Largest nuclear weapon ever deployed on display in Arizona

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Arizona’s Family (3TV / CBS 5)

Arizona’s Family (3TV / CBS 5)

Күн бұрын

(ARIZONA HIGHWAYS TV) - They say the cold war is over, but Arizona is still holding on to at least one missile from America's nuclear arsenal. It's scary, and yet at the same time impressive. And you can see it inside the Titan Missile Museum in Sahuarita.

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@xyanide1986
@xyanide1986 2 жыл бұрын
You gotta love guys like this that keep these museums and displays alive.
@guytansbariva2295
@guytansbariva2295 2 жыл бұрын
@@Holyinspirit lol..typical comment from someone with your name. Sorry reality, in the past or present, doesn't live up to your impossible Liberal ideals. 🤣
@LarsAndersenFrihed
@LarsAndersenFrihed 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, remembering the past and telling it to new generations is something to be proud of.
@xyanide1986
@xyanide1986 2 жыл бұрын
@@Holyinspirit It's so good for passing down knowledge. Passive displays don't give you a story. Do you know what history even is?
@mr.anderson6040
@mr.anderson6040 2 жыл бұрын
Keep that in mind Russian bot
@JohnBark
@JohnBark 2 жыл бұрын
There's nothing to be proud of with showing off nuclear weapons capable of wiping out populations
@truthseeker9454
@truthseeker9454 2 жыл бұрын
Part of what's impressive to me is the lengths the designers went to ensure two people had to agree to launch. There was a balance between the desire to make the threat of launch credible and the response time quick enough (deterrence), and the responsibility they felt to eliminate accidental or rogue launches (safety). I wonder to what lengths other nuclear nations go to achieve a similar balance.
@bboyenzoIL
@bboyenzoIL 2 жыл бұрын
Pretty sure 2 people are required everywhere in the world for launching nukes and stuff
@chrisb.1214
@chrisb.1214 2 жыл бұрын
@@bboyenzoIL I saw a video somewhere here on KZbin showing a Russian ICBM silo and from what I remember it seemed that only one person could initiate a launch. I may be wrong, but it certainly bothered me if that really is the case.
@ohlala9546
@ohlala9546 2 жыл бұрын
@@chrisb.1214 With the once active Dead Hand System of the Soviet Union and later Russia, there were warheads that needed NO person to launch. The system detecting an enemy launch or strike would be enough to launch retaliation. To think about that, and the hardware in the cold war times, gives me shivers
@Drew-Dastardly
@Drew-Dastardly 2 жыл бұрын
@@bboyenzoIL No. We all know from the TDS crowd on Twitter that Donald could have launched a worldwide global nuclear war at any time on a whim from his Mara-a-Lago estate if he lost a game of golf. He carried the Big Red Button everywhere. Biden has it now.
@donniebaker5984
@donniebaker5984 2 жыл бұрын
Answer push button launch missile checkmate game over... And this is not sarcasm of any video game has actually it's both video and real life procedures... The two keys the two buttons all pressed and turned the same time as the actress to ease the tensions of the on looking public... Banana real fail safe scenario of whatever damage your sub your ship your bunker has taken there are buttons all over the facility or the whole or the bowels of a submarine that any semen of the lowest class can find his button when the sub has taken torpedoes half the cruise dead instantly including the captain and all come to the outside world and you see the water pouring in and you're up to your neck in it and you're The last One alive on the sub and you're going to be dead with him a minute you push the button and launch what you have left that will launch and there will be plenty before the ship is totally destroyed..... And so is well known and obvious there's no time to wait for any orders all right secret come frequency that activates the copier on board the sub to give you a official document signed by the president to launch it's all too late for that in real life ... So as it stands today and probably always will for eternity the fleet of submarines hidden below the surface undetectable without any way of detecting or estimating where any one of them are at any given time and of course the Russians have exactly the same thing it's down to the wire have who wants to commit suicide first and launch cuz that's what will happen if any or either side for any reason as there's no logical reason when you're shooting into the dark and your opponent is shooting back in the dark as both opposing subs are running at random without reports of any orders as both have free will can you play it out at their own choosing two logically have a higher chance of finding the enemy first ... Like the movie Hunt for Red October is basically a training movie for a captain and crew to experience strategies.... Now take away all those safety precautions on firing off missiles and nukes... And it was during that era of the movie my parents went out to San Diego to visit one of my relations who was the seaman on such a nuke sub who explained there's buttons all over the ship there's no keys there's no waiting for orders if I want to fire off the next and destroy the world I can do it.... And a scary part was the explanation for my parents as mom said he had this crazy look in his eye of some kind of a macho movie star mad scientist knowing he has that power by merely a touch of a button......so this info should educate all your curiosities that's what goes on in the real world beyond Hollywood that's a way more terrifying don't you think.... All's well it ends well sleep tight don't let the bedbugs bite they may be radioactive........ Oops my bad it's easier than my thought nobody even has to push the button the artificial intelligent robots to do that for you just in case you're dead when it comes time to launch which could be any time in the very next second hahaha en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fail-deadly
@TheMasheenist
@TheMasheenist 3 жыл бұрын
Just visited the national atomic testing museum in Nevada, they had a decommissioned m53 9 megaton thermonuclear bomb on display. Very unsettling to stand next to something 600 times more powerful than the bomb dropped on Japan. Even just the casing of such a weapon is still terrifying. Everyone should visit these places to remember how close we stand to destroying our planet
@MrCoors68
@MrCoors68 2 жыл бұрын
Human kind only has the ability to kill its self.......... Earth will last for another 5 billion years.......... in its physical state. Mankind has no means to destroy the planet. all of you earthers are just a bunch of whiney little bitches who have no idea of what total destruction is....... please just shut the fuck up and let the ozone evaporate and destroy the planet........... thanks.
@randomuser5732
@randomuser5732 2 жыл бұрын
@@MrCoors68 planet destroyers are not very far away my g
@NBWDOUGHBOY
@NBWDOUGHBOY 2 жыл бұрын
Even closer now with Looming war with Russia
@TheMasheenist
@TheMasheenist 2 жыл бұрын
@@NBWDOUGHBOY yeah never wanted this comment of mine to be relevant in the future, but welcome to ww3
@azbestusa8107
@azbestusa8107 2 жыл бұрын
I recommend atomic museum in Albuquerque
@jelink22
@jelink22 2 жыл бұрын
I've written elsewhere on KZbin that my dad was a Titan II site commander at one of the Davis-Monthan sites back in 1964. He actually took me down inside the operational silo, where I got a personal tour of the crew quarters, the command center, and---the really BIG THING---to stand directly on the W-duct underneath the fully-armed missile in its silo, the two engines only fifteen feet above my head. I could look up the silo wall to view the small service porches at several levels, with Liquid Nitrogen venting from a port on the missile's side. I was a Chemical Engineering major back then, and let me tell you----it was waaay coool! l would love to go back.
@GodlyClips-pv1yt
@GodlyClips-pv1yt Жыл бұрын
Wow
@jelink22
@jelink22 10 ай бұрын
@@JASONH01 Sorry, but I went in there with my dad. I remember him using an intercom at the outside entrance announcing he was bring me, his son, in. The massive blast door clicked, he entered the code to complete the security sequence, and in we walked. About 20 feet down the steps my dad punched in another code and we proceed to a lower level. There he opened another door to reveal a black cavity with humungous springs in xyz directions meant to dampen a nuclear blast. From there to the crew sleeping quarters /personal area and then to the control center with the two separated launch key mechanisms. Then down a corridor opening onto the W-duct pedestal under the missile. You are free not to believe me, but citing only your personal opnion that I am lying isn't "evidence" of anything. You might want to read puncheex2's story below. Have a nice day, skippy.
