@@TheStig_TG soo, F-35B?? It has VTOL capability too, well, specifically STOVL but it still counts because STOVL stands for Short Take-Off and Vertical Landing while VTOL stands for Vertical Take-Off and Landing
@@TheObsidianX It was originally officially RS but was read backwards when introduced. To prevent embarrassment of correcting the mistake of those on top it was officially changed SR
Back then, F was used to refer to unarmed reconnaissance variants of pursuit planes (the F-5 was a P-38 with its weapons removed and replaced with cameras for photo-recon purposes, the F-6 was an unarmed photo-recon variant of the P-51)
@@nickfury1279 At least, in Air Force use. In the Navy, F was the fighter designation. and they even had an identifier for who made the plane. For instance, the second F in F4F Wildcat meant that it was a Grumman design. M= General Motors, D=Douglas, C=Curtis, Y= Consolidated, F=Grumman, U=Vought, A=Brewster.
The Navy system meant that a plane could have different designations, even inside the Navy. An example is the last variant of the Grumman Wildcat, which was named F4F-8 if it was manufactured by Grumman and FM-2 if it was manufactured by GM's Eastern Aircraft division.
So what I'm hearing is that it would be technically possible to make a prototype special electronic mission version of an electronic mission helicopter designated YEEH-4A!
This opened my eyes after so many years of not realizing the letters and numbers had any function and thinking they were just "names" given by manufacturing Thank you so much, my life has become better
Many manufacturers also have their own company designation for military designs outside of the USAF tri service designation, like the P-8 Poseidon being a 737-800ERX, or the Lockheed C-141 being the L-300. This is mostly just the case when they’re developed from a civilian aircraft (like the P-8) or if the manufacturer intends/intended to sell the aircraft as a civilian model later (like the L-300). What’s even more interesting is the aircraft from foreign countries that use similar naming systems and completely ignore some of the conventions, like the Embraer C-390, which just so happens to use a numerical value three times that of the C-130 it replaces with Brazil.
Thank you, I was also researching this myself here is the data I observe from military aircraft A= Attacker B= Bomber C= Cargo/Transport D= Dive Bomber? E= Electronic equipped F= Fighter G= Glider/Permanenly Grounded H= Search and rescue I= (I can't find this one) J= Special test, temporary K= Aerial refueling plane L= Laser equiped M= Military Mission N= Special test, permanent O= Observation P= Pursuit/Patrol Q= Long range drone/unmanned aircraft R= Reconnaissance S= Scout/Anti-submarine T= Training U= Utility V= VTOL W= Weather reconnaissance X= Experimental Y= Prototype Z= Planning
Actually pretty accurate, but it can get a bit more complex. I also feel like talking about stuff so this will be a bit (extremely) long. in no particular order: D actually designates drone control systems, which aren't aircraft, although drone director aircraft are allowed as well under the same designation. H can designate search and rescue, medivac and just helicopter (AH-64 is attack helicopter 64, UH-60 is utility helicopter 64 and so on), helicopter of course being the most common. E doesn't simply mean electronically equipped as that would be all aircraft, but rather special electronic mission, usually early warning, radar jamming or something else like that. F does mean fighter, but the most common mistake I see is people assuming that is the aircrafts primary job, in reality aircraft that only have air to air as a secondary defense while primarily being for ground strike can also have this designation. M means multi mission, I'm not sure what you mean by "military mission" tbh, thats just all of them, it also used to mean missile carrier, and then mine countermeasure, those were both dropped when the navy stopped having use for them. W does in fact mean weather reconnaissance, but it will not be used alone, always with another letter (generally C, just like tankers) (example: WC-130). X means experimental, but also aircraft designed to carry out experiments not directly related to the aircraft (flying laboratories would receive the X designation). Z does mean planned when used as a status, just as J and N are used, however Z also used to mean lighter than air, to my knowledge this is no longer recognized. L does mean laser equipped, but this was dropped quite rapidly, with the failure of the YAL-1 airborne laser aircraft, it may come back now that lasers are coming back as well, it also means cold weather equipped, although thats basically all aircraft now. V in addition to VTOL/STOL (The OV-10 for example was a short takeoff observation aircraft) means VIP transportation when appended to another letter, now exclusive to presidential (and by transfer the vice president) transportation aircraft, the VC-25, the presidential 747, is an example of such a designation. I in fact does not exist as a designation, not even retired or rarely used like many of them, which is why you couldn't find it. Of course, the greatest of them all, P, it is only used as Patrol now, but it used to be used for Pursuit, as you listed, which was generally a fighter or interceptor. A will likely be retiring soon actually as its quite obsolete, every year for quite some time now the USAF has submitted plans to retire the A-10, the senate has denied these plans every time, it will likely take the aircraft seeing serious combat to convince the senate to approve its retirement as the USAF has been trying to do. The video also stated that the A-10 is the lone example of the A designation, this is not entirely true, excluding aircraft designated AC (AC-130 is quite a famous example), the A-29 Super Tucano currently holds this designation as well, and is possibly going to be one of the last to hold the designation, as it is the only fully modernized dedicated ground strike aircraft Anyway, I'm done pretending to know anything and talking too much.
