Catastrophic Engine Failure Destroyed The Plane (Dominicana 401) - DISASTER BREAKDOWN

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  • Опубликовано: 19 июн 2024
  • If you found this video to be interesting, be sure to subscribe as there is a new video every Saturday. This video also went out to my Patrons on Patreon 48 hours before going out publicly. Consider joining here from £1 per month: / disasterbreakdown
    Twitter: / chloe_howiecb
    Problems relating to one of the plane’s engine had caught the pilots off guard. Confusion began to mount on the flight deck as the pilots attempted to troubleshoot the problems with their plane. Things went from bad to worse as it appeared there were failures of not one but two engines. But how did things get to this point, that is what we’re going to investigate in this video. The timeline of events of Monday, June 23rd, 1969.
    The Caribbean nation of the Dominican Republic has long struggled to sustain a National Flag Carrying Airline. It didn’t used to be this way as Dominicana de Aviacion served as the country’s national air carrier between the years of 1944 and 1995. For 51 years, the airline carried passengers and cargo from the Dominican Republic to many countries in the Americas and even Europe, flying out from their bases in Santo Domingo and Puerto Plata.
    Sources:
    libraryonline.erau.edu/online-...
    aerocorner.com/aircraft/dougl....
    www.enginehistory.org/Piston/...
    drs.faa.gov/browse/excelExter...
    www.baaa-acro.com/crash/crash...
    www.skybrary.aero/articles/fe....
    • Aircraft Engine Types ...
    • The Air Ferry - Aviati...

Комментарии • 607

  • @DisasterBreakdown
    @DisasterBreakdown  Год назад +97

    If you found this video to be interesting, be sure to subscribe as there is a new video every Saturday. This video also went out to my Patrons on Patreon 48 hours before going out publicly. Consider joining here from £1 per month: www.patreon.com/DisasterBreakdown
    Twitter: twitter.com/Chloe_HowieCB

    • @RFS-Vids
      @RFS-Vids Год назад +1

      Which simulator are you using???

    • @Knight6831
      @Knight6831 Год назад

      Would the Douglas DC-6-based Aviation Traders ATL-98-6 Carvair with the PW R2800 and the Douglas DC-7-based Aviation Traders ATL-98-7 Carvair with the Wright R3350 have fared better than the DC-4-based ATL-98?

    • @almightysamwhich4203
      @almightysamwhich4203 Год назад

      @@RFS-Vids I believe it's x plane

    • @MLXaviation
      @MLXaviation Год назад

      Hey Disaster Breakdown Can you do a 737 MAX Breakdown (Lion Air flight 610 and Ethiopian Airlines flight 302)
      And Happy New Year 2023

    • @birgenair301
      @birgenair301 Год назад

      Happy new year🥳🥳🥳

  • @Happymali10
    @Happymali10 Год назад +427

    On a lighter note, I once read "the plane looks like someone with an aversion to jet-engines drew a 747 from Memory" and I think that description is accurate^^

    • @Madhouse_Media
      @Madhouse_Media 7 месяцев назад +17

      It's actually one of those designs that's so ugly it's charming in a weird way.

    • @TH3L3G3ND
      @TH3L3G3ND 7 месяцев назад +5

      @@Madhouse_Media💯😂😭

  • @senabecool7232
    @senabecool7232 Год назад +821

    Wow, loook everyone its the propellor 747

  • @riddle7911epic
    @riddle7911epic Год назад +380

    My dad use to fly this airline for business trips in the late 80's early 90's. He once told me he was glad the government decided to shut it down. This airline made Spirit look like the Concorde in terms of service and luxury

    • @grmpEqweer
      @grmpEqweer Год назад +18

      I'm just happy getting somewhere alive, TBH. Although a working onboard restroom is nice.

    • @BoBandits
      @BoBandits Год назад +3

      Concorde??? They have a great record. Lol.

    • @shrimpflea
      @shrimpflea Год назад +2

      Concorde wasn't an airline.

    • @tanjianyumoe5700
      @tanjianyumoe5700 Год назад +6

      @@shrimpflea well it was an airliner

    • @Xvladin
      @Xvladin Год назад +10

      ​@BoBandits no, that's what he's saying. OP is saying:
      "This airline is SO BAD that it makes Spirit (a cheap airline) look like Concord (a fancy airplane) in comparison"

  • @thatoneplaneboy8619
    @thatoneplaneboy8619 Год назад +137

    Ah yes, the 747 from wish, i like this one

  • @6yjjk
    @6yjjk Год назад +252

    Not that coincidental - the 747's hump was also there to leave the cargo deck clear and allow nose loading.

