Was This The Most Dangerous Airliner Ever?

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  • čas přidán 16. 11. 2022
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    In the late 1940’s and early 1950’s the Soviet Union was in critical need of newer, more modern civil airliners. Existing aircraft like the Lisunov Li-2 (a license-build derivative of the Douglas DC-3) and Ilyushin Il-12 were small, slow, and outdated when compared to their western counterparts. Travelling across the vast expanses of the Soviet Union was measured in days due multiple refueling stops, and often unpredictable weather.
    By 1953 plans were underway to solve the Soviet Union's airliner shortfall, but one pioneering aircraft designer named Andrei Tupolev was committed to propelling Soviet civil aviation well into the future. By 1953, the British de Havilland Comet was beginning to prove itself in passenger service. It flew nearly twice as fast as the latest generation of piston powered airliners, and much higher. With its speed and ability to fly above most weather, the Comet was proving to be much more convenient and comfortable. Tupolev was convinced that jet power was exactly what the Soviet Union needed, but Soviet leadership was skeptical. Jet engines were relatively new and unproven. There were lingering questions about long-term reliability, fuel consumption, and whether the resources needed to retrain Soviet pilots could be justified. More modern piston airliners seemed to be a more sensible path forward.
    Realizing that Soviet leadership would be unwilling to commit significant time and resources required to develop a jet airliner like the de Havilland Comet, Tupolev proposed an alternative approach. Having just finished designing the jet-powered Tu-16 heavy bomber, Tupolev proposed converting the aircraft into an airliner. Doing so would save significant engineering time, allowing for the airliner to be introduced within just 3 years. It would also be far less expensive, as factories were already configured to manufacture Tu-16 components that could be reused on the airliner, like engines, wings, landing gear and avionics. The approach would allow the new jetliner to enter service in 1956 - years ahead of the Americans. It was an irresistible proposition, but like the British, the Soviets would pay a heavy price for being the first to introduce jet travel.
    Thanks for watching!

Komentáře • 6K

  • @shimavitz47
    @shimavitz47 Před rokem +11246

    The pilot reporting all the details before the crash is a hero.

    • @Zebred2001
      @Zebred2001 Před rokem +437

      Yes indeed! Max respect to that guy!

    • @vangard9725
      @vangard9725 Před rokem +340

      He is the superior pilot westoid pilots could never be as good as him

    • @henryatkinson1479
      @henryatkinson1479 Před rokem +389

      Truly a testament to the dedication, expertise, and skill of Soviet pilots.

    • @flakmag1004
      @flakmag1004 Před rokem +5

      @@vangard9725 lol what a dumb vatnik

    • @Primarch359
      @Primarch359 Před rokem +119

      My other favorite crash heroism from the soviet union is the water landing on the neva.

  • @easy_eight2810
    @easy_eight2810 Před rokem +8371

    The Soviet Union's motto could just be: "Safety is secondary, superiority is priority"

    • @1234j
      @1234j Před rokem +313

      Great comment. Though 'apparent superiority (don't read fact-based reports) is priority' is closer to the truth, sigh.

    • @Quattordici
      @Quattordici Před rokem +81

      Da, comrade

    • @jhfdhgvnbjm75
      @jhfdhgvnbjm75 Před rokem +120

      Or 'why worry about something thats never going to happen...'

    • @extremegrieferbible
      @extremegrieferbible Před rokem +220

      Might aswell be McDonnell Douglas' motto.

    • @austinhan6998
      @austinhan6998 Před rokem +205

      @@extremegrieferbible and now Boeing

  • @georgegonzalez2476
    @georgegonzalez2476 Před rokem +451

    Like many early jets, like the B-47 and B-58, the pilots would often take the handbook landing speed, and add 5 knots for the wife and 3 for each child.

    • @brianmaitai7685
      @brianmaitai7685 Před měsícem +8

      Wow!...you learn something new everyday. On the TUPOLEV TU 22 Blinder A Bomber, Iraqi Airforce pilots would augment the autopilot by tying the fighter type control column with bungee cords!

  • @nigelrg1
    @nigelrg1 Před rokem +753

    The 707, briefly mentioned here, was the real advance in jetliners. It was the first aircraft to have flexible wings, which avoided the need for massive reinforcements at the junction of wing and fuselage.

    • @HorrorFuse
      @HorrorFuse Před 9 měsíci +38

      Agreed it did have some flaws but it was a safe aircraft with advanced technology at the time

    • @ironcito1101
      @ironcito1101 Před 7 měsíci +57

      The 707 is basically a modern aircraft. All changes since then have been refinements, such as more efficient and quieter engines, more modern avionics, and so on, but the overall design is mostly the same. Losing the flight engineer was perhaps the most notable change since then.

    • @WilhelmKarsten
      @WilhelmKarsten Před 7 měsíci +27

      The 707 series is still flying and is expected to remain flying until 2040

    • @supa3ek
      @supa3ek Před 5 měsíci

      Typical americunts. Think you created everything !!!

    • @halweilbrenner9926
      @halweilbrenner9926 Před 5 měsíci +11

      707 was a terrific plane.

  • @MrVijay0611
    @MrVijay0611 Před rokem +2872

    Mustard is back again with another quality content. Always worth the wait.

  • @Googleissmart-iq5uv
    @Googleissmart-iq5uv Před 9 měsíci +25

    ''The TU-104 is the best aircraft in the world. In 5 minutes it will bring you to your grave'' really got me 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 9 měsíci +1

      The de Havilland Comet has the worst loss rate of any jet airliner in history

    • @senorpepper3405
      @senorpepper3405 Před 9 dny

      ​Those square windows​@@sandervanderkammen9230

  • @Mathias-RetroFutureTech
    @Mathias-RetroFutureTech Před rokem +658

    I can imagine these flights, where the plane stalled, to be one of the most horrible things one can experience... this must have been absolutely terrifying.

    • @jeelsvealnerve1163
      @jeelsvealnerve1163 Před rokem +45

      Just like the 737Max... or the original 737 before they redesigned the rudder servo valve.
      We have our colossal failures in aviation, just as the Russians and British do.

