Why You Wouldn't Want to Fly The First Jet Airliner: De Havilland Comet Story

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  • čas přidán 30. 11. 2017
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    Air travel before the Jet Age wasn’t always glamorous. The relentless noise and vibration from a piston powered propeller aircraft often made long flights even more exhausting. Most aircraft also couldn’t fly high enough to avoid bad weather, so air sickness was more common.
    After World War Two, as part of an effort to develop its civil aviation industry, Britain stunned the world by unveiling the world's jet airliner. The de Havilland Comet was sleek, quiet, and flew higher and faster than any airliner of the day. As piston propeller technology was reaching its limits, the conventional thinking was that jet engines were too unreliable and produced too little power relative to their fuel consumption. But the de Havilland Comet proved that jet travel was the future. When the Comet entered service in 1952, it immediately began breaking travel time records and became a point of national pride for Britain.
    The de Havilland Comet was perhaps little too ahead of it’s time. With such a clean sheet design, there will still lessons to learn. When early Comets suffered from catastrophic depressurization incidents, the entire fleet was grounded and their Certificate of Airworthiness was revoked. Flaws in the design of the aircraft’s fuselage were resolved in later Comet versions. However, the rest of the world was now catching up, and manufacturers including Boeing and Douglas began to offer their own jet airliners. While later version Comets served airlines reliably, they were outsold by competing aircraft. There's no question However, that the comet paved the way. The British had taken a massive risk and brought the world into the jet age. #DeHavilland #CometAirliner #Airplane
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Komentáře • 10K

  • @erikig
    @erikig Před 5 lety +7887

    Gotta love how the engines are integrated in the wings, so sleek...

    • @doktorbimmer
      @doktorbimmer Před 5 lety +741

      *The downsides outweighed any perceived advantages... the configuration is less aerodynamic, causes excessive interior cabin noise that requires extra heavy sound insulation, it is more difficult to service or replace the engines and greater risk of damage to the airframe and injury to passengers in the event of a fire or un-contained catastrophic engine failure (which is still a threat even today), the wing root mounting also prevents the aircraft from being upgraded to newer more efficient and powerful turbofan engines like the Boeing 707 received and continues to receive as it remains in service beyond the 2040's.*

    • @luttrwe7688
      @luttrwe7688 Před 5 lety +14

      @@user-ky6vw5up9m OH YAW!

    • @gcrav
      @gcrav Před 5 lety +197

      @@doktorbimmer Also, that mounting caused airflow patterns around the air intakes that tended to starve the engines. That was a factor in the Comet takeoff accidents. The problem was exacerbated by spanwise airflow that occurred with swept wings, directing air away from engines near the wing roots. .

    • @doktorbimmer
      @doktorbimmer Před 5 lety +52

      @gcrav *Excellent comment, in fact a complete redesign of the Comet's engine inlets was required to pass air-worthiness certification in later models. The exact same problem would again come back again to haunt Hawker-Siddeley with the Nimrod and was a major factor in the cancellation of the BAE Nimrod MRA4*

    • @caseyspruill1410
      @caseyspruill1410 Před 5 lety +160

      Yes, most of us already know all the technical problems of wing integrated engines. That aside, it looks sleek and more modern than what's common today. Add some winglets, change the tail design and the Comet would look better than any current airliner.

  • @TalenGryphon
    @TalenGryphon Před 4 lety +5079

    Its a shame the Comet was a failure. Those intergrated engines and smooth 50's futurism lines are downright sexy

    • @None-zc5vg
      @None-zc5vg Před 4 lety +159

      The early Comet's engines weren't powerful and the aircraft's structure had to be light in order for the plane to reach its required performance targets, so the plane's skin was paper-thin, like kitchen foil,strong but very thin, subject to immense pressure from within at high altitude...

    • @None-zc5vg
      @None-zc5vg Před 4 lety +93

      @flip inheck The early "Comet" design was a flop but the plane was redesigned to get rid of its shortcomings: when the revised planes started being produced and delivered in the late '50s, Boeing's superior "707" variants had won most of the orders for big transatlantic-range airliners.

    • @barrierodliffe4155
      @barrierodliffe4155 Před 4 lety +11

      @@None-zc5vg
      Bollocks little idiot. You have no idea.

    • @barrierodliffe4155
      @barrierodliffe4155 Před 4 lety +64

      @@None-zc5vg
      Boeing had to pay bribes and hide the design fault on the 707 which killed more people than the Comet

    • @sadaesthetic724
      @sadaesthetic724 Před 4 lety +4

      Stfu

  • @rickbelieves7652
    @rickbelieves7652 Před 4 lety +1380

    I flew on a Comet as a kid....I remember thinking it was cool looking, and then found out about its colorful history much later.

    • @HavenMarches
      @HavenMarches Před 4 lety +90

      How was the flight? I've always been curious about someone's experience on one of these beauties.

    • @octave1
      @octave1 Před 4 lety +9

      Wow! Very cool

    • @Maximus20778
      @Maximus20778 Před 3 lety +12

      Did it fell apart

    • @dontknowwhattoputhere2793
      @dontknowwhattoputhere2793 Před 3 lety +50

      @@Maximus20778 i dont think so ;-;

    • @Maximus20778
      @Maximus20778 Před 3 lety +14

      @@dontknowwhattoputhere2793 well obviously hes commenting here

  • @kingjames4886
    @kingjames4886 Před 4 lety +1078

    the comet almost looks more futuristic than modern planes lol.

    • @joeboi1342
      @joeboi1342 Před 4 lety +56

      king james488 funny how older planes look more futuristic like the sr-71 blackbird

    • @paveantelic7876
      @paveantelic7876 Před 3 lety +18

      @@joeboi1342 also b2 and f117

    • @SimbaTheGreat
      @SimbaTheGreat Před 3 lety +66

      A lot of our modern planes are still from the 70s and 80s.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 3 lety +10

      The Boeing 707 series is still in service, the tanker version is expected to remain in service until the 2045 or longer.

    • @rjfaber1991
      @rjfaber1991 Před 3 lety +19

      It is funny that the shape of the nose on the Comet, with the cockpit windows following the same curvature as the rest of the nose, is remarkably similar to that on the three newest airliners; the 787, A350 and A220.

  • @Jerry-qt2gk
    @Jerry-qt2gk Před 4 lety +7167

    Remember that this is just 45 years after planes were invented.

    • @openthinker6562
      @openthinker6562 Před 4 lety +1120

      Yeah, a young boy seeing pictures of the wright brothers and their first plane would have grown to watch jet fighters and commercial jet planes in the sky near the end of their life.
      If he survived WW1, Spanish Flu, the Great Depression, and WW2.

    • @slesru
      @slesru Před 4 lety +119

      80/20 rule

    • @spacecowboy2483
      @spacecowboy2483 Před 4 lety +727

      As harsh as it sounds, it is a fact that war is the strongest steroid for invention.

    • @thatssofetch3481
      @thatssofetch3481 Před 4 lety +188

      Bruno Altobello You’re right, and it’s a shame that that’s the way it was. But hopefully in modern times we can innovate further without the need for in fighting.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 4 lety +73

      Remember that prior to the Comet Disaster DeHavilland was still building planes the same way as the Wright brothers did, from wood and fabric.

  • @jaxxonad619
    @jaxxonad619 Před 5 lety +2271

    beside the Concorde, this is by far one of the most beautiful passenger jets ever made.

    • @Frserthegreenengine
      @Frserthegreenengine Před 4 lety +82

      Beautiful it may be, but unlike Concorde, the Comet was not safe.

    • @Frserthegreenengine
      @Frserthegreenengine Před 4 lety +33

      @CovertCoder01 not really. At first yes but the Comet never really recovered in sales following the two accidents. The Comet 4 for instance, while an improved design and safer, hardly made any sales.

    • @Frserthegreenengine
      @Frserthegreenengine Před 4 lety +5

      @CovertCoder01 But even then compared to newer Jet airlines, the Comet wasn't very fuel efficient either. It was more efficient than the propeller aircraft it replaced, but newer jet airlines? no.

    • @andrewdking
      @andrewdking Před 4 lety +8

      I concur. The Comet has the most elegant and sleek nose profiles of any airliner bar none. I've always wondered why other airliner designs never mimicked it. That was until the Boeing 787 Dreamliner arrived, but still not as good.

    • @staalman1226
      @staalman1226 Před 4 lety +2

      @flip inheck Turbo props aren't jets.

  • @wyqtor
    @wyqtor Před 3 lety +212

    Fun fact: Sir Geoffrey de Havilland, whose company made the Comet, was the cousin of actress Olivia de Havilland, who just recently passed away.

  • @tayzonday
    @tayzonday Před rokem +429

    So the Comet ended up being an expensive “beta test” that taught all future competitors how to make passenger jets correctly.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před rokem +20

      The Comet Disaster remains a shameful example of how NOT to build a jet airliner.
      The tragedy of the Comet Disaster was that it could have been easily prevented if de Havilland had simply followed well-known and understood industry standards for design and construction of pressurized cabins made from riveted aluminum alloys.
      The truth is Boeing, already the world's leader in pressurized airliners flew the 707 prototype in July 1954 before anyone knew what caused the Comet Disaster.

    • @paulpaul9914
      @paulpaul9914 Před rokem +8

      @@sandervanderkammen9230
      There seems to be some idiots posting inane & rather ridiculous comments in any videos that mention the Comet?

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před rokem +6

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

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před rokem +1

      @@paulpaul9914 *I don't think you're an idiot, just uneducated, misled and pathetically biased*

    • @paulpaul9914
      @paulpaul9914 Před rokem +3

      @@sandervanderkammen9230
      "Name a single ....."
      UK Aerospace & nuclear power / weapons engineering sectors - highest per capita sector specific activity on the planet.

  • @MikMoen
    @MikMoen Před 5 lety +4624

    Having your plane "disintegrate" around you at 40,000 ft above ocean doesn't sound like a particularly good way to go..

    • @Supcharged
      @Supcharged Před 5 lety +232

      tbf you probably wont feel it for very long

    • @roblaa3198
      @roblaa3198 Před 5 lety +103

      lol you wouldn't even know about it it would be a very quick death

    • @doktorbimmer
      @doktorbimmer Před 5 lety +268

      *Quick death? Not for the folks at De Havilland... it was a slow and humiliating death for the company that was finally defunct in 1959.*

    • @TheIntJuggler
      @TheIntJuggler Před 5 lety +66

      @@roblaa3198 it's a quick splat, but you see it coming all the way down.

    • @PabloGonzalez-hv3td
      @PabloGonzalez-hv3td Před 5 lety +177

      Those people died from pulmonary barotrauma that means their lungs exploded

  • @thekingofdarts
    @thekingofdarts Před 5 lety +2105

    Easily one of the sexiest hunks of metal to have ever flown.

    • @doktorbimmer
      @doktorbimmer Před 5 lety +28

      *Flying was something that the Comet 1 just didn't do well... which is why its airworthiness certification was permanently revoked and the aircraft in the fleet that had not yet crashed were grounded and were scrapped.*

    • @Scazoid
      @Scazoid Před 4 lety +119

      @@doktorbimmer can you stop using the bold letter it started looking a bit corny

    • @TijmensAviation
      @TijmensAviation Před 4 lety +28

      doktorbimmer You idiot did anyone here say it was a good aircraft? It’s about the looks and I have to agree it looks good.

    • @barrierodliffe4155
      @barrierodliffe4155 Před 4 lety +21

      @@TijmensAviation
      I say the comet was a very good aircraft, the Comet 4 went on for many years with a low accident rate.
      doktorbimmer is well known for hating anything British.

    • @johnnynewsome2265
      @johnnynewsome2265 Před 4 lety +1

      I wonder if the Hawker Nimrod has a beter designed fuselage

  • @lucaortolani2059
    @lucaortolani2059 Před 4 lety +81

    The included jet engines inside the wing are stunningly gorgeous

    • @garypeatling7927
      @garypeatling7927 Před 4 lety +5

      Part of problem very expensive to maintain engines in there hours and hours just to inspect

    • @hoen2009
      @hoen2009 Před 4 lety +8

      @@garypeatling7927 Yup thats true, but honestly modern jets look ugly compared to this. But we gotta be happy that we took function over form.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 3 lety +1

      @@hoen2009 The Comet's engine placement was a fatal flaw in its design and was responsible for several fatal accidents.
      Based on a aerodynamic theory that was later proved to be incorrect, the. Germans had already developed data on the ideal placement of jet engines in subsonic aircraft.
      Data later used by Boeing and Douglas thanks to Operation Lusty and Operation Paperclip.

    • @FnD4212
      @FnD4212 Před 2 lety

      @@sandervanderkammen9230 what aerodynamic theory back then that make this Comet design a failure?

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 2 lety

      @@FnD4212 Placement of the engine inlets in the leading edge of the wing was believed to have aerodynamic and performance advantages however several of the Comet crashes are directly related to this flawed theory.
      DeHavilland failed to do its due diligence in proper wind tunnel and prototype testing.
      Modern aircraft designers avoid placing the engine inlets in the leading edge for these reasons.

  • @anonykip
    @anonykip Před 4 lety +48

    Man that whole intro up until the title is gorgeously made. I love how the British Loop music fades in. 👍👍👍

    • @angryocker6085
      @angryocker6085 Před 3 lety +1

      That's what I was thinking! Best intro I've seen yet.

  • @Zulfburht
    @Zulfburht Před 6 lety +4358

    it actually still looks kinda futuristic to this day

    • @sce2aux464
      @sce2aux464 Před 5 lety +82

      Except for the straight-finned empennage, yes.

