Boeing B-52G Stratofortress Minimum Interval Take Off (MITO)

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  • Опубликовано: 25 авг 2024
  • Note the Hound Dog cruise missiles under the wings...
    The B-52G was proposed to extend the B-52's service life during delays in the B-58 Hustler program. At first, a radical redesign was envisioned with a completely new wing and Pratt & Whitney J75 engines with a water injection system to assist on takeoff. The water injection adds approximately a 17% increase to the takeoff power, also leaving the runway covered in a dense smoke screen.
    The most significant of these was the brand new "wet" wing with integral fuel tanks which considerably increased the fuel capacity - gross aircraft weight went up by 38,000 pounds (17,235 kg) compared with prior variants. In addition, a pair of 700 US gallon (2,650 L) external fuel tanks was fitted under the wings. The wing also had the traditional ailerons eliminated, instead utilizing spoilers for roll control. The tail fin was shortened by 8 feet (2.4 m), water injection system capacity was increased to 1,200 US gallons (4,540 L), and the nose radome was enlarged. The tail gunner was provided with an ejection seat and moved to the main cockpit. Dubbed the "Battle Station" concept, the offensive crew (pilot and copilot on the upper deck and the two bombing navigation system operators on the lower deck) faced forward, while the defensive crew (tail gunner and ECM operator) on the upper deck faced aft. The B-52G entered service 13 February 1959 (a day earlier, the last B-36 was retired, making SAC an all-jet bomber force). Nearly all B-52Gs were destroyed in compliance with the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty of 1992. A few examples remain in museums and as static displays at various air force bases.

Комментарии • 605

  • @Lancair84
    @Lancair84 11 лет назад +194

    The MITO for the movie was briefed at 10 seconds because the director said that 15 seconds wouldn't look very close on film. Our crew was 8 seconds behind the aircraft in front of us and it looked very close. The turbulence was considerable before we got out of it on the fan out. (744 Bomb Squadron S-84 crew member)

    • @allalbavincero
      @allalbavincero Год назад +5

      Thank you for your services.

    • @_Leouch
      @_Leouch Год назад +2

      My Dream was to become a pilot, unfulfiled one :P

    • @johnbarnes5237
      @johnbarnes5237 Год назад +1

      What is the movie?

    • @richardvernon317
      @richardvernon317 Год назад +3

      @@johnbarnes5237 A Gathering of Eagles 1963.

    • @johnbarnes5237
      @johnbarnes5237 Год назад +2

      @@_Leouch Me, too. But my eye doctor told me that with 20-200 vision, color blindness and depth perception issues, there was no way.

  • @davidpan5176
    @davidpan5176 Год назад +63

    One of the most underrated military movies. As a former SAC guy, I loved it.

    • @paoloviti6156
      @paoloviti6156 Год назад +1

      I agree fully with you! 👍👍👍

    • @paaat001
      @paaat001 10 месяцев назад

      It was a victim of the politics of the times. It is a super accurate SAC portrayal.

    • @zlovredniyTip
      @zlovredniyTip 9 месяцев назад

      @@paaat001 what is SAC?

    • @mr.kamikaze8660
      @mr.kamikaze8660 9 месяцев назад

      Strategic Air Command :)@@zlovredniyTip

    • @user-xx3fx2kn8q
      @user-xx3fx2kn8q 8 месяцев назад

      Посмотрел этот фильм полностью😅 Понравился!!! B-52 впечатляют... Оказывается что база ВВС это не только бомберы, но и ракеты Проверяющий прилетевший на Kc-135 жёсткий

  • @garystafford6570
    @garystafford6570 3 года назад +45

    I was stationed at Beale AFB in 1973, 10 years after the movie was filmed there. I got to witness several alert interval takeoffs like that and it was very impressive. I also watched the SR-71 take off many times with full AB. I was an aircraft mechanic on the KC-135Q so also got to see several air to air refuels of the SR from the boom pod on our aircraft. I am proud to have been a member of SAC before it was dissolved. "GO AIR FORCE!"

    • @davidgilbertson4354
      @davidgilbertson4354 3 года назад +3

      Gary what shop were you in ? I was at BEALE 72-75 456 FMS jet shop eng cond. Went tdy to Kadena 72 and Anderson 73.

  • @fun2drive107
    @fun2drive107 7 лет назад +167

    All you see is black smoke from the previous bomber or tanker until you break ground. Only the H model didn't use water since it was a turbofan. 10000 pounds of water was good for about 90 seconds (I don;t have my Dash 1 anymore so from memory). I am proud to have flown these things and been fortunate to have tested a lot of mods made to them in the 80's and early 90's....

    • @joekabira3986
      @joekabira3986 5 лет назад +10

      Fun2 Drive thank you for your service then

    • @realistic272
      @realistic272 4 года назад +8

      Not the most glamorous job in the Air Force, but reminds of my years at Castle AFB as a fuely right out of high school in the 80's. Refueling the G's took 45 minutes to 1 hour. Filling with DI water was about 1000 gallons. Thanks for sharing

    • @jkanderson7
      @jkanderson7 4 года назад +5

      Lewis I fueled tankers and we also used demin water - 600 gal and plenty of black smoke.

    • @c.g.3931
      @c.g.3931 3 года назад +3

      Didnt direct injection foul the engines after a time? What was the service interval to clean the soot?

    • @ronaldrobertson2332
      @ronaldrobertson2332 3 года назад +3

      @@realistic272 POL!!
      I was with the 3902nd SUPS LGSF out of Offutt AFB from 1980-1983.

  • @fastacker2
    @fastacker2 9 лет назад +247

    Stealth aircraft. Nobody can see it for all the smoke. :)

    • @kflyer936
      @kflyer936 9 лет назад +4

      ***** he was joking, fool

    • @Hin11
      @Hin11 8 лет назад +9

      +Vladislav Tamashevska You don't know what you're talking about. When the water injection is exhausted, the thick smoke will stop. That happens a few minutes after water injection is initiated which occurs about 2,000 ft or less.

    • @fastacker2
      @fastacker2 8 лет назад +15

      Thank you, Yes, I was making a joke. it's a little thing we Americans do to pass the time. Do you not have humor where you live? I even had a smiley face on it to indicate humor.

