The 20th Century must've been a mind-blowing hundred years; from the first airplane in 1903 that didn't travel all that far, to these supersonic jets in fifty years, then rocketing to the Moon. The two most devastating wars in history, as well, just 20-30 years apart. All within an average lifespan.
All that thanks to increased proficiency in killing other humans Man got hungry, man got monumentally petty, man progressed science Awful and awesome at the same time!
just wait for the mind blowing things that happen in the 21st century, electric cars, hover car drones , then rocketing to mars , and lets not forget world war 3!
British Admiral Jackie Fisher would begin his career on sailing ships, and finish his career on guided missile cruisers and nuclear submarines. It’s no wonder that old sci fi like Star Trek thought we would break lightspeed by the 21st century.
That crash was not without warning. The Starfighter pilot radioed he was getting into the Valkrie's jet wash, and was backing off, but the photographer said he needed the shot, and to continue moving closer. Dispite the Starfighters continued protest, he was ordered to move closer. The jet wash from the Valkrie caused him to lose control, and roll over the valkrie and take out it's tail section.
@@_Erogaki if i was a pilot there i'd prioritize safety over orders. who cares if i get reprimanded back on the ground, at least i make it back down safely
I've never read any of that information. I've heard it repeated on many comments boards for videos about this plane, but never saw an actual for source for 1) the F-104 pilot's protest, and 2) the orders telling him to get closer. What are those sources?
Dude...your stuff is truely next level. HBO, Netflix, would be proud to have you if docs actually ment anything. I say your material is the benchmark produced or RUclips.
@@1mol831 it depends on the train(weight), velocity of both bird and train. After calculating it my answer is… it won’t due to not having a constant source of velocity and hitting at any imaginable angle. Sorry maybe next time.
My grandpa, Joseph Cotton, was one of the test pilots for the xb-70. He passed away a few years ago and were now developing boxes of films he had from the 60s that captured the xb70s test flights. Hoping to have it available to view at the Edwards AFB museum in time for the October Airshow!
@Galileo7of9 I'm guessing he means they're converting to digital, or that he found boxes of negatives, which AIR were included with developed prints. Ahh, the wonder of the pre-digital age.
I would LOVE to see those photographs, as I’m certain every other aircraft enthusiast would. If you ever make them publicly available, please come back and post your link!
Isn’t it crazy having a grandpa like this? My grandpa was an fb111 pilot for a long time and flew through two wars. He passed a few years ago now two. Makes me feel like such a little ant knowing I won’t ever do anything as great as fly a plane that in the 70-80s is still faster than an f22.
B-52 pilots have a saying "when the last B-1 retires, and the last B-2 retires, their crews will fly home on a B-52 first flown by their grandfathers."
@@AnonymousFreakYT I’ve head a similar one about B-52’s being crewed by grandchildren of the pilots who brought it into service. The plane simply will not die!
"Striking"? Yes, absolutely gorgeous and cutting edge for its day. But "modern"? I don't know. the general shape of the cockpit glass and the squared intakes in particular look rather dated in my eyes.
@@FP194 They are commenting on the fact that the aesthetics of the aircraft look a bit dated, not its technological capabilities. And the reason why bombers that fly beyond Mach 3 do not exist anymore has already been explained in the video. ICBMs are a bigger threat in the modern era. And the SR-71's downfall was marred by economic costs on top of the introduction of spy satellites and UAVs. If we were to ignore the financial and practical inefficiencies, modern defence contractors could likely build an aircraft faster than the SR-71. But it wouldn't make sense today.
People in the 50's and 60's did some amazing engineering that still beats out some of our modern stuff simply because there was a global push for innovation in every and all fields, as well as the absence of most consolidated industries holding back progress for their own gains. For example the nuclear industry was soaring back then and was essentially getting rid of the energy problem before it even manifested, with crazy efficient designs ripped straight out of even more absurd military projects. But the downfall of many of these projects was also the military interests of nations. If something could not be used to give an edge in the cold war, it was canned. Take nuclear again. Oakridge made and operated nuclear reactors that were cheaper, safer, and quite literally had thousands of times better return on energy ratio than PWRs. They did it because they had developed it first for a nuclear engine equiped bomber then took what they learned and created the ultimate power generation platform, being utterly destroyed (and I'm talking orders for forced destruction of equipment and data) by the US government because unlike the Navy's PWRs or the army backed plutonium breeder, Oakridge's design could not be used to produce weapon grade plutonium. Let me get this straight, half a century ago, climate change and the energy crisis was a SOLVED ISSUE. Today we are living under a veil of idiocy that makes us take the longest road for maximum profits of interested parties..
My dad was an hydraulics engineer on the XB-70 development. I'm sure it was just a coincidence that there were hydraulic issues. Seriously, though, he was mechanical genius. I must have been taken to an open house at Palmdale, or something, as a little kid, because my very earliest memory is of something huge and white and beautiful inside an enormous building.
My grandfather Hap Anderson worked on this one as well. From what I understand he was a go-between from the engineers to a team of fabricators. I have the large wood model of the aircraft used to sell the project.
I can't believe it! I was just thinking about how much I want a new Mustard video, and here it is! And the XB-70 is one of my favorite aircraft ever made. I was lucky enough to see it up close in the National Museum of the US Air Force, before they moved it to the new hanger. That old hanger was inconvenient to access, but once you were there, you could get so close to this vast array of mind-boggling planes. I can say that I peered right into the cockpit of an X-15, just inches away from the glass of the window
@@lmaoxd2957 Agree. Mustards animation improves with every video and looks great, but this comment kind of disrespects the work of other CG artists. I recently started working for a studio and can tell that full CG often can look better, than real footage mixed with CG. It's really hard to do that and modern movies (like some marvel productions) sometimes don't give enough information for the artists to work with. A bit exaggerated, but it's a bit like:" here's the green screen footage, put your cool stuff in there!" There is also a difference if you animate a CG double for a movie or if you make a static model. Also don't know what he means by "year". Most productions don't have this much time exclusively for adding the CG parts and even if they do, it's often limited by the endless amount of changes the studio demands that had to be done as fast as possible.
been here for quite some time when Mustard was still relatively small. Always thought you deserved more, glad you've come this far. Keep up these amazing videos and go even higher!!
I know, right? The first Mustard video I think I saw was the one on the De Havilland Comet and after watching that video I took a look at the subscriber count in awe The CGI with how the channel seemed to appear out of nowhere blew me away
Two pilots lost. Just to clarify, only one of the XB-70 pilots, Major Carl Cross, died; the second pilot who died was Pilot Joe Walker in his F-104. Pilot Al White, the chief test pilot of the XB-70, was able to engage his ejection capsule and survive with some injuries.
@@fridaycaliforniaa236 Exactly. And he landed so hard he put a butt dent in the medal seat...jacked up his back a good bit. His co-pilot couldn't get the mechanism engaged soon enough and the G forces kept him from being retraced back into the clamshell.
An ex-girlfriend's Dad was an AF test pilot and was in the GE photo formation, flying I forget what. I remember he said that with time compression at the time, the 16 seconds the XB-70 flew on seemed like forever. He figured that the drooped wingtips were giving lateral stability and was trying to remember if there had been a calculated max-droop while landing. He said he had time to wonder if the max-droop would be defined by ground clearance or by center of gravity. The wing-droop while supersonic also had the effect of shifting the center of lift forward to offset nature's pushing it (center of lift) back at high mach (This was the trifecta of the wing droop: compression lift, additional lateral (rudder area) stability, and forward center of lift shift). Drooping at sub-sonic speeds was limited by how much fuel you could pump forward to move the CG forward or it got tail heavy. So he had what felt like forever to run numbers in his head. Then it Dutch-rolled and then flat-hatted and came apart. He also said it was difficult in an odd way to formate up to because it was hard to settle on visual cues for separation, to run parallel. He later worked for GE.
The other aircraft in that formation were a T-38A Talon, F-4B Phantom, and a YF-5A Freedom Fighter. Did some quick searching online; other than the pilots directly involved, I can only find Col. Joseph F. Cotton mentioned, but the aircraft he was flying is not named (only it was supersonic, but all three aircraft I named above are capable of supersonic speeds). Maybe if I can find the official accident report...anyway, thanks for sharing your story.
@@hbdragon88 its an F104 starfighter and its the aircraft that caused the crash. Theres a detailed report on the whole incident of you do some searching
@@connorjohnson4402 ...yes, I'm aware of that, but that wasn't at all related to thetopic at hand. OP's story is that the dad of one of his ex-girlfriend's was one of the AF test pilots flying in that ill-fated formation, so I was trying to figure out the names of those three pilots, but I could only find one.
@@hbdragon88 great reply to a great comment.Well done.I’m a truck driver and I love how pilots are so supporting of each other.Steering wheel holders do they’re best to tear each other apart. Pics all over Y/T of trucks in the worst positions with no context of how they got there. A guy could be a hero rolling 80k to save a church bus but people think he or she are tired,stoned Etc. I’m retired now over 4 million miles driven and I see the industry that paid for my house,fed my family Etc thought of as drug addicts and scumbags. Like a said nice job on reply.
The XB70 is my favorite aircraft, Concorde is a close second. Seeing them tumble out the sky is literally heartbreaking. Rest in peace to the brave men that pushed technology to its limits.
@@ronjon7942 i've posted this on other aviation videos, but in my mind, as an aviation buff, I imagine various "what-ifs" in aviation. If the YB-49 entered service and bombed Germany in WW2, and later versions later joined the B-52 in raids on Hanoi... if the F-20 Tigershark was put into production... and if the XB-70 entered service and was upgraded through the decades alongside the B-1B, and still in service today. I could daydream about these alt-history outcomes for hours...
