Classic British Aircraft De Havilland Sea Vixen

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  • Опубликовано: 24 авг 2024

Комментарии • 462

  • @davegoldsmith4020
    @davegoldsmith4020 4 месяца назад +2

    I trained as a rigger in the RAF at RAF Halton,. 1970-72 Towards the end on what was called airfields we worked on Sea Vixens. One of the guys I shared that two years with, was Paul Kingsbury. room 3 Anson flight 219 Entry. in two weeks time I drive my grandson to RAF Halton to start his training.

  • @someguy1256
    @someguy1256 Год назад +124

    My father was a draftsman/design engineer for DH and designed this aircraft along with his colleagues. Using an old Rapide with window blinds to create blind flying to understand the risks then invent and test the radar system in all flying conditions day and night, they he also worked on countless other DH aircraft and missiles eg the Blue Streak. He had been a Navy pilot during his National Service so aircraft were his passion.

    • @johnp8131
      @johnp8131 Год назад +8

      Interesting. I presume he was at Hatfield, if so my father would have known him, as at the time of the Vixen he was Assistant Chief Inspector in the Erecting Shop. So he would have been bouncing between the Vixen and the delelopment of the Trident?

    • @guaporeturns9472
      @guaporeturns9472 Год назад +1

      Too cool 👍🏻

    • @guaporeturns9472
      @guaporeturns9472 Год назад +3

      One of the top 5 best looking jets of all time.

    • @someguy1256
      @someguy1256 Год назад +4

      @@johnp8131 Yes he was at Hatfield the photos i have show the drawing office [with his colleagues] had 2 locations the airfield judging by the huts and a modern office i think it was Martins House ? something not sure. The drawing office liked to dress and behave like the Goons radio show if one photo is accurate. Our fathers must have met. He worked on the Vixen and Comet not sure re Trident has he left sometime after the Hawker Siddeley take over. Have found a letter addressed to father from his colleagues at DH dated 1961 seems the office was St Georges House if that clarifies. But as they were into the Goons and joked around a lot so this maybe misleading.

    • @obsidianjane4413
      @obsidianjane4413 Год назад +1

      I bet there were a lot of RN WSOs who would have punched him in the mouth. lol.

  • @michaeljohnson9717
    @michaeljohnson9717 Год назад +113

    In 1960 the combination of HMS Victorious, 984 radar, CDS and the FAW1 Sea Vixen astounded the Americans when we intecepted everything the USS Ticonderoga threw at us in Exercise Royal Flush IV. I was there!

    • @elcastorgrande
      @elcastorgrande Год назад +12

      I remember the Victorious in New York harbor in 1959. The Sea Vixens were the high point of the air group.

    • @sigbauer9782
      @sigbauer9782 Год назад +1

      now you clowns can't keep a carrier running, your military and government are jokes, your navy has like 20 ships, and the UK is more a burden to the US than a help.

    • @sir-richard4172
      @sir-richard4172 Год назад +4

      It's awesome when 2 great countries get together for exercises.

    • @sigbauer9782
      @sigbauer9782 Год назад +2

      @@sir-richard4172 So, America is one; who's the other?

    • @texleeger8973
      @texleeger8973 Год назад +2

      Zambia? Albania? Give us a hint.

  • @althalus401
    @althalus401 Год назад +38

    Many years ago I spent a very pleasant evening with a former FAA Lt. Cdr. pilot. He had started on Se Vixens and he and his navigator had flown a lot of hours with a lot of arrested deck landings. Time came when they retrained for the Buccaneer and eventually we tasked with a arrest4ed deck landing on Ark Royal. After the aircraft came to a halt the navigator said he would not be flying again, and he did not. He had done hundreds of deck landings but had never actually seen one from the cockpit.

  • @orgeebaharvin6284
    @orgeebaharvin6284 Год назад +66

    British engineers produced some of the best aircraft in the world. The Sea Vixen is a very beautiful plane. My favorite English fighter is the classic, the English Electric Lightning, absolutely amazing!

    • @norwegianzound
      @norwegianzound Год назад +12

      They certainly did and there are still some fine engineers left. However, most British people can't tie their shoes nowadays.

    • @guaporeturns9472
      @guaporeturns9472 Год назад

      @@norwegianzoundshhh 🤫 your ignorance is showing
      😂

    • @Sterlingjob
      @Sterlingjob Год назад +4

      The U.K. has designed and produced more aircraft types than any other country

    • @orgeebaharvin6284
      @orgeebaharvin6284 Год назад +4

      @@Sterlingjob The Buccaneer is simply amazing!

    • @Sterlingjob
      @Sterlingjob Год назад +2

      @@orgeebaharvin6284 as said…it flew too low, too fast and too far. One of my favourite aircraft

  • @generalrodcocker1018
    @generalrodcocker1018 2 месяца назад +1

    those pilots were built different back then ... those type of men are what we need most today

  • @bobbralee1019
    @bobbralee1019 Год назад +11

    I was in the RAF as a Weapons Tech and trained on Sea Vixens in the early 80's at RAF Cosford. We fitted the Command Ejection seat system, as my instructor said if you can fit that system you can fit any Ejection seat, Needless to say it was really difficult to fit.

  • @jonfox8010
    @jonfox8010 Год назад +6

    This was the first aircraft I worked on after I joined the Fleet Air Arm back in 1966. It was a joy to work on and I also had a couple of flights in the 'coal hole'. I later worked on the Phantom F4k, but the Vixen was always my favourite.