@crouchiie1995
@crouchiie1995 10 ай бұрын
@@jelink22 Things were different back in the day, people don't understand that just because things wouldn't happen now they were pretty common back then.
@JanPeterson
@JanPeterson 2 жыл бұрын
When I was an AFROTC cadet at Vandenberg AFB in 1984, our flight's FTO was one Captain Brown, who was formerly a Titan launch officer. He had some stories. Some of us (at least me and another cadet from Bozeman MT, Jay Helming) were on Missile scholarships and were planning to be Minuteman crews. Growing up on a missile base, the thought of a nuclear war was never far from your mind. I wouldn't say we lived in fear, exactly, but we all knew what it would mean if we saw multiple vertical contrails rising out of the Montana landscape. We had faith in those days that our command authority (i.e., the President of the United States) would not order the use of nuclear weapons without a damn good reason. I am glad that that faith was never tested. For those who served, thank you.
@shenmisheshou7002
@shenmisheshou7002 2 жыл бұрын
The "Top to Bottom Tour" is absolutely amazing. This is a very limited tour that they only do only a few times a month and it goes into EVERY space in the silo. The 1 hour tour is ok, but this tour goes into every nook and cranny, including down into the very bottom of the blast deflectors. Because of its limited nature, you need to reserve in advance, but this is the best best best tour I have ever done in my life. You miss nothing. You see every inch.
@stevenakn1
@stevenakn1 2 жыл бұрын
Is it the same guy giving the tour he seems pretty cool.
@shenmisheshou7002
@shenmisheshou7002 2 жыл бұрын
​@@stevenakn1 There were only a few people that did the Top to Bottom tour. The guy that led my tour had been at one time a crew commander in a Titan II Silo, so he had intimate detail of just about every aspect of the silo, the missle, and the various launch details. The standard tour does a simulated launch, but my guide gave a great deal more information about targeting, codes, maintenance, security, and pretty much anything else you could ever want to know. It was one of the very best military tours I have ever done in my life. They only did six people on the tour and I was there by myself so they paired me up with this History teacher and she was completely absorbed in every detail. I think she enjoyed the tour as much as I did. I cannot recommend this tour highly enough. No other museum of any other type put as much into the four hours I spend on this tour.
@AJ-ui6ny
@AJ-ui6ny 2 жыл бұрын
I just looked online and only see an option for a 45 minute tour. Maybe I'm looking at the wrong site?
@mechellekingman7833
@mechellekingman7833 2 жыл бұрын
On putins head in Moscow
@carbonking53
@carbonking53 2 жыл бұрын
@@AJ-ui6ny More than likely they suspended the long tour due to covid. They have a lengthy section on their site about covid safety protocols. Hopefully they will get back to the old normal soon.
@55nsmooth
@55nsmooth 2 жыл бұрын
I was in elementary school in Seattle in the 60's during the Cuban missile crisis. We had drills in school where we would have to go in the basement of the wood frame school building and lie down in the hallways in the event of a nuclear attack by the Soviets (as if that would protect anyone). Every Wednesday at noon, they turned the air raid sirens on as a drill. I will never forget that sound or that time. Creeped me out. Even today, the sound of those sirens brings back those memories.
@happygimp5167
@happygimp5167 2 жыл бұрын
I can relate sir!
@sasori6417
@sasori6417 2 жыл бұрын
I only played many sirenhead games (horror monster that lives in the woods and has thoose air raid sirens replacing his head but they are looking like normal speakers, its pretty big, can do thoose siren sounds, can imitate any other noise that would come through a radio like a police call and more ), and thats enough for me to feel uncomfortable when they test the sirens every month. (they only test if they work, once a month on the first saturday at 12:30am.).And once, a few months ago, it was tuesday, at f*cking 11:13 pm, thoose air raid sirens randomly started and wooke me up, i was scared a.f. and woke my mother, ( she always wears that anti-sound things in her ears while sleeping) and exactly then the sirens stopped., my mom heard nothing. After half a hour, I calmed down and got sleep, it never got mentioned anywhere, and even my friends didnt heard anything. But I know it happend. I am living in a place with democracy and peace. (Germany)
@jacsonjames
@jacsonjames 2 жыл бұрын
@@sasori6417 I believe you sir 💯
@dhowar
@dhowar 2 жыл бұрын
You was in school and I was a bosun's mate on the USS Wasp off the coast of Cuba during the blockade. We watched the Russian cargo ships come out of Cuba. It was a close call, we was on alert.
@AK47z
@AK47z 2 жыл бұрын
Check out the old minutemen missile sites on cougar mountain in Bellevue.
@murfrirhke4557
@murfrirhke4557 2 жыл бұрын
Former Little Rock Titan MFT here. Your show brought back many memories & really got my heart racing. I can even remember the smells & noise of the complex. Thank you so much.
@danieloblinger6648
@danieloblinger6648 2 жыл бұрын
My first base that I was assigned when I enlisted in the Air Force was Vandenberg AFB in California. It was a missile test base, in other words they would pull them from various silos from around the country, take the warhead off and send them to VAFB so they could "do their thing" with them. It was interesting to see the launches, although you could usually hear and feel them even if you were nowhere near them.
@herzeleid9525
@herzeleid9525 Жыл бұрын
Everytime Vandenberg AFB does a ballistic missile test, you can see it hundreds of miles away. It’s so cool. Last time I saw one was maybe 3 years ago.
@danieloblinger6648
@danieloblinger6648 Жыл бұрын
@@herzeleid9525 it's really cool when they launch one about an hour after sunset, the sun that's over the horizon lights up the exhaust trail all the way to the ground when it's dark outside.
@DFisk75
@DFisk75 2 жыл бұрын
Great news report. Just the thought of turning the key gave me chills. When my father was in the navy we were stationed twice at the POLARIS missile assembly facility near Charleston, South Carolina. It was always unnerving seeing missiles being moved by train to the ship yard
@robster6884
@robster6884 2 жыл бұрын
Good video. I was a Titan crew commander in Arkansas (308 SMW) for four years in the mid 70s. Brings back old memories. Everything in this video was just the way I remember it.
@elisolomon8741
@elisolomon8741 2 жыл бұрын
That's a hell of a thing you did, Rob. Thank you for your part in keeping us safe through some of those cold war years. Respect from Australia.
@fiendish67
@fiendish67 2 жыл бұрын
Did you drop the wrench? Fess up.
@PotatoeJoe69
@PotatoeJoe69 2 жыл бұрын
What's it like now, being older and having the time and ability to openly reflect on having the responsibility and power of ending the world in your hands? Does it ever bother you
@heppoify49
@heppoify49 2 жыл бұрын
I spit on you, Rob
@VinnieFarsheds
@VinnieFarsheds 2 жыл бұрын
@@fiendish67 I was curious about what happened so I watched this video *The Damascus Missile Explosion (Disaster Documentary)* kzbin.info/www/bejne/qZ60p4WVi6lqr9k Perfect example of how a simple decision of not wanting to waste some time to go back and get the approved tool end up causing A LOT more waste of equipment and a death in the end. Still could have been a lot worse.
