Nothing can stop me from loving airships, they are so epic
@MustardChannel9 күн бұрын
Even after two months of working on this video, the thought of sleeping on one of these still blows my mind
@DarkKatzy0139 күн бұрын
Same here
@lucasglowacki46839 күн бұрын
Not even hydrogen?🤔😏
@hollyrobertshaw38139 күн бұрын
Who was gonna stop you
@maxresdefault38509 күн бұрын
If only they were just a little more practical. Still they were real beauties for the time.
@フ一フ9 күн бұрын
Blud went missing for 5 months and returned with the most fire video I have ever seen.
@spaceeDolphin9 күн бұрын
It's more like his production time is 4 months per documentary. Which makes every single one worth watching
@CSAdityaHoon8 күн бұрын
and now that CL-1201 video is going viral in memes 💀
@dannyboyy317 күн бұрын
@@spaceeDolphin This is why I much prefer this channel's content to channels such as Megaprojects, which churn out content daily, but which feels rushed and error-strewn.
@althejazzman7 күн бұрын
You must be new here. Mustard has always uploaded quality rather than quantity.
@polskabalaclava5 күн бұрын
Kid thinks he’s cool for saying blud every sentence
@captain_commenter87969 күн бұрын
Captain Wiley is extremely admirable. He survived the Akron and willingly went right back to work on the Macon. He even helped to improve her tactics. Despite the unfortunate end of these ships, it’s inspiring to see how the enthusiasts creatively worked to keep the dream alive.
@paleoph61689 күн бұрын
Finally, a comment that isn’t about Mustard. And yes, captain Wiley was… wily indeed, especially with his decision to find the ship FDR was on instead of sticking to the exercise.
@Teampegleg9 күн бұрын
It almost seems like a different era. When was the last time the Navy really had mavericks pushing toward a singular goal? Now it seems largely corporatized with at best you have minor differences between the Atlantic and Pacific fleets.
@SpencerNeutron9 күн бұрын
Did you write this comment with GenAI?
@randycampbell63078 күн бұрын
@@paleoph6168 Ya but also proving the rule, "don't show up your commanders because they will make your life a living hell AND take away your birthday if you do" More to the actual point though he DID royally screw up by radioing the Houston, if they'd just dropped mail/papers and gone back once the Houston was 'safe' that would be one thing and maybe the Navy would have spun the story in a more positive light. As it was they likely would have screwed the airship even more had it not been lost.
@randycampbell63078 күн бұрын
@@Teampegleg Budgets far short of keeping up maintenance and training let alone experimenting with new technology and tactics is a hard task master. Since that time we've been supporting a strong enough military to fight two wars simultaneously with a budget that's far beyond that of any other nations capability. We went from the biggest military in the world at the end of WWII with the power to project anywhere in the world with overwhelming force in 1945 to one barely able to keep the occupation of Germany and Japan going and arguably outclassed by North Korea in the opening months of that conflict back to a military that is so superior in numbers and technology that it outclasses the two nearest national militaries combined and that costs to keep up. In terms of innovation that means you're going to have far fewer "mavericks" simply because you're already innovating or you lose the ability to keep relevant very quickly.
@stevemc019 күн бұрын
Navy: “Do this job.” Guy: *does job* Navy: “NOOOOOOOO WHAT ARE YOU DOING?”
@Edax_Royeaux9 күн бұрын
That's military politics for you.
@HipHopIsLifee8 күн бұрын
“You did the job so good, that you made the rest of us look bad. So, BAD JOB!!!!”
@neeterunsocial8 күн бұрын
This is the military everyday even at this age lol
@kaitlyn__L8 күн бұрын
@@HipHopIsLifee this kind of attitude is so pervasive >.< I'm sure it must hold back a lot of engineers.
@alaric_30158 күн бұрын
Kelly Johnson knew this
@videostudios60429 күн бұрын
"He's not around a lot but when he is around he hits hard"
@jacobcave15879 күн бұрын
Lol
@ASupressedGuest9 күн бұрын
true
@goosenotmaverick11569 күн бұрын
Oh you know my dad?
