The Science of Iron Man | Aerospace Engineer Reacts

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  • čas přidán 25. 07. 2024
  • Aerospace Engineer Reacts to the aerospace engineering in the Marvel movie Iron Man. He talks about how realistic the technology and science presented in this film really are.
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    Footage Referenced:
    All military aircraft footage courtesy The Department of Defense www.dvidshub.net/
    Spacecraft Footage courtesy of NASA: images.nasa.gov/
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 1,8K

  • @ajberinguela5196
    @ajberinguela5196 Před 2 lety +979

    Please do Top Gun Maverick

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +63

      Top Gun: MAVERICK reaction video is live now! Check it out! czcams.com/video/Xj7DFyMAJJ0/video.html

    • @RazDaz2000
      @RazDaz2000 Před 2 lety +28

      Isn't Top Gun mostly real?

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +42

      Most of it was practical and based on the real world of course. But, there's some interesting concepts that are shown in the movie that I go into more description of.

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +14

      ?

    • @amarlanewsnetwork5079
      @amarlanewsnetwork5079 Před 2 lety

      YOUR MOUTH LOOKS BIGGER THAN YOUR FACE

  • @endosym5023
    @endosym5023 Před 3 lety +3550

    Iron Man's arc reactor is based on the Tesseract. The blue cube in Captain America 1 and Avengers 1. Tony's dad was able to study it and was able to theorize the energy but he wasn't able to recreate it because he was "limited by the technology of my time"

    • @MinecraftShadersandChill
      @MinecraftShadersandChill Před 2 lety +233

      I'm pretty sure that is the new core that Tony made in Iron Man 2, because that was when the recording was shown and Tony found the structure of the element the core is made of (as you said, it's based off of the tesseract or the space stone. But not the previous ones because Tony didn't watch the recordings yet, and he used palladium for the cores.

    • @endosym5023
      @endosym5023 Před 2 lety +244

      @@MinecraftShadersandChill Howard was able to partially recreate the energy of the tesseract, as the giant arc reactor proved it, but because he was limited by the technology of his time, it was imperfect and unfinished. So that's why he switched to palladium, cuz the prototype arc reactor was unable to keep up with the energy demand of the electromagnet and suit. But because he found his father's notes and the blueprint he laid out in the expo design, he was able to complete Howard's unfinished work and make badassium

    • @crisbowman
      @crisbowman Před 2 lety +54

      @@endosym5023 🤣 forgot he called it that

    • @MinecraftShadersandChill
      @MinecraftShadersandChill Před 2 lety +3

      @@endosym5023 oh I see

    • @arafat_arslaan
      @arafat_arslaan Před 2 lety +21

      @Chris Martinez now that's cool analogy... Salute brother

  • @TopShot501st
    @TopShot501st Před 2 lety +443

    Iron Man came out when I was 13 and made me want to become an Engineer, mechanically it fascinated me (regardless of realism ) so I now am one...

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +53

      That's awesome! That's the magic of these movies done right!

    • @collin5353
      @collin5353 Před rokem +9

      …same

    • @Lantanum057
      @Lantanum057 Před rokem +7

      Same, i was 7 at that time but finally i became Medical doctor student LOL

    • @simonezini5944
      @simonezini5944 Před rokem +7

      I was 11, now I'm ending my degree in "Robotics and smart industry"

    • @ginjuice3792
      @ginjuice3792 Před rokem +13

      I'm 27 and still confused

  • @BlackWolf18C
    @BlackWolf18C Před 2 lety +392

    The Arc Reactor is supposed to be a type of theorized energy source called an 'induced decay reactor'. The premise was that you could bombard an isotope with some form of radiation, in this case I believe it is supposed to be a platinum-paladium alloy bombarded by electrons, to artificially induce a nuclear decay and capture the resulting particle as power. The platinum or paladium isotope decay trees do include an electron emission, and that particular isotopic decay induction was theorized at the time to be possible with a magnetic field. That was why they put in the scene of the Arc Reactor first needing to be kick started by an electrical power source before it became self-sustaining. I think the theory was later disproven with experimental testing, but the idea was beyond cutting edge back in the day.

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +57

      That's impressive comic knowledge! Thanks for the description!

    • @funveeable
      @funveeable Před rokem +20

      The exhaust that comes out of Iron Man jets is plasma, and it leaves at around light speed. The momentum of low mass but extremely fast gas give him the propulsion needed to fly. The smoke stream is the plasma igniting the atmosphere. This kind of thruster is only possible because the Ark reactor has the power of a nuclear powerplant behind it to make this plasma. Impractical engine for anything that doesn't have an Ark reactor.

    • @daniellucas2968
      @daniellucas2968 Před rokem

      Thanks for this explanation. I had thought that it was supposed to be some sort of miniaturized Tokamak reactor, but that makes a lot more sense (even if the theory ultimately failed).

    • @paintspot1509
      @paintspot1509 Před rokem +1

      ​@@funveeablejust to make sure, that is not physically accurate, just comic book science.

  • @dustinc6869
    @dustinc6869 Před 2 lety +419

    I know this is an old video, but wanted to add a bit of detail/correction to the ejection seat claims. I used to work on GRU-7 and GRU-8 ejection seats. You are 100% correct that they are designed to work fully automated. However, they are also designed with barometers and DO NOT deploy the parachute until the seat has dropped below 8k feet. We dont want pilots freezing so we dont want to deploy a chute too early. The drogue chute will deploy right away to keep the seat stable as it falls (so its not doing flips and twists the whole way down) which then will pull the main chute and release the pilot once the barometer meets the required altitude.

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +66

      That's awesome. Thanks for your knowledge and insight! I always welcome kind correction!

    • @Alexx120493
      @Alexx120493 Před rokem +7

      How does this work in mountainous terrain ? If you are unlucky and eject with terrain features above 8000ft MSL you just hit the ground without the main chute opening?

    • @cartire2000
      @cartire2000 Před rokem +10

      @@Alexx120493 yes. This is correct. The seat would hit the mountain before deploying parachute. However, there is a manual option as well. The aircrew can manually separate from the seat earlier if they need too. Hopefully, they didn’t pass out before this is required. Many do from the g’s.

    • @lqfx8262
      @lqfx8262 Před rokem

      lol gru

    • @ericparrish1515
      @ericparrish1515 Před rokem

      I stand corrected.

  • @amofag
    @amofag Před 3 lety +2174

    7:59 It is said in the film that his armor is made of an alloy of gold and titanium because "it is more solid". Later in the scientific community, some had fun checking that out. And the film (luckily) was right; the gold-titanium alloy is much stronger (but also much more expensive) than titanium alone. So it's not surprising I guess?

    • @wanrqu5045
      @wanrqu5045 Před 2 lety +81

      Alloy is the most durable even a titanium can't break it

    • @brap6557
      @brap6557 Před 2 lety +321

      Billionaire, playboy, philanthropist, scientist, engineer

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +371

      It then just becomes a question of momentum and impulse. I wonder what was the relative speed at impact. And what if that really wouldn't have been enough to even fracture the suit.

