Why Airbus Nearly Didn’t Happen: The A300 Story

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  • Опубликовано: 28 янв 2025

Комментарии • 4,3 тыс.

  • @MustardChannel
    @MustardChannel  5 лет назад +6024

    Hey guys... looks like Mr. Mustard needs some new glasses. A couple spelling errors on the map slipped in. It's "Colombia" not "Columbia" and "Sao Paulo" not "Sao Paolo". Sorry my South American friends.

    • @Seatux
      @Seatux 5 лет назад +197

      Tad more disappointing than a Columbia Hospital opening in my area. Was hoping for attractive looking healthcare professionals....

    • @onenerdarmy
      @onenerdarmy 5 лет назад +98

      It's ok for the past 500 years every continent besides South America has been apologizing to South America. See: Spain, USA, UK, Portugal, even Russia by extension...I could go on and on!

    • @joeyvanostrand3655
      @joeyvanostrand3655 5 лет назад +57

      Those fuckers don't speak English so it doesn't matter anyways.

    • @ferko28
      @ferko28 5 лет назад +53

      Classic American mistakes.

    • @aduptuniform2647
      @aduptuniform2647 5 лет назад +13

      LOOL, all good

  • @GrimHijinks
    @GrimHijinks 5 лет назад +7759

    When you go down a random youtube recommendation rabbithole and suddenly you've binge watched two hours of aviation videos.

    • @mr.whatever1492
      @mr.whatever1492 5 лет назад +106

      Same here. 🤣

    • @the3am368
      @the3am368 5 лет назад +167

      Its normal shit for me I’m an aviation geek

    • @mr.whatever1492
      @mr.whatever1492 5 лет назад +36

      @@the3am368 now I want to specialise in aviation law. I can't be a pilot or owner of airlines but aviation lawyer for sure. 😍😌

    • @the3am368
      @the3am368 5 лет назад +27

      Akash Chandra you could be a pilot if you wanted to, it’s not that hard to get a license, it’s like going it the dmv and doing your drivers test for 1-3 hours at a time for half a year

    • @About37Hobos
      @About37Hobos 4 года назад +4

      Avenger SAME!

  • @cedricye1767
    @cedricye1767 5 лет назад +5669

    Boeing: "Just a normal government airplane maker."
    Airbus: "Hold my free samples."

    • @FindLiberty
      @FindLiberty 5 лет назад +45

      lol

    • @jacobnathanielzpayag3885
      @jacobnathanielzpayag3885 5 лет назад +300

      Guess we now know why free samples at grocery stores are really essential

    • @Le_Flatfish
      @Le_Flatfish 5 лет назад +10

      Omg WOW

    • @EdgyNumber1
      @EdgyNumber1 5 лет назад +54

      @@jacobnathanielzpayag3885 Of course, free samples still have to be good quality and hopefully not magically fly out of your hands and splat on the floor.......

    • @Brosk1s
      @Brosk1s 5 лет назад +129

      @@EdgyNumber1 except with Boeing, you have to pay for the privilege of your planes splatting on the ground and eventually having the entire fleet grounded

  • @danielcuevas5899
    @danielcuevas5899 5 лет назад +4491

    >Mocks government programs.
    >Is the largest government contractor.

    • @dynamo1796
      @dynamo1796 5 лет назад +480

      Boeing : "LOL, typical govt programmes, nothing happening there"
      Also Boeing Aerospace Defence: "Hue Hue Hue!!"

    • @seneca983
      @seneca983 5 лет назад +82

      Maybe they considered themselves an atypical government program.

    • @johniii8147
      @johniii8147 5 лет назад +182

      Boeing wasn’t going to make it without all the business from WWII. Even the 747 had a large chunk of its development costs funded by a failed bid on a military cargo aircraft

    • @cancelanime1507
      @cancelanime1507 5 лет назад +9

      Chris Goodall Lockheed is better

    • @nobilesnovushomo58
      @nobilesnovushomo58 5 лет назад +133

      >Be Lockheed Martin
      >Start as civilian airliner
      >become military
      >Be used by military
      >Monopolize large portion of military industry as a reliable company
      >Be surprised American as one F35 costs more than Swedish submarine that sank entire Carrier.
      >Monopolize space contracts.
      >When exclusively used as part of ULA (Also Boeing) for most part by government to make rockets, gets beat by a 20 year start up Space-X in likewise manner, that goes to mars on Rocket that's half the cost of what ULA use to get into orbit.

  • @BandanRRChannel
    @BandanRRChannel 4 года назад +1937

    As I recall, Boeing had been asking the FAA to change the 60-minute ETOPS rule for twin engine jets so they could market the in-development 757. Except when the change occurred, the 757 wasn't ready yet...but the A300 was.
    Boeing literally threw its competition the lifeline it needed to survive. BY ACCIDENT.

    • @osasunaitor
      @osasunaitor 3 года назад +210

      That's interesting, Boeing seems convinced in making their rivals' lives easier thanks to their own mistakes. The Bombardier C-Series, now A220, is a recent example of that

    • @dasovietpotato3784
      @dasovietpotato3784 2 года назад +42

      I doubt that the 757 would have filled the same role of the a300, simply because of the 757 being a narrow body airliner.

    • @BandanRRChannel
      @BandanRRChannel 2 года назад +25

      @@dasovietpotato3784 Hmm, true. Maybe I'm confusing it with the 767? More research needed...

    • @dasovietpotato3784
      @dasovietpotato3784 2 года назад +34

      Just for the clarification, all of Boeing's narrow body air liners are the 707, 727, 737, and 757. All of Boeing's wide body airliners are the 747, 767, 777, and 787.

    • @Dill_Pickle1997
      @Dill_Pickle1997 2 года назад

      Ha ha

  • @katherinealexr.h.chandler337
    @katherinealexr.h.chandler337 5 лет назад +149

    Mustard videos are simply amazing. Staggering visuals, video isnt too long yet isnt too short, long enough to compile the right information and to keep people to watching the video rather than skipping

  • @FamousDMagnificent
    @FamousDMagnificent 5 лет назад +474

    The day is immediately nicer when there’s a new Mustard video.

  • @Twiggy163
    @Twiggy163 3 года назад +2070

    "The A300 is a typical government airplane"
    -Boeing Exec.
    So is pretty much the entire Boeing company.

    • @pguth98
      @pguth98 2 года назад +159

      The entire Boeing company, as it exists now, is a Bruh Moment.

    • @coolcatmeow77
      @coolcatmeow77 2 года назад +95

      Boeing like every other once venerable company is being run by bean counters instead of engineers.

    • @Rookie_One
      @Rookie_One 2 года назад +62

      @@coolcatmeow77 it has been said that McDonell-Douglas bought Boeing with Boeing own money

    • @ColonizedEthan
      @ColonizedEthan 2 года назад +2

      @@Rookie_One huh?

    • @Rookie_One
      @Rookie_One 2 года назад +81

      @@ColonizedEthan basically, once Boeing bought MD and the two company merged, the bean-counters management that came from MD managed to take control of Boeing, instead of boeing own engineering-oriented management keeping control

  • @Kukus-xy3gi
    @Kukus-xy3gi 5 лет назад +1459

    Boeing: airbus is unproven and will go out of business after a few weeks
    Airbus: laughs in A-330 & A-320

    • @DC.402
      @DC.402 5 лет назад +27

      A380

    • @wellhello4858
      @wellhello4858 5 лет назад +52

      Official D Clarke ATL a380 failed

    • @DC.402
      @DC.402 5 лет назад +23

      @@wellhello4858 I know but thankfully it's still flying with us for the next 30 years or so

    • @wellhello4858
      @wellhello4858 5 лет назад +33

      Official D Clarke ATL I’m not sure the airbus a380 and Boeing 747 will survive for much longer, small, efficient planes may take over

    • @DC.402
      @DC.402 5 лет назад +1

      @@wellhello4858 it's wait and see

  • @krrk6337
    @krrk6337 5 лет назад +1565

    I really dig your graphic style. I'd watch even if you make a video about a garbage truck.

