And the Tibetan Plateau - no emergency airports, average altitude of 14,000 ft, a geography that causes turbulences and freezes jet fuel. Not exactly ideal according to ICAO.
Also the path low-key implies that the world must be flat because surely no one would consider flying point A to point B simply by going southwest instead of all that flying around airspaces...Kyrie Irving, do you know something we don't know?
In a tragic and inexplicable incident, American Airlines flight 4--- from Kansas City to Alice Springs was tragically shot down by a North Korean test missile. The flight, which took over twenty hours due to its winding route, had miraculously survived two ground to air missile attacks, one while flying over Ukraine and the other when flying over Iran.
Flat or otherwise, a circular/spherical shape cannot possibly have "corners." It is geometrically impossible. Therefore, whether Earth is flat or not is irrelevant.
I actually remember at least once flying over the North Korea on my flight between Helsinki and Tokyo-Narita airport. It was only for a brief moment over the city of Chongjin before the plane headed for the Sea of Japan. AFAIK that's the only area where North Korea actually allows foreign airlines to fly over their airspace (for a good fee of course). Not sure if airlines are allowed to use this route anymore after the North Korean missile tests.
And I would like to add another: Taiwan Strait is also a highly sensitive region that no commercial airplanes are allowed to fly through. So the flight from Taipei/Taichung/Kaohsuing to Xiamen or Fuzhou need to fly a long way around it (800km instead of 200km fly-cross), except Taiwan's domesic flights to Kinmen or Lienchiang (Matsu) where is located in the west of the strait, are allowed to fly through it directly.
helps to note that some of the ones in the US are restricted but only to a certain altitude. You CAN fly above the Capital, just can’t do it below 18,000 ft.
How do you plan to use this useless information? I'm guessing you're also a fan of the channel "Half as interesting" This is 0 calorie brain food for NPCs lbs
You forgot to mention the Soviet Union once had restricted airspace until the end of the Cold War. Because of that flights flying from Europe to Asia would have to stop over Anchorage in Alaska for refueling.
Pacific Ocean is Prohibited Airspace now The whales have had enough of our bullshit polluting the world's oceans and will shoot down any planes that fly in their airspace
I live in Vladivostok and I'm impressed how accurate you pronounced the name of my city. You can scarcely hear someone outside pronounces it in such way.
Man. I remember flying to South Korea and the pilot was headed straight toward North Korea and then finally turned towards the Yellow Sea. I was just thinking to myself is he trying to get us shot down lol
I would have loved to see the world map with every restricted and prohibited area on it. Would be cool so see how much of the worlds skies we don't have access to
Pantex isn’t “just north” of Abilene. It’s like four hours from there. It’s just north of Amarillo, which has started calling itself Bomb City because of it.
Actually these flights go between Area 51's airspace and China Lake/ Joshua Approach's airspace. Think of a line from Pahrump to Beatty to just sw of Coaldale, this area is outside of those restricted areas.
@@JimmyMon666 I wouldn't recommend this route by air. Fallon is home to the Naval Air Station Fallon and US 95 goes near the bombing range they use. You can see targets from the highway and I've seen them drop live ordinance in the area. There is also the Undersea Naval Warfare Training Center at Walker Lake and the Army Ammunition Depot Hawthorne. In general, there are many reasons over 90% of the state of Nevada is off limits to the public.
Note: Windsor Castle doesn't have any sort of air restriction. Source; Windsor resident for 25 years and still getting woken up by the planes departing and arriving at Heathrow. This problem will only be exasperated if/when the 3rd runway is ever built
There are also some remote protected natural areas that have flight restrictions to protect them from human impact. For example, there is a minimum flyover distance above the Boundary Waters Wilderness in MN.
I was flying last year for my birthday, and my instructor was telling me I was allowed to pierce loose clouds, he pointed to a cloud to our port side, and told me to buzz that. I banked and ruddered my way there, turned out it was the summer residence of the princess of The Netherlands, we were intercepted by an F-16. He got off with a three month ban and I got away with a fine, only 300 euros, but it’s an experience!
Even when landing in Paris, you cannot fly over the city of Paris. The only possibility to fly over París is at 20 000 feet above the city. Orly and CDG airport are located in the Paris metropolitan area but not on Paris. Not to confuse both.