    • @amofag
      @amofag Před 2 lety +236

      @@AviationAustin as for taking a plane, I don't know if the armor would have resisted in real life. But in any case what is certain is that if it would resist the person inside would be shaken to death (literally I think) so...

    • @theapeape5094
      @theapeape5094 Před 2 lety +15

      @@wanrqu5045 what

  • @miketully9905
    @miketully9905 Před 2 lety +396

    There are some ridiculous scenes though. For example, when Tony escapes from the terrorist camp in the prototype ironman suit that he cobbled together. When he sails through the air and lands in the desert he comes to such a sudden stop in the desert sand that even if the suit didn't come apart (which it did), he'd be little more than a splattered bag of goo. There's just on way he'd survive the g-loading of hitting the desert sand from so high up. And there are plenty of other nit picks. But it's a movie. It's for fun. And as an engineer myself I really love the Ironman movies.

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +145

      That might be the most consistently overlooked physics with Ironman in general. The g loads would kill him in most scenes with the suit.

    • @alexforce9
      @alexforce9 Před 2 lety +6

      Maybe something about the suit falling apart that saves him? Like the collapsing cardboard boxes used in stunt jumps.

    • @succulentravioli954
      @succulentravioli954 Před 2 lety +11

      @@alexforce9 i don't think that'll do much 💀

    • @alexforce9
      @alexforce9 Před 2 lety +14

      @@succulentravioli954 I must see if Muthbusters have some episode on wrapping Buster in a bubble wrap sheet and letting him go out of a plane or something.

    • @succulentravioli954
      @succulentravioli954 Před 2 lety

      @@alexforce9 lmao fr

  • @TearDownGenesis
    @TearDownGenesis Před 2 lety +548

    The part that took me out of it scientifically, is when he gets shot out of the sky. It doesn't matter what armor you're wearing, getting hit like that / landing like that will liquefy your insides.

    • @crystllclr3743
      @crystllclr3743 Před 2 lety +65

      Yeah energy just doesnt disappear it has to go somewhere doesnt it one way or another

    • @arkplaysgame3826
      @arkplaysgame3826 Před 2 lety +58

      @@crystllclr3743 yeah like in the movie hurt locker where when the bomb explode the bomb defusing guy died even though he ran away and sustain minor scar on the suit as his body got almost shredded inside from the shock wave

    • @user-tb7ml8kz7h
      @user-tb7ml8kz7h Před 2 lety

      Yep, and give you a brain concussion from which you will pass out immediately just to die very soon after.

    • @crystllclr3743
      @crystllclr3743 Před 2 lety +23

      @@arkplaysgame3826 yep most explosive deaths dont have a mark on them. Just liquefied their brains ect

    • @Qureas
      @Qureas Před 2 lety +93

      Gotta say the gunner in that tank is also godlike for hitting such a small object flying that fast at a high angle compared to the tank.

  • @JustH3LL_
    @JustH3LL_ Před 2 lety +135

    As a radar operator, I love seeing that particular detail. Marvel truly did their homework

    • @ScottyBGaming239
      @ScottyBGaming239 Před 2 lety

      14E, 14T, 25N

    • @MandalorV7
      @MandalorV7 Před 2 lety +5

      So this may be a dumb thing to ask, but then do birds give off a small radar signal too?

    • @ScottyBGaming239
      @ScottyBGaming239 Před 2 lety

      @@MandalorV7 they’re not big enough to show up

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +9

      Yes they do. I'm no radar operator but theoretically with a ultra high frequency radar a bird should show up the same way a stealth aircraft could.

    • @ScottyBGaming239
      @ScottyBGaming239 Před 2 lety +10

      @@AviationAustin I’ve trained on and have sat olin front of live radar scopes while in the army. I was attached to a Patriot missile defense battery. I can tell you the radar did not pick up birds and won’t. There’s parameters set for size and speed and nothing as small and as slow as a bird is seen.

  • @davidalangay1186
    @davidalangay1186 Před 2 lety +310

    One particular bit of science added in the Iron Man movies was the use of his hand repulsors as thrusters to help hold a parallel plane to the ground. In the Iron Man comics I grew up reading as a child, his boots were the main and only form of thrust and direction. It would be nearly impossible for Stark to hold that form while in flight.

    • @ijust96
      @ijust96 Před 2 lety +35

      Yea, that’s how Star Lord flies in Avengers Endgame and it doesn’t make sense!

    • @UltraSolarGod
      @UltraSolarGod Před 2 lety +13

      For just flying the boots are ok but to maintain balance in mid air you need some kind of stabilizer

    • @stevenbergom3415
      @stevenbergom3415 Před 2 lety +11

      Also overlooked: In the original comic books Iron Man had wheels on his boots like roller skates.

    • @davidalangay1186
      @davidalangay1186 Před 2 lety +5

      @@stevenbergom3415 he also had at one time a nose. 😂

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +11

      I did not know that. But makes so much sense!

  • @nathangames1576
    @nathangames1576 Před 2 lety +229

    Not sure if this has already been pointed out but at 7:19 you have a note stating it is "Very important to know the plane you're flying, while you're flying it." A red arrow points to the F-22 in the HUD; however, I would like to point out that is what Tony is seeing. In the upper right hand corner is the what appears to be the arc reactor and suit inside as well as the red letters stating Engage Supersonic Flight. He scanned the plane to know exactly what he was dealing with.

  • @frostfang7670
    @frostfang7670 Před 2 lety +264

    Yeah in later films, it really does seem like they are skimping on these little details. I know Tony's suit gets more advanced but it loses some of that sense of impact. It shows definitely when Joss Whedon did it in Avengers and continued with Iron Man 3 by Shane Black. I wish Marvel went back to smaller scale stuff like Iron Man instead of making every Marvel movie gigantic spectacle trying to outdo the last.

    • @jfletcher1029
      @jfletcher1029 Před 2 lety +26

      Yeah, it just went on to become a nano suit that could do everything and be anything.

    • @ramonwang4611
      @ramonwang4611 Před 2 lety +22

      That also ties back into that whole "grounded in reality" thing that was mentioned earlier too. When every movie from Infinity War onwards is a matter of life or death for the universe, it becomes a bit corny and repetitive

    • @frostfang7670
      @frostfang7670 Před 2 lety +13

      @@ramonwang4611 Yeah,Black Widow and Shang Chi were definitely big examples of them trying to take stories that would have excelled with smaller budgets and instead making them blown up with needed excess flair.

    • @Dem0n1337
      @Dem0n1337 Před 2 lety +3

      @@jfletcher1029 They are going through the natural progression of how things would change for Tony as his tech changes. Think about it, He knows a guy who can shrink himself and tools and easily build things. Knowing this he is able to build something that is smarter and works much easier than his clunky suits from the past. After he loses each time he upgrades. He is a scientist, he is looking to perfect his gear.

    • @Dem0n1337
      @Dem0n1337 Před 2 lety +1

      Of course there are moments where things are a bit more suspended in disbelief. But most of it is grounded in reality. Like space travel and skip jumping. While we can only partially do it there totally could be another life form out there that is 100% capable of it. Magic and mythical creatures are on that edge of disbelief, though if Thanos is real and is part celestial then a dragon like creature makes total sense.

