Orbiter - Vostok 1 - First Ever Manned Spaceflight

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  • Опубликовано: 26 мар 2014
  • Orbiter is a free spaceflight simulator, it's got much more detail on the actual flying and vehicles than KSP, but lacks the building and real time rigid body physics that provide so much entertainment in KSP. But if you want to experience real spacecraft then it's probably a better choice
    Orbiter is developed by Martin Schweiger and can be downloaded for free from orbit.medphys.ucl.ac.uk/
    The Vostok Plugin I use is by Igel it supports all of the Vostok missions - including the ones with animals as passengers.
    www.orbithangar.com/searchid.p...
    Videos featured in the credits:
    • A-OK Wings Of Mercury ...
    • Scott Plays Orbiter - ...
  • ИгрыИгры

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @pjousma
    @pjousma 9 лет назад +395

    I'm never going on a space flight with Scott Manley, he'll be like: "actually let's just do that, switch into manual control mode and fly that thing around."

    • @smainebelhadi1193
      @smainebelhadi1193 5 лет назад +20

      His curiosity will kill the crew. He must be tapped to his seat completely except his head. : "enjoy the view and please keep you recommendations to yourself ".

    • @rbrtck
      @rbrtck 5 лет назад +7

      That was pretty much the attitude of NASA's astronauts, though. It wasn't that NASA and the US couldn't do as much automation as the Soviets (if anything the former were more sophisticated with computers and programming than the latter), but NASA's astronauts wanted, perhaps even demanded, that they do the flying rather than computers. Obviously some critical parts of each mission, such as the launch sequence and staging, were automated, but overall NASA's astronauts were given a lot more manual control because that's how they preferred it to be.
      Of course, this still doesn't mean you're wrong, as Scott Manley is not a highly trained test pilot and astronaut, but I'm just saying that NASA's astronauts felt the same way for their own reasons.

    • @twistedyogert
      @twistedyogert 5 лет назад +5

      "I hit that switch I hope I didn't break anything."

    • @hankblaster
      @hankblaster 4 года назад +3

      ... "No, wait. I really need to land this thing."

    • @bigblue6917
      @bigblue6917 4 года назад

      You could test the idea that in space they cannot hear you scream.

  • @avj_curvebreaker
    @avj_curvebreaker 10 лет назад +588

    Today I learned that Yuri Gagarin reentered in a goddamn cannonball.

    • @seanmchughinfo
      @seanmchughinfo 5 лет назад +64

      and landed in an ejection seat, lol. who knew.

    • @markswanson1752
      @markswanson1752 5 лет назад +21

      Didn’t land with his spacecraft. Flight doesn’t count.

    • @garethcurtis7545
      @garethcurtis7545 5 лет назад +18

      @@markswanson1752 better tell him 🤣

    • @jdmlegent
      @jdmlegent 5 лет назад +24

      Better say...in a fireball !
      Non on the less, he was 1st human to go to the unknown, the last frontier which is space!
      Consider the situation back in USSR in 1961 he was a hero on doing that flight, much respect!

    • @davidwaynechoate8059
      @davidwaynechoate8059 5 лет назад

      I highly doubt Anyone was in That Stinky Old Movie Prop.

  • @KossolaxtheForesworn
    @KossolaxtheForesworn 8 лет назад +87

    yuri gagarin was a brave man. no wonder his massive monument immortalized like a super hero.

  • @odysseusrex5908
    @odysseusrex5908 4 года назад +38

    The interior room of the Vostok capsule is quite impressive. The old NASA hands called them flying offices.

  • @ZavorotKostey
    @ZavorotKostey 10 лет назад +505

    Gagarin is like Jebediah - smiles whatever happens.

    • @AlfredqwertyZien
      @AlfredqwertyZien 10 лет назад +75

      I think that Jebediah was created with Gagarin in mind. Smile and first man in space.

    • @RandomPerson-jo7cw
      @RandomPerson-jo7cw 5 лет назад +18

      @@AlfredqwertyZien looking at the person who inspired Valentina would probably tell the true answer so yeah, I guess you're right

    • @twistedyogert
      @twistedyogert 4 года назад +14

      "Regardless of my currently precarious situation I assure you that I'm still enjoying myself."

    • @prcvl
      @prcvl 4 года назад +4

      But jeb is cute!

    • @givemebackmyhamster6392
      @givemebackmyhamster6392 4 года назад +1

      All smiles

  • @pavelZhd
    @pavelZhd 10 лет назад +144

    Yuri's words were:
    Поехали! (Let's ride!)

    • @bergonius
      @bergonius 10 лет назад +24

      It might be translated as "Let's roll!" as well. How cool is that?

    • @pavelZhd
      @pavelZhd 10 лет назад +18

      bergonius I'm not sure Gagarin intended to be that badass. :D
      And if he meant "Let's roll" he probably would say "Погнали!"

    • @edgeeffect
      @edgeeffect 4 года назад +2

      I always wondered if it was "в путь" from the Russian military song... just 'cus that would be good propaganda... but apparently not.

    • @DrCranium
      @DrCranium 4 года назад +7

      @@edgeeffect Gagarin was a trained military pilot, and I assume that his habbits took over at the launch: as far as I know, "Poyekhali!" was a command that has been used to inform the ground crew that the jet plane starts moving and everyone should get away from it, basicaly - similar to English "Clear prop!" command for propeller planes.

    • @JesusisJesus
      @JesusisJesus 4 года назад +1

      And the great Zephram Cochrane’s first words were “Oh, I think I forgot something!” And first words at warp “Sweet Jesus!”
      “You don’t know what, you can find.... Why don’t you come with me, on a Magic Carpet Ride?”

  • @waterlubber
    @waterlubber 9 лет назад +127

    "Appreciate the sounds of the instrumentation"
    *ksp music begins playing in background*
    Oh, my burn is done!

    • @diabeticalien3584
      @diabeticalien3584 6 лет назад

      waterlubber Same!

    • @kerbalizergamingsoldchanne1926
      @kerbalizergamingsoldchanne1926 6 лет назад +1

      when?