    • @1nadjmi1
      @1nadjmi1 5 лет назад +106

      @@metanumia indeed, a review of garbage truck design and history is most likely very interesting

    • @trolloler5954
      @trolloler5954 5 лет назад +89

      Mustard we want a history of garbage trucks video

    • @brendanpospischil3871
      @brendanpospischil3871 5 лет назад +15

      I'm sure that a video explaining the complex mechanics involved.

    • @mikegaskin5542
      @mikegaskin5542 5 лет назад +14

      There are whole channels on RUclips dedicated to garbage-truck spotting...none of us should be surprised

    • @deanc9453
      @deanc9453 5 лет назад +1

      +

  • @average7557
    @average7557 5 лет назад +4097

    Boeing in 1973: bruh they gonna die soon lol
    Boeing in 2019: *NO HAVE MERCY HAVE MERCY*

    • @average7557
      @average7557 5 лет назад +522

      @@jeshkam K

    • @apotato5563
      @apotato5563 5 лет назад +30

      Boeing easly still gets out of the 737M7/8/9/10

    • @m2heavyindustries378
      @m2heavyindustries378 5 лет назад +310

      @@jeshkam Just like the 737 Max

    • @iain3713
      @iain3713 5 лет назад +88

      Shawn Esquilona no they both care about money lol, it’s a business

    • @flybyairplane3528
      @flybyairplane3528 5 лет назад +6

      Shawn Esquilona ARBUS, HAS ITS PROBLEMS, BUT WITH THEM ITS always SOFTWARE RELATED, THE A230 NEO, seems to have a BALANCE PROBLEM ie; LUFTHANSA, has STOPPED SELLING TICKETS FOR THE LAST 2 ROWS OF SEATS!!, THENit seems ALL, their engine problems, causing engine replacements, NOW SAY, ITS A SOFTWARE PROBLEM. , in several models.the company HATES PILOTS, they wold Pd to ALWAYS CONTROL ITS PLANE BY COMPUTERS, SAYING , IT CAN FLY THEIR PLANES BETTER THAN ANY PILOT, JUST REMEMBER AF 449, CHEERS FROM NJ.USA🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @dalebrown322
    @dalebrown322 4 года назад +111

    I was in the first class of A-300 pilots from the US and was trained at the factory in Toulouse. It was a great airplane and did a fantastic job in the wide body class. One of the great things we could fly the aircraft from JFK to San Juan, PR or ATL to LGA and land this wide body on a 6000 foot runway. It was just a great flying no nonsense airplane.

  • @PHRCpvh
    @PHRCpvh 4 года назад +2119

    Boeing in the 70s: "Airbus is going to fail"
    Airbus today: Full stonks with the A320neo.
    Boeing today: The whole company is on fire after the 737 Max.

    • @clevergirl4457
      @clevergirl4457 4 года назад +241

      that what happens when you care more about the money and the bling-bling than the actual freaking passengers who are going to fly on your planes! lol, i feel like Boeing deserves all the consequences they're getting

    • @charlie7mason
      @charlie7mason 4 года назад +156

      @@clevergirl4457 They deserve worse, and I say that as someone who literally spent nearly 3 decades defending them (typical if it ain't boeing...stuff). Both them and the FAA should just be dissolved. They failed at the most essential task and responsibility and should not be allowed to exist anymore.

    • @clevergirl4457
      @clevergirl4457 4 года назад +110

      CharlieMason yeah, but you seem to be forgetting about the workers, the innovators, the engineers etc. I want Boeing to become a company led by engineers again, not out of touch money hungry businesspeople

    • @mejoargreen
      @mejoargreen 4 года назад +20

      I want boeing to go back to the oldish days like the 767 and before cuz I only really like Boeing up to the 767. Anything after I'm not really a fan of. With airbus I only like the a340 and the a330

    • @charlie7mason
      @charlie7mason 4 года назад +24

      @@clevergirl4457 You're right. That is exactly what I want them to be as well and have said so in many comments myself. It's just frustrating that they would let bean counters make decisions involving life and death. Suits never see anyone as people, just a number and a value.

  • @Yautah
    @Yautah 5 лет назад +1625

    Mustard + Airbus ? Is this Christmas already ?

    • @everettrailfan
      @everettrailfan 5 лет назад +13

      Wdym? I want another video on Boeing. If it ain't Boeing, I ain't going. I'd even fly on a 737 MAX, even if I didn't have to.

    • @firewolf1814
      @firewolf1814 5 лет назад +29

      @@everettrailfan Airbus vs Boeing is stupidly petty. Each company has had its highs and its lows. They're companies. Both make good generally reliable jets. It really shouldn't matter which company you're flying so much as if it can get you from point A to point B at a price you can comfortably afford.

    • @Optimaloptimus
      @Optimaloptimus 5 лет назад +7

      RailfanReaper I would fly on a Max 737 too. Cause the 737 is still the safest jet on the bloody planet.

    • @AviTheWolf
      @AviTheWolf 5 лет назад +1

      #boeing4life

    • @Raditram
      @Raditram 5 лет назад +71

      @@Optimaloptimus The 737 Max is currently the safest jet on earth, cos it's not flying.

  • @Chris0-58
    @Chris0-58 3 года назад +200

    8:27
    "...the move was nothing short of genius."
    Clarkson: I'm staggered.

    • @straightbusta2609
      @straightbusta2609 3 года назад +15

      His genius is frightening... Really

    • @SimonBauer7
      @SimonBauer7 10 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@straightbusta2609it creates gravity.

  • @JimKirk1
    @JimKirk1 5 лет назад +3134

    Last time I was this early, Convair was still making planes
    Edit: Wao that's a lotta likes, thanks y'all

    • @beepthemeep12
      @beepthemeep12 5 лет назад +13

      Oh my god. It's you. Ethan

    • @JimKirk1
      @JimKirk1 5 лет назад +4

      @@beepthemeep12 *Mild surprise*

    • @abandonedchannel281
      @abandonedchannel281 5 лет назад +7

      Last time I was this early, Boeing hasn’t been established.

    • @revolver265
      @revolver265 5 лет назад +21

      Last time I was this early, the Midwest wasn't covered with the shrapnel from cargo doors.

    • @Luke-bf1wt
      @Luke-bf1wt 5 лет назад +1

      @@revolver265 dc-10

  • @alvishuang3699
    @alvishuang3699 4 года назад +1050

    Mustard: “This video was made possible by curiousity stream”
    No, mustard, it was made possible by Airbus

  • @Tank67_
    @Tank67_ 5 лет назад +540

    See you guys in 2 months

    • @kamaking6284
      @kamaking6284 5 лет назад +8

      Lmaooo

    • @mgabrysSF
      @mgabrysSF 5 лет назад +63

      It's worth the wait. It's so worth the wait.

    • @hamzaghazi
      @hamzaghazi 5 лет назад +6

      Yup let's see if I haven't hanged myself in the next 2 months

    • @matsv201
      @matsv201 5 лет назад

      Oooh... a optimist.. i like that

    • @hamzaghazi
      @hamzaghazi 5 лет назад

      @@matsv201 you Know I just got my GCSE results and I have realized that life is just gonna keep on sucking. Might as well look at my options

  • @themomentchannel3498
    @themomentchannel3498 3 года назад +415

    I guess boeing didn’t expect airbus to become their biggest rival, like the A320 NEO was carefully designed to replace older A320’s, as soon as boeing found out that the NEO series were becoming popular they designed the 737 Max in a big rush, result: 2 fatal crashes caused by design flaws and the company losing billions of dollars and losing trust in their newest product

    • @gloriousposter9296
      @gloriousposter9296 3 года назад +1

      Loopy Europeans created a short hauler with huge capacity. The airlines couldn't fill the seats. But they got lucky, twin jets were allowed to fly transatlantic routes.

