RAF Fauld explosion part 1

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  • Опубликовано: 12 янв 2025

Комментарии • 60

  • @chrisdavid1410
    @chrisdavid1410 Год назад +2

    This is Hanbury. My grandpa was right on top of it when it went off. Just as he sat on a bench to rest with a friend the munitions went off. They were blown into the air, and when he came back to earth my gramps turned to his friend and said, 'have you farted? ' Truth was the munitions were not secure and one knocked against another. Not all went off, some live ones are buried, but many of the tunnels were back in use within a few weeks. My grandma was knocked off her feet from the explosion and she was 20 plus miles away. The main centre of the explosion is off limits to this day.

  • @45H4W
    @45H4W Год назад +14

    Second biggest Non-Nuclear explosion in the UK was from the porta-loos at a chilli eating festival near Bath 😂

  • @lorriebuxton2041
    @lorriebuxton2041 Год назад +5

    The van sounds like two cyl diesel running at 10 grand keep up the great videos

    • @lesbaty8919
      @lesbaty8919 Год назад +2

      😂😂😂 it did sound like it was getting a hammering

  • @petej29
    @petej29 Год назад +3

    Second biggest non nuclear explosion will be that vans engine 🤣 great video folk

    • @lesbaty8919
      @lesbaty8919 Год назад

      Brilliant comment, I’m still laughing

  • @prof_kaos9341
    @prof_kaos9341 Год назад +5

    Many will know of the 1917 Halifax explosion of an ammo ship after it caught fire. Supposedly smaller at 2,900tons TNT was used to calibrate the first atomic tests. A 90mm deck gun was thrown 5.6km, with a building set on fire 1.5km away. Was accompanied by a tsunami. Sadly was in the city so 1,800 killed, 20,000 injured. Also in WW1 the Germans had a very successful sabotage group in USA who in 1916 set fire to Black Tom island, an ammo storage/loading dock in NY, it burnt for days. This led to the Mafia, Lucky Luciano/Myer Lanski being paid to guard NY harbour in WW2! There was another ammo ship explosion when loading in California, WW2.

  • @brutter602
    @brutter602 Год назад +2

    There are still tons of buried munitions there that didn’t explode .

  • @tardismole
    @tardismole Год назад +3

    So sad. A series of mistakes ends in tragedy; you hear it happening far too often. My thoughts to the victims and their families.

  • @keithdolman2658
    @keithdolman2658 Год назад +3

    I could have took you in a year ago there was an entrance what I found explored it 3 times it was very interesting it was a storage bunker I got picks on my face book I explored with the past explorer he got picks on his page

    • @lesbaty8919
      @lesbaty8919 Год назад

      Where would be the best place to park? As it seems to be in the middle of nowhere cheers

  • @lesnelson3458
    @lesnelson3458 Год назад +1

    It was still in use until 1973
    With USA being the last place to store bombs there 1967-1973
    It was fenced off in 1979
    significant amount of explosives are still buried deep in the site; the UK government has deemed their removal too expensive to be feasible.

  • @simongumbrell2955
    @simongumbrell2955 Год назад +1

    Great video be careful guys stay safe ❤ the fact I get to see places I can't get to is awesome love the content take care the radius of the blast zone with compression and concussion is evident by the tree stances and ground movement

  • @dr_dr
    @dr_dr Год назад

    It always amazes me when you mention this place to people who live in the wider general area, how many have never heard of it.

    • @lesbaty8919
      @lesbaty8919 Год назад

      I’ve only just heard about it and I only live about 20miles away,

  • @Dan-TheOracle
    @Dan-TheOracle Год назад +1

    300ft deep is roughly 100m deep. its roughly 3 feet to a meter

  • @buzzabuzza3494
    @buzzabuzza3494 Год назад +1

    Hi guys Fauld crater it’s a interesting place been a few times not sure if the pubs still open in the village.

  • @danhoward1163
    @danhoward1163 Год назад

    I did a training course in the building next to that power station and at lunchtimes could walk around the cooling towers. The size and noise from them is amazing.

  • @detectacache6220
    @detectacache6220 Год назад

    Great video. think 300 feet is about 92 metres. Wiki catches me out too. Always wanted to visit this place

  • @ROLL4FUN123
    @ROLL4FUN123 Год назад +3

    Van sounds like it's going to explode 😅

  • @deniseatkins9407
    @deniseatkins9407 Год назад

    Not the one I have seen a documentary on that was a hut that was blown up. They cleared away the debris and built a new hut work building bombs continued

  • @columbo7927
    @columbo7927 Год назад

    Interesting folks Cheers Ian Thank you very much

  • @davidfreeman4407
    @davidfreeman4407 Год назад

    Not to far from where I grew up, my dad took me there the once and the place has a really strange feeling to it.