    • @xXCursedWorgenXx
      @xXCursedWorgenXx 5 лет назад +3

      he meant he was playing KSP and watching that video at the same time. so when scott talked about shutting down the radio at the start of the video when he reached the orbit, Lubber's own rocket reached orbit which is when a music start playing in KSP

  • @CachorroPodre
    @CachorroPodre 10 лет назад +148

    Even Gagarin used mechjeb all the way-out! How could you blame Scott from using it!?!?!?!?!?

  • @k1productions87
    @k1productions87 10 лет назад +84

    Scott, I love how you are doing a historical perspective. The early space program is something that just isn't taught anymore, and I find that quite disheartening. It is awesome to see a fellow space enthusiast out there. Keep up the good work.
    Can't wait to see your perspective on Voskhod 2 (boy, that was an amazing story, hidden for the longest time).

    • @scottmanley
      @scottmanley  10 лет назад +29

      You mean the story of how Alexie Leonov almost never made it back inside?

    • @k1productions87
      @k1productions87 10 лет назад +26

      Scott Manley
      Beyond that. The craft landed several hundred kilometers off course in the frozen wilderness. Leonov and his co-cosmonaut had to survive the night in the cold with just their pressuresuit and sweat-soaked longjohns. Wasn't until the next day that rescuers could come on skis to build a log cabin for the next night, and not until the morning of the third day that they could all ski back to the aircraft to take them home.

    • @jdoldaccountschoolaccount4362
      @jdoldaccountschoolaccount4362 8 лет назад +6

      +K1productions and they also had a survival shotgun\pistol combo gun

    • @nihil2157
      @nihil2157 8 лет назад +3

      +Jamie Workman no they had only PM

    • @husaynahmed428
      @husaynahmed428 7 лет назад

      K1productions

  • @WheatleyOS
    @WheatleyOS 9 лет назад +233

    I speak Russian, but that just sounded like a squeaking tin can. The more I turned up the volume, the more it sounded like that.

    • @KossolaxtheForesworn
      @KossolaxtheForesworn 8 лет назад +21

      Wheatley I was playing some video game that was supposedly about winter war, and as finnish I of course bought it. I dont remember what country had made it but it sure didnt have fins doing the voice overs. by god it sounded horrible. incomprehensible accent is one thing but I could hardly understand what they were saying. just have to guess what the hell did that guy just say.

    • @WheatleyOS
      @WheatleyOS 8 лет назад

      MrAnimepredator xD

    • @LowFlyer
      @LowFlyer 8 лет назад +6

      I am serbian(the language is very similar to russian) and i could understand a single word.If those were words.LOL

    • @WheatleyOS
      @WheatleyOS 8 лет назад +1

      @104658095579990664870 yeah, when you increase the volume it sounds like tin foil

    • @LowFlyer
      @LowFlyer 8 лет назад

      omg just noticed it.

  • @vonKartoffel
    @vonKartoffel 10 лет назад +345

    When i saw the Thumbnail i thought its KSP

  • @sirHonbob
    @sirHonbob Год назад +2

    damn, 9 years on and this video still beats most.

  • @MrPashee
    @MrPashee 9 лет назад +134

    Thank you for this, Comrade Manley ) Respecting you for knowledge of our history. I hope someday one russian cosmonaut and an astronaut from US will make a first step together on the Mars) From Russia, with love)

    • @widg3tswidgets416
      @widg3tswidgets416 6 лет назад +18

      MrPashee as an American that hates the Russian government, even I could support a joint mission as a nod to our shared history as pioneers in the space field.

    • @odysseusrex5908
      @odysseusrex5908 5 лет назад +4

      From Russia with love? Best James Bond story ever!

    • @user-mr1um1cg5v
      @user-mr1um1cg5v 5 лет назад

      MrPashee No, thanks. We don’t want the astronaut poisoned by Novichok or some radiative substance in tea. You hope because Russia is finished as a space superpower. A few more years of Soyuz and Progress and you’re done.

    • @ThatCamel104
      @ThatCamel104 5 лет назад +3

      @@user-mr1um1cg5v I presume you have an alternative?

    • @user-mr1um1cg5v
      @user-mr1um1cg5v 5 лет назад

      ThatCamel104 AlternativeS - plural, mate, are in the pipe.

  • @nblax41
    @nblax41 10 лет назад +138

    The pilot of Soyuz 1, Vladimir Komarov, was apparently the first choice for Vostok 1 but the Soviets didn't want to risk their best pilot so Gagarin was chosen in his place. Komarov was given the more demanding Soyuz launch which ended up killing him.

    • @scottmanley
      @scottmanley  10 лет назад +102

      You're confusing Komarov and Gherman Titov - Titov was the pilot for Vostok 2, who was percieved to be a stronger choice and therefore assigned to the 1 day mission vs Gagarin's 1 orbit mission. Komarov came along later.

    • @nblax41
      @nblax41 10 лет назад +4

      Scott Manley
      I had always read Komarov was the first choice for Vostok but it was too risky. Maybe it was for Soyuz and they didn't want Gagarin flying again nor was he considered good enough. Something along those lines. Oh well.

    • @tank_3487
      @tank_3487 9 лет назад +67

      ***** Yep. And bloody capitalists have murdered 14 astronauts by putting them in defective Space Shuttles. You have overdose of propaganda.

    • @tank_3487
      @tank_3487 9 лет назад +44

      ***** You think soviets have known? They were first peoples in space. Lol, they even maked assumption that Gagarin can go nuts due to long term weightless experience, this is why code panel was installed. Still you have used defective shuttles after first crash. That coating can get damage was known well enough. Still they risked. About suffocation its unfortunate incident, huge mistake was asumption that if something goes wrong all cosmonats would die no matter with space suit or without it. Problem was not in not full seal. Problem was that emergency automatic have opened valve on too high attitude. Cosmonauts even tried to close it manualy(they maked tragic wrong guess).
      Fighters are always crash, in all countries. Its unfortunately not surprise that after quite long pause in piloting chance of such accident are higher.

