MiG-25 - the king of interceptors

Ғылым және технология

The MiG-25 is a Soviet supersonic fighter-interceptor, created at the Mikoyan and Gurevich Design Bureau in the 1960s.
The aircraft was created as the main component of the unified air defense system of the USSR and was supposed to neutralize the threat of high-speed high-altitude penetration by supersonic strategic bombers and reconnaissance aircraft of the US Air Force, such as the A-12, SR-71 and XB-70. The MiG-25, capable of flying at altitudes of up to 25 km at speeds of up to 3000 km/h, has won many world records and is considered one of the fastest aircraft in the world.
The MiG-25 family had many modifications: the basic MiG-25P interceptor and MiG-25R reconnaissance aircraft, as well as two-seat variants, bombers, carriers of special missiles, and so on.
More than 1,190 aircraft were produced between 1969 and 1985, some of which were exported to several countries in the Middle East and Asia. At the moment, most of the fleet has been removed from service.
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00:00 - Interceptor League Champion
00:46 - Threats and solutions
04:15 - Supersonic heart
06:09 - E-150 and E-152
07:34 - E-155
10:50 - Power plant
12:16 - Steel body
13:34 - Fuel
15:14 - Cockpit and equipment
16:54 - Alcohol
17:43 - Birth of the MiG-25
18:36 - FoxBat
20:00 - Taming of the stallion
20:55 - Production
22:07 - Flights and weapons
30:10 - MiG-25 and SR-71
33:12 - Hijacking and its consequences
37:06 - Combat experience
42:03 - Energia-Buran
40:43 - The age of speed

Пікірлер: 1 100

  • @nateweter4012
    @nateweter4012Ай бұрын

    There’s just something about these old Soviet machines. They are unapologetically utilitarian, and one would think that’d make them hideous, but they have a grace and beauty that’s entirely their own. The Su-15 Flagon, the Mig-21, the Mig 23, the Mig 25, the Mi-8 and Mi-24. I find all of these machine beautiful.

  • @Audfile

    @Audfile

    Ай бұрын

    You say that now, it's like a photoshop from a dating site. Up close they are hideous. Grace and beauty lmao. You've never seen one next to an F16.

  • @TomasFunes-rt8rd

    @TomasFunes-rt8rd

    Ай бұрын

    I saw hundreds of weapons systems at the great open air displays of Russia, all the way up to armoured trains and a US Pershing II nuclear missile (WTF??) yet the one that bowled me over to meet in the flesh was the MiG-25 !! It felt like it was doing Mach 3 just standing in the grass....

  • @YankeeVatnik1917

    @YankeeVatnik1917

    Ай бұрын

    The war in ukraine has proved that the Soviets understood what warfare is all Soviet planes can take off on far less than ideal runways wear the NATO planes even a nut can complete destroy a plane. They over engineer all their weapons so only specialists can repair then and they are fragile. A Russian artillery piece you can toss it out a plane 30000 ft na parachute it land no prop. Lol. A NATO cannon is a prissy diva that only works in ideal conditions and for short periods.

  • @c1ph3rpunk

    @c1ph3rpunk

    Ай бұрын

    @@YankeeVatnik1917how’s that Warsaw Pact working out? How about that Soviet economy?

  • @borghorsa1902

    @borghorsa1902

    Ай бұрын

    MIG-25 copy of similar North American design 10 year prior.

  • @tommytwotacos8106
    @tommytwotacos8106Ай бұрын

    That crazy machine has a landing speed of 186mph! Can you imagine that? That fact that these guys didn't routinely pancake their planes just trying to set them down is a real tribute to their skill and their testicular fortitude.

  • @ThomasBestonso-zr4ko

    @ThomasBestonso-zr4ko

    29 күн бұрын

    The one thing I never understood is why a country with a plethora of titanium, built a steel airframe ?

  • @loveandforward2870

    @loveandforward2870

    28 күн бұрын

    @@ThomasBestonso-zr4ko As a CNC machinist I can tell you that titanium is exceedingly difficult and time consuming to machine.

  • @batmanmarvel

    @batmanmarvel

    28 күн бұрын

    Because it’s mass build machine

  • @loveandforward2870

    @loveandforward2870

    28 күн бұрын

    @@batmanmarvel Yes, maintaining and repairing a titanium frame would be an absolute nightmare.

  • @batmanmarvel

    @batmanmarvel

    28 күн бұрын

    @@loveandforward2870 🤝 It's one thing to build two planes, another thing is to provide the army with thousands of migs

  • @mohb1818
    @mohb1818Ай бұрын

    I was serving as operator of MIM-23 Hawk anti aircraft missile system during 80's Iran-Iraq war, I was witnessing Iraqi MiG-25 bombers (reconnaissance version converted to high altitude bomber) entered Iranian aerospace at ultra high altitude immune to our interceptors and missiles, to save fuel, halfway through their mission they throttle engines to idle and simply glided toward furthest targets deep into Iranian territories, bombed them and turn around in a big big circle (for not loosing energy and speed) and return back to Iraq while still ideling and gliding, still have enough altitude to be safe, a genius tactic changing relatively short range aircraft to very long range bomber. they adopted this tactic from Russian when the Soviet reconnaissance MiG-25s entered Iranian aerospace in same manner to gather Intel from Iranian F-14 base in Isfahan and CIA facilities inside Iran in 70's, gliding across whole country and land in Oman.

  • @alfa99121

    @alfa99121

    Ай бұрын

    Fascinating info

  • @hotstepper887

    @hotstepper887

    Ай бұрын

    True, this is when we saw a MiG-25, tracked, flying over Sinai at Mach 3.2 during this period

  • @piotrd.4850

    @piotrd.4850

    Ай бұрын

    @@hotstepper887 I believe that triggered really hot-rodded, streamlined F-4 conversion..?

  • @robertmaybeth3434

    @robertmaybeth3434

    Ай бұрын

    Thanks mate, for the brilliant comment.

  • @zulharriansyahsyamsul3970

    @zulharriansyahsyamsul3970

    Ай бұрын

    This could become great story

  • @DolleHengst
    @DolleHengstАй бұрын

    In summer 2004 i was in Taganrog, Russia, to help in a home for mentally disabled children. A humanitarian project. Anyway, we visited the military airbase, and there was a MIG 25 on display. One of the engines next to it, with a fact sheet. Children were allowed to sit in the cockpit. Even then, it had a dominant presence. From the front, it's the most menacing airplane i've ever seen. The inlets appear as one huge black hole that will devour anything in its path.

  • @SiVlog1989
    @SiVlog1989Ай бұрын

    My favourite story about the MiG 25 was the ultimately unbuilt adaptation of it to make what would have amounted to a Mach 3 Business Jet. The idea would have involved removing the weapons from the airframe and the fuselage was lengthened and widened to create space for a passenger cabin

  • @PyromaN93

    @PyromaN93

    18 күн бұрын

    How about to using MiG-25 for delivering small satellites for low orbits?

  • @SiVlog1989

    @SiVlog1989

    18 күн бұрын

    @PyromaN93 that sounds pretty cool as well :)

  • @aditj
    @aditjАй бұрын

    That was a great video on the MiG-25's development!

  • @trumanhw

    @trumanhw

    Ай бұрын

    Yup. We need one with the same details on the МиГ-31 !!!

  • @Scrat335
    @Scrat335Ай бұрын

    MIG 25 was just 2 enormous engines with wings, tail and a cockpit strapped to it.

  • @vickclash7955

    @vickclash7955

    Ай бұрын

    That’s according to the west to bash everything The Soviet built. Are you an engineer? A good engineer always give credit to other people’s work with limited resources (money). A bad engineer bash everyone!

  • @nikbg7221

    @nikbg7221

    Ай бұрын

    РЛС в носу и ракета под брюхом)

  • @PeterWT-C

    @PeterWT-C

    Ай бұрын

    Ik it looks like a brick [a fat brick]

  • @danilvinyukov2060

    @danilvinyukov2060

    Ай бұрын

    That phrase can be said about most modern combat airplanes if you look at the ratio of their engine volume to overall volume

  • @GipsyDanger41

    @GipsyDanger41

    Ай бұрын

    same with the f104 lol

  • @vipondiu
    @vipondiuАй бұрын

    32:09 "What did you today?" "Nothing, just played a little golf over a Blackbird on an aircraft carrier....the usual"

  • @isiTsotsi

    @isiTsotsi

    Ай бұрын

    that's will smith in the move " I am legend"

  • @madaxe606
    @madaxe606Ай бұрын

    The best documentary I've yet watched about this magnificent aircraft. Thank you for making this! :)

  • @cdgncgn

    @cdgncgn

    Ай бұрын

    Ka-bot 15a has great videos that cite documents. Things like SR-71 speed that was officially measured, was closer to the equator, which has colder atmosphere, compared to moscow latitude, difference in speed and altitude is lower. So, SR-71 wasnt as fast up in the north.