    • @spdfatomicstructure
      @spdfatomicstructure Před 5 lety +51

      It's probably still used today. In the 60s the RAF replaced its Lancaster-based maritime patrol aircraft with the Nimrod, which was basically a Comet airframe reconfigured for the role. The replacement, the P-8, only entered service much later

    • @poIand966
      @poIand966 Před 5 lety +51

      Comet is the most beautiful plane in history of aviation. Those cute engines and sweet front of the plane with its painting... Awww

    • @erikig
      @erikig Před 5 lety +62

      It has to be because of the integration of the engines into the wings. There's nothing that looks like it in civil aviation since.

    • @guywithahoodie7859
      @guywithahoodie7859 Před 5 lety

      True
      True

  • @jordyboy321
    @jordyboy321 Před 6 lety +2415

    I help maintain the worlds only running comet here in England. Being a 4c (most up to date) variant, the 4 rolls Royce avons still whirl into life with ease after all these years. We do have some minor hydraulic and electrical faults but she can still move under her own power.

    • @darrendavenport3334
      @darrendavenport3334 Před 6 lety +89

      jordan hardink good work jordan.... im proud of you like my own son

    • @TenorCantusFirmus
      @TenorCantusFirmus Před 5 lety +55

      Any plains of flying it again, maybe just for historical plane expositions?

    • @speed65752
      @speed65752 Před 5 lety +24

      I'm jealous of you.

    • @brookeking8559
      @brookeking8559 Před 5 lety +32

      I have a cousin who has helped restore historic propeller-driven birds. I’m grateful people with your skills use them this way.

    • @MrShobar
      @MrShobar Před 5 lety +11

      But not approved for flight.

  • @book3100
    @book3100 Před 4 lety +101

    Beautiful plane. Growing pains, sure... But somebody has to pioneer, or we don't get anywhere. Thanks to Dehavilland and the people that flew and crewed. We owe you.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 4 lety +8

      The Comet Disaster was the worst engineering failure in the history of aviation... it is disgraceful that the DeHavilland personnel responsible were never punished.

    • @barrierodliffe4155
      @barrierodliffe4155 Před rokem

      @@sandervanderkammen9230rappy is a pathetic liar, 707 design fault killed more people, DC19 design faults killed many people, 787 was grounded because it is dangerous, 737 MAX grounded but still not fixed. It was very disgraceful that McDonnel Douglass and Boeing have been allowed to make such bad designs.

    • @paulpaul9914
      @paulpaul9914 Před rokem

      @@sandervanderkammen9230
      Vin DurbKrappen / Dr DikBummer - poster of SO much BS They need the world's largest cow herd..?
      en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_accidents_and_incidents_involving_the_Boeing_707

    • @James-dv1df
      @James-dv1df Před rokem +2

      ​@@sandervanderkammen9230 said in the video other manufacturers admitted they would have had to learn as well though

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před rokem +1

      @@James-dv1df That is a popular but completely false urban myth that is easily debunked by the slightest scrutiny.
      The Comet Disaster could have been easily prevented if de Havilland had simply followed well-known and understood industry standard for design and construction of pressurized cabins made from riveted aluminum alloys.
      de Havilland company was decades behind in aircraft technology and was still building aircraft primarily from WOOD and Fabric well into the Jet Age.
      The only thing that was learned by the _Comet Disaster_ is that manufacturers cannot be trusted to conduct their own aircraft crash investigations.

  • @airandres24
    @airandres24 Před 4 lety +56

    Two years later and I still wanna give credit to how he sets up the prop plane before the transition to the comet. Amazing animation on the fact that I could feel the uncomfort of the first plane then the ease of the comet.

  • @GloomGaiGar
    @GloomGaiGar Před 6 lety +3306

    I'm no engineer but I just find the engines incorporated into the wings to be so sexy unlike today's airliners where they just hang under the wings like ballsacks.

    • @jasoncarswell7458
      @jasoncarswell7458 Před 5 lety +656

      Agreed. But sad to say, it creates major problems, primarily by taking up space inside the wing that can be used for structural support (to make the wings stronger) or fuel (to give the plane better range). Also, the failure of an in-wing engine usually blows the wing off and destroys the airframe, whereas the failure of a hanging engine doesn't usually doom the aircraft because the debris has two separate barriers to penetrate and a lot further to travel if it wants to smash anything important.
      People recently were outraged when a hanging engine failed on a jetliner, blew up, smashed the nearest porthole window out and killed the poor woman leaning against it. Nearly sucked her out, in fact. But....Other casualties? 0. Wing intact? Yes. MISSION SUCCESS. Crass, but true. That spray of debris was BELOW the engine, got deflected away from the hydraulics and fuel by the armor on the bottom of the wing, and instead blew out a single porthole in a non-critical area. A dog's breakfast, but one that DOESN'T crash the plane, and therefore not so bad.
      The amount of power those things harness is crazy. The DC10 for many years had external engines EXCEPT for one in the tail which was internal. It was that engine that was responsible for most of it's crashes, since a huge compressor lighting on fire or blowing up directly next to your important flight controls in the tail was typically fatal for everybody.

    • @venomfanex
      @venomfanex Před 5 lety +279

      As a mechanical engineer (not aircraft), I would guess, perhaps, because an integrated engine would be a bitch to work on, which would drive up maintenance costs and the overall cost of commercial flying. And don't get me started on resonant frequencies..

    • @m64h
      @m64h Před 5 lety +238

      Well, you can have sexy or you can have safety. Not both.

    • @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823
      @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 Před 5 lety +49

      @@jasoncarswell7458 Wait, did not the DC-10 also integrate the different doors that depressurized abd opened during flight because they electric locks didn't close right, pulling giant holes in the planes?

    • @twistedyogert
      @twistedyogert Před 5 lety +31

      Also, if one engine needed to be removed, I'd imagine that the Comet's wing would have to be taken off just to get to the engine.

  • @doktorbimmer
    @doktorbimmer Před 5 lety +4219

    *_"The comet shattered conventional thinking..."_** it also shattered when it reached cruising altitude.*

    • @blobydude420productions4
      @blobydude420productions4 Před 5 lety +47

      LOL🤣🤣🤣

    • @georgebuller1914
      @georgebuller1914 Před 5 lety +30

      Joke in bad taste! :-(

    • @doktorbimmer
      @doktorbimmer Před 5 lety +102

      @George Buller *Its not a joke... the Comet disaster was one of the worst engineering failures in history...*

    • @georgebuller1914
      @georgebuller1914 Před 5 lety +76

      @@doktorbimmer You make it sound like they knew there were issues. Don't forget, the Comet was - for its time - at the very cutting edge of advancing technology.........

    • @doktorbimmer
      @doktorbimmer Před 5 lety +40

      @Goerge Buller *Of course they knew there were huge risks and went forward anyway... **_WAS IT?_** Boeing had produced the first large all-metal, fully pressurized commercial passenger airliners in 1938... at a time when De Havilland was still building wooden biplanes... Boeing was vastly more experienced in large multi-engine planes and critically with large multi-engine jets with the cutting edge B-47 **_Stratojet_** years earlier...*

  • @maxthelab8457
    @maxthelab8457 Před 2 lety +20

    I flew on Comets as a child in the 60's - and almost all other jets right through from the 60's to now, including several trips to the US by Concorde. It's been alot of fun!

  • @Zanzibar2Far
    @Zanzibar2Far Před rokem +29

    It's remarkable how similar to modern jets this looks.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před rokem

      You really need to get you eyes checked.

    • @petemaly8950
      @petemaly8950 Před měsícem

      ​@@sandervanderkammen9230
      Kharzeestan Krappenz DiktorBummer Jurkzxoffenz etc and co - they should note good with much awestruckness & extreme wonderment.
      *UPDATE BREAKING NEWS ETC*
      *_It's interesting that some of the aircraft on the list should really have been noticeably safer than the Comet due to being a similar type but of much later design & manufacture but they definately were not safer._*
      How things were back then -
      *_Accident losses - % of aircraft built._*
      DeHavilland Comet 4 UK 14%
      DeHavilland Comet all mks 17%
      Vickers VC10 UK 5%
      *_The DH Comet had better safety than or similar safety to many other commercial passenger aircraft of a similar era_*
      Douglas DC-1 99%
      Douglas DC-2 47%
      Douglas DC-3 30%
      Douglas DC-4 26%
      Boeing s300 72%
      Boeing 307 70%
      Boeing 247 48%
      Boeing 707 20%
      Lockheed Electra Turboprop 29%
      Fairchild FH-227 30%
      McDonnell Douglas DC-8 14%
      Sud Aviation Caravelle 15%
      Canadair CL-44 Turboprop 46%
      Convair CV-580 Turboprop 22%
      A comparison of more recent aircraft.
      Accident losses comparison examples.
      1970s - 1980s
      % of total Aircraft built
      Similar aircraft type, date / decade, useage, size.
      Biz Jets
      BAe-125-800 1.7 %
      Beechcraft Beechjet 400 2.2 %
      Cessna 550 Citation II 7.1 %
      Learjet 35 / 36 12 %
      Beechcraft 1900 6%
      Dassault Falcon 10 11.5%
      Aérospatiale SN.601 22.5%
      Medium size jets / Turboprops.
      BAe-146 5.1%
      Fokker 100 6%
      McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30 9.5%
      Fairchild FH-227 30%
      McDonnell Douglas DC-8 14%
      Canadair CL-44 Turboprop 46%
      Convair CV-580 Turboprop 22%
      Beechcraft, Fokker, McDonnell Douglass, Learjet, Fairchild, Aerospatiale, Canadair, Convair companies defunct.
      All Comets, including some Comet 1s, had full civilian use certification at some point after 1954, civilian use certification only being withdrawn after commercial flying stopped. Examples were flying until 1997 - one example did a signals research global circumnavigation flight series in 1993 via Australia virtually without a rest travelling 28000 miles, only had an ice warning indicator issue during the flights.
      *The DH Comet - World Firsts.*
      1st gas turbine jet powered airliner. 1st high altitude 8psi pressurised full fuselage length passenger cabin airliner, not a trivial feature as structure strength required for pressurisation considerably exceeded strength required for normal flying stress. Nobody else had done anything similar before the Comet.
      The b-47 used 2 relatively small, heavily built pressurised modules (the aircraft where 6 had their wings fold up in 2 months while flying & some had their wings fall off while parked).
      The 1937 Boeing piston engined airliner pressurised passenger cabin was pressurised to 2 psi only - in fact that could easily be done as the normal unpressurized fuselage cabin structure strength for flying stresses only was all that was needed to be adequate so no significant weight increase issues needed addressing.
      1st all hydraulically powered flying surface controls & actuators airliner with under carriage wheel disk brakes + ABS.
      1st jet airliner to cross the Atlantic.
      1st jet aircraft to do a world circumnavigation flights series.
      *Of course De Havilland had prior experience building many all metal construction airframe aircraft including thousands of jet powered fighter aircraft that were primarily of metal construction with pressurised cockpits & jet engines built by De-Havilland & we know the world's first all metal construction airframe airliner was built in England in the 1920s by Handley Page.*
      *_De Havilland did indeed always work to better than industry standards at the time, no evidence of negligence ever being produced in relation to the DH Comet._*
      The course of De Havilland & the general UK aerospace industry sector was not affected even slightly by the DH Comet.
      *_Other interesting World firsts_*
      *Vickers Viscount Turboprop Airliner 1947*
      *Gloster Meteor Turboprop Aircraft 1945*
      They might like to answer these questions.
      *Which airline has just ordered*
      *60 RR England Trent XWB Engines*
      *& What aircraft are the engines for?*
      _Bonus question for 10 points._
      Which country has the
      *World's Highest Combined Per Capita Nuclear +
      Defence + Aerospace Sector Activity?*
      👍 Cheers 🙂

      .. ... ..... ....... ........
      ixixixixxixicivcvcvc

    • @GregWampler-xm8hv
      @GregWampler-xm8hv Před měsícem

      That's just not true. Take a B-777, the Boeing Dash 80 and the flying artillery shell and put them side by side. Now tell me which aircraft Dash 80 or the artillery shell looks almost identical to the very modern 777. 😎

  • @ztoob8898
    @ztoob8898 Před 5 lety +543

    1:09 - "It *shattered* conventional thinking." Now, that right there is some quality foreshadowing.

    • @bmc9504
      @bmc9504 Před 4 lety +7

      Americans completly rejected jet engines and then a guy from Lockheed came to Britain and flew in the comet (even flying it himself). It shattered his anus and American industries.

    • @doktorbimmer
      @doktorbimmer Před 4 lety

      @Michell C *Please tell us what british companies make commercial airliners today?*

    • @bmc9504
      @bmc9504 Před 4 lety +4

      @@doktorbimmer For a start, you aren't clever changing the subject because you're a bit butt hurt.
      Second, name an American plane that's built in America.......
      Aviation is our biggest industry and we build enough of your shit, because you know , global-iz-im innit. Think we still build CRJ aircraft in NI.
      Plus, plans for future aircraft is there also, supersonic and military.
      Even a damm spaceport in Newquay. Jesus Christ.