  • @macdodd
    @macdodd Год назад +2

    Never forget watching a Vixen low running down a runway in 1965 as the pressure aura built up on her, truly amazing

  • @agdgdgwngo
    @agdgdgwngo Год назад +13

    Awesome, unusual and charismatic machine. The first time I became aware of it was as an excited 10 year old kid at his first ever airshow, Waddington. Unfortunately it didn't fly that day, but the image of G-CVIX in it's striking yellow and red target towing scheme was etched into my mind. It really stood out from Tornadoes, Jaguars, F15s and Mirages. It's the quirks too, the offset cockpit, the twin boom design that looks like a meaner and faster Vampire. And of course, it's a de Havilland, who seem to only make beautiful and significant aircraft. I really want to fly one in a sim some day, hopefully DCS to do carrier landings and interception missions.

  • @dezmondwhitney1208
    @dezmondwhitney1208 Год назад +3

    I saw this amazing aircraft only once, flying at RAF Saint Athan in 1969. As a 12 year old I went with my local ATC to see the annual air display there. All the aircraft were impressive but the Sea Vixen looked purposeful and 'out of this world' somehow to me back then. What a Day ! Thank You.

  • @RobertB56
    @RobertB56 Год назад +38

    Britain designed and built some brilliant aircraft

    • @MrSdsr
      @MrSdsr Год назад +6

      It is very sad that the famous „white paper“ killed the fighter Industrie . Even the beloved lightning nearly was stopped .

    • @daviddarrall9384
      @daviddarrall9384 Год назад +2

      Absolutely agree with Alf!

  • @iduswelton9567
    @iduswelton9567 Год назад +5

    She's an Absolutely Beautiful air craft - watching her fly, take off, & land She's very graceful

  • @DougGlendower
    @DougGlendower Год назад +6

    This plane represents almost everything I love in an aircraft, taking my #5 spot from the P-61. It is the UK's prettiest aircraft and one that even outclassed anything in it's role at the time. She did everything that the A-5 Vigilante later would want to do, but never got the chance to in the US Navy.

  • @ednammansfield8553
    @ednammansfield8553 Год назад +1

    I had the privilege of doing ground training on the Sea Vixen when on my Air Radar mechanic course at RAF Cosford back in the early 1970's. They used the Sea Vixen for ejection seat training as part of that course. After passing the course at Cosford I was posted to 5 fighter Squadron at RAF Binbrook in Lincolnshire and worked on English Electric Lightnings.

  • @idubzh243
    @idubzh243 Год назад +3

    I love the design of british jets of that era : Vulcan, Victor, Lightning, this Sea Vixen, Javelin, Hunter, among others. And they are still looking great today. What a very nice video !

  • @ciaranmcginn2234
    @ciaranmcginn2234 Год назад +1

    FYI last entry on Wikipedia about the aircraft flying in this video - On 27 May 2017, XP924 performed an emergency wheels-up landing at Yeovilton after a hydraulic failure. The pilot was uninjured during the belly-landing.[49] In November 2020, the trust announced that fundraising efforts and ongoing investment to return XP924 to flying condition had been suspended indefinitely

  • @iamgod6464
    @iamgod6464 Год назад +4

    Saw 2 Sea Vixens fly over Dawlish back in 1970 or early 70's. It became my favourite jet back then.😊👍

  • @KevBryce
    @KevBryce Год назад +2

    My Dad was serving on HMS Ark Royal when a Sea Vixen from the carrier was lost when a bomb detonated prematurely when it was on bombing exercise.

  • @johnstygall860
    @johnstygall860 Год назад +2

    Remember them well as a kid living in Farnborough in the 60s. Always looked forward to the Airshow and the iconic aircraft that took part. Amazing video, thanks

  • @Istandby666
    @Istandby666 Год назад +4

    This is such a beautiful aircraft.
    When you think of it's era and the math that went into this craft. It goes to show what kind of education one had.

    • @nialldoyle8206
      @nialldoyle8206 Год назад +2

      The math was done on slide rules. Some amazing aircraft coming out of Britain in those days.

    • @Istandby666
      @Istandby666 Год назад +2

      @@nialldoyle8206
      Yes, I know. I learned how to calculate on a slide rule, also.

    • @user-in7wp7mv2v
      @user-in7wp7mv2v Год назад

      In my opinion, looks ugly. Try to compare whis f 15 or su 27.

  • @MistaGabagool
    @MistaGabagool 9 месяцев назад

    The Sea Vixen shown at 3:48 is at the Hatfield De Havilland heritage centre. The old guys there have tons of stories and know everything. My dad reminised about seeing the exact vixen at an airshow and they said he could sit inside it if he liked, I got to aswell. Definitley need to go again soon.

  • @rogb3199
    @rogb3199 Год назад +1

    Sadly witnessed a Sea Vixen crash at Braunton Burrows on 24/7/1968 as a young Cadet on exercise. Both crew lost. RIP Pilot Booth and Observer McKenzie. Watching it on approach to Chivenor when it just seemed to go into a dive with no recovery. We ran over but no help could be administered.

  • @edwardgrabot798
    @edwardgrabot798 Год назад +12

    I saw a D.H. Vampire up close at an airshow. I was absolutely floored by the fine English metalsmithing around the wing roots, jet intakes, fuselage tail booms. It wasn't a machine, rather a hand crafted artwork. From photos I never would have appreciated that plane as much.

    • @mothmagic1
      @mothmagic1 Год назад +3

      If you encountered a vampire you would not have encountered metal smithing. In terms of construction the Vampire was a jet Mosquito. In other words it was wooden construction.

    • @edwardgrabot798
      @edwardgrabot798 Год назад +2

      @@mothmagic1 Actually, the fuselage pod was of wood construction but the rest of it was conventional metal i.e., around the air intakes and the tail booms, wings, stabs. So in essence it was not really like the mosquito it was partially like a mosquito.

    • @barklet6110
      @barklet6110 Год назад

      @@edwardgrabot798the last sentence conflicts itself

    • @edwardgrabot798
      @edwardgrabot798 Год назад +2

      @@barklet6110 How so? The Mosquito was mostly wooden skins, wooden fuselage, wooden internal framing, wooden wings, wooden tail. The Vampire had a wooden fuselage. All the rest was metal construction.