@@_TheRealMud the A designation and it's retirement or not with the Hog is indicative of the strange place the military often finds itself. I expect the A-10 to eventually be retired purely from running out of parts. But Fighter/Attack aircraft are both expensive and fairly fragile. So something will come along that's more resistant to ground fire for that role when a whole air strike isn't needed. Seeing an AQ wouldn't be all that surprising now that I think about it (Ground-Attack drone)
You have to consider that prior to 1962 there was no real standard naming or numbering convention for aircraft. Which is why you have aircraft like the TBF-Avenger, SBD-Dauntless, the F4U Corsair and the F4F Wildcat. And why there is no real consistency between the numbering of the "P" aircraft (P-51, P-38 P-47 P-61 etc). Interestingly enough there is a similar naming convention in place for Naval Ships as well. CV, CVA, CVE, CVL, CVN are all designations for aircraft carriers. CC, CA, CL, CG are designations for cruisers, and DD, DDE, DDR, DDL DDG were used as designations for destroyers.
Small correction: Tsar Bomba was actually only 50MT, not 100. It was changed in the late stages of development in order to give the pilots who dropped it a whopping 50% chance of survival versus the certain death of dropping a 100MT. Also because even the Russians knew 100MT was just too much lol
IIRC a very large percentage of the blast energy went straight up into the upper layers of the atmosphere, making the bomb less efficient, in it's effects on ground targets, than the same amount of fission material/effort being used in several smaller nukes.
Something cool about the U-2, since there's such a limited number, there is a public list of pilots that show their first flight dates, and nicknames. Also, the pilots got to keep some of their stuff; my dad kept his gloves and they're sitting in a glass box above me in display.
@@elliotgillum lol yeah, after 39-40 months of a chemo clinical trial. Unless this is my digital immortality and my brain was uploaded somewhere along the way.
YEH-60B is a prototype (Y) electronic warfare (E) helicopter (H) equipped with a high precision radar antenna mainly designed to detect moving targets on a battlefield and datalink the location of them to army ground stations (stand off target acquisition). It’s based off of an A model Blackhawk which is the 60th designated helicopter (-60) and it’s the second prototype of the YEH variant. (B) The first one (YEH-60A) having a radar that was susceptible to ice. They fixed the icing problem in the B model.
F-117 is also a well-known exception to the rule. It's primarily a bomber but because of its stealth characteristics, they needed fighter pilot type skill sets to fly it successfully so gave it an F designation to attract the right sort of interest.
The concept of this video is so original. I get to see many unique and original concepts in your videos. Thank you for your hard work to keep us entertained and teaching us so many things.
Now I know why the AC130 is designated that way. It’s a modified mission of Attack while it’s basic mission is Carrier. In this case it carries a whole lot of cannons to fire upon the enemy.
"Make sure to hit anything that doesn't have flare on" ("Church doesn't have flare on") *load 105mm* "No Johnson, no, no, no!..." *105mm artillery fire sound* "Here he go..."
A lot of the numbers that are "skipped" actually come from the experimental phase. multiple airframes will be developed by multiple manufactures and compete for the single slot that will actually be used. An example would be the F-22. During the X-22 days, there was also a X-23. the two companies competed for the bid with the USAF. Developed similar aircraft that would fill the role that was needed. And the USAF selected the one they deemed best. In this case, the X-23 was basically doomed from poor original design and changing the entire airframe mid experimental stage. And Fighters with really high numbers are not actual fighters. They are aircraft that have filled the funding for a fighter but the aircraft actually has a very different role. The F-111 is a great example, as that aircraft was basically a flying radar jammer and sub hunter. Or the F-117 which is a small bomber designed for precision strikes and small targets.
You forgot some of the most legendary aircraft, the A-12 and its big brother the SR-71 “Blackbird”; both were reconnaissance aircraft and deserve a special place in aviation history.
The U.S. Army Air Service used the term “P” for pursuit aircraft, adapted from the French Avion de Chasse for pursuit or hunt airplane. After World War II, the term fighter was formally adopted by the USAF with the designator “F.
OH MY GOD. It makes so much sense. Idk how I never realized how straight forward the military aircraft designation system actually is. My mind is blown, and this is an absolutely amazing video! It makes me love all of those planes like the F-22, F-15, B-2, B-29, C-5M, etc. Thank you so much for making this video.
My military knowledge has increased. Also, YEH-60B means it is a prototype electronic warfare avionics installation helicopter 60 model B. So basically it is the second model of a prototype electronic warfare helicopter. Used for electronical warfare
13:18 The actual blast yield of the Tsar Bomba was more likely around 50-60MT of TNT. The initial design had 100MT in mind, however in the end they didnt utilize the full capability.
So this is how to work out the designation - unless they decide to ignore the rules! Please don't put a RUclips taken down notice halfway through the video - I almost had a heart attack! Well played!
