19:30 You can’t hear it too well in the video but if you listen closely near the end of the clip someone tells out “It’s not a race!” I love military humor
@@asdefull I mean, that's easy. It's Russian meaning there's a greater than 0% chance it actually either A. doesn't exist or B. can't actually do what it's advertised as doing. So if it either doesn't exist or can't actually launch, it's easy for it to escape radar. 🤣🤣🤣
@@steeljawX Arrogance leads to negligence and negligence leads to poor decision making. There is a reason the US spends as much as they do on their military. Is it morale? Probably not. Another reason to not be a cocky, prideful fool.
In the early 2000’s when I was an active duty Marine when a unit of Marines were doing a jump with sabotaged chutes. My platoon was on range SR-10 when this happened and had a good view of most of the incident. Three Marines jumped before the rest of those slated to jump were stopped. We watched helplessly as 3 Marines fell behind the trees from our point of view. What we didn’t see was that all three pulled their reserve chutes at very low altitude and survived with minimal injuries. A Marine was arrested and court martialed for purposely sabotaging multiple chutes after being NJP’d by his CO. His charges included multiple attempted murder charges, and he might actually be still in prison.
Same thing happened to my little brother one one of his jumps! He got his opened less than 60 ft from the ground. He still hit hard enough to break his ankle. We both joined and left for boot at the same time back in 95’.
The video is a bit overdramatic on Quicksink. It's nothing really groundbreaking. It's an existing JDAM with a new seeker. Any aircraft (and the F-35 in particular) that's capable of lobbing a JDAM, is also capable of lobbing a GBU with laser guidance, which achieves the same thing. The mine clearing line charges aren't all that unique, but a cool piece of kit. There's man-portable versions that come in backpacks. The Russians have their own versions.
Drove me nuts as the clip keeps calling it a rocket, or missile. It's a bomb. A bomb with a seeker and steering, but still a bomb. A rocket is a self propelled, unguided device. A missile is a self propelled, guided device. A guided gravity bomb is still a bomb. The real advantage of the system is the price. Instead of sinking it with a 2 to 5 million dollar torpedo, you can sink it with a 2 to 300k bomb. That also gives a use to outdated munitions.
RE: Railguns - Remember this acronym WAV - Wattage = Amperage x Voltage. If you have a million amps, that means your wattage has got to be absolutely bonkers. It's why stun guns won't kill you, high voltage but low amperage. Voltage doesn't kill you, Amperage does.
Wait... forgive my shitty analogy. Electricity is energy and can be measured like uh.... frequency I think. So a stung gun per say has a High and wide frequency pattern, Where as lets say two powerlines being short circuited could be a High but Short frequency pattern. Long F:(/ \ / \) Short F:(\/\/\/).
@@Whiteknight-xg2pq It's better to think of electricity like water coming out of a hose with a spray nozzle. Try this analogy: To better understand the relationship between voltage and amperage and how it affects the risk of electrical shock, imagine spraying someone with a water hose with a spray nozzle. For this analogy, consider the following: Voltage = Water Spigot's Initial Pressure Resistance = Hose With a Spray Nozzle Amperage = Resulting Water Flow Pulling the spray nozzle's trigger further would decrease the resistance, thus increasing the current. The initial water pressure (constant voltage) never changes. However, the increase in the volume of water (increased amperage) due to the opened spray nozzle (decreased resistance) is what determines how soaked you get when sprayed. Thus, with amps vs. volts, the danger is in the amps. So while the voltage can remain the same in the system, increasing amperage drastically starts to increase the overall wattage (the spray power out of the nozzle). It's why Stun Guns don't kill you, it's like a HUGE amount of light misty rain that soaks you wet. You get wet, but you're not killed by it. Hope that long block of text helps
I think I heard it best on one of Tom Scott's many shows. During a Technical Difficulties show, Chris Joel quoted, "It's the volts that jolts. It's the mills (as in milliamps) that kills." That, I believe, was their Citation Needed episode about the Coffin Ray, but that's how I remember it now. High voltage is going to hurt and really REALLY suck. If it's got high amps, I'm not dealing with it.
Military parachutes are meant to get you to the ground quickly You're going to have to remove the main shoot very quickly Because they throw you out the jet at low altitude To help get you to the ground quickly So you don't get shot
Railguns would be used for potential anti nuclear deterrance, becuase of the speeds they can be launched very far very fast and if you can manage to use a shrapnel shell and get them close to warheads in the terminal phase you should be able to add a new layer of defence. so they have uses.
Im a military veteran and when they sink something in a test we then dive and take video of the damage to analyze it usually small navy seal subs or drivers will take pictures and videos
Great video. Super tiny thing is that US navy carriers have F35-C aircraft not B. The US marines do operate the B type VTOLs on their smaller carriers that can’t support catapult launches.
As terrifying as heli crashes are they are way safer than people think. I know someone who was serving in the RAF as a heli crewman in the early 2000s and during an exercise in Germany the heli rolled down the side of a mountain. I've seen the footage he showed me once and as violent as it looked no one was harmed at all.
