Maybe the Soviets were too ambitious but I have to admire their optimism. Landing a probe on Mars _with a rover_ in 1971 is mind blowing indeed. A colossal achievement that I was completely unaware of until now. This is why I'm subscribed to Simon's channels
All the Soviets really proved is that being first doesn't have much to do with being the best or even being successful. Most of the Soviet space program was little more than the equivalent of publicity stunts.
@@autodidact537 soviet missiles today Are the best though and I don't think that would have been the case without the lessons learned in their space program. You don't go through the efforts they did for publicity it is to learn and they did.
You left out one of the scariest aspects of Venus. Atmospheric pressure at the surface is roughly equivalent to the pressure you'd feel 3000 feet below the surface of an ocean on Earth. The atmosphere IS gaseous, not liquid, just at an extremely high pressure.
It's actually a supercritical fluid at that temperature and pressure, which means it has properties of both a gas and a liquid at the same time. The atmosphere of Venus is wild.
Yes, not only were they the first to put a manmade object on the moon (and thereby any celestial object other than Earth) with Luna 2, but they also achieved the first soft landing on the moon with Luna 9.
Since you talked about Saturn briefly in this video, I think you should do a video on Cassini Huygens Space Probe. It explored the Ringed Gas Giant and learned a lot of things about not only Saturn, but also the many moons which orbit Saturn. Plus its final suicide dive into the Saturnian Atmosphere as it sent back final bits of data is a badass way to go.
I'm opting out. I Can't negate my own experiences that go against this kind of narrative. Sorry. I do not believe the celestial spheres will welcome human life on them. Humanity reaching for the stars while babies starve on the Earth... yeah. I just don't think that looks good to the creator program that watches everything we do. UFO's are more real to me than missions to mars will ever be.
And I love watching my daily dose of Stargate, so.... It's not that i don't believe in other worlds, or realms. I just don't think humanity will travel there via the ozone soup we call space.
@@victorzvyagintsev1325 Agreed; first to hit Mars was an accomplishment; first to land a spacecraft that survived and functioned as designed was another.
NOW YOU HAVE TO DO VENERA. It may have been a failure in the grand scheme of things, but it was still a mega project deserving of coverage. Edit: sorry for the late edit to this. Okay in retrospect after thinking about it for a while, he's Venera was successful in their primary objective. It's just that it took Soooo long and with so many failures for them to get was was essentially a few minutes of glory before the sulphuric atmosphere melted everything. You know I kinda wanna see a mission back to Venus and back to the spot where Venera landed with a Venus rover to see what half a century of exposure does to the structure.
@@atomicskull6405 yeah I get what you mean. Considering that the Americans took the easy planet and the Soviets took the hardest planet to go to... I kinda wrote that comment in a rush so I didn't have the time to think about my statement. But fact remains. VENERA COMMRADE SIMON
1:50 - Chapter 1 - Mars 3:40 - Chapter 2 - The space race 4:55 - Chapter 3 - Race to the red planet 6:35 - Chapter 4 - Mars missions 7:25 - Chapter 5 - The 3 amigos 8:20 - Chapter 6 - Mars 2 & 3 11:35 - Chapter 7 - The main event 15:05 - Chapter 8 - The future of mars travel
I want to say, that mini rover looks super interesting and I wish current rovers got something like this at their disposal. Soviet engineers got quite fun and outlandish ideas it seems :) This and lunokhod vehicle are really "sci-fi" looking :)
I love the fact that you always express scientific measures using the metric system instead of the antique imperial system. I wish NASA would do the same. Keep up the good work!
Specially History, The Venus missions blew my mind. I really wanna see more of their accomplishments as well, they deserve some global recognition for their efforts.
10:48 "This is happening in the 1970's this is mind blowing". Oldie here (well born in the same year as Steve Jobs). May I remind you Simon it was my generation that invented the computers, infrastructure and associated gadgets that make your career possible, but it was not us but our parents generation that actually went to the moon. My school physics teacher actually worked for NASA before he had to return to the UK at the end of the Apollo programme.
