Why This Obsolete Bomber Will Outlive EVERYTHING

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  • čas přidán 5. 05. 2024
  • The B-52 Stratofortress is expected to be in service well into the 2050s, and yet, the B-1 Lancer and the B-2 Spirit bombers are expected to retire in the early 2030s. But why is an older airplane going to out-serve much newer and more capable bombers? It's not that simple, or as we like to say it, it's #NotWhatYouThink #NWYT #longs
    Music:
    Tiger beat-Tigerblood Jewel
    All Parts Equal - Airae
    As history unfolds - Christoffer Moe Ditlevsen
    Ostinato - Vieveri
    Displaced - Robert Ruth
    Flightmode - Chris Shards
    Chaos Theory - Ava Low
    We Are Giants - Silver Maple
    Hyena - Tigerblood Jewel
    Virginia Highway - Tigerblood Jewel
    Footage:
    National Archives
    Rolls-Royce
    US Department of Defense
    Note: "The appearance of U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) visual information does not imply or constitute DoD endorsement."

Komentáře • 4,2K

  • @mikemaresca4999
    @mikemaresca4999 Před rokem +6479

    Other Aircraft: "The B-52 is obsolete."
    The B-52: "I will be the flyover aircraft for your retirement ceremony."

    • @deusvult6920
      @deusvult6920 Před rokem +264

      It will be at the post nuclear war flyover ceremony of not dying

    • @SHVRWK
      @SHVRWK Před rokem

      @@deusvult6920 Cringe username aside, there will be no nuclear war as every nuclear power in the world has responsible nuclear weapons policy.

    • @combatengineer8575
      @combatengineer8575 Před rokem +79

      My "best comment of the day" award goes to you sir, congrats!

    • @ricardokowalski1579
      @ricardokowalski1579 Před rokem +114

      The joke I heard is like this 😁
      The last B52 pilots will fly back from the airplane graveyard in a DC3
      The last DC3 pilots will fly back from the airplane graveyard in a C172
      The last C172 pilots will drive back from the airplane graveyard in a WV beattle
      The last WV beattle driver will walk back from the junkyard wearing RedWing boots

    • @sd906238
      @sd906238 Před rokem +69

      When you fly your airplane to the boneyard you will get a ride back to your base on a B-52.

  • @antoniooliver7708
    @antoniooliver7708 Před rokem +9905

    Something crazy is that the time jump between the B-52 entering service and the present day is longer than the jump from the wright flyer to the B-52.

    • @Jabberstax
      @Jabberstax Před rokem +1220

      It's incredible to think how much WW2 advanced the aviation industry.

    • @NotWhatYouThink
      @NotWhatYouThink  Před rokem +1208

      Good perspective!

    • @chad6243
      @chad6243 Před rokem +183

      @@Jabberstax The Nazi bomber plan was a great influence on the B2 Spirit, atleast I believe. The design is almost identical.

    • @Jabberstax
      @Jabberstax Před rokem

      @@chad6243 It was Nazi Germany who first put a jet fighter into action. At the end of WW2 both the UK and the US took German engineering plans and the physical planes back to help develop their own jet engines and fighters.

    • @charliebrown1006
      @charliebrown1006 Před rokem +213

      @@chad6243 I might be wrong but I remember reading that an American engineer was developing a flying wing beforehand. Undeniable that they had a huge influence on aviation though.

  • @williampaz2092
    @williampaz2092 Před rokem +405

    One retired B-52 pilot had lost his favorite tobacco pipe “somewhere” on his bomber. Even though his faithful crew tore the plane apart they couldn’t find it. 25 years later his granddaughter returned it to him wrapped up as a birthday present. Believe it or not she was assigned to the same B-52 as her grandfather and found it!

    • @ronjon7942
      @ronjon7942 Před rokem +13

      Wow! Just, wow. Nice.

    • @mq5731
      @mq5731 Před 3 měsíci +8

      SOURCE PLEASE!!!!

    • @tylerpierce618
      @tylerpierce618 Před 2 měsíci +14

      @@mq5731 Source: Trust me bro

    • @rickwilliams967
      @rickwilliams967 Před měsícem +3

      Sweet story, but that makes me never ever want to fly in one. That had to be at least like 18ish years minimum in between? That's sketchy as hell. You know they don't maintain them as well as they say.

    • @tompowers4013
      @tompowers4013 Před 16 dny

      And these are the planes the US uses still.... Smh..

  • @themetalslayer2260
    @themetalslayer2260 Před rokem +445

    This plane is like an old truck. You're not sure of its intentions, you're not sure if it's been reliable but it's here and it does the job

    • @cannabislife1688
      @cannabislife1688 Před rokem +22

      Like my old Toyota, the B-52 is workhorse

    • @maulrat588
      @maulrat588 Před rokem +12

      Yeah if your "old truck" has had a frame up rebuild about five times and is on its sixteenth new engine.

    • @themetalslayer2260
      @themetalslayer2260 Před rokem +1

      ​@@maulrat588 i drove old trucks with i don't remember how many miles and they worked perfectly

    • @pumberdog
      @pumberdog Před rokem +1

      That is a perfect analogy. I was born in 53 and to think it is a year older than I am is amazing. Wish I could have that many rebuilds.

    • @KorEditing
      @KorEditing Před 11 měsíci

      i drove old trucks and never had parts brake off mid ride lmao

  • @ranaezerone
    @ranaezerone Před rokem +3276

    Just imagine in the future you're a Space Force pilot in your highly advance space craft orbiting Mars and you see a 200 years old bomber somehow propelling itself in the vacuum with it's jet engine wondering how the hell is the thing is still in service

    • @mrpineapple3942
      @mrpineapple3942 Před rokem +226

      Nah bro you’d be the one piloting it

    • @ric84
      @ric84 Před rokem +543

      And then as you reach the surface to reclaim some rogue colony of rebels you get shot in the chest by a 200 year old M2 machine gun that somehow also refuses to die.

    • @dsdy1205
      @dsdy1205 Před rokem +315

      @@ric84 even better - M2s don't need any real modification to work in space

    • @deusvult6920
      @deusvult6920 Před rokem +16

      You'd have to imagine it because we've never even been to space.

    • @dvdraymond
      @dvdraymond Před rokem +157

      And then you see that it's still being refueled by a KC-135

  • @Hoshimaru57
    @Hoshimaru57 Před rokem +2820

    Don’t forget the C-130, a cargo plane from the 50’s that’ll also live forever. My dad always said “when they retire the last C-17, the crew will fly home on a C-130.”

    • @jadefalcon001
      @jadefalcon001 Před rokem +182

      Or maybe even a DC-3! There's hundreds of them out there still in daily commercial service with the old radials, and several outfits completely rebuilding them with longer fuselages, bigger wings, and new turboprop engines. The airframes are so robust that the FAA is certifying the rebuilt aircraft as zero-hour new. I love those things.

    • @originflightstudios2863
      @originflightstudios2863 Před rokem +132

      The C-130 has new models coming out all the time, unlike the B-52, the C-130 is always brand new off the assembly line. The oldest model C-130s that are still being used are the H and W models, much younger than the B-52 airframes.

    • @mohammadnoormauludadnan1847
      @mohammadnoormauludadnan1847 Před rokem +7

      @@originflightstudios2863 so if my country have C130H..... that's mean it's old than B52.

