I worked on these engines on the test cell at Kadena AB Okinawa Japan. It was neat to see one of these pigs run again but your video doesn't really show the noise that this engine makes. I have been underneath one of these on an open air test cell trying to read the variable vanes during a trim. The howl that came it made as the engine neared a target rpm was enough to make you physically sick and it did do that do me several times. The only engine that made more noise than a J-79 was J-58(SR 71 Motor). The first time I watched an SR 71 warm up it shook the ground enough at mil to vibrate me off the ground. Awsome!
In the early 80's, as a Marine Corps aircraft mechanic I worked for 6 months in an enclosed test cell called a "Hush House." In that building we accommodated entire aircraft to include A-4's (my birds), A-6's, and of course F-4's. Far and away one of the most memorable experiences of my life was standing 15 feet away from the F-4 as one of the engines (only one at a time) was put into full, 7-stage afterburner. The Gunnery Sergeant in the cockpit knew that I was new at the Hush House and slammed it into afterburner to scare the hell out of new Corporal (me) standing there in amazement. I will never forget my chest as it vibrated from the rumbling of that full AB. And if the awe for my body trembling trembling from sound waves wasn't enough, the 20 foot flame coming out of the engine was the icing on the cake. My words don't adequately convey the moment, and I know I'll never get to experience that again...INCREDIBLE.
just taken a course on jet/rocket propulsion at the college i go to, and it's so cool to watch videos like this after taking such a course knowing what's generally going on behind the scenes. makes me even more in awe really. amazing video :D (also just gained yourself a sub)!
Currently revising exam coming up next week for turbomachinery module, learning about inlet and afterburning, and everything in between. I do agree that its quite cool to understand the general gist of what happening in that metal tube.
That brings back some memories. I grew up near a AF base with an F-4 fighter wing. The daily roar of the J79 was a completely normal part of my childhood. The loudest noise I've ever heard in my life was watching 4 F-4's take off in formation with afterburners engaged. The noise was incredible and the ground shook like an earthquake.
I am a U.S. Air Force veteran. I served from 1977-1981. I was a jet engine mechanic working on Phantom F-4Es. This GE J79 is the engine for that aircraft. I well remember standing next to it when it went to full power and then to afterburner. And the date of this video, June 17th, is my birthday. Go figure!
Great to see the brains behind the machine still active with commenters on the video even almost nine years later. The F-4 Phantom II and all the other aircraft this beast was mounted in were all worthy machines, and this loud chunk of supersonic thrust is a beauty. I can tell you and the gang take real good care of it.
When I was a kid in the 70's we lived on MCAS Yuma. There was a squadron of F-4's there. They would take off over base housing, afterburners on. It would shake the dishes in the cabinets. We were so used to it we didn't even pay attention to it. The good old days...
Yeah, your description is on key! As a former F-15E Crew Chief, there is no way to describe what its like to be next to a running jet engine in full AB. Its overwhelming and strikes you full of awe! You can scream at the top of your lungs and still not even hear your own voice. You can feel your internal organs shake. Great video man! It brings back memories of working with the last Wild Weasels during Desert Storm.
Very cool I was a Dedicated crew chief and cut trained jets and hydraulics on the F4E/G Phantoms at George AFB Ca, 1986 till 1992 when we closed George and they moved to Nellis AFB for five more years I spent many long nights working, slaving and cursing those mighty J79-GE-17 !! IT WAS ALWAYS a love hate relationship but when you beat them gremlins it was such a great feeling like you could conquer the world and we did, I was the best damned F4 Phantom phixer that ever lived and thats not bragging it's a fact everyone I worked with and my pilots new me and damned proud of that honor. After I went 5o the kc135rt stratotankers where I had the pleasure of conquering another aircraft!! But that's another story.!!! Peace out and keep burning.
I worked on the J79 in the F4 Phantom while assigned to VF-103 and went to A school as well as C School eventually becoming CER QUALIFIED. THIS ENGINE CAN TAKE A BEATING. One thing we were always taught was if the new engine did not have a slight leak from the Aux Air Door (81) send it back lol.
Nucking Futz! The camera shake during the AB and the sound is pure insanity. That's so much power in such a little space. Good to see you're still here 12 years later. Time travel FTW.
Absolutely, sir! The J79 weighs a ton and a half, burns 90 gallons per minute of jet fuel, and makes almost 9 tons of thrust. It's perfect for any beginners project in RC model making.
You know, after you fired off that afterburner, I was more than a little surprised that we didn't see your shop skootching along the ground with everyone chasing after it.
Oh my! So as the vid ends..we Sailors on the flight deck called this the "fireplace" as we loved the Phantom returning to deck and warming us when in cold weather seas. I have a lump in my throat and tears in my eyes. Man, I miss my time in the Navy.
I began my aviation career working on these. They were utilized in the F-4 Phantom's. We also O/H'd the civilian version CJ-805 -3 & -23. They were used in the Convair 880 & 990 respectively.
I can tell you for a fact, it's incredibly loud. I worked on them in the service years ago. It will bring you to your knee's. The F-4 phantom has two of those engines, they would buzz our F-15 base in Germany during exercises, near the speed of sound so you wouldn't know they were coming until they were almost on top of you.
I used to run the test cells at Bergstrom in the 1980's, there is nothing like leak testing an engine in full afterburner. Can't describe fully what it feels to be next to it, but the feeling is still awesome. Thanks for the memories.
Yes, and as many people have refused to believe... that shaking is all caused by sound. The camera is of course not in the jet stream, but is off to the side. The volume of the noise is so high that it is dangerous. Not just to your hearing, but to all of you. Foamie ear plugs under ear defenders, and it's still too much. As you can see, it nearly shakes the camera apart.