    • @superstarmusic9043
      @superstarmusic9043 Před rokem +2

      whats the first song name

    • @jeomirit
      @jeomirit Před rokem +9

      ​@@jeelsvealnerve1163 and you understand that, but unfortunately others don't and just keep saying that Russia is unsafe

    • @mandarin1257
      @mandarin1257 Před 10 měsíci +19

      A stall doesn't feel that scary. For an average passenger, it would probably just feel like some bad turbulence, not realizing they're going down until the very end. Different story for the pilots, who were acutely aware of the entire situation as it was unfolding. Terrible tragedy... the rules of aviation, both written and unwritten, are in blood.
      Source: I'm a private pilot.

    • @dmitrykim3096
      @dmitrykim3096 Před 9 měsíci +7

      People were built differently back then, it was almost normal that disasters happen from time to time and airplanes crash

  • @aidenmclaughlin1076
    @aidenmclaughlin1076 Před rokem +2197

    Might have been a horrible craft, but you’ve gotta admit that it looks incredible. Those integrated jet engines are sleek as hell

    • @tylerk2533
      @tylerk2533 Před rokem +128

      Big facts the plane is nice looking

    • @feodorramin7043
      @feodorramin7043 Před rokem +24

      Agreed

    • @Edax_Royeaux
      @Edax_Royeaux Před rokem +93

      One engine explosion or engine fire and the wing is toast.

    • @drabberfrog
      @drabberfrog Před rokem +87

      How big of a pain in the ass was it to do maintenance on those engines?

    • @popcornfury9095
      @popcornfury9095 Před rokem +119

      "this plane is a beautiful coffin" - Soviet pilots, probably

  • @ApolloApplications
    @ApolloApplications Před rokem +1683

    As with more than a few Soviet airliners, despite its design troubles, the -104 was a seriously beautiful aircraft.

    • @tagorod
      @tagorod Před rokem +16

      And fast

    • @kilianortmann9979
      @kilianortmann9979 Před rokem +89

      Tu-104, Tu-134 and Tu-154 Tupolev really know how to design good looking aircraft.

    • @hulagu3068
      @hulagu3068 Před rokem +21

      I think its ugly

    • @nickmurphy4209
      @nickmurphy4209 Před rokem +40

      I love the sleek look of almost all early jet airlines

    • @marallenrondez2606
      @marallenrondez2606 Před rokem +29

      The swept-wing, and integrated engine wing design is always a favorite design for early jet lovers.

  • @user-wy7em7mg1x
    @user-wy7em7mg1x Před 7 měsíci +89

    The pilot reporting all the details before the crash is a hero.. Mustard is back again with another quality content. Always worth the wait..

    • @player1GR
      @player1GR Před 3 měsíci

      No, it's not any kind of quality content. His explanation is totally incorrect. In fact those crashes were caused by stalls on wingtips (so called "Saber dance"). Planes of that era didn't have a special twist. New planes do have it. So now if a stall is occurred, it starts not on wingtips. But Tu-104 developed stalls on the wingtips, and as wings are very much sweped back, wing loses the lifting force closer to a back of the plane, so the center of lift shifts to the nose of the aircraft.
      And of course it has nothing to do with being a former bomber aircraft

    • @maus-chanuwu1244
      @maus-chanuwu1244 Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@player1GR then do the same stuff as he do instead of crying in comments

  • @maxuabo
    @maxuabo Před rokem +1528

    Who doesn’t love trying out the first prototype of the first generation of anything

    • @microcloudhd9231
      @microcloudhd9231 Před rokem +53

      I do clinical trials and am a member of the Windows insider program so I do that quite a lot lmao

    • @twistedyogert
      @twistedyogert Před rokem +6

      It's exciting.

    • @Edax_Royeaux
      @Edax_Royeaux Před rokem +27

      HMS Dreadnought was supposedly a very safe posting to be on, since all she accomplished in the war was the sinking of a U-Boat. First all-big guns warship with the new prototype steam turbine engines redefined what it was to be a Battleship and rendered any pre-dreadnoughts before it obsolete.

    • @CynthiaSchoenbauer
      @CynthiaSchoenbauer Před rokem +2

      Not me.

    • @TheLaughingDank
      @TheLaughingDank Před rokem +5

      You take the leap, either you land or you don't.

  • @he11ange1
    @he11ange1 Před rokem +676

    One of the worst accidents of TU-104 is the Soviet Navy СССР-42332 in the 80s. It carried on board 50 admirals and high ranking officers of the Soviet Pacific fleet. All passengers were killed. Nearly reduced the whole command line of the Soviet Pacific fleet to nil.

  • @i.o.inoagenta
    @i.o.inoagenta Před rokem +473

    Great video! Thank you
    Just some details here:
    all soviet passenger's pilots those days were former army pilots. And this is very important detail about why engineers couldn't understand why such situations happen with the plane. And why they were blamed by Tupolev for incidents and crashes. That planes had blackboxes but very basic; every time on inspection after crash there were no any voice recording. So black box constructors were blamed for failed device as well. But again, nothing was wrong with black box: just pilots when they fought for the plane they did it in total silence. Like they tought and did in the army. So that heroic captain (Garold Dmitrievich Kuznetsov) did was completely uncomon. He commented every step and result. He fought with his crew for the plane til the end. His last words before crash on black box recording were "..we are dying! Goodbye!"

    • @irisiris143
      @irisiris143 Před rokem +13

      omg wow ok thank you for this

    • @DiggerDeeper01
      @DiggerDeeper01 Před rokem +31

      I'm sorry I was enraptured and felt so bad reading this and want to salute these men, but the last sentence slapped me in the fucking face. It just reads like "Ohp, I'm die. Thank you forever." and I just lost it.

    • @i.o.inoagenta
      @i.o.inoagenta Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@DiggerDeeper01not sure if i understood it in the right way. But if you’re skeptical about last words - you can find confirmation on wiki en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/1958_Aeroflot_Tu-104_Kanash_crash
      or related videos with recorded audio from the box. Google voice translate can help with russian audio

    • @Junimeek
      @Junimeek Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@DiggerDeeper01 i wonder how many people reading this are actually going to know who you're referencing here lmao

  • @fraizie6815
    @fraizie6815 Před měsícem +14

    Boeing: hold my door

    • @WilhelmKarsten
      @WilhelmKarsten Před měsícem +2

      Boeing makes the safest aircraft in the world

    • @combie7482
      @combie7482 Před měsícem +1

      @@WilhelmKarsten737 max loose doors 💀
      united airlines 777 gear wheel flies off 💀

    • @WilhelmKarsten
      @WilhelmKarsten Před měsícem +2

      @@combie7482 It happens all the time to Airbus aircraft... the news media doesn't cover it.
      Recently a brand new A321 Neo lost its engine leaving debris all over the runway, no media outlets covered the story.

