@@bruno80292 Commercial engine tech here. I garantuee you the tip clearance between the fan and the casing is either 1mm or less. 2mm at most. While the engine is running that is. Believe me. It would blow your fucking mind if i could show you how close those blades are to scraping at the case at speed. (Theres a scrapable, destructible material on the casing around the fan just incase of that. It indicates when work needs to be done on it.) With turbine engines, *clearance. is. everything!* The less tip clearance you have anywhere in your engine, the less air slips by unused, and the better your engine will perform. The compressor blade clearances in the ge9x/ge90 most likely range between 0.5 mm and 1.5 mm depending on blade wear and thermal expansion wear on the casing.
Starting Engines during boarding? Probably if you fly with gulag air. Usually the planes are starting the engines if there is no person near to the plane/engines
I love how you can feel the ground vibrate sometimes when the GE-90 starts up. Best sound out of all the heavies I see at work. The 787 and A350 engines are nice too but the deep vibrations of a GE-90 cannot be beat.
@@arnabnath8428nah 777x has it. Also airlines arent going to waste their time and money on replacing their current fleet of 747's and a380's with those engines due to long term cost(cuz its 4 of the big bastards you have to put on them, so double the engines double the cost). Not to mention the 747 has to have taller landing gear because the engine is so god dam big it has to be angled😂 in order to fit. Its all about efficiency
This is the engine speed when you just landed, the reason why the plane is not moving because it's on brakes and there are some objects that wont let it go.
Can you imagine a 777 with GE90-115 in August 1949 next to a Comet? The engine was wider than the fuselage of the Comet and had 475% more power than the Comet's four engines combined and VERY quiet by comparison.
I remember waiting for flights inside New York JFK and Rome Fiumicino. Those GE90 starts are so beastly loud that they are one of the only things you can hear loud and clear inside the terminal. Might be the greatest jet engine type ever created.
*HA!* You ain't heard nothing yet. This is what's called "ground idle." This is the weakest setting the engine can run at while supplying power to the aircraft systems. Probably like 15%-20% power.
As an aircraft mechanic for over 35yrs years what blows me away is the fact that the 737 sitting in the hangar behind and to the right, has a fuselage diameter approximately the same diameter as the engine cowling of the triple seven!
I've only ever been on board A320s, 737s, Dash 8s and a museum Concorde so it's extremely hard for me to grasp how absolutely huge those engines actually are
How come at 1:30 it sounds like the engine stops ramping up but then the sound comes again a second later at higher pitch? Have noticed several times when flying in a 777.
@@CaptainTransit U mean initially a starter motor and bleed air is used to start the engine to some RPM then the fuel is introduced which further spools up the engine to IDLE rpm right ??
Nothing better than hearing the kids crying and nervous flyer's faces when that rumble echoed through the ENTIRE cabin...it was glorious to operate on them
@@SSaugaCriss Usually if there is a fault with an IDG and your company's MEL (minimum equipment list) allows you to defer the defect. The engine must be at or above idle speed to enable a disconnect via the overhead switch. Disconnecting energizes a solenoid and opens a clutch in the IDG.
@@SSaugaCriss 777 has a pneumatic starter so it must have an air source for ground start. Either APU, ground start cart or doing a X-bleed from the other engine.
I hear these things spooling up on the cargo side of O'Hare from the last place where I lived. That low 1:10 BWOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO sound is very therapeutic especially late at night.
@@zacharysylvester8349 i watched a documentary about 9/11 and how they hurried the oresident bush with his staff to AF1 and how they were hauling ass out if the airport like a bat out of hell. Apparently they had to alternate fighter jet planes to escort it around the skies because it was going to fast the jets were burning fuel just trying to keep up. I did some digging in around snd i found out that for them to burn fuel at that ratem the airforce 1 had to be going over 550 mph. Which is shocking for a 747. But i think AF1 have a top speed of mach .90 I know. But who are yo dictate to the airforce i suppose. Its all hersay for now. But I do know that current airforce one utilizes two 787 engines for the inner ones and larger engine size of 757-300 for outer. That i k ow for a fact. I spotted airfoce one 1 2 years ago and I didn't believe how massive the 747 engines were. I know what typical 747 engines are. And typical they were not.
