The Invention That Stops Aircraft No Matter What

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  • Опубликовано: 16 фев 2023
  • With thousands of aircraft taking off and landing at any given time in the world, it is just a matter of time (and statistics) for something to go wrong on the runway. But why runway excursions happen, how the chances of it happening is reduced, and what can be done to stop an airplane that is about to overshoot the runway, is #NotWhatYouThink #NWYT #longs
    Music:
    Floods - Frank Jonsson
    Dark Water - Magnus Ludvigsson
    Aural Imprints - Frank Jonsson
    Keep an Eye - Frank Jonsson
    Cut the Mustard - Tigerblood Jewel
    Comprehension - Frank Jonsson
    Leaps - Jay Varton
    Solve It - Max Anson
    Where the Air Is Thin - Jay Varton
    Footage:
    Shutterstock Enterprise
    Select images/videos from Getty Images
    Stock Media provided by ViralHog / Pond5
    Storyblocks
    Envato Elements
    FAA/NTSB
    2020 HeinSite: • NAC CFME Testing at AIR H
    KIBAG Airfield Construction
    US Department of Defense
    Note: "The appearance of U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) visual information does not imply or constitute DoD endorsement."

Комментарии • 689

  • @qulzam685
    @qulzam685 Год назад +2651

    That was a great tip. I will not use military runway to hide a body next time.
    Edit: I forgot.

    • @virajkharat1515
      @virajkharat1515 Год назад +126

      Next time 🤨?

    • @DeadDolphinMan
      @DeadDolphinMan Год назад +50

      where will i hide my next body😢

    • @ste4lth570
      @ste4lth570 Год назад +11

      yeah better not use the military runway

    • @lycossurfer8851
      @lycossurfer8851 Год назад +9

      @@virajkharat1515 Yeah, now SOMEBODY.......... has to go and dig it up

    • @blulumen5420
      @blulumen5420 Год назад +6

      @@DeadDolphinMan where will I hide my next vessel?

  • @willful759
    @willful759 Год назад +891

    "That's a good reason why you *wouldn't* wanna bury a body under a military runway"
    Oh thanks mate you just saved my ass, gonna have to find a new spot

    • @predatortheme
      @predatortheme Год назад +38

      Well, he said military runway, you can still hide bodies below civilian airports runway

    • @skyekid1
      @skyekid1 Год назад +5

      :o good point

    • @bigdapramirez6157
      @bigdapramirez6157 Год назад +9

      You can use my basement. I'm building a new foundation next week and I had to excavate the old concrete. I'll be pouring it soon though so you might want to hurry

    • @Merigold83
      @Merigold83 Год назад

      Have you tried page three from the google search results?

    • @_Umbrael_
      @_Umbrael_ Год назад +1

      Hi 2B.

  • @SaTyAm-yo7ez
    @SaTyAm-yo7ez Год назад +491

    Thanks for the info....now I will not hide a body under any runway!!

    • @NotWhatYouThink
      @NotWhatYouThink  Год назад +89

      😅

    • @masterbaiter5283
      @masterbaiter5283 Год назад +19

      @@NotWhatYouThink Thanks for this Advice.

    • @3OBFALL
      @3OBFALL Год назад +7

      lol

    • @khit007
      @khit007 Год назад +12

      I'm about to hide a body under a runway... but it's not what you think!

    • @SaTyAm-yo7ez
      @SaTyAm-yo7ez Год назад +1

      @@khit007 tell us what u think

  • @gihangagurugamage3985
    @gihangagurugamage3985 Год назад +1299

    “When things get wet even pilots lose control” killed me 😂😂😂😂😂😂
    Edit: Thanks for the likes guys

    • @SneakyNinja5225
      @SneakyNinja5225 Год назад +25

      💀💀💀💀

    • @encinoman903
      @encinoman903 Год назад +20

      Mile high club 🤣

    • @4-Methylaminorex
      @4-Methylaminorex Год назад +39

      This narrator always has amazing puns in every video and were here for it!

