Yak-42: The Soviet Airliner that Failed

  Рет қаралды 104,259

Skyships Eng

Skyships Eng

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 215
@yohannessulistyo4025
@yohannessulistyo4025 Жыл бұрын
Indonesian low cost airline, Lion Air, famous for being the launch customer of Boeing 737-900ER, and one of its subsidiaries also become the first to fly 737MAX (Malindo Air - now Batik Air Malaysia). They also operated 5 x Yak-42Ds for about a year, from 2001 to 2002. What makes the plane rather obsolete is the noise, among local Indonesian plane spotters, the Yak-42Ds are known as "trumpet plane" as they make a distinctive turbine whine noise. The plane was used to fly many major Lion Air routes at the time (e.g. to Kupang, Singapore, or even Surabaya), complementing its fleet of Boeing 737-200 and Airbus A310-300, before post-9/11 give them a chance to hoard more than a dozen of extra MD-80s from major US carriers at cheap leasing rate. When the MD-80s arrived, the Yak-42D's tenure simply ended. The little Soviet regional jet briefly helped bridge and transition the airline to become Indonesia's largest airline and Boeing's 2nd largest customer (the entire group) after Southwest Airlines and also ATR's largest operator.
@patpat-rp3lv
@patpat-rp3lv Жыл бұрын
I saw the plane once, and indeed it was cery noisy
@АлексейПархоменко-л3л
@АлексейПархоменко-л3л Жыл бұрын
Tu-134 is the actually noise plane. The right sound of soviet turbine!
@dpairlines1480
@dpairlines1480 Жыл бұрын
This is one of my favourite planes from Russia, a few years ago I had the chance to fly on one as part of a special tour, it was operated by a small private company, the crew were amazing, allowing us avgeeks to look at every aspect of the jet, sadly I’m not sure when I will get the opportunity to visit Russia again, for reasons I don’t need to explain, but hopefully I will get the chance to visit some of the amazing aviation museums that are in Russia. Thank you for a wonderful channel
@shakiMiki
@shakiMiki Жыл бұрын
Yeah, Great time to be celebrating all things Russians.
@JohnnyWednesday
@JohnnyWednesday Жыл бұрын
I love Russia and don't have a problem loving it while it's engaged in war. America killed over a million children across Iraq, Afganistan and Syria. Russia don't even come close.
@dpairlines1480
@dpairlines1480 Жыл бұрын
@@shakiMiki really ??? It’s a documentary about a Soviet jet made by a Russian KZbinr whom I admire, get a grip
@mofayer
@mofayer Жыл бұрын
​@@dpairlines1480lol, some people prefer a black and white world, it's easier, you don't need to think, everything other is bad by default.
@williambarry8015
@williambarry8015 Жыл бұрын
​@@shakiMikiAm I a bad person if I Watch Messi the Puma?
@paulantonio740
@paulantonio740 Жыл бұрын
Back in 2013, I flew on a Cubana Yak-42 from Cancun to Havana. The flight was short and uneventful but I enjoyed the experience. When we returned to Cancun we flew on a Tu-204, which reminded me of a 757.
@GIGABACHI
@GIGABACHI Жыл бұрын
Such a good looking bird, so well proportioned, flowing lines, easy on the eyes. Always loved it.
@justforever96
@justforever96 3 ай бұрын
Are there any ugly trijets?
@Demoralized88
@Demoralized88 Жыл бұрын
Hey man, I appreciate these videos that go beyond Wiki reading. Also, your English is so much better than a few years ago and you're getting the harder syntax of native speakers way more often.
@edgarguinartlopez8341
@edgarguinartlopez8341 Жыл бұрын
The Yak42/D was never my favorite, I flew it here in Cuba, back in the nineties; were nice rides... My biggest concern were about the lack of speed and some problems with the pressurization system. However was not a bad aircraft for a country like the mine... As many other Soviet aircraft, the Yak42 fleet (around 15) did the job in the island for many years (20+), where the only accident was due to the crew bad performance approaching Valencia, Venezuela... Again, thank you for this new material friends of Sky; you do are my favorites! :)
@OOpSjm
@OOpSjm Жыл бұрын
They were loud!!
@jerryle379
@jerryle379 Жыл бұрын
​@@OOpSjmless loud then turbo prop plane 😉 😂 joke a side yak40 for it time was great small regional airlines bringing people to small regional airport
@needchemistry
@needchemistry Жыл бұрын
I remember flying in one back in 1998 I was a teenager and it was actually my first time flying alone in a Jet.! We had to get in from the planes behind… literally the rear door of the plane retracted and has a built in stairway. No need for a Tunnel or a stair. When it reached cruising altitude the cabin filled with what I thought was smoke and I freaked out but the pilot announced that it was mist from the Airconditioning. It was an uneventful flight otherwise. And the leg space in economy was way better than todays jets.