I remember seeing the one they had on display at the USAF museum in Dayton a few years ago and thought it was an incredible concept. Particularly seeing it just a couple hangars away from primitive WW1 planes, it really puts into perspective just how fast aviation technology progressed in just a few decades. It was also a big reminder that for better or worse nothing fuels innovation like war.
Yep. The sad and amazing thing that set both World Wars apart from the others was that (apart from the massive scale) both of them were wars of technology. New and terrifying weapons were being built by the day and what was tried and tested one day was useless the next.
i happened to have had a 1927 copy of a brochure titled " A little journey to the home of the engineering division, army air services". It was apparently an open house brochure for mcCook field, dayton ohio. It showed wing testing, propeller test stands, new fangled parachutes, etc. This was the era of fabric coated biplanes. I always thought that the Barling bomber was noteworthy. This was a triplane wing bomber with 4 engines, open cockpit, at least one engineer/gunner between the two wing engines. it was billed as the worlds largest airplane. while i realize no remaining craft exist, i always thought that the Barling (the original B1 bomber :-) ) should be displayed next to a museum B-1B just to show off the contrast in 50 years of air engineering.
Or rather, nothing fuels innovation like _motivation,_ war is just highly motivating that way. It’s nothing intrinsic to war, really, just a matter of what humans deem sufficiently urgent.
I was able to see it in person at the us air force museum and i can confirm it is absolutely massive, like you can only really admire it's size in person
Considering the Rate of progress in such a short time. What secrets do they have today with all the computer modeling, composites and metallurgy experience....?
@@stuartd9741 Jet engine tech opened up new niches that were filled with admirable speed and efficiency, it is true, and development since the 60s or so can seem lacklustre by comparison. A similar rapid explosion of innovation will occur as soon as propulsion tech makes it next leap forwards. My hopes are pinned on the SABRE engine, but we will have to wait and see.
It didn't advance as fast as most people think. The building blocks had been there in the 1920's and 1930's, it was just a question of optimizing and scaling. The advances that did happen were very visually distinguishable though so it seems like they happened overnight but it's not really the case.
Imagine you were born in 1900 and an aviation enthusiast. In your childhood, you experience the first motor planes and 150km/h are fast, 300km are long range. When you retire in the 1960s, the Valkyrie flies with Mach 3 and (theoretically) can cross oceans. Must have been amazing to see this developent. My generation will experience the same with AI, Biotech and Human-Machine-Interfaces, I believe. Less visually spectacular, but probably even more impactful than high speed aviation.
It's crazy how fast it changed. When my uncle went to school plastic was junk and largely useless, now he works on plastics for the aviation industry. My grandma, his mom, was born in a farmhouse without electricity, plumbing, or a car and she died In a house with a smart TV, smart phone, and hybrid car.
Exactly, my grandfather trained as a blacksmith and briefly shod horses...and in the sam lifetime saw a man on the moon. Crazy. I think you are correct that AI and biotech, will bring even bigger changes...existential even.
I got to see the XB70A's maiden flight. I was in the 4th grade in Palmdale, Ca. My father worked at Edwards AFB. We did not go to school that day, but out to the base to see this magnificent flight. The unfortunate clip by one of the escort jets on the XB70B's flight was very sad. This was a beautiful aircraft.
So sad for those pilots who died. Brave men for sure. I couldn't imagine how scary it was to fly such a large plane that didn't have the best results. The pilot must have known there would have been a 20% chance he would die. Literally almost every time it flew something major happened.
@@red_day6097 Well yes the immediate cause of death was the ejector, but it was needed because of the crash. There were 3 people in total. Two on valkyrie and 1 on F-104 fighter jet. If the ejector had worked, both pilots of Valkyrie would have suvived, but the jet pilot who crashed, would still die.
@@red_day6097 the ejecting seat probably worked fine, but accounts suggest that the pilot was unconscious, probably because of the g forces that built up as the plane tumbled.
That's a lot of info about the XB-70 Valkyrie I have never heard of until now, from the challenges it was designed to solve over the technical issues early in testing to the alternative uses NASA wanted to put it to. Great animation as well, makes it clear how elegant yet intimidating its design look... the exact type of aircraft that deserves the title "Valkyrie". Always found it one of the most beautiful aircraft ever designed. Great job as usual Mustard!
fun fact: if i remember correctly, it wasn't actually originally intended to cruise at mach 3 for its whole flight. the original brief was to have it cruise subsonically at similar speeds to the b-52, to save fuel, and use its true speed capability for a quick 'dash' at high supersonic speeds, into and out of its target airspace. the idea shifted when the designers figured out that even while the engines on afterburner used a lot more fuel to overcome higher supersonic drag, the overall distance-per-fuel was increased by the dramatically higher speed i still call that 'efficiency through speed' idea the 'valkyrie effect' whenever it comes up in other contexts
Fantastic video on the history of the valkyrie. I saw it at the air force museum . It is mind boggling huge. I had a buddy stand under it for several pictures. The 6 engines look straight out of star wars. The underside is flat and looks as long as a football field. I can't think of many other planes that have other full size jets UNDER their wings! Truly awe inspiring to see it in the flesh...absolutely awe inspiring.
I wish people making these comments would come up with something else to say. Like yeah I get it, the videos are nice, but I've heard it 3 million time already all across RUclips, all across a bunch of different channels. People just want likes...
This world is rapidly passing away and I hope that you repent and take time to change before all out disaster occurs! Belief in messiah alone is not enough to grant you salvation - Matthew 7:21-23, John 3:3, John 3:36 (ESV is the best translation for John 3:36) if you believed in Messiah you would be following His commands as best as you could. If you are not a follower of Messiah I would highly recommend becoming one. Call on the name of Jesus and pray for Him to intervene in your life - Revelation 3:20. Contemplate how the Roman Empire fulfilled the role of the beast from the sea in Revelation 13 over the course of 1260+ years. Revelation 17 confirms that the beast is in fact Rome. From this we can conclude that A) Jesus is the Son of God and can predict the future or make it happen, B) The world leaders/nations/governments etc have been conspiring together for the last 3000+ years going back to Babylon and before, C) History as we know it is fake. You don't really need to speculate once you start a relationship with God. Can't get a response from God? Fasting can help increase your perception and prayer can help initiate events. God will ignore you if your prayer does not align with His purpose (James 4:3) or if you are approaching Him when "unclean" (Isaiah 1:15, Isaiah 59:2, Micah 3:4). Stop eating food sacrificed to idols (McDonald's, Wendy's etc) stop glorifying yourself on social media or making other images of yourself (Second Commandment), stop gossiping about other people, stop watching obscene content etc. Have a blessed day!
This world is rapidly passing away and I hope that you repent and take time to change before all out disaster occurs! Belief in messiah alone is not enough to grant you salvation - Matthew 7:21-23, John 3:3, John 3:36 (ESV is the best translation for John 3:36) if you believed in Messiah you would be following His commands as best as you could. If you are not a follower of Messiah I would highly recommend becoming one. Call on the name of Jesus and pray for Him to intervene in your life - Revelation 3:20. Contemplate how the Roman Empire fulfilled the role of the beast from the sea in Revelation 13 over the course of 1260+ years. Revelation 17 confirms that the beast is in fact Rome. From this we can conclude that A) Jesus is the Son of God and can predict the future or make it happen, B) The world leaders/nations/governments etc have been conspiring together for the last 3000+ years going back to Babylon and before, C) History as we know it is fake. You don't really need to speculate once you start a relationship with God. Can't get a response from God? Fasting can help increase your perception and prayer can help initiate events. God will ignore you if your prayer does not align with His purpose (James 4:3) or if you are approaching Him when "unclean" (Isaiah 1:15, Isaiah 59:2, Micah 3:4). Stop eating food sacrificed to idols (McDonald's, Wendy's etc) stop glorifying yourself on social media or making other images of yourself (Second Commandment), stop gossiping about other people, stop watching obscene content etc. Have a blessed day!
This is why I love this era of creativity we were coming up with wild things a lot not possible and some never worked but the ones that made it in some cases as far as this was amazing unfortunately lives were lost in many experiments of creativity and advancement
I honestly can't recommend Curiosity Stream and Nebula enough. With Curiosity you get a ton of extremely high quality docs and with the bundle you're not only supporting mustard, wendover, rll, etc, but you're also getting extra videos from them and you get to see these videos early.
Wish that Magellan TV was as competitive as the Curiosity Stream+Nebula bundle. $20 a year vs $59.99 yearly? I'll take the former offer which has two websites to boot.
with all the failures and damages that plane took during testing, it proved it take can serious a beating and still be able to get the pilots home safely
Do cry….What is not being told here is that America built at least 5 of them for regular use of top politicians and dignitaries and congress people back then and NASA built a bunch for recreation use for the Shahs and Sheiks in the middle east for recreation. It is there that some engineers attempted to put a bomb on it as a war machine. It didn’t work however, just too heavy and much too much drag. What a horrible way to kill a beautiful airplane ….A plane that was designed from the mind of a child with a paper airplane that he brought into the Northrop plant one day. Two more dents
I remember seeing the only remaining aircraft in the experimental hangar at the Dayton Air Force Museum. It was amazing. I'm so happy they moved it to the main location so everyone can see it
My grandfather actually helped with this project! He was contracted out - via his regular gig running the machine shop at American Airlines' maintenance and overhaul facility - to fix quality control issues in fabrication. I still have the team photo and thank you letter they sent him. Need to get it all matted and framed.
@@artisan002 Yes my grandfather worked in Tulsa. He also ran maintenance in Chicago, Detroit , LAX and Dallas. He also spent most of WW2 in India with American Airlines in the Air Transport Command.
Such an incredible plane (and a very cool looking one). The quality of the models and renders is outstanding, somehow they look better with each video.