@@AgentJayZ oh I believe you. I have performed maintenance over a huge transport helicopter engine. The thing was so loud we couldn't work in a hangar made out of riveted sheet metal. The whole building was resonating amplifying already deafening jet turbine roar.
My most memorable afterburner experience was at an Air Show a few years ago watching a real rare bird, a Blackburn Buccaneer do a fly past, then at the second fly past the pilot hit the afterburners and put it into a steep climb......went like a bloody bat out of hell!! The sound was earth shattering!!
That would be cool to see. Maybe you saw a development prototype or something. My information is that the successful variants of the Buccaneer used the RR Spey, two of them, but without AB. Still the Spey is a very loud engine, and two of them would be making the equivalent of about 40 thousand Hp at takeoff power.
That's awesome! "Newly rebuilt" huh? That's neat. I'm always thrilled when I change the oil and spark plugs on my vehicle and it still works after. Thanks for creating the video. When I was 12, my next door neighbor was fresh out of the Air Force and was a jet engine mechanic though I'm not sure which specifically. He had a picture on a shelf of a test burn like yours but at night. It was so cool. He became our neighbor 'cause after service he got a job at Aerojet in Rancho Cordova. That was back in '85 and there was nothing between but grassy fields and Mather Air Force Base. On very calm Saturday mornings, you could hear long burns of jet engines. I always wondered if it was from the base, 8 miles or Aerojet, 15 miles. Mather is only 8 miles so that's more likely, I'd think. Again that was back when Mather was an active military base so any day you could see B-52s or F-4 Phantoms (a childhood favorite + F-14 = drool) among many other aircraft. Before I go, well into adulthood, around the early 2010s, I found out that the lifelong neighbor on the other side was an engineer on the F-117!!! No one had any idea. He looked like of the drawings from the old Herman comic strip. Asked about work he'd say vaguely that he was an engineer of some kind then ramble some ridiculously technical mumbo-jumbo (nothing aerospace sounding though) and change the subject. It was probably a scripted response given the extreme top secrecy of the project. Well, thanks for the vid, sorry I'm so wordy, I love all things aviation, just never had the aptitude to do anything with it.
In A&P school we had a J47 off a B-47. We had it on a test stand. At power it would start pulling the anchors out off the ground and digging up the earth behind it. We also had a pretty good grass fire behind it. You guys must have one heck of an anchor system to keep it in place at full afterburner.
Stationed in Thailand, 388th Fighter Wing. Three squadrons of F-4Es, I can tell you how loud they get, 179 dB loud. It hurts your chest if you stand facing the rear of the aircraft when the burner is lit. It hurts so bad, you turn sideways to avoid it. No amount of hearing protection works. Spent the next two years in England on Bentwaters-Woodbridge Base, 81st fighter wing, F-4Ds. left the AF with a 30% hearing loss.
@@jamesmarlowe8231 I was there 1971-1972. I worked the last squadron of F-105F/G's in the 6010thm later changed to the 17th WW Squadron. They were no better noise wise.
I was at Korat the year of 1968. I worked the F105’s. Only one occasion did I work an F4. A sheared starter shaft…I dropped the starter but they arrived before the parts did! Someone else did the repair. Yes, those Thunder Hog 105’s were extremely loud too. That J75 in AB was too much!! You are so right. Ear protection couldn’t dampen all that racket! By the way, I did work the F4’s at Nellis AFB, and TDY at Davis-Monthan before Thailand. What a crazy 4 years of my life, but I’m glad I did it.
@@jamesmarlowe8231 I was Avionics, INS/Doppler. We were in for six active, for that year of schooling we got. I reupped early and did seven plus. But used that electronics training right up until I retired. It was worth the trip for seven years.
I am near the airport in Portland Oregon PDX often and once in a while the Air Force jets are taking off. It is indescribable the feeling of them kicking off the afterburners while taking off. Every car alarm within a mile is going off you feel it you chest and in your groin. Absolutely amazing piece of human technology.
I used to fly the F-4E with 2 J79-17 engines. I believe 11,800 lbs thrust in military and 17,800 in full burner. 1000 lb per minute both engines in full burner. The aircraft weighed 31,250, With 4500 of fuel, about a 1:1 thrust to weight ratio. Now just a Model T used for target practice.
Hey David, X F-4 II VF-102 guy here.. There still are "flyable storage" ones in Tucson... a couple guys have been able to refurb them into "air show" displays.. there are a couple vids here on RUclips. Thank you for your service! VF-102 Diamondbacks Oceana, OUTSLANT USS Independence CV-62.
Absolutely fascinating! I used to work for Allied Signal (before Honeywell bought us) and used to watch every engine test I could get time (and space, and clearance) to see, from commercial to military... but I have NEVER seen an afterburner demo! Too much power for our facility, that was done at a remote facility that I had neither the time nor clearance to enter. Thanks for posting these videos. You've got a new Subscriber!
I used to be lucky enough to be able to stand behind Concord at Heathrow airport.......on the boundary fence......that was LOUD!!!! 4 Olympus with full after burn!!!!..... I would say difference between with and without after burn is like a Street pro on a drag strip then a Top fuel goes past and life stops for a split second.... great filming and thanks for putting on RUclips.....
Few years back, an F4 made it's way to Oshkosh. Sitting on the line next to a kid - probably 10yo - watching a national guardsman do his F16 demo, and the kid, responding to an afterburner pass, says, "Wow! That was loud." I told him, "Yeah, but wait till the F4 does his thing." When the time eventually came, and those twin J79s lit up, the kid turned to me, eyes wide, jaw literally dropped... I nodded in understanding.
I really like that story. I have seen many of these engine tests, and the AB always scares me. I think I know what's coming, but it seems I always forget.