  • @UTTPhakim03

    @UTTPhakim03

    Ай бұрын

    😂Russian propaganda channel, mig-25 is utter shit, a quarter of F-15 would decimate it

  • @justinstrong9595

    @justinstrong9595

    Ай бұрын

    It wasn't even that good lmfao

  • @madaxe606

    @madaxe606

    Ай бұрын

    @@justinstrong9595 Why don't you make one and show us how its done then? LMFAO.

  • @user-ss6bm3vx7v

    @user-ss6bm3vx7v

    Ай бұрын

    what magnificent is there

  • @TyrannoJoris_Rex
    @TyrannoJoris_RexАй бұрын

    19:39 The F-X program that became the F-15 launched all the way back in 1965. The Americans weren’t scared into making the F-15. They were freaking out because they saw the similarities with the massive wings, squared off intakes, and twin tails in the MiG-25, and thought the Soviets had penetrated the F-X program and beat them to the punch. That’s why they assumed the MiG-25 was some super-fighter, because that’s exactly what they were going for with the F-X.

  • @Pangolin_6483

    @Pangolin_6483

    Ай бұрын

    F-X proposed many concepts for a new fighter, the Vietnam War at some point began to tilt the US Air Force towards an aircraft with the F-5 concept, light and maneuverable, but the advent of the MiG-25 forced a change in views, which ultimately led to the creation of the F-15 , although as stated in the video, the F-15 is not an analogue of the MiG-25; The Soviet equivalent of the F-15 was the Su-27.

  • @ronjon7942

    @ronjon7942

    Ай бұрын

    @@Pangolin_6483yes

  • @winternow2242

    @winternow2242

    Ай бұрын

    Mig-25 first flew before FX began, in 1964. Twin tails had been used on the A-12 and XB-70A, and are a natural alternative for high-speed aircraft that would otherwise need a single tail that would have to be much longer. Square intakes were used on the A-5 Vigilante, and were a natural choice to avoid iet airflow problems caused by the forebody of the aircraft. Nobody would have needed to be scared of the MiG-25 because the experience of American pilots in Vietnam.

  • @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    Ай бұрын

    @@Pangolin_6483 Yes but those aspects of the airframe had been decided upon prior to seeing the MiG-25. And the Lightweight Fighter Program that resulted in the F-16 was completely separate from the F-X program.

  • @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    Ай бұрын

    @@winternow2242 Yes, I'm aware those design elements weren't anything new. It wasn't about innovations, it was about perceived threat. Like I said, it was because the Americans were incorporating these features into what was supposed to be their brand new super-fighter, and then they see that the Soviets have already done the same thing on [what they assumed to be] a fighter of their own. And they didn't know much about it, including its actual role, except how it looked and that it had high performance capabilities that had shattered several previous aviation records.

  • @flankerpraha
    @flankerpraha27 күн бұрын

    As for the combat use, in Iran-Iraq war the most probable score is 19:5 in favor of MiG-25. MiG-25 is also the only type of Iraqi air force that has officially recognized hit against the allies in 1991 war, when during the first night in downed Canadian F/A-18. There was also one remarkable clash 2xMiG-25 vs. 2xF-15. But both sides fired all of their missiles but scoring no hit as the electronic countermeasures on both sides worked 100 % that day. MiG-25 is also so far the only fighter jet/interceptor that won a dogfight against a drone. It took place in 2002, a year before the US invasion MiG-25 downed a MQ-1 Predator that fired a stinger missile on it in the "no fly zone".

  • @bassam6194

    @bassam6194

    Күн бұрын

    During the Iran-Iraq War the Iraqi MiG-25 achieved the highest kill ratio after the Iraqi Mirage F1. During the Desert Storm the Iraqi MiG-25 achieved two kills vs F-18 and F-15 in 30 January 1991 in Operation Samurra.

  • @DNG12900
    @DNG12900Ай бұрын

    So Americans thought to make Valkyrie, Soviets learned of that and made Mig 25, Americans saw it and thought its stats were real so they made F15 and when they learned that its stats were exaggerated they were disappointed and realized they made F15 out of a fear of a weapon that wasn't as good as they thought it was. Man, what a story. Edit: okay so the story is a bit more different than I thought but it's still interesting

  • @mbtenjoyer9487

    @mbtenjoyer9487

    Ай бұрын

    Well, technically, the F15 was already in development it’s just they increased capability and sped up the development

  • @winternow2242

    @winternow2242

    Ай бұрын

    The Soviets didn't start developing the MiG-25 until 1961. The B-70 was designed in 1957, years earlier. The B-70 was never built, and cancelled just a few weeks after the MiG-25 project began. The Soviets continued developing their plane for the next decade. Clearly the MiG-25 and the Valkyrie have little (if anything) to do with each other. I have yet to see any evidence showing what air force officials and civilian officials thought about the MiG-25 during the late 1960s. They wouldn't have had to think much about the plane because American pilots encountered large numbers of MiG-21 and MiG-17 fighters in Vietnam. Lastly, what features of the MiG-25 were "exaggerated"? There's a pervasive narrative that the Soviets lied about the MiG-25, but no specifics about factual claims that were made and la6er proven false.

  • @johnweerasinghe4139

    @johnweerasinghe4139

    Ай бұрын

    I think you are as confused as the people who assumed it was a multi role fighter. It was an dedicated interceptor. And as such still owns the speed and altitude record. Wow ! Way to listen. This plane was the first to use phased array radar. Valves were used in the electronic components so in a nuclear explosion the radar worked but the solid state circuitry in the western fighters would fry . First to use HUD. The phased array meant they were the first to be able to independently target multiple aircraft. The SR71 flights stopped when this plane appeared . Give them credit for original technical innovation and the solution of so many technical issues... To the untrained mind it seems they " copied" but here is proof the Soviet ( and Russian) designers have their own parameters and in the conditions of war their weapons have proved more practical

  • @Mr.Monta77

    @Mr.Monta77

    Ай бұрын

    Crap.

  • @roblockhart6104

    @roblockhart6104

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@winternow2242 The MiG-25 was 100% based on the US WS-300A program. Many proposals were submitted (early to mid 1950's) that would 'strangely' come to resemble Soviet aircraft, only at a much later time. One aircraft in particular that was submitted by manufacturer North American was the NA-237. To the common layman, if they didn't know any better they'd easily mistake it for a modern day F-15, sans bubble canopy. A design concept that was developed less than a decade after WWll. Eventually, this led to the A-5 Vigilante. Originally, the A-5 had dual vertical tails but the navy opted for only one. It was advertised (perhaps a bit hyped) as a mach 2 to 3 nuclear strike fighter bomber, which sent shock waves throughout the Soviet Union. Still, the blueprint for what would become the conventional twin engine air superiority fighter platform was born. Increase the proportions of the A-5 all around and you basically have the MiG-25. The Soviets, having built the best intelligence gathering agency ever known to man utilized it to its fullest extend in regards to foreign espionage. The MiG-25 is just one example. At least superficially.

  • @hansmiseur3025
    @hansmiseur3025Ай бұрын

    I love this cast iron & mahogany Formula 1 car that ended up drag racing.

  • @Manospondylus
    @ManospondylusАй бұрын

    It might not have lived up to it's fearsome reputation but it certainly looks every bit as lethal as they feared. "Foxbat" is absolutely one of the best Nato designations.

  • @jonathanrobinson7573
    @jonathanrobinson7573Ай бұрын

    The Foxbat’s offspring- the MiG-31 is the last dedicated interceptor still in mass service now that most F-14s are retired.

  • @JohnnyWednesday

    @JohnnyWednesday

    Ай бұрын

    Iran operate 24 F-14s

  • @hiphip4808

    @hiphip4808

    Ай бұрын

    Most F14s are still retired

  • @thundercactus

    @thundercactus

    Ай бұрын

    F-14 was an interceptor, but it was also an air superiority fighter. Because of its baked in ability to dogfight, it's not a dedicated interceptor. (There was also a bombcat variant that was multirole, but that's besides the point since F104 also mysteriously had a fighter-bomber variant) Panavia Tornado ADV was the last dedicated western interceptor, and the F106 Delta Dart was the last dedicated US interceptor. The MiG-31 isn't a dedicated interceptor anymore either. The BM and BSM variants are multirole, being able to carry anti-radiation, anti-ship, and air-to-ground missiles. And the MiG-31K (the one they're using most often right now) is actually an attack aircraft; a modified BM variant able to carry the Kinzhal. It's a cruise missile truck.