@byronharano2391
@byronharano2391 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your service to display what was once our Nuclear deterrent site and to have ordinary citizens feel emotionally the strees of launching a nuclear exchange. Wow. Thank you.
@honved1
@honved1 2 жыл бұрын
It’s hard to imagine what the operators of the missiles would feel after a launch if it came to that.
@allenjenkins7947
@allenjenkins7947 2 жыл бұрын
Totally numb would be my first guess. That's if one or both of the pair didn't refuse to launch.
@verruekterPhysiker
@verruekterPhysiker 2 жыл бұрын
Here you can hear about what happens after a launch, gives something of a perspective: kzbin.info/www/bejne/fIe9nnl_iN-krbs
@davidsmith3736
@davidsmith3736 2 жыл бұрын
Depends who the target was,in the case of Putin,glad,but you would have to be sure it got to its target.
@jdvandy8528
@jdvandy8528 2 жыл бұрын
Probaly just like that war games movie one is ready to do his job the other won’t kill millions .. every one is different under pressure everyone is different period ..
@slaytanic921
@slaytanic921 2 жыл бұрын
Get it launched before the enemies missle hits your launch site.
@greggd2027
@greggd2027 2 жыл бұрын
No idea how I stumbled upon this video but glad I did - Incredible. Not only is the history fascinating, but important to preserve so it can be learned from. And that siren - gave me chills. I came of age in the 80s - one of these sirens was on my high school campus. Every last Friday of the month, at 11:00 AM, the sirens all over my home town (maybe even the state) would go off. I remember getting out of class and watching the siren go round and round.. and it was so damned loud. Back then we lived with the fear of nuclear war happening at any minute.. I feared hearing those sirens at any other time than the usual prescribed day and time.
@JosephMusgrove
@JosephMusgrove 2 жыл бұрын
Actually, the Titan silo accident that prompted the installation of the air raid horns at Titan silos, was in Damascus, Arkansas not Little Rock. In September of 1980, A large 8-pound socket from a wrench was dropped during maintenance and punctured the missile’s skin resulting in a fuel leak. Some hours later there was an explosion that actually blew the silo door off the silo and the nuclear warhead was ejected and landed next to the complex entry gate.
@JosephMusgrove
@JosephMusgrove 2 жыл бұрын
@@LauRoot892 Central Arkansas. Remember as a kid seeing this event on the local news.
@LauRoot892
@LauRoot892 2 жыл бұрын
@@JosephMusgrove Ugh 😑
@mlester3001
@mlester3001 2 жыл бұрын
My dad worked in construction as a crane operator and helped to build Titan II missile sites in Arkansas back in the early 1960's.
@BlueSky......
@BlueSky...... 2 жыл бұрын
who cares
@bobolulu7615
@bobolulu7615 2 жыл бұрын
@@BlueSky...... Actually, I do.
@lewisproffitt9584
@lewisproffitt9584 2 жыл бұрын
That’s cool did he have to get special permission I assume? That’s pretty serious stuff for a civilian.
@LiamFisawesome
@LiamFisawesome Жыл бұрын
@@BlueSky...... 26 people cared, but not a single person cared about your faggot ass comment
@jacksonvilletaxman1
@jacksonvilletaxman1 2 жыл бұрын
My hometown in SW Michigan was and is home to three nuclear reactors. We grew up with them so we didn't pay much attention to potential problems. After Three Mile Island in 1979, the government put the sirens in to warn of a meltdown, tornadoes, and to a lesser extent, a nuclear attack. They would test them once a month (scheduled and announced). I think the sirens were creepier than the actual nuclear reactors.
@madmax2069
@madmax2069 2 жыл бұрын
The town I use to live in had the exact same siren as in the video, it was used for the fire station and tornado warnings. Every time there was a fire it would go off. It was freaky getting woke up by it going off in the middle of the night.
@ColeRiedel
@ColeRiedel 2 жыл бұрын
Ahhhhh good ol cook nuclear plant
@Thememelord134
@Thememelord134 2 жыл бұрын
I’m in Michigan and I wanna hear it
@jacksonvilletaxman1
@jacksonvilletaxman1 2 жыл бұрын
@@Thememelord134 Cook Nuclear Power Plant is in Bridgman, MI, and Palisades Power Plant is in South Haven
@Thememelord134
@Thememelord134 2 жыл бұрын
@@jacksonvilletaxman1 thank you
@dalelestourgeon3355
@dalelestourgeon3355 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video. Great to have this museum and make people aware of the awesome responsibilities we had. I was Commander of the 373rd Strategic Missile Squadron (Titan) and can attest you got it right.
@lilblackduc7312
@lilblackduc7312 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your service Commander, so old workers like me finally have a safe place to retire! 🇺🇸 👍
@codyking4848
@codyking4848 Жыл бұрын
The sound of that Federal Thunderbolt gives me chills. Grew up in a small town in West Texas that had a Thunderbolt as a tornado siren.
@Skywatcher2002
@Skywatcher2002 Жыл бұрын
Me,too.Those sirens have been around for many years.Some still in operation . Used for weather,nukes,, tornado watch Warnings.The mid west st one point in time ,was prepared.
@genocardosi4185
@genocardosi4185 2 жыл бұрын
In Dayton, they have several decommissioned nuclear weapons on display, and it's, unsettling to say the least, to be standing next to something that could make 10 million people cease to exist.
@davea1771
@davea1771 2 жыл бұрын
I took the tour at this museum several years ago. Very impressive stuff. The gyroscope for this missile is in the museum and is the size of a beach ball. Without that gyroscope, the missile would have a very difficult time flying to the target. It's an interesting look back at the technology of 50 years ago. In addition, some of the scenes in the Star Trek: First Contact movie were filmed in the silo in 1995.
@Mike-01234
@Mike-01234 2 жыл бұрын
Back then I believe the tour was given by the Air Force personal who were assigned to that site in the 1980's before it was shut down they all gotten lot older now I'm assuming retired from that.
@silicon212
@silicon212 2 жыл бұрын
50 years ago was 1972. This was 60-70 year old tech.
@elultimo102
@elultimo102 2 жыл бұрын
@@silicon212 A Luger from WW1, can kill you just as dead as a new Glock. Just because it's old, doesn't mean it wouldn't work.
@silicon212
@silicon212 2 жыл бұрын
@@elultimo102 Nobody ever said it wouldn't.
@theonewhowas7709
@theonewhowas7709 8 ай бұрын
if it was this good back then.. can only imagine what its like today..
@JackMooney
@JackMooney 2 жыл бұрын
This guy is a TRUE teacher. He really went through everything showing off EVERYTHING in a professional manner of course. But had the police come when the sirens rang out HAHA. Whose teacher would of had the balls to do that for a demonstration in the USA!? XD
@sunadsuhasini
@sunadsuhasini 2 жыл бұрын
Good they had a white guy answering the police ...
@rjinnh3933
@rjinnh3933 2 жыл бұрын
Memories. I was a Titan-II BMAT (Balistic Missile Analysist Technician) from '62 to' '70. The last 5 years as a Launch Crew Member. BTW: We knew what our targets were. Every Air, Ground and Sea Launched Target was listed in the SIOP (Single Integrated Operations Plan). We had to access the SIOP to determine our available Launch Times under certain conditions.