    • @tank_3487
      @tank_3487 9 лет назад +4

      ***** Ты видимо туповат, раз сарказм воспринимать неспособен... Перечитай сообщение на которое я отвечал. Обе стороны не были способны оценить полностью риск для полетов в космос. И то что советы(да и американцы) подвергали излишнем риску космонавтов может утверждать лишь мудак.

  • @MrJest2
    @MrJest2 10 лет назад +11

    This is actually kind of cool... a perspective on history you could never have imagined, much less SEEN, at the time.

  • @josefodium8888
    @josefodium8888 6 лет назад +23

    Gagarin's phrase in English would be something like “Let's ride”.
    The flight was fully automated since nobody new if a man can pilot one at all. Remember that was the first flight.
    Medics fully believed that conditions of the spaceflight can knock a person unconscious or alter their perceptions in some major way.
    Russian space tests were on dogs and they were not really fond of zero G going full berserk on those capsules.
    Tyuratam was basically a test launch site to get all the tech straight for Baikonur spaceport that was still under construction. The name was taken from a small village situated nearby, which was a common practice for all kinds of industrial complexes in USSR (practice being - name the thing same as the closest town while it is under construction and then give it some pompous formal name after it is operational).
    Baikonur spaceport was chosen as a name for the whole complex of launch sites and infrastructure.
    They are in the same area. Tyuratam even served as Baikonur's reserve launch site after the latter became fully operational.
    So no renaming really occurred, they just used a formal name of the spaceport and not the working name of the launch site in the international announcement. Makes sense, if you ask me.

    • @igvc1876
      @igvc1876 3 года назад

      Let's roll would be a better translation

  • @LTrotsky21stCentury
    @LTrotsky21stCentury 10 лет назад +295

    So many Americans think their space program was the first in many things, and it's good that sims like Orbiter and KSP have mods that can teach people about *both* space programs. If enough people in every country become aware of what we (humanity) did 50 years ago, maybe humanity can have a real, global space program - with all of the resources and technology of the globe we have today we could do just about anything in the solar system we, collectively, wanted to do.

    • @PObserver
      @PObserver 10 лет назад +20

      4th Internationalist Trotskyite pls go.

    • @LTrotsky21stCentury
      @LTrotsky21stCentury 10 лет назад +56

      ***** Build me a rocket to the moon, and I will. ;)

    • @qwe2433
      @qwe2433 10 лет назад +25

      I like the way you type the words for this topic. However, world peace isn't a very realistic idea. At least, not from my rather pessimistic point of view.

    • @Finkin79
      @Finkin79 10 лет назад +34

      qwe2433 Peace is significantly easier when the politicians and the elites in the military industrial complex aren't in the picture. I've been around people from all around the globe and got on well with all of them. Regular populous of every country has about 10 times as much in common with the regular population of other countries then we have with our own governments.

    • @LTrotsky21stCentury
      @LTrotsky21stCentury 10 лет назад +15

      Finkin79
      Reveal, my friend, the truth hidden from us by those who desire to keep their power over us.

  • @coryman125
    @coryman125 10 лет назад +166

    10 meters per second is too fast? Just yesterday, Bill Kerman landed in the Arctic Circle at that speed and survived. To be fair, the thruster broke.

    • @AltereggoLol1
      @AltereggoLol1 10 лет назад +1

      D3LTA48 whoosh, right into orbit.

    • @gunnervine
      @gunnervine 10 лет назад +3

      people run faster than that

    • @jasonsleight1531
      @jasonsleight1531 10 лет назад +16

      Oinikis Not really, world record for 100m dash is 9.58s. This gives an average speed is ~10.44 m/s for the race, and certainly faster than that for a maximum. Now obviously a normal person couldn't run a sub 10s 100m (mostly because they wouldn't accelerate fast enough), but running 10m/s for a moment shouldn't be out of reach for a reasonably athletic person. That said hitting the ground from a fall at 10m/s is very different than running 10m/s since in the fall you go from 10m/s to 0m/s in an instant.

    • @ideasrule2
      @ideasrule2 10 лет назад +61

      gunnervine
      Try running full-speed into a wall, and you'll see why 10 m/s is too fast.

    • @Markus9705
      @Markus9705 9 лет назад +6

      LOL

  • @ScripturusEU
    @ScripturusEU 10 лет назад +465

    In Soviet Russia, spacecraft flies you!

    • @charlescsmith1213
      @charlescsmith1213 6 лет назад +10

      ScripturusEU most underrated comment on the board lol

    • @glowingone1774
      @glowingone1774 5 лет назад +18

      @Hawksley Marshall Way fuck off you ruined the joke

    • @tunisianpartisan1080
      @tunisianpartisan1080 5 лет назад +3

      @Hawksley Marshall Way thanks for information (i like learn thing XD) i liked your comment

    • @allesmedvesek
      @allesmedvesek 5 лет назад +4

      I give you the best Soviet Russia joke award.

    • @fredforbush1388
      @fredforbush1388 4 года назад +3

      @Hawksley Marshall Way This is open to conjecture.

  • @twistedyogert
    @twistedyogert Год назад +4

    Even if he was ejected before landing I'd still consider Yuri to be the first person to orbit the Earth.
    The records people should've made exception for safety protocols.

  • @Edax_Royeaux
    @Edax_Royeaux 8 лет назад +52

    It's a shame Kerbal Space Program doesn't have engine cluster designs that makes a simple 20 engine rocket feasible.

    • @projecttitanica9516
      @projecttitanica9516 5 лет назад +5

      Now it does

    • @rbrtck
      @rbrtck 5 лет назад +8

      20 engines? If you're referring to the Soyuz (R-7 based) rockets, then not counting the Vernier thrusters, it only has five engines at liftoff. Each engine has four combustion chambers and four nozzles, but there are only five engines in the first stage, total.

    • @CarlosAM1
      @CarlosAM1 4 года назад +1

      It does, just place more engines. Also the soyuz only had 5 engines

    • @cursedcliff7562
      @cursedcliff7562 2 года назад

      Oh how times change

  • @zelda_smile
    @zelda_smile 3 года назад +3

    "Why is my oxygen at zero? That dosent seem like a good plan."
    Scott manley's famous last words

  • @aviationzach8438
    @aviationzach8438 3 года назад +1

    Awesome video! Its really cool that this Orbiter Sim can show what happened and give you a visual then just hearing about it. Thanks Scott!