Epic sponsor transition. So smooth I had to pause the video, record my praises in the comment section, and then still went back to the video to watch the whole add. A+
If you actually read into the F-15 with the wing ripped off the pilot didn’t know the wing was ripped off he said if he saw the wing was gone he would’ve ejected right then and there but he didn’t know he thought it just started a listing
This is brilliant! Very informative and explains a lot. Your humour gets better and better and even the segue into the sponsor spot was elegant - as noted by many. WELL DONE!
The official mission of the U-2 when it was introduced, was weather research. Ironically, several years later, there was a version of the U-2 called WU-2, used for exactly that.
I don't think so. It can't do cargo because it's full of guns, so it wouldn't be used for cargo. I think it's that the C-130 is the base platform, but the preceding "A" is the modifier, so it's a C-130 modified for an attack role.
It carries cargo. And the cargo is hellfire. Sweet, sweet, hellfire. (The A in AC means while it was originally for Cargo, it is converted specifically for Attack purposes and not cargo.)
Wasnt tzar bomba just a 50 megaton bomb and not 100 megaton. Soviets were planning to make 100 megaton bomb, but after testing thrir 50megaton bomb they decided it was powerful enough and didnt make any 100 megaton bombs.
13:23 Tsar Bomba had a theoretical yield of 100Mt if it’s lead cladding was switched out for a uranium one. This would also have greatly increased the fallout, so the test organizers chose to use the lead cladding instead, bringing the actual yield down to 50Mt. Even still, it remains the largest man made explosion on earth.
neat, I actually has a P-8 Poseidon doing touch and goes at my local airport (KILM) a few nights ago, was pretty neat to see it flying around low like that
Does the "F" status prefix apply only to fixed wing fighters? Just curious because when you said that the f-14 popped into my head as a swept wing fighter. Great video btw!
The F-14 is a fixed-wing aircraft. Yeah, it can move the sweep angle of it's wings, but it is still considered a fixed-wing aircraft. The word fixed, i would presume, means that the wing is stationary in relation to the plane. I.e. the wing doesn't generate lift by moving itself. Unlike a helicopter, which moves it's wings (the blades) in order to generate lift.
The airplane boneyard that he showed in the first seconds of the video is the place i really want to go to. and also i've seen a C-5 galaxy in person but i was far from it i was on the freeway i think and my grandma was driving and i saw it
im kinda more impressed by the plane, it almost had its entire wing taken off n it still flew... it even looked half stable as it was landing.. thats impressive
@@kendellmoore8367 dam really??? I missed that part completely Im goin to have to watch again im usually pretty good at guessing or estimating the outcome or results of something, i love when somethings completely counter intuitive like this lol im weird
Get Manscaped!
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bruh why did u choose this sponsor
I thought BUFF was Big Ugly Fat Fellow
Learned something new today! Awesome content!👍
Buff is back Yeeeeeeeeeh
Dont u dare get mobile games next please dont
This has to be the smoothest sponsor transition ive ever seen.
Legendary as the pilot who landed the plane
And the sponsored part was just as good as the rest of the video. Genius! I usually skip sponsored parts, but this is just brilliantly made.
True ,it was brilliant
Heh, "smooth".
I agree with you so much I couldn't believe that really just happened and I didn't skip
Most dedicated sponsor commercial content ever.
@OPEN PAGE,,,,, 👇🤗 bot
@OPEN PAGE,,,,, 👇🤗 bruh
For real, and that segue was awesome!
@@DingDingTheRUclipsBuddy its japanese not chinese (im pretty sure)
Not really
There actually was an A-4 Skyhawk, A-5 Vigilante, A-6 Intruder, and A-7 Corsair II. The AV-8 is exactly where it should be.
Point
That would be wrong on the official system as A is pure attack while AV is attack with vtol capability
@@TheStig_TG soo, F-35B?? It has VTOL capability too, well, specifically STOVL but it still counts because STOVL stands for Short Take-Off and Vertical Landing while VTOL stands for Vertical Take-Off and Landing
@@LordSmallest The F-35 itself isn't VTOL capable, since only the B model is. The base A, and the modified C dont have VTOL.
So is there an A9?
The “K” for tankers represents “Kerosene” to clear up any confusion. “S” can also mean “Spy/Surveillance” in the case of the SR-71.
Is S supposed to mean that or is that another instance of misdirection like the U-2?
This made me look up the difference between Surveillance and Reconnaissance.
I feel like I’ve heard it said they were supposed to call it the RS-71 for recon space plane but flipped it because it sounds better as SR.
@@TheObsidianX Strategic Reconnaisance
@@TheObsidianX It was originally officially RS but was read backwards when introduced. To prevent embarrassment of correcting the mistake of those on top it was officially changed SR
Ngl, the intro for the sponsor was smooth af.
*revives avocado*
Check the likes
@@jonachamp3946 whats MQ nine? M is modified mission and it has no mission at alll?
