HOW did this plane FALL APART after takeoff?! | United 811

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  • Опубликовано: 12 май 2024
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    It’s the night of February 24th, 1989, and a living nightmare is unfolding over the dark Pacific Ocean. There has been a massive explosion on board a United Airlines Boeing 747, carrying over 350 passengers and crew. An enormous hole has opened up in the side of the aircraft, and the oxygen masks have dropped, but nobody - not even the pilots, can use them. The captain begins diving towards the ocean to get to a more breathable altitude, but his engines are catching fire, and he’s having trouble controlling the aircraft. In the cabin, nine passengers are missing. With more critical systems being lost by the minute, how will the crew be able to wrangle their jumbo jet back to the airport? This is the harrowing story of United Airlines flight 811.
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    Special thanks to Selma for creating this video's Thumbnail!
    Music Licensed through Epidemic Sound
    Official report:
    www.ntsb.gov/investigations/A...
    -----
    00:00 Intro
    00:46 RAID
    02:04 Flight background
    03:03 UAL 811 Pilots
    04:07 The Emergency
    04:33 Pushback and taxi
    05:00 Takeoff and Climbout
    05:37 An Explosion
    06:18 Decompression
    07:30 Engine trouble
    09:03 Missing fuselage and passengers
    10:14 More engine trouble
    11:02 Fuel dump
    11:49 Engine fire
    12:40 Control problems
    13:15 Unstoppable descent
    14:55 Flight Engineer sees the problem
    16:20 Flap problems
    17:40 Initial Approach to HNL
    19:02 Extending the flaps
    21:00 Final approach
    23:03 Seconds to touchdown
    24:28 Aftermath
    24:47 Investigation
    25:41 The Campbell's investigation
    27:29 Recommendations and safety improvements
    27:47 A passenger premonition?
    28:30 Thank you and support
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Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @GreenDotAviation
    @GreenDotAviation  Год назад +137

    🟢If you liked this video, please 'like' this video - it helps a lot :)
    You can also support me on Patreon so I can keep making them! www.patreon.com/GreenDotAviation

    • @GreenDotAviation
      @GreenDotAviation  Год назад +5

      @Joe Shmoe Thanks I'll have a look into it!

    • @djplayzyt1234
      @djplayzyt1234 Год назад +3

      @@GreenDotAviation can u do Qf 1 or qf 30? The one that overrun and the one that got a hole mid flight

    • @ThePrimeMinisterOfTheBlock
      @ThePrimeMinisterOfTheBlock Год назад +11

      Congrats, you are officially a meme

    • @djplayzyt1234
      @djplayzyt1234 Год назад

      @@ThePrimeMinisterOfTheBlock ?

    • @MrCaiobrz
      @MrCaiobrz Год назад +3

      "It was not human error .... " well, who designed the plane? it was a human error in design wasn't it?

  • @rezhaadriantanuharja3389
    @rezhaadriantanuharja3389 Год назад +3891

    One mechanical engineer out-investigated a whole NTSB investigation team? That’s a kind of shame one does not simply recover from as engineer

    • @fuckgoogle2554
      @fuckgoogle2554 Год назад +586

      Can’t find what you’re paid not to find.

    • @anhedonianepiphany5588
      @anhedonianepiphany5588 Год назад +203

      Without his tireless, and considerably hindered, personal investigation the 747, or at least some models, may have ended up being as poorly regarded as the DC-10 (not to mention the many lives that would have potentially been lost along the way).

    • @matthewellisor5835
      @matthewellisor5835 Год назад +134

      That's the difference between someone seeking truth and a group settling to justify their salaries.
      Which would you trust with your family?
      I don't mean to disparage those at NTSB or similar agencies who "mean to do good" for their neighbors, it's just to identify that the mission is different and the stakes are high. One person can make a difference, one group can set a meeting to find a way to prove that their department deserves continued funding. To quote a popular talking picture: "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky, dangerous animals and you know it."
      There's probably a good doctoral thesis on philosophy out there and wrapped-up in that nugget of the Stanford prison experiment and the "tall stick" police in rounding the subjects up. As I haven't the patience or the gastrointestinal fortitude, I'll leave to the reader that opportunity.

    • @CriticalInception
      @CriticalInception Год назад +49

      Gov't efficiency at it's finest

    • @naughtiusmaximus830
      @naughtiusmaximus830 Год назад +59

      That was when the NTSB was largely credible too. Not so much anymore. Kinda like NASA.

  • @wthalex9319
    @wthalex9319 Год назад +1207

    It feels more appropriate watching videos like this from an aviation channel, not a horror channel. It feels like I’m receiving a respectable, factual video essay, no over-dramatisation for profits sake. Thank you very much Green Dot Aviation.

    • @powertrip6426
      @powertrip6426 11 месяцев назад +35

      Yes I agree wholeheartedly. He definitely gives them the respect they deserve.

    • @liamcollinson5695
      @liamcollinson5695 10 месяцев назад +39

      I agree I watched one channel that covers themepark accidents and they added creepy music and clickbait thumbnails I even commented that it was disrespectful to the victims particularly the thumb nails and was told to not watch if I didn't like it

    • @frankyb5064
      @frankyb5064 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@liamcollinson5695 what channel was it?

    • @liamcollinson5695
      @liamcollinson5695 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@frankyb5064 I believe it was infamous accidents

    • @lebahfavoritmoe
      @lebahfavoritmoe 10 месяцев назад +12

      @@liamcollinson5695 i searched the channel up and wow. didnt watch the videos but even looking at the thumbnails alone it looked really clickbaity.

  • @zipjay
    @zipjay Год назад +1618

    In case anyone was wondering, the crew was awarded the Heroism Award by then US Transportation Secretary Samuel Skinner

    • @amarillagriffin7427
      @amarillagriffin7427 Год назад +45

      That's good to know.