@@aky19832001 Wrong. The VC-25A uses four CF6 engines, while the VC-25B uses four GEnx engines. And the C-32 uses two RB211 engines, while the other plane uses CFM56 engines.
heard one starting up at LAX. i was in the parking garage outside the terminal and the sound reverberated through the entire garage. i knew instantly what it was
This is a sound I won’t forget as a passenger- on the older British Airways 200ERs I remember, you can literally hear the plastic paneling of the cabin rattling as the engine howls on startup
Until passed by its derivative, the GE9X, the GE90 series held the title of the largest engines in aviation history. The fan diameter of the original series being 123 in
Believe it or not, most of the resistance comes from the compressed air in the HP stages of the compressor. But once it's connected power wheels get going, it's a totally negligible force.
That is the Auxillary Power Unit, or A.P.U. for short, running in the rear of the aircraft. It's basically a gas turbine engine that produces electricity and hydraulic power, and also can supply pressurized air to start the engines. Pilots typically leave it on so they can start their engines without needing a Ground Power Unit (or G.P.U. for short).
@@davecrupel2817 oh i understand now.....that was also something that I wanted to know actually....i thought it was like a mini turbo engine like that on a military aircraft
You're a little light, Stephen. More than 100 F1's combined. The GE90's strength is commonly measured in pounds of thrust but it equates to over 100,000 horsepower. GE90-115 fun facts: 9'7" in diameter, weighs 18,000 pounds (although the carbon fiber fan blades only weigh about 1200 pounds combined), cost $40 million apiece and on a test stand, it's been pushed to over 125,000 pounds of thrust, making it the most powerful jet engine in existence. Two of these big boys can shove a 700,000 pound aircraft through the air at 550mph for 10,000 miles.
The best sound in the world imo. It sounds amazing in video, but it's nothing compared to being inside the actual aircraft during takeoff. This is a beast.
I'm so impressed that the fan blade tips don't touch the cowling, considering it's only 1 or 2 mm space between them.
i'm pretty sure that is more than this lol
@@bruno80292 maybe not 1mm but it's surely not more than 3mm. I can say that from my own experience because I did walk arounds on a 737.
Indeed, it’s for the efficiency of the engine
@@bruno80292 Commercial engine tech here.
I garantuee you the tip clearance between the fan and the casing is either 1mm or less. 2mm at most. While the engine is running that is.
Believe me. It would blow your fucking mind if i could show you how close those blades are to scraping at the case at speed. (Theres a scrapable, destructible material on the casing around the fan just incase of that. It indicates when work needs to be done on it.)
With turbine engines, *clearance. is. everything!* The less tip clearance you have anywhere in your engine, the less air slips by unused, and the better your engine will perform.
The compressor blade clearances in the ge9x/ge90 most likely range between 0.5 mm and 1.5 mm depending on blade wear and thermal expansion wear on the casing.
@@davecrupel2817 fantastic!
@ 1:10, the extra bass sound is fuel light-up, and around 1:32 when it goes slightly quieter is the air starter dis-engaging. (Ex RB211 Engineer)
Just upgraded my speakers to the Klipsch ProMedia 2.1 THX, and this was one of the first things I tried on them. Not disappointed at all.
@@Daymond42 Glad to hear it was a good test!
Wow thanks alot i had that question from a very long time 😀
I thought it was an electric starter.
@@davecrupel2817 @0:29 start air valve opens, big rush of air!😊
”I won’t need audio files because my PC already sounds like a plane...”
my pc sounds like an f18
@@SanSonT mine is like f-35
You should hear my ps4
My pc sounds like you... but dead.
My like a380
1:10 The deep startup sound during every 777 pushback/safety briefing
That's coming from the plane
There is no operating procedure which allows a commercial aircraft to start engines during pax boarding.