    • @gihangagurugamage3985
      @gihangagurugamage3985 Год назад +10

      @@4-Methylaminorex IKR every time, that’s y I love to watch his videos

    • @josephmastroianni1560
      @josephmastroianni1560 Год назад +7

      Really...don't bury a body under a military runway got me. 🤷‍♂️

  • @DasIllu
    @DasIllu Год назад +74

    "Damn, it's called Runway, not run away! Where did you get your license?"

    • @mysticmarble94
      @mysticmarble94 Год назад +3

      plane be running away from the runway tho 🤓

  • @byronharano2391
    @byronharano2391 Год назад +80

    Safety technology in aviation is always interesting and worth the cost over time.

    • @akashiseijuro5216
      @akashiseijuro5216 Год назад +3

      Unfortunately, a good amount of those safety technologies came at a price.

  • @bruhagain5324
    @bruhagain5324 Год назад +222

    As someone actively working to get their piloting license, your aviation videos have been quite interesting. Hell, I’ve learned a fair bit that may even become useful when I start to actually fly! Thank you for making these videos, and keep up the great work!

    • @patrickrico2467
      @patrickrico2467 Год назад +3

      Your a lucky man im really jealous 😔....I have only had 1 taster flying lesson and was hooked immediately. Its my dream to get my pilots license.

    • @nonamenoname5107
      @nonamenoname5107 Год назад +3

      The fact that you’re learning things from these videos is both amazing and horrifying, remind me to never fly with you if possible

    • @BladeStar420
      @BladeStar420 Год назад +1

      You ever thought about joining the military? If you're American, all branches are offering significant bonuses to pilots to stay in, the air force is giving out $400,000 bonus ten years contracts. Just a thought. I'm obviously not a recruiter.

    • @nonamenoname5107
      @nonamenoname5107 Год назад +2

      @@rookietherooks1594 for a regular person it’s not the greatest thing to hear a future pilot talking about how much they are learning about flying from a RUclips video

    • @benztech2262
      @benztech2262 Год назад

      You should also watch the “Mentor Pilot” channel. He’s a very experienced pilot with in depth videos. Lots of crash evaluations too.

  • @SeanBZA
    @SeanBZA Год назад +306

    Seen the coring team at work once, they were trying to get a sample of the sub base on a road, and had cored down half a metre through layer upon layer of top material, before they finally came to the sub grade layer. That road had been getting layers of top wear course added every few years since it was built, because the ground had subsided a little with time, and the swamp had been drained. Plenty of roads have thick wear courses, because they simply got overlaid with new, and the crown increased, and every decade or so the pavements were relaid higher. Old pictures from the 1930's of the building i lived in had a set of stairs at the front, now the pavement is level with the top step of the building, stairs all buried. Where I currently live 3 steps down from street level, for the same reason.

    • @BeKindToBirds
      @BeKindToBirds Год назад +10

      Wow, that really puts it into perspective.

    • @samheasmanwhite
      @samheasmanwhite Год назад +16

      Wow yeah, it can get pretty nuts when they never regrade a road, just keep slapping it on :)

    • @janeblogs324
      @janeblogs324 Год назад +7

      I've seen Russia doing that, the video said it was corruption though, getting paid to lay road even when it doesn't need it

    • @cooperised
      @cooperised Год назад +9

      Same around my house which was built in the early 1700s. Ground level is now above floor level. Not great for drainage!

    • @rob5944
      @rob5944 Год назад +3

      ​@@cooperised and here at a village in the UK. The drainage is rubbish, not helped by poor resurfacing.

  • @abdulwahabkhan1836
    @abdulwahabkhan1836 Год назад +2

    Very Information Video.