@dazzledave8 күн бұрын
That's what she saiddd
@williestyle358 күн бұрын
That is Mustard for ya
@Showe26259 күн бұрын
As a kid I always imagined the entirety of the passengers aboard airships did so within the confines of the small observation decks hanging below. It blew my mind when I saw a cutaway image of the Hindenburg complete with private rooms, lounges and restaurants.
@fredblonder78508 күн бұрын
Have a look at the interior photos of the British R100.
@takiua22648 күн бұрын
I still thought that until your comment…..
@Showe26258 күн бұрын
@@fredblonder7850 wow, just looked it up…they have a whole 3 story building in there!
@NathanDudani7 күн бұрын
No showers, though
@fredblonder78507 күн бұрын
@@NathanDudani The 𝑯𝒊𝒏𝒅𝒆𝒏𝒃𝒖𝒓𝒈 had a shower for the passengers.
@michaelhowell23269 күн бұрын
Airships and armored trains are something that didn't really pan out, but that doesn't stop them in the rule of cool.
@anon-iraq26559 күн бұрын
Armored trains fared better, they were used often and still are, the North Korean president has a personal armored train
@pegcity4eva8 күн бұрын
So does Putin
@JrgPt968 күн бұрын
There's been deployment of (improvised) armoured trains in the war in Ukraine. Turns out it's a pretty efficient way to patrol railways etc.
@warbrain10538 күн бұрын
@@anon-iraq2655 i think he means trains with tank turrets artillery and more on top
@pootis_cat8 күн бұрын
Armoured trains had a pretty good run, they were used effectively throughout the entire first and 2nd world war as well as inbetween pretty much.
@Maple_Leefreal8 күн бұрын
the Macon really did a redemption arc only to die because of poor choices
@thejunky19087 күн бұрын
corporate bureaucracy and shipyard lobbyists killed it. Forget the price tag.
@jaydennighthawk78159 күн бұрын
This Chanel is the Definition Of Quality over Quantity.. And Each Video is better than the last. This Guy is the king of Absolute Cinema.
@Michael-ft1bd9 күн бұрын
glaze
@Paper2469 күн бұрын
@@Michael-ft1bd he just telling the truth
@rogermcbear41639 күн бұрын
literally every video is dripping with quality
@johnmcjeff8819 күн бұрын
Meanwhile found and explained is making slop
@ib75669 күн бұрын
stop capitalizing everything goofball
@radicaldisconnect8 күн бұрын
Admiral Wiley is badass. In WWII he would command the battleship USS West Virginia from 1943-1945, and was the most accurate shooting battleship during the Battle of the Surigao Strait.
@paogene12888 күн бұрын
I think you got those wrong. According to Wikipedia, Admiral Wiley didnt serve in the Battleships.
@radicaldisconnect8 күн бұрын
@ He absolutely did. Check out the book Rear Admiral Herbert V. Wiley, A Career in Airships and Battleships. There’s no Wikipedia article on him yet, there’s an article on a different Admiral Wiley.
@cammando20577 күн бұрын
Macon needs a movie, and Wiley needs a miniseries.
@jamesy85819 күн бұрын
Moffat walked so Wiley could run
@MustardChannel9 күн бұрын
I need you write some scripts :)
@zadinzadin9 күн бұрын
@@MustardChannel face reveal when
@shmuck669 күн бұрын
@zadinzadin never reveal. the magic disappears
@Roddy5569 күн бұрын
@zadinzadinis he the guy who does FortNine motorcycle videos? They're both Canadian .
@dv92398 күн бұрын
@@Roddy556 ain't no way
@Swordgaming3607 күн бұрын
Mustard actually never goes missing for months. He is simply perfecting the next video to somehow top the last one he made
@blohaj4 күн бұрын
18:29 Mustard: Coming soon... Me: *Gasp* New video soon????? Mustard: to Nebula Me: Goddamnit :/ I'm broke a$$
@icedhelixx9 күн бұрын
It's a shame that airships never really took off. The few video games that include them spawned my love for them. I wish there were more videos as high quality as this one because they deserve more love!