    • @AndrewOfMA
      @AndrewOfMA 8 лет назад +7

      +fastacker2 Truly it was stealth. When it was bombing Hanoi from 40,000+ feet in Viet Nam, they never saw/heard a thing until things started blowing up around them. Scared the SH-T out of them. :D

    • @777Outrigger
      @777Outrigger 7 лет назад +7

      Yes, the old J-57 engines had water injection to increase thrust for takeoff, which made them very smoky. Water injection lasted for just over 2 minutes from takeoff, just enough time to get to 1,000' to level-off, and accelerate to get the flaps up.

  • @paulwatters9225
    @paulwatters9225 10 лет назад +72

    I was a KC-135A pilot from '82 to '88 and, as I remember it, the target window was 9 to 15 seconds. Getting that timing down took a lot of practice! It would only have been put to use in the event of war, but naturally we had to train to that standard in peacetime.

    • @davidsandell7833
      @davidsandell7833 5 лет назад +2

      Paul Watters: My Dad was a 135A pilot as well. Flew out of Homestead and then Loring after Homestead kicked SAC out. Where did you fly from?

    • @msmeyersmd8
      @msmeyersmd8 2 года назад +4

      My Dad was a B-52 pilot out of Walker AFB in 1962. In addition to flying with his crew he was an aerial refueling trainer and check pilot. Years later, he talked about quite a few good pilots that just couldn't hack the aerial refueling in such a big airplane. My first memory is that my Dad was gone on alert at the base for a long time. My Mom drove me to the base to see him at the door of the crew alert building in his flight suit. He gave me a red toy fire engine for my 4th birthday. The adults around our neighborhood had been acting strange for awhile. I had no idea at all what was going at all. But I remember my Mom crying when she hugged Dad goodbye.
      I don't know how soon they needed to get tanker fuel after takeoff. I suspect not immediately as the wings were drooping from the fuel. Not immediately like today with fighters and such that need fuel soon after TO because of munitions loads. I imagine 9 second MITO in KC-135s with water injection was probably impressive as well. That's a whole lot of accelerating jet fuel on the runway at the same time. Roughly, how much fuel did you carry? After Dad's 104 flying missions from Thailand over Laos and North Vietnam in SEA. Ironically, not in a B-52? They xferred him to TAC. He flew an underpowered EB-66 that was a single pilot EW airplane with ~three people and lots of electronics in a converted bomb bay that, ironically, used probe and drogue to refuel. Then we moved to Omaha. Dad was good friends with a 135 pilot that lived across the street from us and did a lot of Looking Glass refueling.
      Dad had one sad story about a KC-135 crew out of Elmendorf AFB in Alaska. In the early 1960s he flew thousands of hours of Operation Chrome Dome 24 hour flights. Obviously requiring many tankers full of fuel. Based out of Roswell NM and heading South for home from over the Northern ice cap, he was informed that he would need to land at Elmendorf AFB because there was a problem with his tanker. Since they had nukes onboard, there's a lot of MP security procedures and other procedures to temporarily sign the airplane and nukes over, etc. that needed to be organized. As they approached to land there was a gigantic fire burning off of the end of a runway. That was the "problem" with his tanker. Geezus, that's got to be a horrible way to go. I've read about tanker pilots improvising and doing lot of cool things like towing F-4s or F-105s with the boom while transferring fuel until they could land at a safe AirBase.
      I hope those Patriots that died in Alaska are RIP. 🇺🇸

  • @BMF6889
    @BMF6889 3 года назад +14

    I grew up as and Air Force brat. My dad flew B-17's in WW II, shot down, and spent 2 years as a POW. He stayed in the Air Force after the war and flew B-47's in the early 1950's and then flew B-52's in the late 1950's though1968. He may have flown them after that, but I had joined the Marine Corps in 1968 and was a platoon commander in Vietnam 1968-69. By the time I left Vietnam, dad was the Commander of Clark AFB, The Philippines where he died unexpected of a heart attack in 1971 at the age of 51.
    I remember growing up on Air Force bomber bases. During the Cold War, B-47's and B-52's were always on alerts and training was intense. The maintenance crews would work on the bombers all night and I remember the sounds of them testing the engines. Saw many MITO's in those days and they were an awesome sight. I also watched alert crews scramble to their bombers during practice. Amazing how quickly they were able to get started and start taxiing, but the MITO's were the best part.
    Those were great days, but the early model B-52's had a number of accidents. Every base we were stationed at lost a couple of B-52's. Don't know the exact number of deaths but it was not uncommon for some of the crew not to make it out before the crash.
    I'm 75 now and the BUFF's are still reporting for duty. An amazing bird.

    • @MikeNaples
      @MikeNaples 3 года назад +2

      Same here, AF brat. Dad was a 30 year veteran mostly on 52's but did crew the short lived B-58's at LRAFB. I only comment because you mentioned the maintenance crews working on the bombers all night. I remember the same. Despite base housing being ~5miles from the flight line separated by a hill you could hear those noisy J79s whine all night while being serviced. Annoying at the time yet now a fond memory.

    • @dwmzmm
      @dwmzmm Месяц назад

      In the mid to late 1960's we lived in Niceville, FL (near Eglin AFB) where my dad (USAF, Chief Master Sergeant) was in his final years before retiring and we'd have military aircraft (mostly F4 Phantoms) flying low over our neighborhood practically 24/7 preparing to land at Eglin. You know those F4's are very loud. At first the noise was annoying but we got used it. It was like one aircraft coming in low overhead every several minutes.

    • @ronaldvrooman9695
      @ronaldvrooman9695 8 дней назад

      There were a lot more accidents involving B-47's, if I'm not mistaken. The B-52, while not perfect, was a major upgrade and it generally has been safer.

  • @howardhamer1379
    @howardhamer1379 10 лет назад +149

    Our crew S-84 (a Select crew) was designated to do most of the flying scenes mainly because we were scheduled for summer leave and therefore weren't on the Alert schedule during the filming. I was the EWO and at that time held a Spot Captains rank. The refueling scenes were taken in Arizona in order to get clouds in the scene. Paul Mantz flew his modified B-25 as the camera ship. He asked both the KC-135 and our B-52 to fly below 200kts IAS so he could get good pictures. Our pilot LtCol Gordon Mack complied but had to really work at it since it was much slower than normal refueling speed. The copilot Capt Blanchard is the only other crew member still around.

