The Challenger Disaster: STS-51-L Helicopter Camera

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  • Опубликовано: 26 авг 2016
  • From Tuesday, January 28th 1986 The Space Shuttle Challenger Explosion from the Helicopter camera. The explosion took place 73 seconds into Challengers 10th flight at 11:39:13 A.M EST
    The STS-51-L Crew:
    Commander:Francis R. Scobee
    Pilot:Michael J. Smith
    Mission Specialist:Ellison S. Onizuka
    Mission Specialist:Judith A. Resnik
    Mission Specialist:Ronald E. McNair
    Payload Specialist:Gregory B.Jarvis
    Payload Specialist: Christa McAuliffe
    (Teacher in Space)
    (Footage is courtesy of shuttlevideo Y.T channel)
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Комментарии • 8 тыс.

  • @josephwood499
    @josephwood499 3 года назад +1620

    After so many years, this is the first time i see this helicopter view

  • @slipstream9368
    @slipstream9368 5 лет назад +3388

    The early pioneers always take the greatest risks. My greatest respect for those people. R.I.P

    • @javiersimental1908
      @javiersimental1908 5 лет назад +47

      They are still alive...
      They didn't die.
      Research it.....
      They are all alive and well they are professors and teachers now.

    • @Samaintbovered
      @Samaintbovered 5 лет назад +22

      I had the same reaction.There are events that consist of the "before," the "after"-- and whatever edge divides them. The "before" can be anything from a horrendous disaster to the articulation of a single sentence... But once that action is complete, there's no going back. You've crossed a line-- and nothing can ever the same again. With the Challenger, I remember being at school, focused on a test, when the vice-principal slipped in. Without looking at any of us, he quietly made his way to my teacher, whose desk was behind me. I stared at my paper and waited. Finally, l heard him whisper, "The 'Challenger' has exploded." This was my first encounter with total incomprehension. Although I understood that such a thing was possible, it never occurred to me that universe would actually allow it, my mind seemed incapable of absorbing the situation's enormity. Since then, only two other events have ground me to an all-systems-fail halt: Event #1. 9/11, which was a disaster in the truest sense: humans glorying in the perversion of God's greatest gifts, free will & intellect. The 18 years since have provided little clarity.
      Event #2. The confirmation that my mother had Alzheimer's. Having spent 10 years begging my family to believe that she had the illness, I figured I'd be super-stoic when the confirmation finally came.
      Wrong.
      Again, there are certain, merciless truths that can knock the world off its axis--The only thing that's changed is that I'm intellectually aware of the fact. Unfortunately, that doesn't do much for the lonliness.

    • @Samaintbovered
      @Samaintbovered 5 лет назад +6

      had the same reaction.There are events that consist of the "before," the "after"-- and whatever edge divides them. The "before" can be anything from a horrendous disaster to the articulation of a single sentence... But once that action is complete, there's no going back. You've crossed a line-- and nothing can ever the same again. With the Challenger, I remember being at school, focused on a test, when the vice-principal slipped in. Without looking at any of us, he quietly made his way to my teacher, whose desk was behind me. I stared at my paper and waited. Finally, l heard him whisper, "The 'Challenger' has exploded." This was my first encounter with total incomprehension. Although I understood that such a thing was possible, it never occurred to me that universe would actually allow it, my mind seemed incapable of absorbing the situation's enormity. Since then, only two other events have ground me to an all-systems-fail halt: Event #1. 9/11, which was a disaster in the truest sense: humans glorying in the perversion of God's greatest gifts, free will & intellect. The 18 years since have provided little clarity.
      Event #2. The confirmation that my mother had Alzheimer's. Having spent 10 years begging my family to believe that she had the illness, I figured I'd be super-stoic when the confirmation finally came.
      Wrong.
      Again, there are certain, merciless truths that can knock the world off its axis--The only thing that's changed is that I'm intellectually aware of the fact. Unfortunately, that doesn't do much for the lonliness.

    • @fascinatedweeb9324
      @fascinatedweeb9324 5 лет назад +115

      @@javiersimental1908 Sorry but that's a big negative to your response, all 7 crews on board was killed in this miserable disaster

    • @davejachamikovitz3817
      @davejachamikovitz3817 5 лет назад +32

      Not all of them are alive today, Javier Simental. One of them was killed when the first missle struck the twin towers, and another one is missing after hijacking and piloting a Malaysia Airlines flight to parts unknown.
      Jeez.

  • @donaldkoelper5807
    @donaldkoelper5807 3 года назад +535

    "Flight controllers here looking very carefully at the situation - obviously a major malfunction." 35 years later, that's still the most haunting and heartbreaking understatement I've ever heard uttered by anyone. You can sense the NASA announcer trying to maintain his professionalism and composure in the face of profound tragedy that was still unfolding right in front of him.

    • @mulliganstew72
      @mulliganstew72 Год назад +23

      Yes yes yes. He didn’t want to believe it. And neither did we.

    • @salvitoripopadillo4539
      @salvitoripopadillo4539 2 месяца назад +9

      I couldn't sense anything. It sounded almost scripted to me. No emotion in his voice whatsoever. I remember watching this in my classroom like 95% of children around the world. "They" made sure EVERYONE would witness that event live! 🤔

    • @stripedassape8148
      @stripedassape8148 Месяц назад +2

      I think the hindenburg audio beats it in that regard not that it's a competition✌

    • @MrRedeyedJedi
      @MrRedeyedJedi Месяц назад +5

      Stark difference to the hindenburg announcer

    • @salvitoripopadillo4539
      @salvitoripopadillo4539 Месяц назад +2

      @@MrRedeyedJedi Ha! 😅 "Oh The Humanity!"

  • @otiscambell1883
    @otiscambell1883 2 года назад +692

    A couple months before this happened I landed in el Paso. Tower told me to" hold my position. Allow NASA t 38s to have right of way. Before taxing . All of them passed in front of me while taxing to the runway for take off. They all waved. But she, Christa , waved the longest, and had the biggest smile. She was so proud to be there. I'm proud to because she waved at me in my little 172. A great memory for me

    • @enjoyingmyvodka1013
      @enjoyingmyvodka1013 3 месяца назад +4

      😮😊

    • @sen5908
      @sen5908 3 месяца назад +4

      She wasn't allowed to fly on the T38s

    • @todddraper
      @todddraper 3 месяца назад

      @@sen5908 Yeah, she was. Try Googling Christa McAuliffe T-38.

    • @karensamuels390
      @karensamuels390 3 месяца назад +7

      I dont believe you. You cannot even spell.

    • @todddraper
      @todddraper 3 месяца назад

      @@sen5908 Not sure why my original comment got deleted, but yes, she was allowed. Try Googling it.

  • @fr-tigerfangs7039
    @fr-tigerfangs7039 4 года назад +958

    - Control: "Challenger, go at Throttle Up".
    - Challenger: "Roger, go at Throttle Up".
    Then, two seconds later, there is this crackling on radio, indicative of the explosion. Sends some very cold chills down my spine each time I watch it. These guys on board Challenger saw themselves plunging to their own death... RIP, all of them.

    • @charlesschauer8927
      @charlesschauer8927 4 года назад +8

      I never heard that before either

    • @lujo0707
      @lujo0707 3 года назад +64

      If you listen to full radio interaction between shuttle pilot and mission control you can clearly hear pilots last words. He said : "oh no".

    • @fabio78
      @fabio78 3 года назад +47

      @@lujo0707 he said "uh oh" and no, you can't hear it. It's part of the transcripts, but wasn't open.

    • @lujo0707
      @lujo0707 3 года назад +3

      @@fabio78 than maybe i heard some recreation of event, i remember showing it to my friend.

    • @blue9multimediagroup
      @blue9multimediagroup 3 года назад +4

      @@fabio78 in certain audio, you can hear it albeit brief.

  • @sergeyzagoruyko26
    @sergeyzagoruyko26 3 года назад +1155

    I remember a day when it happened... I was 14 years old kid in USSR and I was feeling that pain. I feel very sorry for those who lost their life it that tragic incident. It was like all our dreams about space exploration just hit a wall.