  • @BloodyMobile
    @BloodyMobile Год назад +54

    There's way to little appreciation for all the work that goes into making everyday stuff safe and reliable.
    Thinking about it, it's obvious that there's a plane equivalent of "guard rails", but until now I didn't think about it, let alone know it exists on top of that :o

    • @longnamedude3947
      @longnamedude3947 Год назад +10

      Even things like the everyday door in hospitals, or Windows at mental health facilities designed to be breakable in the event of a fire but also withstand something like a chair or arm being thrown at them without a scratch.
      Think about how much testing goes into things like lifts every day..... Around the world millions of people work hard to keep us all safe.
      They are our nameless & faceless hero's!

  • @julian3bk
    @julian3bk Год назад +38

    Your videos do a great job connecting multiple general concepts and specific examples that I have never heard of

  • @mahidhar3157
    @mahidhar3157 Год назад +17

    1:48 how I land a plane in a flight simulator

  • @evanstedman7405
    @evanstedman7405 Год назад +13

    2:34 is also why when landing in wet weather the landing is harder than normal as the pilot is intentionally landing at a higher than normal speed and at a steeper angle than normal. This helps minimise the hydroplaning because the water is driven out from between the tyre and the runway by the increased forces.

  • @Brian-cr6rb
    @Brian-cr6rb Год назад +16

    One of these systems is installed at a small airport a few minutes from my home. Common sense told me what it is, but I never knew what it was made of. Thank you for explaining it!

  • @bobboberson2024
    @bobboberson2024 Год назад +62

    Great post as usual. But you buried the lead!! The EMAS was added to "Bob Hope" airport - runway 26 - for a very specific reason: Southwest Airlines Flight 1455 crashed through the end barrier, crossed a street, and plowed into a gas station! Thankfully, no casualties. But certainly one of L.A.'s most notorious aircraft incidents.

    • @chimrichalds5205
      @chimrichalds5205 Год назад +2

      Huh, I forgot about that and only remember the Southwest Midway overrun. Very similar scenario with short runway(s) in a terrible location.

    • @AdeleiTeillana
      @AdeleiTeillana Год назад +5

      That's not burying the lede. Burying the lede (or lead if you use the older spelling) is mentioning the details but doing it in a way that "buries" them deep in the story rather than emphasizing them. I don't think he mentioned these details at all, (though granted I was doing other stuff while listening) so that doesn't fall under the definition of burying the lede.
      But even if he had mentioned those details, I wouldn't consider them to be the "lede". I think they were just ancillary to the actual point of the video, which was just to discuss the various methods that airports can and do use to slow down planes when necessary. This wasn't a video about Bob Hope airport or the EMAS at Bob Hope airport or the accident at Bob Hope airport, so those details can't be the lede.

    • @bobboberson2024
      @bobboberson2024 Год назад

      @@AdeleiTeillana Thanks, Walter Cronkite.

    • @bobboberson2024
      @bobboberson2024 10 месяцев назад

      @@Ayn-Rand-Is-Dead You're the reason people hate RUclips. But thanks for the clearing up the spelling!

    • @bobboberson2024
      @bobboberson2024 10 месяцев назад

      @@Ayn-Rand-Is-Dead I hate hurting someone's feelings. Sorry, pal.

  • @thegameblend
    @thegameblend 3 месяца назад +2

    1:56 damn that quote hits hard

  • @cc0767
    @cc0767 Год назад +5

    Im impressed how you manage to find new interesting topics I have never thought about, without repeating yourself or stretching 3 sentences into a 10 min video

    • @shemullet
      @shemullet Год назад

      That's exactly what he did. I can't even finish this video because he just keeps dragging on about virtually nothing to hit the 10 minute mark

    • @cc0767
      @cc0767 Год назад +2

      @@shemullet What? Dude actually put a lot of information in this.