@adrianyallop2880
@adrianyallop2880 Жыл бұрын
Dear Sky, great channel, just discovered you and working through 'Back catalogue'. You produce good and interesting videos indeed and I am happy to congratulate you. More on Russian/soviet aerospace will be welcome, it is hard to find much at all in English. Thank you.
@yangguzheng3544
@yangguzheng3544 Жыл бұрын
man your videos are getting better and better, keep it flying in!
@vincentgraffeo9030
@vincentgraffeo9030 Жыл бұрын
I appreciate your hard work to make these videos. So interesting and informative.
@williamscott8227
@williamscott8227 Жыл бұрын
Love your coverage Soviet and Russian aircraft.
@machpodfan
@machpodfan Жыл бұрын
A favorite channel of mine, thanks for your work and best wishes!
@linkfreeman1998
@linkfreeman1998 Жыл бұрын
I'm glad that you finally added proper subtitles comrade, I hope more viewers come to your channel!
@JohnnyWednesday
@JohnnyWednesday Жыл бұрын
Great video as always - I've always loved tri-jets and this one is a beauty!
@samgeorge4798
@samgeorge4798 Жыл бұрын
Sad because it is in my opinion one of the most beautiful regional jet of its time
@lowiqindividual
@lowiqindividual Жыл бұрын
Been watching your channel for a while now , very interesting , explanations simple and good production.
@SkyshipsEng
@SkyshipsEng Жыл бұрын
I'm glad you like the channel
@lowiqindividual
@lowiqindividual Жыл бұрын
@@SkyshipsEng im glad i found your channel in the first place
@johnforsyth7987
@johnforsyth7987 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for another entertaining informative video. You have a great channel. Here in my hometown, Wichita, Kansas. The Beechcraft Co. just launched a new single engine aircraft called the Denali. It is a turboprop powered aircraft with seating for 10 - 12 passengers.
@paulsz6194
@paulsz6194 Жыл бұрын
Does it have a GMC interior , LoL? ....
@johnforsyth7987
@johnforsyth7987 Жыл бұрын
Building the aircraft like this means jobs for my hometown.
@johnforsyth7987
@johnforsyth7987 Жыл бұрын
You are right. It does look a lot like the PC-12, @jimbee7342
@grafhilgenhurst9717
@grafhilgenhurst9717 Жыл бұрын
...and cost $6,000,000!😁
@DC3Refom
@DC3Refom Жыл бұрын
I am glad that ia bring my work into your home :) , However in regards to airvraft its self It's slower than single turbo prop aircraft like the tbm 930 and pc12 ngx , not to mention a lot slower the king air 350 😂 , after having a look on beechcraft site ,I am not that impressed tbh seems too akin to the pc12
@pianodude6855
@pianodude6855 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your work! For us it would take several hours of research and reading to get these informations. But you just make it like an interesting story in a 18min video! Great video!
@philiproseel3506
@philiproseel3506 Жыл бұрын
I'm glad I watched this. I thought I knew what the Yak-42 was. Great video.
@rapidthrash1964
@rapidthrash1964 Жыл бұрын
I'm glad I'm still subscribed to your channel; been waiting for a video about this plane
@rrice1705
@rrice1705 Жыл бұрын
That was a nice video, thank you. Soviet-era airliners and the stories behind them make for some fascinating reading/watching. Sad to hear about another three-engine airliner going by the wayside, but such is the world of aviation.
@petesheppard1709
@petesheppard1709 Жыл бұрын
A good looking aircraft; in fact, I think the tri-engine layout is the most graceful jetliner arrangement. The tri-engine concept just didn't have longevity anywhere in the world. The plane I'm most familiar with, the Boeing 727 was hamstrung because the design could not accommodate the new, economical turbofans which were also larger than the jets it was designed around.
@lgerigk
@lgerigk Жыл бұрын
Also, with more powerful and reliable engines around, there was no need for a third engine any longer. The DC9- variants were much longer in service than the 727 because of this. Also, the need for a flight engineer didn't help. The 9ers got rid of the third man right from the start.
@telewlzor
@telewlzor Жыл бұрын
which one? is this an airliner from 70s so 50 years ago?
@Peizxcv
@Peizxcv Жыл бұрын
I think the main issue was plane design bureau wasn’t in sync with engine design bureau like it is in the West. The original plan was for a jet with either 2 outdated engines or 3 too heavy engines. The entire project either should have new engines designed for it or not start at all
@grafhilgenhurst9717
@grafhilgenhurst9717 Жыл бұрын
...and right about then they discovered that 2 engined airliners were more fuel efficient than 3 engined airliners.