You know what's ironic: The 'B' at Australia from 7:50 is actually restricted airspace LOL. The dot covers as least part of the ‘Woomera Range Complex’, which the Australian military uses to conduct military exercises and tests. It is also ironically similar to the land area of.....North Korea.
One time, I was traveling back to Hong Kong from LAX via Shanghai Pudong (United Air). So the fastest route is to pass thru Northern part of North Korea from Eastern Russia, then straight to Shanghai. However, the flight head west when prox. 50km away from North Korea border in China. Passing Tianjing, and from there to Shanghai.
One time I went to do a cross country night flight with my instructor. We flew, stopped for a while, went to fly back and realized that our home airport was temporarily closed. We'd checked the NOTAMs beforehand but it wasn't on there when we checked for some reason. It was... a bit of an ordeal. But minor by comparison.
"These are airspaces that you are not allowed to fly over." US Military: "Hippitty hoppity, your airspace is now my property." *Proceeds to fly drones and spy planes over the area*
Ukraine restricted airspace is at least 50 times smaller in real life than in the picture they showed. It only affects "separate regions of Donetsk and Lugansk oblast" (official description of the territory), while the video shows like 40% of the whole country.
@@ymodnar i know. russian is a part of Ukrainian airspace now, if the russian media who constantly cries about UA planes, helis and UAVs entering and bombing them are to be believed.
4:46 - Windsor is on the flightpath to Heathrow. You see it when you take-off/land
3 ปีที่แล้ว +1
Yeah, I was going to say, planes fly over Windsor regularly. Actually, even during the broadcast of Harry and Meghan's wedding, I could see planes in the sky, I tracked them on FlightRadar24 and they went straight above the castle, on their approach to LHR.
Hey man. Love the videos. I’m a commercial pilot and I just noticed some inconsistencies with the info here. The map you introduced of restricted airspace seemed a little off and then when you zoomed in to the restricted over Area 51 you outlined it a lot larger than you depicted it on the previous map. The second illustration of the restricted was the correct one. Also, the airspace that follows Air Force One and the airspace above Ex-President’s homes and Disneyland is not Prohibited Airspace, it’s a TFR (Temporary Flight Restriction). TFR’s are not depicted on standard Sectional Charts because they move/ come and go. They also are for things like large gatherings of over 30,000 people and Sporting events. So Disneyland is not a TFR for Mickey Mouse, but the amount of people concentrated in that area, and it’s a TFR, but permanent. It’s weird, but that’s how it works. Prohibited and Restricted Airspace is depicted because they typically stay where they are and are more permanent. I love the video though and you always do a great job! Just thought I would help a fella out and let you know.
"All Russian flights are banned from entering Ukraine" 2 seconds later: Shows flight to Crimea Soooo are we admitting Crimea isn't a part of Ukraine now 🙊
There was an incident I remember from back in the summer of 2010 where a private plane flew into the President’s prohibited airspace when he was visiting Seattle. Two F-15 fighter jets were scrambled to defuse the threat and they broke the sound barrier right above where I lived at the time.
Flying above the Taj Mahal is restricted as well, even Indian Airforce's aeroplanes are not allowed. My dad, who served the Indian Airforce, however had the luxury of flying over the Taj in the late nineteen eighties when the permanent ban wasn't there.
'Restricted airzones around the world make navigating the worlds skies from point A to point B a more difficult task.' _Casually draws line through Iran, North Korea and the right half of Ukraine_
7:50 Instead of that long route, you could just go the easy way, getting to the left side (that is, flying over the Pacific). That's definitely easier if we go from the US to Australia. If that's true, then why the video only shows the long route over the Atlantic and Eurafrasia?
The path you are telling is how most flights between australia and United States take place. But during 7:50 he wanted to emphasize that while flying in the world can be confusing for some people due to restricted airspaces, Remembering passwards is not. In brief, it was just a segway to the sponsered part of the video.
@@ianeons9278 Other airlines can and do fly into Pyongyang, there's just no commercial scheduled flights because well... there's no market for it. RLL even says here (despite the clickbait) that North Korean airspace isn't closed per se, it's just most countries and/or airlines have a policy of avoiding it, same as eastern Ukraine etc.
