due to the government. Superheavy is ready to go today.

  • @ShiftingDrifter
    @ShiftingDrifter Před 3 lety +3

    It's worth mentioning that Kennedy's "We choose to go to the moon..." speech came in 1962, a full year after NASA had successfully launched their first Saturn I heavy lift booster capable of putting a 14 metric ton payload into space with its H1 Rocketdyne Engines. The USSR may have been first in space, but the US was ahead in heavy-lift rocket development by 1962, which is why confidence was so high in reaching the moon.

    • @faustin289
      @faustin289 Před 2 lety

      When you say the US was ahead you mean the german engineers and tech were better.... perhaps??? Lol!

  • @nigeldepledge3790
    @nigeldepledge3790 Před 3 lety

    One technical point - nitrogen tetroxide isn't a fuel, it's an oxidiser. The N-1 used liquid oxygen as its oxidiser to burn the kerosene fuel (which was probably more like RP-1 than the kerosene that you might buy to fuel a camping stove).
    Many modern rockets use nitrogen tetroxide oxidiser in combination with a fuel such as UDMH (unsymmetric dimethyl hydrazine), because this mixture is hypergolic : the two components react upon contact, so no ignition system is required. Both components are toxic, though, and the NO4 is pretty corrosive, too.
    UDMH / NO4 powered the ascent stages of the Apollo lunar modules, because the designers wanted to make that engine as unlikely to fail as humanly possible. (For the same reason, the Apollo LM ascent engine had no turbopumps, instead using helium pressurisation to drive fuel from the tanks into the engine.)

  • @benn454
    @benn454 Před 3 lety +14

    *Googles N1 moon rocket*
    Google: Did you mean N1 bomb?

  • @vevenaneathna
    @vevenaneathna Před rokem +3

    compairing this to starship.... spacex did far more in a couple years what the 2nd most powerful country in the world couldnt do in a decade. things are changing so fast right now. proud of spacex today

    • @ChaosCat79
      @ChaosCat79 Před rokem

      Copium post.

    • @vevenaneathna
      @vevenaneathna Před rokem +1

      @@ChaosCat79 think of how many new-ks the DOD could shove into starship and have it accidentally fail to reach orbit and then "break up" over RU but actually act as a disguised first strike capability. you could vaporize every nuclear storage site in the RU and sever command and control before RU knew what hit them. then all you have to deal with is a handful of clapped out loud and easily tracked kilo class subs. if any nukes do get launched, there has never been a situation where interceptor missiles placed in norway could conceivably stop RU launched silos nukes. RU is more vulnerable now to new-clear checkmate than they were in the 1950s. cope :}

  • @chrisbremner8992
    @chrisbremner8992 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Starship is very much an update of the N1 design.

  • @mgabrysSF
    @mgabrysSF Před 3 lety

    An interview by Luke Talley who worked on the instrumentation ring noted that the Saturn V fins nearly struck the tower in the first test launch (requiring a hard gimbal update to the control program to make sure the fins had more clearance). Although the solution made for one hell of a swimmy ride for the astronauts on top - it prevented the rocket from striking the tower and causing a 1500 foot fireball that would have consumed everything including the launch platform.

  • @justdoityourself7134
    @justdoityourself7134 Před 3 lety +7

    "We choose to go to the moon... in this decade and do the other things..."

    • @dinoschachten
      @dinoschachten Před 3 lety +6

      "and do the other thing(s)" - my absolute favourite choice of words in any speech ever. :D

  • @DEXWrecksOfficial
    @DEXWrecksOfficial Před 3 lety +26

    The guy's name is SEMEN?!?!?!

    • @sowhat249
      @sowhat249 Před 3 lety +5

      Yes, but you don't read it as semen in Russian. It sounds different when you read it phonetically.

    • @cheaterman49
      @cheaterman49 Před 3 lety +1

      My name shortens to "Cman", I get that joke sometimes... >__

    • @dale116dot7
      @dale116dot7 Před 3 lety +7

      DEX Wrecks Been a while since I wrote in Cyrillic, but I think the name would probably be Семён, sometimes spelled in English as “Semion”.

    • @fhlostonparaphrase
      @fhlostonparaphrase Před 3 lety

      In certain Nordic countries Simen is a given name, try to pronounce that...