Starting Engines during boarding? Probably if you fly with gulag air. Usually the planes are starting the engines if there is no person near to the plane/engines
I love that sound 👌
Jul1an ramp agents? Only in gulag lol
I love how you can feel the ground vibrate sometimes when the GE-90 starts up. Best sound out of all the heavies I see at work. The 787 and A350 engines are nice too but the deep vibrations of a GE-90 cannot be beat.
Nothing compared to the howl of the Avro Vulcan 😏
I once felt a fighter engine start, it was so good
What about the electric saw of the a320?
Tanuj Kumar the startup of a MiG-29 is so cool!
It can even be heard in the terminal or even in the jet bridge boarding a 777
Omg, this has to be the best sound picked up video of a GE-90 on youtube! 🤤
CJ ye lol
Airport Madness Pro (2020)
Hshdhjakdfkfkkkm
Vxgvnjrufdhdrjfj
Imagine walking in front of this active engine,
It would *suck*
Mr. Artist hmmmmmm
XD PUNS
lol nice one
That's a nightmare
Mr. Artist it would suck yoinks in
Ain't nothin' like hearing the sound of a 777 engine blasting first thing in the mornin'!
I like it late at night when its all quiet and imagine the thrust of more than 77,000 pounds of air in a second from the GE-90
You gotta love it allways
Airport Madness Pro (2020)
Dufhdfhjd {6⃣}
@@itsma._ttt Nah. 747 with the classic RB211, A330 with trent 700, All Boeing 777 sounds are so much better
Hats off to the aircraft maintainers who keep these machines airworthy and safe.
The first time I went on the 777 I was shocked by the size of the GE90. didn't know it was the biggest jet engine ever but it was really cool to see.
Wait until you see the GE9X...
@@notleks2411anything bigger than GE90 is only suitable for a380 or b747.
@@arnabnath8428nah 777x has it. Also airlines arent going to waste their time and money on replacing their current fleet of 747's and a380's with those engines due to long term cost(cuz its 4 of the big bastards you have to put on them, so double the engines double the cost). Not to mention the 747 has to have taller landing gear because the engine is so god dam big it has to be angled😂 in order to fit. Its all about efficiency
Its amazing how fast the engine is spinning even though its only on idle
This is the engine speed when you just landed, the reason why the plane is not moving because it's on brakes and there are some objects that wont let it go.
Emil K. Yes
They blasted the engines to full but the plane isn’t moving because the brakes are on and there are additional ground brakes stopping it
1:50 is about taxi power.
Wait untill you see it at *MAX T/O* power. Boy does it whine and roar like a demon.
Doge Bomber yeah.
Can you imagine a 777 with GE90-115 in August 1949 next to a Comet? The engine was wider than the fuselage of the Comet and had 475% more power than the Comet's four engines combined and VERY quiet by comparison.
Wet dream of plane engineers of 1949
That's actually insane.
The only thing i'm hearing is a ps4 startup
All I’m hearing is that one kids mic
Mine whilst sat in the lobby screen in call of duty modern warfare
Literally 🤣🤣🤣
Sony Airlines.
EXTREMELY relatable.
me: tries to run microsoft flight simulator and google at the same time
my pc fans:
Same here, except it’s World of Tanks
😂
They should link this sound up to electric cars, everyone would buy one then lol
Porsche Taycan: wants to know your location.
Allow *Deny*
What?
Airport Madness Pro (2020)
Sdhdggdhsheie
@@user-pl1nn5ch9m ?
Link a gas engine car with aftermarket turbos, no electric motors.
I remember waiting for flights inside New York JFK and Rome Fiumicino. Those GE90 starts are so beastly loud that they are one of the only things you can hear loud and clear inside the terminal. Might be the greatest jet engine type ever created.
Maybe. IMO nothing beats the sound of an RB211!!! It’s raucous
What the RR had that made it cool was SMOKE!
Whenever I'm on a 777 I could feel the vibrations from this beast
And this is only at idle thrust. I love GE90s
Mee too.
