The Aircraft NOBODY Knew about! Lockheed Constellation

Ғылым және технология

Go to squarespace.com/mentournow to get a free trial and 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain
-----------------------------------------------------
Why did this aircraft have three tail fins? And why did it have such a sculpted, intricately-curved fuselage, instead of just a simple tube, like all othef modern airliners?
This is the story of the Lockheed Constellation, one of the most graceful airliners ever made, and the story of an era where innovation went hand-in-hand with style.
Stay tuned!
-----------------------------------------------------
If you want to support the work I do on the channel, join my Patreon crew and get awesome perks and help me move the channel forward!
👉🏻 / mentourpilot
Our Connections:
👉🏻 Exclusive Mentour Merch: mentour-crew.creator-spring.c...
👉🏻 Our other channel: / mentourpilotaviation
👉🏻 Amazon: www.amazon.com/shop/mentourpilot
👉🏻 BOSE Aviation: boseaviation-emea.aero/headsets
Social:
👉🏻 Facebook: / mentourpilot
👉🏻 Instagram: / mentour_pilot
👉🏻 Twitter: / mentourpilot
👉🏻 Discord server: / discord
Download the FREE Mentour Aviation app for all the lastest aviation content
👉🏻
-----------------------------------------------------
Below you will find the links to videos and sources used in this episode.
• Lockheed Super Constel...
• Douglas DC-2 B-roll | ...
• Amelia Earhart Departs...
• THAILAND: ATTEMPT TO R...
• Douglas DC-3 Assembly ...
• Boeing's Stratoliner 7...
• TWA Boeing 307 Stratol...
• Boeing Model 307 Strat...
• Swedish National Anthe...
• Lockheed Hudson, P-38s...
• Chronicles of Courage:...
• Sky High: The Story of...
• DC 4E in 1938
• Pan American Lockheed ...
• Lockheed C-69 Constell...
• Douglas C-54 Skymaster...
• R-3350 Engine Startup ...
• Lockheed L-1049 Super ...
• P-3 Orion 50th Anniver...
• Delta Lockheed L-1011 ...

Пікірлер: 1 600

  • @MentourNow
    @MentourNow9 ай бұрын

    Go to squarespace.com/mentournow to get a free trial and 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain

  • @chifordenis

    @chifordenis

    9 ай бұрын

    😂

  • @danimal0921

    @danimal0921

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@garrus2022 Please, for the sake of all that is good and holy, unsubscribe and allow those of us who value and enjoy these videos to not be forced to endure your incessant drivel! Do you honestly believe that you are SO FREAKING IMPORTANT that if YOU were to unsub from this channel, it would destroy its successful future? Peter, please ignore this weiner and keep providing us with your awesome content! I truly do look forward to EVERY new video notification for both of your Mentour channels!

  • @cynth0984

    @cynth0984

    9 ай бұрын

    11:00 isn't that Warner Bros opening sequence?

  • @jamesyoung7798

    @jamesyoung7798

    9 ай бұрын

    In 1960 I flew from Travis Air Force Base to Hawaii then to Wake Island and finally Tachikawa Air Base in Japan on the beautiful C-121. Then back home in 1961 in yet another C-121 via Midway Island finally terminated the trip at Travis. A truly great experience except for screaming dependent children. President Ike had 2 C-121 available to him and poor General MacArthur had only one!

  • @Laodell

    @Laodell

    9 ай бұрын

    Except that plane used to be a commercial airliner prior to the commercial era of jet transport and was ridden by hundreds of thousands. *everybody* saw that plane.

  • @ianmorris7485
    @ianmorris74859 ай бұрын

    Probably the most beautiful and graceful passenger aircraft ever built, the likes of which we regrettably will probably never see again. A gem of an aircraft.

  • @MentourNow

    @MentourNow

    9 ай бұрын

    Absolutely!

  • @wesss9353

    @wesss9353

    9 ай бұрын

    KZread had me rate your comment. Gave you 5 star and all the little options.

  • @tommc290

    @tommc290

    9 ай бұрын

    Graceful, but DAMN they are loud! I used to work near an airport where they were restoring one, and when they took it up, everyone in the county knew.

  • @threeparots1

    @threeparots1

    9 ай бұрын

    @@tommc290I found the Martin Mars, which uses the same engines to also be crazy loud. You could hear them from miles away. Quite the sight to see though.

  • @MattH-wg7ou

    @MattH-wg7ou

    9 ай бұрын

    Yep the Super Connie or the Concorde. Very different! But both beautiful and iconic.

  • @vetsurginc
    @vetsurginc9 ай бұрын

    First exposure to the Connie mid 1950's at age 7 when my dad took me along on a non-stop from Washington D.C. to LA. Big airplane to my eyes, and a fast flight. I got a lot closer experience while working ramp crew for TWA at Washington National in the last years it flew for TWA. Tough plane. We had one transcontinental flight arrive that had sucked a valve half way through the trip. Flight engineer reported a minor increase in engine temp and minor loss of power. But they flew on just fine. The engine was repaired in our hanger and I got to see the piston of that cylinder - its dome looked like a hand hammered art sculpture from the bouncing bit of valve! When Delta started flying jets, their ramp location was just outboard of us. They would have to interrupt loading passengers for our engine starts due to the clouds of exhaust smoke. One of their agents ran through the cloud one time to stop passengers. When he came out the other side his once white shirt was an oily black. My least favorite things about the Connie were loading the forward luggage compartment (through the nose wheel bay) which was so tight top-to-bottom you sometimes had to lay on your back and pass bags over your chest to the next guy deeper in the compartment, and the honey-bucket toilet in the left rear fuselage which was an open-top 3 ft long bucket you had to lift out and carefully walk out through the cabin, down the steps to the sewage truck, dump, refill with blue antiseptic liquid (think porta-potty fluid) and walk it back into position. All without spilling a drop!

  • @MentourNow

    @MentourNow

    9 ай бұрын

    Wow that's... interesting, thank you for sharing!

  • @fantabuloussnuffaluffagus

    @fantabuloussnuffaluffagus

    9 ай бұрын

    What did that bit of valve do to the power recovery turbine?

  • @BarefootBill

    @BarefootBill

    9 ай бұрын

    Thank You for sharing!

  • @filanfyretracker

    @filanfyretracker

    9 ай бұрын

    I am sure ramp crews were very happy when planes got the valve to just hook directly to the honey wagon and let it pump the black water tanks out and blue water in.

  • @stevewatson6839

    @stevewatson6839

    9 ай бұрын

    So you, got paid for taking the piss?... I'll get my coat! 🙂

  • @scottgorman7166
    @scottgorman71669 ай бұрын

    The reason the Connie's shape is so smooth and flowing is the fact that Howard Hughs and Kelly Johnson are aeronautical wizards. My grand mother was a big traveler in her day and loved flying the Connie out of NY. She called it a "Sky Angel". Due to so much travel and knowing the attendants she got me on board to walk around the interior up to the flight deck. I still have the smile plastered on my face. I have seen this wonder fly numerous times while living on the West coast and have the drone of her engines stored in memory. What a beauty she is! Thank you for bringing back great memories.

  • @SBCBears

    @SBCBears

    7 ай бұрын

    Cool to have visited the flight deck. I never flew or even been inside one. My father and I watched Connies come and go at Midway. Standing on the sidewalk, they would come in with a roar low over the street. I see it as the most beautiful aircraft ever.

  • @engrpas

    @engrpas

    4 ай бұрын

    My grandmother’s cousin flew to America after WW2 on a TWA Connie - London to NY. Through an immigration website, I was able to find the flight manifest that included his name. Even in my teen years, I saw the Connies flying on the Eastern Airlines shuttle approaching DCA airport from downtown Washington.

  • @scottgorman7166

    @scottgorman7166

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@SBCBearsyup she is!