    • @urdnal
      @urdnal Před 3 lety +2

      Oh man a Ukrainian guy at work had his name transliterated to that when he first started. Felt so bad for him. Eventually he had the spelling changed to be more phonetic, but still. Nice guy, smart too from what I recall. Of course he didn't stay more than 2-3 years at my work lmao

  • @gnaskar
    @gnaskar Před rokem +1

    Important to note: The soviet test strategy was very different from the Americans. In the US each and every part of the rocket was carefully preplanned and each was individually certified to handle the maximum possible stress it could be exposed to during a mission, and each being built by a different company in a different state on a cost plus budget (whatever it takes you to build it + 10% profit for you). This is why every single NASA program is delayed and over budget, but they have very few accidents.
    The Soviets, on the other hand, made the simplest and fastest to design possible concept, then tested it and fixed whatever goes wrong, quickly iterating through prototypes and ending up with a cheap reliable workhorse rocket (if the program isn't cancelled before it can complete). You may recognize this approach as the SpaceX "Fail Fast" strategy, and see it's success in the R7 rocket family, which launched Sputnik and is still flying today. Soviet tech starts up seeming rushed and substandard because it's deliberately designed that way, like a beta version or an early access game. Once it's in production and being actively tested, it can be polished and improved until you end up with some genuinely cool tech.

  • @colinmartin9797
    @colinmartin9797 Před 3 lety

    I have a vostok europe watch themed on the N1. It's a huge, expensive solid bronze beast.
    Always thought it was weird to theme a watch on such a catastrophic failure, but i still like it

  • @kevinlind4640
    @kevinlind4640 Před 3 lety +20

    "It remains one of the biggest non nuclear explosions the world has ever seen"... Posted the 3rd of Aug, 2020. Timing, anyone?

    • @jovee6155
      @jovee6155 Před 3 lety +2

      Fart and piss bags in Beirut port: hold my explosion

  • @Katniss218
    @Katniss218 Před 3 lety +9

    1:10 That's a Saturn I tho :D

    • @stuartyoung4182
      @stuartyoung4182 Před 3 lety +4

      Common mistake made when using stock footage: "Oh, it's a vaguely round-in-cross-section white rocket with black stripes and red 'USA' lettering - must be a Saturn V." ;-)

    • @richardmillhousenixon
      @richardmillhousenixon Před 3 lety +1

      @@stuartyoung4182 My best guess is whoever was editing it searched "Saturn V" in whatever stock footage service they use and probably just picked one that fit the time window for the subtitle card.

  • @michaelsnowden5735
    @michaelsnowden5735 Před 3 lety

    Great video! Could you do a Magaprojects on The Old River Control Structure? It regulates the flow of water from the Mississippi into the Atchafalaya River, thereby preventing the Mississippi River from changing course.

  • @j_styfen4064
    @j_styfen4064 Před 3 lety

    Amazing, I didn't think this rocket was still talked about.

  • @atomicskull6405
    @atomicskull6405 Před 3 lety +5

    Please do a video on the Mil V-12, the biggest helicopter ever made. It was literally the size of a C-130 cargo plane, but it was a helicopter (and yes it was russian because of course it was)

    • @Self-replicating_whatnot
      @Self-replicating_whatnot Před 2 lety

      And, most importantly, it's a machine many countries and companies all over the globe are happy to have and use, not a one-off vanity project.

  • @TomTimeTraveler
    @TomTimeTraveler Před 3 lety +5

    The "N" designation was a Russian word meaning "Carrier."

    • @drojaz1
      @drojaz1 Před 3 lety

      Nositel 1

    • @gunternetzer9621
      @gunternetzer9621 Před 2 lety +1

      Although the Saturn V was the greatest I preferred the N1 design as it resembled most the rockets of 60s' science fiction.

  • @jokern80
    @jokern80 Před 3 lety

    I have a request! Do a episode about russian proton rockets, R-7 family rockets and Soyuz rockets. I love your channels becouse its very interesting and i am like a sponge when it comes to learn about history. Its really great channels and I thank You and your Team behind them alot for making them so good. Thanks!

  • @angelsachse9610
    @angelsachse9610 Před rokem +1

    8:26: Small correction: The third stage of the N1 was Block V, as the stages were named after the order of the first letters in the russian cyrilic alphabet, which is A, B, V, G, D.

