Hilarious 🙄 a standard issue Ryanair joke from someone who probably only flew occasionally. When folk makes gags I often wonder who they’re comparing with?
The second F/A-18 pilot knew the hikers were there. We had a similar encounter at Stevens Pass, WA years ago. Got buzzed and felt the jet blast from #2 being low.
And they definatly saw them. You just don't understand how good vision they have, and they are amazing at finding small details and that woulda been easy to see anyways.@@rtbrtb_dutchy4183
@@tomlee7956 No they haven't. I don't know why people are perpetuating this idiotic meme about Ryanair. It has absolutely no basis whatsoever. It is actually one of the world's safest airlines. Their fees and charges might be controversial but you can't fault their safety record.
I was a passenger on a flight that had an especially hard landing back in the '80s. The crew was standing outside the cockpit, thanking the passengers as we were deplaning. The older lady in front of me asked the pilot, "Did we land, or were we shot down?" I couldn't look him in the eye as I shook his hand, because I was about to crack up.
Looking down on an F18 is surreal. Years ago the Blue Angels performed over Elliot Bay in Seattle, rather than over Lake Washington as they normally did. This was only done one year, but during their VIP rides, they buzzed through the downtown area below the level of the tops of some of the skyscrapers. From the top of the Westin building we got to both look down at a jet, then later, as one flew south and we all turned to watch it, the 2nd came from behind us, starting below the top of the building and clearing it by...20 feet? It caught everyone off guard and the sound blew you away, but it also absolutely felt like you could reach up and touch it. Pretty sure these were the reasons they moved it back over Lake Washington the next year. The downtown area was not ready for that kind of excitement on a Thursday afternoon. 🤣 Amazing planes and the Angels are amazing pilots.
In RUclips, type in Mach Loop. It is in Wales and there might be up to maybe 4 F15s line up to shoot down a much longer canyon flying lower than the cameraman. Lots of other aircraft are doing the training too . From the C-130 down to Alpha Jets of all the NATO countries.
@@Ayrshore Joke aside you're not completely wrong there. Since Ryan Air mostly fly to smaller airports with shorter rwys they aim for firm landings with no extended floating. So the marginal between a firm and a hard landing is smaller.
@@jameswillingham5373 field of view. Associated with things may appear closer than they seem. The way the camera is zoomed and at the angle it is at, it looks extremely slow
I had 2 Eurofighters doing a low dogfight above my house last week. A bit like 1:31 but 2 of them chasing each other for 10 minutes. I wish I had a camera. I was ecstatic, but my wife didn't appreciate the noise and she got frightened when the fighters pointed its nose straight at us.
I really like comments" Pilot forgot the landing gear or forgot to flare" true if you don't know something don't talk about it. It just matter of common sense
I really don’t know why Ryan Air enjoys this reputation for bad landings. To me this suggests that their pilots are badly trained. I know that they are usually at the start of their career flying these small jets, but surely pride comes into play when it comes to landing the aircraft.
The Ryan Air one just looks like a hard landing rather than forgetting to flare. The rear wheels touch the ground and bounce before the nose wheel touches the runway surface. If you pause the video at 0:20 you can clearly see the flare with the two rear wheels grounded and the nose raised.
0:19 thahnkyou for flying Ryanair. Last year, over 90% of our flights arrived on time. We hoped you enjoyed yours, and look forward to seeing you again soon
Ryanair did flare, it was a last minute microburst, look at the windsock almost vertical to the right. You can see the aircraft being rolled to the right by the wind and the pilot correcting by left input. It was a good landing. Thanks for the video.
At first I thought it said "Ryanair pilot forgets his flares", and I thought "is it the 1970s again?". I've no idea what decade it is. I'm riddled with dementia, but at least I know that Lloyd George is the prime minister of wherever here is.
1:29 that guy needs to SHUT UP... I get that it can be exciting (it sure as hell is), but man how can you even enjoy the sights and especially sounds yourself if you're screaming like that?!
I find it entertaining to hear plane spotters in these videos lose their mind when a plane does a go around. When you watch a video from a pilot talking about them, they're just something that happens on occasion it's nothing more than a minor nuisance.
I would imagine that it is something that goes on an airline pilots record (percentage of go-arounds and reasons for such, since it will mean extra fuel is burnt) and is a factor in deciding promotion/ seniority. Any comment from someone 'in the industry'?
