WALT DISNEY U.S. NAVY ICE FORMATION ON AIRCRAFT WWII ANIMATED FILM 42304
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- Опубликовано: 28 ноя 2024
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Made by the Walt Disney Company during WWII for the U.S. Navy, ICE FORMATION ON AIRCRAFT was part of a series of films and booklets in the "Aerology Series" produced by the Bureau of Aeronautics Training Division, Navy Department, Washington D.C. for Naval Aviation Cadets. (The film was later re-made after the war, with the graphics updates to reflect more modern aircraft.)
Each section of the film deals with a type of ice and its ramifications for aircraft. The film features flight patterns during different types of icy weather as well as images that depict ice build up on essential aircraft parts such as the carburetor. The film also provides detailed animations showing the formation of ice and appropriate flight patterns when certain types of ice are encountered.
The Walt Disney studios produced many similar training films, and portions of training films, for the United States Army and Navy during World War II. Most of these films were not sole productions of Disney, but were collaborations with other entities such as the First Motion Picture Unit (FMPU).
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This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD and 2k. For more information visit www.PeriscopeFi...
Shoutout to the sound effect of the antenna breaking at 11:12
We are still, after almost 80 years, struggling to find instructional videos/films/industrials that are this clear. I now understand the idea of icing, and why it's best to be prevention minded. Fascinating stuff.
It's simultaneously inspiring and harrowing how much we learned about icing since. How little of a hazard ice-bridging is at modern speeds, for example. Or how incredibly dangerous rough ice texture is, even if the volume of it is low.
(Ice-bridging is the reason the narrator warns against using the boots continuously: the ice could freeze in a long hollow bubble and become unreachable for the boot)
I can picture all those fine young men back in 1942 over to Langley field....sitting in a large classroom watching instructional films such as this prior to heading for england and flying B-17's...I salute you fine young Army airmen and your bravery.
70+ years later and it's still good advice. Even if your aircraft is certificated for flight into known icing conditions, it's best to avoid them.
i guess I am kinda off topic but does anybody know a good website to stream new series online ?
@@jaylendamari5451 that is an excellent question, that might provide a better understanding of the information about this very specialised topic that can vary between different plane types.... Try looking into the FAA Advisory Circulars, that describe the basics of the modern equipment functions of various types of equipment to mitigate & control situations like this... Maybe the AC-65 series of books can be what you are looking for....Or if you have access to service manuals of a certain type of an aircraft, you might be able to find what you are looking for in ATA chapter, 30- ice & rain protection and ATA chapter 75 - Engine Bleed air... The ATA information will have engineering D&O's of specific types of aircraft... But you would have to have special access to get information like that... I would start on the FAA Advisory Circulars, if I were you...
Certificated. Nice.
Once on my pusher propeller electric model radio control after flying in low fog for about an hour on landing I was surprised to see the amount of ice crystals that had form on wing leading edge.
This is highly technical . Commercial Aviation wasn't even a regular event until after the war, so it seems like they had to train pilots and educate them while the science was still being discovered!
1:20 amazing how Disney animators made that plane rotate in perfect perspective. It looks CGI -decades before computers.
And the nasa thing
GymbalLock considering there animators would be draughtsmen and artists, why should it be so surprising? Any engineering student up to atbleast the 1990s would have had drawing office lessons on how to draw using pencil and paper (plus lessons on CAD systems when they came in). I know I did.
Yes. And that was before Disney Corp got on the Woke agenda.
Back when Walt was still alive. He'd be horrified at what's become of his company today.
@@isolinear9836 They should put magnets in his pockets and a coil of wire around his coffin. Then he'd generate electricity as his spins in his grave.
this is great, the condensed evap cooling is cool
I iced up over mountainous Valdez Alaska. Being that this was the first time that I had experienced this, I was worried about turning back do the decrease of lift in accomplishing this. About the time that I was running out of ideas, I came across a sucker hole of clear sky. I applied aileron and rudder and quickly descended. Seeing approx two inches of rime ice, I added two knots to my landing speed, and kissed the ground upon landing. If this happens to you, quickly turn back and decrease your altitude if possible.
I've been to Valdez once in the winter. Snow was piled up several feet high on perilous looking peaks. Glad you made it safely.
Landed there in a Navy C-130T. We were prepared to delay takeoff if icing conditions were present due to the fact that winds forced takeoff in the direction of the mountain, necessitating a sharp 180 degree bank towards open sky.
Airlines are unlikely to offer this Walt Disney cartoon as in-flight entertainment!
😂 Good point!!! That and the documentaries about air crash's, like Mayday!
