My Grandfather was in these Lancasters as part of 460 Squadron based in Binbrook during WWII. He flew in many sorties over Germany, returned home and married his lady. He lived from 1920-2004, passed away in his own bed, in his own house. ❤️
I'm not of a certain age but hell I love this old girl to bits and always will... Anything with a merlin engine (or 4) gets me a little in the throat.... Anyone who has served flying these and other aircraft in the war have my utmost gratitude and respect as long as I live. The gentleman stood at the side of me in Metheringham that day.. Cried tears of joy. He'd been stationed to the rcaf and had waited almost 69 years to see the zero feet pass she did.... I won't forget that either. Magical.
There are three sounds a man will never forget. The sound of his mothers voice, the sound of his first-born crying, and the sound of a Rolls-Royce Merlin engine.
I am from Uruguay, 84. In 1952 the Lancastrians, converted Lancs for commerrcial service, flew overhead my home in Montevideo. Airline was BSAA (British South American Airways) and I still remember the sound those Rolls-Royce engines produced
The only similar scene where revving the engine plays a great role is japanese takeoff sequence in "Tora, Tora, Tora". Is not Merlin but also sounds great.
I live about 5 miles from the Hamilton airport. The Lanc flies quite low over my house on it's way to land. I love the sound of a Lancaster in the morning, it sounds like...............Victory!
The sound of those four 12 cylinder Rolls Royce Merlin engines is just pure music. Thanks for sharing the vid. Lest we never forget those that payed the ultimate price for our freedom today flying these Lancs.
There are no words that can match this brilliant and famous war winning bomber.55,000 RAF aircrew were lost on the thousands of missions over Germany who gave their today for our tomorrow.🇬🇧💕👍
In 1946 I had just started school and my father worked on the railways. Dad heard that a Lancaster was going to be at Kingsford-Smith airport at Mascot. He kept me out of school for the day , we caught the train to Sydenham and walked the goods rail to Mascot Airport, clambered down the embankment, not a fence insight and walked across to the most beautiful sight we had ever seen. The crew were all there and talked to us/Dad. The pilot asked Dad if we would like to look over this piece of history, silly question! Finally ended up in the cockpit where the skipper sat me on his lap and I worked the ailerons and column (probably with help). It was then that in my tiny mind I decided that I was going to fly. It never happened as I am hopelessly colour blind. However the day was so deeply etched in my brain I have never forgotten any of it
My family name is Yeadon. I didn’t realise until I was about 50 that my granddads stories about working in the Lancaster factory nearby wasn’t a yarn, Avro Yeadon being a large underground plant next to my long ago home village in Yorkshire. It’s now under Leeds / Bradford airport. I love the story that it was never bombed because the cunning locals would rearrange the model farm animals on the ‘roof’ each night so that any Luftwaffe reccies would see just farmland... I salute everyone involved in this monumental effort never to led Hitlers lot feel they were safe in their beds. But what a toll on everyone. Today, I visited East Kirby Aviation museum in “Bomber County”: Lincolnshire. Their Lanc, ‘Just Jane’ didn’t see wartime service, but it was made to, yet was not needed. A moving exhibition of memorabilia.
That brought tears to my eyes. Oh what it must be like to fly in one. My brother was a skipper on Lancasters during WWII. The Rolls Royce Merlin engine is something else. Thank you for giving us this video.
Never fails to thrill. I served on 70 sqdrn Lancs in Egypt, 1946, and tho not aircrew, I've flown a few times, including my final trip to Ein Shemer in Palestine (prior to partition), where I served out the rest of my time, Happy Days and great memories.
@Philip Corrin ~ what a marvellous opportunity and a spectacular memory for you, sir! Thank you for your service~ grateful for your return home in one piece!
Great video of VR-A. I saw it in Winnipeg when it was here. My wife's father was with RCAF 434 squadron during the war stationed at RAF Croft in Yorkshire. He was a tail gunner on Halifaxes and Lancasters. He did 24 trips in the Halifax and 10 trips in the Lanc. They converted to Lancs in December 44, I think. (Don't quote me on that). He died last year at age 96. I was lucky to have known him and to have heard his stories of the war years. He had some amazing stories to tell.