    • @gloriousposter9296
      @gloriousposter9296 3 года назад +1

      hi

    • @stegx2853
      @stegx2853 3 года назад +5

      what actually happened is American Airlines ordered the 737 max before boeing announced the 797 nma and then boeing said that they will ditch the 797 and build the 737max

    • @cameosix7077
      @cameosix7077 3 года назад +37

      @@gloriousposter9296 at least those European planes fly without killing me, unlike American ones...

    • @kiraasuka9943
      @kiraasuka9943 2 года назад +18

      boeing is an US government subsidiary now. It doesn't matter for executives if the company loses billions on paper and trust coz their salary pack remain unchanged

  • @katout75
    @katout75 5 лет назад +32

    Frank Kolk (Chief Engineer and later CEO) of American Airlines was extremely influential in defining the requirements for the A300. He spent entire day (they worked past midnight) with Béteille and his team defining the wide body twin he thought was the idea long haul ~250 passenger airliners with standard cargo containers in the lower fuselage. Kolk really didn't want the 747/DC-10/L1011 for operating cost, but was forced into it by the late 60's ETOPS rules. In the end what Kolk wanted is what is defining long haul commercial air travel today the 767/777/787/A300/A330/A350 do today. Kolk had amazing vision in the mid/late sixties.

    • @MrMarinus18
      @MrMarinus18 Год назад +1

      The 767 really is just a Boeing's version of the A300 with just enough different to avoid any potential lawsuit.

    • @michaelkevinmirasol8256
      @michaelkevinmirasol8256 Год назад +3

      The Airbus indeed is the pioneer of widebody twin-jet series that even Boeing once ridiculed, not struggling to keep up. So far upon the introduction of A350 as direct competitor of B777x and B787, there are no recalls, grounding, incidents and even crashes of the type.

  • @Ms24richard
    @Ms24richard 5 лет назад +289

    OMG Finally a new video from you!!
    I love them so much!! :)

  • @stenjoearu6010
    @stenjoearu6010 5 лет назад +26

    With all of the drama and thousands of just moneygrabbing clickbait channels, your channel is one of the best on RUclips and from the first video ever, I can't help, but to just binge your videos over and over again. They are so informational and just pretty to look at. The animations are so good and insanely realistic. Thank you so much for the effort you put in these videos.

    • @JostVanWair
      @JostVanWair 5 лет назад +2

      I can think of a few clickbait channels, Kurzgesagt (or however the fuck you spell that) In a nutshell, Bright Side, Smart Banana (made by the dude who created bright side so he could steal thumbnails etc) The infographics show, oh so many

    • @vehicleboi5598
      @vehicleboi5598 4 года назад +2

      Waird One
      Wait, kurzgesagt is clickbaity? I must be living in a cave!

    • @gsyt2356
      @gsyt2356 Год назад +1

      ​@@JostVanWair kurzgesat is a clickbait channel???

    • @JostVanWair
      @JostVanWair Год назад

      @@gsyt2356 Pal you're replying to a comment made 3 years ago. I don't really have an opinion on them anymore

  • @davasaurthereal4678
    @davasaurthereal4678 5 лет назад +633

    RIP Fokker, they had a nice long run
    1912-1996

    • @jox8334
      @jox8334 5 лет назад +27

      Davasaur The Real still quite a lot flying in Australia and Brazil

    • @godfreypoon5148
      @godfreypoon5148 5 лет назад +27

      @@jox8334 Can confirm, many many flights. F70 and F100 are good solid aircraft.

    • @godfreypoon5148
      @godfreypoon5148 5 лет назад +12

      @@ipoopalottm5979 Yes, curse the fokkers who crashed that business into the ground. Their profits were sky high but I guess they must have given their competent managers a window seat.

    • @fryphillipj560
      @fryphillipj560 5 лет назад +8

      They live on in the Bus of the Air

    • @aqimjulayhi8798
      @aqimjulayhi8798 5 лет назад +5

      I've been on a Fokker 50 several times. The name Fokker itself brings back so many childhood memories.

  • @impinas
    @impinas 3 года назад +55

    That gift to the airline was a fine example of thinking-out-of-the-box. Airbus did a miracle. And they did it again, buying the Bombardier C-Series. From one day to the next they got a brilliant aircraft of the future, a future that commands for small and efficient planes!

  • @madingwang7778
    @madingwang7778 5 лет назад +375

    Everyone in the 70s and 80s: Airbus will go bankrupt
    *BOY WERE THEY WRONG!*

    • @lettuce7378
      @lettuce7378 5 лет назад +12

      odds1out reference? 1 like for you.

    • @vieuxbal1253
      @vieuxbal1253 5 лет назад +7

      They were completely wrong, you mean.

    • @GroundHOG-2010
      @GroundHOG-2010 5 лет назад +35

      The thing was, the American aviation community was kind of correct. They had seen Concorde and many other government run aviation projects go out the window really quickly. Some more examples of course include the 2707, and several aircraft by the Brabazon Committee. Airbus was just another one of these technologically advanced but not well enough supported aircraft. Not to mention that at this point you still had every manufacturer being separate and all the politics that includes. It was risky of course. It just so happened that the aircraft was well designed and the political issues of the day lead to it being a winner and selling a lot. This is one of those "hindsight is 20/20" sort of moments.

    • @apollocreed2089
      @apollocreed2089 5 лет назад +10

      Of course they didn’t. They’re essentially a government entity.

    • @UndeadPorcupine
      @UndeadPorcupine 5 лет назад +4

      Everyone in the 30's and 40's: "North American Aviation is unstoppable, they will always be number 1!"

  • @Sushi2735
    @Sushi2735 Год назад +8

    I flew that plane when working for Eastern Airlines! We all loved that plane! The passengers loved it and it never broke! No nasty mechanical delays. So comfortable to fly on ❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @FlyLeah
    @FlyLeah 3 года назад +104

    So airbus was an underdog story. That just made me respect them even more.

  • @rajgurtata7826
    @rajgurtata7826 4 года назад +121

    The mother of all widebody twinjets, the entire industry basically follows the form factor the A300 pioneered - respect

  • @jnb894
    @jnb894 5 лет назад +79

    Can't wait to have a notification from your channel for a video about the Avro Arrow!
    But still, as usual, awesome video with an impressive quality!

    • @vieuxbal1253
      @vieuxbal1253 5 лет назад +2

      You have my vote! I made the same suggestion several months ago.

    • @GhostlyMeows
      @GhostlyMeows 5 лет назад +3

      Yes. I would love for him to do the Arrow. Would be an amazing topic to cover.

    • @gordophoto
      @gordophoto 5 лет назад +3

      YES! a Mustard video on the Arrow would be awesome.

    • @cyal8eravi8or57
      @cyal8eravi8or57 5 лет назад

      I want a video on the TSR-2.

  • @YearsOfLeadPoisoning
    @YearsOfLeadPoisoning 5 лет назад +435

    The texture/bump mapping on that top-down view of the wooden table is freaking wonderful. What render engine are you using?

    • @aeromartin7175
      @aeromartin7175 5 лет назад +25

      He once said Sketchup, but he's slowly switching to Blender.

    • @Red-Magic
      @Red-Magic 5 лет назад +46

      I'd imagine Blender. I've used it for years, and honestly, it's a miracle Blender is EVEN free!

    • @thetimewalrus7424
      @thetimewalrus7424 5 лет назад +12

      @@aeromartin7175 i mean that does not really say the render engine although if he is using blender it's most likely cycles

    • @SimplySpace
      @SimplySpace 5 лет назад +1

      @@thetimewalrus7424 Or EEVEE

    • @jensenraylight8011
      @jensenraylight8011 5 лет назад

      real-time render probably, look at on the render result, it has a bit of PBR characteristics

  • @SteveWilde
    @SteveWilde 5 лет назад +13

    It's a Mustard day! Yay! I remember seeing the first A300B on the tarmac at Toulouse when I toured the facility a few years back. It was great to see Airbus keeping its historical first on display for everyone to still see. Also another great video from the Mustard team. Thanks.