tHE REASON YOU NEVER HEARD OFF BECAUSE IT WAS IN THE SOVIET TIME and the US LIED ABOUT THE SOVIET IN SHAME THEY COULD NOT MANNAGE WHAT THE SOVIET COULD AND ALSO STILL LIES ABOUT THE MILITARY WEAPON THAT THE SOVIET RUSSIANS AND EVEN TODAYS IS BETTER.... THAT IS WHY THE WHOLE WORLD IS BELIEVE THE SOVIET AND THE RUSSIANS WHICH ALL COUTRIES KNEW BUT THE US BAN IT'S CITIZENS FOR TO FIND OUT ABOUT
This was actually very cool! I had known about Mars 2 and 3, but not with this level of detail. Very nicely done!! I really do like your videos on space topics
That really was interesting, I knew that both the USSR & the USA had got orbiting satellites to Mars, but had no idea that the USSR had managed to land something that then transmitted back to Earth, 50 years ago, that was a pretty mean feat even now, thanks for doing this.
I love to watch all of your channels, and you do a great job, but you had one small mistake. The Apollo 11 landing occurred on July 20th, 1969, and Neil Armstrong’s first steps occurred late on the 20th or early on the 21st depending on what time zone in the world you were living in. The 24th was the day they returned to Earth.
Shielding for space radiation so that humans can survive a trip to Mars with more than 60% of their brain intact would indeed be a Megaproject. Living on Mars will require just as much shielding, so structures on Mars will be megaprojects too.
Didn't we go to Escobars for that? What year did we go to Escobars for Hippos? Or Pablos... or something... Ask the guys that did South Park, they prolly know for sure... Or Tom Cruise, ask him... no, maybe don't ask Tom Cruise how to get to other planets... What about Zod... The general.... You don't know General Zod? WHERE HAVE YOU BEAN? WHERE AM I ?
Apparently Beagle successfully entered the orbit of Mars at something like 17 kms per second, successfully aerobraked as it entered the atmosphere, deployed it shutes then inflated the dodecahedron of air Bags built into its fuselage just before cutting the chutes and landing!. Upon landing, it bounced once… twice, rolled a little… and promptly dropped into a bottomless pit. So in summation, was Beagle a success! Not really! But technically I feel that it’s also the greatest Hole in One ever played!
There’s a scene in the BBC documentary series The Planets tff he at features two of the scientists who’d worked on Mars 3. One of them explained about how the “image” was being received and then the signal stopped, the other guy just looked at the ground the whole time saying very little. His sense of disappointment at how close they’d come to success was so evident. Space missions operate on very fine margins, when Beagle 2 was located on Mars and it was evident that it had reached the surface only to fail to properly deploy I immediately thought back to Mars 3.
Mars mission windows are fun because you only get several weeks-months every 2.2 years because of the separate orbits so when the windows open you often see a big group go up at once when interest is high. For example, 6 craft were sent by two countries in Jul-Aug 2020 including Chinese and American landers (Zhurong and Perseverance)
you guys do great work; i enjoy it every time it comes across my feed! simon, you should have compared the soviet mars 2 to a heavy duty pickup; most of us have never ridden a hippo!
i think in 1971 is was working in a computer center, essentialy calculating and printing out invoices for building supplies and laundry requisits, it was owned by sunlight laundries, so...but although it got lost years ago, i did have a print-out of a naked girl leaning on a bar stool, printed using letters and numbers. so i was going to complain that if you're going to take photos of mars maybe a decent reproductive system would have been useful, but, considering the tech of the time maybe a fuzzy blob is all you could expect. the computer we used, a UNIVAC 9300 had a 64k memory which was revealed from behind the panel with all the flashing lights on, a criss cross of wires and tiny ring magnets.
I admit I never thought the Soviets be the first to smash and land on Mars! Why do they have an obsession of keeping really awesome projects a secret that could benefit everyone else. They are bringing more respect to their daring achievements and doesn't matter they don't last long they just showed humanity can do it.
YES! As soon as you mentioned the PROTON K I immediately thought of Voyager and Capt. Proton, I LOVE that you also did and called it out. Lol'd so hard. Love you Simon.
@ 7:12 corection, the Soviet Union were the first to land a man made object on the moon. Luna 2 1959- 1st Lunar impact, then Luna 9 1966, first Lunar soft landing, they were also the first to land a craft on Venus as Well as Mars.
3:30 actually venus is closer than mars but mars's environment is more habitable. 7:08 also the soviet mission luna 9 was the first object to soft and on the junar surface. Please do a video on the soviet venera probes and you never did a video on the Buran shuttle, the soviet space shuttle analogue.
