Detailed tour through a NUCLEAR ICBM missile base! (Includes a mock missile launch!)

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 7 июн 2024
  • Join me in this guided tour of a decommissioned Titan II nuclear ICBM missile silo and command centre in Tucson, Arizona!
    I have two RUclips channels:
    Paul Stewart (aviation travel vlogs): / paulstewartaviation
    Paul Stewart 2nd channel (unedited aviation footage): / @paulstewart2ndchannel
    Check out my Instagram account: @paulstewartaviation ( / paulstewartaviation ) and Facebook: / paulstewartaviation
    If you enjoy this videos and want to see more, you can send me a donation via Paypal :) paypal.me/paulstewartaviation
    Other videos:
    Tour through a USAF Boeing B-52: • Detailed tour through ...
    The first Boeing 737 tour: • Detailed tour around t...
    The first Boeing 727 tour: • Detailed tour around t...
    Tour around the first Boeing 747 in Seattle: • Detailed tour through ...
    Lockheed YF-12A tour: • Video
    Tour around a Saturn V rocket in Houston: • Detailed tour around t...
    Tour around the Northrop YF-23 in Dayton: • Tour around the Northr...
    Detailed tour around the Lockheed F-22 Raptor: • Lockheed F-22 Raptor d...
    F-117 Nighthawk: • Tour around the Lockhe...
    NASA Shuttle Carrier Aircraft 747-100: • Detailed tour through ...
    Space Shuttle Orbiter: • Detailed tour through ...
    Hughes H-4 Hercules Spruce Goose: • Detailed tour through ...
    Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress: • Detailed tour through ...
    Boeing B-29 Superfortress: • Detailed tour through ...
    Convair B-36 Peacemaker: • Tour around the TEN en...
    Boeing B-47 Stratojet: • Tour around a Boeing B...
    Convair B-58 Hustler: • Tour around the first ...
    North American XB-70 Valkryie: • Tour around the North ...
    North American X-15: • Video
    BAC Concorde: • Detailed tour of a Bri...
    Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird: • Detailed tour through ...
    Northrop Grumman B-2 Spirit: • Detailed tour around a...
    Grumman F-14 Tomcat: • Tour around the Grumma...
    Tour through an AVRO Lancaster bomber: • Detailed tour through ...
    Tour through a QANTAS Boeing 747-200B: • Detailed tour through ... ​
    Tour through a QANTAS Boeing 707-138: • Tour through the uniqu... ​
    Tour through a QANTAS Lockheed Super Constellation: • Tour through a Lockhee...
    Tour through a Douglas DC-3: • Detailed tour through ...
    Tour through a USAF Boeing B-52: • Detailed tour through ...
    USAF/RAAF General Dynamics F-111: • Full tour through a Ge...
    RAAF CAC Avon Sabre: • Tour around Australia'...
    RAAC CAC Dassault Mirage III: • Tour around the Dassau...
    100 years of QANTAS aircraft on display at the Qantas Founders Museum: • Video ​
    Tour through the first ever Boeing 747 in Seattle: • Video ​
    Tour through Concorde: • Video ​
    Tour through a VC-137B - Air Force One: • Tour through a Boeing ... ​
    Onboard the LAST EVER Qantas Boeing 747 flight in Canberra: • Onboard the LAST EVER ... ​
    Tour through a DeHavilland Comet 4 at the Duxford IMW: • Video ​
    Tour through the Museum of Flight in Seattle: • Video
    0:00 intro
    1:13 security
    1:44 aerozine 50 fuel hard stand
    2:08 AN/TPS-39 surveillance system
    2:30 stage 1 and 2 rocket engines, butterfly lock valve, vernier motor
    3:44 oxidiser hard stand
    4:29 silo doors
    5:18 going down the stairs
    6:00 3 tonne blast door
    6:40 launch control centre and missile launch process
    11:48 silo and Titan II missile
    12:09 reentry vehicle
    12:28 W-53 thermonuclear warhead

Комментарии • 414

  • @JamesD1701
    @JamesD1701 Год назад +31

    Interesting fact for any Star Trek fans here, This is where they filmed parts of First Contact when they were with the "Phoenix" Warp ship

  • @garypillischafske1425
    @garypillischafske1425 3 месяца назад +6

    I was Quality Control and Evaluation at these sites in 67/68/69. Proud to have helped. Good people with lots of skill. Enjoyed my time there.

