Fabulous job! I absolutely agree with viewer comments that it needs the Flying Sub! Chip and Kowalski were my favorite characters and I dug the cool leather jacket Captain Crane wore when piloting the Flying Sub 😊
Presentation is exceptional. Outstanding detail of the ship, and details about it. One of my favorite shows as a teen; starting in 1964 in B&W. As a 13-yr. old, I so wanted to be Lee Crane.
The show takes place in the 1970's and 1980's. In 1964 that was the future. I saw an episode once where the SEAVIEW was on the surface, and above it it said " 1979" for a second or two. I laughed for in reality it was 1981.i fondly remember this. The seaview, the only sub with Cadillac tail fins !!,
This is a totally awesome video, I remember rushing home from school as a kid to watch Voyage to the Bottom of Sea. Watching this took me right back to those memories.
As a kid I loved this show. I had a model of the submarine that shot torpedos out. I took it to the lakes and played with it for hours with my mask and snorkel. Thanks for the memories.
Simplesmente o maior seriado da minha infância. Não perdia um capítulo. Quase todos membros deste seriado já se foram e trazem saudades. Bons tempos! 🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷👏👏👏👏
Ah, me too. Watched it all the time. Do you remember the sounds? Not just that brilliant theme song (starring Richard Basehart... David Hedison...). How about the various sonar and Bridge sounds? Ping. Ping. Ping. Ping... Bah bee boop boop boop... Capt. Crane screaming Dive!! Dive!! And my favorite visual: Everybody in the boat being violently tossed left; right; left; right, lol. How many of you built your own plastic model? Jesus, has it really been 50+ years, already? :)
My favorite show when I was a kid. Thanks for the memories! My parents gave me the model from the Sears Christmas Wish Catalog. Best present ever as a kid. 👍
I rewatched voyage to the bottom the sea recently and was amazed how well the Special effects especially the subs and underwater shots have held up. Now I am not saying the're not cheesy at times and there are so many times you can clearly see they are in a swimming pool but the craft and skill put into them is amazing for the time and budget, In the mad rush to reboot series I wish they would reboot this series. I know we had Seaquest DSV that was a spiritual descendant of this series but it was its own wonderful thing.
@@darrellcook8253 Sealab 2021 was a parody of the cartoon Sealab 2020 I fondly remember watching this show and rewatched it not long ago but it was more of a kids cartoon with an environmental theme but it bore little resemblance to Journey beneath the sea which was more a spy thriller in the earlier seasons tending towards a sci fi fantasy themes for the last 2 years
My dad was a chauffeur oh, and I have when I was a kid, 5 years old my dad had a 1964 Fleetwood black and white combination in the seat, it had a fantastic steering wheel because on certain parts of it it was transparent it was black and transparent, the work that the rocket scientist used to make the cars the work that they put into that car when I look back at us this is pretty impressive and look at the size of these things we used to drive, everything on the dashboard had I the stainless steel, caps on the instrumentation if I can remember correctly but that was a heavy car and it didn't have no problem and getting around oh, my dad had a 1964 Chrysler Imperial remember the one with the square wheel?
Excellent video thanks for posting it & I often wondered why the US Navy never decided to actually build such a vessel! Looking at it today in this video, it still looks like something futuristic!
@@shaund7725 Great model.... it was a great show when we were kids. Now when I watch it, I find it is for kids. Too many monsters.... Would love to have a new TV show with this ship going back and forth in time from 1972 to 2020 ??? Hopefully with better scripts.
@@FooFahFoeFum The first season was more realistic focusing on Cold War themes. It's funny when I was a kid I found those episodes boring and loved the monster episodes. Now it's the opposite. As for when the show took place you have to remember continuity and cannon didn't matter much back then. I honestly hope they don't remake it. It's a product of it's time and the way Hollywood is now they would only end up ruining it.
The SSNR. SEAVIEW is the first submarine( even thou its a scale model) to use the pump-jet propulsers,.The 1st subs to use this type of propulsion is the U.K. TRAFALGAR class. the U.S.N. uses this on the SEAWOLF class & the follow on VIRGINIA Class.they were way behind the advancement of Seaview.