We simply cannot imagine the brave youngsters who flew these incredible bombers, knowing there was a very high chance of them not coming home alive. It brings tears to my eyes watching this magnificent video, WHO OWE THEM SO MUCH
a 50% chance of dying, each time, each mission, and there were 30 missions in each tour. Imagine that each time you went for work, your returning home depended on the flip of a coin... I cannot imagine.
My great uncle was an upper gunner and radio operater, they were shot down over hamburg and he is buried in Holland. My nan still talks about him to this day. Those men were superhuman. Knowing they were probably going to die a fiery death but accepting it to do their duty to protect their families back home.
She sounds wonderful...but I can't imagine sitting there, listening to that, in the dark, for hours, waiting for the inevitable Flak and/or night fighters :| Those aircrews had something to keep doing it.
Philip Croft - what can you say; we owe him, all of them, an unplayable debt of gratitude for what they sacrificed in the name of democracy, an ideal we now appear to regard so cheaply
Obviously, you wouldn't try this, but I wonder what it was like at max weight. We're lucky here in England to see the BBMF from time to time. Thank you taking us along.
Some serving airmen of the era likened the deafening drone of 4 Rolls Royce Merlin engines on full song to the sound of a symphonic orchestra: they were very brave.
This is one of two flying Lancaster’s left . I was lucky enough to watch the other one fly overhead, flanked by two spitfires two weeks ago over Biggin hill
andypandawalters......UUUUUHHHHH Those engines in VRA a Canadian built MkX were the PACKARD verion, built in AMERICA !!!! NOT RR built Merlins !!! FYI !!!
So unbelievable ... I was so young when my dad died, yet I can feel the leather seats and smell .... oh, the beautiful smell .... of the Lancaster. It will never die. I used to ride in the glass cockpit of the Lancaster; it was so beautiful! Nature and its beauty ... it just surrounded me. And yes ... that smell ... xox
Patricia Kuryluk they are an incredible plane the Lancaster bomber is such an incredible sound the Merlin engines is just absolutely astonishing to them still going strong
Full load, four merlins at 3,000 rpm, props in first gear, awesome. Then times that by twenty. The end of that runway was the place to be. From then on though, it was a hard road. The Brylcream Boys, BBC Playhouse, is a must watch.
Brought me to tear watching the actual inside and takeoff. My Grandfather was a Polish fighter pilot who fought and escaped to Romania then to France and onto Britain to continue the fight with Hitler. He flew Lancaster's and Halifax's. Could never go back to Poland so continued with the RAF. RAF sent him to Singapore to teach the LIghtening Pilots. Sorry I sound so proud but, but for him, I wouldn't be writing this. The people who risked and lots their lives, did it for those that have them now.
Thank you for this! Sadly, this is as close as I'll get to flying in Vera; however, I do get to see her flying over downtown Toronto many times each summer and the sight and sound is fantastic.
All fourty eight pistons in 4 x 24 litre Rolls Royce Merlin aero engines, roaring, to create the sound comparable to a well conducted dance band: Brave men flew them and died in those missions to uphold the freedom of country and Empire: we should never forget them.
That was the problem - to uphold the British Empire - and thank god the Indian nation. above all - was not seduced byall that British patriotic crap - and ended the British empire in short order.
A small taste of the sensations experienced by very young men as they took off for what was sadly often their last mission But they could not have had a better vehicle, Chadwicks shining sword. Lets hope NX 611 can join the other two flyers asap.
Thanks for the video, this is a close as actually flying the aircraft....and i hope this plane may for many more days as it will be harder to find people with knowledge to operate in this electronic world, this plane is like a living thing and need proper handling and understanding of its many systems...all praise for the people for maintingen and flying this aircraft so tha many can see and hear history 👍👍👍
John O'Neill. The normal bomb load was 14,000-18,000lb. Only a heavily weight and defence stripped Lancaster could carry the 22,000lb Grand Slam bomb.....which is amazing enough in itself. This is an article about the various bomb combinations carried by the Avro Lancaster www.lancaster-archive.com/lanc_bomb_loads.htm
leenfieldsmle EXCEPT IF a Lanc had a 22,000 # bomb it would not have a full fuel load nor a full crew you see to get that bomb in the air they had to strip the plane of all guns except the tail, and change out the engines to a more powerful version and strengthen the landing gear and remove the bombay doors, and only 41 Granslam bombs were ever dropped, a standard Lanc could not lift the 22,000# bomb !!! FYI Them facts of history that get over looked in the lies, hype and bull$hit told after the fact !!!