@@alfnoakes392 no, no records and no factors at all for promotion. If you were to do that, then pilots would be reluctant to do a go around, which is dangerous. The biggest example is Asiana Airlines crash of their B777 in San Fransisco. Due to culture, a go around was considered a bad thing in the company. So instead of going around, they crashed.
@@alfnoakes392 IIRC it used to be tracked, but they didn't want pilots risking landings that should be aborted so they did away with it. I remember a couple of pilots on youtube saying something to that matter but there are too many videos for me to go digging through them. lol
Definitely cringe. Especially the ones that try to critique landings. I know of a guy on YT that will scream go around at regional jets that float slightly on 13,000 ft runways. 🙄😬
I sit by the local harbour and critique landings at the airfield a mile away over the water on a regular basis, wonderful fun, especially weekends (flying lesson time) with a good cross-wind. Best is watching the super-experienced glider-tug pilot landing 'in place' in a strong breeze like a bird of prey descending to its nest. To offer online criticism of such professionals is not always 'polite' though, agreed.
Wouldn’t it be entertaining to put the male commentator on the BA A320 go around in a simulator and mimic that day’s wind conditions! It would only be fair to let the BA pilots critique his efforts too! You can be well trained, practiced and recent at crosswind landings. You can be in a familiar aircraft at a familiar airport. But all that pales into insignificance because the only thing that really matters is what the wind does (shear/gusts) in the last 30 feet before touchdown! 🥴
That go-around by BA was textbook. It's what we used to call a TOGA-10. 10 degrees pitch in order to avoid a tailstrike and once you're clear of the runway, you revert to the "normal" go-around procedure. It was in no way "late". Also plane-spotters commenting on what the pilot is supposed to do is utterly infuriating. Learn to fly an airbus yourself, then we'll talk. Same goes for a lot of people in aviation related comment sections! Best regards, a 320 driver.
@@rtbrtb_dutchy4183 I've never implied that it was. Maybe. Afaik old BA and Virgin guys also had that procedure, as that's who my instructors were. Nowadays it's called balked landing procedure, at least at my company.
@@EinfachLuap balked landing isn’t new. It’s been around longer than I’ve been flying and I started in 1992. But a balked landing doesn’t mean 10° pitch to avoid tail strike. Now, to be fair, I have zero A320 experience. So maybe it’s an A320 thing. However, I’m typed on the A340, which is prone to tail strikes, yet we weren’t trained to 10°.
@@rtbrtb_dutchy4183 I haven't claimed it's new, just that we call it that now. Gone through the rating 1 year ago, so I guess I'm still fresh and just checked the docs, it's 10° for us. Maybe a company thing, who knows.
I had one of those landings. The pilot apologized to everyone. It was Southwest Airlines back in the 90's and we landed in Minneapolis. The entire plane made a "crunching" noise and I truly thought for a moment we were all going to die.
@@franticflyboy Hey now, they call themselves Naval Aviators. Not sure if that applies to wannabes who bend weaker everyday undercarriage. Related, Blue Angels’ team landings (sequential I saw, maybe 8-12 sec between), are so cool. They all planted it at the same spot, no flare lol. Husky legs.
I was recording a video while landing in Zadar, Croatia and my phone fell from my hand as the plane touched the ground. I can now imagine what it must have looked like outside the plane during that landing.
I live in a MOA where they do canyon flying. Does get annoying when you’re trying to fly fish until two F-117 come right overhead and I live out my childhood dream.
There must be something to these hard landings by Ryanair because despite the harshness their aircraft seem to be in fighting condition. I mean knock on wood but no fatal crashes with its reputation? Bloody good.
Not enough passengers paid the extra landing flare fee.
They spent all their money on the $20 pillow fee.
More like they're gonna get charged a fee for the landing gear maintenance costs 😂
😂
Hilarious, yet strangely probable
Hilarious 🙄 a standard issue Ryanair joke from someone who probably only flew occasionally. When folk makes gags I often wonder who they’re comparing with?
Ryanair never disappoints.
Still, you have to give Aero Union an "A" for effort.
Yes the Aero Union had some definite Aerosucre undertones!
Kablammo!