  • @yurialtunin9121
    @yurialtunin9121 4 года назад +1

    Scott! What a wonderful clip! Thank you very much!

  • @shinnyorc2278
    @shinnyorc2278 7 лет назад +68

    Let's please not bring politics into this. Both space programs produced fascinating scientific results and built good, spaceworthy vessels. Each and everyone of the men, women, and dogs that crewed them are valiant heroes who risked their lives for science. Unfortunately, not all of them made it back. May those lost to the vastness of space rest among the stars, peacefully, forever.

    • @redsoldier7220
      @redsoldier7220 6 лет назад +7

      Only 3 people died in space, and the capsule landed with their bodies. But your message is great.

    • @VidweII
      @VidweII 5 лет назад +2

      RED Soldier I'm maybe more bothered by all the Ruskie pups that were sacrificed, especially the one that literally cooked to death. Brutal.

    • @weasle2904
      @weasle2904 5 лет назад +6

      I can only imagine how many people died in the Soviet Space Program that were covered up to prevent a bad image for them. This was the peak of propaganda for the USSR.

    • @odysseusrex5908
      @odysseusrex5908 5 лет назад

      @@VidweII What dog got cooked to death? I am unfamiliar with that.

    • @odysseusrex5908
      @odysseusrex5908 5 лет назад +4

      @@weasle2904 If you mean died in space flights and were covered up, there were none. They did have a terrible accident when a rocket exploded on the pad while a number of people were out on the gantry working on it, and they had one poor guy who got terribly burned in a fire in in a pure oxygen environment, and later died. Information about those did not come out until the 1970s.

  • @TychoBrahe21
    @TychoBrahe21 9 лет назад +12

    Anybody else notice the excellent Orion constellation and it's accompanying nebula? Sweet!

  • @killmenow6982
    @killmenow6982 10 лет назад

    I have been waiting forever for this video! Thank you so much!

  • @mkii1964
    @mkii1964 8 лет назад +1

    Very cool, thank you for posting Scott!

  • @tefras14
    @tefras14 10 лет назад +4

    17:35 things are getting hot when he is flying over Cyprus. How appropriate

  • @Onychoprion27
    @Onychoprion27 10 лет назад +28

    Scott, I'd love to see you do the International Space Station missions addon for Orbiter, where you construct the ISS module by module using Soyuz, Progress, and Shuttle. It'd take a lot of work, yes, but personally I'd be fascinated with it. I only got as far as the Quest mission, I think. Anyway, just a thought.

    • @FoXenthusiast42
      @FoXenthusiast42 4 года назад

      How do you launch the Vostok 1?? I've pressed EVERY button!

  • @patriotastronomer6780
    @patriotastronomer6780 6 лет назад

    Thank you for the excellent history lesson! Always enjoy watching your videos.
    Also, 20 years later was the maiden flight of the Space Shuttle Columbia.
    Fly safe!

  • @steve1978ger
    @steve1978ger 8 лет назад +5

    Wow. What detail. So awesome. Much Soviet. Realistic night sky. Much prettier than the candy colored fantasy skies of other games. And that lush Soviet carpeting. Ah! I love it!

  • @aplixtv3353
    @aplixtv3353 4 года назад +5

    Gagarin loved women, that is a fact, when they were on holiday in Krimea Gagarin was drunk and lock himself in a hotel room with a maid. When his wife started to scream he jumped out of the window. He hit his head an fall uncuncious (sorry my english is not so good) so they were worried sending him back to space.
    This is was in one book that i readed.
    Once again sorry for my engish

    • @xerosfs
      @xerosfs 3 года назад

      @Pete is never wrong Honestly, most Americans have good English.
      *MOST*

    • @xerosfs
      @xerosfs 3 года назад

      @Pete is never wrong oh, xD
      You're welcome I guess.

    • @xerosfs
      @xerosfs 3 года назад

      @Pete is never wrong Once again, you're welcome.

  • @PyroSAJ
    @PyroSAJ 8 лет назад +2

    Bloody hell this is beautiful!
    One of the shortcomings still in (well, stock at least) KSP.

  • @kebman
    @kebman 6 лет назад

    Awesome! :D I really liked this _historical_ simulated illustration!

  • @ianabruce
    @ianabruce 10 лет назад +6

    Soon after his flight, Gagarin was assigned to play himself in the comedy "I Dream of Evgeniya" on Russian television. While Evgeniya' s powers of manifestation were limited to tins of herring in tomato sauce, this was considered magical by the standards of the time.

  • @kaiserredgamer8943
    @kaiserredgamer8943 5 лет назад +6

    7:49 The island is Cyprus. You're heading towards Baikonaur.

    • @robertbennett9949
      @robertbennett9949 3 года назад

      Thanks. Americans need longer vacation time.............

  • @piplupsingularity
    @piplupsingularity 10 лет назад +1

    Awesome, another Orbiter video!

  • @rwsmith7638
    @rwsmith7638 7 лет назад +1

    Great vid. I didn't know such a simulator existed.

  • @wraine999
    @wraine999 10 лет назад +9

    At 18:13 it was cyprus at south and turkey at north

  • @davidrenton
    @davidrenton 3 года назад +2

    he had bigger balls than the one he went to space in.

    • @robertbennett9949
      @robertbennett9949 3 года назад

      The American were so furious at the success that he was not invited to the US, despite the fact that he visited 30 countries, including Canada.

  • @chinchilla2302
    @chinchilla2302 10 лет назад

    Very cool video, I'd definitely like to see more historical missions like this.

  • @thephantomharanguer
    @thephantomharanguer 4 года назад

    Tanks, cool vid. As a big part of my life has been about RF, the u-shaped antennae shown intrigue me.