    • @doktorbimmer
      @doktorbimmer Před 4 lety

      @Michell C *I'm not changing the subject, De Havilland went "tits-up" in 1959 and there are no british commercial aircraft made in the UK anymore. Bombardier NI. is a **_Canadian_** company.*

    • @doktorbimmer
      @doktorbimmer Před 4 lety

      @Michell C *That is easy, Boeing is the largest manufacturer of large transport aircraft in the world....*

  • @87Wayne
    @87Wayne Před 5 lety +864

    I was on a that ill fated aircraft , BOAC (British Overseas Air Corp.) Comet. Gilmore family was on flight #783/057 May 2
    1953. My mother , my sister Angela and myself Wayne were aboard. Had mother not been expecting and been too tired to continue
    and insist that we wait till the next day so she may rest I would not be typing this today. We left and flew out on a conventional
    Prop plane the next day.

    • @sebclot9478
      @sebclot9478 Před 5 lety +116

      You were actually on board Comet G-ALYV before it departed Calcutta on May 2, 1953? Wow! That must be absolutely surreal. Do you remember anything else about that experience?

    • @mtntime1
      @mtntime1 Před 5 lety +71

      Wow. That is like Waylon Jennings, who gave up his seat to the Big Bopper on the plane with Buddy Holly and Richie Valens.
      He took a bus instead. The rest, on the plane? Well that was the day the music died. For them, anyway.
      Weird, how sometimes fate just seems to intervene (you're not dying today!)

    • @victorburton9499
      @victorburton9499 Před 5 lety +5

      British Overseas Airways Corporation

    • @blackhawkswincup2010
      @blackhawkswincup2010 Před 4 lety +10

      "Flew in from Miami Beach BOAC, didn't get to bed last night..."

    • @chocomanger6873
      @chocomanger6873 Před 4 lety +27

      You must have been rich to fly on a jet back then. You sound posh how you say "Had mother not been..." In normal English we usually say, "If my mom hadn't been..."

  • @UncleFeedle
    @UncleFeedle Před 4 lety +178

    There have been so many times in Britain where we were ahead of everyone else in technical innovation, only to screw it all up. Computers would be another example.

    • @jamsstar2010
      @jamsstar2010 Před 4 lety +23

      We gave it all away 😂
      Look at the mills we had, as soon as the bosses realised foreign shores saved a lot of money we lost an industry.
      Jet industry
      Nuclear industry
      Pioneered by us and given away for no return
      Im still coming to terms with how shit this country actually is

    • @vaIe_
      @vaIe_ Před 4 lety

      jamsstar2010 imagine your entire thought process being ‘what stuff we have’

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 4 lety +9

      Perhaps the UKs self-image as a technical innovator was simply exaggerated?

    • @EpicMania18
      @EpicMania18 Před 4 lety +22

      @@sandervanderkammen9230 I'd hardly suggest it's exaggerated - We've always seemed to be better at creating academic new things but never entrepreneureal enough to become a market leader.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 4 lety +3

      @@EpicMania18Perhaps if we are discussing the steam age but by the 20th century the UKs self image as a technology leader is without doubt greatly exaggerated if not completely fictional in some cases... like the development of jet engines.

  • @johnjephcote7636
    @johnjephcote7636 Před 4 lety +18

    The windows should have been glued by Redux bonding but were rivetted to save costs but it iniated stress. That was the weakness. Also, at first, DH wanted to use their own Ghost engines which were not so powerful so very thin metal was necessary. The later, successful Comet 4s has RR Avons. I was impressed by your inclusion of the over-rotation. Originally blamed on the pilots DH very quietly made a retro fit to the leading edge. I grew up with these planes living between where they were made at Hatfield and what was then called London Airport.

  • @Krackerlack
    @Krackerlack Před 4 lety +808

    The prop plane's like *WHIRRRRRRRRRR*
    and the comet's like *EEEEEEEEEEEE*

  • @DeathbyPixels
    @DeathbyPixels Před 5 lety +426

    Sometimes I randomly remember just how genuinely incredible it is that we have designed giant metal machines capable of true flight.

    • @qkirafan1000
      @qkirafan1000 Před 4 lety +2

      Working below wing at an aiport and I'm still amazed every day

    • @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823
      @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 Před 3 lety

      Well, YOU don't personally, lol...

    • @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823
      @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 Před 3 lety +5

      Once asked a pilot how they stay up and he told me.
      I didn't understand one friggin word....lol

    • @dalehall2067
      @dalehall2067 Před 3 lety +3

      As a short time between the Wright brothers flight I want airplanes were high in the sky in the 30s 40s 50s etc. Amazing amazing engineering

    • @conservativecalvinist3308
      @conservativecalvinist3308 Před 3 lety +2

      But remember, somehow we just “eVOlvEd”

  • @Errcyco
    @Errcyco Před 2 lety +8

    When I was a kid I flew everywhere.. I’d say 20 states easy and flights every 6 months. My grandpa traveled for work and I guess I took it for granted, it was so fun. As an adult I’ve flown from the Bay Area to San Diego lol..

  • @hiddenname6578
    @hiddenname6578 Před 4 lety +5

    Dude, I must say that I love the way you explain everything and the visual quality on your videos.
    It looks amazing as always! you sure make anyone turn into a transport tech passionate by just looking one of your videos
    I hope you keep going ahead, they're awesome and give a lot of inspiration!

  • @xetalq
    @xetalq Před 6 lety +209

    I flew the Comet 4 on BOAC as a small boy, in 1960, during a trip to Tokyo, Australia and back.
    All these years later, my memories are fewer now, but those that remain are crystal clear. In my mind's eye, I still remember looking out the (round!) window of the Comet 4 at its wingtip tank, as the sun rose behind it. I remember the ride as smooth and quiet, and - above all - comfortable.
    My father was an airline pilot for BOAC (no - he never flew the Comet himself), and in my own airline career I flew the DC-8 (briefly featured in this video), in its DC-8-73F and DC-8-63F and -61F variants. By the time I flew the "Diesel 8" in 1987, it was ancient technology, and a bit of a Dog's Dinner to operate. We cruised the -8 at M0.80 (by company policy), but the aircraft was much more speed-stable (and much more thirsty on fuel) at M0.82. Forget about M0.84 cruise though - it would have guzzled fuel so quickly at that speed we would never have been able to fly it very far!
    I also flew as a passenger on the B707 (BOAC operated the B707-420): again, more comfortable than the jets of today (because of greater seat pitch - typically, 38" in standard economy, back then), but - boy! - was it noisy. If you were seated in economy class aft of the engines, engine noise made conversation difficult-to-impossible.
    The one area where modern jets triumph over the jets of the 1960s is cabin noise - it is simply far, far quieter in the cabin in all classes now than it was back then, simply because of the high-bypass turbofan engines with which all aircraft are equipped today. Amongst the 2nd Generation jets of the 1960s, only the VC10, the B727, the HS.121 Trident and the MD-80 were as quiet in the cabin as modern aircraft are now. The quietest today? The much-maligned Airbus A380, which might surprise some of you. But they're all so quiet these days, that were really isn't much to choose between any of them for cabin noise.

    • @xetalq
      @xetalq Před 6 lety +14

      Indeed - the last aircraft of my own career was the mighty 747-400, but I'll readily concede that the A380 is noticeably quieter in the cabin.
      As for smoothness of landing - in all modesty, that depends mostly on the competence of the pilot, although some aircraft types are inherently more difficult to land than others. The DC-8 was difficult to land well, and the Lockheed L-1011-200 TriStar (which I flew for a year and a half before converting to the 747-400) was also a handful. This was due not only to its rigid landing gear struts and main gear trucks maintained at 90 degrees to the struts, but also because of its alarming tendency to dump lift very rapidly if you entered the flare at any speed below Vref + 10.
      My father maintained that the Bristol Britannia 312 always gave him problems on landing (he flew the Britannia for nearly seven years for BOAC). Conversely, he loved the VC10, and found it relatively straight forward consistently to make smooth landings therein.
      In my own career, I found the BAe-146 and the B744 were the easiest to land - there were times I put the 744 down, and even in the cockpit we didn't know when or even if we'd touched down.

    • @johnprice5784
      @johnprice5784 Před 6 lety +5

      Flew on them also in the early sixties as a kid , I still have a free tiny postcard size Comet 4 jigsaw they gave to kids on the flight back then . Happy days going to Ibetha as it was spelt back then .

    • @tengbernardez6043
      @tengbernardez6043 Před 6 lety +2

      woah 38"! the average today is about 29-31"!!!

    • @xetalq
      @xetalq Před 6 lety +4

      Indeed - I have manufacturers' documents from Vickers in the 1960s which describe the all-Economy class seating configuration on the VC10 at 34" pitch as being "high density" - and I quote!
      The Vickers VC10 Type 1180 'Superb' (a double-deck/'Double-Bubble' design which was never built), was designed to carry 295 passengers in a 'high density' all-Economy class cabin layout, at 34" pitch and six abreast.
      I did my calculations and discovered that the VC10 Type 1180 could have carried 343 passengers in all-Economy class seating at 29" pitch/six abreast.

    • @th3azscorpio
      @th3azscorpio Před 6 lety

      xetalq At least you made it to all of those places and back in one piece! I often think about air travel back then, and how safe it was compared to today.

  • @plank9484
    @plank9484 Před 6 lety +479

    that has to be one of the best looking aircraft ever made

    • @doktorbimmer
      @doktorbimmer Před 5 lety +15

      *Too bad it was the worst aircraft ever made...*

    • @Justice_Akbr
      @Justice_Akbr Před 5 lety +1

      which one?

    • @HerveBoisde
      @HerveBoisde Před 5 lety +11

      @@doktorbimmer You dont know anything about the worst planes. The very worst plane was the Wright Kitty Hawk Flyer which ONLY flew 4 times and was super unstable and slow. Losers.

    • @doktorbimmer
      @doktorbimmer Před 5 lety +3

      @Herve B *What about all the first attempts that never flew??? Like Welhelm Kreiss or Samuel Langely???*

    • @doktorbimmer
      @doktorbimmer Před 5 lety +5

      @Herve B *The **_Comet Disaster_** was the worst engineering failure in the history of aviation, De Havilland's incompetent engineering and shoddy construction and criminal negligence produced an aircraft that disintegrated in mid-flight and mass produced it anyway . Other companies managed to built jet airliners like the Boeing 707 that were safe and successful.*

  • @shocker..8469
    @shocker..8469 Před rokem +1

    The transition from the engine to that soundtrack was rather smooth

  • @doriensutherland8893
    @doriensutherland8893 Před 4 lety +11

    I did fly in Comets. The first and the later versions. Well, I`m still here decades later. I`ve flown in all the jetliners since but Concorde aside this was a beautiful aircraft. The most ever ...

    • @tarunbasra8230
      @tarunbasra8230 Před 3 lety

      How old are you

    • @doriensutherland8893
      @doriensutherland8893 Před 3 lety +2

      @@tarunbasra8230 Old enough to remember these things .. so for now, ruling out dementia. I also remember the seats were big. But I was very small come to think of it.

    • @tarunbasra8230
      @tarunbasra8230 Před 3 lety +1

      @@doriensutherland8893 ok thank you fir the reply. Stay safe

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 2 lety

      Still here... still flying like the Boeing 707... the De Havilland Comet and the Concorde however are long since retired.

    • @barrierodliffe4155
      @barrierodliffe4155 Před 2 lety +1

      @@sandervanderkammen9230 No passengers in a 707 for many years. Just like the failure DC 10, as for the 737 Max Boeing has shut down the production lines of that disaster.

  • @SSOrontes
    @SSOrontes Před 6 lety +499

    My first ever flight. London to Singapore. Only had to stop six times for re-fueling and took twenty three hours. Things change.

    • @davecrupel2817
      @davecrupel2817 Před 6 lety +7

      SSOrontes now it can be done in half that time.

    • @nimueh4298
      @nimueh4298 Před 6 lety +14

      SSOrontes
      How long ago was this if I may ask?

    • @FA_2_Pilot
      @FA_2_Pilot Před 6 lety +27

      How old are you darling?

    • @pixelatedparcel
      @pixelatedparcel Před 5 lety +31

      John Tam Here's a handy frame of reference: In the mid '40's, Sydney-London took 4 days with 6 stops. By the '50', Sydney-London was down to 54 hours same number of trips. In 1960, the fastest trip from Sydney to London was 34 hr 30 min with eight stops. In 1970, Sydney- London took 29-32 hours with 5-7 stops (this improved drastically, shortly after with the 747). In 1989, a Boeing 747-400 flew nonstop from London Heathrow to Sydney in just over 20 hours. With the 787-Dreamliner, Sydney-London non-stop in 15 hours.

    • @gandalfthegrey7874
      @gandalfthegrey7874 Před 5 lety +1

      Now you can do that one way on a BOEING 747. Hell, even a 727-77 can do that

  • @Maoshung
    @Maoshung Před 6 lety +181

    The Comet was SUCH a sexy....pretty....futuristic jet. I love the design of the engines in the wings.

    • @jayreiter268
      @jayreiter268 Před 6 lety +5

      The engines in the wings was viewed as a fire prevention problem in an un- contained engine failure. The B707 engine pylons were meant to shear off in a crash or sudden engine stoppage.

    • @Maoshung
      @Maoshung Před 6 lety +13

      Melinda Reiter nice info! But whatever the reasons....it was sleek and sexy in my opinion.

    • @robertmurphy4549
      @robertmurphy4549 Před 6 lety +5

      This must have made maintenance a lot more complicated and longer as well - just to gain access to the turbines would have been an huge effort.

    • @PassiveSmoking
      @PassiveSmoking Před 6 lety +4

      de Havilland loved unconventional designs. Check out the Sea Vixen, for example. It looks like something out of Thunderbirds.