  • @PaulStewartAviation
    @PaulStewartAviation  Год назад +121

    Thanks for watching everyone! Are you interested in these types of non-aviation videos? Don't worry, I'll also keep doing plane videos too. Please comment below and let me know!
    Mistake update: I meant to say that the stage 1 rocket motor produces 430,000lbs instead of 43,000 as I incorrectly said. Sorry!

    • @Piglife101
      @Piglife101 Год назад +10

      The nuclear triad is fascinating, although terrifying. Would love more of these types of videos 👍🏼

    • @soldaat001
      @soldaat001 Год назад +4

      Hugely interesting Paul 👍✌️

    • @eft6753
      @eft6753 Год назад +2

      I loved it

    • @OldmanGamerYT
      @OldmanGamerYT Год назад +2

      Yeah, this was really cool!

    • @CaymanIslandsCatWalks
      @CaymanIslandsCatWalks Год назад +3

      And 1 train video...

  • @laguy9091
    @laguy9091 Год назад +6

    I was here over 10 years ago. It was an interesting trip and still remember it today.

    • @laguy9091
      @laguy9091 Год назад +2

      I remember I pressed the lunch button, and many other lights lit up. Now, the museum put a plastic glass to cover the control panel...hahaha

  • @jamesharrison2570
    @jamesharrison2570 4 месяца назад +3

    I spent over 7 years under ground in a Titan II Silo. This was my home site.

    • @jamesharrison2570
      @jamesharrison2570 4 месяца назад +2

      I forgot to add. The missile fuel, a form of hydrazine, has given me leukemia. Knowing that, I would do it again. When I taught Survival for the USAF, I would write on the board a sentence. I told my students, if you can read this sentence, thank your teacher. If you can read it in English, thank the military.

  • @SilverSergeant
    @SilverSergeant 10 месяцев назад +17

    Thanks for posting this video. My time as a launch crew member (BMAT) was the very best part of my 20 year career in the USAF. I had the honor of "pulling" 200+ alerts under the hills of north Arkansas 1978-1987. Line Crew BMAT, Training Crew BMAT, Senior Training Crew BMAT, Chief, MPT. What an experience!!!!

    • @Bbendfender
      @Bbendfender 9 месяцев назад +2

      Former MFT here from McConnell, 1971-75. I pulled over 200 alerts also. Instructor MFT for final year and a half on crew. I got out but wish now that I had stayed in. It was an unforgettable experience for sure.

    • @jasonduncan69
      @jasonduncan69 6 месяцев назад

      Did you by chance pull time in the ghost silo outside of searcy?

    • @thefieldphoneguy8254
      @thefieldphoneguy8254 3 месяца назад

      Was stationed at LR when they stood the 308th down. They had some INCREDIBLE fast and slow pitch softball teams!!

    • @thefieldphoneguy8254
      @thefieldphoneguy8254 3 месяца назад

      Was stationed at LR when they stood the 308th down. They had some INCREDIBLE fast and slow pitch softball teams!!

  • @Zas379
    @Zas379 10 месяцев назад +23

    Looking down into the silo and seeing the missile sitting there is absolutely terrifying, it seriously freaked me out.

    • @GM8101PHX
      @GM8101PHX 4 месяца назад

      It is not capable of flight and has a Dummy warhead on it, everything was drained and oil pumped in to make any drop inert!!! If your city was targeted by this missile you would have every reason to be terrified!!! I grew up in Tucson from 1959 to 1972 with these missiles being on alert. My Dad the NCOIC of the supply squadron knew what equipment was in the silos but never talked about because it was Top Secret!!!

  • @Mike_Malloy
    @Mike_Malloy 3 месяца назад +1

    Nice presentation. I was a 308th FACE/RPIE Electrician at LRAFB silos complexes from 1980-1986. Since all the silos were built identical, everything in this video was exactly how I remember it at the 308th. I was in my early 20's back then, an enjoyable experience.

  • @ricelaker
    @ricelaker Год назад +2

    I operated a power plant at Vandenberg AFB in 1973-1974 supporting satellite launches when they used TItan IIIB and Titan IIID

  • @charleslowery789
    @charleslowery789 Год назад +25

    Enjoyed your video of the Titan. My father was a Ballistic Missile Analyst Technician (BMAT) on the Titans stationed at Little Rock AFB in Arkansas in the mid 60's. He was one of two enlisted technicians who were part every Missile Combat Crew deployed to the sites. He and his enlisted partner were responsible for maintaining the missile's readiness, refueling the missile when necessary and conducting all other maintenance activities on the missile while it was in the silo. I visited some of the silo's with my father in Arkansas and remember many of the areas you discussed in your video. He retired from the Air force in 1967 as a Quality Assurance Inspector on Titans and was called up when the disaster at Damascus happened to help with the investigation. Keep up the good work of documenting flight !