    • @combie7482
      @combie7482 Před měsícem

      @@WilhelmKarsten man news is biased these days

    • @ilzuab8467
      @ilzuab8467 Před měsícem

      ​@@WilhelmKarstenYeah the news doesnt cover it, because everyone is out to get americans and no news would ever cover for them. Seriously, how would you even believe that?

  • @user-qn3xu5ee3t
    @user-qn3xu5ee3t Před rokem +86

    Comparing to comet, there were twice as many 104s built. 25 serious accidents happened to the comet, 37 - with 104 which actually makes 104 a more reliable aircraft in terms of serious accidents per airplane

    • @Frserthegreenengine
      @Frserthegreenengine Před 7 měsíci +20

      Out of the 25 Comet crashes, 13 were fatal and most of them were caused by pilot error. Only 3 were as a result of metal fatigue or the structural problems.
      Tu-104 fatalities were significantly higher than those of the comet.
      Also the Soviets did not ground the aircraft unlike the British with the Comet. Instead the Soviets kept them in service and thus sent many innocent passengers to needless deaths. So much for claiming to be for the people, the Soviets didn't care about safety.

    • @geo.m1639
      @geo.m1639 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Frserthegreenengine’Pilot error’

    • @carkawalakhatulistiwa
      @carkawalakhatulistiwa Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@Frserthegreenengine😂pilot eror and bad training

    • @machirim2805
      @machirim2805 Před 5 měsíci

      What the hell does accident rate per airplane have to do with the overall reliability and danger of an aircraft beyond being a mere statistic? The DC-10 had a lower hull loss rate than the Tu-104, yet was just as dangerous as a Tu-104, as both had major design flaws.
      It really does seem that logical fallacies (and especially whataboutism) are as natural to Russians as vodka.

    • @annoyingbstard9407
      @annoyingbstard9407 Před 5 měsíci +11

      @@Frserthegreenengine. If “numbers killed” is how you like assessing aircraft then the Boing 747 is the most dangerous in history.

  • @tidmouthmilk12
    @tidmouthmilk12 Před rokem +571

    I love how much the CG renders have evolved over time on this channel. They were always nice looking, even with the models on the desk aesthetic of the older videos, but seeing the fully rendered vehicles in an outdoor and realistic looking setting I'm surprised I'm still watching a series on CZcams sometimes.

    • @solsoman102
      @solsoman102 Před rokem +6

      haha wow you just reminded me of the old model on table thing they used to do it's what made me fall in love with the channel but over time i forgot that their tenders weren't always this great

    • @Fisher_007
      @Fisher_007 Před rokem +1

      Not to mention that they are rendered with a real-time engine (Unreal Engine) so one day we might have interactive versions. That would be so cool!

    • @DataC0llect0r
      @DataC0llect0r Před rokem

      I was about to say something like this. CG looks amazing

    • @cuccklord
      @cuccklord Před rokem

      szfhdg

    • @SDRIFTERAbdlmounaim
      @SDRIFTERAbdlmounaim Před rokem

      are they blender animations or what softwares does he use ?

  • @vladilenkalatschev4915
    @vladilenkalatschev4915 Před rokem +403

    My dad flew on board of TU-104 several times in 60s. He told me that the airliner was really comfortable and the catering was great with black caviar and cognac

    • @restojon1
      @restojon1 Před rokem +28

      That's fantastic! What an experience that must have been! The Soviet era was so fascinating from both an engineering and social history standpoint. с уважением кому папа (я учу русский excuse me if my Russian is wrong)

    • @daymenleo6895
      @daymenleo6895 Před rokem +28

      it's a shame airlines don't bring back the caviar and COG' nac

    • @dannydaw59
      @dannydaw59 Před rokem +9

      I wonder if the Soviet Govt kept the crashes a secret from the flying public.

    • @restojon1
      @restojon1 Před rokem +2

      @Константин Родчанин большой спасибо 🙏

    • @vladilenkalatschev4915
      @vladilenkalatschev4915 Před rokem +8

      @@restojon1 flying in 50s-60s was really something special on both sides either East and West.

  • @wideyxyz2271
    @wideyxyz2271 Před 3 měsíci +9

    Boeing, "hold my beer"!

  • @leonidpopkov7623
    @leonidpopkov7623 Před rokem +1173

    When I was 4 years old I flew by TU-104 from Moskow to Sverdlovsk. From the comfort point of view it was very fine journey.

    • @gedgjoumk5449
      @gedgjoumk5449 Před rokem +16

      Your family must be rich

    • @leonidpopkov7623
      @leonidpopkov7623 Před rokem +242

      @@gedgjoumk5449 Not at all) Flights in USSR were cheap. One of rare good things in that undead state.

    • @gedgjoumk5449
      @gedgjoumk5449 Před rokem +4

      @@leonidpopkov7623 how much usd in today's value I wonder...

    • @angusclark8330
      @angusclark8330 Před rokem +1

      The only Soviet airliner that wasn't furnished like your Grandma's house was the Tu144. Most had Cadillac upholstery, deep carpets, curtains and library standard reading lights. You might die in a field, but you would be comfortable till the thump.

    • @angusclark8330
      @angusclark8330 Před rokem +160

      @@gedgjoumk5449In the 70s, a flight from Moscow to Central Asia would cost 30 Roubles. Moscow to Khabarovsk was 40. Moscow to Vladivostok was 50. Hideously underpriced to some eyes, but the overriding priorities in the Soviet Union were national connectivity and accessibility.Even Solzhenitsyn, no fan of the Soviets, remarked on the cheap availability of air transport. Subsidized to Hell and back, but Whoop de Doo, so's Amtrak.

  • @Poorschedriver
    @Poorschedriver Před rokem +294

    I've been watching Mustard for years now, and every time I see a new video I'm blown away by every aspect of it. Honestly, from the intriguing topic, to the life-like 3-D models, to the smooth narration, you guys just amaze me. Seriously the most underrated channel on YT. Thank you for providing this content, and yes I've joined Nebula I just can't comment on there!

    • @MustardChannel
      @MustardChannel  Před rokem +57

      Thank you! I know it's cliche to say, but I'm so glad there's an audience out there that appreciates it :)

    • @mui6151
      @mui6151 Před rokem +3

      From all of us who have seen your videos there is indeed an audience

    • @TastyPurpleGum
      @TastyPurpleGum Před rokem +2

      @Poorschedriver I couldn't have said it better

    • @Fetherko
      @Fetherko Před rokem +1

      The audio is clear and he has a great voice.

