NASA Just Solved the Super Sonic Flight Problem

Ғылым және технология

Supersonic: Check out the Laifen Wave Toothbrush TODAY! bit.ly/3xuNKkt or Buy on Amazon: bit.ly/3JeCrzx
🚀 NASA Is Bringing Supersonic Planes BACK! 🚀
Remember the Concorde and the golden age of aviation when we could fly faster than the speed of sound? 🌟✈️ Fast forward to today, and there isn’t a single supersonic passenger plane in service. So, what makes supersonic travel so tricky, and can modern technology change that? Are we on the brink of a new golden age of aviation? 🛫✨
Join me as we explore the challenges and exciting possibilities of supersonic travel! Let’s figure this out together and see if NASA can make our high-speed dreams come true! 🚀🔍🌍
》》》SUPPORT THE SHOW!《《《
Join our Newsletter! twobit.link/Newsletter
Become a Patron! twobit.link/Patreon
Buying a Tesla? twobit.link/Tesla
》》》OUR PARTNERS《《《
Protect Yourself Online: twobit.link/DeleteMe
》》》GOING SOLAR?《《《
Energy Sage for Solar ⟫ twobit.link/EnergySage
》》》COMPANY OUTREACH 《《《
Sponsor A Video! sponsors@twobit.media
》》》CONNECT WITH US 《《《
Twitter 》 / twobitdavinci
Facebook 》 / twobitdavinci
Instagram 》 / twobitdavinci
Chapters
00:00 - Introduction
02:11 - The Concorde
03:36 - Safety issues
06:25 - Concorde's Problems
08:51 - Sonic boom
09:18 - New Blood
11:31 - NASA's X-59
13:36 - Future is Bright
@laifen_tech #laifen #laifenwave
what we'll cover
two bit da vinci,Why America's NEW Supersonic Race Will Be DIFFERENT,supersonic,supersonic race,supersonic travel,concorde,supersonic flight,nasa x59,nasa x-59 supersonic jet,new supersonic race,boom overture,why is supersonic,why supersonic flight failed,sonic boom,why is supersonic flight so hard,why dont we have supersonic,why the concorde failed,what happened to the concorde,future of supersonic commercial flight,future of supersonic flight, NEW Supersonic Race Will Change Aviation Forever!, NASA Just Solved the Supersonic Flight Problem!, Supersonic Air Travel is Making a MAJOR Comeback!, Researchers JUST Solved the Super Sonic Flight Problem!, NASA Just Solved the Super Sonic Flight Problem

Пікірлер: 272

  • @TwoBitDaVinci
    @TwoBitDaVinciАй бұрын

    Thanks for Watching! Check out the Laifen Wave Toothbrush TODAY! bit.ly/3xuNKkt or Buy on Amazon: bit.ly/3JeCrzx

  • @lettersandnumbersuc

    @lettersandnumbersuc

    Ай бұрын

    Nasa lol… Is a scam. Earth is flat. You disagree? Name any device that proves any earth rotation… Suprise, there isn’t any…

  • @lettersandnumbersuc

    @lettersandnumbersuc

    Ай бұрын

    search the challenger crew is still alive. NASA claims the challenge crew all have twin brothers and sisters. This is not a joke. This is literally what NASA claims. Wake the F up.

  • @PiDsPagePrototypes

    @PiDsPagePrototypes

    Ай бұрын

    Skipping too many details - such as the crash flight having missing landing gear spacers, meaning it drifted off centerline and hit the debris that had fallen off a US aircraft. If it ran down the centerline, it would never have hit the debris. The US regulators and the Noise - Concorde was nowhere near as loud as maade out - the 'tests' that 'proved' the noise of sonic booms were done with a fighter jet at low level over a major city, and not at the Concorde's 60,000ft flight level, or over the farmland it was to fly over. Those 'tests', were biased through Boeing's interference and 'funding', because Boeing had already failed at making a US SSC.

  • @amritbhupal8514

    @amritbhupal8514

    Ай бұрын

    Right now all resources should be focused on how to provide green air travel rather then pursue a supersonic plane thats highly unlikely to be commercialised and if it is will only be used by the very wealthy

  • @kandismueller7716
    @kandismueller7716Ай бұрын

    I worked on the Concorde as a Braniff flight attendant because Braniff had a promotional interchange with Air France and British Airways in the late 70s. Braniff only flew it sub-sonic and we only flew it between Dallas and Washington DC. The week that I worked on it the flights were always brim-full. I sat in the aft jump seat (facing aft) and take-offs were especially thrilling. It felt and sounded like a rocket ship with my body thrown against the seat harness! Because we remained sub-sonic over the US, even at our cruising altitude the plane never leveled off. Pushing those carts uphill from the aft galley was a bit of a chore. No, really, I was very lucky to experience the Concorde!

  • @Morecreativemind

    @Morecreativemind

    Ай бұрын

    That's super cool that you've Been on it!

  • @alainabogle

    @alainabogle

    Ай бұрын

    this a flex lol and i love it

  • @PapaWheelie1
    @PapaWheelie1Ай бұрын

    I would be more impressed if they could double the speed of the TSA lines

  • @chrisjenkins9978

    @chrisjenkins9978

    Ай бұрын

    😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂😅

  • @Chris.Brisson

    @Chris.Brisson

    Ай бұрын

    The 12 passengers of the next supersonic service will not be encumbered by TSA lines.

  • @sparkysho-ze7nm

    @sparkysho-ze7nm

    Ай бұрын

    Or reduce unemployment lines

  • @emilysmith6897

    @emilysmith6897

    Ай бұрын

    Or better yet, just abolish it.