Eighteen people 'disliked' this video? This is my first time for this viewing perspective. No doppler roar of the Merlins. Just a constant unison chat. No wonder the bomber boys are nearly deaf! Many thanks bartman, and the support and aircrew of Vera!
My grandparents in Belgium may well have heard them overhead at altitude, on their way to bomb Germany. I've read both that book and "Men of Air". Brave men all of them.
Hi, Kauley! Oh yes. The surest sign of a guy with his head screwed on right is a video like this with no music playing besides the ol' Merlin Symphony...
@@EleanorPeterson I once had the battle of Britain memorial formation fly 500ft above my house a few years back. The sound of the avro, spitfire and hurricane together was a sound I'll never forget
Designer Roy Chadwick died August 1947 owing to human error, Crossed aileron wires in a Avro Tudor. An unjust end when his genius instilled confidence into much stressed aircrews,
Think on everyone. Those brave boys that flew these on missions didn't have risk assessment forms to fill in. No snowflake society. No complaining. Risked there lives on a daily basis. We inherited the benefits. God bless them all! 💐🌹⚘️🌷
I have a photo of my son, when he was 8 or 9 years of age, with his head outside, from the left seat of that very aircraft. He's now 47, so that was a few years ago now. At the time, it was still undergoing restoration and I don't believe that it was flight worthy at the time. Canadian Warplane Heritage used to drag it out of the hanger for the Hamilton Airshow which always featured dozens of fly-in Warbirds. They Collected money for it's restoration by permitting photos to be taken of fans peering from the left hand seat. This is nostalgia piled on nostalgia.
Wow, 38 Years ago. Time flies! The donations have apparently paid off as we all enjoy this very rare Aircraft today! Thanks for the comment, glad you enjoyed my Video. More CWHM flights are on my channel. Enjoy!
That flight was August 22 2015. I've flown on 10 Aircraft from Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum. 9 of theirs and the B-17 "Sentimental Journey" when she visited from Mesa, Arizona. More to come so stay tuned! Thanks for watching!
I've noticed this on other Lancaster taxis what is the psshht sound you hear every now and again during the taxi part around the round ways. Sounds like an air dump valve or sum sort of, heard this in Just Jane during taxiing, this aircraft, archive video of WWII lancasters etc?
Hi there if you check out the Mosquito footage here you can also hear this, air brakes, Spitfires etc also used this braking system I believe (happy to be corrected)
Hi JungleYT, there are only 2 Airworthy Arvo Lancasters still flying today. One in Hamilton, Ontario at CWHM and one is in England with the BBMF. Thank you for viewing!
from the way those props just don't seem to spin, or spin backwards... I swear Harry Potter's been busy! Looks so much like magic gets that beautiful plane into the air.
I am at this very moment watching a documentary about the war factories and the Lancaster bomber were made by Vickers and not Avro, the factory was a quarter of a mile long and was mass produced. So I don't know when Avro took over production of the Lancaster bomber, which was the best bomber of world war two. My father was a rear gunner in the Lancaster bomber 101 squadron. The dambuster squadron was 617,squadron lead by Guy Gibson. The great ace leader of world war 11.these days the Lancaster bomber is supported by many fans who have taken great interest in the best bomber in the world war.
michaellodwyer The Lanc was and old model T compared to the New B29 !!!! Not even in the same legue why 100 were given to the Brits post war so they had a long range , high altitude nuclear bomber !!!
Good question. Anyone else in here have any idea? I do know it's Leaded Gas, the stains on the leading edges of the Wings after its U.K. Tour were tough to scrub off!
My Grandfather was in these Lancasters as part of 460 Squadron based in Binbrook during WWII. He flew in many sorties over Germany, returned home and married his lady. He lived from 1920-2004, passed away in his own bed, in his own house. ❤️
my father was also in 460
For us Brits of a certain generation it brings tears to our eyes. The greatest British bomber of all time and one we owe our lives to .
Have you watched "Lancaster Skies"? It's a low cost british movie but with it's heart in the right place.
I'm not of a certain age but hell I love this old girl to bits and always will... Anything with a merlin engine (or 4) gets me a little in the throat....