    • @PaulStewartAviation
      @PaulStewartAviation  Год назад

      Glad you enjoyed it

    • @arkadyfolkner
      @arkadyfolkner Год назад +1

      Working at the Damascus site after the disaster there must have been one sobering experience for your dad, grateful for his service.

    • @michaelvalencia7234
      @michaelvalencia7234 Год назад

      Umm I wouldn’t have said that at all… but cool story and thank you to your dad

    • @DarwinWJ74
      @DarwinWJ74 Год назад

      @@michaelvalencia7234 why?

    • @michaelvalencia7234
      @michaelvalencia7234 Год назад

      @@DarwinWJ74 he has seen a inside of a silo and has information… just like we don’t have all info on russias shit it’s the same
      My mom works for the federal government won’t say what agency she is but it’s just something you learn
      You don’t open your mouth when you know info wether it’s a known info or not

  • @tazrugby
    @tazrugby Год назад +3

    Visted there last year. Was a Communications Tech for that site and the other 17 from 1978 to 1982.

  • @ivo4357
    @ivo4357 Год назад +20

    I hope the people working in these bases are allowed to watch Netflix. Can you imagine a more boring job than waiting your entire career to possibly push 1 button?

    • @Woody2Shoe
      @Woody2Shoe 3 месяца назад +3

      They could watch "Threads"!!! Or " The sum of all Fears". Or "The Day After". You get it ..

    • @carlosvasquez9890
      @carlosvasquez9890 3 месяца назад +2

      ​@@Woody2Shoe...but probably Wargames was banned...for not to undermine the line of command. 😂

    • @cameronsienkiewicz6364
      @cameronsienkiewicz6364 3 месяца назад +2

      It’s an extremely boring job that pays amazingly well, but a job you wish you never have to actually have to do “the work”

    • @francisdbrooksjr5025
      @francisdbrooksjr5025 2 месяца назад

      ​@@cameronsienkiewicz6364
      Not sure where you got your info, but these were not manned by civilians, but by USAF personnel, specially trained, and not highly paid, no haz duty pay or any such thing. We ( I was a PadDad [MMT] at 381st SMW McConnell, '73-'75, boring at times, but ever vigilant, had many friends on the Command and Control Teams (BMATs, etc). There was always books, magazines, TV for entertainment. No special compensation just your salary by rank, which for some of us was about $300 monthly including seperate rations if we lived off base and not in the barracks. It was more stressful arriving at the launch site each day and going through the security checks, than being in the launch duct with that big beautiful bird!

  • @budlaumer
    @budlaumer Год назад +8

    I worked in the Guidance shop and later Elab on the Titans in Arkansas from 1974-79. Walking with you down the stairway was a memory and thank you for sharing it. Coding on the way in or clearing topside on the way home were always an opportunity for drama and never of the sort that you wanted. At the bottom of those stairs we picked up the phone and only got down to the outer door if we got our codes right. Lots of hard work for young men and women who were not always appreciated by management and it being the 1970s, not always a hit out around the community. Jeff Kennedy and David Livingston and Greg Devlin all paid a huge price one night in Damascus. We did the best we could

  • @johnt.4947
    @johnt.4947 Год назад +21

    Thanks for the memories Paul! I was stationed there from 1977-80 as a missile tech, engine and "handling". My first USAF assignment, then trained to aircraft maintenance.
    BTW, kudos to your thoroughness for mentioning the Titan 2 being used for the Gemini program.

  • @roygarciaazborn64
    @roygarciaazborn64 Год назад +7

    I grew up in Tucson where the missile titan museum is located and I can remember when this missile site was active as a small child back in the early seventies.

    • @Stingray4
      @Stingray4 Год назад +1

      I always wondered Why MEsa had tornado or warning sirens. Till I went to the Pima Air & Space Museum and mentioned the titan museum. Now I want to go here to see it.