Back in the 70s I was stationed at Castle AFB. I worked for a time at the engine test cell. We had a cell for the j57 and one for the tf33. The TAC guys had their own for the j75 that went into the 106 Delta Dart. When that thing went into afterburner you could always tell because there was a momentary absence of noise then BOOM. We had a hut 50 feet away from the back of their cell. The calendar and anything tacked to the wall would stand away and coffee cups and anything not secured would just vibrate off. There was no conversation, all you had were your thoughts. Your body would vibrate the ground would vibrate chairs would move. It was like you were locked in and you had to ride it out. Then pffft gone the engine would throttle down and shut down. You were then free to go. You could hear that thing when we were running our own engine and it was just as dramatic. Last thing. I was running ground while we were testing a j57. A family came out, I guess their son mom and dad and a couple of little kids. I keyed into the booth and told them and to watch what happens. The were running a j75 and the family was watching everything in awe. I turned my back on them and waited for the j75 to go ab. When it did they all thought there was an explosion and hit the ground. I was standing there with a smile and pointing at them. I had some good times on that cell.
I was working on the F4F from 1998 to 2004. I have seen engine runs quite often. When the engines are installed in the airplane they are extreme loud. Its a sound you can feel in your bones and estomach. But when it is mountet on a dolly like in the video it is just brutal. It made me get sick. It was realy like someone kicking in your cheast. I loved it 😂. I miss working on the good old double ugly.
the reason is the intake of the jet engine on the jet itself dampens the sound in a good way cause it needs a special design for supersonic flight. if it is subsonic it doesnt need that special intake design so the sound is louder. the best example would be the harrier. it has a very very short intake and for this reason it must be very very loud
1973, USS Independence, RVAH-14 flying RA5C Vigilante. Twin J79's. I was a final cat-checker at launch. The roar was deafening. Now at age 70, my hearing is going.
72 was in Air Force Kunsan Korea. I was Munision Maint on F-4. Pulled safety flags at end of runway just b4 takeoff. Was very close to afterburners. So loud your body vibrated.
Thank you for these - it's greatly appreciated. I remember the noise of an f16 going afterburner whilst banking away from the crowd at an airshow when I was a kid; the sound is hard to explain, I felt it in my chest more than heard it through my ears. Unbelievable stuff!
Awesome and a truly remarkable sight to see that girl running. The difference from augmented to after burning is different but principal is still there. This engine was a beast of its time.
@Zfast4you is it not possible for you to know there was a time when RUclips was for people who wanted to share something entertaining or interesting without having a singular monitary agenda behind it? Without having to install ad blockers that also cost Money? GREED GREED GREED. It shall be humanities demise.
I was in a Navy F-4 squadron at Miramar NAS in the late 1960s. F-4 Phantoms used J-79 engines. When we would check a new or refurbished engine in a plane, we would tow the plane to a remote corner of the airfield, secure it to the deck with a bunch of tie-downs, and then run both engines up to full A/B (17,000 lbs of thrust from each engine). During the test we would go stand a few feet aside the exhaust and you could feel your entire body vibrate like crazy. The strangest feeling I've ever experienced. There was a big pile of cinderblocks near the test pad. We'd pick up a cinderblock and toss it into the exhaust stream from a few feet away. It would blow the cinderblock anywhere between 50 and 75 yards aft of the exhaust in a fraction of a second. The test would consume nearly a full load of fuel (18500 lbs) in 10 minutes. An awesome demonstration of power.
As a USAF crew chief, the guy without ear protection drives me crazy. I had a guy lose a filling from a tooth during an F-16 engine run. So he’s either already completely deaf or completely insane.
The shot was taken at idle. These magic things called hands can block out a lot of sound when it gets louder. Not convenient, and hey, I am not his mother. But for a spectator, you don't really need hands, right? Also, it was a long time ago, and I think he may have had earplugs in. It's so loud, as you know... that I use ear plugs under ear defenders when I am back there...
Pretty cool. And imagine, an F4 Phantom used 2 of those babies and these engines are from late 1950’s early 60’s. Pretty impressive or at least for me.
I might need to buy one of these. When I'm driving and one of those ghetto fabulous dudes with subwoofers thinks he's cool booming everybody at the light, I just switch on the J79, say "I got something for you mang!", kick on the burner, "whatchoo think about my bass mang!!" Yes. I think this is the winning ticket right there.
I watched the the Thunderbirds at an airshow a couple of times in pocatello Idaho the first time the observer line was close and it was so freaking loud you felt it in your chest as they took off at full afterburner...the second time however they move the line a considerable distance back sill loud but not near as bone rattling, however we were treated with a high speed low pass of a B1 bomber at full afterburner which seemed to shake the earth. Great show it was I'll never forget it....nice demonstration of your engine I can relate to some degree 👍btw.
I worked on GE J79 for many years. It is hard to R&R the AB ignition switch when the engine is installed in the F-4 A/C. I started working on them in 1977.
"Modern" HAHAHAHA this was state of the art in 1955 its a 65 year old design a more modern engine design makes 8000 lbft more thrust than the afterburner on this while dry, and even that is a 20 year old engine
that looks so much fun to be around. i remember the F-16's doing the flyover at the MIS for the NASCAR race back in 2007, they came in low and then went vertical and lit up their burners.....damn that was loud and you could feel it in your chest, you could see the red glow from them too as they shot upwards very fast. they sounded like a rocket does. so much respect for the people who fly them. :)
omg this video got posted in 2011, we're in 2019 almost 2020 and all the comments have been posted like "11hours ago" or "44minutes ago" bro wtf RUclips has done ? Ytb just put this vid in the recommandations of everyone this morning xD
@@AgentJayZ No it doesnt my brother.....it's like a hearing a big block chevy or seeing a child smile in delight or holding a beautiful woman....it never gets old!!