I went to the same High School as Joseph Walker, one of the test pilots who died in the photo op. He was also an astronaut who flew various X-15 tests. Many photos of him coming to visit in old 1960s yearbooks. He even had a local elementary school named after him for a time. I believe he was piloting the F-104 starfighter thay collided with the XB-70, though I can't recall. The entire photo op was clouded in scandal due to improper authorizations and ignored protocols.
What the hell are you two arguing about? Ian posted his comment and it's entirely clear what he meant by the things he said, so what exactly is your issue with it, Galileo7of9? It also isn't very clear to me what your disagreements are, regarding the AV-2 incident, so would you mind explaining that?
I remember the day the Valkyrie was delivered to the Museum of the United States Air Force 1969. I was in second grade and was on the playground at school. This huge airplane with a very unusual silhouette flew directly over us in slow motion at low altitude making a lot of noise. A few moments later, it circled back and did it again. From what I have been told, the plane arrived a heavy (too much fuel) so the pilot flew it low and slow over the suburbs of Dayton to show it off and burn off extra fuel. It was amazing! I share this story with anyone who will listen every time I visit the museum (once every year or two).
I saw the surviving Valkyrie at the USAF Museum before the new hangar was built. Back then it was in a hangar you needed to sign up for a bus ride to. It barely fit in this hangar, and all sorts of other x-planes were parked under it, such as the x-15 and x-24b. Still one of the coolest airplane experiences I've had.
In a way, I'm glad it became a supersonic research aircraft and never saw conflict. Probably one of the most striking aircraft designs, behind only my favorite; the SR-71
One of this aircraft's shortcomings that I find humorous is due to the placement of the "nose" gear. Since the forward landing gear is back at the middle of the aircraft and the pilots are well forward of it, when the aircraft traverses over slight undulations in the runway the pilots will, thanks to geometry, travel up and down three or four times greater than the nose wheel does. The pilots were said to get motion sickness while taxiing.
What, and put a humongous nosewheel up front? If a pilot would get messed up by a few runway undulations, then he shouldn't be flying. Besides, everyone thought having the pilot so high up in a 747 would make it tough to fly, especially land.
@@alphakky I was a flight test engineer at Edwards............and raced sailboats on Puget Sound. "undulations" are a WHOLE different thaaaaang...........
Having no clue about engineering or aircraft but loving this channel, I begin to understand that the most grim wars produced some of the most awe inspiring technology and I cannot decide how I feel about that.
I think most people overlooked the fact that B-2's flywing design not only give it great radar deflecting ability, but also reduced drag so it had a very long range.
That design was a different kind of revolutionary. The B-1 tried it, but the turboprops and later turbines created so much leading and trailing turbulence that superior aerodynamic efficiency was never achieved. The materials advances that made the B-2 so lightweight by comparison also helped the drag reduction factor. If ICBMs become neutralized by DEWs and hypersonic interceptor vehicles, then the B-2 and the Valkyrie might become relevant once again.
@@H.EL-Othemany Failure is the stepping stone to success. An aircraft is a culmination of systems and sub-systems. Many of those lessons learnt would have been used in a later aircraft.
That's a truly nutty thing to comprehend. A passenger aircraft nearly as fast as an SR-71, and faster than a Concorde by a margin as large or larger than standard 737 or Airbus A3xx cruising speeds, lol.
That proposal was doomed before it was even conceived. The Lockheed and Boeing SSTs were both, on paper, "Concorde Killers". " Second Generation" SSTs purpose built (or designed, i guess) as airliners rather than bombers mutated into passenger carriers.
I can't even begin to think of how expensive tickets on it would be. I imagine it consumed at least as much fuel as the Concorde, and the passenger capacity looks to be about half of the Concorde's, so 25 grand minimum for a 1 way ticket across the Atlantic.
One of the lesser known XB-70 subsystems in developement was the "Pye Wacket" anti-missile system. Disc shaped anti-missile missiles would have been stacked vertically in auxiliary weapons bays which would have been able to pre-orient (rotate) the defensive missile toward the direction of incoming SAMs and then launch them in a head on intercept while maintaining mach 3 flight, and without the need to perform defensive maneuvers. The system was canceled with the XB-70.
That is interesting indeed. Thank you, something for me to research. I’m surprised that kind of defensive tech never made it to other bombers, tankers, large recce, etc.
Wow, considering what the programme went through I was very lucky to have seen the remaining plane in 1986 stood outside at Wright-Patterson AFB during a family trip to the States. I was in awe standing looking up at it and still remember it vividly. Really sad that the other planes and pilots were lost in the tragic accident. As others have said your videos are next-level! Thanks for making this epic account of an incredible plane.
Did this plane for my CATIA project and this thing was such a pain, especially the fuselage and inlets so good on you. A note on the XB-70 was its boron based fuel, which I believe was highly toxic and corrosive. So if the engines didn't get blown out, they wouldn't have a long service life due to the corrosion. But, that's what you get when trying to go fast back in the day.🙂
@@alphakky Boron-based fuels, probably; Boron is too reactive to be allowed to contact operation-critical metal parts like turbine blades or vortex vanes. There are other options, akin to 'nitrous' for an ICE, that I don't think have been operationally tested.
This is why the passenger concept was bunkum. That would have been a million a one way ticket! The reason it was OK for military is that nuclear delivery capability is a desperately needed condition for survival. To date France still relies (partly) on aircraft-carried delivery of its nuclear deterrent, so as to be entirely self-reliant and capable of a counter strike in extremis.
Stunning visuals, captivating music, and historically and technically astute narration. Another BIG WIN for this channel. Thanks so much Mustard and Addecco! Will definitely be looking you up on CuriosityStream 😎👍
I've seen the only one they have left in Ohio... man, that thing is HUGE... As someone who's tall... that thing made the B-52 look nearly the same size if not smaller... THE B-52...
@@thereaper5743 I absolutely love that place! I live about 20 mins away from the place and I would recommend everyone to take a trip there! Its been a few years since Ive been there but I might make a trip up there this summer! Its amazing how they can hang those heavy planes up and have them dangle from the ceiling.
In 1976 I've seen the XB70 aged 6 years old in reality at Wright Patterson Museum, Dayton and I was impressed at once by the design of that plane! And this impression of design still lasts until today!
You COULD be a little more accurate. The co-pilot(Carl Cross), and the pilot of the chase plane(Joe Walker) were killed. The pilot of the Valkyrie(Al White) survived.
Inaccuracies in videos like this kill it for me. I've been an XB-70 fan for most of my life, and the accident has always been reported as two killed, one seriously injured. Joe Walker, the F-104 pilot, had an amazing piloting record and a few firsts to his credit. Al White also had quite a record with the XB-70.
@@mrbill6765 I saw one of those birds @ Carswell AFB, back,...well a long damn time ago. Pretty sure before the accident. Saw it leave. Lived under the flight path for the B36s - very distinctive drone. Also remember the +mach 1 booms of the B58s.
I watch a lot of content about various subject on RUclips. There are few that are as visually striking and informative in research as this channel. The content is stellar and beyond what I could articulate in a RUclips comment. This content has won me over enough to sign up for Curiously Stream / Nebula so I can see even more Mustard content. Keep up the good work and thanks!
In a happy coincidence, Paul Stewart came out with a walk around of the only surviving XB-70 on the same day as this video. The 2 videos compliment each other nicely.
Such an a amazing aircraft, the remaining example is in Dayton Ohio at the Air Force museum. It was not this aircrafts fault for the crafts crash when the chase aircraft hit it.
I have to say the effort, time, consideration and sheer man hours to put these videos together is extremely commendable, I don't believe there are many people on RUclips who could justify earning their viewership more than yourself! Thank you for another fantastic, interesting and beautifully crafted video!
1:28 - As a Moldovan, I thank you for drawing our national borders not according to the soviet occupation zone but according to the will and soul of the people
Back in the 70's I was a young boy in Dayton, Ohio. I would go to the Wright Patterson Air Force Museum every chance I could. The XB-70 was a favorite to be sure. It was massive and very impressive.
Don't forget, the Valkyrie also inspired the Soviets to make the MiG-25. When the Americans overestimated the abilities of the MiG-25, they responded with the F-15, which proved vastly superior to the MiG-25, especially after the weaknesses of the MiG-25 were revealed.
That's false. The F-15 was developed as a USAF replacement to the originally USN developed F-4 with lessons learned during the Vietnam war where the short cummings of the USAF's current doctrine were put on full display. As to the F-15 being superior I should hope so there was 8 years between the first flights of the MiG-25 and the F-15. There was also 8 years between the F-86 and the F-105 which shows how much technology advances in just 8 years.
@@Ushio01 Although the F-X program was started before MIG-25 became known and wasn't supposed to counter it, the program specs were later altered and improved, at least to some extent, because of it.
@@zigmar2 It's a single seat F-4 raw spec like jet designed for high speed, high manoeuvrability air to air combat rather than as an interceptor. Which is what the USAF needed after the Vietnam war disaster. The specs are what should be expected being nearly 20 years newer than the F-4.
Really? Different tastes I guess, cause there are a lot of angles like 6:30 where I feel it looks really ungainly. The cylindrical nose, the triangular rear and the square intakes just seem to clash a lot in my mind.
What a wonderful machine. People and engineers were allowed to dream back then. This, Concorde, Tu-144… the future seemed very promising back then… good times!
@@craigkingdon4424 But you have to admit the pace in which technology was evolving back in the 40's 50's and 60's was stunning, people could dream about incredible stuff and it might actually become a reality a few years later. No wonder they thought we'd have big mars colonies by now.