@justforever96
@justforever96 3 ай бұрын
​@@grafhilgenhurst9717that had nothing to do with it. They always knew that two engines is more efficient than three (although that's a very complicated question). About then they decided that modern engines were safe and powerful enough that two was sufficient margin of safety, a plane could keep flying just fine in one engine. That was the main reason for trijets to start with. The regulations in the West prohibited twin engines on overwater flights of more than a certain distance, because it was felt two wasn't safe enough if one failed. So it had to be four or three, and they were well aware of the extra drag and weight each engine created, so three was the more efficient option. But in the 70s they reviewed the latest engine data and removed the restrictions, allowing twins to fly ETOPS as long as they are approved, so the main incentive to have three was removed. Not that three inherently uses more fuel. It depends on the exact scenario. Mostly it's the weight and drag, and the cost (each engine costs millions of dollars and requires maintenance). You are running three engines, but you can run them at lower, more efficient settings. Sometimes running more engines at lower ratings is more efficient, and you have a larger reserve of power. But in the end, if two will do the job and there is no legal requirement to have more, two is more efficient in all ways. Same reason they tried to couple four engines into two prop units on the He 177. Same number of cylinders firing, but much less drag than four individual units.
@colino72
@colino72 Жыл бұрын
I think I flew on one in about 1995 from an oilfield location to Tomsk. It was interesting!
@tiberiusgracchus4222
@tiberiusgracchus4222 Жыл бұрын
Good timing. The Russian company, Irkut, that bought Yakovlev in 2004 just changed its name back to Yakovlev.
@justforever96
@justforever96 3 ай бұрын
"index" "Resource" "Firey hearts" "Aviators" I love all the interesting translation artifacts that appear in these videos. They make the whole thing more interesting to me.
@alinili5569
@alinili5569 Жыл бұрын
You making your clips / videos lots more interesting and it is beautiful thank you
@TJ-USMC
@TJ-USMC Жыл бұрын
Another Excellent Video !!!
@poli4869
@poli4869 Жыл бұрын
there is still a Yak-42 in good condition being displayed in the VDNKh/ VDNH, Park in Moscow, visitors can even going inside of the plane
@ronik24
@ronik24 Жыл бұрын
Nice! 🙂 I flew three times with one on Cubana Nassau - Havanna - Nassau, one time not by choice as a passenger collapsed and we returned to Havanna before taking off again to Nassau.
@Alejandro-vh5ox
@Alejandro-vh5ox Ай бұрын
I flew in one of these as a kid. I loved it. I was obsessed with planes
@RichieRouge206
@RichieRouge206 Жыл бұрын
Another great video my friend! I really enjoy your videos
@PeterPan-iz1kk
@PeterPan-iz1kk Жыл бұрын
Looks very much like the successful Hawker Trident.
@easydrive3662
@easydrive3662 Жыл бұрын
Love them guys in the clip at 1min20 that had to duck down for the wing haha The yak42 is certainly a very compact well proportioned aircraft slightly smaller than your 737 and a320 aircraft
@johnparrott4689
@johnparrott4689 Жыл бұрын
Great video. I had no idea it was tested with both a straight and swept wing. Thank you😊
@SotonyaAcckaya
@SotonyaAcckaya Жыл бұрын
When i started a job with a lots of business trips all around Russia, those birds were still in use. Aaaaand i was really glad that they were rare. In fact i flown on Tu-134 more times than on Yak-42 and from the point of passenger comfort, Tu-134 were way more comfortable than Yaks.
@samy7013
@samy7013 8 ай бұрын
Do you mind describing the differences in passenger comfort between the Tu-134 and Yak-42? I’m very curious about this.
@SotonyaAcckaya
@SotonyaAcckaya 8 ай бұрын
@@samy7013 tu-134 was narrower with 2+2 seats and a big round windows, yak is 3+3 but it is 10cm narrower than for example a320 so it felt more overcrowded. For me the bigest difference was in quality on interior components. My last busines trip on tus and yaks way in 2000s, while tu's interior holder pretty well, yaks had seats thaw would not recline or recline kn their own, signs that was made more crudely and so on.
@AAbshier
@AAbshier Жыл бұрын
I saw a Cubana Yak-42 in Cancún in the 1990s. I was hoping to fly on one, but never got the chance.
@ernestoschmid2544
@ernestoschmid2544 Жыл бұрын
Wonderful channel. Thank you
@mcal27
@mcal27 Жыл бұрын
Ashamed to say I never heard of this aircraft before!! Seems to be in a similar category to the BAC 1-11. Sadly once you get beyond a certain size, a tough,regional jet becomes very niche I think
@petesheppard1709
@petesheppard1709 Жыл бұрын
As a Yank, my comparison is the Boeing 727.