  • @user-sg6zh6vr7h
    @user-sg6zh6vr7h Před 2 lety +44

    5:23 notice how the calve "flaps" move outward when he's going up so that the flight control thrusters could do their job. Or maybe demonstrates the use of the flaps as control surfaces, that was quite nice.

    • @kennyraiden9346
      @kennyraiden9346 Před rokem

      You made a good point and that probably is. Thanks.

  • @CarlosSantos-kv9ip
    @CarlosSantos-kv9ip Před 2 lety +161

    Regarding the ejection failure on the F-22: I remember reading stories back around the time just before Iron Man 1 about incidents with ejection seat bugs which the military knew about. I think writers were adding real-life components to a great movie.

    • @okieboy7065
      @okieboy7065 Před 2 lety +3

      i was an ejection seat mechanic in the Navy. Ejection seats are never researched by movie makers. { ex: Goose would NOT have died ). When you pull that handle and the catapult cylinders launch you out of the cockpit it knocks your ass right out. The parachute catching air is what usually wakes them back up.

  • @ninepuchar1
    @ninepuchar1 Před 2 lety +61

    What really impresses me is the G tolerance of Tony. Those quick maneuvers at such steep angles are just freaking dangerous 🤯🤯. Still,awesome. Love seeing these scenes😍😍😍😍❤❤❤❤

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +7

      It definitely looked cool. Haha

    • @vgsschade839
      @vgsschade839 Před 2 lety +7

      The comic and Film theory has been that the ironman suit has an inertia dampening system (Star Trek has them on the ships also) in it so that Tony's internals stay intact while in the suit. It is an anti gravity system that we as humans haven't yet achieved.

    • @brodriguez11000
      @brodriguez11000 Před 2 lety +4

      The AI is a nice backup in cases of unconsciousness.

    • @ninepuchar1
      @ninepuchar1 Před rokem

      @@brodriguez11000 Indeed👍.

    • @lastofthebest5102
      @lastofthebest5102 Před rokem +1

      @@vgsschade839 MMM, not even close. The suit is worn so that Tony's auric field (aura) is enhanced to such a degree that each organ is surrounded in its own energetic barrier. An amalgamation of alloyed metals to introduce certain energies and vibrations into the body so that the body may produce its own general and specific auric fields. Superman, Shazam, War Machine, Spiderman, Vision, Wanda and a whole host of others do exactly the same thing. The movie "Chronicle" explains it very well by stating "as long as you see things coming they cannot hurt you, because of the barrier." Explains why Iron Man (for example) on rare occasion has bullet holes in his suit...didnt see them coming. Anti gravity is a weaponized misnomer meant to keep people ignorant, what you mean to say is directional levitation due to controlled vibrations of the body. Some may also call it tactile telekinesis.

  • @olivierS.
    @olivierS. Před 2 lety +54

    You have a talent at explaining complicated stuff 👍🏾

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +9

      Thank you, I really appreciate that!

    • @lastofthebest5102
      @lastofthebest5102 Před rokem +1

      Did you know that talent refers to a measurement of Gold? So what you are really saying is that he still has quite a bit of Gold in his body as he hasnt had enough time to remove it from his body thereby making him dumber. Typically expelled through the urine or fecal matter. Did you know that certain cows expel actual gold out of their body through urine? People do the same thing and there are quite a few studies on exactly that. "Dont P1ss your life (life force) away." "Flushing your life down the toilet." Depending on how "talented" one is they may even get a gold medal.

  • @tofu_golem
    @tofu_golem Před rokem +11

    What I really love is that they show an engineer testing things and show things going wrong during testing.

  • @jeffthompson9622
    @jeffthompson9622 Před 3 lety +22

    I greatly enjoyed how they conveyed his joy of flying the Mark 2 suit.

  • @KerbalLauncher
    @KerbalLauncher Před 2 lety +25

    7:20, another neat detail is that he was cruising at mach .86 before thrusting to supersonic. This is about the airspeed at which wave drag kicks in due to the airstream above your lift surfaces going supersonic.

  • @Brad772006
    @Brad772006 Před 2 lety +21

    I also enjoyed the first few marvel movies the most. They did indeed have a sense of grounded yet hyper reality. While I am not an engineer I have a long history in mechanics. I have built motorcycles from scratch in my shop. So seeing him build a flight suit at home that actually looked plausible. Well, that just excited me to no end.

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +3

      Yeah I just watched the latest installation in the MCU. They fallen very far from their once grounded reality.

  • @IrishPotato86
    @IrishPotato86 Před 2 lety +80

    Tony’s suit is eventually made of vibranium alloy, the first controllable suit created in his home was a gold-titanium alloy. His very first suit was made from iron scraps while imprisoned in the cave.

    • @verigamingofficial6059
      @verigamingofficial6059 Před 2 lety +3

      Made me remembered aboau super alloy darkshine

    • @sc4r.mp218
      @sc4r.mp218 Před 2 lety

      Within one day

    • @irregulargorilla8217
      @irregulargorilla8217 Před 2 lety +13

      When regarding the Mk1 suit, it's important to note that Tony Stark was able to build this in a cave... with a box of scraps!

    • @turtlejr8911
      @turtlejr8911 Před 2 lety +1

      Tony never made a vibranium suit.

    • @SpecterNeverSpectator
      @SpecterNeverSpectator Před 2 lety

      @@irregulargorilla8217 welcome to fiction
      Not to be rude tho, just thought it was funny

  • @awesomedavid2012
    @awesomedavid2012 Před 2 lety +63

    I really appreciate how you went about this. A lot of channels would've been like "well the arc reactor couldn't possibly exist so bad movie"

    • @davekisman2763
      @davekisman2763 Před rokem

      Don't be like that. An arc reactor could excist... in future.

  • @schmidtytime
    @schmidtytime Před 2 lety +6

    Randomly got suggested this video by CZcams and can’t believe the hidden gem I’ve found. Truly a great watch, very informative, and entertaining!
    Earned a new sub!

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +1

      Glad you find the channel! Feel free to check out all the other videos I've posted!

  • @markuseavids5362
    @markuseavids5362 Před rokem +4

    The "shock and awe" tactic actually fits the Jericho well as when Tony introduces it he said he likes weapons that only need to be fired once.

  • @toolman4745
    @toolman4745 Před 2 lety +4

    This video popped up on my feed and it's my first of yours I've watched.
    Great video, fantastic break down and information, plus you have a good presence/voice and articulation. Subscribed and looking forward to going through your channel.

  • @AlGorup
    @AlGorup Před 2 lety +9

    Iron Man's armor has Inertial dampeners. This is one more piece of impossible technology that makes the suit work. That's why he can survive a collision with an airplane's wing. It's also why he can jet into the atmosphere w/o visible signs of stress from G forces. Like the arc reactor it's never fully explained.