  • @bogwife7942
    @bogwife7942 Před 5 měsíci +8

    a beautiful plane that probably should have stayed in an aviation museum from the moment it was first built

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 5 měsíci

      Much better plane than the de Havilland Comet

    • @Robonoob_per
      @Robonoob_per Před 5 měsíci

      The is way better that any aircraft ever like the f15 doesn’t even have as many kills

    • @jimtaylor294
      @jimtaylor294 Před 4 měsíci +2

      ​@@Robonoob_perTrue, true 😆👌 .

  • @brianw612
    @brianw612 Před 2 měsíci +5

    The TU104 carried over 90 million passengers in it's career.

  • @symilarian8650
    @symilarian8650 Před rokem +1343

    My parents and I flew on a Comet from New York to London 1959. First Jet airliner for us. It was really a great experience. We went on to a different flight to Paris. We heard that the same plane (Comet) went on to Stockholm and exploded in the air. Something to do with the cabin pressure system. Our next flights were on the DC8 and 707.

    • @kjetilkjernsmo8499
      @kjetilkjernsmo8499 Před rokem +166

      Hmmm, I can't find any such accidents in the Aviation Safety Network database. Neither in 1959, not enroute to Stockholm.

    • @therealtony2009
      @therealtony2009 Před rokem +19

      @@kjetilkjernsmo8499 ooh

    • @MeTube3
      @MeTube3 Před rokem +97

      By 1958 the on service Comet fleet were replaced by Comet 4 which was modified to prevent the pressure hull structural failures that affect the earlier versions.

    • @semsemeini7905
      @semsemeini7905 Před rokem +3

      I think it was coming from Rome.

    • @kjetilkjernsmo8499
      @kjetilkjernsmo8499 Před rokem +26

      @@pa.d5688 Ah, OK, I thought it was a Comet we were talking about, not a Tu-104.

  • @BaronSirolf
    @BaronSirolf Před rokem +186

    This should deserve to be on television 10 times more then any other documentry I really love your content!

    • @williamyoung9401
      @williamyoung9401 Před rokem +3

      "Why you wouldn't want to fly the new Boeing 737-Max. Did I say 737-Max? I meant a 'Soviet' airliner...yeah..."

    • @heidirabenau511
      @heidirabenau511 Před rokem +1

      @@williamyoung9401 *Boeing moves head office to Moscow*

  • @user-uv7oz2zl6h
    @user-uv7oz2zl6h Před rokem +22

    Often in the summer, the family flew Tu-104 from Vladivostok to Khabarovsk and then to Moscow on Il-62. Comfort corresponded to that era.

  • @CrippedGinge
    @CrippedGinge Před rokem +4

    Fantastic video about a plane I didn't know of from a channel I hadn't seen before. Brilliantly put together video of a really high quality. Well done.

  • @kipchickensout
    @kipchickensout Před rokem +96

    I love the almost photorealistic graphics in between, the choice of music, the type of information you provide and how you provide it coupled with real pictures an videos, as well as simple graphics, superb!

  • @machpodfan
    @machpodfan Před rokem +107

    I flew on one in 1976, from then-Leningrad to Moscow. No individual air outlets, loud engine moan, and I watched in fascination on approach as the flaps wound out on long, long exposed jackscrews. As well, at Leningrad were a flock of recently-retired TU-114s on the tarmac, all those multiple layers of props glinting in the sun...good memories!

    • @tonyunderwood9678
      @tonyunderwood9678 Před rokem +1

      Exposed jackscrews on the flaps reminds me of the DC-10... sitting in the right spot, you can see the jackscrews working. :-)

    • @chrisamies2141
      @chrisamies2141 Před rokem +2

      I flew on one the same year, can't remember which route (we went to Moscow, then-Leningrad, Kiev and Yalta), but going by what you've said it may have been the same.

    • @superstarmusic9043
      @superstarmusic9043 Před rokem

      whats the first song name

  • @jdee8267
    @jdee8267 Před rokem

    Excellent documentary, no wastage and straight to the point. Thank you.

  • @BlueyChandler
    @BlueyChandler Před rokem +7

    Beautiful looking aircraft, especially the Glass nose cone/ cockpit and wing design.

  • @upperborders
    @upperborders Před rokem +95

    Every few months the world becomes a better place due to your videos.

    • @saml7610
      @saml7610 Před rokem +2

      Yeah I think that's negated by all the, well... *Gestures at the world*

  • @MrTHAUniverse
    @MrTHAUniverse Před rokem +450

    It is a hella gorgeous aircraft for sure regardless of it's reputation

  • @ndirangugichuki6260
    @ndirangugichuki6260 Před rokem +6

    This was very interesting, the pilot who radioed back as he was experiencing that event, I salute him 🫡 !!

  • @mk_787
    @mk_787 Před rokem

    Thanks for making the great video! I really enjoy watching your content. The qualities are high af.

  • @1234j
    @1234j Před rokem +90

    Excellent video and content, as always. Thank you for such consistently high quality of content. I remember these aeroplanes! Cheers from England.

  • @al_caponeh6185
    @al_caponeh6185 Před rokem +36

    As an aerospace(aeronautical) engineering student I confess that I did shorten the wings of a G550 in order to turn it into a EMB-145, albeit just on the sim ofc. If I were to test it, surely it will stall.

  • @generalized_lesbian
    @generalized_lesbian Před rokem

    I love how he starts his videos with get access to thousands of high quality shows and series. My man doesn't realize that the content he provides is the reason I signed up for curiosity stream. Keep it up.

  • @dstuart2918
    @dstuart2918 Před 10 měsíci

    These films are incredibly well-made and researched. The narrator's voice is engaging and interesting. Thank you so much for bringing these to us.

  • @BotNickz
    @BotNickz Před rokem +64

    Maintenance must’ve been a pain but wing integrated engines look so sleek like on this and the De Havilland Comet

    • @hurri7720
      @hurri7720 Před rokem +4

      Still a very bad design as every engine "explosion" would have been more dangerous to the plane, the fuselage. No wonder it's not used.