    • @alejandrayalanbowman367
      @alejandrayalanbowman367 Год назад +10

      The design of the 747 was actually a copy of the Carvair.

    • @GroundHOG-2010
      @GroundHOG-2010 Год назад +30

      @@alejandrayalanbowman367 The podded cockpit design was used in other designs than the Carvair before the 747 (two examples were the Bristol Freighter, which was show in the video, and Armstrong Whitworth Argosy), and all three designs in the competition that lead to the C-5 all had a variation on this idea (the C-5 uses a spine, while the Douglas used a shorter pod design). Meanwhile besides people vaguely suggesting it drew inspiration for the design from the Carvair, I have not found direct evidence that was the case rather than (like with all designs of this type) the reasonable assumption that if you want to load cargo through the nose, moving the cockpit up just makes sense.

    • @Thiscooldude123
      @Thiscooldude123 Год назад +12

      Fun fact: The reason the 747s cockpit is higher up then usual. was that boeing was planning to convert the 747s into freighters, after the boeing 2707 was operational. which never happend.

    • @TheSonicsean
      @TheSonicsean Год назад +13

      @@Thiscooldude123 Though now most of the largest 747 operators are cargo airlines, so it ended up happening eventually.

    • @roykliffen9674
      @roykliffen9674 Год назад +5

      @@Thiscooldude123 As far as I'm aware the original 747 design was always meant as a freighter until someone came up with the idea to use it as a passenger jet too.

  • @aviationdude9546
    @aviationdude9546 Год назад +85

    Mom can we have a 747
    We have 747 at home
    747 at home:

  • @neilperry2224
    @neilperry2224 Год назад +149

    This plane had a lasting film role, in a James Bond movie.
    The film is Goldfinger, where the two cars are seen driven onto the plane in separate scenes, as Goldfingers Rolls Royce weighed over 2 tonnes.

    • @Primus54
      @Primus54 Год назад +14

      Yes… British United was the airline. They called them “Air Ferries”.

    • @danhooper3819
      @danhooper3819 Год назад +15

      Ah yes, the prequel to the Austin Powers movie Goldmember.

    • @sarahalbers5555
      @sarahalbers5555 Год назад +2

      Wow. Good catch!

    • @stracepipe
      @stracepipe Год назад +2

      At Southend Airport in Essex.

    • @budwhite9591
      @budwhite9591 Год назад +2

      I thought so. Thank you for confirming that it’s this plane

  • @Reindeer911
    @Reindeer911 Год назад +34

    Strange looking plane indeed! When I first saw a picture of one, I thought someone was having fun with photoshop, trying to merge a Boeing 747 with a WWII era bomber.

  • @PFMediaServices
    @PFMediaServices Год назад +175

    Chloe, you and Plainly Difficult have become an integral part of my Saturday morning workout, as well as my education on the history of safety in various industries. Thank you for consistently delivering such excellent content. Happy new year!

    • @Tycowiz
      @Tycowiz Год назад +9

      I agree two great channels.

    • @VikkoTheTusken
      @VikkoTheTusken Год назад +3

      I'll join you lol I look forward to Saturdays

    • @_powerrranger
      @_powerrranger Год назад +7

      who is chloe?- keen to know as these two PD and this account are great

    • @richardmillhousenixon
      @richardmillhousenixon Год назад +7

      @@_powerrranger Disaster Breakdown is Chloe

    • @PFMediaServices
      @PFMediaServices Год назад +3

      @@_powerrranger Chloe is the magnificent mind behind the Disaster Breakdown channel!

  • @rtlgrmpf
    @rtlgrmpf Год назад +10

    Hehe, me looking without glasses at the phone notification: this 747 looks kinda weird...