  • @scottgorman7166

    @scottgorman7166

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@engrpaswhat a beauty she was and is....great memories

  • @JohnArthurAlejado

    @JohnArthurAlejado

    4 ай бұрын

    Flew on a Military Space Available flight in 1962 when it was dubbed a C-121. Flying out of Hickam AFB in Honolulu, we re-fueled on Wake Island on route to Tachikawa AFB in Japan. Upon takeoff, we lost an engine and returned to Wake to await a replacement engine from Hawaii. There were quite a few aircraft losses on overseas flight back in the early sixties.

  • @ericandersson9949
    @ericandersson99499 ай бұрын

    I was born in Burbank and we lived with my grandparents who both worked for Lockheed. The house we lived in was on Rosita Ave, close enough for them to walk to work. My grandfather was a radio and electrical inspector, and my grandmother a production supervisor. They both worked on Connies. I remember visiting the plant multiple times in the early and mid 50’s and seeing the Connies being built. And, we could see them taking off and landing from the backyard. I thought they were the most beautiful planes, nothing else looking nearly so graceful. I have loved the Connie my whole life and last year got to see the own owned by the Smithsonian. I stood, mesmorized, looking it over, as in love with it as I was as a boy.

  • @tomondra4522
    @tomondra45229 ай бұрын

    My father was a flight engineer on the Connie (Seaboard & Western Airlines) for most of his career. Those four engines kept him busy. My first memory of riding on the Connie (at age 6) was a flight from Idlewild Airport (now Kennedy) to Frankfort, Germany. We (my mother, brother, sister) flew in the back with the cargo (you could do that in those days). At times, he would take me to the flight deck to watch how the plane was being flown. I remember falling asleep to the droning of those four engines. My father bought a Volkswagen in Germany and loaded it on the Connie to bring back to the USA. A beautiful plane indeed and one of my earliest and best memories!

  • @CoryChu

    @CoryChu

    9 ай бұрын

    A Volkswagen? That was crazy!

  • @mikep490

    @mikep490

    8 ай бұрын

    I wonder if he flew on the L-1049D. S&WA bought the only 4 produced and, in '54, were the largest cargo planes in existance, carrying almost 37,000 lbs of cargo, from what I've read. My friend flew the L-1049H ("Husky") with his dad via Qantas, a flight he loved talking about. On that one the seats could, apprently, be tucked in the lower compartment. His flight was shared with 2/3 of the compartment filled with cargo.

  • @brianray2614

    @brianray2614

    7 ай бұрын

    Wow!!

  • @TheTurbinator

    @TheTurbinator

    5 ай бұрын

    Yeah, boomers had it real good, before they destroyed the world for everyone else.

  • @coreyboyette2080
    @coreyboyette20809 ай бұрын

    It was amazing to see one actually flying this year at Oshkosh/Airventure. I have never seen a more graceful, beautiful plane.

  • @JenSalvatore21

    @JenSalvatore21

    9 ай бұрын

    So happy they got that old bird airworthy so we could enjoy it!

  • @monkeybarmonkeyman

    @monkeybarmonkeyman

    9 ай бұрын

    There really isn't anything more graceful or beautiful in the air to carry multiple passengers, imo.

  • @derekheeps1244

    @derekheeps1244

    9 ай бұрын

    Arguably , the DeHaviland Comet - the world's first jet airliner - eclipsed it in the looks department .

  • @martinneuliep6133

    @martinneuliep6133

    9 ай бұрын

    Do you know what model it was?

  • @jayschafer1760

    @jayschafer1760

    9 ай бұрын

    The Connie's shape looks like a dolphin with wings. Gorgeous.

  • @genesmith487
    @genesmith4879 ай бұрын

    My dad flew C47s in WWII, and I got a ride on one of the last Connies as a kid, coming home from Minnesota to Texas. Since I was flying alone, I had a stewardess looking after me. I am still madly in love with her. Even as a kid I recognized the breathtaking beauty of that plane!

  • @fluffypuppy1040
    @fluffypuppy10409 ай бұрын

    There is a still flying Constellation at an aircraft museum in Wollongong Australia. It flies a few times a year for special occasions.

  • @LetterboxFrog

    @LetterboxFrog

    8 ай бұрын

    The story of how the museum salvaged the Connie, including a large amount of guano inside, is almost as impressive as Connie.

  • @gravelydon7072

    @gravelydon7072

    8 ай бұрын

    @@LetterboxFrog We had one land at the local general aviation airport one rainy night. It was on its way to South America with a load of cattle. Barely got stopped before the end of the runway. When it flew back to Miami, it was minus the cattle and nearly ran out of runway with just 15 minutes worth of fuel onboard. Loudest plane I have heard with recip engines, a Catalina Flying Boat ( PBY ) owned by North American Aviation that was stored at the same airport until Hurricane Andrew. When it started up, you could hear it two miles away.

  • @gppilot8544
    @gppilot85449 ай бұрын

    I was lucky enough to fly in a Connie in 1962 from Honolulu to San Diego. At the time, my father was a Navy pilot, and he flew a military reconnaissance version of the Super Connie (with a radar dome like AWACS planes today) between Honolulu and Midway Island. It’s tough to choose between the Boeing 314 flying boat and the Connie as the most romantic airliners of all time.

  • @MattH-wg7ou

    @MattH-wg7ou

    9 ай бұрын

    I just learned that the version you mention is likely the EC-121, there is a Weather Recce version at the Museum at NAS Pensacola. Thats awesome, Im jealous you got to fly in one of these beautiful planes!

  • @gppilot8544

    @gppilot8544

    9 ай бұрын

    @@MattH-wg7ou Thanks so much for the additional information. I just looked it up and it looks just like I remember. My dad has some awesome pictures that he took on those anti-submarine reconnaissance flights.

  • @lindycorgey2743

    @lindycorgey2743

    9 ай бұрын

    I got to tour the EC121 at the Forbes AFB, KS Museum.

  • @jackaustin3576

    @jackaustin3576

    9 ай бұрын

    I have about a 20x24 picture of a 314 hanging in my den at a pier loading passengers....It is strange that the starboard outboard engine was running while loading passengers....

  • @gordyscamerastraps
    @gordyscamerastraps9 ай бұрын

    In 1957 my dad, who had been flying C-124s out of Travis AFB in central California was transferred to Tachikawa AFB in Japan to continue flying C-124s. In February of 1957 our family flew across the pacific from California to Hawaii to Wake Island to Japan in a Navy R6D - a DC-6. I was 12 years old. For health reasons I had to return to the States in October 1958. It was in a Constellation. Such a beautiful airplane!. In June, 1959, I returned to Japan in a Boeing Stratocruiser. (Before the Korean war my dad was flying C-97s to Germany.) I flew across the Pacific in the three major piston engine airliners in a space of a little under 2 1/2 years. In February 1961 my family returned to the States in a Boeing 707. It was like walking into a barn. Six abreast seating! Crazy! No vibration! So little noise! No refueling stops! The world had changed.

  • @MentourNow

    @MentourNow

    9 ай бұрын

    It really had changed! Thank you for sharing.

  • @fjp3305

    @fjp3305

    9 ай бұрын

    The B-707 could cross the Pacific non-stop?

  • @NavyCWO

    @NavyCWO

    9 ай бұрын

    My Dad was an Air Force LTC stationed at Tachikawa from 1962-63. The Navy was flying the Passenger version (R-7V) of the Super Connie with VR-7 Detachment Alfa. As a high school student I dated the OIC's cute daughter. Little did I realize that some seven years later I'd be a crewman on a Navy EC-121M Super Connie recon aircraft belonging to VQ-2!

  • @JD-fx1mb

    @JD-fx1mb

    5 ай бұрын

    In Nov 1964 I few from Travis AFB to Tachikawa AFB with family, my father was in the Air Force aboard a Connie. I remember the flight took forever and I was airsick . I remember a fuel stop in Hawaii and once in Japan I was allowed to view the cockpit . Four years latter the return trip to the United States was on Boeing 707 and the passenger seats faced the back of the plane which I found very odd.