The second F/A-18 pilot knew the hikers were there. We had a similar encounter at Stevens Pass, WA years ago. Got buzzed and felt the jet blast from #2 being low.
They are not gonna pay attention to hikers. 🤣🤣. But hey, I guess it’s a better story to tell that he knows. 😂
@@rtbrtb_dutchy4183 "🤣🤣." bro actually put a "." after a emoji. It isn't a sentence.
And they definatly saw them. You just don't understand how good vision they have, and they are amazing at finding small details and that woulda been easy to see anyways.@@rtbrtb_dutchy4183
@@Ghost_III. I clicked twice on the spacebar. When you do that, iPhone puts a “.” 🤷🏻♂️. See, just happened again. 🤷🏻♂️
Why are you clicking twice 💀@@rtbrtb_dutchy4183
3 minutes of aviation never disappoints
Apart from the missing 7 seconds
@@JohnSmithShieldshey! That was my line!!!😂😂😂
@@JohnSmithShields yeah seriously has the creator never heard of subtitles?
Can we not increase it to 4 minutes ?
Bot
Ryan Air in its 37 year history and currently ranked number three in the world for yearly passengers carried has never had a fatal accident.
That might be true but they have given their passengers more heart attacks than any other airline...
@@tomlee7956 No that’s just not true.
@@ramps2402 it is. They have never had a fatal crash ever.
Their yearly bill for paying for passengers soiled underwear is $12,000,000
@@tomlee7956 No they haven't. I don't know why people are perpetuating this idiotic meme about Ryanair. It has absolutely no basis whatsoever. It is actually one of the world's safest airlines. Their fees and charges might be controversial but you can't fault their safety record.
Ryanair Executives: Give that pilot a raise!
but that would mean paying him above minimum wage and that would affect his Tax Credits award
CANSADO ???? BURNOUT ???? WHO KNOWS.....
Literally no one knows what they’re talking about re this subject. It’s ridiculous
I was a passenger on a flight that had an especially hard landing back in the '80s. The crew was standing outside the cockpit, thanking the passengers as we were deplaning. The older lady in front of me asked the pilot, "Did we land, or were we shot down?" I couldn't look him in the eye as I shook his hand, because I was about to crack up.
Looking down on an F18 is surreal. Years ago the Blue Angels performed over Elliot Bay in Seattle, rather than over Lake Washington as they normally did. This was only done one year, but during their VIP rides, they buzzed through the downtown area below the level of the tops of some of the skyscrapers. From the top of the Westin building we got to both look down at a jet, then later, as one flew south and we all turned to watch it, the 2nd came from behind us, starting below the top of the building and clearing it by...20 feet? It caught everyone off guard and the sound blew you away, but it also absolutely felt like you could reach up and touch it.
Pretty sure these were the reasons they moved it back over Lake Washington the next year. The downtown area was not ready for that kind of excitement on a Thursday afternoon. 🤣 Amazing planes and the Angels are amazing pilots.
In RUclips, type in Mach Loop. It is in Wales and there might be up to maybe 4 F15s line up to shoot down a much longer canyon flying lower than the cameraman. Lots of other aircraft are doing the training too . From the C-130 down to Alpha Jets of all the NATO countries.
Looks like Nevada out of Fallon NAS.
Isn't this star wars canyon in the clip here? @@MrTommy001
@@felixx321: Yes
Why do americans always make so much noise?
smoothest Ryanair landing
Every RyanAir pilot to ever exist, in unison: "Flare? What's flare??"
In the case of Ryanair, it would be more astonishing to see a video of a smooth landing 😬
They did one once. Co-pilot made him take off and do it again properly :P
@@Ayrshore Joke aside you're not completely wrong there. Since Ryan Air mostly fly to smaller airports with shorter rwys they aim for firm landings with no extended floating. So the marginal between a firm and a hard landing is smaller.
The A380 always looks like it's just driving down a street when it suddendly starts to fly.
hard to judge the speed on this bird , always looks like it's going too slow to take off right up until it does . something to do with size I wonder?
@@jameswillingham5373nope. It’s the fov/ perspective
@@AV1AT1XN what's that ? Front on view? First officer view? I don't know really
@@jameswillingham5373 field of view. Associated with things may appear closer than they seem. The way the camera is zoomed and at the angle it is at, it looks extremely slow
field of view doesn't mean what you think it means. Foreshortening maybe, but not field of view.@@AV1AT1XN
Wow, that's one of the smoothest Ryanair landings I've ever seen!
