The most insane photos of a US bomber ever taken!

A series of incredible photos taken by sailors in the USS Ranger carrier strike group in 1990 grants us a rare glimpse into the dangerous world of nap-of-the-earth bomber operations meant to allow these massive aircraft to penetrate enemy airspace undetected.
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Citations:
theaviationgeekclub.com/the-s...
theaviationgeekclub.com/that-...
www.wearethemighty.com/tactic...
theaviationist.com/2013/05/28...
www.af.mil/About-Us/Fact-Shee...
www.popularmechanics.com/mili...
www.afgsc.af.mil/About/Fact-S...

Пікірлер: 719

  • @laverian2251
    @laverian2251Ай бұрын

    When you're trying to spot a plane and the pilot says "look down" LMAO

  • @Hughjaoses8766

    @Hughjaoses8766

    Ай бұрын

    "Look down" "I beg your fuckin pardon"

  • @RobertNowagarski

    @RobertNowagarski

    Ай бұрын

    @@Hughjaoses8766fuckin what?

  • @longshot7601

    @longshot7601

    Ай бұрын

    B-52 pilot: I could have gone lower but that carrier has a big wake.

  • @rolandcopittus

    @rolandcopittus

    Ай бұрын

    yup, I did a full on LOL

  • @ADB-zf5zr

    @ADB-zf5zr

    Ай бұрын

    My estimations about the height above sea level from those pictures was were made using the height of the tail of the B52 (and that part of the fuselage) and comparing that to the reflected shadow (that alone says a lot) to the (flat) sea. My estimation is 2x tail height (plus that part of the fuselage). I best add, this is from eyeballing and finger measurements so I could still be off by 50%, but whatever the tail height of a B52 is (plus that part of the fuselage) x2 is my eyeballing, finger measuring guess.

  • @AndyFromBeaverton
    @AndyFromBeavertonАй бұрын

    "Do you want us to do that again?" "HELL YES!"

  • @byewhobayou8868

    @byewhobayou8868

    Ай бұрын

    “Do you want us to do that again?” “Do Marines chew on crayons and scare the hell out of us?!”

  • @patdohrety2940

    @patdohrety2940

    Ай бұрын

    "I mean, a big plane like the B52, like VROOOM just frying chickens in the barnyard" Gen Buck Turgidson

  • @darinallen67
    @darinallen67Ай бұрын

    I was standing on the port side of the USS Ranger flight deck for that photo. My buddy took the pic from a HS-14 SH-3. I’m in the pictures standing next to the Fresnel lens.

  • @Skinflaps_Meatslapper

    @Skinflaps_Meatslapper

    Ай бұрын

    I was wondering who that weirdo was, thanks for pointing that out

  • @DanielMasmanian

    @DanielMasmanian

    Ай бұрын

    Mate, thank you.

  • @gilly4881

    @gilly4881

    Ай бұрын

    Cool!

  • @The_ZeroLine

    @The_ZeroLine

    Ай бұрын

    Is that a Snickers in your pocket there or were you just happy to be in …*_THE NAVY!_* you can put your mind at ease!

  • @mr.knowitall6440

    @mr.knowitall6440

    Ай бұрын

    What month in 1990 was that? I'm betting it was between Aug. 2-16... I was on Guam for a joint-forces exercise, and the B-52s ingressed at such a low altitude, that we could see big rooster tails behind them, from our vantage point on top of a 3-story building adjacent to the flightline. When they got to the island, they pulled up to the 200 ft. "hard deck" and opened their bomb bays as they commenced their bombing runs right over our heads. It was pretty surreal, and totally bitchin'! 🤙😎 The start of that exercise just happened to coincide with Iraq's invasion of Kuwait (Aug 2)... so our briefing when we arrived was "We're in a wartime situation". 😳

  • @victoradam8485
    @victoradam8485Ай бұрын

    Back in May 1977, I was hiking in the Adirondacks with a group of friends. We were going up a fairly narrow valley, when a low rumble behind us made us turn. It was a B-52, maybe a 100ft above the tree tops, and passing right over our heads. An indelible memory of something that lasted a few heartbeats.

  • @SmedleyDouwright

    @SmedleyDouwright

    Ай бұрын

    I think there was a bomber base in Upstate New York back then.

  • @longshot7601

    @longshot7601

    Ай бұрын

    I remember reading an article in Air and Space magazine. It was about a multi national exercise in Alaska that the B-52s were invited. They were told to fly to the target at 1000' AGL at a specific vector. The debrief in the auditorium featured a cartoon of an elephant with a bunch of arrows stuck in it. The bomber crews were pissed and asked the commander if they could use their full capabilities explaining that it would give a better training exercise. He said OK, if it is done safely. The crews had a meeting with maps and the navigators plotted a flight path. The three bombers approached their first waypoint and split up and descended to low level...then dropped down some more. The debrief was completely different with a lot of pissed off fighter pilots. Only one B-52 was intercepted...egressing the target area. A British F-4 pilot said that it looked like a big aluminum wall went up in front of him when a B-52 threw out flaps and spoilers to suck him into tail gun range. An F-16 pilot that chased a bomber in the canyons and valleys remarked that was the best low level flying that he had seen. He wasn't able to get any gun camera footage.

  • @rpeltier2621

    @rpeltier2621

    Ай бұрын

    That could have been me in that bomber, station out of Griffiss AFB. For us in the USAF, that area was known as the FORT DRUM low level route. Several times had to scrub pine pitch off the bottom of a B52 after a practice run.

  • @longshot7601

    @longshot7601

    Ай бұрын

    @@rpeltier2621 That must have been quite a sight. Looking UP at some very abrasive rock off of your wingtips.

  • @mikee4596

    @mikee4596

    Ай бұрын

    I was at a boy scout weekend camp in 81 or 82 in Montana while the B52s were running an excercise. All weekend at treetop height and yeah it's something you dont forget

  • @poodlescone9700
    @poodlescone9700Ай бұрын

    Basically the Air Force figured out how to make a B52 into a stealth bomber back in 1990.

  • @johnsmithe4656

    @johnsmithe4656

    Ай бұрын

    This type of flying is common for radar evasion, and it goes back long before 1990. This is still the way attack helicopters operate. It's called Nap of the Earth (NOE) and is standard for all military pilots.

  • @wstavis3135

    @wstavis3135

    Ай бұрын

    Back in 1960....

  • @kimweaver1252

    @kimweaver1252

    Ай бұрын

    @@johnsmithe4656 Take a look at the B-58 Hustler's flight profiles. Nap of the Earth AND supersonic, although not necessarily at the same time,....... but..........

  • @beeble2003

    @beeble2003

    Ай бұрын

    @@johnsmithe4656 Right. Any competent Air Force has been doing this for as long as radar-guided missiles have been a thing. Any bomber designed in the 1950s was designed for high-altitude flight, followed immediately by whoopsie!, better retrofit NOE capability and pop up at the last minute to bomb from altitude.

