@@WebDiice Chorus girls were proper and didn't get into much in terms of excitement. So they in particular wouldn't be able to handle their liquor and would therefore stumble about when drinking.
@@booksgaming1426 What's it like to just completely buy all the propaganda the media directs at you? Do you even realize that you have no opinions you formed yourself, or do you actually believe you're a free and intelligent thinker? You'd be embarrassed if you could see the truth behind every big headline you blindly accept. So it's pretty ironic that YOU are the problem with this world, while you sit back mocking others that are trying to help you.
yah the rate of advance in the 20th century is insane. communication / transport / industrialization reached a point which enabled sparks to fly. The output not only being material & ideas being realized, but human population itself exploded.
@@JVT- We can't say one way or another but the facts are that they went from mostly blowing up and burning up (a handful of people DID die, but not in space) on the launchpad, to allegedly making 6 or 7 successful landings, with rovers and cameras and everything working perfectly, and did all those landings in a span of less than 3 years with zero casualties. That's almost hard to believe for many. All the stuff about NASA being fake and stealing the money is just a distraction. Its more likely than not, that it was faked as a gotcha on the soviets.
@@fenrix155 you're right, I didn't know that's how English speakers pronounce bologna. It's so far from the original that the thought didn't even cross my mind. The joke makes more sense now. The more you know...
It’s the same thing for every other fancy thing that exists. People just had fun fiddling around with stuff until they got something good. And those two oversized pinwheels are an amazing idea
It all started with the vibrating umbrella-orthopter "Sky Car" by James Pitts, then the umbrella was closed with a dome and devices appeared according to the scheme of conventional electromagnetic vibrating speakers (membrane + inductance) - fragments of the membrane were found by a farmer in Roswell. Then they created piezoelectric motors or with small dischargers on the surface (they glowed all over the body due to air ionization), and now these are aircraft with plasma propulsion panels (because they are angular - that is, with flat surfaces). Thousands of discharge cells are packed tightly in the motor panels - they shoot plasma streams (railgun architecture - coaxial electrodes). The ionized air of the spark discharge is accelerated in the railgun cell by the Lorentz force to enormous speeds - a kind of ramjet engine is obtained. Just imagine! - tens of thousands of small ramjet engines assembled in a panel and firing plasma synchronously with a huge frequency (hundreds of kilohertz). Plasma jets form toroidal vortices of air - this air cushion creates lift and acceleration force. In my article "UFO - it's made in the USA" and in the books "UFO Hunting" and "UFO Elimination" all this is described in detail. The technology is quite mundane - it is known in the smallest details due to information leaks. For example, air ionization in coaxial railgun cells is created with the help of radiation (radioactive polonium is introduced into the metal). Devices of this type were used all 50-60-70-80 for secret missions (they took off, as a rule, from special submarines). With the fall of the USSR, their use by the United States was practically curtailed (in the novel "Little Green Men" by Christopher Buckley, a speechwriter for Bush Sr., a scene is described where the US president decides to curtail the project with "flying saucers"). The curtailment of the project can be recorded by the drop in magnesium consumption in the United States, since such fuel was used in fuel cells (magnesium tapes burned in forced galvanic batteries), this is 2007-2008. However, the development of the technology continued later in the Russian Federation and China (the technology was restored by reverse engineering methods for downed devices). Secrecy, however, remained, and there was no civilian use, because the technology is not suitable for this - harmful microwave from pulsed plasma engines (harm to pilots and the impact on electrical appliances inside and along the flight line). The payload is low (but one nuclear charge will pull.) There is no radio communication - unmanned vehicles can fly and maneuver only according to the program. Previously, there was a narrow application profile - rare spy missions (so that pilots do not receive a lot of radiation). Reconnaissance aircraft of this type were often observed at military bases, missile launch pads and airfields. They were even seen by peaceful explorers in the taiga, where glades were laid for seismic exploration - UFOs flew there to check whether military construction was underway (I myself heard stories about it))). I think this technology will be declassified soon, and cargo airships with flickering round plasma panels on the hull surface will appear in the Arctic sky.