I flew over a part of north korea near Chongjin coming from Japan. And I was uncomfortable as heck. To this day, I don’t understand why we couldn’t have flown a bit more east.
Buckingham Palace yes, due it's proximity to London center. However, Windsor Castle is a stone's throw away from Heathrow Airport. All you see is BA chem trails above St. George's Cathedral on a sunny day.
Just so you know, Kitsap isn't a city or town, it's an entire county 😂😂😂 I live extremely close to that Naval Base. I had no idea it was such a big deal to be placed in a prohibited airspace!! That's amazing!!
It is internationally controversial that "Sea of Japan" should be named "East Sea" because of the small islands located in East Sea. Known as Dokdo(or in Japanese assertion, Dakeshima). Some historical territory issues are ongoing between Korea and Japan. Actually Korea has Effective Control on that islands, not only these days but from Josun Dynasty era. On my personal opinion, I want to assert that island is Korea's territory, not only because I am a Korean, but historically and currently, it was Korea's territory, is Korea's territory, and will be Korea's territory.
As for the body of water, neither Japan nor Korea owns it (it's legally international waters except for space around disputed islands) so I suppose they can both call it whatever they want. It's not "internationally controversial"; only Korea disputes it being called the Sea of Japan and most maps other than those made by Korea label it as such. If only one country seriously objects (2 if you count North Korea as a separate country) then it's only controversial to that country. It's not so much that most of the world supports Japan on this matter as "East Sea" is incredibly generic (east of what?) while "Sea of Japan" makes it a lot more where the body of water is. Korea doesn't insist that the Yellow Sea be called the "West Sea" so this is clearly just a grudge against Japan and not because they have any cultural or historic claim to the body of water. The islands ave been variously claimed on both Korean and Japanese maps, but historical maps are not of much help as they weren't particularly accurate, often placing the islands in incorrect places if they even included them at all. (It's almost overstating things to call them "islands" as they're basically big rocks, have never been permanently inhabited, and have only been used as convenient places to fish from.) Korea more actively defends them now, and I suppose possession is 9/10 of the law as they say. Japan has been willing to have the dispute settled by independent arbitration; Korea has refused this, saying there is no dispute to settle (honestly seems ridiculously stubborn to me, as the arbitration would probably go in their favor anyway). Japan doesn't seem to care much about the islands but they don't want to be seen as just giving them away (occasionally especially nationalistic Japanese people protest this point but even they don't seem to care about it very often). If Korea just consented to arbitration they could have this dispute settled by now. I mean, Japan is willing to let Korea have them, as long as it's not Japan that has to say that.
ive flown through a restricted area with permission before. If its for general artillery training. and the area is not active. you'll probably be able to fly through it.
Alternate title: Best locations to visit in Microsoft Flight Simulator
Eat your cereal
@@bumble5286 he did not
@@bumble5286 it not the same comment
This comment is amazing and you should feel proud
😂
7:49 I like how the path getting from point A to point B specifically chooses to fly over eastern Ukraine, Iran, and North Korea.
And the Tibetan Plateau - no emergency airports, average altitude of 14,000 ft, a geography that causes turbulences and freezes jet fuel. Not exactly ideal according to ICAO.
and russia
Yeah that's messed up
And belerus.
Also the path low-key implies that the world must be flat because surely no one would consider flying point A to point B simply by going southwest instead of all that flying around airspaces...Kyrie Irving, do you know something we don't know?
8:00 That flight went both over North Korea and eastern Ukraine
And Iran and Syria
@@theoeis4677 :)
bruh
In a tragic and inexplicable incident, American Airlines flight 4--- from Kansas City to Alice Springs was tragically shot down by a North Korean test missile. The flight, which took over twenty hours due to its winding route, had miraculously survived two ground to air missile attacks, one while flying over Ukraine and the other when flying over Iran.
@Atharva Mandrekar that's the joke?
7:50 i like how this line is crossing almost every restricted airspace mentioned in the video
death flight
@@mastereddarkheart4695 final destination
@@hidaven2006 holy shit that got me wheezing
@@hidaven2006 nothing wrong will definitely happen
How dare you fly over Disney World
Rll: You can fly to almost every corner of the globe
Flat earthers: *Enters
Silly Billies. It’s not a globe or flat.. it’s the shape of a velociraptor!