@Nukepositive8 күн бұрын
Once a nation advances to fighter jets and missiles, there's no value in a dirigible, unfortunately. That being said, it could still make sense for some undeveloped countries running turboprop aircraft like Chad, provided they could acquire the helium. We can dream!
@Edax_Royeaux8 күн бұрын
If you want to see a good movie about an Airship, there's The Red Tent (1969), about an expedition to the North Pole, with Sean Connery playing Amundsen. It has a wonderful opening sequence as they start their journey.
@ScarriorIII8 күн бұрын
Crimson Skies?
@dongiovanni43318 күн бұрын
@@Nukepositive I think there are some floating radar platforms, for when you don't want a plane to fly the mission.
@john2g18 күн бұрын
Kirov reporting!
@i_nameless_i-jgsdf9 күн бұрын
The CGI is so good that i think it looks even better than ''found and explained'', another excellent channel that pushing out videos like there is no tommorow, but i wish the CGI scenes were a little longer tbh.
@jackattack42549 күн бұрын
I'm absolutely elated to see a new upload from you. The best part is that I've recently struck a fascination with airships. Lo and behold, you return with an amazing video on said topic!
@MustardChannel9 күн бұрын
I can never get bored of airships. Thanks for watching!
@iKLKNY8 күн бұрын
Thanks
@MustardChannel8 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@dlxmarks9 күн бұрын
William A. Moffett's name lives on at Moffett Federal Airfield on the San Francisco Bay now under the joint administration of NASA and the military. It includes Hanger One and Hanger Two which were built to house the airships. Completed in 1933, Hanger One is still one of the world's largest freestanding structures enclosing 8 acres of floorspace and its restoration will be completed this year, 2025.
@youngbloodhobby999 күн бұрын
Correct. Moffett Field was also an excellent air show site back in the day, featuring everything military related from the F-14 Tomcat to the Blue Angels or Thunderbirds.
@georgeburns72519 күн бұрын
Is hanger 2 still there?
@youngbloodhobby998 күн бұрын
@georgeburns7251 Yes. Hangar 3, however, was unfortunately demolished last year. It's not known if Hangar 2 will be left standing or not.
@machupikachu10858 күн бұрын
@@youngbloodhobby99 Isn't that the building that is so big it gets its own weather patterns like fog?
@PrograError8 күн бұрын
Isn't that where MythBusters went to test one of the myths?
@Attilakiralyart8 күн бұрын
U.S. before Pearl Harbour: "lol this is useless" U.S. after Pearl Harbour: "where were you when the Westworld fell??"
@bronson45745 күн бұрын
*westfold
@ThumperDumper-44283 күн бұрын
Akron: Went the same way as the Arizona but decades before..... *WHAT DO YOU THINK?!*
@Z3R0_Pr0ToGen9 күн бұрын
It’s things like this that make you wonder how modern combat would look if these became the standard. Thanks for another great video!
@IgiSzy9 күн бұрын
Zveno vs this ships?
@KandiKlover9 күн бұрын
They would have those r2d2 looking mini guns and tons of A2A and cruise missiles and would look like some sci-fi alien warship.
@baronvonslambert9 күн бұрын
It would look a lot like Command and Conquer Red Alert 2 probably.
@SimonBauer79 күн бұрын
wouldnt last too long assuming Things like radar and guided missiles also exist. the Radar cross section of such a thing is HUGE.
@L.P.19879 күн бұрын
@@SimonBauer7Isn't the same for naval aircraft carriers?
@rtyrsson9 күн бұрын
I've been well aware of the Navy's work with airships in the 30s. But you managed to cover the important aspects, and make it interesting and engaging in just 20 minutes' time. Fantastic video. The only criticism, if any, would be maybe another minute or two in explanation of the parasite fighters and their trapeze system. Still... fantastic work.