@bruceu2274
@bruceu2274 2 жыл бұрын
This is legit
@stevenakn1
@stevenakn1 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your service sir
@AZStarYT
@AZStarYT 2 жыл бұрын
@Felicity Grossman Both. What Capt. Bruce Cathie (q.v.) discovered is that the Earth's fields wouldn't support more than one nuke going off at a time. They had to be programmed for specific places at specific times, pertaining to the relative position of the Sun and Moon at the intended point of impact. After one went off, the atmosphere and magnetic fields would be so distorted in several ways that another one wouldn't detonate for at least a day or more. Big secret .mil didn't want anybody knowing about, since the idea of 'all-out' nuclear war (M.A.D.) was the deterrent. Talk about insane . . .
@dang3554
@dang3554 2 жыл бұрын
@Felicity Grossman He spelled it out for you...SIOP (Single Integrated Operations Plan)
@SAArch82
@SAArch82 2 жыл бұрын
@@AZStarYT do you have a link to more information on that topic?
@ivanscottw
@ivanscottw 2 жыл бұрын
About the sirens. Here in France, the alert sirens are still in operation. Each number of tone is suppose to indicate the type of impending danger (fire, flooding, high winds, bombing..) and the fifth one (5 tones) is supposedly to indicate a nuclear attack (but this was never confirmed nor denied - so could be lore culture). However, you'll hear it throughout France at 12PM (actually twice, once at 12:00 and once at 12:05) every first Wednesday of the month to ensure they still operate properly.
@Nick-bk7es
@Nick-bk7es 2 жыл бұрын
I can't imagine what it would be like being a commander and you being ordered to fire the missile. The fate of millions at your fingertips, a once populated city gone in a matter of seconds.
@puncheex2
@puncheex2 2 жыл бұрын
I have no idea how it was done, but in about 1963 I was a member of a Boy Scout Explorer Post outside of Denver, CO which was sponsored by the Martin-Marietta Corp., the manufacturer of the Titan missile (probably 724-B). Our leaders, who were engineers at Martin, got us a tour of one of the operational Titan missile silos in the old Lowry bombing range east of Denver. I later found out that they were in the stages of closing the site, but before they did, we got to tour it. The diesels were providing noisy power to the facility and it was crawling with uniformed Air Force people, no workmen in sight. We walked out to one of the silos and the sergeant who was guiding our group pointed up to the top of the missile we were viewing and told us that that was a live "hydrogen bomb" (he used that description) about 30 feet above our heads. I don't know whether he was pulling our legs, but I would presume that they wouldn't have installed a dummy in its place. It was a great tour, but I have to really wonder how they'd let a bunch of teenagers do that.
@jacksonvilletaxman1
@jacksonvilletaxman1 2 жыл бұрын
Much simpler and better times
@harry-kf7kw
@harry-kf7kw 3 жыл бұрын
that horn freaks me out, so i guess it's up to the task of warning people.
@glenng7085
@glenng7085 2 жыл бұрын
Good video, I wish you had given the dimensions of the missile and showed how the missile crews lived underground and coped with the enormous responsibility they had to endure.
@scottfailing7045
@scottfailing7045 2 жыл бұрын
Scare me to turn the key/Was not or true.One of two guys had a gun ready to force the other guy to turn the key if the other guy dont turn the key/.Second the 2 would be locked in the room foreever if they had to turn the KEY.Takes guts to know you will destroy builting or things.But kill many on the other end.Scare me to death.I cant do it !!.Good educational video sir.
@glenng7085
@glenng7085 2 жыл бұрын
@@scottfailing7045 they both had guns, I recommend watching 1980's movie" war games", great scene about exactly this sinario u talk about in the opening part of movie!
@tedmoss
@tedmoss 2 жыл бұрын
Actually bigger bombs were made, they just were not needed because of the waste, most energy goes straight up because of atmospheric pressure.
@kbanghart
@kbanghart 2 жыл бұрын
@@tedmoss very true. Of much greater destructive power are several smaller warheads.
@deadspeedv
@deadspeedv 2 жыл бұрын
Would have been manned 24/7 for 21 years. Would love to know what their actual usual workday was like without the overdramatised BS. I would imagine there were plenty of daily system checks and possibly a weekly firing drill, but other than that it would have been a very quiet uneventful job. So would love to know what they did to pass those quiet times.
@mrradio2187
@mrradio2187 2 жыл бұрын
When I lived in Las Vegas during the 60's and 70's we could see (and feel) the nuclear blasts. We would place a stack of quarters on the ground and watch the blast shock wave from 90 miles away knock them over!
@jayg339
@jayg339 11 ай бұрын
I feel like a nuclear missile like this is kind of like a large tornado/volcano. Its a combination of being simultaneously awe-inspiring and terrifying. It has to be fascinating to see in person, and feel the immense magnitude of the responsibility the soldiers who worked here had and the gratitude that we've never had to use these weapons. Plus, it also puts in perspective that even today nuclear war is still a possibility and the idea of people casually throwing around terms like "ahh, just nuke em..." is not really something that should be casually thrown around. Very interesting report - and credit to the museum tour guy who was very knowledgable about this stuff and explaining the gravity of it.
@phil20_20
@phil20_20 2 жыл бұрын
We heard this siren every day at Noon. If it's not oscillating from loud to quiet and back again, it's just a test. A straight blast is also the all clear siren. If it wavers, or "oscillates", that means get in a bomb shelter, because an attack may be imminent. They were originally air raid sirens for WWII. Since planes and missiles are still the way nuclear weapons are delivered, it's still a valid term.
@MrSolLeks
@MrSolLeks 2 жыл бұрын
I hear them ever so often here in illinois, they test them about once a month. Growing up I knew them as tornado sirens but they probably are the same thing. sounded the same too.
@charliewerchan7252
@charliewerchan7252 2 жыл бұрын
Crazy thing is that with the ability of the Russian navy to put subs off the coast, getting to a shelter nowadays wouldn't be possible. Launch to land would be just a few minutes, then BOOM. Probably the best answer would be , to be always ready for your final moments here on earth. Love God and your neighbor, and leave the rest to His hands. Just a thought.
@slaytanic921
@slaytanic921 2 жыл бұрын
@@MrSolLeks ours sound like they oscillate because they spin, in northern Illinois anyway.
@mulletfish290
@mulletfish290 2 жыл бұрын
What a great museum guide 👌you can tell he loves what he does 😀
@djolley61
@djolley61 2 жыл бұрын
That siren is identical to those used in Michigan for tornado warning sirens. If you hear that, a tornado has been spotted in your area. Yes, it's kind of spooky.
@raymondpierce8162
@raymondpierce8162 2 жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same thing. At the township hall in Wales, MI it still operates monthly. Well, when it works
@djolley61
@djolley61 2 жыл бұрын
@@raymondpierce8162 Oh yes, the monthly tests. They should let the local police know when they are going to fire it up.
@FontaineLovers
@FontaineLovers 2 жыл бұрын
"mom, the cornfield is smoking"
@richhoops2413
@richhoops2413 Жыл бұрын
My father owned an old Nike missile base in Austin. It was off of 812. I still have the original survey and letters from the city, when he was planning on converting it in to a homeless boys shelter. Keep in mind, this was in the 80's. This was just outside of Bergstrom AFB (before it became a public airport). I barely remember going there as a kid. I'm 40 now
@swedhgemoni8092
@swedhgemoni8092 2 жыл бұрын
The RS-28 Sarmat is the largest ICBM in the world.
@fabio2990
@fabio2990 2 жыл бұрын
It's not a nuclear weapon. It's the Phoenix, a warp capable rocket!
