History of Airliners in 15 MINUTES! | Curator on the Loose!

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 2 авг 2024
  • 13 planes.
    15 minutes.
    Can he do it?
    Senior Curator Matthew Burchette tries to (literally) race through 100 years of history! He’s cramming the story of commercial airliners into just 15 minutes, using superstar aircraft in our collection like Concorde, the de Havilland Comet, the Boeing 747 and the Lockheed Super Constellation!
    What commercial airliner should we add to our collection?
    Visit The Museum of Flight ➡️ museumofflight.org/
    Check out The Museum of Flight's Podcast ➡️ museumofflight.org/podcast
    Note: Running and teleportation are not allowed in The Museum of Flight. Running/teleportation scenes were shot with professional stuntmen on a closed course. Please do not attempt.

Комментарии • 118

  • @museumofflight
    @museumofflight  2 года назад +9

    The (possibly multi-) million dollar question: If you were running the place, what commercial airliner would you add to our collection?

    • @MrDgwphotos
      @MrDgwphotos 2 года назад +7

      767 or 777 for ETOPS.

    • @MrDgwphotos
      @MrDgwphotos 2 года назад +7

      Otherwise, a DC-4.

    • @ianmcgee9945
      @ianmcgee9945 2 года назад +3

      For a propeller plane, a DC7C. For a jet, maybe a Soviet airliner like an IL-62.

    • @jjm007pig
      @jjm007pig 2 года назад +4

      Boeing Clipper hands down :)

    • @avgjoeavglife
      @avgjoeavglife Год назад +10

      L-1011 TriStar

  • @Pwj579
    @Pwj579 Год назад +5

    @6:26 Key point missing------ the majority of currently flying DC-3s are actually C-47s that were manufactured as troop transports during WWII for Allied Forces. While over 600 DC-3s were built between 1936-1941. Over 10,000 C-47s were built from 1941-1945. After the war thousands were bought up by as surplus by new and existing airlines.

  • @marioguerrero9527
    @marioguerrero9527 Год назад +7

    What a demonstration of how comprehensive the collection at the MOF is!

  • @AB-wf4gt
    @AB-wf4gt 2 года назад +8

    Wow. It’s incredible how fast the technology advances!
    And how fast Matthew runs!

  • @Flyby-1000
    @Flyby-1000 Год назад +2

    FUN FACT... The 727 was indeed the fist airframe to have an APU...However... it was not originally designed to support an APU as the APU did not exist at the time of the of 727 production... The APU was a retrofit on the early models (the -100's). The only place they had any room to place the retrofit APU was in the main wheel well. That is why you see he APU air inlet on one wing and the APU exhaust outlet on the other...

  • @chipcurry
    @chipcurry Год назад

    Great job, you get the gold star for museum curation.

  • @MrWayner2
    @MrWayner2 2 года назад +10

    This is an amazing production! Both educational and entertaining! Keep up the great work!

  • @Idahoguy10157
    @Idahoguy10157 2 года назад +11

    The British lessons learned from the investigation of the of the Comet were freely shared. Boeing and every manufacturer used these on all new aircraft.

    • @EricIrl
      @EricIrl Год назад

      What improvements did Boeing make to their pressurised aircraft based on the problems with the Comet?

    • @RaoulStankovitch
      @RaoulStankovitch Год назад

      Boeing had experience with airliner pressuring 20 years before the Comet. 1939 they introduced the B-307. World's 1st pressurized commercial airliner...I know because my Dad flew them!!! British engineers apparently didn't used what Boeing had learned, not the other way around.

    • @EricIrl
      @EricIrl Год назад +1

      @@RaoulStankovitch Pretty much what I was getting at. There wasn't much that Boeing needed to learn from de Havilland's bad experience. Boeing, Lockheed and Douglas had all designed and flown pressurised airliners before de Havilland. Even the British compnay Vickers had pressurised aircraft flying before the Comet. As far as I know, Vickers, Boeing, Douglas or Lockheed never lost an airliner due to a structural breakup caused by the fuselage bursting open due to inadequate construction methods.

    • @peterweinberg4504
      @peterweinberg4504 Год назад

      @@EricIrl Boeing added titanium tear stoppers to the skin as a result

    • @EricIrl
      @EricIrl Год назад

      @@peterweinberg4504 Are you sure it was a result of the Comet problems. Boeing already had extensive experience with pressurised aircraft.

