F-16 Launch Procedure - Crew Chief Pulls Out EPU (Hydrazine) Safety Pin

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  • Опубликовано: 4 дек 2024

Комментарии • 635

  • @blackrabbit4035
    @blackrabbit4035 2 года назад +608

    For everyone asking about the last pin not being pulled, the pin is the Chaff/Flare pin. This pin gets pulled at the EOR (end of runway) check/inspection by ammunition when the aircraft is loaded. I'm crew-chief on heavy aircraft and we also have pins to pull before the aircraft taxis off the spot, as we do not do EOR checks or in some cases not always will pull them in the air being the box is usually located in the cargo area as some frequencies can set them off when parked.

    • @Haruko_Le
      @Haruko_Le 2 года назад +6

      how can it get pulled ? pls enlighten me

    • @ryanbrennan4634
      @ryanbrennan4634 2 года назад +17

      @@Haruko_Le at the end of the runway, a dude pulls it out

    • @thepioneer6178
      @thepioneer6178 2 года назад +16

      Why pull it at the end of the runway and not at the start of the runway?

    • @sirzebra
      @sirzebra 2 года назад +37

      @@thepioneer6178 because chaff and coutermeasures are dangerous and very inflammable, and in case of an accident / unforseen activation, you want it to happen when the airplane is isolated when ready to take off. before you pull the plug, nothing can get activated by mistake, it's the reason they even exist.

    • @scottmccullough8030
      @scottmccullough8030 2 года назад +13

      Look I am sure you all have a good reason for that...but my anxiety! Why won't you worry about the stressed out people on the internet!

  • @88sideburns22
    @88sideburns22 2 года назад +277

    You should rename this video to "F-16 Launch Procedure." Pulling the EPU pin is only one step in the whole thing. This video would be a great learning tool for future F-16 crew chiefs.

    • @pukinator1
      @pukinator1 2 года назад +3

      Looks like a very inefficient launch to me though. 1 time around the plane should bee enough

    • @88sideburns22
      @88sideburns22 2 года назад +17

      @@pukinator1 it depends on the crew chief on how they do it and the speed they do it. There aren't that many videos on how to launch so this video is something to go off of.

    • @pukinator1
      @pukinator1 2 года назад +8

      @@88sideburns22 i understand everyone has their own ways but i have been a crewchief on the f16 and used to walk around once, also pulled the epu as one of the last things to avoid possible hydrazine contact

    • @88sideburns22
      @88sideburns22 2 года назад +6

      @@pukinator1 I'm a current crew chief for the f16 and the way I was trained was to pull it during the middle of launch for the epu run up

    • @drutalero2962
      @drutalero2962 2 года назад

      Oh yeah rather than just walking into the exhaust 😭😭😭

  • @mykey39
    @mykey39 2 года назад +90

    Good to see that procedures haven't changed since I crewed the F-16 back in the late 80's. I still remember all of those checks. I love the smell of jet fuel in the morning. ;-)

    • @db5757
      @db5757 2 года назад +2

      It smells like…victory!

    • @dwagincon4841
      @dwagincon4841 2 года назад

      They must've gotten it right early on if it hasn't changed

    • @johnshade4282
      @johnshade4282 2 года назад

      I have a coffee cup that says that. As a retired development engineer, for the engines, I got to the early mornings by staying up all night. And no, we weren't paid for our overtime!

    • @drearyerie8504
      @drearyerie8504 2 года назад

      Is it true jet fuel exposure can lead to a form of auditory dyslexia?

    • @christopherbernhardt
      @christopherbernhardt 2 года назад +1

      Smells like hearing loss lol

  • @youdoyouplayer8529
    @youdoyouplayer8529 2 года назад +203

    Interesting that there’s a little box for the safety pins tucked away in the airframe.

    • @bobthecannibal1
      @bobthecannibal1 2 года назад +31

      They do have to have some way to hard-safe things if they need to divert due to damage, malfunction or fuel exhastion.
      It's better than just tossing a wad of flagged lock pins into the cockpit
      Every pilot gets to learn how to do the stuff their crew chief does for them in case they're unavailable for some reason, and having the pins in the same place every time prevents losing them or forgetting them.

    • @iainburgess8577
      @iainburgess8577 2 года назад +9

      Great idea.
      A, every plane carries its own set, much easier logistically, and you don't have to track, store them, have extras in case of unexpected events or emergency. It stays in the hole, or in the integrated storages, never leaves the plane. This alone would arguably offset the minor fuel efficiency & performance loss of their mass in flight.
      B, in emergency settings- war, transfer, scramble, or landing- it has its safe-ing pins, even in nonstandard locales. For a military craft, invaluable. (See first reply)
      C, if it shows up anywhere missing any of them, thats an integrated safety spot check, giving a rapid self-check capacity to relevant safety issues. Again, invaluable.
      Just by carrying less weight than a packed lunch.