@Catinthehackmatrix
@Catinthehackmatrix 2 жыл бұрын
How they guided anything in the 1960s is a miracle, but they did have televisions.
@kbanghart
@kbanghart 2 жыл бұрын
Brand new computers for sure. Have you seen how the core memory of Apollo was made? It's fascinating.
@Hattonbank
@Hattonbank 2 жыл бұрын
Smaller warheads on Minuteman 3 and Trident are all that is needed due to much more accurate delivery. If you can deliver the weapon within 100 yards of the tareget instead of 1,000 yards, you do not need such a large warhead to destroy the target, plus you can get more smaller warheads into the one missile.
@kahowka
@kahowka Жыл бұрын
There is the same post Soviet museum in Ukraine. We were there before 24.02.2022 with my family we are from Russia. And there were a group of people from Lviv. We spoke different languages but understood each other. Everyone were proud that we are part of this history and understood the responsibility of having such weapons. The guide even said that he would not use the nukes in any case against Russia because alot of families in Ukraine and Russia have relatives on each side not speaking of how many civilians including kids would die. And nowadays ukrainian president and russian media workers allow themselves to throw words about nukes like its nothing. People definetely degrade
@RonnieToo
@RonnieToo 2 жыл бұрын
I'm originally from Scotland and I remember hearing the Air Raid sirens that would be tested periodically when I was at primary school around 1960. I believe there were air raid sirens at most schools in Glasgow that were originally installed in WWII to warn the population that there were Bombers heading our way and we should head to the Anderson bomb shelters for protection. I was only 5 years old when I first heard them and knew what was making all that noise. I'm not sure if the sirens are still there but many of the Anderson bomb shelters were demolished although there are a few still surviving today but would not survive a nuclear blast.
@jaymac7203
@jaymac7203 2 жыл бұрын
Zephram Cochrans Phoenix? 🤔
@brucesteele3052
@brucesteele3052 2 жыл бұрын
I was stationed active duty on those sites and can tell you there were no sirens like the one in the video. We had a claxon and a series of colored lights, but no air raid-type siren.
@davidtong2776
@davidtong2776 2 жыл бұрын
For more than a decade the United States, stock piled 500, 24 megaton bombs, they were bomber only weapons to be carried by B-52s. The Titan was capable of carrying a more powerful warhead, but one was never fitted to them.
@airmanfpv964
@airmanfpv964 2 жыл бұрын
holy fuck.
@MrKen-wy5dk
@MrKen-wy5dk 2 жыл бұрын
We used to have a siren like that, or similar, in downtown Houston. It would always go off at exactly 12:00 Noon every Friday. People would set the clocks and watches by it. I still miss hearing it.
@LauRoot892
@LauRoot892 2 жыл бұрын
😑
@EastDetroitMusic-Sirens3000A
@EastDetroitMusic-Sirens3000A Жыл бұрын
I'm actually a siren enthusiast or someone who shares the same interest, if you're interested in looking at my channel you can find plenty of videos of all kinds of sirens including those types called the "Federal Signal Thunderbolt 1000" in the video also can be found on my channel so you can find documentations of them that I've filmed around the state of Michigan.
@Connors_Engines
@Connors_Engines Жыл бұрын
imagine turning the keys and he says "wait did u fr turn it?!?!?"
@nex_us227
@nex_us227 3 ай бұрын
Yea I did what it's fake right RIGHT
@tomp8094
@tomp8094 2 жыл бұрын
I was a Minuteman II ICBM Combat Crew Member at Malmstrom AFB MT. Toward the end of my crew commitment we started getting a lot of ex Titan II crew members that were coming to the Minuteman weapons system to finish out their crew commitments. Many I knew had some really good "war stories" about that antiquated system. Look forward to visiting this site someday.
@gunsnoptics2172
@gunsnoptics2172 2 жыл бұрын
There was around 10 of us that came to Malmstrom. I went from 10 years pf Titan II PTS (Propellants) to (MMT) Minuteman II and III at Malmstrom. Retired in 1997 at Malstrom.
@dennispfeifer7788
@dennispfeifer7788 2 жыл бұрын
We had one of these Titan II missile silos 1 mile from our house....we figured if it happen, we would not even know it...French fried into dust...in a mili-second. We were basically at ground zero in a Soviet attack.
@Sporttster
@Sporttster 2 жыл бұрын
I grew up not far from a ammunition plant(s) that made ammo for WWII so we had those same sirens in town. After WWII they continued using them for decades to warn of tornadoes so this siren sound is very familiar to me.
@peterjohnston1224
@peterjohnston1224 Жыл бұрын
Got back from a 12 day holiday in Arizona 10 days ago. There were many highlights of that trip - the people, the incredible vistas - and a visit to this museum. I volunteered as the Deputy Commander - and turned the launch-key to send the 9 Mt warhead on it's way.
@skatergirl6764
@skatergirl6764 2 жыл бұрын
If you've ever seen Star Trek: First Contact, this is the Phoenix.
@simplywonderful449
@simplywonderful449 2 жыл бұрын
Remember too that the Titan II missile was what launched our Gemini astronauts into space, lest you doubt the ability of the Titan II to get a payload into space, or into an enemy!
@susanhodges9447
@susanhodges9447 3 жыл бұрын
It was not Little Rock AR, it was Damascus AR in Falkner county, where the missile blew up in the silo. I was visiting the now defunct silo, after my spouse told me about the incident where the bomb landed a few hundred yards away in a chaps garden.
@luisaleman4008
@luisaleman4008 3 жыл бұрын
Did it blew with nuclear weapon? Or just the missile?
@runlikehell4180
@runlikehell4180 2 жыл бұрын
@@luisaleman4008 luckily the warhead was intact and only the missile exploded, just one of the several thousand nuclear accidents in us history.
@dominicseanmccann6300
@dominicseanmccann6300 2 жыл бұрын
Did warhead detonate....blimey we'd have heard it here, in little limey land!
@insideoutsideupsidedown2218
@insideoutsideupsidedown2218 2 жыл бұрын
@@dominicseanmccann6300 no, the warhead did not detonate.
@dominicseanmccann6300
@dominicseanmccann6300 2 жыл бұрын
I know mate. Just as well. Fucking maniacs.
@dbx1233
@dbx1233 2 жыл бұрын
As a kid in the 1960's, I remember hearing this siren. Now, as a 60-year-old watching this video and hearing the man play this siren again, was amazing. Until this moment, I had completely forgotten about this siren. I had forgotten how perilous the times were, way back when.
@bIakeee
@bIakeee 2 жыл бұрын
In the 60s you guys were also under the threat of being nuked by the Soviet Union if you're in America.
@paulvarn4712
@paulvarn4712 2 жыл бұрын
It's only an illusion these times are not as perilous. We are always one mad man away from turning those keys. Today that mad man is Putin.
@FrankHeuvelman
@FrankHeuvelman 2 жыл бұрын
At the Great Planes they used enormous elevated all-around sirens driven by a V8 car engine at full throttle. They reached 30 miles wide or so to be able warn the population for an imminent Soviet attack.
@red_day6097
@red_day6097 2 жыл бұрын
Beautiful, thanks for sharing.
@sdasdsad6843
@sdasdsad6843 2 жыл бұрын
@@paulvarn4712 Of course, of course, it's Putin
@josephpnjasme8189
@josephpnjasme8189 2 жыл бұрын
Make sure you don't die before the next war commander in chief.