    • @eugene8498
      @eugene8498 Před 2 lety +2

      Tony has to have a suit dimension in there. v^2 - v0^2 = 2 * a * S, simple as that.
      No damper that could fit into the space in a suit could have damped the g forces from such collision and radical change of speed. So mathematically impossible technology indeed.

  • @x0311ofone
    @x0311ofone Před rokem

    Loved the input, nice context thank you. Something worth watching on here.

  • @shivu6377
    @shivu6377 Před 2 lety +6

    4:24 I really love the HUD details in Iron Man suits. Just look at the reflection in the eyes, how they managed to CGI it. It may be real, but still to hard to mimic this accurately.

  • @warrenscipio4168
    @warrenscipio4168 Před rokem +5

    Another section that deals with impact is when the flares deployed and the missile goes off right behind Stark and the blast catches and knocks him forward even more, while he wasn't at a stand still being launched by explosions in movies is probably one of the most common underestimations of inertia in movies. We can assume the suit protects against a lot of heat transfer, the quick pressure change and possibly even a little of the impact, but based on how he moved forward most likely he was close enough to the blast to experience the delta between his speed and the explosions speed in acceleration, which is likely enough to smash his brain against the inside of his skull or cause "shell shock" (we'll assume the suit also prevents whiplash since it can support his neck, good luck supporting the neurons in the brain)

  • @mylezzpurhourr
    @mylezzpurhourr Před 2 lety +12

    I’d say the Mk II is the best iron man suit it just screams Authentic design and science at its finest

  • @Ps3thi
    @Ps3thi Před 2 lety +16

    How do the thrusters work ? The look like tiny jet engines but the suit doesn't have any fuel to combust, I've always wondered how does a nuclear reactor produce thrust 😅

    • @ryanmarbut1035
      @ryanmarbut1035 Před 2 lety +3

      They could be ion thursters or a derivative. Although from what I understand about ion thrusters they produce very little thurst and are therefore only used in space.

    • @Ps3thi
      @Ps3thi Před 2 lety +2

      @@ryanmarbut1035 yes exactly, and they only work in space because there's no drag (cause no atmosphere). But his suit as we see in the video, goes faster than sound 😅

    • @cnault3244
      @cnault3244 Před 2 lety +2

      The comics and movies refer to repulsor rays, apparently some sort of pressor beam, the reverse of a tractor beam. They just named the rays though, they don't explain how they work.

    • @terrellwadsworth2402
      @terrellwadsworth2402 Před 2 lety +1

      You could also pass air through a heat exchanger wich is pulling heat from the reacter, the rapidly standing air is passed out of the exhaust producing thrust, don't know how much heat that little reacter produces, you need alot to make it work

    • @terrellwadsworth2402
      @terrellwadsworth2402 Před 2 lety

      Expanding not standing

  • @NeoOnenessSubliminals
    @NeoOnenessSubliminals Před 2 lety +4

    Awesome video! Kept me interested the entire video.

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety

      Glad to hear! Hope you check out my other videos as well!

  • @bobthompson4319
    @bobthompson4319 Před 2 lety +5

    6:55 Stealth that absorbs radar waves is early stealth from the F-117 on stealth is RAM radar absorbent material and a shale that will reflect the radar waves away from the direction that its expected to come from like the front 180. The SR-71 used RAM and a little of its shape to reduce its RCS. It also had the advantage of flying high and fast enough that a radar operator could believe its not a plane.

  • @CKGBarmy
    @CKGBarmy Před 3 lety +49

    I love Iron Man, I can't wait to watch this

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 3 lety +14

      No doubt, he's the best avenger.

    • @stephan2807
      @stephan2807 Před 3 lety +1

      @@AviationAustin Captain America is up there too. Iron Man is just so realistic. Just like Batman

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 3 lety +8

      Yeah cap is good and all. But there's almost no nuance to his character. I appreciate characters that have depth.

  • @FazedSoul
    @FazedSoul Před rokem +5

    Hey man! I really love this video. I really admire your vast knowledge in aviation and aeronautic engineering. Keep up the good work! I am an Electrical Engineer and just discovered your channel. Maybe some of your videos may prove to be very helpful. Subbed.

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před rokem +1

      Welcome to channel! Glad you enjoyed it!

    • @lastofthebest5102
      @lastofthebest5102 Před rokem +1

      LOL, ok. “The day science begins to study non-physical phenomena, it will make more progress in one decade than in all the previous centuries of its existence.” Tesla

  • @ethanyork3037
    @ethanyork3037 Před 2 lety +13

    You could also comment on the fact that despite generating zero lift, the suit can achieve level flight with all thrusters parallel to the ground. With no propulsion to counteract gravity, he would be in free fall

  • @gauthamsankarrajeeth9723
    @gauthamsankarrajeeth9723 Před 2 lety +3

    Love what you do... Great work ❤️

  • @theishiopian68
    @theishiopian68 Před rokem +4

    The arc reactor, at least at the start, is (I think) a cold fusion reactor. The palladium core is based of a theoretical idea that was tried for a while to use palladium to catalyze room temperature fusion. It didn't work of course, but I think thats what this is based off of.

  • @NimN0ms
    @NimN0ms Před rokem +2

    What I appreciate about your educated review/reaction was that you showed appreciation for the imagination rather than dismissing it.

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před rokem +1

      Thank you. Glad you enjoyed it. I try to be impartial as opposed to being overly critical

  • @mgutkowski
    @mgutkowski Před rokem +2

    I love that you can suspend disbelief on the stuff that clearly nonsense and enjoy the detail in the rest of it. This engineer loves the iron man suit.

  • @PrimeGaming10
    @PrimeGaming10 Před 2 lety +16

    Thats what I was thinking , the F22 broke its wing like a tissue paper meaning the relative speed at the time of crash was high enough for even gold-titanium alloy to be damaged considering Tony was still inside of the suit so even light damage like bending etc. would have cause malfunction but tony was able to restart the thrusters in his suit 😕

    • @adib-enc
      @adib-enc Před 2 lety

      +1, compared to thanos's blade effect upon the suit at the infinity wars, we saw how easy it is to break tony's suit. The question is which suit has the most strength.

    • @zbeast
      @zbeast Před 2 lety

      I never had an issue with the impact... as his suit is made of "magic" .
      My issue is with the F22 after the strike rolling in the wrong direction.
      but that could just be computer failure and the roll being induced by the tailplane.

    • @PrimeGaming10
      @PrimeGaming10 Před 2 lety +1

      @@zbeast , yup . The computers onboard must've tried to correct its trajectory but failed due to missing an entire wing . The shocking part is almost everytime when the pilot ejects the plane explodes right the next second as if there's a health bar 😂 and pilots exit after health reaches 1% 🤣

    • @Rascacio86
      @Rascacio86 Před 2 lety

      That's because gold-titanium alloy is 4 times stronger than titanium.

    • @redgloves9159
      @redgloves9159 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Rascacio86 yes but at speed of qn impact it still should suffer light damage like bending

  • @blazingshadow2669
    @blazingshadow2669 Před 2 lety +3

    the boot thrusters use air, convert it to plasma and directed downwards to fly (at least that is what the comic book says it should do for the first few suit models) the hand repulsors are plain super science (they act like same polar magnets facing each other but it works for everything Tony feels like pushing away)

  • @zachbeyer7007
    @zachbeyer7007 Před 2 lety +1

    Dude, some wine and a blunt paired with your content is chill. Reminds me of when I started getting in to this kinda stuff, fuuuuunnnn.