  • @jb111082
    @jb111082 10 лет назад +103

    "The Earth was blue, but there was no God." Yuri Gagarin

    • @scottmanley
      @scottmanley  10 лет назад +81

      Apparently Gagarin did not say this, it's not in any of the transcripts. It's believed that Nikita Krushchev attributed this quote to Gagarin during a speech about religion.
      en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Yuri_Gagarin

    • @jb111082
      @jb111082 10 лет назад +30

      Scott Manley I never knew that, Scott. Thanks for the info. P.S. I never meant that as an anti-religion statement, just as a quote from a famous cosmonaut.

    • @samovarmaker9673
      @samovarmaker9673 8 лет назад +2

      Didn't Titov say that?

    • @twistedyogert
      @twistedyogert 6 лет назад +7

      If I remember correctly, Yuri was not an atheist, he was Russian Orthodox.

    • @tempname8263
      @tempname8263 6 лет назад +3

      Back then all of Soviet Union was considered atheistic. And now everything what's left of it is considered christian.

  • @nameitifyoucan
    @nameitifyoucan 10 лет назад +34

    I love russian rocket designs. The soyouz has to be the prettiest rocket in my mind

    • @killmenow6982
      @killmenow6982 10 лет назад +6

      Nah, proton is

    • @twistedyogert
      @twistedyogert 6 лет назад +3

      I gotta admit that the Vostok looks more comfortable than the Mercury.

    • @termitreter6545
      @termitreter6545 6 лет назад +4

      Mercury was a lot more safe and realiable, though. The whole non-aerodynamic reentry and parachute thing is pretty sketchy.
      And lets not even talk about the 3 man vostok...

    • @RustedCroaker
      @RustedCroaker 6 лет назад +8

      There were never 3 man Vostok. That was Voskhod. Only 2 missions (including firts spacewalk) and it was replaced by Soyuz.
      BTW, spherical shape is more reliable in case of something go wrong and its ballistic was more predictable (easier to calcultae at the time). It can withstand any reentry profile, it doesn't need precise orientation.

    • @igvc1876
      @igvc1876 3 года назад

      @@termitreter6545 There is nothing sketchy about a ballistic re-entry - it's uncomfortable, but it's absolutely safe.

  • @GlowDarkBat
    @GlowDarkBat 7 лет назад +1

    I...just find these things to...facinating to watch!

  • @namesarehardok8832
    @namesarehardok8832 10 лет назад

    Great video scott

  • @DmAlmazov
    @DmAlmazov 8 лет назад +76

    "Поехали!" (с)

    • @Fixxate
      @Fixxate 8 лет назад

      What that mean?

    • @linecraftman3907
      @linecraftman3907 8 лет назад +11

      +RandomSpaceManInSpace lets go

    • @ehnasan
      @ehnasan 8 лет назад +3

      +RandomSpaceManInSpace this word Gagarin said on 1st second of flight, right after liftoff

    • @excrafterhd3247
      @excrafterhd3247 8 лет назад

      😉

    • @CD-iz4ul
      @CD-iz4ul 7 лет назад +2

      Уважаемый Дмитрий Изумрудов, использованная вами комбинация букв была зарегистрирована компанией "Союз космос" 12 апреля 1961 года. Для уточнения информации пожалуйста проследуйте на сайт [сайт не существует].

  • @BorisGrishenco
    @BorisGrishenco 10 лет назад +4

    At the start Gagarin said: "Поехали!" Which is mean something like "Let's ride!"

  • @sillyrunner1
    @sillyrunner1 10 лет назад +1

    I'm so glad to see another Orbiter video. It's not just gameplay, I actually learned something about the first spaceflight.

    • @scottmanley
      @scottmanley  10 лет назад +1

      That's good, because there's not really much gameplay if you want to pretend you're Yuri Gagarin.

    • @tiagogobbi3610
      @tiagogobbi3610 9 лет назад

      Scott Manley OMG OMG OMG!!! THIS IS A NEW AND RIDICOLOUS NEW GAME??! I always play KSP but never see such realistic images like this! Where I buy this game? Steam?

    • @sillyrunner1
      @sillyrunner1 9 лет назад

      Search "Orbiter." It's a completely free and amazing space simulator. I've seen just about every space mission realistically added to the game through mods. It takes a bit of practice though. My favorites are the Apollo program missions. Hours of actual Apollo audio clips are added for each mission.

    • @tiagogobbi3610
      @tiagogobbi3610 9 лет назад

      Thank you sillyrunner!! But... What?! OMG OMD IT IS FREE?!?! IS IMPOSSIBLE MAN!! I can't believe! I will check for sure!

    • @tiagogobbi3610
      @tiagogobbi3610 9 лет назад

      sillyrunner1 Thank you sillyrunner!! but.. What?! OMG OMG IT IS FREE?!! IT IS IMPOSSIBLE MAN!!! I can't believe!! I will check and play for sure!!!

  • @ZemplinTemplar
    @ZemplinTemplar 6 лет назад

    You were clearly flying over Cyprus, so yes, the Mediterranean. :-)
    Nice walkthrough of this Orbiter scenario. I've seen it before, but it's even better with commentary.

  • @Mr66D
    @Mr66D 9 лет назад +8

    The Motherland Knows
    The Motherland Hears
    When Her son is flying
    up in the clouds...

  • @ParaglidingManiac
    @ParaglidingManiac 10 лет назад +6

    Orbiter, Orbiter, Orbiter, Orbiter!

  • @darkvincentslayer5911
    @darkvincentslayer5911 10 лет назад

    No matter what space game you play I always want to play it. Already purchased KSP and my friend is getting it now I got to find Orbiter. Cheers Mate.

    • @gunmaster2796
      @gunmaster2796 10 лет назад

      orbit.medphys.ucl.ac.uk/download.html

    • @cody13434
      @cody13434 10 лет назад

      TheCanadianPoliceman luckily it is free too. I would also recommend getting some mods such as the Delta Glider IV (DGIV) and Universal Cars and Cargo which contains a massive "mother" ship

  • @nimbly1693
    @nimbly1693 3 года назад +1

    I met a guy once that had worked for NASA. He was a metallurgist that developed super strong bolts that when exposed to an electrical currant shatter. From what I understand that is how the shuttle separated.