Anyone who has served flying these and other aircraft in the war have my utmost gratitude and respect as long as I live.
The gentleman stood at the side of me in Metheringham that day.. Cried tears of joy. He'd been stationed to the rcaf and had waited almost 69 years to see the zero feet pass she did.... I won't forget that either. Magical.
It should bring tears to the eyes of Brits of all generations - we owe our freedom to those crews (amongst others of their generation).....
And her younger sister, the Avro Vulcan was a masterpiece too. 👍
Lest we forget
Roy Chadwick was a genius.
There are three sounds a man will never forget. The sound of his mothers voice, the sound of his first-born crying, and the sound of a Rolls-Royce Merlin engine.
And the sound of it landing, out of danger for another day too.
The Snarl of a Merlin is unlike any other engine
Especially when it's mounted in a a32'unlimited hydroplane named miss Budweiser ⚡
I am from Uruguay, 84. In 1952 the Lancastrians, converted Lancs for commerrcial service, flew overhead my home in Montevideo. Airline was BSAA (British South American Airways) and I still remember the sound those Rolls-Royce engines produced
The only similar scene where revving the engine plays a great role is japanese takeoff sequence in "Tora, Tora, Tora". Is not Merlin but also sounds great.
I live about 5 miles from the Hamilton airport. The Lanc flies quite low over my house on it's way to land.
I love the sound of a Lancaster in the morning, it sounds like...............Victory!
I actually saw my home in this video in the distance
gbrm6077 You love the sound of those PACKARD merlins ??? Made in AMERICA !!!!
The sound of those four 12 cylinder Rolls Royce Merlin engines is just pure music. Thanks for sharing the vid. Lest we never forget those that payed the ultimate price for our freedom today flying these Lancs.
fleuger FYI VRA Canadian built Mk X used the PACKARD built in AMERICA merlins, they were not made by RR !!!! or did you not know that ????
There are no words that can match this brilliant and famous war winning bomber.55,000 RAF aircrew were lost on the thousands of missions over Germany who gave their today for our tomorrow.🇬🇧💕👍
In 1946 I had just started school and my father worked on the railways. Dad heard that a Lancaster was going to be at Kingsford-Smith airport at Mascot. He kept me out of school for the day , we caught the train to Sydenham and walked the goods rail to Mascot Airport, clambered down the embankment, not a fence insight and walked across to the most beautiful sight we had ever seen. The crew were all there and talked to us/Dad. The pilot asked Dad if we would like to look over this piece of history, silly question!
Finally ended up in the cockpit where the skipper sat me on his lap and I worked the ailerons and column (probably with help).
It was then that in my tiny mind I decided that I was going to fly. It never happened as I am hopelessly colour blind. However the day was so deeply etched in my brain I have never forgotten any of it
Very nice! Thanks for sharing that Memory, that must have been fantastic!
What a beautiful aeroplane. I have been fascinated with the Lancaster since I was at infant school.
My family name is Yeadon. I didn’t realise until I was about 50 that my granddads stories about working in the Lancaster factory nearby wasn’t a yarn, Avro Yeadon being a large underground plant next to my long ago home village in Yorkshire. It’s now under Leeds / Bradford airport. I love the story that it was never bombed because the cunning locals would rearrange the model farm animals on the ‘roof’ each night so that any Luftwaffe reccies would see just farmland...
I salute everyone involved in this monumental effort never to led Hitlers lot feel they were safe in their beds. But what a toll on everyone. Today, I visited East Kirby Aviation museum in “Bomber County”: Lincolnshire. Their Lanc, ‘Just Jane’ didn’t see wartime service, but it was made to, yet was not needed. A moving exhibition of memorabilia.
That brought tears to my eyes. Oh what it must be like to fly in one. My brother was a skipper on Lancasters during WWII. The Rolls Royce Merlin engine is something else. Thank you for giving us this video.
Never fails to thrill. I served on 70 sqdrn Lancs in Egypt, 1946, and tho not aircrew, I've flown a few times, including my final trip to Ein Shemer in Palestine (prior to partition), where I served out the rest of my time, Happy Days and great memories.
@Philip Corrin ~ what a marvellous opportunity and a spectacular memory for you, sir! Thank you for your service~ grateful for your return home in one piece!