@mcal27
@mcal27 Жыл бұрын
@@petesheppard1709 yep that works too
@justforever96
@justforever96 3 ай бұрын
​@@petesheppard1709I think the 727 is a step or two larger than this. This is more like a DC-9 or ACR-72, or an early 737. It's only similar to the 727 in engine layout, but that doesn't mean very much. And there is a large market for mid sized regional jets, but there is also a lot of competition.
@bigsarge2085
@bigsarge2085 Жыл бұрын
Always interesting.
@MLQUILLA
@MLQUILLA Жыл бұрын
Mr Sky my respect 4 u amigo iam from Colombia and know for the fact that people in the state they make fun of everibody accent you have a heavy accent but you go ahead to make it bettter have a very good knowlege on the planes history congrats i dont miss your videos amigo
@justforever96
@justforever96 3 ай бұрын
I can't deny there are some people from the US who will laugh at accents, but not everyone is like that. And I don't see very many of them on this channel. I enjoy his accent very much, it makes the video more enjoyable for me. And he can at least speak English, I can't speak Russian, or Spanish. So I would be a fool to mock someone for not learning my language perfectly when I can't even speak his language poorly. The US doesn't have a monopoly on ignorant people. Our fools are simply louder and more visible than most.
@IMrnsv
@IMrnsv Жыл бұрын
Very interesting!
@intikhabhussainmirza1975
@intikhabhussainmirza1975 Жыл бұрын
I loved to fly on this Yak-42 and IL with 4 engine wide body from Karachi to Lahore route in Pakistan in early 1990s. I really liked the flight, crew and serving etc.
@Manniefield
@Manniefield Жыл бұрын
Love seeing all the footage from my home airport PDX 😁
@randomscb-40charger78
@randomscb-40charger78 Жыл бұрын
How come the men standing near the Yak-40 in the start of the video not wearing some kind of ear protection?
@ivoryjohnson4662
@ivoryjohnson4662 Жыл бұрын
Good to see a new video Sky
@mrrolandlawrence
@mrrolandlawrence Жыл бұрын
one of my favourites.. the yak-40. its a shame they didnt update the yak-40 ever in its lifetime. money could have been better spent on yak-40 upgrades & tu-134 upgrades. still though soviet planning. no one can argue with that. another top quality video production !
@justforever96
@justforever96 3 ай бұрын
There is only so far you can upgrade a small jet like the Yak-40. It's still going to be limited in capacity, fuel load. You can stretch the fuselage a little, you can give it better engines, but there will be a barrier to how far you can go. Why not invest that same money into a new design? Boeing did will because their initial design could be made shorter or longer, turned into the 727 and 737, etc, because they had a relatively large fuselage to start with. But there is only so much you can do with a 20 passenger jet. It was already crowded just fitting four rows in it, and the range was pitiful. At best they might make it carry a few more and then the range into "acceptable" with better engines.
@justforever96
@justforever96 3 ай бұрын
7:10 it's interesting to see how the spray from the landing gear shoots back in a perfect line that just misses the engine inlet, so most of the water doesn't enter the engine. That's the kind of thing you don't think about very often, but i would bet that they spent a lot of time and money designing and adjusting the landing gear and the engines to make sure that the water sprayed exactly that way, every time. Because that much water would kill the engine if that spray struck the inlet directly. Kind of a good example of the thousands of small details that they have to consider and change while designing an aircraft. You can't just pop the landing gear wherever you want and hope it works, you need to test it to make sure it works, or you need to relocate the engines. If you need to change the gear or engines , that always effects something else, and other changes need to be made, and you need to consider _all _ of the implications every time you change anything, and make more changes, which require additional changes. And you need to test every change carefully to make sure you didn't forget some factor. There is a reason aircraft testing and design takes a very long time and a lot of money. Im pretty sure that's exactly what they were doing in those clips, making sure it handled correctly on wet runways. Don't want to find out that you messed something up by wrecking a brand new $10,000,000 engine. Or worse, the whole plane is wrecked because you didn't accommodate for water on the runway. I do know that's a huge design factor in flying boats, but im sure it's significant even in commercial planes.
@callenclarke371
@callenclarke371 Жыл бұрын
I like this style of narration. It sounds to my English ears as if it is being translated directly from Russian. It's a different psychology.