  • @johnsmithe4656

    @johnsmithe4656

    Ай бұрын

    @@beeble2003 Right. And the Russian Air Force has been trying to do it and hitting the water instead. Oh well, if at first you don't succeed.... Keep going.

  • @SmallProphet
    @SmallProphetАй бұрын

    Thanks for this story. I was on the Ranger when this happened and have had folks call BS when I would tell this sea story. Vindicated at last! haha

  • @Ghoulza

    @Ghoulza

    Ай бұрын

    how long have you waited to be vindicated???

  • @SevenAlaris
    @SevenAlarisАй бұрын

    My father was a civilian assigned to schedule logistics and repairs at Kelly AFB, 1962-64, and he tells stories of the B-52‘s coming in for repairs after low altitude training with trees stuck in the fuselage of the planes, they got that low!

  • @roberthevern6169

    @roberthevern6169

    Ай бұрын

    A la Richard Dreyfus and his A-24 Fireeater in the great Spielberg movie, 'Always'! A movie all fans of Airpower should see!!

  • @rpeltier2621

    @rpeltier2621

    Ай бұрын

    We (B52 crew) often came back with pine sap or cactus needles, depending on the low level route. Lost more than a few belly ECM antennae.

  • @Skinflaps_Meatslapper

    @Skinflaps_Meatslapper

    Ай бұрын

    @@rpeltier2621 Give me a shout when you guys get the nerve to fly under powerlines and wind turbines, I'll give you some tips.

  • @keithavery7087

    @keithavery7087

    Ай бұрын

    Why were they low level with the gear down if they weren’t landing?

  • @worldatpeace8979
    @worldatpeace8979Ай бұрын

    That picture is historical ❤

  • @michaelburggraf2822

    @michaelburggraf2822

    Ай бұрын

    ... or hysterical😅

  • @roberthevern6169

    @roberthevern6169

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@michaelburggraf2822. . 'Well, aren't we feeling frisky, today!

  • @nunya___

    @nunya___

    Ай бұрын

    I almost _past_ out laughing.

  • @Spawn-td8bf
    @Spawn-td8bfАй бұрын

    Some friends of ours and my wife and myself were jumping off his boat off of Hernando Beach here in Florida years ago when I heard a familiar sound. I grew up near MacDill AFB in Tampa and in the 70's it was a fairly common occurrence to have BUFF's , my favorite bird, fly overhead. Sure enough we looked BARELY up and saw her coming in hugging the coast. As they got closer we started waving like maniacs and the pilot actually and gently rocked the wings. Talk about thrilled beyond belief. To this day I get goosebumps thinking back on it.

  • @Meower68
    @Meower68Ай бұрын

    "Habitual Linecrosser" has a variety of videos which are rather comical. One of his characters is "Grandpa Buff." There's an episode where an F-35 is explaining why the Internet was down. Grandpa Buff responds "yeah, we get it, you're a flying computer; when you becoming a flying apocalypse, like me, we'll talk." He's not joking. When you consider how much "things that make ya go boom" it can carry, that's a valid description.

  • @isaacbrown4506

    @isaacbrown4506

    Ай бұрын

    As another favorite creator calls them, "bologna mist technology"

  • @mpr6486

    @mpr6486

    Ай бұрын

    @@isaacbrown4506 A chubby electron guy?

  • @TheOneWhoMightBe

    @TheOneWhoMightBe

    Ай бұрын

    The speed at which Grandpa Buff can switch from 'kindly old grandpa' to 'flying apocalypse' is scary in itself.

  • @MrGaryGG48

    @MrGaryGG48

    Ай бұрын

    @@mpr6486 Man... you got it in ONE! ;^)

  • @willythemailboy2

    @willythemailboy2

    Ай бұрын

    "Moses may have parted the Red Sea, but I'm gonna widen it!"

  • @MrDlt123
    @MrDlt123Ай бұрын

    I was stationed at Andersen Air Force Base, Guam when this went down, and one of the crewmen told me about it. Cool story. Although I generally hated Buffs. Loud SOBs when your barracks room is less than 500 yards away. 😅

  • @screddot7074

    @screddot7074

    Ай бұрын

    You got barracks? Guam 72 - 73, we got tents. They made us go to the barracks when a typhoon came through, but we liked the tents better.

  • @thanhtong2281

    @thanhtong2281

    Ай бұрын

    Bone said hold my beer

  • @temarikel8674

    @temarikel8674

    Ай бұрын

    You ain't lying how loud they are. I lived there in the 80s and 90s and they would fly directly over my house on the southern approach to Guam airport. Couldn't been more than 1500ft up. It was amazing looking up at something that big flying overhead at probably about 200 knots, idk maybe less. Them damn Chinooks were loud as hell too!

  • @MrDlt123

    @MrDlt123

    Ай бұрын

    @temarikel8674 Yeah, I moved to Mangilao, near the UOG fieldhouse (about half-way down the island) after I made SSgt, so not much of a problem with the noise there. Seems the Buffs have mostly left the island now.

  • @temarikel8674

    @temarikel8674

    Ай бұрын

    @@MrDlt123 I lived in Agana Heights so I heard everything on the southern approach. Haven't been there since '93 but I think you're right, I think the Buffs are gone. Went to high school with a lot of military kids too from Anderson. Seemed like new classmates every year.

  • @derflitermouse8976
    @derflitermouse8976Ай бұрын

    Being a USAF vet it warms my heart seeing your perma-grin while telling this story. Some stories are just fun to tell.

  • @kylesherrisalkintrent7828
    @kylesherrisalkintrent7828Ай бұрын

    I've seen this picture a million time and always wanted to know the story behind it. Now I do thank you alex.

  • @roberthevern6169

    @roberthevern6169

    Ай бұрын

    'Thanks, ALEX HOLLINGS' And thanks to Ward Carroll for promoting Sandboxx News some years ago!

  • @THE-X-Force
    @THE-X-ForceАй бұрын

    *_I'M ALEX HOLLINGS!!_*

  • @sumiterxeroslargosiuscrosi7819

    @sumiterxeroslargosiuscrosi7819

    Ай бұрын

    BS... stop tryin' to steal other peoples fame...

  • @bradolfpittler2875

    @bradolfpittler2875

    Ай бұрын

    No, I'm Alex Hollings.

  • @dariuszglabik4558

    @dariuszglabik4558

    Ай бұрын

    Before I knew his name I thought. Alex. Was saying I'm alcoholic sorry I'm not native speaker 😂 ! Love the channel

  • @danielbeshers1689

    @danielbeshers1689

    Ай бұрын

    No, I'm Spartacus!

  • @nihatsavmaz6677

    @nihatsavmaz6677

    Ай бұрын

    aaand this is airpower!!!!