@@margotmaines7427 Good on you, Thank you for your service soldier....
We have to thank you a lot for your service sir!
I will check my fathers logbook but I believe he did some ops to/in Egypt.
The roar of those Merlins, magnificent..
Beianboru Especially since those are the PACKARD Merlins Made in AMERICA !!! FYI or did you not know ???
Great video of VR-A. I saw it in Winnipeg when it was here. My wife's father was with RCAF 434 squadron during the war stationed at RAF Croft in Yorkshire. He was a tail gunner on Halifaxes and Lancasters. He did 24 trips in the Halifax and 10 trips in the Lanc. They converted to Lancs in December 44, I think. (Don't quote me on that). He died last year at age 96. I was lucky to have known him and to have heard his stories of the war years. He had some amazing stories to tell.
Magnificent and what a crescendo of wonderful Merlin sound
We simply cannot imagine the brave youngsters who flew these incredible bombers, knowing there was a very high chance of them not coming home alive.
It brings tears to my eyes watching this magnificent video, WHO OWE THEM SO MUCH
a 50% chance of dying, each time, each mission, and there were 30 missions in each tour. Imagine that each time you went for work, your returning home depended on the flip of a coin... I cannot imagine.
My great uncle was an upper gunner and radio operater, they were shot down over hamburg and he is buried in Holland. My nan still talks about him to this day. Those men were superhuman. Knowing they were probably going to die a fiery death but accepting it to do their duty to protect their families back home.
peterlewis one half of them did NOT come home 55,000 of them, the Lanc was a death trap few survived a bail out especially th pilot !! !
She sounds wonderful...but I can't imagine sitting there, listening to that, in the dark, for hours, waiting for the inevitable Flak and/or night fighters :| Those aircrews had something to keep doing it.
---and mostly, just boys--an amazing generation. Lost my brother aged 22, last bombing raid of the war over Kiel, May 3rd 1945, 5 days from wars end.
@@MrDaiseymay thankyou for sharing your story Phillip .
Philip Croft - what can you say; we owe him, all of them, an unplayable debt of gratitude for what they sacrificed in the name of democracy, an ideal we now appear to regard so cheaply
@@thelwulfeoforlic6482 you could say all of that again...
thhseeking All were volunteers, too. No one was conscripted to the bomber service.
Vera is a Canadian treasure and I always love watching her take off....
Obviously, you wouldn't try this, but I wonder what it was like at max weight.
We're lucky here in England to see the BBMF from time to time.
Thank you taking us along.
peterbrown they struggled to get in the air and could not get above 20,000ft !! ! Those merlins were the 20 series and single stage supercharged !!
Amazing aircraft!
Glorious. Thank you. Sobering and sad to think that so many went out, and so very few returned.
@Elli P ~ yes, indeed ~ I am SO thankful for their sacrifices!
Remind me how many women and kids were incinerated in the firestorm they intentionally caused in the city of Hamburg again?
eleanor one half of bomber command were killed in action, 55,000 very poor survival rate !! !
Some serving airmen of the era likened the deafening drone of 4 Rolls Royce Merlin engines on full song to the sound of a symphonic orchestra: they were very brave.
postwar one half of all Lanc had the PACKARD built in AMERICA merlins in them, NOT all were RR !!! Facts of history !!!
It's seems strange but I had the feeling the those Merlins sounded happy to be roaring again, doing what they were built to do.
.... the memories, oh the memories ... but I wasn't even there! I imagine so many of us feel like that. It simply sends chills down ones spine!
Thanks, Jonathan! Glad you enjoyed it!
The sound is just fantastic, how many young men were glad to hear that noise on the trip home from Germany
This is one of two flying Lancaster’s left . I was lucky enough to watch the other one fly overhead, flanked by two spitfires two weeks ago over Biggin hill
There are no words, my one & only bucket list wish. Majestic!
The sound of four RR Merlins at full chat.....pure music!
andypandawalters......UUUUUHHHHH Those engines in VRA a Canadian built MkX were the PACKARD verion, built in AMERICA !!!! NOT RR built Merlins !!! FYI !!!
Gee what an honour to fly in this old girl.