  • @pmnichols10

    @pmnichols10

    Ай бұрын

    Arguably the most lethal fighter jet ever made, it's virtually untouchable and it can lock and fire on any rival fighter (stealth or not) long before coming into their radar range.

  • @jonathanrobinson7573

    @jonathanrobinson7573

    Ай бұрын

    @@pmnichols10 I’m not sure how far out the MiG-31 can detect stealth aircraft. Let’s stay an F-22 can fire on an MiG-31 before the MiG’s radar sees the F-22, the fired missiles will at least alert the MiG something is out there. Until we have a real world F-22 or F-35 vs MiG-31 engagement it’s hard to say which will win in actual combat.

  • @jessicaluchesi
    @jessicaluchesiАй бұрын

    Thank you for the very complete story and ending with the Buran... a very needed "What if" of what we can do when we focus on things other than war, if only all warbirds could end their days helping knowledge move on and nothing else.

  • @cheekarp2180

    @cheekarp2180

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you for bringing it up brother.

  • @jessicaluchesi

    @jessicaluchesi

    Ай бұрын

    @@cheekarp2180 brother? :/

  • @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    Ай бұрын

    @@jessicaluchesi He's not being literal

  • @cheekarp2180

    @cheekarp2180

    Ай бұрын

    @@jessicaluchesi Oops, I meant sister!

  • @historiadaaviacao.4274

    @historiadaaviacao.4274

    Ай бұрын

    Excelente comentário ❤❤❤❤

  • @tonyb6821
    @tonyb6821Ай бұрын

    You've made the best documentary on the Foxbat that I've ever seen. GREAT JOB!

  • @erikarnold4737
    @erikarnold4737Ай бұрын

    I've learned a bit about the Mig-25 in the past and this channel is new to me, but this video was just fantastic and had some great information!

  • @Acorns4Bullets
    @Acorns4BulletsАй бұрын

    I remember going to the Moscow aircraft museum. I tried to climb into to the mig 25 air intake and cut my hand because steel was so sharp because of the air friction on the steel body

  • @lukec9444
    @lukec9444Ай бұрын

    Ive been waiting for a good mig 25 documentary. THANK YOU!

  • @RE_INN
    @RE_INNАй бұрын

    What a great documentary with no western bashing nonsense . All about engineering , history , knowledge which is so great for Aviation Enthusiast. Thank you a lot. Mig25 ; I can feel their joy and their engineering passion all they put in this plane. Such a classic masterpiece. Easy to produce , cheap maintain , best at what it design for , cost efficient , creat new manufacture technique , versatile in various mission Indian person who already fly mig31 which is successor of this plane also said : it not like any kind fighter jet , it some kind of launching platform (some pilot say it just flying S300 ) Then MiG 25 legend is continue in MIG 31 Fucking Supersonic flying radar station with onboard hypersonic Nuke missile with insane range. What a plane. Feel glad for some civilian EU people who buy this Classic jet sit in their backyard . I ‘m not sure he is also Aerospace engineer. For me it look like he has private own spacecraft which is insanely cool !!!!!

  • @wadewilson6628

    @wadewilson6628

    Ай бұрын

    Pffft. The Mig-15 was crap. The only good thing it did was make the West develop the F-15.

  • @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    Ай бұрын

    @@wadewilson6628 No it didn't. F-15 development started back in '65

  • @jamesmandahl444

    @jamesmandahl444

    Ай бұрын

    @TyrannoJoris_Rex Early iterations of these were different from the final product.

  • @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    Ай бұрын

    @@jamesmandahl444 No shit. Still wasn't spawned by the appearance of the MiG-25

  • @killjoymcnugget7877

    @killjoymcnugget7877

    Ай бұрын

    Mig-25 was a big heap of trash compared to the F-15 and as it is well known that every russian avionic insight was a straight-forward copy of american aircraftmanship-art. You just cant deny that in any way, shape or form. I mean you could... but.. ..that would make you even worse💀

  • @dezmondwhitney1208
    @dezmondwhitney1208Ай бұрын

    This is a great video, providing a lot of information and history too. Thank you.

  • @mig21pilot
    @mig21pilot23 күн бұрын

    So GOOD to see a well-done presentation that really presents how fantastic this aircraft was. SO many just parrot back myths and lies about the Foxbat. For its day it was a beautiful staggering design!

  • @sammesopotamia8166
    @sammesopotamia8166Ай бұрын

    good job, i hope u start later to talk about mig-31 which originated from mig-25.

  • @lumen8r
    @lumen8rАй бұрын

    Fantastic documentary, very well done. Also I would like to add my voice to any encouragement for Buran related content. Specifically, that automation system must be an amazing story. What I’ve heard about its software kind of blows my mind already. Anyway, thanks for the history! 🤘🏼❤️🤘🏼

  • @Phil-ey6yh
    @Phil-ey6yhАй бұрын

    The king of interceptors.... the finally made it into service when air interceptors were pretty much obsolete. It was fast. I'll give ya that. Just pray you don't have to turn.

  • @mirandela777

    @mirandela777

    Ай бұрын

    " the finally made it into service when air interceptors were pretty much obsolete." sure, dude, but Kinzhal wants a word with your ignorance ! It is ironical now, the Mig 31, The world's fastest interceptor in service, is the perfect platform for hypersonic cruise missiles... at a time when murica have no fast interceptor, nor a hypersonic cruise missile :p

  • @Phil-ey6yh

    @Phil-ey6yh

    Ай бұрын

    @mirandela777 lmao... the kinzhal.... the non-hypersonic "hypersonic missile". Acting like I'm the ignorant one. The 31 can do mach 2.8. Push it to 3 if you want to completely trash the aircraft and make it a "use once and discard" plane. I will tell you one thing though.... the 31 will go faster than that propaganda piece kinzhal. Russia has stocks of "hypersonic missiles" that they can attach to fast, unmaneuverable, outdated bomber interceptors... that's why they're gluing wings to dumb bombs in Ukraine and dusting off 30+ year retired A-50 because they don't have any other options. Keep talking that bullshit, Chauncey

  • @mirandela777

    @mirandela777

    Ай бұрын

    @@Phil-ey6yh - sure dude, an illiterate muppet on YT commenting about Kinzhal knows more about hypersonic than all the world professional military community ... obvious, we should trust you and not the rest of the world. I bet next you will say the Earth is flat ! If stupidity could hurt, you will cry all day long....

  • @Tonik-13

    @Tonik-13

    27 күн бұрын

    @@Phil-ey6yh You're talking nonsense, buddy. Dumb bombs are a thousand times cheaper than kinzhal, there is no need to use an expensive long-range missile on the front line, they have different tasks. By the way, what does the A50 have to do with it?

  • @Phil-ey6yh

    @Phil-ey6yh

    27 күн бұрын

    @Tonik-13 the kinzhal is a joke. Like almost ALL Russian hardware statistics, it's capability is a lie. Flat out. The A50 their pulling out of mothballs, with its antique hardware, shows how inadequate and equipment-poor the Russian military is. The Russian command structure is obsolete, the kill chain capacity is pathetic, Putin kills any capable military commands because he's Stalin-paranoid of anyone that might usurp him, the entire operation and structure is a shitshow and any victory will be a pyrrhic one.

  • @LupinYonderboy
    @LupinYonderboyАй бұрын

    Really great deep dive with a lot of details I've not heard elsewhere.

  • @davidjele3268
    @davidjele3268Ай бұрын

    Always look forward to your videos Sky, thank you!!

  • @brealistic3542
    @brealistic3542Ай бұрын

    Another thing is it wasn't just any steel. It was loaded with the metal nickel. It was a special steel alloy. Made it very heavy but resisted heat very well. I believe the American research aircraft the High Speed Rocket powered X-15 uses it too.

  • @pmnichols10

    @pmnichols10

    Ай бұрын

    It's commonly known as stainless steel, it resists corrosion and it's a poorer heat conductor if compared with normal steel.

  • @britjohnson1990

    @britjohnson1990

    Ай бұрын

    @@pmnichols10 stainless steel contains chromium. The material he means is inconel a mix of steel, chromium and nickel.

  • @pmnichols10

    @pmnichols10

    Ай бұрын

    @@britjohnson1990 correction, stainless steel contains nickel and chromium, exactly like Inconel. Both are resistant to oxidation and corrosion thus earning the common designation of stainless steel.