  • @alistairwhite2906
    @alistairwhite29069 ай бұрын

    I've been lucky enough to see a Connie fly a few times at the Avalon Airshow in Australia. Normally she's on late in the day/dusk period, so you get to see the flames from the exhaust stacks on take off. A magical aircraft to watch.

  • @johno9507

    @johno9507

    7 ай бұрын

    As a young Qantas engineer in the 90s we had that same Super Connie parked at the Jet Base that I literally walked under everyday. I knew the pilot so he used to let me have a poke around it. Used to love watching it take off with flames shooting out the power recovery turbines. 🙂🇦🇺

  • @smurphy31
    @smurphy319 ай бұрын

    Loved hearing the story behind the Skunk Works name. 40 years a military aviation enthusiast and never knew the origin of the name - or that Kelly Johnson’s parents were Swedish; my wife will be very proud to hear that. Great video - thanks!

  • @SrAtoz

    @SrAtoz

    9 ай бұрын

    I always knew that it was named after the secret distillery in Li'l Abner, which was also secretive and no one knew how their drink was made. What I did NOT know was that the workshop also smelled in real life!

  • @MADHIKER777
    @MADHIKER7779 ай бұрын

    The Constellation was the first plane I ever flew in. I was 7 years old in the 1950's. It was with Eastern Air Lines. Both then as a child and now as an old man, I think the Constellation is the most beautiful thing man has ever put into the skies!

  • @marklease9717
    @marklease97179 ай бұрын

    in 1967 I had the honor of riding on a Super G Constellation of KLM from Amsterdam to London (in their last years of service KLM and many other airlines used them on shorter haul regional routes.) It was a great experience-overshadowed only by the fact that we (my family and I) were traveling to London to cross the Atlantic not on an airplane, but on one of the last transatlantic crossings of the RMS "Queen Mary".

  • @user-li7ec3fg6h

    @user-li7ec3fg6h

    9 ай бұрын

    Great story! Thank you very much! Also to everyone else who has reported flights with this magical airliner. But then still RMS "Queen Mary"?! Wonderful to hear about it. Great!

  • @alanbrandon8823
    @alanbrandon88235 ай бұрын

    My first exposure to the Connie was the 1049. I was a First Officer at Capitol Air that had a large operation in Berlin. The thing I hated most about the Connie other than walking under one and getting covered in oil was the way the cockpit leaked water when you were flying in precipitation as we actually placed ice buckets under the worst leaks. It was a joy to fly although the Flight Engineers delighted in destroying a good landing by extending the cowl flaps just before touchdown and alternating between the left and right engines on approach to totally foul up the trim. Ultimately I was the Chief Pilot at Capitol prior to its shutdown in 1985. I flew all of the Boeing's thru the 767. I loved the Connie as it was my first large airliner. I have truly enjoyed your video, please make more.

  • @Satchmoeddie
    @Satchmoeddie9 ай бұрын

    The Lockheed Constellation is an iconic airplane. Their Electra was another plane with absolutely superb design lines.

  • @malahammer

    @malahammer

    6 ай бұрын

    As is the C130 and the L1011. They made gorgeous machines.

  • @JarrodFLif3r

    @JarrodFLif3r

    6 ай бұрын

    The Electra is basically a civilian version of the old P-3

  • @huskyflylangley6053
    @huskyflylangley60539 ай бұрын

    Connie's fuselage shape was actually done in order to get the tail out of the propeller wash caused by the huge engines, and the nose was bent down in order to have ground clearance for the huge propellers without having to make the nose gear taller than it already was. Result? the most beautiful propeller driven airliner ever; that is Scandinavian design I can truly love. I'm sure glad Johnson's parents emigrated here! Also check out the Latécoere 631 flying boat- gorgeous! The most beautiful jet? DeHavilland Comet by far, maybe the Sud Aviation Caravelle too. much better looking and elegant than any 707 or scarebus. military jet? Canberra takes the cake there, and the P-80.

  • @mycosys

    @mycosys

    9 ай бұрын

    Remembered hearing that about the prop wash on teh tail too

  • @arthurjennings5202

    @arthurjennings5202

    9 ай бұрын

    I just responded with the same answer you did. I just didn't scroll down far enough. But! Yes, the bent fuselage was intentional for the huge props on the aircraft.

  • @derekheeps1244

    @derekheeps1244

    9 ай бұрын

    Agree , re the Comet , but the VC-10 and then Concorde kept the good looks this side of the Atlantic for many years .

  • @huskyflylangley6053

    @huskyflylangley6053

    9 ай бұрын

    @@derekheeps1244 If a Savile Row suit could fly, it would look like the VC-10, I'd rather fly on it than Airbus any day.

  • @johnbaker1256

    @johnbaker1256

    9 ай бұрын

    I'd add Hawker Hunter to the list.

  • @curm1778
    @curm17789 ай бұрын

    I hope all of Sweden is as proud to claim Kelly Johnson as you are, Captain. His designs were not only fast they had a knack for looking fast, too. He made beautiful planes and his crowning achievement was The Sled, if you ask me. The SR-71 Blackbird. Most graceful thing I've ever beheld.

  • @RooEfx

    @RooEfx

    9 ай бұрын

    100

  • @henryblanton6992

    @henryblanton6992

    7 ай бұрын

    Most of the Military Personnel (of any branch) near and on the ground close to the SR-71 for a multitude of reasons call it the Habou.

  • @kemprof
    @kemprof5 ай бұрын

    In 1954 I was 8 years old in LA. The east end of the LAX runway began at El Segundo Blvd (which now is a tunnel under midfield). My father and I would pull off the road next to a chain link fence less then 100 ft behind aircraft preparing to take off. Every third one seemed to be a "Connie". A long process, each engine in turn would be run up as the other three idled, as we got blasted by its draft. Great memories.

  • @noreenmacuga1866
    @noreenmacuga18663 ай бұрын

    I have a pin of the Connie ❤️ I was a flight attendant back in the 80’s and there was a push to “save a Connie” What a beautiful plane 😊

  • @hubbardhowe9620
    @hubbardhowe96209 ай бұрын

    My grandfather was the production control manager for the P-38 in Burbank during the war. He said that the curve of the fuselage produced enough lift to cancel most of the fuselage drag. Also had the opportunity to fly a Lufthansa L-1649 from Frankfurt to Stuttgart. back in 1965. I was 12 at the time and never realized that this intercontinental beauty had been reduced to a regional puddle jumper.

  • @pjford1118

    @pjford1118

    9 ай бұрын

    I used to work in a wind tunnel facility, the optimal taper as far as sub and trans sonic speeds is ~7%. The Connie looks like it is close to that.

  • @billdurham8477

    @billdurham8477

    9 ай бұрын

    That's why it cruised 30kt faster than the DC's on the same engines. And then there was the USN's one off with Electra turbo props, it must have been a rocket.

  • @johngregory4801

    @johngregory4801

    9 ай бұрын

    I was thinking that it was an early lifting body design.

  • @patrickgriffitt6551

    @patrickgriffitt6551

    8 ай бұрын

    Interesting is the wing platform is that of the P-38

  • @johngregory4801

    @johngregory4801

    8 ай бұрын

    @@patrickgriffitt6551 Lockheed used that planform from the L-133 StarJet through the Connie airliner and the Shooting Star series, both P-80 and T-33. Like the Seversky wing that Republic used over and over... They ran with what they know worked.

  • @richardclark4610
    @richardclark46109 ай бұрын

    Kelly Johnson was the greatest aerodynamicist ever! All of his designs looked like they were going 200 mph while parked on the ramp. In 1963 I was in the USMC. I was transferred to Kodiak, Alaska. We were flown from Seattle, WA to Kodiak, AK on a Super Constellation...all of those hours completely over water. The "jet age" had been in high gear since 1956 so by then, the Connie was considered "old hat". She was a truly graceful old bird even then.

  • @paulbrouyere1735

    @paulbrouyere1735

    9 ай бұрын

    What is amazing is he could see air at supersonic speeds and acted along this knowledge to choose his team and materials.