@justforever96
@justforever96 3 ай бұрын
I like it too, it has a nice feeling to it. It gives you a glimpse into the idiom of the Russian language, his little unfamiliar expressions that I have never heard and things like that. It gives these videos a special appeal for me. Only rarely does it make it difficult to understand him. Like it took me a long time to figure out that the "resource" of an engine is engine life, or time-between-overhaul rating (and I would argue that's a better word and we should use it too). Pretty sure that's a direct translation, but we didn't use that word that way. If he has measured it in operating hours I might have figured it out, but it took me a long time to learn what that meant. "Firey hearts" I think is also a direct translation, I like that as well. Some people always have to complain but I like it, and I hope he doesn't "improve" his English so much that he sounds just like all the rest. Something would be lost.
@rachelcarre9468
@rachelcarre9468 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the video.
@User0000000000000004
@User0000000000000004 6 ай бұрын
The 2-134? What are all these 2-models you keep mentioning?
@JustoEroles-ts1yk
@JustoEroles-ts1yk Жыл бұрын
Can you make a video about the propfan I think it is a very interesting topic to talk about please.
@JustoEroles-ts1yk
@JustoEroles-ts1yk Жыл бұрын
And also I love soviet planes even my favorite plane is a soviet plane and also ther is a plane that use propfan that is the AN-70
@justforever96
@justforever96 3 ай бұрын
Didn't he do a video about that? I know he at least covered the topic in one of his videos about one of the failed airliner prototypes of the 1980/90s.
@MrKenny777
@MrKenny777 3 ай бұрын
Its an elegant aircraft. I like the design very much.
@jve89
@jve89 Жыл бұрын
I believe there's a yak 40 on display in the aviation museum of Tartu, Estonia. Not completely sure though.
@juancas-cas9570
@juancas-cas9570 Жыл бұрын
I follow the channel in spanish. Love your videos. Could you make a video about military aerial refueling tanker aircrafts? Thank you so much. Greetings from Spain.
@oat138
@oat138 Жыл бұрын
I flew on one, it was very comfortable.
@devilsfavorite999
@devilsfavorite999 Жыл бұрын
The only soviet plane that I flew in the end of the 80s, and it was my first ever plane ride.
@petergajda3732
@petergajda3732 Жыл бұрын
A few days ago, Russia announced that the MC will be officially re-named YAK
@slartybartfast6868
@slartybartfast6868 Жыл бұрын
The Yak 40. A legend in your own mind.
@justforever96
@justforever96 3 ай бұрын
Right because there are definitely no planes like that in the Western aviation world. We are here because we _like_ planes, not to hear about all the ways they suck and were terrible and someone else did it better. Most of my favorite aircraft were flawed in some way, it makes them more interesting. And bad aircraft don't serve for decades in large numbers.
@badcompany-w6s
@badcompany-w6s Жыл бұрын
Well that's a shame things didn't turn out like they wanted it to. It wasn't a bad looking plane. Nice and simple straightforward.
@rehanansari3581
@rehanansari3581 8 ай бұрын
The aeroplane failed due to heavyweight. Instead of two three engines were installed further the over seating capacity resulted in a failure.
@ouroboris
@ouroboris Жыл бұрын
15:20 What the heck is that thing?
@andrewlandry625
@andrewlandry625 Жыл бұрын
With five percent of the aircraft built being involved in fatal accidents I’m not sure I’d ever feel safe on a YAK-42☹️!
@rhodium1096
@rhodium1096 Жыл бұрын
Most of them Human error like the locomotiv disaster or in Turkey with Spanish soldiers returning from Afghanistan
@amiralavi5585
@amiralavi5585 Жыл бұрын
I'm really curious about the status of projects such as MS21 following international sanctions.
@dougstubbs9637
@dougstubbs9637 Жыл бұрын
The 99% of development are realistically achievable, but that final ONE Percent, the tiny bit which prevents aircraft from falling from the sky….well….thank you for shining the spotlight on Soviet domestic airliners. The aircraft known as the Yak 20, AND Yak 40, thank you also.
@filanfyretracker
@filanfyretracker Жыл бұрын
I think there is a joke that airplanes are 100,000 parts flying in formation and 99% of the time they agree on the same destination.