So unbelievable ... I was so young when my dad died, yet I can feel the leather seats and smell .... oh, the beautiful smell .... of the Lancaster. It will never die. I used to ride in the glass cockpit of the Lancaster; it was so beautiful! Nature and its beauty ... it just surrounded me. And yes ... that smell ... xox
@Patricia Kuryluk ~ how wonderful was that?!
Patricia Kuryluk they are an incredible plane the Lancaster bomber is such an incredible sound the Merlin engines is just absolutely astonishing to them still going strong
Well that took me by surprise.
I can't stop reading it. You've (for me at least) created such clear images and emotion. I'm a bit envious. Show off 👍
Whats. really sstounding is that the designer of this aircraft went on and designed the Vulcan. Thank you zRoy Chadwick and team
Full load, four merlins at 3,000 rpm, props in first gear, awesome. Then times that by twenty. The end of that runway was the place to be. From then on though, it was a hard road. The Brylcream Boys, BBC Playhouse, is a must watch.
Brought me to tear watching the actual inside and takeoff. My Grandfather was a Polish fighter pilot who fought and escaped to Romania then to France and onto Britain to continue the fight with Hitler. He flew Lancaster's and Halifax's. Could never go back to Poland so continued with the RAF. RAF sent him to Singapore to teach the LIghtening Pilots. Sorry I sound so proud but, but for him, I wouldn't be writing this. The people who risked and lots their lives, did it for those that have them now.
It was an emotional flight for me as well. Many sacrifices were paid for our Freedom. I'm so glad you enjoyed this video!
@@bartman2120 Just amazing and thank you for sharing the video.
Thank you for this! Sadly, this is as close as I'll get to flying in Vera; however, I do get to see her flying over downtown Toronto many times each summer and the sight and sound is fantastic.
Me as well . I watch for it on flight radar 24 most of the summer (when I have time) . Just beautiful to see VeRA flying over .
Wonderful, made the hairs stand up on my neck when on take off.👍
If they didn't, I'd say you weren't a human being.... They always... Always, get me too.
All fourty eight pistons in 4 x 24 litre Rolls Royce Merlin aero engines, roaring, to create the sound comparable to a well conducted dance band: Brave men flew them and died in those missions to uphold the freedom of country and Empire: we should never forget them.
Packard licence built RR Merlins to be precise.
We shall never forget the sacrifices of those aviators. NEVER.
27 litre I believe...
@@superancientmariner1394 rolls royce merlin engine's, built by Packard!
That was the problem - to uphold the British Empire - and thank god the Indian nation. above all - was not seduced byall that British patriotic crap - and ended the British empire in short order.
A small taste of the sensations experienced by very young men as they took off for what was sadly often their last mission
But they could not have had a better vehicle, Chadwicks shining sword. Lets hope NX 611 can join the other two flyers asap.
Thought that prop was never going for a minute. Brilliant!
Thanks for the video, this is a close as actually flying the aircraft....and i hope this plane may for many more days as it will be harder to find people with knowledge to operate in this electronic world, this plane is like a living thing and need proper handling and understanding of its many systems...all praise for the people for maintingen and flying this aircraft so tha many can see and hear history 👍👍👍
Thanks a million for showing this. Take my hat of the all who were involved. keep up the goo work.
Goosebumps, brilliant, thankyou!
Imagine in WW2 with a 22,000lb bomb load ,full fuel and seven crew. Those Merlins would have been screaming.
John O'Neill. The normal bomb load was 14,000-18,000lb. Only a heavily weight and defence stripped Lancaster could carry the 22,000lb Grand Slam bomb.....which is amazing enough in itself. This is an article about the various bomb combinations carried by the Avro Lancaster www.lancaster-archive.com/lanc_bomb_loads.htm
A max weight take off, regardless of what bomb configuration, would be deafening. Merlins at max boost is something to be experienced.
leenfieldsmle EXCEPT IF a Lanc had a 22,000 # bomb it would not have a full fuel load nor a full crew you see to get that bomb in the air they had to strip the plane of all guns except the tail, and change out the engines to a more powerful version and strengthen the landing gear and remove the bombay doors, and only 41 Granslam bombs were ever dropped, a standard Lanc could not lift the 22,000# bomb !!! FYI Them facts of history that get over looked in the lies, hype and bull$hit told after the fact !!!
So awesome. I watched this bird takeoff from Trenton airbase. Such an awesome sight to behold
Stunning. Just stunning !!