Learned more about warplanes in a short video than I did in 7 years in the Air Force.
Lol
Prior to this designation system, P primarily referred to “Pursuit” aircraft (basically fighters) such as the P-38, P-40, and P-51
thats cool
Correct
Back then, F was used to refer to unarmed reconnaissance variants of pursuit planes (the F-5 was a P-38 with its weapons removed and replaced with cameras for photo-recon purposes, the F-6 was an unarmed photo-recon variant of the P-51)
@@nickfury1279 At least, in Air Force use. In the Navy, F was the fighter designation. and they even had an identifier for who made the plane. For instance, the second F in F4F Wildcat meant that it was a Grumman design. M= General Motors, D=Douglas, C=Curtis, Y= Consolidated, F=Grumman, U=Vought, A=Brewster.
The Navy system meant that a plane could have different designations, even inside the Navy. An example is the last variant of the Grumman Wildcat, which was named F4F-8 if it was manufactured by Grumman and FM-2 if it was manufactured by GM's Eastern Aircraft division.
So what I'm hearing is that it would be technically possible to make a prototype special electronic mission version of an electronic mission helicopter designated YEEH-4A!
How does this not exist yet
This man needs a Nobel Prize
@@Willon This man needs funding
I want this to happen
*pentagon wants to know your location
Finally, I found a Not What You Think Video
Where it ended up being Exactly What I Thought.
You are here?
fell off
This opened my eyes after so many years of not realizing the letters and numbers had any function and thinking they were just "names" given by manufacturing
Thank you so much, my life has become better
Fun fact, most manufacturers don't know their MDS designations until they actually receive funding from the military.
same
@@firstletterofthealphabet7308 MD=mexican dream
Many manufacturers also have their own company designation for military designs outside of the USAF tri service designation, like the P-8 Poseidon being a 737-800ERX, or the Lockheed C-141 being the L-300. This is mostly just the case when they’re developed from a civilian aircraft (like the P-8) or if the manufacturer intends/intended to sell the aircraft as a civilian model later (like the L-300). What’s even more interesting is the aircraft from foreign countries that use similar naming systems and completely ignore some of the conventions, like the Embraer C-390, which just so happens to use a numerical value three times that of the C-130 it replaces with Brazil.
Not liking this comment to keep 420
I choked on my water when they talked about the sponsor
I was like, bro is this even a true sponsor?!
Water isn't the only thing that you will choke on 😏
@@singularityraptor4022 wasnt able to choke, too small. 1 star review
@@bruuuuuuuuh8333 What if he was talking about something else 🤨
honestly... this video let me speechless... simply amazing detail and information... amazing... truly amazing
Thank you, I was also researching this myself
here is the data I observe from military aircraft
A= Attacker
B= Bomber
C= Cargo/Transport
D= Dive Bomber?
E= Electronic equipped
F= Fighter
G= Glider/Permanenly Grounded
H= Search and rescue
I= (I can't find this one)
J= Special test, temporary
K= Aerial refueling plane
L= Laser equiped
M= Military Mission
N= Special test, permanent
O= Observation
P= Pursuit/Patrol
Q= Long range drone/unmanned aircraft
R= Reconnaissance
S= Scout/Anti-submarine
T= Training
U= Utility
V= VTOL
W= Weather reconnaissance
X= Experimental
Y= Prototype
Z= Planning
Actually pretty accurate, but it can get a bit more complex. I also feel like talking about stuff so this will be a bit (extremely) long.
in no particular order:
D actually designates drone control systems, which aren't aircraft, although drone director aircraft are allowed as well under the same designation. H can designate search and rescue, medivac and just helicopter (AH-64 is attack helicopter 64, UH-60 is utility helicopter 64 and so on), helicopter of course being the most common. E doesn't simply mean electronically equipped as that would be all aircraft, but rather special electronic mission, usually early warning, radar jamming or something else like that. F does mean fighter, but the most common mistake I see is people assuming that is the aircrafts primary job, in reality aircraft that only have air to air as a secondary defense while primarily being for ground strike can also have this designation. M means multi mission, I'm not sure what you mean by "military mission" tbh, thats just all of them, it also used to mean missile carrier, and then mine countermeasure, those were both dropped when the navy stopped having use for them. W does in fact mean weather reconnaissance, but it will not be used alone, always with another letter (generally C, just like tankers) (example: WC-130). X means experimental, but also aircraft designed to carry out experiments not directly related to the aircraft (flying laboratories would receive the X designation). Z does mean planned when used as a status, just as J and N are used, however Z also used to mean lighter than air, to my knowledge this is no longer recognized. L does mean laser equipped, but this was dropped quite rapidly, with the failure of the YAL-1 airborne laser aircraft, it may come back now that lasers are coming back as well, it also means cold weather equipped, although thats basically all aircraft now. V in addition to VTOL/STOL (The OV-10 for example was a short takeoff observation aircraft) means VIP transportation when appended to another letter, now exclusive to presidential (and by transfer the vice president) transportation aircraft, the VC-25, the presidential 747, is an example of such a designation. I in fact does not exist as a designation, not even retired or rarely used like many of them, which is why you couldn't find it. Of course, the greatest of them all, P, it is only used as Patrol now, but it used to be used for Pursuit, as you listed, which was generally a fighter or interceptor. A will likely be retiring soon actually as its quite obsolete, every year for quite some time now the USAF has submitted plans to retire the A-10, the senate has denied these plans every time, it will likely take the aircraft seeing serious combat to convince the senate to approve its retirement as the USAF has been trying to do. The video also stated that the A-10 is the lone example of the A designation, this is not entirely true, excluding aircraft designated AC (AC-130 is quite a famous example), the A-29 Super Tucano currently holds this designation as well, and is possibly going to be one of the last to hold the designation, as it is the only fully modernized dedicated ground strike aircraft
Anyway, I'm done pretending to know anything and talking too much.