    • @originflightstudios2863
      @originflightstudios2863 Před rokem +35

      @@mohammadnoormauludadnan1847 No, H models are younger than the B-52...you should reread my reply

    • @mohammadnoormauludadnan1847
      @mohammadnoormauludadnan1847 Před rokem +1

      @@originflightstudios2863 oh I get it. ...just like younger brother.tq

  • @thelastroman7791
    @thelastroman7791 Před rokem +778

    It’s amazing to think that some of the people who helped design aircraft during the First World War, or could remember the first flight of the Wright Brothers, probably had a hand in designing and building the B-52 bomber. An aircraft that will probably still be in service when the first humans walk on Mars. Truly an amazing piece of aviation, and American history.

    • @cavaleermountaineer3839
      @cavaleermountaineer3839 Před rokem

      It is amazing but we're not walking on Mars. We'd die in a few minutes. Someone may plant the Stars and Stripes on Mars but it will be very quick. Mars is unbelievably hostile to life as the Earth knows it. We'll probably put some robots on asteroids if we find some valuable elements.

    • @myblacklab7
      @myblacklab7 Před rokem +41

      They'll probably modify the B-52 so that it can fly to Mars. ;)

    • @MrFister84
      @MrFister84 Před rokem +14

      @@myblacklab7 MORE POWER!!

    • @denny414
      @denny414 Před rokem

      Fake news the earth is only 3,000 years old according to the bible

    • @gregarioussolitudinist5695
      @gregarioussolitudinist5695 Před rokem +7

      nobody is going to walk on Mars.

  • @BILLYBOBB3080
    @BILLYBOBB3080 Před rokem +869

    My dad built these in the late 50s . It's crazy to think he had a hand in the greatest bomber ever. Rip Dad

    • @Alex2K
      @Alex2K Před rokem +25

      May he Rest in Peace

    • @dedsussybaka4619
      @dedsussybaka4619 Před rokem +17

      It is sure scarry to see a few b-52s fly together in a pack

    • @brendonnz1964
      @brendonnz1964 Před rokem +4

      I agree, along with the Tu-95

    • @mjleger4555
      @mjleger4555 Před rokem +2

      I'm, sure there are still some of us left who had Dad and the War stories. My father was a physician, and he wanted to join the WWII effort in the worst way, only he was 4-F due to asthma. But he did go to work in a veteran's hospital, caring for the horrible wound injuries for soldiers who came home with them, and probably saved some lives or at least made the patients have a better outlook on life when he got through with them. My Dad's stories are probably why I support the Wounded Warriors today! I've seen some incredibly awful injuries in the ER from MVA's, and other traumatic accidents, but probably nothing like he saw and cared for with combat soldiers. That's part of why I still have so much respect for our military veterans. That and the song "He's Not Heavy, He's My Brother" which I listen to now and again to remind myself of what our fighting soldiers do to keep our Country free!

    • @Lungoose
      @Lungoose Před 10 měsíci

      Yo daddy n the other builders bummed in dem all yo pops was like this
      😮AHHHHHHHHH GAWDAM UHAHHHHHHOHHHHSHEEET

  • @ivoivic2448
    @ivoivic2448 Před rokem +524

    B-52 is like that piece of gear on your character that is way under the character level, but has such a useful unique effect that there's nothing newer that's overall better.

    • @AzillaKiami
      @AzillaKiami Před 10 měsíci +4

      yea...

    • @moneyzoner
      @moneyzoner Před 9 měsíci +8

      borderlands 2.....

    • @CRITICALHITRU
      @CRITICALHITRU Před 7 měsíci

      Quite the opposite

    • @ivoivic2448
      @ivoivic2448 Před 7 měsíci +15

      @@CRITICALHITRUlook, it's the "I want to be controversial" comment. you were noticed, now off to the cave.

    • @CRITICALHITRU
      @CRITICALHITRU Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@ivoivic2448 ironic.

  • @michelleshaw337
    @michelleshaw337 Před rokem +1048

    There is a key reason the B-52 continues in service: It’s effectively a flying truck chassis that can be put into a wide range of roles with different payloads. The ballistic missile effectively rendered the strategic bomber role obsolete decades ago, but the capacity of the B-52 to carry out a wide range of other mission types has kept it alive while several generations of other bombers have come and gone.

    • @user-ek8uw1rt6z
      @user-ek8uw1rt6z Před rokem +22

      Wouldn’t say that Strategic bombers are obsolete, the USAF is investing billions in their development

    • @bertg.6056
      @bertg.6056 Před rokem +13

      All that time sitting nuclear alert kept the fleet young. It's basically an 'arsenal ship' now.

    • @LeviBulger
      @LeviBulger Před rokem

      Has anyone told the B2 that strategic bombers are obsolete?

    • @piscessoedroen
      @piscessoedroen Před rokem +2

      @@LeviBulger probably has, since it's also doing similar jobs as B-52

    • @Hattonbank
      @Hattonbank Před rokem +9

      @@user-ek8uw1rt6z Maybe what Michelle meant was that the days of strategic bombers carrying a 10 megaton free fall thermonuclear bomb and dropping it right over the target are gone, but with stand off conventional or nuclear armed warheads, they are still relevant.
      We see that with Russian bombers taking off from Russian airbases and releasing cruise missiles into Ukrainer whilst still in Russian airspace.

  • @bengoacher4455
    @bengoacher4455 Před rokem +349

    on that nuke crash. Do you think the people making the nuke questioned the need for 4 triggering mechanisms? I can imagine one engineer asking another why they need a fourth and the other being adamant that they add a 4th only for them to say told you so 50 years later when it gets declassified.

    • @fish_citizen
      @fish_citizen Před rokem +77

      I don't think anyone questioned adding so many back ups on a fricking doomsday device

    • @endyoutubecensorship6639
      @endyoutubecensorship6639 Před rokem +70

      I bet most designers thought 4 was too few. Some bureaucrat probably thought 4 sounded good and made it a spec.

    • @ronjon7942
      @ronjon7942 Před rokem +6

      I had the same thought as Ben, and wonder if they started out w fewer but added more after a 'learning opportunity' or two.

    • @myblacklab7
      @myblacklab7 Před rokem +1

      @@endyoutubecensorship6639 Sounds about right.
      Love your username!

    • @MicroageHD
      @MicroageHD Před rokem +3

      Nope, I don't think an engineer would say that. Maybe the higher ups in the corporation but not the engineers.

  • @garyk.nedrow8302
    @garyk.nedrow8302 Před rokem +38

    I'm an old Air Force pilot and loved the engineering of the B-52 and the C-130 Hercules. Both were invaluable in Vietnam. But the real take-away from this video is about maintenance: if you replace the parts in your car prospectively, as the Air Force has done with these planes, you will never have to buy a new one until the parts are no longer made. I bought a 1997 Ford Expedition new and maintained it the Air Force way. It still runs like new, and I haven't had a car payment in 22 years.

    • @dakota4766
      @dakota4766 Před 11 měsíci

      Very cool. How many miles you drive it?

    • @michaeldickmeyer493
      @michaeldickmeyer493 Před měsícem

      Gary, I've had a 73 Chevelle for 30 years, replaced the motor shortly after I bought it for 1K, and through proper PMCS (I am Army, you all might call it something else?) still have it. Runs great, looks like "S". Along with my other vehicles that I have always owned for over 15 years. Yeah to your no car payments comments!

  • @whirledpeaz5758
    @whirledpeaz5758 Před rokem +438

    In 2070, after first contact with the Vulcans, Warp nacelles were fit to the B-52 to facilitate defense operations from the Moon.

  • @StrikeEagleCinema
    @StrikeEagleCinema Před rokem +329

    One of the coolest parts of the BUFF is that a man flew the same jet his grandfather, and father flew.