  • @very2.0
    @very2.0 Год назад +6

    “the big is too big” -big

  • @davidlegeros1914
    @davidlegeros1914 Год назад +21

    Southwest Airlines has run into the EMAS on more than one occasion. EMAS is Engineered Matierial Arresting System. We call it "Energy Management At Southwest"! 😆😆😆

  • @3OBFALL
    @3OBFALL Год назад +3

    Love your videos!

  • @sethclonts512
    @sethclonts512 Год назад +6

    For those that want to skip the pointless fluff, the video starts at 5:15

  • @jason8966
    @jason8966 Год назад +31

    You should do non-military stuff more often

  • @glencrandall7051
    @glencrandall7051 Год назад +2

    Excellent explanation of the runway overrun areas. Thank you for sharing. Have a great day and stay safe.🙂🙂

  • @bluehorseshoe23
    @bluehorseshoe23 Год назад +19

    Protecting the fuselage is key when dealing with a wet runway. The “go around” is another safe option.

    • @taylorgarrett793
      @taylorgarrett793 Год назад +2

      untill they run out of fuel

    • @rickybobby7285
      @rickybobby7285 Год назад +1

      We can only hope they somehow figure out how to build another runway somewhere else............ Runways are super rare

    • @jarekferenc1149
      @jarekferenc1149 Год назад +1

      The GO is safe provided a pilot decides to perform one. Regretfully, some pilots try hard to land anyway, even when overshoot the touchdown zone. We see the results in the news only when they stop beyond the runway, fortunately very seldom cases.

  • @fvo911
    @fvo911 Год назад +2

    Please more videos like this, it is super duper educational!

  • @averyfancypeanut
    @averyfancypeanut Год назад +2

    I visit telluride Colorado almost every week to ski, and now that I know they have this installed it makes me feel a lot better about looking at the runway from the top of the mountain, as it ends right at the edge of a cliff

  • @NickC_222
    @NickC_222 Год назад +7

    For the sake of precision, hydroplaning is different from, and actually a lot more interesting than, simply losing traction or friction because of water. Hydroplaning happens when water gets in front of/under your tires _faster than the weight of the vehicle can displace it_ . The incompressability and pressure of the water raises your tires completely out of contact with the driving surface and they end up skimming across the top of the thin later of water, like a water-skiier skimming across a lake. You're actually driving on top of the water, causing a potential complete loss of control or ability to brake in an acceptable fashion. It's super dangerous, but still very interesting from a physics perspective.

  • @Titin5123
    @Titin5123 Год назад +7

    Aren't all airplanes off-roading whenever they fly?

  • @jemmerllast8492
    @jemmerllast8492 Год назад +3

    I love it when life-saving tech is developed and then widely implemented.

  • @carlosocampo2828
    @carlosocampo2828 Год назад +10

    Dude, thanx for usually showing the units using the international system. It gives me hope.

    • @TheEsdaniel
      @TheEsdaniel Год назад

      Right? It's sorely needed

    • @georgehilario3544
      @georgehilario3544 Год назад +4

      No dude , American platform, no problem using only our measurements 💯

    • @quinndenver4075
      @quinndenver4075 Год назад

      @@georgehilario3544 As an american metric is superior in every way.

  • @esdeekay4344
    @esdeekay4344 Год назад +2

    Never knew that.
    Thanks for this educational video.👍

  • @theredacted3805
    @theredacted3805 Год назад +11

    i like how 99% of your videos are exactly what i thought.

  • @CALIBER-AN-ELITE
    @CALIBER-AN-ELITE 4 месяца назад

    i enjoy your videos man, very informative and just a great method of presentation

  • @juliematovu3506
    @juliematovu3506 Год назад +1

    Amazing, very informative

  • @shobhitshukla5697
    @shobhitshukla5697 Год назад

    Great contribution 👍

  • @asit-1586
    @asit-1586 Год назад

    great video . i allways wait or your video.

  • @TerryMcKean
    @TerryMcKean Год назад +1

    Very excellent invention.
    Thanks for sharing, Not What You Think 🙂

  • @tomschmidt381
    @tomschmidt381 Год назад +1

    The runway overrun system is really clever.