  • @harveysmith100
    @harveysmith1004 ай бұрын

    There was a story about Orville Wright being onboard a Connie on his 82nd birthday. The pilots found out he was onboard and did the only thing you could do in such a situation, invited him up front. They even let him take control, well, you would, he was the father of aviation. I always think, what was going through Orville's mind, he went from lying on his stomach risking his life in 1903, to flying a fully pressurized airliner sipping coffee. What a life.

  • @MoreMotivationalMojo
    @MoreMotivationalMojo3 ай бұрын

    I flew as radar/atc operator on a super connie in US Navy squadron VW-1. we flew into the eyes of typhoons for fleet weather info - and rotated through Chu Lai Vietnam, where we provided tactical support for the US fleet in the Gulf of Tonkin. This old bird was tough enough to withstand penetrating an ocean borne typhoon with up to 200 mph winds at 1500 ft off the deck Great airplane, spent over 2200 hours on one, great memories

  • @mfrmorrobay
    @mfrmorrobay9 ай бұрын

    In 1958 my family flew cross country in a TWA Lockheed Constellation LAX to LGA - was 9 yrs. old and have vivid memories of it, including a visit to the cockpit, getting to sit on the captain's lap and move the yoke (slightly!) and to see the Grand Canyon passing under the nose.

  • @user-li7ec3fg6h

    @user-li7ec3fg6h

    9 ай бұрын

    Wow! Old times, but wonderfull!

  • @StephenCole1916
    @StephenCole19169 ай бұрын

    The Connie was my late fathers favorite aircraft. When he was a kid, he saw a model of one in a toy store and wanted to get it but didn't have money at that moment. So he worked hard and saved up enough money to get it and when he went back, it was gone. He always thought it was such a beautiful looking airplane.

  • @iphonedoc
    @iphonedoc4 ай бұрын

    I had the great fortune to be a flight engineer on the Connie! I joined the Wyoming Air National Guard and after training and working as an aircraft mechanic I was able to transition to a flight engineer. I eventually logged over 1000 hours before the unit transitioned to C130's. The Connie was the most beautiful airliner ever even today. It was a joy to be a crew member. I had a real job on the plane and was very sad when I had to ferry one to Davis Monthan. Thanks for the memories!

  • @Duvstep910
    @Duvstep9109 ай бұрын

    I had the Constellation addon for FSX; the most beautiful plane I ever virtually flew. The sounds, the charm, the design; everything about it stole my heart.

  • @MentourNow

    @MentourNow

    9 ай бұрын

    Couldn't agree more!

  • @PaulTopping1
    @PaulTopping19 ай бұрын

    When I was a child, my family took a TWA Constellation from LA to London. This was around 1960 I believe. Every passenger got a little paper certificate congratulating them for having taken the "Polar Route". Of course, it didn't really go very close to the North Pole. If I remember correctly, it refueled midway in Bangor, Maine.

  • @PaulTopping1

    @PaulTopping1

    9 ай бұрын

    Just looked it up. It was actually London to LA on 3/15/59.

  • @MentourNow

    @MentourNow

    9 ай бұрын

    Very cool, thank you for sharing!

  • @jetsons101
    @jetsons1016 ай бұрын

    Love the Lockheed Constellation painted in TWA colors -- the Super Constellation (with tip-tanks) being the best for Mid-Century flying art.

  • @lowelltackett3323
    @lowelltackett33239 ай бұрын

    In 1949, as a five-year old, I went with my [military] father to Hawaii; we flew from San Francisco to Honolulu on a MATS (Military Air Transport Service) Constellation. The majestic beauty of that airplane, the first one I'd ever seen (let alone been so close to) completely captivated me. Standing on the tarmac staring up at this massive metal beast in front of my very young eyes, I was immediately captivated by the tail structure, huge engines, and overwhelming presence of that majestic airliner.

  • @basta118
    @basta1189 ай бұрын

    I wonder if Petter and the team realize that they are producing real documentaries? It'll be no surprise for me if one day we could watch a full-length movie directed by Mentour Now! And it's also inspiring to see how Petter develops in different directions (talking now about 737 online-course) building on his love for aviation! Way to go! 👏

  • @wrightmf
    @wrightmf9 ай бұрын

    I skydived from a Constellation that was brought in as one of the specialty jump ships at World FreeFall Convention in 1990s. This emaculate refurbished aircraft was by Save A Connie. It had all the markings of a TWA but the lettering was SAC. Even the inside had that art deco design though seats removed to accommodate 90 skydivers. It was very interesting on the ride up, it took some time to get to altitude (12,000), SAC people said engines were designed for high octane gas that used to be available back in the days so engines not as powerful. During the 30 minutes or so during climb after takeoff, we were able to walk around the aircraft. Entering the cockpit, I saw the three flight crew were constantly manipulating controls. This aircraft was pure analog, all steam gages and discrete switches. I am sure there were modern avionics but otherwise was like going back in time and see how this thing is flown. Even the flight engineer would make adjustments, write in a ledger. There was a fourth station for navigator (not used) but SAC recreated this former cargo version to be exactly like what was flown by TWA. Speaking of flight decks and I am no pilot but my impression is you have to be a real multi-engine pilot. There are so many controls that it seems one must be an octopus to fly this thing. I also remembered entering a 747 simulator in 1990s (glass cockpit, etc) which my impression is I don't understand all the abbreviations of controls but yet it felt I could fly this thing, the Constellation absolutely not. Many of the Save A Connie were former TWA employees from the 1950s, even some of the pilots and stewardesses. Of course I had to get my pictures with them. Talking with them about the restoration, one lady said it seemed endless hours and days cleaning various parts. They also sold copies of Robert Serling's book "TWA: The Howard Hughes Airline" which has all sorts of insights of those early days. What stood out was how new pilots were coached or not by experienced pilots. Some captains will mentor the co-pilots, others would say "don't bother me, go back and serve coffee to the passengers!" I read Howard Hughes once flew a Connie across the country by himself (insisted but no other aircraft available) which I don't see how that is possible. However, I met a pilot who flew Constellations and he said it is not that difficult to fly the aircraft. Regarding Hughes, amusing scene from the movie "The Aviator" when Hughes agreed to buy Connies from Lockheed, calls his accountant at 2 am to provide the money. Which Noel says "Howard, I don't have 14 million dollars in petty cash laying around!" But Howard insisted, "mortgage Toolco!" and hung up.

  • @paulkoza8652

    @paulkoza8652

    9 ай бұрын

    Damn!

  • @jayschafer1760

    @jayschafer1760

    9 ай бұрын

    That particular aircraft has not been seen (by anyone) for over a year.😢. The museum it is in in Kansas City has been locked out of the building the museum leases, as the big corporate company that rents the building from the city is trying to get the city to tear up an ordinance so that big business can rent out the hangar at a much higher $ value. City council lacks a spine and isn't stopping them. Very sad. Glad I had the chance to walk in that aircraft a few years ago, big bucket list item for me.

  • @sgd5k292
    @sgd5k2929 ай бұрын

    As a child who was born in Hawthorne and lived in Lawndale in the 1950's until age 10, then Torrance until 18, I remember late at night when I could feel the rumbling of those big radial engines as they did their run up's and take offs and then climbing out eastward on their downwind leg not too far overhead. I always wondered where they were going to. Once the B-707 and DC-8s replaced the piston airliners, the sounds changed and was not as noticeable (Edit: They were quite smokey though! ). Also, my dad worked at a company based at LA International all that time, and I remember when I went with my Mom the times when she picked Dad up from work, the airliners taxiing on the bridge over the main road which was shown in your video was an incredible sight and inspired me to become a pilot later in life. Thanks for posting this excellent video of my favorite piston airliner that I saw in person many times as a child. Never got to fly on the Connie, but did fly on the Electra in my teens to the San Francisco Bay area every summer to visit cousins. Great memories!

  • @franklinnorth7708

    @franklinnorth7708

    9 ай бұрын

    I lived in Lawndale, from 1960, I remember those sounds. the bridge was over the Sepulveda tunnel.