    • @GM8101PHX
      @GM8101PHX 4 месяца назад

      I lived in Tucson from 1959 to 1972, our sirens always went off at 12 noon all across the city, we never had a real event causing the sirens to be used!!!My Dad was assigned to the 309th Supply Squadron as it's NCOIC, he knew what equipment was used in the silos but never talked about it, that being Top Secret!!@@Stingray4

  • @10splitter
    @10splitter 10 месяцев назад +2

    That's why the technicians who work in the missile silos now have all their tools connected by a lanyard to their work belts.

  • @pepperman2385
    @pepperman2385 Год назад +13

    When the Docent was going second by second through the launch process, I could actually start to feel my heart racing. I was amazed at just how much tension there was in the room and the looming sense of dread when he said the missile was on its way and there was no way to stop it. I can only imagine the strain those young men must have been under everyday while serving at the silo.

    • @GM8101PHX
      @GM8101PHX 4 месяца назад +1

      Part of our training serving with Strategic Air Command was to know our job was so very important for the survival of our nation that we knew if the order came we would obey it and launch!! I served with the 92d Security Police Squadron it was routine to hear the klaxon to go off any time of day no matter the weather outside. I became common place, but we knew that the weapons we secured, maintained and manned could eliminate a city!! Our weapons were the B-52G on 15 minute nuclear ground alert!!

  • @applejacks971
    @applejacks971 Год назад +2

    'Watch for Rattlesnakes', yeah, that's kind of an important sign...

  • @michaelohara5703
    @michaelohara5703 Год назад +7

    Paul- the launch crew consisted of two officers & two enlisted people. This site 571-7 was my home site & pulled nearly 250 alert tours while I was a crew member.
    Great video! Brief and hit the high points of the complex.
    I think I heard you say the 1980 missile accident was in Kansas. It happened at complex 374-7 in Arkansas…
    Thank you for sharing

    • @infinityvideoprod
      @infinityvideoprod 6 месяцев назад

      No, he just pronounced it as R-Kansas, instead of R-Kan-saw

  • @Kj_Gamer2614
    @Kj_Gamer2614 Год назад +19

    I'm still so glad I found this channel a while ago. I love the tours, and love the detailed facts. keep up the great work Paul :)

  • @raymondmartin6737
    @raymondmartin6737 Год назад +2

    When I was in USAF ROTC Summer training
    at Plattsburgh Air Force Base, NY in August
    1967, after my Junior year in college, my
    Cadet Flight Commander, a Captain in the
    USAF, discussed career areas for me and
    being a Missile Launch Officer, probably as
    a deputy to a higher ranking officer, such
    as a Captain or Major, when I would have
    been a First Lieutenant after training in
    that Specialty.
    I did not go into that position, but after I
    was a Personnel Officer for a couple of
    years, my Chief of the Consolidated Base
    Personnel Office, CBPO, was a Major, who
    had been a Launch Officer, with a Deputy,
    and he wore the Missileers Badge on his
    uniform. Captain, USAF, Reserve Retired.
    1969-1973.

  • @thedudeshaunsa
    @thedudeshaunsa Год назад +5

    Yet another great video, Paul, and it’s nice to have this in the mix of the others you typically do.

  • @johnwatson3948
    @johnwatson3948 7 месяцев назад +3

    A well done tour video. The museums missile is the training one from Sheppard AFB - it never contained fuel or was in an active silo. And of course they made that cutout in the re-entry nose cone to show there’s no warhead inside. The engines on display outside are from this missile so it has no engines to view when taking the special tour downstairs (now discontinued I’m told).

  • @spazda_mx5
    @spazda_mx5 Год назад +4

    There's a good book called 'Command and Control' by Eric Schlosser that deals with the Arkansas Titan II accident.

  • @Iamthelolrus
    @Iamthelolrus Год назад +2

    The last time I was at that museum, they were still shooting scenes for "Star Trek First Contact." After I left, I started wondering what the missle crew do after launch, I didn't remember that being covered. Crack a beer? Walk home? What do you do in an empty silo? Assuming it's not a smoking crater.

    • @GM8101PHX
      @GM8101PHX 4 месяца назад

      They would stay put for 30 days after they launched the missile, then exit through a secondary exit and attempt to make it to the mountains!!!

  • @65gtotrips
    @65gtotrips Год назад +7

    I’m not a flower and completely understand the need for military defense and offense, yet when I view all of this hardware, the missile, and all of the necessary infrastructure, IT’S ABSOLUTELY INSANE !