@@e.sstudios1015 "Then" is a comparison word for time based structured sentences. "Than" is a comparison word used for comparing 1 or more things to 1 or more things.
Same thing happening with programming. Lots of coding competitions with prizes and stuff. Later on we will have to use what corporations sell. Home programming will be obsolete.
@@scottl.1568 The engineer would think that, but I see that man as the financier, and after seeing that I don't think there will be any more payments for the engineer.
The key was being able to vary the pitch of the blade during its cyclic rotation so that for example if the vehicle is leaning left, increase the pitch only in that portion of the rotation that is on the left. If this cyclic pitch control is controlled by the gyroscopic effect of a spinning disc stability can be generally obtained. Then in addition, if the pitch is increased collectively to all blades at all points, lift is achieved I think.
Yea but it’s a lot more complicated, like when you increase blade pitch you increase blade drag which requires more engine output which makes more torque which does silly stuff, then you got another thing called “gyroscopic procession” which everyone pretends to understand but if something goes wrong with the helicopter you just blame it on gyroscopic procession then redesign the cyclic and hope it doesn’t happen again
100 years later we flew an automated helicopter on another planet... That's legit insane think about how much technological progress we have had over the past 100 years vs all of recorded human history
@@volarex4178 they purposely all sounded the same and had that same acccent for a reason. Familiarity. Theres different accents all over america so they chose the "accent neutral" so that it sounded formal clean and understandable to everyone.
@Corporal Adrian Shepard no the point of it was to vilify him and by extension you for saying the most stereotypical zoomer bullshit ever. This video is about antique aircraft and what do you have to say about it being most likely the age from 14-20? You compare these historic videos to fucking video games like anyone cares. The only thing worse would be to compare it to an anime. It’s so pathetic
@BOGDAN SERBAN Such a wooden surface with a man behind it and a beer tap built in. On the other side of the wooden surface there are usually beardy people sitting, laughing at manly jokes while holding a beer glass in their hand.
@BOGDAN SERBAN A bar is a segment of time within musical notation which usually consists of 4 beats of music. The start and stop of each bar is signified using a black vertical line.
Whoa. It feels like a sandbox game like besiege with the way they build those helicopters. Damn we went from clunky propeller machines to modern, better helicopters like Blackhawks and Pave Lows.
I used to fuel helicopters....WHILE they were running!.... blade spinning 10ft from the Fuel tanker.....pretty fucking terrifying feeling.......It's called a "hot fuel". Mostly for Police or Military, when they have to quickly return to the air. But helicopter blades are WAY longer than they look......fuel hoses are JUST long enough to get the job done. Those ground crews have a Super dangerous job.
@@scottowens398maybe it could have taken off, but I don't think it just wouldn't have fallen apart after a few seconds of flying with that much wobbling
Lol I love the things the narrator said the two that made me laugh the most was try this on your next hangover and this is how they got airsick in 1921
Vintage videos and documentation of old innovations are as important as the invention itself. It's there to remind the general public that the discovery you see today, despite how silly and unimportant it is, will change and shape the world in the near future.
Seeing these crazy machines from a century ago we can easily say that they would obviously never work and those attempts surely do look hilarious to us now (especially the one at 00:45), but those of us who think that little of those machines are nothing but fools who are taking everything for granted! Nothing begins perfect. Those people back then weren't failing and coming up with crazy ideas that could not work; they were learning and coming up with ideas of how to not build a helicopter. Tried something and it didn't work? Add it to the list of mistakes and move on to something else until they eventually figured it out, built a thing that actually works and then over time, perfected it more and more until it came the time were we can say that we have the safest and best helicopters ever designed and built so far. We can laugh, but lest us not forget to do so with respect, because those pioneers deserve it! On that note, the current attempts at "flying cars" we have today (and have had for at least the past 50 years) will one day, if flying cars ever do become an actual thing, be looked at by people in the future with very similar eyes and thoughts as the ones we use today when looking back at these early attempts at making a helicopter. The only limit for the human mind and creativity is time and the laws of physics, after all! Having said all that... dafuq 00:45! lolol XD
The narrator is hilarious. Roasting everyone's machines lol
Shut up kid
@@nativetube You’re the kid, though? 🧐
@@nativetube japa koniu
@@nativetube cry some more, kid
@@nativetube who talks like this
We laugh, of course, but it´s important to remember that these brave pioneers gave us today´s safe, beautiful and nice riding choppers!!