@@theluftwaffle1 pfft it's obviously a backwords lamborghini ninja Dinosaur tomato potato chocolate syrup.
The Flat Earth Society has members all over the globe...wait
The flat earth model is actually a circle so...
Flat or otherwise, a circular/spherical shape cannot possibly have "corners." It is geometrically impossible. Therefore, whether Earth is flat or not is irrelevant.
“Mickey mouse is as important as the president” is more true than most people would like to know
At least Mickey Mouse isn’t real and thus won’t screw America up.
@@ranelgallardo7031 mickey mouse isn’t real? Are you fucking out of your mind?!!
@@Zico20 bruh
Yes their president is a cartoon too no wounder both are important
More important than the current one that's for sure !!!!
I actually remember at least once flying over the North Korea on my flight between Helsinki and Tokyo-Narita airport. It was only for a brief moment over the city of Chongjin before the plane headed for the Sea of Japan. AFAIK that's the only area where North Korea actually allows foreign airlines to fly over their airspace (for a good fee of course). Not sure if
airlines are allowed to use this route anymore after the North Korean missile tests.
"You can not fly over North Korea"
> End graphic shows plane flying explicitly over North Korea
@internet person Ukraine > Russia
Imagine if someone actually took this route.
It also went through Iran and Iraq (I think it should be blocked from traveling)
And I would like to add another: Taiwan Strait is also a highly sensitive region that no commercial airplanes are allowed to fly through. So the flight from Taipei/Taichung/Kaohsuing to Xiamen or Fuzhou need to fly a long way around it (800km instead of 200km fly-cross), except Taiwan's domesic flights to Kinmen or Lienchiang (Matsu) where is located in the west of the strait, are allowed to fly through it directly.
But why?
@@aliffrazak China and Taiwan relations
@@aliffrazak when one people are divided into two regimes and do not even agree if there are in one country or not, lol
@@aliffrazak And military reasons too I think. China keeps posting news about fighter jets and aircraft carriers in that area
An aviation video from RLL? I almost thought I was watching Wendover haha
They are bros from different mos 💭
Everyone when they get flight simulator: *Are you sure about that?*
woah same pfp
😂😂😂
My GPU are Melting While Playing MIcrosoft Flight Simulator,Thanks I can Now Fried Egg With My GPU
helps to note that some of the ones in the US are restricted but only to a certain altitude. You CAN fly above the Capital, just can’t do it below 18,000 ft.
Who randomly found one of this guys video and now watches him almost everyday.
Btw u should keep up the good work RealLifeLore
I discovered him whilst researching Chernobyl - t'was a good decision to click on that vid.
@@Essence213 Nah mate, no one would even bother listening to you anyways.
Lol
How do you plan to use this useless information? I'm guessing you're also a fan of the channel "Half as interesting"
This is 0 calorie brain food for NPCs lbs
@@jaydupree418 it's also propaganda. The people who don't see that are totally blind
RealLifeLore: - North Korea has the most restricted airspace.
Lukashenko: - Hold my potato.
You are in restricted airspace divert your course or you will be shot down
Bruh
You forgot to mention the Soviet Union once had restricted airspace until the end of the Cold War. Because of that flights flying from Europe to Asia would have to stop over Anchorage in Alaska for refueling.
And it 80s a Korean air plane got lost and the USSR shot it down. Almost lead to wwiii
Very important one he missed
i believe wendover productions have covered this topic
@@ronfranklin1940 where? Link plz?
@@AdamSmith-gs2dv Korean Air Lines flight 007
7:49 just go over the Pacific Ocean lol
Just another proof for The Flat Earth Community xd
Pacific Ocean is Prohibited Airspace now
The whales have had enough of our bullshit polluting the world's oceans and will shoot down any planes that fly in their airspace
@@kitsunefire1 yep as a whale I can confirm
Quantum as a aircraft, i can confirm that you whales are shooting us down.
@@gingerpatch6803 yeah I'm trying to tell my friends to stop shooting you aircraft down.
France: you can't fly over Paris unless you're flying to or from one of our airports.
Pilots: ORLY?
Haha, nice pun
"And don't call me Orly."
Leslie Nielsen joke. 😉
@@neriv12 no, they actually fly above Paris while in cruise, because the prohibited area is just between the ground and 6500 ft
What is ORLY? 🤔
I don't get it, explain plz?