    • @francisschweitzer8431
      @francisschweitzer8431 2 года назад +4

      Every jet has a place. Example: A-10 ground pins ( EXCEPT WEAPONS RELEASE/ ARM ) went inside the FUEL MANAGEMENT/SPR ACCESS DOOR which is on the left wing at the Lead edge of the BUMP on the fairing for the left main landing gear

    • @francisschweitzer8431
      @francisschweitzer8431 2 года назад +1

      @@bobthecannibal1 well kinda … they get taught … rarely every use that skill because they typically end up being handled by Transient Maintenance.

    • @counterfit5
      @counterfit5 2 года назад +2

      @@iainburgess8577 all that is especially important for planes meant to operate with limited ground support from improvised and/or temporary airfields.

  • @Adonnay76
    @Adonnay76 2 года назад +20

    The little tap on the missile at the end... the good luck tap ;)

    • @francisschweitzer8431
      @francisschweitzer8431 2 года назад

      No… it’s to see if the Seeker Head bounces on it gimbal …

    • @wolfsdarkshadow
      @wolfsdarkshadow 2 года назад +3

      Former Crew Chief here, I'd always kiss my fingers and then touch the wing after a launch, asking my Jet to bring the pilot and herself back safely. Dunno about the gimbal check they other guy was taking about

  • @dLimboStick
    @dLimboStick 2 года назад +9

    The F-16 is such a badass looking airplane. I was at Kunsan AB for a while and it was heaven for me with all the F-16s around there.

  • @jimparham525
    @jimparham525 2 года назад +13

    I was lucky enough to be an Electro-Environmental technician on these jets with the 132 FW before the AF decided to move our jets to AC and DC back in 2013. This A/C (407) and the one sitting next to it (303) were both from our unit, and I know that I turned wrenches on these airframes both at home and abroad. I retired last year, but I still very much enjoyed seeing some of my old tail numbers in action! I know I was far from the only one who was devastated when our jets left... And yes, you should pull the comm cord by the plug, not the cable. I was one of the poor souls who got to repair those cords by the bushel basketful!

  • @Ja-mbi
    @Ja-mbi 2 месяца назад +1

    I was taught these steps in a completely different order. Wouldn’t start shutting any doors until after EPU run up. Interesting to see this. Nice video !

  • @455jj3
    @455jj3 2 года назад +29

    整備員の作業風景、格好良い

  • @davebest7911
    @davebest7911 2 года назад +1

    So much more calm and serene, and cleaner too than what I was used to. I'm retired Aviation Boatswain's mate (US NAVY) and my playground was flight deck aircraft carriers. Now that was a circus

  • @cudathehawgjetfixer7520
    @cudathehawgjetfixer7520 2 года назад +6

    YES, it's the Crew Chief's job to remove that safety pin just prior to the pilot to taxing out of the chocks! I've worked on the Lawn Darts for over 8 years and way back when I was just a skitter wing at Nellis AFB, NV, was sent to Luke AFB, AZ to recover a broken Lawn Dart from our wing (Spark Chaser and had to replace the IDG and do a Monopropellant Ops Check, AC & DC Distribution Check because the Main Generator Disconnected while in flight) and while we where awaiting our planes to clear EOR there was a flight of Lawn Darts at EOR getting cleared for their training mission that night, when my trainer, the planes DCC and ACC (Dedicated Crew Chief & Assistant Dedicated Crew Chief) and I was in our step van when we seen a 3 Level Weapons Trooper get sucked into the main intake of an F-16, just after the CC pulled the EPU Safety Pin and the pilot went to 85% Throttle then turned on the EPU in Bleed Air Mode, needless to say the young trooper was killed when his body hit the First Stage Compressor Blades. After the investigation the AF came down with a change to the pre-flight ops cks of the EPU, the Safety Pins are pulled at the parking spot, then the Bleed Air Ops cks of the EPU is then done at this time then the plane is released to taxi to EOR. Also the USAF recalled and banned all Parka Hood attachments to all F-16 maintainers field jackets because the investigation found that when the F-16's engine throttle went to 85% the amount of air drawn into the aircraft's main intake within 4 feet aft of the intake causes the Parka Hood to blossom like a small parachute and then able to be pulled with everything attached to the hood into the intake.
    SO THIS TITLE IS NOTHING BUT CLICK BAIT,
    Nothing seriously to be scared about pulling a safety pin to the F-16's EPU Ground Safety Switch just prior to the planes taxing, or even a ground maintenance run (IT'S STANDARD PROCEDURE)

  • @ThomasKent1346
    @ThomasKent1346 2 года назад +61

    8:18 Good Grief! PULL THE PLUG, NOT THE CABLE!

    • @AboxofMonsters
      @AboxofMonsters 2 года назад +2

      Just another maintenance order 🙆‍♂️

    • @ihavenoidea9543
      @ihavenoidea9543 2 года назад +8

      Hahaha! I think we found an avionics guy that doesn't want to resolder a cannon plug

    • @King_Flippy_Nips
      @King_Flippy_Nips 2 года назад +3

      @@ihavenoidea9543 well a broken connection can also cause a short in some very expensive equipment

    • @Stubbies2003
      @Stubbies2003 2 года назад +8

      @@ihavenoidea9543 Avionics wouldn't be stuck fixing that. It would be the support section. OP is correct that is a rather crap way to disconnect the comm cord. It will break doing that prematurely.