@mylesspear9 күн бұрын
Northeast Ohio native, here. Thanks for sharing an incredible yet over looked part of my home town’s history! I lived close to the air dock for a majority of my life and it was and still is a common sight for me. It’s incredible to think that our nation had flying aircraft carriers at one point and had things gone a little differently for the airships, aerial warfare may had been changed forever. Thanks for sharing this incredible documentary! All the best!
@jessedierksheide9 күн бұрын
Ohio bro
@cgarciacorzo8 күн бұрын
Thanks!
@MustardChannel8 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@cgarciacorzo8 күн бұрын
@@MustardChannel thanks to you my kids your videos
@joshdevad49779 күн бұрын
Im volunteering at a air museum and we have an engine from the uss los angeles (zr-3). Its great to see that her story is still getting out there. Love your videos by the way.
@joshdevad49779 күн бұрын
If any of yall are in the fort worth area come visit the Fort Worth Air museum. Many of our war birds have amazing stories
@dugroz8 күн бұрын
IIRC, the Los Angeles was the one made by Germany and taken as a WWI reparation. It was also the only rigid airship in the US Navy to survive.
@joshdevad49778 күн бұрын
@dugroz yes she was made by the zeppelin company after the war but was sadly retired and scrapped in 1939.
@kaitlyn__L8 күн бұрын
@@joshdevad4977 I'd heard of ZF gearboxes for a long time, but it was only a few months ago I learned that's actually the modern continuation of the Zeppelin company. IDK why but I always assumed it had gone under!
@normal-potato058 күн бұрын
The animation is unbelievable, the sun shining over the sparrowhawk’s wings is beautiful
@waltercv9 күн бұрын
Without a doubt this is one of the best KZbin channels. The story telling, use of graphics, archive footage, script, cgi, editing, narration, length, soundtrack. It's all top notch.
@wtdoober9 күн бұрын
Put bro on the history channel 😭🙏
@Tom-cn4cm9 күн бұрын
Sounds like AI narration now though.
@zadinzadin9 күн бұрын
@@wtdoober better than history channel
@waltercv9 күн бұрын
@@wtdoober Back in the day History Channel was pretty good. Around the Bush Jr era it became a becon of disinformation. This Channel does everything better than even back then.
@waltercv9 күн бұрын
@@wtdoober History Channel used to be pretty good. Around the Bush Jr era it became a beacon of disinformation. This channel does better than HC ever did.
@tsbrownie4 күн бұрын
Very informative and accurate. Thank you. I have always loved lighter than air and read every decent book on them. My grandfather was a civilian LTA flight trainer at NAS Key West who trained many of the sailors who went on to be USN LTA senior staff. He quit in 1921, but stayed in contact with them until his death.
@mystic3169 күн бұрын
A new Mustard video drop on my Bday, best present ever! 🎉
@MustardChannel9 күн бұрын
Happy birthday!🎈 🎂 🥳
@zanegunn7709 күн бұрын
happy birthday
@mziwendukuntsele6719 күн бұрын
@@MustardChannel Mine is the 2nd of April. Just sayin'....🤭
@cocostixgaming81199 күн бұрын
It's your birthday too
@daveweiss56479 күн бұрын
I have been obsessed with these flying aircraft carriers for years and this is the best video I've seen on them yet. Thanks!
@wonderman19189 күн бұрын
The quality of your videos really are worth paying for
@guyfawkes18905119 күн бұрын
This channel is a paragon of quality content. I Always get excited to see a new Mustard release, thank you for sticking with it all these years!
@Dark_Productions9 күн бұрын
You never Disappoint Love every video ♥
@themicrowave9059 күн бұрын
that one war thunder content creator
@thegreenlandicgamer9 күн бұрын
real
@XWINGMAN_X9 күн бұрын
Bro two legends in one comment section is insane
@wtdoober9 күн бұрын
@@thegreenlandicgamerwhy is your verified squished
@sashs84615 күн бұрын
Your videos are such a treat - the storytelling and production value are premium. Enjoyed watching this on my 50inch in 4k. drool. those renders and archive footage. Re. the topic, airships are so epic, miss understood and one could say before their time. Cause and effect. Imagine them returning with the precision engineering of the 21st century. I'm sure they'd make for some efficient and spectacle use cases
@edxcal849 күн бұрын
I've read about the Akron and Macon my whole life, I've been fascinated by them and what would be known as "diesel punk". I've never heard the story of them hunting down FDR's ship, that was an awesome story! Great video!