    • @barklet6110
      @barklet6110 Год назад

      @@edwardgrabot798" it was not really like a mosquito it was partially like a mosquito" the first statement conflicts the second statement

  • @Swaggerlot
    @Swaggerlot Год назад +5

    In North Wales we had the privilege of operating the last Sea Vixen on the MoD inventory, quite possibly it was the same one that later flew in the Red Bull colours. Great fun for both myself and the pilot to bounce passing Hawks and other aircraft operating in the LFA. I'm sure it got many WTF? comments.

  • @daszieher
    @daszieher Год назад +4

    "'twas exciting, wasnt it?"
    "Great fun."
    Sounds like it was frighteningly deadly.

  • @mickb474
    @mickb474 Год назад +1

    When i was on HMS Hermes in the late 60’s early 70’s there were Sea Vixens on there, i worked on Fairey Gannets but i loved watching the Vixens and Buccaneers operating 👍🏻

  • @markmullins1967
    @markmullins1967 Год назад +3

    We made some beautiful awesome planes in the 40,50,60s

  • @user-pl7sf9qm9o
    @user-pl7sf9qm9o Год назад +5

    Odd the farnborough accident to the prototype was not mentioned. Not only did it cost the lives of John Derry and Tony Richardson but also a substantial number of spectators (over 50 from memory). The wing was redesigned in consequence and airshow rules changed to protect the crowds more ,although accidents remain sadly common.

  • @AVMamfortas
    @AVMamfortas Год назад +3

    Beautiful aircraft. In the 60's the Navy would offload the Vixens to RAF Tengah when in Singapore, where they would do QRA in relief of the Javelins. I saw them off and recovered them, from my place in the Tower.

    • @guaporeturns9472
      @guaporeturns9472 Год назад

      In the Tower? What was your offense? Did you see the ghosts of the young princes?

    • @AVMamfortas
      @AVMamfortas Год назад

      @@guaporeturns9472 Control tower.

    • @guaporeturns9472
      @guaporeturns9472 Год назад

      @@AVMamfortas Oh , I thought you were in the Tower of London🤦‍♂️

  • @happisakshappiplace.6588
    @happisakshappiplace.6588 Год назад +2

    Amazing plane. fabulous futuristic look about it. That and the Victor bomber.

  • @patrickrose1221
    @patrickrose1221 Год назад +1

    The narrator sounds like Mr Grayson lol. First Dinkey toy I ever had was the Sea Vixen so it was nice to see and hear all of this. Thank you 😊

  • @thegreatvincenzo8159
    @thegreatvincenzo8159 Год назад +1

    I was 766 Squadron at Yeovilton in the late 60's. This particular aircraft is a Mk2 but pre-upgrade to the frangible hatch for the observer. These hatches allowed the observer to eject without first having to lose that solid hatch. Once fired, the ejection seat went straight through the new frangible hatches 0:01 , hence the sharp pointy bits on the top of the seat. Not 100% certain but we were told that once the solid hatch had been detached in flight, the air pressure from the high velocity winds made operating either the face blind or seat pan handle in order for the observer to eject extremely difficult.
    Lovely aeroplanes though.

  • @neiloflongbeck5705
    @neiloflongbeck5705 Год назад +5

    The DH.110 wax initially designed to meet Air Ministry specification N.40/46 for the Navy and F.4/48 (previously F.44/46) for the RAF due to the similarity in the requirements. Due to a cut to the R&D budget the Navy dropped N.40/46 and with all the costs now falling on them the RAF aldo dropped their specification. De Havilland failed to redesign the DH.110 to fit the box dimensions for the N.14/49 leaving Fairey the only design under consideration. Unfortunately for Fairey this too was cancelled just a few months before the outbreak of the Korean War. A new specification issued in 1951 (N.114T) to which no designs came close to fulfilling. This brought the Navy back to the naval version of the DH.110 and 2 new specifications were written around the DH.110 (N.139D and N.139P) and the first aircraft flew from Christchurch on 20th June 1955. The first production type entered service in 1959 of an order of 75 (reduced from 100 by the Treasury).
    The aircraft was originally to be called the Pirate.

  • @BlueyChandler
    @BlueyChandler Год назад +1

    Beautifully designed Aircraft. It looks majestic and menacing at the same time.

  • @Stibsyt
    @Stibsyt Год назад +1

    Living in Plymouth in the 60s these machines seemed to be ever-present in the skies over the city. Noisy buggers too!

  • @geraldarcuri9307
    @geraldarcuri9307 11 месяцев назад

    1951? This plane looks modern in 2023. Beautiful!

    • @WilhelmKarsten
      @WilhelmKarsten 11 месяцев назад +1

      With twin booms and a straight tail??? Looks more 1930s and definitely not modern.

  • @adrianrosenlund-hudson8789
    @adrianrosenlund-hudson8789 Год назад

    Early jet aircraft are beautiful. It was a golden age, and I envy the people who served during that era.

  • @stuartcrane9409
    @stuartcrane9409 Год назад +1

    My relation funded the DeHaviland Aircraft company startup after WW1 when John DeHaviland worked as designer at Airco for Holt Thomas

  • @aaron6178
    @aaron6178 Год назад +1

    What a gorgeous craft. Well ahead of its time. So good listening to the esteemed gents who developed and flew her.

  • @georgebarnes8163
    @georgebarnes8163 Год назад +26

    Still an amazing looking bird even today, a product of a time when engineers thought outside the box.

    • @comediangj4955
      @comediangj4955 Год назад +2

      One of the ugliest aircraft man kind has ever made, and not in a brutally beautiful kind of way.