    • @x-ray3443
      @x-ray3443 Před rokem +4

      @@hurri7720 That and you cant really use high bypass turbofans with that design

    • @filledwithvariousknowledge2747
      @filledwithvariousknowledge2747 Před rokem +1

      @@x-ray3443 A key advantage from that embedded design was no engine drag

    • @x-ray3443
      @x-ray3443 Před rokem

      @@filledwithvariousknowledge2747 but dont non highbypass turbofans drink fuel?

  • @jaybee9269
    @jaybee9269 Před rokem +62

    I love the B-29 Navigation/Bombadier window on that beast. Beautiful aircraft.

    • @shaider1982
      @shaider1982 Před rokem +10

      I wouldn't be surprised if that was deliberate: Tupolev had the job of reverse engineering B29's that landed in the USSR
      Theses became the Tu4 Bull

    • @SMGJohn
      @SMGJohn Před rokem +10

      Soviets liked having the navigator in the nose, a tradition they kept for a long time.

    • @RatPfink66
      @RatPfink66 Před rokem +1

      @@SMGJohn he was probably having to shoot the stars and other stuff

    • @angusclark8330
      @angusclark8330 Před rokem +5

      @@shaider1982 Landing fields in the Soviet Union were often just that: fields. The navigator/ co- pilot would have to assess ground conditions before okaying a landing attrmpt. ANT was just keeping up the practise of his youth.

  • @mojoneko8303
    @mojoneko8303 Před rokem +6

    10:50 Should write a version of this song for the 737Max...

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před rokem

      The Max is a much safer than the Tu-104 or the Comet

    • @clarenceghammjr1326
      @clarenceghammjr1326 Před 3 měsíci

      Present day makes this post even funnier, today united airlines said Boeing is not in there future 😂😂😂😂

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 3 měsíci

      @@clarenceghammjr1326 *United is so badly managed it might not have a future..*
      *Boeing reported it has 1,456 new orders in 2023 with 150 new 737 Max orders from Alaska Airlines!!!!*

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 3 měsíci

      @@clarenceghammjr1326 *Stupid people who watch the mainstream Media often forget that Boeings 737 is the most successful aircraft in history with over 11,000 sold and orders for 15,000.*
      *1/3rd of all the people in the air right now are onboard a 737... more than 2,000 in the air as you read this, one takes-off or lands every 3 seconds.*

  • @tandemcompound2
    @tandemcompound2 Před rokem

    Top marks for this video, interesting, new to me; but best of all great graphics, narration, timing, and story telling. ONe of the best videos I have seen in 3 years. thank you

  • @henrikr7445
    @henrikr7445 Před rokem +93

    Mustard needs his own documentary special on one of the major streaming services. Each episode is so well done, informative and entertaining to watch.

    • @sailintothesun3421
      @sailintothesun3421 Před rokem +1

      I think the 'execs' would meddle in the creative process. They would probably find his dedication to making his videos so visually appealing wasteful

    • @tihspidtherekciltilc5469
      @tihspidtherekciltilc5469 Před rokem +1

      No.

    • @MONARCH1985
      @MONARCH1985 Před rokem

      Yeah if he released videos that are exclusive. Still waiting on the B-2 video that was supposed to release two months ago

    • @BR69843
      @BR69843 Před rokem

      @@MONARCH1985 Did you note the point made at the end of this video about the Spirit video?

    • @MONARCH1985
      @MONARCH1985 Před rokem

      @@BR69843 no I didn’t watch it

  • @avramnovorra
    @avramnovorra Před rokem +53

    It's amazing that the Tu-104 and the Tu-114 and -116 are based of of Soviet bombers yet have had such importance to aviation in so many regards.. well done Mustard!

    • @hurri7720
      @hurri7720 Před rokem +5

      All civilian aviation with jet engines was based on bombers. Perhaps not the British but they failed perhaps due to that.

    • @aoki6332
      @aoki6332 Před rokem +2

      @@hurri7720 not really only the jet engine came from bombers its just that most company that made plane where making civilian and Military plane the same why lockheed martin make missile for the air force and booster (and a lot of other stuff but you get the idea) for the nasa

    • @theq4602
      @theq4602 Před rokem +2

      I;d love to see a passenger jet based on the TU-22

    • @cuccklord
      @cuccklord Před rokem +1

      hi

    • @machupikachu1085
      @machupikachu1085 Před rokem

      @@aoki6332 the boeing 707 was designed from a bomber.

  • @Qonvex
    @Qonvex Před 8 měsíci +4

    love aeroflot, last time i flew with one they had the absolute nicest brand new plane's with the best service and food, plus they gave you an actual metal fork haha love it. oh and the pilot was absolute world class, no heavy touchdown or anything when landing. smooth as butter.

  • @mustafaaktas2552
    @mustafaaktas2552 Před rokem

    The videos you are making are marvellous! Keep going like that.

  • @nodarikvatchantiradze7277
    @nodarikvatchantiradze7277 Před rokem +615

    I'm from a post Soviet county and I've actually heard some people using phrase going to the TU 104 as an euphemism for going to toilet, so I guess it didn't have all that great reputation here as well 😂

    • @EmWe972
      @EmWe972 Před rokem +4

      where you from?

    • @RpMTarTar
      @RpMTarTar Před rokem +32

      @@EmWe972 Idk, maybe she/he is from Georgia, just assuming from the end of the last name.

    • @indridcold8433
      @indridcold8433 Před rokem +12

      The Canadians have a term when we mess up, "screwing the pooch." As attractive as that may sound to some, for the majority of us it means we messed up because we meant to make sweet love to our partners instead, unless, of course, your partner is a pooch. I guess then that is good for that microminority.

    • @peepa47
      @peepa47 Před rokem +5

      post soviet is a vague term

    • @machupikachu1085
      @machupikachu1085 Před rokem +7

      @@indridcold8433 LOL I forgot about that term! My cousin earned the nickname 'Dogger' because he was always screwing the pooch.

  • @saalamin1869
    @saalamin1869 Před rokem +463

    Safe or unsafe , Soviet engineering always fascinates me.

    • @angela20377
      @angela20377 Před rokem +4

      agreed

    • @ikr9358
      @ikr9358 Před rokem +108

      It's kind of like "Here's the bare minimum of money and resources, build something that'll at least look good for a year or two."

    • @kristoffer3000
      @kristoffer3000 Před rokem +63

      @@ikr9358 And last for 50.

    • @ourfarmhouseinspain
      @ourfarmhouseinspain Před rokem +31

      They certainly had some interesting, if impractical, designs. Corruption, overreaching ideas, poor research and development, political interference all combined to dilute all of them.