SUGGESTION: Ilyushin IL-2 - Visionary WWII ground-attack "flying tank" and spiritual predecessor to the A-10 Warthog - The single most produced military aircraft in aviation history - Some WWII-era Wehrmacht nicknames for it: "meat grinder", "butcher", "black death", "slaughterer", "concrete bird" - What Stalin had to say about it: "Our Red Army now needs IL-2 aircraft like the air it breathes, like the bread it eats."
At 5:33, there is a historical inaccuracy. NASA didn't attempt 4 missions to Mars during Mariner programme. The first two Mariner missions(Mariner 1 & Mariner 2) were launched to Venus in 1962. Out of this two missions, Mariner 2 made a first successful flyby of Venus in history. By a successful flyby, i mean the first ever to make a measurement of the physical characteristics of the planet venus and successfully report the results obtained during the flyby back to Earth. NASA just attempted two missions(Mariner 3 & Mariner 4 in 1964) to Mars.
My parents brought a couple of cosmonauts to the Houston rodeo and you never partied with crazier folks, and they made the American astronauts seem really ummm...straight-edge? God I'm old 😆 well done, sir!
What a great video, really informative and enjoyable. One little question: did the Americans manage to land the first manmade object on the moon as stated in the narration? I thought that was the Luna 2 impactor, while Luna 9 was the first to achieve a lunar soft landing? But, I don't pretend to be an expert on this stuff, and am more than willing to be corrected.
Wonder what the odds are of a modern rover finding mars 3 and figuring out what went wrong. Extra points if someone from the original mission is still around to appreciate the effort.
Do an episode that would take the budget(1yr)of the us military & use that for another purpose(space expansion)what it could do please absolutley love simon
0:55 Perseverence and Curiosity have the same Chassis. They are about the same size and 90's Honda Civic. They are nuclear powered and have totally awesome twitter accounts. Ingenuity (the mars chopper that could), on the other, hand is tiny.
This was a real space race. The technological achievements were principally in the fields of engine and telemetric engineering, rather than pure (i.e.: theoretical) science. We already suspected what we would find there. It is obvious to anyone considering the subject that these missions were spinoff applications of the same technologies (those mentioned above plus ballistics) which were expected to be used to deliver nuclear devices to "enemy" cities.
If you're gonna play another game Simon, play SimpleRockets II.. It's right up your street to launch some stuff and get onto Mar before everyone else, and do something worthy and dump stuff.
Also do the pioneer missions which were the first to send back images of Saturn and Jupiter. The literal precursors to Voyager. Also do Voyager 2 since you did Voyager 1. Voyager 2 was the first and only spacecraft to visit Uranus and Neptune
Your content is disgustingly underrated. You’re the goat 🔥.I don't know who, but someone actually needs to hear this, you've got to stop saving all your money. Venture into investing some, if you really want financial stability.
Beautifully said, I tell my folks these words everyday. It's good to save money but most people don't understand the market moves and tend to be misled in facts like this and always depend on money in the bank.
@Collins Markson Hey, this is a computer age. Peeps who aren't even traders make money from the crypto and forex markets ,how many millionaires do you know who have become wealthy by investing in savings accounts?
Ok but really, how many channels do you have mate 😂 how do you keep track of all that or have time for them all haha. You must have a seriously good team to help with that all! You lot do amazing:)
Did you see yesterday's video on the first attempt by America to launch a satellite. The thing that really shocked me from that video was the fact that Russia were still using the old valve technology in their electronics even really late in to their development. It's mad just what they could all do on both sides with the tiny amount of tech that they had. I mean the early mobile phones had more processing power than the original moon mission vehicles.
@@itarry4 Before very large scale integration of circuits, designers would make analog type computers. You are correct: we can fit more computer power on a chip the size of your fingernail now
An actual event that was funnier was a meeting of space agencies back in the late sixties early seventies. One American was telling how millions were spent to get a ballpoint pen to work in microgravity. A Russian, overhearing this, said, "We give our Cosmonauts pencils."
@@patdohrety2940 yhea I know back then it was the programming and ways they utilised what they had that was amazing. They wasted nothing so different from today where as long as it works it'll do even if it draws far more power than it needs to or uses more memory etc. The programmers today don't need to save every bit they can and they tend to build "new" systems on older ones rather than starting again.
