Tense moments for the Connie over Sun N’ Fun

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Lewis Air Legends

Lewis Air Legends

14 күн бұрын

During the Sun N Fun airshow routine with the Connie, it was discovered that there was a front landing gear issue. Watch the tense moments in the air as these experienced pilots trouble shoot the issue only to discover another issue seconds after landing. The crew, made up of Rod Lewis, Stewart Dawson, Jeff Whitesell, Jim "JD" Dale, Steve Hinton, and John Hinton put their heads together to resolve the issue so the Connie could reliably fly once again.
A film by ‪@BradleyWentzel‬
Produced by Lisa Damuth Snow
Supplemental footage by Ethan Green

Пікірлер: 733
@blancolirio
@blancolirio 10 күн бұрын
"A down gear is a happy gear" No, don't 'cycle' it. My vote too.
@ZetaByteMe
@ZetaByteMe 9 күн бұрын
The age old adage "don't screw with 3 green" comes to mind!
@tc0330
@tc0330 2 күн бұрын
That was the only decision they seemed to agree on. Too many chefs in that kitchen at the end. Glad the left seater finally raised his hand, albeit too little too late.
@brandonharlow7067
@brandonharlow7067 Күн бұрын
Fancy seeing you here Juan!
@DirtRoadLanding
@DirtRoadLanding 4 сағат бұрын
Hey Juan!
@thomasjacques5286
@thomasjacques5286 11 күн бұрын
The CONNIE is one of the most beautiful flying machines ever to grace the skies. So glad it is still flying for generations to enjoy.
@stefanvanrensburg6096
@stefanvanrensburg6096 10 күн бұрын
A work of art
@Tiger313NL
@Tiger313NL 10 күн бұрын
Reminds me a bit of a sturgeon, just with a triple vertical stabilizer. :)
@infledermaus
@infledermaus 10 күн бұрын
Nah. It is THE most beautiful aircraft ever designed and built! 😊 Designed with a French curve. 🤣🤣🤣
@paulyoung181
@paulyoung181 10 күн бұрын
the the most beutiful airplanes I have ever seen, P-38 Lightning, Lockheed Constellation, and Boeing 747.
@Tiger313NL
@Tiger313NL 10 күн бұрын
@@paulyoung181 Missing the Fokker G-1 in that list 🤔
@BaumannJA
@BaumannJA 12 күн бұрын
By Far.... the most beautiful airplane in the skies today. THANK YOU for "Keeping" it Flying!!!!!
@Ripper13F1V
@Ripper13F1V 12 күн бұрын
Indeed.
@DebOxy
@DebOxy 12 күн бұрын
@@Ripper13F1V true Queen of the sky
@user-pv6vi6xq6d
@user-pv6vi6xq6d 11 күн бұрын
so agree, love the sounds of those engines,
9 күн бұрын
I'm not sure about that, but maybe a close second just behind the Aeronca C-3 😁
@rogerkober9836
@rogerkober9836 12 күн бұрын
Can you imagine back in the day when keeping hundreds of big radial engine airliners operational and flying safely was everyday stuff? God bless people who are willing to invest the blood, sweat, tears and $ into keeping such classics flying. Thank You
@DebOxy
@DebOxy 12 күн бұрын
...and its mostly all volunteer blood sweat and tears, ....all for the love of Connies
@rael5469
@rael5469 9 күн бұрын
"and flying safely was everyday stuff?" Back in the day safety of flight wasn't always so safe. We've learned a LOT over time. More and more each day.
@oldmech619
@oldmech619 9 күн бұрын
I flew over a Super Connie that went in just after departure. Hit a supercell microburst. Fully loaded. Just an everyday flight. Korat Thailand. All brave men.
@markhenry6486
@markhenry6486 23 сағат бұрын
god?
@rogerkober9836
@rogerkober9836 13 сағат бұрын
@@markhenry6486 ?
@jstrat121
@jstrat121 12 күн бұрын
Never said what they found as the problem….left me hanging.
@theChickenstones
@theChickenstones 10 күн бұрын
Or the comment at left turn at the end of the runway "I've lost the third". Super Constellations were renown having red hot cantankerous engines and often completed flights on three. Qantas briefly had a fleet of them doing long haul to Europe & the UK and kept spare engines at all the airports on the way.(It took 5 days with overnight stops) before the fleet was changed to 707's.
@aaaht3810
@aaaht3810 9 күн бұрын
Agree. Conclusion of the video gave the perfect opportunity to explain the problem.
@USS-SNAKE-ISLAND
@USS-SNAKE-ISLAND 9 күн бұрын
bugged me too
@rand8025
@rand8025 8 күн бұрын
Obviously some person, entity, or agency didn't want it revealed.
