Doc's permanent home is a hangar at Wichita's Eisenhower Regional Airport. When not on tour it as on display at its hanger and is available for tours. It took 10 years to restore by volunteers from Boeing employees and retirees. Doc was built here is Wichita and it was great to watch the progress of the restoration.
@harveyjones152610 ай бұрын
By
@jodipennington422410 ай бұрын
We Wichitans love Doc!
@jcmissimer591810 ай бұрын
Very cool ride on the B29. When are you going to fly on the B17, Flying Fortress?
@AndrewTubbiolo10 ай бұрын
But by definition, wouldn't any airport hosting a B-29 automatically become an INTERNATIONAL airport?
@wolfbyte317110 ай бұрын
Very happy to have been one of the donors to help get Doc airworthy.
@DrJD12310 ай бұрын
$1500 seems like an absolute bargin for an experience like this!!! Awesome video as always mate.
@stringalongmike19536 ай бұрын
$1500 is a great deal. I'd pay more than that.
@dustyflair6 ай бұрын
I did B-17 last year for $525/45 min flight
@Amos-fn7ieАй бұрын
agree
@Flajetcollector6010 ай бұрын
Very special video for me Noel as my dad was a B-29 Flight Engineer who flew 38 combat missions out of Tinian in the south Pacific over Japan and came back to tell about it. Dad passed at 95 years old 7 years ago but I have all of his medals and even an original leather flight jacket. We donated many things of his to the New England Air & Space Museum before moving to Florida, but the thing I will remember most is having the opportunity to fly on Fifi with my dad. The things he and the other young men and women endured during WWII are a testament to what has made our country great. Thanks for this Noel very special !
@Bellthorian10 ай бұрын
I was in the Army and deployed to Tinian in 93. I bet I walked along the same airstrips your dad took off from.
@timdake10 ай бұрын
@@Bellthorian - That is hallowed ground... The US is in the process of "reviving" parts of Tinian, for military use (once again).
@Redwhiteblue-gr5em10 ай бұрын
Thank you to your Dad and the greatest generation ever who made the USA the greatest and best country in human history. Unfortunately the leftist media and the Democrats have made this no longer true.
@MrChaso12310 ай бұрын
That's too cool. Do you know which wing, bomb group, and squadron he was apart of?
@crooked-halo10 ай бұрын
Wow! That is such a super-cool story! In the late 70s FIFI was parked at Dee Howard in San Antonio undergoing maintenance. My dad was chief pilot for Dee Howard flying the Howard 500. Dee was also a close friend of his. One afternoon dad took me out to Dee Howard & just he & I walked & crawled around inside the B-29 for a while. When FIFI was ready to leave dad had arranged for me to ride during one of FIFIs post-maintenance flights around San Antonio! It was epic & unforgettable! Dad wasn't crazy about WWII aircraft, _but he knew I was,_ so it was really special he made the effort for me to get to do this.
@troplightn10 ай бұрын
I got to fly in the B17 "Nine-O-Nines" a few years before she sadly crashed. One of the most amazing experiences in my life. Truly incredible. Great video
@mamasinger4910 ай бұрын
1500 for the flight but the amazing experience, priceless. What a treat, and we get to experience it vicariously through you. You were like a big kid with that massive grin of yours throughout the flight. What a privilege to be on something so historical and fantastic and that they allow the public to experience it. More than worth the price tag in my opinion, especially being up the front. Thank you again for another wonderful video!
@LordMekanicus9 ай бұрын
And 1500 is not a bad price for a ride in Doc. Especially when you consider the operating costs of a B-29 in the modern day. The engines alone require an hour of maintenance for every 10 flight hours. Not to mention the fuel, 100/130 avgas that runs double-digits per gallon, very few airports supply it, and aircraft like Doc can slurp gallons on takeoff.
@sebastian30049 ай бұрын
Yeah if they guarantee that front seat view then worth it. If not, too much lol
@JamesHart-up6pt5 күн бұрын
Well clearly not priceless, I mean it cost 1500 dollars. This is a joke.
@Golfer582410 ай бұрын
Many thanks for the video. My father was a radar bombadier on B29s towards the end of WW2 and then flew 24 missions during Korean War.