I think it takes about 7 months to get from Earth to Mars but that is only when they’re within an optimal Flight window every 2 years when Earth and Mars’ orbit align to be at their closest distance from each other
Maybe the Soviets were too ambitious but I have to admire their optimism. Landing a probe on Mars _with a rover_ in 1971 is mind blowing indeed. A colossal achievement that I was completely unaware of until now. This is why I'm subscribed to Simon's channels
same as they already did on the moon, since the russians had no a heavy lunar rocket, they spend their time and resources on someting else
@@impaugjuldivmax obviously the rocket that sent 7000kg landers and fuel to reach mars was pretty big, dude.
@@lostpony4885 not enough, only 1/3 of what needed for the Lunar landing mission.
All the Soviets really proved is that being first doesn't have much to do with being the best or even being successful. Most of the Soviet space program was little more than the equivalent of publicity stunts.
@@autodidact537 soviet missiles today Are the best though and I don't think that would have been the case without the lessons learned in their space program. You don't go through the efforts they did for publicity it is to learn and they did.
You left out one of the scariest aspects of Venus. Atmospheric pressure at the surface is roughly equivalent to the pressure you'd feel 3000 feet below the surface of an ocean on Earth. The atmosphere IS gaseous, not liquid, just at an extremely high pressure.
It's actually a supercritical fluid at that temperature and pressure, which means it has properties of both a gas and a liquid at the same time. The atmosphere of Venus is wild.
Venus being 100% covered in sulphuric acid clouds is scarier still.
I'd like to recommend the Russian satellites sent to Venus. The only devices to survive the surface, despite melting an hour later.
Yes please do this mission
Agreed. 👍🏿
Yeah, that's a good one. It really threw me when I found out it was called Venaria. I just immediately thought of STDs.
Yes
I'd like to recommend the probes in Uranus.
Please do the one about USSR Venus probes! That's even more impressive.
Or the probes in Uranus! They went deep.
@Va Sr does Uranus have a crust?
It's crazy how much they spent on something with so little payoff.
@@Shadow__133 What was the mission called? Thats so cool and would love to learn more!
@@LimitlessEntertainment_ it's a troll unfortunately 😭
Ah yes of course!
The Reds going to the Red Planet.
Mars is the red planet
They were trying to claim their real estate.
they were going to the one place untainted by capitalism
SPUACE
Just for the color, Mussolini would have sent an expedition to reclaim the planet in the name of Fascism if he had the means. He was THAT crazy.
Sounds like a Teaser that was at the End of Iron Sky 2, Nazis on the Moon and then Teaser for Soviets on Mars.
Megaprojects: countless attempts to get to Mars
Megaprojects: there were 12
Weird flex that you can count past 11, but okay.
Respect to all the men and women of the Soviet (Russian) Space program. Just imagine what we could all accomplish together.
I thought I knew a lot about space history,
but I didn’t know this!
Thanks Simon!
im the same , never expected that
7:13 The Americans weren't the first to land a man made object on the moon. The Soviets were. Look up Luna 2.
Yes, not only were they the first to put a manmade object on the moon (and thereby any celestial object other than Earth) with Luna 2, but they also achieved the first soft landing on the moon with Luna 9.
@@michaelkuper6604
Luna 9 also sent the first photos of the moon from the moon.
Since you talked about Saturn briefly in this video, I think you should do a video on Cassini Huygens Space Probe. It explored the Ringed Gas Giant and learned a lot of things about not only Saturn, but also the many moons which orbit Saturn. Plus its final suicide dive into the Saturnian Atmosphere as it sent back final bits of data is a badass way to go.
RUclips: "How many channels do you want to make for content?"
Simon: "Yes."
The most over used comment on almost every video Simon presents...
@@Iamtheliquor ... anyways, there is a team, not only Simon.
@@krollpeter thats why I said what Simon presents instead of Simon’s channels
I'm opting out. I Can't negate my own experiences that go against this kind of narrative. Sorry. I do not believe the celestial spheres will welcome human life on them. Humanity reaching for the stars while babies starve on the Earth... yeah. I just don't think that looks good to the creator program that watches everything we do. UFO's are more real to me than missions to mars will ever be.
And I love watching my daily dose of Stargate, so.... It's not that i don't believe in other worlds, or realms. I just don't think humanity will travel there via the ozone soup we call space.