  • @associatedblacksheepandmisfits
    @associatedblacksheepandmisfitsАй бұрын

    Audio vox is extremely muffled

  • @potatoradio
    @potatoradioАй бұрын

    1961 a Douglass DC8 became the first supersonic airliner.

  • @sunkeyavad6528
    @sunkeyavad6528Ай бұрын

    And this video just solved acoustic time travel. It's audio is from 30 years ago.

  • @paulgracey4697
    @paulgracey4697Ай бұрын

    I spent most of my high school years of 1967-60 in San Diego, when military jets at Miramar and North Island regularly broke the sound barrier over populated and non-populated areas. It was the height of the Cold War after all. Learning to drive with the occasional sonic boom rattling my nerves was a hazard on top of the no seatbelts cars we had then. But I want to tell you about the 1967 trip I took to the Expo 67 Worlds Fair in Montreal Canada. A model of the Concorde was of course prominently displayed at the French and British pavilions, but it was there that the Russians made known that they would be building one too. I saw their Model TU-144 and did not expect that it was a real project. After all I had seen their display of color TVs that were built around an export version of the RCA shadow mask picture tube that also had been the basis of the Hitachi color TV I saw in a bar in the Tokyo Ginza in 1963 when there with the U.S. Navy ship I served aboard. The U.S. pavillion had a model SST too, as I recall, that could have solved the profitability issue, should it have been built. Swing wing, for much better landing and take-off performance, and 300 passenger capable, at least on paper. It represented our American pride of aerospace primacy. But for our government to build and test such a beast back then was going to impact that other program we had been spending roughly 4% of our GDP upon, the Apollo manned missions to the Moon. We did not want to fail at that one. So maybe that prohibition against supersonic overflights had been a product of of a governmental ruling with ulterior motives. It was well known that the airlines flying the Concorde hoped to add several inland cities on both sides of the Atlantic to their flight plans for it, which would have meant around a hundred of them being built. Had those factors have been possible, we might still be seeing them in the skies today.

  • @Istandby666
    @Istandby666Ай бұрын

    Growing up around Edwards Air Force Base and the Mach tunnel. I grew up listening to and feeling sonic booms, in fact it's one of the biggest things I miss about the desert.

  • @codebycarlos
    @codebycarlosАй бұрын

    Not sure if it's just me but audio sounds muffled?

  • @captjack2112

    @captjack2112

    Ай бұрын

    He's not a real person but an AI generated FBI planted climate energy seller😎🙈🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @TestTest-eb8jr

    @TestTest-eb8jr

    Ай бұрын

    Let's say the audio is suboptimal....

  • @WTH1812

    @WTH1812

    Ай бұрын

    Innovation has its own unique costs. How fast did Russians need to get to Kazakstan? How many supersonic planes will the market support? Spare parts? What is the range? What routes will be available? Profitable? How much faster can airlines go bankrupt this time? You didn't mention the toxic fuel of the Concordski. Tesla's Cybertruck is proving to be a herd of White Elephants combined in each rust bucket. EV's are just finding out some major issues: zero resale value, energy grid stress, charging time, range constraints, "booming" sales, Chinese lemons swamping the market, overcapacity, sales volume plateaus, data collection, ...,

  • @boxxdrmtb

    @boxxdrmtb

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah I'm a minute into this and I came right to the comments. At first I thought it was some weird effect cuz they were going supersonic and it was slurring the speech or something 😜

  • @TwoBitDaVinci

    @TwoBitDaVinci

    Ай бұрын

    apologies! we are working on a new set and recording setup... need to dial things in!

  • @thehobbyguy7089
    @thehobbyguy7089Ай бұрын

    The fuel cost may not be what you think it will be. Consider the idea of the current adaptive cycle engines coming online for military jets, they make supersonic flight possible without using afterburners or even better fuelless engine designs using heat exchangers instead of dumping masses of fuel into the airstream.

  • @simontillson482

    @simontillson482

    Ай бұрын

    No matter what engines you use, supersonic flight is always going to be way less efficient than subsonic. This argument doesn’t work I’m afraid.

  • @thehobbyguy7089

    @thehobbyguy7089

    Ай бұрын

    @@simontillson482 I am not saying supersonic flight would be less energy-intensive than subsonic flight, just his baseline comparison looking at Concorde consumption levels vs the technological advancements we have today is off and will not be as prohibitive as he imagines.

  • @simontillson482

    @simontillson482

    Ай бұрын

    @@thehobbyguy7089 Very true. The gap with modern technology is narrower, but it’s still wide enough to make it impractical. As mentioned in the video, even military jets only use supersonic flight to avoid interception and avoid it for cruise wherever possible, because it reduces their range so drastically. Honestly, I can’t see any reason for commercial supersonic flight. It just makes no sense. For long haul flights, the actual flight time is not a big proportion of the door-to-door time anyway, so even for business class, the cost/benefit ratio is very poor. It’s pretty much a gimmick at this point and will probably remain that way due to increasingly tighter controls on emissions and efficiency.

  • @friendlyone2706

    @friendlyone2706

    Ай бұрын

    @@simontillson482 You remind me of the college professor who said we didn't need a new delivery service whose motto was "When it absolutely, positively, has to get there overnight." The professor was wrong. The student became rich. Sometimes people absolutely, positively have to get there faster.