@zachhering5809
@zachhering5809 8 күн бұрын
@@theChickenstones Its not uncommon to pull the power levers back too far on big radials and they'll stall. Thats why we never pull ours back to "idle" unless we are on the ground.
@user-cp3hp5ph4x
@user-cp3hp5ph4x 9 күн бұрын
I piloted the Super Connie for Eastern between Houston and NY back in around 54 or 55 , Of course I was only 5 or 6 years old and sitting on the captains lap and steering the wheel. Now that guy in the right seat was just resting his hands on the other wheel because I was flying the plane, at least in this little boy's mind, I was flying the plane. I'll never forget that experience. Worked at IAH in later years and one came in as a cargo hauler (late 80's-early 90s), I crawled up in it and when I stepped down into the flight deck it all came back after all those years. Love that plane and Howard Hughes was the driving force behind engineering the Super Connie.
@johnevers3531
@johnevers3531 11 күн бұрын
I remember this beautiful bird sitting in a fenced lot at Ft Rucker Al, years ago just rotting away, all I could think at the time was "What a shame." Thanks for all the effort in bringing her back to the beautiful machine she was meant to be.
@ronaldcooper7609
@ronaldcooper7609 11 күн бұрын
I didn't know that it was the same aircraft. If I remember right, it was assigned to a general when it was in US ARMY use?
@johnevers3531
@johnevers3531 10 күн бұрын
@@ronaldcooper7609 It was Gen MacArthur's aircraft, "The Bataan". The Army should be ashamed of the way they treated this bird.
@twa2471
@twa2471 9 күн бұрын
I remember it at Ft Rucker when I was stationed there too, I didn't realize till now this was the same plane though. The "pucker factor" is real when this happens and I got to experience a main gear failure first hand in the Pacific Prowler in the early 80's and having to divert to BLT while flying with my Dad. Exciting to say the least ! I also got to experience a total power loss in a J3 a few hundred yards off the end of the runway , lucky there was smooth a pasture just off the end of the runway where we set it down with only some minor gear damage. Worst part of that whole deal was that when we went back to retrieve it, the cows had chewed half the fabric off the tail feathers and lower fuselage ! I don't think I ever saw the "old man " that mad before ! There was some cow ass kicking going on then mister , Pa was not a happy camper LOL !! Bright side ,,,that's how I learned to stitch & dope fabric at a very young age . 👍
@jeffreykoran4820
@jeffreykoran4820 8 күн бұрын
IN 1959...MY FAMILY AND I FLEW A TWA CONNIE FROM PHOENIX SKY HARBOR AIRPORT TO SAN FRANCISCO.....WE HAD TO ABORT THE TAKE OFF BECAUSE OF AN ISSUE WITH THE LANDING GEAR...I JUST WANTED YOU TO KNOW THAT
@Hemifan4266
@Hemifan4266 6 күн бұрын
I remember this bird sitting out at the grand canyon airport and then it was gone. Glad to know where she ended up.
@garyeverettlynne9437
@garyeverettlynne9437 12 күн бұрын
Best looking airplane ever built
@tomedgar4375
@tomedgar4375 12 күн бұрын
The B1 is pretty sexy but doesn’t sound near as good as those 4 radials
@suspicionofdeceit
@suspicionofdeceit 11 күн бұрын
@@tomedgar4375Yep, B1 instantly came to mind.
@kevspss
@kevspss 10 күн бұрын
You mean the A-6 Intruder isn’t?lol
@infledermaus
@infledermaus 10 күн бұрын
I concur! A beautiful aircraft. I like the Super Connies which are longer and more attractive than this one, but they are all stunning.
@jwh475ezc
@jwh475ezc 8 күн бұрын
Maybe, but imo the B727 gives it a run for the money
@lowelltackett3323
@lowelltackett3323 11 күн бұрын
In December of 1949 I flew on a MATS Connie (as a 5-year-old) from San Francisco to Honolulu. Even at that "tender" age I was struck by the inherent beauty of that "beast". It was the first time I'd ever seen an airplane, but my little mind still marveled at the overwhelming majesty that lay before me.
@Klink330
@Klink330 12 күн бұрын
Towards the end of the landing roll, there were too many “cooks in the kitchen” and the left seat pilot started to protest for everyone to just wind it back a bit. That’s command authority right there.
@ctiley2212
@ctiley2212 11 күн бұрын
That's a cockpit full of American egos, a bunch of idiots, no wonder the Yanks have never been any good at anything.
@yeti5631
@yeti5631 11 күн бұрын
Totally agree poor CRM shown by the copilot, should have concentrated on his own job and let the P1 and FE do thiers without interference.