  • @bc-guy852
    @bc-guy852 Před 2 lety +2

    New subscriber here, going through your catalog. Did I hear you say this has put you into aviation as a career? Fantastic.
    Keep giving the detail and quick reviews of your prior released materials - (no assuming what us dummies know) - it's why I'm here!
    I sure like what I've seen and wish you the best. Better clear a spot on your wall - - for the YT 100K plaque - you'll be there in No Time!

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks for subscribing I'm glad I could provide some aerospace knowledge for you!
      Wow that be amazing. I'm not sure I'll ever hit that. But I hope you continue to enjoy the channel and I hope you have seen my content improve over time as well!

  • @Fridgeboy87
    @Fridgeboy87 Před 3 lety +3

    Excellent :) Please do more Aerospace engineer Reacts!

  • @aidan4472
    @aidan4472 Před 2 lety +21

    2:45 and that’s where the old adage “accuracy by volume” comes into play. Similar to something like Operation Typhoon, this rocket sends out dozens of baby rockets, and the sheer number means you’re hitting something!
    4:05 working on blueprints for a real one, and am now editing for that
    6:03 let’s see if I remember my warbird jargon: Radar Cross Section, RCS. How big it looks to a Radar. RADAR RAdio Detection And Ranging. Stealth aircraft: looks very small. Much smaller than it really is. You can do this by making it paper-thin, making it absorb or knock off whatever’s detecting it, not emitting easy to spot exhaust, and more. Lastly, UAV, Unmanned Armed/Ariel Vehicle. Drones, robots, droids, you name it, sci-fi has it. We have lower-end ones as well.
    7:15: I forgot Bogey!
    7:35 looked like a CIS…
    8:17 what I heard was a gold-titanium mix for the suit, but I’m pretty sure he has that as a coating over tungsten carbide. Which is used in modern tank armor, capable of shrugging of attacks a plane couldn’t afford to take without being far to heavy to fly.

  • @user-sh1gy2oe5f
    @user-sh1gy2oe5f Před 2 lety +1

    I love these types of video when specialist react to movies or games etc

  • @orpattmaks490
    @orpattmaks490 Před 2 lety +2

    Mate your channel is underrated af!! Loved every bit of it! Subscribed :)

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety

      Thanks so much! Make sure you check out my other content as well!

  • @VegasGenxBox
    @VegasGenxBox Před 2 lety +6

    One thing not addressed in the physical mechanics of IM is the frailty of the organism in the suit.
    Long story short, the human brain and internal organs would be slammed against the surrounding structures every time a rapid vector change occurs. The suit goes one way, and the squishy human inside gets demolished in the process.

    • @kanati
      @kanati Před 2 lety +4

      It's marvel. All you have to do is introduce vibranium into the mix and all that logic goes out the window. :)

    • @jaredharris1970
      @jaredharris1970 Před 2 lety +1

      I totally agree that’s why a real suit would be impossible to make fly because the human body wasn’t designed to fly at such high speeds the fastest bird on earth wouldn’t be able to fly at its top speed and make a sharp turn it would kill itself hell even if it dived and hit terminal velocity and pulled out the dive and rapidly changed direction it’s brain would be mush

    • @VegasGenxBox
      @VegasGenxBox Před 2 lety

      @@kanati that's a very good point, I had considered that as well. The only problem is vibranium is an vibration absorber, it still doesn't give inertial dampening qualities for rapid acceleration though

  • @JustJoshTech
    @JustJoshTech Před 2 lety +5

    Amazing video. Subscribed

  • @apocalpyse7
    @apocalpyse7 Před rokem +1

    Stumbled on your video, good stuff bro.
    Keep it up

  • @dominiclapinta8537
    @dominiclapinta8537 Před 2 lety +4

    The suit was a gold titanium alloy, which makes it stronger. Stark said that at the end, that his suit is a gold titanium alloy. So a piece of stronger titanium alloy, at high velocity, hitting a weaker titanium alloy, would make sense..
    Imagine how strong a gold titanium sword might be. Very expensive to make, but might be worth it.

  • @kurinjiking1294
    @kurinjiking1294 Před 3 lety +19

    Have you watched/planning to do a reaction/assessment of their design, any of the Gravity Industries videos? The real human flight suit, it's pretty awesome how fast people are pushing the limits of aero tech these days. Only caught your vid cause I was doing research for one of my own. Good job. Could I pick your brain for some specifics on the original Iron Man Movie?

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 3 lety

      No I wasn't planning on that. It is certainly interesting.
      But sure, what do you want to discuss?

    • @kurinjiking1294
      @kurinjiking1294 Před 3 lety +1

      @@AviationAustin ok so I'm an animator setting up a dog fight, one faction is fast with poor maneuvering and long-range weapons, the other slower with great maneuvering and effective but medium/close range guns. I'll be honest, I don't understand flaps and how they help adjust flight, but I don't want to get it wrong either, that would be terrible. It's sci-fi but I still want it to be grounded in reality. Do you think you can help me?

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 3 lety +2

      I made a whole video on how aircraft use their control surfaces. This should help you understand how they all work. czcams.com/video/SLU4mciRGTs/video.html

  • @dweiss1
    @dweiss1 Před 2 lety +11

    Thanks for the video, I appreciate your review. After watching it, I do have a couple questions from a layman's point a view.
    1. You say the warheads that come out of the missile are not guided. But they come out in all different direction and orient themselves in a fairly uniform pattern. What could cause that if not for onboard guidance? Plus, they have propulsion which would seem to suggest some level of guidance.
    2. Tony tests the control surfaces on his suit so we know they are there. But would they be effective considering the shape and position?
    Lastly, I was also a bit disappointed in how the Iron Man suit came out unscathed after tearing off a wing from a military jet.

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +5

      1. Stabilizing isn't necessarily mean guidance. They could have some sort of gyroscope that orients them without specifically guiding them to a target.
      2. normally it wouldn't be too effective but because he flies on his belly and very fast any small control surface would/ thrust vectoring would be effective. Even if they're not in an optimal location.
      Great questions!

    • @reaganharder1480
      @reaganharder1480 Před 2 lety +1

      A close look at the individual "warheads", they really look like just smaller missiles, complete with fins and propulsion and everything. Fins (when properly designed/placed) will stabilize a projectile quite passively, and propulsion in no way means a projectile is guided. And what constitutes "guided" is a bit of a fuzzy term anyway if we're being honest. If I recall correctly, the German V1 in WW2 was "guided" by a gyroscope and possibly a magnetic compass, and were easily knocked off course by carefully tipping the wing with your own aircraft. That said, quite likely this missile system is designed to establish a ballistic trajectory with a guided carrier rocket, and then split into the individual warheads to strike across a wide area for something like lethal area denial.