  • @samscharp3367
    @samscharp3367Ай бұрын

    I walked up to one of these beasts at an airshow with my son and got to look up in the bomb bay. Blew me away how huge these things are and how they can even stay afloat in the air let alone skim the waves at 20 feet. Awesome engineering.

  • @O.Shawabkeh

    @O.Shawabkeh

    Ай бұрын

    I only saw an F-16 close for the first time and it surprised me how huge it was.

  • @DUKE_of_RAMBLE

    @DUKE_of_RAMBLE

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@O.Shawabkeh I haven't seen them in person, but I noticed how stark a size difference there was between the F-22 and F-35, with the former absolutely dwarfing the latter! _edit: typo_

  • @nfuryboss

    @nfuryboss

    Ай бұрын

    They have better quality then.

  • @brucestarr4438

    @brucestarr4438

    Ай бұрын

    look up 'ground affect' (aerodynamics). When a aircraft is less than half the wingspan above the ground/water, the lift to drag ratio goes up. A plane can float just above a runway and build up to its climb speed.

  • @DUKE_of_RAMBLE

    @DUKE_of_RAMBLE

    Ай бұрын

    @@brucestarr4438 I'd point then towards Ekranoplans, since that would not only explain the use of ground effect AND show them an actual vehicle utilizing it exclusively. _(at least, if they go to Wiki, but I assume most other sites covering then would inherently need to explain it as well)_

  • @winglessviper
    @winglessviperАй бұрын

    I heard of a K I Sawyer B-52 flying under the Mackinac bridge. When asked why they did it, the pilot said because we got away with it the first time.

  • @FKHC2005

    @FKHC2005

    Ай бұрын

    it was a B-52H from Kincheloe Air Force Base (sometime in the mid 1970's). and someone got a picture of it too.

  • @stevenmitchell6347
    @stevenmitchell6347Ай бұрын

    While the B52 was originally designed as extremely high altitude bombers, this proves that "on the deck" missions are well within its capabilities. The B1, aka BOne, was designed specifically for "on the deck", terrain following missions but have proven that they can take on the same high altitude missions as the B52. Mission flexibility through crew training and aircraft capabilities is a major factor in the extreme terror that American airpower instills in our adversaries. They never see them coming... unless we want them to!

  • @thedabblingwarlock

    @thedabblingwarlock

    Ай бұрын

    The B-1B is the one that was was designed for nape of the earth flying. The B-1A, on the other hand was designed as a high-flying strategic bomber.

  • @nattybumpo7156

    @nattybumpo7156

    Ай бұрын

    Lets also remember the original Bone was an even faster aircraft.​@@thedabblingwarlock

  • @thunderbird1921

    @thunderbird1921

    Ай бұрын

    AND the B-52 is now being equipped with hypersonic missile capabilities. It's like an old man standing across a field from a group of thugs with a rifle and hollering "I can kill you from clear over here. I don't need to come fight you youngin's up close!"

  • @user-ho4nw5sf3w
    @user-ho4nw5sf3wАй бұрын

    As someone trained one the B-52 without the picture I would find this story hard to believe. But I will accept the picture. You can also see this in the picture. The horizontal stabilizer on a B-52 is so large it creates its own lift. If you look at the picture the tail of this plane shows it flying tail high. It is and has been since it was designed on a table cloth and amazing aircraft. That's why it's still in our Air Force inventory.

  • @tdhawk7284
    @tdhawk7284Ай бұрын

    Years ago, I was Officer of the Deck on an Aegis cruiser underway in the Pacific. Our Combat Information Center (CIC) had been doing exercises with an F-14. The F-14 did a fly-by on our port side after the exercises were done. From the Bridge, we were looking DOWN on the F-14 which was just above wave top. The pilot hit afterburner and pulled back on the stick. In an instant, the F-14 was rolling out into level flight up in low clouds. It happened in seconds. It was beautiful.

  • @bobaloo2012
    @bobaloo2012Ай бұрын

    I grew up in the Ozarks long ago and can remember having a B52 pop over a hill 100' or less over my head several times, couldn't hear it coming from the other side of the hill, scared the hell out of me every time as you can imagine.

  • @Darren4352

    @Darren4352

    Ай бұрын

    Terrain masking. It's a thing😂

  • @jum5238

    @jum5238

    Ай бұрын

    Bobaloo, this is your dry cleaners. We are no longer accepting your underwear for cleaning as it contaminates the rest of our cleaning solution. Thank you very much. And have a nice day.

  • @bjolie78

    @bjolie78

    Ай бұрын

    Scare the Williams of the mountains

  • @jameshisself9324
    @jameshisself9324Ай бұрын

    I was there and I saw this with my own eyes. Naval aviation considers itself some sierra hotel fly boys but this got all of us finding a lot of respect for the BUFF and her crews. After the low passes they would bank away and seeing that banked wingspan so close to the water was probably even more badass.

  • @Chuck_Hooks
    @Chuck_HooksАй бұрын

    B-52s were seriously over-engineered, which has allowed them to be continually re-invented. Now, they will be able to launch AGM-183A.

  • @713Tankbuster

    @713Tankbuster

    Ай бұрын

    Back when Boeing was good

  • @joelr.9330

    @joelr.9330

    Ай бұрын

    Empire State Building was over engineered and took only one year to build. A B-25 crashed into it yet it's still standing.

  • @roots4x

    @roots4x

    Ай бұрын

    @@713Tankbuster Back when nuclear war was a real threat and an ungodly amount of money was spent on defense. This is why we were able to go to the moon in 1969 and younger people today think it didn't happen. Sometimes, money does trump technology. During WW2 we spent 40% of GDP on the defense. In the years immediately after, we spent as much as 15% but hovered around 10%. We now spend in the low single digits. The US defense industry has greatly benefitted from the US defense spending. If we poured money like that back into our military, someone would/could easily do it again. There's just no need.

  • @jamesogden7756

    @jamesogden7756

    Ай бұрын

    May Grandpa BUFF live forever. Because he's awesome AF.

  • @waynej1883

    @waynej1883

    Ай бұрын

    @@roots4x "There's just no need." We've heard that line from before. There's never a need, until it's nearly too late!

  • @sagebrushbob2321
    @sagebrushbob2321Ай бұрын

    One early morning back in 1993, about 0230 or so, I was driving south on US 95 between Jordan Valley, Or and Winnemucca, Nv. A long, boring stretch of desert in the middle of nowhere. Suddenly, it seemed like the sun was rising...in the North. Then all I could hear was a massive rumbling and WHAM ! A B-52 went right over me with every landing light they had turned on. You could see the fuel streaks along the wings and count places in the fuselage where there were missing skin rivets. Apparently they were doing a practice hit on Fallon Naval Air Station and sneaking in along the valley floor behind the mountains. A few seconds later all the lights went out and they just faded away like they were never there. I'm just glad I didn't need to change underwear afterward!

  • @baomao7243
    @baomao7243Ай бұрын

    I think Nutnfancy said he did a low altitude fleet-at-sea flyby in his Tanker. I think he basically said that the morale value for the navy crews and also his own crew was priceless.