    • @1AlexanderCole
      @1AlexanderCole 2 года назад +1

      And don’t wrap cord around elbow…

  • @idahosagebrush5662
    @idahosagebrush5662 2 года назад +39

    Our son, an F-16 Crew Chief had died in another accident a couple months before this happened to his best friend... An F-16 pilot accidentally dumped the hydrazine on a crewman on the ground, giving him chemically induced leukemia. It took 18 months, more or less for him to die. We got to say goodby to Michael the day before he left us at the Seattle VA hospital.

    • @RustyorBroken
      @RustyorBroken 2 года назад +16

      I am so sorry for your loss. His willingness to stand on the line is what has kept us safe.

    • @michaellim4165
      @michaellim4165 2 года назад +3

      Does hydrating give you cancer? I'm sorry to hear about your son's friend and of your son's passing. May they both rest in peace and you find closure.

    • @maverick9708
      @maverick9708 2 года назад +6

      @@michaellim4165 yeah, hydrazine is really nasty stuff, my knowledge of it from the space industry is that people try to avoid using it in designs for the first place but sometimes it's just needed and that creates a ton of extra precautions and procedures because the crew working around hydrazine related chems is at risk for something like what happened to the crewmen

    • @jollygreen4662
      @jollygreen4662 2 года назад +1

      Sorry for your loss.

    • @idahosagebrush5662
      @idahosagebrush5662 2 года назад +3

      @@maverick9708 We were told that they taught crew chiefs that one breath of the fumes takes 10 years off a person's life. I heard that later blocks of F16s had a different system w/o the hydrazine...after watching this, maybe not.
      I think there is a YT safety video about a hydrazine spill during a transfer from a truck to a storage tank where some people died.

  • @williamolsmit4659
    @williamolsmit4659 2 года назад +3

    Had a hydrazine leak at Hill AFB in 79, nasty stuff

  • @すき焼き-r5v
    @すき焼き-r5v 2 года назад +8

    F2と同じところもあれば全然違うところもあって大変勉強になりました。
    このような動画を公開してくださってありがとうございます。

  • @lolvks
    @lolvks 2 года назад +6

    Oh boy, this brings back memories. My last F-16 launch was 6 years ago

    • @therealxunil2
      @therealxunil2 2 года назад

      My last F-16 launch was never.

    • @hardsuit
      @hardsuit 2 года назад +1

      My last was in 2000...lol

    • @joeg5414
      @joeg5414 2 года назад +3

      I was at cannon AFB from 2001-05 when they had 5 squadrons of F16s. Didn't work on them at all - I worked in airfield management. Spent a lot of time on the airfield though watching. I was obsessed with the F16 (and aviation in general) since I was a kid and played Falcon 3.0 on the computer 😂

    • @phoenixskeptic7698
      @phoenixskeptic7698 2 года назад +1

      @@joeg5414 I was at Canon, twice, booth times with F-111's. Sucked both times. Hated Clovis.

    • @joeg5414
      @joeg5414 2 года назад

      @@phoenixskeptic7698 nice! I actually found pieces on the airfield from an f111 that crashed in the 90s. Covis sucked but looking back, I kind of miss it😂

  • @drutalero2962
    @drutalero2962 2 года назад +9

    By the way that's not the flcs panel, that's where there a delta p for the motor called the lipstick delta p. The pneumatic is underneath the lt strake next to the stab.

    • @Stubbies2003
      @Stubbies2003 2 года назад +2

      Never mind that the real flight control panel is in the cockpit. :)

    • @irunwire8528
      @irunwire8528 2 года назад +1

      Was looking for this reply.

  • @nokki1444
    @nokki1444 2 года назад +80

    この動画、モデラーにとってはこの上ない資料になるんじゃなかろうか。ディテールアップにめっちゃ役立ちそう🤤

  • @forfreedomandpeaceinukrain2943
    @forfreedomandpeaceinukrain2943 2 года назад +47

    いつかの航空祭で見た戦闘機の整備員めっさ格好良かった。

  • @captaincodebook3200
    @captaincodebook3200 2 года назад +32

    I am impressed by the simple check system of looping the rope over panels to verify a rewalk and the safety pin box. Sometimes its the little things.

    • @aaronhoglund9414
      @aaronhoglund9414 2 года назад +10

      That's not a rope it's the communication line to the plane. It's how the crew chief and pilot stay together during the start-up. The engine generates so much noise you would never be able to talk without that connection.

    • @Qwerty0791
      @Qwerty0791 2 года назад +1

      All useful things are based on very simple mechanics. Overly complicated mechanisms are almost never combat effective.

    • @francisschweitzer8431
      @francisschweitzer8431 2 года назад +1

      He’s NOT looping the cable over the panel. The crew chief has the COMMUNICATION cord with the TALK BUTTON in his hand. He needs his hand to do the panels…

  • @Fran_SG
    @Fran_SG 2 года назад +1

    I will always love F16s.