@kbf643410 ай бұрын
Fifi is a reconstructed B29. The B29s were put in a “graveyard” & none were in flying condition, so they scavenged the planes for parts & built her from them. She was the ONLY flying B29 when they made the movie “The Enola Gay.” She was built by & for the CAF in Harlingen, Tx, but that collection was later moved (over huge outcry) somewhere else in Texas. Doc was found in 1987, but Fifi is older. I ❤ Fifi & saw her many times in Harlingen.
@ssms397810 ай бұрын
Doc is prettier
@nachobroryan882410 ай бұрын
Fifi's home is Dallas Executive airport now.
@Itallianmobboss10 ай бұрын
Fifi was at Ft worth meacham. But they moved her to Dallas executive
@GaryCameron10 ай бұрын
Fifi visited Canada a few years ago
@aj-2savage89610 ай бұрын
The one at The American Air Museum at Duxford flew there in 1980 from, I think, California, where it was long-term derelict. The Air Force retired the last B-29 in 1961.
@brentboswell129410 ай бұрын
The R-3350's used in the B-29's were quite temperamental, and almost as many B-29's were lost to accidents as enemy action (usually engine fires). The Commemorative Air Force's contribution to keeping the B-29's flying was obtaining FAA approval for exchanging parts on the engines with parts from 1950's airliners that were powered by later, much more reliable variants of the Wright R-3350. Doc has benefitted from this, as has the CAF's own B-29, FiFi.
@aircraftadventures-vids6 ай бұрын
I honestly didn't know that, thanks for that tidbit. And I guess it's all relative, I mean ANY large radial is temperamental, right? (especially the 3350s)
@FullThrottleRacing535Ай бұрын
@@aircraftadventures-vids The b29's engines were quite a bit worse than others.
@DiogenesClub53210 ай бұрын
Noel: But was it worth it? Me: Shut up and take my money!
@jasonnovak663010 ай бұрын
Yes
@nikesb942010 ай бұрын
Yes
@bananam227 ай бұрын
yes
@ourlifeinwyoming465410 ай бұрын
I got to visit FiFi. My grandfather flew 14 missions as a gunner. They let me check out everything - but, I was only a couple of weeks out of surgery and was having trouble getting around. But I still got to sit where my grandfather would've sat in his B-29, to include a great picture taken from outside the plane and I'm inside, looking out bubble window for the left gunner holding up a picture of my grandfather. Great video!
@RideFreestyleOhio10 ай бұрын
I’ve flown on that as a kid! Someone donated a flight to me and it was awesome. Then I joined the Air Force as a Loadmaster years later.
@rlrober10 ай бұрын
My Dad was a B-29 Flight Engineer and was based on Tinian island during WWII. He had many many stories from the war, but this video really puts you where he was. Thank you !!
@blodyholy_10 ай бұрын
Awesome, Noel! Timing w/this video is impeccable. (*cough*Masters of the Air*cough*) I sent this to a friend thinking he'd enjoy it, and he shot back a photo of him standing in front of THAT plane. A work of art, and truly an experience indeed. Cheers, mate!
@Sparty-pi3jq7 ай бұрын
I was able to take my Grandfather (ex B-17 pilot) on the Yankee lady before he died. It was like 50 years of aging, just melted off the man! It was incredible and soooo worth it!!
@chriszbinden174010 ай бұрын
You flew right over my house! Thanks for taking this journey for us, what an incredible experience. Its always a thrill during EAA to hear the rumbles of those piston engines and see that silver bird flying right overhead!
@horsehollerer10 ай бұрын
I'm not even an av geek and I think it was TOTALLY worth it. What a thrill. Well done!
@paulhoughton526610 ай бұрын
Hello Noel, here is one for you, not B29 but B17 related. My Great Grandfather killed by B17 that crash landed near Great Ashfield USAF base in Suffolk in 1944. USAF paid my Great Grandmother a pension from 1944 until 1983. I managed to get a copy of the accident report via a guy that worked on the Saturn rocket from USAF records held in San Francisco, what a story !
@CarPitStop4 ай бұрын
RIP
@xmvirus20210 ай бұрын
Well done Noel! 1500.00 is a drop in the bucket for those priceless memories! Thanks for taking us along ❤️🙏
@nicka225610 ай бұрын
When I was a kid, used to build plastic models of these old planes and peek out the windows of the half built fuselage, to imagine how it looked to be on board the real thing.