@oliviersavard86767 күн бұрын
if you like dieselpunk, you'll *love* wolfenstein tno and wolfenstein ii tnc
@Tales_of_Tanks9 күн бұрын
I wanted to say thank you for covering this story that is very much brushed under the rug. My friends grandfather served in the U.S. navy airships and knew 2 of the 3 sailors who were carried away during that freak accident
@MalteSpieltYT9 күн бұрын
I'm still astounded that videos like this can be watched for free on youtube. Thanks for the amazing content, both informative and with high production quality!
@judet29929 күн бұрын
So Up is what happened if the Macon didn’t crash but was sold to an eccentric explorer after being proved obsolete?
@paleoph61688 күн бұрын
Wonderful movie.
@theotherohlourdespadua11318 күн бұрын
There is more than one airship maker in the 1930's, and the biggest of them all is the Zeppelin Airline Company. The USS Los Angeles is a Zeppelin-built airship as part of the WW1 reparations and the USS Macon and USS Akron are designed by one Karl Ahrendt, a stress engineer from the Zeppelin Airline Company...
@judet29928 күн бұрын
@ yeah but the Spirit of Adventure had Sparrowhawks
@dylpickel84606 күн бұрын
@@judet2992I forgot all about that
@billc_269 күн бұрын
I live a half hour away from Akron, Ohio in a little town called Canal Fulton, Ohio. Even today, you can still see glimpses of the good year blimp in the sky from time to time during the summer. I love reading about all of the old airships, so thanks for posting! I love all of your content and have been watching since your TU-144 video
@diamondcreepah8 күн бұрын
Fun fact: most of the Goodyear blimps today are still made by Luftschiffbau Zeppelin, the same company that made the Hindenburg
@elliotsjunnesson25498 күн бұрын
@@diamondcreepah blimps are not as good
@hangglidernerd7 күн бұрын
@@diamondcreepah Goodyear's 3 new ships aren't just gas bags...they do have an internal frame's... They are Zeppelin NT ships..... they are semi-rigid ships
@seanchristopher919 күн бұрын
I've been looking forward to Mustard's next video, and this was my greatest treat. The US Navy's flying Aircraft Carriers is a topic I have searched for without much more information I wanted. Your latest video was the most informational presentation I have found on this topic.
@otterpocalypse10039 күн бұрын
This might be my favorite Mustard upload yet. Great job explaining the story of these little spoken of marvels of engineering and passion!
@Plutonium239Enjoyer4 күн бұрын
i have watched all mustard's videos on youtube and nebula, most well spent days of my life
@r4microds9 күн бұрын
incredible research, artwork, animation and narration, as always!!!
@niros96675 күн бұрын
Such a cool period of history and an amazing feat of engineering. Top video as always Mustard, thanks!
@coopercannon20079 күн бұрын
THE KING RETURNS
@wannabewallaby15924 күн бұрын
Sound design for the videos are amazing
@Leothegeo6599 күн бұрын
Finally the legend reappears when we needed him the most..
@grapesoder13016 күн бұрын
The Military Channel and History Channel perfected this kind of content, and then refused to keep producing it. So glad channels like this revived it.
@An3mal9 күн бұрын
Just want to genuinely thank you for these amazing videos you put out!
@Ryzard3 күн бұрын
What a chad move, saying "screw it, I'll trace your untraceable ship and deliver packages to it"
@warhawk44949 күн бұрын
Great video man. This makes me think about one of my favorite games Crimson Skys and that alternative universe.
@YTLSF9 күн бұрын
My thoughts exactly! The memories I have of hours spent on this game when I was younger I will forever remember!