  • @simontillson482

    @simontillson482

    Ай бұрын

    @@friendlyone2706 Good point. Maybe it does make sense for the ultra-rich or executives with unlimited expense accounts. I did deliberately use the business class in my discussion for this reason. I ignored the idiot class deliberately… 🤓

  • @Istandby666
    @Istandby666Ай бұрын

    The effects of sonic booms on the public was first tested in Tulsa, Oklahoma. After blowing out windows and tearing roofs off houses. The AIr Force moved just North of Oklahoma City for further testing. Now the Mojave desert is the only legal place to break the sound barrier in the states.

  • @tonycosta3302
    @tonycosta3302Ай бұрын

    I recall the TU144 was incredibly loud inside, so much so that you could barely have a conversation. And the air show crash was actually a result of a French surveillance airplane flying above (it was he reason the TU144 take off was delayed as the French had to wait for the surveillance airplane to get in position). When they climbed, their radar sounded a collision warning causing them to level off abruptly, stressing the plane beyond its design. The French and Soviets settled the case quietly as it was an embarrassment for both.

  • @garyleo14
    @garyleo14Ай бұрын

    3:12 that crash happened in 1973 not 63

  • @josephbryant8799
    @josephbryant8799Ай бұрын

    Slight correction, Aerion is no longer building their supersonic business jet, the company has been defunct as of 2021

  • @LordDustinDeWynd
    @LordDustinDeWyndАй бұрын

    Don't forget the USA's Boeing SST, killed in 1971 because of skyrocketing fuel prices and environmental concerns

  • @leftcoaster67

    @leftcoaster67

    Ай бұрын

    Lockheed L2000 for the same project. Maybe they should have backed Lockheeds more realistic performance.

  • @petehutzel3778
    @petehutzel3778Ай бұрын

    Ricky As an aging engineer who once worked in aero, I really like your channel and most of your articles. But on this one, I have to part company with you. In the '50s and '60s, I was growing up a bit south of Wright Patt AFB. They regularly flew supersonic boom busters over our farm. As a kid, I found it exciting, even tho a close pass would bring me to my knees. I doubt that the general public is willing to live with that on a daily basis. In terms of time saved, I doubt that supersonic can make a big reduction in travel times. If you are flying NYC to London, you will likely spend much more time in ground transport at each end plus endless waiting in each airport. Having flown our of NYC hundreds of times, I can say that none of my trips would have been materially shortened by supersonic. Most of my time was on the ground at each end. If we wish to shorten air travel times, we should focus first on the ground legs. Pete Hutzel

  • @woltews
    @woltewsАй бұрын

    Sonic booms are not the problem, the problem is with GHG restrictions we will be using less dense energy sources ( compare the best battery in w/kg to regular gas ) and Since the kinetic energy increases with the square of the speed, an object doubling its speed requires four times as much energy.

  • @simontillson482

    @simontillson482

    Ай бұрын

    That’s just for static drag. If you include the supersonic drag, power is more like velocity cubed. That’s why supersonic flight is a dead-end. The amount of extra power required to go supersonic is just stupid and makes it horribly inefficient.

  • @friendlyone2706

    @friendlyone2706

    Ай бұрын

    @@simontillson482 If speed is the object, you pay the price. That's why most people no longer use boats to cross the Pacific.

  • @jehiahmaduro6827

    @jehiahmaduro6827

    Ай бұрын

    @@friendlyone2706 That is an Awesome point! Were we the people of yesteryear we would think "Why are these young people hurrying to jet set across the Atlantic? The Queen Mary, "Blue Ribbon Atlantic Crossing Holder" can get there in a blistering 4 days. What's the point of going faster? It is clean, efficient and most of all safe!

  • @larryscott3982
    @larryscott3982Ай бұрын

    Single engine transatlantic flight may be another hurdle. Regulations for Transoceanic flights for twin engine jet passenger aircraft had to be carefully drafted after reliability of twin engine jets proven. Single engine is a whole nuther issue for passenger service. “ETOPS, originally short for Extended-Range Twin Operations Performance Standards, or more recently just plain Extended operations, is the rating that allows twin-engined aircraft to fly long distances; particularly over large bodies of water like oceans.”

  • @andrewday3206
    @andrewday3206Ай бұрын

    Watching this video I couldn’t help but think of two options. The expensive supersonic aircraft would be for low volume passengers. The ultra efficient aircraft would be for everyone else. In the future I could see the blended wing body with very high bypass ratio geared turbofans being possible. Both could possibly utilize rotating detonation turbines for the power section. The blended wing body might have a contra-rotating bypass fan like the NK-93 for maximum efficiency. The NK-93 was never funded enough to reach market but highlighted a possible path forward solving the noise issue of the CFM RISE and other propfans.

  • @drockjr
    @drockjrАй бұрын

    12:06. It took 12 minutes to get to some semblance of what the title proclaimed

  • @icosthop9998

    @icosthop9998

    Ай бұрын

    ...And

  • @drockjr

    @drockjr

    Ай бұрын

    @@icosthop9998 someone needs reading comprehension skills

  • @snakezdewiggle6084

    @snakezdewiggle6084

    Ай бұрын

    And... NASA have Not "solved" anything. He just spouted a bunch numbers. Yep, that's 17 minutes I'll never get back.

  • @karthikd03

    @karthikd03

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah I've been seeing recently two bit da Vinci just uploads clickbait videos which never really show what the title says

  • @RipRoaringGarage

    @RipRoaringGarage

    Ай бұрын

    And incomplete if not false info. The Paris Air Show crash was a mid air near miss with a Dassault chase plane that was not in the briefing, causing the Tupolev pilot to react, over pitching and causing a stall. But channels like this, with zero connection of experience is how urban legends spread. Pseudo sciency, be smarty pants type channels. I wouldnt care if KZread didnt keep shoving this channel in my recommended for weeks now.