    • @malkymcfly
      @malkymcfly Год назад +61

      I was going to ask that….honestly these guys are who I would trust with my life 👏👏👏

    • @sandpiper9288
      @sandpiper9288 Год назад +33

      They are amazing. Like the opposite of the people at Boeing.

    • @Maetrx
      @Maetrx Год назад +19

      I did wonder if recognition of all the crew had been acknowledged, thanks for the update much appreciated

    • @aishadalwai1178
      @aishadalwai1178 Год назад +12

      Was about to say the crew should be awarded handsomely

  • @vgamedude12
    @vgamedude12 Год назад +2136

    How calm and collected the pilots were was admirable.

    • @joefox9875
      @joefox9875 Год назад +154

      It was crazy. In the cockpit recordings they sound like bad actors who don't care about their role. "Okay, It looks like we got a bomb ah that went off on the right side"

    • @sandpiper9288
      @sandpiper9288 Год назад +111

      @@joefox9875 I think some of it is a re enacted.

    • @ever7672
      @ever7672 Год назад +4

      They often are… amazing

    • @dillonyang6869
      @dillonyang6869 Год назад +53

      @@joefox9875 Yeah that was a reenactment

    • @mr.blackhawk142
      @mr.blackhawk142 Год назад +5

      There was no re-enactment so that part of it wasn't at the forefront here.

  • @nwbackcountry5327
    @nwbackcountry5327 Год назад +1113

    I met Cronin in 1990. He was giving a detailed breakdown of this event at an aviation conference. Cronin said he was hand flying the aircraft when the side blew out, and remarked if the autopilot had been engaged, he might not have been able to regain control the aircraft. Luckily, Cronin had a habit of hand flying all the way to cruising altitude. He also had to input full left rudder immediately after the explosion to maintain control.

    • @jaybee9269
      @jaybee9269 Год назад +14

      Lucky man.

    • @juliemanarin4127
      @juliemanarin4127 Год назад +70

      An amazing pilot!

    • @carolynromero4462
      @carolynromero4462 Год назад +76

      Superb flight team, all worked together through good communication, thinking ahead and planning. I hope Cronin got the recognition he deserved.

    • @phillylarkin.s1930
      @phillylarkin.s1930 Год назад +12

      I met Cronin in 92 also

    • @horsewithnoname12345
      @horsewithnoname12345 Год назад +42

      I am still in awe of the work of these 3 pilots, how they handled the situation so professionally and against all odds were able to land the plane as safely as possible given the circumstances.
      Employing full rudder is also very labor intensive and I can’t imagine how hard that would be on a nearly 60 year old man while trying to figure the entire situation out.

  • @shaneatl
    @shaneatl Год назад +988

    damn man I would have guessed this channel would have been around for years. 9 months? waaaaaaaay better content than a lot of channels that have been around for a lot longer.

    • @GreenDotAviation
      @GreenDotAviation  Год назад +120

      Much appreciated! More videos on the way 🙏

    • @juliemanarin4127
      @juliemanarin4127 Год назад +6

      I agree...love this channel!

    • @danm3195
      @danm3195 Год назад +6

      I've only just discovered it,and subbed.

    • @nihaartrivedi9540
      @nihaartrivedi9540 Год назад +3

      @@danm3195 me too… stumbled on a video.. got hooked and subbed… now bingeing…. Well formed content… details are good, narration is good… animation can get better but its good as it is too….

    • @mr.blackhawk142
      @mr.blackhawk142 Год назад

      @@juliemanarin4127 WHO love?

  • @rilmar2137
    @rilmar2137 Год назад +1033

    One of most fascinating aviation stories. The pilots did a great job here. The Campbells are heroes in their own right. This is how far parental love can go

    • @m118lr
      @m118lr Год назад +40

      ..absolutely true. Totally dedicated and involved in bringing Boeing to task. And SHAME ON Boeing for their LACK of honesty and denying the issue from the start.

    • @debbiebrock9121
      @debbiebrock9121 Год назад +5

      I have flown several times & never felt uncomfortable but watching these I get chills!

    • @sandpiper9288
      @sandpiper9288 Год назад +17

      I can't believe they landed that thing! Also that guy totally foresaw his own death and wrote a poem about it. I am not convinced dying is what we think it is, but we are so primitive.

    • @imcaufieldholt
      @imcaufieldholt Год назад +1

      @@sandpiper9288 Don't be ridiculous.... I imagine you see your future in tea leaves too.

    • @sandpiper9288
      @sandpiper9288 Год назад +1

      @@imcaufieldholt No you

  • @vermine18
    @vermine18 9 месяцев назад +118

    My god man I cannot imagine how terrifying it must be to suddenly be ripped out of the plane into the pitch black night falling from that height into the ocean... Rest in peace to the ones who passed :\

  • @elsen0va
    @elsen0va 8 месяцев назад +106

    My aunt was a stewardess on this flight, working the back of the plane. It's genuinely a miracle that the pilots were able to bring the plane down the way they did so calmly and meticulously, she's haunted by it to this day.

    • @rickbrenner6079
      @rickbrenner6079 6 месяцев назад +9

      Did that flight cause your Aunt to quit her job? Or did she still work as a stewardess after this incident? I wouldn’t blame her if she quit. A flight like that is so traumatic, even if one wasn’t physically injured. Just curious.
      Thanks:)

    • @elsen0va
      @elsen0va 6 месяцев назад +27

      @@rickbrenner6079 She quit immediately after. Out of respect for her, I won't get too into details about it, but I'd be shaken up too.

  • @toddclean547
    @toddclean547 Год назад +688

    I encourage people to go watch the documentaries regarding the insane amount of work the parents did and all the resistance they got from the FAA and Boeing. They drove across the USA many times. Also, the day they removed all the documents from a room and loaded them in their car and took off. One of the best stories ever.

    • @bar10ml44
      @bar10ml44 Год назад +96

      The cover up was disgusting but then it is America. Had the parents not had the means and determination it would have remained covered up.