"The first ever to crash into the surface of Mars"
LMAO
Thats actually an achievement in terms of the space race. Luna 2 and Ranger 4 were specifically sent to hit the moon.
We meant to do that
@@victorzvyagintsev1325 Agreed; first to hit Mars was an accomplishment; first to land a spacecraft that survived and functioned as designed was another.
@@JohnWilliamNowak it was a controlled flight into terrain
The Soviets just wanted to see if Martian Man-Hunter was gonna retaliate. They got their answer
NOW YOU HAVE TO DO VENERA. It may have been a failure in the grand scheme of things, but it was still a mega project deserving of coverage.
Edit: sorry for the late edit to this. Okay in retrospect after thinking about it for a while, he's Venera was successful in their primary objective. It's just that it took Soooo long and with so many failures for them to get was was essentially a few minutes of glory before the sulphuric atmosphere melted everything.
You know I kinda wanna see a mission back to Venus and back to the spot where Venera landed with a Venus rover to see what half a century of exposure does to the structure.
Venera wasn't a failure though it was massively successful. The soviets did really, really well with Venus for some reason.
@@atomicskull6405 yeah I get what you mean. Considering that the Americans took the easy planet and the Soviets took the hardest planet to go to... I kinda wrote that comment in a rush so I didn't have the time to think about my statement. But fact remains.
VENERA COMMRADE SIMON
First images and sounds of venues were captured in the veneria missions
He did it today check his newest upload
everything soviet is scary, big, terryfing and.. and... and.. absolut MAGICAL WONDERFUL. As always, thank u Simon!
1:50 - Chapter 1 - Mars
3:40 - Chapter 2 - The space race
4:55 - Chapter 3 - Race to the red planet
6:35 - Chapter 4 - Mars missions
7:25 - Chapter 5 - The 3 amigos
8:20 - Chapter 6 - Mars 2 & 3
11:35 - Chapter 7 - The main event
15:05 - Chapter 8 - The future of mars travel
I think you might have an addiction to building youtube channels.
I'm going to start a group to you know "deal" with our fixation on all things Simon.
Probably true.
I want to say, that mini rover looks super interesting and I wish current rovers got something like this at their disposal. Soviet engineers got quite fun and outlandish ideas it seems :) This and lunokhod vehicle are really "sci-fi" looking :)
I love the fact that you always express scientific measures using the metric system instead of the antique imperial system. I wish NASA would do the same. Keep up the good work!
Same here.
THAT IS WHY THE NASA IS BEHIND THE SOVIET BECAUSE THEY USE THE ASIAN METRIC
Simon Whistler: Living proof that not all addictions are bad...
Please more Soviet space projects, they have so many and never have been heard, do it for science!
And history! c:
Specially History, The Venus missions blew my mind. I really wanna see more of their accomplishments as well, they deserve some global recognition for their efforts.
I'd love to see one about Laika's mission. I have a postage stamp they issued for her memory.
America has no idea about these missions lol. I do remeber the viking rover video. Actual footage used in the transformers 1 movie
A group of European short wave listeners say Yuri Gagarin wasn’t the first man in space. He is just the first man who got back alive.
10:48 "This is happening in the 1970's this is mind blowing". Oldie here (well born in the same year as Steve Jobs). May I remind you Simon it was my generation that invented the computers, infrastructure and associated gadgets that make your career possible, but it was not us but our parents generation that actually went to the moon. My school physics teacher actually worked for NASA before he had to return to the UK at the end of the Apollo programme.
Well shit... Today I Learned am I right? I had no idea the USSR managed to land something on Mars back in the 70s
tHE REASON YOU NEVER HEARD OFF BECAUSE IT WAS IN THE SOVIET TIME and the US LIED ABOUT THE SOVIET IN SHAME THEY COULD NOT MANNAGE WHAT THE SOVIET COULD AND ALSO STILL LIES ABOUT THE MILITARY WEAPON THAT THE SOVIET RUSSIANS AND EVEN TODAYS IS BETTER....
THAT IS WHY THE WHOLE WORLD IS BELIEVE THE SOVIET AND THE RUSSIANS WHICH ALL COUTRIES KNEW BUT THE US BAN IT'S CITIZENS FOR TO FIND OUT ABOUT
This was actually very cool! I had known about Mars 2 and 3, but not with this level of detail. Very nicely done!! I really do like your videos on space topics
That really was interesting, I knew that both the USSR & the USA had got orbiting satellites to Mars, but had no idea that the USSR had managed to land something that then transmitted back to Earth, 50 years ago, that was a pretty mean feat even now, thanks for doing this.