@bobhearst7306
@bobhearst7306 11 күн бұрын
Mutual respect includes telling the other guy when he's got his head up his zzz.
@LJDRVR
@LJDRVR 11 күн бұрын
No command authority at all. He allowed himself to be distracted and let the FE and scanner totally run roughshod during the abnormal. No checklist called for. No emergency declared. Total helmet fire on rollout with directional control. The FO had to be assertive because the guy in the left seat was hanging on for dear life. Lastly, their “decision” to recycle the nose gear when it was already down more than likely contributed to the loss of directional control. These cats have no business flying that airplane. If you can’t manage a simple gear malfunction, a real emergency is possibly going to kill you.
@Klink330
@Klink330 11 күн бұрын
@@LJDRVR. I’m not sure your observation is accurate. The CM1 just flew the aircraft, letting the FO and FE manage the abnormal. He could’ve handed control to the CM2 and then managed the problem directly with the FE, but that’s his prerogative as PIC (and we are assuming the CM1 is the PIC. He may have been under supervision of the CM2). It was a simple gear issue. They clearly had vast experience to fall back on and knew that the first step in the procedure was to select gear down. Which they did. They didn’t ever recycle the gear again after it was down, so not sure what you’re referring to there. Then the CM1 had to handle the offset nose gear. Not knowing the Connie’s NWS, I can’t comment on whether he handled that well or not. One could argue that maybe the checklist had some helpful information about nosegear not uplocked, that might have given them a little warning of likely nosewheel offset. Who knows.
@maxhardover9772
@maxhardover9772 10 күн бұрын
What a goat-rope. Since this is a very old aircraft and just out of heavy maintenance, I don't believe I would've screwed around with the landing gear. The video is edited so I'm not sure what transpired from the decision to just leave landing gear down and the approach & landing, but it appears there was no crew briefing on how this was to be accomplished, and assignment of duties. The video gives the impression that the PIC had something unusual he wanted to do (like hold the nose up as long as possible, etc.), but the SIC seemed to have other ideas as to what his function was and during the landing rollout proceeded to inject himself into the program causing a lot of barking back and forth with the pilot flying. They did manage to take out a couple of taxi lights, but the aircraft appears undamaged. Hopefully, going forward, they'll have a debriefing, critique their performance, and come up with some crew procedures. Gorgeous aircraft - one of my favorite since I was a kid.
@user-zm1ho5ko6s
@user-zm1ho5ko6s 11 күн бұрын
There is nothing like hearing her approaching our house and running out to see her fly over! Makes my week❣️🙋🏼‍♀️
@SLJ2137694
@SLJ2137694 11 күн бұрын
Makes me weak too!
@frostyfrost4094
@frostyfrost4094 10 күн бұрын
Use to do that some sixty years ago usually at meal time
@infledermaus
@infledermaus 10 күн бұрын
My father was stationed at McClellan AFB in the mid to late 50s where there were tons of EC-121s. I was about 4-5 years old. That's when I fell in love with Connies! Something like 1957-8. 😊
@unclesven4515
@unclesven4515 10 күн бұрын
I rode in a Constellation from Alaska to California when I was a kid. I thought it was beautiful. It is still the most beautiful aircraft ever to fly God’s blue sky. As for the back seat comments, I doubt any of you have flown or worked on a Constellation. These pilots and engineer have worked on this aircraft. I was an engineer on KC-130s for 5 years and I would trust these guys to know what they were doing.
@marcwolf60
@marcwolf60 9 күн бұрын
A beautiful burble...
@lohikarhu734
@lohikarhu734 11 күн бұрын
During the takeoff runn, I thought about the incredible complexity of the engines, and all the other systems...that Constellation is one of the beauties of the propeller age, like the Mosquito, Spitfire, and Mustang! Thanks to all who keep her in the air!
@LJDRVR
@LJDRVR 12 күн бұрын
Sigh…I’ll be the jerk: professional crews have somebody flying the airplane, while the PM works the issue. In an airplane such as yours, it’s even easier, as you’ve got an FE and a scanner to troubleshoot while the PF devotes their full attention to aircraft control. I don’t need to tell you guys what can happen when all three aviators on board are heads down with something that has nothing to do with flying the airplane. While it’s nice that you’ve got both pilots actively trying to address the directional control issue, on rollout, the SIC is having to help because the PIC doesn’t have enough bandwidth left for anything but hanging on. There are several tells there that the PIC has lost SA. That’s a lovely airplane you all have, and although you put it safely in the ground, you need to improve as a crew. Less than adequate CRM, fellas. And I’d say that right in front of you. If you’re distracted and overwhelmed with a minor gear issue, how’s the engine failure going to go?