    • @SPARTS3000
      @SPARTS3000 Před rokem +7

      Oh yes just ask the Polish!

  • @jicabe577
    @jicabe577 Před rokem

    Exquisite pictures and beautiful retro graphics and composition. A lot of work, I guess. Congratulations, Sir!

  • @beahns
    @beahns Před rokem +8

    10:58 got me laughing so hard lmao
    especially since i speak russian as my parents immigrated from the soviet union to canada

  • @slavsh
    @slavsh Před rokem +214

    I watched Russian TV film about this aircraft where they mentioned that pilots reported many times weak responsiveness of the elevators and official reports after the first crash, which mentioned this dangerous tendency to pitch-up, but Tupolev himself ignored pilot's complains and the report and said that pilots just don't know how to fly. Probably because this aircraft was a favourite one of Krushchev and authorities just didn't want to take responsibility to ground this airplane - direct results of autocracy and totalitarianism. If they haven't ignored pilot's reports, they would have avoided future catastrophes and deaths. Another issue for this plane was it's challenging landing, pilots should descend in steps rather than smoothly following glissade. All in all Tu-104 scored the worst reliable Soviet airliner with 37 airplanes lost out of 201 produced. The last catastrophe happened in 1981 (being dismissed from Aeroflot, Tu-104 still has been in use for army). In this catastrophe high-ranking Soviet military personnel of Pacific fleet had died.

    • @slavsh
      @slavsh Před rokem

      @TacticalMoonstone Thank you for letting me know.

    • @angusclark8330
      @angusclark8330 Před rokem +20

      @@tacticalmoonstone9468 He also noted that the cause of the accident was unsecured rolls of printing paper that were being, in essence, internally smuggled to the Far East, each weighing half a metric tonne. When the plane pitched up to take off, the paper rolls rolled to the back of the (tail) cargo compartment, destroying the plane's balance irrecoverably. No pilot on this earth or the next could have saved it. The irony that the cream of Soviet Naval Defense had died because of their bourgeois (and possibly capitalist) greed seems to have evaporated from the official report.

    • @matthewmosier8439
      @matthewmosier8439 Před rokem +13

      @@angusclark8330 Interesting info. Capitalism doesn't have anything more to do with greed than Socialism does. One can be greedy in either system.

    • @slesru
      @slesru Před rokem

      "direct results of autocracy and totalitarianism. " I guess communist are responsible for boeing 737max ? ;-)

    • @himoffthequakeroatbox4320
      @himoffthequakeroatbox4320 Před rokem +5

      @@matthewmosier8439 Indeed. Boeing 737 Max, anyone?

  • @Alanjohnlew
    @Alanjohnlew Před rokem +36

    I remember plane spotting at Heathrow as a kid in the 60s, when ATC change from the two main runways to one of the shorter, no longer existing, cross runways. An Aeroflot TU104 came in fast and had to deploy parachutes to stop. A very unusual sight at Heathrow.

  • @amgluk
    @amgluk Před měsícem +2

    Nice song, we sang it in the 60s. However, I had to fly the Tu-104 Lelingrad-Moscow several times in the mid-70s. This is considered a short route and was served by this aircraft. It has already been removed from long-distance routes. The plane seemed rather archaic to me until I had to fly from Moscow to Central Asia on an IL-18. This was a real vibration stand, although it had the most comfortable seats of anything I had to fly on.

  • @tasteofmeiguo1146
    @tasteofmeiguo1146 Před rokem

    Awesome informational videos !! Keep it up !! Thank you

  • @Stripdancer100
    @Stripdancer100 Před rokem +59

    The last TU-104 was put out of service in 1981 (by that time, it had been out of civil aviation for many years) after its crash resulted in deaths of top brass of the Soviet Pacific Fleet's

    • @canerguener8664
      @canerguener8664 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Think it was mid 80s. Or it was a similar plane

    • @skeetrix5577
      @skeetrix5577 Před 6 měsíci +5

      there's a video on CZcams, shit I don't remember the creator name but it explained that crash in great detail. it is narrated by a Russian native speaker and was a great channel. It pisses me off I can't remember his channel name

    • @imaginationplay3382
      @imaginationplay3382 Před 5 měsíci +5

      The channel is paper skies

    • @legatvsdecimvs3406
      @legatvsdecimvs3406 Před 3 měsíci

      Tu-104 was flying until 1986.
      That crash was caused by idiots not securing cargo in the back of the plane, it resulted in a "nose up" stall on take-off from a sudden shift in the center of gravity. Something similar happened to a US Military chartered Boeing 747 in Afghanistan in 2013.
      czcams.com/video/5fpxm0D46iQ/video.html

    • @NickNameRU
      @NickNameRU Před 2 měsíci

      @@skeetrix5577 I think, its chanel "Skyship Eng".

  • @jmi5969
    @jmi5969 Před rokem +35

    The first airplane I ever flew was the Tu-124 - a scaled-down and reengined 104. It was 1975 or 76, I was 8 years old and the main impression was - just how small the thing was, especially inside. Much smaller than a regular city bus. And, in retrospect, it wasn't much safer than the 104 - the 124s were grounded and written off along with the remaining 104s, in 1979-1980.

    • @DavidAndersonKirk
      @DavidAndersonKirk Před rokem

      You were a pilot at 8 years old! No wonder these things crashed a lot

    • @jmi5969
      @jmi5969 Před rokem +1

      @@DavidAndersonKirk That's why I already considered retiring then...

  • @eggstatus5824
    @eggstatus5824 Před 8 měsíci +4

    Then during the rise of jet airliners, Boeing said "hold my beer" and nailed it on their first try with the Boeing 707

  • @viniciusmagnoni6492
    @viniciusmagnoni6492 Před 7 měsíci +1

    It might be the most dangerous, but it's certainly one of the most beautiful.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 7 měsíci

      Actually it is a very safe aircraft compared to the British de Havilland Comet...
      The Comet has the highest loss rate and fatalities statistics, 1 out of every 3 Comets built crashed or were destroyed in accidents.

    • @Crustaceannationrepresentative
      @Crustaceannationrepresentative Před 6 měsíci +2

      ​@@sandervanderkammen9230Soviet bot 💀

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Crustaceannationrepresentative Just the facts here lad, just the facts.