    • @GM8101PHX
      @GM8101PHX 4 месяца назад

      The silos were under construction in 1959 when my Dad was stationed at Davis-Monthan AFB home to 18 Titan II missiles, the base also had the B-47 bomber on nuclear alert as well as a medium sized weapons storage area. I was age 2 and up, then 6 when the missiles went on alert status.

  • @kanzeon7729
    @kanzeon7729 Год назад +2

    Thanks for the tour!

  • @halitosis75
    @halitosis75 Год назад +4

    Once again a brilliant video. Absolutely fascinating 👏

  • @youtuuba
    @youtuuba Год назад +3

    I think it would have been useful to actually name this museum. Also, it is not located in Tucson. Potential visitors might wish to know where this is when watching this video, so I can add that that it is the "Titan Missile Museum", and is about 25 miles (40km) south of Tucson, just off of I-19 in Green Valley, Arizona.

  • @mischief33
    @mischief33 Год назад +3

    Really interesting tour Paul. Thank you .

  • @chiefcrash1
    @chiefcrash1 19 дней назад +1

    If you're a ham radio operator, there's also a giant discone antenna at the site that you can use after checking in with the museum staff

  • @Robslondon
    @Robslondon Год назад +7

    An astonishingly good video Paul, I was transfixed all the way through. Keep up the fantastic work mate.

  • @davenz000
    @davenz000 Год назад +3

    The book and later documentary "Command and Control" painted a slightly different view of how the Arkansas incident could have panned out.

  • @davechapman7735
    @davechapman7735 Год назад +2

    wow that was a blast! the workmanship and tech from that year was incredible, thanks so much for creating the vid to share. Love your work Paul. cheers NZ

  • @ChrisSlack
    @ChrisSlack Год назад +2

    Thanks for the tour. Well done.

  • @horrgakx
    @horrgakx Год назад +4

    A sobering reminder of things in the shadows which would completely destroy our planet.

  • @DeepWebDiary
    @DeepWebDiary Год назад +3

    Good to see ya again Paul.

  • @vocalpro
    @vocalpro Год назад +2

    Absolutely amazing mate.

  • @CaymanIslandsCatWalks
    @CaymanIslandsCatWalks Год назад +3

    Yeaaahhhh my man! Was waiting on next upload.

  • @That_Stealth_Guy
    @That_Stealth_Guy Год назад +3

    Great job on this one Paul.

  • @utubecorporatetroll
    @utubecorporatetroll Год назад +1

    Great to see an up to date video on this

  • @Uberaroundtheworld530
    @Uberaroundtheworld530 Год назад +2

    The most clever way for us to have a fully functioning ICBM hidden in plain sight ;) “it’s a moo-seum”

  • @OTRABlog
    @OTRABlog Год назад +6

    I took the tour in september and actually had to turn the launch key as the deputy. The whole visit was incredibly exciting yet also a very frightening experience. Thank you for this video, which sums up the museum nicely!

  • @dvanerdivkanade
    @dvanerdivkanade Год назад +3

    Trully great format of videos! Appreciate the hard work! Thank you

  • @jpdive8664
    @jpdive8664 Год назад +1

    Very very cool. Thank you for sharing this

  • @mikesolomon5584
    @mikesolomon5584 Год назад +2

    We were just there a couple weeks ago and had the same guide. It's a great tour. Thanks for the video.

  • @mcd3379
    @mcd3379 Год назад +2

    Absolutely fascinating! Excellent video - thank you!

  • @GM8101PHX
    @GM8101PHX 4 месяца назад +1

    I went on the tour and was selected as the Commander and then tour guide ordered the two of us to turn the key at the count of 3. Alarms went off, and the process to launch the missile was under way!! You can not stop an missile once it is launched and pretty much guarantee a Soviet city would be wiped off the face of the planet!! I also served in SAC with the 92d Security Police Squadron, we had the B-52G on 15 minute nuclear ground alert. Thankfully no bomber or missiles from the Air Force or Navy were ever launched. Our motto was Peace Is Our Profession!! We collectively with the bomber bases, missile bases and the Navy's boomer submarines won the cold war without firing a shot in anger for 46 years!!!

  • @ashleystyles6888
    @ashleystyles6888 Год назад +1

    Great video. Thank you for the upload.

  • @rogersmith7396
    @rogersmith7396 Год назад +3

    I like the numerous watch for rattlesnakes signs. Yikes!