Jose Marmontel You can always tell an aviation pioneer by sight - They're the ones with the helicopter blades in their backs.
@Ginseng Road damn son
"Safe"
Olha o Brasil aí. Você é um ótimo professor, José. Obrigado pelo seu trabalho!
I dont laugh.
In fact, i could watch experimentation videos like these for hours.
RESPECT TO THESE MEN. no matter how failed they were
Agreed
Blood clot respect dat
They failed that's we are enjoying the technology today
What have women done in society, beside complains about the size of the toilet on planes 😔
@@mukbang4265 :)
"The stability of an intoxicated chorus girl.”
Who knew black and white footage could have such colorful narration?
bro that was... poetic
how is it anyhow surprising?
Am I the only one who didn't get it:\
@@WebDiice Chorus girls were proper and didn't get into much in terms of excitement. So they in particular wouldn't be able to handle their liquor and would therefore stumble about when drinking.
That announcer knew how to have a good time. XD
00:45 who the hell thought this was a good idea lmao
No idea, but it seems fun
Just imagine in the nam war you hear tump tump tump ka boooom
he just wanted to make something people could laugh at a 100 years later
it's look like a fucking machine, Lmao
Doctor Seuss
I like how the announcer was roasting each and everyone of those inventors 😂
Lmaoooo 🤣😂😂😂😂😂
Never got as high as an elephants eye
Because in 1920’s you said what you meant.
@@anthonyjh02 hahaha yes and today if you breathing someone might feel offended.
You remind me of Indian tech support scammers
This looks like something I'd build in bad piggies as a kid
I read this while exactly thinking about bad piggies umbrella
SAAAAAAAAME
😂
Good old game.
Lol same
"Try this on your next hangover" i swear the narrator is poetic
“Not as high as an elephant’s eye
how is that poetic
@1:00 - "This aerial bucking bronco has the stability of an intoxicated chorus girl"
The narrator knows his chorus girls...
lol
I love how he was just low-key roasting everybody
They knew it
I hear it as "This aerial fucking bronco" lmao
I heard "Fuckin Bronco"
lmfao
The umbrella one has me dying, lol. That would be one hell of a ride, for sure.
I'm surprised the thing didn't tear itself apart. Or maybe they stopped rolling moments before.
Not the best way to keep your lunch down.
Imagine if that was the design that worked and all future aircraft was based on that
@@GenericInternetter bruh I would be terrified riding an aircraft
thats extra useful if one practice soaking and hump jump
0:45 It's the world's first lowrider! lol
Looks creepy
🤣🤣🤣
LOL 🤣
jajajajajajaja la wea
Still Dr dre
“The stability of an intoxicated chorus girl.”
That’s, . . . Oddly specific.
0:45 so that's a 20's lowrider.
*PIMP MY RIDE*
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
Pimp My Ride featuring Kaiser Willhelm
Snoop dog
1920 snoop dogg
Funny to see the 1950's low key burning the 1920's.
Hindsight is worth more then gold.
In capital and in humor.
I wonder how they'll roast us decades from now.
@@34zakk First burn point: "LOL, I can't believe you're the decade that voted for Trump. Was science not taught in your school?"
@@booksgaming1426 I think it's just gonna get worse in that department
@@booksgaming1426 What's it like to just completely buy all the propaganda the media directs at you? Do you even realize that you have no opinions you formed yourself, or do you actually believe you're a free and intelligent thinker? You'd be embarrassed if you could see the truth behind every big headline you blindly accept. So it's pretty ironic that YOU are the problem with this world, while you sit back mocking others that are trying to help you.