If the thrust had any effect on the globe, which it doesn't, as the drag on the atmosphere makes this a closed system. If it did, then the engine mounted tangentially to the globe could only affect the rotation of the Earth. If it did, and we wanted to actually accelerate the globe's travel in orbit, we would need to mount it "normal to" the surface. From our point of view, it would be mounted vertically, with the exhaust jet facing either up or down. Makes no difference, as I mentioned earlier that it's a closed system with no net force exerted on the world.
C'mon everyone! Point your jets to the sky. Rev them up and nail the afterburners. We gotta catch those martian pirates before they get away with our oxygen!
Although I never got to work/run the J79 engine (before my time) I have worked on/ran the PW-F100-220/229, the GE F110-100/129 and my favorite one so far, the F119-PW-100. the amount of power you feel coming off a turbo fan jet engine and max AB is literally breath taking.
Your PC fan is less than one millionth the power of a J79. I have couple PC fans laying around, and I just checked: 2W. The J79 without AB is about 9MW... so roughly four and a half million PC fans. Yeah, I spelled it out for you. Prob a good idea, eh?
A lot of comments recently. It's like YT suddenly decided 'this needs to be seen'. I can only agree. Having been near these things, I can almost feel my internal organs melting at the earth shaking sound levels again. Watching a B1B at just-over-your-head levels in burner makes the world shake.
I worked on these engines on the test cell at Kadena AB Okinawa Japan. It was neat to see one of these pigs run again but your video doesn't really show the noise that this engine makes. I have been underneath one of these on an open air test cell trying to read the variable vanes during a trim. The howl that came it made as the engine neared a target rpm was enough to make you physically sick and it did do that do me several times. The only engine that made more noise than a J-79 was J-58(SR 71 Motor). The first time I watched an SR 71 warm up it shook the ground enough at mil to vibrate me off the ground. Awsome!
Sometimes we are blessed by the gifts the algorithm gives us
Indeed.
And some of us look this up
True
A beautifull comment dear boy.
I'd buy you a beer in the bar.
In the early 80's, as a Marine Corps aircraft mechanic I worked for 6 months in an enclosed test cell called a "Hush House." In that building we accommodated entire aircraft to include A-4's (my birds), A-6's, and of course F-4's. Far and away one of the most memorable experiences of my life was standing 15 feet away from the F-4 as one of the engines (only one at a time) was put into full, 7-stage afterburner. The Gunnery Sergeant in the cockpit knew that I was new at the Hush House and slammed it into afterburner to scare the hell out of new Corporal (me) standing there in amazement. I will never forget my chest as it vibrated from the rumbling of that full AB. And if the awe for my body trembling trembling from sound waves wasn't enough, the 20 foot flame coming out of the engine was the icing on the cake. My words don't adequately convey the moment, and I know I'll never get to experience that again...INCREDIBLE.
I worked on the J79 -15 and -17 engines for over ten years in the Air Force. Thanks for sharing
Hey, I know it's random but how often do you have sex in a week?
The most powerful leaf blower I have ever seen!
lolz
3 things you can listen to for hours:
1. Fire burning
2. Water flowing
3. GE J79 on full thrust with afterburner
How do you just have this in your garage lol
Who doesn't
Its not his garage lol, this is his company workshop
This is a test building, they ain’t putting them together in there
just taken a course on jet/rocket propulsion at the college i go to, and it's so cool to watch videos like this after taking such a course knowing what's generally going on behind the scenes. makes me even more in awe really. amazing video :D (also just gained yourself a sub)!
Welcome to Jet City!
Currently revising exam coming up next week for turbomachinery module, learning about inlet and afterburning, and everything in between. I do agree that its quite cool to understand the general gist of what happening in that metal tube.
nobody:
csgo russians microphones
So true, who knows what is happening in their houses
@@dwdadevil i know . they have a big family :)
**Hardbass intensifies*
That brings back some memories. I grew up near a AF base with an F-4 fighter wing. The daily roar of the J79 was a completely normal part of my childhood. The loudest noise I've ever heard in my life was watching 4 F-4's take off in formation with afterburners engaged. The noise was incredible and the ground shook like an earthquake.
I am a U.S. Air Force veteran. I served from 1977-1981. I was a jet engine mechanic working on Phantom F-4Es. This GE J79 is the engine for that aircraft. I well remember standing next to it when it went to full power and then to afterburner. And the date of this video, June 17th, is my birthday. Go figure!
Great to see the brains behind the machine still active with commenters on the video even almost nine years later. The F-4 Phantom II and all the other aircraft this beast was mounted in were all worthy machines, and this loud chunk of supersonic thrust is a beauty. I can tell you and the gang take real good care of it.
Watching this at 1:10 am January 1st, great way to start the new year!
12:23 am pst same here jan 1st
Same
nobody:
youtube: Testing a GE J79 with afterburner
me: why not
I've worked end of runway with two of these in full afterburner. It literally rumbles everything in your body. What a great experience.
When I was a kid in the 70's we lived on MCAS Yuma. There was a squadron of F-4's there. They would take off over base housing, afterburners on. It would shake the dishes in the cabinets. We were so used to it we didn't even pay attention to it. The good old days...
Recommended 8 1/2 years later, and still great to watch.
Yeah, your description is on key! As a former F-15E Crew Chief, there is no way to describe what its like to be next to a running jet engine in full AB. Its overwhelming and strikes you full of awe! You can scream at the top of your lungs and still not even hear your own voice. You can feel your internal organs shake. Great video man! It brings back memories of working with the last Wild Weasels during Desert Storm.