    • @kristianhartlevjohansen3541
      @kristianhartlevjohansen3541 Год назад +3

      @@comediangj4955Pffft - troll harder! I call - the Fairey Gannet 😁

    • @Eric-kn4yn
      @Eric-kn4yn Год назад

      ​@@comediangj4955I agree not sexy

    • @stewsretroreviews
      @stewsretroreviews Год назад +1

      ​@Eric-kn4yn I disagree!! 😂

    • @Eric-kn4yn
      @Eric-kn4yn Год назад +1

      @@stewsretroreviews whatever the f 22 raptor and f 35 lightning stealth a/c the days of the sexy fighters are over

  • @tklrrbccar3906
    @tklrrbccar3906 Год назад +2

    Superb example of British engineering. You should be proud to fly her!

  • @allgood6760
    @allgood6760 Год назад

    HMS Eagle visited NZ in the early 70's and had Sea Vixen planes I been interested ever since.. thanks from NZ 👍✈️🇳🇿

  • @Nomorewoke0k
    @Nomorewoke0k Год назад

    My late father used to work on the Vampires. Lovely aircraft. Sea Vixen is just gorgeous.

  • @well-blazeredman6187
    @well-blazeredman6187 Год назад +1

    There's a van that sometimes appears near my home that has a nicely-painted Sea Vixen covering much of the side. Good-looking aircraft - and van.

  • @brianwillson9567
    @brianwillson9567 Год назад +1

    Beautiful machine. Congratulations to all involved in her ongoing wellbeing.

  • @nozrep
    @nozrep Год назад +1

    man that is so cool! American here but if I may say as we say in America, not sure if yall say it in Britain? Haha maybe yall have yall’s own way to say it… but anyway… thank you gentlemen for your service and thank you for the great history here preserved!

  • @Twirlyhead
    @Twirlyhead Год назад +11

    I do think it is very hard on a navigator who should have spent his naval career seeing open skies, seas and wonderful sights to be just stuck blind to all that in a viewless _coal hole._

    • @mothmagic1
      @mothmagic1 Год назад +5

      The window by his knee was blacked out on the orders of the admiralty so that he couldn't cheat on Nav exercises - as though that tiny window situated where it was would have been of any assistance.

    • @shable1436
      @shable1436 Год назад

      Lots of roles in today's skies still have roles where you go up and never see anything, not just navigating, but weapon controllers

    • @Twirlyhead
      @Twirlyhead Год назад +1

      ​@@shable1436 Of course. AWACs etc, etc, in that era Canberra is an example but that is not what I refer to. Usually the navigator in a two seat naval fighter has a good view.

  • @Horizon344
    @Horizon344 Год назад +2

    I kept expecting Harry Enfield to come out as Mr. Cholmondley-Warner watching this

  • @christophertletski4894
    @christophertletski4894 Год назад

    This has always been my favorite British aircraft.

  • @storkonstage
    @storkonstage Год назад

    Absolutely one of the most beautiful jets ever designed. A treasure from the golden era of British aviation. Would love to see the only one left fly.

  • @gavinc.morrison1147
    @gavinc.morrison1147 Год назад +3

    The sea vixen is so beyond cool

  • @MaverickSeventySeven
    @MaverickSeventySeven Год назад

    ".....able to fly it supersonic in a 'controlled dive' which wax a great joy.... I bet it was !!!! Typical, Englisgh understatement!!! Fantastic sir. Very few like you left!

  • @silverdale3207
    @silverdale3207 Год назад

    Gotta love the British, pilot and Nav were two great examples of a couple of fine British gents. Lovely aircraft.

  • @chazsutherland
    @chazsutherland Год назад +3

    I never understood why the canopy was skewed to one side until I realized the designers were just making it easier for the pilot to reach the glovebox [@9:21].

  • @liberatumplox625
    @liberatumplox625 Год назад +9

    That awful Redbull livery really doesn't do her justice.
    Such a shame, a bit of an insult really.

    • @RoboticPope
      @RoboticPope Год назад +1

      True. At that time they needed the sponsorship money to keep it flying though.

    • @liberatumplox625
      @liberatumplox625 Год назад

      ​@@RoboticPope I figured it would be something like that, overall that's a good thing then.

    • @Pillowcase
      @Pillowcase Год назад

      Could be worse.

    • @liberatumplox625
      @liberatumplox625 Год назад

      @@Pillowcase I mean, they could be sponsored by Mr. Blobby or something.

  • @Farweasel
    @Farweasel Год назад

    *A really lovely video about a beautiful Aeroplane*
    Quite a potentially historic piece too capturing the words of the men directly involved in its development & deployment.
    Thanks

  • @ianseddon9347
    @ianseddon9347 Год назад

    Superb film reminding us of what was and what the future could have held.

  • @robdave1974
    @robdave1974 10 месяцев назад

    Love hearing these elderly gentleman talk about the plane. We would see these chaps at the shops and never realise these were the “Mavericks” of their day.

  • @bobbyduke777
    @bobbyduke777 Год назад

    That vixen is one beautiful jet

  • @ertwander
    @ertwander Год назад +1

    Even the slightest look at the development of the D.H.110 isn´t complete without mentioning John Derry and the 1952 Farnborough disaster.

  • @allancopland1768
    @allancopland1768 4 месяца назад +1

    One of my old friends, now departed, flew the Vixen and Venom. Bob Hambleton-Jones. Fleet Air Arm pilot.

    • @WilhelmKarsten
      @WilhelmKarsten 3 месяца назад

      Was he killed in the Vixen or the Venom?