  • @TheBloodStripeArtist
    @TheBloodStripeArtist Год назад +3

    On the opposite side of the first blast door is a beautiful mural/patch of the SAC unit that operated this silo. Has a copper penny on it for the copper mine that this silo sits next to.

  • @simonr8323
    @simonr8323 Год назад +3

    Thanks for sharing, very interesting 👍

  • @chrisbeauchamp5563
    @chrisbeauchamp5563 Год назад +4

    This video is cool Paul and fits in with your normal Aircraft ones. I like it

  • @charlesachurch7265
    @charlesachurch7265 Год назад +1

    Fascinating presentation thanks xxx. Scary stuff!

  • @skovner
    @skovner Год назад +8

    Great video. And it explains why we moved to solid fuel rockets. They don't need to be refueled, and are hard to iginite, so no accidents.
    So much 1960's technology. I do have to ask if it has the old military equipment smell.
    I do think the tunnels remind me of the Stargate SG-1 series.

  • @CNC295
    @CNC295 Год назад +1

    Thank you for what you do.

  • @docbrown9018
    @docbrown9018 Год назад +4

    My favorite ICBM 👍

  • @allezvenga7617
    @allezvenga7617 Год назад +2

    Thanks for your sharing

  • @davesherman74
    @davesherman74 Год назад +3

    Well worth a visit, my wife and I visited earlier this year. She got drafted to turn the missile launch key!

    • @GM8101PHX
      @GM8101PHX 4 месяца назад

      She was either the deputy commander or the commander, I was selected as the commander on my tour!

  • @marceloccarmello7978
    @marceloccarmello7978 Год назад +1

    Thank you for sharing.

  • @legendhasit2568
    @legendhasit2568 Год назад +1

    Another great video! Well done 👍

  • @Stllno
    @Stllno Год назад +2

    Very informative, thx for posting!

  • @OldmanGamerYT
    @OldmanGamerYT Год назад +2

    Great walkthrough! I really enjoyed this video! I hope to make it to the Titan Missile Museum one day. Thanks for sharing!

  • @rick5346
    @rick5346 Год назад +3

    Visited last month, kind of chilling to think that there are still functional missile bases such as this up in Northern US. Was a great tour and would recommend to everyone.

  • @michaeldavidson2767
    @michaeldavidson2767 Год назад +49

    There's a book and documentary called Command and Control that covers the incident in Arkansas. Pretty scary how close central Arkansas was to getting wiped off the map! Cool tour and awesome channel!

    • @johnt.4947
      @johnt.4947 Год назад +6

      The systems in place designed to arm and detonate the warhead are such that was never a danger of a nuclear explosion. Some radiation leakage is possible from physical damage to the RV, but the warhead(s) were armed through a series of events that, for instance, included it reentering the atmosphere before detonation could occur.

    • @stevevisscher1350
      @stevevisscher1350 Год назад +5

      I used to live in Arkansas with a retired Titan II Combat Missile Crew Commander and his wife. I remember him telling me the incident at Damascus, AR, wouldn’t have resulted in a nuclear detonation, although there may have been some risk of radiation leaking if the RV had been sufficiently damaged. Interestingly, the missile involved in that mishap at silo 373-7 at Damascus, was the same one that had been installed in silo 373-4 in Searcy, about 30 miles east, which caught fire in 1965.

    • @SilverSergeant
      @SilverSergeant Год назад

      Except that is bogus, Why do people keep repeating this garbage.

    • @colinstewart1432
      @colinstewart1432 Год назад

      Was this the infamous spanner ( wrench ) incident? That one had the Angels worried

    • @mcallenbell2279
      @mcallenbell2279 Год назад +1

      Eric Schlosser..same guy who wrote fast food nation

  • @markwng
    @markwng Год назад +3

    Interesting subject

  • @lidarman2
    @lidarman2 Год назад +2

    "Turn your key Sir!" Great tour. Thanks.

  • @jooei2810
    @jooei2810 Год назад +3

    Now is a good time to say that I really like your channel, just the other day was the first time I saw your content and was instantly hooked! Thanks!

  • @mc171
    @mc171 Год назад +2

    What a great channel brother so glad I found it. I've always loved aviation and these videos are great. Keep up the good work!

  • @picardbs
    @picardbs Год назад +2

    Fascinating

  • @jamieshardlow1486
    @jamieshardlow1486 Год назад +2

    Nice video. I've recently re-read Eric Schlosser's Command And Control of which a large part covers the accident you refer to. So it's nice to be able to put some visuals to the descriptions. Thanks!