Always good to hear from someone with real experience using these engines for there designed purpose.
steve bober thank you for your service!
7:13 - the vtec kicks in.
Very cool I was a Dedicated crew chief and cut trained jets and hydraulics on the F4E/G Phantoms at George AFB Ca, 1986 till 1992 when we closed George and they moved to Nellis AFB for five more years I spent many long nights working, slaving and cursing those mighty J79-GE-17 !! IT WAS ALWAYS a love hate relationship but when you beat them gremlins it was such a great feeling like you could conquer the world and we did, I was the best damned F4 Phantom phixer that ever lived and thats not bragging it's a fact everyone I worked with and my pilots new me and damned proud of that honor. After I went 5o the kc135rt stratotankers where I had the pleasure of conquering another aircraft!! But that's another story.!!! Peace out and keep burning.
I worked on the J79 in the F4 Phantom while assigned to VF-103 and went to A school as well as C School eventually becoming CER QUALIFIED. THIS ENGINE CAN TAKE A BEATING. One thing we were always taught was if the new engine did not have a slight leak from the Aux Air Door (81) send it back lol.
NASA: “The earths rotation is slowing down, what should we do?”
This guy: 7:14
NASA: «Not that side!»
That is truly awe-inspiring power. Watching the camera shake and the exhaust go red made me truly happy that i decided to go into aerospace.
"go into aerospace" as in.....light a joint?
@@klam77 I'm in school for it
@@Bobcatwill i envy you. (I was just joking). Are u doing a undergrad 4yr degree now?
@@klam77 I am on my 4th year of college. I literally decided to change to aerospace right before I graduated.
Nucking Futz! The camera shake during the AB and the sound is pure insanity. That's so much power in such a little space. Good to see you're still here 12 years later. Time travel FTW.
I‘m in rc planes for 2 weeks now.
And i was wonderling if that engine is good for beginners
Absolutely, sir! The J79 weighs a ton and a half, burns 90 gallons per minute of jet fuel, and makes almost 9 tons of thrust. It's perfect for any beginners project in RC model making.
AgentJayZ ok thanks! Can i buy it on amazon?
You'll want something more powerful after the first time you fly it......
Peter Plassmann yeah but everyone have to start somewhere🤷🏼♂️
Would look forward to see you cross an ocean, as the french jetboarder did with the smaller model jetengines and the english channel..
Amazing how the nozzle can keep the narrower opening without being forced open.
You know, after you fired off that afterburner, I was more than a little surprised that we didn't see your shop skootching along the ground with everyone chasing after it.
Oh my! So as the vid ends..we Sailors on the flight deck called this the "fireplace" as we loved the Phantom returning to deck and warming us when in cold weather seas. I have a lump in my throat and tears in my eyes. Man, I miss my time in the Navy.
10:41 when you start your old laptop
When im running throttlestop benchmark
I began my aviation career working on these. They were utilized in the F-4 Phantom's. We also O/H'd the civilian version CJ-805 -3 & -23. They were used in the Convair 880 & 990 respectively.
I can tell you for a fact, it's incredibly loud. I worked on them in the service years ago. It will bring you to your knee's. The F-4 phantom has two of those engines, they would buzz our F-15 base in Germany during exercises, near the speed of sound so you wouldn't know they were coming until they were almost on top of you.
I used to run the test cells at Bergstrom in the 1980's, there is nothing like leak testing an engine in full afterburner. Can't describe fully what it feels to be next to it, but the feeling is still awesome. Thanks for the memories.
It really is something else. You can feel the vibrations in your sinuses.
Was at Bergstrom in the late 80's and worked on the F4 and was engine run qualified miss that sound.
Camera violently shaking while holding onto it's dear life just makes it all 500% more exciting to watch.
Yes, and as many people have refused to believe... that shaking is all caused by sound. The camera is of course not in the jet stream, but is off to the side.
The volume of the noise is so high that it is dangerous. Not just to your hearing, but to all of you.
Foamie ear plugs under ear defenders, and it's still too much.
As you can see, it nearly shakes the camera apart.
@@AgentJayZ oh I believe you. I have performed maintenance over a huge transport helicopter engine. The thing was so loud we couldn't work in a hangar made out of riveted sheet metal. The whole building was resonating amplifying already deafening jet turbine roar.
@@romant1127 like working inside of a church bell basically
My most memorable afterburner experience was at an Air Show a few years ago watching a real rare bird, a Blackburn Buccaneer do a fly past, then at the second fly past the pilot hit the afterburners and put it into a steep climb......went like a bloody bat out of hell!! The sound was earth shattering!!
That would be cool to see. Maybe you saw a development prototype or something. My information is that the successful variants of the Buccaneer used the RR Spey, two of them, but without AB.
Still the Spey is a very loud engine, and two of them would be making the equivalent of about 40 thousand Hp at takeoff power.
Buccaneers are great, they do not have afterburners though
10:42 school pc when you open a second chrome tab
You are detained for that kid
true
That's awesome! "Newly rebuilt" huh? That's neat. I'm always thrilled when I change the oil and spark plugs on my vehicle and it still works after. Thanks for creating the video. When I was 12, my next door neighbor was fresh out of the Air Force and was a jet engine mechanic though I'm not sure which specifically. He had a picture on a shelf of a test burn like yours but at night. It was so cool. He became our neighbor 'cause after service he got a job at Aerojet in Rancho Cordova. That was back in '85 and there was nothing between but grassy fields and Mather Air Force Base. On very calm Saturday mornings, you could hear long burns of jet engines. I always wondered if it was from the base, 8 miles or Aerojet, 15 miles. Mather is only 8 miles so that's more likely, I'd think. Again that was back when Mather was an active military base so any day you could see B-52s or F-4 Phantoms (a childhood favorite + F-14 = drool) among many other aircraft.
