097 - Avro Vulcan
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 15 ธ.ค. 2024
- Bomber Month marches on with our first foreign bomber to be featured: the Avro Vulcan.
This week, retired Royal Air Force Squadron Leader Martin Withers joins us to discuss this British Cold War-era strategic bomber that found notoriety for a long-range strike on an enemy airfield in the opening hours of the Falkland Islands War. Martin was part of that strike and went on to fly a Vulcan at airshows until its final sundown in 2015.
Episode artwork adapted by Janek Krause from original aviation photography by Rich Cooper. Bumper music by Jaime Lopez / announcements by Clint Bell. This episode was produced by our friends at The MuscleCar Place Podcast Network.
What a jackpot of a guy for Vulcan interview.
Also the quickly referenced animated Falklands air raid video is most probably the one from Operations Room channel. It's a really good one.
That whole channel is amazing. The Falklands and desert storm day one are beyond impressive
What he did not tell you is that on this mission to the Falklands he was supposed to be on stand by ,but the primary Vulcan shortly after take off had a cabin pressure problem, and had to abort, he was the next in line .Also encountered some really bad T storms ,lightening, and turbulence over the Atlantic on this mission ,a very humble man On his way back to base ,he was flying on fumes before he finally spotted the Handley Page Victor tanker ,thought he may have to ditch over the drink. The storm was so bad that one of the tankers broke its refueling probe ,and could give only half of the allotted fuel to Vulcan XM607.He could have aborted but decided to press on knowing that he was about 7 thousand pounds of fuel short to rendezvous with the tanker on his inbound flight back to base ,he was awarded the DFC.
Great interview! An entire episode on the Falklands war would be outstanding.
One of the best interviews I've listened to and a great insight to first hand experiences and stories. Still a much loved aircraft in the UK. Great job.
Wonderful episode! Vulcan and Victor are ones of the most unusual and strange-beautiful aircrafts. And Martin Withers is the great guest.
The incredible howl of a passing Vulcan is something I'll never forget
As a child in England I remember the Vulcan's well.
They would come from AVRO workshops down the Broadway on Pickford tractor trailers to get to Ferranti next door to my 3 room school, Eve's Lane of Chadderton.
Each aircraft was white with RAF roundels on the nose and full letter sets.
As testing around AVRO's field continued, we could often see Vulcan's in the sky around the neighbourhood. Sometimes there was an enormously loud ominous howling sound from the front of the aircraft, that can only be described as the emanation of evil.
Black Buck was the lead aircraft on the Falklands raid.
Per Ardua Ad Astra
There's a fantastic video on TH-cam that outlines the logistics of getting that one Vulcan to the Falkland Islands - amazing. Martin's aircraft was actually the spare, the #1 aircraft had a windscreen pressurisation leak 1/2 hour out of Ascension Island and had to turn back.
th-cam.com/video/e5yAtuYPHK4/w-d-xo.html
@@FighterPilotPodcast th-cam.com/video/u8FEmLVHE_w/w-d-xo.html
Another guy who would be awesome on the Podcast is Dave "Mog" Morgan, he flew the Sea Harrier in the Falklands and has some amazing stories from there, including taking a round through his fin and bringing the aircraft back to the carrier
What a delightful interview, thank you Martin and Jello! I was lucky enough to see the Vulcan's last flights in 2015 at Bournemouth Air Festival and a flyover at Old Sarum on the final farewell tour. Such a beautiful aircraft and a fascinating history!
That must have been something. 👍
Really interesting episode, would really love to get an episode on the Blackburn Buccaneer as well.
Saw three of these on display all in Chicago (NAS Glenview) 1978 was XL-390 (Sadly, Its last flight) The RAF didn't come in 1979 but returned in 1980 with XL-443; XM-575 ended the tradition in 1981.
I got an inside / outside tour of XM-575, and the accompanying Nimrod that came with that year.
1978-1981 was eons ago -- but I can still remember it all like it was yesterday.
XM575, the "Teasin' Tina"?!
@@scarecrow108productions7 This seems to be a popular aircraft. I mentioned this on the Iconic Aircraft Forum, and several posters there knew this particular aircraft, and some of the crew as well. I guess it flew pretty well. As for the moniker, I would have no idea. Perhaps you can shed some light on it?
You could not possibly have found a better person to interview regarding the Vulcan . One of the best episodes yet !
Thanks, Anthony! Yep, Martin was a saint...