  • @rpeltier2621

    @rpeltier2621

    Ай бұрын

    Try watching a low level B52 bomber crossing your vessel from the deck of the frigate. Talk about jet wash!

  • @baomao7243

    @baomao7243

    Ай бұрын

    @@rpeltier2621 I bet !

  • @Skinflaps_Meatslapper

    @Skinflaps_Meatslapper

    Ай бұрын

    Is fancynuts even making videos these days? Dude's a relic now like hickok45 and fpsrussia.

  • @michaelbrugato2959
    @michaelbrugato2959Ай бұрын

    I was there that day (VAW-116). I ran up to the flight deck for the second pass. When I came out from the island on the starboard side, all I saw was the top third of a Buff's vert stab passing by the port side. I finally saw the whole bomber as they climbed off the port bow.

  • @adlerpfingsten4205
    @adlerpfingsten4205Ай бұрын

    I served on the flight deck of the USS Coral Sea CVA-43 from 71-74 and in truth when I looked at those pictures I felt like I was standing on the edge of a cliff with all of the butterflies…look down. No thank you. Amazing.

  • @duanedoepke9697
    @duanedoepke9697Ай бұрын

    B-52's used a technique called "terrain avoidance" for low level bomb runs!B-1B's used the technique called "terrain following"! Two completely different techniques. I know because I worked on both planes. I flew in and worked on B-52's and worked on the Offensive Avionics System of the B-1B's. The "OAS" system of the B-1B's encapsulated the terrain following system.

  • @rael5469

    @rael5469

    Ай бұрын

    The OAS (Ring Laser Gyros) Offensive Avionics System was introduced on the B-52H. (It was actually first used on the ALCM cruise missiles) "September 3, 1980: B-52 Tests Offensive Avionics System. When we got B-52H at Carswell in Fort Worth Texas in 1983 they had OAS. Just before they were retired the B-52D models were equipped with the DBNS, Digital Bomb/Nav System.

  • @duanedoepke9697

    @duanedoepke9697

    Ай бұрын

    @@rael5469 Grand Forks AFB, where I was stationed, tested and brought the ALCM's online in the 80's. B-52G models were used. The OAS system of a B-1 is much more involved than the one in an "H" model B-52.

  • @rael5469

    @rael5469

    Ай бұрын

    @@duanedoepke9697 "The OAS system of a B-1 is much more involved than the one in an "H" model B-52." Well it's been more than 40 years so I would hope so.

  • @duanedoepke9697

    @duanedoepke9697

    Ай бұрын

    @@rael5469 DBNS!!!! My God, I haven't heard that in decades! B-52D's - the "Big Bellies"!!!! Not only did I work on B-1's and B-52G's, my first assignment was Guam and D models! I worked the Defensive Fire Control System on the D's and G's. The four .50 cal. machine guns mounted in the tail turret! I went by the name Obe Wan in Guam, Loring, Maine and Grand Forks, North Dakota.

  • @tomcoleman4207

    @tomcoleman4207

    Ай бұрын

    Hey Duane, did you go through Lowry AFB for training?

  • @justsayen2024
    @justsayen2024Ай бұрын

    The B-52 one of the models I put together as a kid hanging by fishing line from my ceiling.

  • @johnsmithe4656

    @johnsmithe4656

    Ай бұрын

    One kid's dream is another kid's nightmare.

  • @justsayen2024

    @justsayen2024

    Ай бұрын

    @@johnsmithe4656 very profound

  • @johnsmithe4656

    @johnsmithe4656

    Ай бұрын

    @@justsayen2024 That's what I'm here for! 👍👍

  • @skozacik

    @skozacik

    Ай бұрын

    We all had a model of the B52 hanging with fishing line in our bedrooms back in the day!

  • @ivancho5854

    @ivancho5854

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@skozacik Some had Vulcans. 😉🇬🇧

  • @mikeh.753
    @mikeh.753Ай бұрын

    The B-52 always flies with a nose down attitude so the nose had to be the closest part of the aircraft to the water. 20-30 feet above the water is insane. Even when taking off the buff climbs with a nose down attitude. Crazy.

  • @colinhooper1933

    @colinhooper1933

    11 күн бұрын

    If you want to see similar nose down, search "Armstrong Whiteworth Whitley" bomber from WWII RAF

  • @waltgoggin6063
    @waltgoggin6063Ай бұрын

    In the early 1970s I was at West Point just prior to an Air Force V Army football game. While standing near a parade ground I heard a growing roar coming from the north along the Hudson. As the roar reached its loudest a couple of B-52s popped up from the Hudson and flew overhead (imitating a bombing run??). Several Army officers were very unhappy with this display. Service rivalry at its finest!

  • @user-qq9ir3vx5c
    @user-qq9ir3vx5cАй бұрын

    People call the B-52 ugly, but without the "bumps" they added for all the new sensors, it was as sleek and beautiful as any jet airliner. It is a true testament to the perfection of design achieved in the 1950s on basic jet aircraft.

  • @BenTLH
    @BenTLHАй бұрын

    Those BUFF crews were just showing that SAC legacy that never gets old!

  • @FinsburyPhil
    @FinsburyPhilАй бұрын

    You should do a video on the Royal Navy and RAF Buccaneers - their attack profile regularly had them flying at under 50'. There's a legendary story of aggressor squadrons on Red Flag exercises at Nellis being unable to shoot them down because they couldn't point down enough to use their guns, even when right behind them.

  • @crazyleggsjr
    @crazyleggsjrАй бұрын

    On a ship stationed in Guam, I had the opportunity to look down on more than one aircraft type, but a B-52 “welcoming you home” is truly special.

  • @Darren4352
    @Darren4352Ай бұрын

    The thing that really impresses me about that aircraft is there are pilots flying today whose grandfather's possibly flew that aircraft!

  • @capn82
    @capn82Ай бұрын

    *14 stories. We don’t have 13 story buildings. Murica.

  • @johnsmithe4656

    @johnsmithe4656

    Ай бұрын

    If we really wanted to get lucky we would stop building after Floor 3.

  • @annettea2997

    @annettea2997

    Ай бұрын

    That’s why they skip the 13th floor on many high rise elevators,

  • @rael5469
    @rael5469Ай бұрын

    In the earlier B-52D I was told that flying low over the water was dangerous. They said that sometimes the water would get smooth like glass and that the radar could then not get a return from it. One Navigator told me their system had a feature called "Memory Point" so that when the system lost the return signal the system would go into memory point which means it would stay with the last parameters it had and assume those same conditions until it received a return signal again. He said the danger was that if you didn't notice the memory point light come on you could fly into the water. Especially true at night but also dangerous during the day because the glare off the water could blend with the sky and you could lose your reference to the horizon. If I'm not mistaken, this same thing resulted in an F-111 flying into the water. Sept 1968.