  • @lasanga23
    @lasanga238 ай бұрын

    While I was in the Navy I was a crew member on an EC-121K, the Navy version of the "Connie", from 1967-1970. Almost 900 hours. Most beautiful airplane ever built

  • @p.s.224
    @p.s.2249 ай бұрын

    The Super Constellation actually plays an important role in the novel “Homo Faber“ by the famous Swiss author Max Frisch (the plane has engine issues and the pilots perform an emergency landing in the Mexican desert). So, many literature lovers and so many former/current students of swiss, german and maybe austrian schools have read about this plane. I actually never realized that Max Frisch didn’t just make up an aircraft type there technobabble style but that the Super Constellation really existed. When I found out not long ago after your channel (among others) got me interested in aviation, it made me instantly appreciate the novel for that orientation towards detail. I obviously shouldn’t have been surprised, but that is the thing with realistic literature, after a few decades we just lose parts of the context.

  • @NicolaW72

    @NicolaW72

    9 ай бұрын

    Indeed.

  • @tj1947
    @tj19479 ай бұрын

    I was six years old when my mother, sister, and I flew to England on a Constellation in 1952. Even at that age, I fell in love with the airplane. I have models of what I consider to be the most beautiful aircraft designs and the Connie is one of them. (The Electra, 104, SR71, P38, and U2 are also in the collection.)

  • @michijimc9753
    @michijimc97533 ай бұрын

    During the era depicted in this video Clarence “Kelly” Johnson was the design honcho at Lockheed. He was called “The man who can see air.” His highly trained mind and those of his design team didn’t put any design line on an airframe unless it was necessary.

  • @user-nr3ss5hk9s
    @user-nr3ss5hk9s4 ай бұрын

    When I was a preteen in the 50s I flew on an Eastern Connie from Miami to New York I distinctly remember the Captain telling the passengers that the engine sound would change so the superchargers could be engaged at altitude As an airline pilot now I recognize they didn’t want to overboost the 3350

  • @bobbennett884
    @bobbennett8849 ай бұрын

    I recently visited the TWA hotel at JFK airport, where there is a stationary connie converted into a cocktail bar. Seeing that airplane brought back memories from my early childhood - My parents would drive to the recently built county airport, park at the tarmac fence (no charge) and then we would climb outdoor steel stairs to the roof of the terminal building. There was seating up there, along with coin operated binoculars. I distinctly remember seeing a large four-engined airplane with three tail fins on several occasions. This was the late 1960s, so it would have been at the end of the constellation's service life. I was too young to remember specifics, and I have no idea what livery was on the airplane, but it clearly left an impression on me.

  • @danielbarreiro8228
    @danielbarreiro82289 ай бұрын

    I flew in a Super Constellation with my parents in 1961 from Buenos Aires to New York. I was 5yo at the time so I don't have any memories of it, just the stories told by my parents in family reunions, and B&W pictures with the plane in the background. We flew from Buenos Aires, to Rio de Janeiro, then La Guaira, Miami and finally NYC. We might have switched planes at some point, I guess. Those stops weren't brief, we had to disembark the plane while it was being serviced so each stop took at least 2 hours. On the way back, a year later, we flew on a B707, I assume, with fewer stops. Being so far south in the continent, stopovers would be a regular feature for years. Flying to Europe in 1966 from Buenos Aires required stopovers in Rio de Janeiro and Dakar and finally Madrid. As the years passed, Dakar was dropped and now there are plenty of direct flights from everywhere to anywhere else.

  • @MentourNow

    @MentourNow

    9 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing!

  • @memule
    @memule9 ай бұрын

    As a kid, I flew on Connies many times crossing the Atlantic at night. Loved to see the exhaust flames and the glowing red exhaust pipes. What a magnificent sound at take off power! I fell asleep with my face lying against the window. Woke up with a numb cheek. Worth it!

  • @franklinnorth7708

    @franklinnorth7708

    9 ай бұрын

    Yes, blue flames out the exhaust and red metal.

  • @HDSME
    @HDSME9 ай бұрын

    I was a child I would lay on my back wacth the Connie come and go beautiful classic air craft ! Kelly's been my idol all my life

  • @bobdinitto
    @bobdinitto9 ай бұрын

    I've flown on a number of commercial airliners over the years but two I've always wanted to fly but never had the chance are the Constellation and the L-1011 both of which were ahead of their time in various ways. Thanks for explaining the history of this beautiful airliner.

  • @MentourNow

    @MentourNow

    9 ай бұрын

    Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @anay3000
    @anay30009 ай бұрын

    My dad was a pilot on the L049 Super Constellation in his younger days, flying for Air India. He also flew the Sud Aviation Caravelle, an aircraft I hope you cover in a video someday.

  • @butchroberts8719

    @butchroberts8719

    9 ай бұрын

    Agree. Caravelle has to be the sweetest looking passenger jet ever. Flew on the last United AL Operational Caravelle on its last flight before retirement. Pilot was emotional as he informed passengers and basically flew the old beauty VFR from ORD south to ATL. A fantastic touring flight of sorts as the left seat continuously pointed out locations and geographic features during the lazy and sometimes meandering course. The few passengers onboard all enjoyed it, as did I. Suspected the low FLT level may have been necessary do to aging/ mechanical or most likely, pressurization issues? I’ll never know. Fabulous flight.

  • @karlgustafson179
    @karlgustafson1799 ай бұрын

    I toured the MATS Connie at an airshow a few years before 9/11. It was so impressive. Then a few days later I heard a racket at the airport, 2 miles away. It was the Connie taking off. The single most impressive, memorable sound I have ever heard!

  • @johnjoseph3667
    @johnjoseph36679 ай бұрын

    In 1960 when I was 12 my family took our first trip to Europe. We sailed from NYC to England but I was already a huge av-geek. 1960 was the beginning of the jet age and I was so excited that we were to fly an Air France Boeing 707 London to Paris. The plane was parked at a remote stand at Heathrow. When we got off the coach from the terminal I was very upset to find my first jet flt was an old AF Constellation. I am still quoted as saying, "That's not a jet, it's a gyp."

  • @jonrolfson1686
    @jonrolfson16869 ай бұрын

    In the fifties I got to see the airliners quite frequently, on the ramp at Salt Lake City Airport (my Dad worked there, first for United Airlines, then for ARINC). The Constellations seemed like some sort of sleek, long-legged bird, always ready to leap into flight.

  • @MentourNow

    @MentourNow

    9 ай бұрын

    They really do. Thanks for sharing!

  • @DonBlackBird71
    @DonBlackBird719 ай бұрын

    Have had the pleasure in being inside one the last remaining flying examples of one of the GLORIOUS birds. 'Connie' a fine example beautifully preserved and maintained at HARS Aviation Museum in NSW, Australia.

  • @froggy0162

    @froggy0162

    9 ай бұрын

    I was walking in Melbourne one day in the 90s when that one flew over the city on its way to the Avalon air show. It’s odd to hear a big aircraft over the cbd anyway, but the sound made me look up! It was very clearly something pretty big and like nothing I’d ever heard. Awesome thing.

  • @mikeherren5604
    @mikeherren560426 күн бұрын

    As a lowly private pilot I appreciate so much what you do. I don’t know how you have time for this. The amount of work that you do and your knowledge base few people know m. You do such a great job explaining things to folks that have no knowledge of airplane subjects. thank you very much always informative, educational and entertaining

  • @johnwalker3534
    @johnwalker35345 ай бұрын

    I was fortunate to fly in one of these when I was in the Navy. The squadron was AERON-1 and our job was to fly into and report on typhoons in the western pacific. It was designated a WC-121. Of course it had the radoms on the top and bottom of the fuselage. It kinda looked like it was pregnant on the bottom with a shark fin on top. I loved the airplane above all others. It was and still is the most beautiful airplane ever built.

  • @Sacto1654
    @Sacto16549 ай бұрын

    When the Constellation entered service just after World War II, it essentially marked the beginning of the end of most passenger railroads in the USA. I believe the Model 049 could fly from Los Angeles to New York City eastbound non-stop and New York City to Los Angeles west with only one fuel stop, which meant under nine hours flight time, a sharp contrast to the three days it took by train to travel between the same two cities.