  • @detroitmissioncontrol2070
    @detroitmissioncontrol2070Ай бұрын

    Keep up the great work on educating the public

  • @GROGU123
    @GROGU123Ай бұрын

    Everytime I think of the Concorde, I think of "The Parent Trap" with Lindsey Lohan. They used the Concorde to get to London faster than the regular airline and profess his love for their mom.

  • @katanaridingremy
    @katanaridingremyАй бұрын

    Not a bad video. Would have liked more on the engineering side of these new planes but cool to know they exist

  • @staipari6244
    @staipari6244Ай бұрын

    Great video. Would love to see you break down the aerodynamic design used in formula one. How it works and what could it be like in the future.

  • @kadourimdou43
    @kadourimdou43Ай бұрын

    Great episode 👍

  • @dustinandrews89019
    @dustinandrews89019Ай бұрын

    As someone with a toddler and family 4,000 miles away cutting the travel time down from 4 hours to two is a big deal. Though as someone with a toddler I might not be able to afford it...

  • @jamescobban857
    @jamescobban857Ай бұрын

    For a lower ticket price, less sonic boom risk, and far less GHG emission into the Stratosphere, Starship, a transport solution that is already under construction, can deliver passengers anywhere within 10,000km in 50 minutes.

  • @baldytail
    @baldytailАй бұрын

    My dad went on the first commercial flight of Concorde ie hired rather than a scheduled flight, think they flew over the Bay of Biscay and then back to Heathrow. Seriously jealous to this day as it was massively expensive by the time I could afford to travel and now not an oiption.

  • @yosefross
    @yosefrossАй бұрын

    One word: Starship. All of these developments are truly exciting, but by the time it arrives commercially, Starship will be whizzing 800 people at a time around in a fraction of the flight time, and since it's designed to be massed produced at a crazy scale, it'll probably even be cheaper! And you get to float in outer space for a few minutes as the cherry on top!

  • @sarkhori
    @sarkhoriАй бұрын

    As long as the flight is long enough to justify it, the fuel burn rate wouldn't necessarily be hugely different if the plane were higher up - most of the fuel burn on the Concorde was keeping that speed up against the friction of the atmosphere - fly higher, less friction. Only works for long flights, though....

  • @dannygoldsmithmagic
    @dannygoldsmithmagicАй бұрын

    The muffled audio makes this very difficult to watch

  • @stanmitchell3375

    @stanmitchell3375

    Ай бұрын

    You are deaf

  • @davidbangsdemocracy5455

    @davidbangsdemocracy5455

    Ай бұрын

    muffled? better speakers needed?

  • @simontillson482

    @simontillson482

    Ай бұрын

    I got the same here. The audio recorded inside the plane sounded like his microphone was inside a cushion. Not good at all, quite annoying to try to understand. Even his studio audio is extremely bass-heavy. Very unusual for this channel - it’s normally fine.

  • @snakezdewiggle6084

    @snakezdewiggle6084

    Ай бұрын

    Its fine here. Tales off above 6k, a little muddy below 800.

  • @sparkysho-ze7nm

    @sparkysho-ze7nm

    Ай бұрын

    Not

  • @LordNementon
    @LordNementonАй бұрын

    Concorde, oh yeah

  • @SkepticalCaveman
    @SkepticalCavemanАй бұрын

    I'm more interested in electric planes. Quick swappable Aluminium Air batteries could make long distance EV planes viable. The battery is very light making it perfect for planes, just split it in many small modules so that swapping them out is easy. Charging a plane takes too much time anyway so battery swapping is the way to go.

  • @friendlyone2706

    @friendlyone2706

    Ай бұрын

    Batteries are secondary stored energy and therefore always for inefficient than direct energy production. But, if government grants are your objective, battery powered planes can be profitable. If you're on Mars, battery powered might be more efficient than carrying your own solar panels.

  • @justinterested5819

    @justinterested5819

    Ай бұрын

    @@friendlyone2706 Depends on where you get the energy from. Sure, putting a generator and a battery between an engine and the wheels doesnt make sense most of the time. But if you want to use other forms of energy (be it renewables (sun, wind, water, waves, biomass), or other types of fuels that cant be used for mobile applications (coal, trash, nuclear power)), a battery is often more efficient than power to fuel applications. Even here on earth.

  • @friendlyone2706

    @friendlyone2706

    Ай бұрын

    @@justinterested5819 Batteries do have their uses. And going downhill can be recharged -- even on the moon and Mars.

  • @jameskunzman4585
    @jameskunzman4585Ай бұрын

    To increase fuel efficiency pilots throttle back slightly in a tailwind and throttle up slightly in a headwind affecting true airspeed, (TAS) accordingly.

  • @scottthomas3792
    @scottthomas3792Ай бұрын

    As a teenager in the '70s, I was in the ground relatively close to an aircraft breaking the sound barrier....a sonic boom is impressive....

  • @LadiesMan-bo2cc
    @LadiesMan-bo2ccАй бұрын

    Just glad Boeing isn’t building any

  • @LordDustinDeWynd
    @LordDustinDeWyndАй бұрын

    14:03 Scaling up - Yep, once it's flyable and flying, Lockheed probly start looking at scaling up. Hmm... here's radical idea! Put passenger seating below and forward of pilot (in 747 deck configuration) ! Be a Monster, though!