    • @deepujacob3419
      @deepujacob3419 3 года назад

      Explosive bolts are used for stage separations.

  • @StefanKorotynov
    @StefanKorotynov 10 лет назад +6

    My precious soviet ears! All the mispronunciations, all of them! :)

    • @scottmanley
      @scottmanley  10 лет назад +18

      Now you know what it's like to come from the UK and live in the US!

  • @CommandLineVulpine
    @CommandLineVulpine 10 лет назад +13

    I think its silly that not landing with your spaceship makes things not count. Its almost like saying Apollo doesn't count because it wasn't a direct ascent.

    • @pyr0b1rd
      @pyr0b1rd 10 лет назад +1

      I suppose it's similar to how ejecting from a plane doesn't really count as landing it; similarly a plane you have to eject from in order to land is a bad design. I agree it's rather petty though, discounting things like that.
      But hm... they probably could have added something for a soft landing for the same weight of the ejection system but... given my experience remains solely with Kerbals I'm probably incorrect there. ^^;

    • @CommandLineVulpine
      @CommandLineVulpine 10 лет назад +6

      Keep in mind America landed their's in the ocean. I'm not sure if Mercury capsules could have landed on land. Russia is relatively land locked and if they were to mobilize their ships to conduct a water rescue other nations might have considered the ship movements aggressive.

    • @hongtae2012
      @hongtae2012 9 лет назад

      Lance Elliott
      Soviet landing capsules use small retro thrusters to brake few meters above ground. How unfair they are land-locked. I heard that their rocket blew up above Australia and they have to convince that its not a nuclear test.

    • @VidweII
      @VidweII 5 лет назад

      Lance Elliott Russia land locked? Don't be daft.

  • @sega00709
    @sega00709 9 лет назад

    Спасибо за видео, Мэнли!

  • @Oinikis
    @Oinikis 10 лет назад +2

    As Gagarin wrote in his book, this achivement is for whole humankind. doesn't matter Russian, or American, this achivement is by whole humankind. like lunar landing. both Americans and Russian did lots of first, and Saturn V head designer, was Werner Von Braun, a german.

  • @michaelmartin9022
    @michaelmartin9022 6 лет назад +6

    "They had to just aim for the Soviet Union"
    Big target, at least.

  • @zeekertron
    @zeekertron 10 лет назад +4

    PLEASE PLEASE PLX PLZ PLOX DO MORE ORBITER VIDEOS!

  • @dnskmv
    @dnskmv 9 лет назад +1

    Great work, Scott. I like it. I am glad that the rocket opened the way for humanity into space, instead of to carry nuclear bombs across the ocean. And this is a real victory of reason.

  • @JeffreyBue_imtxsmoke
    @JeffreyBue_imtxsmoke 5 месяцев назад

    This is the video where I discovered Scott Manley's YT channel. It showed up in my recommended and I've been subscribed ever since.

  • @naominekomimi
    @naominekomimi 10 лет назад +3

    What are the four little beams of exhaust coming out of the engine when it fires? Why isn't all of the thrust directed out of the back?

    • @dsny7333
      @dsny7333 5 лет назад +1

      not sure,but I think maybe they were stabilizing thrusters that fired automatically to keep the spacecraft in the proper orientation .

  • @Technoid_Mutant
    @Technoid_Mutant Год назад +1

    Gagarin's flight qualifies in all respects for a first. He took off in a spacecraft and landed with a part of that spacecraft. The Apollo program did the very same thing. Nothing that might be said about this subject affects Gagarin's courage or his own perception of this historic flight.

  • @Sprengi86
    @Sprengi86 10 лет назад +41

    Apparently you forgot to take 'Near Space' science, you're starting to slack.

    • @scottmanley
      @scottmanley  10 лет назад +27

      I was doing scientific observations of my clipboard.

    • @Sprengi86
      @Sprengi86 10 лет назад +13

      Scott Manley Yeah, but you forgot to take the science data from the capsule when you went EVA with your parachute.

    • @R3bel02
      @R3bel02 10 лет назад +2

      ICHBlNS Hahaha hilarious

    • @gavrilmilokumov5763
      @gavrilmilokumov5763 4 года назад

      @@scottmanley great job!

  • @petermcgarrymusicandflying
    @petermcgarrymusicandflying 4 года назад

    Just loved this. Yuri is my hero

  • @KOTYAR0
    @KOTYAR0 4 года назад

    Awesome! I will be visiting museum of RKK Energiya tomorrow!

  • @tristenturner832
    @tristenturner832 5 лет назад +3

    idk, he landed in the chair he took off in. i would argue he landed with his spacecraft as much as any other multi stage spacecraft. his final stage just wast until after re-entry

  • @illarionjabine6690
    @illarionjabine6690 4 года назад +6

    It's really sad how tragically Yuri died while pilot testing a new military jet.

  • @olegator2203
    @olegator2203 9 лет назад

    ОФИГЕТЬ!!! Я не думал, что можно сделать НА СТОЛЬКО реалистично! Лови лайк!

  • @erictaylor5462
    @erictaylor5462 6 лет назад +2

    I heard a story that he landed near a farmer, who asked, "Are you a space man?" and Yuri said, "Yes, I am." and hugged the guy. Probably not true, but I wish it was.

    • @whiplash7400
      @whiplash7400 5 лет назад +1

      Eric Taylor That's a heartwarming story, but I don't think you can farm in a desert.

    • @MrPashee
      @MrPashee 5 лет назад

      @@whiplash7400 He landed in the centre of Russia and this story is true. After landing he had to find a phone in this village to call to Moscow)))

    • @terryboyer1342
      @terryboyer1342 5 лет назад

      @@MrPashee Why not AAA or it's Russian equiv?

  • @Yokopo_
    @Yokopo_ 10 лет назад +4

    The old Russian rockets and capsules looked really cool. The N1 rocket being one of the more interesting designs, however it didn't really work out in the end...

    • @msbuinov926
      @msbuinov926 10 лет назад +4

      Because the pesky people who funded the mission, cut of all funding just before the NK engine was brought into use...