  • @dieseldragon6756
    @dieseldragon6756 3 месяца назад +1

    EMAS looks like a fantastic invention - Not just for its ability to _stop_ a runaway aircraft quickly and safely, but also for the fact it still provides a firm base over which to evacuate safely. EMAS stops aircraft, doors thrown open, slides deployed, everybody slides _over_ the damaged section of EMAS and then runs to safety. This gets a 100% from me! 💯✈👍

  • @codycoyote6912
    @codycoyote6912 Год назад

    Very interesting, thanks!

  • @amazingduniyaBangla
    @amazingduniyaBangla 6 месяцев назад

    This is very educational video

  • @amirnazir5255
    @amirnazir5255 Год назад +1

    Very informative video

  • @antprzy
    @antprzy Год назад +3

    I love that sense of humour.

  • @bobwoods1302
    @bobwoods1302 Год назад +3

    While friction between the wheels and the runway provide most of the breaking, passenger aircraft still have reverse thrust from the engines they can use for breaking that doesn't rely on friction. Planes can still land on slippery surfaces (within limits )but the aircrew needs to know the conditions so they can plan for it.

  • @captainjohnh9405
    @captainjohnh9405 Год назад +1

    Oh!! Ohhhh!!!! Pick me, I know this one. When an airplane loses brakes, it keeps on truckin'!

  • @danieltv1943
    @danieltv1943 Год назад +6

    The Heavy Weight Deflectometer (HWD) is technically a Falling Weight Defectometer as it has a single axle. Both are interchangeable but the HWD can deliver way more "oomph" to the ground :) It works by measuring the sound soundwaves picked up by the geophones from different distance from the point of impact.

    • @NotWhatYouThink
      @NotWhatYouThink  Год назад +1

      Oh that’s good to know. Didn’t realize it measured things by picking up sound waves from distances. 😊👍🏼

  • @alm5992
    @alm5992 Год назад +4

    "...that's why you wouldn't want to bury a body under a runway" I didn't see that coming. Dude, what!?

    • @nolesy34
      @nolesy34 Год назад

      ....and other metaphors that have you thinking what psychologist does the commentator have

    • @NotWhatYouThink
      @NotWhatYouThink  Год назад +4

      I don’t have a psychologist.
      I have the
      rapist.
      Oh … looks like I hit the enter key too quickly!

    • @nolesy34
      @nolesy34 Год назад

      @@NotWhatYouThink they dont tinker with your mind they tinker with your poopy

  • @placeholder7213
    @placeholder7213 Год назад +1

    This is the 3rd time I've seen the title and the thumbnail change

  • @Cheiff117
    @Cheiff117 Год назад

    This is cool!

  • @SMichaelDeHart
    @SMichaelDeHart Год назад +1

    8:25 had to stop the video because I immediately recognized Yeager International Airport in Charleston, West Virginia. Where the Airport was built literally cutting off the top of a mountain. Have flown in and out of CRW numerous times over the years and it's ALWAYS fun...especially in poor/wet/foggy weather.

  • @artgreen6915
    @artgreen6915 Год назад

    Good one.

  • @Sajuuk
    @Sajuuk Год назад +1

    This is amazing, I first saw this stuff when I was a kid and I've been looking for it ever since.
    Thanks for the video!

  • @beeftec5862
    @beeftec5862 Год назад +1

    0:41 that is a falling weight deflectometer that they use to test the flex of the runway surface

  • @iNTECH-Official
    @iNTECH-Official Год назад

    Good Job 👍👍👍

  • @dungeondeezdragons4242
    @dungeondeezdragons4242 Год назад

    Hmm, very practical, and doesn't look too expensive.

  • @rustyudder
    @rustyudder Год назад +1

    You mentioned the French press and my mouth watered lol

  • @maritimefilminguk
    @maritimefilminguk Год назад +1

    Just spoted one of our drone shots of Southampton airport at 4:37 How cool!