The umbrella copter looks like something directly out of loony toons cartoon!
😂😂😂 I cant hold it man
“As light as cast iron can make her” I feel like that was some 1920s sarcasm right there😂😂
Woken Artist it went ⬆️⬇️⬆️⬇️⬆️⬇️⬆️⬇️⬆️⬇️
Lol
😂😜🤣🤣
good word write
People are talking about failure , but the first one must have been an amazing victory for the inventor , and the invention of helicopter
Just 49 years later, man set foot on the moon. Incredible, isn't it?
yah the rate of advance in the 20th century is insane. communication / transport / industrialization reached a point which enabled sparks to fly. The output not only being material & ideas being realized, but human population itself exploded.
That never happened
@@salehmansour1 and a few decades later, you guys appeared
Then there's people crying about moon landing not being real lmao
@@JVT- We can't say one way or another but the facts are that they went from mostly blowing up and burning up (a handful of people DID die, but not in space) on the launchpad, to allegedly making 6 or 7 successful landings, with rovers and cameras and everything working perfectly, and did all those landings in a span of less than 3 years with zero casualties. That's almost hard to believe for many. All the stuff about NASA being fake and stealing the money is just a distraction. Its more likely than not, that it was faked as a gotcha on the soviets.
“Try this on your next hangover.”
What a marvelous quote.
"just let her loose, where she goes nobody knows"
This line fits somewhere
lmfao
It fit in the video
My ex-wife's biography
Where a naive man with a lot of cash is
@@CTKearns take my like and fucking leave youtube this shit cracked me up lmao
00:45 when your all into engineering but don't know how physics work
_"They call her the flying sausage, but to that perspiring ground crew she was just a lot of bologna."_
10/10
"Balloony*"
@@arianagandhi7595 *baloney
you had one job...
@@ArgentavisMagnificens I don’t see the error here
@@fenrix155 you're right, I didn't know that's how English speakers pronounce bologna. It's so far from the original that the thought didn't even cross my mind. The joke makes more sense now. The more you know...
Helicopters are insanely difficult, and being the ones to design them must’ve been a massive challenge.
Probably is
It’s the same thing for every other fancy thing that exists. People just had fun fiddling around with stuff until they got something good. And those two oversized pinwheels are an amazing idea
It all started with the vibrating umbrella-orthopter "Sky Car" by James Pitts, then the umbrella was closed with a dome and devices appeared according to the scheme of conventional electromagnetic vibrating speakers (membrane + inductance) - fragments of the membrane were found by a farmer in Roswell. Then they created piezoelectric motors or with small dischargers on the surface (they glowed all over the body due to air ionization), and now these are aircraft with plasma propulsion panels (because they are angular - that is, with flat surfaces). Thousands of discharge cells are packed tightly in the motor panels - they shoot plasma streams (railgun architecture - coaxial electrodes). The ionized air of the spark discharge is accelerated in the railgun cell by the Lorentz force to enormous speeds - a kind of ramjet engine is obtained. Just imagine! - tens of thousands of small ramjet engines assembled in a panel and firing plasma synchronously with a huge frequency (hundreds of kilohertz). Plasma jets form toroidal vortices of air - this air cushion creates lift and acceleration force. In my article "UFO - it's made in the USA" and in the books "UFO Hunting" and "UFO Elimination" all this is described in detail. The technology is quite mundane - it is known in the smallest details due to information leaks. For example, air ionization in coaxial railgun cells is created with the help of radiation (radioactive polonium is introduced into the metal). Devices of this type were used all 50-60-70-80 for secret missions (they took off, as a rule, from special submarines). With the fall of the USSR, their use by the United States was practically curtailed (in the novel "Little Green Men" by Christopher Buckley, a speechwriter for Bush Sr., a scene is described where the US president decides to curtail the project with "flying saucers"). The curtailment of the project can be recorded by the drop in magnesium consumption in the United States, since such fuel was used in fuel cells (magnesium tapes burned in forced galvanic batteries), this is 2007-2008. However, the development of the technology continued later in the Russian Federation and China (the technology was restored by reverse engineering methods for downed devices). Secrecy, however, remained, and there was no civilian use, because the technology is not suitable for this - harmful microwave from pulsed plasma engines (harm to pilots and the impact on electrical appliances inside and along the flight line). The payload is low (but one nuclear charge will pull.) There is no radio communication - unmanned vehicles can fly and maneuver only according to the program. Previously, there was a narrow application profile - rare spy missions (so that pilots do not receive a lot of radiation). Reconnaissance aircraft of this type were often observed at military bases, missile launch pads and airfields. They were even seen by peaceful explorers in the taiga, where glades were laid for seismic exploration - UFOs flew there to check whether military construction was underway (I myself heard stories about it))). I think this technology will be declassified soon, and cargo airships with flickering round plasma panels on the hull surface will appear in the Arctic sky.