    • @sytrxrainz3769
      @sytrxrainz3769 2 года назад

      Sorry to burst your bubble but aircraft in Toulouse in the original house colours is not the prototype but a former Pan Am/DHL example preserved by Airbus.

  • @EmeraldForester777
    @EmeraldForester777 4 года назад +24

    I remember being on an Airbus as a kid. One of the most memorable flights of my life so far. It’s either that or my mentally grueling first flight over the Atlantic in a 757.

  • @DivyangOza7998
    @DivyangOza7998 5 лет назад +38

    Man the animations are just top notch. Sometime I really thought that "was it really the animation or just the real footage!!!".
    Hatsoff to the VFX/Animation whoever made it. 😍😍

    • @liu7
      @liu7 5 лет назад +2

      Mustard does all of the 3D models himself

  • @infinitecanadian
    @infinitecanadian 5 лет назад +174

    In my country, we had an airliner programme to be built by Bombardier. This was failing, so Airbus stepped in and are helping us go against Boeing. Thanks, Airbus!

    • @Planefan1000
      @Planefan1000 2 года назад +23

      Are you talking about the Bombardier C-Series / Airbus A220? Nowadays, I think, Bombardier builds it and Airbus sells it

    • @infinitecanadian
      @infinitecanadian 2 года назад +7

      @@Planefan1000 Yes.

    • @qibcentricsplayground2043
      @qibcentricsplayground2043 2 года назад

      ​@@Planefan1000 the A220 ones are the only ones that are made by Airbus in their US plants to work around the bribery US government got from Boeing that made foreign plane imports face heavy taxes (Bombardier decided to work with Airbus since the A220 will be a "made in america" plane so it would not have to face that enormous import taxes) .
      The rest of the world gets the C series and it's built in Bombardier plants in Canada like their other aircrafts.

    • @Rookie_One
      @Rookie_One 2 года назад +11

      @@Planefan1000 actually bombardier sold the factory and tooling to Airbus, bombardier don't have a take anymore in the program

    • @qwl4363
      @qwl4363 Год назад

      Especially when Boeing tried their legal bullshit on the CS/A220 series. A lot of planes sell lower than cost at the start to get traction going, boeing's argument was bogus bullshit.

  • @YusukeShirogane
    @YusukeShirogane 5 лет назад +1807

    Today Airbus is more successful than ever before. Well done by Europe.

    • @finnleithomczyk5292
      @finnleithomczyk5292 5 лет назад +104

      so proud of Europe.

    • @adamp.3739
      @adamp.3739 5 лет назад +53

      I'd even bet that if Scania came to North America, they'd be a roaring success also.

    • @adamp.3739
      @adamp.3739 5 лет назад +22

      @@dodecahedron1 Then what about a sort of Scania and Kenworth partnership, in which the chassis and bodywork would be made by Kenworth, but the gearboxes and engines by Scania?

    • @UnePintade
      @UnePintade 5 лет назад +10

      Well because it allies 3 of the 5 major planes builder in history

    • @yuuboi661
      @yuuboi661 5 лет назад +40

      @@adamp.3739 Well, Volvo is already selling quite a number of trucks in America

  • @linux_doggo
    @linux_doggo 5 лет назад +7

    I can't stress this enough, this channel deserves all the love it gets. High quality renders of maps and aircraft, well researched history and overall great narration on some of history's most interesting projects.

  • @thanosyf3632
    @thanosyf3632 5 лет назад +1149

    Trijets:exist
    Airbus:I'm going to end this man's whole career

    • @neeleshchithru6558
      @neeleshchithru6558 5 лет назад +7

      I wish there was more. Do u know how it failed so badly?

    • @jameskearsing9254
      @jameskearsing9254 5 лет назад +35

      Neelesh Gunawardena more expensive, fuel efficient engines on 2 engined aircraft were enough to fly around the whole world so designing a trijet with expensive fuel efficient engines would be a waste of money and also more dangerous (more crashes from trijets percentage wise)
      these arent the only reasons

    • @thanosyf3632
      @thanosyf3632 5 лет назад +27

      The DC-10 crashes has not to do with the trijet configuration, but more because of design flaws made by Douglas, rushing to sell the plane before Lockheed sell the L1011.But yes ,a twin jet is more economical in fuel efficiency and maintenance and has the same capabilities and safety that a trijet has

    • @mwbgaming28
      @mwbgaming28 5 лет назад +25

      @@jameskearsing9254 the L1011 was a trijet and it had a great safety record
      Blame McDonnell Douglas for the DC-10 debacle

    • @tiemen596
      @tiemen596 5 лет назад +15

      @@neeleshchithru6558 The trijet was the answer to regulations that prohibited twin engine jets from crossing the Atlantic (ETOPS). The regulations state that a plane needs to be within a certain range of an alternative airport in case of a single engine failure, at every point along the flight path. Progressively more reliable engines and better aircraft performance altogether caused those regulations to become less restrictive, paving the way for twin engine jets like the B767, B777 and A330 to replace the more thirsty trijets such as the DC-10 and MD-11 on the intercontinental routes.

  • @williamrobey1820
    @williamrobey1820 5 лет назад +1467

    I’m a simple man, I see a mustard video and click like.

  • @cymbalbell1270
    @cymbalbell1270 5 лет назад +175

    Mustard: *makes videos about planes and trains*
    Wendover: "wait, that's illegal"

    • @imblack011
      @imblack011 4 года назад

      HAI: *burns down the youtube office knowing that not only will he have to tolerate sitting next to the wendover guy, but also that weird aviation mustard ketchup guy*
      (btw this is a reference to a video of his, so if you don't get it you can swiftly move on)

  • @EuropeanRailfan-AM
    @EuropeanRailfan-AM 10 месяцев назад +13

    Boeing in 1970s: Hah, they won't survive for long.
    Boeing in 2024: Help the door fell off (but our executives will still get 100M$)

  • @supersoslox
    @supersoslox 5 лет назад +148

    Wendover Productions and Mustard should do a collaboration. They both LOVE airplanes lol...

    • @joeyknight8272
      @joeyknight8272 5 лет назад +4

      Yesss

    • @supersoslox
      @supersoslox 5 лет назад +2

      Anodyne Melody yaaass

    • @SouthernHerdsman
      @SouthernHerdsman 5 лет назад +2

      Their voice sounds the same. I doubt they're the same person, lol.

    • @scanida5070
      @scanida5070 5 лет назад +3

      *NOW THIS IS AN AVENGERS LEVEL REQUEST*

    • @manusmacgearailt667
      @manusmacgearailt667 5 лет назад +1

      Well the voice in both creator's videos sounds almost the exact same...it isn't the same person?

  • @shaun1293
    @shaun1293 5 лет назад +654

    747: *Exists*
    Tristar and DC:10: I’m about to ruin this whole man’s career.
    Airbus: hold my European beer.

    • @MarloSoBalJr
      @MarloSoBalJr 5 лет назад +20

      Hold my Dutch ale you mean

    • @903strikerunit
      @903strikerunit 5 лет назад +28

      Wasn't beer a European beverage from the start?

    • @plaz6973
      @plaz6973 5 лет назад +23

      @@903strikerunit No, Invented by the Egyptians

    • @903strikerunit
      @903strikerunit 5 лет назад +8

      @@plaz6973 thank you

    • @Marylandbrony
      @Marylandbrony 5 лет назад +7

      @@MarloSoBalJr Speaking of wish. I've only been drinking for a few months, and I'm a European beer loyalist despite being American.

  • @johnvining1489
    @johnvining1489 5 лет назад +5

    Love your work! Very pleasing, I can only imagine the details I overlook that make your videos flow seamlessly, like water flowing through a creek. Also appreciate the way you incorporate sponsors, peaks interest without taking away from your content. DEFINITELY worth a sub!!!!!!!!