  • @mariannwatt2678
    @mariannwatt2678 2 года назад +6

    Brings back memories of flight line years ago

  • @wwg2133
    @wwg2133 2 года назад +17

    EPUには有毒な物質があるので取り扱い注意らしいです

    • @naochanroadster
      @naochanroadster 2 года назад +5

      ヒドラジンは毒物ですからね。

  • @centerfield2740
    @centerfield2740 2 года назад +12

    わかる気がする。
    整備士さんがしっかり点検、チェックしていても事故は起こる事がある。
    たしか陸自のAH64が墜落したときもAH64の整備の動画出していたと思う。(勘違いならば申し訳ない)
    今回動画での機種は違うが、彼らなりの無言のフォローなんだと感じた。

  • @iVTECInside
    @iVTECInside Год назад

    Always a favorite. Love the close footage. It really is just an engine with wings and a seat lol. Also like the panel latch procedure of doing the hand sweep to catch anything not latched.

  • @krisdrinkwine6045
    @krisdrinkwine6045 2 года назад +2

    Impressive, quite the process to take off.

  • @gnedelcu7
    @gnedelcu7 2 года назад +4

    Thank you for this video.
    Nice bird!
    Bucharest, Roumanie

  • @moohamada6582
    @moohamada6582 2 года назад +10

    重要機体部品の作動状態を、パイロットがコクピットの計器でモニターするだけでなく、整備長がアウターハッチの外から目と耳と手で直接確認する手順があることをこの動画を見るまで知りませんでした。

    • @霜見月
      @霜見月 2 года назад +2

      コメパクられてまっせ

    • @moohamada6582
      @moohamada6582 2 года назад +5

      @@霜見月 ご報告ありがとう。別に良いです。動画を見て素朴な感想を述べただけで、著作権を主張する気なんかない。

  • @n-yoshi
    @n-yoshi 2 года назад +43

    右後ろのリボンはいつ取るのだろうとずっと待ってたけど、アレ外さないのか…

    • @珈琲牛肉
      @珈琲牛肉 2 года назад +18

      多分ですけどアーミングエリアで外すんじゃないですかね?

    • @wingdream6408
      @wingdream6408 2 года назад +16

      空自でピン抜きやってましたけど、F-2と同じならチャフフレア用のピンなのでアーミングエリアで抜きます。

  • @grundyb
    @grundyb 2 года назад +4

    Yes! I also was wondering why I still saw one pin with a red flag hanging but not pulled. Great training item. 💨

    • @Stubbies2003
      @Stubbies2003 2 года назад +1

      Not a training item. Done intentionally.

    • @wizzotizzo
      @wizzotizzo 2 года назад

      @@Stubbies2003 what

    • @ziadajam5433
      @ziadajam5433 2 года назад

      @matas Gus this is the chaff/flare pin. Qualified Weapons maintainers pull it at the End Of Runway inspection right before the jet takes off

  • @ph11p3540
    @ph11p3540 2 года назад +2

    Blessings to the squires who take care of the knights aluminum steeds.

  • @x2dedepon
    @x2dedepon 2 года назад +23

    ゲームやシミュレーターだとボタン一つで終わってしまう各種作業、地上要員無しでは飛べませんな

  • @oleksandrzubchenko210
    @oleksandrzubchenko210 2 года назад +14

    Chinese military aircfart engineers: *taking detailed notes*
    :)

    • @semajniffirg230
      @semajniffirg230 2 года назад

      F16'S have been around a long time and many countries use them. Nothing here the Chinese don't already know.

  • @todd0474
    @todd0474 2 года назад +1

    I miss working on her. Seems like yesterday, but I left the Iowa ANG Des Moines in 1997.

  • @chrisblevins4502
    @chrisblevins4502 2 года назад

    Excellent annotation!! Please keep it up!!

  • @hawkeye200996
    @hawkeye200996 2 года назад +4

    単発でシンプルなF-16でもプリフライトチェックでこんなにやることがあるんですね
    危険な作業もパイロットと意志疎通を密に交わして行っているんですね
    最後のピンは滑走路脇の最終チェックで外すんでしょうか?
    貴重な映像を出してくださってありがとうございます

  • @casperbosman1896
    @casperbosman1896 2 года назад +15

    I never knew the pins were stored on the planes themself. i always assumed the crew chief keeps them. actually make kinda sense.

    • @nathangoddard8115
      @nathangoddard8115 2 года назад +1

      I agree. But yes it makes sense that if the jet landed somewhere else it brings its pins.

  • @ryanlong1
    @ryanlong1 2 года назад +2

    Loved the info boxes!

  • @Studio23Media
    @Studio23Media 2 года назад +8

    Nothing could be cooler than being a fighter pilot, but it must feel so badass to be a crew chief too.

    • @nullptr.
      @nullptr. 2 года назад

      For sure, until your commander sends you to die in a third world country we're invading for oil by some random SAM.

    • @rasmusericsson8447
      @rasmusericsson8447 2 года назад +1

      Pretty cool to be a Russian or Chinese spy, sitting in a bunker taking notes from this video also! They don’t even have to work for it anymore!