*Me, looking at such puns:* "Go away, all of you!"
_(seeing this one)_
*Me:* "Except for you. You stay"
Pentagon: My air space is restricted
Fort Zancudo from Gta 5: Hold my missiles
Area 69 > Fort Zancudo
1 nanometer into fort zancudo And my Lazer is smoking
What about Fort Wallace and Area 69
Donald Rumsfeld: Hold my 9/11 commission.
You gotta jump in there with a vehicle from the north heading south using the cliff
I live in Vladivostok and I'm impressed how accurate you pronounced the name of my city. You can scarcely hear someone outside pronounces it in such way.
“Can I fly over Area 51?”
“Depends”
“What about Disney world?”
“Absolutely not”
7:39 "Because Iran shot down a Ukrainian Airplane a year ago in January 2020"
Me: *It's been 84 years*
Wdym?
I feel like time is going rly fast
@@adyan7953 yeah so fast its like im running across the earth At 32% of the speed of light
Man. I remember flying to South Korea and the pilot was headed straight toward North Korea and then finally turned towards the Yellow Sea. I was just thinking to myself is he trying to get us shot down lol
the pilot trying to see how close he can get just for kicks lmao
During the lockdown you had a good chance to get permission to fly through most restricted airspace such as Disney World’s.
"And earlier today, Superman was shot down by two F-18 fighter jets for flying over Mickey Mouse's house. More of this story at 5"
I would have loved to see the world map with every restricted and prohibited area on it. Would be cool so see how much of the worlds skies we don't have access to
THAT'S CLASSIFIED 🤣🤣
People with Flight Simulator: FAA regulations _prepare to be ignored!_
lands a 172 at area 51
Stan pines
Pantex isn’t “just north” of Abilene. It’s like four hours from there. It’s just north of Amarillo, which has started calling itself Bomb City because of it.
Yeah but in Texas 4 hours is nothing!
@@topspot4834 true true
“Fly to any corner of the world”
Me: corner? The earth is a spear, there aren’t corners.
It's not a spear though. I don't think we're living on a melee weapon.
uh its sphere
Nah earth is a plate on top of a bull
Its flat ACTUALLY
@@wleavy1813 what flat? your breasts? Okay then.
You forgot [REDACTED] at [REDACTED] in [REDACTED] in the Lattitude [REDACTED] and Longitude [REDACTED]
Yeah no shit of course you can’t fly over the SCP foundation.
Yeah
@@nottelling8129 conspiracy theory: area 51 is an scp facility
@@foxloaf8843 maybe
NO airplanes are given permission to fly through Area 51
Reno to Las Vegas: Allow me to introduce myself
Actually these flights go between Area 51's airspace and China Lake/ Joshua Approach's airspace. Think of a line from Pahrump to Beatty to just sw of Coaldale, this area is outside of those restricted areas.
@@dseanjackson1 good
I would imagine they roughly follow US95 which goes from Las Vegas to Reno (actually Fallon).
@@JimmyMon666 I wouldn't recommend this route by air. Fallon is home to the Naval Air Station Fallon and US 95 goes near the bombing range they use. You can see targets from the highway and I've seen them drop live ordinance in the area.
There is also the Undersea Naval Warfare Training Center at Walker Lake and the Army Ammunition Depot Hawthorne.
In general, there are many reasons over 90% of the state of Nevada is off limits to the public.
Pantex is outside Amarillo, not Abilene
7:49 When you put your child in charge of drawing out the flight path.
Ah yes, the child wants to fly over banned places that your not supposed to fly over...
"Micky Mouse is just as important as the President."
I thought they were the same person anyway.
You from China or something
@@T.Gonz1216 I'm anti CCP and not from China, so I guess I'd have to answer, "or something."
@@bobhope4288 understandable, have a nice day
show micky mouse this comment and u will be the first person killed by micky mouse lol
No, it's easy to tell them apart. Mickey's the smart one. (And I'm not just talking about the present and about to be ex- incumbent)
Belarus is now restricted airspace to EU aircraft, and the other way around applies too (EU is now restricted airspace to Belarusian aircraft).
Pantex is located NE of Amarillo, not Abilene. Easy to confuse as they are both in the middle of nowhere.