  • @britjohnson1990

    @britjohnson1990

    Ай бұрын

    @@pmnichols10 there are many different types of stainless steel. Surgical stainless doesnt contain nickel at all. Inconel is unique because of its resistance to high temps thus used in the x-15 program. Inconel and stainless are classified in different categories.

  • @pmnichols10

    @pmnichols10

    Ай бұрын

    @@britjohnson1990 there's nothing unique about Inconel it's just a trade name for several specific kinds of stainless steel.

  • @henryr5492
    @henryr5492Ай бұрын

    love the longer format! keep up the good work!

  • @spladam3845
    @spladam3845Ай бұрын

    Nice drone shots of the Mig 25. Great video again.

  • @PhoenixA380
    @PhoenixA380Ай бұрын

    Great episode, Thank you!

  • @thechad1905
    @thechad1905Ай бұрын

    The russians make such awesome aircraft I bet they could make some beautiful high performance cars.

  • @jfbaquero
    @jfbaqueroАй бұрын

    Excellent video, what an amazing plane the Mig 25 was. Misunderstood and belittle by western powers (not surprisingly) and magnificent machine in its own right. Extremely beautiful. Just dreamed all my life I could fly one to the limit of space as many wheatley people did, the dream came for free. Greets from Bogota - Colombia

  • @thundercactus

    @thundercactus

    Ай бұрын

    It was misunderstood by the west in that the US thought it was a dogfighting air superiority aircraft. When they found out it was just a drag racer of an interceptor, they weren't worried about it anymore. It's a successful aircraft though, did exactly what it was meant to; intercept bombers and scare the west into developing a new fighter.

  • @wadewilson6628

    @wadewilson6628

    Ай бұрын

    Belittled? It was nothing but a paper tiger. Its radar was crap, it's engines loved to randomly burst into flames, and its titanium frame would develop cracks with as little as 100 hours on the airframe. It was garbage. The best thing it did was scare the west into creating the F-15. The actual best interceptor in the world.

  • @burtbacarach5034
    @burtbacarach5034Ай бұрын

    The SAM's that brought down Power's U2 worked a bit too well.They also shot down a Soviet interceptor chasing the U2....Life(and death)in the USSR.

  • @Slaktrax

    @Slaktrax

    Ай бұрын

    Source?

  • @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    Ай бұрын

    @@Slaktrax Think the PVO sent up Su-9's and MiG-19's after it and a SAM got a MiG-19

  • @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    Ай бұрын

    From what I'm finding, the pilot's name was Sergei Safronov

  • @burtbacarach5034

    @burtbacarach5034

    Ай бұрын

    @@TyrannoJoris_Rex Well they DID get the U2,and embarassed the US,so..Net gain?

  • @cdgncgn

    @cdgncgn

    Ай бұрын

    and they sent 4k spy balloons too.

  • @jordiribas2883
    @jordiribas2883Ай бұрын

    Great work, as usual. Love your narration skills.

  • @HandFromCoffin
    @HandFromCoffinАй бұрын

    Always love your video's. I've been an aviation geek from a kid and live close enough to Dayton, Ohio that I can go to the USAF Museum. I like hearing your eastern view on these aircraft and the little nuances between US documentaries. Suggestion, 5:23 you are discussing the engines "flight resource" of 15 hours. It would be more clear if you used "service live, overhaul time, rebuild time, operating lifetime or just lifetime". "The engines service live was only 15 hours". Sounds like this is a direct translation to English causing it to sound strange. I'm an old USAF mechanic and would love to get to that Russian museum some day.

  • @vaterchenfrost7481

    @vaterchenfrost7481

    Ай бұрын

    You have a point there. But I would like to add some perspective to it. I'm operating multilingually on a daily basis, and with all the praxis, I'm still struggling to have a proper translation, because there is frequently no 100% corresponding meaning. The considered technical, engineering, and operational key figures are deviating in some of the aspects, so in the heat of the translation, especially if the time is of the essence, I take the next best, or use a description. But even after 10 rounds of editing and correcting, one can still overlook some of the mistranslations, even by using translation software. In the case of the TBO you are referring here to, one still can't be entirely sure if one can translate it 1 to 1. I know a lot and suspect much more of the differences in the technical culture of maintaining and refurbishing in that field. The nearest thing I would have used here (while still consciously avoiding the term TBO) is "engine flight endurance", or "engine fatigue reserve". Its meaning is almost the same as TBO, but I gues some significant differences to "TBO" still might remain, about which some pedantic technical geeks would have their arguments and fights. P.S. Just to give you an impression of the translating effort - this commentary took me two minutes to write, ten minutes to check the translation, and another ten for grammar and spell checking with PC tools. And I'm still sure - it sounds foreign to you here and there. So thank you for your commentary, but also, please give us non-native speakers some credit for trying :) to be as frank as possible.

  • @svetlovchanin

    @svetlovchanin

    Ай бұрын

    Hey, my Air-comrad!) There is a large museum of Russian aviation not far from Moscow. It is called the Central Museum of the Russian Air Force. It is located in Monino.

  • @jsvno
    @jsvnoАй бұрын

    As usual very informative engineering explantions.Thank u.

  • @prathameshacharya9739
    @prathameshacharya9739Ай бұрын

    This is one my all time favorite Cold war era jets. Great content as always Sky! Cheers!

  • @aydincakiroglu1665
    @aydincakiroglu1665Ай бұрын

    Please make a documentary about SU-15 flagon also.

  • @mcal27

    @mcal27

    Ай бұрын

    Was just about to ask the same! )

  • @hiphip4808

    @hiphip4808

    Ай бұрын

    Boeing Fears him

  • @bensmith7536

    @bensmith7536

    Ай бұрын

    you beat me to it !

  • @mcal27

    @mcal27

    Ай бұрын

    @@hiphip4808 here’s a thought process that might help you with this: Imagine and Il-62 deviated from it’s assigned course over North America and was heading into Nellis Airbase range and didn’t answer radio communications to change course. Do you think Uncle Sam would have done any different?

  • @hiphip4808

    @hiphip4808

    Ай бұрын

    @@mcal27 F15 was shot down, cry about it

  • @eottoe2001
    @eottoe2001Ай бұрын

    This is the plane that shifted thinking about electronics. When Western experts looked at the electronics, they were shocked at how primitive they appeared. It wasn't fully solid state but had valves or tubes. It was then thought it wasn't for lack of know-how but because it was more resistant to EMP blasts. That was when they started to make US planes with shielded electronics. There is one in part in Dayton. If we ever cease hostilities between one another, I hope they will send us some wings to put on it. TY for a great video.

  • @NickThePilotUSA

    @NickThePilotUSA

    Ай бұрын

    I could see Ukraine sending a pair of wings for that 25.

  • @eottoe2001

    @eottoe2001

    Ай бұрын

    @@NickThePilotUSAI like that. ;-) TY. That made my day. LOL

  • @nigeriaroberts678
    @nigeriaroberts678Ай бұрын

    Soviet engineering is something I find fascinating.

  • @Mortablunt

    @Mortablunt

    Ай бұрын

    It’s one of those crazy like a Fox sort of things. The Russians are no fools, even with their disadvantages in technology, population, and funds. Northern Eurasia is a brutal place where every European imperialist wants to spread their lands where they think there’s less competition, and every Asian imperialist wants to capture the wealth of Europe. And the Russians have met and seen to the disposal of all of them. They are a remarkable people. I would not be surprised if the Russians were either the last to fall to an alien invasion, or perhaps even the people to turn it back.

  • @imrekalman9044

    @imrekalman9044

    14 күн бұрын

    @@Mortablunt Heh, this reminds me of a comment under an A-235 Nudol launch video: "And that's why aliens never land in Russia." 😂

  • @terencedunn
    @terencedunnАй бұрын

    thanks for another great vid Sky. Its great to see the old soviet era film. Please keep up the great work.

  • @thefrecklepuny
    @thefrecklepunyАй бұрын

    As far as Soviet fighters are concerned, the MiG 25 will always hold interest. However, I find the Tu-128 more enigmatic due to its rarity and its huge size. Bigger even than the Foxbat!!

  • @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah fuckin' twin AL-7's. Fat thing...

  • @thundercactus
    @thundercactusАй бұрын

    Would have been really interesting to see a MiG-25/31 with a titanium frame. But I guess they were using all the titanium to build submarines at the time.

  • @RCLepcha

    @RCLepcha

    Ай бұрын

    A lot of weight would have been reduced and the Aircraft could be more agile and fast

  • @pmnichols10

    @pmnichols10

    Ай бұрын

    It wasn't a question of availability, titanium is much harder to work with, the mass production of titanium Mig 25 would have made them insanely expensive and difficult to replace in case of war. This video actually addresses the issue at beginning.