@gavindaniels280510 ай бұрын
Hey Noel love the videos. Im from the Appleton Area and work at the airport. I had the privilege of fueling the B29 this year. Nice to see you had a good time. Safe flying.
@kenpierce94668 ай бұрын
Both Fifi and Doc will be at Appleton in July 2024
@seanzealony949910 ай бұрын
As a 60s born kid, I had Airfix models hanging from my ceiling with catgut. My Dad used to build them and paint them. Lancaster, Mosquito, Flying Fortress, Super Fortress, Pam Am Chinook, Mustang & a Spitfire. As only a few miles from RAF Cosford I’ve seen all but Super Fortress fly over. Great video 👍🏻
@hsucic7710 ай бұрын
Amazing!! Those engines - music to my ears
@aneel493210 ай бұрын
Absolutely worth it Noel. Great report! I took my son to see "Fifi" 20 years ago at the Boise airport. We took the onboard ground tour and were inside when they had to start an engine up for a test run. My 8 year old son's eyes got pretty wide when they started it up. A lot quieter than I expected though. 30 years ago my dad and I went to a ground display of a B-24 and B-17 in Wenatchee, Washington. It was really cool to listen to him talk about both of them as he had been a flight engineer on both in WW2. Also warned me not to stand directly in back of them as they started up as the old radials spit out some oil... he was right!
@daigriffiths39910 ай бұрын
The bombardier 'drops his load' immediately after refusing to do a loo review. Thanks Noel - I missed that first time through. Good job I'd just swallowed my mouthful of tea.
@alleykeosheyan477910 ай бұрын
OMG, this aircraft has a special place in my heart - my grandfather was one of the first flight instructors on the B-29s during World War II. I got to tour "FIFI," the only other airworthy B-29, at the Salt Lake City airport but I didn't have the wallet for a flight at the time. Thank you for showing us what it would have been like - no AC and all!
@coloffroad10 ай бұрын
I flew in the cockpit in 2020 at Wichita. It was a dream come true. I got great photos. And a bit of video. I used to watch them fly over every day in Idaho, coming out of the Mountain Home Airbase.
@johnkoerschner830510 ай бұрын
The Super Guppy that crossed the path on this flight is in a way the "grand child" of the B-29. The B-29 was developed into a Boeing C-97 Stratofreighter/Boeing 337 Stratocruiser which was the base aircraft in which the Guppies were developed.
@erik_griswold10 ай бұрын
And the Super Guppies were critical in the formation of Airbus. They were replaced by the Belugas.
@Razor48X6 ай бұрын
@@erik_griswoldso Boeing kinda helped creating their enemy, like Ferrari and Lamborghini
@owenbegner300410 ай бұрын
Noel, thank you so much for this video. Doc and Fifi are such treasures. This is an epic review. You made my year
@noelphilips10 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@bigbadcrusher10 ай бұрын
Few years ago, I was home for the weekend from college and they happened to have a B-25 there giving rides. One of my favorite experiences ever. Really put things into perspective how fortunate we are that I got to do that for fun as a 22 year-old kid, where as 70 years earlier, people my age were in the exact same plane over the Pacific, praying not to get shot down during their mission.
@Robslondon10 ай бұрын
This was simply superb Noel. Really enjoyable video… would love to see you experience more ultra-vintage aircraft! Stay well and keep up the great work.
@midwestadventures197510 ай бұрын
This is the coolest thing I have watched on utube in a while. I have seen these older planes in museum but I had no idea that there was any that could still fly.
@5thGenNativeTexan10 ай бұрын
While riding in the nose is certainly the best spot for epic out-the-window visuals, I was more excited about watching all the in "in-cockpit" action between the pilots and the flight engineer. Thus, I chose the Pilot Observer seat, right behind the pilots and facing the flight engineer. From that location you get the entire view of all the action.
@chaseb498810 ай бұрын
Now your talking, I love the B-29 and I watched them restore Doc to Airworthiness. It’s a beautiful sight to see and know that there is two airworthy B-29’s flying today.
@stuartgarfatth144810 ай бұрын
Everything considered, $1500 dollars is SO cheap as chips, absolutely, money well spent. Mate, your presentation was fabulous!.