    • @toddclean547
      @toddclean547 Год назад

      @@bar10ml44 America may have it's corruption and coverups, but it is still far far less than many other countries (Russia, China, +++)

    • @bar10ml44
      @bar10ml44 Год назад +77

      @@toddclean547 Big difference. There is no pretence with the other countries. With Russia, China or North Korea totally vile however America stands for the platinum standard in democracy and freedom. The American people are hospitable, kind and welcoming but they have been completely brainwashed by the flag and that American dream. I too was brainwashed. As a young kid in Glasgow, I drove my dad mad because I was so obsessed with America, mainly through the movies and television.
      The world has changed dramatically and I am much older and a million times more cynical. The current situation in the US is so sad but I’m in London now and the UK is equally as corrupt.

    • @grahamstevenson1740
      @grahamstevenson1740 Год назад +31

      @@bar10ml44 Where the USA leads, sadly the UK often follows. The corruption in high places today is beyond belief. I'd say that the case of Enron first brought it into sharp relief.

    • @billb7876
      @billb7876 Год назад

      @@bar10ml44 Your right there UK is one of the most corrupt places in the world and its going to get much worse as we don't have guns to protect ourselves from the criminals in suits and their police thugs. I have been to Russia and would feel much safer there than this prison island.

  • @SuperLake16
    @SuperLake16 Год назад +623

    The communication in the cockpit was excellent!

    • @hamletksquid2702
      @hamletksquid2702 Год назад +29

      I wonder how many all-Irish crews United has.

    • @Edward1312
      @Edward1312 Год назад +8

      It wasnt great though between the cockpit and cabin crew.

    • @juliemanarin4127
      @juliemanarin4127 Год назад +3

      Yes I noticed that too

    • @juliemanarin4127
      @juliemanarin4127 Год назад +31

      @@Edward1312 yes you'd think one of the flight attendants would have informed them as to the giant hole and the loss of several passengers.

    • @tyrotrainer765
      @tyrotrainer765 Год назад +8

      Agreed. FO Slader was truly outstanding, but all 3 cockpit crew did an amazing job. I'm surprised the forward flight attendants didn't run upstairs to brief the pilots and eng.

  • @seattleraf
    @seattleraf Год назад +434

    It’s a miracle they made it back and more than 300 lives were saved!

    • @UwU-ok2jr
      @UwU-ok2jr Год назад +23

      @@Ansset0 the pilots skill and training caused the miracle. also, there was no coincidence the pilots safely landed the plane with intent and were careful not to crash so it wasn't luck based

    • @karolakkolo123
      @karolakkolo123 Год назад +17

      @@UwU-ok2jr The word miracle doesn't have to be used in the literal sense, you know that right?

    • @jhh2001
      @jhh2001 Год назад +2

      Thanks you ruined the whole thing

    • @mr.blackhawk142
      @mr.blackhawk142 Год назад +1

      I watched a similar YT segment last year, where errors were made refueling bc of metric conversion mistakes! About 300 people lost their lives bc of this!!! As a Canadian I curse every time somebody online uses metric. I'm old and grew up on ft. and inches.

    • @mr.blackhawk142
      @mr.blackhawk142 Год назад

      @@UwU-ok2jr Yup, it's 30% inspiration, and 70% "Godly" PERSPIRATION! Meaning DOING the WORK (training) creates success, or what you call a miracle. Honest work is a Godly endeavour.(virtue)

  • @publicmail2
    @publicmail2 Год назад +279

    The Campbells story in itself was amazing. His father said they were relieved his son went into the engine because the other passengers had a 3-4 min fall to the ocean.

    • @CubicSpline7713
      @CubicSpline7713 Год назад +98

      Grim. But you are right. Anticipating your death for 5 minutes is beyond cruel.

    • @enigmalex3649
      @enigmalex3649 Год назад +84

      @@CubicSpline7713 I think they would be unconscious from decompression

    • @publicmail2
      @publicmail2 Год назад +64

      ​@@enigmalex3649 The time for unconsciousness at that altitude is about 30 secs. and you would be falling at about 15k /min. you would've fell to a lower altitude that would maintain consciousness below 20k.

    • @OwlRTA
      @OwlRTA Год назад +76

      I think they never confirmed that the human remains in engine was their son. They merely hoped it was.

    • @maevephipson2803
      @maevephipson2803 Год назад +30

      @@OwlRTA.. Probably compared DNA of parents to body parts. So I would say they received confirmation it was their son 😐

  • @davidhynd4435
    @davidhynd4435 Год назад +470

    As with the 737 Max, Boeing immediately looked to lay blame on human error. The rotating "C" locking tabs were shown to be so soft that they would actually bend out of shape under the force of the locking/unlocking motor. Some of the passengers were quoted as saying that they could hear the locking motor trying to work prior to the loss of the cargo door. From memory, I think Lee Campbell was their only son, which makes it especially tragic. Good on the Campbells for pursuing the cargo door issue as they did, otherwise, with Boeing refusing to recognise the design fault, there may have been an even greater loss of life with the next door failure.

    • @dexio85
      @dexio85 Год назад +25

      Well, if it's Boeing I'm not going ;)

    • @hylkewesterhuis9667
      @hylkewesterhuis9667 Год назад

      I wonder if the Campbells, or s'one other, wrote a book about this. :_[ hYlkeW

    • @grahamstevenson1740
      @grahamstevenson1740 Год назад +21

      IIRC, the locking tabs were originally made of aluminium and so soft that normal operation alone could distort them out of shape.

    • @davidhynd4435
      @davidhynd4435 Год назад +21

      @@grahamstevenson1740 Yes, I think that's correct. I seem to remember that in the Air Crash Investigations episode that there was footage of Mr. Campbell demonstrating how soft they were. The truth is that a plug door is simply the safest option, but that eats into precious cargo space. More precious than human lives, apparently.