  • @imrekalman9044

    @imrekalman9044

    14 күн бұрын

    Some 8-9% of a MiG-25 is titanium, that's 1,600-1,800 kg per aircraft.

  • @waldundwiesenandi4079
    @waldundwiesenandi40796 күн бұрын

    ...these monster engines are really amazing. You cant imagine how big these nozzles are.

  • @djaneczko4
    @djaneczko4Ай бұрын

    Love your content dude!

  • @rapidthrash1964
    @rapidthrash1964Ай бұрын

    This has to be one of your longest videos yet! Impressive!

  • @tacticaltoolbox7046
    @tacticaltoolbox7046Ай бұрын

    This is one of the best videos you've done, if not the best

  • @rozinaakter7147
    @rozinaakter7147Ай бұрын

    Thanks for the detailed video

  • @gusmanovr
    @gusmanovrАй бұрын

    Cool episode and a fantastic aircraft. Just a beast

  • @captainnutzlos3816
    @captainnutzlos3816Ай бұрын

    Imagine its made out of titanium, the range would be much higher !!

  • @richardbullwood5941
    @richardbullwood5941Ай бұрын

    Do you know why the Soviets kept making interceptors even though they were completely obsolete when they rolled out? Because they were so good at it! They kept making interceptors long long after they knew we would not ever attack them with waves of bombers. Because they made good interceptors! That was the Soviet way of thinking

  • @Pangolin_6483

    @Pangolin_6483

    23 күн бұрын

    Or maybe they continued to be produced because, given the vast, sparsely populated territory of the Soviet Union, which does not allow the creation of a sufficient number of airfields at reasonable costs, having an aircraft that would quickly intercept intruders even over a long distance is very useful, because one day border violators may turn out to be planes with nuclear missiles aimed at bases deep in the USSR.

  • @richardbullwood5941

    @richardbullwood5941

    22 күн бұрын

    @@Pangolin_6483 if you were talking about tactical Cruise missiles, those can be launched well outside the borders of the Soviet union. Like I said, the only thing they were good for was shooting down waves of bombers. And that threat stopped in the 1960s

  • @Pangolin_6483

    @Pangolin_6483

    22 күн бұрын

    @@richardbullwood5941 cruise missiles also have a range and flight speed, cruise missiles could not reach strategic targets deep in the USSR, unlike airplanes, and hundreds of American bombers did not go anywhere. In the 60s, even ballistic missiles were limited in range and could not reach objects deep in the USSR.

  • @richardbullwood5941

    @richardbullwood5941

    22 күн бұрын

    @@Pangolin_6483 the term ICBM stands for intercontinental ballistic missile. That means it can be launched in one continent, and it can go to another continent. The first ICBM in the American inventory was the atlas that came online in 1959. So I am correct. By the mid-1960s, our strategic nuclear missile threat to the Soviet Union was no longer bomber based. And what bombers were used would launch cruise missiles outside of the boundaries of the Soviet union. Both of these things made the Interceptor completely obsolete. And by the time the mig-25 foxbat was put into service, there was nothing left to intercept. If I'm wrong, tell me what successful military operation the mig-25 was ever utilized in. I was born in 1970 and my father served in the air force during vietnam, so obviously I might know a little bit more about this than you do. Interceptors were obsolete by the mid-1960s. Why do you think our last dedicated Interceptor was the f-106? After that, interceptors became second-tier aircraft and the role was simply relegated to air-to-air superiority Fighters that we already had such as the F4 Phantom

  • @Pangolin_6483

    @Pangolin_6483

    22 күн бұрын

    @@richardbullwood5941 intercontinental missiles - intercontinental missiles are very conditional, for that matter, the distance from Europe to Africa is 16 km. There were few аtlаs, there were many times more Soviet ballistic missiles, and it was their launch sites that were supposed to be destroyed by the bombers, which were supposed to intercept the MiG-25. As for successful operations, American reconnaissance aircraft, including the A-12 and SR-71, did not fly into Soviet airspace thanks to the MIG-25 until air defense systems were sufficiently developed. MiGs also called back high-altitude balloons over the territory of the USSR. MiGs were used quite successfully in the Middle East, although the Arab countries did not have the comprehensive air defense system that the USSR had. The United States had no need for interceptors; the main striking force of the Soviet Union was ballistic missiles, with which aircraft could not do anything, and not bombers. As I already said, for the USA or Europe the need for interceptors is irrelevant due to the densely populated territory, which makes it possible to create a sufficient number of airfields throughout the country; most of the USSR and now Russia are very sparsely populated territories, little suitable for economic activity due to that permafrost, however, it is through them that American planes will fly to strike targets inland. In the 40s and 50s, the USSR built Arctic airfields on the ice of the Arctic Ocean to intercept American aircraft, until interceptors with sufficient range and speed appeared.

  • @robbyowen9107
    @robbyowen9107Ай бұрын

    Another fantastic video in history, thanks Sky!!!!

  • @JayzsMr
    @JayzsMrАй бұрын

    I will always respect the Soviet union because despite having obviously less sophisticated methods compared to the Americans they made up for it with sheer balls and audacity. Leading to sometimes primitive but pragmatic solutions to engineering problems. This plane couldn’t be more Russian , welded steel, vodka inside, just very based

  • @peekaboo1575
    @peekaboo1575Ай бұрын

    What a fantastic machine.

  • @divyamsinghchauhan1740
    @divyamsinghchauhan1740Ай бұрын

    Had been asking for this for years! Thank you!

  • @ayanchakraborty3559
    @ayanchakraborty355913 күн бұрын

    Thank you for this wonderful documentary.❤

  • @floofycatz
    @floofycatzАй бұрын

    Thank you for this expose of a super intersting aircraft by the then, Soviet Union. They definitely had a formidable air force, in size and variety of roles.

  • @klen7642
    @klen7642Ай бұрын

    Excellent Video and Documentary. BURAN MY BELOVED.

  • @bigsarge2085
    @bigsarge2085Ай бұрын

    Interesting!

  • @pierovittori1076
    @pierovittori10764 күн бұрын

    This is the best content I've ever seen on the Foxbat and by far. All the essential ar here, also strategic and historical elements that help the viewer understand the ahead of their time tech solutions adopted in this jewel engineering and production. Full geopolitical and srategic scenario is pictured 360° and still no unnecessary blabla. Plus the text style, narrator voice and rithm, some irks and quirrks and funny facts make this content extremely enjoyable and never dull despite its length. It's definitely worth an instant subscrtiption P.S. kudos also for the brilliant and accurate pronounciation of russian words and names

  • @nero995
    @nero995Ай бұрын

    What an awesome an accurate video dude I love it

  • @ellomirza
    @ellomirzaАй бұрын

    Somebody’s uncle was flying that twin supercharged Aston Martin of the sky cavalier af and never had to shoot anybody down? That sounds like an awesome job.

  • @msb3235
    @msb3235Ай бұрын

    Talking about expensive titanium, I thought Russia was the largest titanium producer and even CIA tricked her into selling the material to them for SR-71 development!

  • @tyrantfox7801

    @tyrantfox7801

    Ай бұрын

    Soviet submarines used a lot of titanium

  • @flyerkiller5073

    @flyerkiller5073

    Ай бұрын

    Titanium was too expencive for the mass production jets

  • @Pangolin_6483

    @Pangolin_6483

    Ай бұрын

    Russia became the largest manufacturer after the appearance of the MiG-25; at the time of its creation, the interceptor was needed as soon as possible. In addition, it is not enough to extract titanium; we also need technologies for its smelting and welding, which also appeared later.

  • @ronjon7942

    @ronjon7942

    Ай бұрын

    @@Pangolin_6483Ya, and I don’t think the machining, forging, and sheet metal techniques were as well developed as steel. I’m not certain, but weren’t the titanium subs well after the MiG-25?

  • @Pangolin_6483

    @Pangolin_6483

    Ай бұрын

    @@ronjon7942 Most titanium boats were built in the 80s; in parallel with MIG-25, a titanium boat of Project 661 was actually developed, during the construction of which titanium processing methods were investigated, but this was just a single experimental project, plus titanium alloys for ships and aircraft are different.

  • @100lancey
    @100lanceyАй бұрын

    What a great story. Thank you!

  • @rgochina
    @rgochinaАй бұрын

    Great video, thanks a lot!