@LJDRVR
@LJDRVR 12 күн бұрын
Also, cycling a landing gear that’s already down? YGTBSM. Why aren’t you all following the checklist procedure? Anybody want to wager the cocked nose gear was an issue from the second extension and not the first? Lastly, doing a low pass for untrained observers to participate in the process by giving you what is probably bad data, is a recipe for more mayhem - greatly increased risk from flying low passes with a distracted crew that’s inventing its own procedures for the abnormal instead of strictly adherent to flight manual guidance.
@williamadler3003
@williamadler3003 11 күн бұрын
@@LJDRVR Terrible CRM. No emergency declared with a known gear issue. No checklist ran concerning gear issue when first discovered, First Officer made all the decisions and the Captain basically froze not knowing what checklist to call for. On landing Crew was confused as to delegate aircraft control. Ran over many taxi lights without noting deviation from taxi lines. I could go on but this was a clear example on how NOT to handle an emergency. Captain Ret. 35,000 + hrs. ATP MEL CFIME FETJ Type rated B-747, DC-10, B-737, EMB-110.
@LJDRVR
@LJDRVR 11 күн бұрын
@@williamadler3003 I’m with you Bill. Six type ratings, 18,000 hours and years of experience as a check pilot. If that flight had been a checkride, there would be some uncomfortable phone calls being made and people removed from the flight schedule. Given how much attention it’s receiving and how poorly the vintage/warbird community is doing, it’s surprising these guys have put this out on the Internet, replete with sinister music. Well, given their low SA, maybe not so surprising. A CRM facilitator could use this effectively to demonstrate EXACTLY why we have the FO fly and talk, while the PIC manages the abnormal.
@tungstentwohundredandtwent7007
@tungstentwohundredandtwent7007 10 күн бұрын
@@williamadler3003your points are noted and valid but you’re tipping into self aggrandising by repeating this comment over and over again in this thread.
@graemejwsmith
@graemejwsmith 10 күн бұрын
@@tungstentwohundredandtwent7007 It's a way of alerting the poster he is replying to that there is a comment on THEIR post. If you don't - that poster rarely reads the rest of the comments to realize there is a different point of view in the short attention span Internet. I agree it's repetitive - but it's the way to beat the YT reporting system. If you don't kinda hammer it home to each poster we end up with a bunch of "wonderful job airshow enthusiasts" who don't understand that to the pilots it was not a stellar bit of CRM.
@johnleinen7167
@johnleinen7167 12 күн бұрын
When I was a little kid in the early 60s, we would see Connie's on the LAX flight path over Downey, they had a roar to them and iconic tri tail!.
@1954shadow
@1954shadow 7 күн бұрын
Similar experience here for me, the airport was in downtown KCMO, my house as a kid in the early 60s, was in the flight path on the east side in Independence, MO. Would see a Connie now and then and lots of turbo prop aircraft, fly overhead, an awesome thing for a little kid.
@TomP-nw4wu
@TomP-nw4wu 9 күн бұрын
Beautiful.
@Eructation1
@Eructation1 10 күн бұрын
Quite a few in command , and a few ego's, in that Flt deck. The left seater seemed put out even when ATC gave crowd clearance instructions.. "I know I know".
@modshaman
@modshaman 12 күн бұрын
Your Videography and editing is second to NONE !
@wallyzworld7108
@wallyzworld7108 11 күн бұрын
My late Father-in-law's favorite airplane to work on. Came out of the Navy working on P2Vs and worked for TWA for 37 years at San Francisco International. Always liked the Connie the best of all the airplanes TWA flew. At the beginning of the video when you were starting #3 engine, reminded me of a story he told me about having the number 3 engine tear its self off the wing during start up. They found out that the pin that holds the massive counterweight in that big ole R3350 had broken and the engine was so out of balance on start up it torn the motor mounts before they could shut it down. He said the engine came to rest on the spinner held vertically by all the cables and hoses still attached to the wing. Said it was a really long night getting that engine off and replaced to get the aircraft back in flying condition.
@user-pb7ig4sv2l
@user-pb7ig4sv2l 10 күн бұрын
The pin in the counterweight must be a bit of a wright thing. I’ve heard of the same in an 1820
@jeffdriver3000
@jeffdriver3000 11 күн бұрын
I grew up near the flight line of McClellan AFB where the connie early warning radar planes was maintained and I had a couple friends who worked on them. I remember watching them fly in to McClellan
@thatairplaneguy
@thatairplaneguy 12 күн бұрын
Thank you all for taking care of this world asset. It needs to fly but it needs to fly safely. Wonderful job
@garfieldsmith332
@garfieldsmith332 10 күн бұрын
Beautiful aircraft. So glad they got back safely. It was awesome that there are dedicated people who preserve and maintain these aircraft from a time gone by.