I've seen footage from sinking a carrier as a reef. There were numerous cameras and other sensors throughout the ship feeding video and data to computer equipment in a large launch sitting on the flight deck on stocks. When the carrier went under, the launch floated off. Presumably, the Navy recovered the launch and the data. If you've never seen this video, it's worth watching : USS Oriskany Sunk and becomes Artificial Reef
As far as military parades go in the US, we don't necessarily just drive the equipment down the road waving, but we do have military exercises and simulated events you can attend. They are fucking awesome! U.S. Special Operations Command hosts a thrilling capabilities demonstration in Tampa, Florida. They have simulated gunfire and explosions, heli's and much more! You should check a video out on one of the demonstrations. It's called the "Battle of the Bay".
The US Navy has had Rail Guns on several small boys testing goong back to when I first saw one in Mayport Florida back in 2001. The benefits are speed, no tracking or noise. It's like riding a motorcycle at 100 mph with no helmet and taking a bumblebee to the eyeball.
In defense of nukes, there is a reason WW3 was never fought. 75 million people died in 6 years in WW2. In 80 years there has not been a major shooting war between world powers SOLEY because of nukes. Peace by threat of mutual annihilation is not ideal, but it is stil peace that would not be there otherwise.
You were in the Royal Marines and haven't ever heard of the MCLC they used them in the first Gulf War. How the hell could you not know about this? I did.
Not in the sense where we just drive the equipment down the road to look at, but we do have military showcases and simulated operation events! I like the one in Florida a lot, one was in Tampa where U.S. Special Operations Command hosts a thrilling capabilities demonstration. Simulated gunfire and explosions, heli's and all that good stuff!
The 2nd shot was of an Army Grizzly shooting it. I remember seeing it way back when we thought we were getting a new CEV. We(12B) used them quite often in Iraq and did a ton of training with them before 9/11 vs russian style minefields. My cousin was a 1370 in Afghan doing route clearance and he said they never used them. He joined post 9/11.
26:55 what I want to know is if that Mexican paratrooper stayed a paratrooper or if that was enough to make him quit. I wouldn’t blame him honestly. Also, rail guns have been a thing in sci fi for a long time. As we know, sci fi has a habit of becoming reality. That’s where we’re headed, buddy. Railguns on spaceships.
5:10 "I feel like its russian, it might just fall apart." -- Actuallly you have no idea how accurate that is for their Mobile Missile carriers... they operate off a 2-stage 'booster' system. The first stage 'kicks' the rocket up out of the lunch-tube, then the 2nd stage kicks in to send it on its way. There are MANY, many, videos of the 2nd stage never igniting and the Missile falling back down 'onto' the launch-carrier. OR the 2nd stage ignighting, and the guidance breaking so it just spirals above the carrier or 'cartwheels' above it before detonating in the air or back on the ground.
6:50 Why you ask? Because others are making them. And they make them because you're making them. There is no winners in war, but it's worse if you don't play along.
NSM The Naval Strike missiles has also been sold to the United Kingdom and is being used / installed on their United Kingdom Type 23 frigate Type 45 destroyer
19:50 First guy in the line: See you ladies on the ground! -- Guy who later has the chute-snare: Not if i get there first! Glad his reserve didnt get tangled in the mess his main was.... dont they usualy 'cut away' then pull their reserve to ensure that isnt a issue? (not that im complaining, just a question ive always had when seeing that video)
Paratrooper probably pulled the ripcord for his reserve chute "hands-free" with his a-hole because it puckered so much lol...whew, damn that'd scare the crap out of a person.
I think Belarus would be better off training their drivers better than spending the money of the parade and road repairs... Then again, if Lukashenko is going to continue on his foreign policy track as he has been, by all means keep drifting those T-72s.
The video is factually hopeless. At 2:37 "steers the rocket"? It's a bomb. At 3:17 "you can see the rocket fly in" 3:28 "the missile is so fast you don't even see it hit"? Oh, now it's a missile? The narrator pointed it out at 3:17 so it is not too fast to see. The script feels AI generated. I didn't bother with the rest of the video. Even though I love explosions as much as anybody.
One of my favourite modified bullets is the Eargesplitten Loudenboomer, which is a .378 Weatherby cartridge necked down to .22 LR. Its rounds go up to 4600fps, or Mach 8.
I had a cigarette roll in my chute on thay same drop zone back in 2008. Scariest shit ever, pulled my reserve after about 10 seconds. That video is a 10 for me lol
6:50 Because if we had not been able to deliver these warheads across the globe within 10-20 minutes, they would most likely have been destroyed without the ability to strike back, and in general they do a good job of deterring a possible encroachment on territories
18:41 RIGHT?!?! They want to help anyone in the helicopter but, chunks are still flying off of it! 🤯😵💫👀 it could have blown up as well due to fuel leaks. 19:49 10/10 for that paratrooper!! 🙈🙊🙈
@@JerelleBowensWe can easily intercept them. ICBMs with MIRVs not so much solely because of the sheer amount of warheads compared to interceptors and Russia would face the same problem. They don’t even have an equivalent to GBMD. Russias most touted weapon the khinzal has been intercepted multiple times now by Patriot PAC3.