*HA!*
You ain't heard nothing yet.
This is what's called "ground idle." This is the weakest setting the engine can run at while supplying power to the aircraft systems.
Probably like 15%-20% power.
@@davecrupel2817 you are wrong. Ge9x is now the strongest engine ever somewhere from 100,000 pounds of thrust following the Ge90 and then Genx.
@@davecrupel2817 well anyways you are half wrong and half correct.👍👍👍
@Muslimcel you are indeed correct.
Focus very closely on the center of the engine. Now I'm going to snap my fingers, and when I do, you're going to fall asleep.
Hahahaha 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
👁👅👁
That whole engine and cowling is almost the same size as a NYC Flat. A man thats 5ft 8" can stand in the intake. Gigantic
This is the avgeek version of an ASMR video. Love it!
0:48 put earrape over that and your ears would be dead in a nanosecond
“Sir our engine failed!”
“Don’t worry I have a crappy PC”
Me: turn on max quality in minecraft
My pc sound:
1:11 my favourite sound
This is so cool, you can hear the rate of rpm the compressor blades are at as the engine is spooling up before stage one even starts to move, so cool.
Nobody:
Literally nobody:
My PC fan when my PC is not in use:
@Joshua Reape 😍
Airport Madness Pro (2020)
Dhdhhddj Gdhjdjjsk Zhdhcjj5⃣0⃣
@@user-pl1nn5ch9m the fuck?
@@tanmaychat5802 I'm glad someone else caught how questionable that comment was.
@@user-pl1nn5ch9m ????? What
I used to work in the bagwell for dnata at SFO, and I never got tired of hearing a 777's GE-90s spool up. The feeling of the vibration was insane.
Damn this sound brings me back to working inside the fence at LAX, its really a sound you feel more than hear, especially 1:10 to 1:38.
Something about jet engine sound is just so fulfilling and satisfying to me
Same😎
Amazing, especially at the 1:11 mark when fuel is being done injected into the combustion chamber.
The CF6 does have a deep sound, but nowhere near as deep as the GE90
@@ag6371
The new GE9X even sound ultra Better.
Its like roaring..
Its alot Better for sure
I love the sound it makes when the air goes through the gearbox to spin the blades
0:30 The Tornado alarm just went on time
nice
amazing
@@mjt777x8 THX
Still after many years the 777 has been in service the engine start up is so sweet to hear...inside or outside the aircraft...
Alternate title: 2 minutes and 50 seconds of relaxing sounds for sleep and study!!
As an aircraft mechanic for over 35yrs years what blows me away is the fact that the 737 sitting in the hangar behind and to the right, has a fuselage diameter approximately the same diameter as the engine cowling of the triple seven!
I've only ever been on board A320s, 737s, Dash 8s and a museum Concorde so it's extremely hard for me to grasp how absolutely huge those engines actually are
How come at 1:30 it sounds like the engine stops ramping up but then the sound comes again a second later at higher pitch?
Have noticed several times when flying in a 777.
Introduction of fuel into the system. This is when they start to burn.
I noticed that on the 737 Max engine too
@@CaptainTransit U mean initially a starter motor and bleed air is used to start the engine to some RPM then the fuel is introduced which further spools up the engine to IDLE rpm right ??
@@CaptainTransit The fuel is injected way earlier, its when the bass starts, the sound at 1:30 is just characteristic as far as I know.
Ralf XIV it is very deep that it gives a vibrating effect in the cabin
It is satisfying to actually hearing the oil turning the engine on from the electrical motor.
Sounds like my 2020 macbook pro 16 when doing nothing.
Darude - Sandstorm
lol this jet is nothing compared to my 2017 13 inch when im doing nothing too
I’m impressed by how quickly it speeds up.
The GE-90 engine is the size of a 737 body ;-;
No wonder they call the 777 a mini-jumbo
Nothing better than hearing the kids crying and nervous flyer's faces when that rumble echoed through the ENTIRE cabin...it was glorious to operate on them
Disclaimer: this video is in partnership and paid by FedEx.