    • @irish89055
      @irish89055 10 лет назад +4

      A good movie.. Thank you for your service sir.... The man's name is spelled Paul Mantz. I think he filmed the b-36 scenes in the movie Strategic Air Command..

    • @BadSneakers
      @BadSneakers 10 лет назад +7

      And it was Lt Colonel Hammack. may have been called Mack for short. Second in command bedind Gen Byerly. I know because he was my father

    • @BadSneakers
      @BadSneakers 10 лет назад +7

      I have my dad's commendation citation when leaving Beale. He was Col Charles R. Hammack and served as Chief of the Operations and Training Division and Deputy Commander for Operations at Beale from 1962-1965. I love the phrase "Colonel Hammack's outstanding professional knowledge and devotion to duty enhanced the nuclear deterrent capability of his unit and the Strategic Air Command." We had a red phone in our house. I knew to never, ever touch it

    • @teenagerinsac
      @teenagerinsac 9 лет назад +3

      BadSneakers Yep, it wasn't a link to Batman, that much you sure knew :)

    • @teenagerinsac
      @teenagerinsac 9 лет назад

      teenagerinsac Yes, I know- this was just a few years before the Batman craze :)

  • @davidcavissi3198
    @davidcavissi3198 Год назад +18

    My father was the AC in the lead aircraft for this MITO. His best friend was AC in the second BUFF.
    Dad had a few standard stories about the production of this film. Rod Taylor was apparently a big hit with the crews, he'd mingle, play cards with the guys pulling alert, that sort of thing. Rock Hudson, not so much. Kept to his trailer apparently. Dad never said much about Ms. Peach, perhaps because she wasn't on base as much as her co-stars ( or, perhaps the crews kept a distance so as not to provoke the wives... ).

    • @bobjohnson1587
      @bobjohnson1587 Год назад

      Rock probably felt he just didn't fit in!

  • @GooglFascists
    @GooglFascists 13 лет назад +18

    During Desert Storm we watched several B52s take off loaded heavy.
    Their engines make a distinctive growling sound as they go in circles
    until they gain altitude.
    Haven't heard that in these videos yet but only B52s do it. Once you
    hear it you never forget it.
    One day I was at the end of the runway directly under the spot where
    those gigantic planes lifted off. It was a roar like the crack of doom
    and choking kerosene exhaust when those big birds passed over.

  • @janreznak881
    @janreznak881 6 лет назад +18

    No CGI in this scene!
    What have we lost?

  • @barrysullins4839
    @barrysullins4839 6 лет назад +16

    Filmed at Beale AFB, CA in 1961. J-57 engines with water injection for extra thrust. Thus all the smoke. Beautiful.

    • @old-time-family-cooking
      @old-time-family-cooking 2 года назад +1

      J57-43WB. Wrote that a few times for SOAP sample paper work.

    • @chrismartin1956
      @chrismartin1956 Год назад

      This scene was filmed at Blytheville AFB in Arkansas but the rest as you mentioned was indeed at Beale.

    • @danelder6846
      @danelder6846 9 дней назад

      ​@@chrismartin1956I find no reference indicating that this was filmed at Blytheville. I was told and read that it was shot at Beale.
      en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Gathering_of_Eagles

  • @akt56
    @akt56 9 лет назад +53

    They don't make movies like that anymore.

    • @bluemarshall6180
      @bluemarshall6180 4 года назад +1

      akt56 Hello Grandpa...... 😆

    • @TralfazConstruction
      @TralfazConstruction 4 года назад +1

      I saw this movie at a drive-in with my parents way back when. I still remember my childhood impression of the fuel-leak emergency sequence. I've carried that impression around for decades and it's probably been twenty years since I last watched this movie.

    • @TralfazConstruction
      @TralfazConstruction 3 года назад +1

      @Paul Kowalczuk A Gathering of Eagles. Rock Hudson and Rod Taylor (1963). Enjoy!

  • @paulwatters9225
    @paulwatters9225 10 лет назад +24

    I believe you're referring to the Buff we lost on the main ramp at Grand Forks AFB. I was a pilot in the 905th AREFS who happened to be in the vicinity when it blew (there was a short circuit in the wiring conduit in one of the fuel tanks). A number of us manned the tankers parked across from the burning aircraft in case it was decided to taxi them out of the way. I don't remember for sure how many maintenance troops (I think it was 5) were killed. Many brave folks died in the "Cold" war...

  • @stevenvicino8687
    @stevenvicino8687 2 года назад +7

    I got to watch a MITO at Loring AFB Maine. We were about 25 yards further back than this and we couldn't scream loud enough to be heard. The spacing, the spread after take-off and the smoke are real. The sound, that's something altogether different.

  • @jimsmith4005
    @jimsmith4005 5 лет назад +6

    My first assignment as a brand new air traffic controller in 1970 was a SAC base in California. Those MITO takeoffs were just incredible to behold!

  • @usafvet100
    @usafvet100 12 лет назад +8

    I was a firefighter at Grand Forks AFB, ND, and wore the SAC patch with pride. SAC had a grim but important job to do in providing nuclear deterrence for 40 years until the now-defunct USSR collapsed under its own weight. A pity that the only way to do so was through MAD (Mutually Assured Destruction), but the Cold War was a fight worth winning. Many thanks for your service in this fine organization.

  • @BadSneakers
    @BadSneakers 16 лет назад +77

    This from the movie "Gathering of Eagles." Much of it was filmed at Beale Air Force Base in California. My father is flying one of the B52s! Thank you so much for uploading this clip! But would you had "Gathering of Eagles" as a tag? i found this by searching Minimum "Interval Take Off." Thanks again!

    • @thomasharmon6444
      @thomasharmon6444 3 года назад +2

      Thanks was wondering where it came from

    • @johnking7454
      @johnking7454 2 года назад +2

      That and "Strategic Air Command" are two of my all-time favorite movies about the Air Force. I had the pleasure of watching a B-52 MITO while I was serving, it's an awesome thing to see! I've always loved the B-52 and left scale models I'd assembled hanging from the ceiling in every office I served in.

    • @TommygunNG
      @TommygunNG Год назад

      @@thomasharmon6444 Same here.
      Look at the posting date: 2008. RUclipsrs were still getting on to how to do good descriptions and such. Add in no copyright strikes. No one cared. People were just amazed at being able to share a video--theirs or ripped--with everybody so easily.