  • @davidmccarthy6061
    @davidmccarthy6061Ай бұрын

    A good exercise to figure out the issues so I wish them luck. The real problem will be economic feasibility for the operating airlines given the much reduce occupancy. Concorde had very limited routes and a great many airports that could not accommodate it, besides the very expensive ticket cost. Now we have virtual meetings and many fewer people that must travel.

  • @danielrichards4927
    @danielrichards4927Ай бұрын

    Audio is definitely messed up…usually not an issue on his videos. I assume there was just an issue and not enough time to fix it this time.

  • @donaldduck5731
    @donaldduck5731Ай бұрын

    Employing Inertia drives and not relying on aerodynamics means we can leave earths atmosphere and accelerate to any velocity before reentering at our destination.

  • @DavidCoxDallas
    @DavidCoxDallasАй бұрын

    SpaceX released a KZread video in 2017, "Starship | Earth to Earth," suggesting much faster possible transport: less than an hour between any 2 places on the planet - half an hour for most trips. might be worth a look.

  • @davidfgranger
    @davidfgrangerАй бұрын

    Giving the Tesla Clustertruck as an example of "throwing out the rulebook and starting over". Well that's going to age like milk isn't it.

  • @melivey4196
    @melivey4196Ай бұрын

    Hey Richey, I’m glad you covered this, but consider me unimpressed. The tech gives the rich another way to amuse themselves at environmental expense. Mostly it allows them to divorce themselves from the reality that the rest of us face. The fuel burn is unconscionable in the midst of our exponentiating co2 crisis. And can you imagine the effect on wildlife and wilderness areas when even the sound of a car door (loudly) closing (at arms’s length) will disrupt the activities of the critters on the ground and in the air?

  • @andyroid7339

    @andyroid7339

    Ай бұрын

    totally agree! And I thought that I was the only person who considered this aspect. I regularly make such points in the comments of many videos. I suppose we are faced with the question: 'Do we continue to develop our engineering with the prospect that innovations will be found which might actually help the planet or do we stop where we are?' My feeling is the former because we have the ability to 'think' our way out of trouble. The only thing missing is the drive to do this.

  • @friendlyone2706

    @friendlyone2706

    Ай бұрын

    First the rich experience new options... then those options become more common and the costs lessen. True of modern indoor plumbing, color TV, standard airline flights... and can be true here as well. Unless resentment of the luckier is allowed to lessen the visions of creators.

  • @melivey4196

    @melivey4196

    Ай бұрын

    @@friendlyone2706Thanks for your thought on this, which has largely been true of consumer goods. And I don’t care so much about the extraordinary expense that people are willing to incur, but if one were to step back a bit from the supersonic transport product, the objective viewpoint will almost certainly see this tech as an extraordinary creation of harmful environmental byproducts. Please excuse me if it brings to mind folks taking helicopter rides to see the last of the melting glaciers - even as the helicopter exhaust contributes in its own small way to the glaciers melting. Am I off base?

  • @friendlyone2706

    @friendlyone2706

    Ай бұрын

    @@melivey4196 We have been told warming is bad, bad, bad. That it would repeat the floods that seem to have flowed at the end of the younger dryas. That it would increase desertification. When was Earth as warm as the temperature increase we are told to fear? A few centuries ago during a period text books written in the 1950's called the medieval optimum. Back then warmer times increased ocean water evaporation, bumper crops, little war anywhere, then within a year cold happened, crops failed, starvation, wars of desperation, less rainfall. Was there ever a time of "dangerously warm" weather for a long period of time during our Age of Mammals? Look up the average temperatures of the last 8 million years --current continental arrangement, only garden of Eden wonderful world wide. Some of this information is available on line. You might have to look at some older printed encyclopedias and other print reference books. But all of it is available on line if you know how to dig. Remember, what you see as a melted glacier, animals see as improved living quarters. It's all about doing your own homework and digging deep. I've been reading science books & publications since the 1950's. Along with many other topics. In 1965, it was widely believed too many cars spewing fossil fuel exhaust would bring on an ice age within 30 years. I'm sure you heard that before. Any idea what experimental evidence change the prognosis? The eight million year graph shows steady weather until about 2.5 million years ago. We have (so far) never returned to the benign world of 10 to 3 million years ago. Not even close. We've had frequent ice ages with only very, very brief warming periods. Looking at the graph, we are overdue for another killing ice age. Pray it doesn't come in your life time. I'm old enough, I'll probably miss it, but my grandchildren might not be so lucky. Complex hydrocarbons do seem to cause warming. CO2 is not a complex hydrocarbon. Since CO2's effect is defined by a logarithmic curve, it's effect on weather is trivial. Most green plants get barely enough CO2. Commercial greenhouses buy CO2 generators so they need less water and fewer insecticides.

  • @pietroantonelli6961
    @pietroantonelli6961Ай бұрын

    Absolutely love your channel... I don't think it's a 7000 miles from New York to Linda...

  • @21degrees

    @21degrees

    23 күн бұрын

    You are correct. It is half that distance, so 7000 miles round trip. Ultimately the limited range was the main reason no American airline purchased it. It could not go from London to Texas directly and it was a business failure.

  • @anonymous13141
    @anonymous13141Ай бұрын

    Apart of the technical issues (ie noise emissions, safety) My understanding on what partly of not almost entirely killed the supersonic travelling was just fuel cost and operation cost. Now there's additional carbon tax. I am not sure how commercially viable is this idea.