I like the idea she was named Seaview and you had a sea view with the glass windows, and most submarines you don't operating by Sona you don't get an image of everything, she was revolutionary and the science fiction movies and TV shows show us what we should scribe for and aren't we there now
Few yrs back, I clicked on several "Sky King" TV series excerpts on RUclips. I noted in the comments that some folks had pursued aviation related careers, as pilots etc., due to having watched the series as youngsters. Or how many other youngsters watched police/crime drama, and so on, and were positively influenced to the extent that it helped give them constructive career direction.. In my opinion, such commercial media has constructive social potential that is overlooked. My idea is that, if we want more youngsters to grow up to pursue more science/engineering etc. careers, or just otherwise positively connect with the occupational work environment, our media might be a very viable tool toward those ends.. Imagine a sci-fi series about private sector space industry, with asteroid mining, rotating wheel stations.. Or historical fiction series about an entrepreneur who, with lots of adventures along the way, creates a booming airship airline during the early 20th century..
My Good God, what a video! This video reminds me of the time when I saw the movie, and later the TV series. All aspects of your video are outstanding. At the beginning of the video, I felt that I was watching the movie. Just outstanding in ALL respects. You showed a real RUclips video should me.
There's a 3rd or 4th season episode where Nelson orders the Seaview to travel at 60 knots (submerged). That's the fastest I ever heard of it going on the series. Since I recall that it seemed to be no big deal, I would assume it could probably go even faster than that.
@Mark Nehring I bet it really sucks for you, to not know what an honest days work entails, as you sit their on your butt, with all the non-productive idle time on your hands. FYI I didn't watch WestWorld 2016. We didn't have the channel because money needed to go to family.
Always the bubbles coming up. If I remember correctly once a week mid watch or maybe when we came to periscope depth to do housekeeping we would cycle the main ballast tank vents to get rid of any air accumulation and OOD on scope looked for any air
We had TV shows back then to help set your conscience and thinking really smart nothing negative in it when you get filled with positivity it makes you a great person you don't even realize it yourself TV shows like Cannon Batman Barnaby Jones The Mod Squad Hawaii Five-O the Thunderbirds you'll have to look that up on RUclips y'all too young to get this, the Streets of San Francisco with Karl Malden did Michael Douglas these look great actors and we had them every week, Dragnet, Sergeant Joe Friday, Dan Aykroyd did an accurate amazing job when he did Dragnet, he caught the history of it and the moves of Sergeant Joe Friday
Dan Ackroyd did ONE "Dragnet" movie, it was a spoof of the series which was written, directed and starred in by Jack Webb, who was a legend of the police/emergency genre. He pretty much created it.
Dra Williams, Man, I must be getting old! I remember ALL of those great TV shows! My mom and siblings looked forward to them coming on every night. Starsky and Hutch, Six Million Dollar Man, Bionic Woman, Fantasy Island. In the 70's, my brother and I watched the after school shows like Speed Racer, Ultra Man, Johnny Sokko and his Giant Robot, The Space Giants, Captain Scarlett. Does anyone remember the lesser known Marine Boy or Kimba the Lion? Those were great times in front of a TV after playing outside all day, riding our bikes with friends for many blocks with hardly a care in the world. During summer vacation from school, we'd build tree houses or a pallet fort in an empty lot around the corner. We were living like kings with our Coca Cola and cans of Spaghettios that we took from home! A shout out to my old neighborhood around 63rd & Dicks or Elmwood Avenue's in good ol' Southwest Philly!
@Dave Roche Joe Mannix! Even though I was just a kid, I loved that convertible GTX he drove in the earlier seasons of that show. Although I'm a Ford Muscle guy now, Joe Mannix always drove the newest hot Mopars of the year in his series.
I think the flying sub was introduced after the first season. Maybe that's why he didn't include it. I used to love the wobbly way it went up into the belly of the sub.
When I was a kid I always thoght, why they don’t build a sub like this? Looks a pretty useful design. By the way, last actor of the series to be alive, David Hedison aka Captain Crane, died last year.
They should do an updated version of voyage to the bottom of the sea ,on TV as a series ,with a slicker version of the seaview still with the flying sub and better CGI
Jeeez give him some credit. He was a brilliant producer who had a great imagination. This was his vision of how a submarine might look like in the future. And we've got plenty of subs - albeit not as large as Seaview - with forward facing screens these days. So he wasn't far off.
@@dennisrobertson5616 He was smart enough to create something that, while not completely realistic in a literal scientific sense, was "sciency" enough to spark our imaginations. Speaking of which, I'm surprised you didn't point out those weird totally non-hydrodynamic "manta-ray-fins" on the nose, which in the real world would accomplish nothing but extra drag and unnecessary downward thrust. But so what? They looked cool!