Just wanted to say that I really appreciate that you took a second to say, "The title says incredible military moments and that was an incredible moment. Not incredible in a good way, incredible in a bad way." One of my biggest TH-cam gripes is the name of videos. The greatest, the best, You won't believe this, New discovery breaks the laws of physics. This shit pisses me off to no end, even if I actually really enjoy the content they produced. The false, over hyped titles completely turn me off. So when you or anyone else reference the content in relation to what the video is sold as is a wonderful thing. I would actually ask you to drop more lines like that into your commentary. Even if you only do it when it's positive... I can totally understand you not wanting to dump on a creator whose video is good enough for you want to share it and break down.
A british man wants to sink a ship, tell me something new. 😂 It has to run in your guys genes I guess. Ever thought about nicking some spices? I'm just curious 😂 Greetings from germany ❤
16:17 That wire could also possibly be a phone/telegram transmitting wire. I assume/hope that authorities wouldn't allow a crowd to form around a downed power line 😬
Ngl its annoying when videos tell you what they're going to show in the first 15 sec like that's the point of the video, like you dont even have to watch the full video anymore😅
One of the mine clearing charges looked like it got snagged on a tree, hence getting piled up. Gauss rifles or rail guns have potential to be placed on battleships for naval artillery. A guided round could be launched to intercept aircraft. Imagine an artillery round with the range of a missile.
Ive been in a helicopter accident when i was in the army. We lost the tail rotor. Thankfuly we were not too high up but i ended up fracturing joint in my hip.
That's exactly what happened to my father when his shoot didn't deploy. So he had to use his backup shoot in the front. After that near death experience he became extremely afraid of heights the rest of his life.
Belarus just recently had another parade and another military vehicle went out of control and hit the center median separator made with metal decorative poles and completely destroyed two of them and the curb just seems like they don't know when to slow down
There are rail guns and coil guns (aka Gauss rifles, even though they're smoothbore) A coil gun uses a series of electromagnets that turn on as the projectile approaches, then turns off when the projectile goes through it and the next coil activates. The more coils you have, the more power they can handle to make more magnetic force, and the speed they can power up and down makes the projectile faster and larger. They use a similar system in the new electromagnetic catapult system on the Ford class of aircraft carriers, which are nuclear powered. The electromagnetic system stores current in capacitors, which charge instantaneously compared to batteries or the old steam catapults, so they can launch several aircraft a minute of various weights, as long as they put in the proper weight. you would not want to launch an F-35 after putting in a cargo plane's weight or it would rip the landing gear off. They also need to know the loadout of weapons to make sure they have the right weight. Atomic General, the inventors of the electromagnetic launch system was working on a rail gun to replace the Navy's 5" guns, but the Navy put it on hold. At the time the only supplier of blackpowder, which artillery still uses in big guns, went out of business for a while and they were worried they wouldn't have enough powder for practice and active warfare, so they were looking at other technologies. If you have a ship with a nuclear powerplant, you don't have to worry about powering up such a beast, but the rail gun can only handle so many shots before the barrel needs replacing, the rails act just like brushes in a motor, but with more stress, the contacts burn out. Gun barrels can handle a lot more rounds between replacement, and another company took over making blackpowder, so they could keep on using old fashioned cannons. They are still working on guns that can use liquid propellant, like a giant potato launcher or how car engines work. Inject some aerolized fuel into the chamber and hit it with a spark. You adjust the amount of fuel for the range or weight of the projectile. The Germans have a mobil artillery piece that can fire up to 5 rounds a minute using liquid propellant. It's not a rail gun but still hella cool. We figured our 3 rounds per minute Paladins were "good enough" especially since they can drop all three rounds on the same target simultaneously. We use the German cannon, but they use our targeting systems. :)
Mine clearance the British in the 70s 80s had viper the same thing PE4 in a hose fired from a three quater ton trailer like a Land rover would tow this had two cases in it the thing was this could be towed by any armoured Vehical from a ferret to a 432 to a tank and yes if breave enough a truck or land rover. Plus the unit was so cheep it could be loaded into any empty trailer . And looking from the front you could have dozens of 432s approaching you and not be able to see the trailer behind one let alone say twenty
Yeah, the JDAM thing - The Navy can drop them from all the variations of F-18s, and the F-35C from their large carriers, and the F-35B, and the AV-8B Harrier from their LHAs & LHDs, Though it is not listed as a weapon carried by the P-8 Poseidon patrol bomber - I suspect they could be equipped with JDAMs if the Navy wanted to. Despite being ex - Navy, for my money the most frightening delivery system to contemplate is the B-52 which can be JDAM equipped and could potentially carry dozens of them, dropping them from a height where there would be no visual or audible warning of the bomb's approach.
My dad and his friends were hooligans in the early 50's. He got drunk and crashed his pickup into a pharmacy at age 17. When he went to court, the judge offered jail time or military service. He chose to join the Army. As a paratrooper, he did a practice jump similar to the ones in the video. Back then, one guy packed everybody's chutes. Guy that packed chutes this particular day was notoriously lazy, careless, stupid or all three. When he jumped, his primary deployed tangled and didn't open. My dad pulled his backup and it only partially deployed. He landed in a sand dune, broke his hip pointer and crushed a vertebrae. The ornery bastard walked into town 4 miles away and got drunk. Hitched back to base where he immediately went and punched the "lazy dipshit" that packed chutes before finally reporting to the infirmary. Somehow, he still managed an honorable discharge, but he said he never wanted to jump out of a plane or tolerate a lazy dipshit ever again.