@justforever96
@justforever96 3 ай бұрын
​@@filanfyretrackerit is way more than 99% of the time or the accident rate would be unacceptably high. Like there are thousands of 737s flying at any given moment, something like 20,000 daily flights. If one out of 100 flights ended in parts flying off we would have hundreds of crashes. I suppose if you want to count all forms of mechanical failure in that number, that might be accurate, but that usually only amounts to some minor system acting up somewhere and needing service, backup being used to complete the flight. Parts "leaving the formation" is pretty rare. But yes, a large aircraft is unbelievably complex. People love to complain about airlines and maintenance, but the fact that they manage to keep these intensely complex and expensive machines flying multiple times a day for years, decades, with such a low failure rate, is really incredible. If you tried using a normal passenger car on a duty cycle like an airliner, constantly being used, a stream of passengers coming on and off, rough landings, takeoffs, cold and heat, rain, running for hours on end, it would only last a few years before it was totally worn out, even with regular maintenance. Airliners are built more like commercial trucks, which can easily do a million miles in their career, pulling tens of thousands of pounds of freight. They don't make cars that way because most people don't need anything like that capability, and because the quality is reflected in the cost of the product. People like to flex that they paid $200,000 for a fancy car, but that's not an unusual price for a heavy truck or tractor, let alone an aircraft, which also has to be light and fail-proof. I just find that idea amusing, the guy in his Ferrari feeling all superior while he doesn't realize the farmer plowing his field next to him actually paid three times as much for his "mundane" tractor. And the farmer will get his money back out of his tractor, hopefully. The Ferrari is just a method of wasting money to demonstrate that you can afford to waste money. You could just go burn stacks of cash and get the same result. I remember when I was a kid and I found out that a pedestrian, slow, boring little Cessna Caravan cost $1.5M to buy. That's about the cheapest passenger/transport plane you can get. It's closer to $2M now. Somehow that was very eye-opening to me.
@anthonyhalpin66
@anthonyhalpin66 16 күн бұрын
I flew on a Tatarstan Airlines Yak-24, lovely plane but not maintained (seeing wires hanging down from where the overhead lights were meant to be did not inspire confidence)
@kolasillers7776
@kolasillers7776 Жыл бұрын
15:52- RIP Karlis Skrastins.
@leo88aum
@leo88aum Жыл бұрын
Good morning from Toronto ❤
@SkyshipsEng
@SkyshipsEng Жыл бұрын
Good morning!
@daylate
@daylate Жыл бұрын
I thought you said yak 42... Then i heard stabilizer problem and grounded for 2 years... Then it's Booing you are talking about right? 737 Maxi pad.
@Rudy_Play
@Rudy_Play 6 ай бұрын
As far I know 737 MAX crashed because of autopilot, wasn't it?
@daylate
@daylate 6 ай бұрын
@@Rudy_Play no, because of MCAS. The Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS) is a flight control system designed for the Boeing 737 MAX to improve handling and reduce pitch-up at high angles of attack. MCAS is designed to activate automatically in manual flight when the flaps are up and the plane's angle of attack (AOA) is too high relative to air speed. When activated, MCAS pushes the nose down to reduce the AOA to an acceptable level. The Boeing Company 737 MAX Software Update Inteq Group Boeing 737 Max MCAS Software Epiphany - Inteq Group Jan 25, 2024 - Rather than redesigning the airframe to accommodate the new engines Boeing cho... SKYbrary Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS) | SKYbrary Aviation Safety MCAS has several safety features to prevent it from overriding the pilot's control of the plane: It only activates if data from two AOA sensors agree. It only activates once. In 2018, after the Lion Air accident, Boeing instructed pilots to take action if the plane entered a series of automated nosedives, but didn't reveal the existence of MCAS until pilots asked for more information. In December of that year, the FAA privately predicted that MCAS could cause 15 crashes over 30 years. Boeing later admitted to misleading statements about MCAS and settled with victims' families and airlines, paying $2.5 billion in total. Generative AI is experimental.
@hosseinhosseini4194
@hosseinhosseini4194 Жыл бұрын
I worked for an airline that leased the YAK 42 D for a short period in Iran. It was very underpower and didn't like any temperature above 24 C. Made to fly in Russia only !!!
@rhodium1096
@rhodium1096 Жыл бұрын
Yak 42 was flying many years in Cuba with flights to Cancun ( Mexico), Nassau ( Havana) and there are all days temperature above 24 C..
@erikziak1249
@erikziak1249 Жыл бұрын
3:33 or "Soot sling" in Czechoslovakia.
@anitaroberts8729
@anitaroberts8729 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting! Poor old Yak42! 🛩 💙 🛩
@Ethan7s
@Ethan7s Жыл бұрын
Apparently, 42 wasn’t the answer to everything.
@thomasburke7995
@thomasburke7995 Жыл бұрын
Soviet era airframes were always a curiosity in the west. Its final design was more functional (unimproved runways little ground support ) then flash. But the biggest baine of all past and current Soviet/Russian/UKRAINE airframes were those absolutely rotten engines. Over sized underpowered gas guzzling maintenance queens!
@mahiramvevo
@mahiramvevo Жыл бұрын
Always love your great work and russian sorviet aircrafts
@dad_jokes_4ever226
@dad_jokes_4ever226 Жыл бұрын
Good afternoon from the Wild Atlantic Way
@SkyshipsEng
@SkyshipsEng Жыл бұрын
And good afternoon!