@maineiacman9 күн бұрын
Crimson skies really could've used a sequel. Fantastic game.
@claudiosimas10208 күн бұрын
This is the ONLY channel I look forward to watching videos. Please, never stop making videos.
@evamatthews3949 күн бұрын
another wonderful, historic, and informational video I love it!!!!!
@SandmanJr904 күн бұрын
This channel is super super cool
@captain_commenter87969 күн бұрын
This was stated in videos like the 747 aircraft carrier video, but airborne aircraft carriers would honestly be a great thing to revisit in the modern day, especially with drones. Maybe not Arsenal Burd levels of offensive capabilities, but perhaps scout and support alongside conventional aircraft.
@8qk67acq58 күн бұрын
It can take more of a territorial guard role. Transport troops and supplies.
@nercksrule8 күн бұрын
The Soviets built a jet-powered mothership aircraft for launching anti-ship missiles that flew in ground effect just above the surface of the ocean. It was the Lun-class ekranoplan. It was a sea plane, designed to land in the water for fuel and ammunition replenishment from ship tenders, and had a max speed of 297 knots (550kph/342mph). Flying up high may be more economical fuel-wise, but it would make the mothership stick out like a sore thumb due to its massive radar signature.
@RaskiPlaski30009 күн бұрын
props to whoever does those incredible visuals!
@aslamnurfikri76409 күн бұрын
HE'S BACK
@andrewbloom76948 күн бұрын
7:13 "six year old boy attacked by wolves" is the most stereotypical "headline next to the plot relevant one" in a documentary ever somehow??
@hiskibidi-j3q4 күн бұрын
Bro i was looking for someone who saw it too 😂
@volganin27169 күн бұрын
Thank you for this informative and nice to watch video, but 0:11 Is there a mistake? 785ft equals 239m isn't it?
@chaliboy-wf7ol7 күн бұрын
No
@ColdKiwi27 күн бұрын
@@chaliboy-wf7ol785 meters does not equal 785 feet
@MisterSingh.7 күн бұрын
AI is gayi
@michaelyee98397 күн бұрын
Bro yes! You finally posted! I literally watch ur videos when playing ps4. I love ur videos. Good work man😊
@ThatOneLeaf_099 күн бұрын
This is what peak content looks like 🗣️🗣️🔥🔥
@KE_Aviation8 күн бұрын
I now see why it takes so long to make these videos. Super informative and high quality
@SaturnCanuck9 күн бұрын
The Akron Class were as good as they could be. They were the fastest airships ever built, at 84 mph (USS Macon), and among the largest. You did miss a crucial element, however, in regard to the design flaw of the upper and lower fins of the class. You see, designer Dr Karl Arnstein in an effort to give the ships greater structural integrity developed what he called “deep rings”. These were large triangular structures - similar to the keel structure - spaced seventy-four feet apart. While heavier than traditional main rings, by spacing the deep rings further apart, less weight would be utilized, yet the structural integrity would still be greater. However, during the design phase in October 1929, the arrangement of the fins was altered. In order to give better landing sightlines, a second control room was added to the lower fin, which due to its position, required the fins to be extended outwards from the hull (in all directions), necessitating the fins being shorter in overall length. As a result, this had the effect of moving the leading edges of the fins aft of the forward deep ring it was originally designed to be attached to, resulting in only two deep rings providing structural integrity. So, the so-called design flaw was the US Navy’s own fault and was never corrected during the class’ lifetime. This essentially doomed both airships.
@Jjames7639 күн бұрын
Actually, the later ZPG-3W blimps used by the Navy in the Cold War were even faster, with a top speed of about 94 mph. A modern rigid could likely achieve over 230 mph over short distances, due to excessive fuel use, but ~170 mph is actually where the peak productivity lies for many airship configurations, per Boeing’s analysis. Peak efficiency at very long distances is still around 90 mph, though.
@richardarcher71779 күн бұрын
That is interesting. Thanks for the information. always the case, non-engineers tinkering with a design or ordering changes and not giving the engineers the time to rework the design.