  • @josephpadula2283

    @josephpadula2283

    9 ай бұрын

    There was a short period of time the people left on a plane , landed at night , transferred to a Train till morning, then back into the plane . Cross country airline flights.

  • @rogerveon3631
    @rogerveon36319 ай бұрын

    Was F/E on L749A for WAL . Flew about 700 hours mostly in Alaska flying PNA routes as they had merged with WAL in 1967. I had just been furloughed from BNF and was smashing baggage for them at Love Field when I got telegram offering immediate,permanent ,employment at WAL. We had six Connies two with Curtis Electric Props and four with the Hamilton Standard props. We often had a speed pack winched onto the belly which carried 8000# of cargo often King crab from Kodiak Island to Seattle.That only knocked five knots off our cruising speed.We carried about 55 passengers and had two stews.We had stewardesses as flight attendants had not yet been invented.

  • @user-li7ec3fg6h

    @user-li7ec3fg6h

    9 ай бұрын

    Great Story! Thank you very much!

  • @paulaspinall919
    @paulaspinall9199 ай бұрын

    As a youngster in the late 1950’s Dad used to take us to Heathrow on a Sunday morning when we were visiting London. The road he parked on was parallel to the main runway and about 400 yds away! I only remember the Constellations. Tall, elegant, massive nose wheel assembly. They were distinctive and beautiful. We had a superb view of them. How life has changed.

  • @peteranninos2506
    @peteranninos25064 ай бұрын

    I flew on Camarillo Connie, later the Breitling Super Connie. It was so interesting to see how slowly the props seemed to turn. I was lucky and basically had the run of the whole plane!

  • @franksimon6617
    @franksimon66179 ай бұрын

    I had one trip in a Connie from Clark Air Force Base in the Philippines to San Francisco, with fuel stops at Wake and Honolulu. The only interesting incident was when we were over the mid Pacific and it started hailing, or that's what it sounded like. But it was bright sunlight out side and not a thunderstorm in sight. Next thing we knew was the flaps and landing gear started down. That increased the heartbeat. Then we looked up the aisle into the cockpit (you could do that in those days), and saw the engineer open an overhead hatch and stick his head out into the slipstream, with another crewman gripping him about the waist. A few moments later the "hail" stopped. Turns out one of the antennas had broken off at one of the vertical fins. Then the engineer closed the hatch, the pilot rolled up the flaps and gear, and we continued out way to Honolulu.

  • @kenbrown2808
    @kenbrown28089 ай бұрын

    the movie the Aviator really did a good job of capturing both hughes' struggles with mental illness, and his love of building new aircraft. it's sad that so many people in management now think the only purpose for innovation is to increase profit.

  • @jameswinburn6843
    @jameswinburn68436 ай бұрын

    One of my clearest memories goes back 70 years when I was a ragged little boy on a northern Mississippi farm. There was little to reccommend it as a way of life but it was under the landing approach of the Nashville airport and that made it a place of wonder. A couple times a week a Connie would fly over our house at 1500 or so feet with it's engines roaring and it's propellers popping the sound barrier every rotation. I suspect it was a flight from Nashville to Memphis but I can't find documentation of an air route from the early 50s.I could see the windows in the side and that graceful curve back to the tripple rudders. I could hear them coming over and if I hurried I could get outside before they disappeared. I remember getting punished for pushing a screen loose on the screen door in my hurry to get outside. The Connie was and still is the most beautiful plane ever designed. I'll give props to some of the beautiful sailplanes out there but it's still the connie for beautiful functionality. The jet age ended it's reiagn too soon. I didn't realize it was a product of the Skunk Works but I'm not surprised.

  • @robertpray1064
    @robertpray10649 ай бұрын

    Now this brought about a great memory. As an A1C I was traveling with a Lt and three other airmen to visit all 12th AF bases to provide safety seat belt training. Our little team all had auto accidents which seatbelts helped keep us from being injured, so we were volunteered to tell our stories to troops to help build awareness for the safety team. We travelled mostly via the fleets of older aircraft kept aloft and used to keep older pilots a way to keep their flight status and keep a shuttle service available for hops. For one leg of our journeys we found ourselves catching a hop on a VC-121A Connie. This had been a personal staff aircraft until just before she was moved to the shuttle routs. This craft was in extraordinary condition, configured with seats set facing each other with large tables between them. Lots of space for layout papers while in flight. There were only two other passengers aboard for this flight. Quite a difference from our normal canvas side seats or rear facing layout of other craft we flew. I believe we traveled to Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, was 1974 I think. Smooth flight and the awesome sound of the old recips.

  • @mikeskinner45
    @mikeskinner459 ай бұрын

    Our group(a USN band)flew from Japan to the Philippines in the Admiral's Connie in 1967. As smooth a flight as I've ever experienced.

  • @johnwatson3948
    @johnwatson39485 ай бұрын

    With limited piston engine power they were always looking for “magic bullet” airframe ideas to improve performance - like the lower drag curved fuselage. I recall the first 1941 B-36 bomber concepts had the same curved Constellation shape.

  • @MikeHammer1
    @MikeHammer15 ай бұрын

    I flew on the Super Connie several times as a child (LGA or Idlewild to LAX) before the Boeing 707 was a thing. My dad was an aircraft mechanic for TWA, so it was affordable for vacations. He had an APU rating and worked on the radial engines which are incredibly complex. Later he worked on 727s and Lockheed 1011 Tristars. When I was around 12 years old, he took me to work and put me in the FO seat in the cockpit, started up the engines and taxied the plane (a 727) he just finished working on from the hanger over to the terminal. What a thrill. Now my middle son is an airline Captain/Check Airman. This thrilled my dad who recently turned 93.

  • @emmabird9745
    @emmabird97459 ай бұрын

    I never rode Constellation, but i remember seeing them along with Comet, 707, Vanguard, Viscount etc flying over the Great south West road into Heathrow. Wow what an aeroplane. I also had one drip oil on me at Farnborough in the 80s.

  • @jackknowitall

    @jackknowitall

    9 ай бұрын

    Lol Did you keep the shirt 👕? How much would you let it go for? My friend in elementary school dad flew them for Eastern Airlines. I loved the old EAL logo on the shiny aluminum fuselage.

  • @emmabird9745

    @emmabird9745

    9 ай бұрын

    @@jackknowitall Yes I have, and it is not for sale at any price.

  • @TheMitchyb61
    @TheMitchyb619 ай бұрын

    The contributions to aviation Kelly Johnson made are staggering! So amazing to think he worked in aviation from before the jet age and had his hands in the F-117 which is still pretty amazing even today!

  • @davidbarr49

    @davidbarr49

    9 ай бұрын

    And, of course, Kelly's greatest triumph was the SR-71, the fastest (and highest flying) manned, air breathing aircraft ever built. Built before computers and made of titanium, for which they had to invent tools and processes to work it.

  • @kdrapertrucker

    @kdrapertrucker

    9 ай бұрын

    His main contribution to the F-117A is to say it could never fly. He had been retired for a decade at that point and would come in once a week to consult. Technology had already passed him by.

  • @richardnewell7958
    @richardnewell79584 ай бұрын

    My first summer job was washing Connies for Air Ventures at Hobby airport in the summer of 1967. They did cargo and charter flights. The Connie displayed at Fantasy of Flight in Florida is one of them.

  • @1945jlee
    @1945jlee25 күн бұрын

    The Constellation was my first airplane ride ever! It was a Navy MATS C121(?) I was 13 and we (my mom & 3 younger siblings) flew to Guam to be with my dad. He was to be a flight Eng. on a C121j(?) flying an early warning radar net, West Pacific. It was Nov 1958, we left from Travis AFB (Calif) refueled in Hawaii, refueled on Kwajalein then on to Guam. Dad got sideways with his chief and ended up as assistant pro at the Armed Forces Golf Course. Now closed. After 2 years he made chief and retired at 20 years. We came home on a MATS ship in Feb 1961. Best 2 years of my young life!

