America Spying with the Corona Satellites
My companion blog post to this video is up on Medium: amyshirateitel.medium.com/ame...
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The U-2 series!
Part 1: Origins • U-2: How the Spy Plane...
Part 2: First Flights • The "Invisible" U-2 Im...
Part 3: The Powers Incident • What Really Happened w...
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Пікірлер: 467
As a machinist, i built the frame that the camera's were mounted to on these spy satellite's! That was on a tape controlled machining center back then! One broken tap would junk the entire 6 ft piece!
@chevystuffs5971
3 жыл бұрын
My first real machine shop job was at a place called "Tapemation." There were still, no longer used, tape reels close to some of the old HSK 5 axis machines.
@adrianhdragon718
2 жыл бұрын
Cool. In a parallel life Science, Innovation and Technology would have been my chosen path.....tell me more details ;0
@haunter_1845
7 күн бұрын
Back then Bridgeport made tape driven machines using controls from Moog for milling, drilling, peck drilling, boring, and tapping. These machines were capable of making great parts, or serious carnage. Everything had to be right.
I am loving this series; puts 'commercial TV' to shame. Just amazing. Thanks so much.
@qetoun
3 жыл бұрын
TV is dead.
@deadhamster7570
3 жыл бұрын
To be honest: American TV is impressively sh*tty.
@roberthouston9272
3 жыл бұрын
@@deadhamster7570 most assuredly.
@bobair2
3 жыл бұрын
I gave up T.V. in April 2013 and I do not miss it!
@dictumobiter1365
3 жыл бұрын
@@qetoun live broadcast tv=half dead, TELEVISION=healthy alive😉😉😉
Fun fact: every time Amy says "Corona," KZread's algorithm goes haywire.
@cernowaingreenman
3 жыл бұрын
:(
@roberthouston9272
3 жыл бұрын
Haha, good.
@flexairz
3 жыл бұрын
@@cernowaingreenman Don't be afraid. The common flu kills some 500000 every year...
@RobertWormald
3 жыл бұрын
@@flexairz and worldwide mortality from Covid is 2.2 million in one year, even after lockdowns and controls to minimise impact. So your point is what?
@michaeldunne338
3 жыл бұрын
There is a wide spread with such estimates, if looking at the world as a whole. Like estimates ranging from 250,000 to 500,000 deaths for particular years, or 291,000 to 646,000 deaths by other studies. Personally when I hear corona, I first think of the cerveza ...
Great video Amy! FYI my father designed the Elint package for that GRAB satellite! A replica and his notes from it's first transmission is on display at the Air and Space Museum in D.C.!
Dad worked on this program for years, first from Sunnyvale, then from Vandenberg AFB. Love hearing outside accounts of what he was FINALLY able to talk about with us (his family) just a few years ago following declassification... just to work on the program, he had to have his wife/my mom vetted for a Top Secret clearance (even though he still wasn't supposed to talk about it, lol)! Thanks, Amy!
My late ex-father-in-law (late father of my ex-wife) flew air rescue in the South Pacific during WW-II, Korea, and Vietnam. He also flew Corona air-snatch missions in the early 1960s. The stories he had...! And the stories he couldn't tell must have been even more amazing.
I once spent over an hour talking to a vintage old dude in isle 9 at the Andrews AFB Commissary. He was a JC-130A pilot that first wanted to know if I was on C-130s today. No, I said I was C-17s, but upon asking what he did, I lost all track of time listening to his story. My crew abandoned me to meet up at a bar later, but he recommended to read the book, To Catch A Falling Star. Great read of a fascinating USAF operation.
My father was a major part of the photo section on these projects. As an engineer on this thing, they were all swarn to total secrecy. This was a monumental effort commissioned by the CIA. We lived in Rochester NY at the time, most people don't know that Kodak, founded in Rochester, was a major defense contractor dating back to WW1. Great vid Amy.
@BobGeogeo
Ай бұрын
I found some still sealed rolls of Kodak reconnaissance film at a surplus sale once in the '80s. From memory one roll was about 8" wide and the other close to a foot. Both were several hundred feet long.
At the time this was going on a designer at Estes Rockets developed a model rocket to carry a 8mm movie camera. It was called Cineroc. There is a video on KZread about the history of Estes Rockets.
@MrJackHackney
3 жыл бұрын
My friend and I launched the camroc and cineroc . Had to wait weeks to get the film developed.
@KK-pq6lu
2 жыл бұрын
Mr. Estes took the time to write back to me when I wrote him. That’s how much he cared.
Love your attention to detail. Keep 'em coming!