    • @jmuck7800
      @jmuck7800 2 года назад +1

      Being a crew chief is only fun the first few years. Then the aches, pains and hearing loss sets in. We do our best to make it fun but a lot of commanders don't approve of moral.

    • @Studio23Media
      @Studio23Media 2 года назад

      @@rasmusericsson8447 Lol the F16 is nearly 50 years old. None of this is a secret.

    • @rasmusericsson8447
      @rasmusericsson8447 2 года назад +1

      @@Studio23Media it’s a joke man 😉

  • @Jerry_SWMO
    @Jerry_SWMO 2 года назад +4

    I was taught never pull on cord to disconnect. Pull on plug.

  • @edoya9445
    @edoya9445 2 года назад +6

    F16、格好良いし美しいと改めて思います。そして整備員の大変さを実感です。

  • @trig
    @trig 2 года назад +6

    Would be interesting to see a "Ready 5" precheck for comparison...if there is one.

    • @TheOpacue
      @TheOpacue 2 года назад

      What is that, and what is the difference between that and this?

    • @trig
      @trig 2 года назад

      @@TheOpacue Ready 5 is the designation for aircraft that are prepared for immediate take off in case of attack. In the film topgun they call it Alert5. The aircraft shown are being prepared for a standard mission.

    • @TheOpacue
      @TheOpacue 2 года назад

      @@trig ooh cool! Like "just check the absolute necessities" kind of thing? Is that like "ready in 5 steps", or ready in 5 minutes? Like, what does the 5 stand for? So interesting 😁

    • @trig
      @trig 2 года назад

      @@TheOpacue Its 5 minutes, they are armed and fueled with the pilots in their seats in an area at the end of the runway. I suspect that the planes still have a number of pins in place as they need to be spooled up and the weapons made ready. I am not an expert, that's just what I have picked up over time.

    • @TheOpacue
      @TheOpacue 2 года назад

      @@trig that is so cool though! What is spooled up?

  • @gerardroll6468
    @gerardroll6468 2 года назад +23

    Peace & best wishes to all in 2022… From Australia 🇦🇺✌️😎✌️🇦🇺

  • @FirstDagger
    @FirstDagger 2 года назад +11

    I like to call Hydrazine as Liquid Cancer. The Me 163 rocket fighter and space flight liquid fueled rockets also use that stuff. It is scary stuff.

    • @ionator2000ist
      @ionator2000ist 2 года назад

      Me-163 does not use hydrazine

    • @FirstDagger
      @FirstDagger 2 года назад +2

      @@ionator2000ist ; Laughable, look up C-Stoff. Hydrazine hydrate 30%

    • @idahosagebrush5662
      @idahosagebrush5662 2 года назад +1

      My son was an F16 crew chief. His best friend had a pilot dump the hydrazine on him out of an F16 at Misaua Japan in about '96. Diagnosis: Chemically Induced Lukemea. Took about 18 months of misery for his body to die. We got to say our goodbys at the Seattle VA hospital the day before he left. Hard to believe they still use that stuff. I thought later F16 Blocks had done away with it... We heard that one breath of hydrazine fumes will take 10 years off someone's life.

  • @koujyuan210
    @koujyuan210 2 года назад +21

    早い、丁寧、プロとして当たり前の仕事って感じ。
    到底素人じゃ出来ないな。戦闘機のカッコイイ整備員の仕事は。

  • @georgeburns7251
    @georgeburns7251 2 года назад +7

    They had to stop recording so they could refuel the planes since the preflight takes so long

  • @ThomasSmartt
    @ThomasSmartt 2 года назад +17

    Super interesting! I had no idea that the f-16 has a hydrazine powered EPU. Was reading up on it and it is pretty interesting how it works. Does this mean the f-16 does not have any kind of apu and has to use the epu to start up?

    • @mattirrodraca2807
      @mattirrodraca2807 2 года назад +6

      No it has a jfs

    • @berryreading4809
      @berryreading4809 2 года назад +14

      It's basically for power demands in case of in air catastrophic engine failure from what I understand... then assuming you sagely land at the nearest appropriate runway It's a circus of emergency response/hazmat teams and the pilot staying sealed in his bubble until a sniffer gives the all clear or he's down to his minimum pure oxygen, I assume off of the pony bottle in the ejection seat or maybe in the parachute? Lots of precautions for a pretty low system design, but why risk anything with hydrazine 😵 I know there is atleast one good video on RUclips including communications, where the APU was activated and saved the aircraft, that detail was also an important part of the information relayed to the tower, since it was an emergency landing at a civilian airport if I remember right so they didn't want people rushing up to the neat gray jet pouring out death gas lol

    • @ke4drj912
      @ke4drj912 2 года назад +6

      The jfs is for engine start only. Any power required for maintenance or ground tests gets supplied by a generator set called a dash 60.
      The epu provides emergency power etc in case of an engine failure in flight.

    • @trey1531
      @trey1531 2 года назад +2

      ​@@berryreading4809 Hydrazine is very water soluble. So they probably hose down the aircraft.

    • @rexlee3710
      @rexlee3710 2 года назад +7

      The U2 uses Hydrazine also. No room for an APU and extra weight. It’s used only for restarting the engine while in flight in case of flame out. Older turbojet engines could windmill the engine in flight to restart. With the newer turbofan engines they need assistance.