  • @joeyconservative
    @joeyconservative Před rokem +176

    My dad was a B-52 pilot during Vietnam War and the plane has outlived him and may outlast me

    • @michaeldickmeyer493
      @michaeldickmeyer493 Před měsícem +1

      My step-brother flew these out of Loring AFB, Maine in the late 80's. Visited him there once during a cold December week. He is the one I learned the acronym "BUFF" from. Thanks, Brother!

  • @mikewilson920
    @mikewilson920 Před rokem +15

    From a US Air Force Vet. The B-52 bomber has never been obsolete!
    It is the biggest and most powerful bomber ever. And with its ability to carry various payloads long distances and continue to get major upgrades it will be in service for a very long time !

    • @Jnor116
      @Jnor116 Před 9 měsíci +2

      The b-1 actually is able to carry a bigger payload, and had the strategic arms reduction plan not been put in place they would be nuclear capable. The b-1 got nerfed in a very unfair manner.

  • @HenryProductionsYT
    @HenryProductionsYT Před rokem +2060

    It’s not obsolete. It’s just an incredibly adaptable design that has allowed the Air Force to consistently add/replace various parts and instruments, thus allowing the aircraft to last for a very long time, and with more upgrades in the works, including a recent engine replacement project, the aircraft will still continue to fly for hopefully another 25+ years. In short, not obsolete, just a design that can stand the test of time. Hints why I sometimes call it “The Brick”

    • @lookoutforchris
      @lookoutforchris Před rokem +1

      This video is full of propaganda. The first two statements made are already lies. I hear two more lies and I'll stop watching.

    • @sovereign6445
      @sovereign6445 Před rokem +127

      “Old not obsolete”

    • @bigdaddy7119
      @bigdaddy7119 Před rokem +18

      Well said! 👍🏻

    • @militavia-air-defense-aircraft
      @militavia-air-defense-aircraft Před rokem +44

      It is just "adaptable" as any plane if your only task to be a weapon truck...
      Nothing special.

    • @cashewnuttel9054
      @cashewnuttel9054 Před rokem

      People over at Quora are upset that you murdered 1 million Iraqis.

  • @jameslewis2635
    @jameslewis2635 Před rokem +792

    It seems that the USSR's greatest defense against Operation Chrome Dome was the B-52.

  • @Kspat2
    @Kspat2 Před rokem +6

    I live in Louisiana and close to Barksdale AFB and couldn’t count how many B52 I’ve seen fly over but it’s still one hell of a sight everytime.

  • @Eisenkrone5000
    @Eisenkrone5000 Před 8 měsíci +5

    yeah thats the thing with grandpa buff, he can drop anything.
    the moment someone says: the enemy is that way, he just destoys "that way".

  • @starbomber
    @starbomber Před rokem +608

    17:14 as an aircraft mechanic, that is a *massive* depot operation. You're effectively rebuilding the airplane from the ground up (the wings are pretty vital.)

    • @israfelsnead2132
      @israfelsnead2132 Před rokem +5

      I don’t know I think the engines are the only thing needed to fly
      Lol

    • @TheSeppentoni
      @TheSeppentoni Před rokem +26

      Wouldn't be one wing enough?
      Two seems excessive

    • @WhysafraidofCause
      @WhysafraidofCause Před rokem +5

      @@TheSeppentoni just wait until you uhewr about the elevators

    • @quickstrike98ify
      @quickstrike98ify Před rokem +1

      Yeah I think that was the rebuild of that boneyard jet "Lazarus"

    • @dudeuncool5115
      @dudeuncool5115 Před rokem

      Ah buff

  • @alexalbrecht5768
    @alexalbrecht5768 Před rokem +348

    I think people often confuse old with obsolete. If something still does the job it is far from obsolete

    • @curtisthomas2670
      @curtisthomas2670 Před rokem

      The BUFF is the AK 47/74 of planes

    • @fretsward2225
      @fretsward2225 Před rokem +21

      As long as the U.S. Force maintain air superiority in every conflict it enters, the B-52 will never be obsolete...

    • @axel3895
      @axel3895 Před rokem +2

      Like a matchbox

    • @badguy1481
      @badguy1481 Před rokem +14

      The B-52 was a "long range missile carrier" 50 years ago! How is that any different than what its mission is now? In other words: The mission has remained the same. It is, therefore, NOT obsolete.

    • @mikepotter5718
      @mikepotter5718 Před rokem +3

      The Fairey Swordfish got the job done. It was still obsolete.

  • @makli922
    @makli922 Před rokem +15

    1:19 you can hear him try to hold his laugh in

  • @trainpuns2rblx980
    @trainpuns2rblx980 Před rokem +7

    "Giant Flying Dump Trucks" is the greatest description of a heavy bomber I have ever heard. Nicely done.

  • @samuelweir5985
    @samuelweir5985 Před rokem +651

    It should be noted that the airframes of bombers like the B-52 don't age anywhere as rapidly as the airframes of commercial passenger jets. Airline companies try to keep their jets flying in the air as much as possible because a parked jet is a jet that isn't making money for the airline. The B-52's, on the other hand, spend many more hours parked on the ground and only fly for training missions and combat.

    • @hewhohasnoidentity4377
      @hewhohasnoidentity4377 Před rokem +53

      The design standards for airliners is not the same as far the B52. The skin on the B52 is much thicker. Also, aircraft don't age by the hours in flight. The only thing that matters is the number of flight cycles. If a single aircraft stays at altitude for four days, that is one flight.
      Also, the military doesn't leave them parked. They are constantly flown for training purposes. Not just their own training, but training the refueling crews, the fighter crews and others. They experience more flight cycles than most airline aircraft.
      In other words. Your wrong.

    • @hanaWare
      @hanaWare Před rokem +59

      @@hewhohasnoidentity4377 well, you have one slight problem.
      you're*
      other than that, nice information.

    • @militavia-air-defense-aircraft
      @militavia-air-defense-aircraft Před rokem +18

      @@hewhohasnoidentity4377 Nope, you are wrong.
      1. Not only cycles are matter, also the hours. BWT there is cycle for the airframe and also for the engines.
      2. The pressurization cycle of the B-52 is lower as well as the FH. An average airliner in a single year can fly 3000-4000 hours while a single B-52 flies maybe 500-600.

    • @danharold3087
      @danharold3087 Před rokem +23

      @@hewhohasnoidentity4377 Would like to add that most of the B-52 is unpressurized. Unpressurized planes don't see the stress pressurized ones do. That is on reason we see DC3's and DC4's still flying. GO BUFFALO AIR :)

    • @bobbyrayofthefamilysmith24
      @bobbyrayofthefamilysmith24 Před rokem +2

      @@hewhohasnoidentity4377 Actually you're wrong and he was correct

  • @badguy1481
    @badguy1481 Před rokem +746

    I flew the B-52 in the early 70's. I didn't think then, nor do I think now, that it was a particularly dangerous aircraft to fly (outside of combat missions, of course). We did have equipment problems, though. We had a fire in the forward equipment bay (the radar dish). And I remember a fire in a cable bundle on a new equipment installation. Had a bird strike on the front window due to low level flight. It was my impression that most of the accidents with the aircraft were due to "crew error".

    • @Merthalophor
      @Merthalophor Před rokem +42

      Hm arguably a crew error is also an error in design. Some airplanes generate fewer crew errors than others, but the crews are the same.

    • @timlovett6200
      @timlovett6200 Před rokem +18

      @@Merthalophor That is one way to look at it, but flawed I think. Equipment is equipment. One has to remember these were built before the time of automation that we live in today. Most items had to be activated manually. It is a bit unfair to compare to modern equipment. You have to look at it from the perspective of the era it was produced.