  • @franosbornblaschke3694
    @franosbornblaschke3694 Год назад +2

    Matthew is a wonderful host!

  • @byronharano2391
    @byronharano2391 Год назад +1

    Thank you for this tour 💗

  • @burroaks7
    @burroaks7 Год назад +1

    this really should have more views

  • @theoldar
    @theoldar 2 года назад +3

    I visited the museum in May of 2022. Highly recommended for any aviation enthusiast.

  • @ianmcgee9945
    @ianmcgee9945 2 года назад +3

    It's great to see the Constellation looking so good. My Dad was a mechanic for Trans-Canada Airlines and probably worked on it when it was new!

    • @museumofflight
      @museumofflight  2 года назад

      Wow! Thanks for sharing your dad's story. Connie has a place of honor in our Museum. She just got a nice pressure wash a few weeks ago, in fact.

    • @lewiskemp5893
      @lewiskemp5893 Год назад

      My mom was a stewardess on the Connie for Eastern

  • @richd8537
    @richd8537 2 года назад +1

    If you had 30 extra seconds you could have added the 337 Stratocruiser! Great job Matthew!

  • @schmitty1944
    @schmitty1944 2 месяца назад

    I smashed the like button..... you owe me a monitor. Seriously, Great video. Loved it!

  • @Allan_aka_RocKITEman
    @Allan_aka_RocKITEman Год назад

    Matthew Burchette: Doing ALL THAT RUNNING so we do not have to...😉

  • @brianloomis9351
    @brianloomis9351 Год назад +1

    Interesting that you left out the Boeing 314

  • @jim5870
    @jim5870 Год назад

    I enjoyed that!

  • @Andi845
    @Andi845 Год назад

    Great video!!!!!! Thanks!!!

  • @theymusthatetesla3186
    @theymusthatetesla3186 Год назад

    Very good presentation!!

  • @amandajones7566
    @amandajones7566 Год назад +1

    The DC-10!

    • @TheKaidynB
      @TheKaidynB Год назад

      Yes yes! My late great grandfather was a second officer on the DC-10 for many years

  • @TheMarcball
    @TheMarcball 2 года назад

    Thanks for the inspiration and keep on trucking!

  • @walterpleyer261
    @walterpleyer261 Год назад +1

    The Model 80 looks like the love child of a Fokker F.VII and an Antonov An 2

  • @petersteirer5728
    @petersteirer5728 Год назад

    Actually, except for Concorde, this is a BOEING Short History.

  • @bobbartlett1185
    @bobbartlett1185 Год назад +1

    Great episode

  • @trob0914
    @trob0914 Год назад

    Noticed this awhile ago, but when did Matt leave Colorado for WA. ? Glad to have him, as I live in the Seattl Metro...Your videos are always informative, thanks !!

  • @brentflora8965
    @brentflora8965 Год назад +1

    Loved your history under pressure 😅! There's 1 plane missing in the Boeing collection, or better yet 2! I didn't see the flying pencil (757) or the muscle plane (767)! When I bought a ticket to fly from Atlanta to Brasilia in the pencil, NON-STOP, is MY never to forget flight! 30 years earlier I took the same flight in Varig's 707, Brasilia to Miami, stopping for fuel in Caracas!

    • @museumofflight
      @museumofflight  Год назад

      Wow, that must have been quite an adventure!

  • @crownlands7246
    @crownlands7246 11 месяцев назад +1

    Score: 10-10-10

  • @Vickyvee97
    @Vickyvee97 Год назад

    I remember when you can walk through the Model 80 there.

  • @fr6885
    @fr6885 2 года назад +3

    Excellent job! Educational and fun. Lots of energy. Was it as much fun to make as it is to watch? I like to see a Making of this video.

    • @museumofflight
      @museumofflight  2 года назад +2

      We did snag some behind-the-scenes footage (not much), so we'll find a way to share it.

  • @uuzd4s
    @uuzd4s Год назад

    Went thru the Boeing Museum of Flight several times, when the "Glass" Museum first opened, when Brian Shul "officially" retired the SR-71 (I wish I's bought his autographed book "Sled Driver" for $75 bucks back then), and whenever something new was added. For me, the "Little Red Barn" has the most historical significance as that's where Boeing started. Gr8 Museum, if you get the chance, go see it!