Pilot didn’t forget he was a Ryanair pilot
Edit: thanks for the likes
Always look forward to a new three minutes.
I had 2 Eurofighters doing a low dogfight above my house last week. A bit like 1:31 but 2 of them chasing each other for 10 minutes. I wish I had a camera.
I was ecstatic, but my wife didn't appreciate the noise and she got frightened when the fighters pointed its nose straight at us.
1:14 "Here it comes another one‘s coming in"
"YEEEEESSSS" lmao
Looks like an unusually soft landing for Ryanair.
I love when people who have never flown in their life are giving advice on what to do
I also love it when actual pilots make comments or observations and then reading the comments from the usual know it alla who don’t realise 😂
Really? I don't like it at all.
@@IIIlIIIIlIIIII the original comment was sarcasm.
Thank you…
I really like comments" Pilot forgot the landing gear or forgot to flare" true if you don't know something don't talk about it. It just matter of common sense
Regarding the Ryanair landing, look at the wind sock. It was a strong crosswind. They did fine! A firm landing isnt necessarily a bad landing!
That’s the standard Ryanair landing procedure. Late or no flare.
I hope this is meant as a joke. 😂
@@rtbrtb_dutchy4183looking at the windsock I just assumed it’s gusting and so they planted it firmly and on purpose?
@@MeppyMan I agree with you. Or, he or she simply had a brain fart and flared too late, that’s a possibility too. 🤣🤣
I really don’t know why Ryan Air enjoys this reputation for bad landings. To me this suggests that their pilots are badly trained. I know that they are usually at the start of their career flying these small jets, but surely pride comes into play when it comes to landing the aircraft.
@@MeppyMan I don’t think so since the landing was to hard to be firmly on purpose.
The Ryan Air one just looks like a hard landing rather than forgetting to flare. The rear wheels touch the ground and bounce before the nose wheel touches the runway surface.
If you pause the video at 0:20 you can clearly see the flare with the two rear wheels grounded and the nose raised.
it was a clearly strong windy day, nothing about the flares
The first one was actually a normal landing... following Ryanair standard company procedures. 😊
It's the most direct route...by about three seconds.
The passengers have to pay a $10 surcharge each if they want a smooth landing. They announce it on the descent.
The Ryanair passengers didnt pay for the "premium" landing option, got stuck with the standard landing.
Carrier landing! Nailed it 😂😂
Man those A380s amaze me every time I see them
0:19 thahnkyou for flying Ryanair. Last year, over 90% of our flights arrived on time. We hoped you enjoyed yours, and look forward to seeing you again soon
A more shocking video would’ve been “Ryanair pilot remembers to flare”
I usually hate it when people talk while they're filming, but the guy who filmed the RYR landing made me smile!
That F-18 buzz was epic
they're RCAF, Royal Canadian Air Force. There is a much longer video of this on YT.
The question is how does a B737s chicken legs take that pounding form RyanAir pilots?😂
Ryanair did flare, it was a last minute microburst, look at the windsock almost vertical to the right. You can see the aircraft being rolled to the right by the wind and the pilot correcting by left input. It was a good landing. Thanks for the video.
Just imagine a RyanAir-AeroSucre merger: your flight barely takes off and lands with a thud!
At first I thought it said "Ryanair pilot forgets his flares", and I thought "is it the 1970s again?". I've no idea what decade it is. I'm riddled with dementia, but at least I know that Lloyd George is the prime minister of wherever here is.
Ryanair, We'll get you there! (spine realignment included!)
another great episode ❤
Any respectable Naval Aviator would be proud of that first landing. OK-3 for sure.
The Ryanair motto, "We'll get you to your destination. Even if it kills us."
Plot twist: after that landing, the Ryanair pilot was gifted by the airline with an 'Employee Of the Year' medal.
Ryanair was landing in strong cross wind. He probably landed hard on purpose to stick to the runway. Look at the wind sock.
Indeed: plant it and don't worry if the landing isn't pretty. It's not going to be.
I've seen RC-Plane landings under that Conditions that were smoother 🤣
At 19 seconds you can see the pilot did indeed flare. It's just a high descent rate no doubt due to the challenging wind conditions.