@xsawbonesx
@xsawbonesx 12 күн бұрын
Utter professionalism. Obvious care for safety, the crew, crowd, and preserving that beautiful bird. Well done to all involved.
@deeremeyer1749
@deeremeyer1749 12 күн бұрын
Professionalism. The most ridiculously overused word online "aviation enthusiasts" use to describe the "performance" of hobby.flyers that haven't flown as a profession anywhere but their dreams.
@williamadler3003
@williamadler3003 11 күн бұрын
Terrible CRM. No emergency declared with a known gear issue. No checklist ran concerning gear issue when first discovered, First Officer made all the decisions and the Captain basically froze not knowing what checklist to call for. On landing Crew was confused as to delegate aircraft control. Ran over many taxi lights without noting deviation from taxi lines. I could go on but this was a clear example on how NOT to handle an emergency. Captain W.S. Adler 35,000 + hrs. ATP MEL CFIME FETJ Type rated B-747, DC-10, B-737, EMB-110.
@hinterkress
@hinterkress 11 күн бұрын
I'm not sure you could describe it as "utter professionalism". They got it down safely but the teamwork sounded like utter chaos. Rotorhead is on the money.
@patrickcowan6134
@patrickcowan6134 11 күн бұрын
The truly professional decision was - all gear down, we'll land...
@agairinc
@agairinc 11 күн бұрын
Wonder who the copilot is. He’s grabbing and doing things that are making the Dawsons job as the captain more difficult. You can tell towards the end , he’s starting to get a little tired of it.
@diversherwood9631
@diversherwood9631 12 күн бұрын
What a joy that was to see her at Sun N Fun 2024!
@trob0914
@trob0914 12 күн бұрын
The Connie is such a beautiful aircraft! Lockheed with help from Howard Hughes designed a gorgeous airplane! This is an excellent video, thanks!!
@salcurcio2791
@salcurcio2791 11 күн бұрын
I had a chance to work on one of these back in the early 70s . Never forget it.
@gottadomor7438
@gottadomor7438 10 күн бұрын
For sure one of the most beautiful aircraft ever manufactured.
@1966pahandyman
@1966pahandyman 12 күн бұрын
Rod Lewis ,Thank you for having this beautiful airplane restored and made flight worthy so many people like myself can appreciate what our fathers flew in during their time in their militaryu services. My father flew with tha Paang ang crewed on some of the remaining static c-121's left . So again thank you Rod Lewis for bring Bataan out for everyone to see , and thank you to Steve Hintons POF for the amazing restoration.
@visibilityunlimitedmedia
@visibilityunlimitedmedia 11 күн бұрын
Wow, I recorded this startup, take-off and flight. But never knew there was an issue with the nose gear. It was definitely a smart decision to come back and land when you had "3 green" after cycling the gear. This is no doubt the most beautiful, majestic aircraft I've ever seen! I hope we get to see it again at Oshkosh 2024.
@mikewatson49
@mikewatson49 12 күн бұрын
The struggle for power in the cp is still alive and well and annoying. Glad you gentlemen got her down safe and sound.
@briggsquantum
@briggsquantum 12 күн бұрын
Yes the CRM was a bit fuzzy, and no one appeared to be the leader. Even with all that experience somebody has to be the final arbiter.
@farleymusclewhite411
@farleymusclewhite411 9 күн бұрын
"cp"?
@farleymusclewhite411
@farleymusclewhite411 9 күн бұрын
@@briggsquantum "CRM"?
@mikewatson49
@mikewatson49 9 күн бұрын
@@farleymusclewhite411 Cockpit
@imvandenh
@imvandenh 9 күн бұрын
​​@@farleymusclewhite411CRM= Cockpit Resource Management
@justinfuller8803
@justinfuller8803 12 күн бұрын
A lovely, lovely aeroplane.
@PenAirPilot
@PenAirPilot 11 күн бұрын
A true legend. What a gem. Beautiful production and aircraft. Thanks everyone for keeping her in the sky!
@unclebuckeroo
@unclebuckeroo 10 күн бұрын
Probably the most beautiful piston engine aircraft ever built!
@alanmiller9681
@alanmiller9681 9 күн бұрын
Iconic! Classic! An incomparable beauty! Yes. I flew on Constellations several times, all on TWA’s transcontinental routes. As I’ve recounted before, on one such flight I met every kid’s greatest hero, Mr. Walt Disney! Our family was invited to sit with him in the Constellation’s unique lounge. I never saw another lounge like that until Continental Airlines introduced Pub Service on their DC10s.
@ddouglas3687
@ddouglas3687 11 күн бұрын
Just wow! Amazingly beautiful aircraft.