@@_TheRealMud the A designation and it's retirement or not with the Hog is indicative of the strange place the military often finds itself. I expect the A-10 to eventually be retired purely from running out of parts. But Fighter/Attack aircraft are both expensive and fairly fragile. So something will come along that's more resistant to ground fire for that role when a whole air strike isn't needed. Seeing an AQ wouldn't be all that surprising now that I think about it (Ground-Attack drone)
You have to consider that prior to 1962 there was no real standard naming or numbering convention for aircraft. Which is why you have aircraft like the TBF-Avenger, SBD-Dauntless, the F4U Corsair and the F4F Wildcat. And why there is no real consistency between the numbering of the "P" aircraft (P-51, P-38 P-47 P-61 etc).
Interestingly enough there is a similar naming convention in place for Naval Ships as well. CV, CVA, CVE, CVL, CVN are all designations for aircraft carriers. CC, CA, CL, CG are designations for cruisers, and DD, DDE, DDR, DDL DDG were used as designations for destroyers.
I would most likely be Interceptor
So you could have a aircraft named the YEET-69
Small correction: Tsar Bomba was actually only 50MT, not 100. It was changed in the late stages of development in order to give the pilots who dropped it a whopping 50% chance of survival versus the certain death of dropping a 100MT. Also because even the Russians knew 100MT was just too much lol
Yes they replaced the U238 tamper with lead.
Imagine they didn't make the bomb in drop test not 50MT
@@BenedictF79B even after 50MT explosion scientists were scared that it caused irreversible environmental catastrophe, so...
At least they didn’t do a Castle Bravo mistake 🤔😉
IIRC a very large percentage of the blast energy went straight up into the upper layers of the atmosphere, making the bomb less efficient, in it's effects on ground targets, than the same amount of fission material/effort being used in several smaller nukes.
Something cool about the U-2, since there's such a limited number, there is a public list of pilots that show their first flight dates, and nicknames. Also, the pilots got to keep some of their stuff; my dad kept his gloves and they're sitting in a glass box above me in display.
Nice, my dad gave me shitty genetics and cancer.
@@riothero313 Still alive?
@@elliotgillum lol yeah, after 39-40 months of a chemo clinical trial. Unless this is my digital immortality and my brain was uploaded somewhere along the way.
@@riothero313 Well either way, glad to hear it. I suppose if you can't tell the difference, then who cares.
YEH-60B is a prototype (Y) electronic warfare (E) helicopter (H) equipped with a high precision radar antenna mainly designed to detect moving targets on a battlefield and datalink the location of them to army ground stations (stand off target acquisition). It’s based off of an A model Blackhawk which is the 60th designated helicopter (-60) and it’s the second prototype of the YEH variant. (B) The first one (YEH-60A) having a radar that was susceptible to ice. They fixed the icing problem in the B model.
Thanks
so basically it has a radar almost ice proof that can strategically see enemy forces on the ground and its base H is a black hawk
What you said isn't unclass...
based
Cant tell if that last part is real or a reference to iron man
"they can hit a target with a great degree of precision"
Shows a clip of a pilot missing every single shot
Gotta love the humor of this channel 😂
Hey, they did hit with great precision, just not great accuracy lol.
@@daddysempaichan lmao
Tbf that's super accurate by airstrike standards.
It was just a warning shot.
LMFAO the accuracy is just too bad for him, maybe just a small angle of precision will add accuracy maybe
LMFAO the humor is so good
These puns are kind of good, not gonna lie. Thanks for explaining the letter in this video!
5:21
That handshake is what I strive for
From my knowledge and experience, a-10 warthog when flying, is not as loud as you think, it’s as loud as a propeller plabe
That makes sense the a-10 is about as fast and around the same altitude as a ww2 plane
yeah but it's the plabe
@OPEN PAGE,,,,, 👇🤗 SHUT UP GO SOMEWHERE ELSE, YOU DON'T CHAT ABOUT THAT HERE! WE TALK ABOUT WEAPONS HERE.