    • @ajaysghag
      @ajaysghag 3 года назад +38

      Yes. I was 15 at that time. I followed developments of Russian and American space programs.It was absolutely heart breaking to see the Shuttle explode. May the souls of the Astronauts find eternal peace

    • @ajaysghag
      @ajaysghag 3 года назад +20

      @Shane J Absolutely...The way the world politics is shaping up ...it's alarming... World leaders should work towards Global Peace...then only the world will prosper

    • @listenup872
      @listenup872 3 года назад +4

      No one was hurt during the propaganda delusion effort made on the part of the US. As the phallic shaped device was unmanned.

    • @xenophagia
      @xenophagia 3 года назад +18

      @@listenup872 You're a fucking idiot. Get out of here you disrespectful flattard. I have a play list on my channel just for your kind but I've learned there's no getting through your stupid skulls.

    • @phillipcsandoval9094
      @phillipcsandoval9094 3 года назад +2

      @@xenophagia , My brother ! I couldn’t be happier right now! Thank God I found your comment. These leftist parasites need to be exterminated 100% so us patriots and decent future generations may have a respectful prosperous life. Thank you !

  • @crockett_lee6605
    @crockett_lee6605 2 месяца назад +116

    After all these years those words "Challenger go at throttle up" are still haunting 😢

    • @rhondaeverett8284
      @rhondaeverett8284 Месяц назад +3

      Yes

    • @straight5926
      @straight5926 23 дня назад +1

      Except its Challenger go AT throttle up

    • @johnmccnj
      @johnmccnj 17 дней назад +5

      Alongside "Columbia, Houston. UHF comm check."

    • @ebonaparte3853
      @ebonaparte3853 16 дней назад

      @@straight5926The point still stands.🤷🏾

  • @rugbynimbus
    @rugbynimbus 3 года назад +112

    Since it's a single tilt-up shot near ground level, this is the best video I've seen of this event in terms of conveying altitude.

    • @williammcbrayer3277
      @williammcbrayer3277 2 месяца назад +11

      In the traditional view that everyone has seen, you're flying with the shuttle as it ascends, and then you're almost part of the explosion, the camera goes haywire, herky jerky, etc. In this view, the launch just.......stops.

  • @barbarossa1234
    @barbarossa1234 5 лет назад +5818

    This is what happens when companies do not listen to their engineers.

    • @generalkickass6385
      @generalkickass6385 5 лет назад +85

      Agreed

    • @youngcracker9517
      @youngcracker9517 5 лет назад +90

      Gotta save money somehow

    • @roguishpaladin
      @roguishpaladin 5 лет назад +568

      Mustafa Sahin I think you are gravely mistaken. After the Challenger disaster, there was a period of review - a scientific review in which the scientific method was used to determine the cause of the failure, as well as to refocus themselves upon a safer approach for the good of the astronauts involved. On September 29, 1988, the Discovery launched, not the Apollo. Apollo was the name of the 3-man capsules of the 1960s moon missions. And, by your logic, the Apollo moon missions, being named after a pagan Greek god, should have been even more unsuccessful.

    • @HeyDude93gt
      @HeyDude93gt 5 лет назад +175

      Mustafa Sahin It wasn’t that they challenged this god, but they probably weren’t pedophiles! Now that might of upset your god

    • @thiagov6123
      @thiagov6123 5 лет назад +29

      This is what happens when engineers make mistakes

  • @JoaoSilva22222
    @JoaoSilva22222 3 года назад +243

    The video that shows their families and Christa´s elder parents crying in hopelessness as they watch the sky is something I wish I could unsee, it literally made me sad for a week.

    • @Cliew5473
      @Cliew5473 3 года назад +13

      I just watched it and that's how I'm feeling now... Heavy heart. :(

    • @cocochanel9285
      @cocochanel9285 3 года назад +7

      Oh no .. I never saw that video. My heart still aches for all involved

    • @corneliuscrewe677
      @corneliuscrewe677 3 года назад +15

      I wish they would stop showing that. No one should be subjected to that kind of scrutiny at a time like that.

    • @threeminuteshate
      @threeminuteshate 2 года назад +7

      I avoid any videos with that footage. I’ve seen it plenty for this lifetime. You know they want to break down and sob but they desperately keep their composure. A heart breaking sight.

    • @awesomerpower
      @awesomerpower 3 месяца назад +10

      @@corneliuscrewe677Morton Thiokol should be forced to watch it. NASAs decision makers should be forced to watch it. Boeing and the FAA should be forced to watch it.

  • @kendemers8821
    @kendemers8821 3 года назад +123

    I heard about the Challenger Disaster when I was serving in the Marine Corps. A sergeant who was passing by told me that the Shuttle had just exploded, but I thought he was trying to kid with me. I remember going into my car and hearing live coverage on the radio of the tragedy. After growing up as a kid during the triumph of the Apollo Program, it seemed inconceivable to me that an inflight catastrophic failure was possible. But of course, it did happen and it would happen again 17 years later with Columbia. Very sad. RIP Challenger and Columbia Astronauts.

    • @TacShooter
      @TacShooter 5 месяцев назад +1

      Yeah, I heard two people talking about it and I asked, "Wait, what movie is this?"

    • @dragondancer1814
      @dragondancer1814 3 месяца назад +2

      I was in sixth grade then, and my class was returning from our twice-weekly trip to the local gymnastics club for PE when we heard the report of the shuttle explosions over the van’s radio. Our driver started cracking jokes about it like it was some disaster on _Star Trek_ or something, while I was sitting there in shock. How could this guy be such a jackass about it, I mean really? Our principal, who was also one of the upper-class teachers (grades 4-6 in one of two classrooms-did I mention that this was a small Montessori school?), was shellshocked at the news and found a way to break it to the school with grace, dignity, and respect for those brave star voyagers who were taken from us too soon!
      RIP Challenger crew! You are not forgotten 38 years later!

    • @duartesimoes508
      @duartesimoes508 2 месяца назад +3

      The Space Shuttle was far more dangerous than the Saturn V. They took much higher risks in order to have a reusable vehicle with much heavier payload. And paid accordingly.

    • @Cool1097
      @Cool1097 2 месяца назад

      Thank you for your service! And I'm sorry you had to endure hearing about this!

    • @alex-internetlubber
      @alex-internetlubber 26 дней назад

      @@duartesimoes508 Yes although I see Challenger as a management screwup. The engineers knew it was too cold. Columbia is a different story because as you allude to, bits of foam broke off on other flights, only on that mission did it end up proving fatal

  • @TheCosmicElephant
    @TheCosmicElephant 3 года назад +188

    They wheeled the TVs in our science classrooms when I was in 9th grade to watch the launch. Even me the class clown was left in tears. It still brings tears to this day. Farewell again crew, you’ll always be in our hearts.

    • @CanIbeFrank
      @CanIbeFrank 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/mN1JMTfeaqg/видео.html

    • @lifepasses1875
      @lifepasses1875 3 года назад

      That's sad tho

    • @googoolac1060
      @googoolac1060 3 года назад +6

      6th grade same thing. We couldn't believe it

    • @xenophagia
      @xenophagia 3 года назад +4

      That happened in my class with Columbia. I teared up too man. Couldn't help it.

    • @xenophagia
      @xenophagia 3 года назад +3

      @@CanIbeFrank You're a moron.

  • @sylviaross5486
    @sylviaross5486 6 лет назад +2592

    "Obviously a major malfunction" has to be the biggest understatement of that entire decade.

    • @Lerxstification
      @Lerxstification 5 лет назад +37

      NO. It was Obama saying "You didn't build that".

    • @bobford1866
      @bobford1866 5 лет назад +171

      @Lerxstification Fuck off with the political B.S. for once you slow-witted imbecile.

    • @Facelessify1
      @Facelessify1 5 лет назад +44

      @@Lerxstification Oh boy here we go....