    • @thezeitos469
      @thezeitos469 Před rokem +22

      @@timlovett6200 its really not. Many, MANY so called "human errors" are avoidable through good design.
      As a designer or engineer you should never go "oh its the humans fault", when their might be ans often are actual solutions. Otherwise the problem will just reappear.
      And such good design isnt tied to automation either.

    • @PDXDrumr
      @PDXDrumr Před rokem +3

      I worked on G models. 80s it was a second strike aircraft at the time.

    • @orangedream267
      @orangedream267 Před rokem +11

      On the other hand. Something in the area of 11-20 (depending on sources, and ignoring any 'secret' crashes the USAF didn't reveal) crashes over 70 years isn't shabby at all for a plane that went through a 24/7/365 run of missions for 8 years.

  • @ShamileII
    @ShamileII Před rokem +41

    Great video and very informative. I also enjoyed reading the comments from all the vets that flew or were around them. Good peak into history.

  • @christianhill45
    @christianhill45 Před 3 měsíci +3

    As habitual line crosser states, the buff is eternal. Long live Grandpa Buff.

  • @TR-zx1lc
    @TR-zx1lc Před rokem +431

    The B52 is capable of flying much higher than 50,000', but the official ceiling is listed there because the USAF regulations state that if you are flying above 50,000', you need a pressure suit (those space suit things you see U2 and SR71 crews wear). I've heard more than one ex-B52 crewmember hint that they would fly higher, but in that "wink and a nudge" kind of way.

    • @angusmatheson8906
      @angusmatheson8906 Před rokem +33

      75,000 ft with minimal payload and pressure suits

    • @singularityraptor4022
      @singularityraptor4022 Před rokem +22

      50k feet with weapons, 70k feet with none.

    • @angusmatheson8906
      @angusmatheson8906 Před rokem +38

      @@singularityraptor4022. If we want to be as accurate as possible: Some airframes are quite capable of at least 75k ft providing light payload and pressure suited crew.

    • @dr.jamesolack8504
      @dr.jamesolack8504 Před rokem +12

      @@singularityraptor4022
      At about 63,000 feet (47 mm of Hg), blood will boil at 98° F (without a pressure suit.)
      Ebullism is a painful way to go…..

    • @hammersmith1653
      @hammersmith1653 Před rokem +8

      Just like the max ceiling of the Sr71 was 85,000 and Mach 3.2…🤣

  • @badguy1481
    @badguy1481 Před rokem +494

    The B-52 was a "standoff missile carrier" over 50 years ago. It was clear, even then, that attempting to penetrate enemy anti-aircraft missile and artillery systems was problematic. So the way the B-52 is being used today, as a long ranged missile carrier, is nothing new.

    • @20772
      @20772 Před rokem

      Ccc cccc ccc cc cc cc cc cv ccc cc c c cv

    • @20772
      @20772 Před rokem

      C c

    • @20772
      @20772 Před rokem

      C v v v

    • @20772
      @20772 Před rokem

      V c

    • @20772
      @20772 Před rokem

      V v v

  • @submergedstegosaurus437
    @submergedstegosaurus437 Před rokem +3

    @1:40 that footage is actually not from an airframe mishap but a pilot that wanted to fly it like it was a fighter and had a very hazardous attitude. Happened at Fairchild AFB during an airshow.

  • @boooofer
    @boooofer Před 11 měsíci +3

    I swear the Air Force gives their aircraft the most funny nicknames ever

  • @kayzenl7911
    @kayzenl7911 Před rokem +358

    The fact that the engineers that work on her are by now almost dead while their creation is still here as a proof of their amazing work. Congratulations to every people that make her, queen of the sky alongside Concorde

    • @portablerefrigerator4902
      @portablerefrigerator4902 Před rokem +7

      they are definitely not "almost" dead

    • @domesticcat1725
      @domesticcat1725 Před rokem

      An aircraft that accidentally nukes a foreign country is anything but a "queen of the sky"

    • @Melonist
      @Melonist Před rokem +20

      @@portablerefrigerator4902 the bomber is some 70 years old; at the youngest, the engineers who originally designed the plane have to be at least 90 years of age.

    • @portablerefrigerator4902
      @portablerefrigerator4902 Před rokem +1

      @@Melonist yes thats literally what I said

    • @Melonist
      @Melonist Před rokem

      @@portablerefrigerator4902 fair enough

  • @realistic272
    @realistic272 Před rokem +265

    Brings back memories as a refueler in the Air Force during the 80’s while at Castle AFB. Took me 2 hrs to fully refill a single BUFF. Close to 40000 gallons of JP4. If I was in good terms with the pump house operator who supplies fuel from the storage tanks, he’d go against tech orders and switch to two pumps to increase fuel supply volume to my hose cart and refill of a BUFF would take 1 hour. Remember those freezing winter temperatures on the flightline as I worked nights. Wind howling. Standing in front of the diesel APU exhaust just to stay warm during refueling. Great conversations bullshitting on our mics with the crew chief and ops working the tank controls in the cockpit during the long hours. Now I’m closing in on 60 and would not trade those memories of my enlistment for anything.

    • @thekharkivcoomer8841
      @thekharkivcoomer8841 Před rokem +4

      and my dad works at Nintendo

    • @alexbrown1050
      @alexbrown1050 Před rokem +42

      @@thekharkivcoomer8841 do you really think someone would steal valour by saying they refuelled B52s? It's not exactly a glorious job, I'm pretty sure this guy is real

    • @clothbooster
      @clothbooster Před rokem +3

      @@alexbrown1050 for me is an absolutely badass job

    • @thisiswhatilike54
      @thisiswhatilike54 Před rokem +8

      @@thekharkivcoomer8841 You do realize the Armed Forces isn’t just something you see on TV and video games, right?

    • @chloekaftan
      @chloekaftan Před rokem +1

      people getting triggered by syber-VHS for nothing smh

  • @jamiedriscoll9781
    @jamiedriscoll9781 Před rokem +22

    To be fair, the vertical stabilizer didn't just fall off... the B52 lost its vertical stabilizer when it hit clear-air turbulence. Thst lasted for 9 seconds. Too much stress for most any airframe. AND 1:41 that crash was due to a pilot intentionally crashing the plane. You can find that story on CZcams

    • @myblacklab7
      @myblacklab7 Před rokem

      If all you say is true, then this is a very underrated comment.

    • @bwoah76
      @bwoah76 Před 8 měsíci

      isnt 1:41 the one where they were practicing for an airshow and then they lost control which made them crash? if thats true it doesnt sound intentional lol, also heard that the b52s took around 5 seconds to respond and reflect, so this accident sounds well... like an accident

    • @user-mm1yf7yj7u
      @user-mm1yf7yj7u Před 7 měsíci +2

      The o e that crashed practicing for an airshow, the pilot was a "hit-dog", ku d of like Maverick from top gun and had been reprimanded multiple times for unsafe flying, he had a habit of flying the '52 like it was a fighter plane. There were actually many of his crew that had asked to be transferred because he was unsafe and he should have lost his airforce wings the first time he was caught flying like an idiot.
      Just goes to show that there are old pilots and bold pilots but there is never old and bold pilots

    • @tenkloosterherman
      @tenkloosterherman Před 4 měsíci

      It's on CZcams so it must be true, right?

  • @vesstig
    @vesstig Před rokem +5

    The idea that the enginges require the use of protective kit is so bad ass, could you imagine how awesome it would be to start one of those up!