  • @GroundHOG-2010
    @GroundHOG-2010 Год назад +35

    The aircraft was created by a very interesting company, headed by a very interesting person in the history of commercial aviation. Aviation Traders (Engineering) Limited (ATL) was founded by Sir Freddy Laker. The company itself was originally traded by buying up surplus aircraft and converting them to civilian use (hence the name), something that was very profitable after WW2, especially during the Berlin airlift where airframes that could haul cargo were very valuable. Old Halifax bombers would be converted to cargo use, and supplied to independent airlines during the airlift, with them being serviced by ATL for a significant portion of the cargo contracts. After the airlift was over, these aircraft would all mostly be scrapped. ATL would continue trading in aircraft as it also developed a few of it's own. The Carvair was their most successful, but they also developed an in-house "DC-3 Successor" (a task a lot of aircraft builders were trying to do, see the Convair CV-240 of the Parnair video, or the Fokker F27 Friendship of the Pakistan Airlines Flight 404 video). The ATL-90 Accountant would not draw much interest, though, so never made it beyond the first prototype.
    Meanwhile, Laker would also found two airlines. The first, Air Charters, as far as I can tell had some regular scheduled services, but also gained some very important contracts, flying between West Berlin and West Germany as part of the Little Berlin Airlift, and doing trooping flights. He would also found Channel Air Bridge, a company set up to run (first through Air Charters, later through it's own aircraft) cross channel flights. Man this guy's companies were all blurred together, I can completely understand why the version I first read when I was young just said it was a single company.
    Anyway, shortly before the ATL-98 Carvair took it's first flight, Laker sold all three companies to a rival called Airworks. Through a couple more mergers, this would become British United Airlines, what was probably at the time the largest private airline in the UK, with Laker as managing director. He would leave this post to found a new airline in 1965... which was actually his most influential airline, if less successful.
    Laker Airways would become one of the first of the modern "low cost" carriers, offering very cheap flights, same day ticket purchase, buying your food, etc. The modern low cost carrier owes a lot to Laker Airways and the Skytrain. They mostly used DC-10s and expanded quickly throughout the 70's, especially on the trans-atlantic market. The reality was it forced the legacy carriers to compete, and they had over extended themselves (taking out large loans to buy more aircraft). That, along with public perception in the DC-10, lead to one of my most favourite quotes of all time, as said by Sir Freddy Laker: "I am flying high and couldn't be more confident about the future". He said that 9 days before the collapse of Laker Airways. Laker would try to get his airline back off the ground, and would run an airline named Laker Airways in the Bahamas from 1992 til 2005, but by then it was a minor airline and he was getting up in age, and he would die in 2006.
    Sir Freddy Laker would be honored in many ways, having at least 3 aircraft named after him (by Virgin Air, AirAsia X and Norwegian Air Shuttle, three low cost airlines), and is known as a pioneer in the commercial aviation sector.

    • @bobswan6196
      @bobswan6196 Год назад +4

      I remember he bought hundreds of ex-RAF Percival P40 Prentice trainers, with a view to converting them to 4-seat GA aircraft. It didn't go well and most of them finished up in piles at Southend and Stansted airports; their registrations painted by hand over their RAF markings. I believe there are one or two still flying plus a handul in various museums. Incidentally, Stansted and Southend were where the Carvairs were built.

    • @waldopepper1
      @waldopepper1 Год назад +3

      Great post! Thanks for the info.

  • @tessiepinkman
    @tessiepinkman Год назад +49

    Great video, as always! This was an accident I hadn't heard of, and I always enjoy learning something new.
    You are one of my favourite content creators on RUclips and I want to wish you a happy new year and I hope that the year will be a great one for you, and anyone else who might read this. Keep doing what you're doing, at least as long as it is giving you pleasure :)

    • @YDKJ07
      @YDKJ07 Год назад +2

      I agree too great video and content though I still however still haven't seen the collision over Cerritos. Hopefully we'll see it in the next year........

  • @eucaminty1366
    @eucaminty1366 Год назад +37

    Happy New Year from a silent fan! Love your style of educating us and finding rarer plane crashes that not many people speak of. Can't wait for more videos and I wish you good health and happiness going into 2023 ☺️

  • @dfuher968
    @dfuher968 Год назад +5

    Lol, my immidiate thought, when I saw that first picture of this weird plane was "damn, that looks like, some1 spliced the front of 1 plane to the back 2/3 of another plane". And thats pretty much, what they did!

  • @clarsach29
    @clarsach29 Год назад +14

    I seem to recall that this aircraft was briefly featured in the James Bond film "Goldfinger" when it is used to transport one of Goldfinger's sports cars from England to Switzerland...i have a memory of a scene where the front the plane is flipped up so the car can be loaded....and of course there is then that famous car chase through the Swiss alps with Sean Connery in pursuit in his equally sporty car.

    • @carsten4594
      @carsten4594 Год назад +2

      I think that one was a Bristol Freighter.

    • @SaraSpruce
      @SaraSpruce Год назад +1

      @@carsten4594 It was a Carvair, G-ASDC to be exact.

    • @carsten4594
      @carsten4594 Год назад +2

      @@SaraSpruce Yes you are right! I had encountered a Bristol Freighter out of Australia several times in Vietnam and when I saw the movie ages ago that's what stuck in my head. Apologies to clarsach29.
      Thanks and Happy New Year.

  • @carsten4594
    @carsten4594 Год назад +6

    Pilot error? Easier to dump on a deceased crew than face the fact that this airline had shoddy maintenance. These Hamilton Standard propellers require oil pressure to feather. Although they have their own dedicated oil pumps they cannot do their jobs when the oil is gone. He was able to feather the other one. But with two of the four engines out it's going to come down fairly quickly. RIP

    • @josh3771
      @josh3771 Год назад +3

      Was looking for this comment. There is no good options when you lose 50% of your engines on takeoff low in the circuit while marginally overloaded.
      Even the best crew can’t defy gravity. Easy to blame a dead crew who can’t defend themselves.