    • @petemaly8950
      @petemaly8950 3 месяца назад

      ​@@WilhelmKarsten
      As they will be aware.
      *_British military aircraft at the time did not have unusually high accident losses rates._*
      *For example*
      De Havilland Vampire & Sea Vixen & Gloster Meteor accident losses were not high or unusual for fighter aircraft at the time.
      Non combat phase accident losses
      % of Aircraft built.
      *Lockheed XF104 (ff 1954) 100%*
      *Lockheed P80 (ff 1944) 43%*
      *Lockheed F104 (ff 1954) 45%*
      *McDonnell FH Phantom (ff 1945) 35%*
      *_Gloster Meteor (ff 1943) 17%_*
      *_DH Vampire (ff 1943) 23%_*
      *_DH Sea Vixen (ff 1951) 33%_*
      Cheers
      🙂 & 😎 & of course 👍 Indeed.
      _Toodle_ *PIP* -Old- *_chap._*


      . ... . .. ...............
      ixxcxiixxcxixxcv

    • @allancopland1768
      @allancopland1768 3 месяца назад

      @@WilhelmKarsten Neither. He went on to fly for Computaplane and as a captain with Loganair.

    • @WilhelmKarsten
      @WilhelmKarsten 3 месяца назад

      @@allancopland1768 Well he was very lucky indeed... many RAF pilots didn't survive their service in de Havilland jets.

    • @WilhelmKarsten
      @WilhelmKarsten 3 месяца назад

      @@petemaly8950 Please name a de Havilland jet still in service or production?

  • @auldflyer
    @auldflyer Год назад +1

    Excellent presentation, so hard to believe these days that some of the best and most beautifully designed aircraft in the world were British, built during days of severe austerity following WW2. Long gone are great designers like De Havilland, Vickers, Avro, Hawker, Supermarine, Gloster, Handley Page, Fairey, Bristol and many others. Thank goodness for videos such as this one to keep memories alive for those who can remember seeing the Vixen and other great planes like the Meteor, Vampire, Javelin, Hunter and Canbera flying during their service years.

    • @WilhelmKarsten
      @WilhelmKarsten Год назад

      They weren't... which is why Britain no longer has any companies that make modern jet aircraft.

    • @WilhelmKarsten
      @WilhelmKarsten Год назад

      The Vixen was a horrible design... de Haviland went tits-up in 1958 after the infamous Comet Disaster, the worst engineering failure in aviation history.

    • @petemaly8950
      @petemaly8950 3 месяца назад

      ​@@WilhelmKarsten
      *_It's interesting that some of the aircraft on the list should really have been noticeably safer than the Comet due to being a similar type but of much later design & manufacture but they definately were not safer._*
      How things were back then -
      *_Accident losses - % of aircraft built._*
      DeHavilland Comet 4 UK 14%
      DeHavilland Comet all mks 17%
      Vickers VC10 UK 5%
      *_The DH Comet had better safety than or similar safety to many other commercial passenger aircraft of a similar era_*
      Douglas DC-1 99%
      Douglas DC-2 47%
      Douglas DC-3 30%
      Douglas DC-4 26%
      Boeing s300 72%
      Boeing 307 70%
      Boeing 247 48%
      Boeing 707 20%
      Lockheed Electra Turboprop 29%
      Fairchild FH-227 30%
      McDonnell Douglas DC-8 14%
      Sud Aviation Caravelle 15%
      Canadair CL-44 Turboprop 46%
      Convair CV-580 Turboprop 22%
      A comparison of more recent aircraft.
      Accident losses comparison examples.
      1970s - 1980s
      % of total Aircraft built
      Similar aircraft type, date / decade, useage, size.
      Biz Jets
      BAe-125-800 1.7 %
      Beechcraft Beechjet 400 2.2 %
      Cessna 550 Citation II 7.1 %
      Learjet 35 / 36 12 %
      Beechcraft 1900 6%
      Dassault Falcon 10 11.5%
      Aérospatiale SN.601 22.5%
      Medium size jets / Turboprops.
      BAe-146 5.1%
      Fokker 100 6%
      McDonnell Douglas DC-9-30 9.5%
      Fairchild FH-227 30%
      McDonnell Douglas DC-8 14%
      Canadair CL-44 Turboprop 46%
      Convair CV-580 Turboprop 22%
      Beechcraft, Fokker, McDonnell Douglass, Learjet, Fairchild, Aerospatiale, Canadair, Convair companies defunct.
      All Comets, including some Comet 1s, had full civilian use certification at some point after 1954, civilian use certification only being withdrawn after commercial flying stopped. Examples were flying until 1997 - one example did a signals research global circumnavigation flight series in 1993 via Australia virtually without a rest travelling 28000 miles, only had an ice warning indicator issue during the flights.
      *The DH Comet - World Firsts.*
      1st gas turbine jet powered airliner. 1st high altitude 8psi pressurised full fuselage length passenger cabin airliner, not a trivial feature as structure strength required for pressurisation considerably exceeded strength required for normal flying stress. Nobody else had done anything similar before the Comet.
      The b-47 used 2 relatively small, heavily built pressurised modules (the aircraft where 6 had their wings fold up in 2 months while flying & some had their wings fall off while parked).
      The 1937 Boeing piston engined airliner pressurised passenger cabin was pressurised to 2 psi only - in fact that could easily be done as the normal unpressurized fuselage cabin structure strength for flying stresses only was all that was needed to be adequate so no significant weight increase issues needed addressing.
      1st all hydraulically powered flying surface controls & actuators airliner with under carriage wheel disk brakes + ABS.
      1st jet airliner to cross the Atlantic.
      1st jet aircraft to do a world circumnavigation flights series.
      *Of course De Havilland had prior experience building many all metal construction airframe aircraft including thousands of jet powered fighter aircraft that were primarily of metal construction with pressurised cockpits & jet engines built by De-Havilland & we know the world's first all metal construction airframe airliner was built in England in the 1920s by Handley Page.*
      *_De Havilland did indeed always work to better than industry standards at the time, no evidence of negligence ever being produced in relation to the DH Comet._*
      The course of De Havilland & the general UK aerospace industry sector was not affected even slightly by the DH Comet.
      *_Other interesting World firsts_*
      _World's first turboprop aircraft._
      *Vickers Viscount Turboprop Airliner 1947.*
      *A 1945 Gloster Meteor Aircraft with Turboprop Gas Turbine Engine.*
      They might like to answer these questions.
      *Which airline has just ordered*
      *60 RR England Trent XWB Engines*
      *& What aircraft are the engines for?*
      _Bonus question for 10 points._
      Which country has the
      *World's Highest Combined Per Capita*
      *Nuclear + Defence + Aerospace Sector Activity?*