@Kkp-s5c
@Kkp-s5c 4 ай бұрын
When do the other things 🤔
@TheMidasMD
@TheMidasMD Жыл бұрын
You went from talking about a crash, caused by a design error and a stabiliser mechanism failure and went straight to solving the chronic problem of short range? You should have talked about how the stabiliser problem was resolved and how grounded planes where released. The issue of short range was only resolved, I am sure, after the stabilizer problem was resolved. I have included a link to the full story of the failure in design. YAK-42 remains my absolute best Soviet era plane. As a matter of fact, it remains my absolute best looking commercial plane, along with Lockheed Tristar, till date. See link below for details about the tragic crash. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aeroflot_Flight_8641
@naughtiusmaximus830
@naughtiusmaximus830 Жыл бұрын
East Germany in the 60’s seems preferable to the USA today.
@babrakkhan411
@babrakkhan411 Жыл бұрын
Make a video on ussar 's naval awacs aircraft
@777PhilAir
@777PhilAir 4 ай бұрын
god i hate it when i get retired
@toomanybears_
@toomanybears_ 3 ай бұрын
I always like the YAK-40
@ChipMIK
@ChipMIK Жыл бұрын
You forgot "Also" in the headline...
@Rudy_Play
@Rudy_Play 6 ай бұрын
Why? Many Soviet aircraft were successful.
@ChipMIK
@ChipMIK 6 ай бұрын
@@Rudy_Play Which? When comparing equal age since intro, regarding passengers, payload, noise levels, fuel burn etc. etc. ?
@Rudy_Play
@Rudy_Play 6 ай бұрын
@@ChipMIKTu-134, Yak-40, Tu-154, Il-62, An-24, Il-76. All these aircraft actively flew to the USSR and abroad. The Yak-40 even managed to fly in Italy, and the Il-76 is still All these aircraft actively flew to the USSR and abroad. The Yak-40 even managed to fly in Italy, and the Il-76 and An-24 are still produced.
@ChipMIK
@ChipMIK 6 ай бұрын
@@Rudy_Play Yeah surely they flew...And that an aircraft manages to fly in Italy doesn't really make it a winner vs. competitors and can be due to many factors. That Il-76 & An-24 still are in production doesn't really tell how efficient and economic it is in production in a regime like Russia when comparing those to what else is on the market across the world...Just like the other models you mentioned where most if not all are outdated by a zillion standards and never were a true competitor for anything in anything but 3. world countries or dictatorship countries that for other reasons couldn't get or afford new modern aircrafts.
@Rudy_Play
@Rudy_Play 6 ай бұрын
@@ChipMIK An-24 produced in China. And there is no need to speculate about the effectiveness of the Il-76. It is enough to look at how many airlines operate it, and this plane even is flying with one US airline, given that the U.S. has it's own cargo planes. Oh, really? The Il-62 was a direct competitor to the Boeing 707, DC-8 and VC-10, at the same time, it was safer than all of them. Moreover, it was developed in parallel with the VC-10, while being easier to maintain and did not fail unlike the VC-10. And Turkey, Egypt, Pakistan also operated the Tu-154. I think they could afford Western aircraft.
@AO-ow6tt
@AO-ow6tt Жыл бұрын
The Yak-42D is a nice looking aircraft that could have been successful hadn't it have some design flaws which could have been fixed like the Boeing 737 which is known for high rates of technical failures. The model could be successful if revived with a full digital modernization and motorized with 2 high bypass fuel efficient turbofan engine.
@ihsanullahkhan3422
@ihsanullahkhan3422 Жыл бұрын
Yak 42 is a very slow aircraft as has been seen when yak42 took off much before 737 and destinations were the same and 737 arrived much earlier
@stevenzeeland9670
@stevenzeeland9670 3 ай бұрын
In 2024, when Russia makes daily news in a bad way? There is something sweet about seeing these beautiful (if sometimes flawed -- like recent Boeing MAX) SO COOL Soviet planes that I feel a personal sad regret that I will never get to fly.
@omerfar
@omerfar Жыл бұрын
It was soooooo loud you will not believe it…
@skylineXpert
@skylineXpert Жыл бұрын
Cannot forget the FC lokomotiv disaster
@JoshuaC923
@JoshuaC923 Жыл бұрын
17:30 DC-10ski
@marcelfermer5369
@marcelfermer5369 Жыл бұрын
I really cannot understand the USSR: even when it had a good product it couldn't use it nationally or sell it abroad. WTF ?