@SaturnCanuck8 күн бұрын
@Jjames763 I'm sorry. I should have said dirigable
@alexgorski18065 күн бұрын
Just to add this change was in response to a handling accident on the Graf Zeppelin. where the rear tail had clipped some powerlines/cables on landing damaging the fin.
@SaturnCanuck5 күн бұрын
@@alexgorski1806 Yes, this was the impetus for the design change for the Akron Class. Lieutenant Commander Charles Rosendahl was aboard Graf Zeppelin during this incident - her around-the-world tour - and he did not want the same thing happening to these new ships. Thanks for bringing this up.
@mgsBicycleO96 күн бұрын
Some of the best quality content that KZbin, or even the INTERNET, has to offer. Kudos 👍
@EmperorDank8 күн бұрын
It would be so cool to experience a trans-atlantic voyage in an airship. Shame i doubt i'll ever see that day. The idea of roaming around a ship and going to sleep in a cabin while in the air seems so wild
@marrqi7wini547 күн бұрын
I think that depends if the start-ups actually succeed in doing what they say they were going to try and do.
@red_five33255 күн бұрын
Hello, airplanes? Yeah, it's blimps. You win, bye.
@KristovMars7 күн бұрын
This video combines two of my favourite things - airships, military history - and just fills my head with alternate history scenarios. Great research, storytelling, and graphics - exceptional work! The Macon''s captain is a truly inspiring figure too - I would totally watch a feature film about this man and his sadly doomed ship.
@Mr.America12508 күн бұрын
12:15 bro is this the Avengers theme!?
@alexgorski18065 күн бұрын
While the ridged fleet may have been scrapped, the LTA branch didn't go away after the accidents. They took what they learned and formed a more comprehensive fleet of smaller blimps that would over watch convoys crossing the Atlantic. One Admiral Karl Doenitz even stated that with a blimps supporting convoys it was extremely frustrating for his U-boat commanders to approach them. Leading to Doenitz to halt all U-boat operations in the western Atlantic area.
Your videos are incredible, and the topic of airships and airship carriers is always a huge win! Amazing as always man, you're awesome!
@mixererunio17578 күн бұрын
It's honestly disappointing that the video doesn't mention that while rigid airships ended after Macon in US Navy, the blimps were very extensively used during and after the WW2 in ASW role.
@rogermcbear41634 күн бұрын
Doesnt Mustard usually cover one Machine at a time?
@ventusvindictus6 күн бұрын
Not only was this a good video, it also had the best pitch for Nebula I have seen yet!
@MsZeeZed9 күн бұрын
WWI showed that in air-combat Zeppelin’s (lifted by Hydrogen) were almost impossible to take down with machine guns mounted on biplanes. By WWII cannons with incendiary shells would have made mincemeat of them, even if they were Helium lifters. However, in-between the wars they seemed a good fit for a country that had almost all of the world’s Helium reserves. Nice use of Avengers alike music for these airbourne-carriers 😹
@tz87858 күн бұрын
Incendiary bullets already started to bring down airships back in WWI, starting in September 1916.
@ostrich677 күн бұрын
More Zeppelins were lost to bad weather than by combat. That was a problem that was never solved.
@InaHaze-05 күн бұрын
The brotherhood of the Macron crew had to be so badass up until they passed. Imagine the old vet stories THEY were telling back in the day!
@julesjackson48557 күн бұрын
10:26 Mustard swearing was NOT on my 2025 bingo card
@KrisRowberry8 күн бұрын
So so happy that you decided to highlight this incredible piece of aviation history. Working at Moffett Field, you can definitely feel the history all around you.
@unsatisfiedfans74229 күн бұрын
Don't forget R33, an airship operated by Royal Navy capable of carrying small aircraft like Sopwith Camel and Gloster Greebe
@adrianp30989 күн бұрын
I’ve known about the flying carriers for a while, it’s cool to finally see a video on them.