    • @WilhelmKarsten
      @WilhelmKarsten 3 месяца назад

      @@petemaly8950 *NAME A BRITISH JET PLANE IN PRODUCTION?*

    • @petemaly8950
      @petemaly8950 3 месяца назад

      ​@@WilhelmKarsten
      *_DID SOMEBODY ACTUALLY SAY SOMEWHERE THAT THERE'S AIRLINER ASSEMBLY LINES OR SIMILAR IN THE UK OR IRELAND OR THAT Airbus or BOW-WING is actually British? (B-47 wings on many occasions folded up in flight or dropped off while parked)._*
      Of course Brazil makes very good airliners & Brazil is 100th down list along with Indonesia for wealth per capita.
      *Norway Holland Denmark Ireland Belgium - Top 20 wealth per capita - Don't make airliners - its as simple as that.*
      BAe Systems & RR combined now do more Airbus work than Germany on an absolute basis & significantly more work on a per capita basis.
      _BAE systems announced recent £4 Billion takeover of Colorado based US based Ball Aerospace._
      *BAE systems now does a significantly higher value of work for Airbus than it did when it was a major Airbus shareholder before 2005.*
      *_RR now owns US Engine maker Allison for example which does classified Aerospace work for the US Govt._*
      The UK has more important stuff to do these days.
      _Routine simple passenger aircraft airframe assembly is becoming more of a 3rd world / trailer park area thing._
      *_The DH Comet - world's first high altitude capable pressurised passenger cabin jet airliner in regular service, world's first jet airliner aircraft to cross the Atlantic, worlds first jet airliner aircraft to complete a global circumnavigation flight series._*
      *They might try to sensibly answer this question - why do they believe that BAE Systems & RR (aero engines etc) & other companies, for example should be doing anything other than what they currently do & where do they get the idea from that the DH Comet had any affect at all on the progression UK aerospace sector.*
      *Anybody currently flying on a widebody airliner stands a good chance of being on an aircraft powered by RR gas turbine aero engines built in England.*
      📯📯📯📯
      *The New RR Trent Ultrafan*
      *Built In England*
      *_World's Largest (see T&Cs)_*
      *_Gas Turbine Aero Engine_*
      📯📯📯📯
      👍Manufactured by the people on a small island with less than 1% of the world's population.👍
      *_A typical but small glimpse of what goes on in the very internationally orientated British aerospace sector._* -
      Boeing Apache Attack Helicopter.
      AH-64: *75 UK suppliers,* 7% UK content, global fleet of 1280+ aircraft.
      *F35B more than 130 UK Suppliers, more than 30% UK content.*
      *_F35A & F35C more than 130 UK Suppliers, more than 15% UK content._*
      They might like to answer these questions.
      *Which airline has just ordered*
      *60 RR England Trent XWB Engines*
      *& What aircraft are the engines for?*
      _Bonus question for 10 extra points._
      Which country has the
      *World's Highest Combined Per Capita*
      *Nuclear / Defence / Aerospace Sector Activity?*
      👍& 🙂 Cheers & of course 😎
      Toodle *PIP* _Old_ *_Chap_*

      . ... ... . ... . ... .. ...
      xcxvxcxvxcvxcxvi

  • @oscoe
    @oscoe Год назад

    Omg they used a Dalek head for the scanning! Genius use of alien technology!

  • @philreading3836
    @philreading3836 Год назад

    Spent best years of my life with sea vixen on hms centaur hms hermes 892 squadron much underrated especially mk 2 version when fitted with redtop giving virtually all angle attack

  • @ChipMIK
    @ChipMIK Год назад +5

    Only a British engineer would put a guy down in such a hole vs. the pilot LOL I used to work as ECPO on the only non-RAF IUKADGE EW site (7 Keystrokes to get IFF presented on the operators screen). British engineers have some amazing solutions. I used to say back then that you should do the prototypes, then send it to America to make it ready for serial production & then let the Japanese produce it, that would make the grounds for a perfect product. TY for a very nice video of another very beautiful British plane.

    • @daszieher
      @daszieher Год назад +4

      Basically what happened to the Merlin. 😅
      Except, of course, for the Japanese production

    • @ChipMIK
      @ChipMIK Год назад +1

      @@daszieher Yes 😀Although i believe the British was spot on with that engine, beside a little something with inverted flight for the 1. part of using it.

    • @daszieher
      @daszieher Год назад +1

      @@ChipMIK the British (Rolls-Royce) Merlin was great, when all parts came together well.
      The advantage of the Packard Merlin, was the automotive style mass production with tighter tolerances and repeatability, that Rolls Royce was incapable of at the time.

    • @ChipMIK
      @ChipMIK Год назад

      @@daszieherI wasn't aware of that. I thought Merlin was produced in the US for the P-51´s after the engine really converted it into an incredible fighter with very long endurance and high altitude power which was perfect for the bomber escorts where the Hurricanes & Spitfires couldn't follow the bobbers all the way. TY

    • @bigredracingdog466
      @bigredracingdog466 Год назад +1

      Look at the RA-5 Vigilante. It had its own coal hole.