    • @ThePrimeMinisterOfTheBlock
      @ThePrimeMinisterOfTheBlock Год назад

      Boeing are pretty much the enemy of the human race at this point

  • @RichPaterno
    @RichPaterno Год назад +97

    How on earth did they manage to locate the cargo door from the middle of the ocean? Amazing!

    • @gregorypierson4536
      @gregorypierson4536 11 месяцев назад +31

      That door was located with the use of radar tracking, and the actions of a dedicated Naval salvage team.

  • @Jus2Wise34
    @Jus2Wise34 Год назад +67

    Those pilots deserve a huge award for their handling. Lot of pilots wouldn't have been able to handle it 👏👏

  • @DodaGarcia
    @DodaGarcia 11 месяцев назад +51

    It's just mind-boggling to me how calm and collected the pilots were.

    • @Vanosphere
      @Vanosphere Месяц назад +1

      You do realise the voices were the guy that made the video don't you.. please tell me you know this 🙄

  • @rex8255
    @rex8255 Год назад +179

    I recall in times past Pilots were getting pissed off at the NTSB (and it would be around the time frame of this incident) because it seemed the default setting was "Human error until proven otherwise". It occurred to me that this makes life easy for all involved. Smear the good name of a couple pilots (or ground crew in this case), and call it a day. No expensive aircraft fixes, etc.
    It seems (and recent stories about Boeing seem to confirm) that the emphasis on safety seems to lessen the closer one gets to a Board of Directors.

    • @amazer747
      @amazer747 Год назад +30

      "Nothing comes before safety!"... except money

    • @dennischallinor8497
      @dennischallinor8497 Год назад +11

      After WWII until the late '70s my father was a Shop Foreman in the Electrical Hanger of Canadian Pacific Airline (repairs), Lincoln Park, Calgary, AB. Those were before the days of CVR and FDR and he would read of a crash where the flight crew didn't survive to testify. He would read of these crashes where the airline would claim "pilot error" when plainly he could see it was caused by bad maintenance and the airline was trying to duck their legal liability. During WWII he trained pilots in Dafoe SK and then sent them to be slaughtered over the North Sea and the English Channel so it galled him no end when they went for the low-hanging fruit instead of owning up to sloppy maintenance!!! 🧐😤👨‍✈👩‍✈

    • @mr.blackhawk142
      @mr.blackhawk142 Год назад +9

      In most cases, the closer to the top, the more CORRUPT it gets!

  • @patriciaramsey5294
    @patriciaramsey5294 Год назад +93

    You presented this very well. Much better than Mayday and other channels. You made it clear that the plane was very near impossible to land safely. Thank you for your hard work, your narration and attention to detail

  • @lprophit
    @lprophit Год назад +100

    i cant believe they made it back, and that poem at the end gave me chills. insane though the other accident i know about where part of the plane blew out was that Hawaiian islands flight where the roof was ripped off

    • @pixelate9980
      @pixelate9980 Год назад +5

      The Aloha Airlines one ?

    • @lprophit
      @lprophit Год назад +3

      I don’t know the name but that what a lot of ppl concluded happened was asmall hole opened up in the roof Right above one of the senior flight attendant's near retirement age and as she got sucked up with the force of her body ripped the rest of the area in the roof off.

    • @pixelate9980
      @pixelate9980 Год назад +2

      @Grumpy Ol' Bastard Ya It was definitely Aloha. It was actually my first air accident investigation in which I heard of people getting sucked out of the airplane. It was horrifying for me.

    • @jodyschweiner6356
      @jodyschweiner6356 Год назад +3

      My sister-in-laws Boss Was on the aloha plane… He was just one seat away from the seats that flew out. He has a hand that was shredded by Shrapnel and it only has a small amount of movement. He was well compensated by the airline.

  • @hack1n8r
    @hack1n8r Год назад +56

    The poem at the end punctuated the graveness of those forever lost.
    Boeing was 100% at fault. This should never happen, but, it does. Why? The bottom line. Thank God for champions, in this case, the boy's parents, who press through until the truth is made undeniably evident. It's not that the engineer was smarter than the whole of Boeing and the NTSB (at the very least, Boeing knew the real cause), but it's that the parents had nothing more to lose.

    • @animula6908
      @animula6908 5 месяцев назад

      Sorry if I don’t take a blameful member of the general public’s word for it. I’ve dealt with too many Karens in my life already.

  • @Mugairyuiai
    @Mugairyuiai Год назад +65

    This was terrifying. You did an amazing job with this video and had me in more fear and suspense than any movie. Unfortunately it was not a movie. Rest in peace to all that lost their lives. I am sure the survivors must have been traumatized for years after this.

    • @maesapolu1832
      @maesapolu1832 Год назад +16

      I have P.T.S.D and soft tissue problems etc so I have to learn to stay away from things that are overwhelming.
      It has been about 33 years since this flight happened.
      I hope that one day I will be able to write about my horrible experience in the Business Class main cabin.
      Thankyou for this video.
      ALOHA
      from flight attendant MAE
      SAPOLU TUI MANU'A BROWN-WINDSOR of HONOLULU and SAMOA

    • @iecsao
      @iecsao Год назад

      @@maesapolu1832 are u okay now?

    • @maesapolu1832
      @maesapolu1832 Год назад +4

      @@iecsao
      With Jehovah God by my side I endure.
      Thx for ssking.
      A-lo-ha

  • @Meng96x
    @Meng96x Год назад +118

    great Video Greendot! Your videos are improving insanely, thank you for all the effort and time youre putting into these videos. They are really detailed and I love the length of it and music/video transitions. Also, the thumbnail font change looks great!
    Rip to all the passengers who passed away and to the Hero Pilot David Cronin who managed to save so many lifes.

    • @GreenDotAviation
      @GreenDotAviation  Год назад +8

      Thanks Selma! And your work on the thumbnail is much appreciated.

  • @eucliduschaumeau8813
    @eucliduschaumeau8813 Год назад +77

    This all sounds like the cargo door problems experienced on the early DC-10 widebody planes.