THANK YOU!! Fantastically brilliant interview and guest!!! A fitting tribute to truly one of the greatest, most awesome aircraft the world has ever seen!! It is by far the most imposing aircraft one can see and hear banking at low level making the unique frightening howl that it produced as well as the thunderous air splitting roar that is by far the loudest plane i've ever heard. Having been a regular visitor to the old Mildenhall Air shows where one could see/experience basically every miitary aircraft from around the world including SR71 Blackbird, Rockwell B1 bomber and Soviet stuff too -- the incredible sounds and volume of the Vulcan was in a different league to ANYTHING ELSE!!
Fun fact, the RAF had a small detachment of Vulcans stationed at Offutt AFB until 1982. I often saw them flying around Omaha. Great episode!
Who knew?!
Didn't they take part in Red Flag exercises? I wonder how they performed?
I used to watch them around Offutt also.Bar none the best air show performance at the annual Offutt air show was the Vulcan much better than the AF Thunderbirds or the Navy Blue Angles.
A Vulcan went to the Falklands carry Strike and I think the (failed) Skybolt missile was intended
A Vulcan went to the Falklands carry Strike and I think the (failed) Skybolt missile was intended
The Vulcan was also used for maritime reconnaissance by the RAF
You haven’t lived until you’ve played the bagpipes at 50,000 ft in an Avro Vulcan. You can only get these kind of stories from people who were there. Thanks again for another great podcast.
Right?!
They went from the Avro Lancaster to this.
Via the Avro Lincoln, Boeing Washington (B29/50) and Vickers Valiant...
@@dogsnads5634 And Canberra!!!
Awesome that you’ve gotten Mr. Withers on the podcast!
The Yorkshire Air Museum is a few miles to the east of York, just off the main road to the city of Hull. The Vulcan had a strong relationship with the museum and people driving on that road would stop - during rush hour - to watch it. The tail-backs were horrendous but the view was well worth the wait.
For its penultimate flight it came over every house in my village a few miles to the east of the museum at maybe 200 feet with the bomb bay doors open! My dog still has PTSD from it flying directly overhead whilst walking through Wheldrake woods, very close to the museum, at not much than tree top height! For those that never heard it, the Vulcan was just unbelievably loud.
The Vulcan successfully 'nuked' New York twice, I wonder what the reaction would've been if we over-flew Buenos Aires at low level with the doors open. Risky, but what a reaction that would've caused.
A little off-topic but Yorkshire Air Museum is where Richard Hammond had his dragster crash and used to host F1 straight line testing whilst testing was still allowed.
Thank you for such an interesting interview.
Saw a doco on Netflix with guy Martin on this plane one of the all time greats
the victor and vulcan both look incredible! they look like space ships even 70 years later
First saw this gorgeous plane as a kid watching Thunderball (huge Bond fan). Thirty years later saw the original concrete pads for the underwater mock-up while diving in the Bahamas.
This is great stuff. If he ever wrote one, I'd buy Mr Withers' book in an instant.
What a magnificent aircraft. The infamous Avro howl on takeoff is unmistakable!
Wish I'd had a chance to hear it.
Awesome
Amazing interview. Beyond facinating
Vulcan did carry things that had rocket motors, before and during the Falklands War. The B Mk 2 was designed to carry a large stand off missile called Blue Steel, powered by a Hydrogen Peroxide / Kerosene Rocket Motor and fitted with a 1 Megaton Hydrogen Bomb. It was operational between 1963 and 1970 and an operational force of 48 missiles were fitted to Vulcans and Victors. The missile was not that reliable and the failure rate in test firings was around 50%.
The other two missiles were emergency fits for the Falklands, the AJ37 Anti Radiation Martel missile used by the RAF Buccaneer Force at the time and the AGM-45 Shrike which were given to the UK by the US. The Martel was fired on the UK Missile firing range at Aberporth in early May 1982 off a Vulcan and it worked OK. The Aircraft's mission was to take out two Argentinian long range search radars in the vicinity of Port Stanley, an Air Force TPS-43F and an Army TPS-44. When photographic reconnaissance from the Sea Harrier force discovered the location of these Radars, it was found that they were located on the edge of the town and dropping a missile with a 300lb HE warhead on the edge of the town was not a good idea (seeing that most of buildings were made out of wood and sheet metal). Thus the British got the Shrike of the USAF and modified a Vulcan to carry them. There was no time to test the missile on a range, so the first firing of a Shrike off a Vulcan was in combat.