  • @lawrencedardin9046
    @lawrencedardin9046 Год назад +4

    Thank you for superior production and informative descriptions of these unfortunate accidents. Greatly appreciated are the relevant and appropriate visuals.

  • @TheHamburglar69
    @TheHamburglar69 Год назад +41

    Another fantastic video as always! I look forward to your new videos all week :) Thank you for the quality content and have a great new year!

    • @DisasterBreakdown
      @DisasterBreakdown  Год назад +9

      Thank you so much for the Super Thanks! You're too kind. Happy New Year!

    • @Mizai
      @Mizai Год назад +3

      -$5.00

  • @thejudgmentalcat
    @thejudgmentalcat Год назад +7

    Thanks for the year's content! I discovered your channel this year and really enjoy it. Looking forward to 2023 and Disaster Breakdown 👍

  • @jazzinrascal
    @jazzinrascal Год назад +5

    Thank you for all your work producing these documentaries. All the best for 2023.

  • @elian11111
    @elian11111 Год назад +1

    Tysm for all your work in 2022!!!!! your videos are always so entertaining and well produced

  • @robm3074
    @robm3074 Год назад +5

    As always, an excellent video. Thank you for all of the great ones that you produce, Chloe. And also Chloe, I wish you a healthy New Year, a safe New Year, and last but not least... peace.

  • @heatherydew3361
    @heatherydew3361 Год назад +4

    Thanks for your hard work on your videos, I really enjoy them!! Happy new year to you, here's to 2023!!👍🍾

  • @gnarthdarkanen7464
    @gnarthdarkanen7464 Год назад +4

    Happy New Year, Chloe!!! Thanks for another year of obscurities and lesser known incident and disaster videos!!! Looking forward to your next, as always... ;o)

  • @vespurrs
    @vespurrs Год назад

    Happy New Year! I only recently found this channel but your presentations are top notch and I've spent some time binging. I look forward to seeing more in 2023!

  • @abest5164
    @abest5164 Год назад +4

    You told me a lot this year looking forward to your content in 2023. Happy new year!

  • @alankeith7866
    @alankeith7866 Год назад +1

    Wishing you and your family a wonderful New Year's day!!! Thank you for the wonderful videos that you produce.

  • @melmoore6885
    @melmoore6885 Год назад +1

    Marvelous video as always, thanks for this and all the other posts, have a great new year and onwards and upwards.

  • @michaelmurphy2211
    @michaelmurphy2211 Год назад +2

    I'm a history fan and I enjoy events like this that are little known in Aviation history. I had never heard of this aircraft before. Good show!

  • @alexandrareitz2391
    @alexandrareitz2391 Год назад +8

    My favorite channel ❤️ happy new year, Chloe!

    • @DisasterBreakdown
      @DisasterBreakdown  Год назад +4

      Thank you so much for the Super Thanks. Legend! Happy New Year!

    • @Mizai
      @Mizai Год назад +2

      -$9. 99

  • @robr2389
    @robr2389 Год назад +17

    Wow!!!!! I always considered myself quite the aviation nut and pretty well versed on most aircraft. This one took me by surprise. Not only had I never heard of a Carvair, I had never seen a photo of it until this video. Really odd ball looking aircraft. Sort of resembles the Guppy. Have seen those and the DreamLifter. Good upload!!👌👍

  • @DiecastPowderCoating
    @DiecastPowderCoating Год назад

    Thank you very much for your wonderful video's. I especially enjoy the older accidents.
    Take care and have a very happy new year.

  • @ferrisb1588
    @ferrisb1588 Год назад +1

    Happy New Year, Chloe! Looking forward to your videos in 2023.

  • @joeb5316
    @joeb5316 Год назад +10

    I'd never heard of or seen pictures of this plane until your Community notice a few days ago. Quite interesting.

  • @kenbellchambers4577
    @kenbellchambers4577 Год назад +8

    It would be a terrifying process to buy a second-hand plane.

    • @chuckschillingvideos
      @chuckschillingvideos Год назад +3

      Not if it has been properly maintained and recommended service intervals observed (with documentation) and is properly inspected before purchase. What is terrifying is ignorance.

  • @brianmuhlingBUM
    @brianmuhlingBUM Год назад

    I love your visual reconstruction of this strange looking aircraft. What a great story! Well done. 😊

  • @richardshiggins704
    @richardshiggins704 Год назад +1

    As a child I used to visit Dublin airport and remember these oddities parked on the apron . I am not too sure how long Aer Lingus kept them in it's fleet . Very interesting documentary and well narrated .