  • @bar10ml44
    @bar10ml44 Год назад +85

    Absolutely brilliant production. This equates to the British Airways 747 that lost all four engines over Indonesia? Due to a volcanic eruption. The passengers were in silence as their jet glided without engines. The captain over the intercom said something like We Are Having A slight Problem On The Flight Deck, but We Are Doing Our Best To Sort It Out. Once low enough the Volcanic ash clogging the engines dissolved and all 4 engines were re started.
    The Qantas A380 that had a disastrous engine failure shortly after take off from Singapore. There were four highly experienced pilots on board as well as a flight examiner who was assessing the captain. Superb airmanship saved hundreds of lives. We must not forget Captain Sully on the Hudson. What burns me about this incident is how authorities were instantly blaming the ground crew cargo engineers. The guys who do the hard work. If it wasn’t for the deep investigation that the parents of their lost son undertook this corporate failure would have never been uncovered and these vile executives and FAA officials would walk away with their massive salaries and bonuses.

    • @juliemanarin4127
      @juliemanarin4127 Год назад +1

      I think the hard work in this case was on the flight deck

  • @helencb9940
    @helencb9940 Год назад +59

    Great video. This is such a sad story, I have seen the air crash investigation and seen Lee Campbell's parents, but I had never heard about the poem he had written. You did a great job telling us the story, very informative and easy to understand and follow.

  • @JerseyLynne
    @JerseyLynne Год назад +26

    This had me on the edge of my chair. I have accumulated 1000 flight hours. (On RUclips flight videos), so I knew exactly what they were up against. I wondered why I haven't heard about this incident. Then, as soon as you mentioned the parents in New Zealand it came into focus and I knew of the cargo door issue. So I have heard this story, but never, ever like this! Bravo! I love the fact that after so many hours of being a passenger, I know how it is done! I thought the pilots watched the weather on the news before leaving home and then got on the plane as soon as they arrived. Seriously!

    • @warriorprincessharmony
      @warriorprincessharmony Год назад +4

      😂😂😂
      You have accumulated 1000 flight hours You're an experienced pilot.
      These videos help in gaining experience. I'm at less than 100hours

    • @JerseyLynne
      @JerseyLynne Год назад +3

      @@warriorprincessharmony Haha! I have learned so much on RUclips, how to cut out a paper snowflake, how to make a Mobius strip and how to pour a Guinness from tap, bottle or can!

  • @Mitchellms123
    @Mitchellms123 Год назад +21

    This FO did a great job assisting with calls and deciding to only use number 2 thrust reverser. Great flying overall by this crew

  • @user-hq4yq8cs4f
    @user-hq4yq8cs4f 9 месяцев назад +7

    The communication in the cockpit was excellent!. How calm and collected the pilots were was admirable..

  • @helenmcloughlin9065
    @helenmcloughlin9065 Год назад +94

    May god rest the souls of the 9 passengers who died.i send all my love and condolences to their families and friends.all planes should be maintained properly.

  • @777dexx
    @777dexx Год назад +35

    As a former Delta worker , great job to all, and flight crew getting everyone of in 45 sec. Amazed how it all worked out, RIP to the 9 that did not make it...

  • @revokdaryl1
    @revokdaryl1 Год назад +21

    This was a great reenactment. I was on the edge of my seat the whole time. Great work and kudos to those heroic pilots that got the plane on the ground safely. Sad to hear of the passengers that passed away.

  • @GurpreetSinghmadsfan
    @GurpreetSinghmadsfan Год назад +37

    This episode gave me goosebumps, one of the best aircrash inv I've ever seen!
    Kudos to parents who had the courage to find the answers in adversities!

  • @htos1av
    @htos1av Год назад +45

    When I started out in tech, I worked for GE in the 80's, they were VERY tight and careful about the avionics, especially with the new digital gear. I have degrees in a couple of electrical disciplines, and I couldn't just "walk in". Mr. and Mrs. Campbell are an inspiration, too! Mr. Campbell is one of us!

  • @chrisframpton7681
    @chrisframpton7681 Год назад +33

    Can we just say that what these pilots accomplished (landing this plane safely) was beyond incredible!

  • @yoot74
    @yoot74 Год назад +13

    These pilots were and are simply amazing to keep their cool under horrible circumstances. That's an amazing feat in itself. I feel bad for the people that parished but I am also thankful for the lives these heroes had saved.

  • @gosborg
    @gosborg Год назад +38

    That was a great video - the best I have ever seen on this accident. It was concise yet thorough, and also managed to tell the story from a human perspective. Well done!

  • @Akula114
    @Akula114 Год назад +17

    Bt far, this is one of the best videos of any sort I have seen on RUclips. Honestly, I think I got so much more than a story about something technical that went wrong and people died, sure glad it wasn't me. Now... next story...
    I not only learned more than I already knew about this tragic accident but I also really FELT it. I'm really ever more impressed with the quality of your videos. Keep it up!

    • @GreenDotAviation
      @GreenDotAviation  Год назад +1

      Thank you for the kind words Don! Many more videos on the way :)

  • @tugatomskanimation6370
    @tugatomskanimation6370 Год назад +22

    Amazing crew and airmanship. They were heroes.
    EDIT: Also, shame on you, Boeing and NTSB...

  • @alexlents4689
    @alexlents4689 10 месяцев назад +4

    Hats off to both the crew and the Campbells! The crew for their skill during the disaster, and the Campbells for being actual vigilante investigators! Absolute legends!

  • @carolyngair7051
    @carolyngair7051 4 месяца назад +6

    Something terrifyingly similar happened to Alaskan Airlines last week! Door plug blew off of Boeing 737 enroute from Portland to Ontario, California.

    • @Mateo.GamingYT
      @Mateo.GamingYT 3 месяца назад

      Yea I just realized that is basically what happened in the video but not as serious.