Reconnaissance. Now we need to hear you say, “sabotage!”
@RCAvhstape
3 жыл бұрын
Also, the way she pronounces "projects" is pretty cool.
@NathanDudani
3 жыл бұрын
@@RCAvhstape prohgeyts
@leftcoaster67
3 жыл бұрын
She can, but she's needs Beastie Boys music in the background.....
@Animalwon
3 жыл бұрын
you are hearing a French accent when she pronounces "Reconnaissance".
@leftcoaster67
3 жыл бұрын
@@Animalwon I'm Canadian. Thats the first time I've heard it pronounced that way. But I like her videos. Not crazy about The in front of Vintage Space. I assume there's a copyright thing over it?
Would love to see a series like this from the Soviet angle. I've heard about the Corona sats and their recovery, but I have no idea what early USSR spyware was like.
@davelowe1977
3 жыл бұрын
Sounds like they were better at it!
@Sacto1654
3 жыл бұрын
Well, the Russians essentially used a variant of the Vostok spacecraft for reconnaissance work, launched from Plesetsk in northern Russia.
@Mongler37
3 жыл бұрын
Usually Soviet spycraft involved sending field agents to get moose and squirrel.
@dukenukem8381
3 жыл бұрын
Well USA was not behind iron curtain for one, and not a homogeneous nation racial wise, so it was much easier to spy on USA using just ordinary espionage infiltration. Also capitalism is prone to sell all of its tech eventually. So you dont need to spy , after 5-10 years IBM will just sell it to you. Also spy military tech is usually about only 30% better than top of the line ordinary tech, soviets could have just purchase it thru agents and so on. USA did not have such luxury.
@leefithian3704
3 жыл бұрын
Man , those guys should really dig through their archives, hard stuff for a previously closed society , so many in the know are gone , or even let go with a bang from behind , yes , it would be interesting
I worked with a couple engineers who worked on corona and Hubble at Perkin Elmer. They were amazingly talented and collaborative.
Amy: **says corona** KZread: I now diagnose you with hidden
I've taken that Amtrak train through Vandenburg, you can see the SpaceX and ULA launch complexes not too far away.
Really enjoying this series. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
Great Job Amy!!! Concise, to the point, but packed with interesting historical information. I lived through that wild time, so knew a lot but not all of the story details. Thanks for the very well done video.
About that Southern Pacific rail line. The SP had a Train Order Station located near the base. In the days before radio, train orders were how railroads gave special instructions to train crews, like if one train was running late, or an extra unscheduled train was running. It was in the down range zone, and if a rocket were to fail, the debris and flaming fuel could fall onto the office. So the air force build a bomb shelter behind the office and a hot line to base operations. The procedure was they would call and warn the operator and dispatcher 15 minutes before a launch, the operator would head for the shelter, and wait until another phone there would ring giving the operator a all clear.
Anyone else binging on all things Vintage Space channel? So much good stuff here.
In a contemporary context, "Corona Spy Satellites" sounds like a conspiracy meme right alongside "Jewish Space Lasers"
@anarchyantz1564
3 жыл бұрын
You should let your GOP lawmakers know about that they have expanded from releasing the virus via "ChemTrails" to using satellites.
@paulslevinsky580
3 жыл бұрын
That's called "Iron Dome". They don't work...but don't ell anyone.
@colfaxschuyler3675
3 жыл бұрын
Wait... You KNOW about those? You're brave to mention it. Right now, Goog/ABC is using the magicks of the Interweb to track your packets! Although everybody knows that Corona is Bill Gates' baby, to get everybody injected with his meshed networked nano bots, after which, we all get switched into The Network, and become widely-distributed, low-capacity, wet compute nodes. On the plus side, we all get the Home Use Program licenses for Microsoft O365, to run spreadsheets in our dreams.
@anarchyantz1564
3 жыл бұрын
@@colfaxschuyler3675 The main use of Bill Gates chip is also to help us all network freely on the interwebs and to block the mind controlling chips and apps used by Apple in their bid to further the "Cult of the Fruit" which coerces their user base to force their over priced tech on others knowing full well they will be made to upgrade in months or face "bricking". Many are fearful of leaving the cult due to their now embedded tech being forced into obsolescence and labelled as a "Brick". The Network on the other hand hopes to ease users off this so they can actually game as well as continue their spreadsheet fantasies. All hail Gates! Down with the Fruit!
@colfaxschuyler3675
3 жыл бұрын
@@anarchyantz1564 "Face bricking...". Hmm. Either as punishment, or as an attempt to defeat facial recognition!