    • @arsarma1808
      @arsarma1808 Před 6 lety

      Agreed it’s super pretty

  • @bencowie3141
    @bencowie3141 Před 2 lety +14

    The comet was disastrous, yet in my opinion I think it was the most important commercial airliner to have existed. Without it Commercial aviation would not be where it is today, it thought us more about anything than any modern plane today

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 2 lety +7

      Indeed, the Comet Disaster remains the worst engineering failure in commercial aviation history.
      How can the Comet be the most important commercial airliner? It was clearly a failure, a dead end design.
      The Boeing 707 series was the plane that revolutionized the air travel industry, more than 200 remain flying today.

    • @Aderin.
      @Aderin. Před 9 měsíci

      If the comet wasn't a thing we will still have jet airliners. It would just have happened a bit later

    • @Aderin.
      @Aderin. Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​@@sandervanderkammen9230bro, it was literally the first jet airliner, don't try and cause arguments by trying to sound dumb

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 9 měsíci

      @@Aderin. The Comet Disaster was definitely a failed attempt to produce the first jet airliner.
      The first successful, airworthy jet airliner is the Boeing 707... several other manufacturers developed jet airliners at this time.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 9 měsíci

      @@Aderin. The Comet 1 was grounded in 1954 after 6 unexpected hull loss accidents, 5 of them with fatalities. It airworthiness certification was permanently revoked.
      The Boeing 707 is still flying today and is expected to remain in service until 2050.

  • @uwumeow
    @uwumeow Před 3 lety +2

    Wow! I heard the first prop plane coming in my right earphone before my left! That's pretty cool.

  • @shabbirnaqvi1344
    @shabbirnaqvi1344 Před 6 lety +216

    Damn the production value on this video was better than most documentaries. I LOVE THIS CHANNEL.

  • @MegaMykus
    @MegaMykus Před 6 lety +112

    In the 80's, I got to go inside a Comet that was grounded at Chicago's O'Hare airport. Oh my GOSH, those planes were VERY rich inside!!! Beautiful out side as well!

    • @garyjohnson8120
      @garyjohnson8120 Před 5 lety +10

      Yes...and people actually got dressed up to fly...today half of the passengers are total pigs and smell bad...and then there are the lunatics who cause some sort of 'incident' because they are 'special'. I absolutely hate to fly these days.

    • @robertallen6710
      @robertallen6710 Před 5 lety

      ...I remember passengers dressing up...most people have no social skills, or at least don't use them while flying or in airports...my wife used to SFO to PHX at night, stopping in Vegas to pick up loud, sunburnt, obnoxious drunks in flip flops...I avoid flying if I can anymore...

    • @Ronbo710
      @Ronbo710 Před 5 lety

      Yep a cattle car with wings.

    • @joecremer3633
      @joecremer3633 Před 5 lety

      - Wow ok that went from 0 to 100 quick

    • @andrewwmacfadyen6958
      @andrewwmacfadyen6958 Před 2 lety

      Comet ???? 1980 ???

  • @mynameisbobandilikebananas2143
    @mynameisbobandilikebananas2143 Před 2 měsíci +1

    This video inspired me to make a research paper on the impact that the De-Haviland comet had on the aviation industry

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 2 měsíci

      The only impact the Comet made was on the ground... de Havilland went tits-up in 1958 as a direct result of the worst engineering failure in the history of commercial jet aviation.

    • @mynameisbobandilikebananas2143
      @mynameisbobandilikebananas2143 Před 2 měsíci

      @@sandervanderkammen9230 I did highlight that in the paper

    • @WilhelmKarsten
      @WilhelmKarsten Před měsícem

      As the worst engineering failure in commercial aviation history the real tragedy was that it could have been easily prevented if de Haviland had simply followed well-known and understood industry standards for the design and construction of pressurized cabins made from riveted aluminum alloys.
      d-H was still more than a decade behind in aircraft technology and was still building planes out of wood and fabric when all-metal pressurized aircraft were introduced into service.

    • @petemaly8950
      @petemaly8950 Před měsícem

      ​@@WilhelmKarsten
      *UPDATE*
      Kharzeestan Krappenz DiktorBummer Werkzxoffen etc and co SHUD note good with much awestruckness.
      *_It's interesting that some of the aircraft on the list should really have been noticeably safer than the Comet due to being a similar type but of much later design & manufacture but they definately were not safer._*
      How things were back then -
      *_Accident losses - % of aircraft built._*
      DeHavilland Comet 4 UK 14%
      DeHavilland Comet all mks 17%
      Vickers VC10 UK 5%
      *_The DH Comet had better safety than or similar safety to many other commercial passenger aircraft of a similar era_*
      Douglas DC-1 99%
      Douglas DC-2 47%
      Douglas DC-3 30%
      Douglas DC-4 26%
      Boeing s300 72%
      Boeing 307 70%
      Boeing 247 48%
      Boeing 707 20%
      Lockheed Electra Turboprop 29%
      Fairchild FH-227 30%
      McDonnell Douglas DC-8 14%
      Sud Aviation Caravelle 15%
      Canadair CL-44 Turboprop 46%
      Convair CV-580 Turboprop 22%
      A comparison of more recent aircraft.
      Accident losses comparison examples.
      1970s - 1980s
      % of total Aircraft built
      Similar aircraft type, date / decade, useage, size.
      Biz Jets
      BAe-125-800 1.7 %
      Beechcraft Beechjet 400 2.2 %
      Cessna 550 Citation II 7.1 %
      Learjet 35 / 36 12 %
      Beechcraft 1900 6%
      Dassault Falcon 10 11.5%
      Aérospatiale SN.601 22.5%
      Medium size jets / Turboprops.
      BAe-146 5.1%
      Fokker 100 6%
      McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30 9.5%
      Fairchild FH-227 30%
      McDonnell Douglas DC-8 14%
      Canadair CL-44 Turboprop 46%
      Convair CV-580 Turboprop 22%
      Beechcraft, Fokker, McDonnell Douglass, Learjet, Fairchild, Aerospatiale, Canadair, Convair companies defunct.
      All Comets, including some Comet 1s, had full civilian use certification at some point after 1954, civilian use certification only being withdrawn after commercial flying stopped. Examples were flying until 1997 - one example did a signals research global circumnavigation flight series in 1993 via Australia virtually without a rest travelling 28000 miles, only had an ice warning indicator issue during the flights.
      *The DH Comet - World Firsts.*
      1st gas turbine jet powered airliner. 1st high altitude 8psi pressurised full fuselage length passenger cabin airliner, not a trivial feature as structure strength required for pressurisation considerably exceeded strength required for normal flying stress. Nobody else had done anything similar before the Comet.
      The b-47 used 2 relatively small, heavily built pressurised modules (the aircraft where 6 had their wings fold up in 2 months while flying & some had their wings fall off while parked).
      The 1937 Boeing piston engined airliner pressurised passenger cabin was pressurised to 2 psi only - in fact that could easily be done as the normal unpressurized fuselage cabin structure strength for flying stresses only was all that was needed to be adequate so no significant weight increase issues needed addressing.
      1st all hydraulically powered flying surface controls & actuators airliner with under carriage wheel disk brakes + ABS.
      1st jet airliner to cross the Atlantic.
      1st jet aircraft to do a world circumnavigation flights series.
      *Of course De Havilland had prior experience building many all metal construction airframe aircraft including thousands of jet powered fighter aircraft that were primarily of metal construction with pressurised cockpits & jet engines built by De-Havilland & we know the world's first all metal construction airframe airliner was built in England in the 1920s by Handley Page.*
      *_De Havilland did indeed always work to better than industry standards at the time, no evidence of negligence ever being produced in relation to the DH Comet._*
      The course of De Havilland & the general UK aerospace industry sector was not affected even slightly by the DH Comet.
      *_Other interesting World firsts_*
      *Vickers Viscount Turboprop Airliner 1947*
      *Gloster Meteor Turboprop Aircraft 1945*
      👍 Cheers

      . .. . ... ... . ... .. ... ..
      xcvcxxcxvcxvcxxc

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před měsícem

      ​@petemaly8950 *Pete, please tell us why there are no longer any British jet aircraft still made in the UK?????*

  • @ericgeorge5483
    @ericgeorge5483 Před 4 lety +102

    The Comet had so much going for it. It looked (and still does) beautiful and was futuristic, but on the flip side it was rushed through and in some respects under engineered. Such a shame.

    • @barrierodliffe4155
      @barrierodliffe4155 Před 3 lety +5

      Yet the Comet 4 was an excellent aircraft and a pleasure to fly in,. Boeing had their share of trouble but they restricted the speed of the 707 and hushed it up, not before it killed many more people than the Comet ever did.

    • @ericgeorge5483
      @ericgeorge5483 Před 3 lety +4

      @@barrierodliffe4155 I had no idea about the safety record of the 707 to be honest.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 3 lety +4

      @@barrierodliffe4155 The DeHaviland Comet Disaster was and remains the worst engineering failure in commercial aviation history.
      26 Comets crashed or were destroyed in accidents killing 426 innocent people... that is 1 out of every 4 Comets built making it the worst safety record in commercial aviation.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 3 lety

      @@ericgeorge5483 Don't mind Barrie, he is not old enough to understand *Statistics* like _per flight_ and _per passenger/mile_ safety records.
      The Comet Disaster remains the worst aircraft safety record in commercial aviation history.

    • @ericgeorge5483
      @ericgeorge5483 Před 3 lety +4

      @@sandervanderkammen9230 It's such a shame because aesthetically its a lovely design.

  • @McRocket
    @McRocket Před 6 lety +972

    I pretty much knew everything you said already (I am a bit of an aircraft buff). But you presented it so very well that I watched (and enjoyed) the entire video.
    Well done.

    • @McRocket
      @McRocket Před 6 lety +23

      Lachlan O'Neil - LOL. First. You are such a moron (and probably a pre-teen one at that) that you actually had to type 'No one cares' as 'n1 crs'? ROFL. A longer sentence, I could understand. But three short words. Again...ROFL.
      Second. You made the post after people had already thumb'd up it (including the guy who created it). So you still typed something that you already knew to be 100% false.
      Try using more of what brain cells you have before you type a post and you will not come across as quite so stupid.

    • @lastshadow2542
      @lastshadow2542 Před 6 lety +4

      McRocket same I already knew this but I enjoyed this video

    • @acetiger9337
      @acetiger9337 Před 6 lety +3

      Here's your 83rd like.. nice comment, and nice video at that

    • @yamahonkawazuki
      @yamahonkawazuki Před 6 lety +4

      same here. to the OP, i chuckled at the closing graphic/animation ( the mustard meteorite.) if someone actually built that plane or used its name, i dont think it would sell. "meteorite"

    • @lachlanoneil8938
      @lachlanoneil8938 Před 6 lety +2

      McRocket yeah I know it was quite hillarious but I stand strong on my point.

  • @bonzolo2358
    @bonzolo2358 Před 6 lety +364

    Is it just me or are these airplanes really beautiful?

    • @Revelian1982
      @Revelian1982 Před 5 lety +3

      It's just you. I'd rather bonk Jessica Alba than an aeroplane, you sicko!

    • @penkagenova7073
      @penkagenova7073 Před 5 lety +8

      @@Revelian1982 actually I think they are beautiful

    • @DrWhom
      @DrWhom Před 5 lety +3

      Neither will happen Revelian

    • @user-jg3dq3oi6k
      @user-jg3dq3oi6k Před 5 lety +3

      All planes are really beautifull

    • @DearHRS
      @DearHRS Před 5 lety +1

      Check out concorde

  • @paulharvey7223
    @paulharvey7223 Před 3 lety

    Flew several times on Comet 4s belonging to BEA Airtours and Dan Air London in the early 70’s (4B and 4C ). They were Very comfortable and smooth! As an aircraft enthusiast it’s something to look back on !

  • @oholibama8888
    @oholibama8888 Před 4 lety +90

    Mustard: out of nowhere came jetengine
    Messerschmitt: am I a joke to you?

    • @igameidoresearchtoo6511
      @igameidoresearchtoo6511 Před 4 lety +2

      LOL, but he meant commercial-passenger plane

    • @fulcrum2951
      @fulcrum2951 Před 4 lety +5

      Pretty sure me 262 isn't the only jet aircraft operational in ww2
      Its only famous due to being rushed into combat

    • @investorbloke
      @investorbloke Před 4 lety +6

      The jet engines in question were invented by the British in 1920's and 30's. A.A. Griffith invented the first working axial-compressor with Sir Frank Whittle inventing the centrifugal jet engine design. The British had jet-engined fighters in service from 1943 onwards, using primarily the more reliable centrifugal engine design, but some had test-bed axial-flow jet engines as well. The German engineers copied the British engines designs, but the ME262 had very poorly-manufactured engines, the Germans lacking the metallurgical know-how of the British to make proper metals for durable engines. Messerschmitt didn't invent them. The first jetliners were British, not forgetting the Avro Tudor 8 jetliner from 1947 that was beaten by the Comet to airline use. It's successor, the Avro 706 Ashton was a stronger design, as well, and first flew in 1950, but never entered full-scale service. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avro_Tudor en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avro_Ashton Also: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gloster_Meteor and en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Havilland_Vampire

    • @josesammut9396
      @josesammut9396 Před 4 lety

      nerd

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 4 lety

      @Michelangelo Miano Frank Whittle did not invent the turbojet engine...