    • @j.o.p.enforcementagency7931
      @j.o.p.enforcementagency7931 Год назад +1

      Thanks for that answer! I love that scene. And a sulute to your dad for his service. I will be watching this film!

  • @davewilson6313
    @davewilson6313 6 лет назад +16

    i love the reverberating sound of the enclosed studio space as they're yelling.

  • @1tnrealtor
    @1tnrealtor 10 лет назад +10

    My first assignment after graduating from Air Traffic Controller School was Columbus AFB, Miss., a SAC base at the time. This was really something to watch, I can remember the wing tips looking like they were making contact with the runway they were "flapping" so much....looked really dangerous as a young airman. Was not a member of SAC as a controller, Comm Sq...then years later working the midnight shift at Da Nang we would mark the coordinates on our radar scopes where the B52s were making bombing run to create a no fly zone.

    • @tesmith47
      @tesmith47 4 года назад +1

      I was radio maintenance out of keesler too 1965

  • @JBSmoke1
    @JBSmoke1 7 месяцев назад +1

    Reminds me of my old SAC days. MITO's were great to watch!

  • @B1900pilot
    @B1900pilot 14 лет назад +5

    BEST aviation sequence filmed in Hollywood history!

    • @Reewen
      @Reewen 4 месяца назад

      personally I'd say the parachute scene from "A bridge too far" takes it though that wasn't filmed in hollywood

  • @videographer1KIK
    @videographer1KIK 4 года назад +4

    I worked on the B-52 in Andersen AFB, Guam and on the C-130 in Little Rock AFB, Arkansas!
    SAC STRATEGIC AIR COMMAND
    Persian Gulf War

  • @robf93
    @robf93 5 лет назад +23

    How can you not love a plane with eight J57s and water injection?

    • @davidgilbertson4354
      @davidgilbertson4354 3 года назад +1

      J57 - 43WB trimmed a lot of these at BEALE . Always fun when you hit the water inj switch 2000 lbs more thrust. 456 FMS eng. cond. Jet 16.

    • @robf93
      @robf93 3 года назад +2

      @@davidgilbertson4354 Cool stuff! I'm glad you had fun. I always wondered what the differences were in the minor variations of the J57; it was an excellent engine.
      Thank you for your service.

    • @robertsullivan4773
      @robertsullivan4773 Год назад

      You can't ❤️

    • @CaoimhinOMaol
      @CaoimhinOMaol 6 месяцев назад

      When one of the water pumps fails to work properly and you lose water-injection on the two engines on the strut. One pump feeding two engines. Or the water pump surges...water, then no water.

  • @cmscms123456
    @cmscms123456 5 лет назад +5

    khaki uniform 1505's I miss them. Looks very cool

  • @oisiaa
    @oisiaa 15 лет назад +3

    This video is a true pleasure for any SAC buff.

  • @alexp3752
    @alexp3752 6 лет назад +26

    Rod Taylor and Rock Hudson... They don't make fine stars like that anymore.
    This clip was from the film Gathering of Eagles.

    • @dgeneeknapp3168
      @dgeneeknapp3168 5 лет назад +4

      Can you imagine any of the actors of that day trying to make the kinds of movies today's snow flakes find acceptable? EVERYTHING these actors said/did would trigger the hell out of these idiots today. There would be a theater of people sitting and holding puppies, or bunnies, or turkeys, or whatever the hell it is they need...the concession would need hot cocoa.

    • @kirrich9441
      @kirrich9441 5 лет назад

      Rarely shown anywhere... :(

    • @artist92543
      @artist92543 4 года назад +2

      @@dgeneeknapp3168 They would need the biggest "safe spaces" EVER!

  • @stevedandy973
    @stevedandy973 10 лет назад +21

    GREAT movie. Back in SAC's heyday. I also wore the uniform these officers are wearing - the old 1505's. I can almost smell the jet fuel.

    • @hughcapetien
      @hughcapetien 10 лет назад +6

      Same here, kind of cool uniforms at the time - sharp!

    • @280StJohnsPl
      @280StJohnsPl 9 лет назад +1

      Hugh Lusignan
      Yep !
      USAF 1968-72

    • @captianconnorusafbr03.65
      @captianconnorusafbr03.65 9 лет назад +1

      What movie is it

    • @stevedandy973
      @stevedandy973 9 лет назад +4

      "A Gathering of Eagles."

    • @warplanner3258
      @warplanner3258 6 лет назад +4

      God, those were the greatest uniforms, weren't they? They were $5 a set and $1 to dry clean! No ties or coats, rank and wings easy to pin on. Head to the O Club, get shitfaced, come home, throw them in the laundry bag, put on a new set the next day..
      ..rinse and repeat.

  • @usafvet100
    @usafvet100 11 лет назад +7

    The T33 was fitted into the H Model, the biggest external differences between the 2 models were the 2-step nacelles for the turbofans and the 20mm rotary cannon in the tail as opposed to the 4 .50s in the Gs.

  • @1938dmkdz
    @1938dmkdz 13 лет назад +3

    When the ist B52G landed at Dow AFB I ran in front of it on the taxi runway I was
    so excited and after six months I couldn't stand them anymore. When we had alerts
    we had to sleep next to them.... I spent a total of two years with them and worked with
    Boeing to get parts for mainenance. The crew chiefs on these planes were really tops
    and I had alot of respect for these gentlemen, I was in SAC and I enjoyed it..

  • @tombutcher5776
    @tombutcher5776 7 лет назад +12

    1505's. They wear that uniform well. Belt perfect!

    • @danielpurcell7395
      @danielpurcell7395 3 года назад

      Gig line is what that’s called. That’s when we wore starched uniforms and spit shined combat boots or low quarters. These guys today wear what look like pajamas with booties. Lol

  • @howardhamer1379
    @howardhamer1379 9 лет назад +29

    The B-52 did not fall like a rock as one person commented. The glide angle for a B-52 was about 18 to 1. That is an aircraft that runs out of fuel at its maximun altitude (52,000ft) will glide160NM. This data is from my T.O. 1B-52G-1 page A8-3.

    • @WhiteGangster400
      @WhiteGangster400 9 лет назад +2

      What about a fighter jet? For example an F-15 or an F-16, wouldn't they sort of fall like a rock if their engines went out since they don't have a large surface area in their wings?