Good gravy, that weenie in the corner blabbing on again!!! (I'm trying to keep you honest here, Luke.) But you're saying, "Oh, I love a good ship sink'n!" And I'm here like, "So you're the freak in the theater laughing and cheering in the viewing of 'Titanic'." You know, there were people shrieking and crying and gritting their teeth. Luke's entire family are in the back like, "WHOOOO! SINK ANOTHER!!!!" That was less well received when they did the same during the movie "Pearl Harbor." . . . I'm kidding, but I can totally see you holding in the urge to whoop at the sinking scene of the Titanic. It's a big ship that went down. That Russian missile......yeah, it might be able to do that, but we're talking about Russia. Also, that's something I don't feel is worthwhile gloating over and here's why. Rockets aren't like an engine where you get to adjust amounts. Rockets are an all on or nothing at all deal. Meaning that it's not so much that they've programmed the rocket to correct itself, it's that they've worked out exactly how much fuel needs to be put in those correcting rockets to get it to go in a certain direction. I don't think if they have any other option. Don't get me wrong, it's impressive that they got that figured out, but it's kind of like those tank fireworks when they work right. They move so far before "firing" little fire balls and maybe explode or crackle. That's not huge tech working, that's just careful measurements. So I applaud Russian chemists and physicists for figuring that bit out, not so much on the rocket engineers and technology programmers who probably are accredited with making an "amazing sophisticated rocket correction system."
The other thing you need to note about the mine clearing device is it's a cord. It's less about how it lands initially because you can pull on the end still connected to the vehicle with the trigger line until it's covering a more decent distance. As long as the head of the line gets as far as it can, you can reel that back just enough to get maximum clearance out of it. And what's even more mind boggling about it is that it's another some how "close enough" calculation. It will clear out surface width that just happens to be a little wider than most US Military vehicles are wide, but it doesn't make a ditch. That aside, it's one of many tools usually fitted to the M1150 ABV Shredder.
I feel like the practicality of a railgun is gonna be when our anti-projectile defenses are just shooting rockets and rounds out of mid air before impact. Railguns are gonna have a niche.
America probably does the most military parades, just in the form of flyovers. We have flyovers for almost every single baseball game in the 162 game season. We have flyovers for every single football game. We have flyovers for fireworks sometimes. And then there's the blue angels.
"Jesus Christ on a Unicycle" ...i never heard that one before...that was a 10.😂😂
Holly circus? 😂😂
I’ve always said Jesus Christ on a bike
The check pattern was painted on the nuke was to determine the initial velocity during a test with camera footage.
19:30 You can’t hear it too well in the video but if you listen closely near the end of the clip someone tells out “It’s not a race!” I love military humor
"Into the stratosphere never to be seen again."
American Radar tech: "Oh, no we can see it."
Sarmat avoids radars...
@@miko886no it can’t it’s like literally shooting a city block at someone it’s not hard to see it with a radar
@@miko886 no it doesnt, dude nasa can detect a pebble in space what makes you think a big ass rocket CANT be detected
@@asdefull I mean, that's easy. It's Russian meaning there's a greater than 0% chance it actually either A. doesn't exist or B. can't actually do what it's advertised as doing. So if it either doesn't exist or can't actually launch, it's easy for it to escape radar. 🤣🤣🤣
@@steeljawX Arrogance leads to negligence and negligence leads to poor decision making. There is a reason the US spends as much as they do on their military. Is it morale? Probably not. Another reason to not be a cocky, prideful fool.
In the early 2000’s when I was an active duty Marine when a unit of Marines were doing a jump with sabotaged chutes. My platoon was on range SR-10 when this happened and had a good view of most of the incident. Three Marines jumped before the rest of those slated to jump were stopped. We watched helplessly as 3 Marines fell behind the trees from our point of view. What we didn’t see was that all three pulled their reserve chutes at very low altitude and survived with minimal injuries. A Marine was arrested and court martialed for purposely sabotaging multiple chutes after being NJP’d by his CO. His charges included multiple attempted murder charges, and he might actually be still in prison.
Holy shit I hope he still is! The betrayal of his own brothers and sisters makes that even worse!
Same thing happened to my little brother one one of his jumps! He got his opened less than 60 ft from the ground. He still hit hard enough to break his ankle. We both joined and left for boot at the same time back in 95’.
MICLIc Truly a street sweeper
The C4 cords are the weirdest Snake in a Can trick ever
The video is a bit overdramatic on Quicksink. It's nothing really groundbreaking. It's an existing JDAM with a new seeker. Any aircraft (and the F-35 in particular) that's capable of lobbing a JDAM, is also capable of lobbing a GBU with laser guidance, which achieves the same thing.
The mine clearing line charges aren't all that unique, but a cool piece of kit. There's man-portable versions that come in backpacks. The Russians have their own versions.
Drove me nuts as the clip keeps calling it a rocket, or missile. It's a bomb. A bomb with a seeker and steering, but still a bomb. A rocket is a self propelled, unguided device. A missile is a self propelled, guided device. A guided gravity bomb is still a bomb.