  • @Chaos_rider_666

    @Chaos_rider_666

    Ай бұрын

    Exactly but one of the reasons it economically failed was because the US and several other countries restricted the route that a super sonic plane can travel due to sound complaints from residence (during the testing) with this new nasa method we could open lot more routes on top of that i think they might initially start as luxury type of plane marketed for rich people who by saving few hours of travel time could earn several times the ticket price......well just my guess but these planes atleast at the beginning might be exempted from carbon tax and hopefully one day bio fules become cheap alternative for petrol as electric planes are almost impossible within this century

  • @bearcubdaycare

    @bearcubdaycare

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@Chaos_rider_666Boom has said they're targeting 100% SAF (sustainable aviation fuel).

  • @Chaos_rider_666

    @Chaos_rider_666

    Ай бұрын

    @@bearcubdaycare yea but honestly I think that's just bs atleast for now the only way they could do that at present is using bio fules but the cost will shot up the roof adding it on top of the high fuel expense of supersonic jets.....it's suicide for any real company so i think it's either just marketing gimmick just like how Elon promising self driving cars for 10 years 😅

  • @friendlyone2706

    @friendlyone2706

    Ай бұрын

    @@bearcubdaycare Meaning only those with private jets will experience reliable, fast travel to anywhere they choose. The rest of us will stay home, taking their word for what is happening elsewhere -- happy little ostriches with restricted flight options.

  • @atrumluminarium

    @atrumluminarium

    Ай бұрын

    Keep in mind, we have CFD and better material science now compared to the 60s. We also have more mature engines like ramjets, scramjets and rotating detonation engines.

  • @michaelrivera9822
    @michaelrivera9822Ай бұрын

    Been waiting my entire aerospace career to build one. Alot of talk and demonstration happened since the 1990's

  • @Drakuba
    @DrakubaАй бұрын

    my hopes and dreams are with Hermeus. Real Engineering did a vid on their engine and why its "only mach5, but around the world in few hours, flying on the edge of space sounds hella fun :)

  • @JegaSingam
    @JegaSingamАй бұрын

    Wondering if speakers, mounted on the exterior of the plane can provide a sound cancelling effect. Perhaps, it might be no good for propagating shock waves.

  • @BradAkersphotography
    @BradAkersphotographyАй бұрын

    Great job Ricky, but I feel if you’re going to adjust for today’s dollars. Fuel cost should be adjusted as well. zero chance a Concord and a 777 both cost the same per passenger mile. The slide before gave the 777 4.7x passenger mile advantage!

  • @HobbesNJoe
    @HobbesNJoeАй бұрын

    Hat tip to the jazzed-up intro!

  • @barryon8706
    @barryon8706Ай бұрын

    Just use a ballistic trajectory, vertical take off / vertical landing so the shockwaves are nearly parallel to the ground. The airlines can make it proitable by charging a premium for the air sickness bags. 😀

  • @noam65
    @noam65Ай бұрын

    How long from NY to Sydney? NY to Delhi?

  • @5GentleGiants
    @5GentleGiantsАй бұрын

    DO NOT LET HYPERSONIC BECOME COMMERCIAL, YOU WON’T EVER HAVE PEACE AND QUIET IN YOU HOME AGAIN

  • @bobthegoat7090
    @bobthegoat7090Ай бұрын

    Could we get a video about the actual engineering? I really want to know exactly how that long nose and other parts of the engineering make a quieter supersonic boom. Good video, just didn't think I would get a video about history.

  • @urbanstrencan
    @urbanstrencanАй бұрын

    Surprised that the Concorde got canceled, after the crash and high prices for running it, why they didn't try to update it with new engines and new tech?

  • @SP4CEBAR
    @SP4CEBARАй бұрын

    I can't wait for the time when Hermeus and Starship Earth To Earth become competitors

  • @jehiahmaduro6827

    @jehiahmaduro6827

    Ай бұрын

    I can see Hermes becoming a VIP Superjet. Maybe for the Sultan of Brunei or King Abdula of Abu Dhabi. Such a jet is as much statement of wealth as it is a strategic military transport.😊

  • @NeonNijahn
    @NeonNijahnАй бұрын

    8:00 apparently true for this video as well. 😅 love your stuff though but thought it was ironic.

  • @Mobile_Dom
    @Mobile_DomАй бұрын

    as someone that does the london to LA trip more often than I thought I would, I wouldn't mind doing london to LA in under 6 hours, that's fro sure, I'm also down to have planes with fewer seats crammed in

  • @sparkysho-ze7nm
    @sparkysho-ze7nmАй бұрын

    Ty for takin time to teach lil ones proper oral care

  • @thomaslanders2073
    @thomaslanders2073Ай бұрын

    This aircraft will probably never advance to the stage of commercial production. Doomed to remain a test prototype at best 🙄

  • @MattPerdeck
    @MattPerdeckАй бұрын

    All the projects for supersonic planes you mention are for business jets. Not sure you'll get to do your supersonic flight if these go into service, even at $14000. Plus, what would be the point anyway in supersonic airliners for the masses? NY to LA: 1 hour travel to airport, check in 2h before flight, fly 2.5h, 1 hour travel from airport to city = 6.5h. On a far cheaper subsonic flight, that would be 9h. Is that really worth the expense if you're not super rich?

  • @OneWildTurkey

    @OneWildTurkey

    Ай бұрын

    Business flight: Helicopter from downtown Manhattan to JFK, 5 minutes ($200). no TSA, arrive moments before flight, 2.5 hour flight time, helicopter to destination from airport, another 5 minutes depending on destination. Less than 3 hours not 6.5

  • @boxxdrmtb
    @boxxdrmtbАй бұрын

    Please pull this video and fix the audio and re-release I can't watch this. It looks like a great video.