  • @mylife1221
    @mylife1221 Год назад +1

    thanks for more amazing content, chloe!

  • @smacke2950
    @smacke2950 4 месяца назад +2

    god imagine you die in a plane crash and everyone's focused on how goofy looking the plane was

  • @07willows
    @07willows Год назад +1

    Congratulatios on producing this excellent reconstruction and animation of a lesser known aicraft and accident. As a boy I saw many Carvairs operating into Manchester UK. Incidentally my hometown, Stockport, had it's own air disaster where another DC-4 derivative, the Canadair Argonaut, crashed in the middle of the town in June 1967, killing 72 people. There is a very good documentary on RUclips (1 hour) titled Stockport Air Disaster. I have been surprised that no one has yet covered what was then, Britain's worst air crash, that during the subsequent investigation, was to have repucussions much wider. Well done, a very interesting video. Regards.

  • @thomaspiedmont
    @thomaspiedmont Год назад

    Happy New Year Chloe! 😁🙏🏼🎉
    Great work! ✈

  • @peggyh8937
    @peggyh8937 Год назад

    Great content, thanks! Happy New Year to all!

  • @ac9110
    @ac9110 Год назад

    Lovely soothing voice and great videos. Many thanks for your interesting and accurate content. I've subscribed.

  • @randomscb-40charger78
    @randomscb-40charger78 Год назад +5

    3:29: In other words, this particular plane walked so the Boeing 747 could run.

  • @trekaddict
    @trekaddict Год назад +5

    We also know from the documentary "Goldfinger" that a Carvair can carry a gold-plated Rolls-Royce Phantom to the continent.

  • @yichythegoat
    @yichythegoat Год назад +1

    Thank you very much for music titles, have a happy new year!

  • @emmareynolds3428
    @emmareynolds3428 Год назад

    Another video to keep me entertained, Keep up the good work DB ☺️😊

  • @jameswebb4593
    @jameswebb4593 Год назад +2

    I remember these car ferries flying out of Southend airport Essex England still climbing as they passed overhead of my town on the other side of the Thames estuary. Witnessed a near miss collision when waiting for a train at Kemsley one afternoon. A RAF Hawker Hunter was circling the area on a training mission I assume . I was in a left hand turn , gradual not steep , I happen to notice coming from his right at about the same altitude Carvair . Fortunately the RAF pilot spotted it a the same time and altered course. This was in perfect weather conditions , but it struck home to me how easy it was for those type of accidents to occur.

  • @rilmar2137
    @rilmar2137 Год назад +5

    Definitely a curious aircfaft. Given the captain's history, makes sense that the crew wouldn't handle the situation too well

  • @larumpole
    @larumpole Год назад +1

    Thank you for another great video! I remember these aircraft from my childhood when my father would drive us to Lydd or Southend Airport and we would use one of British Air Ferries airplanes to cross the channel for our holidays in France. I never knew they had such a poor accident rate, although I suspect that was due to poor maintenance with low budget carriers, rather than anything inherent to the Carvair. Thanks also for your mention of the Carvair's manufacturer - Aviation Traders, that was one of Sir Freddie Laker's ventures. Laker was a pioneer in aviation, challenging the traditional airlines with his low cost airline. He was, like Sir Richard Branson, something of a visionary. Happy New Year to you and to all your viewers.

    • @davidjones332
      @davidjones332 Год назад +3

      The first Carvair conversion G-ANYB had already logged 37,000 hours before conversion, so these were already quite elderly aircraft before Aviation Traders started modifying them (with the approval and co-operation of Douglas, let it be said). I've no doubt that as they drifted from one low-budget freight airline to another the maintenance got progressively worse. If the ground engineers' attitude to their job was anything like the captain's it's small wonder it fell to bits.

  • @theautistictransitfan
    @theautistictransitfan Год назад +3

    I will never get over just how goofy that plane looks

  • @kevinheard8364
    @kevinheard8364 Год назад

    Very interesting video.... happy new year to you and yours

  • @chriscool5869
    @chriscool5869 Год назад +7

    Great video as always. The carvair was really an interesting plane. I’d like to recommend a disaster. National Air Cargo flight 102 - it’s a really interesting disaster. I remember seeing it on TV when it happened.

  • @jorgereixach9509
    @jorgereixach9509 Год назад +2

    Very interesting and well documented video. Also, Thanks for put the names of the soundtrack music

  • @claytoningram1333
    @claytoningram1333 Год назад

    Wow that’s all I can say! Absolutely love this channel!