The real advantage of the system is the price. Instead of sinking it with a 2 to 5 million dollar torpedo, you can sink it with a 2 to 300k bomb. That also gives a use to outdated munitions.
Take a look at how close they're all coming out together so they all are able to land in the same location
RE: Railguns - Remember this acronym WAV - Wattage = Amperage x Voltage. If you have a million amps, that means your wattage has got to be absolutely bonkers. It's why stun guns won't kill you, high voltage but low amperage. Voltage doesn't kill you, Amperage does.
As an EET we were always taught Amps kill, Watts hurt.
Wait... forgive my shitty analogy. Electricity is energy and can be measured like uh.... frequency I think. So a stung gun per say has a High and wide frequency pattern, Where as lets say two powerlines being short circuited could be a High but Short frequency pattern. Long F:(/ \ / \) Short F:(\/\/\/).
@@Whiteknight-xg2pq More amps means more shocks.
@@Whiteknight-xg2pq It's better to think of electricity like water coming out of a hose with a spray nozzle. Try this analogy:
To better understand the relationship between voltage and amperage and how it affects the risk of electrical shock, imagine spraying someone with a water hose with a spray nozzle. For this analogy, consider the following:
Voltage = Water Spigot's Initial Pressure
Resistance = Hose With a Spray Nozzle
Amperage = Resulting Water Flow
Pulling the spray nozzle's trigger further would decrease the resistance, thus increasing the current. The initial water pressure (constant voltage) never changes.
However, the increase in the volume of water (increased amperage) due to the opened spray nozzle (decreased resistance) is what determines how soaked you get when sprayed. Thus, with amps vs. volts, the danger is in the amps.
So while the voltage can remain the same in the system, increasing amperage drastically starts to increase the overall wattage (the spray power out of the nozzle). It's why Stun Guns don't kill you, it's like a HUGE amount of light misty rain that soaks you wet. You get wet, but you're not killed by it. Hope that long block of text helps
I think I heard it best on one of Tom Scott's many shows. During a Technical Difficulties show, Chris Joel quoted, "It's the volts that jolts. It's the mills (as in milliamps) that kills." That, I believe, was their Citation Needed episode about the Coffin Ray, but that's how I remember it now. High voltage is going to hurt and really REALLY suck. If it's got high amps, I'm not dealing with it.
I was just looking at your channel to if you uploaded and then this popped up in my notifications. 😂
You can get flotation devices for GoPro. We use them when diving.
I love how the missile roars across the sky. 5:53
JESUS!! LOOK AT THAT SHOCKWAVE 10:18
Imagine crashing a tank. 14:32
I'm with you, the successful parachute jump recovery is that absolute best for multiple reasons.
F35-C is the Carrier specific. F35-B is STOVL capable.
Yup and B’s would be on amphibs, not carriers. Although some marine pilots will fly the c variant.
It goes wrong when you get out the door you could hit the tail Or.
Your shoot could fail to deploy
The rope is like Det cord, the rope explodes.
Military parachutes are meant to get you to the ground quickly You're going to have to remove the main shoot very quickly Because they throw you out the jet at low altitude To help get you to the ground quickly So you don't get shot
Railguns would be used for potential anti nuclear deterrance, becuase of the speeds they can be launched very far very fast and if you can manage to use a shrapnel shell and get them close to warheads in the terminal phase you should be able to add a new layer of defence. so they have uses.
Im a military veteran and when they sink something in a test we then dive and take video of the damage to analyze it usually small navy seal subs or drivers will take pictures and videos
Great video. Super tiny thing is that US navy carriers have F35-C aircraft not B. The US marines do operate the B type VTOLs on their smaller carriers that can’t support catapult launches.
As terrifying as heli crashes are they are way safer than people think. I know someone who was serving in the RAF as a heli crewman in the early 2000s and during an exercise in Germany the heli rolled down the side of a mountain. I've seen the footage he showed me once and as violent as it looked no one was harmed at all.
I've seen footage from sinking a carrier as a reef. There were numerous cameras and other sensors throughout the ship feeding video and data to computer equipment in a large launch sitting on the flight deck on stocks. When the carrier went under, the launch floated off. Presumably, the Navy recovered the launch and the data. If you've never seen this video, it's worth watching : USS Oriskany Sunk and becomes Artificial Reef
As far as military parades go in the US, we don't necessarily just drive the equipment down the road waving, but we do have military exercises and simulated events you can attend. They are fucking awesome! U.S. Special Operations Command hosts a thrilling capabilities demonstration in Tampa, Florida. They have simulated gunfire and explosions, heli's and much more! You should check a video out on one of the demonstrations. It's called the "Battle of the Bay".
The US Navy has had Rail Guns on several small boys testing goong back to when I first saw one in Mayport Florida back in 2001. The benefits are speed, no tracking or noise. It's like riding a motorcycle at 100 mph with no helmet and taking a bumblebee to the eyeball.
Coming here to learn your accent🤣. greeting from indonesia
In defense of nukes, there is a reason WW3 was never fought. 75 million people died in 6 years in WW2. In 80 years there has not been a major shooting war between world powers SOLEY because of nukes. Peace by threat of mutual annihilation is not ideal, but it is stil peace that would not be there otherwise.