  • @michaelsteiger8509
    @michaelsteiger8509 6 месяцев назад

    Little known… the 737-100 prototype has a cockpit in the cabin located just at the wing leading edge. That’s where glass cockpits were born and it’s the first fly by wire airliner. The control sticks in the aft cockpit evolved into FBY. Too cool

  • @bernhardecklin7005
    @bernhardecklin7005 Год назад

    Great as always, thank you so much! Little error where you state which aeroplane (Boeing 80) was the first to have been designed and built for passenger transport. The first worldwide built pax-aeroplane was the Junkers F-13.

  • @flyonbyya
    @flyonbyya 9 месяцев назад

    Super Channel
    Super Guy !!!

  • @bretthoffman2128
    @bretthoffman2128 2 года назад +1

    Maybe one on military cargo aircraft?

  • @TeargasHorse
    @TeargasHorse Год назад +1

    I would add the Ford Trimotor. Even though the Boeing 40 is there, wasn't the Ford in service first?

  • @GroundhogDay-
    @GroundhogDay- Год назад

    Ideally both, L1-88 Electra and Ilyushin IL-18.

  • @brentflora8965
    @brentflora8965 Год назад +2

    Why is there no Lockheed L188 Electra II in flight museums? A twin sister of her flew for the Airforce until recently, the Orion!

  • @roykliffen9674
    @roykliffen9674 Год назад

    Boeing 80; looks like a Fokker VII-3m knock-off without the single wing.

  • @joseonastick155
    @joseonastick155 Год назад

    I was a Boeing South Carolina 787 Delivery tech.

  • @HaddaClu
    @HaddaClu Год назад

    Why do you have the Comet designated as a Boeing product in the "chapters" for the video? De Havilland Comet DH106 4C is the correct designation as Boeing never touched these planes, and you have the other manufacturers correctly listed for their planes.

  • @bossdaddy1919
    @bossdaddy1919 Год назад

    No mention of Airbus?

  • @bobbartlett1185
    @bobbartlett1185 Год назад

    Dc-4?

  • @jpstripeit4447
    @jpstripeit4447 Год назад +1

    I've been to this museum and got more from watching this video. so much to see and never enough time. This video should have been almost a hour long.

    • @museumofflight
      @museumofflight  Год назад

      We could easily have made it that long, too! There's so much to talk about!

    • @jpstripeit4447
      @jpstripeit4447 Год назад

      @@museumofflight Not everyone has the opportunity to visit your museum. personally, I think it would be very educational to make longer more Indepth video's on the fantastic aircraft you have.

  • @robertlafnear7034
    @robertlafnear7034 Год назад +2

    I'll take that Boeing Model 40 for my collection😆...... It would be my first plane..... no wait......LOVE that 80A-1even better ! GREAT TOUR.

  • @bretthoffman2128
    @bretthoffman2128 2 года назад

    Good job but a little Scant on the McDonnell Douglas, I.e. dc 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, md11, L1011?
    What happened there?
    Not a lot of interior shots, but you were on a time limit.

    • @tiadaid
      @tiadaid Год назад +1

      The Museum of Flight doesn't have the other Douglas planes & the L-1011. They're only covering planes in their collection, obviously.

  • @garyshelly6555
    @garyshelly6555 Год назад

    Without reading through all the comments, is it just me or should have Howard hughes's name did not get mentioned here

  • @bierce716
    @bierce716 2 года назад +2

    Good job! But how can one discuss the history of airliners without even mentioning the DC4/6/7 series?

    • @museumofflight
      @museumofflight  2 года назад +2

      As Matthew said in the introduction to the video, this history only uses planed in our collection. Sounds like those would be great answers to our question, "what commercial airliners would you add to the collection?"

  • @Howrider65
    @Howrider65 Год назад +1

    You still have no leg room in a 787. So what comfort are you talking about?? They jam people in that thing like tuna fish in a can.

  • @troybeason3517
    @troybeason3517 Год назад

    What, no 777, or 757?

