Good question! I only just noticed that now, after you mentioned it, but not during the time. Isn't it just turbulence or do you reckon a small bird strike or something?
They did. The Trent 800 powered the -200, -200ER and -300. The -200LR and -300ER uses the GE90 only, although the GE90 was available with previous 777 models.
I love the sound generated by the power of the engines
Music to my ears--'makes you feel like part of the plane just listening. "Up we go, into the wild, blue yonder!"
0:24 I always love that sound"
5:31 that's a nice spool up ☺️☺️
This is an awesome sound! Liked!
Beautiful sound
The most noisiest engine of all triple seven variants. (Correct me if I'm wrong) ✌
I think you are right!
@@civagiarn I just watch Malaysian Airlines 777-200ER takeoff. Its loud! It uses RR Trent 800.
Sounds like an a330’s Trent 700
Yes, a little bit.
And the Trent 500
5:41 what happened
Good question! I only just noticed that now, after you mentioned it, but not during the time. Isn't it just turbulence or do you reckon a small bird strike or something?
Not sure, seems like a sudden burst of turbulence. Quite a strong one, it seems!
FlightFilms looks like wake turbulence. Very sudden and can be quite rough. Only lasts a couple of seconds
@@civagiarn Its just a small part of rough air, you can't feel a bird strike. You can only hear it :)
Engine comparison is going to be either HKG-ICN Korean Air B777-3B5 PW4098 or HKG-MNL PR B777-3F6/ER GE90-115B
I thought 777 use ge90
Yeah, usually they do this was an early variant.
777s use RR Trent 800, GE90s and PW4000s
Rolls-Royce did not build an engine to power the 777-300 this must of been a 200
Yes they did
They did. The Trent 800 powered the -200, -200ER and -300. The -200LR and -300ER uses the GE90 only, although the GE90 was available with previous 777 models.
All 777-300s have either the Trent 800 or the PW4000
They did on some of the non extended range versions, but yes, otherwise quite rare.
@@sidewalk__ well some -200ERs use GE90s