America does not have military parades at least not active military members or equipment.
You were in the Royal Marines and haven't ever heard of the MCLC they used them in the first Gulf War. How the hell could you not know about this? I did.
15:43 why shouldnt those wires not be powered. The reason he didnt get electrocuted was because its an insulated cable.
that was probably a phone line since it was attached to a street light if it was a power line it most likely wouldnt be on youtube lol
It could've been uploaded on TH-cam via phone, so no it very much could have been a power line
@@904_noah I meant if it was power line the dude would be a fried stick and death isn’t allowed on TH-cam
@@abominablesnowman646 Ohhh gotcha, yeah true that. He would be a French fry if those were live for sure
I've seen the Para jump from the C-17s before. It didn't go wrong, just one amusing landing.
The uS doesn't really do military parades with equipment and tanks and stuff.
Not in the sense where we just drive the equipment down the road to look at, but we do have military showcases and simulated operation events! I like the one in Florida a lot, one was in Tampa where U.S. Special Operations Command hosts a thrilling capabilities demonstration. Simulated gunfire and explosions, heli's and all that good stuff!
They are using the antimine rope thing in Cambodia to clear the mines that the Kymer Rouge laid
Battleships in 2024 hahahjahaha
Convoys as ships hahahajha
That "rope" or MCLC is a Marine Corps tool. Army has it as well, but for accuracy, the video shows Marine Corps AAV's firing it.
The 2nd shot was of an Army Grizzly shooting it. I remember seeing it way back when we thought we were getting a new CEV. We(12B) used them quite often in Iraq and did a ton of training with them before 9/11 vs russian style minefields. My cousin was a 1370 in Afghan doing route clearance and he said they never used them. He joined post 9/11.
Was on an exercise and had a MICLC go off. Shit shook the earth
That video does not do that thing any justice. The fireball was HUGE! Like it looked and felt like some end of time shit.
Plz, do a reaction video to the Belarus Military Parade Commemorates 80th Anniversary of Liberation from Nazi Invaders.
Fireeeee videoooo
Almost got his bounce wing's . 👼
Imagen the power Bill 😂
26:55 what I want to know is if that Mexican paratrooper stayed a paratrooper or if that was enough to make him quit. I wouldn’t blame him honestly.
Also, rail guns have been a thing in sci fi for a long time. As we know, sci fi has a habit of becoming reality. That’s where we’re headed, buddy. Railguns on spaceships.
5:10 "I feel like its russian, it might just fall apart." -- Actuallly you have no idea how accurate that is for their Mobile Missile carriers... they operate off a 2-stage 'booster' system. The first stage 'kicks' the rocket up out of the lunch-tube, then the 2nd stage kicks in to send it on its way. There are MANY, many, videos of the 2nd stage never igniting and the Missile falling back down 'onto' the launch-carrier. OR the 2nd stage ignighting, and the guidance breaking so it just spirals above the carrier or 'cartwheels' above it before detonating in the air or back on the ground.
6:50 Why you ask? Because others are making them. And they make them because you're making them. There is no winners in war, but it's worse if you don't play along.
there a video of a British Para who got hung up on the static line.
The parachruper was an oh shit moment, was my biggest fear during training.
13:25 Yeah nah, we germans sure aint be doing military parades ^^
NSM The Naval Strike missiles has also been sold to the United Kingdom and is being used / installed on their United Kingdom
Type 23 frigate
Type 45 destroyer
🇮🇳 Bharat 🇮🇳
Belarus has no live wires, that's why it was fine
19:50 First guy in the line: See you ladies on the ground! -- Guy who later has the chute-snare: Not if i get there first!
Glad his reserve didnt get tangled in the mess his main was.... dont they usualy 'cut away' then pull their reserve to ensure that isnt a issue? (not that im complaining, just a question ive always had when seeing that video)
Paratrooper probably pulled the ripcord for his reserve chute "hands-free" with his a-hole because it puckered so much lol...whew, damn that'd scare the crap out of a person.
Putin is nuts, but I don't think he's suicidal.
I think Belarus would be better off training their drivers better than spending the money of the parade and road repairs... Then again, if Lukashenko is going to continue on his foreign policy track as he has been, by all means keep drifting those T-72s.
Rail guns are cancelled
Sadly a Mexican paratrooper fell to his death. While on exercise the other day. 😢
The video is factually hopeless. At 2:37 "steers the rocket"? It's a bomb. At 3:17 "you can see the rocket fly in" 3:28 "the missile is so fast you don't even see it hit"? Oh, now it's a missile? The narrator pointed it out at 3:17 so it is not too fast to see. The script feels AI generated. I didn't bother with the rest of the video. Even though I love explosions as much as anybody.
One of my favourite modified bullets is the Eargesplitten Loudenboomer, which is a .378 Weatherby cartridge necked down to .22 LR. Its rounds go up to 4600fps, or Mach 8.