What the fuss about?
Just spin fan realy fast and it fly
President Harris: "Ah, good. The Air Force is here with those new round planes!"
This announcer is savage even by 2019 standards
Whatever you say Stone Cold Steve Austin
I agree
You are absolutely correct, his sneering, scornful attitude is totally disgusting.
What @@douglasallen511?
This is so fun to watch by the narrator alone
Even in this worst year ever 2020
“The stability of an intoxicated chorus girl!” Brilliant 🤣😂
😂😂😂😂
what is a chorus girl?
"This aerial bucking bronco had the stability of an intoxicated chorus girl"
Man, I love the 1920s
I love the "overly manly man" -meme style back then!
1920s was silent film this was made in the 40s probably
And no Karen's "That's offensive!" bullshit.
Near the end of the video he said "back in 1921" so I don't think it was made in the 20s
@Mr. crusader Probably 60s or 70s in fact because the narrator clearly knows what a proper helicopter is supposed to look like and function
"This aerial bucking-broncho has the stability of an intoxicated chorus girl!"
1:20 Just let her loose and where she goes, nobody knows 😂
They called her the flying sausage😭😭
Bro i heard at at the same time i read it
wtf happened to ur username
The qaulity is still way better then a bank security camera that cost more than the old cameras
Cameras costs a fortune back then... b&w Film was really expensive...
Is it really "Then" or "Than"?
Modern security cameras are cheap and 4k
@@e.sstudios1015 "Then" is a comparison word for time based structured sentences. "Than" is a comparison word used for comparing 1 or more things to 1 or more things.
That joke is getting stale
"Try this on your next hangover"
hahaha holy shit the absolute savagery
“Let her go and where she goes nobody knows.” Classy
know*
these people are crazy... legends,we will never do any of this
If you never go beyond normal, you will never advance
Horror Ak If we didn’t have people like this, there would be no world today
Theses people had an idea that to some seem crazy but they didn’t cared what other people thought so they put it to the test.
@@matthewl2036 some of them also died.
now people are busy inventing new pronouns and genders, also nowadays nobody does anything if it doesn't either get you money or fame. Sad society
“Never got as high as an elephants eye”…. Definitely related to Eminem.
Narrator's roasting make this even better.
Humor aside, it’s amazing to see how optimistic they were
Look at today's helicopters and see how far we have come. They have a right to be optimistic :)
Homo Sapiens
1) Baby steps
2) Giant leaps
3) Modern helicopters.
"Haste towards the wurstcopter!"
~Baron Arnold von Schwarzenegger
_The wurstcopterfleppenmachine_
@@WolfEpsilon Wurstschrauberflattermaschine*
Lmao
@@kevinpeng8295 lol
it's crazy to think how people back in the days were trying to make helicopters, and now they sell mini drones for like $10
That's how advancements work. Its just a matter of time before we will have robotic wings
@@abdulalimsayem5225 if that happens hen most living thing on earth will just perish cuz of the deadly radiation of nuke bombs
@@abdulalimsayem5225 also since technology is advance now one or more country will survive and live on
A helicopter, even an RC one, is a much more complex machine than a drone (at least mechanically).