@kylebaddog5084
@kylebaddog5084 Жыл бұрын
We are idiots for allowing people to even make weapons like this
@empireofthechangedayandnight
@empireofthechangedayandnight Жыл бұрын
Yes, but what is your stance on making AI than even more dangerous than this ? kzbin.info/www/bejne/gGewlaRpo5uenc0
@mhmaggelet2288
@mhmaggelet2288 2 жыл бұрын
It's not a nuclear weapon, it's a retired Titan II missile frame with empty Mk 6 RV. The W53 was the largest yield warhead deployed on US ICBM's, but not the highest yield US warhead. There were five other US nuclear weapons, deployed from the '50's to the mid '70's, with much higher yields. One had a yield of around 25 megatons- see "DOE Restricted Data Declassification Guide 8". The largest missile/warhead goes to the Soviet SS-18, deployed with a single RV, in the 20-25 megaton range.
@jamal4381
@jamal4381 2 жыл бұрын
9 million tons of TNT seems pretty nuclear to me.
@eriksrensen6369
@eriksrensen6369 2 жыл бұрын
I'm not sure about Russia have the largest missile /warhead....not at all. US will NEVER give away classified details on how big a missile /warhead they have. My guess is maybe Russia got more nuclear bombs than US, but that doesn't mean US is behind Russia. US got less nuclear bombs/missiles, but have much better technology and strategic skills. It's not about how much but how effective they are. Russia will lose if Putin press the button . China will lose and North Korea. US got much more nuclear airpower (warplanes) than any other country. And US nuclear submarines are superiour. North Korea will be gone in less than an hour. I do not hope to experience a nuclear war, It will be devastating, and destroy almost all population on Earth, and destroy nature for over hundreds of years (radiation and nuclear winter) . But if Putin is crazy enough......he WILL pay a very high price - and lose
@stephenwalsworth8295
@stephenwalsworth8295 2 жыл бұрын
@@eriksrensen6369 there's no winner in a nuclear war ,just mutually assured destruction.
@hdj81Vlimited
@hdj81Vlimited 2 жыл бұрын
@@jamal4381 its TNT , not nuclear.
@jaystol7988
@jaystol7988 2 жыл бұрын
@@hdj81Vlimited no, they're called crazy crack-ups and sparkulars!
@smw381st
@smw381st 2 жыл бұрын
This brings back memories of when i worked with all 18 Titan sites around Wichita Kansas back from 1971 to 1974.
@Forever_5150
@Forever_5150 Жыл бұрын
Its so intriguing, looking how much technology american and soviet looked identical. The titan missile looks like the satan. Anyone else think of that
@francisphillipeck4272
@francisphillipeck4272 3 жыл бұрын
Lived an hour away for years and never knew...my parents fucking suck
@dominicseanmccann6300
@dominicseanmccann6300 2 жыл бұрын
I know the feeling. First i heard about nukes was a civil 'defence' leaflet. Where i grew up in London we was, err, screwed.The old ww2 siren at end of road used to let us know we were gon was tested once in 1980. Soviets invaded Afghanistan..shit. i'll never forget the fear i felt.
@Hattonbank
@Hattonbank 2 жыл бұрын
You should thank you parents, at least you never worrierd about being close to a Soviet first strike target
@charliewerchan7252
@charliewerchan7252 2 жыл бұрын
No , I wouldn't say your parents suck, I would say they wanted you to sleep soundly at night and not be afraid of what could happen.
@johnnytyler5685
@johnnytyler5685 2 жыл бұрын
I know we are never going to actually call their bluff, but every time I see how complex not just the manufacturing, but also the MAINTENENCE, of a nuclear weapon is, it really makes me wonder just how many nukes Russia has and just how many could actually be used during a real nuclear war. And this is something that I wondered long before the Ukraine invasion...but now that we've seen the unimaginable incompetence of the Russians in Ukraine, it just makes me even more skeptical of Russian nuclear force. The most amazing thing may be how the Russians have managed to avoid nuking THEMSELVES in an accident up to this point. Seeing how beat the Russian ground forces' equipment is, just imagine what kind of shape their freaking NUKES are in?!?! The people in charge of the Russian ground forces have been skimming billions of dollars that were to be used for maintenance so you can GUARANTEE that the ones in charge of the nukes have done the same. I mean Russia can't even afford ONE functioning aircraft carrier. The one they DO have in "active" use quite literally cruises around WITH ITS OWN TUGBOAT because it is not a possibility...it is a GUARANTEE...that the ship will break down and need to be towed back to port on every single deployment it attempts. And we seriously believe that the Russians can afford to maintain an arsenal of THOUSANDS of nuclear weapons?!?! It's pretty terrifying when you think about it. Especially because a Russian nuke detonating in its own launch silo could easily be misconstrued as an American "first strike". Or if Russia's leader was a crazy, angry midget, it could be used as an unintentional...or maybe even INTENTIONAL..."false flag" nuclear attack as an excuse for Russia to launch nukes against NATO. Don't get me wrong...these aren't things that I worry about AT ALL. Not even right now. But it IS a little bit terrifying to sit down and think about it. Especially now that the entire world is aware of just how laughably pathetic and incompetent the Russian military really is. They are going to be a laughingstock on the international stage probably forever now. Not hard to imagine a crazy midget in Moscow wanting to STOP the laughter and ridicule by "proving" just how "dangerous" Russia really is with a nuclear strike. Although I suppose there is always a chance that they would try something like that to "prove their might" and the idiots would end up nuking THEMSELVES on accident. "Yuri! Dear Leader Vladimir has given the order to launch our nuclear ICBM! Launch the missile now!" Missile launches and instead of turning towards the US it flies a few thousand feet into the air and then the jet engines burn out and it falls right back down on Russia and vaporizes a quarter of the country. "Great success!"
@aaronlowe3156
@aaronlowe3156 2 жыл бұрын
Lol I was wondering the same thing too and you bring up some good points. If the US missiles are this old, relics of the cold war, I wonder what shape they're in right now. But yeah even if a Russian nuclear bomb failed (which it could), it would still spell trouble for the rest of us even if the bomb backfired. Firing at all is enough for a nuclear winter.
@LunasEmpireSL
@LunasEmpireSL 2 жыл бұрын
Sadly Russia is on the cutting edge when it comes to rockets that's why Nasa scraped the space shuttle and now uses Russian rockets
@aaronlowe3156
@aaronlowe3156 2 жыл бұрын
@@LunasEmpireSL I don’t think so. The Soyuz rocket is a very cramped rocket to transport humans in and the toilets aren’t very great. NASA only used Soyuz for cost savings because it was easier to buy a seat on a rocket already headed to the ISS vs hosting their own expensive launch using STS. SpaceX crew dragon reduces the cost per seat by 3x vs shuttle. So we’re probably using SpaceX going forward. Way better rocket than Soyuz.
@wasser5686
@wasser5686 2 жыл бұрын
@@aaronlowe3156 russia has invested alot in their rockets, look at the zircon. what people dont understand, ukraine isnt seeing russias entire military power, but yes russia is weaker than most people think ( minus the nuclear bombs)
@phil20_20
@phil20_20 2 жыл бұрын
Keep Hoping
@JonaskarlssonfotoSe
@JonaskarlssonfotoSe Жыл бұрын
The you-might-want-to-get-out-of-town-for-a-little-while-siren was really neat
@markbehr88
@markbehr88 2 жыл бұрын
I did the tour in 1996. Amazing.