  • @danbhakta
    @danbhaktaАй бұрын

    90 minutes across the pond...sounds awesome...until they tell you to arrive 3 hours early for international flights.

  • @poporbit2432
    @poporbit2432Ай бұрын

    Seems to me combining two shock waves out of phase 180 degrees is the only real solution. How this can be done is the challenge.

  • @LordDustinDeWynd
    @LordDustinDeWyndАй бұрын

    11:18 Proposed aircraft: With capacities under 15 or 20 people, they are merely executive jets that the general public will only see in magazines, &c.

  • @Istandby666
    @Istandby666Ай бұрын

    I would never fly on the Concord. 1) too expensive, 2) too cramped

  • @Neeboopsh
    @NeeboopshАй бұрын

    audio is muffled. and for the "get better speakers! change your settings!" rebuttals. i can just open up any other video produced by twobitdavinci and they are markedly better, as are every other normal video i watch right now, same setup edit: clears up a bit with more higher frequency at about 8:10

  • @bobnomura2068
    @bobnomura2068Ай бұрын

    The shape of the X-59 Isn't all that good for packing in the passengers. Perhaps a smaller super-expensive private 10 to 20 passenger plane ? With that super-long snout, current passenger plane ramps couldn't reach the cabin doorways.

  • @MrThacke
    @MrThackeАй бұрын

    Field momentum vehicles will out class any plane in the future.

  • @stickynorth
    @stickynorthАй бұрын

    These projects are cool and all but I am most interested in hydrogen and electric aircraft. Both the adapted reuse of existing airlines refitted for hydrogen like Universal Hydrogen is proposing but also new designs that incorporate it from the get go... Most of the new blended body aircraft including the Bombardier Ecojet design are counting on this being the future of aviation... And I kind of hope it is!

  • @frankbauerful
    @frankbauerfulАй бұрын

    The real problem of today's air travel is that check in takes over 1h and requires you to strip to your underwear. And often the airport is hours away. So 1h flight time comes with 4h pre and post flight time.

  • @OneWildTurkey

    @OneWildTurkey

    Ай бұрын

    Business flights (not business class) don't require TSA and helicopters aren't much more than the travel time cost plus the vehicle.

  • @user-ig4xr9ub7w
    @user-ig4xr9ub7wАй бұрын

    One thing to remember @TwoBitDaVinci is that a lot of this research is funded by oil companies, especially those in Dubai, to justify and continue fossil fuel extraction. The question is, do we need super sonic flight when we could be investing this wealth and human power into more sustainable tech. Remember, sustainable tech isint sexy or exciting, but it means we get to live another day, and I much rather have that then a drug filled crazy party one night, and a burning world the next.

  • @turningpoint4238
    @turningpoint4238Ай бұрын

    I've been flying for 30 odd years and it's got worse over the years not better. Not holding my breath for any improvements anytime soon.

  • @Mr2Reviews
    @Mr2ReviewsАй бұрын

    I think SpaceX will achieve point to point commercial services before quiet supersonic planes imo. NY to LA in 2 hours? How cute. Starship will do US to the other side of the world in 90 mins.

  • @dwightnix893
    @dwightnix893Ай бұрын

    fly higher and no noticeable sonic boom on the ground.

  • @informationcollectionpost3257
    @informationcollectionpost3257Ай бұрын

    Wow, I still need a $14,000 ticket to fly at the speed of sound. No way Mr Two Bit Da Vinci! Perhaps the military is interested in this technology & perhaps even funding it. Look at rotary combustion jet engines to learn about a less expensive way to travel at the speed of sound.

  • @nesseihtgnay9419
    @nesseihtgnay9419Ай бұрын

    Seems like NASA is always solving problems for everyone

  • @jantjarks7946

    @jantjarks7946

    Ай бұрын

    Every billionaire. Else?

  • @bearcubdaycare

    @bearcubdaycare

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@jantjarks7946 As the video said, the new supersonic companies are targeting leisure travel, not just business. (And most business people aren't billionaires, but people whose families would be happy to see them home faster.)

  • @jantjarks7946

    @jantjarks7946

    Ай бұрын

    @@bearcubdaycare Who said that it's about the passengers? 😉

  • @ryanpoulter6286
    @ryanpoulter6286Ай бұрын

    To the title of the video : no it ain't. I'm willing to reconsider in 5 years once we actually see FAA EAA approvals

  • @nuxli6454
    @nuxli6454Ай бұрын

    SpaceX? 🤔 Speed and number of people in one flight? 🤔

  • @clintcowan9424
    @clintcowan9424Ай бұрын

    Russia just couldn't market their wins well enough outside of their close loop

  • @Robbedem
    @RobbedemАй бұрын

    The ban on supersonic travel in the USA is an example of bad law making. The supersonic travel isn't a problem, the sonic boom was. So instead they should have banned travel that created more than x amount of noise.

  • @OneWildTurkey

    @OneWildTurkey

    Ай бұрын

    Since when do legislators have common sense?

  • @Robbedem

    @Robbedem

    Ай бұрын

    @@OneWildTurkey since before they could be legally bought I guess. ;)

  • @OneWildTurkey

    @OneWildTurkey

    Ай бұрын

    @@Robbedem 💯😃

  • @CBR2200
    @CBR2200Ай бұрын

    Seems like the perfect solution for Taylor Swift. Cost is no object, room for one person. Perfect. She just needs to get certified to fly it.

  • @RagnarokLoW
    @RagnarokLoWАй бұрын

    a toothbrush with a fucking app. Hell nah.