@Kaiser_von_Europa8 күн бұрын
It's ashamed that airships are taken down for being too dangerous, I always dream of a world where they still exist and dominate the skies alongside with the airplanes
@Ryzawa9 күн бұрын
I love how Wiley is constantly being tested and basically just saying "aight bet" each time, what a madlad lol
@adamkoubeck8 күн бұрын
There's a good book, "When Giants Ruled the Skies" that goes into all of this in greater detail, if anyone is interested
@Zippsterman2 күн бұрын
The mention of the Lexington is extra fun for me - I spent a night aboard that carrier in its current role as a museum ship, it's fun to imagine that very same vessel was involved in this event.
@Aikibiker18 күн бұрын
While not airships, tethered aerostats are valuable ISR platforms still used today. We had them in the middle east during the GWOT to protect bases and surveil large swathes of terrain. The Philippines has a maritime surveillance version to watch Chinese activities in the South China Sea. It also provides AWACS like radar coverage.
@codys20188 күн бұрын
My son brings home report cards more often than this fella drops videos, but it's worth the wait every time. The gold standard!
@zephyrod73078 күн бұрын
So basically, as most of the time an unconventional idea fails, it’s the lack of willingness to adapt of the given military branch and/or government that causes the failure, not actually problems with the machinery itself
@alexgorski18065 күн бұрын
Yes and no. yes the military wanted to use them as the German high seas fleet had during the first world war. However the airship branch couldn't really come into its own without more support, that it didn't have. it was the same thing with carriers. there was only 3 carrier admirals, 1 airship admiral, but 12 battleship admirals before the war. and that reflected in the fleets allocation of funds. even the carrier admirals recognized the sheer scouting power of airships. but the battleship admirals dominated the fleet and the funding.
@Hotdawg249 күн бұрын
Bro. When this guy uploads, you literally have to watch it. Love your vids, keep it up!
@conniepoo7 күн бұрын
I truly believe given todays technology, airships can become practical for other uses, like airship cruises over beautiful natural untouched land, or replace semi-trucks on the road by transporting goods for a tenth of the cost, or even a atonomous mobile warehouse that drones can collect and deliver packages from. Plus our weather prediction is way better and since an airship can just move, it would always be able to avoid bad weather, which doomed many airships before.
@nicolashallaert55659 күн бұрын
I am a simple man rewachting mustard videos every couple of weeks and losing it when there is a new one ❤ great job like always
@hurricanefury4398 күн бұрын
the funny thing is that the structural flaw in the fins eas easily fixable. and if we'd gone through with the project they might have even impacted the war.
@fen33116 күн бұрын
Almost certainly not. As mentioned in the vid their use was easily superseded by heavier than air sea-planes.
@Algorithm3767823 сағат бұрын
That bomb going off at 1:13 when you said "powerful" was spot on
@OnkelSnoke9 күн бұрын
A new mustard video is like a blessing
@YourMemerEcko8 күн бұрын
MUSTARD YOUR BACK I HAVE AWAITED YOUR RETURN FOR 5 MONTHS AND IT WAS WORTH ALL THE WAIT
@Boraunk9 күн бұрын
Found this randomly The Censored Guide to Wealth on Bovolorus and wow it's a game changer
@ronmaximilian69535 күн бұрын
The interesting thing is that airships or at least aerostats are having a resurgence in airborne early warning with radar to detect sea skimming and low-flying aircraft and missiles
@alperd.78169 күн бұрын
We need a Crimson Skies remake.
@Rubberduck0559 күн бұрын
Ya seriously talk about a franchise that needs to comeback
@rory49899 күн бұрын
Hands down the best channel on KZbin. Incredible work as always.
@oysero9 күн бұрын
Babe wake up, Mustard posted new video!
@jeffbenton61838 күн бұрын
I've long had a fascination for the Akron-class, but to say my knowledge of the type doubled today would be a *massive* understatement. Thanks so much!
@Trivcino9 күн бұрын
Feels like christmas
@KingTheDestroyer86499 күн бұрын
Everything goes on hold when Mustard uploads, I don’t often find myself as glued to videos as I am to these