Those merlins are just a loud but beautiful sound.
My immense respect and admiration to Bomber Command
Thankyou for sharing this,its amazing.
visited the Hamilton Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum in Hamilton, ONT in 2006 ~ I.was.thrilled. to see my Lancaster!!
me too, in 2014 on a visit from the uk
Thank you for the video. That is as close as I will ever get to flying in her. It is something that I could never do.
You're more than welcome. Thanks for watching!
Eighteen people 'disliked' this video? This is my first time for this viewing perspective. No doppler roar of the Merlins. Just a constant unison chat. No wonder the bomber boys are nearly deaf! Many thanks bartman, and the support and aircrew of Vera!
Still going on today.
Ask any Tornado boy.
Make sure to use his ear on the right side...
But four synchronised Merlins, I will stand up for that.
I'm partway through 'Bomber Boys'. We owe a huge debt to the men who flew these icons in WW2
My grandparents in Belgium may well have heard them overhead at altitude, on their way to bomb Germany. I've read both that book and "Men of Air". Brave men all of them.
We can never repay them.
Still got my fathers Lancaster soup Thermos from his last flight in one 1944
Engines were kicking!
Great vid- would liked to have seen more of instrument panel and comment on take off and fly process
Imagine trying to keep those in synch. By yourself .🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
I saw that aircraft flying over the seven valley railway twice
Father in-law, WWII bomber command, Lancaster, top turret gunner.
Fantastic video, would love to see same thing at night, would be totally awesome. Thanks for this.
My dad used to be the pilot on one of these beauties. 49Sq Cave Canem.
Wow thank yoy for the video.the moment those 4 × v12 merlinn engines went full power i got a skin crawl
santinho Those PACKARD merlins !!!! FYI
What an amazing sight.
What an amazing SOUND.
SENDS A TINGLE UP MY SPINE❤❤❤❤
Safe to say that the avro lancaster mk x fm104 restoration is taking shape at the bc aviation museum
cheryldawdy Another Canadian built Lanc that uses the PACKARD merlin engines !!!
the sound of those engines!!!
Hi, Kauley! Oh yes. The surest sign of a guy with his head screwed on right is a video like this with no music playing besides the ol' Merlin Symphony...
@@EleanorPeterson I once had the battle of Britain memorial formation fly 500ft above my house a few years back. The sound of the avro, spitfire and hurricane together was a sound I'll never forget
arsenalfeet those PACKARD built in AMERICA merlins ???? or did you not know ????
What a sound 😍
fkn awesome
Im doing a taxi run at the end of july at east Kirby cant wait ...
The last few flying examples of the different ww2 aircraft must be kept flying at any cost as a reminder to us all of the hero’s that flew in them!
Designer Roy Chadwick died August 1947 owing to human error, Crossed aileron wires in a Avro Tudor. An unjust end when his genius instilled confidence into much stressed aircrews,
BEAUTIFUL!!!!
That's the W.Op/AG's position isn't it? My Uncle was sat there when the wing exploded in 'Helle flammen' in '43.
Went through this aircraft when she visited Calgary a few years ago impressive
imagine having two spitfires straped to each wing.magnificent machines.
Sad to think how many people were terrified and died to that sound or very similar
love that sound
Damn how good are those engines? Love
Fun fact for you, the Spitfire used very similar Merlin engines so they could share parts with the Lancasters.
kfing They were the best models they were made by PACKARD in AMERICA !!!! FYI !!!!
Oh my.......Spectacular !!!!!
Wonderful. Are the wheels actively braked before undercarriage retraction?
Pascal Chauvet, Yes to prevent damage to any cables or pipes that may have inadvertently gotten in the way of the wheel.
If this sound doesn't stir your soul.
You don't have one.
In Toronto we get treated to a flyover quite often... 😃
Think on everyone. Those brave boys that flew these on missions didn't have risk assessment forms to fill in. No snowflake society. No complaining. Risked there lives on a daily basis.
We inherited the benefits.
God bless them all!
💐🌹⚘️🌷
I have a photo of my son, when he was 8 or 9 years of age, with his head outside, from the left seat of that very aircraft.
He's now 47, so that was a few years ago now. At the time, it was still undergoing restoration and I don't believe that it was flight worthy at the time. Canadian Warplane Heritage used to drag it out of the hanger for the Hamilton Airshow which always featured dozens of fly-in Warbirds.