  • @Aidan-fw1xr
    @Aidan-fw1xr Před rokem +466

    If the bomber outlasts just about every competing bomber… is it really obsolete?

    • @eee9034
      @eee9034 Před rokem +3

      Just like sloth survived everything

    • @garethonthetube
      @garethonthetube Před rokem +14

      Obsolescent is the word. It means becoming obsolete, but just taking a long time to get there.

    • @Operation_C4
      @Operation_C4 Před rokem +5

      It's obsolete in it's original role

    • @eljayalcantara3633
      @eljayalcantara3633 Před rokem

      It is very obselete but it's the Pentagon who will stop and scrap it

    • @hphp31416
      @hphp31416 Před rokem +2

      tu95 is bassicaly only competitor and those are still flying

  • @azj_
    @azj_ Před rokem +67

    "The B-52 Stratofortress was truly a 'F•CKER' "
    *I'M DYING AT THIS PART 😂*

  • @samorowell535
    @samorowell535 Před rokem +5

    My grandpa was a B-52 captain for a while, first in the ‘Nam, and then was part of Operation Chrome Dome, he definitely swore by these things

  • @connorredshaw7994
    @connorredshaw7994 Před rokem +2

    Apparently when the last of them retire they will have been in service for almost if not 100 years a a phenomenal achievement for keeping them around for so long

  • @amschind
    @amschind Před rokem +211

    It's an amazing warbird. One terrifying factoid: its wings "flap". It was a marvel of technology in the early 50s, and its intercontinental range was the key factor that converted the hydrogen bomb from a crazy science project into a weapon of war (much like what the B-29 had done with the original fission weapons). However, it was still the early 1950s and they were still working with riveted aluminum and EARLY turbojets. The engineering required to get under the weight targets while still hitting durability requirements (see video) was astonishing, but it lead to compromises. One result of that is that the wing structure could not be all that rigid- making one as stiff as a B-2 or B-1 or B-21 would've required advanced composites and titanium alloys that were still decades away. So they built wings designed to flex a bit. It is apparently very disconcerting to people who aren't familiar with the aircraft, but one of those things that you just get used to.

    • @prasannakumaris7149
      @prasannakumaris7149 Před rokem +4

      I have no praise for this Buff bomber plane it was given to a nation that fought four wars with India. They used to bomb a military hospital a Ambala in Punjab duri

    • @prasannakumaris7149
      @prasannakumaris7149 Před rokem +1

      J

    • @prasannakumaris7149
      @prasannakumaris7149 Před rokem +1

      During the war inspite of a big Red Cross mark on its roof The air crew opened the bomb bay to to roll down several bombs on the hospital below shame on the pilots and crewl

    • @classarank7youtubeherokeyb63
      @classarank7youtubeherokeyb63 Před rokem +7

      Is that not something they would fix when the materials came? Do we still not know how? Seems like flappy wings would wear down much faster than stiff ones.

    • @amschind
      @amschind Před rokem +6

      @@classarank7youtubeherokeyb63 Absolutely. A modern composite airframe would rapidly fatigue itself to death with much less deformation, and the wings on say a B2 flex FAR FAR less. The rather extreme wing movement wasn't regarded as a feature, just a necessary expedient in light of extreme range/weight constraints and the materials available at the time.

  • @randomlyentertaining8287
    @randomlyentertaining8287 Před rokem +321

    Long as the B-52 can carry modern stand off cruise missiles, she will never be "obsolete".

    • @naughtiusmaximus830
      @naughtiusmaximus830 Před rokem

      It will outlast the USA that’s for sure.

    • @Ass_of_Amalek
      @Ass_of_Amalek Před rokem +5

      russia has been doing the equivalent of that with its strategic bombers (pretty direct equivalents of the B-52 and the B-1 I think, the bear and that big swing-wing) in the ukraine war. I'm not sure if they haveeven flown them into ukrainian airspace at all.

    • @battleshipiowa2052
      @battleshipiowa2052 Před rokem +3

      He's immortal bro

    • @patrickweaver1105
      @patrickweaver1105 Před rokem +7

      @@Ass_of_Amalek Most of the big Russian bombers have been retired. The Soviets didn't really build them to last. Most of the remaining aircraft are being used in a maritime role. They had some in Syria for a while.

    • @ser43_OLDC
      @ser43_OLDC Před rokem

      @@patrickweaver1105 false. No so many has been retired, they are constructing new one and they have been use a lot during Siria war and during ucraine but less

  • @Uajd-hb1qs
    @Uajd-hb1qs Před rokem +2

    This is kinda the paradox to the phrase “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” cuz they’re constantly fixing it and now it’s the best thing flying.

  • @idknils2920
    @idknils2920 Před rokem +5

    I love how even in cyberpunk they are joking about it still flying

  • @RyanHinch1
    @RyanHinch1 Před rokem +266

    Something worth mentioning is that the buff was extremely instrumental in the space program and the overall development of air launched systems. The X-15 rode on a B-52 to great success and without the B-52, we probably would have never made it to the moon.

    • @jameskeith7608
      @jameskeith7608 Před rokem

      Well nobody did did they?

    • @vijay-jw8gq
      @vijay-jw8gq Před rokem +4

      @@jameskeith7608 ok keith

    • @Kazperh
      @Kazperh Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@jacknewman9106 ok jack

    • @imagereader_9
      @imagereader_9 Před 7 měsíci

      @@jameskeith7608 grow up arschloch

    • @tenkloosterherman
      @tenkloosterherman Před 4 měsíci +1

      I think that is a bit too much credit for the BUFF, excellent aircraft that it is though.

  • @jasperthehairycaterpillar1168

    Have a soft spot for BUFFs. Back in the early 80’s as an USAF AutoTrack Radar Specialist, 1CEVG, we had many electronic war games and radar bomb scoring runs with these big critters. It was an awesome site to see these huge planes flying sometimes what looked like treetop level. So low at time the tracking radar would break full auto lock going through the trees. ECM capability of these things couldn’t be fully utilized during training runs due to the havoc they would create on civilian electronic equipment. It was sad seeing them being chopped up after the service they performed for so long. Thanks so much for this video! Long live the BUFF!

    • @54DonaldB
      @54DonaldB Před rokem +6

      Tail gunner on a B-52 about the same time. We had a training flight with fighters over water off Norfolk. Late at night on our way back the Norfolk ATC called us up and asked if we could turn on our jammers. Apparently, he somehow got permission for us to jam the ATC frequency (very close to the same frequency the Soviet's used). We where over eastern KY and the EW turned on the jammers. The ATC's response was "HOLY SHIT, I can't see anything, my entire scope is nothing but white." That's about 350 miles.

    • @jasperthehairycaterpillar1168
      @jasperthehairycaterpillar1168 Před rokem +1

      @@54DonaldB Lol! I can Imagine. I worked for the FAA after leaving the AF. I was a ATC radar tech and I’ve seen ATC’s response when something goes hinky. You must have flown through Richmond KY’s range. DET.8 I was there until 86 with some TDY up in Scobey, MT at a mobile Detachment, think it was MD 34 but can’t remember now. It was awhile ago, lol. They shut it down in ‘94…Now look what’s happening and no SAC😑
      Edit: They shut Richmond down in 94. We were located on the Bluegrass Army Depot full of nerve gas. They would forget there was an AF radar site there when there were gas leak scares. We were the only active duty on the depot except for the med clinic doctor. The rest was contracted security.
      Probably did EW against your crew and also scored you bombing run.