  • @hgghgguk
    @hgghgguk Год назад +3

    how does anyone know it was a Italian pow with a chisel im sure anyone who actually knew would have been vaporised by the explosion

    • @RJM1011
      @RJM1011 Год назад +3

      It had been going on for months live bombs were being brought into the base and the fuzzes removed with chisels it was NOT a spark like he said in the video but the act of removing the live fuze that way buy bashing it out. The recovered bombs should have NEVER of been brought into the place underground with other live bombs and worked on that way.
      Thank you.

    • @The_Modeling_Underdog
      @The_Modeling_Underdog Год назад +1

      You gotta blame someone.

  • @shayne109
    @shayne109 Год назад +1

    very sad. it does intrigue me how they state it was a pow with a chisel how could they possibly know that when the whole area was turned into a sub orbital cloud of dust!? i suppose we will never truly know. still given the amount of UXB still buried in the vicinity of the crater walls and the unstable tunnels im not sure i would be stomping around the site its pleasant to look at today but its hiding a lot of real dangers. be safe folk!

    • @The_Modeling_Underdog
      @The_Modeling_Underdog Год назад +1

      There was already a record of workers using unauthorized tools while working on ordenance. The Wikipedia article puts it short: bad management of the site, no clear chain of command, untrained staff. It was going to happen, eventually.

  • @flexairz
    @flexairz Год назад +1

    Chimneys? Nope, cooling towers. And the white stuff is water vapour.

  • @lesnelson3458
    @lesnelson3458 Год назад

    There was a blinding flash," a villager would later recall, "and the ground I was standing on shook under my feet. Lumps of clay as big as railway engines soared up in the sky."

  • @lesnelson3458
    @lesnelson3458 Год назад

    the entire vicinity enveloped by a vast mushroom cloud as trees, rocks, and bits of buildings floated back towards the earth. Windows were shattered 40 miles away from the blast.

  • @neilbethell2299
    @neilbethell2299 Год назад +1

    Really interesting video 👍

  • @winstonsmith478
    @winstonsmith478 Год назад +2

    Largest accidental artificial non-nuclear explosions by magnitude:
    Halifax Explosion: Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, 6 December 1917, High explosives, 2.9 kt (12 TJ) - 1,950 people were killed and much of Halifax was destroyed

    RAF Fauld explosion: RAF Fauld, Staffordshire, UK, 27 November 1944, military ammunition, 2 kt (8.4 TJ) - death toll was approximately 78, including RAF personnel, six Italian prisoners of war, civilian employees, and local people

  • @RJM1011
    @RJM1011 Год назад

    To think they heard this in Italy when it went off is amazing !

  • @andyplimbley5583
    @andyplimbley5583 Год назад

    48 minutes from my house folk good to see you in staffs some great Vids

  • @mbokneancok9570
    @mbokneancok9570 Год назад

    Biggest non-nuclear explosion, and it wasn't caused by our old friend, ammonium nitrate.

  • @lesnelson3458
    @lesnelson3458 Год назад +1

    Windows over 40 miles away was damaged from this blast
    Of this 4,000-ton blast
    The entire farm house on top of the tunnes was blasted half-a-mile into the sky

  • @unrulysoldier2140
    @unrulysoldier2140 Год назад

    That's not a crater boys that's Ireland

  • @DonaldHolben
    @DonaldHolben Год назад +1

    Biggest non nuke? I think the Halafax one was bigger

    • @RJM1011
      @RJM1011 Год назад +1

      This was a lot bigger but the one in Halifax killed more people and did more damage because of where it was.

  • @LakesMTB1964
    @LakesMTB1964 Год назад

    It can’t have been a brass chisel Brass doesn’t spark

    • @ho251136
      @ho251136 Год назад

      Exactly as someone whose worked in trade so to say, they prefer you to use Brass tools, as it's non ferrous and doesn't spark when struck against/into metal.

  • @ActionAdventureTwins
    @ActionAdventureTwins Год назад

    Extremely sad

  • @oscars4107
    @oscars4107 Год назад

    Then chimneys be cooling towers

  • @karenflanagan1961
    @karenflanagan1961 Год назад

    I'm looking forward to next week episode. God bless the victims of this horrible part of WW2.

  • @ROLL4FUN123
    @ROLL4FUN123 Год назад +1

    Why you guys wearing so many layers in summer?

  • @signal98
    @signal98 Год назад

  • @nigelperkins1317
    @nigelperkins1317 Год назад

    But I like your videos

  • @urbangeeze1348
    @urbangeeze1348 Год назад +2

    Ian, 300 feet is 91.44 m in new money, ffs! Never mind about staying off Wicki, you need to stay off the microphone until you can stop talking bo**ocks. 😂🤣.

    • @mikemines2931
      @mikemines2931 Год назад +2

      Rather harsh, are you two married.

    • @urbangeeze1348
      @urbangeeze1348 Год назад

      @@mikemines2931 Firm, but fair me, Mike.😜

  • @wulliest
    @wulliest Год назад

    Just down the road from me, cycled past there many times.

  • @nigelperkins1317
    @nigelperkins1317 Год назад

    Sorry I gust think you look funny