    • @baskremers2999
      @baskremers2999 Před 2 lety

      The suit is a alloy of titanium and gold wich is much more durable than just titanium

  • @lilzenongene
    @lilzenongene Před 2 lety +4

    I'd like to know what kind of magical sidewinder that was to create an explosion that large, that looked like way more than 9kg warhead.

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety

      You're not wrong 🤣

    • @SpectorOfDoomYT
      @SpectorOfDoomYT Před 2 lety

      They subcontracted the "M.B. Armes" company, that's why it didn't leave a scratch.

  • @captainstroon1555
    @captainstroon1555 Před 2 lety +2

    The YT Algotithm is listening to my thoughts again. I've just been talking with a friend about flying hotel planes in the Venusian atmosphere simulating a 24 h day by flying towards sunrise and boom, the perfect channel pops up in my feed. Your channel.
    Instant sub because I can very much need some aerospace engineering knowledge in the webcomic I'm working on in which flight is a major theme. From SSTO VTOL shuttles to alien aircraft, I'm sure I will find plenty of useful information here.

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety

      Thanks for the sub! Be sure to check out all my other videos I've posted on the basics of aerospace engineering as well! Hope I can continue to help!

  • @liamoliverdarroch6482
    @liamoliverdarroch6482 Před rokem +3

    8:15 his suit is made of a titanium alloy three times as strong as steel

  • @cwatch6223
    @cwatch6223 Před 2 lety +5

    I am not sure about the aero dynamics of the Iron Man suit.
    Assuming you can build thrusters, power source, navigation system, etc. into the suit to make it float in the air and move it around. But how would you be able to fly it the way Tony does?
    There are MAIN thrusters at the back, under the feet, on the palms; I find it hard to image how he can fly Superman style (without arms extended to the front). How does the placement of the thrusters create enough lift if he were to fly Superman style?
    I tend to believe a suit like that would allow the person to fly Green Goblin style (in an upright position) instead.

  • @theflamecoreguy7929
    @theflamecoreguy7929 Před 2 lety

    Hey , your videos are good but underrated really appreciate your content

  • @kentkrl8709
    @kentkrl8709 Před 2 lety

    your explanation is on spot. good job sir

  • @edwardfletcher7790
    @edwardfletcher7790 Před 2 lety +3

    Love listening to you geek out about the same details I love about Iron Man 👍
    The suit would be huge on radar compared to any stealth aircraft though !

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety

      Especially since he made attempt to make it low observable.

  • @hackysackmonster
    @hackysackmonster Před 2 lety +7

    I'm no enginerd, but I'd love to hear an explanation on how Tony managed the heat generated from the leading edges of his suite and propulsion.

    • @zeroraptor
      @zeroraptor Před 2 lety +1

      I don't think his propulsion creates much heat beyond air friction or I would think his work shop/cars would have caught fire or melted and I think if it would create heat it would be too hot to use in the no suit testing phase. But I could be completely wrong.

    • @bert3163
      @bert3163 Před 2 lety

      By panting.

  • @RamenHutt
    @RamenHutt Před 2 lety +1

    At 7:18, i think that is Tony's HUD and its giving him the information about the jets tailing him. This is also supported by the pilots HUDs being green in the next scene.

  • @notharry9328
    @notharry9328 Před rokem +1

    Nice Video! I want to become an aerospace engineer in the future actually.

  • @victorunbea8451
    @victorunbea8451 Před 2 lety +7

    The repulsors (propulsion) works by taking in air, turning it into a plasma (free nuclei and electrons floating around), then taking the free electrons from the plasma and colliding them to form muons which are about 200 times heavier than electrons but also have a half-life (time to decay to half the number of particles) of a few microseconds, and shooting them out the ends by means of electromagnetic propulsion similar to an ion drive.
    To make a man fly with a particle drive you would need an insane amount of energy to accelerate the particles to within a fraction of a fraction of a fraction of a fraction of the speed of light. Luckily he has like 3 large scale nuclear reactors' worth of energy strapped to his chest.

    • @HaloDude557
      @HaloDude557 Před 2 lety

      Explain how he can fly in space then

    • @victorunbea8451
      @victorunbea8451 Před 2 lety

      @@HaloDude557 onboard fuel tanks.

    • @HaloDude557
      @HaloDude557 Před 2 lety

      @@victorunbea8451 but you just said the repulsors need air

    • @victorunbea8451
      @victorunbea8451 Před 2 lety

      @@HaloDude557 to clarify. Onboard tanks for environments without air. A back-up if you will. When operating in air the repulsors those tanks stay full. It's the same reason he can breathe in space inside the suit.
      There are special iterations of the suit with extended spaceflight capabilities.

    • @HaloDude557
      @HaloDude557 Před 2 lety

      @@victorunbea8451 the tanks would be tiny though and provide very limited acceleration.

  • @ImmaFastBoii
    @ImmaFastBoii Před 2 lety +15

    That F18 you showed was from my first squadron. When we first started the jet the pilot ran an”IBIT” which tests all the flight control surfaces, what you showed is what we called a “wipe out” to do a last minute check in the catapult before the shooters give the final thumbs up to launch. #VFA115 #EFR

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +5

      That's awesome! I did not know it was called that. Fly Navy!

    • @okieboy7065
      @okieboy7065 Před 2 lety +2

      when i was in the navy they called it stirring the stick

  • @commandsecurity9149
    @commandsecurity9149 Před rokem

    So grounded in reality that at times I find myself looking for stark tech when I'm at grand central 42nd street.

  • @bulletproofpepper2
    @bulletproofpepper2 Před rokem

    Yep, got it. Just a enough science to explain the known things and to make you not question the unexplainable. Thanks for sharing.

  • @gunner3548
    @gunner3548 Před 2 lety +7

    I am no engineer, but please someone explain to me how it's possible to be alive in that thin armor after being hit by the wing of a thirty ton fighter flying at MACH 1.

    • @gunner3548
      @gunner3548 Před 2 lety +1

      @@HallikTruce1111 "Iron Man do a "Darth Maul" right outta the sky ". Brother, you made me laugh and I needed it. Thank you.

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +4

      Yeah also, the F-22 is made of a titanium composite. He'd be dead 100% 😂

    • @qdllc
      @qdllc Před 2 lety +1

      Pretty much everything Iron Man does violates physics. Some of his maneuvers would instantly scramble his inner organs. He would need some type of inertia cancelling technology to survive much of what he does. Add in being hit with munitions capable of taking out aircraft and ground targets, and there is no way a layer of armor would negate the kinetic force hitting the suit without transferring in through the occupant.

  • @PWNSTERSkyline
    @PWNSTERSkyline Před 2 lety +11

    As someone that used to specialize in military munitions while in the military for almost a decade, the Jarico missile could be easily possible and smart. Look up cluster bombs that were used in desert storm to take out tanks and you can see how one could be updated to a missile today. CBU-105 is a start for you to look at.