Very interesting video and history of the Corona Satellites program. Good job Amy, looking forward to the next video about the "black birds". I did not know how long we had to catch the capsules in mid-air by passing airplanes . Thank You, please keep the great videos coming.
As always, incredibly well researched and presented. Again I learn something new, always. Thank you Amy, truly.
Yey ! Can we get a "Reconasanse" ..GO Canada 🇨🇦🥰
@NicolasPare
3 жыл бұрын
You sir are a conoissior.
@Vadjong
3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, but still feet and pounds.. booh!
@ltandrepants
3 жыл бұрын
aooot and abaaooot
@Animalwon
3 жыл бұрын
What you are hearing is a French accent in how she pronounces "Reconnaissance".
@Vadjong
3 жыл бұрын
@@Animalwon No, what you are hearing is the correct(-ish) pronunciation of a french word. Not a french accent, but rather a canadian accent of actual french. [language police over and out] 🤗
Why don't you have over 1mil subscribers yet? You're amazing. Love the content and you're nostalgic style
From 1954 until 1999 in the UK, packets of Brooke Bond tea included illustrated cards, usually 50 in a series, which were collected by many children, including myself. The subject of the 1971 series was 'The Race into Space' which included a card on the American 'Discoverer' series of 'scientific' satellites. Yet another part of the 'hiding in plain sight' cover story for the Corona program. In fact, I may still have that old card set packed away somewhere.
@jp5481
3 жыл бұрын
I had tons of those little cards out of the teabags when I was a kid. My nanna practically lived on tea 😂 No idea what happened them, shame...
Thank you for a great overview of Carona. My dad worked on the optical design and testing-and later the image interpretation of Corona/Hexagon - both at Itek and Perkin Elmer. We of course had no idea of what he was working on at the time. When the initial de-classification of the project happened in the early 1990's, dad took great joy in bringing out the imagery from his files, and explaining the photo-telemetry and ground-truth checking that he and his colleges used to assess the Soviet threat. I love that I can go and view a light table that he actually helped design and sat at to inspect Carona imagery at the Udvar-Hazy Center of the Smithsonian Institute Air and Space Museum.
I lived in Switzerland until 1964. Any technical news quite simply never came my way. Thanks for filling the gap.
Your ability to weave a story through these programs is incredible!
Thank you Amy, this series is so enjoyable!
New to your channel but I really enjoyed your Video on the early spy satellite programs. I love space and discussions of how we got to where we are are badly needed now. Btw I saw your series on why you might not cover the Space shuttle on your vlog; know you do have supporters out there. "You do you" and what drives your love of space is your business your vlog is cool and your really fans will stay for the content you love and they style they love. There are so many over looked stories from the early years that need to be told you'll never run out of content. Look forward to more Vintage Space.
I came across your series while currently collecting Soviet watches from the 70s and 80s... I’m newly subbed, to say the least. Your videos are incredibly well-researched and the dialogue is thoroughly engrossing! Excellent stuff.
Excellent presentation. However, it left me wanting more. A topic worthy of an entire episode: The Hubble Space Telescope and its origins with the KH-11 and KH-13 NRO _Keyhole_ Birds (good luck getting declassified reports).
I'm really loving this channel
Great series. Can't wait for the rest.
The title looks like a headline we would've seen at the start of the pandemic 🤣🦠
@Hans-gb4mv
3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, just trace all those sick people with a satellite and lock em up. Or use them to see if we are social distancing.
@MacDaddyRico
3 жыл бұрын
PLANdemic... Research "Event 201"... Research "Georgia Guide Stones"...
@roberthouston9272
3 жыл бұрын
@@MacDaddyRico yep, control grid.
Whoa!!! Packed with sooooo much info.....I thought I had been listening for hours. I remember being blown away as a kid when visiting the Museum of Science and Technology in Chicago and they had a display of photo's taken from space. The photo sequence gradually focused on NYC to a bee on a woman's leg sitting on a park bench in Central Park. I went back to that display about 5 time's throughout the day spent there. Never forget that......utterly amazing. Sorry.......still can't get over.....recona....."sance". It just makes you even more endearing than you are naturally. Thanks for the waaaaay excellent work .......love it all. 💖🚀💖🚀💖🚀💖🚀💖🚀💖🚀💖🚀💖🚀💖🚀💖🚀💖🚀💖🚀💖🚀💖🚀💖
@thebobs9343
3 жыл бұрын
Musta been the leg that caught your attention. it would me.
Really enjoying this series on the u2/corona/sr71!!! Awesome content.