    • @paulpaulsen7777
      @paulpaulsen7777 5 лет назад +126

      Sylvia Ross No, they need to stay professional, even at the biggest disasters- that’s what they did

    • @billyfraiser6298
      @billyfraiser6298 5 лет назад +6

      @Sylvia ... sorry but you're point doesn't make any sense. If the guy had said "a major malfunction", than your point would make sense. But he's already making the SAME POINT AS YOU in the video. So you're an idiot :/

  • @jetaddicted
    @jetaddicted 3 года назад +89

    I have been a witness to Paris’s Concorde crash, I was at the airport and that aircraft was loud, everyone would look at it when it took off.
    The worst part of being a witness is the feeling of helplessness: you want to help, do something, but there’s nothing you can do.
    My respect to the crew and their families.

  • @nolandt4641
    @nolandt4641 3 года назад +29

    I worked that mission as a diver doing crew training and sat in disbelief as the tragedy unfolded. I will never forget the moments and emotions of that day.

  • @AloneInTheVoid
    @AloneInTheVoid 3 года назад +908

    “The engineers don’t know what they’re talking about”. - NASA

    • @trashpew7275
      @trashpew7275 3 года назад +51

      To be fair, before Apollo 11, the engineers gave NASA a ~5% chance of the astronauts coming back alive.
      Post program analysis put it at ~80% I believe. Still a miracle that only ever Apollo 13 had a very close call with loss of mission.

    • @oliverclark8873
      @oliverclark8873 3 года назад +25

      @haymayjay I agree that Apollo 13 was probably the closest call but Apollo 10 and Apollo 12 both had close calls on loss of mission. Apollo 10 when the Lunar module went out of control on the way back to the Command module and came within seconds of not being able to get back. Apollo 12 when it was struck by lightning during launch and came within seconds of having to abort before they regained power to their instrumentation.

    • @spetsnatzlegion3366
      @spetsnatzlegion3366 3 года назад +16

      NASA employs people who are at the very cutting edge of their field, top-notch workers who really should be listened to if they say anything at all.

    • @markusmuller6173
      @markusmuller6173 3 года назад +12

      Engineers didn't want to start because of freezing temperature - the root cause for all three sealers beeing destroyed. Engineers on Titanic: Five cells filled and we go down - evacuate now! The engineer knows the design limit. If he tells you it will fail, you are just nuts when you continue! ruclips.net/p/PL7tB6qL0r-AYne4REmG9Axwv3gfNRBUjN

    • @clay8739
      @clay8739 3 года назад +5

      @@markusmuller6173 Reminds me exactly of the 2016 water slide decapitation of Caleb Schwab: "Not one engineer could get it right. Not one. So I fired them all..." -Fucking Idiot (Jeffrey Wayne Henry)

  • @ShootAUT
    @ShootAUT 5 лет назад +1476

    I didn't really mind Challenger footage, until now. I've never heard the radio communication.
    "Roger. Go with throttle up", then cracking on the radio and an explosion in the sky. That's chilling.

    • @duderama6750
      @duderama6750 5 лет назад +18

      Go with throttle up = 237. A prayer to satan.

    • @AdrianJayeOnline
      @AdrianJayeOnline 5 лет назад +29

      @@duderama6750 explain

    • @deanpd3402
      @deanpd3402 5 лет назад +17

      @Fazersion you obviously know nothing about the satanic masonic history of NASA. It's even right there in your face with that Hollywood movie about rocket scientist and Satanist, Jack Parsons but you just go along and keep sticking your head in the sand. It's much safer.

    • @duderama6750
      @duderama6750 5 лет назад +10

      @@AdrianJayeOnline
      A,B,C, easy as 1,2,3. Do the math. What's not so easy is to learn all of the meanings of numbers and how to apply them in context. In this case, H = 8, E = 5, L =12, so Hell = 37. 237 could be interpreted as 2-Hell, or to Hell.
      "I'm on the highway to Hell" = 237

    • @robertgonzalez6046
      @robertgonzalez6046 5 лет назад +200

      @@duderama6750 well that was stupid

  • @EventHorizon34
    @EventHorizon34 6 лет назад +2879

    RIP to the brave astronauts aboard Challenger.

    • @MiguelGarcia-ht9xz
      @MiguelGarcia-ht9xz 5 лет назад +70

      There's pictures of the 6 out of 7 crew members

    • @stevens4877
      @stevens4877 5 лет назад +11

      Stevie Curry ....yeah...they made my laugh so fuckin much...hahaha

    • @WasItWorthTheTime
      @WasItWorthTheTime 5 лет назад +3

      You mean ignorant. Brave ia for other people.

    • @nrodry76
      @nrodry76 5 лет назад +25

      And the teacher too, Christa McAuliffe.

    • @lucianoinso
      @lucianoinso 5 лет назад +24

      They all died, just checked

  • @mesau7002
    @mesau7002 3 года назад +179

    It's 2020 and watching this video still hurts.

    • @daviddean4061
      @daviddean4061 3 года назад

      I’m 2020, watching the abject stupidity of humanity hurts...

    • @abheekgulati8551
      @abheekgulati8551 3 года назад +1

      2021 now, it'll always hurt

    • @sarashepard7504
      @sarashepard7504 3 года назад

      No one died. Shock factor trauma is what they did. Check out Cows In Trees.

    • @Dude_Guyman
      @Dude_Guyman Месяц назад

      @@sarashepard7504 Correct. This was faked.

    • @ArchangelExile
      @ArchangelExile Месяц назад

      What about in 2024?

  • @geokgaming3175
    @geokgaming3175 3 года назад +21

    The combination of the explosion, the shock, and the screams and wails, and the guy commentating, trying to back his throat, trying not to cry, it’s enough to make a grown man cry.

  • @wolfe1970
    @wolfe1970 5 лет назад +874

    That silence when they lose the shuttle, still haunts me after all these years, RIP challenger crew

    • @soldiers303
      @soldiers303 5 лет назад +18

      No one died you idiot. Do your research. Space travel is not real.

    • @nightowl7459
      @nightowl7459 5 лет назад +94

      @@soldiers303 It's you who is the idiot.

    • @kingsman428
      @kingsman428 5 лет назад +46

      @@soldiers303 Just checked you're still a fucking clueless moron

    • @wolfe1970
      @wolfe1970 5 лет назад +14

      @Alex2900 Come to my home and call me a idiot you chicken shit

    • @trudijones6992
      @trudijones6992 5 лет назад

      This is a lie! I had the honor of meeting an engineer who worked there at the time of this explosion. The engineer told me there is a red button that is to be pushed if there is danger during take off. He said there was something wrong, and he was told to push the red button, and he refused. They told him to righter push the button, or walk away. He chase to walk away. The Challenger was blown up from within the compound. Once my friend returned to work, they told him he no longer was employed there, that when he walked away, he was quitting his job there. He took legal action against them, and he won the case. He said he could not blow that space ship, and live with himself! THEY BLEW UP THE CHALLENGER ON PURPOSE! MORE OF AMERICA'S LIES!!!

  • @mrgalvez11
    @mrgalvez11 7 лет назад +1950

    After all these years, this event makes my heart sink.

    • @mrgalvez11
      @mrgalvez11 7 лет назад +9

      LMFAO!!

    • @BornAgain77757
      @BornAgain77757 7 лет назад +53

      Sure would dislike living in an Everything Is A HOAX world, never being able too face reality!

    • @siliconbong9386
      @siliconbong9386 7 лет назад +6

      *gives your heart a balloon, so it not sink too far :D

    • @Cin_Vhetin
      @Cin_Vhetin 7 лет назад +27

      They are not alive, BUT all evidence shows they were still alive after explosion... and died on impact

    • @stevealino2899
      @stevealino2899 7 лет назад +1

      me too

  • @paulbaxter2007
    @paulbaxter2007 3 года назад +122

    I was there that day it happened. I remember being terrified and asking my grandma, "where are their parachutes?" Ronald McNair, the mission specialist, spoke at our school in Jacksonville FL, a few months beforw his training started. I got to meet him. It was such a shame to see these men and women die but they did it for a greater cause.

    • @longhairwhocares
      @longhairwhocares 3 года назад +7

      What 's the greater cause?

    • @ObnosisJones
      @ObnosisJones 3 года назад +10

      @@longhairwhocares I feel sorry for you. To really not know that the exploration of the universe to increase human knowledge and understanding is the greatest cause that we could aspire to.