    • @MrTrilbe
      @MrTrilbe Před 2 lety

      A KSP'd mix of SMArt 155 or Bofors/Nexter Bonus with the submunitions being M982 Excalibur, with engines on them of course

    • @morgankuikka4940
      @morgankuikka4940 Před rokem

      I was thinking somthing like the tech used for a mirv but scaled down, main missle body selects targets, data upload to the small missles housed inside split off to independantly hit different targets, the guidance and targeting programs wouldnt be as hard, the hardest part would seem to be how they can produce so much explosive power, each one of the smaller missles looked like the sice of an average arm or leg but packed way more power then should have been possible, the shock wave was closer to the explosion in Berute (misspelled probably) then any conventional munition we currently possess

    • @MrTrilbe
      @MrTrilbe Před rokem

      @@morgankuikka4940 they could be FAB's with added movie magic because movies like to add about 1000x more explosion to their explosions

    • @morgankuikka4940
      @morgankuikka4940 Před rokem

      @@MrTrilbe i was thinking about that as well, but those tend to have a delayed effect before the large explosion, i may need to rewatch the scene again, but it wouldnt be as effective for bunker busting or heavily fortified positions, although the cuncussive blasts are really nice. I just thought the explosions looked more like high powered conventional explosives.
      On another note though cluster FAB is actually a scary thought if you can get enough spread on the indevidual warheads, ctr alt del grid square

    • @MrTrilbe
      @MrTrilbe Před rokem

      @@morgankuikka4940 you have to account for movies not really being into realistic explosives and most moviegoers being knowledgeable about them, what matters is that it looks good on the screen

  • @monsterrun
    @monsterrun Před 2 lety

    The propulsion makes me think of ecm electro combustion..
    There was a top secret project a few years back about ecm missile.

  • @ultimategaming6749
    @ultimategaming6749 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the best knowledge good work

  • @raghavsingh3764
    @raghavsingh3764 Před 2 lety +4

    At 7:19, the shockwave is produced continuously at supersonic speed, not just at the sound barrier. Isn't it?

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +1

      Correct! Watch my supersonic flight video if you're interested in why that happens.

  • @PeterDB90
    @PeterDB90 Před 2 lety +7

    I never actually thought about the "propulsion" aspect of it. You're right, even if that arc reactor is a mini-nuclear power station that can generate enough energy for Ironman to use however he pleased, you can't propel yourself with energy alone - it's not like he can shoot energy out of his hands and feet and use them to fly.
    But, since we are talking about a movie where arc reactor is a thing, why not mini jet engines all throughout his body - channels that suck in air and push it out of his feat and hands with such force that propulsion happens? It's not something that would cause light/fire like in the movies but is it really any crazier than the idea of an arc reactor?

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +4

      There is a jet suit that does actually exist that uses jet engines. But it has limited range and capabilities. It also requires the user to wear the fuel on a giant pack on his back.

    • @TwinShards
      @TwinShards Před 2 lety +3

      Well tbh technically there is already real way to create propulsion using electricity alone (ion-propulsor). But not at the scale of lifting 300+ pound human flesh+armor.
      Just push satelite faster and faster in friction-less, empty void space.
      Maybe in the far future we, as human will have built Ion-Propulsor capable of doing what is happening in the movie with Stark ;)
      Only time will tell.
      The only part that it truly doesn't make logical sense is when he build a suit in a cave. I rly doupt he would have the material to do it.

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +1

      Correct. But to be fair the one he built in a cave looked like it was rocket powered which he could have easily gotten access to since he was supposed to be building a missile.

    • @hidum5779
      @hidum5779 Před rokem

      @@TwinShards thanks. I'm hooked on ion propulsion now

  • @juancuenca6804
    @juancuenca6804 Před 2 lety +1

    it is great to listen to someone who actually KNOWS about science! thx

  • @lordpoundcake2317
    @lordpoundcake2317 Před 2 lety

    Yea this was fun, thanks for the video

  • @KeepItBeastn
    @KeepItBeastn Před 2 lety +5

    The thing that always lost me from a reality aspect was when he would take a hit from something (direct hit from a tank round for example) and be complete unscathed. Regardless of whether the suit material withstood the blow, the human inside the shell would be completely destroyed. His organs, brain, ect would just be destroyed from the impact alone.

  • @ThirdDynamic
    @ThirdDynamic Před 2 lety +3

    Yeah, that was my biggest complaint too with those seats. The ACES II system is designed without the pilot in mind because they will most likely be unconscious flying at those speeds. If it's a low speed, low opening ejection, it won't be as bad, but still could be G LOC regardless. Having worked directly with Egress for several years on the F-15's at Kadena, I can also say that those helmets and masks are incorrect for the F-22. The mask would be a MBU-20/P and each helmet is actually designed specifically for each pilot using laser measurements. They also have a ton of HUD inside the visor of the helmets to give the pilots way more SA. Granted, they can't show all that since a lot of it is secret, but they could have done a slightly better job with it. Overall though an excellent movie! And a fantastic video!

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +2

      Glad you enjoyed it. And thanks for that insight! Very cool

  • @cpeabody85
    @cpeabody85 Před 2 lety +2

    Not normally my kind of thing, but you kept things short and simple, and as a whole it was very well executed

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety

      Thank you! I hope you enjoy my other content as well!

  • @GolemiTopurdaci
    @GolemiTopurdaci Před rokem

    Very informative. Young and knowledgable dude. Bravo!

  • @waxt0n
    @waxt0n Před 3 lety +7

    7:19 that's iron man's HUD, but the f22's. It might be very important to know the plane you're _fighting_ while you're _fighting_ it

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 3 lety

      Really it looked like a chase angle? I thought his HUD looked different.

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 3 lety +1

      Oh no looks like you're right. It is tony's HUD. I guess the transition was so quick I confused them. Good call. Makes more sense now. Still, no way the CEO of a major defense contractor can't identify a F-22. Lol you know that was still for our benefit.

    • @waxt0n
      @waxt0n Před 3 lety +1

      @@AviationAustin yeah either that, or jarvis just brought it up for some reason. Either way it isn't that necessary
      Edit: maybe it's protocol to bring up whatever they're engaged with, incase it had snuck up from behind or something

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 3 lety

      @@waxt0n that would also make sense.

  • @iamsam322
    @iamsam322 Před rokem +3

    So in reference to getting hit by a plane wing and leaving unscathed, not only is his suit made of gold-titanium alloy so it’s much stronger than titanium, you’re also forgetting to take into account his plot armor being the main character which also makes his suit far stronger than even the gold he alloyed the titanium with😂

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před rokem +1

      i thought you were going to give some material engineering answer. 😅 I certainly overlooked the plot armor strength. Silly me

  • @edburns584
    @edburns584 Před rokem

    I think they are guided the way a few of them start out aimed backwards then corrected and join the rest looks like they have some sort of guidance system

  • @pedroramirez3614
    @pedroramirez3614 Před 2 lety +1

    The handle that the pilot is attempting to pull on the ejection seat is called an emergency manual chute handle. It is a backup in the event that the primary mortar cartridge does not deploy the parachute or if the restraint harnesses re not released from the seat to allow seat-man separation. Parachutes will also not deploy until the seat is below 15K feet and the seat has been reduced to a speed below 250 kts.