  • @treyaldridge1757
    @treyaldridge1757 Год назад +9

    6:16-6:30 the wacky world between different kinds of polystyrene (that are all essentially the same) and the implications of the phrase "like styrofoam" could be a 2 hour long video all it's own

  • @andysvehiclehistorychannel
    @andysvehiclehistorychannel Год назад

    Very interesting

  • @robinzereaper7019
    @robinzereaper7019 Год назад

    The bury your body under military runway part caught me off guard.. 🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @thatoneguylmao5201
    @thatoneguylmao5201 Год назад +2

    interesting video, you should continue these types

  • @Chris.Davies
    @Chris.Davies Год назад +2

    Video starts at 5:40.

  • @killpioo2
    @killpioo2 Год назад

    this guy's job at 9:41, the guy sitting in the truck. That job looks super chill.

  • @georgewelker853
    @georgewelker853 Год назад +2

    So they are using the pavement for a tire tread essentially, and basically a controlled sand traps! That makes a ton of sense and is way better than just being regulation happy.

  • @rafaelvalle8989
    @rafaelvalle8989 Год назад +2

    Excellent content, very accurate.

  • @TheCritic-MMA
    @TheCritic-MMA Год назад +6

    Burbank/Bob Hope/Hollywood -- BUR airport and the history there with Southwest Airlines runway overruns should have been instructive in this video. Southwest Airlines flight 1455 on March 5th, 2000 went off the end of the runway and famously came to a stop at a gas station across the street. It's an amazing testament to the constant culture of improvement how different the later Southwest incident was due to this barrier system--though one wonders about Southwest's lack of improvement...

  • @odiousmelodious2410
    @odiousmelodious2410 Год назад

    I love this channel, and I am curious where you got your accent

  • @ThinBear4
    @ThinBear4 Год назад +5

    8:24 - I find it highly concerning that over the years of this system existing, there were 18 aircraft overruning the runway in the airports to begin with.

    • @albertobueno7805
      @albertobueno7805 Год назад

      Why? Mishaps occur all the time. Accidents only happen when these aren't accounted for.

  • @olds97lss
    @olds97lss Год назад +1

    How do they get the plane out of the EMAS after it's buried itself in it? Does it usually break the wheels/landing gear off?

  • @fearthehoneybadger
    @fearthehoneybadger Год назад +2

    "That's a hell of a way to land an airplane".

  • @SeanTakesOn
    @SeanTakesOn Год назад +1

    It's like a Runaway Truck strip but for planes

    • @stuarthart3370
      @stuarthart3370 Год назад

      Not sure what the specifications are for other countries but I'd guess the UK's gravel sand traps can easily deal with a 44 tonne artic or semi. I'm betting that most of the EU is similar.

  • @KuDastardly
    @KuDastardly Год назад +3

    There's also another invention in UK I think where concrete dries instantly regardless how much gallons of water you dump on it all at once.

  • @thomasroulston8972
    @thomasroulston8972 10 месяцев назад

    Was expecting a rail gun but this is also cool

  • @alexbillingham9593
    @alexbillingham9593 Год назад +2

    4:40 thats my local airport lol. Southampton UK. wiered how identifyable it was considering its size

  • @ropefreeze1660
    @ropefreeze1660 9 месяцев назад +1

    An expensive but possibly good idea is to have layers of material so that a smaller plane (private jet) will not slam to a halt and a larger plane (747) will still stop due to stronger, higher resistance materials on the bottom.

  • @FeNite8
    @FeNite8 Год назад +2

    5:08 is a picture of Newark. Not LaGuardia

  • @Satrus-Popeye
    @Satrus-Popeye Год назад +1

    can we get a video on deployable composite forward runways?
    cant remember the official name but like massive carpets you roll out for fighter aircraft

  • @trikyy7238
    @trikyy7238 Год назад +2

    That Ape Team t-shirt is badass.