  • @livestock9722

    @livestock9722

    Ай бұрын

    I can imagine it to get disorienting, but you'd be fighting against ground effect to push it into the water, no?

  • @rael5469

    @rael5469

    Ай бұрын

    @@livestock9722 I'm not a pilot. You'd have to ask a BUFF pilot that.

  • @russbell6418

    @russbell6418

    Ай бұрын

    @@livestock9722 Ground effect isn’t noticeable when you’re already in it. The change from descent to horizontal flight during the flare makes it quite noticeable, but flying along at low level, it just becomes part of the overall sensations and you don’t notice it.

  • @abepotter9302
    @abepotter9302Ай бұрын

    When I was a kid in the early 80s we lived in the tiny Nevada town of Pioche. On more than one occasion my little brother and I watched B52s fly by our mountain town so low we could see the tops of the wings. I’ll never forget that awesome high pitched scream of those 8 engines.

  • @andrewday3206
    @andrewday3206Ай бұрын

    Before even looking at this… it has to be the B-52 flying below flight deck level passing a carrier EPIC pic

  • @martinhink6244
    @martinhink6244Ай бұрын

    I was at my grandfather's place. He lived in north east Montana. His place used to be used as bombing practice for crews out of Minot. I was in his shop and the whole place started shaking and there was a terrible roaring sound. I stepped outside and saw one of those monsters pulling up right over the house. An impressive scary sight.

  • @brudnick39
    @brudnick39Ай бұрын

    I have loved this story and the BUFF pretty much all my adult life...I was in my very early 20s when this happened, and I learned of it almost immediately. It is always so fun to see coverage of it on YT.💯

  • @mikearon76
    @mikearon76Ай бұрын

    Growing up in Northern Michigan there is an urban legend of a B-52 being flown UNDER the Mackinaw Bridge. I think it was during the 80s and in the local paper

  • @FKHC2005

    @FKHC2005

    Ай бұрын

    its true, not a urban legend....(it was in the mid 1970s)....

  • @1337flite
    @1337fliteАй бұрын

    Not quite as visually spectacular but in either 1990 or 1991 I was a member of an Australian cavalry regiment and we went to RAAF Base Tindal as the RAAF Airfield Defence Gaurds (ADG - Adgies - I think they have been disbanded and combined into the RAAF security police now) wanted to trial the use of armoured vehicles, so we were driving them around in some of ours as a trial. We got an air alert red weapons free and a few minutes later a B-52 came in low level and flew directly above us. I would estimate it was maybe 7-10 meters above us - like about 3 or 4 vehicle VHF whip antenna lengths above us. It literally blocked out the sun and though it could only have been a second or two it felt like we were in shadow for ages. We could see every detail, we saw the pilots in the cockpit nose on, on their way in. Unfortunately for them we were in M113AS1s which have a small T50 turret each turret having a .30 M1919 and .50 M2HB MG. - 5 vehcles, 10 machine guns - exercise kill. That was an awesome exercise for a young plane spotter we spent most of our time between the air craft shelters and the end of the runway so we saw every that came and went.

  • @cheeseburger3072
    @cheeseburger3072Ай бұрын

    I had a truck driving job years ago where I would make occasional deliveries to military bases. One delivery I had was to Dyess . It was a large wooden crate about 20 foot long , no idea what it was ( Rule #1 about hauling military cargo is not to ask questions). I had to follow an escort out across the runway to a C 17 where the crate was to be loaded. One of the airmen handed me some earplugs and told me to put them in right away. A few moments later a B 1 touched down on another runway, powered up to full afterburner and lifted back up. It was out of sight in what seemed like seconds. Never seen an aircraft that size move that fast and the decibel level was off the chart even with earplugs. From that moment forward the B 1 became my favorite aircraft.

  • @mbak7801
    @mbak7801Ай бұрын

    A British Vulcan nuclear bomber flew along the Grand Canyon below the height of the lip. Yes they should not have done that but nobody told them until afterwards. Needless to say they got to their target undetected.

  • @kevinf6413
    @kevinf6413Ай бұрын

    I used to work with a guy that was a navigator on a B-52 back in the late 70's. I think he was out of the base in Goldsboro, NC. Anyway, he said they would fly that low to evade radar. They went against USMC anti-aircraft radar units in Camp Lejeune or Cherry Point. He said they always remained undetected until they were flying over the AA units. He added the B-52 was rooster tailing water as they passed over the Atlantic. He also added, back in those days, almost every flight they experienced at least one real in-flight emergency. Hopefully, our current fleet has been upgraded and better maintained.

  • @barryaloisi7397
    @barryaloisi7397Ай бұрын

    Your enthusiasm for these topics is infectious

  • @roberthevern6169

    @roberthevern6169

    Ай бұрын

    Vaccine coming soon!

  • @barryaloisi7397

    @barryaloisi7397

    Ай бұрын

    @@roberthevern6169 After our last experience with vaccines, I can say with confidence that the disease is better than the "cure."

  • @johnwest7993
    @johnwest7993Ай бұрын

    My buddy was part of a SAC B-52 crew. He said the maintenance crew chief had a 'talk' with his pilot and told him he never ever wanted to see salt splotches on their fuselage again. The pilot just grinned.

  • @cheetahb5
    @cheetahb5Ай бұрын

    My old boss did that. Carrier group wanted a B52 to do a penetration run on the carrier. So, he obliged and flew his buff just off the water. He came at the carrier on its beam. They never saw him coming. He said the popped up, opened the bomb bay doors, and radioed “Bang, you’re dead” as he passed like 60 feet over the deck. Did it a couple times. A buddy of his on a destroyer said he got a photo of the top of the BUFF as it flew by.

  • @justachipn3039
    @justachipn3039Ай бұрын

    I was on the USS Indy CVA-62 from 75-79. We had a bombing demo during a Med Cruz and had 1 Vigilante on board. We witnessed a mech 2 flyby that was amazing, the Captain calling out distance. Hard to believe something could go that fast... it was far out of site before we got the *BOOM* !!!

  • @awg9aim54
    @awg9aim54Ай бұрын

    The picture at 3:43 was taken from vultures Row on the USS independence. The F 14 in the picture belongs to VF 154. This particular flyby took place in Hawaiian waters during a January 1990 Rimac exercise. The one of the USS ranger was taken while they were in the Persian Gulf.

  • @ZekeRivers

    @ZekeRivers

    Ай бұрын

    I was on CG-29 (USS Jouett) during RIMPAC 90; believe it was in July.

  • @awg9aim54

    @awg9aim54

    Ай бұрын

    @@ZekeRivers I don’t know if the exact date of that rim pac but in July 1990 we were in the Indian Ocean or the Philippines. I will never forget August 2, 1990, that is the day Iraq invaded Kuwait and our whole deployment got changed into operation desert shield. I have a great picture of your ship with two standard missile extended range on your MK 10 launchers as we went through the straits of Hormuz. I took the picture from the USS Indepenence of the USS Jouett as she steamed between us and the coast of Iran. That was the first week of October 1990 when we sailed into the Persian Gulf for a few days.