  • @martinross5521
    @martinross5521 Год назад

    Thank you for this story and analysis. My parents booked on Silver City Airways from Lydd to Le Touquet and back - car and family in the very early 60s. I was allowed to go to the jump seat for part of the flight and landing. Exciting times!

  • @kevink2986
    @kevink2986 Год назад

    Excellent! I really enjoyed this video. Will you do the other Dominicana crash that was mentioned in this video.

  • @noneofyourbizness
    @noneofyourbizness Год назад +4

    40% crash rate...holy moly !
    'Ccfffinair' might be a better name for it.

    • @redblade8160
      @redblade8160 Год назад +1

      NunofyourBusiness.
      No wonder there were only 4 passengers on board.

  • @JohninRosc
    @JohninRosc Год назад

    Many thanks - another great video.

  • @JonathanEzor
    @JonathanEzor Год назад +1

    I love aviation, and I'd never seen or heard of the Carvair until your video. Yeesh! Thanks for the info.

  • @davidej9091
    @davidej9091 Год назад +2

    I used to work at Southend Airport in the 1960s where they were modified. I was a luggage loader for BAF which flew mainly cars to the European mainland. They seems pretty antiquated then.

  • @nyxqueenofshadows
    @nyxqueenofshadows Год назад +4

    some part of me is weirdly unnerved by the fact that the cargo was loaded through the front 😂great video, as always! and a happy new year!! looking forward to what you've got lined up :)

    • @grmpEqweer
      @grmpEqweer Год назад +5

      Check out photos of the Super Guppy, or other planes meant for really big cargo. It's a usual design, and looks really cool.

    • @nyxqueenofshadows
      @nyxqueenofshadows Год назад

      @@grmpEqweer oh man what a weird looking thing!

    • @mbvoelker8448
      @mbvoelker8448 Год назад +3

      The cargo variant of the 747 is a front loader too.

  • @whome4642
    @whome4642 Год назад +1

    That evaluation sounds like my report card when I was a kid. “Needs to apply himself”. But then I wasn’t flying a plane in fourth grade.

  • @mahogany3947
    @mahogany3947 Год назад +3

    That is a weird looking plane very interesting thank you for posting

  • @birdbrain4445
    @birdbrain4445 4 месяца назад

    Lol, man. I know a thing or two about aviation (not nearly as much as you, of course) but I had *never* seen one of these planes before - well, aside from in Goldfinger, though I haven't watched that film since I was young. It really does look like, well, 'we already have the 747 at home', as others have noted. Fascinating. Great video as usual!

  • @gonetoearth2588
    @gonetoearth2588 Год назад +1

    excellent video!

  • @tpol9112
    @tpol9112 Год назад

    Interestingly, two of these Carvairs made their way to Honolulu in the 1980s and flew cargo to the neighbor islands for a regional carrier called Pacific Air Express. After working an operations manager at DHL Air Cargo in Hawaii, I was employed as a station manager for.short period of time with Pacific Air Express and oversaw the operations of these aircraft. Although my memory fails me somewhat, I believe one of these Carvairs suffered a controlled crash into a sugar cane field on a routine flight to Kahului, Maui, where all crew members survived including a buddy of mine. The 80s were a glorious time in aviation including this chapter for me personally. Thanks for your wonderful report on this aircraft!

  • @ibluap
    @ibluap Год назад +2

    An excellent 2023 and a lot of new videos.😄🥳🥳🥳

  • @patrickmuhwheeney6518
    @patrickmuhwheeney6518 Год назад

    Well done! Thank you!

  • @TheEarthRealm
    @TheEarthRealm Год назад +3

    So many plane crashes in the Dominican republic... 😮‍💨

  • @Bigones111
    @Bigones111 Год назад +1

    I’ve become a really big fan of this channel, and I’m really looking forward to seeing what’s next for you in 2023 😊
    If I could recommend an accident to cover, you should do the 1972 Puerto Rico DC-7 crash that killed Roberto Clemente

  • @hreader
    @hreader Год назад +1

    Very many years ago (1959/60/62) my family went on holidays in France which entailed a drive from the Channel coast right down to the Pyrenees (where they'd spent their honeymoon). I can still remember the most peculiar-shaped rather small aeroplane used to transport people's cars as well as the people themselves across the Channel, and it looked very much like this, i.e. with a very large hump at the front to take the cars. I think we would take off from Lydd or somewhere in Kent and land on or maybe a bit inland from the French coast. The clip at around 3:55 showing a car being loaded in at the front definitely brings back this memory (even if in the photo the car's just cargo). Very interesting of course that the commentary mentions mixed cargo and passenger aircraft. It must now I think of it have been one of these which we used to hop over the English Channel to France.