TH-cam: how much sponsors do you want in your videos
Real life lore:yes
_"It is no secret that this is a highly classified base"_
Nice one there.
Note: Windsor Castle doesn't have any sort of air restriction.
Source; Windsor resident for 25 years and still getting woken up by the planes departing and arriving at Heathrow. This problem will only be exasperated if/when the 3rd runway is ever built
There are also some remote protected natural areas that have flight restrictions to protect them from human impact. For example, there is a minimum flyover distance above the Boundary Waters Wilderness in MN.
I was flying last year for my birthday, and my instructor was telling me I was allowed to pierce loose clouds, he pointed to a cloud to our port side, and told me to buzz that. I banked and ruddered my way there, turned out it was the summer residence of the princess of The Netherlands, we were intercepted by an F-16. He got off with a three month ban and I got away with a fine, only 300 euros, but it’s an experience!
"that is not 30 miles" - way too many people
The way this guy introduces his sponsors is too smooth
Great video! One error I've spotted: The Pantex plant is actually located just north east of Amarillo, TX rather than Abilene, TX
Came to say the same.. can't even get a shout out to my home town.
yeah as a texan i was a bit confused by that bit 💀
I came to the comment for express purpose of seeing if anyone comment on this.
@@carriekmonje I’m not sure why I knew this at the time because I’m from the uk haha
Even when landing in Paris, you cannot fly over the city of Paris. The only possibility to fly over París is at 20 000 feet above the city. Orly and CDG airport are located in the Paris metropolitan area but not on Paris. Not to confuse both.
"Mickey Mouse is as important as the President" is the funniest thing I've heard in quite some time.
8:01 That flight from A to B overflys the Woomera restricted area. The world's largest weapon test range.
It also passes through north korea and the eastern part of ukraine
You know what's ironic: The 'B' at Australia from 7:50 is actually restricted airspace LOL. The dot covers as least part of the ‘Woomera Range Complex’, which the Australian military uses to conduct military exercises and tests. It is also ironically similar to the land area of.....North Korea.
One time, I was traveling back to Hong Kong from LAX via Shanghai Pudong (United Air). So the fastest route is to pass thru Northern part of North Korea from Eastern Russia, then straight to Shanghai. However, the flight head west when prox. 50km away from North Korea border in China. Passing Tianjing, and from there to Shanghai.
Nobody cares
@@madbymycommentumad9041 Rude
Microsoft Flight Simulator: I don't have such weaknesses.
One time I went to do a cross country night flight with my instructor. We flew, stopped for a while, went to fly back and realized that our home airport was temporarily closed. We'd checked the NOTAMs beforehand but it wasn't on there when we checked for some reason. It was... a bit of an ordeal. But minor by comparison.
You said and showed Abilene, I think you meant Amarillo.
Yes, as an Abilenian I was shocked and had to google it, lol
Came here to say this. Although, disinformation is probably our best friend here.
7:18
That pilot better be getting hazard pay.
6:33 This one didn't age quite so well...
"These are airspaces that you are not allowed to fly over."
US Military: "Hippitty hoppity, your airspace is now my property."
*Proceeds to fly drones and spy planes over the area*
LOL
Classic America.
Ukraine restricted airspace is at least 50 times smaller in real life than in the picture they showed. It only affects "separate regions of Donetsk and Lugansk oblast" (official description of the territory), while the video shows like 40% of the whole country.
well that aged well
@@ymodnar yes, now it stretches all across russia
@@deim3 i was talking about ukrainian airspace
@@ymodnar i know. russian is a part of Ukrainian airspace now, if the russian media who constantly cries about UA planes, helis and UAVs entering and bombing them are to be believed.
for example at 6:33 Seoul to vladiorstock 7:18 Moscow to Sevastopol 7:25 Kiev to Dubai
4:46 - Windsor is on the flightpath to Heathrow. You see it when you take-off/land
Yeah, I was going to say, planes fly over Windsor regularly.
Actually, even during the broadcast of Harry and Meghan's wedding, I could see planes in the sky, I tracked them on FlightRadar24 and they went straight above the castle, on their approach to LHR.