  • @timbaskett6299
    @timbaskett6299Ай бұрын

    "Let's drink to another successful flight of this aircraft!!!" 😂 The MiG-25 is a beautiful aircraft. I remember building a 1/144th scale model of it when I was a kid. I liked it so much that I got a second one and modified it. I moved the main wing down and back, and used the tailpIane for canards. I like the design of the Su-15 and Tu-128s as well, though. One thing that would be epic is a heritage flight of the MiG-25, English Electric Lightining, and the Convair F-106.

  • @salmiakki5638
    @salmiakki5638Ай бұрын

    11:36 what is the benefit of the "turbolator" ? I never knew something like this existed in intakes

  • @thundercactus

    @thundercactus

    Ай бұрын

    vortex generator, likely just there to affect airflow coming into the engine

  • @salmiakki5638

    @salmiakki5638

    Ай бұрын

    @@thundercactus thanks for the reply, but that much is clear. What i don't understand is why you would want vorticity in the intake. Usually one tries to avoid that, using boundary layer control etc.

  • @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    Ай бұрын

    @@salmiakki5638 Probably slows down the air by the point at which the flow redevelops

  • @ronjon7942

    @ronjon7942

    Ай бұрын

    @@salmiakki5638Yeah, I share your questioning. I had no idea an inlet device even existed. I could almost comprehend a compressor device, or something related to shockwaves slowing down the uppermost air, but ONLY if it extended across the entire inlet from right to left. How it works or what function it performs as the stubby thing with three short airfoils has me utterly confused, but very interested.

  • @briancavanagh7048

    @briancavanagh7048

    Ай бұрын

    I wonder if its not a vortex generator but a sprayer either to cool the charge air into the air intake or a act as a de-icer. Just guessing here.

  • @bannedone3ice138
    @bannedone3ice138Ай бұрын

    Awesome channel. Thankyou for the amazing content 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @mahyadnaadlaw3112
    @mahyadnaadlaw3112Ай бұрын

    Excellent presentation. Balanced

  • @Snake-ms7sj
    @Snake-ms7sjАй бұрын

    Viktor Belenko, the Mig pilot that defected in a Mig-25 to the U.S. by way of Japan, died September 24, 2023 in Rosebud Illinois at the age of 76. RIP Viktor.

  • @user-nm6ki7rq8g

    @user-nm6ki7rq8g

    28 күн бұрын

    Земля тебе стекловатой.

  • @Sajuuk
    @SajuukАй бұрын

    An impressive interceptor. Even more impressive is the SR71 which could outrun the Foxbat. Now THAT'S fast!

  • @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    Ай бұрын

    Tough to say, but the MiG would need an overhaul after

  • @beibotanov

    @beibotanov

    Ай бұрын

    @@TyrannoJoris_Rex SR-71's and A-12's needed an overhaul after every mission. MiG does not leak on the ground when fueled, got decent turning rate at lower speed, cheaper to operate, can engage other planes in combat. Which plane is more practical then?

  • @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@beibotanov No I only meant if the MiG was going fast enough to keep up with the SR-71

  • @elcrapulento4278
    @elcrapulento4278Ай бұрын

    My favorite jet, thanks for the video!!

  • @Buster_Piles
    @Buster_PilesАй бұрын

    Great video. Well done. Best I've ever seen on the bat.

  • @davidoverschmidt9312
    @davidoverschmidt9312Ай бұрын

    What movie is some footage from?

  • @srendrbersnegle1887

    @srendrbersnegle1887

    Ай бұрын

    The right stuff and Thirteen days

  • @paogene1288

    @paogene1288

    Ай бұрын

    I too wish to learn, especially Mig 25 production.

  • @jimkenealy6448

    @jimkenealy6448

    Ай бұрын

    I saw a segment from Failsafe! where interceptors fired into a cloud of decoys. bravo for this excellent video!

  • @none941
    @none941Ай бұрын

    The Foxbat was considered a problem until one was snatched and examined. It was fast, but very primitive. Not the threat it was feared to be.

  • @mcal27

    @mcal27

    Ай бұрын

    F-18’s disagree btw

  • @JohnnyWednesday

    @JohnnyWednesday

    Ай бұрын

    That's not accurate - it was determined not to be the extreme dog-fighter they mistakenly believed it to be. It was still a Mach 3 interceptor.

  • @adillakandi.r

    @adillakandi.r

    Ай бұрын

    The American just disappointed that it not looks what they imagine, they think Foxbat was a air superiority fighter capable of beating their F-15. Its not fast primitive plane just not the way they expected to be

  • @Mark_Ocain
    @Mark_OcainАй бұрын

    It was an interesting experiment for the Russians. The aircraft was largely impractical but showcased the Russian knack for getting a lot from a little. The migs couldn't keep station with an SR71 for long, the SR71 was very efficient at speed and could stay at mach3 for over an hour at a time. The Mig 25 couldn't sustain the thermal stresses or fuel consumption for long at all.

  • @ianmangham4570
    @ianmangham4570Ай бұрын

    Fantastic vid ,well worth a SUB 👍🇬🇧

  • @AlphaWhiskey_Haryo
    @AlphaWhiskey_HaryoАй бұрын

    flying brick of steel

  • @cdgncgn

    @cdgncgn

    Ай бұрын

    all Mach 3 had to use steel, Valkyrie as well as SR-71.

  • @dystopianlucidity4448
    @dystopianlucidity4448Ай бұрын

    The mig 25 didn’t so much fly as it was beating the air into compliance.

  • @andymunnings9109
    @andymunnings910926 күн бұрын

    "I enjoyed your presentation. It taught me about supersonic and materials. I believe? This means; A mig engine is idle to be used for a commercial transit carriers that include passenger occupants for supersonic flight. I feel? The engineers who created this engine for the unit is very smart. They were as stars due to their creativity. To move through the air at mach three and go at an 80, 000 '(foot) or more altitudes is an achievement that is crown with a reward. I respect these past designers. They were very smart.'👍

  • @svx4477
    @svx447721 күн бұрын

    Wish you talked more about the bomber/strike variants, I'd love to learn more about those

  • @GnuReligion
    @GnuReligionАй бұрын

    No mention of the Firefox movie!?

  • @Eric-kn4yn

    @Eric-kn4yn

    Ай бұрын

    Thank gosh

  • @davidwright7193

    @davidwright7193

    Ай бұрын

    Firefox was about the mig31. Particularly the look down shoot down radar and the helmet mounted radar sight.

  • @freeworld88888
    @freeworld88888Ай бұрын

    western media likes to belittle of mig25. Mig 25 was amazing plane , such a powerful monster

  • @shakiMiki

    @shakiMiki

    Ай бұрын

    looooool. Western media doesn't care about Soviet aircrafts, What a weird whinge.

  • @koekiejam18

    @koekiejam18

    Ай бұрын

    The Mig-25 just wasn't that good compared to what the west made in response. Whilst the Mig-25 is the final evolution in its class, its class stems from a doctrine that is just no longer valid.

  • @thundercactus

    @thundercactus

    Ай бұрын

    Not western media, westerners. The media couldn't care less. The MiG-25 was a great plane in that it did exactly what it was intended to do from purchase; 1) be a low cost drag racer to intercept bombers, 2) scare the US into reacting to it (thus the F-15)

  • @wadewilson6628

    @wadewilson6628

    Ай бұрын

    The only good thing the Mig-25 did was create the F-15.

  • @alangordon3283

    @alangordon3283

    Ай бұрын

    It was garbage when eventually it was trialed .

  • @paulvadeanu246
    @paulvadeanu246Ай бұрын

    Great source of encouragement for the crew as booz source!

  • @myhometechguy
    @myhometechguyАй бұрын

    I believe the Mig 25 was inspired largely by the North American XF-108 Rapier. They're very similar in design especially when considering the Mig-25 was first being developed as a single tail. It was being designed as a Mark. 3 capable interceptor/ penetrator based to some extent on the xb70 Valkyrie. The threat of these aircraft was enough to motivate the Russians to quickly develop a countermeasure.

  • @stekra3159
    @stekra3159Ай бұрын

    F 16 still flys

  • @MichaelMiller-op8fe
    @MichaelMiller-op8feАй бұрын

    The mig- 25 never caught an SR-71. But ,we have an F- 15 who shot down a satellite in orbit moving over 25, 000 miles an hour.

  • @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    Ай бұрын

    I think he meant was able to lock it up and had a chance to take it down if it took the shot

  • @jamesmandahl444

    @jamesmandahl444

    Ай бұрын

    They got close. Also the mig31's indeed got into firing positions a couple times on the st71.

  • @flyerkiller5073

    @flyerkiller5073

    Ай бұрын

    It’s a different operations to shoot a plane and a satellite

  • @ronjon7942

    @ronjon7942

    Ай бұрын

    Maybe so, but still, not a bad point.