  • @paulmaddison6193
    @paulmaddison6193 Před 3 lety +26

    Can you imagine how many engineers would have been shot if these launches had failed during Stalin's reign?

    • @alexandersorokin355
      @alexandersorokin355 Před 3 lety +4

      no one, I belive, because we already new the history, when R-1 legacy of V-2 crashed and smashed several times... Stalin was not stuped, but very smart managing director of very huge corporation (USSR)

    • @MyPhobo
      @MyPhobo Před 3 lety +2

      The rocket scientists probably had more security. I mean they could disappear some cosmonauts, but the rocket scientists probably held more value.

    • @alexandersorokin355
      @alexandersorokin355 Před 3 lety

      @@MyPhobo there is russian saying those days: every man is valuable on proper place

    • @maclain728
      @maclain728 Před 3 lety +3

      Alexander Sorokin No Stalin was pretty terrible and did some really really stupid things. The Aral Sea is a perfect example

    • @alexandersorokin355
      @alexandersorokin355 Před 3 lety

      @@maclain728 I am not so sure that Stalin personally digged that channel through the desert. I think there are a lot of engineers who proposed that solution and diggers who made it. Why - for that time solution was to make more good earth for agriculture or have salt lake...

  • @schlirf
    @schlirf Před 3 lety +7

    Yep, same old story: The Second mouse always gets the cheese.

    • @michaeldunne338
      @michaeldunne338 Před 3 lety +5

      Well there was the Gemini program, which put Americans in a better place when it came to getting down the fundamentals of spaceflight. That program, which involved manned and unmanned flights from 1964 through 1966, is often described as "when NASA learned to fly."

    • @jonnunn4196
      @jonnunn4196 Před 3 lety

      Yup, the first mouse gets the trap.

    • @jamiecottrell2347
      @jamiecottrell2347 Před 3 lety +1

      The big reason the USSR led the early space race was because America's atomic bomb technology was more advanced. All early rockets used to launch things into orbit were repurposed ICBMs. Korolev built the R7 rocket (aka Soyuz) based on launching a really big, really heavy atomic bomb, so it was big enough that it could pretty easily put a small satellite into orbit and be modified to put humans into orbit. American ICBMs were smaller, and so couldn't put things into orbit.

    • @michaeldunne338
      @michaeldunne338 Před 3 lety +1

      @@jamiecottrell2347 Well, the Americans also dawdled with ICBM development. Stuff that got kind of ignored, of placed in a lower priority category: Karel Bossart made a proposal in the fall of 1945; Wernher von Braun and his team were out in Texas doing tests, but on a pretty conservative scale/cadence; there was work on shorter range missiles like Corporal but not the same (and that one took a long time - same with the Navy and Viking?).
      Maybe the Air Force was too focused on bombers? That SAC focus had been cited at times. Regardless, the Americans woke up around 1955 and then accelerated the program for Atlas, and had Titan as the back up for the Air Force's landbased ICBMs. For submarines, thought the Navy was relatively early on keen about solid fueled rockets (regardless of work around Viking/Vanguard)?

    • @CountArtha
      @CountArtha Před 3 lety +1

      You’re exactly right. The Americans were slower to develop ICBMs because they had an edge in strategic bombers and that was their preferred delivery system for nuclear weapons. Not only that, but the first-generation ballistic missiles all used cryogenic propellants like LOX which made them more useful as space exploration vehicles than as weapons because they couldn’t be kept in a ready-to-launch condition for more than a few hours.

  • @pseudotasuki
    @pseudotasuki Před 3 lety +1

    At 1:15 there's a clip of a rocket launch labeled "Saturn V" but it was a Saturn I. Off to a great start, team!

  • @pamelamays4186
    @pamelamays4186 Před 3 lety +2

    Was disappointed that the MiG 29 video had been taken down.
    I'm glad this video came up. I thought that You Tube was messin' with Simon.

    • @creativechillzone7817
      @creativechillzone7817 Před 3 lety +1

      Please, if there is anyone out there that wants to help a single dad who has fallen on some hard times and really losing all hope and extremely desperate ,please do. gf.me/u/ytfn95. Sorry to post this here but, it I know him and he deserves it for sure. 🙏