US Marine . 🍿🍺😂
China doesn't have a blue water navy it's aircraft carriers won't go further than the West Philippines Sea
I had a cigarette roll in my chute on thay same drop zone back in 2008. Scariest shit ever, pulled my reserve after about 10 seconds. That video is a 10 for me lol
6:50 Because if we had not been able to deliver these warheads across the globe within 10-20 minutes, they would most likely have been destroyed without the ability to strike back, and in general they do a good job of deterring a possible encroachment on territories
18:41 RIGHT?!?! They want to help anyone in the helicopter but, chunks are still flying off of it! 🤯😵💫👀 it could have blown up as well due to fuel leaks.
19:49 10/10 for that paratrooper!! 🙈🙊🙈
I think its pretty safe to say that Russia isn't really scaring or fooling anybody anymore. LOL
Yea I don't know why but those big missiles don't scare me at all
If theres one thing russia is good at....its nuclear weapons.
Sure they are a but of a joke now...but theyre jokers with nukes.
@@JerelleBowensWe can easily intercept them. ICBMs with MIRVs not so much solely because of the sheer amount of warheads compared to interceptors and Russia would face the same problem. They don’t even have an equivalent to GBMD. Russias most touted weapon the khinzal has been intercepted multiple times now by Patriot PAC3.
Just wanted to say that I really appreciate that you took a second to say, "The title says incredible military moments and that was an incredible moment. Not incredible in a good way, incredible in a bad way."
One of my biggest TH-cam gripes is the name of videos. The greatest, the best, You won't believe this, New discovery breaks the laws of physics. This shit pisses me off to no end, even if I actually really enjoy the content they produced. The false, over hyped titles completely turn me off. So when you or anyone else reference the content in relation to what the video is sold as is a wonderful thing. I would actually ask you to drop more lines like that into your commentary. Even if you only do it when it's positive... I can totally understand you not wanting to dump on a creator whose video is good enough for you want to share it and break down.
A british man wants to sink a ship, tell me something new. 😂 It has to run in your guys genes I guess. Ever thought about nicking some spices? I'm just curious 😂 Greetings from germany ❤
16:17 That wire could also possibly be a phone/telegram transmitting wire. I assume/hope that authorities wouldn't allow a crowd to form around a downed power line 😬
Ngl its annoying when videos tell you what they're going to show in the first 15 sec like that's the point of the video, like you dont even have to watch the full video anymore😅
The 3rd one is actually tech we used in the 90s.
One of the mine clearing charges looked like it got snagged on a tree, hence getting piled up.
Gauss rifles or rail guns have potential to be placed on battleships for naval artillery. A guided round could be launched to intercept aircraft. Imagine an artillery round with the range of a missile.
what? no gulf of tonkin? no 911? no "russian attack on ukraine"? pmsl
Ive been in a helicopter accident when i was in the army. We lost the tail rotor. Thankfuly we were not too high up but i ended up fracturing joint in my hip.
We actually used that fire hose looking charge in Operation Desert Storm. Iraq had a lot of large Mine fields we had to go through.
I'm glad you love Jesus Lord God I'm also Christian blesses me my whole Life especially with being a US military veteran
10:14 That makes you think twice next time you buy jump ropes for the kids. "Material: Plastic"
We used the line charges during desert storm
Russian TOFU 😂😅
That's exactly what happened to my father when his shoot didn't deploy. So he had to use his backup shoot in the front. After that near death experience he became extremely afraid of heights the rest of his life.
And those are supposed to be explosive armor plates on the side of it and they crumbled like there was nothing in it
We’ve been had missiles like that I believe they’re called the tomahawk missiles
Belarus just recently had another parade and another military vehicle went out of control and hit the center median separator made with metal decorative poles and completely destroyed two of them and the curb just seems like they don't know when to slow down
This guy didn't make it. They had to cut him lose. They did recover him. th-cam.com/video/xezHaJ17Ik8/w-d-xo.htmlsi=fNpMMl_WySTQ7qUV
There are rail guns and coil guns (aka Gauss rifles, even though they're smoothbore) A coil gun uses a series of electromagnets that turn on as the projectile approaches, then turns off when the projectile goes through it and the next coil activates. The more coils you have, the more power they can handle to make more magnetic force, and the speed they can power up and down makes the projectile faster and larger. They use a similar system in the new electromagnetic catapult system on the Ford class of aircraft carriers, which are nuclear powered. The electromagnetic system stores current in capacitors, which charge instantaneously compared to batteries or the old steam catapults, so they can launch several aircraft a minute of various weights, as long as they put in the proper weight. you would not want to launch an F-35 after putting in a cargo plane's weight or it would rip the landing gear off. They also need to know the loadout of weapons to make sure they have the right weight. Atomic General, the inventors of the electromagnetic launch system was working on a rail gun to replace the Navy's 5" guns, but the Navy put it on hold. At the time the only supplier of blackpowder, which artillery still uses in big guns, went out of business for a while and they were worried they wouldn't have enough powder for practice and active warfare, so they were looking at other technologies. If you have a ship with a nuclear powerplant, you don't have to worry about powering up such a beast, but the rail gun can only handle so many shots before the barrel needs replacing, the rails act just like brushes in a motor, but with more stress, the contacts burn out. Gun barrels can handle a lot more rounds between replacement, and another company took over making blackpowder, so they could keep on using old fashioned cannons. They are still working on guns that can use liquid propellant, like a giant potato launcher or how car engines work. Inject some aerolized fuel into the chamber and hit it with a spark. You adjust the amount of fuel for the range or weight of the projectile. The Germans have a mobil artillery piece that can fire up to 5 rounds a minute using liquid propellant. It's not a rail gun but still hella cool. We figured our 3 rounds per minute Paladins were "good enough" especially since they can drop all three rounds on the same target simultaneously. We use the German cannon, but they use our targeting systems. :)
That "Rope" fired off is filled with C-4 plastic explosive.
nice facial hair
Weird af
@@Asymmetrical-Saggin the man has a nice beard alright? God damn.