BRRRRRRRRRRT
@@StarscreamX404 boiiii a10 goes brrrrrrt brrrrrrrrrrrrt brrrrrrrt
I love the fact that i spend hours watching things about army and learning more and more.But when it comes to study i cant even study for 5 mins.
YEH-60B meaning: Y is for Prototype then E is for Electronic, H is for helicopter, 60 the 60th design or for a name and B for the second series.
F-117 is also a well-known exception to the rule. It's primarily a bomber but because of its stealth characteristics, they needed fighter pilot type skill sets to fly it successfully so gave it an F designation to attract the right sort of interest.
The concept of this video is so original. I get to see many unique and original concepts in your videos. Thank you for your hard work to keep us entertained and teaching us so many things.
Thanks very much!
I love his long videos, I want to see a 40 minute documentary next pls
I have seen a LOT of Manscaped adds. This was easily the best.
D: drone
H: search & rescue, not necessarily helicopters
L: cold weather as well as laser
Q: unmanned
V: vip transport
W: weather recon
Thank you
Isnt a drone unmanned?
@@______1043 AFAIK, drones are controlled by operators on the ground and UAV's can be self-flying... not sure though. Could be the other way around
Hmmm V22 Osprey
@@atlas-3541 Was misnamed. It should have the C designator as it's a cargo aircraft.
Now I know why the AC130 is designated that way. It’s a modified mission of Attack while it’s basic mission is Carrier. In this case it carries a whole lot of cannons to fire upon the enemy.
cargo
"Make sure to hit anything that doesn't have flare on"
("Church doesn't have flare on")
*load 105mm*
"No Johnson, no, no, no!..."
*105mm artillery fire sound*
"Here he go..."
A lot of the numbers that are "skipped" actually come from the experimental phase. multiple airframes will be developed by multiple manufactures and compete for the single slot that will actually be used. An example would be the F-22. During the X-22 days, there was also a X-23. the two companies competed for the bid with the USAF. Developed similar aircraft that would fill the role that was needed. And the USAF selected the one they deemed best. In this case, the X-23 was basically doomed from poor original design and changing the entire airframe mid experimental stage. And Fighters with really high numbers are not actual fighters. They are aircraft that have filled the funding for a fighter but the aircraft actually has a very different role. The F-111 is a great example, as that aircraft was basically a flying radar jammer and sub hunter. Or the F-117 which is a small bomber designed for precision strikes and small targets.
OK that was a clean transaction to the sponsor 10/10
Transition
@@dab_yeetus thx
Clean transportation 😩👉
You forgot some of the most legendary aircraft, the A-12 and its big brother the SR-71 “Blackbird”; both were reconnaissance aircraft and deserve a special place in aviation history.
I think the SR-71 is my favorite machine ever built.
or the F-117 "Nighthawk"
Ah yes, Attack aircraft 12.
Ah yes (x2) anti submarine reconnaissance 71
The a12 and sr71 are related, aren't they?
The U.S. Army Air Service used the term “P” for pursuit aircraft, adapted from the French Avion de Chasse for pursuit or hunt airplane. After World War II, the term fighter was formally adopted by the USAF with the designator “F.
designed to detect moving targets on the battlefield and downlink the information to an Army ground station.YEH-60B.
Yeah but why YEH-60B
OH MY GOD. It makes so much sense. Idk how I never realized how straight forward the military aircraft designation system actually is. My mind is blown, and this is an absolutely amazing video! It makes me love all of those planes like the F-22, F-15, B-2, B-29, C-5M, etc. Thank you so much for making this video.
You stated a total of: Two Fighter aircraft, Two Bomber aircraft, and, One Cargo aircraft
That was honestly such a slick transition to the sponsor commercial
13:22 the Tsar Bomba was 100 megaton but the soviet engineers were really worried about how much damage it would do so they halved it to 50 megaton
My military knowledge has increased.
Also, YEH-60B means it is a prototype electronic warfare avionics installation helicopter 60 model B.
So basically it is the second model of a prototype electronic warfare helicopter. Used for electronical warfare
That’s vague. We know it’s an electronic warfare helicopter but what does it do? Electronic warfare is used for many things.
@@UltraMagaFan do you accept that this video teaches us things that school will never even say about
YEaH-bOB
@@UltraMagaFan you dont recognize it from independce day? they have it fixed with lights to try and communicate to aliens :P
the YEH-60B was mainly used to detect enermys on the battlefeild
Came for the curiosity, stayed for the humor! Love it!
13:18 The actual blast yield of the Tsar Bomba was more likely around 50-60MT of TNT. The initial design had 100MT in mind, however in the end they didnt utilize the full capability.
Ok you no best don’t you
@@amurdera4409 Da fuq??
They did so because the pilots were basically dead if they dropped 100mt tsar, but with 50 or 60 mt they faced smaller chances of dying
You know it's powerful if the Soviets lower its blast yield
So this is how to work out the designation - unless they decide to ignore the rules! Please don't put a RUclips taken down notice halfway through the video - I almost had a heart attack! Well played!