    • @danielgregory3295
      @danielgregory3295 3 года назад +8

      @@longhairwhocares "Space exploration is worth the risk of life"....(Gus Grissom)😢🇺🇸🇺🇸

    • @TexPI-cs7gv
      @TexPI-cs7gv 3 года назад +11

      @@ObnosisJones Still different from knowingly and willingly sending a crew to their death. Manslaughter charges against NASA admins should have been a minimum in the aftermath.

    • @ObnosisJones
      @ObnosisJones 3 года назад +6

      @@TexPI-cs7gv I do not disagree. The decision to launch after the warnings of dire consequences due to the low temperatures was criminal and cowardly.

  • @wacharnaco
    @wacharnaco 3 года назад +39

    I was 7 when it happened, I was watching live, playing with my challenger toy model that my father had bought me on our last trip to Cape Canaveral. I just couldn't hold my tears thinking of the astronauts that passed that day... I was pretending I was one of them, that day my dreams of becoming and astronaut passed too.

    • @russlupky3505
      @russlupky3505 2 года назад

      Did your toy Challenger explode too?

    • @fidelcatsro6948
      @fidelcatsro6948 3 месяца назад +1

      did you become an astronaut after that?

  • @LordOfNothingham
    @LordOfNothingham 5 лет назад +812

    I was in my parents kitchen watching this. I remember telling my sister “it’s not supposed to look like that”.

    • @thekingofvirginia5014
      @thekingofvirginia5014 5 лет назад +7

      Lmao everything was fine until the end and what college did you study rocketry huh? Yea shut the fuck up dummy

    • @sandlot90130
      @sandlot90130 5 лет назад +81

      The King OfVirginia u r a insensitive donkey

    • @TheFrogInYourClosetWatchingYou
      @TheFrogInYourClosetWatchingYou 4 года назад +3

      @David Mc oh we got a badass over here..... you pussy

    • @SnowTopHusky
      @SnowTopHusky 4 года назад +1

      Thats enough. No more arguing here its been settled and resolved.

    • @chateaupig826
      @chateaupig826 4 года назад +8

      You tube ; the only place you can get a sensible observation with a stfu followed by an explanation about the topic at hand . O MG humans are awfull arseholes and fascinatingly insightful all bunched up - LMFAO 🤣🤣🤣

  • @jasongjennings
    @jasongjennings 5 лет назад +30

    Saw it from a loading dock in Pinellas Park, FL. It was mortifying. Went to make my deliveries and the vapor trail was still present in the sky. I was proceeding with my daily routine while consciously thinking, "Seven people just died up there!" It was mortifying.

  • @futurepilot6749
    @futurepilot6749 2 года назад +52

    After so many years, this is my first time i found this helicopter view

  • @magneto44
    @magneto44 3 года назад +70

    I’ll never forget my teacher crying in school when it happened

    • @bobfitz8701
      @bobfitz8701 3 месяца назад

      What a big baby

    • @magneto44
      @magneto44 3 месяца назад

      @@bobfitz8701 so, having empathy for victims of a disaster, unexpectedly going up in flames with the entire world watching as it happened, one of the last true global moments before the Internet that added to even more weight to the moment: that makes you baby, huh? lol
      they died doing the best thing humans can do, space exploration, it’s the key to humans surviving longer than the other mammals to walk this planet who went from thriving for thousands or tens of thousands of years before becoming extinct in a mere instant 🤷‍♂️

  • @assistanttotheregionalmana325
    @assistanttotheregionalmana325 6 лет назад +326

    It's been 32 years and I STILL can't watch this without my heart breaking! RIP Challenger Crew!! You are not forgotten!!

    • @55commodore
      @55commodore 5 лет назад +6

      look it up... all still alive. youve been fooled. harder to prove to someone that they have been fooled than to fool them. FACT!

    • @drubber007
      @drubber007 5 лет назад +5

      "it's easier to fool people than to convince them that they have been fooled"

    • @anthonyw9129
      @anthonyw9129 5 лет назад +1

      Watch they are alive.... ruclips.net/video/mN1JMTfeaqg/видео.html

    • @randysager3660
      @randysager3660 5 лет назад +1

      @Christopher Kupetz You are a moron.

    • @royb5014
      @royb5014 5 лет назад +2

      Conspiracy theorists remind me why it's important for moms to not do heavy drugs during pregnancy. Also, marrying siblings doesn't help. Just look at this thread!

  • @Jaymindrew1990
    @Jaymindrew1990 6 лет назад +484

    I used to work for the company that once was Morton Thiokol, the one that built the SRB rockets. My wife's family knows the engineer that raised the warning about the o-ring joints in cold weather before the flight. It appalls me that his coworkers at the time, they have long since left by the time I joined, basically shunned him like it was his fault. Typical for corporations that sometimes have managers there too proud to admit they are wrong.

    • @SuperPussyFinger
      @SuperPussyFinger 6 лет назад +53

      Yes, Roger Boisjoly was ridiculed for being an alarmist. In truth, he was a brilliant engineer.

    • @dalethelander3781
      @dalethelander3781 6 лет назад +2

      Isn't that legacy company responsible for the SRBs for the Space Launch System booster?

    • @IgnarHusky
      @IgnarHusky 5 лет назад +4

      BA F1 While I take your story with a grain of salt, I completely agree with your premise.. They did so probably to do a cover up. Shut down any whistleblowers before they sprout

    • @greg.d.c
      @greg.d.c 5 лет назад +41

      That engineer, in which your wife's family was acquainted, was facing a 'phenomenon', for lack of a better term, called a "groupthink", a group of people acting on a decision without question or challenge. Groupthinks can be very disastrous, and its size is virtually unlimited. If the group is saying "launch now, launch now, launch now!", and this engineer is saying, "wait a minute!, we can't launch", the group would remove him from the situation and proceed with the launch. As a result the danger comes from the group not heeding the warning, which led to the disaster. There are plenty of examples of a groupthink disaster, but i think it's important for people to be aware of the potential of groupthinks and try to not be discouraged from confronting them.

    • @pjimmbojimmbo1990
      @pjimmbojimmbo1990 5 лет назад +17

      Management by committee has really taken hold in the Corporate World. I guess the incompetents think that in a group, no one person can be blamed, and it is too complicated/expensive to hold the entire committee accountable.

  • @leokimvideo
    @leokimvideo 2 месяца назад +22

    First time I have seen this view of this disaster

  • @davidziemann9653
    @davidziemann9653 4 месяца назад +8

    One of those "where were you" moments in time. I was a new airman at Vandenberg AFB, CA...walkdown the hall of our Accounting and Finance office and passed a lady who said "Did you hear the Challenger exploded?". Will never forget. The shuttle was supposed to launch from Vandenberg in the next year or two but after this they scrapped that.

    • @Tlee521
      @Tlee521 3 месяца назад +2

      I was watching it live on TV in Jacksonville Florida.

  • @garyclouse7234
    @garyclouse7234 5 лет назад +549

    I have worked in industry for more than 40 years! NEVER allow Managers who are responsible for revenue to over ride Engineers and especially safety personnel! Just don't do it! They will almost ALWAYS make the wrong decision!

    • @markmace2113
      @markmace2113 5 лет назад +8

      Yep the Fatheads want to keep it going no matter what sometimes that's a good thing but this time it was not a good thing it's so sad that they would not listen it makes me want to run around screaming. And it's been so long and I remember I was at work and they had it on every TV was on the radio and there are people that knew the people that had worked on the shuttle that knew the people or should I say the family's everybody was in shock it was 1986 so things were a little different you know what I mean right still naive not like today. Well the main thing is God Bless the people that died that day God bless you guys who begged not to go through with it in cold weather

    • @garyclouse7234
      @garyclouse7234 5 лет назад +14

      @@markmace2113 they WERE warned! Yes! Terrible! Fellow Patriot, we now face a very different sort of "Manager". Much more hardened against ANY interest in their workers or even their (bosses) that being the American People. They are being dealt with so I hear. They are the SES - Senior Executive Service! A part of Government that care only for their own advancement, wealth and power! Real Time!