I used to build a version of this beauty out of Lego bricks. I even had a Lego Flying Sub. The first episode was made in 1964 and it was set in 1973. Here we are in 2020 and the actual sub has never been built.
Anybody know what that reflective spinning thing was that was visible through the right windows in the underwater shots of the original full size miniature? I'm guessing it was just a motorized mirror spinning to create the illusion of crew member movement in the nose of the ship.
Lastly, I'm watching the chapters of this series, and in the scene you mention what I see is the movement of the water waves from the surface reflected in the front window of the submarine. At least that's my perception.
And when I heard about the Nautilus, nuclear-powered submarine, I was really impressed 571, the first nuclear submarine went to the North Pole under the ice and broke through it, this was in 19 51 oh, and I was a kid when I heard about it I was born in 59 but look at the development of our nuclear technology
Those were the days when all American submarines sported huge tail fins similar to a 59 Chevrolet Impala. They served no useful purpose but they sure made that submarine look cool!
10,000 megatons!?!?! The TSAR was 57 megatons,, 10,000 megatons?!? is a continent killer. The Seaview, the flying sub, the soundtrack, I loved this show as a kid.
Mr D, is this kit expensive? (over 300$) I Have not done any plastic kits in 30 years. My hand is steady, no shaking. This is is the most beautiful model I've ever seen.
One of the greatest things about the USS sea view is that you had to see View when most submarines you can't see anything except when you raise your periscope but with the Sea View you could see everything they should have made one of these for real but you know what this video that you guys made it's absolutely exemplary I like to revisit this history it's a historic piece
Building a Seaview-type submarine for real would've required a serious engineering breakthrough in regards to the large windows in the bow (in the novelization, and subsequent documents, the windows were composed of a substance called "X-tempered herculite"). Also some severe lighting would be required to see anything, as the water grows dark the deeper one goes (so note the large searchlight in the Seaview's bow, as well as the array of lights around the viewing windows in Captain Nemo's Nautilus from the Disney film). In any case, I'd enjoy seeing such a distinctive design constructed for real.
In real life those big bow windows would quickly be covered over by brown and green sea scum. You would be better off having several large flat screen monitors linked to a bank of 4K underwater cameras in the bow with covers. Sort of like how the Virginia class subs have a optical mast with cameras instead of a periscope.
I always ask myself ..why sub have to depend on sonar or radar well may be not windows ( that would be cool) but cameras in the front and a big screen in the cab 😁😁 that you can see where you going
Thanks for this video! Does anyone remember how many scale models there were for this series? I remember David Hedison holding one that looked to be about 4 ft long, maybe 3, maybe 5. I think they said there were two more models used on the TV series. Does anyone recall any of the details?
I recall reading that there was a 17 footer for surface shots, an eight footer that could submerge and was used for the submerged shots ( the eight footer i think did most of the work in the series), and the four footer that you mentioned. Not sure what the four footer was used for.
@@scottspilis1940 Thank you. I think I read somewhere that one of those models was destroyed accidentally. Or maybe I even saw it in a video. At any rate, it's good to have confirmation. Thanks again!
Voyage to the Bottom of Sea. My favorite series I did not miss any episode was a well made science fiction. Instead I did not like Star Trek, it was pure talk and little action in space, limited effects, just boring for me. This television series Voyage to the Bottom of Sea had many pluses, such as areosub a flying minisubmarine that looked like an O.V.N.I., the underwater sphere, the intercontinental atomic missiles, the torpedo trick and the atomic reactor room. Great video with a very well crafted mockup.
Looks nice. I might suggest you shoot at a higher frame rate. I photographed Ohio class submarines for years, and the slower Rae will capture a more realistic motion of the ship and wake. I slowed it down to 25% and that looked just about right, except for jitter created by the youtube artifacts
Fabulous job! I absolutely agree with viewer comments that it needs the Flying Sub! Chip and Kowalski were my favorite characters and I dug the cool leather jacket Captain Crane wore when piloting the Flying Sub 😊
Presentation is exceptional. Outstanding detail of the ship, and details about it. One of my favorite shows as a teen; starting in 1964 in B&W. As a 13-yr. old, I so wanted to be Lee Crane.