Same thing happening with programming. Lots of coding competitions with prizes and stuff. Later on we will have to use what corporations sell. Home programming will be obsolete.
Can we respect how the narrator roast every helicopter?
0:43 I respect them but I can't stop laugh at this 😂
ROFL!!!
Lol haha
Lol
İt's Angry bird
@@lancep1 lol
00:45 I felt sorry for the man in the back, he seems to think "shit, I wasted my money"
Lmao what an underrated comment
@Jack der Hauptsturmführer lmaoo
LOL
In reality he was thinking "Back to the drawing board..."
@@scottl.1568 The engineer would think that, but I see that man as the financier, and after seeing that I don't think there will be any more payments for the engineer.
Thanksfuly they invented camera before the aviation technology
We are blessed.
@Crazy Janissary :)
Strange that isn't it.
Camera, "is" technology.
@@andrewwright. you one of those kids?
The key was being able to vary the pitch of the blade during its cyclic rotation so that for example if the vehicle is leaning left, increase the pitch only in that portion of the rotation that is on the left. If this cyclic pitch control is controlled by the gyroscopic effect of a spinning disc stability can be generally obtained. Then in addition, if the pitch is increased collectively to all blades at all points, lift is achieved I think.
Yea but it’s a lot more complicated, like when you increase blade pitch you increase blade drag which requires more engine output which makes more torque which does silly stuff, then you got another thing called “gyroscopic procession” which everyone pretends to understand but if something goes wrong with the helicopter you just blame it on gyroscopic procession then redesign the cyclic and hope it doesn’t happen again
100 years later we flew an automated helicopter on another planet... That's legit insane think about how much technological progress we have had over the past 100 years vs all of recorded human history
The dumbest comment I read today.
well no the helicopter they sent to space wasn't very advance
Helicopters on Mars you say? 😂😂 Next you'll believe there's a tesla orbiting the sun 🤭
@@psychedelicprawncrumpets9479 nice troll. Or let me guess - flat earther?
@@Mercifulkingdom wait tell me how it's dumb when he is amazed and not asking or answering a question ❓
Does every old time narrator have the same voice?
@@exotic9345To have an accent as neutral as possible. They still do that in the news.
Ian,
I always ask that question myself.
Lmaooo it sounds almost fake, contrived
@@volarex4178 they purposely all sounded the same and had that same acccent for a reason. Familiarity. Theres different accents all over america so they chose the "accent neutral" so that it sounded formal clean and understandable to everyone.
@@tonymante8759 They also had this in The netherlands, but I think that a lot of western countries had this
First time seeing this. Thanks RUclips Recommendation. We've come so far 😁😁
Hey i am your subscriber why dont u upload videos now
@@scott_xd_ 33 seconds : what a curious machine ?? It seems made with a engine car
-__-
.
@Niagara Falls Technician Say you are old without actually saying it. ^
I've flown one of these in Rust, and it ain't easy.
It’s great that you play a video game.
@Corporal Adrian Shepard no the point of it was to vilify him and by extension you for saying the most stereotypical zoomer bullshit ever. This video is about antique aircraft and what do you have to say about it being most likely the age from 14-20? You compare these historic videos to fucking video games like anyone cares. The only thing worse would be to compare it to an anime. It’s so pathetic
"Just let her loose and where she goes, nobody knows"
Man's got bars.
@BOGDAN SERBAN Such a wooden surface with a man behind it and a beer tap built in. On the other side of the wooden surface there are usually beardy people sitting, laughing at manly jokes while holding a beer glass in their hand.
@BOGDAN SERBAN a bar or Bar Exam as most American lawers know it is the test that a person must pass in order to become eligible to work as a lawyer.
@BOGDAN SERBAN A bar is a segment of time within musical notation which usually consists of 4 beats of music. The start and stop of each bar is signified using a black vertical line.