Excellent documentary! Well done. Great history!! Especially the film and env tech required to make it work, but also the recovery methods in the beginning. Crazy tough.
Brilliant series, Amy, thanks. So much detail and background context in these videos we'll be able to re-watch them several times and still enjoy them.
"Pork Chops & Re-conn-ai-ssance" (smile takes me back).
1:05 My Canadian alert sense is tingling
Love the video, great work as always!
Good to see you again, Amy! Quality content as always.
A Fun Fact: Did anybody here know that Richard Bissell named his "Corona" program after his Smith-Corona typewriter? This is true. The largest CIA spy program of the time was named after a typewriter. BTW, dear Amy, I've been a fan of your channel ever since you began. You have matured over the years but you have not aged. As a New Jersey resident, I love your Canadian accent and the way you say "missile" and "reconnaissance". I've learned so much over the years from your videos due to my interest in things about outer space. Thank you for all of your years of dedication in educating us in the field of Space Technology. You have a master's degree in your field of study. MIT should give you a doctorate degree for all of the good work you have done to educate us over the years.
I so love the way Amy says "reconnaissance".
@mikemclennan8917
3 жыл бұрын
I prefer it pronounced the way everybody else does. Making up your own tends not to be productive.
@christophbader3713
2 жыл бұрын
She might be canadian?
Hi Amy. Thank you for the interesting videos.
Another great video Amy. Thank you.
From riding a rocket to sitting on a comfy chair moving your foot. I love the new intro. You da (wo)man.
Very informative and interesting video young lady. Thanks for sharing.
CNBC coined the moniker "MONEY HUNNY"... Amy has given us a new one... "BOOSTER BABE"! LOL
Another excellent video, thanks Amy
Corona payload retrieval reminds me of the McGuffin being pursued in "Ice Station Zebra".
@richardvernon317
3 жыл бұрын
That is because the McGuffin is a Recce Satellite film containor and not a McGuffin.
Nice piece on a very important program in space history that interestingly enough has been kind of underappreciated. In 30+ minutes, the video covered much ground (I was checking out the Haynes edition on US Spy Satellites as the video progressed; and found the clip distilled some complex topics and series of events really well) ...
Thanks for this video. This is one of my favorite spy satellite programs. The "Rube Goldberg" nature of it, with so many moving parts that have to work correctly in sequence, is fascinating to me. There is a KH9 Hexagon satellite on display at the US Air Force Museum in Dayton Ohio. Really interesting to see it up close.
Great EP. I think this is my fourth or fifth time watching this one...and more for the US-Soviet hietory than just the space based aspect.
I love your look,style and information!
I've only watched the first minute/intro to this episode and I'm in love. Not every day you find a gal who's passionate about Cold War-era military history and technology. Cool, cute and smart as Oppenheimer... Marry me? Side note: I've never before heard 'reconissance' pronounced like 'renaissance' but I like it. Might even love it. Fer realzz tho, keep up the awesome episodes and I --we-- will continue watching. Thanks and hugs from San Francisco 🤗
You're Canadian! I just realized it when at 1:04 you say, "I'd recommend checking those oot."
13:03 C-119 Fairchild Flying Boxcar, I remember seeing them flying in the Philadelphia area when I was growing up. A very distinctive airplane. I remember seeing very coarse resolution weather pictures in the local newspapers at the time. I never made the connection how important these weather pictures were to successful operation of the spy satellites.
This is the best series on KZread
Thank you so much for the amazing content. Very classy look.
enjoying your recent vid topics Amy - ty - 🛸👽💚
KZread algorithm will love this vid. Hope you don't get flagged for being fake news.
@Erde_midget770
3 жыл бұрын
Or for "Terrorism Against the West" or some BS.
Amy, I'm loving this series. Earlier today, I watched Destin over at his "Smarter Every Day" channel do an excellent video on the Lunar Lander Trainer. I couldn't help but think that this subject would have been perfect for one of your deep-dives into Apollo-era hardware.
Damn, Amy. Nice work! Thanks.
Excellent series great attention to detail 👍🌏
Love that dress you're wearing BTW. Reminds me of those shirts you see on Curious Droid.
Love it, as usual! Great to recall many of the details and learn more-- I was a space wonky kid but not as diligent as I wished. Fortunately, you came along to help. My only observation is that while corona, indeed refers to emissions from an outer layer of the Sun-- "corona" effects on film are internal to the camera and static electricity discharges related to plastic sliding over metal (pet cat (Pete!) and touch doorknob). So the Sun's corona does not affect the film, but corona discharge does.