The show takes place in the 1970's and 1980's. In 1964 that was the future. I saw an episode once where the SEAVIEW was on the surface, and above it it said " 1979" for a second or two. I laughed for in reality it was 1981.i fondly remember this. The seaview, the only sub with Cadillac tail fins !!,
I grew up watching this excellent series. I am watching the series again. So awesome. I love the theme song.
This is a totally awesome video, I remember rushing home from school as a kid to watch Voyage to the Bottom of Sea. Watching this took me right back to those memories.
that and the flying sub
I was born in 1959, surely I love that series.
As a kid I loved this show. I had a model of the submarine that shot torpedos out. I took it to the lakes and played with it for hours with my mask and snorkel. Thanks for the memories.
Simplesmente o maior seriado da minha infância.
Não perdia um capítulo.
Quase todos membros deste seriado já se foram e trazem saudades.
Bons tempos!
🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷🇧🇷👏👏👏👏
An extremely well assembled kit, and superb photography and presentation. Well done, sir.
I simply loved this series.
Ah, me too. Watched it all the time. Do you remember the sounds? Not just that brilliant theme song (starring Richard Basehart... David Hedison...). How about the various sonar and Bridge sounds? Ping. Ping. Ping. Ping... Bah bee boop boop boop... Capt. Crane screaming Dive!! Dive!! And my favorite visual: Everybody in the boat being violently tossed left; right; left; right, lol. How many of you built your own plastic model? Jesus, has it really been 50+ years, already? :)
Hey how about the luncheon box and cards.
I still own few cards
My favorite show when I was a kid. Thanks for the memories! My parents gave me the model from the Sears Christmas Wish Catalog. Best present ever as a kid. 👍
Voyage to the bottom of the sea was our favorite!
I get to be a musician in orchestras and this score is amazing!
I rewatched voyage to the bottom the sea recently and was amazed how well the Special effects especially the subs and underwater shots have held up. Now I am not saying the're not cheesy at times and there are so many times you can clearly see they are in a swimming pool but the craft and skill put into them is amazing for the time and budget, In the mad rush to reboot series I wish they would reboot this series. I know we had Seaquest DSV that was a spiritual descendant of this series but it was its own wonderful thing.
Look up Sealab 2021.
@@darrellcook8253 Sealab 2021 was a parody of the cartoon Sealab 2020 I fondly remember watching this show and rewatched it not long ago but it was more of a kids cartoon with an environmental theme but it bore little resemblance to Journey beneath the sea which was more a spy thriller in the earlier seasons tending towards a sci fi fantasy themes for the last 2 years
Gotta love a sub with Cadillac tail fins.
My dad was a chauffeur oh, and I have when I was a kid, 5 years old my dad had a 1964 Fleetwood black and white combination in the seat, it had a fantastic steering wheel because on certain parts of it it was transparent it was black and transparent, the work that the rocket scientist used to make the cars the work that they put into that car when I look back at us this is pretty impressive and look at the size of these things we used to drive, everything on the dashboard had I the stainless steel, caps on the instrumentation if I can remember correctly but that was a heavy car and it didn't have no problem and getting around oh, my dad had a 1964 Chrysler Imperial remember the one with the square wheel?
@@Dra741 Good old historical times
Twice pipes and dingle balls all around
Yeah!
@@sempertard Cheech and Chong as Captain Nemo's first officers, lol!
Excellent video thanks for posting it & I often wondered why the US Navy never decided to actually build such a vessel! Looking at it today in this video, it still looks like something futuristic!
Fabuous model and realistic video. Congratulations
thanks, wanted to see how realistic she looked down at my local lake .
@@shaund7725 Great model.... it was a great show when we were kids. Now when I watch it, I find it is for kids. Too many monsters.... Would love to have a new TV show with this ship going back and forth in time from 1972 to 2020 ??? Hopefully with better scripts.
@@FooFahFoeFum The first season was more realistic focusing on Cold War themes. It's funny when I was a kid I found those episodes boring and loved the monster episodes. Now it's the opposite. As for when the show took place you have to remember continuity and cannon didn't matter much back then. I honestly hope they don't remake it. It's a product of it's time and the way Hollywood is now they would only end up ruining it.
Wonderful video ! Many thanks for posting.
Voyage to the bottom of the sea. I was always intrigued by that series. Loved the Seaview.
Needed more outside shots of sub with crew during shows.😊 1:01
I loved this series!
Always loved that adventure music,
@R Williams I loved the show as a kid.