@MarcosJohn-xi9km
@MarcosJohn-xi9km Жыл бұрын
The problem is that Russia does not partner with its allies to develop and obtain funding
@Pangolin_6483
@Pangolin_6483 Жыл бұрын
Don't try to understand a socialist economy in capitalist terms; there is a lot there that is irrational from a capitalist point of view. For example, the Soviet Union did not own a single enterprise or company operating abroad that profited from workers from other countries; from the Soviet point of view, this was ideologically unacceptable, which is why modern Russia could not retain its allies that the USSR had. Capitalist and socialist economies are fundamentally different, they have different goals and, because of this, different products that cannot effectively exist and be produced in the opposite system. That is why most Soviet products in the capitalist world turned out to be unclaimed, because they were originally created for other conditions in the outside world.
@rhanemann9100
@rhanemann9100 Жыл бұрын
I flew on a Tu-134, but never a Yak-42. Too bad.
@Rudy_Play
@Rudy_Play 6 ай бұрын
Well, it is still flying
@stephenconnolly3018
@stephenconnolly3018 Жыл бұрын
If history has told one thing never get in a Russian I was travelled in a YAK airliner I was shocked how badly made it was not even the seat belts worked.
@erictaylor5462
@erictaylor5462 Жыл бұрын
If you aren't Boeing, don't try to build a 727.
@wanderschlosser1857
@wanderschlosser1857 Жыл бұрын
They built the Tu-154 which was successful and was more comparable to the 727.
@erictaylor5462
@erictaylor5462 Жыл бұрын
@@wanderschlosser1857 true. I'm just joking of course, but the fact that Soviet/Russian airliners look like Western airliners has more to do with the limited number of best configurations for airliners. The American and Soviet Space Shuttles look almost exactly the same, yet the Soviet Shuttle was a completely independent design. If you want to make a space shuttle that side, that is how it will always look.
@Rudy_Play
@Rudy_Play 6 ай бұрын
Have you heard about Hawker Trident? It was before 727
@DavidJones-me7yr
@DavidJones-me7yr 4 ай бұрын
I flew on a yak airplane in the late 2000s. I believe it was in Ukraine and I think it was with the Ukraine National Airline?? I know for a fact it was a yak,, and the 42 sounds very familiar. I also flew on a Saab plane which was a prop plane,, noisy but smooth!
@olegadodasguerras3795
@olegadodasguerras3795 Жыл бұрын
Best airplane channek
@erictaylor5462
@erictaylor5462 Жыл бұрын
0:40 Who taught that guy how to fly? Also, who painted that runway?
@Bac4-qu6qg7sk4v
@Bac4-qu6qg7sk4v Жыл бұрын
russian "special civilization" on display
@johniii8147
@johniii8147 Жыл бұрын
Too bad they couldn't have just used the DC-9.
@Sacto1654
@Sacto1654 Жыл бұрын
Had they fixed the Yak-42 problems earlier, it's likely the plane would have been common sights even in Western Europe, operated by eastern European airlines flying to western Europe.
@10Haille
@10Haille Жыл бұрын
I rember the crash that killed the hocky team that was'nt the fault but the dude flying it. It hit the hocky fans in the Us hard to the life taken away at sunch at a young age.❣️❣️❣️🌹🌹💖💖🌺🌺💞💞🥺🥺😬😬
Yak-40 | A village trijet
22:27
Skyships Eng
Рет қаралды 203 М.
IL-62 - an ideal option
27:36
Skyships Eng
Рет қаралды 1 МЛН
Каха и дочка
00:28
К-Media
Рет қаралды 3,4 МЛН
Beat Ronaldo, Win $1,000,000
22:45
MrBeast
Рет қаралды 158 МЛН
Une nouvelle voiture pour Noël 🥹
00:28
Nicocapone
Рет қаралды 9 МЛН
WHY Did The Tupolev Tu-144 Fail?!
22:29
Mentour Now!
Рет қаралды 542 М.
Why the Soviet wide body airliner failed? Il-86
13:44
Found And Explained
Рет қаралды 249 М.
Fokker 100 | From success to failure
13:21
Skyships Eng
Рет қаралды 111 М.
A Brief History: The Boeing 757
14:25
The Only Nolan
Рет қаралды 8 М.
Tu-114 - the most Soviet airliner in the world
26:32
Skyships Eng
Рет қаралды 1,3 МЛН
IL-18 - airliner for everyone
22:33
Skyships Eng
Рет қаралды 328 М.
The Soviet Union's Deadliest Crash: The Tu-154 Crash at Uchquduq
18:20
The Horrible History of Russian Fighter Jets: Beginnings
2:18:00
Animarchy History
Рет қаралды 290 М.
Sud Aviation Caravelle - the jet lady
16:39
Skyships Eng
Рет қаралды 191 М.
Was This The Most Dangerous Airliner Ever?
13:50
Mustard
Рет қаралды 6 МЛН
Каха и дочка
00:28
К-Media
Рет қаралды 3,4 МЛН