Super good info and program! I try never to miss you as you expand my knowledge so greatly. I was a boy during that time frame and always interested in space/science fiction/anything to do with aircraft. I remember vividly lying on top of the barn on our farm/ranch, smoking cigarette and see Sputnik tumbling in it's low-Earth orbit....then Telstar....etc. What an exciting time to be alive! We didn't know much about the "eye in the sky" because our government was playing it 'close to the vest' in the days of Cold War intrigue. I was planning to join the Air Force as soon as I graduated so to be part of the excitement of space and aircraft.......alas, it was not to be. Shortly before graduation, I was found to have eyesight changes that forced me to wear glasses and would keep me out of fighter aircraft. It was so disappointing but, in the end, it allowed me to have a better job than being a "grunt" in Viet Nam.....so.....what the heck. Thanks for you uploads; I try never to miss one! Tom
Totally worth watching and hearing, great job! Cheers!
You make some amazing videos, keep up the awesome content. A fellow history buff and space nerd
I’ve found myself drawn to Cold War history over the last year because I find the absolute insanity of this time comforting. The Cold War was an existential crisis humanity survived using reason, accomplishing fantastic things in the process. Science was the tip of the spear. Something I find disheartening is that modern American society would have burned the world 1,000 times over if the Cold War was happening now. We’ve abandoned reason and science. The stories of how much we (humanity) was able to do with archaic technology is amazing... but now? Vaccines are a personal choice instead of a societal courtesy. It’s absurd. Your videos have become a major comfort during the pandemic. It’s fitting that some of the best content in this genre comes from a Canadian given the best documentary on the moon landing’s 50th anniversary came from the BBC. Thank you. There may be hope for us yet.
It has been a long tome since you posted a video. Great video!!!
Thanks Amy!
Wow. Every subscriber should refer to this lady as Dr. Amy as each episode is fully researched, written and presented in PhD dissertation quality. It makes me feel a bit old to realize Dr. Amy's historical research interest is within my lifetime and often, as in this episode, remember reading of some of the space attempts in my old Weekly Reader of my junior high school years, particularly the parachute snagging. I appreciate the accent and wonder why Richard "Bissel" doesn't rhyme with "missile" in Amy's delightful "Canadian." Nice to see the word corona not followed by "virus", too.
@owensmith7530
3 жыл бұрын
"Bissel" does not rhyme with "Missile" in British English either.
My dad worked as a manager on the Atlas-Agena program. When that was shut down, the company asked for suggestions to keep things going. He suggested selling space in capsules for the ashes of the cremated. He soon lost his job. He had worked for Northrup in th '50s and hated it. My mother encouraged him to try to getting a job with them. He wouldn't budge. So she sent his resumé to Northrup where he spent the rest of his life (another 10 years), there, designing/inventing flight test instrumentation. Earlier, in the '40s, because he was studying physics, he wasn't drafted into the war. But right after he got his degree in '46... off he went to Los Alamos to work on ballistics for the atom bomb.
Thank you.
Thankyou bringer of awesome
Interesting video on Corona...thx so much!
Wonderful research and story telling. Thank you!
Great Job Amy!😊👍
Extremely impressive and professional.
Great video . Awesome job.
The interplay between this program and the arial one is fascinating. As one struggled, the other took over. It's a great story.
Thankyou Amy, Another very informative video. I learn something new with every video. 🙂
I love how you say: "reconnaissance"!
Inspiring. Thanks Amy, well told bit of history.
Welcome back. happy new year
Keep up the great work.
Thank you for this I have worked to preserve some of this film and its cool to see the full story
Think you you do a lovely job in your presentation thank you
As always great content. I once saw a short documentary on the rover. It's a good origin story itself. I would love to hear your perspective on it. ( 9 years old me had the wind-up rover that came with Tang. ) Your Great, Thanks.
More excellent content. Thanks.
Highly informative and very classy. You get a subscribe!
I was fascinated by this project after I came across a PBS NOVA program on Eisenhower's Corona satellite series several years ago.
Awesome! An new episode!! WOOO!
One of your better presentations, Amy. BTW, I just love the way you pronounce reconnaissance.
@owensmith7530
3 жыл бұрын
I hadn't noticed anything unusual about the pronunciation. 0:26 for example is exactly how British English says it. Do Americans pronounce it differently?
Thanks for the Video. Good luck with the Vine jump and the goomba jump
Amy, CMOS is the more common digital camera sensor vice CCD.
@constantinexi6893
3 ай бұрын
"SAMOS," not CMOS.
I love it space ventures tnx idol