Probably in ils automatic procedure 😅
Ryan air usually lands hard to avoid go around. Save time and money
I`d imagine it was more to do with wind-shear rather than forgetting to flair the Ryanair plane.
I agree with you
Gotta love Star Wars Canyon!
I was lucky to fly it in a Fouga Magister...Magic
It's on my bucket list. Is there a way of knowing when the jets will be there? Do they post anything online etc?
1:29 that guy needs to SHUT UP... I get that it can be exciting (it sure as hell is), but man how can you even enjoy the sights and especially sounds yourself if you're screaming like that?!
Ryan air pilot trapped the 3 wire!
This is such a great channel!!
The fighter saw the people and treated them to a show.
I find it entertaining to hear plane spotters in these videos lose their mind when a plane does a go around. When you watch a video from a pilot talking about them, they're just something that happens on occasion it's nothing more than a minor nuisance.
Right. It’s like realizing your highway exit is right there and you know you can’t make it anymore, so you have to go to the next one.
I would imagine that it is something that goes on an airline pilots record (percentage of go-arounds and reasons for such, since it will mean extra fuel is burnt) and is a factor in deciding promotion/ seniority. Any comment from someone 'in the industry'?
@@alfnoakes392 no, no records and no factors at all for promotion.
If you were to do that, then pilots would be reluctant to do a go around, which is dangerous.
The biggest example is Asiana Airlines crash of their B777 in San Fransisco. Due to culture, a go around was considered a bad thing in the company. So instead of going around, they crashed.
@@alfnoakes392 IIRC it used to be tracked, but they didn't want pilots risking landings that should be aborted so they did away with it. I remember a couple of pilots on youtube saying something to that matter but there are too many videos for me to go digging through them. lol
I want my 7 seconds back
I do enjoy aviation videos, but I continue to marvel at people that spend their day watching landings...
Best Channel on YT!!!!!
It's cringe to say cringe but how do you feel when a spotter is giving tips on how to land a plane to a pilot?
Serious cringe
Definitely cringe. Especially the ones that try to critique landings.
I know of a guy on YT that will scream go around at regional jets that float slightly on 13,000 ft runways. 🙄😬
Super annoying
I sit by the local harbour and critique landings at the airfield a mile away over the water on a regular basis, wonderful fun, especially weekends (flying lesson time) with a good cross-wind. Best is watching the super-experienced glider-tug pilot landing 'in place' in a strong breeze like a bird of prey descending to its nest. To offer online criticism of such professionals is not always 'polite' though, agreed.
Waaaay too many amateur aviation commentators out there. Cringe.
Every Ryanair flight I have flown had a smooth landing.
Same here
Says the Ryanair Marketing Department… 😏😉
Wouldn’t it be entertaining to put the male commentator on the BA A320 go around in a simulator and mimic that day’s wind conditions! It would only be fair to let the BA pilots critique his efforts too!
You can be well trained, practiced and recent at crosswind landings. You can be in a familiar aircraft at a familiar airport. But all that pales into insignificance because the only thing that really matters is what the wind does (shear/gusts) in the last 30 feet before touchdown! 🥴
Whaddya mean "forgets to flare"? That was a perfect Ryanair landing
typical ryanair landings. The pilot def gets an promotion
*Thank you, I am amazed watching these wonderful moments*
When landing, Ryanair planes turn from a Boeing to a Boing
3 minutes of aviation is my fav aviation channel after Ice711 but 3 minutes of aviation makes so good videos we should be paying him for that...
Its Ryanair- what did u expect
Y😄
Butter landing😂😂
It’s like they’re always trying to outdo Aerosucre!
Bet the passengers still clapped 🤣
@@filipdimitrov1630 ryanair should add a clapping fee
That go-around by BA was textbook. It's what we used to call a TOGA-10. 10 degrees pitch in order to avoid a tailstrike and once you're clear of the runway, you revert to the "normal" go-around procedure. It was in no way "late". Also plane-spotters commenting on what the pilot is supposed to do is utterly infuriating. Learn to fly an airbus yourself, then we'll talk. Same goes for a lot of people in aviation related comment sections! Best regards, a 320 driver.
Nowhere near a tail strike. I’ve never heard of TOGA-10. Must be specific to your airline?