  • @maximusbavarius
    @maximusbavarius 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for upload, !

  • @Rheilffordd
    @Rheilffordd Год назад +3

    I greatly enjoy your aircraft tour videos, this one however is absolutely next level and I greatly enjoyed this one more! I'm not even a Military fiend yet I found it interesting. So thanks!

  • @DexterSkelter
    @DexterSkelter Год назад +3

    Soooo Cool!!! 😃

  • @gabrielorigega4753
    @gabrielorigega4753 Год назад +3

    Been here before I appreciate you for showing what arizona offers and the little secrets we have stored around arizona

  • @henrycook1474
    @henrycook1474 Год назад +3

    I want to this museum a couple of months ago and let me just say, it was incredible.
    I would highly recommend it to anyone nearby
    One of my favorite museums of all time

  • @marekeos
    @marekeos Год назад +8

    BTW, forgot to tell you how well done your videos are. Excellent narration, good info, no useless babbling or self aggrandizing and good videography. From an aviation photographer myself, thumbs up and a sub!

    • @PaulStewartAviation
      @PaulStewartAviation  Год назад

      Thanks. I try to be factual and avoid talking about myself too much

  • @Taskforce1
    @Taskforce1 Год назад +3

    imo one of the coolest parts of american military history - something mysterious.
    makes me wonder what sorta similar sites we may have set up nowdays.

  • @applejacks971
    @applejacks971 Год назад +3

    I finally got to visit the Minute Man visitor center in western South Dakota last year. Really interesting stuff! They had the under ground silo tours closed at the time (which were at a different location 2 mile away) but the main center was worth the visit.
    The silo's are 1/2 mile off the interstate and not even hidden. If you didn't know what the little building and mound of dirt was 'over in that pasture', you'd totally pass it off as an abandoned farm from the 1920's with only a single out building left standing.
    The movie 'The Day After' still makes me nervous when I watch it.

  • @scottdrums2128
    @scottdrums2128 Год назад +2

    There is a Titan 2 display also at Evergreen aviation and space museum in McMinnville, Oregon. They run a simulated launch there as well. Crazy scary stuff.

  • @Ronaldl2350
    @Ronaldl2350 Год назад +3

    I was just there last month. I was the missile commander in the launch simulation. The place is neat.

  • @AC_702
    @AC_702 Год назад +2

    I've always wanted to visit one of those, since my home state of Nevada was the country's nuclear testing ground. Sobering to see one, and excellent video, as always!

  • @MenwithPurpose2012
    @MenwithPurpose2012 10 месяцев назад +1

    This is absolutely insane what man has been able to create.

  • @user-oh4on8ln1f
    @user-oh4on8ln1f 3 месяца назад +1

    great video

  • @pi.actual
    @pi.actual 4 месяца назад +2

    We took the tour last summer. You forgot to tell what they were to do after launching the missile. They were to wait for orders and if no orders came after 30 days and they were still alive they would leave the facility through an escape tunnel and attempt to reach a rendezvous point in the nearby mountains. Pretty spooky stuff.

  • @chrismoody1342
    @chrismoody1342 Год назад +2

    I toured the Rock Ks silo in 73’ as a field trip for and aeronautics class in my high school. I basically saw everything you did except the static displays of warhead, engines and fueling truck in my tour. The details are a bit foggy, after all it’s been 40 years ago. But even as high schooler it was super interesting and a bit ominous.
    Being a Boomer brings a lot of other memories from the 60’-63’ time period. That’s pretty heady stuff for an early school age student in grades K-3. The whole civil defense bug out shelters on a civilian scale were indeed a real thing. Most ominous of all was the issuance of dog tags incase I was obliterated in a nuclear exchange.
    After all Wichita was a major target because of a SAC Air Base with a squadron of B-47 and B52 nuclear bombers and ICBM ‘s commands within city limits. Nuclear bombers have been there till the mid-late 90’s. My next door neighbor was a SAC B2 Pilots till the the B2’s moved elsewhere. And then there was the aerospace brain trust and workforce of Boeing Military being there. To think that there were only 4 AFB’s in the whole of the US and Wichita was ringed with 18 of these bad boys all within 30 minute drive. Happy we all made it thru those years. Hope clear minds continue prevail for many many more years.