@noahtramposh3350
@noahtramposh3350 8 күн бұрын
The calm it takes to handle an in-flight emergency is insane. The calm it takes to handle an in-flight emergency with a national aviation treasure like that is leaps and bounds more insane. Well done gentlemen. Well done.
@steelman86
@steelman86 10 күн бұрын
What a beautiful aircraft!!! Great team with her!!! Congrats...
@comfortablynumb4797
@comfortablynumb4797 11 күн бұрын
Absolutly beautiful!!
@MikeLuca
@MikeLuca 11 күн бұрын
Beautiful flying work of art...
@Roy-nk5pc
@Roy-nk5pc 10 күн бұрын
A true piece of artwork being cared by true aviators...the perfect ingredients for poetry in air❤
@jernejfunkl8300
@jernejfunkl8300 10 күн бұрын
Iconic beauty in the sky...Take good care of him guys!
@leo3times
@leo3times 9 күн бұрын
OMG ! That is a beautiful machine. I had chills when they were landing hoping nothing more would happen. Much respect to ALL of the crew and their feedback to each other in that situation. This is something that could be learned by the younger generations. NOT to forget a mention to ALL the ground crew who fix and troubleshoot, so those legends can still fly. Thank you for sharing such skill and beauty.
@Cruiser777
@Cruiser777 10 күн бұрын
What a beauty.❤ Nicely done
@levin645
@levin645 9 күн бұрын
Timeless beauty
@edldl1110
@edldl1110 5 күн бұрын
What a fantastic machine!!! Many thanks for those brave men who pursued their dream and made this possible!!
@swapshots4427
@swapshots4427 9 күн бұрын
So aesthetically pleasing. Perfection.
@lesterhutchins1621
@lesterhutchins1621 9 күн бұрын
No lie that things beautiful
@caseyhill8192
@caseyhill8192 9 күн бұрын
Great job guy's
@Static1701
@Static1701 2 күн бұрын
Great job, Wonderful to see her fly.
@kellynkarr6270
@kellynkarr6270 10 күн бұрын
Absolutely breathtakingly beautiful aircraft. I can’t stop looking at it
@andrewlewis3486
@andrewlewis3486 10 күн бұрын
My first ever flight was a Super Conny, 1958 bound for San Antonio for USAF basic training. What a beautiful aircraft. Inside and out! To me, this is the most beautiful aircraft ever made!
@lonistewart3405
@lonistewart3405 9 күн бұрын
Just such a gorgeous aircraft.
@AeroSafe
@AeroSafe 9 күн бұрын
What an incredible video, capturing a beautiful airplane. I was enthralled, cried, and/or had goosebumps through most of it. Thank you for sharing!
@LMays-cu2hp
@LMays-cu2hp 9 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing a very very beautiful aircraft in our Aviation History.😊❤😊
@retydeere1111
@retydeere1111 12 күн бұрын
That was a nail biter for a bit and I was sitting in my chair! Great recording quality! Puts us right up there. 👍👍
@raybame5816
@raybame5816 12 күн бұрын
I Agree!
@mikoriad
@mikoriad 11 күн бұрын
My right foot was jammed on the floor trying to help! That was a clentcher, lol. Great job!
@DennisMathias
@DennisMathias 9 күн бұрын
REal pucker factor there..
@theoriginalscottmalkinson6161
@theoriginalscottmalkinson6161 7 күн бұрын
AN ABSOLUTE WORK OF ART.
@100SteveB
@100SteveB 9 күн бұрын
Such an iconic aircraft from an era when things were so different. Lovely to see all the dedication a lot of people put in to keep her where she truly belongs - in the sky.
@claykemper7193
@claykemper7193 10 күн бұрын
Great troubleshooting. Way to go!
@bnaivar
@bnaivar 10 күн бұрын
Great flying gentlemen.
@marzancastro
@marzancastro 10 күн бұрын
What a beautiful aircraft! Great job!
@mylynne1953
@mylynne1953 11 күн бұрын
Great job. Though not clear who the PIC was. Too many people making decisions and no clear boss.
@Macrobish
@Macrobish 9 күн бұрын
That’s one beautiful aircraft
@Rcdoski
@Rcdoski 10 күн бұрын
I was lucky enough to see her fly out at Oshkosh. The Connie is one beautiful airplane. I'm glad the issue with the nose gear is fixed and she is still flying.
@guests5863
@guests5863 10 күн бұрын
Simply the most beautiful airliner ever built
@peterj5751
@peterj5751 3 күн бұрын
Those four piston pounders sure sound fantastic. A nice professional job from the crew in handling the situation too.
@Airsally
@Airsally 11 күн бұрын
Very nice restoration. Glad they got it down safely. Beautiful plan with a ton of hours into the rebuild.