    • @NavyGuy2OO7
      @NavyGuy2OO7 10 лет назад

      Thoth themighty

    • @peggyfranzen6159
      @peggyfranzen6159 3 года назад

      Liquid Hydrogen and wires are gone!

  • @kujoforever
    @kujoforever 10 лет назад +6

    5:19 did you mean to say визор? It's pronounced visor.

  • @alexgshirreff
    @alexgshirreff 10 лет назад

    Thanks for the correction I'm going to go look up his story again to refresh my memory

  • @frankenstine4314
    @frankenstine4314 10 лет назад

    Nicely done mod. I use to do a lot of scifi mods for Orbiter but stopped when I discovered KSP. I find KSP a lot more fun to play.

  • @CountArtha
    @CountArtha 8 лет назад +3

    17:50 - Cyprus, Turkey and Syria.

  • @kevintsap3692
    @kevintsap3692 10 лет назад +4

    Vzor is what you meant. It means "A look"

    • @shoora813
      @shoora813 4 года назад

      "Vizor" means a viewfinder

    • @RexyCraxy
      @RexyCraxy 4 года назад

      @@shoora813 it was a NAME of the device. The word "vzor" can mean "view", "look [at]", "gaze" in Russian.

  • @Phylonyous
    @Phylonyous 5 лет назад

    AWESOME STUFF!

  • @lawrencedoliveiro9104
    @lawrencedoliveiro9104 7 лет назад

    3:39 notice the gap separating the stages--I understand that was to allow the upper stage to ignite before the lower one had even separated, and basically blow the latter away.

  • @KayoMichiels
    @KayoMichiels 10 лет назад +10

    Next up: project apollo mod! (or Mercury or even Gemini).

  • @myofficetop
    @myofficetop 4 года назад +11

    Fun fact: In Russia, we call first stage boosters "Carrots"

    • @robertbennett9949
      @robertbennett9949 3 года назад +3

      Well, they look like 4 carrots. I love the R7.

  • @alexgshirreff
    @alexgshirreff 10 лет назад

    Clearly I have spent to long researching this stuff after playing this brilliant mod myself

  • @rawnukles
    @rawnukles 10 лет назад

    That was great ! and I learned something.

  • @liesdamnlies3372
    @liesdamnlies3372 10 лет назад +12

    I should be more excited by this, it having happened, and being awesome, and being an important part of our history and so on, but it just doesn't compare to KSP.

    • @dvl973
      @dvl973 10 лет назад +2

      but look at the size of the earth :) it looks like earth! kerbin is too small

    • @liesdamnlies3372
      @liesdamnlies3372 10 лет назад +2

      Yes. Sure. But KSP is more *fun*. The scaling in KSP is a clear design choice by the devs to not require players to sit through hours, and hours, and hours, of watching things move slowly, or ascend from Kerbin. There's enough of that with ion drives already.

    • @maciejrozanski154
      @maciejrozanski154 10 лет назад

      ***** You made a rocket that can pull itself on orbit by using ion engines o.O, tell me how.

    • @liesdamnlies3372
      @liesdamnlies3372 10 лет назад +2

      Janusz Kowalski
      You misunderstand. I was saying that ion drives are the rocket science equivalent of watching paint dry. It's true even with KSP's stock ion drives, and those are ridiculously overpowered when compared to reality. Not that I mind.
      The design choice to make Kerbin very dense results in quasi-realistic rocket sizes (okay not really, but at least they aren't tiny), but more importantly the relatively small size means that launching a rocket takes quite a bit less time than it does in real life. It's quite literally a difference between minutes and hours.

    • @dvl973
      @dvl973 10 лет назад

      Janusz Kowalski you can't. You can make a plane though.

  • @Jetsubou
    @Jetsubou 9 лет назад +8

    Your Russian is rather good! :)

    • @ik2254
      @ik2254 8 лет назад +1

      No it isn't. Like at all.

    • @KOTYAR0
      @KOTYAR0 4 года назад

      ikr, he knows actual WORDS!
      As a Russian, I'm super glad!

  • @grahamsproductionz
    @grahamsproductionz 10 лет назад

    the spacecraft went into a slightly higher orbit than was expected and he would most likely died if the deorbit burn was unsucessful, BUT HE DIDN'T! well thats good mister Manley, thanks for spoiling our fun

  • @Tarkalark
    @Tarkalark 10 лет назад

    Great video! Maybe people will find it in their heart to forgive you for the space shuttle payload bay door incident :D

  • @jdfj1041
    @jdfj1041 8 лет назад +7

    Do some catastrophic failures

  • @donzetjr6988
    @donzetjr6988 10 лет назад +181

    Слава СССР!

    • @scottmanley
      @scottmanley  10 лет назад +77

      I really need to learn Russian.

    • @mygooseshrine
      @mygooseshrine 10 лет назад +69

      Glory to Arstotzka

    • @Microlabization
      @Microlabization 10 лет назад +19

      Scott Manley Gagarin said: "Poehali". (On English - Let's go). =)

    • @scottmanley
      @scottmanley  10 лет назад +17

      Microlabization Yep I knew it translated to 'Let's Go' but I wasn't going to ruin his enthusiasm by attempting to repeat his words badly.

    • @AlfredqwertyZien
      @AlfredqwertyZien 10 лет назад +15

      There was one phrase in USSR. “Я выучил бы русский язык только за то, что на нём разговаривал Ленин”. - “I would learn Russian just because Lenin spoke it.” If you replace Lenin by Gagarin or Korolev or Tsiolkovsky, that may be suitable for you.

  • @therabbitswhisper
    @therabbitswhisper 2 года назад

    they say you learn something new everyday....I feel enlightened

  • @Duckfisher0222
    @Duckfisher0222 5 лет назад +2

    When you are talking about the fuel pressure, i asked myself, in the real capsule, would it not have multiple gauges, as there are multiple fuel tanks?

  • @IanTester
    @IanTester 10 лет назад +10

    It's a shame that Orbiter is only available for Windows.