  • @ZekeRivers

    @ZekeRivers

    Ай бұрын

    @@awg9aim54 You're right - I was on NIMITZ for RIMPAC 88 and that was June/July. We were near Diego Garcia on 02 Aug 90 and had to scramble to get refueled, get the midshipmen off and up to the SOH. Those SM-2(ER) were impressive on the rails. I recall temps in the engineering spaces were around 120 deg, and we spent many days on water hours. Tired old ship, great CAPT & Crew.

  • @WWeronko
    @WWeronkoАй бұрын

    Flying that low with a B-52 can make turning a real challenge. The B-52's 185-foot wingspan can dip make touching the water (ground) with disastrous results a real hazard. That said, B-52 pilots report that when they get down that low the Wing-in-Ground (WIG) effect takes over for a remarkably smooth ride.

  • @sweynforkbeardtraindude
    @sweynforkbeardtraindudeАй бұрын

    I love it! My Pops drove a BUFF from 1953-1957. He remembers flying at 60,000ft. I'm sure he would have loved this!

  • @rrrobinson97202
    @rrrobinson97202Ай бұрын

    I was stationed on the Ranger when that was going on. It was to test the Ranger's radars upgrades to see if a bomber could get under radars. Crazy bomber driver gave us a show on how low he can fly, nuts lol. Captain Davis was our commanding office at the time. The XO would get on the 1MC and say, "Do the job right the first time". We all got used to that when he got on the mic. lol

  • @airlemental
    @airlementalАй бұрын

    I would love to see more of these short, light hearted history lessons, to go along with all the cutting edge “near peer” adversary talks. ❤ This was a great way to start my morning. ❤

  • @itsallgoodaversa
    @itsallgoodaversaАй бұрын

    Great video Alex. I love stories like these!

  • @alexdeglavina1412
    @alexdeglavina1412Ай бұрын

    Saw a Russian TU 16 do that exact flight deck fly by in 1968, however, the pilot made a left hand turn and his wing tip hit the water causing a crash. None of the crew survived.

  • @johnsmithe4656

    @johnsmithe4656

    Ай бұрын

    Dangerous unnecessary stunt. Performed poorly causing a crash. No one survived. Yup. Story checks out. That's the Russians alright.

  • @bryonslatten3147
    @bryonslatten3147Ай бұрын

    When the last B-21 Raider is retired to Davis Monthan AFB in Arizona, the crew will be flown home in a B-52.

  • @Skinflaps_Meatslapper

    @Skinflaps_Meatslapper

    Ай бұрын

    They'll be flown back in an equally ancient C-130 because the B-52 is not a transport aircraft The retirement ceremony for the B-21 will be interrupted by routine B-52 training missions such a funny joke only heard it one time ever ha

  • @bryonslatten3147

    @bryonslatten3147

    Ай бұрын

    @@Skinflaps_Meatslapper the B-52 has 8 seats but only needs two pilots to fly. That leaves 6 empty seats for ferry missions.

  • @Skinflaps_Meatslapper

    @Skinflaps_Meatslapper

    Ай бұрын

    @@bryonslatten3147 The C-130 can carry 90 or more, no sense in using up the hours on a strategic bomber when there are perfectly capable transport aircraft on hand.

  • @ChadWetzel
    @ChadWetzelАй бұрын

    I made eye contact with a b52 pilot doing this in the 80’s south of Minot airbase about 110 miles. I was riding my ATV on a gravel road south of Glen Ullin ND. One of the most vivid memories I have.

  • @jamess5154
    @jamess5154Ай бұрын

    I was a weather officer to the 2BW back in early 80s when they acquired the capability of carrying Harpoon anti-ship missiles and they did practice missions over water at similar altitudes. Their comments were generally that doing that over water was a piece of cake compared to doing it on the bombing ranges along the Rockies. I remember one time SAC put out a warning that a certain farmer was using them as skeet practice.

  • @eddecook9252
    @eddecook9252Ай бұрын

    Love your even-handed attention to detail...

  • @Mr51Caveman
    @Mr51CavemanАй бұрын

    I'm a 24 year retired USAF vet and these pics amaze me! Cool...really cool!

  • @markarizona1397
    @markarizona1397Ай бұрын

    My father was a B52H aircraft commander at Grand Forks in the early 60’s. I don’t think think there is anything unusual about flying a B52 at 100 feet AGL or less. Great pilots, dedication and lots of flight hours. LeMay was fanatical about SAC readiness and capabilities.

  • @seangelarden9543
    @seangelarden9543Ай бұрын

    Was in a fjord in Norway and a Norwegian pilot asked for a fly bye, flipped his plane upside down and came right down the center of the deck lower than the Air Boss on the O 10

  • @eddrohan4461
    @eddrohan4461Ай бұрын

    I was stationed in Guam when we had an exercise. I went onto the roof of our building (Andersen AFB was over 300 feet above sea level) to watch a B-52 come screaming across the waves and have to gain altitude to make it above the base. This was back in the early 80s, but that scene remains with me today.

  • @CarlosRodriguez-kb9jc
    @CarlosRodriguez-kb9jcАй бұрын

    While I was a Navy helicopter crewman stationed in Puerto Rico, we took some Generals to watch a B-52 bomb run on the Vieques bomb range. We were airborne observing from a safe distance. We could hear the incoming B-52 on the radio, but couldn’t see it. That’s when we saw the doing this same thing. They were just above the water. When they got feet dry, they pulled straight up and released the bombs which went straight up the mountain.

  • @nathanfisher1826
    @nathanfisher1826Ай бұрын

    Thanks Alex 😊

  • @ARGONUAT
    @ARGONUATАй бұрын

    BUFFs FForever. No joke.

  • @RedBud315
    @RedBud315Ай бұрын

    Finally a title that isn't click bait. That was insane and awesome at the same time.

  • @calvinlee1813
    @calvinlee1813Ай бұрын

    Got a surprise BDay Present at McGuire,AFB. Buddy of ours let us climb in during an Airshow. "MAC" was the 3rd Gen BUFF pilot in his family. He flies another cool Big Bad Bomber now. Awesome report Alex! Oh, sonewhere out there are photos of a Bone cracking Mach 1 while a pilot and RIO watch inbetween the tails of their 14.

  • @Oneshot8242
    @Oneshot8242Ай бұрын

    Fighter pilots always love ribbing the bomber guys. I remember this joke told to me by my commander in SAC in '75, he was a former tanker pilot. So, the fighter pulls up next to a buff and asks, "wanna see something I can do that you can't?" and proceeds to do a barrel roll. Then he says, "how about this" and flies inverted. The bomber replies, "ok, here's something I can do they YOU can't ". The fighter pilot waits about 10 minutes, and radios back,"uh, are you going to eventually DO something?" The bomber responds, this time it's the co-pilot who speaks. The fighter jock asks where the captain is, and the co-pilot replies, "Oh, he went to have a sandwich and a cup of coffee, and now he's in the can taking a shit".