  • @llynellyn

    @llynellyn

    Ай бұрын

    In fairness the SR-71 never dared go into the USSR and get chased by a MiG-25 either.

  • @pani_3776
    @pani_3776Ай бұрын

    Great video essay, keep it up man!

  • @ktwei
    @ktweiАй бұрын

    How much vodka is in this one?

  • @burtbacarach5034

    @burtbacarach5034

    Ай бұрын

    ALL the vodka.

  • @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    Ай бұрын

    "Massandra" 50/50 mixture of ethanol and water. Says the MiG-25RB carried "300 L of alcohol". Now I don't know if that's 300 L of the mixture total, which would mean 150 L of ethanol, or if it's 300 L of ethanol, 600 L total mixture.

  • @scarecrow108productions7

    @scarecrow108productions7

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@TyrannoJoris_Rexah, someone's watching Paper Skies eh? Guide to vodka/alcohol usage in Soviet Aviation.

  • @1956tojo
    @1956tojoАй бұрын

    Do the research and you will come to realize that this aircraft wasn't NEARly even close to what the U.S. thought it was... We were actually very disappointed, but we built an aircraft to out perform and beat what we thought this thing could do... And to this very day, our F-15 is undefeated in any air to air combat... Russia has NO aircraft to this day that the West has to fear... It's been that way since Late Vietnam.... Study it..... It's true... and their engines on their best shyt? Service life is measured in hundreds of hours compared to the West's thousands of hours....

  • @Phil-ey6yh

    @Phil-ey6yh

    Ай бұрын

    That's the thing. If you ask the Russiain Government, Russian hardware is the best, and performance outclasses every other country on earth. If you ask literally ANYONE else, including ex-pat Russian military members, it's all junk with inflated numbers. They're always behind the times. This interceptor program was first thought up to catch the B 70 Valkyrie that we never made. Mainly because missiles work better... yet they still dumped billions of Rubles (so, like, $1.75 American) into making a supersonic interceptor, that is inferior to EVERY western fighter in all areas except speed, to defeat a supersonic bomber we didn't make. This is why we don't all sign our names in Cyrillic, and why we use the term "the former U.S.S.R." .

  • @davidherron9151
    @davidherron9151Ай бұрын

    I appreciate a human voice and not using AI which earns immediate refusal to watch a video with me. Thanks watched till the end and subbed

  • @remingtonsteele3581
    @remingtonsteele3581Күн бұрын

    Outstanding production video on the MiG-25

  • @williamvoorhees8201
    @williamvoorhees8201Ай бұрын

    The F15 is king. The YF12 would have been. The. MIGs were and are not really as capable

  • @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    Ай бұрын

    Nah bruh. Rafale

  • @williamvoorhees8201

    @williamvoorhees8201

    Ай бұрын

    @@TyrannoJoris_Rex icj, no.

  • @williamvoorhees8201

    @williamvoorhees8201

    Ай бұрын

    Ick, I mean

  • @ronjon7942

    @ronjon7942

    Ай бұрын

    Imagine that fleet of 93 YF-12s the USAF actually did order but McNamara cancelled.

  • @williamvoorhees8201

    @williamvoorhees8201

    Ай бұрын

    @ronjon7942 would have been impressive indeed. 186 sonic booms at once????

  • @hotstepper887
    @hotstepper887Ай бұрын

    Indeed, it is, and cost like 500 times less than any propaganda based aircraft, we see being produced by the USA, like both the F-22 and F-35.

  • @Pangolin_6483

    @Pangolin_6483

    Ай бұрын

    The F-22 and F-35 are good aircraft whose manufacturers want to make good profits, they are not communists. The Soviet Union was able to catch up with the United States only because the profits that the owners and shareholders of corporations - capitalists - received in the United States, were received in the Soviet Union by the state, which spent it on science, defense and other government needs. Thus, the USSR, which was much poorer, could compete with the world hegemon of the USA and NATO.

  • @hotstepper887

    @hotstepper887

    Ай бұрын

    @@Pangolin_6483 Listen to me, I'm not asking you anything, as you're American, so you'd know absolutely nothing about any military aircraft whatsoever. What you all believe you could achieve by endlessly typing your backward wrong claims, (you can't ever back up with a single fact), I've no idea, but please, I'm not interested in anything you might think or believe, as you're only a propaganda swallowing fool, understand?

  • @hotstepper887

    @hotstepper887

    Ай бұрын

    @@Pangolin_6483 I'm English, and I'd love to know I read so many Americans, endlessly claiming the F-22 is so much better than the Russian SU-57 that relies on washing machine, chip technology, and has the radar cross-section (RCS) of a Jumbo jet? LOL. Firstly, there is no possible way for anyone to know the RCS of any military aircraft, as they're always classified. But then, if you ask, what they've ever seen the F-22, actually do, (that would allow them to hold that opinion)? They can't answer that, (as they've never seen the F-22 do anything), well, other than flying over a beach on a KZread Video. So, all they actually, and endlessly prove, is, their own opinions are worthless, as they're all based on absolutely nothing at all, right?. So, really, what is it all about? And even worse, they never even ask the obvious questions? Questions like, how can the F-22 or F-35's (for that matter) detect, track, and target enemy stealth aircraft from BVR (beyond visual range)? The truth is, they have no idea. Yet, if they had just asked themselves that one question, they'd maybe start to understand that today's reality, is nothing at all like they think! Seemingly they just don't understand, that stealth alone, defeats high-frequency (short wave), radar, by absorption and deflection, but it does not defeat low-frequency (long wave radar). So regardless of the aircraft's RCS (they all believe means so much), when they're being detected, tracked and targetted by long wave radar, they're far from stealthy, and they just light up, and stand out, like a beacon in the night. To detect, track, and target enemy stealth aircraft from BVR, can be done with long-wave radar, (but it must also be enhanced), to remove all background clutter for targeting purposes. Neither the APG-77 radar in the F-22, or the APG-81 radar in the F-35, have any kind of long wave radar, (hence, they can't detect enemy stealth aircraft from BVR)! This is also a fact, the US must be fully aware of. Only it seems the reality is, when the F-35 radars were being designed 13 years ago, there weren't any other stealth aircraft to think about as a potential threat! So, just what do the F-22 or the F-35, actually have available to them to detect enemy stealth aircraft from BVR? They have AWACS, (that can transfer all targetting data to the F-22 - F-35's in real time). Only, that's not possible today. And this is why actually understanding your enemies real abilities, becomes extremely important, critical in fact. Because, on the other hand this (Russian rubbish), they all claim, is equipped with a 5th generation radar, (with enhanced long-wave radar), their new Byelka (2band) radar used in SU-57. They can detect, track, and target enemy stealth jets from BVR, and very easily today. Russia has designed, and developed, the first L-Band fighter radar we've ever seen. They've embedded L-band AESA radars into the leading edges of the wings. The L-band AESA radar "data" gets processed in real time (through extremely powerful Russian computers), being significantly enhanced, removing all background clutter, seeing them perfectly able to detect, track, and engage enemy stealth aircraft from BVR. This new Russian radar technology, along with its very impressive range parameters, and it's jamming ability (over very large areas) make this aircraft deadly to all other aircraft types. (But according to the Americans), it's just Russian rubbish, right?. They can also detect, track, and target enemy stealth fighters, long before they enter Russian airspace, (from much greater distances today), with "real-time" data from all those massive Russian ground (long wave stations), that are all protected with the networked S-400 defensive system. Russia's new (2band) radar, covers all frequencies across all channels, used for tracking, targeting, and also for jamming (over large areas). It's part of Sh121 multifunctional integrated radio electronic system (MIRES) on board the SU-57. We should also understand, that Russia tested this new radar suit in the SU-35's, so they also have the option of fitting this radar into the SU-35's. Seeing the SU-35 at no disadvantage against either the F-22/35. As although the SU-35 can be detected, tracked, targeted and shot down from BVR by the US stealth fighters, the SU-35 equipped with this new radar is just as able to detect, track, target and shoot down the US stealth fighters from BVR. Seeing the all-important, huge Russian advantage, in BVR missile range, plus the excellent manoeuvring, neither the F-22/F-35 have, as more than critical, (if you're going to avoid simply being blown out of the sky). The truth is, this new Russian 5th generation radar design, has very clear potentials, to provide genuine shared multifunction apertures, with applications including... Search, track, and destroy, missile mid-course guidance, against low signature aircraft, identification of friend or foe with secondary surveillance radar. Passive angle tracking and geolocation of JTIDS-MIDS-Link-16 emitters at long ranges. Passive angle tracking and geolocation of L-band AEWC - AWACS and surface based search radars at long ranges. Passive angle tracking and geolocation of hostile (i.e. Western) IFF and SSR transponders at long ranges. High-powered active jamming of JTIDS-MIDS-Link-16 emitters. High-powered active jamming of satellite navigation receivers over large areas. High-powered active jamming of L-band AEWC-AWACS and surface based search radars at long ranges. High-powered active jamming of guided munition command data links over large areas. [Effectively, and completely, neutralizing the USA's use of AWACS for their detection]. The Tikhomirov NIIP L-band AESA radar, is an extremely important strategic development, and it's a technology which once fully matured and deployed in useful numbers, will render narrowband stealth designs like the F-22 & F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, and many, UAVs, as highly vulnerable to all flanker variants equipped with such radars. Get an education. Understand?