Epic sponsor transition. So smooth I had to pause the video, record my praises in the comment section, and then still went back to the video to watch the whole add. A+
5:22 my worst jumpscare this year so far
Congrats NWYT!
If you actually read into the F-15 with the wing ripped off the pilot didn’t know the wing was ripped off he said if he saw the wing was gone he would’ve ejected right then and there but he didn’t know he thought it just started a listing
Love these videos great knowledge and lots of jokes
🤣🤣🤣 5:20 literally just threw an actual fuck at my computer! Well played my friend, well played! 👍
This is brilliant! Very informative and explains a lot. Your humour gets better and better and even the segue into the sponsor spot was elegant - as noted by many. WELL DONE!
Thanks BC-Guy 😊
You’re from British Colombia?
@@NotWhatYouThink Yup - Canada's Best Coast.
5:23 My internet has been crashing a lot recently and it actually got me lol
Y=prototYpe
E=special Electronic installation
H=Helicopter
-
60=60th design
B=2an version of this design.
Lol, prototYpe. I always thought Y comes from experimental being X and Y follows X in the sequence of development and the alphabet.
Best manscaped ad I’m history of ads
* The tsar bomba was actually only 50 megatons not 100. the russians could have made it 100 but were scared that it woukd be too big
Also it wouldn't fit Tu-95, largest bomber in soviet air force
Its dangerous if it made the Russians scared
@@krxzovic That doesn't make sense, the yield was lowered by replacing fissile material with a tamper, not by making it smaller.
What the fuck? What does that have to do with this?
@@somedudes6455 bro he mentioned in the video that the tsar bomba had 100 megaton but it was actually obly 50. We are Politely correcting him
Informative and hilarious. The big balls to manscape transition had me rolling on the floor.
That might be the greatest ad transition I've ever witnessed. Absolutely well done.
The official mission of the U-2 when it was introduced, was weather research. Ironically, several years later, there was a version of the U-2 called WU-2, used for exactly that.
Should have been named WX-2 or WX-1 or something along there. WX literally meens (W=)Weather (X=)Reaserch.
@@axelfoley5265 X is Experimental? Not research?
@@LordSmallest X is the status designation for Experimental status, but it is also the mission designation for Research.
@@StickyBomb0512 I didn't know that, ty
Imagine they added another U....
2:35 that was a good one!
best sponsor ad ive ever seen
This is the best add placement of an add and add itself, that ever existed
You deserve an Oscar for the sponsor transition. Well done sir.
This was super well-organized. Kudos for an awesome vid
5:18 Thanks for the heart attack lol
😅
Same
Bru I thought it was turning off I stg
So that means AC-130 is attack +cargo design 130. Makes sense because Ac-130 is used for cargo and attack
I don't think so. It can't do cargo because it's full of guns, so it wouldn't be used for cargo. I think it's that the C-130 is the base platform, but the preceding "A" is the modifier, so it's a C-130 modified for an attack role.
It carries cargo. And the cargo is hellfire. Sweet, sweet, hellfire. (The A in AC means while it was originally for Cargo, it is converted specifically for Attack purposes and not cargo.)
Well C is the base platform and A stands for attack. Makes sense cuz the AC-130 is a gunship and gunships satisfy the attack role hence the A
Gun,bomb,and ammunition are cargo too
yes, Starting from the C-130 Cargo, it is modified to have Weaponry to attack ground targets
I never knew this, and now i get it, and its actually pretty simple lol.
Smooth, very smooth. The smoothest transition to a sponsor ever. Haha 😂
S Designation: Attack submarines
R Designation: Spy on the enemy
SR-71: Wait I'm supposed to hunt submarines?
SR was used to indicate Strategic Reconnaissance, a non-standard designation.
quite sure they don't fly over oceans but ok.
Tbh it was a typo it was designed to be designated R-71
Yeah that's what confused me
This is the best sponsored content ever. Usually I would skip sponsors but this one was so good
Once you have tasted flight, you will forever walk the earth with your eyes turned skyward.
Someone plays a lot of civ 6
Until you get a motorcycle.
@C H A R L O T T E 🌹🥰 no
@@IIMEERKATPLAYS or civ 4
@@sirsplintfastthepungent1373 ?
"a designation chosen for pun"
that ranks hilariously high on "tell me you're a dad without telling me you're a dad"
Your profile pic makes this comment even better
@@spencerjackson3754 guilty as charged, dad for over a decade
1:56 that line was pure gold
Wasnt tzar bomba just a 50 megaton bomb and not 100 megaton. Soviets were planning to make 100 megaton bomb, but after testing thrir 50megaton bomb they decided it was powerful enough and didnt make any 100 megaton bombs.
@BloxyHD Just put a longer fuze in there and morr parachutes so it would still be in the air after the fuze goes off
That was the smoothest transition to a sponsor ever.
Wow, what a great video. I am in planes for a long time but never found such a condensed version of the MDS!
Good knowledge, I’m thinking of joining the navy. I’m only 15 and planning to finish my education.