Hey man. Love the videos. I’m a commercial pilot and I just noticed some inconsistencies with the info here. The map you introduced of restricted airspace seemed a little off and then when you zoomed in to the restricted over Area 51 you outlined it a lot larger than you depicted it on the previous map. The second illustration of the restricted was the correct one. Also, the airspace that follows Air Force One and the airspace above Ex-President’s homes and Disneyland is not Prohibited Airspace, it’s a TFR (Temporary Flight Restriction). TFR’s are not depicted on standard Sectional Charts because they move/ come and go. They also are for things like large gatherings of over 30,000 people and Sporting events. So Disneyland is not a TFR for Mickey Mouse, but the amount of people concentrated in that area, and it’s a TFR, but permanent. It’s weird, but that’s how it works. Prohibited and Restricted Airspace is depicted because they typically stay where they are and are more permanent. I love the video though and you always do a great job! Just thought I would help a fella out and let you know.
"All Russian flights are banned from entering Ukraine"
2 seconds later: Shows flight to Crimea
Soooo are we admitting Crimea isn't a part of Ukraine now 🙊
It really isn't
Wtf RLL based
Crimea is part of Russia though...
@@merenkov I mean in practicality it is
crimea is de facto russian but de jure ukrainian
There was an incident I remember from back in the summer of 2010 where a private plane flew into the President’s prohibited airspace when he was visiting Seattle. Two F-15 fighter jets were scrambled to defuse the threat and they broke the sound barrier right above where I lived at the time.
That's funny because by the time you heard them, they were already gone. Lol
Well there goes my weekend plans I wanted to fly over the white house and capital building
one reason why you shouldn’t hate two weeks is that it’s always around. why u hate two weeks?
You still can though
Capitol*
"Here, submarines carrying nuclear misles are serviced and contained in between deployments"
Deployments..of....nuclear misles??
4:27 This zone must be really small then. I have flown from Portugal to Germany and saw Paris from above.
Belarus: gets almost all planes avoiding the country
North Korea: First time?
I've heard you're restricted from flying into a couple of towers
Not the North Tower though
Lets fly over the Pyongyang Hotel.
Or else a plane could bring down two massive buildings? Are they Chinese made buildings?
I’ve heard for some locations the restrictions are permanent.
nooooooooooooooo
Having restriced airspaces would mean making the skies free of any aeroplanes.
Nobody:
RLL: “any CORNER of the globe”
Flat Earth confirmed
@@jaydengil3569
But NOT circular!
@@jaydengil3569 lol 😂 Toyota Corolla earth confirmed
Make a video based on all the times a plane has flown in prohibited airspace
Theoretically, does a prohibited area technically ban you from jumping since you are flying for 1 second.
It's stupid
But sounds true
No, in america to be "flying" you need to be flying an aircraft thats motorized or some shit
@@eank3429 so if you tape a paper airplane to an electric bicycle and hold the bike it would be illegal to jump
It’s only restricted if they see you
U2 Gang
Yes,you’re right U2.Until it was May 1,1960 and you’re flying over Yekaterinburg.
*Laughs in Spy Plane
Sr 71 gang
Gets hit by a rocket test.
am i part of the club?
P-56 US Capitol. Protected from airspace but not from hooligans.
you're voice is good, man. so soothing
Plane: demonstrate that you have to avoid some air space at 7:56
Also Plane: *Flies over North Korea*
Underrated comment
Flying above the Taj Mahal is restricted as well, even Indian Airforce's aeroplanes are not allowed.
My dad, who served the Indian Airforce, however had the luxury of flying over the Taj in the late nineteen eighties when the permanent ban wasn't there.
'Restricted airzones around the world make navigating the worlds skies from point A to point B a more difficult task.'
_Casually draws line through Iran, North Korea and the right half of Ukraine_
Fun fact: the flight path at the end is known as the 'Suicide Flight', as it passes over King's Bay, Eastern Ukraine and North Korea.
7:50-7:59 damn, imagine a crying baby on that flight. Damn long
F
F
F
F
Ok
Man i gotta say that transition into your ad was smooth asf
7:50 Instead of that long route, you could just go the easy way, getting to the left side (that is, flying over the Pacific). That's definitely easier if we go from the US to Australia. If that's true, then why the video only shows the long route over the Atlantic and Eurafrasia?
The path you are telling is how most flights between australia and United States take place. But during 7:50 he wanted to emphasize that while flying in the world can be confusing for some people due to restricted airspaces, Remembering passwards is not. In brief, it was just a segway to the sponsered part of the video.
