In theory in case of an engine out during takeoff, the pilot flying may feel a loss of thrust on one side due to assymetry almost at the same time it happens. In professional simulators during training or type rating, almost immediate reactions are seen especially when the pilot flying IS thé Captain (who is the one who decides to reject or not). Depending on the cause of the failure, it's even possible that the pilot flying feel the thrust assymetry before the cautions/warnings identifying clearly an engine failure or fire. Training in simulation is one thing. Real life is way more startling and less easier. That's why pilots train and train over and over again for such a failure that has rarely a chance to occur until their actions become almost a second nature. It's not because of that, that making the right decision at a critical moment is easy. This crew reacted very quickly.
@@Imlegitthatonedude that’s my point. If I heard it wrong AND the caption is also wrong, then it doesn’t really matter what he *meant* to say. It still came across as attached.
So happy to see the Mach Loop getting featured. For those wondering its near the town of Machynlleth in north Wales, from which the name is derived. USAF aircraft out of Lakenheath are a common sight out that way.
@@timschulz9563 Because the blades are spinning at engine takeoff speed and there is still thrust going through the turbine blades, so they would be blown out the back end and the loss of blades wouls unbalance the turbine wheel probably taking out vthe rear bearing von nthe shaft, so it would bounce around too. I used to work in the J57P64s in the CF-101 Voodoos and it would happen to them when the rear oil line broke from the jet jocks whacking the afterburner on and off.
Absolutely! This pilot did not understand the operation of Airbus joystick with smooth inputs and fly-by-wire. This is not a Boeing steering wheel! He should have a training asap.
Seeing the pilot landing in Mexico in strong winds reminds me of my flight from LAX to Guadalajara International Airport 2 months ago. When we started to descend, the plane started to suffer from turbulence. It turns out, there were strong winds messing with the plane. Luckily, the pilots did a fabulous job of keeping the plane as stable as possible, and we landed safely. It was my first experience with flying in strong winds.
I've wondered if English is the narrator's native language. In the opening statement in his videos, he used to mispronounced "aviation." Viewers kidded him about it, and after a while, he redid it. Don't get too pissed about this Lucaas. I'm a subscriber, and I always look forward to your videos.
@@andydufresne8034 Pettor of Mentour Pilot fame is Swedish and lives in Spain and flies for Ryanair. Some of his pronunciations are a little off to Midwest American ears, but it could just be that he is speaking in some kind of UK accent. There are lots of different sounding ones.😁😁😁
This exact scenario is practiced hundreds of times in a very realistic flight simulator during every pilot’s initial and recurrent training so, as you can see, the reaction looks almost automatic..because it is! Sim instructors of the world would be very proud of this pilot for a job, looking almost routine, done perfectly. Hurrah!
The March loop is use by military from a lot of countries, RAF , French , Belgium , German , Spanish, USAF and other nations this place is a hour drive for me and is amazing to watch also 20 mins away from me is Airbus wing factory and watch the Beluga and the Beluga XL take off all this in Wales
The first video was really cool. Spoilers were out less than 2 seconds after the engine failure. Good job. But the Go-Around after a late touchdown was absolutely brilliant. The pilots did a clean and flawless job. Perfect pitch and execution of the go-around. Should become a training-video.
That engine explosion was heard approximately 9 seconds after it was seen. The speed of sound is approximately 343 meters per second. The camera location was therefore approximately 3087 meters (roughly 3 kms) away from the location of the plane at the time the engine exploded. Simon Lowe is known for the quality of his plane spotting videos. He's using a massive zoom lens here.
The sound wave from the first one took a lifetime to reach the microphone. It's crazy how slowly sound travels despite travelling at close to 1000mph. I've noticed it a lot with lightning where the sound takes forever to arrive.
Awesome vlog. Those A330 engines are known to be excellent. Hopefully it got repaired smoothly. Very very nice. Please keep coming out with more vlogs!!
@@DinoDiniProductions It's ok. He just wanted to use the word 'vlog' and since he cant find an appropriate situation to use it he decided to use it now since nobody cares what the recent and fancy word is.
3 seconds to deploy reverse thrust? That's flipping amazing taking into account the actual process is 1 to 2 seconds, so he reacted within 1 second, while applying max brake at the same time
The pilot landing in Mexico. I thought that the computer calling the pilot a "Retard" 4 times in a row was a bit harsh. I didn't think his control and landing of the plane was THAT bad!! ✈️🤣🤣
People saying it’s clickbait, no flames. But you can clearly see it exploded even on 0.25x speed, you clearly see the exact frame of the explosion, “it’s still not the same”??? All he did was make it brighter.