@conorb787210 ай бұрын
That is the best seat in the house for sure. The other one, FiFi is here in Dallas and flies out of Dallas Executive occasionally. My office is under the final and when she flies overhead the entire building shakes and rumbles. I like to pull up foreflight when they're doing maneuvers and run out to catch them passing overhead. Hope I get to fly on one someday
@kbf643410 ай бұрын
Is the CAF in Dallas now?
@conorb787210 ай бұрын
@@kbf6434 I've only been here for just over a year but it seems like its been here the entire time I have. I've seen Fifi and a few others on multiple occasions parked outside the hanger there. Addison airport just a bit north also has some cool aircraft in a small museum.
@nachobroryan882410 ай бұрын
@@kbf6434 Yes
@Over_Aviation10 ай бұрын
@@conorb7872hey just wondering,I’d FIFI damaged?Because I think I saw a video about how the right gear either almost collapsed or did collapse.Can you please tell me if this is true?thank you
@conorb787210 ай бұрын
@Over_Aviation i haven't been over there in a while so i can't say, unfortunately. Hopefully she's alright
@AJ-32510 ай бұрын
Excellent video. I had a similar experience, riding in a B-25 Mitchell at Ellington in Houston. Riding in the nose with the pilot and co-pilot sitting behind you is one of the strangest sensations ever...
@steveg398110 ай бұрын
Suggest you try the Lancaster located at the museum in Hamilton, Ontario. It is also one of only two flying in the World. The other is in the UK. Flights are $3500 (Canadian Dollars)
@dougb804510 ай бұрын
I took a flight on the Lancaster in Hamilton and it was an incredible experience. The noise from those 4 engines when the throttles were advanced to takeoff power was something that I will never forget.
@davidbalcon872610 ай бұрын
Hear and see it many times during the summer flying over Toronto.
@davidbalcon872610 ай бұрын
It’s BOMB-BA-DEER on the B29, BOMB-BAR-DEE-EH on the CRJ across the tarmac.
@Thesmellofrain-h6o10 ай бұрын
I was able to take a ride during Sea Fair in Seattle years ago. My favorite aviation experience. The B-29 will forever be stamped into history for several reasons including the bomb that helped end WWII
@Lizzbird_10 ай бұрын
There’s another Lancaster that’s currently being restored in Windsor Ontario, idk if it will why again though
@dawnsokolik783710 ай бұрын
MJ SOKOLIK Getting ready to fly with my brother on B24 Diamond Lil the last one in the air , in August in Lincoln , Nebraska can't wait, it's hard to believe their are so few of these WW2 work horses left. From the person that discovered machines and the ones who restored DOC and FIFI , hats off to them and the crew that flies them. The mechanics and their office staff are so friendly , and helpful. I hope to fly on the B29 sometime in the near future. Most importantly those who served in WW2, these planes are a reminder. Thanks for the nice video.
@JonnyBabyaka10 ай бұрын
The engines on Doc apparently have been swapped out for lower power units with easier replaceable parts according to the crew I met when it visited my local airport. They are not super or turbocharged and are suffient for the low level flight Doc takes to tour the US. I’m sure with the big power engines it originally had takeoff would have been a cinch.
@donmeyer162110 ай бұрын
The engines on doc and Fifi are a modified newer more reliable 3350 which actually make more power than the original engines… safety first!!!
@JonnyBabyaka10 ай бұрын
@@donmeyer1621 weird. The story I got on the ramp was the original engines in “Doc” according to the guys I talked to on maintenance crew were Pratt and Whit R-4360 (being a late production plane apparently) and made 4300hp. They switched to the A-1 Skyraider engines (3350s) due to parts availability and lack of turbo or superchargers making maintenance intervals and reliability better at a cost of power. I commented about being able to see the turbine wheels in the exhaust on the engines and was told that was not what I thought it was and got the story about the engine swaps. I asked about the high altitude flight and they said they didn’t need the forced induction engines since they just fly from airport to airport at sub 15k feet and also that they do not pressurize the cabin. I thought it was cool the engines they had in there make that much power without the use of turbo or superchargers.
@kenpierce94668 ай бұрын
The R-3350--B29 has an internal supercharger. It does not have the original power recovery turbines (there were 3 on each engine).