    • @howardhamer1379
      @howardhamer1379 9 лет назад +2

      WhiteGangster400
      The glide angle for the X-15. which had almost no wing area was 4 to 1. That is it went four feet forward for one foot down, it took about 5 minutes to glide down from 37,000ft. A F-15 or 16 would glide much better than the X-15 so its glide angle should be between 4.5 to 1 (Space Shuttle) and a Boeing 767 12 to 1. See Wikipedia "Gliding Flight".

    • @stevestreet5063
      @stevestreet5063 3 года назад +4

      Would Rock have fallen for Rod ?

  • @tutts999
    @tutts999 2 года назад +2

    I can remember watching this scene as a kid in the 70's and thought it as amazing.

  • @DontBuyChinese
    @DontBuyChinese 11 лет назад +5

    I worked at the B-52 alert facility at GFAFB, which was situated on the south end of the runways and west side of the base.

  • @usafvet100
    @usafvet100 10 лет назад +4

    Yes indeed, Grand Forks AFB, a bitterly cold January day such as North Dakota often offered. My shift was off duty and hanging out in the barracks when we heard the detonation and saw the fireball, we threw our parkas on and zoomed to the station, and were put to work refilling the crash trucks with water and foam, I'm amazed that we got the hydrants to work at -27F, and when it was all done we had to load the frozen hoses in pickups and take them back to the station to thaw out before we could

  • @craiglizt8074
    @craiglizt8074 Год назад +4

    What a plane!

  • @nowlookatthat
    @nowlookatthat 9 лет назад +6

    One great movie this is! And the late Rod Taylor 'in action'...

  • @Tubetopfan1
    @Tubetopfan1 14 лет назад +8

    I got the privilage of standing beside the runway during a MITO takeoff back in 1988. This was at Blytheville AFB (later changed to Eaker AFB before the base closed). It was quite impressive! Those turbojets sure could make some noise!
    Besides the turbulence from the plane that took off ahead of you, the MITO was dangerous because, if you were one of the lead planes, if you had engine problems, you couldn't abort takeoff. There was was another plane rapidly approaching you from behind.

  • @kirrich9441
    @kirrich9441 5 лет назад +1

    I was at the other end of the runway when they took off during the making of the movie and had an outstanding view!!!

  • @duck_rifle5879
    @duck_rifle5879 2 года назад +2

    Damnit what an era! I wish those were my days.

  • @nowhereman841
    @nowhereman841 11 лет назад +7

    Let's put it this way-I stuck my head through a porthole one deck below the flight deck late one evening just in time to see an F-14 Tomcat roar off one of the waist catapults at full afterburner. I can still see the bright blue flame and hear the earsplitting roar of the TF-30's as the plane completely filled my vision less than 20 feet away from me. I was absolutely terrified-and hooked on watching night flight ops forevermore-from a far safer place.

  • @jameswebb8162
    @jameswebb8162 3 года назад +4

    Awesome!!! Man I loved B-52Gs!!!

  • @daddy1racing
    @daddy1racing 10 лет назад +1

    I"m an ole' SAC brat and have witnessed a number of MITOs back in the day. This is one of my favorite movies along with Stewert's Strategic Air Command.
    Dad was with the B-58 Hustler program till it's retirement in 1969. Hustler MITOs were even more impressive with those afterburning J79s. Especially nighttime MITOs , B-58s roaring aloft 10 to 15 seconds apart, each trailing four long AB exhaust flames. Something one never forgets.
    After a reassignment to the 7th BW at Carswell AFB, and B-52Ds , I remember seeing 11 of those monster Boeings , MITO as they departed for Guam and Linebacker II.
    USAF and SAC proud. No points for second best.

    • @irish89055
      @irish89055 10 лет назад +2

      Have you seen Gen Stewart flying in a B-58 here on RUclips?

    • @daddy1racing
      @daddy1racing 10 лет назад

      Yes I have. My dad was assigned to the 43rd BW at Carswell AFB at the time of that flight, although he wasn't involved with Gen Stewert's flight. I was just shy of two years old at the time.
      Interestingly, the film Strategic Air Command shows several locations of significant in my life. My mom was born and raised in Tampa, Florida, plus dad was with the 305th at Macdill with the B-47 before the Hustler came along. I currently reside in the northern Tampa Bay area and am quite familiar with Macdill and Al Lang field , where Stewart's character was at spring training when called back to service.
      We also were at Carswell twice in my youth. First time with the B-58, second time , after the Hustler's retirement we went back with the 7th BW . Watching that film is like "old home " to me.

    • @Scottrchrdsn
      @Scottrchrdsn 10 лет назад

      The takeoff of the B-58 is depicted quite well in the movie "Fail Safe"; though SAC was such a prick about that movie (would not release even standard stock footage) that the movie team had to film the B-58 takeoff covertly. Most of the time SAC was quite impressive but they could also be very difficult to work with (like Gen LeMay).

  • @semco72057
    @semco72057 6 лет назад +8

    I have seen many of the G and H models taking off during ORI's at Minot and Barksdale AFB's and the D models during sorties going to Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos during the Vietnam War.

  • @saburusakai
    @saburusakai 9 лет назад +15

    Great movie, even if they were just playing it by ear beside the runway; they were only gonna get one chance to watch a SAC scramble that close.

  • @DontBuyChinese
    @DontBuyChinese 11 лет назад +3

    David, I was more on the administrative side when I was assigned to the 905th Air Refueling and 46th Bomb Squadrons which were a joint unit. I was the Chief Clerk and later the wing historian. I wrote much of the wing history of the 319th while I was there but so many years have passed I forgotten most of the details of what you are asking. I was also on the 319th FMS Corrosion Control Board.

  • @kevinwaddell8720
    @kevinwaddell8720 3 года назад +5

    The reason for the exercise was based on the premise that Soviet missiles were inbound (30 minutes from detectable launch) to take out the base and make it totally unusable so it was a "use it or lose it" proposition for the USAF planners.

  • @carlosmartinsribeirojr.1335
    @carlosmartinsribeirojr.1335 8 лет назад +7

    best scene of the movie. great !

  • @BadSneakers
    @BadSneakers 11 лет назад +5

    My dad is piloting of the BUFFS and I have a pic of the film crew filming this and Rock and Rod are definitely right there, but obviously they did voice overdubs.