Ok.
Not
No connection to FDX
The roar of the GE90. I was sadden when I was on a 772 with United and only got stuck with the PW4000.
I had to have the Left IDG (Integrated Drive Generator) disconnected before flight. To do that the engine had to be started, not motored.
can you elaborate on the reasoning or purpose ?
@@SSaugaCriss Usually if there is a fault with an IDG and your company's MEL (minimum equipment list) allows you to defer the defect. The engine must be at or above idle speed to enable a disconnect via the overhead switch. Disconnecting energizes a solenoid and opens a clutch in the IDG.
@@bradw3116 fascinating, thanks.
can a 777 be motored on bat or do you need the apu?
@@SSaugaCriss 777 has a pneumatic starter so it must have an air source for ground start. Either APU, ground start cart or doing a X-bleed from the other engine.
I hear these things spooling up on the cargo side of O'Hare from the last place where I lived. That low 1:10 BWOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO sound is very therapeutic especially late at night.
Could you imagine having 4 of these on a some b747 variant. I heard that they were doing this for Airforce 1.
So inefficient to do that though.
Yet so redundant in case of mechanical failure. That’s THE airplane that you don’t want to crash because of engine failure!
@@zacharysylvester8349 i watched a documentary about 9/11 and how they hurried the oresident bush with his staff to AF1 and how they were hauling ass out if the airport like a bat out of hell. Apparently they had to alternate fighter jet planes to escort it around the skies because it was going to fast the jets were burning fuel just trying to keep up. I did some digging in around snd i found out that for them to burn fuel at that ratem the airforce 1 had to be going over 550 mph. Which is shocking for a 747. But i think AF1 have a top speed of mach .90 I know. But who are yo dictate to the airforce i suppose. Its all hersay for now. But I do know that current airforce one utilizes two 787 engines for the inner ones and larger engine size of 757-300 for outer. That i k ow for a fact. I spotted airfoce one 1 2 years ago and I didn't believe how massive the 747 engines were. I know what typical 747 engines are. And typical they were not.
@@aky19832001 Wrong. The VC-25A uses four CF6 engines, while the VC-25B uses four GEnx engines. And the C-32 uses two RB211 engines, while the other plane uses CFM56 engines.
@@zacharysylvester8349 Use two GE90s on the 74'
heard one starting up at LAX. i was in the parking garage outside the terminal and the sound reverberated through the entire garage. i knew instantly what it was
Congratulations, you just recorded a fan
How a fan blow towards you
2:20 Those are some awesome sounding harmonics that thing has!
My computer fan when I play games in online class:
got hypnotized looking at the spiral thingy
That *MUST* be there or otherwise ground personnel can be sucked onto these beasts kilometers away
What a magnificent engineering .
The school computer when i open 1 tab:
This gonna be a perfect ringtone :)
This is a sound I won’t forget as a passenger- on the older British Airways 200ERs I remember, you can literally hear the plastic paneling of the cabin rattling as the engine howls on startup
Just listen..the sound...this thing coming alive...
Nice video. I love it when the deep bass starts to kick in. ☺️
Bass drop sound around 1:10. It’s even better inside the plane or inside the terminal where it can most always be heard loud and clear
Until passed by its derivative, the GE9X, the GE90 series held the title of the largest engines in aviation history. The fan diameter of the original series being 123 in
I am hipnotized by the spiral spinning in the engine :-)
You should see Rolls Royce engines. Their spirals are much longer and more tightly wound.
Considering how much the turbine and compressors weigh it surely does accelerate quickly
Believe it or not, most of the resistance comes from the compressed air in the HP stages of the compressor. But once it's connected power wheels get going, it's a totally negligible force.
THAT HOWL OF A GE-90 STARTING MELTS MY HEART ALL THE TIME😍🥰💕
I have always wondered where the sound of the aircraft comes from although the engine is off
That is the Auxillary Power Unit, or A.P.U. for short, running in the rear of the aircraft. It's basically a gas turbine engine that produces electricity and hydraulic power, and also can supply pressurized air to start the engines. Pilots typically leave it on so they can start their engines without needing a Ground Power Unit (or G.P.U. for short).