@BOGDAN SERBAN a verb meaning to prevent or prohibit a person or something from going or entering somewhere
Sounds like the reporting on a 30s divorce case.
Pilot can easily loose his head 😂😂
Or has his hair cut for free
@@awesomeone2979 how disrespectful!
@@awesomeone2979 💀💀💀💀
@@awesomeone2979 like ur dick
@@awesomeone2979 🖕🤬
Stability of an intoxicated tourist girl😂
Tom big ... and required a ground crew skilled in the 100 metre dash
Corus girls but tourist still applies aswell
virgilio moncada Chorus girl
I heard “chorus girl”. 🤣
**Chorus girl
"This aerial bucking bronco had the stability of an intoxicated chorus girl."
dead
“Try this on your next hangover” Bruh
Whoa. It feels like a sandbox game like besiege with the way they build those helicopters.
Damn we went from clunky propeller machines to modern, better helicopters like Blackhawks and Pave Lows.
“Try this on your next hangover” sent me 😂
the host is just roasting the crap out of these
"stability of an intoxicated chorus girl" 😂
Tourist
@@brandrobert4741 florist
People just really didn't care about getting decapitated back then, huh?
I used to fuel helicopters....WHILE they were running!.... blade spinning 10ft from the Fuel tanker.....pretty fucking terrifying feeling.......It's called a "hot fuel". Mostly for Police or Military, when they have to quickly return to the air. But helicopter blades are WAY longer than they look......fuel hoses are JUST long enough to get the job done. Those ground crews have a Super dangerous job.
Simple fact: Because they have ball of steel
@@quddussalam8593 or a marble sized brain allocation for common sense
@@94SexyStang Did you ever feel bad for using fossil fuels? did it ever cross your mind? im curious
@@UnusedChar common sense didn't land us on the fucking moon
No idea why the umbrella-coptor failed. Seemed like an expertly engineered and well planned out design to me.
Everything in history seems to be tested by the Mafia or the Marx Brothers.
The flaps closed too late. If they'd created some system to close them before the downstroke, there could be some fruit to the idea.
@@scottowens398maybe it could have taken off, but I don't think it just wouldn't have fallen apart after a few seconds of flying with that much wobbling
This video just amazes me about human ingenuity
Amazing old hero
Đúng vậy
Lạc trôi đi đâu vậy ad
0:43 wkwkwkw
heroes* nhé
Peepeepoopoo
Idk what's more amazing. How far man has come in avionics or the commentary.
Definitely the commentary!
Lol I love the things the narrator said the two that made me laugh the most was try this on your next hangover and this is how they got airsick in 1921
It really got me laughing my ass out 😂😂😂
What a load of Baloney!
Let alone the songs, they were extremely trippy. :P
Netflix: Are you still watching?
Someone's daughter: 0:45
Great footage! Narrator is funny and that umbrellacopter looks highly impractical. Still, these men were great, thanks for sharing.
Failures will always progress into perfection if it's handled right. Respect to these men.
"this arial bugging bronco has the stability of an intoxicated chorus girl"
IM DEAD 💀
Can't imagine how many must have lost their lives testing these early stage helicopters.
You should've seen the first guy that attempted to create a parachute if you think this is a disaster.
0:45 It reminded me of GTA San Andreas voodo hydraulic car!
A low rider
Vintage videos and documentation of old innovations are as important as the invention itself. It's there to remind the general public that the discovery you see today, despite how silly and unimportant it is, will change and shape the world in the near future.
The commentary is so good, just back to back ROFLs
0:55 and this, children, is how Chinook was born.
0:45 when climax is about to end 😅😅
😂😂😂😂😂
😂😂😅
Lmao
Man, somone needs to bring back those kinds of burns the narrator made, they were creative back then, compared to what we have now! 😂
the narrator is gold
"As light as lead and cast iron could make her" gave me a laugh.
And we are living with results, salute to everyone for their hard-work.