  • @hotstepper887

    @hotstepper887

    Ай бұрын

    @@Pangolin_6483 Clueless

  • @hotstepper887

    @hotstepper887

    Ай бұрын

    @@Pangolin_6483 EDUCATION (For free). The F-35B was claimed to be a stealthy single engine multirole combat aircraft, that unlike the Harrier, would be supersonic, stealthy, with modern avionics systems, and like the Harrier, would be VTOL capable. This is why we originally designed our two carriers without ramps. Only one of the biggest technical headaches, the British always had when building the Harrier, was the VTOL, - transferring from "lift" (downward nozzles), to forward flight (rear-facing nozzles), to then fly away from the lift-off. Apparently to achieve it took the British a hell of a lot of technical work, (three - four months at a time, over 3 years). Look up all the variants they made, but they never gave up, and they finally figured it out. I made the claim long before we saw the F-35B, that it wouldn't be VTOL capable, (even with the Rolls-Royce lift engines), because, the US has tried to produce and build a VTOL combat aircraft many times before, only they've failed each time, only ever managing to produce and build the British Sea Harrier, able to do so. Every US airframe (and there have been many), have all failed. I'll show you what I mean... Copy and paste “2013 MCAS Yuma Air Show - AV8B Harrier Demo” into KZread search. At 7 mins, 50 seconds, you'll watch a Harrier performing a proper VTOL. You'll see it lift off vertically, and then fly away from the lift-off, and you'll see the transfer of nozzles take place. -- You'll not ever see any footage anywhere of the F-35B performing a full VTOL. Yet Lockheed Martin do claim it is VTOL capable, when it, so clearly, is not. Copy and Paste “First F-35B Vertical Takeoff Test” into KZread search. You'll see it lift off, only then you'll see it return straight back down from the lift-off. You'll never see it fly away from the lift-off, if it could, we'd see footage of it doing so - like we still see on all the footage of the Harrier. But you'll not find any footage, anywhere, of the F-35B performing a VTOL. The Americans, unable to answer this, will then comically claim it's not necessary? LOL, (while forgetting, they're to be carrier-based aircraft), meaning even any slight damage to the deck or ramp, they'd be unable to get the jets airborne? Defeating the entire purpose of having the aircraft in the first place! You can't ever lose an entire carrier, in battle, for only minor damage?, I mean goodness me, whatever next?. So, why do we see the USA doing this? It's obviously because, the US is still a country that's never managed to produce & build a VTOL fighter aircraft. Britain did so in the late 50s, Russia did so in the late 60s, the USA has tried and failed numerous times, so it seems this time, they're going to try to lie about it LOL. That country is a travesty, man! But it does show us, that Lockheed do indeed produce propaganda aircraft, as the F-22 is exactly the same... A failed aircraft, so today, only being used for propaganda purposes! Typical US propaganda, usually consists of silly falsehoods, fake misinformation claims, or just twisted truths, like the F-15, is said to be unbeaten in A2A combat? It's true (ish), only when we look at every aircraft shot down by an F-15?, we find that none had any offensive capabilities, most had little if anything defensive, many without even a basic radar, meaning, you'd be absolutely stunned, if the F-15 didn't shoot every one of them down! So it really is, once again, and as always, just a very silly, and meaningless remedial propaganda claim. However, there is another aircraft, that's also unbeaten in A2A combat, and has faced off against aircraft just as capable and well armed as itself. The British Sea Harrier, is actually the only aircraft unbeaten in A2A combat, that has faced off against worthy, and viable opposition. And that really is a huge factor, that's worth knowing, unlike the F-15 propaganda claim, that you'd be shocked if it hadn't managed. These Americans really should be questioning why the US government made it illegal to sell the F-22? The US government, seemingly want it believed, that because it's so good, they don't want anyone else to have it. Yet, that actually makes no sense at all, none, not even a little sense. As the facts are, they've no idea what's waiting around the corner in new modern military technologies, and with the speed we're seeing so much new hi tech military tactical hardware being designed, developed, and created today, it could have made great sense to sell the F-22 at some stage. (If it actually works). If it worked, they'd have been able to recoup many of the resources spent on the aircraft, if not the resources in their entirety, even a profit! Yet, as always, there's another, and much more likely, reason the USA made it illegal to sell the F-22. If it is, just as I suspect it is, a "lemon", that was intended to be their leading front line strike aircraft, (that's failed), yet because of the cost/expense, to design and build them, they can't just write it off. So the US have then only used the F-22 for propaganda purposes? Then what better way of preventing anyone else from finding out, that it actually doesn't work, and really is a lemon, than making it illegal to sell? Logically, that's the only real possible reason the USA made it illegal to sell the F-22. -- It can only be, because it's a failed aircraft that was intended to be their leading front line 5th generation strike aircraft.19 years the US have had the F-22 in service, and they've been in wars the entire time, yet they've never used it, not once! And even more telling, was, after Russia arrived in Syria in 2015, the US removed every F-22 from right across the Middle East... Iraq, Tukey, UAE and Jordan. Absolutely no doubt about it, I guarantee that we'll never see the F-22 involved in any real war scenario, or even involved in any major sortie, because it's basically junk. They've even trashed all the infrastructure they had in place to build more of them.

  • @Milky_Nguyen
    @Milky_NguyenАй бұрын

    It's a brick with wings and nuclear missile's jet engine strapped onto it. practically has the aerodynamics of a brick.... but it also hits like a brick :)))

  • @gaveintothedarkness
    @gaveintothedarknessАй бұрын

    Fantastic documentary thank you!

  • @onogrirwin
    @onogrirwinАй бұрын

    currently, the MiG-31 is proving very useful in Ukraine. Turns out kinematic performance has lasting value.

  • @mcal27

    @mcal27

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah the hypersonic R-37 is a potent pairing with the 31. Combat proven

  • @russianaircraft376

    @russianaircraft376

    14 күн бұрын

    @@mcal27 Yes but there is a little bit of a secret formula. you need to use the MIG 31 and the A50-U in combination. let the MIG=31 fire a rocket R37-A and let the A50 do the radar designation/targeting. Exactly the same like they are doing with the S-400 don't use the radar on the ground. use the radar in the air A-50-U then the range of the missile systems becomes a lot more.

  • @mcal27

    @mcal27

    14 күн бұрын

    @@russianaircraft376 good to know. Thanks. I hope they are producing more A-50’s then? I don’t know whether to believe they lost any or not, but if they are so vital it’s always handy to have spares

  • @russianaircraft376

    @russianaircraft376

    13 күн бұрын

    @@mcal27 yes there is an upgrading program running for 3 years now and they are building one every 3 month but they need to put in the effort. because they have lost three of them in the last 2 years one to an accident another one too friendly fire and another one to the Ukrainian Air Force probably

  • @russianaircraft376

    @russianaircraft376

    13 күн бұрын

    @@mcal27 and I am talking about the digital upgraded version with the new engines

  • @timdodd3897
    @timdodd3897Ай бұрын

    Or the F-104. Man in a missle.

  • @KR4FTW3RK

    @KR4FTW3RK

    Ай бұрын

    Reject agility, embrace pure speed

  • @JohnnyWednesday

    @JohnnyWednesday

    Ай бұрын

    Way slower than a Foxbat

  • @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    @TyrannoJoris_Rex

    Ай бұрын

    And that missile takes out your own Mach 3-capable strategic bomber

  • @AlphaWhiskey_Haryo

    @AlphaWhiskey_Haryo

    Ай бұрын

    I wanted to agree, but the MiG-25 wasn't forced to be a multirole

  • @ronjon7942

    @ronjon7942

    Ай бұрын

    No F-104 bashing, please. She’s my favorite from that era of greatness, and I’m very protective of her, and sensitive to criticism. The Starfighter did pretty well with her one J79; just imagine if Kelly had created a twin-engined airframe with a similar design philosophy!

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