@flymeaway121610 ай бұрын
Two years ago the B-29 was on tour and came to my local airport, when i found out it was coming i knew i had to fly in it. i worked so hard to try and get $700 to buy a ticket to fly in the back of it. I was 15 years old and did so much yard work and eventually lucked out and found a old avionic at a antique place and bought it for $2 and sold it for $500! that got me to the $700 with 2 weeks left till the B-29 came to my airport. I bought the ticket then waited. The day came and the weather was bad and they cancelled all the B-29 flights… I was super upset and still wanted to fly and they said i could go to Sun N Fun and fly in it if i wanted to. I took that offer and 2-3 weeks later i’m down at Sun N Fun flying in the B-29! That plane is absolutely amazing and was so worth the money and struggles. Getting to look out the tail while flying was like nothing i’ve ever done, Getting to stick my hand out the window at cruising speeds was absolutely amazing. The crew on the bomber were fantastic and wanted everyone to have a amazing experience. Eventually once we landed we could crawl through the tunnel to the cockpit and see everything up there and sit in the pilots seat. Flying in Doc was a amazing experience and i would recommend anyone and everyone to try and fly in it!
@erichfriedli815110 ай бұрын
Once again a great video😃 Have a good week
@noelphilips10 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@146flyer810 ай бұрын
Every video of yours always bring back great personal memories. Whether it’s travel, experiences, or just thoughts of my bucket list, you do a great job! This video brings back fond memories of being a co-pilot on a B-17 and B-24.
@noelphilips10 ай бұрын
Glad you like them!
@saigonexile53110 ай бұрын
That was awesome!! My dad was a waist-gunner on a B-17 and he loved that plane; said it could take a beating and keep on ticking LOL.......then came along the B-29 though he never got to fly on one but did see them. Thought they were gorgeous and they are!
@jasonmatson415510 ай бұрын
I remember back in the 1980s when we had an airfare in my hometown. Somehow the airfare coordinated a simultaneous flyby of a B-17, a B-29 (Back when only FiFi was the only one) and a B-52. I remember the coordination was pretty immense as the B-17 couldn't go fast enough and the B-52 couldn't go slow enough. But they managed to get it all worked out to meet at the center.
@matthewlerman128810 ай бұрын
Thanks for posting this! My grandfather was a bombardier on a B29 and this was the best walk around and video I’ve seen.
@noelphilips10 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@ShelterCats10 ай бұрын
A bucket list item if ever there was one. How cool!!!! You are cool, Noel.
@Realroyrogers10 ай бұрын
Doc is a B-29 Superfortress and one of 1,644 manufactured in Wichita during World War II. Since 1987 when Tony Mazzolini found Doc on sitting and rotting away in the Mojave Desert, plans have been in the works to restore the historic warbird to flying status to serve as a flying museum. Over the past 15+ years, hundreds of volunteers have worked on Doc and the restoration project. Skilled workers and retirees from Wichita’s aviation industry, veterans, active duty military and others wanting to honor those who served, have spent tens of thousands of hours on Doc’s restoration. Countless individuals and organizations also made financial and in-kind contributions to keep the project going.
@derrickgullage440310 ай бұрын
Well, I'm jealous. To be able to have a ride in a piece of aviation history is a once in a lifetime event. Hope you had fun.
@bradyreed345710 ай бұрын
This is how I felt in 1969 as a young airman in Iceland. As airman-of-the month, I got to ride in an F-102 fighter jet (2-seat trainer version). Besides the fabulous Icelandic scenery from above, I was impressed by how the after-burner-boosted plane fairly leapt off the runway on takeoff.
@thomasconroy697510 ай бұрын
Your video gives a new respect for the guys that few in the plane during the war
@jdii569810 ай бұрын
Dude to say that I’m jealous is a MASIVE understatement. I have seen FIFI fly many times at the CAF AIRSHO’s down when they were in Harlingen, Texas and other air shows. One of my favorite WW II plains along with the P-51 Mustang and the F8F Bearcat. I have also seen the Super Guppy flying out of Ellington in Clear Lake a few times. Also, the sound of a big round radial engine starting up is one of my favorite sounds in the world.
@tibbydudeza10 ай бұрын
Awesome flight - a piece of history - can't imagine the bravery of the folks who flew them over the skies of Germany facing flak and fighters.