  • @irvinwright4075
    @irvinwright40759 ай бұрын

    My first ever airplane ride was in a Connie in January, 1960. Being transferred from Great Lakes Naval Base to MCRD San Diego to attend electronics school, the Marine Corps sent me by TWA non stop from Chicago to LAX. I remember being exited and then looking forward to my first airplane ride but the main thing I remember about the actual flight was the incredible amount of noise generated by the engines! Holding a conversation at a normal level was not possible, so conversations were kept to a minimum. Beautiful airplane though. I don't trust my memory, but it seems like the flight time was 8 hours?

  • @ChuckCobb3
    @ChuckCobb39 ай бұрын

    I flew several flights in an RC-121 out of Reykjavik, Iceland in the AF. A magnificent aircraft for its time.

  • @dantreadwell7421
    @dantreadwell74219 ай бұрын

    I have been lucky enough to see both a Constellation and a Super Connie at local airshows when I was growing up. They are absolutely beautiful aircraft

  • @andrewburnett2215
    @andrewburnett22159 ай бұрын

    Awesome Video. In 1957 I remember my mother boarding a Connie in Dallas, TX. I was only 4 years old but I remember and smoke and fire of the engines - and it was very loud. I have always had a special place in my hear for the Connie.

  • @siddharthtrivediin
    @siddharthtrivediin9 ай бұрын

    In the mid eighties, I remember seeing the super constellation as a child, my father was flying the canberra bombers and we were posted in a place called Pune, India. These aircrafts belonged to the Indian airforce, we used to see them whenever we entered the airfiled area with my Dad. Although I don't remember seeing them fly, they were probably grounded by then. I even have photographs of them.

  • @Joleen3820
    @Joleen38209 ай бұрын

    First, I loved the Connie. It was a beautiful plane and flying in it was, for the most part, a great experience. HOWEVER...... I was on a TWA flight from Chicago to Indianapolis to Pittsburgh. Takeoff and landing were a bit rough! Both takeoffs were terrible. We taxied into place, the the pilot locked brakes and opened the engines wide. The thing I remember most was the airframe screaming in protest. It felt like every rivet was going to pop out! The brakes were then released and it felt like a catapult shot off a carrier, and I have had them. Landing in Indianapolis was horrid. First the left gear hit, bounced, then the right and bounced, 3 TIMES, before we settled down. Pittsburgh was no better, but this time it was ALL 3 GEAR, bounce, bounce, bounce. Loved the plane, only ride I ever had on one, not overly thrilled with the pilot!

  • @michaelblaty9929
    @michaelblaty99298 ай бұрын

    My mother was a flight attendant (Stewardess) for Eastern Airlines in the 1950's, and she expressed her love for the Constellation (Connie) when Eastern was using them as well as DC-3's, and DC-4'S. Her favorite was the Constellation by far. She would regale me with stories of her travels, including one instance in which a young Senator John Fitzgerald Kennedy boarder her Constellation, along with is beautiful wife Jaclyn.

  • @jpetes9046

    @jpetes9046

    6 ай бұрын

    Jacqueline

  • @martinusher1
    @martinusher14 ай бұрын

    London -- Jakarta (eventual destination of plane was Sydney) in 1952 via BOAC. Memorable flight but I was only 4 years old so don't expect too many details. One difference between air travel then and now is that you stopped for lunch and didn't fly overnight so the route went London -- Zurich (lunch) -- Beirut (overnight) etc. I was a bit disappointed in not being able to open my window like a car even though there seemed to be a handle for this. Passengers were also issued sweets (barley sugar) to suck for takeoff. (I did the same run in the 1980s, London to Sydney in a 747. The run was London - Delhi - Bangkok -- Sydney. Rather faster but lacked that early 50s 'je ne sais quoi'!) They had one parked at the end of the runway at our local GA airport (CMA) for many years. Hopefully awaiting restoration.

  • @Peter-55
    @Peter-559 ай бұрын

    My first flights as a passenger were in the Super Connie in 1958. I was 3 years old and flew from Singapore to Nairobi via many stops in India, the Middle East and Africa, this was with Air India.

  • @Imtahotep

    @Imtahotep

    9 ай бұрын

    L-749 Tail#ZS-DBR Capt Rademaker, from London to Johannesburg with lots of stops including Athens, Cairo, Khartoum, and Nairobi: just a fabulous, breathtaking aircraft!

  • @ccudmore
    @ccudmore9 ай бұрын

    In the late 1980s or early 90s I saw a restored “Connie” at an air show. It was an amazing sight!

  • @jimewing5097
    @jimewing50978 ай бұрын

    When I was 11 years old in 1962, my father was with Delta and we took a European vacation as non revenue passengers. I got to fly in a Lufthansa Connie from Rome to Frankfurt. Unforgettable, particularly how smooth and gracefully the wings flexed in a storm over the Ligurian Sea. Later, I was Navigator in Lockheed P-3s in the Atlantic fleet. A lovely airplane as well. Great times in aviation world!

  • @dieselscout
    @dieselscout8 ай бұрын

    On a TWA trip to LA from Omaha in 1958, I was allowed, as a 3-Year-Old, to go into the flight deck of a Constellation and see the pilots in the Cockpit. I can still slightly remember that experience.

  • @PeopleAlreadyDidThis
    @PeopleAlreadyDidThis9 ай бұрын

    I’m not quite old enough-nor was my family wealthy enough!-to even see a Connie while in service, but I did get to see one at an air show in the early 80s. I liked the long landing gear struts, but to see it parked alongside the other vintage planes, even the bombers, was something. It was so tall by comparison. It looked decades more modern than the B-17 or B-24.

  • @johnkelley9877
    @johnkelley98779 ай бұрын

    I have always thought the Constellation was one of the most beautiful airliners. It even looked good in the Southeast Asia Camouflage applied by the USAF when it served in Vietnam. Thanks for sharing the story about this airliner, I learned a lot.

  • @kenlandis4397
    @kenlandis43979 ай бұрын

    Had a 41+ year career in the airline industry... from 1959-2000 with National, Pan Am and then retiring with Delta. My first flight was in 1957 on a night flight (yeah most of the airlines had those back then) on Eastern from Philadelphia to Miami. As a 16 YO, I never knew that there was a career in the airline industry as part of my future. And what a career it was with 22 years in reservations then the remaining years in customer service at Washington National Airport.... this was long before DCA ever had jet service... National had two Super Connie's that had been converted to all cargo by the time I started. Many fascinating stories over those years of the greatness of the industry. just this past week I chatted with two airline friends that were there in the very beginning and one said that we were part of the industry in it's golden years. We enjoy telling of the stories of those days long gone.

  • @luvtheus
    @luvtheus6 ай бұрын

    Excellent video and commentary! I was born in 1956 when my Dad was starting his career with TWA as a Flight Engineer. He started on the Connie right out of training in Kansa City, MO. I have traveled on these birds as a very small child so don't remember any trips that I was taken on but have a couple pictures with my Dad and Mom and me on a Connie that were taken back then. Pretty cool. The Connies were eventually replaced by the Boeing 707 and Dad then went to those Beautiful Birds. He retired in 1989 from flying the 747's on TWA's International route as IRO. He loved his job so very much He remains my Hero always. Thanks for the step back into time. I really enjoyed your presentation. John C.

  • @TheGospelQuartetParadise
    @TheGospelQuartetParadise9 ай бұрын

    I never had the opportunity to fly on a Connie, but every time I saw one I was impressed by the sight and sound of it soaring overhead. My first airline experience in 1964 was on the Boeing 707, another awesome aircraft.