    • @dgcmusi
      @dgcmusi 5 лет назад

      Well said

    • @johnduffy6992
      @johnduffy6992 5 лет назад +1

      your 100 percent rite.. just remember who is signing the checks! they only focus on cost..

    • @guillermoadcox01
      @guillermoadcox01 5 лет назад +5

      But that's the amerikan capitalist way!!!

  • @danielfronc4304
    @danielfronc4304 5 лет назад +28

    The autopsies said that some, or all, of the astronauts survived the explosion but died due to either the traumatic forces on them as they spiralled downward or on impact. I never realized just how long such a terrible, psychologically traumatizing end it was for them. Very sad. Just as with JFK's assassination (I was in first grade) and Oswald's live on TV killing, I'll always remember precisely where I was and what I was doing when this happened.

    • @Ivan_Berni
      @Ivan_Berni 10 месяцев назад +2

      Autopsies just suggests things, and take in consideration that no one is an expert on this scenario, some of them may have survived the blast due of the shielding below them, but is pretty obvious that st that speed, with all the forces applied they loose consiousness inmediately and died the way down, if they even survived the explotion of course, i do not think they suffered pain.

  • @georgemallory797
    @georgemallory797 3 года назад +116

    The horizontal wind shear is unbelievably apparent in the couple minutes after breakup. Huge clear air turbulence day, adding insult to injury.

    • @thenasadude6878
      @thenasadude6878 3 года назад +19

      @Rick O'Shay it's made evident by the shuttle smoke trail left by the solid rocket boosters... You can see that the smoke trail does not move at once, but becomes more and more distorted as time passes. That's because of the various winds at different altitudes.

    • @MrChrisalf2004
      @MrChrisalf2004 3 года назад +2

      Disaster had nothing to do with wind though. It was the O ring in the booster giving way under heat.

    • @ZmannR2
      @ZmannR2 3 года назад

      Wind had nothing to do with it

    • @harrisonkarn2078
      @harrisonkarn2078 3 года назад +5

      @@MrChrisalf2004 the O rings didn’t fail from heat, the cold make the O rings brittle and the sudden temperature change made them fail.

    • @IronHexacyanoferrate
      @IronHexacyanoferrate 3 года назад +3

      @@harrisonkarn2078 pretty sure he meant that you could see the variations in wind from the smoke trails, showing how far they went, and they didn’t make it...

  • @tommylynch7887
    @tommylynch7887 3 года назад +351

    Shuttle lifts off:
    Shuttle explodes:
    30 seconds later:
    1 minute later: It has appeared that the vehicle has exploded

    • @alanwatts8239
      @alanwatts8239 3 года назад +29

      No one wanted to believe their eyes.

    • @WayPastCrazy2525
      @WayPastCrazy2525 3 года назад +35

      I'm quite certain the broadcaster was in disbelief and had to compose himself before continuing.

    • @drpickledude
      @drpickledude 3 года назад +7

      Yeah like the three before me said. The team at NASA hopes the best for those in the chaos of explosions and fire. As well as any radio connections could still be accessed up until the other end couldnt respond

    • @campFTW
      @campFTW 3 года назад

      You have missed the word *Obviously* 😞

    • @jimmorrison4163
      @jimmorrison4163 3 года назад +4

      Yes. You better be damn sure you know what you’re saying when you say that.

  • @MarcelodeAssis
    @MarcelodeAssis 7 лет назад +777

    A new vision! Sad day! Rest In Peace, Challenger crew. We never forget!

    • @johnbrown9092
      @johnbrown9092 7 лет назад +5

      Horrendous

    • @proudtruther9586
      @proudtruther9586 7 лет назад +28

      They are all still alive !!! It was a government HOAX !!! Search Challenger HOAX !!!

    • @rareform6747
      @rareform6747 7 лет назад +5

      Another pitiful Libral ass !

    • @allcot6219
      @allcot6219 7 лет назад +9

      Constitution,,,you are right I saw one of the astronauts yesterday at Walmart.Of course he was 60 years old but I recognized him.

    • @Toekneepowers
      @Toekneepowers 7 лет назад +8

      RUclips should be split into two, one for intelligent speaking humans and the other for window lickers.

  • @LCSGamer100
    @LCSGamer100 4 года назад +721

    "Obviously a major malfunction"
    2020 in a nutshell

    • @Snowowl64
      @Snowowl64 3 года назад

      ABS0LUTLY!!!

    • @Bob31415
      @Bob31415 3 года назад +5

      2020 sucks

    • @Maven01
      @Maven01 3 года назад +9

      2020 has been crap. Space X has been awesome though this year.

    • @X-JAKA7
      @X-JAKA7 3 года назад

      COVID-19

    • @rickhunter6513
      @rickhunter6513 3 года назад +3

      CHINA

  • @ChastonHall
    @ChastonHall Месяц назад +3

    At 1:21 you hear “Challenger going with throttle up” then what sounds like the small part of the explosion the mic picked up before it was destroyed….haunting.

  • @liamuzzalupo
    @liamuzzalupo 3 года назад +5

    I remember watching this live in grade school in the cafeteria. One minute we were all standing up celebrating with our eyes glued to the TV then the next minute we sat there in complete silence. Teachers were crying. Its one of those things that you can't get over. My heart broke for all and their families. RIP 🙏

  • @feeberizer
    @feeberizer 3 года назад +15

    I worked at Boeing Aerospace who built the Inertial Upper Stage mated to the TDRS-B satellite in the cargo bay. Many of us in Engineering had previously worked on the IUS program. A couple years earlier when I was there, I met Judy Resnik when she was a Mission Specialist for the TDRS-A launch. She'd come to meet with the Operations group for training. She was a Mission Specialist for TDRS-B as well. Operations always had a live feed of the launch, and some of the guys were getting phone calls from them. Then one of the managers came over to our building to make the announcement that the Shuttle and crew had been lost. What a horrible, ugly day both professionally and personally. RIP Challenger crew.

  • @Urko2005
    @Urko2005 7 лет назад +587

    Still sends shivers down my spine here in UK to this day, when i hear that phrase "go at throttle up".

    • @ronthatus
      @ronthatus 7 лет назад +13

      Urko2005 just like it was yesterday

    • @trimel81
      @trimel81 7 лет назад +1

      were their bodies ever recovered?

    • @ronthatus
      @ronthatus 7 лет назад +26

      trimel81 yes I believe a few weeks to month later but I could be wrong. There was a theory also that they maybe survived the initial explosion but died on impact with the ocean or lost consciousness

    • @speedbird737
      @speedbird737 7 лет назад +63

      there was evidence they survived the explosion not a theory

    • @ronthatus
      @ronthatus 7 лет назад +9

      Nigel Harrison you're right

  • @marmac2768
    @marmac2768 2 месяца назад +4

    Back then, I lived about 16 miles due west from the Cape. My wife and I would always go outside to see a shuttle launch from our front yard. I remember that morning like it was yesterday. It was so cold and my wife even commented that she couldn't remember the last time it was that cold. As it went up, we went outside to watch and she decided to go back inside because it was so cold. It was so routine we didn't think anything could go wrong. I remember seeing that big cloud of the explosion and not knowing what had happened because I had never seen that before. After a minute of so I went back into the house and I heard the words, "the vehicle has exploded" and I just sat down in disbelief!! What a terrible day that was!!! What was especially shocking was, after a couple of minutes, and because it was so cold, we heard a big BANG that shook our house!! We didn't know what that was until I thought, we actually HEARD the explosion! It was so cold that the sound travelled better than it usually does. THAT was unforgettable too!

  • @ScribbledRiddles
    @ScribbledRiddles 3 года назад +335

    The luckiest person that day was the reserve teacher.

    • @paulcarson7860
      @paulcarson7860 3 года назад +92

      Incredibly she applied to be an astronaut and then rode the shuttle years later. Now that’s courage.

    • @jkvs4448
      @jkvs4448 3 года назад +22

      Barbara Morgan

    • @riquelmeone
      @riquelmeone 3 года назад +64

      I wouldn't call her lucky, she made a lot of friends who she saw dying.