All the best buddy
You'll enjoy it
I ship to basic on Nov 17 and I wanted to join the military since I moved back to the US when I was 6
Air Force has best chow. Navy has second best.
Just some thought for food.
same. I wanna be F 18 pilot
@@someguyonyoutube1820 im trying to be a naval pilot aswell but I wanna get enlisted experience before I get my degree
I think this is the first time in my life I've heard "tzar" pronounced correctly.
Yea, basically tzar = sar, whilst czar = zar
😅👍🏼
“Everyone always talks about the giant balls, no one ever talks about maintain them”
Wow I just watched this guy rub white cream on and avacado what is he getting at…
Slight correction tsar bomba is only 50MT not 100MT, it was scaled back.
Cus Russia was scared of the effects, and you know something is scary if Soviet Russia got scared of it
@@DingDingTheRUclipsBuddy yea Gorbachev sounds right
@@Sp00kq it was Khrushchev. Gorbachev was the one in power when USSR collapsed. He's still alive
@@arturturkevych3816 ohhhh I see. Thank you!
Ahh yes now i know what iam gonna buy for my private army
Ima do the same
firstly buy some respects
Putting the avocados at the beginning and then during the Sponsor video - literally the funniest thing I’ve ever seen in my life
13:23 Tsar Bomba had a theoretical yield of 100Mt if it’s lead cladding was switched out for a uranium one. This would also have greatly increased the fallout, so the test organizers chose to use the lead cladding instead, bringing the actual yield down to 50Mt. Even still, it remains the largest man made explosion on earth.
neat, I actually has a P-8 Poseidon doing touch and goes at my local airport (KILM) a few nights ago, was pretty neat to see it flying around low like that
Come to Jacksonville Florida. There is AWKAYS one of these flying around. It flys so low you can see the probe arm sticking out the back.
[5:24] I really thought it was unavailable🤣🤣😂😂
7:55 “You’ve got a hole on your right wing!”
Does the "F" status prefix apply only to fixed wing fighters? Just curious because when you said that the f-14 popped into my head as a swept wing fighter. Great video btw!
Fixed wing (including swept wing), as opposed to rotary wing. There is no category for variable geometry wing.
The F-14 is a fixed-wing aircraft.
Yeah, it can move the sweep angle of it's wings, but it is still considered a fixed-wing aircraft.
The word fixed, i would presume, means that the wing is stationary in relation to the plane. I.e. the wing doesn't generate lift by moving itself.
Unlike a helicopter, which moves it's wings (the blades) in order to generate lift.
@@gordonrichardson2972 rotary wings mostly refers to helis, right?
@@A.i.r_K rotary wing is helicopters. Helicopter rotors are especially rotating wings or airfoils.
@@Luna-4L0n5 Ah thank you for the clarification!
The airplane boneyard that he showed in the first seconds of the video is the place i really want to go to. and also i've seen a C-5 galaxy in person but i was far from it i was on the freeway i think and my grandma was driving and i saw it
8:11 We save Balls💀
im kinda more impressed by the plane, it almost had its entire wing taken off n it still flew... it even looked half stable as it was landing.. thats impressive
No, you should be more impressed by the PILOT. Every good fighter pilot knows 1 wing is essential, 2 wings are a luxury.
@@kendellmoore8367 ur not wrong about the pilot, i just didn't know planes were that stable
@@4dirt2racer0 Yeah it's crazy he didn't even know he was missing a wing he later stated if he had known he would've ejected haha
@@kendellmoore8367 dam really??? I missed that part completely Im goin to have to watch again im usually pretty good at guessing or estimating the outcome or results of something, i love when somethings completely counter intuitive like this lol im weird
The video is clear, footage is on-point, the sponsored part is great
Military: To organize aircraft categories let us make a system fo that
Also military: screw them lets give this fighter an A category🤣
Or a strategic bomber F. F117
"There is no A-8" I think the Harrier might object, dissed just because it can land vertically AV-8
The manscaped ad was perhaps the best ad I've seen ever
13:23 I thought the Tsar bomba was 50 megatons??
I was under that impression as well, I thought the 50 mt one was actually tested but they designed a 100 mt version as well
It is 50 megaton but It was supposed to be 100 megatons. What a nuke.
1:57 really 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Seriously, that’s what it stands for.
That was the smoothest transition to the sponsor of the video, ever!
The tsar bomba was planned to be 100mt but ended up at 50.
That's a Russian measuring tape. You have to convert it.
1:01 "They can hit the target wit a great degree of precision" *misses *
0:29 What I read: YEH BOB
8:01 you can see the photoshop blur
Yea but the missing wing is real
This is rather helpful for my English GCSE speech that I have to perform next week.
AH-Z1 viper
A=attack
H=helicopter
Z= L I G H T E R T H A N A I R
1= first made
Im thinking Z is one of the later modifications, with the 1 being a modification of Z, but its so minor you cant just add another variant
The ah1 Cobra is much older
16:25 me after taco bell
😂😂😂😂 you brought the ManScape commercial in slick af lol