    • @scottmanley
      @scottmanley  10 лет назад +11

      It is, I'd love to play it on my Mac

    • @JosiahSiegel
      @JosiahSiegel 10 лет назад +1

      I would love to see you play more Orbiter.
      Also, "Let's go" in Russian is "Pahyekhali", (Поехали) stressed on the third syllable from the end.

    • @CarolinaGroyper
      @CarolinaGroyper 10 лет назад +6

      In the end, though, windows is better for gaming. Soyuz is my favourite rocket.

    • @IanTester
      @IanTester 10 лет назад +10

      Carter Khoury Valve seems to think Linux is the future of gaming :)

    • @Buda738
      @Buda738 10 лет назад +5

      Ian Tester Thats due to the fact that anyone can edit how Linux works.

  • @Nightlurk
    @Nightlurk 10 лет назад +4

    I wonder how many people died before Yuri made it back alive. I wonder what was going through his head when he stepped into that capsule... It's sad that we'll never learn the names of the people that went up in space before him and never came back. It must have been a huge burden for him all his life, to be called a hero and praised by the entire world knowing what he probably knew.

    • @scottmanley
      @scottmanley  10 лет назад +12

      As best as we can tell, the only deaths of passengers up to this point were Dogs. There seem to be plenty of claims of prior cosmonauts, but none have ever been substantiated and many have been debunked since the program was declassified.

    • @legoclone0965
      @legoclone0965 9 лет назад +1

      'only' dogs. Why can't Russia tell the truth, we might like them a little more. Well, not really, we threatened each other with nukes.

    • @Nightlurk
      @Nightlurk 9 лет назад +4

      I know westerners have a hard time believing the extent to which the eastern governments were willing to take things back in the soviet era. For people that got to experience living in the communist block, the secret police, having your phone calls monitored, your lifetime neighbor being a secret state informant turning you in for making "inappropriate" jokes about the regime, people being picked up from their homes in the middle of the night never to be heard from again, and the list goes on...
      It's true that we have no evidence of actual deaths during the Russian space program, but coming from a regime who would send a man to be tortured and die in a political prison, just for talking about democracy with his friends one day, how hard is it to imagine what that government would do, only to save face in the eyes of the world...
      It's funny how, when talking about the WW2, everyone thinks the most suffering caused by that war was caused by the nazis, and then everyone thinks about the holocaust. And it's true, that was a very dark period in history. But what about the 50 years of rough communist oppression that the easterners had to endure after the west drew a line on the map and threw millions of people to the Russians.

    • @tank_3487
      @tank_3487 9 лет назад +2

      GoodGameHunter In USA phone calls are monitored now too(and emails and other things). And you can end in secret state prison after a conversation about islam. You would be surprised how many were tortured by US goverment orders. You would face fabricated accusations like Assange for speaking truth. Of course its more simple to live in ignorance.

  • @NathanLucas5
    @NathanLucas5 9 лет назад

    Damnit Scott I did not need this a week before finals!

    • @waterlubber
      @waterlubber 9 лет назад +2

      A week? Ha! I study on the bus.

    • @Ratkill9000
      @Ratkill9000 8 лет назад

      +waterlubber Study? I winged all my finals and barely passed high school.

  • @lemaro1977
    @lemaro1977 7 лет назад

    cool video!

  • @asparwhite86
    @asparwhite86 9 лет назад +3

    Very careful where they land because of the the cold war? Even after the end of the cold war, countries are very careful about where their space ships(and any flying vehicles) land. What space craft were ever designed to be piloted vs automatic? I do not understand how the fact that the space ship was controlled by a computer took anything away (rather I think it shows off how well designed and programmed their craft was).

    • @1312_PV
      @1312_PV 8 лет назад +3

      Yeah, the perfect automatic landing of the Buran in a strong cross-wind was a specially impressive feat of space automation IMO.

    • @victorgigante5374
      @victorgigante5374 8 лет назад +3

      +asparwhite86 It's strictly in contrast to the Mercury capsule, which was frequently hand-flown. There's an expression, "SPAM in a can," that describes how American astronauts felt their Soviet counterparts were treated. It basically means the cosmonauts were just payload, vs. astronauts being pilots. Was it accurate? Not necessarily - Gagarin had his override code, after all. But it's a reflection on the centralized and heavily authoritarian Soviet system that the spacecraft was designed to be operated first in a ground-controlled mode and only secondarily by its pilot.

    • @nikelquint
      @nikelquint 8 лет назад +2

      America got fined for littering when one of their spaceship parts landed on a different content. The fine was around 100$ from my memory

    • @victorgigante5374
      @victorgigante5374 8 лет назад +3

      IIRC, that was when Skylab reentered, and it hit in the Australian Outback. Incidentally, I don't think we ever paid the fine.

    • @johnbrown9181
      @johnbrown9181 6 лет назад +1

      @Victor Gigante A local radio station (IIRC it was in the US) did a fundraising event to pay for the fine 10 or so years later.

  • @keiyakins
    @keiyakins 10 лет назад +3

    Yuri Gagarin: Space Cheater. Jeb would be proud.
    I think the official records now are that he was the first human in space, but Shepard's flight was the first complete spaceflight? It's something ridiculous like that.

    • @tank_3487
      @tank_3487 9 лет назад

      Keiya Bachhuber Shepard flight did not even get him on orbit. Its actually debatable if it even can be counted as "actually be in space".

  • @saturn0660
    @saturn0660 9 лет назад

    Wow, i need to download this again… Been a VERY long time it seems.

  • @TheGreyhoundGames
    @TheGreyhoundGames 6 лет назад +2

    I mean Yuri did have one chance to go into space again aboard the first manned Soyuz flight, but with the way that things had been going it was not going to be a guarantee he'd come back in one piece. Hence why Vladimir Komarov, the other guy that was actually in line in front of him for the task, elected to go instead, even though he knew the risk as he knew Gagarin's legacy, and didn't want to see someone he greatly respected to possibly die on this sketchy as hell mission. Unfortunately, that was only good for Gagarin's sake as Komarov's craft did not deploy its parachute upon reentry and slammed into the ground at high speed.