@@craigkingdon4424 Yes I have to agree, the safety has improved exponentially. Today's turbofan engines are much more fuel efficient as well. But then again, we've been riding the same horse for what, 60 years? And there's no real visible change on the horizon. That's why I feel like it must have been really exciting to be an aircraft engineer or even a passenger in the 1960s. There were some real changes on the horizon at the time. Yes the supersonic tech failed (except the fighter jets), but at the time it must have been really exciting to see the "revolution" no matter what!
I can't imagine how astonishing an entire fleet of these would be, if all the kinks had been ironed out and the project's relevance preserved. The profile is so exotic it's hard to believe it was ever a real aircraft in the first place.
An incredibly beautiful aircraft that presaged titanium structural members and super cruise flight. North American gave us the P51, The F86 and the F100. I have always regretted that they were gobbled up by companies that spent more on lobbying than true research and development.
This is at the Dayton Air Force museum in Ohio. I've been seeing it every visit since I was a kid. It looks very impressive in real life. It definitely stands out with all of it's exhaust ports. I never knew it's story just that it was no longer used. Now I know.
The Valkyrie was so ahead of its time and such a phenomenal feat of engineering. This was one of the few aircraft that intrigued me to become an Aerospace Engineer at an early age and proud to say that I was able to achieve that dream. Thank you for another amazing content!
The USAF Museum in Dayton has their Valkyrie on display with an X-29 hanging from the ceiling behind it, and the sheer contrast between these two masterpieces is just visually jarring and amazing. The Valkyrie is so brutal and aggressive in its every physical detail, just stark sheet metal hammered into an assemblage of knife blades and gaping air intakes around as many jet engines as the desperate engineers could cram together -- while the X-29 is like a Stradivarius, an almost organic shape that draws your eyes in and tells them the story of carefully managing airflow around its elegant surfaces to execute sharp but graceful high-speed maneuvers. Put them on display so close together was either inspired or the luckiest accident ever.
@@jbtechcon7434 you're crazy! The X-29 and the XB-70 ...both designed by the same junior engineer based upon principles demonstrated from a paper airplane (XB-70 ). And the foreword swept wing idea came from the same teenager while watching Superman tv series with George Reeves. The fact is most of aviation accomplishment came from the ideas of children....the Wright Brothers, Howard Hughs, Lindberg, Werner von Braun and ....ME! ...and I knew all of them
I wish the video kept the details about the crash, though it was tragic, it was also quite interesting to know that the incredibly complex pressurized clamshell ejection seat on the Valkyrie performed flawlessly for the pilot who used it.
The 20th Century must've been a mind-blowing hundred years; from the first airplane in 1903 that didn't travel all that far, to these supersonic jets in fifty years, then rocketing to the Moon. The two most devastating wars in history, as well, just 20-30 years apart.
All within an average lifespan.
crazy to think about it lol
All that thanks to increased proficiency in killing other humans
Man got hungry, man got monumentally petty, man progressed science
Awful and awesome at the same time!
just wait for the mind blowing things that happen in the 21st century, electric cars, hover car drones , then rocketing to mars , and lets not forget world war 3!
And now we have attention span of a Goldfish.
British Admiral Jackie Fisher would begin his career on sailing ships, and finish his career on guided missile cruisers and nuclear submarines. It’s no wonder that old sci fi like Star Trek thought we would break lightspeed by the 21st century.
That crash was not without warning. The Starfighter pilot radioed he was getting into the Valkrie's jet wash, and was backing off, but the photographer said he needed the shot, and to continue moving closer. Dispite the Starfighters continued protest, he was ordered to move closer. The jet wash from the Valkrie caused him to lose control, and roll over the valkrie and take out it's tail section.
Seems like skill and equipment issue by the photographer. Fucking hell.
stupidest photographer 😠
@@_Erogaki if i was a pilot there i'd prioritize safety over orders. who cares if i get reprimanded back on the ground, at least i make it back down safely
@@gamemodeone4330 yes that's 100% the pilot's fault unfortunately. just say No.
I've never read any of that information. I've heard it repeated on many comments boards for videos about this plane, but never saw an actual for source for 1) the F-104 pilot's protest, and 2) the orders telling him to get closer.
What are those sources?
Dude...your stuff is truely next level. HBO, Netflix, would be proud to have you if docs actually ment anything. I say your material is the benchmark produced or RUclips.
I calculated if a bird hits a large train could result in it travelling at Mach 200.
@@1mol831 it depends on the train(weight), velocity of both bird and train. After calculating it my answer is… it won’t due to not having a constant source of velocity and hitting at any imaginable angle. Sorry maybe next time.
Agreed
@@cruximperator the bird is launched at the train at high speed though
You can see his docs, on nebula! There are even exclusives
My grandpa, Joseph Cotton, was one of the test pilots for the xb-70. He passed away a few years ago and were now developing boxes of films he had from the 60s that captured the xb70s test flights. Hoping to have it available to view at the Edwards AFB museum in time for the October Airshow!
@Galileo7of9 I'm guessing he means they're converting to digital, or that he found boxes of negatives, which AIR were included with developed prints. Ahh, the wonder of the pre-digital age.
Your Grandfather was Joe Cotton! Really! I have several signed items by him.
I would LOVE to see those photographs, as I’m certain every other aircraft enthusiast would. If you ever make them publicly available, please come back and post your link!
holy SHIT that's cool as fuck
Isn’t it crazy having a grandpa like this? My grandpa was an fb111 pilot for a long time and flew through two wars. He passed a few years ago now two. Makes me feel like such a little ant knowing I won’t ever do anything as great as fly a plane that in the 70-80s is still faster than an f22.
Hands down my favourite aircraft. It looks so futuristic, despite being older than almost any military jet flying today!
B-52 pilots have a saying "when the last B-1 retires, and the last B-2 retires, their crews will fly home on a B-52 first flown by their grandfathers."
@@AnonymousFreakYT I’ve head a similar one about B-52’s being crewed by grandchildren of the pilots who brought it into service. The plane simply will not die!
agreed
Couldn’t agree more
The Valkyrie is at the Air Force museum in Dayton, Oh. It’s an incredible looking aircraft in person, so large.
More than half-a-century old, and still looks strikingly modern.
"Striking"? Yes, absolutely gorgeous and cutting edge for its day.
But "modern"? I don't know. the general shape of the cockpit glass and the squared intakes in particular look rather dated in my eyes.
@@WhitzWolf92
So there is a current bomber that can fly Mach 3
The speed records of the SR-71 have still not been broken
@@FP194 They are commenting on the fact that the aesthetics of the aircraft look a bit dated, not its technological capabilities. And the reason why bombers that fly beyond Mach 3 do not exist anymore has already been explained in the video. ICBMs are a bigger threat in the modern era. And the SR-71's downfall was marred by economic costs on top of the introduction of spy satellites and UAVs. If we were to ignore the financial and practical inefficiencies, modern defence contractors could likely build an aircraft faster than the SR-71. But it wouldn't make sense today.
Speed doesn't really matter as much anymore.
People in the 50's and 60's did some amazing engineering that still beats out some of our modern stuff simply because there was a global push for innovation in every and all fields, as well as the absence of most consolidated industries holding back progress for their own gains.
For example the nuclear industry was soaring back then and was essentially getting rid of the energy problem before it even manifested, with crazy efficient designs ripped straight out of even more absurd military projects. But the downfall of many of these projects was also the military interests of nations. If something could not be used to give an edge in the cold war, it was canned.
Take nuclear again. Oakridge made and operated nuclear reactors that were cheaper, safer, and quite literally had thousands of times better return on energy ratio than PWRs. They did it because they had developed it first for a nuclear engine equiped bomber then took what they learned and created the ultimate power generation platform, being utterly destroyed (and I'm talking orders for forced destruction of equipment and data) by the US government because unlike the Navy's PWRs or the army backed plutonium breeder, Oakridge's design could not be used to produce weapon grade plutonium.
Let me get this straight, half a century ago, climate change and the energy crisis was a SOLVED ISSUE. Today we are living under a veil of idiocy that makes us take the longest road for maximum profits of interested parties..
I can't express enough how much effort you put into these videos, they're always worth the wait
I agree and there are also multiple people working on them.
Wish it was one every month not one every 2 months or if we lucky 1 and half 😢😢😢 but still the best RUclips creator ever!
Consider becoming a Patreon, we get a bonus video every time :D
maybe subscribe to their terrible service of nebula and you'll get to see videos they don't think we on youtube deserve
@@penguinmaster7 lol so nebula is terrible??
My dad was an hydraulics engineer on the XB-70 development. I'm sure it was just a coincidence that there were hydraulic issues. Seriously, though, he was mechanical genius.
I must have been taken to an open house at Palmdale, or something, as a little kid, because my very earliest memory is of something huge and white and beautiful inside an enormous building.
My grandfather Hap Anderson worked on this one as well. From what I understand he was a go-between from the engineers to a team of fabricators. I have the large wood model of the aircraft used to sell the project.
@@butterflywoodworks2374 Wow.
my grandfather also worked on this although i did not learn much about what he did on it.
Ohhhhh.... Congrats
@@butterflywoodworks2374 They didn't mass produce the wooden ones?
I can't believe it! I was just thinking about how much I want a new Mustard video, and here it is! And the XB-70 is one of my favorite aircraft ever made. I was lucky enough to see it up close in the National Museum of the US Air Force, before they moved it to the new hanger. That old hanger was inconvenient to access, but once you were there, you could get so close to this vast array of mind-boggling planes. I can say that I peered right into the cockpit of an X-15, just inches away from the glass of the window
NEW MUSTARD VIDEO=BETTER THAN WORLD PEACE
@@shadowmoth9158 no tbh
bless your wholesome soul
Can you think about how much I want to be rich next?