So much effort, determination and a bit of craziness that went into making of these machines, which ultimately created modern helicopters and planes.
0:40 the omount of work that went into this is hilarious
First one was pretty good.
Blyatiful Cyka
@@leopard2A8 Exactly
Jhekaaas
This is how alien feel when watching human try to space.
These machines are like the actual DRONES today!!!
Why?
@@pk4439 they suck
This reminds me of the funky "hovercraft/helicopter" builds i made in the Bad Piggies sandbox mode lmao
People had balls back in the day exposing themselves to this kind of danger. Much respect to these good old lads.
that guy that was underneath the rotors when it tipped was inches from no head.
iam niclikescake Hopefully none of them got hurt during these prototype tests.
@@flowerywisdom I know, and if someone did they need some recognition for their efforts
iam niclikescake I do sure hope they did. Although, for some to have taken part in history is more than enough and recognition secondary.
Men*
1920s : I wish I could fly in the air
2020 : I wish I could go to another Galaxy
2021: I wish I could return to monke
The sad thing is, they were dreaming of space back then as well, but had a lot more enthusiasm about getting there than we do.
3020s i wish i could go to another univers
2021: Papa Elon hurry up we wanna go to Mars :(
@@kba -500000000: oooga booga
"high as an elephant's eye" is a phrase i will be using in the future from now on
Back in the day of the good ol' one liners.
Mad respect to these men, their trials and failures brought us to where we are today.
0:36 as light as lead and cast iron could make her, im done😂😂
Their Passion, Hard-work Devotion paid off..Respect to these Engineers🙏...!
this is some straight up America's funniest homevideo's commentary. the 20's were savage man
Seeing these crazy machines from a century ago we can easily say that they would obviously never work and those attempts surely do look hilarious to us now (especially the one at 00:45), but those of us who think that little of those machines are nothing but fools who are taking everything for granted! Nothing begins perfect. Those people back then weren't failing and coming up with crazy ideas that could not work; they were learning and coming up with ideas of how to not build a helicopter. Tried something and it didn't work? Add it to the list of mistakes and move on to something else until they eventually figured it out, built a thing that actually works and then over time, perfected it more and more until it came the time were we can say that we have the safest and best helicopters ever designed and built so far. We can laugh, but lest us not forget to do so with respect, because those pioneers deserve it!
On that note, the current attempts at "flying cars" we have today (and have had for at least the past 50 years) will one day, if flying cars ever do become an actual thing, be looked at by people in the future with very similar eyes and thoughts as the ones we use today when looking back at these early attempts at making a helicopter. The only limit for the human mind and creativity is time and the laws of physics, after all!
Having said all that... dafuq 00:45! lolol XD
I mean maybe if the extension and retraction of the umbrella was more sequenced and less random it would’ve gotten a little air
Ancient Egypt blacks had helicopters first.
The main conclusion of flying car experiments should be that we shouldn't have any. They're already a danger and menace on the ground.
Preach
I mean there are literal flying cars now being experimented upon that work
Umbrellacopter made my day... That thing would be an amazing addition to amusement park rides but not for the faint-hearted though.
The Industrial Age is like a sandbox mode for humanity.
This was the Machine Age. 1880-1945. Cars, planes and then helicopters were the reason behind the name.
I really love the narrator completely roasting everyone and everything there
They are so brave, it was so dangerous man beneath those blades
I sexually identify as a flying sausage btw
😂😂😂😂
You're just a lot of baloney
That Narrator with all those puns 😂😂😂
how i wish i had a time machine to go back and show all these inventors what we're flying with today.
I'm getting angry if these people are not mentioned in some museum list or something. They are legends.
1920s: In 2010s, we will have amazing helicopters
2010s: *Happy Helicopter noises*
0:43 I cant stop laughing
At this 😂😂
But still need to respect these lads trying there best
Same here bro!!! LMAO!!!
Wow, that crowd is crazy. Standing few meters from an uncontrolled spinning blade…
And less than 50 years later, a man set foot on the moon, what a time to be alive