1st Raid was aborted due to Tanker Hose Drum Failure issues in some of the tankers, plus Radar failure in the Vulcan.
2nd mission fired two Shrikes at the TPS-43F which detonated around 30 metres from the radar Scanner and cause damage that took 24 hours to fix.
On the third mission, the Vulcan took 4 Shrikes down, two tuned for the TPS radars and two tuned to go for the AAA gun laying radars around Stanley Airport. The Search Radars switched off as soon as they saw the Vulcan, but the Vulcan did get a sniff of a radar signal from one of the Gun layers and fired two Shrikes at it which destroyed the radar and killed four operators. The Vulcan then broke its probe on the return refuelling and had to make an emergency landing in Brazil.
Between 1973 and 1982, a squadron of Vulcans were employed as a high altitude Maritime Radar Reconnaissance aircraft which would fly over the seas of the world (mainly North Atlantic or Mediterranean) and use its radar to find and track ships. They also did Air Sampling missions in the Pacific to get nuclear fallout samples from French and Chinese Nuclear tests.
The good olds days, when we engineered beautiful airplanes. Now we’re a nation of IT consultants 🇬🇧
And gender studies professors.
Most of them, except for a few, were ugly though
A big strategic vulnerability when you have to rely on others for things, we're getting close to that over here now too. I mean the US only has ONE plant left where we make tanks.
Great guest,thanks
The sound of a Vulcan tearing over is something glorious, shame they are relegated to taxi-runs now.
St0atmaster
Enjoy! th-cam.com/video/3gvXf130Wic/w-d-xo.html
ONE OF THE MOST CRAZY MISSIONS EVER!
Martin is a legend
There was a Discovery channel Wings episode named Vulcans, Victors, and Cuba. A link to the video can be found on my 'usnraptor Great Planes ' website in the Miscellaneous section.
Martin Withers is an RAF legend.
really good sound quality for a remote interview
Zencastr. 😎
Vulcan can easily be qualify as next 'Bat Wing'. Easily it got almighty threat appearance. AirIntakes looks too tiny and impractical but they work. This design is 1 of a kind. This episode pairs best with 'Mackerson XXX' from London England
MARTIN FRIGGING WITHERS, hell yes
Just a friendly reminder the B-52 got some MiG kills during Linebacker II, North Vietnam. The four .50 cal guns were replaced with a 20mm Vulcan cannon, and then eventually removed altogether.
Good to know. 💪
Love it!
That was absolutely superb 👍
Thank you, D C.
What a beauty!
Please, please tell me you are going to interview a Vulcan pilot!!!!.....YEEEESSSSSS!!!!
Right on.
Good interview Jello, interesting to listen to.
Thanks. 🙏
Great content. The vulcan also nuked the USA twice jamming up the Eastern seaboard. only losing one of four bombers on each event.
Ok.
47:20 : the video is from "the operation room" channel. A really awesome one. Link to the video:
th-cam.com/video/e5yAtuYPHK4/w-d-xo.html
The Valiant was the only V bomber to drop a British Atomic/Nuke/Thermal bomb AKA The Bomb.
Valiant dropped 8 of them, one over the Western Australian Desert and 7 over the Pacific. Two drops were Atom Bombs and the rest were Hydrogen Bombs (though the first two H-bombs fizzled (gave only a fraction of the yield expected). Got to sit in all three V Bombers, XD818, the Valiant that dropped the first British H-bomb in 1957 (one of the two that fizzled) being the first of the three while it was still on the gate at RAF Marham in 1981. Got to see the inside of a Victor K 2 that day as well. Didn't get into a Vulcan until 2002.
@@richardvernon317 Awesome.
Missed opportunity to have a Vulcan HOWL at the end! Awesome interview apart from that though! Check out this link to hear her howling th-cam.com/video/H_ARSE8jEHQ/w-d-xo.html
Wish the Brits still made aircraft but at least Rolls Royce still makes jet engines I believe.
If you are into aviation:
Dan Gryder can save YOUR life!
NO WAY!!!!!
Way. 😉
Super Sabre in 3...
❤
if you havent done the YF-23 you seriously should do it
We might do X and Y planes in general but plan to reserve feature episodes for operational aircraft.
They have a cockpit at the Glouster jet museum, I took a girlfriend there once, she complained until walking up the ladder :)