  • @karlgmeiner1180
    @karlgmeiner1180Ай бұрын

    This makes me want to watch Dr Strangelove again. I believe there’s a line where Captain Kong says “if we were flying any lower we’d have to put sleigh bells on this plane.”

  • @gilly4881

    @gilly4881

    Ай бұрын

    😂🤣😂

  • @reneelapachet5002
    @reneelapachet5002Ай бұрын

    My dad was the navigator aboard the B-52 back in the early 60s. They used to do the three second alert and let me tell you those planes are LOUD.

  • @flynntaggart8549
    @flynntaggart8549Ай бұрын

    the fact his nose is pointed down like that tells you he's moving pretty damn quick. the wings are producing enough lift that the nose has to point downwards just to fly level.

  • @john316godlovesyou5
    @john316godlovesyou5Ай бұрын

    Awesome! Thanks for another great video! God bless you!

  • @russcarvertruthjedi259
    @russcarvertruthjedi259Ай бұрын

    A B-52 was practicing for an air show at Fairchild Air Force Base in July of 1994. I was getting ready to exchange cars with my ex, when the B-52 was practicing. I hurried to where she worked at the survival school. I told her about the plane practicing and that she should come look at it quickly. She said she had to get something out of the good car, our other car didn't have reverse. They don't pay military personnel enough. As we were coming out of the building, the B-52 was coming around, I believe it was trying to buzz the tower. It appeared to be in a curve leading towards the conning tower, slightly north west of where we were. The plane was sideways, meaning the lower wing. It was closer to us then it was to the tip of the other wing. If it was 20 ft lower it would have clipped the top of the building my ex worked in and you're not getting this message. After it flew over, our heads, literally directly over our heads, which at the moment was exhilarating. It suddenly lost lift. The tail fin did not have enough surface area to keep the aircraft airborne at that moment. It fell from the sky, 300 feet after it went over. Our heads, it clipped a power line and disintegrated into the ground leaving an enormous mushroom cloud behind. All four crew members were killed. One of them tried to eject but it was too late. No one was killed on the ground. It is fortunate that it happened on Friday instead of Saturday. Had it happened the following day, hundreds of people would have been killed.

  • @waynej1883

    @waynej1883

    Ай бұрын

    LtCol Mark McGeehan was in the right-hand seat (pilot's) seat on that flight, and I later flew with two younger crewmembers that he kicked off of that flight because he was concerned that something like what happened would happen. The B-52 aircrew I flew with considered LtCol McGeehan a wonderful leader and he was/is a true hero within the BUFF community. The aircraft commander that caused the crash,... not so. The whole episode is still used in both flight safety training and in leadership studies by the USAF. This June 24 will mark thirty years since that crash.

  • @russcarvertruthjedi259

    @russcarvertruthjedi259

    Ай бұрын

    @@waynej1883 I still can't believe it's been 30 years. My ex worked at billeting at the survival school. I remember hearing about McGeehan, he ended up sacrificing his life to save his subordinates. A noble gesture, I wish it hadn't come to that. It took hours to get out of debriefing. I ended up exhausted from the ordeal and had to sleep at a rest Stop on the way to Great falls. I had a nightmare and the plane had props on it because my brain couldn't conceive of a jet going as slow as that B-52 was as it went over our heads. I miss living in Washington, but I don't miss the snow. I hope you and your family are well.

  • @markaustin643

    @markaustin643

    Ай бұрын

    I knew 3 of the 4 guys who were killed in that crash. Played a lot of poker with Bob Wolff while on alert at Grand Forks AFB, Ken Huston took over on my crew when I PCS'd to Carswell, flew one mission with Bud Holland, who scared the sh*t out of me and made me glad I was leaving GFAFB. I wasn't surprised when I heard Holland was flying and was responsible for the crash. What an A-Hole!

  • @waynej1883

    @waynej1883

    Ай бұрын

    @@markaustin643 "...What an A-Hole!" There was a lot of that going around at FAFB at the time from what I heard from other BUFF crewmembers. After it happened, there was a lot of blaming a couple of FAFB Captains and sheltering of the wing leadership. There were later some movements toward Courts-Martial for some of the leadership personnel, but those actions were eventually terminated. One of my crew mates, a very upstanding Captain and great pilot, went TDY to testify at the Article 32 proceeding and was "on standby" to testify for the JAG (prosecution) at the actual trial. He was really angry when the charges were dropped, and said that charges were dropped because the trial testimony was going to greatly embarrass the Air Force, and likely impact/terminate the careers of some GOs. We'll never know all that was covered up, but the real problem is that three really good people died trying to stop what happened from happening.

  • @cylentone
    @cylentoneАй бұрын

    Hard to imagine any maneuver a fighter pilot could pull off that could top this coolness factor. Seeing this wave-skimming B-52 after seeing the B-1 doing a roll is crazy.

  • @hovishill2779
    @hovishill2779Ай бұрын

    The height of a B52 is 40ft, the shadow on the water would suggest B52 is about 50ft from the water 🙇🏻‍♂️. One sneeze away from disaster…

  • @edfrawley4356
    @edfrawley4356Ай бұрын

    witnessed an example of the Buffs capabilities while travelling hwy 212 as it cut the corner of Wyoming between Montana and South Dakota. I spotted the buff approaching from the south flying in a valley below the hwy . He then crossed the road low enough to be seen in my rearview mirror and then turned east and passed me on my left once again lower than the road in another valley. Pretty awesome NOE flying and damn nimble for a large aircraft.

  • @JohnMGibby
    @JohnMGibbyАй бұрын

    I'm loving the switch to daily videos!!! 😉

  • @davedear929
    @davedear929Ай бұрын

    What an aircraft what a pair of pilots. Amazing photos. Thanks

  • @tropocal2343
    @tropocal2343Ай бұрын

    *They wanted to treat the sailors to the rare view of the top of a B52.* *Very cool, not many can claim they've seen such a sight.* ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

  • @stevepeach3145
    @stevepeach3145Ай бұрын

    I clearly recall seeing a BUFF low enough to cause the trees to sway like there was a hurricane passing by. This was during Exercise Maple Flag in northern Canada where the fighter job was to find these guys sneaking in a tree top level. We were low looking for something lower with old pre-doppler radars. The reliable mark 1 eyeball was called up for the job.

  • @davidedwards8940
    @davidedwards8940Ай бұрын

    I appreciate you Alex. Giving fixes to a retired ISR executive, SIGINT and UAVs

  • @ronvoltz9125
    @ronvoltz9125Ай бұрын

    I was there and have the Pics on my wall. The first pass he was lower and threw a rooster tail above his own tail. ET2(SW), USS Ranger (CV-61) 1987 - 1990

  • @everydayhero5076

    @everydayhero5076

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you for your service.