  • @DocSmouse
    @DocSmouse Před rokem +45

    The Paper Skies video about the Soviet Navy's Tu-104 accident was excellent, and it's great to see an overview of the plane in general. Great video as always!

    • @brianwong7285
      @brianwong7285 Před rokem +4

      10:41 There it is on that list.

    • @arifbayusatrio1028
      @arifbayusatrio1028 Před rokem +1

      @@brianwong7285 good eye

    • @player1GR
      @player1GR Před 3 měsíci

      Not that great, it's a very weak video with bad explanation. In reality those crashes were caused by stalls on wingtips (so called "Saber dance"). Planes of that era didn't have a special twist. New planes do have it. So now if a stall is occurred, it starts not on wingtips. But Tu-104 developed stalls on the wingtips, and as wings are very much sweped back, wing loses the lifting force closer to a back of the plane, so the center of lift shifts to the nose of the aircraft.
      And of course it has nothing to do with being a former bomber aircraft

  • @tyronebenjamin6640
    @tyronebenjamin6640 Před rokem +34

    Another great video. I really enjoy how you mix aviation history with aircraft design. Secondly, you are a great story teller!

  • @onebravotango
    @onebravotango Před 8 měsíci +3

    Fascinating glimpse into the strategic innovation of using existing technology to propel Soviet civil aviation into the jet age. A brilliant move by Tupolev, with both risks and rewards that shaped aviation history.

  • @Crazyuncle1
    @Crazyuncle1 Před rokem +1

    In the 1950s when I was a kid growing up in the States I built plastic airplane models like lost of boys and the TU 104 was one of my favorites. I still like the way it looks.

  • @user-hq7us4lz6g
    @user-hq7us4lz6g Před rokem +50

    I flew a Tu-104. Huge engines power, comfortable interior and loud noise inside. As it took off, thunder was heard on the ground!

  • @deltawarshipdelta8565
    @deltawarshipdelta8565 Před rokem +11

    I love those documentaries , the animation and the stories told are always so interesting to follow something you see very rarely in CZcams

  • @scottmurphy650
    @scottmurphy650 Před 8 měsíci +2

    In Soviet Union Komrade, only one way flights authorized and no guarantee of arriving at destination.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 8 měsíci

      That's the de Havilland Comet's motto.

    • @BarometricQuad
      @BarometricQuad Před 7 měsíci +1

      we have several destinations to choose from in Soviet :
      1. Ocean
      2. Empty field
      3. The forest

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@BarometricQuad The Comet could sprinkle you over all of those destinations...

    • @BarometricQuad
      @BarometricQuad Před 7 měsíci +2

      @@sandervanderkammen9230 yes

  • @charlieccuboston
    @charlieccuboston Před rokem +11

    I absolutely love the graphics and 1950s period style imagery. This is a really high end video. I'm very very impressed!

  • @littlequarian7200
    @littlequarian7200 Před rokem +10

    There is actually one of them placed near my house in my town as a local landmark. Its feels great to finally know the story of this plane after walking by it almost everyday since childhood.

  • @simonjones7727
    @simonjones7727 Před rokem +7

    The story of The Comet is sad, so innovative in many ways, but is was the 707 "Water Wagon" that won the day. I think the West adapted military designs too. If you were to travel on a V-Bomber to New York with Joan Collins and David Frost strapped in next to you then you were basically replicating the Concorde experience (in essentials, anyway)

  • @snow6937
    @snow6937 Před 8 měsíci

    great graphics! thnx

  • @shatterquartz
    @shatterquartz Před rokem +8

    7:18 "Pilots were so afraid of Stalin--I mean stalling"

  • @snjert8406
    @snjert8406 Před rokem +34

    I absolutely adore these videos. I’m studying media and IT and just rendering out a simple animation took my (really good) computer over a night. I can’t imagine the amount of time that goes into these, including the research, scripting, planning, editing and so on.
    I’m incredibly flabbergasted at how you can keep making these and I watch every single one. So good.

    • @interpl6089
      @interpl6089 Před rokem

      What's a Really good Computer? In Different Parts of the World, It Still Means a Different Thing.

    • @xr.spedtech
      @xr.spedtech Před rokem

      Do your Raytracing on your GPU Cores either through cuda or through Frag or pixel shaders ...

  • @visualverbs
    @visualverbs Před 11 měsíci

    You guys produce GREAT videos.

  • @NixataBG
    @NixataBG Před 3 měsíci

    Sweet! Your style is awesome!

  • @detectivepigeon5938
    @detectivepigeon5938 Před rokem +6

    These graphics in combination with this quality and style of video is an absolute masterpiece every single time. Very impressive, I wish I could watch one every week

  • @chrisplunkett2814
    @chrisplunkett2814 Před rokem +66

    I remember seeing Aeroflot '104s landing at Gatwick in the 1970s and were the only civilian aircraft I'd seen that used a parachute to slow down.

    • @Anodum
      @Anodum Před 5 měsíci +5

      The 104 is based on a military aircraft; when it was created, reverse to turbines had not yet been mastered. Issue 104 ceased in 1960.

    • @arthurennimore-empties6709
      @arthurennimore-empties6709 Před 4 měsíci +6

      The French built Caravelle had a parachute that could be deployed to slow the aircraft down upon landing.

    • @lzbhcvm6747
      @lzbhcvm6747 Před 4 měsíci +4

      Russian propaganda planes are never good

    • @legatvsdecimvs3406
      @legatvsdecimvs3406 Před 3 měsíci

      The Tu-104 RD-3 turbojet engines were designed in the 1940's, engine thrust reversers only appeared on Soviet aircraft in the 1960's. The engine nacelles on the Tu-104 could not be modified for those(or was too much of a headache). Using a parachute shortened the landing from around 3,000 meters to around 1,600 meters without stressing the air brakes and landing gear brakes. It was also safer in some weather conditions and short runways.

  • @AltRockLover
    @AltRockLover Před 5 měsíci +3

    I think I would've felt safer on this than a Comet, if I had a choice 😂.

    • @jimtaylor294
      @jimtaylor294 Před 4 měsíci

      ...and you'd be right. The Comet C outlasted the TU-104 (didn't leave all military service until 1997, and the Nimrod subvariant lasted until the 2010's), had a robust safety record, and the manufacturer & Airlines actually made fixing issues a priority (unlike the USSR) 😏 .