  • @taxidude
    @taxidude Před 4 lety +144

    My first flight was in a Dan Air Comet after the modifications had been made to round windows instead of square. Still a beautiful looking aircraft and the RAF continued to use the Nimrod for decades. Very safe because in an emergency with no protruding engines creating drag, it could land on the sea and remain intact.

    • @rodpettet2819
      @rodpettet2819 Před 2 lety +4

      Oh how I remember Dan Air!

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 2 lety +2

      Dan Air never operated Comet 1 aircraft.
      Despite being modified with round windows all the Comet1s had their airworthiness certification revoked.
      Dan air flew Comet 4s, a completely redesigned aircraft.
      The Nimrod was designed and built by Hawker Siddeley decades later...
      History proves that planes that have engines on wing mounted pylons can and do land safely on water...
      History also proves that placing the engines inside the wing caused many fatal crashes... which is why this flawed design is not used anymore.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před rokem

      @@derektaylor2941 The remaining Comet 1 aircraft that were not destroyed in accidents or broken up after 1954 were modified with round windows.
      In 1958 it was determined that these aircraft would never be safe to carry passengers and all Comet 1 aircraft had their civilian airworthiness certification permanently revoked.
      No commercial airline used the Comet 1 after 1958.
      The Comet 4 series is a completely redesigned aircraft and is very different in appearance and operated with a different type certificate.
      The Nimrod is not a de Havilland Comet, while 2 unsold Comet 4C aircraft where extensively modified to build the first prototypes.
      The Nimrod was designed by Hawker Siddeley nearly 2 decades later...a completely new aircraft albeit specifically designed to repurpose millions of pounds worth of unsold parts and unused tooling from the canceled Comet 4C production line.
      While many ancillary parts and systems are interchangeable between the Comet 4 series and the Nimrod... their airframes, engines and structural parts are not interchangeable, they are different aircraft with different type certificates.
      Only amphibious aircraft are designed to land safely on water, their engines are typically mounted above the wings and fuselage... neither of the Comet's nor the Nimrod were designed to be amphibious or land on water... so it's a completely moot point.
      The Comet 1 suffered four runway excursions in 1949, 1950, 1952 which completely destroyed the aircraft and 1953 which destroyed the aircraft and killed people.
      These failures to take-off are directly related to the severely flawed placement of the engines inside the wings, specifically the disruption of airflow to the inlets mounted in the wings leading edge at high angles of attack.
      There were approximately 100 Comets in total that saw operational service but 26 aircraft crashed or were destroyed in accidents.
      A loss rate of 1 out of every four in service, and appalling loss rate and the worst safety record of any jet airliner in history.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před rokem

      @@derektaylor2941 No, the Hawker Siddeley Nimrod is not a de Havilland Comet...
      Just like a Poseidon MRA1 is not a Boeing 707.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před rokem

      @@derektaylor2941 You have made several false assumptions based on your very limited knowledge and experience... and have made yourself look like a fool... don't blame me for pointing out your errors.

  • @door-to-doorhentaisalesman2978

    De Haviland = open beta, early access

    • @DrSabot-A
      @DrSabot-A Před 5 lety +8

      deHavilland's the manufacturer's though

    • @gamebrains834
      @gamebrains834 Před 5 lety +29

      @@DrSabot-A chill he is a hentai salesman not a aviation expert

    • @DrSabot-A
      @DrSabot-A Před 5 lety +8

      @@gamebrains834 I didnt even notice his name, loll

    • @Kxre_
      @Kxre_ Před 5 lety +2

      Azar Asgarov they'll just keep on saying it's because it's in beta stage

    • @fulcrum2951
      @fulcrum2951 Před 5 lety +2

      Ahh the hentai salesman, say got any offers?

  • @corvetcoyote443
    @corvetcoyote443 Před 2 lety +7

    Yes, I do like the sturdy, reliable,but slow Douglas DC-3,took a bit longer to get there and the Lockheed Constellation was one of the most beautiful prop driven airliners ever,but yes as far as jet liners that Comet was a modern thing of beauty,as well as the amazing Concorde!

    • @Charger1917
      @Charger1917 Před rokem

      So my first cousin works with lots of plane ONE of them is a Douglas DC-3 with 20 seats like usual

    • @mangos2888
      @mangos2888 Před 11 měsíci

      Lockheed definitely should have won over McDonnell Douglas!

  • @flakeyjake3339
    @flakeyjake3339 Před 2 lety +3

    Having spent my entire career of over 40 years in aviation, this was definitely interesting and something I hadn't known.

  • @TheAussieStig30
    @TheAussieStig30 Před 6 lety +98

    Such a beautiful aircraft though. I always loved the Comet.

    • @reallybrokenalways
      @reallybrokenalways Před 6 lety +15

      The last models were just as safe as the other Boeing Variants though, it's just the original window design that was at fault.

    • @flybyairplane3528
      @flybyairplane3528 Před 6 lety +3

      muya kill em all if you look at all Aircraft of its time they ALL had square windows, so just used the same type, BUT nobody had EVER CONSIDER the pressure differential at the cruise altitude, the grand difference was NONEof the other aircraft were PRESSURISED.., AND that was the sum difference.

    • @Agrippa31BC
      @Agrippa31BC Před 6 lety +4

      Being a pilot myself, I’d love to fly some of the later, safer Comets.

    • @o11o01
      @o11o01 Před 6 lety +2

      Leighton Samms The difference wasn't that no other craft were pressurized, but that no other craft faced such a large pressure differential because of it's uniquely high cruising altitude.

    • @doktorbimmer
      @doktorbimmer Před 5 lety +2

      *It wasn't that there were earlier aircraft that were pressurized, the problem was none had ever been made by De Havilland... in fact not only had DH have zero experience with pressurized aircraft, it had little to no experience building large aircraft, jet powered aircraft or using all-metal construction... DH had only ever produced a single engine jet fighter... and it was very primitive being constructed mostly from wood.*

  • @justjason87
    @justjason87 Před 5 lety +126

    My grandfather was the Navigator of the fateful G-ALYY. Even though I never met him, each time I look out a (rounded) Aircraft window I think about him.

    • @fidelcatsro6948
      @fidelcatsro6948 Před 5 lety +9

      sorry to hear this amigo..it must have taken a lot of courage to fly a plane of any sort in those early days

    • @pickles3128
      @pickles3128 Před 4 lety +6

      Comet G-ALYY Navigation Officer A. E. Sissing. Both my grandfathers designed planes for the US government and McDonnell Aircraft (what would become McDonnell Douglas) during the 1940s and 50s; it's why we moved to St. Louis.

    • @tangerinetech5300
      @tangerinetech5300 Před 4 lety +1

      This is like the 4th comment about how they have some weird connection this flight or plane

    • @chocomanger6873
      @chocomanger6873 Před 4 lety +1

      Do you mean "first officer"?

    • @brianeleighton
      @brianeleighton Před 4 lety +3

      @@chocomanger6873 No. They meant what they said. The equivalent in modern times would be a Second Officer, but not really because they were not pilots. They had a map, a compass, a ruler, a stopwatch and a pencil. In early aviation, the Navigation Officer would be responsible for keeping the aircraft on course and would give headings to the Pilot (Captain) and Co-pilot (First Officer). There would also be a Flight Engineer who would be monitoring the engines and gauges. The Captain wore a coat with 4 bars, the First Officer had 3, the Navigation Officer had 2 bars and the Engineer had 1.

  • @fullwaverecked
    @fullwaverecked Před 3 lety +1

    New technology always has a teething component. I admire De Havilland for their fearless innovation. Took a lot of guts.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 3 lety +1

      The Comet Disaster was the result of incompetence and criminal negligence on the part of DeHaviland... thankfully this careless, poor managed company went completely bankrupt in 1958 due to the worst engineering failure in aviation history.

    • @Paul-Nicer58
      @Paul-Nicer58 Před 3 měsíci

      Chow Mein gobblers should be aware.
      *_Accident losses - % of aircraft built._*
      DeHavilland Comet 4 UK 14%
      DeHavilland Comet all mks 17%
      Vickers VC10 UK 5%
      Boeing 707 USA *20%*
      Lockheed Electra USA *29%*

  • @chubbychubbs5552
    @chubbychubbs5552 Před 2 lety +11

    I’ve flown on many jets to holiday mainland Europe and it’s more popular islands but the best experiences were 2 DC6’s and 4 DC3 Dakotas oh and a small Piper 4 seat, much prefer the props, but would like to have flown the later Comet. Favourite I would like to fly ….Super Constellation.

    • @walcoman
      @walcoman Před 2 lety

      Most engineers in the Aircraft industry will tell you, you're much safer flying in a propeller driven aircraft.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 2 lety

      @@walcoman Statistics show very conclusively that you are much safer on a modern jet airliner.

    • @barrierodliffe4155
      @barrierodliffe4155 Před rokem

      @@sandervanderkammen9230rappyboy. As long as the modern airliner isn't made by Boeing.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před rokem

      @@barrierodliffe4155 *Boeing makes the safest jet airliner in history. The 787 Dreamliner.*

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před rokem

      @@barrierodliffe4155 . *Please name a single British company that still makes commercial jet aircraft in Britian.?*

  • @chrisjohnson4165
    @chrisjohnson4165 Před 6 lety +482

    To all those armchair experts who call this plane a failure....yes, it was. Someone had to be first, and DeHavillands learnt a lot from the metal fatigue etc. The variants of the Comet (Nimrod) gave good service until 2011. Not bad for a (basically)1940s plane from a small island.

    • @bastownsend2281
      @bastownsend2281 Před 5 lety +1

      Chris Johnson h

    • @mrtom2854
      @mrtom2854 Před 5 lety +12

      My grandad worked as the flight engineer on a Nimrod, and although he grew very sick and died when I was young (he was only 66 when he died) I do remember 1 conversation I had with him about his time in the RAF - specifically flying on Nimrods. He always stressed how much he loved that plane and how nice it was to fly

    • @pilotjonas8
      @pilotjonas8 Před 5 lety +14

      J nobody has ever died on The 787 and hopefully that will be The case forever

    • @georgebuller1914
      @georgebuller1914 Před 5 lety +4

      @@pilotjonas8 Sadly, it won't........

    • @georgebuller1914
      @georgebuller1914 Před 5 lety +5

      Let us not forget the safety record of the 737!

  • @douglasrodrigues332
    @douglasrodrigues332 Před 6 lety +55

    As a young kid back in the 50's, I got to fly in a DC-7 and a Lockheed Super Constellation. The seats were huge by today's airline standards. The meals were great, not just soft drinks and peanuts. True, it took twice as long to get there, but you did it in comfort.

    • @Nathan-bd6cq
      @Nathan-bd6cq Před 5 lety

      What?

    • @TheCaptainSplatter
      @TheCaptainSplatter Před 5 lety +5

      There was no economy. It was all first class.

    • @puresomenessd2146
      @puresomenessd2146 Před 5 lety

      @Desmond Bagley You mean Aeroflot flight 593?

    • @bbthing68
      @bbthing68 Před 5 lety

      The same thing, for the same price, exists today: Private (GA) jet planes.

    • @battlemouse1
      @battlemouse1 Před 5 lety +1

      Douglas didn't say that he was flying the aircraft. In fact, Douglas didn't even mention one word about being in the cockpit of those aircraft.

  • @boarking3670
    @boarking3670 Před 3 lety +4

    Look even today so futuristic, i cant imagine how people back then would think about it

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před rokem

      They looked at the Comet in absolute horror after 6 of them crash ed in rapid succession..
      Thankfully is appallingly bad aircraft was finally grounded permentally and it airworthiness certification revoked.

  • @pionnm1
    @pionnm1 Před 3 lety

    this is just sooo well made.i keep coming back and watching this time to time

  • @anonymousengineer2467
    @anonymousengineer2467 Před 5 lety +304

    video: "don't put square windows or you'll explode!"
    mustard meteorite: has square windows

    • @Spido68_the_spectator
      @Spido68_the_spectator Před 5 lety +25

      In fact it wasn't the square windows, but the rivets of the windows being punched into the metal instead of being drilled. Creating craks that will developp into fatigue and then failure

    • @sebclot9478
      @sebclot9478 Před 5 lety +39

      @@Spido68_the_spectator The windows did play a role as they increased stress near the rivets, but the cracks did originate at manufacturing cracks caused by the punch rivets. If De Haviland had used drill Rivets and/or Redux (an adhesive used on other parts of the plane) these accidents might not have happened. But hindsight is 20/20. Everyone was using square windows and punch rivets at the time. Its also a pity that the extensive testing De Haviland put the Comet through didn't reveal the problem. the test bed survived 18,000 cycles before failure. If it hadn't held up so well, the problem would have been noted and corrected before the accidents occurred.

    • @nolongerusing7430
      @nolongerusing7430 Před 5 lety +7

      *You became the very thing you sought to destroy*

    • @concept5631
      @concept5631 Před 4 lety +1

      No Mustard! No!

    • @ryanoneill9710
      @ryanoneill9710 Před 4 lety +1

      Same weakness in the titanic

  • @oliverbury6253
    @oliverbury6253 Před 5 lety +29

    Love the original Chrome silver colour of that revolutionary aircraft.

    • @doktorbimmer
      @doktorbimmer Před 5 lety +9

      *The bright silver color ironically was very advantageous for finding the smaller pieces of wreckage...*

    • @oliverbury6253
      @oliverbury6253 Před 4 lety +4

      #docktorbimmer heh.

    • @Scazoid
      @Scazoid Před 4 lety +1

      @@doktorbimmer Roasted!
      *Literal*

  • @DireW0lf0
    @DireW0lf0 Před 4 lety

    My first flight was in a Comet II (modified windows etc.) in 1976 i loved it!