  • @Aliabdulhussein69
    @Aliabdulhussein69 2 года назад

    I can’t wait to lead this mighty Machine.

  • @なで肩-k5q
    @なで肩-k5q 2 года назад +12

    空母やヘリバージョンも見てみたい!

    • @JustAGooseman
      @JustAGooseman 2 года назад

      I think its being pulled on the pad here because of just how gigantic the tarmac is, still kinda weirds me out to see it not pulled at the EOR station.

  • @gerardroll6468
    @gerardroll6468 2 года назад +5

    Uploads like these are always thrilling to watch ✊️😁👍

  • @bayashi23
    @bayashi23 2 года назад +20

    08:58 水平尾翼胴体接続付近に付いてる安全ピンはいつ外すのかが気になって夜も眠れない

    • @SuperTanner1981
      @SuperTanner1981 2 года назад +1

      I thought I was the only one

    • @lifesajourneyclub
      @lifesajourneyclub 2 года назад +3

      滑走路の終わりに。それはフレアとチャフと関係があります

  • @tigullio1
    @tigullio1 2 года назад +20

    8:15 Who taught you to unplug the connector like that?

    • @1AlexanderCole
      @1AlexanderCole 2 года назад

      And wind the cord around the elbow…

    • @Hyp3rBee
      @Hyp3rBee 4 месяца назад

      The devious e-4 mafia

  • @a6m3type22
    @a6m3type22 2 года назад +2

    ヒドラジンってロケットに使われる燃料でしたよね?
    触れたりガスに晒されるだけでも危険な品物なので、リークを検知する装備があるのですね
    飛行中にエンジンストールしたら、ドカンと再始動するのかな??

  • @Tclans
    @Tclans 2 года назад +12

    After a while I got somewhat bored and thought to myself ‘launch already’.
    But the close up of such cool and live machinery won me to keep watching with attention till the end.
    👍🏼

    • @ntal5859
      @ntal5859 2 года назад

      My god if cylons were attacking we be dead already... Battlestar Galactica knew how to launch a viper quick.

    • @hardsuit
      @hardsuit 2 года назад

      @@ntal5859 The pilot completing his flight check list and waiting for taxi clearance from the tower. Also waiting for any other fighters to complete their startup checks so they all taxi together.

  • @aviationist1018
    @aviationist1018 2 года назад

    Him going behind the Aircraft while it was Running and there was Hot Exhaust Coming out the back, he is one brave, brave man, I would never in a million years do that XD

    • @mykey39
      @mykey39 2 года назад +2

      You would be surprised how many people got caught walking behind the jet and got blown down the ramp several hundred feet.
      He stands there while the flight control computer finishes it's checks and then the pilot does several checks such as nose up, down, roll left, right, then rudder left, right. The Crew Chief calls them out as the pilot does them for verification. SO that's the best spot to see them from.
      If you think it's hot, try doing it in the middle east in summertime. We would be drenched in sweat by the time the pilot taxied out.

    • @aviationist1018
      @aviationist1018 2 года назад +1

      @@mykey39 yeah, just stand in a kiddie pool and you have salt sweat lake or something smh

  • @ghislainnoel6808
    @ghislainnoel6808 Год назад +1

    At 02:53 just after the crew chief has removed the EPU safety pin, you hear the engine spooling up. That's the pilot testing the EPU

  • @politics4793
    @politics4793 2 года назад +16

    EPU 💀 (^^;;
    そっか、基地に戻るとも限らないから、細かな備品も機体のポケットに格納するんだ…

  • @mrjohnklake
    @mrjohnklake 2 года назад

    Whenever a truck is passing me in a truck stop, I have to reach out to touch the tail of their trailer just like this gentleman taps the wingtip missile.

  • @katsuo-bushi1917
    @katsuo-bushi1917 2 года назад +12

    11:32 こんな感じのギャグあったよね…何だったか思い出せないけど

  • @magneticman2003
    @magneticman2003 2 года назад

    Comrade, thanks for The Heads Up;-/

  • @_Mav
    @_Mav 2 года назад +1

    I’ve seen shark week too many times. This reminds me of those fish that swim around sharks cleaning them 😆

  • @Skank_and_Gutterboy
    @Skank_and_Gutterboy 2 года назад

    I like it, this is a very good vid!

  • @codyroberts2449
    @codyroberts2449 3 месяца назад

    Gotta love those GE’s🤤

  • @なめこくじ
    @なめこくじ 2 года назад +40

    エンジンのノズルのところ通るの怖いなぁ…背中とか焼かれそう

    • @dj5fs233
      @dj5fs233 2 года назад +16

      築城基地の航空祭で最前列でF-2のスクランブルのデモ見たことがありますが、温かい温風といった感じですよ。
      強風で砂埃はめっちゃたちますが。
      さすがにアフターバーナー炊いたら大やけどでしょうけど。

    • @LrcE-gp1cm
      @LrcE-gp1cm 2 года назад +1

      @@dj5fs233 結構臭かったりってしました?