  • @MRMoof100
    @MRMoof100 Год назад

    ☕🙂🎧 Interesting. thank you for show this. have god day all.

  • @SandhyaSharma-wr1vv
    @SandhyaSharma-wr1vv Год назад +2

    so many jokes🤣....amazing video

  • @janeblogs324
    @janeblogs324 Год назад

    Wow, once again it's exactly what I thought (due to you thumbnail spoiler)

  • @o0o-jd-o0o95
    @o0o-jd-o0o95 Год назад +1

    schit .... brb, I have to go dig up a runway

  • @Clutch_Shadow
    @Clutch_Shadow Год назад

    After watching a Jschlatt video and seeing this video title as the next video, I was really thinking it was gonna be a 5 second video of some skyscraper….😂

  • @tieradlerch.217
    @tieradlerch.217 Год назад +1

    I think the building giant wall to stop an aircraft is cool idea

  • @hullinstruments
    @hullinstruments Год назад +1

    You'll also see these on the highway going down steep mountains. Here in Tennessee on monteagle mountain they have excursion pits every few hundred yards. The mountain is so steep and the trucker's used to lose control so often... It's basically just really fine River gravel (or pea gravel.) And it's super deep. They'll sink several feet down into it and it can stop them in the length of about five transfer trailer trucks. And they're usually going really fast so that's impressive to stop them in such a short distance.
    I always found them interesting but I made the mistake of stepping into one once after an excursion had just been removed. I sunk down like 3 ft. Nearly left my damn shoes at the bottom

  • @cooldudicus7668
    @cooldudicus7668 Год назад +2

    This technology should be implemented internationally. It would save many lives while being cost effective. Good stuff.

  • @hullinstruments
    @hullinstruments Год назад

    I really like your videos when they pertain to regular engineering in the civilian world. I like military stuff too but damn once you see enough folks dead and rotting in front of you ....sometimes you just not in the mood to think about the military

  • @timoklap
    @timoklap Год назад

    how does it work in cold places, when the blocks get soaked wet and frozen solid. ? has some heating wires in them to get rid of the moisture or freezing?

  • @gamer-zx5ru
    @gamer-zx5ru Год назад

    best ryanair landings

  • @danielbigtiger
    @danielbigtiger 23 дня назад

    There's also one way that stops the trolley at westfield. It stops the wheels using some strong magnetic fields.

  • @Vv-gk4cu
    @Vv-gk4cu 9 месяцев назад

    I was about to comment on the passengers getting killed by over G. but it got answered. Only 1 G force is really impressive.

  • @ExcavationNation
    @ExcavationNation Год назад +3

    In a wet runway landing pilots rely more on the reverse thrusters bc that does not cause hydroplaning

  • @emergcon
    @emergcon Год назад +2

    I thout the groved part is to wake pilots up after the autopilot lands the airplane /s

  • @t0nyc0nde
    @t0nyc0nde 3 месяца назад +1

    The airport at 5:08 is NOT La Guardia. It is Newark.

  • @prov_s195
    @prov_s195 Год назад +1

    "That's a good reason why you wouldn't wanna bury a body under a military runway!"
    Nah bro I just use my garden.

  • @Novnaldailyfood
    @Novnaldailyfood Год назад +1

    I watched your video and felt horrified. Let no one be harmed🙏🙏🙏

  • @konsta3790
    @konsta3790 Год назад +1

    Yes, THAT is the reason why you shouldn't bury a dead body under a military airfield runways :D

  • @MidasImperius
    @MidasImperius Год назад +2

    "The Invention That Stops Aircraft No Matter What".
    Short answer: "The ground".

  • @jannis11
    @jannis11 4 месяца назад

    NiCe

  • @chocolat917
    @chocolat917 11 месяцев назад

    All of the safety mechanisms that go into air travel, make flying the safest way to travel!