  • @joelhenderson4450
    @joelhenderson4450 Год назад +9

    Amazing how a hole blown in the fuselage didn’t bring this bird down, but in another case some blocked pitot tubes are enough to sink it. Great channel.

    • @GreenDotAviation
      @GreenDotAviation  Год назад +1

      Yea it really shows how vulnerable certain points in the aircraft are!

    • @kymilly2549
      @kymilly2549 Год назад

      air france 447

    • @F35Nerd
      @F35Nerd 9 месяцев назад +4

      In both these cases it really came down to the pilots flying the plane. United 811's pilots were calm and had very good CRM (crew resource management). In AF 447 there was no communication to the point where no pilot knew who was even flying the airplane

  • @Swoost
    @Swoost 11 месяцев назад +4

    That poem...its like some weird dreamlike premonition of what was going to happen to him with every line

  • @heatherlouise814
    @heatherlouise814 Год назад +40

    omg i have so much respect for pilots. i could not handle that kind of stress.

  • @dianericciardistewart2224
    @dianericciardistewart2224 Год назад +11

    Wow. That was wild. Those pilots and engy. . . What a nightmare! But they were so professional at getting that plane under control and on the ground in one piece!! IMHO, their working together for 20 years was a definite bonus as they could fully trust each other. Kudos to all and RIP to those lost. . . Great one, GDA!! 👍✈️✈️👍

  • @paulaswaim8434
    @paulaswaim8434 Год назад +15

    I love that clear and pleasant Irish accent. This is a first-class aviation channel. Greetings from Montana, USA.

  • @grahamstevenson1740
    @grahamstevenson1740 Год назад +22

    Excellent flying by the crew who exhibited good CRM (cockpit/crew resource management) before it was fully understood to be such an important factor in dealing with the totally unexpected. The situation they were dealing with is not unlike that faced by the crew of UA232 that landed at Sioux City. Interesting to note that an attempt was made to blame the ground crew when the true defect lay elsewhere, the same also occurring in the case of the loss of a Turkish DC-10 flying out of Paris, France where a baggage handler actually did jail time.

    • @Shay416
      @Shay416 Год назад

      Please drop a link to that video 😮😢

    • @grahamstevenson1740
      @grahamstevenson1740 Год назад

      @@Shay416 There must be loads about United 232. There are a number of TV full length documentaries as well. Type "UA232" into the youtube search. I'll especially recommend the videos by Mentour Pilot for a training captain's perspective.

  • @JimLockwoodShow
    @JimLockwoodShow Год назад +17

    That poem… Holy crap.

    • @GreenDotAviation
      @GreenDotAviation  Год назад +2

      I know, how strange...

    • @mattsan70
      @mattsan70 3 месяца назад +3

      @@GreenDotAviation But we only have the parents word he wrote it. sounds a bit fishy to me

    • @AromaBlue
      @AromaBlue Месяц назад +2

      It can be retrofitting or even unconscious perception. I don't think these parents who fought so hard to find out the truth for their son would lie about this.

  • @ncranger78
    @ncranger78 Год назад +6

    Bravo to those pilots!! Absolutely hero’s!!! To keep that plane from crashing with a gaping hole in its side, both engines on one side and then keeping it leveled…👏🏼👏🏼 RIP to those nine souls lost

  • @GlenDiG1970
    @GlenDiG1970 Год назад +6

    Absolute Heroes. Both pilots and Flight Engineer. Amazing airmanship.

  • @cloudedarctrooperdtq3532
    @cloudedarctrooperdtq3532 16 дней назад +1

    This is super tense, but I swear that "make sure you don't hit any f*ckin hills on the way" comment was to lighten the mood

  • @Maetrx
    @Maetrx Год назад +15

    what a fascinating episode, extremely wwell put together & narrated massive respect to the pilots, this was so well done, that I was actually getting pretty anxious for them, & an amazing flight crew overall (45s to evacuate a747!, it's actually a shame the captain has to retire, as we need more people like him, thanks again for your video

    • @GreenDotAviation
      @GreenDotAviation  Год назад +1

      Thank you for the kind words! Glad you enjoyed it 🙌

  • @kikufutaba524
    @kikufutaba524 Год назад +11

    I have read of this accident before and thought it sad that this problem had not been addressed by Boeing earlier, To hear you tell the story was compelling and very well done. I love your channel thank you so much for all your efforts.

  • @josephpacelli3691
    @josephpacelli3691 Год назад +9

    Hats off to the crew not panicking and getting the plane down safely

  • @wyomingadventures
    @wyomingadventures Год назад +16

    Kevin's parents did a great job finding out what really happened to fly 811. They spent years finding out the real happened to the cargo door. True heroes the pilots and Kevin's parents!

  • @chrisburp
    @chrisburp Год назад +7

    Was stationed at Hickam AFB at the time, which was adjacent to Honolulu airport. I remember doing my daily runs on the base and seeing the plane sitting there with a falling gaping hole in it. Subsequent runs over days and weeks, I saw the plane get repaired, “United” name painted over and supposedly sold to an airline in South America.

    • @Shay416
      @Shay416 Год назад

      Omfg. Damn.

    • @animula6908
      @animula6908 5 месяцев назад +1

      It doesn’t bother me. Knowing it survived such a devastating failure once kind of gives me the sense of an inverted curse or something. Of course, I’d want the same crew flying it too though.

  • @luisferreira7654
    @luisferreira7654 Год назад +21

    Another fantastic episode GDV !
    This channel is so underrated, i really hope more people discover your content.
    Big thumbs up ... you deserve it!

  • @anitaford4138
    @anitaford4138 11 месяцев назад +3

    Whoa! I can't watch more than one of these stories at a time! My heart can't take it! This one was astounding! If the audio of the crew was the real thing, I'm flabbergasted at how calm and clear minded these people are! And the poem at the end gave me shivers. Like a premonition coming true. Again, I thank you for your marvelous talents. ❤❤

  • @st-ex8506
    @st-ex8506 Год назад +4

    I had the pleasure and honor to work and fly with Captain Dave Cronin on a project of his; a remarkable gentleman. May he rest In peace!