    • @davidguenther8170
      @davidguenther8170 Před rokem +3

      I was in the 1CEVG at Det 4 outside of Kaiserslautern Germany. We did the first B-52 training missions in the European theater.

    • @ebadd3468
      @ebadd3468 Před rokem +2

      @@54DonaldB I was Range Controller at White Sands Test Range about the same time. They would regularly test their ECM on captured Soviet radar from Afghanistan. Ahh good times!!!

    • @solargoomba
      @solargoomba Před rokem +1

      I run the EW shop at barksdale. It is sad seeing what they are doing to my baby

  • @williammurray1341
    @williammurray1341 Před rokem +1

    The first 52 i remember was 1962. Tben a 52 flying at about 500 ft caused the bus I was on to drift on the highway in Kansas in 80. As a young Army 2lt it startled me. Still does now.

  • @Enriquert45
    @Enriquert45 Před rokem +3

    4:05 did he said yuba city California what a coincidence that just so happens to be the city I was living right next to

  • @westrim
    @westrim Před rokem +96

    It's worth noting that the KC-135 that did so much of that in flight refueling is only 4 years younger than the B-52, and is only now being replaced, which will take many more years.

    • @originflightstudios2863
      @originflightstudios2863 Před rokem +9

      The C-135 airframe is going to stay with the Air Force for many years to come. The tankers might be going out, but the RC and WC will be around for a long time.

    • @Sipahidesign
      @Sipahidesign Před rokem

      1

    • @StrikeEagleCinema
      @StrikeEagleCinema Před rokem +4

      Even the KC-46 is not doing the greatest job in replacing 135s. With all the issues we have had upon delivery of the 46s, the air force is posturing to double down on the 135

    • @astroclone
      @astroclone Před rokem

      @@StrikeEagleCinema the air force f'd that up.

  • @garyodle5663
    @garyodle5663 Před rokem +89

    Back in the mid-1970's I was in Air Force air defense radar and sometimes we would have B-52's show up to practice being intercepted by our F-101B's and F-106's. The first thing they did was call us up on frequency about an hour beforehand and give us an ECM request, a list of all the frequencies they wanted to use against our interceptors. We would then call our local ATC Region Control Center and pass on the request. They would check to see if it would harm any essential ATC radar systems in the area and get back to us with what they had approved. We would then call up the B-52 and pass it on to them. No way could the B-52 use all the electronic warfare resources they had because it would electronically blind radar sites everywhere around us. It really was an amazing airplane and keeps getting better.

  • @YoSpiff
    @YoSpiff Před rokem +2

    I worked on the G models for a couple of years in the early 80's. I hated having to deal with wiring problems as the wiring had been TCTO'd to death (Time Compliance Technical Order, AKA modifications) and the wiring going into connectors was brittle and difficult to work with.

  • @phoenix21studios
    @phoenix21studios Před rokem +2

    3:53 this is why you dont deprive the hard working troops of sleep. Absolute insane how they function and no wonder no one wants to enlist and feels bitter.

  • @Vinemaple
    @Vinemaple Před rokem +72

    Kind of reminds me of my little crew vehicle in Kerbal Space Program. It was truly awful, but I needed it, so I kept using it, until I figured out all the problems, and now it's the design I'm most proud of, and that I trust the most.

  • @delayed_control
    @delayed_control Před rokem +83

    B-52 should be thought of more as a flying missile frigate than a bomber.

    • @JRyan-lu5im
      @JRyan-lu5im Před rokem

      In which case you would think there would be a argument to create a modern heavy aerial capabilities platform. The only thing keeping B-52's relivant is that they can be outfitted with numberous heavy missiles. They are far from being lateral bombers, which means they are essentially strike missile launch aircraft.

    • @hazmatt3250
      @hazmatt3250 Před rokem +8

      Essentially. The role of conventional bomber could easily be distributed between the three active bombers we have, but the B-52 is the only one that can handle so many different types of missiles at once.

    • @SHVRWK
      @SHVRWK Před rokem

      They still have carpet bombing capabilities so no.

    • @originflightstudios2863
      @originflightstudios2863 Před rokem +5

      @@JRyan-lu5im the reason there isnt an argument to create modern heavy aerial platforms for missiles is because you can fire/drop/launch smart bombs/missiles from a dumb platform like the B-52 rather than spending billions on research and development for a "smart" platform that does the same thing.

    • @JRyan-lu5im
      @JRyan-lu5im Před rokem

      @@originflightstudios2863 The problem is that the B52 leaves a massive footprint, isn’t very fast, isn’t agile, and is a maintenance liability whose only saving grace is a lack of utilization. While a program to reinvent the wheel sounds like a pointless cash burn, to me it would a project to guarantee availability, operation longevity, and growth potential of strike capabilities. Basically the B-52 as it stands are airframes that are shoehorned into a potentially critical specialist role where the Air Force has no other options. But that’s my opinion.

  • @Jules72Bear
    @Jules72Bear Před rokem +3

    The amount of accidental nuke crashes/drops is insane

  • @bikescarsandeverythinginbe7309

    Former B52 crew chief out of Barksdale AFB. I sure do miss that old boy. Crawling from the front to the back was always quite an adventure. The tail gunner is no longer an option but that was pretty cool. While refueling on the ground you could listen to everything in the air. Military and commercial.

  • @christopherg2347
    @christopherg2347 Před rokem +98

    “I’ve failed over and over again. And that is why I succeed.” - Michael Jordan
    Also, definitely BUFF.
    At least, that is what I thought after minute 2.

  • @hazmatt3250
    @hazmatt3250 Před rokem +33

    Absolutely love this plane. I was born on Barksdale AFB, my dad was on BUFF crews for 11 years. We moved away for a decade or so, then moved back so he could work with Global Strike. I’ll always have a soft spot for the BUFF. I sure miss hearing them fly around.

  • @anthonybaskette1708
    @anthonybaskette1708 Před rokem +3

    The department of defense loves this plane so much they would rather adapt the plane to the new modern bombs than build more new types of bombers. Long live BUFF

  • @mikeytee6821
    @mikeytee6821 Před rokem +2

    Wow, I never knew the B-52 had so many early 'teething pains'. I had only ever considered their successful Vietnam/post-Vietnam/current use.

  • @tommybombadil8651
    @tommybombadil8651 Před rokem +13

    I was a in first grader when my dad was stationed at a SAC base.
    I can still feel and hear those B-52's taking off 60 years ago.
    It is unbelievable that they will out live me.

  • @nigel493
    @nigel493 Před rokem +39

    I like how you just gave up the censuring 2 minutes in.

    • @NotWhatYouThink
      @NotWhatYouThink  Před rokem +15

      There we go. De-platformed.
      Oh well, we had a good run, won't you say? 😅

    • @somethingelse4878
      @somethingelse4878 Před rokem

      Lol i thought that or he slipped past that one

    • @viruspter1dactl24
      @viruspter1dactl24 Před rokem +1

      @@NotWhatYouThink already responding???

    • @fatbomber9215
      @fatbomber9215 Před rokem +2

      @@viruspter1dactl24 its not what you think

    • @NotWhatYouThink
      @NotWhatYouThink  Před rokem +6

      Yeah it slipped. We didn't notice. So wonder how many people won't either.
      (some clearly did notice it!)

  • @chuckthomas8176
    @chuckthomas8176 Před rokem

    Truly a plane of a legacy, history rolled into one bird. In my years of Air Force career, I was pleased to have met many legacy people, like General Stewart, the father of sac. The many grandsons granddaughter of the first flight.. to the designer of the B2. B52, B22. Notice I put the b2 before the b52.. cause he designed built the b2 first .. inside truth and fact .. I started my career in the icbm moved to the b52 and saw the first b2 .. absolutely a wonder of my life . Buff .. ooh served in 91 in support and ground desert storm . Watched as she did her job very well . I salute u and too those that serve her now .