  • @damshek
    @damshek Před 2 lety

    That shot of jumping from piston to jet is so damn gorgeous.

  • @justicewarrior9187
    @justicewarrior9187 Před 6 lety +275

    Why is it that the first jet plane was the most beautiful??!

    • @Kalabanano
      @Kalabanano Před 5 lety +23

      Justice Warrior It's not the first jet plane. It's the first commercial jet plane yes, but the Germany used jet fighters in ww2

    • @doktorbimmer
      @doktorbimmer Před 5 lety +11

      *The Boeing 707 is a very beautiful plane... and was heavily influenced by German jet technology captured by operations "Paperclip" and "Lusty".*

    • @mikhailiagacesa3406
      @mikhailiagacesa3406 Před 5 lety +7

      Yes, and the Me 262 was BEAUTIFUL.

    • @doktorbimmer
      @doktorbimmer Před 5 lety +5

      *Indeed! the Messerschmitt Me-262 **_IS_** beautiful!* czcams.com/video/II2zGYRS4Jw/video.html

    • @user-ky6vw5up9m
      @user-ky6vw5up9m Před 5 lety +3

      Look up VC-10

  • @steampunknord
    @steampunknord Před 5 lety +17

    Holy crap, I had no idea that Sydney airport's tower was so old! It still looks like something from the future.
    (Behind the boeing at 7:24)

  • @James_Knott
    @James_Knott Před 2 lety +6

    One plane of that era, that's been largely forgotten, is the Avro Canada Jetliner, which first flew 13 days after the Comet. It was designed and built in Canada, but production was cancelled due to the needs of the Korean war. Avro Canada also produced the Avro Arrow interceptor, which was one of the fastest and most advanced aircraft of the time. Unfortunately, it was killed by the government just before production was to start.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před rokem

      Indeed, the Avro Jetliner was utterly forgettable.
      The Arvo Arrow was one of the biggest 'White Elephants' in Canadaian history, unfortunately it was obsolete technology on arrival and was simply too expensive for Canada's small Air Force.

    • @James_Knott
      @James_Knott Před rokem

      @@sandervanderkammen9230 The Jetliner never made it into production, due to the Korean war. I don't know where you got the idea the Arrow was obsolete tech, as it was well ahead of anything else. There were also plans to sell it to other countries. Both the U.S. and U.K had shown interest and France wanted the engines. One thing that was used to justify cancelling it was the government took the production cost and a portion of the development cost and said it would cost more than the Voodoo. However, with the Voodoo the Arrow development costs were ignored, so they weren't compared on a level field. The other argument was bombers were obsolete due to missiles. Funny thing, the Russians are still sending bombers over and the U.S. is continuing to develop new ones. IIRC, a new one, the B-21 is under development and should have first flight next year.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@James_KnottThe Jetliner was cancelled because it had no customers, no airline made any firm or even tentative orders.
      The Arrow certainly would have been obsolete by the time it entered service, Mach 2 bombers were indeed rendered obsolete by advances in missile technology... thus there were no export orders, no foreign countries were interested enough to load in with offers to buy or license the design.
      Canada was simply too small to afford a plane like the Arrow, military funding was needed to counteract the looming threat of intercontinental ballistic missiles.
      Canada has had and still has a very strong but small aircraft industry, an industry based primarily on building foreign aircraft designs for domestic needs and a handful of very specialized niche market aircraft developed for unique Conadain conditions and have found some limited export sales due to the special roles and the economics of niche market aircraft.

  • @KYNQxEdz
    @KYNQxEdz Před 4 lety +42

    That plane still looks good than any other place out today ... The way those jets blend together with the wing is just amazing 👌😍

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 3 lety +2

      Fatal design failure

    • @barrierodliffe4155
      @barrierodliffe4155 Před 3 lety +1

      @@sandervanderkammen9230
      Isn't that what they said about the aerodynamic problem on the Boeing 707?

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 3 lety

      @@barrierodliffe4155 The Boeing 707 never had a catastrophic structure failure of its pressure cabin and mever had its airworthiness certification permanently revoked... in fact, unlike the Comet the 707 series is still in service and is expected to remain in service until at least 2045 with the U.S. Air Force.
      Boeing still makes the safest aircraft in the world... unlike deHavilland which no longer exists.

    • @barrierodliffe4155
      @barrierodliffe4155 Před 2 lety +3

      @@sandervanderkammen9230
      Only because DH gave all of the information to Boeing and the FAA was so weak.
      After a number of crashes that were listed as unexplained loss of control, Boeing eventually restricted the speed, they knew if they grounded the aircraft it would cost them plenty so they just let people die. There was an aerodynamic problem that Boeing didn't understand.
      The USAAF often keep obsolete aircraft flying well past their time, maybe it has something to do with there being so many that airlines do not want.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 2 lety

      @@barrierodliffe4155 Boeing and Douglas were building pressurized airliners years before DeHavilland without any catastrophic structural failures.
      De Havilland received technical data on cabin pressurization from the Boeing B-29 program during WW2 but obviously ignored this valueable information in the design of the tragic _Comet Disaster_

  • @goytabr
    @goytabr Před 6 lety +36

    Even early turboprops had a lot of noise and vibration. I've never flown on a pure piston-engined airliner, but I'm old enough to have traveled on such turboprop antiques as the Lockheed L-188 Electra, Vickers Viscount, HS-748 Avro, and NAMC YS-11 (my first flight was actually on a YS-11). The Electra was a bit better, but the Avro caused me the only episode I've ever had of motion sickness. Then I flew only jets for a while, until I got a regional flight on an Embraer EMB-120 Brasília, returning on a Fokker 50. The Brasília was bad, but the Fokker 50 surprised me. Extremely quiet, smooth and comfortable. I haven't flown on other recent turboprops like the ATR-72 or the Bombardier Q400 yet, but I'd like to try them.

    • @pedrovicnt_
      @pedrovicnt_ Před 6 lety

      hey,respect my country!!!! embraer brasilia is bad but the e jets are good

    • @patjordan9490
      @patjordan9490 Před 6 lety

      Goytá F. Villela Jr. OK

    • @WASIURPA
      @WASIURPA Před 6 lety

      Gelo ummmmmmm embraer vs bombardier, bombardier+airbus vs embraer vs boeing

    • @WASIURPA
      @WASIURPA Před 6 lety

      The little plane war

    • @goytabr
      @goytabr Před 6 lety +1

      +Gelo, e de onde você acha que eu sou? (Não deu para desconfiar nem por eu ter enumerado justamente os turboélices que eram a base das frotas da Varig e da VASP, e depois da Rio-Sul?) E por que você acha que é falta de respeito e um insulto à nação falar que eu não gostei de viajar no Brasília? Como se tudo de ruim que se faz aqui tivesse que ser varrido para debaixo do tapete e nunca mencionado... Nada a ver! O Brasília é uma merda mesmo, pelo menos do ponto de vista do passageiro (apesar de seguro e econômico para as empresas aéreas regionais). Horrivelmente apertado, claustrofóbico, barulhento, cheio de vibrações que dão até dor de cabeça... Não pretendo voar nele nunca mais, se eu puder evitar.

  • @peanutbutterisfu
    @peanutbutterisfu Před 2 měsíci +2

    The square windows weren’t the cause. They used punch rivets which created small cracks in the aluminum skin which was too thin in the first place and the windows were designed to be riveted and glued but never were glued. The cracks started from the antenna cut outs on the top of the plane. There are videos of engineers that worked on the plane and also documented information from test pilot talking about doing hard turns feeling the floor moving and noises in the structure.

  • @goatman7362
    @goatman7362 Před 3 lety +4

    Gotta love it when you’re flying in the 50s and suddenly the plane you’re in pops like a balloon

  • @ToxicJelly9
    @ToxicJelly9 Před 5 lety +68

    Imagine if they designed an anniversary plane with the in-built/integrated engines of the comet nowadays, would look so cool

    • @dododakowski2813
      @dododakowski2813 Před 5 lety +5

      But now its all about efficiency

    • @sebclot9478
      @sebclot9478 Před 5 lety

      It's probably harder to service the engines in that configuration, which is likely why it hasn't been copied. It would likely improve the aerodynamics though.

    • @andymadden8183
      @andymadden8183 Před 5 lety

      The Comet's engines were accessed through doors. They could be removed through them as well.

    • @supersixjones8905
      @supersixjones8905 Před 5 lety +8

      it looks cool but is not ideal from safety and maint. persepective

    • @doktorbimmer
      @doktorbimmer Před 4 lety +5

      *Engines mounted in the wing roots was a fatal flaw in the Comet design, it was believed that this configuration improved aerodynamics but instead caused several crashes at take-off due to airflow problems with the engines during rotation. This was also the reason why development of the Nimrod was cancelled, mounting modern engine proved to be impractical.*

  • @europeanbourgeois8223
    @europeanbourgeois8223 Před 6 lety +8

    There was a documentary about this on TV. Jet planes were seriously glamorous back in the day (my dad flew on Concord and still brags about it now) and Britain was leading the wold in this new era. The square windows were very unfortunate but the problem was fixed.

  • @diobrando1764
    @diobrando1764 Před 4 lety +32

    Mustard: Talks about how square windows fxxk planes up
    Also Mustard: Uses square windows for his experiment jet
    *Visible confusion*
    Just a joke, relax

  • @robkunkel8833
    @robkunkel8833 Před 2 lety +1

    LOVED THIS VIDEO … 2:30 Dateline 1958 Age 9. I remember being on an Eastern Airlines Connie just like this, talking to a pilot about new jets and I asked the pilot, as we were leaving the plane: “Do you think jets will ever replace planes like this?” I loved the Connies, even then. He said, “sadly, yes they will. People want to get there sooner.” I never thought the engine drone was bad. In fact I found it soothing. Thanks again.

  • @Polpiv4tifish
    @Polpiv4tifish Před 6 lety +210

    It's a shame many adults lose the excitement for flight they once had as kids. They'll just sit there tapping away on devices, completely desensitized to the fact it's still the most miraculous experience of their lives. I always make a point of looking out the window during flights, and it's a real joy to see other people do the same thing

    • @sce2aux464
      @sce2aux464 Před 5 lety +43

      Takeoffs never get old.

    • @thejay8963
      @thejay8963 Před 5 lety +23

      I know, right? Everyone else is tapping away on the phones, but I look out the window and feel the _G E E S_ pushing on my body, it really feels cool.

    • @redblade43
      @redblade43 Před 5 lety +7

      Polp.
      Is it not dangerous to open the window to look out during flight?

    • @sce2aux464
      @sce2aux464 Před 5 lety +11

      Yeah, the wind is moving awfully fast, and the lack of oxygen would make your fellow passengers uncomfortable.

    • @benjaminmajerik2508
      @benjaminmajerik2508 Před 5 lety +5

      I'm going to get my pilots license before I go to college.

  • @uss_04
    @uss_04 Před 6 lety +1334

    Great Plane or Greatest Plane?
    No comet.

  • @orlandotouristtraps7410
    @orlandotouristtraps7410 Před 2 lety +4

    These were such beautiful planes. It is heart breaking to think of how people must have felt as they were failing. Had they been super reliable and safe the UK might be the leaders in Airline Production today.

  • @sussekind9717
    @sussekind9717 Před 4 lety

    I was able, along with 128 other skydivers, to jump out of a DeHavilland comet, over central Illinois. Awesome ride!

  • @NilsAlbertsson
    @NilsAlbertsson Před 6 lety +19

    I was lucky enough to fly on the Comet several times... Never did me any harm!

    • @dododakowski2813
      @dododakowski2813 Před 5 lety +1

      Flying on a Comet 4 wasn't actually anything risky.
      Only the first one was dangerous

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 3 lety +1

      @@dododakowski2813 Both Comets had a very poor safety record.