Captain Proton to the rescue - Tom Paris
Ahhh, Tom Paris Star Trek's take on an edgy rebellious character, and as bland as ever!
Sputnik was the original name for Delta Flyer. Well it might have been, i unno.
I love to watch all of your channels, and you do a great job, but you had one small mistake. The Apollo 11 landing occurred on July 20th, 1969, and Neil Armstrong’s first steps occurred late on the 20th or early on the 21st depending on what time zone in the world you were living in. The 24th was the day they returned to Earth.
I came here to say this, but in my heart I knew it had already been said
BY THAT TIME THE SOVIET RUSSIANS WERE TOWARDS TO MARSH
Shielding for space radiation so that humans can survive a trip to Mars with more than 60% of their brain intact would indeed be a Megaproject. Living on Mars will require just as much shielding, so structures on Mars will be megaprojects too.
University Professor “I need you to use the metric system”. Simon “that’s 13 metric hippos”.
my girlfriend weights 2 hippos half of that ass.
Didn't we go to Escobars for that? What year did we go to Escobars for Hippos? Or Pablos... or something... Ask the guys that did South Park, they prolly know for sure... Or Tom Cruise, ask him... no, maybe don't ask Tom Cruise how to get to other planets... What about Zod... The general.... You don't know General Zod?
WHERE HAVE YOU BEAN?
WHERE AM I ?
With the current temperatures outside , COLD WAR sounds eaven more compelling :D
What's "impressive" is not that all these happened in the early 1970s, but that we still struggle to achieve similar tasks, 50 years later!
So Beagle 2 wasn't the first probe to go splat on Mars then... :P
Apparently Beagle successfully entered the orbit of Mars at something like 17 kms per second, successfully aerobraked as it entered the atmosphere, deployed it shutes then inflated the dodecahedron of air Bags built into its fuselage just before cutting the chutes and landing!. Upon landing, it bounced once… twice, rolled a little… and promptly dropped into a bottomless pit. So in summation, was Beagle a success! Not really! But technically I feel that it’s also the greatest Hole in One ever played!
this was a truly unique video for me. I had never heard of any Soviet missions to Mars
Simon: "...Saturn a gas giant..."
Me: "my uncle Frank is a gas giant."
BA DA BUM BUM TSHSHSHHSHSHSHS
There’s a scene in the BBC documentary series The Planets tff he at features two of the scientists who’d worked on Mars 3. One of them explained about how the “image” was being received and then the signal stopped, the other guy just looked at the ground the whole time saying very little. His sense of disappointment at how close they’d come to success was so evident.
Space missions operate on very fine margins, when Beagle 2 was located on Mars and it was evident that it had reached the surface only to fail to properly deploy I immediately thought back to Mars 3.
New Megaprojects video: Simon Whistlers RUclips empire
Mars mission windows are fun because you only get several weeks-months every 2.2 years because of the separate orbits so when the windows open you often see a big group go up at once when interest is high. For example, 6 craft were sent by two countries in Jul-Aug 2020 including Chinese and American landers (Zhurong and Perseverance)
you guys do great work; i enjoy it every time it comes across my feed! simon, you should have compared the soviet mars 2 to a heavy duty pickup; most of us have never ridden a hippo!
I just found out about this a week ago,it blew my mind too,that Russian was first to Mars.
i think in 1971 is was working in a computer center, essentialy calculating and printing out invoices for building supplies and laundry requisits, it was owned by sunlight laundries, so...but although it got lost years ago, i did have a print-out of a naked girl leaning on a bar stool, printed using letters and numbers. so i was going to complain that if you're going to take photos of mars maybe a decent reproductive system would have been useful, but, considering the tech of the time maybe a fuzzy blob is all you could expect.
the computer we used, a UNIVAC 9300 had a 64k memory which was revealed from behind the panel with all the flashing lights on, a criss cross of wires and tiny ring magnets.
Simon will be the richest man in the world of RUclips soon. Grind on bro!
Please make a video on Venera missions. I'd love see that. Only recently I came to know there was even a balloon mission in it!
I admit I never thought the Soviets be the first to smash and land on Mars! Why do they have an obsession of keeping really awesome projects a secret that could benefit everyone else.