  • @rdouglas747
    @rdouglas747 9 лет назад +23

    From my favorite movie, "A Gathering of Eagles", with Rock Hudson!

    • @BadSneakers
      @BadSneakers 8 лет назад +3

      +Jim Melton I was two. My dad was second in command Col Hammack, behind Gen Byerly

  • @blitz7341
    @blitz7341 14 лет назад +3

    damn those engines make alot of smoke, really cool clip!

  • @FylthyBeest
    @FylthyBeest 14 лет назад +2

    @sanfranciscobay Yes. It's Rock Hudson and Rod Taylor from the 1963 movie, "A Gathering of Eagles". And yes, they are standing alongside the runway during this Minimum Interval Takeoff (MITO). It was filmed, I believe, at Beale AFB, CA.

  • @usafvet100
    @usafvet100 11 лет назад +2

    Thanks for your service. Quite a rigamarole to get on the pad, wasn't it? Line badge exchange and password at the Guard Shack, then onto the pad, KC135s on the left and BUFFs on the right with a red line down the middle. Get the password of the day to cross the red line, then a final red line around each BUFF. We didn't cross that line unless the bird was on fire.

  • @Lancair84
    @Lancair84 11 лет назад +4

    Our crew (I was EWO) had summer leave (vacation) scheduled so when they wanted a crew to work with Paul Mantz that was not on the flying or Alert schedulte we were asked if we would give up our summer vacation. The copilot Wes Blanchard is living in NM. The squadron usually only had three ship MITOs so a five ship was unusual.

  • @bobdehler2812
    @bobdehler2812 4 года назад +2

    The black smoke is from 10,000 lbs of water being used during takeoff

  • @BadSneakers
    @BadSneakers 12 лет назад +3

    My dad was flying one of these BUFFs - Beale AFB, 1963 (at least that's when the movie was released.) I have a pic behind this of the film crew filming this. Note to the right of Rock and Rod - and you can see a shadow of film equipment.

  • @usafvet100
    @usafvet100 11 лет назад +1

    tested the proposition. I was at the CE barracks, a short walk to Captain Nemo's Subs and Sinkers to play Galaga, and the chow hall was very handy as well. Those were the days.

  • @usafvet100
    @usafvet100 13 лет назад +4

    @beerbrewer737 As a firefighter I had to do standby when a KC-135 was doing a rapid defuel- the truck would be parked about 50 yards from the tanker. At least one of the engines had to be at full-throttle, even with our mickey mouse ears on it was still an ear-splitting shreik. Our H-model BUFFs had turbofans- they were much quieter and not quite as smokey as the G models.

    • @PlasmaCoolantLeak
      @PlasmaCoolantLeak Год назад +1

      Was POL, did more than a few rapid defuels, can vouch for the noise, oi, LOL

  • @clendenenjames8804
    @clendenenjames8804 2 года назад +3

    The b 52 is a great plane,I. Love it, when I work in Dallas I could always tell a b 52 by its large tail wing, GO GO B 52

  • @hueydewylouie
    @hueydewylouie 9 лет назад +1

    I was stationed at Travis AFB from 1965-67 (yes, there once was a SAC wing at Travis) and watched several MITOs. One day the wing commander, who was flying the last plane, almost crashed due to the turbulence. No more MITOs after that.

    • @teenagerinsac
      @teenagerinsac 9 лет назад

      Late sister was married to a USAF TSGT stationed at Travis 1976, next door neighbor was SMS Mc Elwain, he was NCOIC of the then Tanker squadron stationed there, there were no longer bombers there at that time. SMS Mc Elwain had formerly served as maintenance chief for AF One during the early 70's, when the 707-320 was used (Spirit Of 76)

    • @tombutcher5776
      @tombutcher5776 5 лет назад

      I was born at Travis Dec 1950 the son of an AF pilot! My Dad was God to me. Later on I spent 13 months in SEA and of course Air Force.

  • @FylthyBeest
    @FylthyBeest 13 лет назад +4

    @fernfeyes Absolutely. The sound of freedom. Good for you and your spirit of patriotism.

  • @rosewhite---
    @rosewhite--- 5 лет назад +3

    just such an awesome engineering marvel!

  • @gallantrycross
    @gallantrycross 12 лет назад

    I was in TAC during the Vietnam War and had occasion to be stationed on a SAC base once. Man, were those guys uptight. I'm glad I never was in SAC. The best outfit I was ever with was the 374th Tactical Airlift Wing, with C-130A models during the Vietnam War. Loose and convivial. We were good, picked up a Presidential Unit Citation, Air Force Outstanding Unit Award with Combat "V", etc. The best units are those that are hip and can cut through the bullshit. The job comes first.

  • @usafvet100
    @usafvet100 13 лет назад +1

    @saptono the massive "fowler flaps" that extend from the wings' trailing edges. We had Gs and Hs at Grand Forks, the Gs' engines were J-57s, and like the ones in the video clip, they emitted a lot of smoke. They also emitted an ear-splitting high-frequency shriek that wasn't fun to be around. The H's turbofans were quieter. Inside the aircraft, It's amazing how cramped the crew's quarters are, and what little space there is is taken up with instruments, electronic and avionics gear. Those

  • @Mark_Ocain
    @Mark_Ocain 8 лет назад +16

    Water/ methanol injection... the ultimate in 'rollining coal'

    • @phugwad
      @phugwad 2 года назад +1

      Water injection, no methanol. In fact, because there was no methanol we would have to dump the water everytime the temperature dropped below freezing, so it wouldn freeze in the tank and pipes. The KC-135 used a heater in the water storage tank, so they didn't have to dump water if the temperature dropped a few degrees below freezing.
      I recall that, back in the 1980s, the demineralized water cost something like $1/ gallon. During the winter in California we sometimes dumped the water each night on alert and then filled the tank back up in the morning, over $1,000 per plane per dump.

  • @afchiefe9
    @afchiefe9 11 лет назад +6

    I maintained the AGM28B Hound Dog Missile you see under its wings for 11 years before they were phased out during the SALT II agreements.

    • @jimrudolph4199
      @jimrudolph4199 2 года назад

      Actually I think it was GAM-77 (nicknamed "Hound Dog") under the wings, the AGM-28 was (nicknamed the "Quail") carried in bombbay.