  • @StephenLuke
    @StephenLuke 3 месяца назад +2

    RIP
    To the nine passengers of United Airlines Flight 811

  • @hiscifi2986
    @hiscifi2986 Год назад +16

    I hope the pilot got to fly one more flight before he retired, that would be no way to end a long career.

  • @PJay-wy5fx
    @PJay-wy5fx Год назад +9

    This must be the most nail biting aviation incident video’s I’ve watched so far.
    Apart from yours, I follow a small selection of exellent similar channels, such as Mini Air Crash Investigation and Disaster Breakdown.

  • @nicedog1
    @nicedog1 Год назад +8

    Tense, interesting and very moving too. RIP the nine passengers.

  • @ByzantineDarkwraith
    @ByzantineDarkwraith Год назад +5

    I think I saw a video about this flight before (and thus I knew it was the cargo door from the second you mentioned them hearing an explosion, but it was still a super exciting vid to watch!), but I don’t remember it mentioning anything about the struggle to maintain altitude and especially not the fact that they had to dump fuel. Maybe I’m misremembering, but it seems like you did a better job of telling this story and including those fascinating details! Thanks!

  • @yy17782
    @yy17782 5 месяцев назад +3

    Could you imagine being happily strapped in for a nice flight… and suddenly being ripped out of the plane? And seeing the plane fly away whilst you fall thru the dark sky towards the sea? Whilst still strapped in? 🤯

  • @horsewithnoname12345
    @horsewithnoname12345 Год назад +9

    Thank you for yet another amazing video. I really enjoy how accurate and well written your videos are. You narrate beautifully. Most videos have text only which can be very hard to follow but your videos stand out because you actually tell the story.
    It is as factual as possible yet you manage to produce a very interesting and engaging story format. Thank you ❤❤ sorry for my rambling but I think it is important for you to know.

  • @angelinaameba
    @angelinaameba 2 месяца назад +1

    I tremendously admire the cold blood and true calm these pilots are able to keep! Kudos to them all!

  • @redwolfpiping5701
    @redwolfpiping5701 Год назад +8

    One unknown passenger had been recovered, or rather parts of one, they found bits of human remains deep inside engine number 3 along with shreds of clothing, that and seat debris caused the failure of engine 3

  • @KMF-nj8kr
    @KMF-nj8kr Год назад +18

    The ground crew that was accused of mishandling the door owe alot to the Campbells.
    I've seen a longer documentary on this one and an interesting bit I'd additional info is how the Campbells got the NTSB reports. From what I remember:
    They attended a conference on the findings and at the end the NTSB had handouts for people to pick up. Well the NTSB reps left the conference room with not only the handouts available for the attendees but also left boxes with their internal reports. The Campbells took advantage of vague offer to take any papers left at the table to grab the box(es) of the NTSB internal reports. If not for them shrewdly acquiring the documents, the cause may have never been made public.

    • @Mrshotshell
      @Mrshotshell Год назад +3

      The series "Mayday" has a great hour long documentary with those details.

    • @AronBezzina
      @AronBezzina Год назад +2

      @@Mrshotshell I believe this was actually the first episode of air crash investigation / mayday

    • @KMF-nj8kr
      @KMF-nj8kr Год назад +1

      @@OwlRTA
      I didn't know that. Kind of cool they were able to meet.

  • @rooster68able
    @rooster68able Год назад +5

    You got pilots today who can't fly a perfect airplane, these pilots were creme of the crop, man nice job baby! Rip to those lost

  • @forbiddenera
    @forbiddenera Год назад +2

    man..how calm they sound considering the situation..that alone is probably one of the most important skill for a pilot to have, if not the most important..

  • @animeshravi1994
    @animeshravi1994 Месяц назад +5

    Hah 'The Cargo Door' has striked Boeing again in 2024.😅

  • @davymckeown4577
    @davymckeown4577 Год назад +3

    I'm one of those weird people who love poetry, I enjoy trying to the analyse the metaphor often contained therein. Perhaps it's because I'm already aware of the poem's story or maybe I just lack the intellect but it's difficult not to make the obvious connection between the poem and Lee's fate. Like the narrator, I am not a superstitious person but according to relativity, when we fall, no forces act upon us. We are weightless. Perhaps, given the recent Lockerbie atrocity, Lee was imagining the last few moments of those unfortunate passengers and crew. Everything about this flight crew says professionalism, thanks for telling this amazing story.

  • @Georgejoseph74
    @Georgejoseph74 Год назад +4

    Tx u for a well briefed video..gives me chills just thinking wat the pilots and passengers went through..can’t imagine how blessed the air hostess who nearly saw death..

  • @MatchingUser
    @MatchingUser Год назад +6

    I always get a little dopamine rush when a green dot video shows up.
    Keep feeding my addiction!

  • @sideeffects6570
    @sideeffects6570 Год назад +2

    I don’t know how these brave pilots keep they’re cool like this. Simply amazing . After watching a handful of these videos , I don’t think I ever wanna have to fly ever , even though I know it’s safer than driving . God forbid anybody has to ever endure this in they’re lifetime .

  • @daruru42069
    @daruru42069 Год назад +4

    the really sad and unlucky part was at least one of the 9 people who fell out of the plane got sucked into engine 3
    here's what wiki has to say:
    "Multiple small body fragments and pieces of clothing were found in the Number 3 engine, indicating that at least one victim ejected from the fuselage was ingested by the engine, but whether the fragments were from one or more victims was not known."

  • @malkymcfly
    @malkymcfly Год назад +3

    Oh my god, I didn’t breath while these amazing men landed that plane! Sounding calm throughout! Just outstanding!

  • @danniballecter7936
    @danniballecter7936 Год назад +18

    I've seen a few other videos about this incident before. This is the first that I've seen that mentioned the poem; eerie.
    Also, wrt the crew....talk about great CRM in the cockpit! It's incredible they were able to land back at Honolulu.