@Trek00110 ай бұрын
B-29s did not see active service in Europe A few unarmed versions did though appear in the UK as a propegenda tool
@tibbydudeza10 ай бұрын
@@Trek001 The B17 then :( I watched Masters Of The Air - harrowing to have flown like a sitting duck.
@renardfranse10 ай бұрын
@@Trek001 you are quite correct, sir
@ukpylot10 ай бұрын
1500 is cheap for such an amazing experience! Though I'm not sure I would have coped well in the tunnel, just watching you inch along it was making me claustrophobic
@therealtarmacc10 ай бұрын
"a little airshow thing at oshkosh" 😂
@bryanhyde885010 ай бұрын
This is your best one yet!!! Way to go Noel !!
@andyphillips743710 ай бұрын
I've never seen a grown man look so excited and happy....😂
@royfr813610 ай бұрын
Well......
@sabot0319610 ай бұрын
Did the same in the nose of Fifi a few years back when she came up to Hamilton, Ontario. I've flown in the CWMH's Lancaster as well but B-29 was such a smooth experience. Fantastic aircraft and worth every penny for the experience.
@Trek00110 ай бұрын
"... pretend to be a fighter pilot" Honey, thats a bomber
@razzakk10 ай бұрын
Beat me to it
@phatbass954810 ай бұрын
That’s the magic of pretending.
@jeffhallel821110 ай бұрын
Bless your heart Honey Trek.
@talun850910 ай бұрын
I used to volunteer with Doc, glad you were able to fly on it! Love your videos as always.
@0_O_000110 ай бұрын
You need to visit the USAF museum in Dayton Ohio on the Wright Patterson AFB.
@darrellhall662210 ай бұрын
Have Bockcar there.
@daigriffiths39910 ай бұрын
Been there. I was at school/college in Pikeville KY back in 2002/03 as a scholarship pupil from Northern Ireland (I was what the US calls a 'returner' in my early Forties). One day the pysch prof turns round and asks me if I want to go to Dayton tomorrow because they had a spare seat on the bus. He'd drop me off with his brother John who was an aviation nut and John would take me up to Wright-Patterson and also to see the Wright Brothers' graves in Dayton Cemetery. Well, we decided that it would be nice to see the Presidential aircraft which were in another hanger but that required the production of identification before you were allowed on the bus to cross the base. That produced my first real do-what!! moment in the US. The queue for the bus was short enough and all papers were being inspected. John went for his identification but before he could hand it over, both he and I were waved straight through!!! The two behind us had to produce!!! It was worth it because I wasn't so much interested in the Presidential aircraft as in the XB-70 and the SR-71 which were stored in the same hanger.
@oyiegeronimo10 ай бұрын
Oh Noel I’m so happy for you! You looked so excited. Thanks for taking us with you.
@brittanyq441410 ай бұрын
At Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome they do WWI era air shows and you can ride in a 1929 biplane! I’ve done it, awesome experience!
@kjean8610 ай бұрын
My Grandpa was tool and die and my Grandmother was an inspector on the bombers during WWII for Boeing. I made sure my mom got to watch today's video. We live near Wichita so we've got to see DOC a few times. Proud of my grandparents for their work during those years. He was a barber and she was a hairstylist... until needed for more.
@MrPickledede10 ай бұрын
My eyes teared up watching this video. As Americans, most of us anyways, we hold a special place in our heart for our veterans those still here and those that passed. Your obvious profound appreciation of our military and its history is so inspiring. You may not be a citizen of the United States...yet, but I can tell you I would be so proud to call you and your family my fellow Americans. I say this mindful of the fact that you are a proud Briton, and so should you be, but as a dual citizen myself I never found my patriotism to both my countries be diminished in anyway. I miss and am proud of my grandfather who fought in the British Army in Tobruk and Italy and my maternal grandfather who fought and was severely injured as a sgt in the US Army in the Pacific in Leyte Island Philippines R.I.P.
@noelphilips10 ай бұрын
Neither us Brits or you guys would be where we are without the other, our grandparents on both sides of the pond (along with many others) sacrificed so much to get us where we are today. I truly appreciate everyone who’s given up so much for our freedom regardless of which nationality they were.
@spitroastfor89 ай бұрын
What a view! Beautiful aircraft, up there with the de Havilland mosquito...