Before I go, well into adulthood, around the early 2010s, I found out that the lifelong neighbor on the other side was an engineer on the F-117!!! No one had any idea. He looked like of the drawings from the old Herman comic strip. Asked about work he'd say vaguely that he was an engineer of some kind then ramble some ridiculously technical mumbo-jumbo (nothing aerospace sounding though) and change the subject. It was probably a scripted response given the extreme top secrecy of the project.
Well, thanks for the vid, sorry I'm so wordy, I love all things aviation, just never had the aptitude to do anything with it.
In A&P school we had a J47 off a B-47. We had it on a test stand. At power it would start pulling the anchors out off the ground and digging up the earth behind it. We also had a pretty good grass fire behind it. You guys must have one heck of an anchor system to keep it in place at full afterburner.
I have a video about The Engine Test Stand.
Stationed in Thailand, 388th Fighter Wing. Three squadrons of F-4Es, I can tell you how loud they get, 179 dB loud. It hurts your chest if you stand facing the rear of the aircraft when the burner is lit. It hurts so bad, you turn sideways to avoid it. No amount of hearing protection works. Spent the next two years in England on Bentwaters-Woodbridge Base, 81st fighter wing, F-4Ds. left the AF with a 30% hearing loss.
I was in the 388th at Korat. I was there when the first F4’s arrived. I too lost some hearing (engine mechanic)
@@jamesmarlowe8231 I was there 1971-1972. I worked the last squadron of F-105F/G's in the 6010thm later changed to the 17th WW Squadron. They were no better noise wise.
I was at Korat the year of 1968. I worked the F105’s. Only one occasion did I work an F4. A sheared starter shaft…I dropped the starter but they arrived before the parts did! Someone else did the repair. Yes, those Thunder Hog 105’s were extremely loud too. That J75 in AB was too much!! You are so right. Ear protection couldn’t dampen all that racket! By the way, I did work the F4’s at Nellis AFB, and TDY at Davis-Monthan before Thailand. What a crazy 4 years of my life, but I’m glad I did it.
@@jamesmarlowe8231 I was Avionics, INS/Doppler. We were in for six active, for that year of schooling we got. I reupped early and did seven plus. But used that electronics training right up until I retired. It was worth the trip for seven years.
I work the e' and d,s at Lakenheath eor. Then the 111,s eor. I do miss it.
They should give you a nobel prize for your education efforts to humanity! Thank you.
I think that's way too extreme, but thanks for thinking that way.
@@AgentJayZ from my heart.
I am near the airport in Portland Oregon PDX often and once in a while the Air Force jets are taking off. It is indescribable the feeling of them kicking off the afterburners while taking off. Every car alarm within a mile is going off you feel it you chest and in your groin. Absolutely amazing piece of human technology.
Postet 9 years ago, now in everyone’s recommendations
Designed in the early 1950s, and still flying in supersonic aircraft in 2020...
Your neighbors must love you.
A very common comment. One of the most common of all. No neighbors... so...
@@AgentJayZ You know we're kidding, right?
How much are they must have ab.
I used to fly the F-4E with 2 J79-17 engines. I believe 11,800 lbs thrust in military and 17,800 in full burner. 1000 lb per minute both engines in full burner. The aircraft weighed 31,250, With 4500 of fuel, about a 1:1 thrust to weight ratio. Now just a Model T used for target practice.
My dad flew em... did not just watch em on a test stand
i think your right i was a crew chief on RF-4C , the F4s were beautiful i think and flying tanks , and then on T33 was at Tyndall AFB
Sad...
Hey David, X F-4 II VF-102 guy here.. There still are "flyable storage" ones in Tucson... a couple guys have been able to refurb them into "air show" displays.. there are a couple vids here on RUclips. Thank you for your service! VF-102 Diamondbacks Oceana, OUTSLANT USS Independence CV-62.
David J. Fox thank you for your service!
Absolutely fascinating! I used to work for Allied Signal (before Honeywell bought us) and used to watch every engine test I could get time (and space, and clearance) to see, from commercial to military... but I have NEVER seen an afterburner demo! Too much power for our facility, that was done at a remote facility that I had neither the time nor clearance to enter.
Thanks for posting these videos. You've got a new Subscriber!
This is the type of "recommended" i want from RUclips ! Nice !
"IN THRUST WE TRUST" :-)
Nobody:
Honda civic exhausts at 3am: 10:45
I used to be lucky enough to be able to stand behind Concord at Heathrow airport.......on the boundary fence......that was LOUD!!!! 4 Olympus with full after burn!!!!..... I would say difference between with and without after burn is like a Street pro on a drag strip then a Top fuel goes past and life stops for a split second.... great filming and thanks for putting on RUclips.....
Few years back, an F4 made it's way to Oshkosh. Sitting on the line next to a kid - probably 10yo - watching a national guardsman do his F16 demo, and the kid, responding to an afterburner pass, says, "Wow! That was loud." I told him, "Yeah, but wait till the F4 does his thing." When the time eventually came, and those twin J79s lit up, the kid turned to me, eyes wide, jaw literally dropped... I nodded in understanding.
I really like that story. I have seen many of these engine tests, and the AB always scares me. I think I know what's coming, but it seems I always forget.
Very loud indeed.