    • @jamesgriffin8624
      @jamesgriffin8624 3 года назад +3

      I had a most memorable teacher in high school that was a finalist for the program. Charles Sposato.. I was in fourth grade, staring at the rolling 32" tv set sitting crossed legged. Sad day... sad memories.

    • @squares4u
      @squares4u 3 года назад +5

      Survivor’s guilt... reminds me of the people who were booked on the 9/11 flights, but didn’t board the plane for whatever reason.

  • @TheTjoy910
    @TheTjoy910 4 года назад +275

    My mother was pregnant with me when this happened, and she almost named me Christa after the Challenger teacher. ❤

    • @ns7353
      @ns7353 4 года назад +6

      Joy'sCurls how do you know if you were in her womb?

    • @TheTjoy910
      @TheTjoy910 4 года назад +68

      @@ns7353 we've had conversations about it, obviously.

    • @deleteduser1603
      @deleteduser1603 4 года назад +43

      @@ns7353 are you dumb

    • @TanzaniteHayley
      @TanzaniteHayley 4 года назад +8

      My mum was pregnant with me too, I was born in June 1986. Chernobyl was the same year. What a terrible year.

    • @TheTjoy910
      @TheTjoy910 4 года назад +8

      @@TanzaniteHayley well, we came into this world that year and that is a good and beautiful thing. I'm glad to be born an '86 baby. God bless all the struggles of 1986. It was a rough one for a lot of people.

  • @SunshineSanji
    @SunshineSanji 5 лет назад +80

    I was 10 years old and watching this live , with my class at school. I remember this very well, everyone was in shock.

    • @milfordcivic6755
      @milfordcivic6755 5 лет назад +5

      Me too. I remember the teachers suddenly turning the TV off and sending us all back to class

  • @illcommunications415
    @illcommunications415 3 года назад +33

    This still hits like a ton of bricks. I had to watch this on repeat in third grade at school before they sent us all home. My young mind couldn't fathom that these intrepid explorers had all just perished and I was in shock. For days, I thought they maybe they had survived in the main capsule and were just waiting to be rescued. I remember the look of horror on my teachers face the discussion amongst them being terse and tearful.
    The day the first of our ships leaves space dock, of it doesn't bear the name "Enterprise" it had better say "Challenger".

    • @CanIbeFrank
      @CanIbeFrank 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/mN1JMTfeaqg/видео.html

    • @illcommunications415
      @illcommunications415 3 года назад +1

      @@CanIbeFrank sheer idiocy

    • @sheev9852
      @sheev9852 3 года назад +2

      @@CanIbeFrank reported it as spam for ya

    • @sheev9852
      @sheev9852 3 года назад +1

      @Andy Jonnson stop chatting shit about something you know nothing about

    • @sheev9852
      @sheev9852 3 года назад

      @Andy Jonnson you do realise that they actually read the comments before they take action you dipshit, although I wouldn't be surprised if you didn't know that due to your lack of brain cells

  • @lesliecolonello9320
    @lesliecolonello9320 21 день назад +3

    Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson said every disaster movie begins with a scientist being ignored. This wasn't a movie but the warning about the O rings were ignored.

  • @doggonemess1
    @doggonemess1 7 лет назад +20

    Thanks for uploading this - it shows you roughly what people would have seen on the ground, and why the crowd reaction was so low key. You really can't tell what happened at first, as the fireball wasn't even visible. Most people probably assumed that the boosters separated early.

  • @bryantrockwell4676
    @bryantrockwell4676 7 лет назад +503

    Woah.......the guys in the helicopter must have been like.....did we just see that?....did that really just happen? The amount of footage captured on video of this tragedy is incredible, and the fact that even after 30 years, it still resonates. Great upload, Good video

    • @FireMinstrel
      @FireMinstrel 7 лет назад +11

      It was a dinky puff of smoke from that view, though. It would only be horrible in hindsight, but as it was happening, it was probably just confusing.

    • @theshillkiller9958
      @theshillkiller9958 7 лет назад +9

      RUclips search : "Challenger HOAX" !!!

    • @F3502000
      @F3502000 7 лет назад +5

      Yeah I'm sure it was a sinking feeling. From their point of view it was probably quite unreal. Did we really just see that happen? That and the call to return to station immediately.

    • @bryantrockwell4676
      @bryantrockwell4676 7 лет назад +10

      DaGingerHeadMan Thank you, I was hoping someone would point that out

    • @09211992ham
      @09211992ham 7 лет назад +1

      Side Thorn ...this is a hoax

  • @GeorgeVreelandHill
    @GeorgeVreelandHill 7 месяцев назад +4

    I lived in New Hampshire (where Christa lived) at the time and knew one of her fellow teachers.
    This was and still is heartbreaking.
    God bless the crew and their families.

  • @Nesmaniac
    @Nesmaniac 2 года назад +3

    First time I've seen the helicopter view and it puts it into better perspective. I was 7 years old and out of school that day in Jan 1986 (seems like yesterday though) and I remember dad and I was watching it live on TV as I played with toys in the living room floor and I recall dad saying something like "it just exploded" before the news even said it but I didn't really grasp what was happening because so much on TV was not live but I knew by dad's reaction it was bad.

  • @Iam-BruceLee
    @Iam-BruceLee 5 лет назад +486

    I remember sitting in my 2nd grade classroom and my teacher turned on the tv so we could watch. Such a sad day.

    • @scottyk_cdvi5650
      @scottyk_cdvi5650 5 лет назад +22

      bruce lee same here... 2nd grade and i remember the teachers started bawling and all of us kids had ZERO clue on what was going on

    • @rw4022
      @rw4022 5 лет назад +17

      bruce lee I was in the fifth grade. I remember all the teachers crying.

    • @Iam-BruceLee
      @Iam-BruceLee 5 лет назад +18

      scotty TIEPILOT57 exactly. We (students) had no clue what was happening. I just remember my teacher acting very strange.

    • @dlynn101
      @dlynn101 5 лет назад +4

      9th grade

    • @lostpockets2227
      @lostpockets2227 5 лет назад +3

      shut the Heck up bruce lee

  • @annetteslife
    @annetteslife 5 лет назад +252

    If NASA had once again rescheduled the launch because it was too cold that day these seven people would still be alive to this day .

    • @larjkok1184
      @larjkok1184 5 лет назад +23

      Annette Melnychuk
      You don’t know that.
      Who could say what would have happened since that day to those people.

    • @colbalt95
      @colbalt95 5 лет назад +22

      Most likely the same result. The engineers warned them about the O-rings susceptibility to Frozen temperatures and when gaskets freeze like that they lose their ability to retain gases or liquids.

    • @annetteslife
      @annetteslife 5 лет назад +6

      @@larjkok1184 sorry for the late reply but you are right

    • @annetteslife
      @annetteslife 5 лет назад +5

      @@colbalt95 I guess you are right. I don't know anything about space launches and space vehicles

    • @annetteslife
      @annetteslife 5 лет назад +6

      @@colbalt95 i.watcbed the documentary about the Challenger disaster

  • @wickrider
    @wickrider 2 месяца назад +2

    I had never seen this footage. Many sincere thanks for posting it. MC

  • @marvinmycat5839
    @marvinmycat5839 3 года назад +47

    As horrific as this was when I watched it on live TV, I still give this a thumbs up, as I think it's important for the new generations to see what sacrifices were made to advance our race into the future, without the truth being warped into some hidden agenda version. RIP.

    • @akshitsharma6205
      @akshitsharma6205 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/j9oLvsV-neY/видео.html

    • @ighfee
      @ighfee 3 года назад +1

      I agree, that's a good point. They make space look routine, it is anything but. Every flight can end in disaster. And future generations should know about all of the mistakes and accidents it took to get it right.

  • @JoeCity
    @JoeCity 4 года назад +89

    1:17 very sad. You can even hear the explosion over the radio....

  • @Ratcliffe1981
    @Ratcliffe1981 5 лет назад +35

    33 years on and still one of the saddest things to happen, still gives me a lump in my throat every time i watch this.