@12jsteve
@12jsteve 11 күн бұрын
Good job guys! 👏
@davepalacios9190
@davepalacios9190 9 күн бұрын
Thank you for this video! Great CRM very cool , they handle it well
@zabaleta66
@zabaleta66 9 күн бұрын
What a gorgeous aircraft! Undoubtedly one of the prettiest aircraft ever built!
@sjkr141
@sjkr141 12 күн бұрын
Well, yeah, lots of experience in the cockpit, great classic aircraft etc., but come on, what actually happened? This video teases the whole problem then does nothing to explain what the findings were. If you watch channels like this it is because of your passion for aviation and a desire to see problems that have been solved. This video pretends to give us that, but it looks to me like it is just click bait...
@GettingToHeaven
@GettingToHeaven 3 күн бұрын
Loved your video. Thanks!
@michaelw2801
@michaelw2801 9 күн бұрын
well done gentlemen
@Enid2Sacramento
@Enid2Sacramento 10 күн бұрын
Got to see her last year at the Capitol Air Show. What a beauty!
@jimjohnson3244
@jimjohnson3244 11 күн бұрын
Just Wow! It was awesome seeing her fly at S-N-F. It’s been probably 25 or 30 years since I’ve last seen one there. Never thought I’d see another one flying. Thanks for bringing her! I can’t even imagine the amount of time and money 💰 that took! AWESOME! New subscriber also!
@EverydayWorkshop
@EverydayWorkshop 9 күн бұрын
Connie’s are such a beautiful aircraft, it’s great to see this one in such a perfect condition and in such capable experienced hands. The pilot in command just concentrated on flying the aircraft while the crew worked the problem, just stepping in when necessary making the final decisions and a very nice landing making sure the nose gear had minimal stress. A beautifully made video, worth watching more than once. 👍🙂
@luizdejardin4432
@luizdejardin4432 10 күн бұрын
Ohhh my god, what a beautiful plane, magnificent!!!!
@keywestjj
@keywestjj 11 күн бұрын
Absolutely THE most beautiful aircraft ever. My first Connie flight was in July, 1956 when I was 7 ... TWA from Chicago Midway to LAX. To pilot one of those magnificent crafts has to be just amazing. After private flying for 34 years I hung it up 4 years ago, but was at Sun 'n Fun 2024 and have sure plans to be there next year 🙂
@jag2039
@jag2039 10 күн бұрын
That's knowing ur job n listening to others with respect to get The Job Done ! Awesome Guy's ya'll rocked it !!
@russflyin
@russflyin 11 күн бұрын
some great flying guys! you brought her home job well done!
@donferrie4070
@donferrie4070 12 күн бұрын
WHY would you cycle the gear up? If the nlg came down in the neutral position, put the gear down, land and troubleshoot the problem with the airplane on jacks, if necessary. Do NOT ‘troubleshoot’ in the air. Eventually they did this, but not after the unnecessary ‘gear up’ selection ‘cycling’ the gear. Furthermore, how many PICs are there? There seems to be a lot of commanding from the right-seater. Perhaps there is left-seat instruction going on, but no one person seems to be the final authority. Ultimately, they got the airplane stopped safely, and that’s the important thing, but there can always be training take-aways from situations like this. This isn’t a critical comment, but an observation from someone with (albeit limited) experience in an EC-121, and over 25000 hours, both military and civilian air carrier. After every mission, the debrief should include ‘how did that go?’. Since there’s video and audio, there’s my input. And it concludes with good job… you can re- use the airplane….
@rotor-head
@rotor-head 12 күн бұрын
You and l have similar backgrounds and l agree with you, but not as politely. Not sure of the actual command structure and interpersonal dynamics , but it seemed like a pain in the neck FO or a weak captain. I’m all for CRM, but this is was unstructured and weak leadership, to the point of an unsafe cockpit.
@williamadler3003
@williamadler3003 11 күн бұрын
@@rotor-head Perfectly put.
@rotor-head
@rotor-head 11 күн бұрын
Thanks🙂
@christopherblack3102
@christopherblack3102 11 күн бұрын
Keep in mind the crew are all volunteers, they don’t get paid to do this. It cost toomuch money just to maintain these aircraft and to pay for the fuel to fly them. They get the best people they can find. Probably current or recently retired airline pilots. If you think their procedures are not up to snuff, contact them personally.
@lohikarhu734
@lohikarhu734 11 күн бұрын
Maybe donate your time and precious wisdom.
@N-Scale
@N-Scale 9 күн бұрын
GREAT JOB GUYS !!!!!
@USApatriotLarry
@USApatriotLarry 12 күн бұрын
Amazingly beautiful. Lisa, JD had a gray shirt then red shirt, then gray shirt when towing out. Us buffs keep track of everything.