  • @tomlathrop4094
    @tomlathrop4094 Год назад

    Not quite the entire history of airliners. Although there are several more you missed some important ones. DC8, DC9, Convair 880, DC10, L1011

    • @museumofflight
      @museumofflight  Год назад +1

      As Matthew said in the introduction to the video, this history only uses planes in our collection. Sounds like those would be great answers to our question, "what commercial airliners would you add to the collection?"

  • @DrBlood-cq2cm
    @DrBlood-cq2cm Год назад

    Wat

  • @cindybetten7573
    @cindybetten7573 Год назад

    No merch available? I want your hat!!!

  • @gilheuss7830
    @gilheuss7830 Год назад

    A bit disappointing.no mention of the Pan Am Clippers. Nor some of the German "Civil" aircraft that ended up bombing London etc.

  • @Rembrant65
    @Rembrant65 Год назад

    Goofy. Awesome anyway.

  • @gnsaxton
    @gnsaxton Год назад

    If a B-52 was configured as an airliner,how many passengers could it hold with in flight refueling on a round the world flight?

  • @thomascooley2749
    @thomascooley2749 Год назад

    So your 747 was the one that did the barrel roll

    • @thomashowlett8295
      @thomashowlett8295 Год назад +1

      You're thinking about the original 707, back in 1955, flown by the legendary "Tex" Johnston.

    • @thomascooley2749
      @thomascooley2749 Год назад

      @@thomashowlett8295 yeah I tend to get all the Boeings mixed up lol

    • @thomascooley2749
      @thomascooley2749 Год назад

      @@thomashowlett8295 was the 747 the one they filled with batteries on the first flights to power back up controls or was that another Boeing lol

  • @jwenting
    @jwenting Год назад +3

    Very US centric. Skipping over the big European airliner manufacturers of the 1920s and 1930s that defined airliner development of the era, especially Fokker whose F.VII and F.VII-3M were the direct inspiration for Boeings Model 80 (and was license built in the US by Ford).
    It also completely misses Soviet aviation. And by stating the Concorde is the only airliner ever with afterburners it's not even telling the truth. The Tu-144 also had afterburners and served in passenger service (albeit very shortly) and ran regular mail runs for quite some time.
    Then again, you are the BOEING Museum of Flight, to use the full historical name of the museum 😉

    • @turriddu6421
      @turriddu6421 Год назад

      The Tupolev 144 seemed so obviously "inspired" (let's stay non-offensive) by Concorde that it was nicknamed Concordoff or Concordski . Due to my old age, it happens that I was in Le Bourget Paris Airshow the day the Tu144 was doing a demonstration . The pilot tried to go up too hard, breaking the fuselage in two . All I could see was a big dark cloud of smoke above the city of Goussainville , where the planes missing their show use to crash ...

    • @jwenting
      @jwenting Год назад

      @@turriddu6421 it also predates Concorde by several years in its original concept.
      While it is highly possible that some "exchange of technology and ideas" through "less than legitimate means" took place, the similarities are most likely mostly because of the shape being a logical result of the design criteria. The US designs for a similar aircraft drafted around the time also featured the same shape and features.

    • @tiadaid
      @tiadaid Год назад +2

      You do realize that the video is covering the planes in the Museum of Flight collection, right? That's why they didn't talk about other European airline manufacturers.

    • @museumofflight
      @museumofflight  Год назад +1

      As Matthew said in the intro, this is an overview using the aircraft in our collection. Feel free to deliver us some more European airliners so we can put them on display. The Museum of Flight is an independent non-profit and is not and has never been owned or operated by The Boeing Company.

  • @jesuspp5157
    @jesuspp5157 Год назад

    would have liked to see a lot less running

  • @aviatorjoe4153
    @aviatorjoe4153 Год назад

    Great overview. But, please tone down your personality, just a bit... 🙂

  • @Pileits
    @Pileits Год назад

    A rather childish presentation

    • @markr.1984
      @markr.1984 Год назад +2

      And even more childish reply!

  • @nonovyerbusiness9517
    @nonovyerbusiness9517 2 месяца назад

    Curator is not funny.

  • @michaelsteiger8509
    @michaelsteiger8509 6 месяцев назад

    I like the black cockpit on the TCA L1049.. 70 years before airbus ever thought of black cockpit windows….. which are useless anyway. We don’t have black hoods on our cars for glare..