Back in the 70s I was stationed at Castle AFB. I worked for a time at the engine test cell. We had a cell for the j57 and one for the tf33. The TAC guys had their own for the j75 that went into the 106 Delta Dart. When that thing went into afterburner you could always tell because there was a momentary absence of noise then BOOM. We had a hut 50 feet away from the back of their cell. The calendar and anything tacked to the wall would stand away and coffee cups and anything not secured would just vibrate off. There was no conversation, all you had were your thoughts. Your body would vibrate the ground would vibrate chairs would move. It was like you were locked in and you had to ride it out. Then pffft gone the engine would throttle down and shut down. You were then free to go. You could hear that thing when we were running our own engine and it was just as dramatic. Last thing. I was running ground while we were testing a j57. A family came out, I guess their son mom and dad and a couple of little kids. I keyed into the booth and told them and to watch what happens. The were running a j75 and the family was watching everything in awe. I turned my back on them and waited for the j75 to go ab. When it did they all thought there was an explosion and hit the ground. I was standing there with a smile and pointing at them. I had some good times on that cell.
Donald Scheibener thank you for your service!
I love this beautiful J 79 engine ❤
such a beautiful piece of ingenuity and engineering, i could watch it run for hours!
Discord voice servers be like: 10:41
Carlos_A_M faks
🤣😂
It’s like millions of dinosaurs roaring together, o wait isn’t that jet fuel made from...
)))))
It's their souls getting burn in hell
In a few million years, we'll end up just like them too.
Discord calls when there are more than 10 people
I was working on the F4F from 1998 to 2004. I have seen engine runs quite often. When the engines are installed in the airplane they are extreme loud. Its a sound you can feel in your bones and estomach. But when it is mountet on a dolly like in the video it is just brutal. It made me get sick. It was realy like someone kicking in your cheast.
I loved it 😂.
I miss working on the good old double ugly.
the reason is the intake of the jet engine on the jet itself dampens the sound in a good way cause it needs a special design for supersonic flight. if it is subsonic it doesnt need that special intake design so the sound is louder. the best example would be the harrier. it has a very very short intake and for this reason it must be very very loud
So Mr Realtor what's going on in that building next door?
Oh just some guys, I think they restore old cars or something.
Oh OK, I'll take the house
ROFL
1973, USS Independence, RVAH-14 flying RA5C Vigilante. Twin J79's. I was a final cat-checker at launch. The roar was deafening. Now at age 70, my hearing is going.
Made me worried those guys watching with no ear protection...
72 was in Air Force Kunsan Korea. I was Munision Maint on F-4. Pulled safety flags at end of runway just b4 takeoff. Was very close to afterburners. So loud your body vibrated.
MrPepper312 In '72 I began building J79's for Phantoms. Awesome memories.
I'm surprised that building doesn't just collapse in on itself. You know the barometric pressure inside the building must be dropping.
Ah, I see you are a man of culture as well.
(the building doesn't collapse because the drop in pressure is holded (mostly) by the engine)
Hence why the two doors are opened🙃
Only If it were a closed system and there was enough suction pressure from the intake
Thank you for these - it's greatly appreciated.
I remember the noise of an f16 going afterburner whilst banking away from the crowd at an airshow when I was a kid; the sound is hard to explain, I felt it in my chest more than heard it through my ears. Unbelievable stuff!
Neighbours be like, can you only use the afterburner when we are at work?
That's one way to clear the leaves from .....the neighbourhood!
Chuck Noris wants his cigarette lighter back!
Chuck Norris wants his hair dryer back.
Awesome and a truly remarkable sight to see that girl running. The difference from augmented to after burning is different but principal is still there. This engine was a beast of its time.
That’s a pretty cool r
Leaf blower you got there
Someone: I have a BMW in my garage him: i have a millitary grade afterburner engine in my garage 😊
"afterburner vid".. Clicks... *RUclips premium earrape ad instantly plays*
@Zfast4you is it not possible for you to know there was a time when RUclips was for people who wanted to share something entertaining or interesting without having a singular monitary agenda behind it? Without having to install ad blockers that also cost Money? GREED GREED GREED. It shall be humanities demise.
I was in a Navy F-4 squadron at Miramar NAS in the late 1960s. F-4 Phantoms used J-79 engines. When we would check a new or refurbished engine in a plane, we would tow the plane to a remote corner of the airfield, secure it to the deck with a bunch of tie-downs, and then run both engines up to full A/B (17,000 lbs of thrust from each engine). During the test we would go stand a few feet aside the exhaust and you could feel your entire body vibrate like crazy. The strangest feeling I've ever experienced. There was a big pile of cinderblocks near the test pad. We'd pick up a cinderblock and toss it into the exhaust stream from a few feet away. It would blow the cinderblock anywhere between 50 and 75 yards aft of the exhaust in a fraction of a second. The test would consume nearly a full load of fuel (18500 lbs) in 10 minutes. An awesome demonstration of power.
As a USAF crew chief, the guy without ear protection drives me crazy. I had a guy lose a filling from a tooth during an F-16 engine run. So he’s either already completely deaf or completely insane.
The shot was taken at idle. These magic things called hands can block out a lot of sound when it gets louder. Not convenient, and hey, I am not his mother. But for a spectator, you don't really need hands, right?
Also, it was a long time ago, and I think he may have had earplugs in. It's so loud, as you know... that I use ear plugs under ear defenders when I am back there...
@@AgentJayZ wow its cool after 9 years buddy is still replying good work!
Will this directly mount to a go kart frame or do I need to drill extra holes?
It's a drop in plug and play. Make sure to only use quality duct tape, or some sagging may occur.
@@AgentJayZ hahaha thanks, my son will love it!
@@AgentJayZ And some quality staples too...
"drill extra holes" 🤣
Pretty cool. And imagine, an F4 Phantom used 2 of those babies and these engines are from late 1950’s early 60’s. Pretty impressive or at least for me.
Still terrific video even after all these years. Love the matter-of-fact manner in which you explain how these marvels of machinery do what they do.