@pgwchaos10 ай бұрын
Great video the B-29 is a awesome aircraft. One small correction the Enola Gay dropped the first atomic bomb over Hiroshima, Bockscar dropped the second over Nagasaki. It was also built for the US Army (the Air Force was founded after WWII). The equipment the bombardier uses was the Norden Bomb sight which was similar to the Manhattan project to develop and was seen as critical to the war effort. It was also a real marvel able to be fairly accurate in the right conditions. If you like military aircraft I would highly recommend the National Museum of the US Air Force it is on Wright-Patterson AFB near Dayton, Ohio and admission is free.
@malcolmcarter172610 ай бұрын
Oh you lucky lucky boy! ( well...hard work rather than luck.) I didn't realise that there were two airworthy B 29's. I thought that FIFI was the only one in the skies. $1500 very well spent I'd say. The Bombardiers position commands an amazing view, but I'd like to see what the gunners cupola on top is like for panaramic views. And like you said , the fee is going to a superb cause. 'Keep 'em flying!' as the WWII posters said. I love your channel and always look forward to whats coming up next. Thank you old chap for such terrific content. Peace.
@greebomusic10 ай бұрын
You got to see the Yankee Lady. That flies out of our local airport (Willow Run) and is a piece from the Yankee Air Museum. You really should come and take a look!
@chaseb498810 ай бұрын
I second this, I love having the Yankee Lady in my Backyard
@thugsdaddy441210 ай бұрын
@@chaseb4988 x3. I live west of A2 and enjoy the flyovers during warmer weather.
@hitgu110 ай бұрын
I saw her on her first tour post restoration at Oshkosh! Also love the B-17 in the background
@MrOmgwtflmfao10 ай бұрын
What an amazing plane! Thank you for this video Noel!! Greetings from the Netherlands!!
@noelphilips10 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@Janet-w2m10 ай бұрын
Noel. Can't remember seeing you so giddy with joy! So glad you were able to experience a flight on this beautiful bird. Worth every cent.
@joannharrington227910 ай бұрын
As cool as the plane is I could not climb into such a small space. Just watching your video I felt claustrophobic. No loo review. Once in a lifetime dream come true. Thank you for sharing this piece of history.
@sherylk669910 ай бұрын
You're too cute Noel ....Your excitement was very real.....You're like a kid in a candy store 😊....Keep up your great work and thank you for bringing me on your travels.....Cheers my friend...😊 xx.
@noelphilips10 ай бұрын
Thank you 🤗
@JS_360NC10 ай бұрын
Imagine being in that thing when a flak shell rips the entire back half off. Props to whoever flew these.
@USAMontanan10 ай бұрын
I know how you felt as I sat in the nose of a B-17 for the landing after a 30 minute flight! They let us move around to the different positions as we flew though which was nice. No one in the tail though because of the trimming issues it would create. But yes, worth every penny!
@SynicalDan10 ай бұрын
Imagine rushing through that tunnel during combat. Just wow!
@Yourmission910 ай бұрын
I hope those B29’s stay in service for as long as possible. One can imagine hundreds of them taking off at once during WW2, must’ve been a sight (and nervousness) to see them all flying in formation during its time
@boppermacca934610 ай бұрын
That would have been epic. My great uncle was a tail gunner in Lancaster bombers in WW2. The Lancaster my uncle flew in is on display at the Australian war memorial
@crazynoob1599 ай бұрын
Recently went to the Pima Air and Space Museum and they have a B-29 there, it amazing to see it in person Idk if I’d spend $1500 to ride it, but I’m certainly glad you did it for me lol
@stuartjohnston303010 ай бұрын
Fantastic. Well done Noel 😊
@noelphilips10 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@stuartjohnston303010 ай бұрын
Top channel top man.
@chrisxshock9 ай бұрын
Have to say I'm stoked to have stumbled upon your channel. I never knew I even cared about any of this stuff you share! That's a sign of a very solid vlogger!
@noelphilips9 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoy it!
@AndrewTubbiolo10 ай бұрын
@7:33. When the Soviets copied the B-29 into the Tu-4 one of things they did not copy was the fan cage. In fact if there's a cockpit shot of Soviet equipment, and I can't immediately type it, I look for the fans. If they're not caged ... it's Soviet. They didn't man rate their equipment, they manly rated their equipment.