    • @MoosicandCritters
      @MoosicandCritters 5 лет назад +1

      Me too 😢

    • @1allanbmw
      @1allanbmw 5 лет назад

      Right back at ya brother! Still remember that morning clear as if it was yesterday just before going to work, how I felt... all of it. I can hardly bear to see it. And we're just now, all these years later beginning to hear they survived the blast and were alive all the way back down. Yet another shock in the wake of it all.

    • @gdesiletsfilms
      @gdesiletsfilms 5 лет назад

      33 degrees of freemasonry

    • @alphonsozorro7952
      @alphonsozorro7952 4 года назад

      Mawkish.

  • @GuildfordGhost
    @GuildfordGhost Месяц назад +2

    As terrifying as a mushroom cloud. One of those moments in time you never forget.

  • @noeone2241
    @noeone2241 3 года назад +2

    I can't believe this was almost 40 years ago. I was 12yrs old sitting in class in the 6th grade in the middle of a math session when we heard the news. Now even at 47. It still shakes me up!

  • @LanceCampeau
    @LanceCampeau 7 лет назад +2198

    I've never seen this footage.

    • @melaniedeal3518
      @melaniedeal3518 6 лет назад +54

      LanceCampeau since we have social media people are now uploading home video footages of the challenger

    • @southtxxbox
      @southtxxbox 6 лет назад +46

      So true. There must be so much media out there yet to be seen. The same can be said for 9/11. I've to see any media from any security camera from that morning.

    • @melaniedeal3518
      @melaniedeal3518 6 лет назад +12

      southtxxbox ruclips.net/video/PDVN78hdqTk/видео.html here's another home video footage of challenger exploding

    • @melaniedeal3518
      @melaniedeal3518 6 лет назад +9

      ruclips.net/video/61298C09BNs/видео.html here's another amateur video footage

    • @shivakumar499
      @shivakumar499 6 лет назад +3

      Must have made some serious bucks outta this video

  • @andrewszombie
    @andrewszombie 5 лет назад +14

    I like to think wherever the crew is now, they are content with us not forgetting them. That we still remember - Americans & the world - still keeps them in our hearts even in 2019 💖💖💖😭

  • @spikester
    @spikester 3 года назад +1

    Still gives chills down my spine again and again years after years, never seen this angle before. RIP.

  • @whiterabbit699
    @whiterabbit699 3 года назад +3

    I remember watching this live at school when I was 13, I'll never forget it.

  • @davbhard
    @davbhard 5 лет назад +347

    I don't know if I should give this video a "thumbs up." I've never seen it from this angle, but it gets sadder everytime I see it.

    • @godanm
      @godanm 5 лет назад +5

      I feel exactly the same.

    • @kinsfather057
      @kinsfather057 5 лет назад +2

      Only free masons are allowed in space. This was intentional. To keep the secret of the firmament.

    • @frankevega
      @frankevega 5 лет назад +2

      Same here I didn't want to thumbs up but I did to confirm I seen it

    • @111ShockWave
      @111ShockWave 5 лет назад

      Wake up they're still alive. Look it up. They were never in the shuttle.

    • @timhall5003
      @timhall5003 5 лет назад

      @@111ShockWave
      Truth, love, light and waking up the sheeple. All 1. Namaste

  • @F.Krueger-cs4vk
    @F.Krueger-cs4vk 5 лет назад +695

    My god, how horrifying & sad. I remember when this happened.

    • @lostpockets2227
      @lostpockets2227 5 лет назад +4

      u were alive then ur hecka old i think

    • @justinkennedy2128
      @justinkennedy2128 5 лет назад +4

      They survived , look into it . I dare you .

    • @joseesparza7488
      @joseesparza7488 5 лет назад +9

      I remember this too. I was sick at home at the time and I was 8 years old. Terrible. I just found out only a few months ago they we’re alive when the crew compartment was falling to earth undamaged. They probably suffered all the way down until the impact liquefied them.

    • @HairyBottom
      @HairyBottom 5 лет назад +1

      j t I remember watching it on TV.

    • @F.Krueger-cs4vk
      @F.Krueger-cs4vk 5 лет назад +5

      @@lostpockets2227 ur hecka young, 😅🤣😂

  • @Rincypoopoo
    @Rincypoopoo 3 года назад +98

    NASA at many levels had talked themselves into a situation where they believed that the chances of an accident were 1 in 100,000 ! It took the wonderful Mr Feynman, the famous cup of iced water, and the investigation committee to expose the truth. Alas that is how lessons are learned and tech moves forward.

    • @CanIbeFrank
      @CanIbeFrank 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/4TJVhdPtEkE/видео.html

    • @CanIbeFrank
      @CanIbeFrank 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/mN1JMTfeaqg/видео.html

  • @robertc8134
    @robertc8134 Месяц назад +1

    January 1986. I was driving a delivery van and somebody said "the shuttle blew up". This had never happened before. 20 or 30 previous missions had gone off beautifully. It was quite a shock.

  • @shelby3822
    @shelby3822 7 лет назад +15

    that silence is deafening

  • @InvokeThought22
    @InvokeThought22 4 года назад +4

    I remember being in my 5th grade class and we were all watching and how exciting it was to see a school teacher go up into space; then the explosion. We were all very sad, even some crying. We just didn’t understand. They cancelled school for the rest of the day shortly after that. RIP, Challenger crew!

  • @marcmarc172
    @marcmarc172 27 дней назад +1

    Horrifying.
    Thanks for uploading.

  • @itscommonsense3128
    @itscommonsense3128 3 года назад +3

    I still remember that day. My boys were in a wrestling tournament that day when they announced over the PA that the shuttle exploded and everyone on board was lost. The tournament stopped and We all had a moment of silence

  • @mewtech6987
    @mewtech6987 7 лет назад +391

    R.I.P with respect

    • @foadrightnow5725
      @foadrightnow5725 7 лет назад +12

      They aren't dead. 6 of the 7 crew members are alive today.Google it yourself.

    • @mewtech6987
      @mewtech6987 7 лет назад +6

      were not wearing a tin foil hat

    • @b-retrogamer2925
      @b-retrogamer2925 7 лет назад +4

      MEW Tech their not resting, their dead

    • @mewtech6987
      @mewtech6987 7 лет назад +8

      They are resting in peace

    • @RyanInLA
      @RyanInLA 6 лет назад +9

      if death is anything like resting then I can't wait.

  • @mountainrunner6922
    @mountainrunner6922 4 года назад +17

    I remember that day like it was this morning... so incredibly sad.

  • @bobthebear1246
    @bobthebear1246 Месяц назад +1

    He was so calm when he stated twice that "the vehicle has exploded."

  • @johncitizen3927
    @johncitizen3927 3 месяца назад +13

    The people who built it said dont launch. Too cold.

    • @DexterHaven
      @DexterHaven Месяц назад +1

      Yeah, those rubber O-rings holding the jet fuel in loose elasticity to form a good seal in the cold weather. The launch temperature was 35F in Florida that morning. The top brass at NASA was too cocky and concerned with public relations to keep the launch date they had set.

    • @Johnpalmer-eq7yq
      @Johnpalmer-eq7yq Месяц назад

      Traded what reagen dud for other. House. Thing is same prob only worse. Turn treasury cards on for all.

    • @DexterHaven
      @DexterHaven Месяц назад +2

      @@Johnpalmer-eq7yq That makes no sense, silly. Try English.

    • @Johnpalmer-eq7yq
      @Johnpalmer-eq7yq Месяц назад

      All academy. Checks turned on 911. There being cashed computers kids bosses. Weren't trained to look at tge food water air. Fish and game dead birds. They want us dead over a check they never earned the planets dying because they never learned to run what we did the. Kids are following them over. Small pay while the planets dying

    • @Orlando_Steve
      @Orlando_Steve Месяц назад +1

      @@Johnpalmer-eq7yq Drugs are bad.

  • @oscarzt1652
    @oscarzt1652 5 лет назад +334

    "challenger go with throttle up."
    "roger go with throttle up"
    *ckkckk*
    big smoke

    • @hunterrice3484
      @hunterrice3484 5 лет назад +6

      Nasa stands for need another seven astronauts for a reason

    • @ronister343
      @ronister343 5 лет назад +13

      @@hunterrice3484 not cool

    • @snepNL
      @snepNL 5 лет назад +3

      2number 9s. A numbers 4 .....