  • @anselmdanker9519
    @anselmdanker9519 Год назад

    Thanks - beautiful aircraft. Brilliant engineering.

  • @socaljarhead7670
    @socaljarhead7670 Год назад

    In the 50s and 60s the Fleet Air Arm had a tremendous variety of unique aircraft.

  • @grahamthebaronhesketh.
    @grahamthebaronhesketh. Год назад +3

    Whoever designed that cockpit should have been jailed.

  • @SimonAmazingClarke
    @SimonAmazingClarke Год назад

    I'd never even heard of it until I joined the RAF in 1983. The New workshops were full of aircraft, including a couple of these. They dwarfed everything else.

  • @jhstony
    @jhstony Год назад +1

    With Harry Enfield doing the voice over, I keep think he’s going to do a funny line Women know your place😆

  • @None-zc5vg
    @None-zc5vg 2 месяца назад

    The DH110 'prototype' had a wing-structure which couldn't take the stresses expected of it.

  • @daviddarrall9384
    @daviddarrall9384 Год назад

    A very admirable plane from any angle!

  • @Andrew-zr1jt
    @Andrew-zr1jt Год назад

    Beautiful aircraft! what a design

  • @boc234
    @boc234 Год назад +1

    "Of the 145 Sea Vixens constructed, 55 were lost in accidents. Two DH.110 development prototypes were also lost. The 55 Sea Vixens lost represented a loss rate of almost 38%." In comparison West Germany lost about 32% of its F-104s.

    • @boc234
      @boc234 Год назад

      Though to be fair, a lot of those old early jets had terrible safety records.

    • @jekanyika
      @jekanyika Год назад

      Surely operating from carriers is more risky than regular air force operations.

    • @petemaly8950
      @petemaly8950 3 месяца назад

      De Havilland Vampire & Sea Vixen & Gloster Meteor accident losses were not high or unusual for fighter aircraft at the time.
      Non combat phase accident losses
      % of Aircraft built.
      *Lockheed P80 (ff 1944) 43%*
      *Lockheed F104 (ff 1954) 45%*
      *McDonnell FH Phantom (ff 1945) 35%*
      *_Gloster Meteor (ff 1943) 17%_*
      *_DH Vampire (ff 1943) 23%_*
      *_DH Sea Vixen (ff 1951) 33%_*

    • @petemaly8950
      @petemaly8950 3 месяца назад

      UPDATE BREAKING NEWS*
      *As they know, the Sea Vixen was indeed a very competent & beautiful aircraft.*
      British military aircraft at the time did not have unusually high accident losses rates.
      *For example*
      De Havilland Vampire & Sea Vixen & Gloster Meteor accident losses were not high or unusual for fighter aircraft at the time.
      Non combat phase accident losses
      % of Aircraft built.
      *Lockheed XF104 (ff 1954) 100%*
      *Lockheed P80 (ff 1944) 43%*
      *Lockheed F104 (ff 1954) 45%*
      *McDonnell FH Phantom (ff 1945) 35%*
      *_Gloster Meteor (ff 1943) 17%_*
      *_DH Vampire (ff 1943) 23%_*
      *_DH Sea Vixen (ff 1951) 33%_*
      Cheers
      👍 & 😎 & of course 🙂 indeed.
      _Toodle_ *PIP* -Old- *_Chap_*

      .. . .............. ...
      icixxcxcxcxcxc

  • @daviddelossantos6075
    @daviddelossantos6075 Год назад

    This was pretty fascinating.

  • @corujariousa
    @corujariousa Год назад +2

    Such an interesting looking aircraft. It could easily have come out of a Japanese Anime movie. I've never seen it before. Thank you!

  • @utub1970
    @utub1970 Год назад +1

    It's like something out of Thunderbirds.

  • @pimpinaintdeadho
    @pimpinaintdeadho Год назад

    Great documentary. Thanks for the upload!

  • @steveshoemaker6347
    @steveshoemaker6347 Год назад

    A very beautiful aircraft to be sure.....Thanks.....
    Shoe🇺🇸

  • @seanjoseph8637
    @seanjoseph8637 Год назад +1

    Jacked one up and did undercarriage functionals on one at RAF Halton as part of my trade training in 83.

  • @Stiglr
    @Stiglr Год назад +2

    Leave it to the British to, after unveiling the aesthetically beautiful Spitfire in WWII, follow it up with an unending series of the ugliest ducklings to ever take to the air. Almost every British warbird ever issued forth after the Spit was a craft only a mother could love... and half the time, not even then.

  • @skylongskylong1982
    @skylongskylong1982 Год назад +1

    Affection for the vixen!
    Most Fleet Arm Pilots called it the flying coffin.
    Check the statistics of those killed flying the death trap.

    • @petemaly8950
      @petemaly8950 3 месяца назад

      British military aircraft at the time did not have unusually high accident losses rates.
      *For example*
      De Havilland Vampire & Sea Vixen & Gloster Meteor accident losses were not high or unusual for fighter aircraft at the time.
      Non combat phase accident losses
      % of Aircraft built.
      *Lockheed P80 (ff 1944) 43%*
      *Lockheed F104 (ff 1954) 45%*
      *McDonnell FH Phantom (ff 1945) 35%*
      *_Gloster Meteor (ff 1943) 17%_*
      *_DH Vampire (ff 1943) 23%_*
      *_DH Sea Vixen (ff 1951) 33%_*