Thanks Reallifelore for all the good work
6:45 aged like wine
Love your videos! Keep the great work up!
Pyongyang INT Airport: Am I a joke to you?
Only Chinese and North Korean planes can fly in so....
@@ianeons9278 Other airlines can and do fly into Pyongyang, there's just no commercial scheduled flights because well... there's no market for it.
RLL even says here (despite the clickbait) that North Korean airspace isn't closed per se, it's just most countries and/or airlines have a policy of avoiding it, same as eastern Ukraine etc.
This channel is incredible, I’m so glad I found it
saturday’s are now officially the best day of the week because that’s when you upload
I flew over a part of north korea near Chongjin coming from Japan. And I was uncomfortable as heck. To this day, I don’t understand why we couldn’t have flown a bit more east.
Wendover: *Are you challenging me?*
Buckingham Palace yes, due it's proximity to London center. However, Windsor Castle is a stone's throw away from Heathrow Airport. All you see is BA chem trails above St. George's Cathedral on a sunny day.
"You'll NEVER Fly Over" *laughs in Microsoft Flight Simulator*
Just so you know, Kitsap isn't a city or town, it's an entire county 😂😂😂 I live extremely close to that Naval Base. I had no idea it was such a big deal to be placed in a prohibited airspace!! That's amazing!!
The Ukraine one didn’t age well
Hey I know this is an old video but in an emergency or by getting prior permission you can fly through prohibited airspace
3:52
I guess the mouse has a hand in more pockets than just the copyright laws
Turns out he can even go nuclear if he so chooses (the powerplant of course, not the weapon)
@@archibaldhernandez5553 oh god
A moment of silence for those passengers & crew who lost lives on anonymous shootouts ...poor souls💐💐
Me: **sees the thumbnail**
Also me : what did i expect? Its best korea. They want they're own airspace
Very nice video, named every No Flying zone very nicely! Thank you! 😄✌🏻
Thanks for the video, I was just about to fly over all of these zones.
It's incredible to notice how fast this video got outdated....😢
It is internationally controversial that "Sea of Japan" should be named "East Sea" because of the small islands located in East Sea. Known as Dokdo(or in Japanese assertion, Dakeshima). Some historical territory issues are ongoing between Korea and Japan.
Actually Korea has Effective Control on that islands, not only these days but from Josun Dynasty era. On my personal opinion, I want to assert that island is Korea's territory, not only because I am a Korean, but historically and currently, it was Korea's territory, is Korea's territory, and will be Korea's territory.
As for the body of water, neither Japan nor Korea owns it (it's legally international waters except for space around disputed islands) so I suppose they can both call it whatever they want. It's not "internationally controversial"; only Korea disputes it being called the Sea of Japan and most maps other than those made by Korea label it as such. If only one country seriously objects (2 if you count North Korea as a separate country) then it's only controversial to that country. It's not so much that most of the world supports Japan on this matter as "East Sea" is incredibly generic (east of what?) while "Sea of Japan" makes it a lot more where the body of water is. Korea doesn't insist that the Yellow Sea be called the "West Sea" so this is clearly just a grudge against Japan and not because they have any cultural or historic claim to the body of water.
The islands ave been variously claimed on both Korean and Japanese maps, but historical maps are not of much help as they weren't particularly accurate, often placing the islands in incorrect places if they even included them at all. (It's almost overstating things to call them "islands" as they're basically big rocks, have never been permanently inhabited, and have only been used as convenient places to fish from.) Korea more actively defends them now, and I suppose possession is 9/10 of the law as they say. Japan has been willing to have the dispute settled by independent arbitration; Korea has refused this, saying there is no dispute to settle (honestly seems ridiculously stubborn to me, as the arbitration would probably go in their favor anyway). Japan doesn't seem to care much about the islands but they don't want to be seen as just giving them away (occasionally especially nationalistic Japanese people protest this point but even they don't seem to care about it very often). If Korea just consented to arbitration they could have this dispute settled by now. I mean, Japan is willing to let Korea have them, as long as it's not Japan that has to say that.
ive flown through a restricted area with permission before. If its for general artillery training. and the area is not active. you'll probably be able to fly through it.