  • @muzaffarmohamad
    @muzaffarmohamad 4 года назад +142

    A300 was actually the son of Concorde. It has brake-by-wire, composites structures, supercritical wings, wide cargo compartment 2 x LD3 containers, 2 man cockpit crew and later on, c g control by shifting fuel in the tailplane. It was the first twin engine widebody and the first to be certified as ETOPS ready. Later versions were offered with carbon brakes, a Concorde innovation. It possessed a big commonality with McDonell Douglas DC 10s namely using the same GE CF6-50 engines, same environmental control system by Garrett and the same Auxiliary Power Unit Garrett TSCP-700. And of course it has better fuel consumption, 2 engine vs 3 engines

    • @turricanedtc3764
      @turricanedtc3764 3 года назад +11

      Additionally, the sidestick/digital flight control system that went into the A320 and formed the basis of all subsequent Airbus types was originally prototyped in a Concorde test airframe (it was called the "mini-manche" experiment).

    • @Ben4A
      @Ben4A 3 года назад +2

      You both make me feel stupid

    • @osasunaitor
      @osasunaitor 3 года назад

      @@Ben4A don't worry, you are not alone my friend

    • @somedudethatripsplanetinha4221
      @somedudethatripsplanetinha4221 2 года назад

      Everyone reading the comment, please note he is referring to the Concorde prototypes (001 and 002)

    • @railfansunited
      @railfansunited Год назад

      PLANE LORE

  • @MostlyPennyCat
    @MostlyPennyCat 5 лет назад +96

    "nobody could commit to such a large project on their own"
    _VC10 cries in the corner_

    • @investorbloke
      @investorbloke 5 лет назад +9

      Exactly! The ultra-fast intercontinental VC-10 from British Vickers was in service years before the A300 was even designed. It still holds the fastest sub-sonic transatlantic time.

    • @hch1414
      @hch1414 5 лет назад +12

      The video just said, not competitive enough. VC10 was wickedly expensive for its 4 engines at the time where turbofan was considered cutting edge.

    • @MostlyPennyCat
      @MostlyPennyCat 5 лет назад +3

      Yeah but we still completed the project.
      In fact _just Vickers_ completed the project.
      Vickers just got fucked by whatever BA was called back then I forget.

    • @investorbloke
      @investorbloke 5 лет назад +4

      @@hch1414 The phrase "none had ever built a large airliner" was particularly nonsensical, as the long-serving VC-10 was larger and longer-range than the first Airbus. It was in service until the late 90's, so clearly a viable commercial aircraft. A larger Comet 5 was also in development in the 50's, but was superseded by the successful HS Trident and various 'large' prototypes of other types had also been built. The claim and implication by Mustard are clear: and both are erroneous as any brief research into 50's/60's British airliners will make obvious.

    • @michaelho4014
      @michaelho4014 4 года назад +2

      You guys are all wrong. What Mustard meant was that the individual European aircraft companies could never break even on their planes - get this in y’all heads. Combining their resources was the only viable gamble to ensure a universal plane would be made and hence sold profitably.

  • @brandscornerhk
    @brandscornerhk 4 года назад +83

    B thinking: How to get money from customers
    A thinking: How to make customers happy to make money

    • @matchesburn
      @matchesburn 4 года назад +7

      "Make customers happy"
      No one is thinking this in the airline industry.

    • @AA-sg2py
      @AA-sg2py 4 года назад +11

      @@matchesburn welp I think “customers” here is the airlines.

    • @thatonekid4717
      @thatonekid4717 3 года назад +3

      Boeing : stupid and greedy
      Airbus. : *intelligence*

  • @darkprose
    @darkprose 5 лет назад +5

    I love that you use modeling in your videos to make a realistic aircraft flying through the skies _and_ what looks like a plastic scale model that sits on a desk. I know they are both digital, but they look distinct. The realistic one looks like a real flying aircraft; the model version looks like a plastic replica. Well done.

  • @cptdutchy3108
    @cptdutchy3108 4 года назад +75

    Am I the only one who has rewatched this video like 10 times already?

  • @Booyaka9000
    @Booyaka9000 5 лет назад +864

    7:59
    "The A300 was out biggest new investment..."
    *Was given A300s for free*
    That's American bunsiness in a nutshell.

    • @brandonryan1218
      @brandonryan1218 5 лет назад +72

      Never underestimate Americans’ love of free samples.

    • @WangGanChang
      @WangGanChang 5 лет назад +19

      @@brandonryan1218 most be a costco shopper.

    • @scarecrow108productions7
      @scarecrow108productions7 5 лет назад +9

      *S T O N K S*

    • @flybyairplane3528
      @flybyairplane3528 5 лет назад +4

      Booyaka9000 because they could NOT PERFORM AS SAID, JUST ASK EASTERN, ( now defunct ) they were FLYING PIGS. They took forever to reach CRUISE,,THEY WERE NOT ECONOMICAL, AND THE AIR CONDITION IN FIRST MODELS REALLY SUCKED !

    • @saswin2757
      @saswin2757 5 лет назад

      Good spot.

  • @H4PPYx337
    @H4PPYx337 5 лет назад +12

    By far the best engineering channel on all of RUclips. I love the history and animation.

  • @kikivoorburg
    @kikivoorburg 5 лет назад +74

    My day is always better when you upload! Keep up the great videos!

    • @blue24angels
      @blue24angels 5 лет назад +1

      kikivoorburg same

    • @revolver265
      @revolver265 5 лет назад

      Definitely, I've just finished a massive virus cleanup on a client's laptop and made an entire Rainmeter suite so I'm wiped out, but I feel so much better now that Mustard's got something new. Been watching the SR71 video and others on repeat while I waited, haha

  • @Takerai-Higgs
    @Takerai-Higgs 3 года назад +1

    Nice micdonald Douglas dc10 Easter eggs in the background at 0:55 and some bits before that and later on in the video. Found it cool. Love learning new things thanks mustard.

  • @tahanaeem5133
    @tahanaeem5133 5 лет назад +260

    Airbus: struggles
    Eastern airlines: I’m gonna make this mans whole career

    • @EdgyNumber1
      @EdgyNumber1 5 лет назад +27

      And it was KAL that help kickstarter Airbus' career....

    • @storyflight8762
      @storyflight8762 4 года назад +21

      Korean air(KAL) bought 30 A300B4 and A300-600 before Eastern..

    • @nathroxer
      @nathroxer 4 года назад

      yay korean air

  • @jackwtanderson4679
    @jackwtanderson4679 5 лет назад +383

    Glad airbus survived, great competition for boeing

    • @MarloSoBalJr
      @MarloSoBalJr 5 лет назад +16

      Definitely is now with that whole 787 MAX B.S.

    • @KanyeTheGayFish69
      @KanyeTheGayFish69 5 лет назад +59

      MarloSoBalJr 787 max isn’t a thing dumbass. The 787 is one of the best planes ever created

    • @air-headedaviator1805
      @air-headedaviator1805 5 лет назад +1

      Nothing like sport to boost development

    • @jamesmb
      @jamesmb 5 лет назад +14

      @@KanyeTheGayFish69 apart from those battery problems

    • @TheWildChildJr
      @TheWildChildJr 5 лет назад +6

      @@KanyeTheGayFish69 787 max 8 is, and its a tin can with wings, it goes 5 feet and slams the groundm

  • @livethefuture2492
    @livethefuture2492 5 лет назад +170

    AIRBUS: "give it a try, and then tell me if it's good or not.
    not convinced? alright ill cut you a deal. the plane is available for FREE. And that's a great price! "
    yeah, you know the reference. don't deny it...