@@rtbrtb_dutchy4183 I've never implied that it was.
Maybe. Afaik old BA and Virgin guys also had that procedure, as that's who my instructors were.
Nowadays it's called balked landing procedure, at least at my company.
@@EinfachLuap balked landing isn’t new. It’s been around longer than I’ve been flying and I started in 1992. But a balked landing doesn’t mean 10° pitch to avoid tail strike.
Now, to be fair, I have zero A320 experience. So maybe it’s an A320 thing. However, I’m typed on the A340, which is prone to tail strikes, yet we weren’t trained to 10°.
@@rtbrtb_dutchy4183 I haven't claimed it's new, just that we call it that now. Gone through the rating 1 year ago, so I guess I'm still fresh and just checked the docs, it's 10° for us. Maybe a company thing, who knows.
I had one of those landings. The pilot apologized to everyone. It was Southwest Airlines back in the 90's and we landed in Minneapolis. The entire plane made a "crunching" noise and I truly thought for a moment we were all going to die.
He didn't forget to flare, that was a carrier landing 👍
Exactly... You can always figure out the Navy pilots!
@@franticflyboy Hey now, they call themselves Naval Aviators. Not sure if that applies to wannabes who bend weaker everyday undercarriage.
Related, Blue Angels’ team landings (sequential I saw, maybe 8-12 sec between), are so cool. They all planted it at the same spot, no flare lol. Husky legs.
So, do they just tell those Ryanair guys not to flare?
It saves dollars worth of fuel to skip it! ;-)
Why, it's a Boeing.
Boing-boing-boing...
Great video, like always!
Ryanair: budget airline, budget pilot! You always know when you arrive with those guys.
Great video!
Ouch that poor 737, that's a confirmed landing 😂
Had the pleasure of meeting Rocco on that very Emirates flight. The nicest guy! Everyone wanted a selfie.
Rocco who, that French porno dude?
Selfie with Rocco or his big di..k?
2:14- I like how the A380 leaves ground as it was on rails.
The first clip is so obvious 🤣
0:19 that's normal landing
I was recording a video while landing in Zadar, Croatia and my phone fell from my hand as the plane touched the ground. I can now imagine what it must have looked like outside the plane during that landing.
0:32 A319 (can tell by single over-wing exit)
I live in a MOA where they do canyon flying. Does get annoying when you’re trying to fly fish until two F-117 come right overhead and I live out my childhood dream.
I love your channel
what was so special abt the first one tho?
thats a totally normal RyanAir landing
Those F-18s were from the set of Top Gun 2 😂
Bahaha old man laughing "what was that" 😂
That Ryanair one was a firm landing rather than a hard one, nothing to worry about on a 737
As always the videos are great. What's not so great is the commentary from some of the British and LA planespotters
Not a typical ryan air landing, this guy's landing is much smoother and controlled than most ryan air landings😂😊😅😅😊
Smoothest ryanair landing:
Great videos as always! Although I have to admit I found the audio on the first few clips annoying.
Definitely agree 100%. Armchair experts..
There must be something to these hard landings by Ryanair because despite the harshness their aircraft seem to be in fighting condition. I mean knock on wood but no fatal crashes with its reputation? Bloody good.
Was that Mentour Pilot slamming his 737 into the planet??? Probably not.
Wow good stuff 👍
1:15 the funny thing is that its way louder in person lol
Ryanair conducts another normal Ryanair landing.
RyanAir: "we'll get you there!... eventually..."
At least they remembered to lower the gear, arm the ground spoilers and lower the flaps. Great pilots
Nah didn't forget to flare, there just wasn't a passenger onboard who had paid extra for comfortable landing
Why oh why do people still fly with Ryanair??? It never ceases to amaze me..
No flare is standard procedure at Ryanair. I flew with the airline a couple of times and non of the pilots actually cared to flare :-)
He landed the plane without a flare in the world... 😁
No, they did flare. Just not alot
0:52 go arounds can be preformed as long as the reversers are not on
Thank you for flying Ryanair
Passengers must pay extra for flair
Ryanair... enough said!😬😳
I reckon RyanAirs' pilot training sim is just GTA in the break room
0:18 truly a Ryanair landing 😂😂😂😂😂
Sadly, no Aerosucrae