  • @larryrobertson4099
    @larryrobertson4099 Před rokem

    I never flew the B52H model that's flying now. But I did fly the B52F model during flight training and upgraded to the B52G on Guam for VietNam bombing missions. B52Ds and B52Hs were also used for bombing missions. Then I went on SAC alert in the 70s after VietNam. In the three models I flew and all the hours I accumulated over the years, I had only one major problem with the B52G I was flying at the time, but it got us home. It is one fantastic aircraft (even though it didn't have ailerons).

  • @danpatterson8009
    @danpatterson8009 Před rokem +116

    In the Museum of Flight in Seattle, the Boeing exhibit includes a silver 14-inch balsa model of what is unmistakably a Stratofortress. It was built in a Dayton hotel room one weekend in 1948 as part of a Boeing technical proposal for an eight-jet-engine bomber. The Air Force liked what it saw and the result was the B-52. Best visual-aid bang for the buck ever.

    • @Condorito380
      @Condorito380 Před rokem +7

      I can confirm to this day that engineers at Boeing are told that story as part of their mythic heritage. Boeing ain't what it was, but every engineer I've worked with is 100% about doing it safe and doing it right.

  • @Ange1ofD4rkness
    @Ange1ofD4rkness Před rokem +74

    What's interesting, years back someone like Discovery Channel, Nat Geo, or one of them ranked the B-52 as the #1 bomber of all time because of its modularity (aka they could easily gut the interior and upgrade it).
    Also, from what I recall, I thought only 2 bombers were in the air at any given time

  • @NatedoggZombies
    @NatedoggZombies Před rokem

    It’s so fun to watch a video of a plane I’ve worked on. I wish I could remember which plane I welded on because that almost never happens on the flightline

  • @fredfarnackle5455
    @fredfarnackle5455 Před rokem

    B.U.F.F. Gotta love it! I was on a ship in Guam in 1967 or 8, we were moored right under the flight path and I remember those monsters flying over us 24/7 as they took off with streams of black smoke pouring out of the engines, the sky lit with their landing lights on their way to Vietnam, one every 30 seconds (or so it seemed), non-stop. And stretching back behind them were a constant stream of others coming in to land and refuel/rearm. The total sight of so many huge bombers all in the sky at once was mesmerising at night. My wife and I went to the Atomic Museum in New Mexico, USA and I took her picture standing under one of the engines, she looks so tiny with the bulk of the aircraft filling the frame. What a machine!🇦🇺

  • @xb70valkyriech
    @xb70valkyriech Před rokem +23

    There are stories of 4 generations of families serving on the B-52, great grandparents, grandparents, parents, and now children

  • @dontimberman5493
    @dontimberman5493 Před rokem +16

    We were really hard on the B-52s road hard and put up wet. Every time one took off it wouldn’t land for almost 30 hours and they did that for years. In a very harsh environment. If it doesn’t fall apart when you kick the tire it’s a miracle.

  • @zachlittle1787
    @zachlittle1787 Před rokem

    3 of these passed over our house in cheltenham england so loud and amazing to see love military aircraft think it was same one doing circuits of some sort

  • @fredericofurlan
    @fredericofurlan Před měsícem

    You're such a great history teller, be proud!

  • @EdgyShooter
    @EdgyShooter Před rokem +90

    Seeing a B52 in real life causes a combination of feelings of majesty at its size and design and also astonishment at the amount of crap that comes out of its engines

    • @moteroargentino7944
      @moteroargentino7944 Před rokem +13

      Kinda like watching an elephant poo then 🤣

    • @thenevadadesertrat2713
      @thenevadadesertrat2713 Před rokem

      I had a feeling of being really scared when I saw them at Davis-Monthan in AZ.

    • @encross8058
      @encross8058 Před rokem +1

      @@moteroargentino7944 lmao

    • @badguy1481
      @badguy1481 Před rokem +6

      A contract has already been signed to replace those old P&W engines with RR's.

    • @joshuakhaos4451
      @joshuakhaos4451 Před rokem +2

      I grew up in Wichita KS and saw these plus the other 2 Planes often. But the B-52 was almost a daily sight. I remember them Flying the B-2 bombers growing up in the 90s, My grandparents live about a mile/mile and a half from the base. So whenever I was over there, I'd usually see them doing test flights with it throughout the weekends. It used to drive their old dog insane as they flew it around due to the noise.
      They never flew it that high for some reason, Which I never minded. It was fun to be in their back yard and watch it fly around their end of town. But as the 2000s wore on, I saw the B-2 less and less until I just never saw it anymore.

  • @sgtrpcommand3778
    @sgtrpcommand3778 Před rokem +42

    America has three ways of naming things:
    M1
    M11311172F "High Altitude Air Assault And Attack Munition " aka "HAAAAAM"
    or
    "Super duper missile"

  • @trippinxout
    @trippinxout Před rokem +1

    Imagine ejecting from a plane knowing you’ll hit the ground at the same time as the two nukes you just escaped from.

  • @crystalsheep1434
    @crystalsheep1434 Před rokem +2

    3:48 wow that was close

  • @TheMDHoover
    @TheMDHoover Před rokem +47

    The B52 will outlive us all.
    Personally love the family story of Capt David Welsh.
    Grandfather flew the BUFF in Vietnam, his dad flew it in in the 80s.
    At this rate if he has a son, he'll get a chance.

  • @NitroWeb777
    @NitroWeb777 Před rokem +18

    I love how he blured the word "fu**er" everything except one😂😂

  • @MotoXfor-ug1dz
    @MotoXfor-ug1dz Před 7 měsíci

    She's still an amazing BOne Rd I spent many hours on it still makes me smile

  • @ughettapbacon
    @ughettapbacon Před rokem

    They have one in a static display at the USS Alabama Museum in Mobile Bay. Several hundred people can have a nice picnic under the wings in the shade.

  • @stevehammel9288
    @stevehammel9288 Před rokem +35

    I was in the Air Force from 1979 - 1983. Stationed at Mather AFB it was mainly an ATC base ( air training command ) with a SAC wing located at the base. Which meant there were B52's taking off and landing there all day long. What I remember most about them is that they were without a doubt one of the loudest and I mean loudest planes I have ever heard taking off as well as landing. The fact that they've been around this long even though they've had their problems means at some point there doing something right. Very right. I tip my cap off to these noisy fu....rs.

    • @ArrowBast
      @ArrowBast Před rokem +1

      it cannot be louder than the blundering tu-95 and its contra rotating turboprops lol.

    • @nordan00
      @nordan00 Před rokem

      I was in the Buff wing at Mather from 86-89. Yes, the Buff was loud, even inside it. But it was nowhere near as loud as a B-1!

    • @bullpup33
      @bullpup33 Před rokem +1

      @@nordan00 they were wet takeoffs. And yes I was also there. Swine bunnies. 😁

  • @cjuice9039
    @cjuice9039 Před rokem +27

    I love how incredibly old weapons like the B-52 and browning M2 are still very useful and nowhere near retirement in this modern day and age

    • @billmoyer3254
      @billmoyer3254 Před rokem

      that they are useful is one sick thought

    • @hankkline7300
      @hankkline7300 Před rokem +1

      In 1963 during basic training, I was impressed with the firepower of a BAR

    • @joefell7845
      @joefell7845 Před rokem +1

      @@billmoyer3254 The Universe is a very violent place, you'll have to deal with it.