    • @dj5fs233
      @dj5fs233 2 года назад +4

      @@LrcE-gp1cm 臭いは特に感じなかったですね。ジェット燃料って灯油みたいなものですし。

  • @creamysbrianna
    @creamysbrianna 2 года назад

    @USA Military Channel You forgot to post your distribution statement and authorization letter number.

  • @henrikgormsen1020
    @henrikgormsen1020 2 года назад +1

    Nice to see the old flight control system self test. Do almost remember the steps ;-) One thing tho,- Don't stand there at JFS start and operation. when the JFS breaks up, thats where the pieces comes..... Telling from a friend !!

    • @Stubbies2003
      @Stubbies2003 2 года назад

      Never once saw a JFS fall apart like that and I worked the aircraft for 20 years. We always stood by the fire bottle.

    • @henrikgormsen1020
      @henrikgormsen1020 2 года назад

      @@Stubbies2003 Saw two desintegrate in 25 years. Not much, but the compressor pieces from the JFS (5x10mm) was nailed in wood work 30 feet away.

  • @gezb99
    @gezb99 2 года назад

    Glad you're on our side - Go Tigers - ;O)

  • @pluttis97
    @pluttis97 2 года назад +5

    Whatabout the last red flag at the right side of the tail in front of the stab?? Did he forget that or what?

    • @gianwilliams7767
      @gianwilliams7767 2 года назад

      Chaff/Flare pin that is removed at EOR (end of runway)

  • @wolfhorschtdab5443
    @wolfhorschtdab5443 2 года назад

    back when they used to make fighter jets with single engines, glad those days are over

  • @fongy7015
    @fongy7015 Год назад

    wow! so different from the way we launch our F16 C/D/D+!

  • @PerryDeGennaro
    @PerryDeGennaro 2 года назад +6

    8:15 that’s not how you unplug connectors and that’s also not how you coil audio cable.

  • @Broadshore
    @Broadshore 2 года назад

    Not going to lie... That actually looks fun to do.

  • @kitwalker520
    @kitwalker520 2 года назад

    Beautiful dance

  • @RazorCustoms
    @RazorCustoms 2 года назад

    Could someone answer a question for me?
    I was Navy airdale, with VF-143 and we always had more than 1 person there outside a running jet, just in case. Even in the Army National Guard we had battle buddies. Does the air force not do this? Yes I see other people out on the flight line, but no one else there at that jet with him, and I know on an active flight line, at that distance, people would not easily be able to hear a call for help, let alone be right there immediately if something went wrong and this turned into one of those seconds matter life and death situations.
    Good on you guys and thank you for carrying on the torch for us.

    • @DareTheMachine
      @DareTheMachine 2 года назад

      Yea,
      If you notice there are a couple of vehicles around the jet watching. Inside are production supervisors/flightline expeditors. They all have radio communication with ground operations. The crew chief is also in communication with the pilot of the jet via the black ics cord. Once that's disconnected you'll notice he stays in view of the pilot during launch.

  • @lenger1234
    @lenger1234 2 года назад +7

    Anyone interested in the development of hydrazine and other liquid rocket propellants should check out the book "Ignition: an informal history of the development of liquid rocket fuels" informative and pretty funny as well.

    • @ShainAndrews
      @ShainAndrews 2 года назад +2

      Been a decade or more since I read that. I concur it is a pretty good read.

  • @EDproject3
    @EDproject3 2 года назад +5

    良い天気だ…それに、凄く参考になる
    右水平尾翼のピン抜いてないけど大丈夫なの?

    • @goattactac8790
      @goattactac8790 2 года назад +1

      私もそう思いました。

    • @tkm8222
      @tkm8222 2 года назад +1

      飛ぶ前の最終チェックで外すみたいです

    • @EDproject3
      @EDproject3 2 года назад +1

      らしいですね

  • @South_Ga_mafia
    @South_Ga_mafia 2 года назад

    Good job, man.!

  • @Revolfe
    @Revolfe 2 года назад +8

    こんな所まで見せてくれるこのチャンネル好きすぎる(≧∇≦)発進からの敬礼のハンドサインみたいなのかっこいい!

  • @jeffmatson2046
    @jeffmatson2046 2 года назад

    Excellent job.

  • @colt10mmsecurity68
    @colt10mmsecurity68 2 года назад +1

    The Porsche 911 of fighters.

  • @211212112
    @211212112 2 года назад

    Also the safety pin box should have the places to insert each pin. No more or less than the number of pins. That way if there is a spot open or you got an extra it is time to figure out the mistake. Also it would secure the pins better.

  • @mapleleaf4ever
    @mapleleaf4ever 2 года назад +1

    Cool to see the difference between these and the Post-Start Checks I did when working on Alpha Jets. Very similar procedure. Although we didn't pass under the exhaust path so much. hehe

  • @Charliano700
    @Charliano700 2 года назад

    How many times can you walk under the EPU exhaust port after unpinning. 1500° heated EPU air will not feel good if the pilot were to hit the EPU switch by mistake. (Not likely) but it has happened and I’ve pulled many pilots out of these birds for runway as well as in flight emergencies. This make me miss the good old days!!

