Thanks for posting this. I need to show it to my dad. He started his career working at Thiokol in Utah back in the 60's and he was working on these systems.
@balazstorok92657 жыл бұрын
Those detailed descriptions are amazing. One of my favs on yt. Very, very well done.
@PeriscopeFilm7 жыл бұрын
Thanks. We are always looking for volunteers to describe more -- let us know if you are interested as we have hundreds of films that await description!
@balazstorok92657 жыл бұрын
I wish I could but but my English is so poor, that it would be more work to correct it, than write the descriptions yourself. And many times you have more information in the description, than in the clip, its so professional, I can't even get close to it. You have all my respect, but - I'm afraid - I can not give you more.
@ignaciomenendez86722 жыл бұрын
The book ‘Ace in the Hole’, by Roy Neal, tells the story starting from the concept, by a Captain in USAF, presented to the Pentagon, and accepted for development in a matter or a day or so. (I don’t remember the name of this great strategic thinker )
@Nighthawke708 күн бұрын
Ask and you shall receive: Minuteman owes its existence largely to Air Force Colonel Edward N. Hall, who in 1956 was given charge of the solid-fuel-propulsion division of General Bernard Schriever's Western Development Division, created to lead development of the SM-65 Atlas and HGM-25A Titan I ICBMs.
@Nudnik13 жыл бұрын
Minute person now.. Lol Dr Strangelove said there was a missle gap.
@donwert7 жыл бұрын
Fascinating that NBC News permitted Chet Huntley to appear in a promotional film for Thiokol. Ethics rules in effect nowadays for all the networks would prohibit this kind of thing.
@OriginalOutdoorplayer7 жыл бұрын
This is an Air Force program where 5 large aerospace entities all had a specific role. Thiokol had a relatively minor one in that they only supplied the first stage motor. I would have called it a PR film for the AF.
@lukestrawwalker2 жыл бұрын
LOL:) This is from back when the major media news was actually journalism with integrity and not just a mouthpiece for the agenda of the elitists as it is today. They may have "ethics rules" today but they certainly have no ethics-- why I don't watch the mainstream media anymore. ZERO credibility or integrity. Just yellow dog "journalism" and drum beating for the agenda. Later! OL J R :)
@jamesanderton3442 жыл бұрын
NBC was a pro Republican network.
@justforever965 ай бұрын
Yes, they aren't allowed to make it obvious any more....
@ScrotusXL5 жыл бұрын
Wow, didn’t realise they had already thought up the concept of the MX!, that’s forward thinking!
@BigDaddy-yp4mi5 жыл бұрын
Indeed! START was Russia's way of staving of bankruptcy and a way to buy time to hopefully steal technology and stay relevant. That country was nothing more than shiny paint on a rusting hulk of an outdated, nearly unusable piece of shit. But, not ENTIRELY unusable, unfortunately.
@ShinVega5 жыл бұрын
Love the idea of mobile ICBM launchers inside hi-cube boxcars & air launches via C-141B starlifter!!
@mikefister58107 жыл бұрын
I want some of that solid propellant please I need enough for a Winnebago to reach orbit
@OutSideTheBoxFormat7 жыл бұрын
Do you have a brother named Mark.
@densealloy2 жыл бұрын
With the implications of E=mc² it was inevitable someone, somewhere was going develop nuclear weapons and once pandora's box was open, M.A.D. was the only way to keep everyone in check. It, hopefully, tapped into the natural instinct to stay alive, was the only logical way to try and to ensure nuclear weapons never to be used again. Fingers crossed 🤞its not perfect but its all we have.
@julion892 жыл бұрын
Willy Wonka and the missile factory
@donwert7 жыл бұрын
Also, it was a Thiokol solid fuel booster whose "O" ring failure led to the Challenger disaster.
@balazstorok92657 жыл бұрын
donwert no pain no game. otherwise, the cold weather, you know
@donwert7 жыл бұрын
True...the investigation showed Thiokol was reluctant to give a "go" and NASA applied a lot of pressure. Too bad they didn't resist it.
7 жыл бұрын
*Morton-Thiokol
@workingshlub88617 жыл бұрын
they guy at thiokol that said do not launch died a few years ago...all for public relations.
@scottfirman5 жыл бұрын
Cold tempratures and NASA's arrogance cost them the Shuttle. They were warned that morning it was way too cold to launch the shuttle and the fact those o- rings couldnt hold up under those early morning tempratures yet ignored the phone call made that very morning that the guarentee that o- ring might fail was high. Yet NASA ignored the warning and destroyed the shuttle and killed its crew by taking short cuts, rushing launches and disreguarding safety procedures.
@oceanhome20237 жыл бұрын
Damn those B52s had Smokey and thirsty engines back then
@shloomyshloms8 күн бұрын
you do not own the copyright of this film.
@publicmail26 ай бұрын
The manned space program was developed in parallel with this.
@justforever965 ай бұрын
Kind of makes one wonder whether these things would have actually worked any better than the Falcons they compared them to so proudly of they actually had every tried to use them? They thought the Falcons worked great too, until they actually tried them in combat (i know, that's not entirely the missiles fault... But they didn't work in any case). Neither did Sparrow, it was pretty abysmal. I suppose they would have worked _enough_ anyway. And since the main reason for existence was to be a plausible threat, i guess you can say they worked. Just would they really have functioned, or would 75% of them blown up, totally failed to launch, run wildly off course? They say the Sparrow, etc, was effected by incorrect maintenance, at we sure the crews actually took care of these any better?
@ronjon79422 жыл бұрын
Please don't drop that hat :)
@ronjon79422 жыл бұрын
Edit - glad we weren't forced to drop that hat.
@Soacwiththaface8 ай бұрын
🇺🇲🗽⚖
@JL-dance7 жыл бұрын
nuclear missiles and peace don't really go together...
@OriginalOutdoorplayer7 жыл бұрын
and without them, the cold war would not have been cold.
@katrinaanon10387 жыл бұрын
yo boi jonx Note that World Wars were fought every 20 to 40 years before nukes. Let us hope it stays that way, but we maybe headed into a time where Iran and NROK may be able to operate as proxies for Russian and China. Could these states attack the US and insulate Russia and China from involvement? Still these are nothing to love, and we have to hope our adversaries love themselves too much to ever use them.
@katrinaanon10387 жыл бұрын
Brandon Bennetzen Actually we are fighting WWIII just no nukes are flying.
@ivanmorton45106 жыл бұрын
They are truly destructive weapons which deter mad men , peacekeepers fact
@BigDaddy-yp4mi5 жыл бұрын
People WISH ICBM's weren't needed for peace.....as long as you have greed, anger, evil, or someone who thinks they can take what they want with no repercussions, to keep peace, you need a bigger bully who HOPEFULLY has good motives deep down, despite his screw-ups from time to time. It's not a binary choice. To quote South Park, "There are dicks, assholes, and pussies." Should really look it up and see why a trinary classification is more realistic than a binary one that only lists 'war-like' & 'peace-loving' as it's only 2 options. Not realistic in the least, and never has been even a single time in history.