    • @aclidinst
      @aclidinst 2 года назад

      @@jimrudolph4199 I also maintained the AGM28B, they were under the wings as the movie shows. 71-74

  • @Ronin4614
    @Ronin4614 5 лет назад +1

    Films like this were part of the curriculum at Cold War USAF SOS. The films were Hollywood hyped, and we knew that. The focus was on the leadership styles that the films portrayed.

  • @davenone7312
    @davenone7312 3 года назад

    Filmed at Beale AFB California as was Tom Hanks movie Bridge of Spies. The U-2 was in Dk-7 as was the chalkboard training scenes.

  • @jpatt1000
    @jpatt1000 14 лет назад +1

    I can't believe how much smoke they used to belch out! Not just these either, all of 'em.

  • @MrCrapmatic
    @MrCrapmatic 8 лет назад +9

    1:27 "14 seco.." "CHECK"
    "Goddammit, stop interrupting!"

    • @RCsportflyer22
      @RCsportflyer22 5 лет назад

      Everytime i watch this i think the same thing hahaha

  • @FylthyBeest
    @FylthyBeest 14 лет назад +3

    @Evolition180 That "air pollution" kept millions of people safe during very turbulent times.

  • @kolbpilot
    @kolbpilot 15 лет назад

    I was in the A.F. for 8 yrs. in the '80's as a jet mech. 6 yrs. at Ellsworth where we had 'H' models, but all the '135's' were still using J57-59W's. Water injection take offs were always fun to watch. My last year & a half was at Loring which had 'G' models. MITO take offs were always impressive to watch. The pilots from about #3 on back had their hands full fighting all the turbulence from the ones ahead.

    • @davidgilbertson4354
      @davidgilbertson4354 3 года назад

      Remember the fuel control DWI . Ever make an adjustment while in water? I have pretty exciting.😁

    • @kolbpilot
      @kolbpilot 3 года назад

      @@davidgilbertson4354 : Actually I have, once. KC-135. I didn't like the experience. Rattled all my bones. I wised up after that.

  • @AndrewOfMA
    @AndrewOfMA 8 лет назад +11

    The B-52 may well be the most cost effective weapons systems the US ever bought. To my mind, instead of trying to come up with a new bomber, we should just build new ones, albeit with updated avionics and engines.

    • @BEDT14
      @BEDT14 8 лет назад +4

      Long thought that myself. Same with the A-10. The patterns should be in storage somewhere.

    • @warplanner8852
      @warplanner8852 4 года назад

      They last B-52H model rolled out in 1962 or so. They just have been refurbished since then. It is astounding for a military aircraft with its mission whose first-time flight (XB-52) was in 1952!

    • @georgegonzalez2476
      @georgegonzalez2476 2 года назад

      The missions and the anti-aircraft technology has changed a lot since then. You might want to tweak a few things so the pilots don't have to babysit 8 engines, make it a lot stealthier, and optimized for roles other than nuclear delivery.

  • @cartman4885
    @cartman4885 4 года назад +1

    A great scene from a fantastic film..................

  • @northwestprof60
    @northwestprof60 6 лет назад +35

    More than a little weird to hear and see Rock Hudson worried about rules in the armed forces. Don't ask, don't tell, eh Rock?

    • @larryl212
      @larryl212 3 года назад

      The other actor... same "tribe." Ironic.

    • @dmize67
      @dmize67 3 года назад +1

      He was a Corsair mechanic in the Pacific in WWII. He served so shut the fuck up.

  • @robw3027
    @robw3027 5 лет назад

    If you like SAC and the B-52, ya have to love this clip. SAC kept world peace through strength and effective deterrence. Those B-52's look sweet with the Hound Dog missiles under each wing. One can hope that SAC will be back. To those that served in SAC- many thanks.

    • @veg1run
      @veg1run 5 лет назад

      Global Strike Command is the modern day version of SAC.

  • @speedskiff2
    @speedskiff2 15 лет назад +2

    early jet engines used a total loss oiling system adding to the smoke. Newer designs took care of that. Heck, they had degreasers back then that would melt skin. Wish I could find a video of B-58 MITO.

  • @DontBuyChinese
    @DontBuyChinese 11 лет назад +3

    Back about the same time, the USAF at GFAFB had a jet engine test cell facility in which B--52s engines were test run. Now here is something hard to believe. Right next door was a horse riding stable on base. Must have been some pretty deaf horses. I remember this very well. Do you? Also, lots of base closures during winter months (traffic conditions alpha, bravo or charlie), when sometimes non mission-essential people would be excused from work.

  • @kolbpilot
    @kolbpilot 14 лет назад +1

    @Tubetopfan1 I too, had the privilage of witnessing more MITOs than I can recall during most of the 80's. 'H' models at Ellsworth (although they had water burning 'A' model tankers) & both water injection J57-59W on the 'G' model bombers & the ever present 'A' model KC-135's. I should have taken more pictures.

  • @ironroad18
    @ironroad18 15 лет назад +4

    They had to be able to take off that fast in order to get up, get their target package, and be in route well before any ICMBS or Bombers hit their base.

    • @infantryattacks
      @infantryattacks 2 года назад

      The SAC bases in CA were vulnerable to all the above, but they were particularly vulnerable to the launches of depressed-trajectory SLBMs.

    • @hoghogwild
      @hoghogwild 7 месяцев назад

      @@infantryattacks Imagine the UK?

  • @usafvet100
    @usafvet100 11 лет назад +1

    The noise and activity didn't seem to bother the jackrabbits, the base was overrun with the critters. We had a dalmation mix named "Blaze" as our station mascot, he always rode in the Asst Chief's truck when we were on a run. On the way back, there would usually be swarms of jackrabbits beneath the water tower near the station, Chief Griifis would let Blaze out to chase them around.

  • @jamesdelaroche242
    @jamesdelaroche242 3 года назад +1

    B52 pilots started the Hound Dog engines on take-off for a little extra boost.

  • @timengineman2nd714
    @timengineman2nd714 2 года назад +2

    I'm not sure when the B-52s started to Takeoff with all 10 engines running! But they strengthen the pylons that carried the Hound Dog missiles and started firing them up to shorten their takeoff runs! After a while they even took it a step further and made it where the B-52s could refill the Hound Dog's fuel tanks (before meeting with the KC-135s)....