    • @petemaly8950
      @petemaly8950 Před měsícem

      ​@@sandervanderkammen9230
      ​@WilhelmKarsten
      Kharzeestan Krappenz DiktorBummer Jurkzxoffenz etc and co - they should note good with much awestruckness & extreme wonderment.
      *UPDATE BREAKING NEWS ETC*
      *_It's interesting that some of the aircraft on the list should really have been noticeably safer than the Comet due to being a similar type but of much later design & manufacture but they definately were not safer._*
      How things were back then -
      *_Accident losses - % of aircraft built._*
      DeHavilland Comet 4 UK 14%
      DeHavilland Comet all mks 17%
      Vickers VC10 UK 5%
      *_The DH Comet had better safety than or similar safety to many other commercial passenger aircraft of a similar era_*
      Douglas DC-1 99%
      Douglas DC-2 47%
      Douglas DC-3 30%
      Douglas DC-4 26%
      Boeing s300 72%
      Boeing 307 70%
      Boeing 247 48%
      Boeing 707 20%
      Lockheed Electra Turboprop 29%
      Fairchild FH-227 30%
      McDonnell Douglas DC-8 14%
      Sud Aviation Caravelle 15%
      Canadair CL-44 Turboprop 46%
      Convair CV-580 Turboprop 22%
      A comparison of more recent aircraft.
      Accident losses comparison examples.
      1970s - 1980s
      % of total Aircraft built
      Similar aircraft type, date / decade, useage, size.
      Biz Jets
      BAe-125-800 1.7 %
      Beechcraft Beechjet 400 2.2 %
      Cessna 550 Citation II 7.1 %
      Learjet 35 / 36 12 %
      Beechcraft 1900 6%
      Dassault Falcon 10 11.5%
      Aérospatiale SN.601 22.5%
      Medium size jets / Turboprops.
      BAe-146 5.1%
      Fokker 100 6%
      McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30 9.5%
      Fairchild FH-227 30%
      McDonnell Douglas DC-8 14%
      Canadair CL-44 Turboprop 46%
      Convair CV-580 Turboprop 22%
      Beechcraft, Fokker, McDonnell Douglass, Learjet, Fairchild, Aerospatiale, Canadair, Convair companies defunct.
      All Comets, including some Comet 1s, had full civilian use certification at some point after 1954, civilian use certification only being withdrawn after commercial flying stopped. Examples were flying until 1997 - one example did a signals research global circumnavigation flight series in 1993 via Australia virtually without a rest travelling 28000 miles, only had an ice warning indicator issue during the flights.
      *The DH Comet - World Firsts.*
      1st gas turbine jet powered airliner. 1st high altitude 8psi pressurised full fuselage length passenger cabin airliner, not a trivial feature as structure strength required for pressurisation considerably exceeded strength required for normal flying stress. Nobody else had done anything similar before the Comet.
      The b-47 used 2 relatively small, heavily built pressurised modules (the aircraft where 6 had their wings fold up in 2 months while flying & some had their wings fall off while parked).
      The 1937 Boeing piston engined airliner pressurised passenger cabin was pressurised to 2 psi only - in fact that could easily be done as the normal unpressurized fuselage cabin structure strength for flying stresses only was all that was needed to be adequate so no significant weight increase issues needed addressing.
      1st all hydraulically powered flying surface controls & actuators airliner with under carriage wheel disk brakes + ABS.
      1st jet airliner to cross the Atlantic.
      1st jet aircraft to do a world circumnavigation flights series.
      *Of course De Havilland had prior experience building many all metal construction airframe aircraft including thousands of jet powered fighter aircraft that were primarily of metal construction with pressurised cockpits & jet engines built by De-Havilland & we know the world's first all metal construction airframe airliner was built in England in the 1920s by Handley Page.*
      *_De Havilland did indeed always work to better than industry standards at the time, no evidence of negligence ever being produced in relation to the DH Comet._*
      The course of De Havilland & the general UK aerospace industry sector was not affected even slightly by the DH Comet.
      *_Other interesting World firsts_*
      *Vickers Viscount Turboprop Airliner 1947*
      *Gloster Meteor Turboprop Aircraft 1945*
      They might like to answer these questions.
      *Which airline has just ordered*
      *60 RR England Trent XWB Engines*
      *& What aircraft are the engines for?*
      _Bonus question for 10 points._
      Which country has the
      *World's Highest Combined Per Capita Nuclear +
      Defence + Aerospace Sector Activity?*
      👍 Cheers 🙂

      . .. . ........ ...... ..... ...
      ivcivcivxivcixcviiiixc

  • @scottsen2128
    @scottsen2128 Před 6 lety +251

    Your channel is absolutely awesome

    • @thelatenightgamer2624
      @thelatenightgamer2624 Před 6 lety

      RC BOSS britain invented everything

    • @grubbuk
      @grubbuk Před 6 lety

      Banyana?

    • @elicharlton6397
      @elicharlton6397 Před 6 lety

      Nukes for Dayz Nk yeah. Cause Britain is the best. We also invented tanks (military tanks)

    • @doktorbimmer
      @doktorbimmer Před 5 lety +1

      *The brits also invented the jet airliner crash.*

    • @petemaly8950
      @petemaly8950 Před měsícem

      ​@@doktorbimmer
      ​@WilhelmKarsten
      Kharzeestan Krappenz DiktorBummer Jurkzxoffenz etc and co - they should note good with much awestruckness & extreme wonderment.
      *UPDATE BREAKING NEWS ETC*
      *_It's interesting that some of the aircraft on the list should really have been noticeably safer than the Comet due to being a similar type but of much later design & manufacture but they definately were not safer._*
      How things were back then -
      *_Accident losses - % of aircraft built._*
      DeHavilland Comet 4 UK 14%
      DeHavilland Comet all mks 17%
      Vickers VC10 UK 5%
      *_The DH Comet had better safety than or similar safety to many other commercial passenger aircraft of a similar era_*
      Douglas DC-1 99%
      Douglas DC-2 47%
      Douglas DC-3 30%
      Douglas DC-4 26%
      Boeing s300 72%
      Boeing 307 70%
      Boeing 247 48%
      Boeing 707 20%
      Lockheed Electra Turboprop 29%
      Fairchild FH-227 30%
      McDonnell Douglas DC-8 14%
      Sud Aviation Caravelle 15%
      Canadair CL-44 Turboprop 46%
      Convair CV-580 Turboprop 22%
      A comparison of more recent aircraft.
      Accident losses comparison examples.
      1970s - 1980s
      % of total Aircraft built
      Similar aircraft type, date / decade, useage, size.
      Biz Jets
      BAe-125-800 1.7 %
      Beechcraft Beechjet 400 2.2 %
      Cessna 550 Citation II 7.1 %
      Learjet 35 / 36 12 %
      Beechcraft 1900 6%
      Dassault Falcon 10 11.5%
      Aérospatiale SN.601 22.5%
      Medium size jets / Turboprops.
      BAe-146 5.1%
      Fokker 100 6%
      McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30 9.5%
      Fairchild FH-227 30%
      McDonnell Douglas DC-8 14%
      Canadair CL-44 Turboprop 46%
      Convair CV-580 Turboprop 22%
      Beechcraft, Fokker, McDonnell Douglass, Learjet, Fairchild, Aerospatiale, Canadair, Convair companies defunct.
      All Comets, including some Comet 1s, had full civilian use certification at some point after 1954, civilian use certification only being withdrawn after commercial flying stopped. Examples were flying until 1997 - one example did a signals research global circumnavigation flight series in 1993 via Australia virtually without a rest travelling 28000 miles, only had an ice warning indicator issue during the flights.
      *The DH Comet - World Firsts.*
      1st gas turbine jet powered airliner. 1st high altitude 8psi pressurised full fuselage length passenger cabin airliner, not a trivial feature as structure strength required for pressurisation considerably exceeded strength required for normal flying stress. Nobody else had done anything similar before the Comet.
      The b-47 used 2 relatively small, heavily built pressurised modules (the aircraft where 6 had their wings fold up in 2 months while flying & some had their wings fall off while parked).
      The 1937 Boeing piston engined airliner pressurised passenger cabin was pressurised to 2 psi only - in fact that could easily be done as the normal unpressurized fuselage cabin structure strength for flying stresses only was all that was needed to be adequate so no significant weight increase issues needed addressing.
      1st all hydraulically powered flying surface controls & actuators airliner with under carriage wheel disk brakes + ABS.
      1st jet airliner to cross the Atlantic.
      1st jet aircraft to do a world circumnavigation flights series.
      *Of course De Havilland had prior experience building many all metal construction airframe aircraft including thousands of jet powered fighter aircraft that were primarily of metal construction with pressurised cockpits & jet engines built by De-Havilland & we know the world's first all metal construction airframe airliner was built in England in the 1920s by Handley Page.*
      *_De Havilland did indeed always work to better than industry standards at the time, no evidence of negligence ever being produced in relation to the DH Comet._*
      The course of De Havilland & the general UK aerospace industry sector was not affected even slightly by the DH Comet.
      *_Other interesting World firsts_*
      *Vickers Viscount Turboprop Airliner 1947*
      *Gloster Meteor Turboprop Aircraft 1945*
      They might like to answer these questions.
      *Which airline has just ordered*
      *60 RR England Trent XWB Engines*
      *& What aircraft are the engines for?*
      _Bonus question for 10 points._
      Which country has the
      *World's Highest Combined Per Capita Nuclear +
      Defence + Aerospace Sector Activity?*
      👍 Cheers 🙂

      . ... .. ... . .... . . ..
      xcxvxcvxcvxcvci

  • @justabirb5015
    @justabirb5015 Před 3 lety

    At this point I'm watching these because I miss traveling and the sight of a plane makes me happy.

  • @tlshortyshorty5810
    @tlshortyshorty5810 Před 4 lety +2

    It might’ve been terrible but wow it’s shape looks badass.

  • @uss_04
    @uss_04 Před 6 lety +720

    Compared to modern aircraft, I bet some people wonder why we don’t have such sleek looking jet aircraft with integrated engines today.
    Got to admit they look totally cool, but Airlines ( and passengers) care more about economy than cool jets.
    Hence the huge, high bypass engines, slung underneath the engines.
    Wendover and Real Engineering covers this.
    Efficiency and serviceability lead to the somewhat sluggish looking aircraft we have in comparison, but they got it where it counts.

    • @zorroalphonso4354
      @zorroalphonso4354 Před 6 lety +13

      Because, modern jet engines are bulky.

    • @pixelshady6143
      @pixelshady6143 Před 6 lety +64

      no,the only reason jet engines aren't built into modern day airliners is due to maintenance, the bulkiness does not matter

    • @googaagoogaa12345678
      @googaagoogaa12345678 Před 6 lety +74

      also its probably safer to have them under the wing then in the wing should one go boom

    • @martinda7446
      @martinda7446 Před 6 lety +22

      The (ultra gorgeous) Comet was as far as I know the only commercial aircraft with engines integrated into the wing structure, (oops Tu104?) The next nearest implementation would be the tri-jets with the no2 (?) integrated in the tail section, (L1011, DC10, 727, Trident, TU154). The pylon mounting that was used by Boeing on the 707 gave a clean wing, easy maintenance and a thrust clear of obstruction and has been chosen by all modern airframes. The only other arrangement is that of the rear mounted twins (DC9, Caravelle, 134, 1/11 etc.) and fours (VC10, IL62), which have most of the advantages as the pylon mounted wing engines with the addition of less noise in the cabin but require a T-tail to allow clean air over tail section and have nastier stall habits.
      Most modern aircraft look (and sound) boring, just like today's cars. Why does a 707 look so gorgeous next to an Airbus? When the 707 itself is the archetype of them all - not the Comet?

    • @oxcart4172
      @oxcart4172 Před 6 lety +3

      The designer of the comet could've used podded engines but apparently just didnt like them

  • @theduke7539
    @theduke7539 Před 6 lety +131

    The chairman of Douglass once said, "Being first is pretty great, but the money is in being second."

    • @redblade43
      @redblade43 Před 5 lety +3

      The Duke.
      America has also come "second" to Britain in the fastest land speed record...

    •  Před 5 lety +13

      The Duke
      Douglas sure knew how to make a far more effective death trap than De Havilland ever could have dreamed of. I heard someone was making 'I flew on a DC10 and got to wear this lousy t shirt as I didn't die' t-shirts.

    • @garyhope2
      @garyhope2 Před 5 lety

      The "smart" money.

    • @TheSecondVersion
      @TheSecondVersion Před 5 lety +8

      de Havilland: "Early bird gets the worm"
      Douglass: "Second mouse gets the cheese."

    •  Před 5 lety +2

      @@TheSecondVersion
      And yet as the second mouse they didn't really capitalise on it, did they?

  • @ALV-gs1xg
    @ALV-gs1xg Před 3 lety

    I flew on a Comet in 1978 on my first flight. Amazing trip.

  • @winll5200
    @winll5200 Před 4 lety

    The mix of the jet sounds and the music got me

  • @santinieve1
    @santinieve1 Před 6 lety +608

    Best.Channel.Ever. Period.

    • @mateigavrila8412
      @mateigavrila8412 Před 6 lety +11

      santinieve 1 wendover productions?

    • @lemao_squash4486
      @lemao_squash4486 Před 6 lety +3

      NoobXSLAYER 1099 as much as i love him, i must say he always tends to get things wrong, and the only really cool part of his channel is the animation

    • @mateigavrila8412
      @mateigavrila8412 Před 6 lety

      Urho The Human what does he get wrong?

    • @lemao_squash4486
      @lemao_squash4486 Před 6 lety +5

      NoobXSLAYER 1099
      Im just going to talk about his Small plane vs Big plane video because it is the only one that i remember really well. He completely ignores overflight fees, airport cost and just overall gets it wrong. In the section about airlines and hubs he is also wrong. If every airport flew to every other airport, the demand would be extremely small and cost huge. Hubs are just overall better. Also in his Why don't planes fly faster video just take a look at the comments and you'll see what i am talking about

    • @Marcus-Lim
      @Marcus-Lim Před 6 lety +1

      I prefer VOX but this is a great channel as well

  • @MrHav1k
    @MrHav1k Před 5 lety +157

    Sees video about planes
    Doesn't see it was made by Wendover Productions
    MIND = BLOWN

  • @thelonerider9693
    @thelonerider9693 Před 4 lety

    It looks nice though! Love the aesthetics of the engines blending into the wings.

  • @geoff37s38
    @geoff37s38 Před rokem +3

    I flew on a Comet 4B from Manchester to Alicante in 1970. Only a few days after a 4B had flown into a mountain near Barcelona. I was on MH17 from Amstadam to KL the week before this aircraft was shot down. I thought it was rather concerning when flight path was over Kabul and Ukraine. I guess I am lucky to still be here!

    • @krio1267
      @krio1267 Před rokem

      bruh man.... i didn't know you were on the crashed plane...

    • @krio1267
      @krio1267 Před rokem

      also hi to you from malaysia!