  • @drakZes
    @drakZes Před 2 lety +22

    The science is pretty realistic. Ironman with 1-2cm armor getting hit by a tank and nothing happens is far from realistic engineering.

  • @espinaca27
    @espinaca27 Před 2 lety +3

    Small detail: When Tony is being chased, he looks to his left. At the speed they’re portraying in the movie, that minimal change would’ve at least destabilized him, which doesn’t happen. Still love the movie, it is really fun!

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety

      Good point!

    • @RayTsou
      @RayTsou Před 2 lety +1

      I think if tony has good control algo's on that thing, it wouldn't destabilize since some thruster should kick in to counter-act. At most his head turning would act as an air brake.

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety

      I agree. It's just not always depicted on screen

  • @BuffRoach
    @BuffRoach Před rokem

    The Scene where he broke the ice was the use of deicer boots . Modern aircraft do the same thing by inflating the deicer boots to break up ice formations

  • @emont756
    @emont756 Před rokem +1

    They went from this to having wizards throwing music at each other

  • @phil4986
    @phil4986 Před 2 lety +3

    The fundamental science of Ironman is that he died as soon as he hard landed one time.
    At least the suit contained the goo that his body liquified into as soon as all the g forces tore his body to pieces inside of it.
    The scene where Ironman is flying along at 400 miles per hour ,the tank shell hits his suit and he barrels into the ground at 500 or so miles per hour is hilarious.
    First off,hell of a shot, tank crew.
    Secondly,from initial explosion,Ironman is a spam sandwich inside that suit.
    But it's a comic book story.
    Have some fun,take it for what it is and enjoy the skill that was obviously used to tell the story to you.

  • @DJ_Force
    @DJ_Force Před 2 lety +7

    +5 points for control surfaces, though the boundary layer effect probably makes them useless.
    +10 points for reactive control jets
    - 1,000,000 points for a reactionless drive powered by an "Arc Reactor".

  • @cypher4783
    @cypher4783 Před 2 lety

    as a question of safety on the iorn man suit. What would be likely the hood of Tony experiencing spinal damage after prolonged exposure of high gs with his head in a stress position?

  • @Chanksss
    @Chanksss Před rokem

    Please guys how do we call the blue light ambiance thing on his shelve?

  • @Tanoro
    @Tanoro Před 2 lety +9

    My issue with the Iron Man suit is the G force and the effect it would have on Tony's blood. Pilots have to wear a G suit that compresses their legs and abdomen to keep blood in their brain. Otherwise, the G force can push all of their blood toward their feet and they lose consciousness while flying. And that's the case when they're sitting upright in a pilot seat!
    Iron Man flies head-first -- not in a sitting position. Any high speed flight in that suit (especially going supersonic) would ensure Tony would lose consciousness almost immediately. Tony would suffer severe brain damage from mere minutes of flight.

    • @xbxb
      @xbxb Před 2 lety

      I mean, with all that high tech stuff in there, do you think that suit doesn't have that feature? Just because it's not being discussed in the movie?

    • @Tanoro
      @Tanoro Před 2 lety +1

      @@xbxb That's my point. It's a significant engineering problem with no viable solution. How Tony deals with this issue is never addressed. You have to assume he found a solution "somehow."

    • @AbyssalMerc
      @AbyssalMerc Před 2 lety +3

      ​@@Tanoro did you notice Tony wears a specially made form-fitting suit under the iron man suits?

    • @benjamindavis2475
      @benjamindavis2475 Před 2 lety

      Maybe something inside the suit massages his body in a way to help with his circulation and counteract some of the g force

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety +1

      That's called a g-suit. It is possible. But he's pulling an insane gs that wouldn't make much of a difference

  • @RexinOridle
    @RexinOridle Před 2 lety +4

    That suite isn’t much aerodynamic. Drag would be insane over mach 1. Surface temp would skyrocket at mach 3 or higher. I don’t know how he survives in that. Then again, this is fiction.

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety

      He has to have an incredible life support system for that reason as well.

    • @nia6849
      @nia6849 Před 2 lety +2

      Let's just imagine the suite is out of this world from another galaxy besides the Milky Way. What do you think?

  • @DonaldHolben
    @DonaldHolben Před rokem

    The arc reactor is a mini tokamak fusion reactor, you see it in the first movie in his building

  • @Obieone2112
    @Obieone2112 Před 2 lety

    From a bio mechanical standpoint, it stands out to me during Tony’s initial flight tests that his legs aren’t straight for extended amounts of time. With thrust from your boot (only 2%, I know) that’s enough to lift you off the ground, I’d think that holding that position would be very difficult.
    Of course, he corrects it with his straight leg stance for take off and landing later. Tony always learns from his mistakes!
    I am nitpicking though. Still one of my very favorite MCU movies to this day!!
    Great video - thanks.

  • @nosuchthing8
    @nosuchthing8 Před 2 lety +14

    The arc reactor is some sort of hydrogen fusion reactor. For propulsion, you draw in air at normal speeds, heat it with the fusion reactor, then let it explode out.
    This lines up with avengers. Tony's suit failed to work outside the atmosphere.

    • @MinecraftShadersandChill
      @MinecraftShadersandChill Před 2 lety +6

      And he must have found a way for it to work without atmosphere because of the Mark 39, also known as Starboost or Gemini. And we can assume that the Mark 50-85 had that as well.

    • @tejaspadhye
      @tejaspadhye Před 2 lety

      in avengers he was just running out of power

    • @MinecraftShadersandChill
      @MinecraftShadersandChill Před 2 lety

      @@tejaspadhye well he also had no oxygen

    • @nosuchthing8
      @nosuchthing8 Před 2 lety

      @@tejaspadhye was he? Or power and propulsion?
      Marvel doesn't get too deep into the details on their tech. Which is wise because it could be outdated very quickly.

    • @tejaspadhye
      @tejaspadhye Před 2 lety

      @@nosuchthing8 if you remember while he was fighting the alien army ( i forgot the name) jarvis told him power at 7 percent, then proceeded to say running on reserve power. And he used all power to thruster to push missile into portal

  • @chamamemestre
    @chamamemestre Před 2 lety +11

    Engineering wise, I would give this movie a C, on the fact alone that Tony would be mush inside the suit, pretty much from the first trials, let alone the rest of the movie mistakes.

    • @leemontgomery7914
      @leemontgomery7914 Před 2 lety

      Yeah I can agree. Especially in his lab he face-planted on the initial FT. That would’ve been very painful.

  • @Andrew-fr1tp
    @Andrew-fr1tp Před 2 lety +1

    If Im remembering correctly. I think the Mark 2 suit (the silver one) was actually a real suit they made for the movie, not cgi. At least for the scene before he starts flying.

  • @sammylane21
    @sammylane21 Před 2 lety +2

    I wonder what would be Sheldon Cooper's facial reaction to realizing Tony Stark is a Engineer??

    • @AviationAustin
      @AviationAustin  Před 2 lety

      Sheldon Cooper is hopelessly naive about the world. I can't watch that show 🤦‍♂️