Me tooooo
Can we all just appreciate the level of detail in his modeling and animations? They are phenomenal!
He bought the model
@@jasond5140 yeah, it's amazing how everybody just repeats this same comment.
@@DrWhom mmmmm
China: Is this for me?
@@jasond5140 Time to skedaddle boys! They're on to us!
This guy makes better animations in a time frame of 1 month than an entire high budget cgi team can in a year
👌 👏 😍 👍 🥰 ☺
Because teachers often have no clue how the world works and get some trashy yet expensive CGI team without even realizing it's trash
Ikr
@@lmaoxd2957 Agree. Mustards animation improves with every video and looks great, but this comment kind of disrespects the work of other CG artists.
I recently started working for a studio and can tell that full CG often can look better, than real footage mixed with CG. It's really hard to do that and modern movies (like some marvel productions) sometimes don't give enough information for the artists to work with. A bit exaggerated, but it's a bit like:" here's the green screen footage, put your cool stuff in there!"
There is also a difference if you animate a CG double for a movie or if you make a static model.
Also don't know what he means by "year". Most productions don't have this much time exclusively for adding the CG parts and even if they do, it's often limited by the endless amount of changes the studio demands that had to be done as fast as possible.
@@Anldiot69 wow lol, I dont know much about CGI and stuff just watch corridor and like their content, anyways good luck at the studio!
They actually had the engineering power to get it flying, wow
Never doubt an engineer with a government budget.
@@andrewthomson ah yes money
they burned more dollars than kerosene, but technically it was worth it
@@TheOnlyVistosi for a project never finished but got flying I guess
@@andrewthomson Or One with stolen Russian secrets. Or An imprisoned German rocket scientist that made your space program.
been here for quite some time when Mustard was still relatively small. Always thought you deserved more, glad you've come this far. Keep up these amazing videos and go even higher!!
Really appreciate it :)
I know, right?
The first Mustard video I think I saw was the one on the De Havilland Comet and after watching that video I took a look at the subscriber count in awe
The CGI with how the channel seemed to appear out of nowhere blew me away
Two pilots lost. Just to clarify, only one of the XB-70 pilots, Major Carl Cross, died; the second pilot who died was Pilot Joe Walker in his F-104. Pilot Al White, the chief test pilot of the XB-70, was able to engage his ejection capsule and survive with some injuries.
didn't the surviving pilots arm get caught in the capsule's clamshell?
@@blockstacker5614 Yeah but he managed to retract it and close the capsule (not without a strong pain, if I remember right).
@@fridaycaliforniaa236 Exactly. And he landed so hard he put a butt dent in the medal seat...jacked up his back a good bit.
His co-pilot couldn't get the mechanism engaged soon enough and the G forces kept him from being retraced back into the clamshell.
Oh my lord what a nightmare… makes me shudder
Joe Walker was definitely the biggest loss, best test pilot NASA and the USAF had at the time. He flew the X-15, crazy talented man
An ex-girlfriend's Dad was an AF test pilot and was in the GE photo formation, flying I forget what. I remember he said that with time compression at the time, the 16 seconds the XB-70 flew on seemed like forever. He figured that the drooped wingtips were giving lateral stability and was trying to remember if there had been a calculated max-droop while landing. He said he had time to wonder if the max-droop would be defined by ground clearance or by center of gravity. The wing-droop while supersonic also had the effect of shifting the center of lift forward to offset nature's pushing it (center of lift) back at high mach (This was the trifecta of the wing droop: compression lift, additional lateral (rudder area) stability, and forward center of lift shift). Drooping at sub-sonic speeds was limited by how much fuel you could pump forward to move the CG forward or it got tail heavy.
So he had what felt like forever to run numbers in his head. Then it Dutch-rolled and then flat-hatted and came apart.
He also said it was difficult in an odd way to formate up to because it was hard to settle on visual cues for separation, to run parallel. He later worked for GE.
Thanks for the story; screenshotted. You had a brush with aviation history.
The other aircraft in that formation were a T-38A Talon, F-4B Phantom, and a YF-5A Freedom Fighter. Did some quick searching online; other than the pilots directly involved, I can only find Col. Joseph F. Cotton mentioned, but the aircraft he was flying is not named (only it was supersonic, but all three aircraft I named above are capable of supersonic speeds). Maybe if I can find the official accident report...anyway, thanks for sharing your story.
@@hbdragon88 its an F104 starfighter and its the aircraft that caused the crash. Theres a detailed report on the whole incident of you do some searching
@@connorjohnson4402 ...yes, I'm aware of that, but that wasn't at all related to thetopic at hand. OP's story is that the dad of one of his ex-girlfriend's was one of the AF test pilots flying in that ill-fated formation, so I was trying to figure out the names of those three pilots, but I could only find one.
@@hbdragon88 great reply to a great comment.Well done.I’m a truck driver and I love how pilots are so supporting of each other.Steering wheel holders do they’re best to tear each other apart. Pics all over Y/T of trucks in the worst positions with no context of how they got there. A guy could be a hero rolling 80k to save a church bus but people think he or she are tired,stoned Etc. I’m retired now over 4 million miles driven and I see the industry that paid for my house,fed my family Etc thought of as drug addicts and scumbags. Like a said nice job on reply.
The XB70 is my favorite aircraft, Concorde is a close second. Seeing them tumble out the sky is literally heartbreaking. Rest in peace to the brave men that pushed technology to its limits.
I know. Whenever I see it in its death spiral, my heart really does break. Such a sad waste of brilliant test pilots and a beautiful craft.
@@ronjon7942 i've posted this on other aviation videos, but in my mind, as an aviation buff, I imagine various "what-ifs" in aviation. If the YB-49 entered service and bombed Germany in WW2, and later versions later joined the B-52 in raids on Hanoi... if the F-20 Tigershark was put into production... and if the XB-70 entered service and was upgraded through the decades alongside the B-1B, and still in service today. I could daydream about these alt-history outcomes for hours...
I remember seeing the one they had on display at the USAF museum in Dayton a few years ago and thought it was an incredible concept. Particularly seeing it just a couple hangars away from primitive WW1 planes, it really puts into perspective just how fast aviation technology progressed in just a few decades. It was also a big reminder that for better or worse nothing fuels innovation like war.
Yep. The sad and amazing thing that set both World Wars apart from the others was that (apart from the massive scale) both of them were wars of technology.
New and terrifying weapons were being built by the day and what was tried and tested one day was useless the next.
i happened to have had a 1927 copy of a brochure titled " A little journey to the home of the engineering division, army air services". It was apparently an open house brochure for mcCook field, dayton ohio. It showed wing testing, propeller test stands, new fangled parachutes, etc. This was the era of fabric coated biplanes. I always thought that the Barling bomber was noteworthy. This was a triplane wing bomber with 4 engines, open cockpit, at least one engineer/gunner between the two wing engines. it was billed as the worlds largest airplane. while i realize no remaining craft exist, i always thought that the Barling (the original B1 bomber :-) ) should be displayed next to a museum B-1B just to show off the contrast in 50 years of air engineering.
Or rather, nothing fuels innovation like _motivation,_ war is just highly motivating that way. It’s nothing intrinsic to war, really, just a matter of what humans deem sufficiently urgent.
@@Jjames763 like survival of the fittest almost
“Necessity is the mother of invention”. The necessity to beat the other military and survive is a quite a driving factor to invent and innovate.
I was able to see it in person at the us air force museum and i can confirm it is absolutely massive, like you can only really admire it's size in person
I assume at Wright Patterson? It is indeed massive, and very stunning.
@@DatacronKeeper yes, the be and really all the planes after the Korean war were really bigger than expected
Visiting that museum is definitely on my bucket list. Will retire next year, maybe then.
Isnt this the fastest mach 3 plane ever built
@@KaushikBala333 The XB-70 had a top speed of Mach 3.1. The the SR-71 is still faster at Mach 3.32.
The XB-70 Valkyrie and SR71 Blackbird both first flew just 19 years after WW2 (1964). Technology advanced at lightning speed during those 2 Decades!
Considering the Rate of progress in such a short time.
What secrets do they have today with all the computer modeling, composites and metallurgy experience....?
@@stuartd9741 The secrets of yesterday become the (told or untold) history of tomorrow.
@@stuartd9741 Jet engine tech opened up new niches that were filled with admirable speed and efficiency, it is true, and development since the 60s or so can seem lacklustre by comparison. A similar rapid explosion of innovation will occur as soon as propulsion tech makes it next leap forwards. My hopes are pinned on the SABRE engine, but we will have to wait and see.
It didn't advance as fast as most people think. The building blocks had been there in the 1920's and 1930's, it was just a question of optimizing and scaling. The advances that did happen were very visually distinguishable though so it seems like they happened overnight but it's not really the case.
Similar to the world's first bullet train, the Shinkansen which launched operations in the same year.
Imagine you were born in 1900 and an aviation enthusiast. In your childhood, you experience the first motor planes and 150km/h are fast, 300km are long range. When you retire in the 1960s, the Valkyrie flies with Mach 3 and (theoretically) can cross oceans. Must have been amazing to see this developent. My generation will experience the same with AI, Biotech and Human-Machine-Interfaces, I believe. Less visually spectacular, but probably even more impactful than high speed aviation.
yes
I would hesitate to put AI on that list, but for the other two yeah.
@@mobiusflammel9372 Why not AI? ChatGPT already was an impressive show of what is to come.
It's crazy how fast it changed. When my uncle went to school plastic was junk and largely useless, now he works on plastics for the aviation industry. My grandma, his mom, was born in a farmhouse without electricity, plumbing, or a car and she died In a house with a smart TV, smart phone, and hybrid car.