  • @richcuss8461
    @richcuss8461 Před 6 lety +14

    My father assisted in the crash investigations of the Comet. He told me that the main point of failure for stress cracks was a small window in the ceiling of the cockpit. The window was there for navigation so the navigator could shoot stars with a theodolite/sextant (way before GPS etc. they still confirmed inertial navigation over ocean routes with star charts) . That window was where most of the fractures began.

    • @ssbohio
      @ssbohio Před 6 lety

      The window in the top of the fuselage where the fracture started wasn't a glass window to look out of, but an opening covered in plastic to provide a way for the direction finder antenna to receive signals. This was used for homing in on radio beacons and even radio broadcast stations as part of radio navigation.
      Here's a drawing from the investigation report, showing where the ADF "window" was located:
      commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Comet_1_G-ALYP_-_wreckage_recovered_png.png

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 2 lety +1

      The _Comet Disaster_ investigations revealed that the catastrophic in-flight structural failures were not related to any specific penetrations in the fuselage but the the completely inadaquate thickness and strength of the aluminum skins, the lack proper rip-stop doubler joints and poorly designed and constructed riveting, the rivet joints were shockingly bad and well below Industry standards.

    • @barrierodliffe4155
      @barrierodliffe4155 Před rokem

      @@sandervanderkammen9230Liar. DH had a problem, then got it right, too bad you can't say the same for American dearhtraps.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před rokem +1

      @@barrierodliffe4155 *The Comet has the worst safety record of any jet airliner in history.*
      *26 Comets crashed or were destroyed in accidents making it the worst commercial jet in.the entire history of commercial aviation.*

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před rokem +1

      @@barrierodliffe4155 *The Boeing 787 is the safest jet airliner in history.*

  • @beachbum4691
    @beachbum4691 Před 6 lety +9

    Hi, I flew on Comets as cabin-crew from 1966-to-1973 Hence I challenge the notion that the Comet-4B was quiet? The rest; great :) this Vid' offered a lot, and yes it was quiet, almost silent at the front, but the rear seats were only 6-feet from the exhausts and the noise levels were damaging to anyones hearing; as soon as cruising altitude was reached the flight crew would kill the two inner engines to save fuel and to lessen the noise. It could fly on one engine so was quite safe. Thanks :)

  • @thetwitchfurry5548
    @thetwitchfurry5548 Před rokem

    I just went to see one of these at the National Museum of Flight in Scotland (G-BDIX, Comet 4c), this one is displayed so you can still board it, and I can't belive how small the door actually is to get on

  • @followyourbliss101
    @followyourbliss101 Před 4 lety

    awesome videos - very impressed you've done all the graphic work yourself via skillshare - i didn't even know about that site before.

  • @shinybaldy
    @shinybaldy Před 6 lety +199

    This channel is so good. Reminds me of what Wendover productions was trending to be before it went tech fanboy without critical thinking.

    • @WASIURPA
      @WASIURPA Před 6 lety +1

      shinybaldy they were great before i went flying around channels

    • @louiearmstrong
      @louiearmstrong Před 6 lety +18

      Im 90% sure this channel and Half As Interesting are Wendover, just changing his voice style/equalizer settings

    • @shinybaldy
      @shinybaldy Před 6 lety +3

      louiearmstrong same affiliated channel but the style is definitely different. Wendover is just sad speculating stuff now.

    • @horusmorus5588
      @horusmorus5588 Před 6 lety +21

      louiearmstrong half as interesting is actually Wendover’s second channel

    • @louiearmstrong
      @louiearmstrong Před 6 lety

      Horus Morus I had a feeling

  • @quinnreverance611
    @quinnreverance611 Před 5 lety +4

    I swear, this is literally one of my favorite CZcams Channels!! The quality of the models and editing is superb!

  • @milkyeagle4700
    @milkyeagle4700 Před 2 lety +1

    Those engines look so smooth . I wish we had those now

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 2 lety +1

      Anyone that has flown in a modern jet is still alive because we don't use this fatally flawed design...

  • @JustinC721
    @JustinC721 Před 4 lety +1

    Hey Dad! Is that a shooting star? No, son, it's a Comet.
    Joking aside though, I never knew about the Comet until now, but I am forever amazed at the level of engineering genius that goes into modern jetliners and it was cool to see what started it all.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 4 lety

      The Comet Disaster remains an excellent example of how not to build and airliner... DeHavilland was more than a decades behind in in passenger aircraft design and construction.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 4 lety

      The Comet Disaster remains an excellent example of how not to build an airliner.
      DeHavilland was more than a decade behind in passenger aircraft design and construction, it was a company sadly more qualified to build furniture than jets.

  • @bradster1708
    @bradster1708 Před 5 lety +41

    Great video, well done.
    Just a couple of extra points if I may;
    The Comet did find success when it became the basis for the RAF maritime reconnaissance aircraft “Nimrod”, it served until 2011.
    One of the reasons the 707 surpassed the Comet was that it was designed to use longer runways which required most airports to extend runways to accomodate this new Boeing jet, the Comet was designed to operate from existing short runways which made it more versatile at the ultimate expensive of less ability to carry passengers.
    The 707 stood on the shoulders of the Comet in the same way that the Douglas DC-3 stood on the shoulders of the pioneering Boeing 247, sometimes being first is not always best.

    • @alejandrayalanbowman367
      @alejandrayalanbowman367 Před 5 lety +2

      The reason the 707 did well was they were given away, the customer only had to pay for the spares.

    • @doktorbimmer
      @doktorbimmer Před 5 lety +5

      @Alejandra y Alan Bowman *WRONG! The Boeing 707 cost $4.5 million USD each! and in 1959 earned a 32 million dollar profit (a 21% return on investment).*

    • @sebclot9478
      @sebclot9478 Před 5 lety

      @@alejandrayalanbowman367 The 707 was a better airliner than the Comet 4. It was faster and held more passengers, which made it more financially viable. That was probably the biggest reason the 707 won out. The Comet was fine plane, but needed a few upgrades to compete with the 707 in the markets they were competing in. Those upgrades were coming in the form of the Comet 5, but by that point that was being considers, Boeing and McDonnell Douglas were in dominant market positions. They gave up on the airliner market and the Comet 5 never happened.

    • @doktorbimmer
      @doktorbimmer Před 4 lety

      *De Havilland went bankrupt in 1959... as a direct result of the **_Comet Disaster_** which remains the worst engineering failure in aviation history.*

    • @tjp353
      @tjp353 Před 4 lety

      +Brad Rigg. While it came first, in the long line of jet airliners, the Comet was at best a transitional design. With it's quite small narrow fuselage, straight tail surfaces, slightly swept wing with plain leading edge & plain flaps, it still had a lot in common with the piston-prop airliners of the '40s. It's early accidents clearly restricted it's success, but even if they hadn't occurred, with the launch of the B707 & DC8 on the horizon, it's sales potential still would have been quite limited. The B707 surpassed the Comet in a number of ways. It was simply a more advanced design, with a lot more potential. Modern designs owe more to the B707 than to the Comet. The Comet was the pioneer, but the B707 created the jet airliner template that's still followed today.

  • @coco-ry8jg
    @coco-ry8jg Před 4 lety +12

    Lucky enough to have experienced flying in the Comet, but it was in the RAF's Nimrod MR2 derivative. Awesome aircraft, used it's four engines for take-off and cruised with just two ! Thrilling experience, preferable to a modern passenger jet any day of the week !

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před rokem +1

      The Nimrod is a completely different aircraft that was designed by a different company decades later.
      The Nimrod like the Comet had a checkered safety record and was grounded due to metal fatigue issues.

  • @zenrising3314
    @zenrising3314 Před 4 lety +48

    "meteorite" means it's going to smash into the ground.

    • @inncogneato6341
      @inncogneato6341 Před 4 lety +7

      zenrising That’s fine but this is a Comet.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 4 lety +7

      @@inncogneato6341 Correct, Comets usually explode before striking the ground

    • @torstenscholz6243
      @torstenscholz6243 Před 4 lety +1

      @@sandervanderkammen9230 Well, the Comet didn't explode, but disintegrated in mid-air, so still an appropriate name.

    • @nickpaine
      @nickpaine Před 3 lety +2

      A meteor is not a meteorite until it reaches terra firma.

    • @Evaunit98
      @Evaunit98 Před 3 lety

      Apart from if it’s made by Gloster

  • @f1hotrod527
    @f1hotrod527 Před 4 měsíci +2

    It is a beautiful plane. The jets in the wing make it look more modern than current planes.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 4 měsíci

      Engines in the wings was one of its many fatal flaws and caused several fatal accidents... no other manufacturers have used this deadly design.

    • @ronjon7942
      @ronjon7942 Před 4 měsíci

      But it looks goooood. Very Art Deco.

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 Před 4 měsíci

      @@ronjon7942 It's very classic de Havilland Art Deco style..
      Unfortunately de Havilland was more concerned with looks than safety and their technology peaked in the early 1930s.

    • @WilhelmKarsten
      @WilhelmKarsten Před měsícem

      Unfortunately, in terms of aerodynamic performance integration of the engines within the wing is a serious design flaw.

    • @petemaly8950
      @petemaly8950 Před měsícem

      ​@@WilhelmKarsten
      Kharzeestan Krappenz DiktorBummer Werkzxoffen etc and co - they should note good with much awestruckness.
      *UPDATE*
      *There are advantages to wing root mounted engines including aerodynamic advantages.*
      *_The Comet engines air intake configuration was not actually a design flaw._*
      *_It's interesting that some of the aircraft on the list should really have been noticeably safer than the Comet due to being a similar type but of much later design & manufacture but they definately were not safer._*
      How things were back then -
      *_Accident losses - % of aircraft built._*
      DeHavilland Comet 4 UK 14%
      DeHavilland Comet all mks 17%
      Vickers VC10 UK 5%
      *_The DH Comet had better safety than or similar safety to many other commercial passenger aircraft of a similar era_*
      Douglas DC-1 99%
      Douglas DC-2 47%
      Douglas DC-3 30%
      Douglas DC-4 26%
      Boeing s300 72%
      Boeing 307 70%
      Boeing 247 48%
      Boeing 707 20%
      Lockheed Electra Turboprop 29%
      Fairchild FH-227 30%
      McDonnell Douglas DC-8 14%
      Sud Aviation Caravelle 15%
      Canadair CL-44 Turboprop 46%
      Convair CV-580 Turboprop 22%
      A comparison of more recent aircraft.
      Accident losses comparison examples.
      1970s - 1980s
      % of total Aircraft built
      Similar aircraft type, date / decade, useage, size.
      Biz Jets
      BAe-125-800 1.7 %
      Beechcraft Beechjet 400 2.2 %
      Cessna 550 Citation II 7.1 %
      Learjet 35 / 36 12 %
      Beechcraft 1900 6%
      Dassault Falcon 10 11.5%
      Aérospatiale SN.601 22.5%
      Medium size jets / Turboprops.
      BAe-146 5.1%
      Fokker 100 6%
      McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30 9.5%
      Fairchild FH-227 30%
      McDonnell Douglas DC-8 14%
      Canadair CL-44 Turboprop 46%
      Convair CV-580 Turboprop 22%
      Beechcraft, Fokker, McDonnell Douglass, Learjet, Fairchild, Aerospatiale, Canadair, Convair companies defunct.
      All Comets, including some Comet 1s, had full civilian use certification at some point after 1954, civilian use certification only being withdrawn after commercial flying stopped. Examples were flying until 1997 - one example did a signals research global circumnavigation flight series in 1993 via Australia virtually without a rest travelling 28000 miles, only had an ice warning indicator issue during the flights.
      *The DH Comet - World Firsts.*
      1st gas turbine jet powered airliner. 1st high altitude 8psi pressurised full fuselage length passenger cabin airliner, not a trivial feature as structure strength required for pressurisation considerably exceeded strength required for normal flying stress. Nobody else had done anything similar before the Comet.
      The b-47 used 2 relatively small, heavily built pressurised modules (the aircraft where 6 had their wings fold up in 2 months while flying & some had their wings fall off while parked).
      The 1937 Boeing piston engined airliner pressurised passenger cabin was pressurised to 2 psi only - in fact that could easily be done as the normal unpressurized fuselage cabin structure strength for flying stresses only was all that was needed to be adequate so no significant weight increase issues needed addressing.
      1st all hydraulically powered flying surface controls & actuators airliner with under carriage wheel disk brakes + ABS.
      1st jet airliner to cross the Atlantic.
      1st jet aircraft to do a world circumnavigation flights series.
      *Of course De Havilland had prior experience building many all metal construction airframe aircraft including thousands of jet powered fighter aircraft that were primarily of metal construction with pressurised cockpits & jet engines built by De-Havilland & we know the world's first all metal construction airframe airliner was built in England in the 1920s by Handley Page.*
      *_De Havilland did indeed always work to better than industry standards at the time, no evidence of negligence ever being produced in relation to the DH Comet._*
      The course of De Havilland & the general UK aerospace industry sector was not affected even slightly by the DH Comet.
      *_Other interesting World firsts_*
      *Vickers Viscount Turboprop Airliner 1947*
      *Gloster Meteor Turboprop Aircraft 1945*
      👍 Cheers 🙂
      . ... ... . . ... . . ... . . ... . .
      xcvxcxvxcxvxcxvxcviii

  • @datathunderstorm
    @datathunderstorm Před 5 lety +8

    Has anybody noticed that Queen Amidala’s Spaceship (the one that was blown up on a sky platform on Coruscant, just after it landed) had wings with embedded engines and a silver metal design that seemed to be nod to the original Comet. Anybody notice? 😃