@thecringeinspector5636
@thecringeinspector5636 2 жыл бұрын
1:50 I bet one of them is Russia
@metallica3556
@metallica3556 2 жыл бұрын
no shit sherlock 😅
@ctbt1832
@ctbt1832 2 жыл бұрын
Great video. Great tour guide. I would love to check it out.
@ditherdather
@ditherdather Жыл бұрын
That's 18 billion pounds of TNT.
@josephrapoza4713
@josephrapoza4713 2 жыл бұрын
I have been here. This is a hair raising place to go. IT IS OUTSTANDING. I got the opportunity to turn the key and even got a card. After you turn the key a sequence starts. Thou this key now does nothing it is not a responsibility I WOULD HAVE EVER WANTED. It is insane.. After thinking about it for a while it kind of made me sick, sad and terrified that such a place existed and still does today.
@bash060656
@bash060656 2 жыл бұрын
As a kid in the early 1960s it used to frighten me to hear those sirens when they tested them. Usually there were two distinct sounds you had to listen for, the sound of the siren and usually about the time the siren went off there would be this shrill blast coming from a nearby radio or Television that would last about a minute after which a warning would be announced (all of the time it would be" This is a test by the American Civil Defense broadcasting network, this is only a test"). Those words got burned into my mind because I'd heard them so much back then. Back then we were so close to Nuclear war (Nikita Khrushchev used to threaten us with nukes regularly) a finger slip and 30 minutes would kill millions of people. Today whether or not you are aware of it, a finger slip and 30 minutes and it seems Vladimir Putin is doing the same thing Nikita Khrushchev did back then with a twist. Khrushchev used to bang his shoe on the podium during a speech and directly threaten a Nuclear strike against the U.S. and even try to move mid ranged Nuclear Missiles into Cuba where as today Putin is claiming that a first strike with offensive nukes is actually a defensive measure and he too is claiming he'll put nukes in Cuba AND Venezuela. Putin is like a little Nikita Khrushchev. Frankly they kind of even look alike.
@krypton1886
@krypton1886 Жыл бұрын
You are taught the wrong story. In fact, the U.S. was the first to deploy its nuclear missiles in Turkey. Cuba was a retaliatory measure in the framework of self-defense
@krypton1886
@krypton1886 Жыл бұрын
Now Putin is doing the same thing. You, the terrorists, are trying to force the whole world to obey you, and those who do not obey - destroy you.
@bash060656
@bash060656 Жыл бұрын
@@krypton1886 Stop lying. And so you can read it . . . Прекратите говорить то, что не соответствует действительности
@bash060656
@bash060656 Жыл бұрын
@@krypton1886 We set up missile tracking stations in Turkey. YOUR government was the one who lied and told you it was missiles. Turkey would not let us deploy missiles on their territory. Мы установили станции слежения за ракетами в Турции. ВАШЕ правительство солгало и сказало вам, что это ракеты. Турция не позволила бы нам разместить ракеты на своей территории.
@krypton1886
@krypton1886 Жыл бұрын
@@bash060656, If you think I'm lying, read history
@viraoionot3b275
@viraoionot3b275 2 жыл бұрын
I know were the 3 target country is # 1. Russia 2. North Korea 3. China😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣🤣
@charliewerchan7252
@charliewerchan7252 2 жыл бұрын
No, the first target is Las Vegas
@johnsears2465
@johnsears2465 2 жыл бұрын
I was a crew commander at 571-9, a sister site to 571-7 and in the same sector. I probably pulled 12-15 alerts at 571-7 during my crew time. It is the most responsibility I will ever have, and no crew member wants to launch. Your primary duty is , by your presence and willingness to launch, to deter the Soviet Union from attacking the United States. If you fail in your primary duty, then do your secondary duty well. I pulled over 400 alerts at primarily 571-1 and 571-9. The duty weighs heavily on your mind, and there is a great deal of relief when you pull your last alert.
@ebolarnator1794
@ebolarnator1794 2 жыл бұрын
He says that the three preprogrammed locations are still classified, but we all know that one of them is definitely Moscow.
@byronmilla9865
@byronmilla9865 2 жыл бұрын
This was 60 plus years ago!!! I can't even imagine what they have in the way of arms now days!!! Scary 😳😳😳
@samuelg3586
@samuelg3586 2 жыл бұрын
You're holding it in your hand as you read this message
@davidkruse4030
@davidkruse4030 2 жыл бұрын
@@samuelg3586 huh?
@bruceu2274
@bruceu2274 2 жыл бұрын
Propaganda
@Hattonbank
@Hattonbank 2 жыл бұрын
@@davidkruse4030 I think he is referring to your computer (surely not your dick?)
@Hattonbank
@Hattonbank 2 жыл бұрын
Much smaller warheads, average 120kiloton, but very accurate by comparison so smallwe warheads are sufficient to hit and destroy the target
@mogol109
@mogol109 Жыл бұрын
You're saying the tsar bomba is not the largest nuclear weapon ever deployed?
@mario12359
@mario12359 8 ай бұрын
Because it wasn't it was a EXPIRIMENT from soviets to test how big of a bomb they can make and its explosive power. The biggest weapon they deployed was 20 MT not 50.
@randomcrapstudios8398
@randomcrapstudios8398 2 жыл бұрын
I live like 5 miles from the museum Awesome thing to see.
@Chris-ut6eq
@Chris-ut6eq 10 ай бұрын
Love the commitment of the guy giving tours! Want to visit next time in AZ.
@Nfr-r2e
@Nfr-r2e 2 жыл бұрын
they should rig it up so after the keys are turned for five seconds, a loud startling launch explosion plays over speakers to mess with everyone.
@mpwaterhouse
@mpwaterhouse 2 жыл бұрын
Fascinating and disturbing at the same time! I've been to the NTSHF National Atomic Testing Museum (NATM) in Las Vegas, the Los Alamos museum and Manhattan Project National Historical Park. One thing that still seems a mystery, I wonder what the "shelf life" is for a nuclear weapon? Does the fissile material get swapped out or re-enriched on a regular schedule? How do you "retire" a nuclear warhead? There is a lot of current news about apparent financial shenanigans within the Russian military, it's contractors, suppliers and super-wealthy oligarchs heading up Russian armaments companies. Given some of the reports of unsafe brittle un-maintained tires on APCs, out of date MREs, malfunctioning and never serviced equipment - yet apparently all these replacements and maintenance cycles have been paid for by the Russian government. Seems the funds to do this critical servicing are simply evaporating and the receiving military are simply signing off and presumably taking a cut! We have to wonder if the same skimming, corner-cutting and lack of integrity occurs within nuclear weapons programs in Russia's (or for that matter China and the US) infrastructures? Given these programs are also all shrouded in secrecy, how would we ever know?
@verruekterPhysiker
@verruekterPhysiker 2 жыл бұрын
For the fissile material itself, having a half-life of 24'000yrs (Plutonium) and 700 million years (uranium), it does not need to be re-enriched or need to get swapped. It's likely the other components would have to get replaced because of age or radiation damage. But most of the warheads, are not constantly armed. Fissile cores were usually inserted in the last moments before launch, except obviously for on-alert missiles. About "retire", most fissile material cores can be recycled and used in nuclear reactors, which has been done a lot in the last years. Also, it can be used to power space vehicles like probes or rovers. The danger of "cost" cutting can be a problem, but since nuclear warheads are very complex and delicate, it's much more likely that an actually launched missile would not detonate, than the chance that one just explodes. As mentioned above, most weapons do not have installed the actual fissile material before the final launch.