    • @straybullitt
      @straybullitt Год назад +1

      It might have also been a Bristol 170 Freighter which is similar, although smaller and a twin-engine design.
      They were a very common predecessor to this airplane.

  • @neontitanium
    @neontitanium Год назад

    Growing up in North-East Wales and watching the Airbus Beluga fly in and out to Broughton every day certainly was a sight. Weirdest shaped plane I've ever seen! (My dad worked on its wings when it was built; worked for Airbus in Broughton, Toulouse & Hamburg during my childhood)

  • @The_ROKCER
    @The_ROKCER 6 месяцев назад +1

    3:20 The hump on those two aircraft is there for the same reason-they look alike because they serve the same purpose. The 747 was merely a stopgap measure until the supersonic 2707 was ready, at which point all the 747s were intended to be converted into freighter aircraft. The cockpit of the 747 is positioned high so that a front-facing loading door can be accommodated, similar to what is seen in the Carvair.

  • @ormondsworld3947
    @ormondsworld3947 Год назад +2

    Great video!

  • @gpm9333
    @gpm9333 Год назад

    I saw one of these in south Africa, great sound and looked amazing as it flew over my house.

  • @RindaJane
    @RindaJane Год назад +7

    I was 5 years old. This is an old plane 😔 😂
    Great video. We are enjoying your Channel!
    Happy New Year to all!!!

  • @akarig4875
    @akarig4875 Год назад

    Am early for a change once again great video and have a great New Years!!! ❤️

  • @alejandrayalanbowman367
    @alejandrayalanbowman367 Год назад +2

    I remember in the 50s being woken up every morning at 4.30 am by those DC4s/C54s taking off and flying past my bedroom window on trooping flights to Cyprus during the troubles there.

  • @nikolatvala
    @nikolatvala Год назад +2

    Cargo in the front, passengers in the back. Sounds like a flying mullet

  • @spencerhardy8667
    @spencerhardy8667 Год назад

    Very familiar with Carvairs. Used to fly over me every evening about 7pm clawing their way to the Channel Islands in the mid sixties.
    One of the very last is sitting in a very "distressed" condition at Nixon Field in Alaska.

  • @Lee-mx5li
    @Lee-mx5li Год назад

    Great job on video! And yes do a video on this model plane where 8 of the 21 crashed

  • @brianperry
    @brianperry Год назад

    Freddie Laker, arguably the first exponent of cheap air fares was the man who had the idea of 'joining' the Bristol Freighter and the Douglas DC-4 to increase the payload. It can be seen on the Bond movie Gold Finger being loaded at Southend airport. l lived on the flight path of Southend airport in Essex UK, which was actually near the village of Rochford. Remember seeing the Bristol Freighters flying overhead during the fifties, and the Carvair later in the sixties... The sound of large radial engines 'coughing' into life and the drone of them overhead...a sound long since passed ....

  • @JLS_CNRD
    @JLS_CNRD Год назад +3

    that is a mighty strange looking plane!

  • @phantomf4747
    @phantomf4747 Год назад

    One again another great video.

  • @emo7636
    @emo7636 10 месяцев назад

    I loved the 'what is the deal with thia airplane, and why does it look like that?' line delivered in your usual lovely calm oration.

  • @Happymali10
    @Happymali10 Год назад +2

    9:50
    Don't plane-engines still need spark-plugs?
    Your explanation of "compression until combustion" is aligned with a diesel engine but I believe kerosene still needs an external spark.

    • @GeorgeMCMLIX
      @GeorgeMCMLIX Год назад +1

      You are correct, but these engines ran on high octane aviation gasoline.

  • @EonArashi
    @EonArashi 6 дней назад

    The R-2000 Twin Wasp was known for being prone to overstress if it was pushed too hard as well. Similar problems came from the R-1830 model that pre-dated it. They didn’t have a ton of horsepower for their era (1,200 to 1,350HP) for a plane this size where you’d probably want the later variants of the R-2800 Double Wasp and its nearly double horsepower of the 2000, it likely just wasn’t strong enough to handle the overweight loads that seemed common for this airline. Wouldn’t surprise me if they just broke down from strain and lack of maintenance.

  • @scoobydo446
    @scoobydo446 Год назад

    That was another great video

  • @OriginalStachuJones
    @OriginalStachuJones Год назад +2

    Mom - can we have 747
    We have 747 at home
    747 at home:

  • @Khether0001
    @Khether0001 Год назад +1

    Lol, this is the first of your videos Im watching (loved, btw, subscribed!) but I looked at the 3d model and thought "hey, interesting, this RUclipsr uses cartoon planes, which is ok, we just wanna know the story", then you showed a picture of the ACTUAL plane and I felt a bit awkward! Never saw that before!!! 🤣

  • @trainz3982
    @trainz3982 Год назад +4

    1:46 That this is a very strange looking plane " 😂😂🤣
    It's something we just ...need to get out of the way so what is the deal with this plane and why does it look like that" 😂😂

    • @redblade8160
      @redblade8160 Год назад +2

      TRAINZ"
      This plane was designed to crash!