    • @itsumonihon
      @itsumonihon 5 лет назад +10

      @Paul Hupperdine do not post bullshit. the nonsense you have put up is not real and was created by a tabloid. it is a major disservice to the people who died on this flight. erase that SHIT.

    • @deannelson9565
      @deannelson9565 5 лет назад

      @@itsumonihon Well true other then Rick did say oh no. And there is no doubt they were alive and conscious after the separation of the vehicle and we're likely alive and conscious at impact.

  • @paulw176
    @paulw176 4 года назад +3

    that was a heartbreaker. I was on base at Pax River across from the NATC when I heard this on the radio - heading off to my own flight ...God Bless that crew and teacher ...

  • @scottfitzpatrick1939
    @scottfitzpatrick1939 Месяц назад +1

    The part that haunts me the most is the report that the crew likely survived the explosion and died when the cockpit impacted the surface of the ocean 😢

  • @ZippyThePinhead
    @ZippyThePinhead 2 месяца назад +1

    For those of us who were alive at the time, I remember being at work that when one of the guys I worked with came in at lunch time & announced that the Challenger had exploded on take off. All of us started calling bullshit, but he said he wasn't kidding, that he watched it on the tv at the place he'd bought lunch. We didn't have a tv at work, someone went & turned on a radio & sure enough...

  • @dayzemae9015
    @dayzemae9015 4 года назад +31

    I watched this in my living room....I remember those poor parents faces watching it and wondering what happened. It was so sad.

    • @CanIbeFrank
      @CanIbeFrank 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/mN1JMTfeaqg/видео.html

  • @CooterCoy
    @CooterCoy 5 лет назад +43

    I am equally sad and pissed off whenever I watch or think about the Challenger.

    • @peacethroughstrength172
      @peacethroughstrength172 4 года назад +2

      I feel the same way, what a negligent thing to do that morning in freezing temps!!
      Semper Fidelis

  • @udayandas8535
    @udayandas8535 3 года назад +2

    RIP all the astronauts who died in the challenger disaster.....they are the heroes who took the risk of early space travel which is ofcourse dangerous...hats off to the martyrs, you guys will always have my respect

    • @ettydavis
      @ettydavis 3 года назад +1

      Um....well I hate to tell you this, they are still alive.

    • @udayandas8535
      @udayandas8535 3 года назад +1

      Yes i agree they are still pretty alive, in our hearts we know that they are looking down upon the upcoming astronauts

  • @Terrestrial..1
    @Terrestrial..1 Месяц назад +2

    On a cold winter's morning a booster rocket engine seal failed when management refused to listen to engineers.

  • @dantyler1558
    @dantyler1558 7 лет назад +168

    Wow, this is hard to watch. Just as hard to watch as it was to watch 31 years ago.

    • @mewtech6987
      @mewtech6987 7 лет назад +2

      it is

    • @b-retrogamer2925
      @b-retrogamer2925 7 лет назад +1

      Dan Tyler really? hard to watch? grow a pair

    • @dantyler6907
      @dantyler6907 7 лет назад +4

      B-Retro Gamer When did you suffer the brain problem?
      Are you getting the help you need?
      Remember, just relax... No need to hurt others.

    • @b-retrogamer2925
      @b-retrogamer2925 7 лет назад

      Dan Tyler im getting help. thank you

    • @dantyler6907
      @dantyler6907 7 лет назад +3

      B-Retro Gamer Sounds good

  • @davidreed9037
    @davidreed9037 5 лет назад +335

    Watched it Live. Was a sobering moment.

  • @Tanvaras
    @Tanvaras Месяц назад

    Was 16 when this happened, still hard to believe today. RIP pioneers of Space travel. Never forgotten!

  • @lpdog82
    @lpdog82 3 месяца назад +1

    Oh wow, footage I've never seen before , , this happened 1 day before my birthday back in '86 , I was 22 at the time , r.i.p. to that brave crew❤

  • @darcybrummett7004
    @darcybrummett7004 4 года назад +11

    I had forgotten that it was going up that day. When I came in and asked my sister what happened, she was so casual in her answer that I thought she was joking. As I watched it was obvious that she wasn’t. I cried later for people I didn’t even know.

  • @NeckarPirate
    @NeckarPirate 4 года назад +14

    Still heart-breaking after all of these years. I remember exactly where I was and exactly what I was doing when I heard the news...

  • @kennysimms5217
    @kennysimms5217 3 года назад +1

    I remember sitting in the house watching this live on the TV. School was canceled that day because of the weather. I was 11 going on 12 years old and I knew what had happened as soon as it exploded. I remember the hype leading up to the launch with Christa McAuliffe being the first teacher in space. RIP to all aboard the shuttle.

  • @robertwalls5794
    @robertwalls5794 3 года назад

    I was a junior in high school watching this in study hall and it's as fresh in my mind today as it was on that day.

  • @Grandizer8989
    @Grandizer8989 7 лет назад +73

    This is my generation's JFK assassination. I was in 10th Grade, and will never forget the look on my English teacher's face when she broke the news to us kids.

    • @MsKeva771
      @MsKeva771 5 лет назад +9

      I was in the 4th grade and witnessed it with my entire school. The teachers were COMPLETELY shook for the remainder of the day. No work was done in school that day and it was indeed a very, very cold morning. Remember it very well. Orlando, FL

    • @raymesquite9157
      @raymesquite9157 5 лет назад +7

      9-11 was more memorable to me than the Challenger disaster. Watched both. Both were sad, but 9-11 stood out more.

    • @HAFILIPINIM
      @HAFILIPINIM 5 лет назад

      aaamalekkk.blogspot.com/2018/07/3-killed-in-plane-crash-in-rural-maine-u.html

    • @Renville80
      @Renville80 5 лет назад

      I was in high school, in home room just before lunch when the announcement came over the PA system.

    • @prozac623
      @prozac623 5 лет назад +2

      Deja Voodoo I remember I was in high school eating lunch. The lunch monitor came in and announced that the Challenger had exploded. We were all sent home early. It was surreal.

  • @ObamAmerican48
    @ObamAmerican48 4 года назад +18

    "Challenger, go at throttle up". I will never forget those words.

  • @jonathandavisofkorn6919
    @jonathandavisofkorn6919 2 месяца назад +2

    I was 9yrs old when me and my Mother was outside watching the Launch, I remember my Mother say this doesn't look right something is wrong.
    About 20 seconds later a man drove and then stopped and said that the shuttle had exploded.....
    Always will remember this......

    • @ledbowman
      @ledbowman 2 месяца назад

      we don't care

  • @ryanpisa1360
    @ryanpisa1360 3 года назад

    Never gets any easier to watch! Heartbreaking day for the nation and the world! R.i.p. to all who was aboard that tragic day! We will always remember you!😥

  • @somarriba333
    @somarriba333 5 лет назад +18

    I was 9 years old when I saw this in school. I cried so hard. This is the first time I have seen this footage.

    • @menditman2004
      @menditman2004 5 лет назад +2

      I was 9 to, I can remember it like it was yesterday, I always remember about the woman astronaut (I maybe wrong but wasn't she going to be the first one in space or something) perhaps someone know more than me. Very sad what happened.

    • @bobbyfletcherDJ187Hardtrance
      @bobbyfletcherDJ187Hardtrance 5 лет назад

      wish i could upload the photo of the then and now of the crew to expose the sick vile zionists lies

  • @crazy8sdrums
    @crazy8sdrums 5 лет назад +4

    I had never seen this tragedy from this perspective. Sad but fascinating. TY uploader.

  • @SweatLaserXP
    @SweatLaserXP 22 дня назад +1

    I've never seen this specific video before. I think I was in 1st grade when it happened, and it definitely cast a pall over the nation. I remember hearing about Christa McAuliffe constantly.

  • @TheChonch
    @TheChonch 3 месяца назад

    Was 7 years old and remember watching this live at home. Still as vivid today as it was back then.