  • @GeneralPhanter
    @GeneralPhanter Před rokem +5

    imagine using a 100 year old plane , damn that's gonna be cool in the 2050's

  • @lolokbr
    @lolokbr Před rokem +9

    I don't know why but I laughed so hard at 2:00 . Something about how you censored F***** twice in the video beforehand made it totally unexpected when you just said the full name 🤣

  • @USSR_leningrad
    @USSR_leningrad Před rokem +29

    2:00 uncensored😬😬🔫🔫👍👍

  • @svbettybelle
    @svbettybelle Před rokem +1

    Stand salute, to one of the greatest planes on the planet. Its still a honor to see them. I have more faith in the B52 than todays planes.

  • @CatArmyGeneral
    @CatArmyGeneral Před rokem +2

    17:00
    Woo! Let's Go Thunder!

  • @alanstevens1296
    @alanstevens1296 Před rokem +28

    Over 90% of the B-52 fleet have been retired. The ones still in service were the latest model and have been majorly upgraded.

    • @jermainerace4156
      @jermainerace4156 Před rokem +4

      That's true, but like he said, even the newest B-52's in service rolled out in 1962, so we're still talking about the 60 year "latest" model of a 70 year old design. Mind you, I'm okay with that, airframes of this sort were pretty much perfected by 1962.

    • @alanstevens1296
      @alanstevens1296 Před rokem

      @@jermainerace4156
      My point was that over 90% are long gone.

    • @Drbeattles
      @Drbeattles Před rokem +6

      @@alanstevens1296 they are just spare parts and airframes. however the USAF does keep many airframes ready for assembly for replacement of damaged frames or if a need for more b52s arise.

    • @alanstevens1296
      @alanstevens1296 Před rokem

      @@Drbeattles
      Over 90% of the retired airframes were scrapped.

    • @Drbeattles
      @Drbeattles Před rokem +7

      @@alanstevens1296 they aren’t scrapped like you think. Most of them are sitting in the bone yard which is considered “scrapped”. However they are constantly being pulled out of said boneyard. Plus the “newest” b52 was built in 1962 so of course there’s going to be a lot of them out of service. we don’t need 744 of em in constantly ready. Hell we don’t even have that many of ANY aircraft in current service.

  • @user-im8gv6eh2y
    @user-im8gv6eh2y Před rokem +13

    famous engineering quote: if you keep fixing it you eventually run out of problems

  • @Scatpack21
    @Scatpack21 Před rokem +13

    That tail didn't fall off, it was shot off and the BUFF still brought its crew home.

  • @jesse75
    @jesse75 Před rokem

    I've sit in the cockpit. You don't think about how old the 52 is.
    Some things are timeless. This is one of those things.

  • @jim2lane
    @jim2lane Před rokem +69

    No aircraft is 100% safe to operate and all carry inherent risks. The first half of this clip implies that the B-52 had a high accident/mishap rate, but compared to other aircraft in the US inventory over the years, the accident to flight hour ratio of the B-52 is not markedly higher than most

    • @ibubezi7685
      @ibubezi7685 Před rokem +13

      Exactly - flying 24/365, they were making hours/miles - hard to compare with fighters that maybe fly a few hours per week/month? Lockheed Starfighters were called widowmakers for a reason...

    • @moteroargentino7944
      @moteroargentino7944 Před rokem +5

      Plus one should see the accidents per flight hour rather than the total. With so many in the air, statistically some accidents are bound to happen.

    • @totoitekelcha7628
      @totoitekelcha7628 Před rokem +7

      Crash landing after running out of fuel is not the fault of the aircraft and should not be deemed as one.

    • @ibubezi7685
      @ibubezi7685 Před rokem +4

      @@totoitekelcha7628 Unless the fuel meters/system was faulty...

    • @totoitekelcha7628
      @totoitekelcha7628 Před rokem

      @@ibubezi7685 They said the regueller aircraft is not available due to weather or some problem on the refueling aircraft not the bomber.

  • @gianpaolovillani6321
    @gianpaolovillani6321 Před rokem +48

    The B52H Stratofortress is a beautiful bomber, I want it to remain operational for many more decades, and never need to be replaced from the b21 raider.

    • @jayjay53313
      @jayjay53313 Před rokem +3

      B21 raider is useless if enemy has advanced military satellite, stealth fighters and many of them. The future bomber must have powerful afterburning engines capable of flying faster than Mach 1.5, AESA radar with air to air capability + stealth.

    • @bobfg3130
      @bobfg3130 Před rokem +2

      Sounds like you want many accidents to happen. This bomber is not beautiful. It's aging and this is probably starting to show. The Air Force is using it less and less. In a few years you will hear it is getting retired.

    • @bobfg3130
      @bobfg3130 Před rokem

      @@jayjay53313
      No, it isn't. You don't know what you're talking about. 😆 No, the future aircraft MUST NOT have powerful afterburning engines. You think you know something about technology but you don't know how inefficient afterburning is. 😆 Don't talk about technology. Ever heard of supercruise? That's what it will be using. Military satellites will be useless because they cannot detect it. Not only that but it will have a new stealth technology that will help it conceal its presence even to radar systems that can detect stealth aircraft.

    • @Blake4625kHz
      @Blake4625kHz Před rokem +1

      B1-B Lancer hands down 💥

    • @hphp31416
      @hphp31416 Před rokem

      @@jayjay53313 Bombers can be escorted by fighters, they don't have to fight everything

  • @maulerXX
    @maulerXX Před 11 měsíci

    Great video! You explained everything so clearly.

  • @tenkloosterherman
    @tenkloosterherman Před 4 měsíci +1

    A tool or weapon is not obsolete because it is more than 10 years old. The good old hammer has been around for centuries and is performing quite satisfactorily, thank you very much. Useful is as useful does.

  • @georgegonzalez2476
    @georgegonzalez2476 Před rokem +22

    One thing often overlooked is how NOISY those things were. Way back around 1963 our family drove to Dayton Ohio, my father was going to a conference there. Starting back, we stopped at a gas station just east of Wright-Patterson AFB. There was a B-52 refueling about 200 yards away with the engines running. It was so loud it was impossible to hear one another. I still remember the strained face of the gas station operator.
    Many years later I was able to walk around and under one at Offut, NE. "A plumbers worst nightmare" under there. The number of hydraulic lines, tees, and valves was astounding. A military analyst once told me the availability rate for the B-52 was secret but was around 45%.

    • @imagereader_9
      @imagereader_9 Před 7 měsíci +1

      And it was a SHRILL WHISTLING noise to boot....!

  • @MaximMarkiw
    @MaximMarkiw Před rokem +10

    My cousin just got his wings in the air force and was assigned to the B52. Such an awesome plane and I’m so happy for him.

  • @Kroggnagch
    @Kroggnagch Před 6 měsíci

    3:14 good God! Look at that thing just spewing out the co2 while it hikes its skirt up and trots towards the end of the runway.

  • @user-sl3hs3vx4v
    @user-sl3hs3vx4v Před 10 dny

    i saw a buff that was camo and was one of the older ones with the quad .50 cal machine guns on the back

  • @timjake78
    @timjake78 Před rokem +17

    I was at Minot AFB '81-'84, KC-135As. Other side of the ramp was all B-52Hs, 1960/1 production. If you want to see something really impressive, see an entire bomb wing (5 Bomb Wing was 20 tankers, 15 bombers at the time) do a MITO (minimum interval take-off). We did one for Global Shield in 1983.