  • @TAllyn-qr3io
    @TAllyn-qr3io Год назад +2

    I am a Navy veteran and retired Army. While in the Navy, in the 80’s, as a sonar technician, was stationed aboard d DDG. We had ASROC’s and Nuclear missiles. I was part of the Nuclear Weapons Handling Team. Also on the 2-man rule team for the missile house. The biggest responsibility of all of this was being in the PRP. Personal Reliability Program. Which was pretty close to what the two members in the missile silo’s were part of. Extreme confidence was placed on us and we had to be morally sound, no psych issues and no chemical dependence.

    • @GM8101PHX
      @GM8101PHX 4 месяца назад

      This also counted for Security Police both missile and bombers, if you suspected someone of having issues you reported it to your flight chief as soon as possible!!! As a Security Police supervisor I could relieve an airman of duty if I noticed problems or they were reported to me.

  • @pixelfehler1111
    @pixelfehler1111 Год назад +1

    Keep making these!

  • @mrsmith4662
    @mrsmith4662 Год назад +2

    What a construction.

  • @themastrofall
    @themastrofall Год назад +2

    Saw the mountains in the background and new it was Arizona instantly, hope you enjoyed the views and weather during your time here!

    • @GM8101PHX
      @GM8101PHX 4 месяца назад

      Those to the north are the Santa Catalina Mountains, closer by and to the east are the Santa Rita Mountains!!!

  • @newflyer6837
    @newflyer6837 Год назад +13

    I guess there were a lot of systems built into the launch process to avoid an world destroying chain reaction. But it also seemed very simple. I guess it had to be done quickly! Imagine the terror those young officers would have had every time that alarm went off!!

    • @jfbeam
      @jfbeam Год назад

      Actually, there's surprisingly little _technology_ preventing a "rogue launch". It was almost entirely down to the the two people down in that hole. If the stories are correct, the code they were later required to install was set to "00000" for a great many years, out of spite. (How dare the POTUS not trust his missile command!)

    • @Leoluvesadmira
      @Leoluvesadmira 10 месяцев назад

      There one code for the butterfly valve and it is 16 to the sixth power and you had six tries to enter the code so on the seventh one even if you got it right the missile would commit electronic suicide and the CO would be in trouble

  • @Doug_Dimmadome
    @Doug_Dimmadome Год назад +2

    I love 4k because I can stop the video and easily read the signs as he walks.

    • @PaulStewartAviation
      @PaulStewartAviation  Год назад +1

      Agreed! Sometimes if I forget to take a photo of the signs on my phone, i can pause the video and still read the text

  • @cmcb7230
    @cmcb7230 Год назад +2

    Terrifyingly scary yet so interesting

  • @mcds54
    @mcds54 Год назад +3

    I did the tour and placed my hand on the key.. awesome... and terrifying. The launch doors are permanently fixed at half open so Russian satellites can verify that it's no longer a threat. The missile is huge!

  • @markclark1654
    @markclark1654 Год назад +3

    Thanks for a great video! Your explanations were excellent, and I enjoyed it. In answer to some questions, we were never terrified about messages, as we quickly determined that it was a test. We weren't bored, lots to do and we kept busy and had fun too. Major Mark Clark, Senior DMCCC at MCAFB and LRAFB, 1984-1987.

    • @arkadyfolkner
      @arkadyfolkner Год назад

      Thank you for your service, Major Clark!

  • @michaelgrey7854
    @michaelgrey7854 Год назад +2

    There is even an old Titan base that has been converted into a B&B that would be cool to stay in!

    • @arkadyfolkner
      @arkadyfolkner Год назад

      Vilonia, Arkansas - the Titan Ranch ;) I so want to go stay there.

  • @emilysmith3446
    @emilysmith3446 Год назад +2

    This is a fantastic tour of the signt, im making a game based of the missile explosion in Damascus and this video is a fantastic reference, thank you for this

    • @kbanghart
      @kbanghart 4 месяца назад

      How's the game coming along?

  • @maxdamage1983
    @maxdamage1983 Год назад +3

    One note on the fuel valve-code. For a long time after the code for the fuel was implemented, the correct code was "00000000" as SAC had some major trust issues...

  • @mer2705
    @mer2705 8 месяцев назад +2

    I wish you could have gotten footage of how the missile is suspended in the silo. I've always wondered about that

  • @Bad_Karma1968
    @Bad_Karma1968 Год назад +2

    Paul as always a great vlog !
    Shopping for a new home ? Apparently it is a popular thing to do buy an old silo and convert it