    • @aarontheaviationaddict3643
      @aarontheaviationaddict3643 5 лет назад +29

      Eastern Airlines: Hmm...okay, I think I'll give it a shot.
      *_Later...._*
      Eastern Airlines: OMG I'VE FALLEN IN LOVE WITH THIS PLANE!!! 😍💖✈️YO AIRBUS! WHERE U AT??? I'LL TAKE 23 MORE OF THOSE BIRDS FOR $778M!!!

    • @mrbones2235
      @mrbones2235 5 лет назад +29

      WHAAAT? YOU NEVER BOUGHT AN AIRBUS? PFFFFTT!

    • @niklas6576
      @niklas6576 5 лет назад +8

      yOu kNoW iTs FuN rIGhT??

    • @75yomu
      @75yomu 5 лет назад +2

      @@mrbones2235 *_WHAAAAAT?!?!?_*

    • @floseatyard8063
      @floseatyard8063 Год назад

      ​@AaronTheAviationAddict Boeing and airbus in a nutshell
      Pan am: yo boeing give us a big plane
      Boeing: okay
      *747 exists in existence*
      Boeing absorbs Douglas
      Leaders of Boeing are money hungry
      Airbus: *laughs in business*

  • @MrCJLambert
    @MrCJLambert 3 года назад +2

    Gotta say I'm so glad I found this channel. The quality of the content and visuals are better than most of the stuff you see on TV.

  • @notgonnabe165
    @notgonnabe165 5 лет назад +72

    •Wow a bus that flies•
    *AIRPLANE*

  • @justsomedudecalledluqman
    @justsomedudecalledluqman 3 года назад +16

    Everybody gangsta until airbus give free samples for 6 month

  • @dangaming1065
    @dangaming1065 5 лет назад +179

    "In an effort to impress airlines, Airbus sent its new jet to nearly all corners of the world....."
    *shows America*

    • @user-ky6vw5up9m
      @user-ky6vw5up9m 5 лет назад +2

      Dangaming10 it showed South America

    • @edipires15
      @edipires15 4 года назад +17

      Ian McGreevy it's America

    • @lavaregion6968
      @lavaregion6968 3 года назад

      @@edipires15 *Americas

    • @BlueRGuy
      @BlueRGuy 3 года назад +8

      Aliens in alien invasion movie:

    • @dbclass4075
      @dbclass4075 2 года назад

      Well, North America's aviation market is huge.

  • @maxflight777
    @maxflight777 4 года назад +4

    Monarch in the U.K. operated the A300. (I think they had four of them) There were no galleys between the front and read of the aircraft. The view of 352 seats, from the back row, was extraordinary!
    They delivered safe and pleasant “bucket and spade” holidays to millions of deserving Brits ! Happy days.

  • @justanotherasian4395
    @justanotherasian4395 5 лет назад +106

    My day: pretty shit
    *Mustard uploads*
    My day: pretty good

  • @christopherxie1634
    @christopherxie1634 5 лет назад +550

    Boeing: Airbus is gonna turn into a failure.
    Airbus: No, No I don’t think I will.

    • @hannesp3493
      @hannesp3493 5 лет назад +18

      Christopher Xie *iT’s FrEe SaMpLe TiMe*

    • @jeshkam
      @jeshkam 5 лет назад +5

      That meme is long dead, plus it is annoying and boring.

    • @madwolf0966
      @madwolf0966 5 лет назад +3

      Jeshkam for once I can agree

    • @DrTWG
      @DrTWG 5 лет назад +1

      I don't get it . Is that supposed to be funny ?

    • @Simp_Recov
      @Simp_Recov 5 лет назад +1

      *revers card*

  • @MrMarinus18
    @MrMarinus18 Год назад +9

    9:35
    Also the oil crisis helped the A300 as it was more efficient than many older planes like the 747 and MD-10.

  • @ChippyMapping
    @ChippyMapping 4 года назад +158

    1973: Nah they’re gonna die lol
    2000: Oh… we got some competition 😈😈
    2020: NO HAVE MERCY, HAVE MERCY!!

    • @sirankleknocker3122
      @sirankleknocker3122 4 года назад +13

      *insert 737 being backed into a corner by an a320NEO with a Gatling Gun*

    • @user-jx6gv9pp4s
      @user-jx6gv9pp4s 4 года назад

      @@sirankleknocker3122 I respect you.

    • @joshua9166
      @joshua9166 3 года назад +9

      @@user-jx6gv9pp4s After creating a bad quality image of exactly that, here it is. imgur.com/a/wgyEaJF
      A scared Boeing 737max in a corner against a aggressive A320NEO with a mini/gattling gun.

    • @orcabeast8006
      @orcabeast8006 3 года назад

      @@joshua9166 masterful

    • @dihydrogenmonoxide9210
      @dihydrogenmonoxide9210 3 года назад

      @@joshua9166 noice!!

  • @spacejaime
    @spacejaime 5 лет назад +5

    When Eastern got the first 4 A300's, it was the dominant carrier servicing PR. I flew sooo many times on the A300! It was so comfy - along the L1011'a that Eastern also had servicing the same routes. Once these two wide body jets were retired, I've only flown narrow body jets....319; 320; 321:737 and 757 (until the last one was retired also.).I flew a couple of times on 767's and were similar to the Airbus, but, I really miss the A300.

  • @TheShowblox
    @TheShowblox 3 месяца назад +4

    This is why the A300 is the most underrated Airbus, it’s literally the 707 of the company

  • @definitely_notme4112
    @definitely_notme4112 4 года назад +191

    Airbus in 1970s: Cheap and Efficient.
    Airbus in 2005: LARGEST PASSENGER PLANE IN THE WORLD!

    • @Tonatsi
      @Tonatsi 4 года назад +18

      Eli Fybush also airbus: Still cheap and efficient and also safe (stares at 737 max 8)

    • @Kalvinjj
      @Kalvinjj 4 года назад +5

      I don't really question the A380, albeit it was bad market analysis and/or timing to market, but I don't really understand their mind when they did the A340, even tho it sold more. Like, they even mocked the tail engine of the DC-10 on the A300 promotions, I know ETOPS rules were still too hard for a long range twin but they could have taken the bet like Boeing did, given the restrictions weren't as strict after the A300...

    • @GalaxyYeaYea
      @GalaxyYeaYea 4 года назад +7

      @@Kalvinjj the a330 and a340 were built together, everyone wanted a twinjet but back in germany they wanted a quad jet, So they made 2 jets. the a330 and a340.

    • @chadofsilesia3320
      @chadofsilesia3320 4 года назад +5

      Antonov wants to know your location

    • @soffici1
      @soffici1 4 года назад

      Yeah, that did age well... after 15 years of service the ugly 380 is going out of business
      Compare it with the 747

  • @JeremyPrend
    @JeremyPrend 2 года назад +1

    Thanks!

  • @XXSwaggsterXX
    @XXSwaggsterXX 5 лет назад +147

    Boeing then: “They’ll only build a couple then go out of business, no biggie”
    Airbus: (Becomes the largest aircraft manufacturer next to Boeing)
    Boeing now (facing controversy over 737 MAX , delays with the 777x and profits hitting record lows): “It seems my calculations were incorrect .”
    (Love both companies btw)

    • @madwax4771
      @madwax4771 5 лет назад +6

      XXSwaggster202020 XX
      Your joke is like my shlong
      extremely long

    • @Coffee-hj5di
      @Coffee-hj5di 4 года назад +4

      Insert surprise Pikachu face

    • @renard6012
      @renard6012 4 года назад +9

      "(Love both companties btw)"
      Nice way to avoid the fanboys. Why does such a company have fanboys in the first place?

    • @leadiet2972
      @leadiet2972 4 года назад +3

      AIRBUS WINS IN EVERY WAY (for me at least

    • @Zechey
      @Zechey 4 года назад +1

      theyre both gonna go to shit cause of corona

  • @chrissmith2114
    @chrissmith2114 2 года назад +8

    I can remember getting off Boeing airliners and boarding an Airbus A300, the first things you noticed was how quiet the Airbus was and how fast it climbed. USA has always had a 'not made here' mindset...