@Doomzdayisgone196910 ай бұрын
Cool. I am from appleton. It’s obvious you were here in the summer, beautiful plane. Oh I miss summer, not so warm now😢. Good thing the groundhog didn’t see his shadow last week.
@johnerp9210 ай бұрын
I can't think of a better way to spend $1500
@dejfixcz8 күн бұрын
No
@Billcipherwemeetagain6 күн бұрын
Same I love planes
@whiteheatredhot534110 ай бұрын
Don’t usually comment a lot but the smile this experience puts on your face is priceless. Makes me smile….
@paulpietruszewski422610 ай бұрын
The Commemorative Air Force is a fantastic organization. What an experience.
@kbf643410 ай бұрын
My uncle was an air mechanic in the war in the Pacific. We’d drop him off at CAF in Harlingen & come back to find him covered in grease because he was “helping out.” He loved it!
@Coaster_Crazy10 ай бұрын
Wow what an incredible experience !!!!
@Trevjanes10 ай бұрын
I like all the notices on the aircraft that says 'Experimental'
@sophiejaysstuff402610 ай бұрын
Just FAA B.S.
@kenpierce94668 ай бұрын
@@sophiejaysstuff4026 These aircraft were not built to carry paying passengers. The passengers need to know. A special airworthiness certificate in the experimental category is issued to operate an aircraft that does not have a type certificate or does not conform to its type certificate and is in a condition for safe operation.
@sophiejaysstuff40268 ай бұрын
@@kenpierce9466 "The passengers need to know". The plane is not airworthy?
@kylieedge987810 ай бұрын
My husband is at Naval OCS , afterwards going to naval flight school , this is the best idea of a graduation gift 🥹 I didn’t know it was even possible to buy tickets .
@IrondilX5 ай бұрын
Hey Noel, just found your channel yesterday and i am amazed. You're such a decent, nice guy and it's just wholesome how you interact with others. As a fellow AV geek who isn't able to travel a lot i enjoy travelling with you in your videos. Keep doing what you do. Cheers!
@noelphilips5 ай бұрын
Thank you & Welcome.
@SerpicoDreams10 ай бұрын
I often think of old time military people as being, what I call, 'military thin.' My dad was extra skinny while in the reserves...and even just as someone born in the late 30s. Seems like a lot of military men used to be super skinny. (I guess 'fresh military' could be skinny these days, too, after bootcamp and such). Thought of this as you crawled through this machine!
@jkoysza110 ай бұрын
I think it was also due to everyman smoking. The genetics from my slender father, a WWII pilot, did not result in the reed-thin look. I am rather pudgy. He smoked, I didn't.
@SerpicoDreams10 ай бұрын
There's something to this. My dad did smoke and I also recall a lot of photos of skinny military guys somewhere...maybe in a group of men 'at the bottom' if you will. He would not have been a pilot, per se.@@jkoysza1
@gailpeterson37478 ай бұрын
Wow, wow, wow...that was a fantastic experience. Thank you, Noel, for taking us along!!
@loonhaunt10 ай бұрын
"Oshkosh, small air show". You're joking. Busiest airport in the world that week.
@andyg989210 ай бұрын
Scored a ride in the navigators seat on Fifi at JVL in 2021. Volunteered the entire weekend and that was the reward. Would easily pay $1500 for that experience again!
@stevenbennett392210 ай бұрын
A little tiny air show. Oshcosh. 🤪
@andyjackson47810 ай бұрын
Flew in a Spitfire last year from North Weald in Essex. Stunning.
@Kansasavation10 ай бұрын
"There is a little tiny airshow thing at Oshkosh." Buddy Oshkosh is the biggest airshow on earth lol 😆
@paulmccool37810 ай бұрын
I've followed Doc's restoration since they dragged it out of China Lake NWS back in the '90s. Love seeing it finished and flying.
@Sansthebadtimebringer10 ай бұрын
I went to see doc at the lone star flight museum, I was able to go inside of the plane, and I even saw it fly at the wings over houston airshow. I asked one of the crew members why flying in it was so expensive, and he said it was because of operating costs of the plane, it costs 6000$ to fly it for 1 hour
@TrooperClerk10 ай бұрын
Not sure if you knew Noel, but the cockpit glass of the B-29 was the main inspiration for the cockpit of the Millennium Falcon from Star Wars.