They are bringing more respect to their daring achievements and doesn't matter they don't last long they just showed humanity can do it.
Dude, they did not keep them secret. But in the West they prefer not to talk about any Soviet/Russian achievements at all! ))
@@wren2900 Oh dang I guess that make sense!
Mega Project suggestions: Benban Solar Park, Aswan High Dam, Bar Lev Line and Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam.
That has to be the definition of a glorious beard sir. Bravo the bar has been set.
YES! As soon as you mentioned the PROTON K I immediately thought of Voyager and Capt. Proton, I LOVE that you also did and called it out. Lol'd so hard. Love you Simon.
The USSR were the first to land a man made object on the Moon - Luna 2, on 13 September 1959.
Omg I have never met anyone else who watched Star Trek voyager my favorite show
@ 7:12 corection, the Soviet Union were the first to land a man made object on the moon. Luna 2 1959- 1st Lunar impact, then Luna 9 1966, first Lunar soft landing, they were also the first to land a craft on Venus as Well as Mars.
How do you handle this many channels? That's the topic for your next megaprojects!😂😀👍
I need a Mars bar after that ..
Good one, m8.
I think you are awesome Simon. I love your videos.
I am amazed at the balls it took back in 1971 to do this! Unbelievable
Thanks from Panama city beach FL
I remember this it was an incredible achievement for Russia.
Really love this content!!!
3:30 actually venus is closer than mars but mars's environment is more habitable.
7:08 also the soviet mission luna 9 was the first object to soft and on the junar surface.
Please do a video on the soviet venera probes and you never did a video on the Buran shuttle, the soviet space shuttle analogue.
"...an old fashioned TV screen when it all goes wrong..." Ah...I remember the days...
4:11 Simon, I thought you loved us but you're just in it for the views! Breaks the heart 😭💔
I read about Lunokhod in a book about space exploration
Great video!!!
SUGGESTION: Ilyushin IL-2
- Visionary WWII ground-attack "flying tank" and spiritual predecessor to the A-10 Warthog
- The single most produced military aircraft in aviation history
- Some WWII-era Wehrmacht nicknames for it: "meat grinder", "butcher", "black death", "slaughterer", "concrete bird"
- What Stalin had to say about it: "Our Red Army now needs IL-2 aircraft like the air it breathes, like the bread it eats."
dude ur a rabbithole. im in awe
At 5:33, there is a historical inaccuracy. NASA didn't attempt 4 missions to Mars during Mariner programme. The first two Mariner missions(Mariner 1 & Mariner 2) were launched to Venus in 1962. Out of this two missions, Mariner 2 made a first successful flyby of Venus in history. By a successful flyby, i mean the first ever to make a measurement of the physical characteristics of the planet venus and successfully report the results obtained during the flyby back to Earth. NASA just attempted two missions(Mariner 3 & Mariner 4 in 1964) to Mars.
Thank you
Look into "Alternative 3" - a colony on Mars in the early seventies! 😆
Me: Another channel?
Simon: Yes.
Me: Why?
Simon: Yes.
Makes you appreciate the Viking missions.
Id like to have a calender where each picture for each month would have a picture of simon in different poses
The Soviets were the first to soft-land on the moon with Luna 9 on 2/3/1966. But I like the video!
The Apollo 11 moon landing was on July 20, 1969, not July 24 as said in the video. Later! OL J R :)
Simon you have so many channels, soon I will will have a entire youtube account that is you!
My parents brought a couple of cosmonauts to the Houston rodeo and you never partied with crazier folks, and they made the American astronauts seem really ummm...straight-edge? God I'm old 😆 well done, sir!
Wow 71 huh that's pretty cool never realized that we made it that far back then good show mate. By the way I love your Australian accent lol
7:09 the first man made objects to land on the moon were the soviet Luna probes
Good video. More please
Didnt know that. Very cool.
Third ..... my quickest ever on this fantastic channel .. SIMON !!!
Excellent work, comrade
Good video 👍
What a great video, really informative and enjoyable. One little question: did the Americans manage to land the first manmade object on the moon as stated in the narration? I thought that was the Luna 2 impactor, while Luna 9 was the first to achieve a lunar soft landing?
But, I don't pretend to be an expert on this stuff, and am more than willing to be corrected.