Exactly, my grandfather trained as a blacksmith and briefly shod horses...and in the sam lifetime saw a man on the moon. Crazy. I think you are correct that AI and biotech, will bring even bigger changes...existential even.
I got to see the XB70A's maiden flight. I was in the 4th grade in Palmdale, Ca. My father worked at Edwards AFB. We did not go to school that day, but out to the base to see this magnificent flight. The unfortunate clip by one of the escort jets on the XB70B's flight was very sad. This was a beautiful aircraft.
So sad for those pilots who died. Brave men for sure. I couldn't imagine how scary it was to fly such a large plane that didn't have the best results. The pilot must have known there would have been a 20% chance he would die. Literally almost every time it flew something major happened.
Yeah..but the crash was not because of fault in the plane itself, but due to some other jet colliding in it🤦
@@Maniacc007 oh okay. Good to know. I thought the ejector didn't work and that's why he died.
@@red_day6097 Well yes the immediate cause of death was the ejector, but it was needed because of the crash. There were 3 people in total. Two on valkyrie and 1 on F-104 fighter jet.
If the ejector had worked, both pilots of Valkyrie would have suvived, but the jet pilot who crashed, would still die.
I'm not sad, they were soldiers testing war machinas designed to murder people like me. I'm glad they died.
@@red_day6097 the ejecting seat probably worked fine, but accounts suggest that the pilot was unconscious, probably because of the g forces that built up as the plane tumbled.
That's a lot of info about the XB-70 Valkyrie I have never heard of until now, from the challenges it was designed to solve over the technical issues early in testing to the alternative uses NASA wanted to put it to. Great animation as well, makes it clear how elegant yet intimidating its design look... the exact type of aircraft that deserves the title "Valkyrie". Always found it one of the most beautiful aircraft ever designed.
Great job as usual Mustard!
fun fact: if i remember correctly, it wasn't actually originally intended to cruise at mach 3 for its whole flight. the original brief was to have it cruise subsonically at similar speeds to the b-52, to save fuel, and use its true speed capability for a quick 'dash' at high supersonic speeds, into and out of its target airspace. the idea shifted when the designers figured out that even while the engines on afterburner used a lot more fuel to overcome higher supersonic drag, the overall distance-per-fuel was increased by the dramatically higher speed
i still call that 'efficiency through speed' idea the 'valkyrie effect' whenever it comes up in other contexts
Fantastic video on the history of the valkyrie. I saw it at the air force museum . It is mind boggling huge. I had a buddy stand under it for several pictures. The 6 engines look straight out of star wars. The underside is flat and looks as long as a football field. I can't think of many other planes that have other full size jets UNDER their wings! Truly awe inspiring to see it in the flesh...absolutely awe inspiring.
This channel is the definition of quality over quantity.
Too bad he post like every 1-3 months, maybe thats why his videos are high quality
@@karlfrr Watch his other video on nebula
Takes time to develop animations
I wish people making these comments would come up with something else to say. Like yeah I get it, the videos are nice, but I've heard it 3 million time already all across RUclips, all across a bunch of different channels. People just want likes...
This world is rapidly passing away and I hope that you repent and take time to change before all out disaster occurs! Belief in messiah alone is not enough to grant you salvation - Matthew 7:21-23, John 3:3, John 3:36 (ESV is the best translation for John 3:36) if you believed in Messiah you would be following His commands as best as you could. If you are not a follower of Messiah I would highly recommend becoming one. Call on the name of Jesus and pray for Him to intervene in your life - Revelation 3:20.
Contemplate how the Roman Empire fulfilled the role of the beast from the sea in Revelation 13 over the course of 1260+ years. Revelation 17 confirms that the beast is in fact Rome. From this we can conclude that A) Jesus is the Son of God and can predict the future or make it happen, B) The world leaders/nations/governments etc have been conspiring together for the last 3000+ years going back to Babylon and before, C) History as we know it is fake. You don't really need to speculate once you start a relationship with God.
Can't get a response from God? Fasting can help increase your perception and prayer can help initiate events. God will ignore you if your prayer does not align with His purpose (James 4:3) or if you are approaching Him when "unclean" (Isaiah 1:15, Isaiah 59:2, Micah 3:4). Stop eating food sacrificed to idols (McDonald's, Wendy's etc) stop glorifying yourself on social media or making other images of yourself (Second Commandment), stop gossiping about other people, stop watching obscene content etc. Have a blessed day!
XB-70 is a beast of engineering
And looks impressive
@@GhostOfDamned it looks a long way ahead of it's time
@@mikewizz1895 unlike your spelling
This world is rapidly passing away and I hope that you repent and take time to change before all out disaster occurs! Belief in messiah alone is not enough to grant you salvation - Matthew 7:21-23, John 3:3, John 3:36 (ESV is the best translation for John 3:36) if you believed in Messiah you would be following His commands as best as you could. If you are not a follower of Messiah I would highly recommend becoming one. Call on the name of Jesus and pray for Him to intervene in your life - Revelation 3:20.
Contemplate how the Roman Empire fulfilled the role of the beast from the sea in Revelation 13 over the course of 1260+ years. Revelation 17 confirms that the beast is in fact Rome. From this we can conclude that A) Jesus is the Son of God and can predict the future or make it happen, B) The world leaders/nations/governments etc have been conspiring together for the last 3000+ years going back to Babylon and before, C) History as we know it is fake. You don't really need to speculate once you start a relationship with God.
Can't get a response from God? Fasting can help increase your perception and prayer can help initiate events. God will ignore you if your prayer does not align with His purpose (James 4:3) or if you are approaching Him when "unclean" (Isaiah 1:15, Isaiah 59:2, Micah 3:4). Stop eating food sacrificed to idols (McDonald's, Wendy's etc) stop glorifying yourself on social media or making other images of yourself (Second Commandment), stop gossiping about other people, stop watching obscene content etc. Have a blessed day!
I can't express how much I love your content. It's so clean and well presented. Informative and entertaining. You're awesome!
Plane'sLike
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What incredible innovation they had in the 50s and 60s. No wonder they had high hope for 2000 and beyond :-)
This is why I love this era of creativity we were coming up with wild things a lot not possible and some never worked but the ones that made it in some cases as far as this was amazing unfortunately lives were lost in many experiments of creativity and advancement
@@shanedaley6236 i blame war for both loss of life in the past and our amazing life right now.
@@dhirajsaxena1971 absolutely technology was advanced faster during war then anytime in history that counts for WW2 and the cold war
Human ingenuity when it comes to engineering never fails to blow my mind.
Especially when it comes to human ingenuity for the purpose of the destruction of humanity
Robot Wars
@@80sWavrDude The hippies were right.....Make love, NOT war.
Yeah me too but.... Why are you also here bro I thought you liked anime and stuff like this but you are on half of the videos I see! How u do dis?
Too bad we use technology for weapons and can’t make car engines that get 100+ mpg! That way we do not kneed Electric Cars!
Always brings a smile to my face when i see you upload love the story telling and animations
@@jillesbruggenkamp5072 you know you can edit comments
@@scrithen2836 thanks mate good shout
I honestly can't recommend Curiosity Stream and Nebula enough. With Curiosity you get a ton of extremely high quality docs and with the bundle you're not only supporting mustard, wendover, rll, etc, but you're also getting extra videos from them and you get to see these videos early.
Ok
Definitely a bot account
Wish that Magellan TV was as competitive as the Curiosity Stream+Nebula bundle. $20 a year vs $59.99 yearly? I'll take the former offer which has two websites to boot.
Damn, curiosity stream needs new members so bad they're resorting to bots with a sponsorship script? That's low.
@@Planet.Xplor3r Am I a bot for trying to help support small creators? Curiosity's doing fine on members, they don't need bots.
with all the failures and damages that plane took during testing, it proved it take can serious a beating and still be able to get the pilots home safely
One of the most beautiful aircraft ever built. One crashed, one in museum. There'll never be another like it.
The Tu-160 “White Swan” is a beautiful bird too. And it is a highly successful one.
Do cry….What is not being told here is that America built at least 5 of them for regular use of top politicians and dignitaries and congress people back then and NASA built a bunch for recreation use for the Shahs and Sheiks in the middle east for recreation.
It is there that some engineers attempted to put a bomb on it as a war machine. It didn’t work however, just too heavy and much too much drag.
What a horrible way to kill a beautiful airplane ….A plane that was designed from the mind of a child with a paper airplane that he brought into the Northrop plant one day.
Two more dents
xb70 is a beautiful aircraft tho sr71 is still my favorite.
bit hopeless really.
I don't know if I would call it particularly beautiful - it's incredibly boxy - but it was certainly impressive looking.
I remember seeing the only remaining aircraft in the experimental hangar at the Dayton Air Force Museum. It was amazing. I'm so happy they moved it to the main location so everyone can see it
the amount of effort and time put into this video is absolutely insane. Mad respects. Love your content
Seeing it at the museum was amazing. That and the blackbird are my all time favorites
The valkyrie is my favourite bomber and its one of the most beautiful planes ever built.
Your opinion
I concur with your assessment. 👍
I think some of its airframe design features would carry over to SSTO orbital flight vehicles, so we may yet see more of it
My grandfather actually helped with this project! He was contracted out - via his regular gig running the machine shop at American Airlines' maintenance and overhaul facility - to fix quality control issues in fabrication. I still have the team photo and thank you letter they sent him. Need to get it all matted and framed.
Our grandfather's worked together. He was a Maintenance Chief from 1937-1977 .
@@markbaker6623 At the Tulsa facility?
@@artisan002 Yes my grandfather worked in Tulsa. He also ran maintenance in Chicago, Detroit , LAX and Dallas. He also spent most of WW2 in India with American Airlines in the Air Transport Command.
Wow
Very cool thread!