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@jimtaylor294 *The Comet was grounded in 1980 due to metal fatigue damage.*
      *The Nimrod although similar looking is not a Comet.*

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@jimtaylor294 *Comet 1 was so unsafe it was permanently grounded in 1954 and its airworthiness certification was revoked.*

  • @simounardashirjahandirbahardi

    Nice video. An eye opener that showed us how tricky it was to spearhead a technological innovation in aviation. Hoping to show in this channel about the first Soviet jet-powered long-range airliner.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 9 měsíci

      The Soviets did well compared to the British... the de Havilland Comet was the worst engineering failure in commercial jet aviation history... 1 out of every 3 built crashed or were destroyed in accidents.

  • @moggsly5669
    @moggsly5669 Před rokem +7

    The man the myth the legend is back

    • @sayfo6141
      @sayfo6141 Před rokem +2

      well he always posts every 2-3 months so..

    • @moggsly5669
      @moggsly5669 Před rokem

      @@sayfo6141 i mean its a ling time

    • @sayfo6141
      @sayfo6141 Před rokem

      @@moggsly5669 true

  • @Someone-ex7ok
    @Someone-ex7ok Před rokem +6

    Always immediately click on a new Mustard video whenever I see one. I love the high quality.

  • @j.mitchcoppoletti6946

    I love the easter egg at 2:42, good work!

  • @thebulgarianguy8461
    @thebulgarianguy8461 Před rokem +1

    What a badass looking plane!!

  • @Pilot-2020
    @Pilot-2020 Před rokem +13

    Another high quality educating video, thanks to you I know more about the history of planes than I could ever imagine!

  • @wills2140
    @wills2140 Před rokem +6

    Mustard releasing a new video is just a good day. I am ao glad we can have this quality content here on CZcams. Thank you for a fun and detailed history on the first Tupolev passenger jetliner!
    (:

  • @reverendbernfriedaxewielde8443

    Nice to see you back. Was getting worried.

  • @salmanthebestful
    @salmanthebestful Před rokem

    Your video's are just beautiful!

  • @davesherman74
    @davesherman74 Před rokem +75

    My family hosted a Russian exchange student in the 1990s, and his dad had a fairly lofty position in Aeroflot. He brought us some gifts, including some literature from Aeroflot boasting of their new navigation system that had an instrument in the aircraft pointing to the location of a radio beacon on the ground. Well, my dad's a pilot, and he chuckled that the Russians were praising their equivalent of an automatic direction finder (ADF), which was a fairly old technology in the U.S.A. by the 1990s.

    • @hicknopunk
      @hicknopunk Před rokem +8

      Our 90s Russian student was a tax free, vodka smuggler 🤣

    • @UWKS911
      @UWKS911 Před rokem +1

      At that time they've been using VOR, DME and RSBN (Soviet short range navigation system). And INS which was synchronized with RSBN. And of course ADF as you've stated earlier. ADF was the only navigation tool probably on some really small aircrafts.

    • @DrWhom
      @DrWhom Před rokem

      @@UWKS911 I hope your facts are sturdier than your grammar. "At that time they've been using" - you mean: would have been

    • @UWKS911
      @UWKS911 Před rokem +4

      @@DrWhom sorry, English is not my native language. My Russian grammar is better)

    • @jonnyd2008
      @jonnyd2008 Před rokem +1

      @@DrWhom “they’ve would have been”?
      If you’re going to correct someone (who’s first language isn’t English) at least get it right. “They would have been”
      Smug twat.

  • @derlaurenz
    @derlaurenz Před rokem +11

    Yaaaaay, you're back with a new one. I always get a little bit excited. Your videos are sooooo good.

  • @Ashwin-zg7rt
    @Ashwin-zg7rt Před rokem

    Looks so beautiful

  • @messidor4399
    @messidor4399 Před rokem

    Excellent video as always, thank you

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před rokem +2

      Except the the de Havilland Comet is the most dangerous jet airliner in history.

  • @SobanAhmed
    @SobanAhmed Před rokem +22

    I always look forward to your Videos Mustard. I work in the aviation industry and I always get excited when you post more informative content like this. Great Job ! its such a breathe of fresh air on CZcams.

    • @sailintothesun3421
      @sailintothesun3421 Před rokem

      I don't really care much for aviation - but Mustard has a way of making it come alive

  • @ProFlightAviation
    @ProFlightAviation Před rokem +3

    Nothing is better than seeing a brand new Mustard video on your recommended after a long day.

  • @rrocketman
    @rrocketman Před rokem

    Fascinating piece of equipment

  • @boltar2003
    @boltar2003 Před rokem +1

    Something not mentioned - downward angled wings underneath the fuselage is a big no-no. Its induces a tendency to roll as the fuselage becomes like an inverted pendulum. Wings underneath should angle up - check any airliner flying today - and wings above the fuselage should angle down (eg C-17)

  • @VC1712
    @VC1712 Před rokem +3

    Thank you for the outstanding quality of your videos. Great job!

  • @ryanchong1648
    @ryanchong1648 Před rokem +9

    I modeled this plane for the last episode of The Queen's Gambit. It was only on screen for about a few seconds though.

  • @himoffthequakeroatbox4320

    When I saw the glazed nose I assumed it was a converted bomber. 3:57 Ah, there you go.

    • @paulpaul9914
      @paulpaul9914 Před rokem

      It seems they kept the look down nose windows just in case they wanted to use them for military purposes in difficult situations some time in the future.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před rokem

      @@paulpaul9914 *Please name a single British company that still makes commercial jet aircraft in the U.K.?*

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před rokem

      @@paulpaul9914 *Please name a single British company that still makes commercial jet aircraft in the U.K.?*

  • @haaxeu6501
    @haaxeu6501 Před 9 měsíci

    The fascinating thing about this era is how fast aviation technology evolved

  • @GarrettLamer
    @GarrettLamer Před rokem +10

    Fantastic work - very informative! I love learning about the early jet airliners - those who designed and flew them were pioneers in many ways. Just a quick note - on the map of the Tu-104's first transatlantic voyage to the United States, you have Gander, Newfoundland, mislabeled as Goose Bay AB (also in the province of Newfoundland in Labrador, but on the mainland portion, called Labrador, some 600 kilometers away). Cheers!

  • @randolfo1265
    @randolfo1265 Před rokem +3

    "Gander International Airport, once one of the most important in the world." On September 11, 2001, it definitely was the most important airport!

  • @1nnu3ndo
    @1nnu3ndo Před rokem

    You've got some amazing visuals