@KonaMan62
@KonaMan62 10 күн бұрын
I REALLY enjoyed watching this video of a Classic Lady of the Sky, with a crew of well-seasoned pilots at the controls. It's like aviation poetry in motion. While a few of my flight instructors were reserve or retired Military Pilots, my very first Instructor was actually a WWII decorated veteran who would make these gentlemen look "middle-aged. After taking an "Introduction Flight" ($15.00 for 30 minutes, as I recall), I signed up for my first few lessons and bought a logbook. At the end of my first hour of duel, he was very complimentary of my skill and quick learning; however, he sent me home with a copy of Stick and Rudder by Wolfgang Langewiesche. He told me not to schedule my next flight with him until I had read the book cover to cover, adding that he might quiz me on various teachings. I still have that book with highlighted passages and notes in the borders. Great Memories. Money cannot buy their level of knowledge and skill.
@OldGlaseye-gf7si
@OldGlaseye-gf7si 9 күн бұрын
Never, NEVER cycle the gear to get an up indication. Only cycle it to get all down...
@NeilJR
@NeilJR 11 күн бұрын
Great to see another one flying. There’s an operational one in Australia too.
@jekimjo
@jekimjo 12 күн бұрын
Breathtaking aircraft. WoW.
@deankaren9237
@deankaren9237 11 күн бұрын
Excellent job by all involved!
@stevendasilva9256
@stevendasilva9256 12 күн бұрын
Still one of the coolest looking aircraft to come out of the Kelly Johnson Skunk Works! Oh, and only one taxiway light lost it's life in the making of this documentary.
@antenaseinterfacescb
@antenaseinterfacescb 9 күн бұрын
Beautiful aircraft.
@brianhoyt2469
@brianhoyt2469 10 күн бұрын
One of the most gorgeous aircraft ever!
@Tianton1
@Tianton1 7 күн бұрын
no decision making process, No sequence in trouble shooting. Sporadic ideas thrown out there.
@kevinsteele2773
@kevinsteele2773 9 күн бұрын
Beautiful aircraft
@MX304
@MX304 12 күн бұрын
What caused the issues?
@hepphepps8356
@hepphepps8356 11 күн бұрын
Probably the camera;-)
@mattkusiak2675
@mattkusiak2675 12 күн бұрын
Couple hundred years of experience in that cockpit! Hope I get to see the Connie fly one day
@v8snbigtires
@v8snbigtires 12 күн бұрын
Well done fellas 👏👏👏👏
@williamadler3003
@williamadler3003 11 күн бұрын
Terrible CRM. No emergency declared with a known gear issue. No checklist ran concerning gear issue when first discovered, First Officer made all the decisions and the Captain basically froze not knowing what checklist to call for. On landing Crew was confused as to delegate aircraft control. Ran over many taxi lights without noting deviation from taxi lines. I could go on but this was a clear example on how NOT to handle an emergency. Captain Ret. 35,000 + hrs. ATP MEL CFIME FETJ Type rated B-747, DC-10, B-737, EMB-110.
@joevanseeters2873
@joevanseeters2873 3 күн бұрын
Without a doubt one of the most beautiful passenger liners ever created! It's hard to believe that this bad boy is about 75 years old! Thank you to the person(s) and business responsible for keeping this plane airworthy. Hopefully it will be kept airworthy for many years to come so that future generations can view this majestic bird in flight!
@DebOxy
@DebOxy 17 сағат бұрын
VH-EAG is another survivor, built 1955, only Super Constellation still flying. NSW Australia 🦘🇦🇺
@raycarter6037
@raycarter6037 7 күн бұрын
What a beautiful aircraft! 👌🏻👌🏻👌🏻👏👏
@joeretired4552
@joeretired4552 10 күн бұрын
May God Bless Connie and the team that watches out for her.
@briansilcox5720
@briansilcox5720 12 күн бұрын
Nice work Stew.
@jeffingram9916
@jeffingram9916 10 күн бұрын
I flew in the Navy version of the Super Constellation (EC-121K) from 1960 to 1963. I was an ACW and operated one of the consoles in the CIC section. My last duty station was Argentia, Newfoundland but all the patrols were flown out of Keflavik, Iceland. There was a gap between Greenland and Iceland and between Iceland and the Faroe Islands. The patrols covered the gaps and were 14 to 15 hours long. There were two squadrons flying out of Keflavik (VW-11 and VW-13) with the squadrons alternating between the two gaps. The patrols were manned 24 hours every day until the squadrons were decommissioned in 1965.
@mikoriad
@mikoriad 11 күн бұрын
I thought this was flight simulator for the first 30 seconds. Everything looked so clean and sharp.
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