The North American XB70, the Grumman F14, and the Lockheed Constellation are all terrific-looking machines.
the trio of iconic american engineer
SR-71 as well
@@LukeTansiongco indeed, dont forget the legendary f15 with 105 air-to-air kill with no lost, of the f4 phantom breaking alot of world recotd
Such an incredible plane (and a very cool looking one).
The quality of the models and renders is outstanding, somehow they look better with each video.
I can’t believe it
Every time we think he’s peaked at quality it just keeps better
Keep it up Mustard👍🏻👊🏻
"he"? lol
Yes, time to apply mustard in my vegemite.
I went to the same High School as Joseph Walker, one of the test pilots who died in the photo op. He was also an astronaut who flew various X-15 tests. Many photos of him coming to visit in old 1960s yearbooks. He even had a local elementary school named after him for a time. I believe he was piloting the F-104 starfighter thay collided with the XB-70, though I can't recall. The entire photo op was clouded in scandal due to improper authorizations and ignored protocols.
Yep! Good old Joe Walker….. always where he wasn’t!
@Galileo7of9 good luck on documented…witnesses say something else…they ain’t dead yet😡
@Galileo7of9 I will not!
@Galileo7of9 And such conversations with you are purposeless. Aaahhh....Mennnnn!
What the hell are you two arguing about? Ian posted his comment and it's entirely clear what he meant by the things he said, so what exactly is your issue with it, Galileo7of9? It also isn't very clear to me what your disagreements are, regarding the AV-2 incident, so would you mind explaining that?
I remember the day the Valkyrie was delivered to the Museum of the United States Air Force 1969. I was in second grade and was on the playground at school. This huge airplane with a very unusual silhouette flew directly over us in slow motion at low altitude making a lot of noise. A few moments later, it circled back and did it again. From what I have been told, the plane arrived a heavy (too much fuel) so the pilot flew it low and slow over the suburbs of Dayton to show it off and burn off extra fuel. It was amazing!
I share this story with anyone who will listen every time I visit the museum (once every year or two).
... I believe you ...
That's fantastic.
I remember my dad making this model when I was a child. Unforgettable.
How are you. I Am here
I saw the surviving Valkyrie at the USAF Museum before the new hangar was built. Back then it was in a hangar you needed to sign up for a bus ride to. It barely fit in this hangar, and all sorts of other x-planes were parked under it, such as the x-15 and x-24b. Still one of the coolest airplane experiences I've had.
In a way, I'm glad it became a supersonic research aircraft and never saw conflict.
Probably one of the most striking aircraft designs, behind only my favorite; the SR-71
It’s so sci-fi looking. Truly breathtaking. Like the circular mono wing that the French developed.
One of this aircraft's shortcomings that I find humorous is due to the placement of the "nose" gear. Since the forward landing gear is back at the middle of the aircraft and the pilots are well forward of it, when the aircraft traverses over slight undulations in the runway the pilots will, thanks to geometry, travel up and down three or four times greater than the nose wheel does. The pilots were said to get motion sickness while taxiing.
What, and put a humongous nosewheel up front? If a pilot would get messed up by a few runway undulations, then he shouldn't be flying. Besides, everyone thought having the pilot so high up in a 747 would make it tough to fly, especially land.
@@alphakky I said what I said, and what I said is true. Your point about the 747 has absolutely zero relevance.
@331SVTCobra I was wondering if we would get a higher compression lift due to ground effect?.
@@331SVTCobra touchy some!
@@alphakky I was a flight test engineer at Edwards............and raced sailboats on Puget Sound. "undulations" are a WHOLE different thaaaaang...........
Having no clue about engineering or aircraft but loving this channel, I begin to understand that the most grim wars produced some of the most awe inspiring technology and I cannot decide how I feel about that.
I think most people overlooked the fact that B-2's flywing design not only give it great radar deflecting ability, but also reduced drag so it had a very long range.
That design was a different kind of revolutionary. The B-1 tried it, but the turboprops and later turbines created so much leading and trailing turbulence that superior aerodynamic efficiency was never achieved. The materials advances that made the B-2 so lightweight by comparison also helped the drag reduction factor.
If ICBMs become neutralized by DEWs and hypersonic interceptor vehicles, then the B-2 and the Valkyrie might become relevant once again.
Amazing piece of engineering. A salute to the people who were behind this project.
Lol it's not. It was a failure.. how's that makes it an amazing piece of engineering?
@@H.EL-Othemany Failure is the stepping stone to success. An aircraft is a culmination of systems and sub-systems. Many of those lessons learnt would have been used in a later aircraft.
@@H.EL-Othemany How is a 3+ mach bomber that actually worked not an amazing piece of engineering?
@@Ignacio.Romero it didn't work... Didn't you watched the video?
@@H.EL-Othemany What? Did you watch the video? It worked until another plane crashed into it destroying it
The Valkyrie as a passenger jet? It would certainly scream “American STS” next to the Concord on the tarmac!
I believe the flipside of this coin was the short lived Bombcorde proposal (to nuclear arm a concord for military use). Never made it beyond paper.
That's a truly nutty thing to comprehend. A passenger aircraft nearly as fast as an SR-71, and faster than a Concorde by a margin as large or larger than standard 737 or Airbus A3xx cruising speeds, lol.
That proposal was doomed before it was even conceived. The Lockheed and Boeing SSTs were both, on paper, "Concorde Killers". " Second Generation" SSTs purpose built (or designed, i guess) as airliners rather than bombers mutated into passenger carriers.
I can't even begin to think of how expensive tickets on it would be. I imagine it consumed at least as much fuel as the Concorde, and the passenger capacity looks to be about half of the Concorde's, so 25 grand minimum for a 1 way ticket across the Atlantic.
@@CockatooDude $25,000!? Maybe $2,500 you mean, or where tickets that expensive?
Imagine WW1 pilots encountering this thing
Them: WHAT THE FU-
J
One of the lesser known XB-70 subsystems in developement was the "Pye Wacket" anti-missile system. Disc shaped anti-missile missiles would have been stacked vertically in auxiliary weapons bays which would have been able to pre-orient (rotate) the defensive missile toward the direction of incoming SAMs and then launch them in a head on intercept while maintaining mach 3 flight, and without the need to perform defensive maneuvers. The system was canceled with the XB-70.
I’m sorry, ‘disc-shaped anti-missile missile’ got me giggling.
Point-defence CDs.
That is interesting indeed. Thank you, something for me to research. I’m surprised that kind of defensive tech never made it to other bombers, tankers, large recce, etc.
The XB-70 looks like something out from the future and looks like it was meant to fly in space
Doesn't look futuristic anymore lol
The thing is even more awe inspiring in person. The last one can be seen up close here at the Airforce Museum in Ohio.
I live just about 2 hours away from there, I will go there this summer!
Why the hell would they put something that cool in Ohio
@@saxreaper all the best of aviation comes from Ohio, didn’t you know?!?
@@saxreaper Wright brothers, probably
@@saxreaper Wright brothers >>> Wright-Patterson >>> Air Force Museum
What a beautiful plane! Looks like a real starfighter
Wow, considering what the programme went through I was very lucky to have seen the remaining plane in 1986 stood outside at Wright-Patterson AFB during a family trip to the States. I was in awe standing looking up at it and still remember it vividly. Really sad that the other planes and pilots were lost in the tragic accident. As others have said your videos are next-level! Thanks for making this epic account of an incredible plane.
Your videos are absolute god tier and the quality of it too. Worth the wait and love
Did this plane for my CATIA project and this thing was such a pain, especially the fuselage and inlets so good on you. A note on the XB-70 was its boron based fuel, which I believe was highly toxic and corrosive. So if the engines didn't get blown out, they wouldn't have a long service life due to the corrosion. But, that's what you get when trying to go fast back in the day.🙂
Nope. Boron "zip" fuel was a dead end.
@@alphakky
Boron-based fuels, probably; Boron is too reactive to be allowed to contact operation-critical metal parts like turbine blades or vortex vanes.
There are other options, akin to 'nitrous' for an ICE, that I don't think have been operationally tested.
This is why the passenger concept was bunkum. That would have been a million a one way ticket!
The reason it was OK for military is that nuclear delivery capability is a desperately needed condition for survival.
To date France still relies (partly) on aircraft-carried delivery of its nuclear deterrent, so as to be entirely self-reliant and capable of a counter strike in extremis.
Saw the one they have at the airforce museum in Dayton Ohio and it’s absolutely incredible I couldn’t quit walking around it
Stunning visuals, captivating music, and historically and technically astute narration. Another BIG WIN for this channel. Thanks so much Mustard and Addecco! Will definitely be looking you up on CuriosityStream 😎👍
He's on nebula
Imagine if Mustard made an add-on aircraft for any flight simulator, it would for sure be top notch when it comes to modeling and animation
I've seen the only one they have left in Ohio... man, that thing is HUGE...
As someone who's tall... that thing made the B-52 look nearly the same size if not smaller... THE B-52...
Is it in the Wright Patterson Air Force Museum in Dayton Ohio?
@@ExorHC Yes it is!
@@thereaper5743 I absolutely love that place! I live about 20 mins away from the place and I would recommend everyone to take a trip there! Its been a few years since Ive been there but I might make a trip up there this summer! Its amazing how they can hang those heavy planes up and have them dangle from the ceiling.
@@ExorHC radioactive spiderwebs. 😅
In 1976 I've seen the XB70 aged 6 years old in reality at Wright Patterson Museum, Dayton and I was impressed at once by the design of that plane! And this impression of design still lasts until today!
5:50 that shot really matches the script: imagine your home gone, everyone dead, and you roaring east on a mission for revenge alone.
You COULD be a little more accurate. The co-pilot(Carl Cross), and the pilot of the chase plane(Joe Walker) were killed. The pilot of the Valkyrie(Al White) survived.