    • @hoghogwild
      @hoghogwild 7 месяцев назад

      They did have that capability. Then they could shut it down, refuel the missile and launch it. . 2 Houndogs under the wings and 4 Quails decoys in the bays.

  • @victormioduszewski4729
    @victormioduszewski4729 3 года назад

    Great film....That depicts the Reality of the Men and Women of the USAF and their dedication and work to protect our country way of life...

  • @mpgingdl
    @mpgingdl 15 лет назад +4

    Thanks. I'd known the old J57s used water injection, but I never knew they were THAT smoky--it almost looks like the engines are all on fire. Any wonder why the military has long been a leader in efforts to produce cleaner engines?

  • @surchris
    @surchris 16 лет назад +1

    Those old turbojets were smokey, but not that smokey. These B-52s are taking off with water injection.

  • @ghostinthemachine8243
    @ghostinthemachine8243 3 года назад

    This was a pretty good movie.

  • @FylthyBeest
    @FylthyBeest 13 лет назад +2

    @olinr2007 Good for you! Seriously. How special it truly is that you were there serving. My hat's off to you. What did you mean when you stated "they lost the first one"? First film capture? I'm glad you were there to see this.

  • @BadSneakers
    @BadSneakers 14 лет назад +1

    They weren't - this was a "live" exercise they were allowed to film. I have devoted a Facebook group to GOE as my dad was flying a B52 in this scene. On it, you can see a pic of the production crew filming this scene.

  • @hoku51
    @hoku51 15 лет назад +2

    SAC crewdogs, love all that smoke, IMC on takeoff, very sporty. BT-DT.

  • @FylthyBeest
    @FylthyBeest 13 лет назад

    @snidelywhiplash Thanks for the endorsement and the comments. Have you seen the early 80's Exercise Global Shield 16-ship MITO at the RUclips post, "Global Shield.mpg". Excellent amateur video shot by some of the maintainers at Griffiss AFB.

  • @thomastarwater2989
    @thomastarwater2989 Год назад

    This scene is from A GATHERING OF EAGLES (1963), starring Rock Hudson as Jim Caldwell, Colonel, United States Air Force who takes command of a B-52 bomber squadron after they flunk a no-notice operation readiness inspection (ORI) and tries to shape the unit for the next ORI. The impressive cast included Mary Peach (whose Hollywood career never took off-pardon the pun), Rod Taylor, Richard Anderson, Barry Sullivan, Kevin McCarthy, Henry Silva, Robert Lansing, Robert Bray, Richard LePore, Leora Dana, Nelson Leigh, Leif Erickson, Russ Bender, and an unbilled Louise Fletcher as an airman’s wife and Brandon De Wilde (SHANE) as Bill Fowler Jr. Also unbilled were John Zaremba (EARTH VS. THE FLYING SAUCERS), Stuart Wade (MONSTER FROM THE OCEAN FLOOR), Bing Russell (THE LAND UNKNOWN), , Ward Ramsey (DINOSAURUS!), and Ed Kemmer (EARTH VS. THE SPIDER). I saw this movie as a kid and ohhhh and ahhhhed at the big airplanes. Saw it again and was still impressed at the B-52s in flight. The Stratofortresses are still flying in 2023. And this is still a great movie.

  • @colindominy
    @colindominy 14 лет назад

    Compared to real-world protocols .. ear / eye protection, et al .. even in the early 60s .. this footage from this great movie is nonetheless very thrilling & exciting. Could've been used for a Recruitment Drive !! Rod Taylor .. the expat Australian Actor well-known during the late 50s & on thr'out the 60s .. was a truly gifted actor, who, like the legendary George Reeves, possessed that certain special gift they call CHARISMA. He brought added-value & great cred to every role he ever played.

  • @tca90210
    @tca90210 14 лет назад +1

    Wow! Wanna see this in real life that close!

  • @warplanner8852
    @warplanner8852 2 года назад

    "A suck for SAC is a blow for peace"
    ~SAC motto

  • @usafvet100
    @usafvet100 13 лет назад +2

    @saptono Have had the opportunity to look up :"Able Archer," interestingly enough, this vent took place while I was stationed at Grand forks, ND, a SAC Base. Although I'm still unconvinced about the possibility of SAC delievering a pre-emptive strike, it does help understand Soviet perceptions of the period. First of all, Soviet leadership was beginning to see the handwriting on the wall, that being that the Cold War was not going in their favor. While I don't see President Reagan willingly

  • @alovedone2251
    @alovedone2251 6 лет назад +30

    And somewhere, Al Gore is shedding a tear.

    • @tombutcher5776
      @tombutcher5776 5 лет назад +1

      Lol! Fat Albert!

    • @dgeneeknapp3168
      @dgeneeknapp3168 5 лет назад +3

      Liberal tears are soooo delicious!!!

    • @killman369547
      @killman369547 4 года назад +2

      +A LovedOne. Eh, he's a massive hypocrite anyway, i'm amazed anyone listens to him when just one of his mansions uses more power than a small city.

    • @larryl212
      @larryl212 3 года назад +1

      @@killman369547 Massive mansion... on a bay. 30 year mortgage. Guess Gore's banker didn't think that particular bay would suffer the horrors of a melting ice pack.

    • @stevesestrich5143
      @stevesestrich5143 2 года назад

      @@larryl212 Jealous? Well, your trailer has a smaller carbon footprint, I'll give you that.

  • @BadSneakers
    @BadSneakers 13 лет назад

    Let me repeat this: they are really standing next to the runway while the planes are taking off. I'm sure the audio/voices were overdubbed. I have a picture of Hudson and Taylor and the film crew filming this. My dad is flying one of the B52s. if you're on Facebook I have devoted a fan site to this movie - just search "Gathering of Eagles the movie". If you look again at this video you can see a shadow of some of the filming equipment.

  • @my-yt-inputs2580
    @my-yt-inputs2580 Год назад

    Love this movie. As I watch this I cringe at the lack of hearing protection for these 2 actors. Being in similar positions in my early AF career working the B-52.

  • @nordan00
    @nordan00 Год назад

    Crazy shit from the height of the Cold War. Brings back memories of good laughs at the alert shack, the chow hall, changeover, C square, meetings of the financial committee, alert Olympics, hall polo, nuke snowball fights, klaxons, TAAN radios, six packs, the keys to the base gym, and all the rest of that BUFF Cold War shit! Those were the days!