@@davecrupel2817 oh i understand now.....that was also something that I wanted to know actually....i thought it was like a mini turbo engine like that on a military aircraft
The 777's APU is powerful enough to start these beasts with a flick of a switch
It looks so small in camera but in reality, the diameter is at LEAST 10 feet
The diameter of the engine is around the same size of the diameter of the fuselage of a 737.
Holy crap that’s small compared to a 777
My intel core i3 when I run GTA 5
This is now my alarm tone. Freakin' more power in that motor than 10 f1's combined.
You're a little light, Stephen. More than 100 F1's combined. The GE90's strength is commonly measured in pounds of thrust but it equates to over 100,000 horsepower. GE90-115 fun facts: 9'7" in diameter, weighs 18,000 pounds (although the carbon fiber fan blades only weigh about 1200 pounds combined), cost $40 million apiece and on a test stand, it's been pushed to over 125,000 pounds of thrust, making it the most powerful jet engine in existence. Two of these big boys can shove a 700,000 pound aircraft through the air at 550mph for 10,000 miles.
@@cll1639 Well shite.. I thought i was an aerosexual 😑 guess i need to do some homework lol
@@stephenhean5831 Aerosexual? Now that's a gender I haven't heard of... LOL
Isn't technology terrifying
@Elisha yup
Or blow things over if you're not careful ;-)
you forgot the words: sometimes or quite
I love the startup on the JET TURBINE ENGINES on the BOEING
I remember boarding a budget airline aircraft and hearing one of these I'm a background
Cool, the story of a background who boarded a budget airline plane and heard the engine.
@@GunsNGames1 in the bg
damn it, I love that humming noise from the GE90 engines when starting😍🎶
This is the shit. OOOhhh yeah this is it. This is what I've been craving.
Get a life
Here I am listening to engine sounds again instead of getting a good night's rest lmao
don’t get close, or get mushed
The sound is just amazing😍😉
this noise usually does my ps4
I love how Criterion Games used this for the boost sound effect in Burnout Paradise. Cool touch by the developers!
Turbine engines suck...
everything in from water to birds: they are so powerful.
Definitely a PS4
In defense of turbofans. That’s an overexaggeration
I wouldn’t want to be anywhere within a quarter mile of the intake of that beast 😎
Those blades are asking for a watermelon
This is so scary how powerful this engine is
Are the FedEx pilots also in such a hurry than the truck drivers in europe? :D BUT nice sound
You know what's painted on the cockpit..."The World On Time!"
the ge90 sounds crazy starting up especially inside the cabin
Wait till you hear the take off spool up from this engine.
The best sound in the world imo. It sounds amazing in video, but it's nothing compared to being inside the actual aircraft during takeoff. This is a beast.
A real "kick-in-the-pants" is a lightweight 777 combined with a MAX power takeoff. 330,000 pound jet and 220,000 pounds of thrust. Amazing....
Why was I expecting it to sound like a car’s starting motor 🤣
When you start up modern warfare:
had the pleasure of flying on the 777 twice over the atlantic
much more impressive when listening to it directly at the airport
never get tired of hearing this
0:31 your brain when your boss asks you about downsizing. 1:56 and then tells you that you will be promoted
That humming sound ♥️👌
The biggest jet engine in the world. Fantastic sound fantastic turbofan made by General electric
It's beatiful when you can hear that the fuel come in.
Beautiful.. Just Beautiful...
the bass sound you hear is because the ge90-110B1 rotorblades are so massive that it makes a low frequentie sound
That roar is just music to my ears😍👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Nobody:
My PC when I have two tabs open at once
Aztec Death Whistle typa sounds with that bleed air
When these powerful GE90-115B turbofan jet engines startup, they howl just like the Avro vulcan when nearly started up.
Wow! Even with the audio off, I can still hear the noise coming from my PC.
Every time a GE-90 starts an angel gets it's wings.