Inaccuracies in videos like this kill it for me. I've been an XB-70 fan for most of my life, and the accident has always been reported as two killed, one seriously injured. Joe Walker, the F-104 pilot, had an amazing piloting record and a few firsts to his credit. Al White also had quite a record with the XB-70.
@@mrbill6765 I saw one of those birds @ Carswell AFB, back,...well a long damn time ago. Pretty sure before the accident. Saw it leave. Lived under the flight path for the B36s - very distinctive drone. Also remember the +mach 1 booms of the B58s.
He did say that "two pilots were lost". Which is exactly what you are saying. Seems accurate to me. He didn't say that the two lost were in the XB-70.
@@kenbeals4462 two test pilots.. wich is still accurate as Walker..the F104 pilot was a test pilot
As amazing as the SR-71 blackbird is, I've always been more fascinated by the Valkyrie. So graceful and futuristic, even by today's standards.
Same is SR-7 blackbird,a futuristic groundbreaking machine
@Shiro Saleem 6ò
This accident really made me cry; Valkyrie was a really beautiful aircraft
I watch a lot of content about various subject on RUclips. There are few that are as visually striking and informative in research as this channel. The content is stellar and beyond what I could articulate in a RUclips comment. This content has won me over enough to sign up for Curiously Stream / Nebula so I can see even more Mustard content. Keep up the good work and thanks!
In a happy coincidence, Paul Stewart came out with a walk around of the only surviving XB-70 on the same day as this video. The 2 videos compliment each other nicely.
Such an a amazing aircraft, the remaining example is in Dayton Ohio at the Air Force museum. It was not this aircrafts fault for the crafts crash when the chase aircraft hit it.
*perfectly balanced, as all thing should be*
I have to say the effort, time, consideration and sheer man hours to put these videos together is extremely commendable, I don't believe there are many people on RUclips who could justify earning their viewership more than yourself! Thank you for another fantastic, interesting and beautifully crafted video!
1:28 - As a Moldovan, I thank you for drawing our national borders not according to the soviet occupation zone but according to the will and soul of the people
Back in the 70's I was a young boy in Dayton, Ohio. I would go to the Wright Patterson Air Force Museum every chance I could. The XB-70 was a favorite to be sure. It was massive and very impressive.
My dad took us there to see it the day it flew in to be displayed. I've got 8mm film of it approaching, landing, and taxiing.
@@mccoyver6651 Do you know what year that was?
Don't forget, the Valkyrie also inspired the Soviets to make the MiG-25.
When the Americans overestimated the abilities of the MiG-25, they responded with the F-15, which proved vastly superior to the MiG-25, especially after the weaknesses of the MiG-25 were revealed.
That's false. The F-15 was developed as a USAF replacement to the originally USN developed F-4 with lessons learned during the Vietnam war where the short cummings of the USAF's current doctrine were put on full display.
As to the F-15 being superior I should hope so there was 8 years between the first flights of the MiG-25 and the F-15. There was also 8 years between the F-86 and the F-105 which shows how much technology advances in just 8 years.
@@Ushio01 Although the F-X program was started before MIG-25 became known and wasn't supposed to counter it, the program specs were later altered and improved, at least to some extent, because of it.
@@Ushio01 *citation needed
@@zigmar2 It's a single seat F-4 raw spec like jet designed for high speed, high manoeuvrability air to air combat rather than as an interceptor.
Which is what the USAF needed after the Vietnam war disaster.
The specs are what should be expected being nearly 20 years newer than the F-4.
@@Ushio01 I know; never said it's an interceptor. I'm just pointing out that MIG-25 did influence the program to some extent. It's documented.
You put so much effort into these videos! They're all so good and you're my favorite youtuber.
As always very, very informative, interesting and incredibly well done video. Thanx a lot. 👍👍👍
One of the most beautiful aircraft ever made.
Really? Different tastes I guess, cause there are a lot of angles like 6:30 where I feel it looks really ungainly. The cylindrical nose, the triangular rear and the square intakes just seem to clash a lot in my mind.
De este bombardero salió la simetría de ĺos actuales SU 38 , 30 , 32 etc. Que el morro emergía desde las nacelas de los motores, saludos.
9
When Mustard uploads, everyone’s day gets better
Just saw it yesterday irl at the Air Force Museum in Dayton, Ohio! Such an amazing plane to walk around.
RUclips videos are more engaging and informative than my history class
What a wonderful machine. People and engineers were allowed to dream back then. This, Concorde, Tu-144… the future seemed very promising back then… good times!
More like health and safety standards were suggestions lol
NEW MUSTARD VIDEO=BEST DAY EVER EVERYONE HAPPY AF
@@craigkingdon4424 But you have to admit the pace in which technology was evolving back in the 40's 50's and 60's was stunning, people could dream about incredible stuff and it might actually become a reality a few years later. No wonder they thought we'd have big mars colonies by now.
@@craigkingdon4424 People had to push the envelope so you can enjoy the things you take for granted these days
@@craigkingdon4424 Yes I have to agree, the safety has improved exponentially. Today's turbofan engines are much more fuel efficient as well. But then again, we've been riding the same horse for what, 60 years? And there's no real visible change on the horizon. That's why I feel like it must have been really exciting to be an aircraft engineer or even a passenger in the 1960s. There were some real changes on the horizon at the time. Yes the supersonic tech failed (except the fighter jets), but at the time it must have been really exciting to see the "revolution" no matter what!
I would love to see more videos on soviet fighters, but this does bring a smile to my face nonetheless. Thank you Mustard. Well worth the wait.
That was the reason Mikoyan designed the MiG-25, to counteract the B-70.
THIS JUST MADE MY DAY, thanks dude, seriously
5:55 awww! Look at the puppy!!
hehe
I can't imagine how astonishing an entire fleet of these would be, if all the kinks had been ironed out and the project's relevance preserved. The profile is so exotic it's hard to believe it was ever a real aircraft in the first place.
I would assume that there are secret aircraft based upon such complex designs.
@@bighands69 yes. you would.
An incredibly beautiful aircraft that presaged titanium structural members and super cruise flight. North American gave us the P51, The F86 and the F100. I have always regretted that they were gobbled up by companies that spent more on lobbying than true research and development.
lol, sounds like America got to create jobs why they arrest the innocent keeps everyone busy so politicians say employment is high in my term
@@onlythewise1 You got a better way?
@@patbateman6729 of course think im telling you
@@onlythewise1 USA is the only way, don't ever forget that fact.
@@patbateman6729 what ever that means, usa is rich with oil and things
been waiting for this one
This is at the Dayton Air Force museum in Ohio. I've been seeing it every visit since I was a kid. It looks very impressive in real life. It definitely stands out with all of it's exhaust ports. I never knew it's story just that it was no longer used. Now I know.
yea, i saw it there too, it was one hell of a sight
The Valkyrie was so ahead of its time and such a phenomenal feat of engineering. This was one of the few aircraft that intrigued me to become an Aerospace Engineer at an early age and proud to say that I was able to achieve that dream. Thank you for another amazing content!
🧢
The Valkyrie Bomber is the most beautiful aircraft ever built.
CHANGE MY MIND
Concorde.....
@@atilllathehun1212 nope. Close. But no.
SR-71. Two generations after prototyping it still looks futuristic - like it should be flying in space, not the atmosphere.
Su-27
@@HuntingTarg nope. The stealth paint looked too boring.
Drinking game: take a shot every time Mustard Guy says "conventional aircraft aluminum"
We would die of alcohol poisoning lol
Whoever makes those thumbnail pics is the BEST
I've always been so fasanated with our military planes. And I'm 71 now and still just as fascinated !
Hi Margaret
The USAF Museum in Dayton has their Valkyrie on display with an X-29 hanging from the ceiling behind it, and the sheer contrast between these two masterpieces is just visually jarring and amazing. The Valkyrie is so brutal and aggressive in its every physical detail, just stark sheet metal hammered into an assemblage of knife blades and gaping air intakes around as many jet engines as the desperate engineers could cram together -- while the X-29 is like a Stradivarius, an almost organic shape that draws your eyes in and tells them the story of carefully managing airflow around its elegant surfaces to execute sharp but graceful high-speed maneuvers. Put them on display so close together was either inspired or the luckiest accident ever.
I think they might have known what they were doing.
That said, they also happen to be two of the most iconic experimental (data-gathering) aircraft
I've been there. It's looks like a beautiful swan. They also have an SR-71 which looked smaller than I thought.
No, not a luckiest accident...deliberate and deliberately designed and flown by the same teenager originally
@@General5USA Umm... Neither of those planes was designed or flown by any teenager.
@@jbtechcon7434 you're crazy! The X-29 and the XB-70 ...both designed by the same junior engineer based upon principles demonstrated from a paper airplane (XB-70 ). And the foreword swept wing idea came from the same teenager while watching Superman tv series with George Reeves. The fact is most of aviation accomplishment came from the ideas of children....the Wright Brothers, Howard Hughs, Lindberg, Werner von Braun and ....ME! ...and I knew all of them
I wish the video kept the details about the crash, though it was tragic, it was also quite interesting to know that the incredibly complex pressurized clamshell ejection seat on the Valkyrie performed flawlessly for the pilot who used it.
It cut his arm off. So I wouldn’t say it worked flawlessly.
I love how literally any bright concept, aircraft, whatever, it always ends up being cancelled. Love this world :)
Shoutout to the cameraman who can keep up with the b-70
it was superman on the camera
I went to the national airforce museum a while back and its bigger than the B2. Absolutely massive
6:56 discribes my current high school life
I know I'm a little late, but you have such amazing videos. I watch every video I can each one is very interesting.