  • @thebobloblawshow8832
    @thebobloblawshow8832Ай бұрын

    Great upload. Appreciate all the info. 👍👍

  • @rgs4x
    @rgs4xАй бұрын

    My brother and I were driving in rural eastern Wyoming in the 1980s and witnessed a B-52 doing a low level pass. Quite a sight!

  • @michaelburggraf2822
    @michaelburggraf2822Ай бұрын

    The US equivalent to a German Leopard A2 carrying a a glass of beer at the end of its gun while driving. 👍

  • @johnsmithe4656

    @johnsmithe4656

    Ай бұрын

    Nah. This has that beat. This is LOW. So low that a stray wave or breeching dolphin could cause a big problem.

  • @DUKE_of_RAMBLE

    @DUKE_of_RAMBLE

    Ай бұрын

    @@johnsmithe4656 Oh, how I would not want to be the pilot who has to write the Incident Report for how they lost an engine nacelle to a jumping dolphin... or worse, how they lost their entire B-52 to a breaching whale..... 😅 _(yes, for the sake of this funny, I'm implying that everyone walks away!)_ Which if ever such a report *were* to come to be, I would sure love to own a copy of it!

  • @roberthevern6169

    @roberthevern6169

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@johnsmithe4656we got a dolphin in the bombbay! Oh, really, well I got a tuna!

  • @johnsmithe4656

    @johnsmithe4656

    Ай бұрын

    @@DUKE_of_RAMBLE I do wonder if Shamoo getting blended through the turbine would be recorded as "bird strike." That's one Big Bird.

  • @DUKE_of_RAMBLE

    @DUKE_of_RAMBLE

    Ай бұрын

    @@johnsmithe4656 lol Hmmm 🤔 *CAUSE OF INCIDENT:* _"C o n t a c t w i t h s c h o o l_ _o f f l y i n g f i sh w h i l e -s h o w i n g o f f- _-i n f r o n t o f C a r r i e r g r o u p-_ _p e r f o r m i n g l o w l e v e l e x e r c i s e"_ "Dude, Stackhouse... You can't put that! We BOTH know those things only fly like 8 inches off the water's surface!" _"If you wanna say “Willy freed itself all over our damn plane” then YOU fill it out!_ 😭"

  • @user-lr9ox5gn5i
    @user-lr9ox5gn5iАй бұрын

    There was an "Olive Branch/Oil Burner" route that crossed Galveston Bay. Back in 1985, I was flying a commercial helicopter across Galveston Bay one day and on the local traffic frequency I heard "WTF! Everybody watch out!" When I looked down (from 1500' MSL) I saw a B-52 flying across the bay - at probably 500'.

  • @russbell6418

    @russbell6418

    Ай бұрын

    Had a CH-53 pilot tell me they were in a training flight, assigned at 500 ft and a pair of BUFFS came through under them on the same vector. Said the peripheral vision anomaly was initially pretty severe, but no wake turbulence.

  • @laserdad
    @laserdadАй бұрын

    I used to park at the fence at the end of the Griffiss AFB runway and watch them land. When they open the wing flaps, the wings double in size, and the engines are screaming to overcome the drag. It was awesome.

  • @daleadkison3349
    @daleadkison3349Ай бұрын

    Cool. I served on the Ranger in 1976-77 as a boiler tech. That would've something I would've missed since I worked below decks.

  • @leifhietala8074
    @leifhietala8074Ай бұрын

    Imagine tactical planners going over how to get the B-52's gigantic radar reflection past AA defense radar. Pilot: "Earth's reflection is bigger."

  • @eronavbj
    @eronavbjАй бұрын

    I flew on B-52s back in the 60s. They were all the “H” models which are the only models still operational. There was a special feature of the Auto-Pilot system known as TA for “Terrain Avoidance” that enabled the pilots to fly at extremely low levels. We used to practice flying over barren lands in North Dakota, Montana, Wyoming… and there were times I felt as though I could touch the top telephone poles as we flew over them. This mode of auto-pilot made the steering system very sensitive, so the plane would respond immediately to the slightest adjustments of the human pilot, hence the ability to stay beneath radar. I have no doubt such a system is that being used by the crew in these photos.

  • @chrissartain4430
    @chrissartain4430Ай бұрын

    That is what I consider a Bonus Video, Thanks !!

  • @BMF6889
    @BMF6889Ай бұрын

    This reminds me of the time in the late 1970's my wife was a private pilot before I earned my pilot's license. We were flying from DC to Melbourne, Florida for a visit. I don't remember exactly where this occurred but was either over North or South Carolina. As a private pilot we were below 10,000 feet VFR. Suddenly out of the right side there was a B-52 approaching right below us. There was no chance of a collision, but it was impressive to see such a large aircraft at such a low altitude. A check of the flight chart indicated that we were in fact flying over a designated military low altitude training corridor, but we had not received any notice (NOTAM) that the corridor was active.

  • @howardhughes7596
    @howardhughes7596Ай бұрын

    Late 80's my wife and I were driving our white Bronco down a lonely Arizona highway on the highlands in the north of the state. We got buzzed by a B52 at treetop level. As the plane peeled off it waggled it wings at us to say hello! I assume the pilots were having one heck of a laugh as they did it. Completely cool with us! If you are out there, thank you for the experience.

  • @Okie-BME
    @Okie-BMEАй бұрын

    Had the opportunity to see one up close recently and these aircraft are so amazing still today. They will be maintained and in service to 2050; 100 years of service will be quite impressive.

  • @shaggybreeks
    @shaggybreeks11 күн бұрын

    I was on a beach in Hawaii one day when the weather was low clouds and mist, with limited visibility. Offshore about a mile or less, I saw a pair of B-52s emerge from the grey mist, and slowly cruise by, low and slow. Maybe 200 feet over the water. No guess what their speed was, but it was slow. They continued parallel to the coastline and disappeared into the mist and clouds. The best word that comes into my mind to describe it was "majestic". Everybody on that beach was impressed. They were like ghosts.

  • @rickflorke7605
    @rickflorke7605Ай бұрын

    1981 I was working in the oilfield driving a truck. I was at a rig one evening when B-52s started flying over the rig every 20 minutes. The rig was sitting in a small valley and I was parked on the hill above the rig when one of the b-52 flew over. I could see the pilots very clearly in a orangeish glow the cockpit had.

  • @tennesseeriverchinooks8828
    @tennesseeriverchinooks8828Ай бұрын

    The B-52 rarely flies low altitude anymore. Back when I flew the B-52 we would fly low almost every sortie, day and night. We were never allowed to fly that low, typically around 500 to 1000 feet which is pretty low considering the 185' wing span.

  • @Mr1westie1

    @Mr1westie1

    Ай бұрын

    But then the was Red Flag, and war rules. And when you're downstairs........