  • @SteveGouldinSpain
    @SteveGouldinSpainАй бұрын

    Wow, why is the audio so duff?

  • @5GentleGiants
    @5GentleGiantsАй бұрын

    MAKE NOISE TOLERABLE? SO AS LONG AS IT DOESN’T BREAK YOU WINDOWS

  • @ulrichraymond8372
    @ulrichraymond8372Ай бұрын

    It seems feasible but if if used nuclear fuel, which would not be much. Sure it does come with some risk but there is less chance for an explosion and would be much safer.

  • @warrenpennick2979
    @warrenpennick2979Ай бұрын

    😃

  • @mhmdnazel1
    @mhmdnazel1Ай бұрын

    I think it will be cheaper to build trains ..China already is coming out with trains that will run 1000km/h ...And the semi vacuum tube system with 4000km/h is planned... 3.2 times the speed of sound... Unless you can build planes faster and cheaper ....Furthermore train stations are more convenient than airports

  • @OneWildTurkey

    @OneWildTurkey

    Ай бұрын

    And after the first tectonic plate shift, they can rebuild the tunnel.

  • @CaseAgainstFaith1
    @CaseAgainstFaith1Ай бұрын

    While it would be foolish to say "never", I can't see it being anything but a tiny niche for the foreseeable future. When all you could do on a plane was read or watch movies or sleep, people would be willing to pay a fair amount more for a quicker flight. Now that you can do most anything on a computer during a flight, paying much more for a quicker flight just isn't worth it. Sure, maybe some people will do it occasionally. But again, almost certainly nothing but a tiny niche for the foreseeable future.

  • @PaulADAigle
    @PaulADAigleАй бұрын

    The engineering aspect is interesting, but why are we still putting so much into more CO2 emissions? We need to work on making an electric propulsion that can go fast and far, not more of the same costly burning we've been doing for years.

  • @dennistucker1153
    @dennistucker1153Ай бұрын

    Supersonic commercial flight is still 50+ years away.

  • @chopper3lw
    @chopper3lwАй бұрын

    Audio sounds a bit like you recorded it under a blanket.

  • @WhiskyTangoFox1
    @WhiskyTangoFox1Ай бұрын

    The audio is horrible. I have an extremely good setup, and it’s not my speakers or setup as your other videos sound fine. All the treble is missing.

  • @johnsonrepp
    @johnsonreppАй бұрын

    14k per seat in 1989? How was it not profitable?

  • @pokemongo-py6yq
    @pokemongo-py6yqАй бұрын

    I hate it, especially the company that wants to lift the ban on supersonic flight above land. Flying at supersonic speeds induces so much more drag, even high performance military jets don't often cruise at supersonic speed because it demands burning more fuel to offset the drag. Love it when NASA makes cool tech, but I'm betting and hoping each of those supersonic flight startups are just scams.

  • @simontillson482

    @simontillson482

    Ай бұрын

    Indeed, just think of the seed money required for a supersonic plane. 10s of millions per year, over 3 years from hype to fail. That’s a good 30 million for these scammers. Better than getting a real job… Venture capitalists are complicit in these scams - they’re taking a 10% cut and all they have to do is find some rose-tinted glasses wearing schmucks to invest.

  • @simontillson482

    @simontillson482

    Ай бұрын

    This is, pardon my french, total bollocks. Why would we want such lower fuel efficiency and passenger carrying capacity? It makes no sense whatsoever.

  • @ronankierans1600
    @ronankierans1600Ай бұрын

    From an engineering standpoint of course all of this is fun and impressive. We live in a new reality though where we have to decarbonise to the point of zero emissions so inefficient fuel hungry aircraft like that don't have a place anymore. I can't see these pipe dreams becoming a reality.

  • @OneWildTurkey

    @OneWildTurkey

    Ай бұрын

    Eventually people will awaken from their self imposed nightmare and realize we're at a CO2 shortage.

  • @ronankierans1600

    @ronankierans1600

    Ай бұрын

    It is certainly a nightmare situation and yes unfortunately the crisis is self inflicted but there is nothing to wake up from unless of course you think it's all fake or overblown, then unfortunately you would have to wake up.

  • @OneWildTurkey

    @OneWildTurkey

    Ай бұрын

    @@ronankierans1600 I woke up long ago and have been watching the characters trying to change the world to their wishes. CO2 is an important gas that's necessary for life on the planet. We're at a near all time low and if it gets much lower, we'll be in trouble. While temperatures here ARE increasing, the activists are approaching things from the wrong direction. But they're getting quite wealthy while doing so.

  • @user-wv6ow5hu1m
    @user-wv6ow5hu1mАй бұрын

    They use 3X as much fuel per passenger. Check out "Climate Town, Saudi Arabia's plan to keep us hooked on oil" .

  • @user-wv6ow5hu1m

    @user-wv6ow5hu1m

    Ай бұрын

    Ya, I didn't watch your entire vid Ricky. What are you selling now after getting STBD wrong!

  • @user-sd3ik9rt6d
    @user-sd3ik9rt6dАй бұрын

    Beleive it when i see it.

  • @daveseniw2380
    @daveseniw2380Ай бұрын

    Sir your audio is very muffled...

  • @LordDustinDeWynd
    @LordDustinDeWyndАй бұрын

    9:32 About halfway through... So NASA has NOT YET solved the booming?

  • @leftcoaster67

    @leftcoaster67

    Ай бұрын

    They can only minimize it. Boeing's Sonic Cruiser concept in the 90's of going to high subsonic speed. But they still couldn't solve the fuel burn issue.

Келесі