  • @ManyTriangles
    @ManyTriangles 5 лет назад +33

    I'd absolutely love to see the MD-11 or VC-10 get the Mustard treatment.

    • @investorbloke
      @investorbloke 5 лет назад +2

      Definitely the awesome and fast VC-10.

  • @TheBritishBarman
    @TheBritishBarman 3 года назад +68

    Airbus: "Try our new plane we made for you"
    America: "Eww, foreign stuff"

    • @marxel4444
      @marxel4444 3 года назад +28

      "We dont like YOUR kind of products here!"
      "Our kind of product?"
      "Govenment products!"
      "Its free"
      "I want 40!"

    • @declannewton2556
      @declannewton2556 3 года назад +6

      I find that ironic now since Delta is practically purging all American planes from their fleet.

    • @torstenscholz6243
      @torstenscholz6243 3 года назад +5

      Well, it worked for German and Japanese cars that now outsell American cars, too.

    • @togafly.
      @togafly. 3 года назад

      @@marxel4444 🤣🤣🤣

    • @gavcom4060
      @gavcom4060 3 года назад +1

      typical American mindset. still happens til his day

  • @HEDGE1011
    @HEDGE1011 3 года назад +96

    Boeing’s hubris has always been their weak point. Now nearing the end of my airline career I’ve flown (among others) the B-727, 737 (-200 to NG), 744, 757, 767, and 777. I now fly the A-320 series because I want to.
    Great job Airbus!

  • @BoulevardFan28
    @BoulevardFan28 5 лет назад +7

    It's fascinating to see how close Airbus got to closing up shop, especially when we couldn't imagine a world without it today. I've flown on an A330, A340, and A350, and all were impressive machines.

    • @someguy4915
      @someguy4915 3 года назад +4

      They got close to closing if you forget that Airbus also sold aircraft back then in Europe (where they were being made...) and Asia. But yeah, if you consider the USA to be 'the world' then yeah, they had a challenge getting their foot in the door in the USA...

    • @m1co294
      @m1co294 Год назад +1

      ​​@@someguy4915 USA was effectively "the world" back in the 70s, from an economical standpoint. You win there, you win everywhere, which is why when Airbus didn't see any sales coming from the US they were contemplating closing everything down.

  • @JetFan-qp6fr
    @JetFan-qp6fr 5 лет назад +6

    These videos are a great entertainment and learning value. Thanks Mustard!

  • @svart835
    @svart835 4 года назад +1

    Your content is absolutely fantastic! As a commercial aviation geek, I think that this was well researched and you certainly covered most of what made the A300 so unique. I always look forward to your new videos. Thank you!

  • @muffen17007
    @muffen17007 3 года назад +24

    Boeing: "lol Airbus is just going to fail"
    Airbus: *REVERSE CARD*

    • @ThatIsALakeSir
      @ThatIsALakeSir 3 года назад

      also boeing : reverse card | Airbus and boeing now : best plane manufacturers making good planes

    • @bathwater3196
      @bathwater3196 3 года назад +2

      @@ThatIsALakeSir Yes, the 737-max was certainly a "good plane" hahaha

    • @ThatIsALakeSir
      @ThatIsALakeSir 3 года назад

      @@bathwater3196 loolololll

    • @sandervanderkammen9230
      @sandervanderkammen9230 2 года назад

      The Airbus A380 is the biggest financial failure in aviation history since the Concorde...

    • @Jan-ov5tm
      @Jan-ov5tm 2 года назад +1

      @@sandervanderkammen9230 No it isn’t.

  • @zbeuzbeu5688
    @zbeuzbeu5688 5 лет назад +268

    Boeing, 1977 (talking about the Airbus A300): “A typical government airplane. They’ll build a dozen or so and then go out of business.”
    Boeing, 2019: profit drops 53%
    Funny how the tables have turned.

    • @gilvu1179
      @gilvu1179 4 года назад +4

      @Arcadia simply incorrect, you tell me when Boeing planes will be made of carbon composite materials then we'll talk

    • @nowtmrb3337
      @nowtmrb3337 4 года назад +5

      @Arcadia your comparing a 777x to a normal a350? That doesn't work here of course the X will be better with a regular a350 if it was another model I think it would be better

    • @nowtmrb3337
      @nowtmrb3337 4 года назад

      @Waddle Dee idk about that maybe airbus might release a more powerful A350 who knows they are strong on competition

    • @nororlol4life819
      @nororlol4life819 4 года назад

      @Bandana Waddle Dee A350ULR?

    • @GTXTi-db5xu
      @GTXTi-db5xu 4 года назад

      ZBEU ZBEU i fucking hate airbus

  • @kimnorberg9783
    @kimnorberg9783 2 года назад +13

    The very first Airbus, A300, is amazing, but it amazes me much much more that Concorde was even earlier in the air.

  • @skyborne80
    @skyborne80 4 года назад +2

    Mustard is the only RUclipsr who's videos I actually watch more than once! Unbelievable channel.

  • @xaviera-l1496
    @xaviera-l1496 5 лет назад +4

    that shot @9:54 :O what a magnificent view. Gave me goose bumps

  • @soulman4292
    @soulman4292 3 года назад +40

    Airbus truly does make some beautiful aircraft. The Europeans sure do know how to design some wonderful machinery.

    • @dbclass4075
      @dbclass4075 2 года назад +5

      I'm not so sure about appearances (I find A380 uglier than 747), but they have not lost their touch on reliability.

    • @jesdadotcom
      @jesdadotcom Год назад

      I think they’re a bit ugly but comfortable.

    • @mteagleworld
      @mteagleworld Год назад +2

      @@dbclass4075 the A380 is ugly and fat but the A330 is a really sleek design

    • @dbclass4075
      @dbclass4075 Год назад +2

      @@mteagleworld A350 is a big step up.

    • @dbclass4075
      @dbclass4075 Год назад +1

      @@jesdadotcom The "comfort" bit depends on the airline, say Spirit Airlines vs. Korean Air.

  • @RyanTheHero3
    @RyanTheHero3 5 лет назад +176

    How people proved their planes were cool:
    America: shows massive plane to everyone in the world
    Europe: drinks a shit ton of champagne while flying all over the US

    • @jsalvation7507
      @jsalvation7507 5 лет назад +4

      Barry Scott this is how we roll

    • @RolandBizjets
      @RolandBizjets 4 года назад +1

      Then drunk Europe decides to build even bigger plane... and the project fails.

    • @eduardomartinezjuarez7849
      @eduardomartinezjuarez7849 4 года назад +2

      @@RolandBizjets the cool Americans build a 4th malfunctioning generation of an aircraft designed more than 50 years ago with parts of an even older plane, while Europeans only needed a new engine option

    • @arcaipekyun4232
      @arcaipekyun4232 4 года назад +1

      eduardo Martínez Juárez thats because 737 is much older than a320, so it was designed closer to the ground.

  • @rmnvldz_
    @rmnvldz_ 3 года назад +6

    The best follow up for this video is the A380. From the first twin-aisle plane, to the first double-decker. From a successful Airbus, to a failed (but a passenger favorite) Airbus.

    • @dbclass4075
      @dbclass4075 2 года назад +2

      Then maybe A320 afterwards, their most successful airliner. It is the world's first fly-by-wire airliner after all.

  • @Codiac300
    @Codiac300 5 лет назад +6

    Airbus is a success story that shows, what you can achieve with cooperation.
    As a European I feel proud of what we have achieved.
    I hope one day, we can do one better, by everyone in the world working together to conquer our solar system.

  • @ryanm.191
    @ryanm.191 5 лет назад +184

    So the aircraft giant that is airbus
    Rests almost entirely on a free sample

    • @Teampegleg
      @Teampegleg 5 лет назад +11

      And a heaping pile of government backed loans, which allowed them to take risks that the American airline manufacturers couldn't like the A380 (which they're are discussions on when, how, and possibly even if those loans will be repaid). While Boeing typically has to woo a handful of launch customers before they can proceed with development beyond the preliminaries and make a prototype.