    • @aesearby
      @aesearby Год назад +2

      It looks like if a 747 was stung by a bee

    • @trainz3982
      @trainz3982 Год назад +2

      @@aesearby 😂😂🤣

    • @trainz3982
      @trainz3982 Год назад +1

      @@redblade8160 Never seen this ever

  • @donalexander4113
    @donalexander4113 Год назад

    Great video. This is the first one I’ve watched from you. One minor note though. You may want to invest in more advanced software that allows you to make curves without all the square intersections in all the curved sections.

  • @rosemarylopez5738
    @rosemarylopez5738 Год назад

    Happy New year to you!

  • @marksmith8079
    @marksmith8079 Год назад +2

    What a shoddy investigation- couldn't say any more about the pilots handled it badly- other than not feathering the number 2 engine- could they definitely have set it no major indication that they were doing badly.

  • @jtveg
    @jtveg Год назад

    Thanks for sharing. 😉👌🏻

  • @fijiwow5447
    @fijiwow5447 Год назад

    I was in the in the area that day and heard the plane crash noise. Next day headline was the story of 2 teenage brothers in that crash site bldg that were on the phone with their mother when it happened. The call went dead and they both were killed. Horrific event ! Years later I was at the funeral of my uncle and observed a large mausoleum with those 2 boys names and ages (I think they were 15 and 17). Hard to grasp such a reality for their mom & family.

  • @Dystopia1111
    @Dystopia1111 Год назад +4

    Just looking at that front-heavy design leaves me bewildered that these ever got off the ground (and that was before seeing heavy cargo loaded into the front). That must have taken some interesting weight distribution and a seriously muscular set of engines to make this contraption fly.

    • @UncleKennysPlace
      @UncleKennysPlace Год назад +2

      It only appears "front heavy". You can bet that the C/G was near the chord line, as it must be.

    • @pikachu6031
      @pikachu6031 Год назад +3

      No not really. The ATL-98 Carvair was built at Southend Airport, Essex, England in the 1960’s. It was a standard DC-4 with the new bulbous cargo compartment nose section added, as in the video. Another major change, apart from those made to the front fuselage, was the fact they used the Douglas DC-7 Vertical Stabiliser, replacing the DC-4’s standard tail. The P@W R2800 Twin Wasp Radials were exactly the same, so we’re the props. The Carvair initially carried 30 passengers in the rear fuselage, as well as two cars in the new nose section. When they were later converted to All-Cargo operations, water ballast or other cargo was loaded into the rear fuselage for balance and trim purposes!

    • @redblade8160
      @redblade8160 Год назад

      Dystopia1111
      It didn't stay long in the air.

    • @Dystopia1111
      @Dystopia1111 Год назад +1

      @@pikachu6031 I'm no expert on aviation and don't claim to be, so I appreciate any additional info. Just the visual difference alone is intriguing, but the very high proportion of crashes for this model definitely invites follow-up questions.

    • @Dystopia1111
      @Dystopia1111 Год назад

      @@UncleKennysPlace I'm sure it was - I maybe should have re-phrased that as 'How did they pull that off?'.

  • @lindyc.2552
    @lindyc.2552 Год назад

    Oh my gosh, I enjoyed this video for 2 reasons.
    First, you mention the plane departing from the cargo "ramp".
    What a breath of fresh air to not hear the wrong cliche "tarmac" that everyone seems to be stuck on using these days!
    Anyone who is familiar with either GA or commercial aviation knows that the area where these planes park and are "turned around" is indeed called "the ramp"...not the tarmac!!!
    So, kudos for using the correct term!
    Also, I enjoyed this video because we had an old Carvair
    that used to come into the RDU airport where I worked in the mid 1990's.
    I used to love when it flew in and out as it was indeed an unusual looking aircraft.
    I even have a photo of myself standing in front of it, with its
    converted "guppy head"
    It used to bring in automotive parts for auto manufacturers assembly lines.
    The other thing unique to this Carvair was in the evening when you watched it take off, it would have some flames coming out of some of its engines.
    It surely was the craziest looking "bird" to sit on our ramp!
    So, I enjoyed hearing more about the history of the Carvair from your video!
    I just subscribed and look forward to your next video on the Carvairs.
    Also, I enjoy your calm voice in the way you explain each detail in each of your videos.