  • @danb5489
    @danb5489 2 года назад

    Did he forget a safety pin on the right side just forward of the aileron i think its called? Or is that pin pulled just before flight? Im a navy vet and we pulled all safety pins before aircraft rolled from the flight line. Nevermind just read the comments below.

  • @HotPasta2122
    @HotPasta2122 2 года назад +2

    FLCS panel and IFF panel 🤣 🤣. But they got most of them right so I'll give them that

  • @marleyboy7732
    @marleyboy7732 2 года назад

    So basically, placing these red tags in certain areas ensures that a pre trip is complete before flight? Any left on the plane would result in a failed inspection?

  • @rifqitaqiuddin
    @rifqitaqiuddin 2 года назад +11

    did Anybody notices that the Chief didnt pull the safety pin on the Right side of the plane, just front of the right Vertical Stabilizer? is it not a Safety pin or is it Something i dont know about? you can see it still there after he detached his Headset Cord at 8:18
    edit:i notice many Japanese Comment mentioning Timestamp of the exact time that tag is Visible so i guess many did notice it

    • @pukinator1
      @pukinator1 2 года назад +4

      Its the safety pin for the flare box, probably removed by someone at the start of the runway

    • @xXCrazyBearXx
      @xXCrazyBearXx 2 года назад +1

      Yeah It's a Chaff/Flare Safety Pin which is remove along with all the Weapons safety pins during End-of-Runway Inspection.

    • @rifqitaqiuddin
      @rifqitaqiuddin 2 года назад

      @@pukinator1 thanks for the info :) so i guess there is ground crew at the end of runway that will pull it.

    • @Falconeer84
      @Falconeer84 2 года назад

      @@rifqitaqiuddin Only if there is live flares in the modules. Otherwise the crewchief will pull them

  • @briansmith2125
    @briansmith2125 2 года назад +1

    The EPU pin used to be pulled on EOR, otherwise verbatim how I used to do it in the 90's.

    • @seankeane6215
      @seankeane6215 2 года назад

      The epu pin was only pulled at arm end of EOR only after a Hot pit refuel, otherwise it was pulled in chocks during launch.

    • @Stubbies2003
      @Stubbies2003 2 года назад

      Saw the same as Sean. centerline and EPU was always pulled and stowed prior to taxi.

    • @DNDRegi
      @DNDRegi Год назад

      @@seankeane6215 that is not true in modern times. epu pin will be stowed even after hot pitting.

  • @jollygreen4662
    @jollygreen4662 2 года назад

    Why are all the panels opened? To see for fuel leak in preflight ?

  • @happysnownaonao
    @happysnownaonao 2 года назад +9

    08:55あたりピン残ってるように見えるけど…

    • @kimmich7166
      @kimmich7166 2 года назад +1

      多分ラストチャンスエリアで抜くと思いますよー

  • @michaelhawk8230
    @michaelhawk8230 2 года назад +1

    Just curious, is there different protocol during an alert or scramble?

    • @StephenStHill-si7en
      @StephenStHill-si7en 2 года назад

      I imagine different aircraft would be required for a scramble.

  • @MrAce0r
    @MrAce0r 2 года назад

    >This was a nice video, a lot of corporation goes into a takeoff and the pre-flight checs.
    But I cant figure out why Hydrazine is used, there must be a specific reason for this. ?

  • @MrDrocballer
    @MrDrocballer 2 месяца назад

    Miss working on these birds

  • @kobasima3
    @kobasima3 2 года назад +1

    右水平尾翼下辺りに最後までピンが残ってたように見えましたが 抜いたシーンはカットされた?

  • @OK_ACME
    @OK_ACME 2 года назад +3

    Why did he leave the last safety pin in, at the right horizontal stabilizer? Does anyone know?

    • @vipercc5067
      @vipercc5067 2 года назад +3

      Chaff/Flare safety pin. Doesn’t get pulled until the A/C arrives at EOR (End Of Runway). Weapons personnel will pull the pin there.

    • @Juno58
      @Juno58 2 года назад

      Yes we all know. 😁

    • @vipercc5067
      @vipercc5067 2 года назад

      @@Juno58 I mean, he was asking a question? Obviously he didn’t know

  • @mode1charlie170
    @mode1charlie170 2 года назад +1

    Man he gets close to that exhaust nozzel.

    • @nocalsteve
      @nocalsteve 2 года назад +1

      Yeah, there should be a warning horn or something.

    • @Stubbies2003
      @Stubbies2003 2 года назад

      Nothing that isn't done every single launch of every single F-16 sortie.

  • @arclementsjr
    @arclementsjr 2 года назад

    Awesome Sauce!

  • @evs251
    @evs251 2 года назад

    I would ding my head and probably poke my eye on the wingtips if I had to do this job lol

  • @delmarrey9077
    @delmarrey9077 2 года назад

    There is one more red streamer (pin) on the starboard side aft that’s still flopping around

  • @DarrenBoxhall
    @DarrenBoxhall 2 года назад

    Are there lights to tell the pilot all the little hatches are open or closed?