  • @lachd2261
    @lachd22619 ай бұрын

    I had the pleasure of viewing the Connie (Super Constellation) at the HARS aviation museum in Wollongong, Australia. She still flies too! A beautiful aircraft

  • @pktiberius
    @pktiberius3 ай бұрын

    I worked with TWA at EWR while going to school at night in 1964 and 1965 and often fueled and did commisary work on the Connie. I was also trained up to stock baggage in it's belly, which meant sliding in on my back to push luggage toward the front of the plane. The Connie also had a beautiful FC section seperated by a door that could be locked. One day, needing to get oil readings in the cockpit, I found the door locked. I heard a female voice say, "Just a minute" and after a little while the door was opened by a lovel hostess with a blanket wrapped around her body. The captain was in one the FC beds. It must have been a tight squeeze but I guess it worked for them! A shy college freshman, I'm sure I changed several shades of pink while passing through the cabin and into the cockpit. My co-workers in Ramp Service pointed out that you could set your watch by the Connie, which was still doing a "milk run" from Ohio into EWR, making several stops before ending up at EWR. Even then we recognized the plane as simply the most gorgeous airplane in the world.

  • @hubnz
    @hubnz9 ай бұрын

    I remember a Super Connie flying into München Riem in the late 60ies. Just a beautiful sight with a fascinating rumble from its 4 engines.

  • @michaelpaske4327
    @michaelpaske43279 ай бұрын

    My first flight in January 1951 was in a "Connie". My folks had adopted me and Mom was returning Kansas with me from Phoenix Az where I was born and had been in foster care for 7 months after being born. The flight was Phoenix to Wichita Kansas on TWA. I obviously do not remember the flight, but my Mother recalled that I was somewhat fussy until the plane took off. Then I was quiet for the flight and slept a lot. She thought the vibration, and there were some in the L-749. Later growing up I got to be a passenger in a Piper Cub and Stearman C3 as a kid. When I was 11 I flew to my aunt & uncle from Wichita to Phoenix to work with my cousin that summer on a sheep ranch in east central mountains of Arizona on land leased from Apache Reservation it was in a Super Constellation in 1961. My return trip was in a clunky DC-6, Phoenix to Wichita with stop in Albuquerque New Mexico and Amarillo Texas. I called it a big puddle jumper after being in Super Connie nonstop flight. It shook and vibrated and was noisier than the Super Constellation. The smoothest flights I ever had were in the Lockheed L1011. It was the quietest aircraft I have ever been on and the most comfortable. It was significantly quieter than the Boeing 737-800, mostly due to engine placement I would assume.

  • @user-li7ec3fg6h

    @user-li7ec3fg6h

    9 ай бұрын

    Thank you very much for sharing this!

  • @tombrown1898

    @tombrown1898

    9 ай бұрын

    I flew on an L-1011 from St.Louis to Orlando in 1980. Somehow I got a free upgrade to 1st Class, and it was a wine tasting flight. A very elderly German lady was seated beside me, who had grown up in the wine country of Germany, and it was a great lesson in the history of the country and its wines. Best flight I ever had. Beautiful plane. It should have been far more successful.

  • @carrickrichards2457
    @carrickrichards24575 ай бұрын

    Post-war travellers around the commonwealth were delighted with the upgrade from DC3 and DC4 to the Constellation - I remember my Dad who did alot, saying it was a great relief!

  • @4myangus
    @4myangus4 ай бұрын

    My dad flew for TWA for 34 years starting in the 50’s. He flew all their equipment. Martins,727,707,747, L1011. In the Navy he flew the F4U Corsair. Of all the planes he has flown to this day(he is 96) he says he loved the Connie the best. As he puts it it was one fine airplane. I got to fly in it many times and there is nothing like the roar of a piston engine starting up. The roar of it coming to life, spitting out volumes of smoke. I am one of the lucky ones to have experienced the thrill.

  • @Manny32V
    @Manny32V9 ай бұрын

    Connie is one of the most beautiful aircrafts ever built.

  • @MentourNow

    @MentourNow

    9 ай бұрын

    I agree!

  • @od1452
    @od14529 ай бұрын

    I was at Ft Rucker when the Museum received McArther's Connie. It had to be landed on a short Runway. It was a very impressive AC. I don't know if it is still there.

  • @paulcan4654

    @paulcan4654

    9 ай бұрын

    McArthur’s Connie went to Planes of Fame Air Museum from Ft Rucker, and it is the Connie restored for Rod Lewis. It flew to Oshkosh this year.

  • @trackie1957
    @trackie19579 ай бұрын

    I remember watching them go over my house in suburban Boston when I was a kid. They were so easy to identify and we were always excited to see one. We were even more excited to see jets, which were not a common sight even then.

  • @michaelfranz6937
    @michaelfranz69379 ай бұрын

    In January of 1960, my military father and my mom, sister and I returned to the US from our 3 year tour near Tokyo, Japan. We flew out of Tachikawa AFB to Wake Island, then Hickam AFB in Honolulu and finally on to Travis AFB near San Francisco. I was 12 years old at the time and remember the awesome beauty of the Constellation as we boarded her that morning. I recall that this military version had a wing spar crossing the cabin floor that required one to step over it passing from one end of the aircraftto the other. My dad was an instructor pilot so I had quite a bit of interest in airplanes...still do. I love your videos and the clarity of your explanations...thanks for all of them!

  • @ChrisFrameOfficial
    @ChrisFrameOfficial9 ай бұрын

    Wonderful video! The Connie at HARS is a remarkable aircraft. Feel very lucky to have visited it three times and written about it for Airliner World ✈️

  • @aussiebandit

    @aussiebandit

    9 ай бұрын

    I visited Connie last OCT and she is a beautiful aircraft!

  • @vegascad
    @vegascad9 ай бұрын

    I flew on a super connie in 1965 from Toronto to Gatwick. Still my favorite aircraft. Love your vids...

  • @MentourNow

    @MentourNow

    9 ай бұрын

    Very cool, thank you!

  • @rodderbob
    @rodderbob9 ай бұрын

    I have a particular warm spot in my heart for the military version of the Super Connie, specifically known as the EC-121R. As a young airman during the Vietnam war we were part of forming a reconnaissance squadron that utilized retired Navy, formerly ray dome equipped, Connies for the mission of tracking Viet Cong traffic along the Ho Chi Min Trail. The ray domes were removed, the aircraft were given jungle camouflage paint, and the interiors were fitted with our electronic surveillance gear. My tour ended with 101 combat missions, and happily we had no loses in the 13 months that passed. Later, the squadron lost a couple aircraft and, sadly, nearly all crew members on board. During my time the reliability rate was good, though it was not uncommon to return to base with one engine out, and a couple times two (thank God for highly skilled AC). None of our birds have survived time, but those versions that have, and have been lovingly maintained/restored are still an inspiration. A most beautiful bird.

  • @Snaproll47518
    @Snaproll475189 ай бұрын

    Great video about my favorite airliner of all times. My very first flight was on a KLM Connie, Idlewild (now JFK) to Amsterdam in August 1955. Overnight to Shannon where we deplaned for an Irish breakfast and then on to Amsterdam. The Irish pub where we ate is still there and is decorated with photos of 1950s movie stars that no doubt also stopped for breakfast on the way to Continental Europe. Only 5-years-old at the time, I vividly recall the #3 engine exhaust stack glowing red hot in the night sky as I crossed the North Atlantic sitting next to my mom. Perhaps a seed was planted at the time. I grew up and had a 52-year career in aviation. The R-3350 had a large prop, which required a long nose gear for ground clearance. The mean camber line of the fuselage was lowered in the front section and curved downward in the aft section. The forward lowering allowed for the long nose gear while the aft curvature decreased drag over the aft section. The design requirements to facilitate the R-3350 gave the Connie its graceful lines.

  • @markmonse5285
    @markmonse52859 ай бұрын

    I was able to ride a TWA Connie from CVG-PIT a couple of times in the late 50s/early 60s. Approaching the bottom of the stairs, looking up at the #2 engine, I can recall asking the agent to ensure they didn't start that one until I was onboard...

  • @ca3340h3993
    @ca3340h39939 ай бұрын

    I absolutely love the Super Connie, such a beautiful airliner. It was the first add on I bought for MS FS2020 and I love flying it.

Келесі