  • @marginalized945
    @marginalized945 Месяц назад

    I simply love this channel. Thoroughly researched accounts, beautifully animated recreations, and wonderfully narrated all with actual audio. My mother was a FA for United for 38 years before finally retiring. I always worried about her flying as ironically I have always dreaded airline flights even as a boy travelling as a UM going to visit my Dad in another state. Thank you for this channel, I can't stop watching.

  • @honestdelivery
    @honestdelivery Год назад +3

    These video investigations are excellent. They always tell a fantastic tale. It's amazing that most of the time things go right but sometimes they don't and it's the skill of the pilots who mostly save the day.

  • @nexpro6118
    @nexpro6118 Год назад +3

    side note....I just read that an airliners aircraft life span is not determined by flight hours but by its number of, "cycles" everytime the aircraft is pressurized and depressurized. so for the larger aircraft that fly for many hours in a single flight will be able to have a much higher flight time in hours than a smaller regional aircraft that flies multiple times a day which will have multiple pressurizations each day. this type of aircraft can be retired with just 50k to 60k flight hours on it but a high number of cycles while the larger long time flight aircraft will retire with 100k flight hours and stay in service for decades while the regional aircraft retired just after 10 to 15 years of service. very interesting

  • @OGSinisterPotato
    @OGSinisterPotato Год назад +2

    In mourning because I was addicted to a show called Air Crash Investigation but Disney plus decided to remove it for whatever reason.. Then I found this channel. Covers the exact same material with similar thorough narration. Flawless channel. Your hard work is hugely appreciated! Something tells me this channel will become my new addiction :)

  • @CaptainSiCo
    @CaptainSiCo Год назад +3

    As well as writing that poem, passenger Lee Campbell had also drawn/painted several pictures showing aircraft with an engine on fire. (This was reported and shown in a 1996 UK Channel 4 series Black Box, about aircraft accidents).

  • @fibboobbif
    @fibboobbif Год назад +4

    That old, analogue 747 an their pilots have saved most of the souls. No need to bash it just because it was not new. I have flown many miles with them in the 70s as passenger, and there was more trouble with new DC10s as i remember.

  • @russellnixon9981
    @russellnixon9981 Год назад +6

    An excellent production Green Dot , I seem to recall a similar incident with a rear cargo door not latching and then blowing off .

  • @ericg4915
    @ericg4915 Год назад +2

    It always baffles me how calm the staff at control and the pilots are. Most of us at work are nervous wrecks over such trivial things. I'll try to emulate these people at work Monday

  • @SoFloAntonio
    @SoFloAntonio Год назад

    After watching many videos on this channel, you are definitely impressed when there’s a successful landing with a plane that has that many malfunctioning parts. The captain & team are heros

  • @eddiebeaty8150
    @eddiebeaty8150 Год назад +25

    So sad for the loss of the 9 passengers. Thankfully the surviving passengers had cool headed great pilots to aid them. Could have been such a worse tragedy.

  • @amirb7437
    @amirb7437 Год назад +10

    Incredible video and what a poem at the end!

    • @akpokemon
      @akpokemon Год назад

      MORE PEOPLE NEED TO BE MENTIONING THE POEM I MEAN WHAT:?????????@??@@!!!!!

  • @lauras2046
    @lauras2046 Год назад +1

    It’s so amazingly brave of these pilots to remain so calm and in control. They are human after all and I gotta hand it to them. They don’t even have time to say their prayers.

    • @shineandre
      @shineandre Год назад

      The passengers were praying so the pilots could fly. Thank God for this miracle.

  • @Anomaliayt
    @Anomaliayt 4 месяца назад

    I discovered this channel recently and have been binging since. You’ve created a fascination within me regarding aviation. You write and speak so well. Amazing work - this was one of my faves :)
    RIP to the unfortunate victims, and kudos to the pilots handling it with the upmost professionalism - A breath of fresh air after seeing a number of cases helmed by total incompetence.

  • @robbiealixsantos
    @robbiealixsantos Год назад +4

    NTSB: *hands over report*
    Campbells: *reads report* yeah, nah

  • @-theislander-5888
    @-theislander-5888 10 месяцев назад +3

    how in the world did they actually find that cargo door in the middle of the ocean after two years?????
    that boggles my mind more than anything.

  • @indianfan1029
    @indianfan1029 Месяц назад

    liked the ATC's response. Very calm and not asking unnecessary questions.

  • @davidpawson7393
    @davidpawson7393 4 месяца назад +2

    In 88 I flew this route as an excited 18 year old and somewhat nervous as my father missed the Air Florida flight that crashed into the Potomac River after hitting cars on the 14th St Bridge just north of Washington National Airport. I could have been on this particular 747.

  • @cynthiatolman326
    @cynthiatolman326 Год назад +6

    During that half second, a young man named Lee, was sucked out of the hole and his life so full of promise was cut short. I believe it was murder, that his parents made sure the çause was not allowed to swept under the rug is nothing short of heroic. Rip to all those lost that night 🙏

  • @ameem8791
    @ameem8791 Год назад +5

    I had anxiety watching as I didn’t read comments 😅. Thank goodness they landed safely. RIP to the missing passengers.

    • @Shay416
      @Shay416 Год назад

      I almost puked just hearing about them trying to land.

    • @freedomofspeech766
      @freedomofspeech766 2 месяца назад

      I was clinging to the edge of my bed praying like mad they'd land safely

  • @bradleybprentice1497
    @bradleybprentice1497 Год назад +1

    Very well done. I followed this accident thoroughly when it occurred. I frequently transited in Hawaii on flights into Sydney from Vancouver. One detail I recall reading was that the #3 engine was buried shortly after the investigation began due to the fact that it was determined some passengers were thrown into that engine after the explosive decompression. A very tragic event that could have so easily been avoided. RIP to those who lost their lives.