That was an awesome show and so was Lost In Space.
Could youpost the specs on the flying sub, the bell and the 2-man mini sub. Like the Seaview's. Also
The different departments in the ship. Thanks
😊😊😊
The SSNR. SEAVIEW is the first submarine( even thou its a scale model) to use the pump-jet propulsers,.The 1st subs to use this type of propulsion is the U.K. TRAFALGAR class. the U.S.N. uses this on the SEAWOLF class & the follow on VIRGINIA Class.they were way behind the advancement of Seaview.
I notice that too on the subs of today. Irwin Allen and Rodenberry saw the future.
Seaview basically had shrouded propellers with long shrouds.
The bow windows, per the book, are composed of "X-Hardened Herculite" ..
This was very good. Plus the illusion was not tampered or destroyed.
I like the idea she was named Seaview and you had a sea view with the glass windows, and most submarines you don't operating by Sona you don't get an image of everything, she was revolutionary and the science fiction movies and TV shows show us what we should scribe for and aren't we there now
I was in the Navy sub service. Those shots are really good.
When I was a kid I thought all subs had windows in the front, how else would they see we're they we're headed??????!
Nice job and what a great show. Remember the seaview shuffle.
Great model shape for a sub, often wondered why they never built submarines as nice as the seaview !
I know right?
Saudade dessa série. Excelente!
Few yrs back, I clicked on several "Sky King" TV series excerpts on RUclips. I noted in the comments that some folks had pursued aviation related careers, as pilots etc., due to having watched the series as youngsters. Or how many other youngsters watched police/crime drama, and so on, and were positively influenced to the extent that it helped give them constructive career direction.. In my opinion, such commercial media has constructive social potential that is overlooked. My idea is that, if we want more youngsters to grow up to pursue more science/engineering etc. careers, or just otherwise positively connect with the occupational work environment, our media might be a very viable tool toward those ends.. Imagine a sci-fi series about private sector space industry, with asteroid mining, rotating wheel stations.. Or historical fiction series about an entrepreneur who, with lots of adventures along the way, creates a booming airship airline during the early 20th century..
My Good God, what a video! This video reminds me of the time when I saw the movie, and later the TV series. All aspects of your video are outstanding. At the beginning of the video, I felt that I was watching the movie. Just outstanding in ALL respects. You showed a real RUclips video should me.
There's a 3rd or 4th season episode where Nelson orders the Seaview to travel at 60 knots (submerged). That's the fastest I ever heard of it going on the series. Since I recall that it seemed to be no big deal, I would assume it could probably go even faster than that.
Wonderfull amazing craftmanship
You had me at Seaview! Such fond memories.
Oh to be back in the days when TV *_Stimulated the Mind & Imagination._*
This is what is lacking today.
@Mark Nehring I bet it really sucks for you, to not know what an honest days work entails, as you sit their on your butt, with all the non-productive idle time on your hands.
FYI I didn't watch WestWorld 2016. We didn't have the channel because money needed to go to family.
That was good to see. Loved that show as a kid.
no pierde su belleza el seaviw no pasa de moda muy bonito el modelo
Hermoso el submarino de la serie viaje al fondo del mar es increíble ya estamos en el siglo XXI y no se a construido uno así real
Always the bubbles coming up. If I remember correctly once a week mid watch or maybe when we came to periscope depth to do housekeeping we would cycle the main ballast tank vents to get rid of any air accumulation and OOD on scope looked for any air
We had TV shows back then to help set your conscience and thinking really smart nothing negative in it when you get filled with positivity it makes you a great person you don't even realize it yourself TV shows like Cannon Batman Barnaby Jones The Mod Squad Hawaii Five-O the Thunderbirds you'll have to look that up on RUclips y'all too young to get this, the Streets of San Francisco with Karl Malden did Michael Douglas these look great actors and we had them every week, Dragnet, Sergeant Joe Friday, Dan Aykroyd did an accurate amazing job when he did Dragnet, he caught the history of it and the moves of Sergeant Joe Friday
"Get Smart" the phone in the shoe agent 86. Top secret conversations required the Cone Of Silence.
Spot on and some great shows you mentioned! Love them all brother!
Dan Ackroyd did ONE "Dragnet" movie, it was a spoof of the series which was written, directed and starred in by Jack Webb, who was a legend of the police/emergency genre. He pretty much created it.