The other end of the hold down bolts have to be periodically torqued down by some guy just outside of Beijing
I might need to buy one of these. When I'm driving and one of those ghetto fabulous dudes with subwoofers thinks he's cool booming everybody at the light, I just switch on the J79, say "I got something for you mang!", kick on the burner, "whatchoo think about my bass mang!!" Yes. I think this is the winning ticket right there.
is this hairdryer greta-approved ? asking for a friend.
You have a marvelously original sense of humor. We enjoy it!
@@AgentJayZ XD i see what you did there :P all good, keep the videos coming :)
Used to park at the end of the runway at El Toro and watch the F4's take off with full AB, it was awesome!
Thank's for the video.
Where can i buy that leaf blower
Mu2_ Nb 😄👍
Grass: oh shet here we go again
The back camera is probably screamin DAAAAMMN!!
I watched the the Thunderbirds at an airshow a couple of times in pocatello Idaho the first time the observer line was close and it was so freaking loud you felt it in your chest as they took off at full afterburner...the second time however they move the line a considerable distance back sill loud but not near as bone rattling, however we were treated with a high speed low pass of a B1 bomber at full afterburner which seemed to shake the earth. Great show it was I'll never forget it....nice demonstration of your engine I can relate to some degree 👍btw.
10:41 when the kid on Xbox uses voice chat
I worked on GE J79 for many years. It is hard to R&R the AB ignition switch when the engine is installed in the F-4 A/C. I started working on them in 1977.
Ignition switch hard, try doing the throttle quadrant or even better dropping in the rig pins.
I left gallons of blood on these.
Loved it😎💣
I think this the ultimate “R.I.P headphone users” video! It’s insane how much power is in modern jet engines!
"Modern" HAHAHAHA this was state of the art in 1955 its a 65 year old design a more modern engine design makes 8000 lbft more thrust than the afterburner on this while dry, and even that is a 20 year old engine
@@zacht9447 Still you get what I mean. It might be old compared to jet engines now, but it's still modern technology haha
that looks so much fun to be around. i remember the F-16's doing the flyover at the MIS for the NASCAR race back in 2007, they came in low and then went vertical and lit up their burners.....damn that was loud and you could feel it in your chest, you could see the red glow from them too as they shot upwards very fast. they sounded like a rocket does. so much respect for the people who fly them. :)
omg this video got posted in 2011, we're in 2019 almost 2020 and all the comments have been posted like "11hours ago" or "44minutes ago" bro wtf RUclips has done ? Ytb just put this vid in the recommandations of everyone this morning xD
Well, it's an engine designed in the early 1950's and afterburner footage has no expiry date.
@@AgentJayZ No it doesnt my brother.....it's like a hearing a big block chevy or seeing a child smile in delight or holding a beautiful woman....it never gets old!!
Hell yea wassap my algorithm bretheren
No one:
My PC fans at night: 10:41
Playing minecraft on max render distance be like: 10:41
Afterburner is so loud, got to see some f15s flyby with and without, super quiet without, and absolutely blasted away with. So awesome.
7:13 when my pc runs any Minecraft shader for more than 1 minute
I see it got reccomended to everyone
This guy here helping Earth orbit a lil faster around the Sun
If the thrust had any effect on the globe, which it doesn't, as the drag on the atmosphere makes this a closed system.
If it did, then the engine mounted tangentially to the globe could only affect the rotation of the Earth.
If it did, and we wanted to actually accelerate the globe's travel in orbit, we would need to mount it "normal to" the surface. From our point of view, it would be mounted vertically, with the exhaust jet facing either up or down. Makes no difference, as I mentioned earlier that it's a closed system with no net force exerted on the world.
@@AgentJayZ don't put us through those college physics lectures again🤣
C'mon everyone! Point your jets to the sky. Rev them up and nail the afterburners. We gotta catch those martian pirates before they get away with our oxygen!
@@AgentJayZ there we go xD
This can't be serious? puh-leaze... We all know the earth is as flat as a pamcake!
Although I never got to work/run the J79 engine (before my time) I have worked on/ran the PW-F100-220/229, the GE F110-100/129 and my favorite one so far, the F119-PW-100. the amount of power you feel coming off a turbo fan jet engine and max AB is literally breath taking.
2:45 my pc fan when starting up
6:29 my pc fan when playing Minecraft
10:42 my pc fan when playing Far Cry 5
Your PC fan is less than one millionth the power of a J79.
I have couple PC fans laying around, and I just checked: 2W.
The J79 without AB is about 9MW... so roughly four and a half million PC fans.
Yeah, I spelled it out for you. Prob a good idea, eh?
@@AgentJayZ Ok it was a joke about how hot his computer gets when playing game :P
Yeah I mean doesn’t everybody have an F4 engine in their garage?
How does one go about acquiring a GE J79 engine...? Asking for a friend...
Give us a call at S&S Turbines.
If I need to give you the number, or a link... please do not contact us.
Marvel of human engineering! Thank you for letting us enjoy this magnificent beast!
*_Still quieter than my computer fan._*
Let me guess, 80mm howler? :))
XD TRUE
best leaf blower ever
Yep lol
I don't know why I'm here 8 years after the video is released but I ain't complaining
Lots more noise and mayhem... right up to last week!
A lot of comments recently. It's like YT suddenly decided 'this needs to be seen'. I can only agree. Having been near these things, I can almost feel my internal organs melting at the earth shaking sound levels again. Watching a B1B at just-over-your-head levels in burner makes the world shake.
Simply Nice....Thanks for the time, effort, and great video.
USAF guy and never saw one this up close and personal.
Cheers Brothers.
Always good to hear from someone who has real world experience with these things doing what they were designed for...