    • @WilhelmKarsten
      @WilhelmKarsten 3 месяца назад

      ​@@petemaly8950*Name a British jet aircraft in production?*

    • @petemaly8950
      @petemaly8950 3 месяца назад

      ​​@@WilhelmKarsten
      UPDATE BREAKING NEWS*
      British military aircraft at the time did not have unusually high accident losses rates.
      *_Of course the Sea Vixen was indeed a very beautiful & competent British built jet fighter. No Fleet Air Arm pilots ever called it the flying coffin._*
      *For example*
      De Havilland Vampire & Sea Vixen & Gloster Meteor accident losses were not high or unusual for fighter aircraft at the time.
      Non combat phase accident losses
      % of Aircraft built.
      *Lockheed XF104 (ff 1954) 100%*
      *Lockheed P80 (ff 1944) 43%*
      *Lockheed F104 (ff 1954) 45%*
      *McDonnell FH Phantom (ff 1945) 35%*
      *_Gloster Meteor (ff 1943) 17%_*
      *_DH Vampire (ff 1943) 23%_*
      *_DH Sea Vixen (ff 1951) 33%_*
      Cheers
      👍 & 😎 & of course 🙂 indeed.
      _Toodle_ *PIP* -Old- *_Chap_*

  • @phugoid2829
    @phugoid2829 Год назад +1

    British airplanes of that era always had that, "Drats, we forgot to put a place for the pilot!," look.

    • @petemaly8950
      @petemaly8950 3 месяца назад

      There were reasons for the way the aircraft looked, lots of them.

  • @Pillowcase
    @Pillowcase Год назад

    Why are people complaining about the livery?
    So they're the one company willing to sponsor a project you obviously care about.

  • @Ploskkky
    @Ploskkky Год назад

    This beautiful plane could and should be in a Star Wars movie.

  • @Rogue-7.62
    @Rogue-7.62 Год назад

    What a beautiful aircraft.❤

  • @fredericklee4821
    @fredericklee4821 Год назад +1

    Pray the pilot sitting next to you doesn't fart.

  • @jonathansteadman7935
    @jonathansteadman7935 Год назад

    Beautiful aircraft, reminds me of going to ATC meets with my dad, who was an officer, in the late 60s, I was too young to join. There would be models of Vixens, Javelins and Lightnings, and occasionally an Airframe outside. Not sure about that garish redbull finish!!

  • @ashakydd1
    @ashakydd1 Год назад

    It is so strange to think that there was a time when sweep back wings was a radical, new design concept for aircraft.

  • @TheFunkhouser
    @TheFunkhouser Год назад

    WONDERFUL video! Thanks! 👍

  • @trevormorgan2636
    @trevormorgan2636 Год назад +1

    Saw one crash in the Med when on HMS Scorpion.
    Too many crew died flying them

  • @nudebaboon4874
    @nudebaboon4874 Год назад

    Beautiful aircraft.

  • @jaywalker3087
    @jaywalker3087 Год назад +1

    I saw one of these crash in Cornwall practicing for a coming air display.
    The pilot was over a town at the time he got into trouble.
    He lost his life trying to clear the built up area and eventually came down on a detached bungalow.
    I think it was only him that died.
    A very brave man indeed.
    RIP mate...

  • @factfilenews
    @factfilenews Год назад

    The British were always on top of their game. Wonder why they never made a Fifth Generation Fighter Aircraft 😮

    • @WilhelmKarsten
      @WilhelmKarsten Год назад

      Planes like the "Sea Bitch" are exactly why Britain no longer has an aircraft industry

    • @petemaly8950
      @petemaly8950 3 месяца назад

      ​@@WilhelmKarsten
      UPDATE BREAKING NEWS*
      *As they know, the Sea Vixen was indeed a very competent & beautiful aircraft.*
      British military aircraft at the time did not have unusually high accident losses rates.
      *For example*
      De Havilland Vampire & Sea Vixen & Gloster Meteor accident losses were not high or unusual for fighter aircraft at the time.
      Non combat phase accident losses
      % of Aircraft built.
      *Lockheed XF104 (ff 1954) 100%*
      *Lockheed P80 (ff 1944) 43%*
      *Lockheed F104 (ff 1954) 45%*
      *McDonnell FH Phantom (ff 1945) 35%*
      *_Gloster Meteor (ff 1943) 17%_*
      *_DH Vampire (ff 1943) 23%_*
      *_DH Sea Vixen (ff 1951) 33%_*
      Cheers
      👍 & 😎 & of course 🙂 indeed.
      _Toodle_ *PIP* -Old- *_Chap_*

      .. . .. . .. . . .. . ..
      icixicixiucixiixx

  • @otgunz
    @otgunz Год назад

    The Tomcat before the Tomcat, that beautiful.

  • @Inkling777
    @Inkling777 Год назад

    Before, during and after WWII British companies showed an incredible talent for innovative aircraft design. It's unfortunate that so few survived to today.

    • @RogersRamblings
      @RogersRamblings Год назад

      Killed off by our own government.

    • @WilhelmKarsten
      @WilhelmKarsten Год назад

      Unfortunately Britain was never a technology leader in aviation and the UK industry was doomed to collapse, which finally came in the 1990s after decades of steady decline.

    • @RogersRamblings
      @RogersRamblings Год назад

      @@WilhelmKarsten I suggest you read up on aviation history.

    • @WilhelmKarsten
      @WilhelmKarsten Год назад

      @@RogersRamblings *The UK aircraft industry is history....* There are no longer any British commercial jet aircraft made and the RAF is a collection of foreign aircraft built outside the UK or built under license from a foreign company.

    • @RogersRamblings
      @RogersRamblings Год назад

      @@WilhelmKarsten That's exactly my point.

  • @Acewhip
    @Acewhip Год назад +2

    Is that Harry Enfield narrating?!?!?! :D

  • @carycoller3140
    @carycoller3140 Год назад

    Theres no way I'd be in the bottom of that. They'd have to raise my seat.

  • @aitorcio
    @aitorcio Год назад

    Es tan espectacular que si no es por redbull lo dejais pudrirse en un hangar de mala muerte.