Dra Williams, Man, I must be getting old! I remember ALL of those great TV shows! My mom and siblings looked forward to them coming on every night. Starsky and Hutch, Six Million Dollar Man, Bionic Woman, Fantasy Island. In the 70's, my brother and I watched the after school shows like Speed Racer, Ultra Man, Johnny Sokko and his Giant Robot, The Space Giants, Captain Scarlett. Does anyone remember the lesser known Marine Boy or Kimba the Lion? Those were great times in front of a TV after playing outside all day, riding our bikes with friends for many blocks with hardly a care in the world. During summer vacation from school, we'd build tree houses or a pallet fort in an empty lot around the corner. We were living like kings with our Coca Cola and cans of Spaghettios that we took from home! A shout out to my old neighborhood around 63rd & Dicks or Elmwood Avenue's in good ol' Southwest Philly!
@Dave Roche Joe Mannix! Even though I was just a kid, I loved that convertible GTX he drove in the earlier seasons of that show. Although I'm a Ford Muscle guy now, Joe Mannix always drove the newest hot Mopars of the year in his series.
What about the Flying Sub? The Seaview also includes the Flying Sub!
The flying gyro (sandwich).
I think the flying sub was introduced after the first season. Maybe that's why he didn't include it. I used to love the wobbly way it went up into the belly of the sub.
When I was a kid I always thoght, why they don’t build a sub like this? Looks a pretty useful design. By the way, last actor of the series to be alive, David Hedison aka Captain Crane, died last year.
Wonderful show .. well at least season 1 and 2 anyways. And a great submarine.
They should do an updated version of voyage to the bottom of the sea ,on TV as a series ,with a slicker version of the seaview still with the flying sub and better CGI
They did come out with SeaQuest.
Seaguest was disappoiting.😢 1:01
I loved that show as a kid!
Irwin Allen was a genius.
Add Gerry Anderson and the Japanese model makers from the Godzilla films and the best television a boy born in the early 60's could ever have.
Genius? He put windows in the bow of a submarine! How smart can he be?
D.E. Robertson ET1(SS) from long ago.
Jeeez give him some credit. He was a brilliant producer who had a great imagination. This was his vision of how a submarine might look like in the future.
And we've got plenty of subs - albeit not as large as Seaview - with forward facing screens these days. So he wasn't far off.
@@dennisrobertson5616 He was smart enough to create something that, while not completely realistic in a literal scientific sense, was "sciency" enough to spark our imaginations.
Speaking of which, I'm surprised you didn't point out those weird totally non-hydrodynamic "manta-ray-fins" on the nose, which in the real world would accomplish nothing but extra drag and unnecessary downward thrust. But so what? They looked cool!
Hello, the 1960s calling... Will you accept the charges?
I used to build a version of this beauty out of Lego bricks. I even had a Lego Flying Sub. The first episode was made in 1964 and it was set in 1973. Here we are in 2020 and the actual sub has never been built.
Have to say your water shots look as good or better than what was shown in the show. The rotating radar mast is a nice touch too.
¡Enorme!.....un saludo afectuoso.
beautiful! congratulations for all team !
Is still a great show to watch
Excellent presentation, sir
Ahhhhh back in the day :)!
Love it!👏👏🤞🎈
Beautiful craft.
Remember that show well. Had a yellow toy Seaview had wheels under it to slide in bathtub, etc.Well done!
Anybody know what that reflective spinning thing was that was visible through the right windows in the underwater shots of the original full size miniature? I'm guessing it was just a motorized mirror spinning to create the illusion of crew member movement in the nose of the ship.
Lastly, I'm watching the chapters of this series, and in the scene you mention what I see is the movement of the water waves from the surface reflected in the front window of the submarine. At least that's my perception.
Excelente. Nunca perdia um só episódio. Gostaria de saber por onde saiam os torpedos. Já me inscrevi e dei o merecido like.
Excellent music for the TV series
It is interesting to see how little it disturbs the water while it moves, they were into something here.
It also had that submersible-flying shuttlecraft. Maybe the next video.
What are the images behind the windows at 2:15?
Did it come with the flying sub?
I remember an episode where there was a creature on board that reminded me of a Christmas tree with sunglasses.
I liked the spinoff of this "Voyage to the bottom of the Bathtub" In the SS Tubview and the smaller vessel The Flying Sink!