Wonder what the odds are of a modern rover finding mars 3 and figuring out what went wrong. Extra points if someone from the original mission is still around to appreciate the effort.
Heres an idea for an future video. Do the Salyut 7 rescue mission in 1985!
Do an episode that would take the budget(1yr)of the us military & use that for another purpose(space expansion)what it could do please absolutley love simon
Another victory for the Mars Planetary Defense Force!
0:55 Perseverence and Curiosity have the same Chassis. They are about the same size and 90's Honda Civic. They are nuclear powered and have totally awesome twitter accounts.
Ingenuity (the mars chopper that could), on the other, hand is tiny.
Could you cover the Øresund Bridge?
“Countless attempts to get to Mars… 12 individual missions” (5:00-5:07). My literal-minded brain laughed at this.
This was a real space race. The technological achievements were principally in the fields of engine and telemetric engineering, rather than pure (i.e.: theoretical) science. We already suspected what we would find there. It is obvious to anyone considering the subject that these missions were spinoff applications of the same technologies (those mentioned above plus ballistics) which were expected to be used to deliver nuclear devices to "enemy" cities.
Wonder full to see Soviet Venus exploration and Mars probes studied
Great video 📹 👍
If you're gonna play another game Simon, play SimpleRockets II.. It's right up your street to launch some stuff and get onto Mar before everyone else, and do something worthy and dump stuff.
Also do the pioneer missions which were the first to send back images of Saturn and Jupiter. The literal precursors to Voyager. Also do Voyager 2 since you did Voyager 1. Voyager 2 was the first and only spacecraft to visit Uranus and Neptune
Now I have an urge to watch "Space Camp"...........
Your content is disgustingly underrated. You’re the goat 🔥.I don't know who, but someone actually needs to hear this, you've got to stop saving all your money. Venture into investing some, if you really want financial stability.
Invest globally in bitcoin, gold, silver, forex market, commodities. Just don't be left out and save yourself
Beautifully said, I tell my folks these words everyday. It's good to save money but most people don't understand the market moves and tend to be misled in facts like this and always depend on money in the bank.
Thanks for the insight I remember friends calling me crazy when I started investing in bitcoin now I shut them up with my 4 figure weekly return
@Collins Markson Hey, this is a computer age. Peeps who aren't even traders make money from the crypto and forex markets ,how many millionaires do you know who have become wealthy by investing in savings accounts?
Very helpful, this is what I needed to hear today.
Captain Proton. Star Trek Voyager. Hell yeah. 🖖🏻👊🏻
Ok but really, how many channels do you have mate 😂 how do you keep track of all that or have time for them all haha. You must have a seriously good team to help with that all! You lot do amazing:)
Americans tailor their space suits
Soviets: One suit for all cosmonaut, if suit too big, put phone book in boot, if suit too small, cut off feet
Did you see yesterday's video on the first attempt by America to launch a satellite. The thing that really shocked me from that video was the fact that Russia were still using the old valve technology in their electronics even really late in to their development. It's mad just what they could all do on both sides with the tiny amount of tech that they had. I mean the early mobile phones had more processing power than the original moon mission vehicles.
@@itarry4 Before very large scale integration of circuits, designers would make analog type computers. You are correct: we can fit more computer power on a chip the size of your fingernail now
An actual event that was funnier was a meeting of space agencies back in the late sixties early seventies. One American was telling how millions were spent to get a ballpoint pen to work in microgravity. A Russian, overhearing this, said, "We give our Cosmonauts pencils."
@@patdohrety2940 yhea I know back then it was the programming and ways they utilised what they had that was amazing. They wasted nothing so different from today where as long as it works it'll do even if it draws far more power than it needs to or uses more memory etc. The programmers today don't need to save every bit they can and they tend to build "new" systems on older ones rather than starting again.
@@drboze6781 Myth. Simon has actually covered it in a video. The story isn't true.
I've watched this dude on 3 other channels in the past hour and a half
4:40 Wrong date - 24th was the day the crew landed on earth. The landing on LUNA was July 20th, 1969
Launched on the BACK of a Proton rocket? Wouldn't "on the top of" be more accurate?
Love for ST:Voyager. Yeah!!
I think it takes about 7 months to get from Earth to Mars but that is only when they’re within an optimal Flight window every 2 years when Earth and Mars’ orbit align to be at their closest distance from each other
oooo was that musk clip a teaser at a dragon capsule video or starship program video