Meanwhile USA shows up to RIMPAC 2024 with an F-18 armed with 2 AIM-174B
It was a Russian built helicopter
When they say “guides the rocket” when referring to a bomb…
Reaction on Indian Marco operation against Somalia pirates and other recent
17:30, well that was as good as a crap situation could go.
And ghats the reason Us Paratroopers have reserve shoots, it will save your life…10 rating for that one.
Mine clearance the British in the 70s 80s had viper the same thing PE4 in a hose fired from a three quater ton trailer like a Land rover would tow this had two cases in it the thing was this could be towed by any armoured Vehical from a ferret to a 432 to a tank and yes if breave enough a truck or land rover. Plus the unit was so cheep it could be loaded into any empty trailer . And looking from the front you could have dozens of 432s approaching you and not be able to see the trailer behind one let alone say twenty
Yeah, the JDAM thing -
The Navy can drop them from all the variations of F-18s, and the F-35C from their large carriers, and the F-35B, and the AV-8B Harrier from their LHAs & LHDs,
Though it is not listed as a weapon carried by the P-8 Poseidon patrol bomber - I suspect they could be equipped with JDAMs if the Navy wanted to.
Despite being ex - Navy, for my money the most frightening delivery system to contemplate is the B-52 which can be JDAM equipped and could potentially carry dozens of them,
dropping them from a height where there would be no visual or audible warning of the bomb's approach.
My dad and his friends were hooligans in the early 50's. He got drunk and crashed his pickup into a pharmacy at age 17. When he went to court, the judge offered jail time or military service. He chose to join the Army. As a paratrooper, he did a practice jump similar to the ones in the video. Back then, one guy packed everybody's chutes. Guy that packed chutes this particular day was notoriously lazy, careless, stupid or all three. When he jumped, his primary deployed tangled and didn't open. My dad pulled his backup and it only partially deployed. He landed in a sand dune, broke his hip pointer and crushed a vertebrae. The ornery bastard walked into town 4 miles away and got drunk. Hitched back to base where he immediately went and punched the "lazy dipshit" that packed chutes before finally reporting to the infirmary. Somehow, he still managed an honorable discharge, but he said he never wanted to jump out of a plane or tolerate a lazy dipshit ever again.
That ship missile 8.5 due to it destroying the super structure of the vessel
Good gravy, that weenie in the corner blabbing on again!!! (I'm trying to keep you honest here, Luke.) But you're saying, "Oh, I love a good ship sink'n!" And I'm here like, "So you're the freak in the theater laughing and cheering in the viewing of 'Titanic'." You know, there were people shrieking and crying and gritting their teeth. Luke's entire family are in the back like, "WHOOOO! SINK ANOTHER!!!!" That was less well received when they did the same during the movie "Pearl Harbor." . . . I'm kidding, but I can totally see you holding in the urge to whoop at the sinking scene of the Titanic. It's a big ship that went down.
That Russian missile......yeah, it might be able to do that, but we're talking about Russia. Also, that's something I don't feel is worthwhile gloating over and here's why. Rockets aren't like an engine where you get to adjust amounts. Rockets are an all on or nothing at all deal. Meaning that it's not so much that they've programmed the rocket to correct itself, it's that they've worked out exactly how much fuel needs to be put in those correcting rockets to get it to go in a certain direction. I don't think if they have any other option. Don't get me wrong, it's impressive that they got that figured out, but it's kind of like those tank fireworks when they work right. They move so far before "firing" little fire balls and maybe explode or crackle. That's not huge tech working, that's just careful measurements. So I applaud Russian chemists and physicists for figuring that bit out, not so much on the rocket engineers and technology programmers who probably are accredited with making an "amazing sophisticated rocket correction system."
The other thing you need to note about the mine clearing device is it's a cord. It's less about how it lands initially because you can pull on the end still connected to the vehicle with the trigger line until it's covering a more decent distance. As long as the head of the line gets as far as it can, you can reel that back just enough to get maximum clearance out of it. And what's even more mind boggling about it is that it's another some how "close enough" calculation. It will clear out surface width that just happens to be a little wider than most US Military vehicles are wide, but it doesn't make a ditch. That aside, it's one of many tools usually fitted to the M1150 ABV Shredder.
Its a phone cable not power that hit dude on the head
I feel like the practicality of a railgun is gonna be when our anti-projectile defenses are just shooting rockets and rounds out of mid air before impact. Railguns are gonna have a niche.
America probably does the most military parades, just in the form of flyovers. We have flyovers for almost every single baseball game in the 162 game season. We have flyovers for every single football game. We have flyovers for fireworks sometimes. And then there's the blue angels.