And when I heard about the Nautilus, nuclear-powered submarine, I was really impressed 571, the first nuclear submarine went to the North Pole under the ice and broke through it, this was in 19 51 oh, and I was a kid when I heard about it I was born in 59 but look at the development of our nuclear technology
Those were the days when all American submarines sported huge tail fins similar to a 59 Chevrolet Impala. They served no useful purpose but they sure made that submarine look cool!
That was neat!! 👏
10,000 megatons!?!?! The TSAR was 57 megatons,, 10,000 megatons?!? is a continent killer. The Seaview, the flying sub, the soundtrack, I loved this show as a kid.
I wonder if the lights on back would indicate a left or right turn.
Fantastic
Adelante Seaview, guardian de los mares !!!!
So did it have a single row of windows at the front or two rows?
Awesome 👍
Love to have one that is fully operational and did the things like in the shows. Diving and surfacing would be great.
Mr D, is this kit expensive? (over 300$) I Have not done any plastic kits in 30 years. My hand is steady, no shaking. This is is the most beautiful model I've ever seen.
Isso é relíquia quem tem não vende é bonito viu pois eu tenho 50 anos assim todas essas séries e Submarino é incrível
Very cool - I was a small boy when this was on the telly
2:30
What was the Morse "BK" and "BC" about?
Awesome model and video! Just curious but what type of motor did you use for the radar dish?
A little one.
Any idea when the SSRN Seaview spec's Will be declassified ?
One of the greatest things about the USS sea view is that you had to see View when most submarines you can't see anything except when you raise your periscope but with the Sea View you could see everything they should have made one of these for real but you know what this video that you guys made it's absolutely exemplary I like to revisit this history it's a historic piece
Building a Seaview-type submarine for real would've required a serious engineering breakthrough in regards to the large windows in the bow (in the novelization, and subsequent documents, the windows were composed of a substance called "X-tempered herculite"). Also some severe lighting would be required to see anything, as the water grows dark the deeper one goes (so note the large searchlight in the Seaview's bow, as well as the array of lights around the viewing windows in Captain Nemo's Nautilus from the Disney film). In any case, I'd enjoy seeing such a distinctive design constructed for real.
In real life those big bow windows would quickly be covered over by brown and green sea scum. You would be better off having several large flat screen monitors linked to a bank of 4K underwater cameras in the bow with covers. Sort of like how the Virginia class subs have a optical mast with cameras instead of a periscope.
Liked the TV Series; as well as the movie we saw at the Drive-in.
Fantástico 👏👏👏
I always ask myself ..why sub have to depend on sonar or radar well may be not windows ( that would be cool) but cameras in the front and a big screen in the cab 😁😁 that you can see where you going
Trip to the bottom of te sea. Very well!
superb, wish mine was as nice as that
Spectacular
And break lights too!
Thanks for this video! Does anyone remember how many scale models there were for this series? I remember David Hedison holding one that looked to be about 4 ft long, maybe 3, maybe 5. I think they said there were two more models used on the TV series. Does anyone recall any of the details?
I recall reading that there was a 17 footer for surface shots, an eight footer that could submerge and was used for the submerged shots ( the eight footer i think did most of the work in the series), and the four footer that you mentioned. Not sure what the four footer was used for.
@@scottspilis1940 Thank you. I think I read somewhere that one of those models was destroyed accidentally. Or maybe I even saw it in a video. At any rate, it's good to have confirmation. Thanks again!
Voyage to the Bottom of Sea. My favorite series I did not miss any episode was a well made science fiction.
Instead I did not like Star Trek, it was pure talk and little action in space, limited effects, just boring for me.
This television series Voyage to the Bottom of Sea had many pluses, such as areosub a flying minisubmarine that looked like an O.V.N.I., the underwater sphere, the intercontinental atomic missiles, the torpedo trick and the atomic reactor room.
Great video with a very well crafted mockup.
It's meant to be a scientific research vessel armed to the teeth with nuclear missiles.🤔A beautiful model though I love the antenna moving 😍
Looks nice. I might suggest you shoot at a higher frame rate. I photographed Ohio class submarines for years, and the slower Rae will capture a more realistic motion of the ship and wake. I slowed it down to 25% and that looked just about right, except for jitter created by the youtube artifacts
What movie ?
very cool!!!
Assisti tds os episódios. Gostei demais.
The 17-foot model had 20 launch tubes. The 8-foot model had 16 tubes.
I always thought it strange how this was supposed to be a _research vessel,_ armed to the gills with nuclear missiles.