    • @joeterzio7175
      @joeterzio7175 5 лет назад +1

      @Joel Schembri The U.S. government doesn't fund Boeing passenger airliners and never has. If Airbus didn't get decades worth of illegal subsidies, they would not have survived.

    • @eruno_
      @eruno_ 5 лет назад +30

      @@joeterzio7175
      Subsidies aren't illegal.

    • @TheMourningBlade
      @TheMourningBlade 5 лет назад +3

      @@joeterzio7175 lol the dumbness

    • @TheMourningBlade
      @TheMourningBlade 5 лет назад +6

      @@joeterzio7175 I mean how much more one can get butthurt

  • @katout75
    @katout75 5 лет назад +5

    Frank Kolk (American Airline Chief Engineer, later President) helped craft the requirements of the A300. Although AA would only buy the A300 much later, Kolk was highly instrumental in getting what he felt was the future of long range commercial airliners. A big twin widebody and not the DC-10/L1011 trijets or larger 747. Kolk worked closed with Roger Béteille and his early Airbus team (only a few dozen engineers).

    • @ELcinegatto87
      @ELcinegatto87 2 года назад +3

      Yup. American got the latest and greatest version of the type. They were the launch customer for the 2-crew, modernized and extended range A300-600R in 1988. Crandall ordered great airplanes. A300-600, 767-300, F100, MD-11 and later on the 777-200 when they were very unhappy with the fuel economy and range underperformance of the MD-11. They ended up putting MD-11s on routes the A300 and 767 could do on their own. They couldn't wait to get rid of them. The A300 made AA a fortune on the cargo capacity alone.

  • @amandaren9622
    @amandaren9622 4 года назад +1

    i really like ur videos, they have amazing quality and it is obvious that a large amount of effort was put into these graphics to make them look so extraordinary, if mustard himself is reading this I really hope u know that there’s slot of people like me like ur videos and appreciate ur efforts. KEEP GOING!!

  • @charlesferdinand422
    @charlesferdinand422 4 года назад +10

    FRANCE: Britain you'll design and build the wings; Germany you do the fuselage; Netherlands the control surfaces and I'll do the cockpit. All right, let's get this done!
    SPAIN: Hey! What about me?
    BRITAIN: Oh yeah you exist too
    FRANCE: Uhhh... You design and build the bolts of the landing gear little buddy; do you think can you handle that? Sure? You promise? Fine, don't fuck it all up like you always do
    SPAIN: I'm hanging out with the big boys now this is so exciting!

    • @NPJGlobal
      @NPJGlobal 4 года назад +4

      ITALY: *sits there slowly unrolling wire and cables...*

    • @cobolqanon3960
      @cobolqanon3960 3 года назад +5

      If the Italians had done the interior and design the exterior, I think it would have been perfection.

  • @marekczyz9036
    @marekczyz9036 5 лет назад +807

    I never left Pornhub so quickly

    • @cameraman655
      @cameraman655 5 лет назад +38

      Best comment thus far.....

    • @EternusTV
      @EternusTV 5 лет назад +16

      What type of videos do u like on there

    • @kevinp8108
      @kevinp8108 5 лет назад +25

      Headed there after this video!

    • @vieuxbal1253
      @vieuxbal1253 5 лет назад +4

      😁😁😁😁

    • @wilkjakub64
      @wilkjakub64 5 лет назад +4

      @Silently Sceptical Polish, to be exact.

  • @Mendota96
    @Mendota96 5 лет назад +5

    My uncle was a captain for Eastern Airlines when the A300 was being introduced. EAL offered to move him and his family to France so that he could teach other pilots how to fly this new plane. He declined the offer, but was still one of the first pilots in the US to be flying the A300!

  • @tylerl6942
    @tylerl6942 4 года назад +1

    First youtuber to ever make me get curiosity stream and I must say, it seems awesome can't wait to watch some stuff after work

  • @Nckolas20
    @Nckolas20 3 года назад +56

    I work at FedEx Express. We have mixed feelings regarding the Airbus A300 freighter. Most of us that offload cargo planes prefer the 767 due to the simplicity and less burdensome to work on. Airbus has a lot of odd and annoying quirks such as:
    1) The tall landing gear requires you to use a ladder to open the lower deck doors. The 767 is low enough to the ground you can reach up and flip a switch.
    2) Lower deck floor controls are not very user friendly compared to the 767
    3) The aft section on the upper deck has a positive slope, which is hazardous pushing a cargo container that weighs 2 tons uphill.
    4) Problematic rainwater drainage when working with the main cargo door open. The plane is sensitive to water damage.

    • @MustardChannel
      @MustardChannel  3 года назад +20

      Thanks for sharing :)

    • @minumilati151
      @minumilati151 3 года назад +20

      True but you are comparing planes that were build like a decade apart. And aren't A300's decommissioned in most countries nowadays? Or are you talking about airbus in general?

    • @rumeru905
      @rumeru905 3 года назад +11

      @@minumilati151 Pretty much all of Airbus’s designs are higher off the ground than Boeing’s competitors, it seems to be part of their design language - working as an aircraft refueler I learned that you need an 8ft ladder to reach the fuel cap on A320 family aircraft, while the job can be done with just a 6ft ladder on a 737NG. Additionally, FedEx still operates around 70 A300F’s and UPS operates around 50. They aren’t decommissioned in the freighter market by any means.

    • @dbclass4075
      @dbclass4075 3 года назад +7

      @@rumeru905 Part of the higher height reason is Airbus being relatively new; in the era of high-bypass turbofans, which are large. Hence, the need to ensure enough space to fit the engines. 737 was created in the era of low-bypass turbofans, which are quite small.
      Also, the airport environment is very different between the two eras. 737s have to deal with airports with limited equipment, hence its low height to ensure minimal equipment needed to handle luggage. A320s are in more modern era where airports are better equipped.

    • @MladenMijatov
      @MladenMijatov 3 года назад +5

      And yet the very reason it's so high off the ground is why it could upgrade to newer engines, while Boeing planes started to fall off the sky. I do understand you are pointing out issues from your perspective, however each coin has two sides.

  • @thirdwheel1985au
    @thirdwheel1985au 4 года назад +3

    5:04 It's worth noting that this "just in time" inventory model had been used in Japan for decades at this point. It meant factories were smaller (since there's no need for massive storage space for components) and product could be shipped out quicker and more efficiently.

  • @robinson-popeproductions5837
    @robinson-popeproductions5837 5 лет назад +9

    Mustard your videos are always amazing!

  • @Angeloflight1415_LastelleCrea
    @Angeloflight1415_LastelleCrea 9 месяцев назад

    I admit what I think I like the most about the story is how different groups got together to make the plane.
    It just goes to show that working together can be better then alone at times.

  • @msb3235
    @msb3235 5 лет назад +21

    OMG, I requested this, thank you for realizing it!

  • @brapa1190
    @brapa1190 4 года назад +14

    "The operating language wasn't french or German it was English"
    United Kingdom: That's my boy

    • @marxel4444
      @marxel4444 3 года назад +4

      They sit together in a room. France Germany and Briten
      France: We should use french! its such a beautiful language.
      Germany: Only over my dead body! we will use german to show dominance!
      Briten: We once showed the world dominance using english.
      France & Germany: Fair enough. English it is.

  • @Illusionyary
    @Illusionyary 4 года назад +5

    I may have never gone on a 747 before the majority were retired, but I did go on an A380 and what an amazing flight that was.

  • @superman28607
    @superman28607 Год назад +1

    I would always come back to this video time to time.
    Airbus's rise is just a beautiful story. Hardship, persistence, strategy and Ultima triumph. You can write Airbus's story into a 12 episode anime or even a movie and it might be the best selling for that season.