One interesting thing about modern turbine engined medium to large airliners, is that many of them use superheated - high velocity 'engine compressor bleed-air' being plumbed into areas where icing is known to be a problem.... Quite often they can overcome icing conditions because of the effectiveness of these de-icing systems. But there are situations that even the best equipment can not overcome severe icing conditions , such as Air France flight 447, when all of the under-powered pitot tube heaters allowed them to ice-up, while over the Atlantic ocean, making it impossible for the pilots or the FMC's to tell how fast the plane was actually traveling through the air...... That is when the pilots of the plane must alter their course and/or planned altitude to get out of these conditions... Most medium to large airliners have the capability to fly around or above conditions like these, but they need to contact ATC to obtain permission to alter their course and altitude, and have enough fuel to safely complete this alternate course... The advent of weather radar and GPS has greatly improved the safety of airliner's flying routes like these... Several flights going overseas will often take a route directly over one of the poles to save over-all distance... This is when I would rather be in a plane with 3 or more engines... More power & reliability to get through conditions like these... The bleed-air de-icing equipment alone, takes quite a bit of engine power to operate by borrowing some of the engine's compressor output to run these systems.... All of these systems are great, but they take a lot of POWER to operate properly.... It is a reason WHY Boeing should continue making 747's for passenger service.. They are the absolute best and safest airliners, ever made...
Boeing 747's are not as fuel efficient (per passenger mile) as more modern aircraft, so who is going to buy them?
@@BrassLock I can't tell you how many times people are trying to sell that idea... The fact of the matter is, the fuel usage is a moot point as compared to what types of routes these twin jets are flying over... Especially the routes over the long oceans.... Nobody has found MH-370 yet, and that was over 8.5 years ago... Somewhere in the Indian Ocean... One engine loss means a lot of things can happen that are very bad... And there have been flights that these planes had very bad engine explosions... Huge 12' diameter fans spinning at high rpm, just clears everything out in it's path , when they go... But You like to save fuel... Nice.. I take the 747, a DC-10 , a A380 , a ship, but not a twin jet, thank you.
@@michaelmartinez1345 Thanks for your rebuttal. Always interesting to hear from someone who has considered the topic deeply.
These days, "air crash investigations" style of videos are becoming more common as animations are readily available to content creators; causing me to become aware that air travel isn't quite as safe as I used to believe.
@@BrassLock There were times that it was safe to fly across huge oceans, but now- I tend to feel differently about it. There are issues that these current planes develop, that just did not happen with the planes being built in the past.... This is what concerns me, but the companies buy it, as they can sell it to the customers... Kind of like tobacco products... Even though the doctors know they are carcinogenic, and warn people of this, there are people who still buy these products, KNOWING that they still could activate the cancer cells in their bodies... With the twin-jet ETOPS flights, people would rather risk their lives to save maybe a couple hundred bucks, instead of increasing the chances of getting to & from their destinations safely...
Really interesting. Thanks for uploading regularly :)
Disney's animation is still amazing and looks as good as most digital animation, imo
It has been 75 years since lessons in a tail dragger, SOP landing required carb heat. Now I understand a lot more.
I wish this Disney would come back
There was a book in Glasgow University's library from this period and clouds and icing. I remember reading it in the early 1990s and it said in icing condition you had to climb to colder drier air, whenever possible.
There was a prang this year or last where the pilot tried that, with disastrous results. It was near the Rockies, I think and he was asking airliners where the ceiling was. He iced up before he could break out on top.
I remember learning this in college in Geography 257. back in 1994 At Clarion University.
Awesome People and Incredible History USA 🇺🇸
I always wondered the significance of manifold pressure gauges and now for the first time I understand ..
Still relevant even today with turboprop planes.
I have had carbs on vehicles ice up in south Florida. Especially when running alkygas or octane booster.
Wasn't the icing incident depicted in Jimmy Stewart Spirit of St Louis movie entirely incorrect as it showed the upper surfaces of the wings coated in a sheet of ice with the inference being the weight of the ice?
I studied this in a Aeronautical Science course at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University ( Global Campus )
Thanks for another educational and interesting video. Before your channel I had no idea how many short films were made on a myriad of different subjects. In grade school in the early 1960’s I attended Charles G. Fraser school in Toronto. They used to show us films on “”Elmer The Safety Elephant”. Would you have any of those in your collection?
Glad you like them! No -- haven't heard about that series but just looked it up, apparently this is a Canadian series. While we do host some films from Canada, we mostly leave their preservation and presentation up to the NFB and CBC. elmer.ca/elmers-story Oh and thanks for being a sub! Take a deep dive at PeriscopeFilm.com/Patreon
Never use sharp objects on your evaporator coils even if it is only rime ice.
I had no idea that the de-icing system was mechanical. I thought it was just electric heaters.
Carb icing is still an issue today. Even in 90 degree+ weather...
100 bombers in Air Division take off and 37 fail to return due to ice. Some two stars, one star, and a bunch of colonels would get releived. Colonels would get CM's. Failiure to train. Failiure to supervise. Dereliction of duty.
also known as Icing Conditions
Was this before inflatable/deformable icing surfaces and glycol/methanol sprays? Like smashing out windows and full military power to the props to fling off chunks of ice seems rough going. I cant imagine 150lbs of deicer would make a huge payload difference.
They mentioned pneumatic and spay in the video lol
Disney films - in the days before woke trash invaded their board rooms and management.