They Collected money for it's restoration by permitting photos to be taken of fans peering from the left hand seat.
This is nostalgia piled on nostalgia.
Wow, 38 Years ago. Time flies! The donations have apparently paid off as we all enjoy this very rare Aircraft today! Thanks for the comment, glad you enjoyed my Video. More CWHM flights are on my channel. Enjoy!
Beautiful video :) when did you got your ride?
That flight was August 22 2015. I've flown on 10 Aircraft from Canadian Warplane Heritage Museum. 9 of theirs and the B-17 "Sentimental Journey" when she visited from Mesa, Arizona. More to come so stay tuned! Thanks for watching!
@@bartman2120 Fantastic~!~
I didn’t realize how tight the cockpit is… about as much room as a compact car for the pilots
Do the propellers always run at different speeds?Does it matter?
In the Air the engines run at the same RPM. On the ground they will run higher on one side to complete a turn. Thank you for watching!
completely perfect
Rolls Royce Merlin, pretty Cool.
Blake Painter WRONG !!!! Those in vra and one half of all Lancs built were the PACKARD MERLINS Built in AMERICA !! FYI
Whats better than seeing one Merlin do its thing? Two Merlins of course.....
Don’t you mean four Merlins? The Avro Lancaster is a 4 prop 4 Merlin Engine heavy bomber.
@@thegrapevine4897 PACkard version to boot !!!
Easy to see the crews comms kits were not just for communicating.....they were essential ear defenders!!
I've noticed this on other Lancaster taxis what is the psshht sound you hear every now and again during the taxi part around the round ways. Sounds like an air dump valve or sum sort of, heard this in Just Jane during taxiing, this aircraft, archive video of WWII lancasters etc?
Thats probably the brakes.
Pneumatic brake system on a Lancaster.
Hi there if you check out the Mosquito footage here you can also hear this, air brakes, Spitfires etc also used this braking system I believe (happy to be corrected)
Nothing so evocative as four Merlin engines going flat chat!. Nuff said. 🙂
One Merlin makes music.....
Four make a symphony.
*How many* are still flying??? Amazingly fast liftoff!
Hi JungleYT, there are only 2 Airworthy Arvo Lancasters still flying today. One in Hamilton, Ontario at CWHM and one is in England with the BBMF. Thank you for viewing!
@@bartman2120 Interesting... Thanks
from the way those props just don't seem to spin, or spin backwards... I swear Harry Potter's been busy! Looks so much like magic gets that beautiful plane into the air.
@Henry Boleszny ~ YES, doesn't it look like magic? Standard operating procedure for a Lanc :)
"Look mummy, there's an airplane up in the sky."
I am at this very moment watching a documentary about the war factories and the Lancaster bomber were made by Vickers and not Avro, the factory was a quarter of a mile long and was mass produced. So I don't know when Avro took over production of the Lancaster bomber, which was the best bomber of world war two. My father was a rear gunner in the Lancaster bomber 101 squadron. The dambuster squadron was 617,squadron lead by Guy Gibson. The great ace leader of world war 11.these days the Lancaster bomber is supported by many fans who have taken great interest in the best bomber in the world war.
michaellodwyer The Lanc was and old model T compared to the New B29 !!!! Not even in the same legue why 100 were given to the Brits post war so they had a long range , high altitude nuclear bomber !!!
Неплохая была цель для зениток и истребителей.
Большая, тихоходная....
Couldn't agree more
ROLLS ROYCE MERLIN V12 THE SOUND OF FREEDOM
A roaring drone sound the Gerrys didn't want to hear over their heads at night, a bunch of Rolls Royce Merlins.
ka2rwp One half of all lancs had the PACKARD built in AMERICA merlins or did YOU not know ????
Couple of guys in work would find this... Porn, TFS, G :)
What octane do you fly a modern merlin on?
Good question. Anyone else in here have any idea? I do know it's Leaded Gas, the stains on the leading edges of the Wings after its U.K. Tour were tough to scrub off!
@@bartman2120 I read back in the day it got quite heavy so they had to scrape it off regularly. 140 octane I think.
roop298 most modern av gas is 100 octane unless it was beefed up, thats what they ran on in WWII