@mpwaterhouse
@mpwaterhouse 2 жыл бұрын
@@verruekterPhysiker Many thanks for the info. My dad was a submarine engineering commander in the Royal Navy and was later a naval overseer for the propulsion systems on many of the nuclear subs built up at Barrow in Furness so he often talked about the challenges with rapid metal degradation inside nuclear reactor cores . Stainless steel and nickel were predominant with the biggest concerns over welded components typically using a nickel-chromium-iron alloy rod. Seem to recall the radiation accelerated failure rate was referred to as stress corrosion cracking. I think the most amazing and disturbing experience I had was visiting the reactor compartment during "family days" at the naval base. I actually got to peek down at the glowing core (through a very thick gamma glass port).
@ldr9146
@ldr9146 3 жыл бұрын
During 1966 I was in the Air Force stationed at Davis-Monthan AFB 390th SMS. While there i worked with a SGT Brewer we were both electricians and very close friends. I lost contact with him and would like information where he lives.
@carlosagustinfrancogarcia4456
@carlosagustinfrancogarcia4456 3 жыл бұрын
m.kzbin.info/www/bejne/hXjGhJpveq9sjdk
@ironjohn5914
@ironjohn5914 2 жыл бұрын
He Moved to the south Carolina.
@ldr9146
@ldr9146 2 жыл бұрын
@@ironjohn5914 thanks im checking it out wish i had your email address
@ldr9146
@ldr9146 2 жыл бұрын
@@ironjohn5914 I'm not having any luck with South Carolina , would you have any other information . Thank You
@wadewilson524
@wadewilson524 2 жыл бұрын
"Skybird... This is Dropkick with a Red dash Alpha message in two parts....."
@TightyWhiteyTrash
@TightyWhiteyTrash 3 ай бұрын
*This guy is awesome* He’s super passionate & I bet he’s got a lot of awesome stories! 🤙🏼
@ColonelJohnmatrix1000
@ColonelJohnmatrix1000 Жыл бұрын
There are other aspects about these silos that are not spoken about and we are unable to tell the general public for national security reasons. But a good general overview of our legacy missile system.
@ferdinandmiranda899
@ferdinandmiranda899 2 жыл бұрын
This is a perfect timing for Ukraine & Russia conflict.
@michaeljohn7394
@michaeljohn7394 Жыл бұрын
It was already deployed...it's amazing they found all the peices and put it back together perfectly...one of the astounding wondrous mysteries of mankind's achievements..
@havenbirb1525
@havenbirb1525 2 жыл бұрын
I like how they act like we don't know who those 3 targets are
@lavosierjr
@lavosierjr 2 жыл бұрын
I've been to this place in 2014 when I was living on Tucson. I really loved every second I stayed on this place. I hope I could visit it again soon.
@ITILII
@ITILII Жыл бұрын
Titan could carry a W-53 warhead (9 megaton) though highest yield US ever deployed was B-41 (carried by B 47 and B 52 bombers) Yield was the largest US deployed - 25 Megaton
@PlatinumEagleStudios
@PlatinumEagleStudios 2 жыл бұрын
Came for the awesome sounding Thunderbolt. It's also set to 4RPM. The Thunderbolt can have its rotation changed from 2, 4 or 8 RPMs. The common speed was 2, and 8 was more rare.
@vizkiz.4431
@vizkiz.4431 2 жыл бұрын
They're bigger than I would've ever thought of.
@Rich-hy2ey
@Rich-hy2ey 2 жыл бұрын
All the nuclear weapons now in arsenals (a fraction of what it was in the 1960's) could only destroy an area about 250 miles on a side. Hardly the "planet-killing scenario" envisioned by doomsayers.
@billsmith9966
@billsmith9966 2 жыл бұрын
Russia has hundreds of 10 megaton warheads
@Rich-hy2ey
@Rich-hy2ey 2 жыл бұрын
@@billsmith9966 I dont think so. They "may" have some 2-5MT ICBMS still but 10 megaton warheads were deemed a waste in the 1970s and the two nations developed MIRV weapons with multiple 100kT+ warheads in one missile, capable of more widespread damage.
@twonulator
@twonulator 2 жыл бұрын
No.
@bobolulu7615
@bobolulu7615 2 жыл бұрын
@@billsmith9966 Have a look at a photo of planet Earth from space missions and see how large it is. Now picture a nuclear explosion somewhere on that planet. Reality is, it will be just a pin-head in size. This idea that man can destroy the world with nukes is a bit far fetched.
@billsmith9966
@billsmith9966 2 жыл бұрын
@@bobolulu7615 that's true.. but 9000 nukes going off will destroy human life
@eddiemperor
@eddiemperor 2 жыл бұрын
Can you imagine if your government spent all this money, knowledge and energy into helping the poor and cleaning our planet???? What an Insanity.
@MaineOffGrid.
@MaineOffGrid. 2 жыл бұрын
I remember when I was a kid in the late 80’s early 90’s my town had two of the thunderbolts. The one in town was on the roof of city hall and went off every Saturday at noontime. I don’t know when the other one was used, it was 5 miles away on the edge of town.
@iitzfizz
@iitzfizz 10 ай бұрын
Always been fascinated with the Titan 2 and it's huge 9MT W-53 warhead.
@Milk-ew4pf
@Milk-ew4pf 2 жыл бұрын
i'm pretty sure the 3 targets were important soviet cities.
@prsearls
@prsearls 11 ай бұрын
I've been on this tour and it is indeed impressive. My wife got to turn the key to "launch" the Titan II. In 1963-64, I loaded B-58's; the weapon pod contained a Mk53. I disagree that the Mk53 was our largest fielded weapon. The Mk41 was larger (15 Mt) but was too large and heavy for our ICBM's. It was carried by B-52's. The Mk53 remained in our inventory for many years after the retirement of Mk41's. It was the last of our high-yield weapons. Its destructive effects can hardly be comprehended.
@rustyneedles3743
@rustyneedles3743 2 жыл бұрын
"Largest nuclear weapon ever deployed" ... lol "Tsar Bomba @51 Megatons" = How cute "AN602 @101 Megatons" = How adorable
@414s4
@414s4 7 ай бұрын
Using a pole with a slot cut in it, would allow both keys to be turned nearly simultaneously. Just was in that exact spot a few days ago.
@ricksanchez9232
@ricksanchez9232 2 жыл бұрын
There is no Earth like planets in our immediate universe, or place we could travel in a lifetime, so this is it folks and we must protect it at all costs.
@greybread301
@greybread301 2 жыл бұрын
*Person simulating commander turns key *Something part of the simulation happens *The presenter says "Oh my god that's not supposed to happen" Everyone shits themselves
@eddieburgett9678
@eddieburgett9678 Жыл бұрын
I really appreciate all the info from the group leader he understands and explains procedures and even gives people a chance to participate very good team leader but with that said I liked the video 👍
@natevailikit1536
@natevailikit1536 2 жыл бұрын
This is the new final challenge for museum robbers
@dano1307
@dano1307 2 жыл бұрын
I own an overhead door business and I do work at an Atlas Missle launch site in upstate NY. A rich guy bought it and a bunch of military vehicles and they play war games up there. Its awesome. I have a video on my channel of me going into the bunker.
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