A turbine blade detatching is my biggest fear sitting near an engine. These TITANIUM pieces shouldn't be flying off, and when they do, they're sharp, fast, and deadly. They'll bring down the whole plane with fuselage depressurization and breakup.
Same. Sharp, fast, and out of control 🙀. I’ve never flown on a large turboprop, but being able to SEE the huge blades spinning right next to me would be even more nerve wracking. Though probably really cool too 😅
I'm yet to hear of a major disaster based on your comment so i guess the risk is very acceptable, and they say you're more likely to be in a car crash enroute to the airport rather than an aircrash, so i'll gladly take the risk.
Had the same thing happen on a long haul leaving JFK just before V1 , Hell of a bang & shake, The Air hostess facing me went white as a ghost. We then sat for an hour down the main runway waiting for the tug which then took another hour dragging us back. Was always curious what the dozen or so aircraft lined up behind were thinking.
"A series of valleys in the UK" ... that would be the Mach Loop my dude. (Which has nothing to do with the sound barrier, it's an abbreviation of the name of a nearby town.)
The way the sound travelled for the explosion was so cool
Yeah, he must have a really nice lens and be far away. Took several seconds.
You see it about 875,000 times faster than you hear it.
Yep, that tells you how "slow" the seed of sound is. Given enough distance, even the speed of light is slow.
Almost 9 seconds is almost 3km distance.
@@RatzfourtyfourCloser to 7 seconds
The reactiontime of the first pilot is incredible!
I don’t know about the A330 specifically, but some aircraft have a system which automatically do this if one engine loses thrust.
Which is why the PIC has a hand on the throttles while accelerating.
@@Penfold101 Yes, some have that by not the A330. Apparently the A350 has that.
In theory in case of an engine out during takeoff, the pilot flying may feel a loss of thrust on one side due to assymetry almost at the same time it happens. In professional simulators during training or type rating, almost immediate reactions are seen especially when the pilot flying IS thé Captain (who is the one who decides to reject or not).
Depending on the cause of the failure, it's even possible that the pilot flying feel the thrust assymetry before the cautions/warnings identifying clearly an engine failure or fire.
Training in simulation is one thing. Real life is way more startling and less easier. That's why pilots train and train over and over again for such a failure that has rarely a chance to occur until their actions become almost a second nature. It's not because of that, that making the right decision at a critical moment is easy.
This crew reacted very quickly.
reverse trust was active way before the explosion sound, probably already knew something was off
Jet2: Friendly low fares, Exciting high flares
Hah love it
🤣🤣🤣👍👍👍
Best joke of the comment section
So underated
@@Morecreativemind Fr
You can see the rudder immediately yawing left (pilot's perspective) as soon after the engine failed. They were on their game that day
Yeah the Flight Augmentation Computer is lightning quick. The Yaw Damper code was running fast that day.
@@douggale5962that’s some amazing technology!!
@@douggale5962not the case. This is the pilot’s doing.
@@douggale5962you’ll be surprised how fast you react when you’ve been flying for a long time and have practiced and trained for things like this.
@@douggale5962 Doesn't drive the rudder on the 330
Look at that yaw with an instant rudder correction. That was pretty awesome.
Its call awesome yaw
“Inspection later revealed that a turbine blade had attached”
Wow, that’s quite amazing. Must be one of those new self assembling planes. 🤣
He actually said detached. It may be due to his accent, since he's not a native english speaker.
@@Imlegitthatonedude I doubt it cuz even the transcription says he said “attached”.
@@adamdavila Auto captions can be stupid sometimes. It's his accent. He's Swedish (i believe).
@@Imlegitthatonedude that’s my point. If I heard it wrong AND the caption is also wrong, then it doesn’t really matter what he *meant* to say. It still came across as attached.
@@Imlegitthatonedude1000% said "had attached"!
2:21 oh yes the new famous 777 with dirty flaps 😂
shouldn't all the airbrake things have deployed at an equal angle? one of them seems off
@@corl4147 nah thats normal
I can't imagine that dirt helps aerodynamics.
It's like the fourth time I've seen it in two days! 🤣🤣🤣
@@corl4147nah, all they have to be is high enough to disrupt airflow over the wing, thus destroying any remaining lift.
So happy to see the Mach Loop getting featured. For those wondering its near the town of Machynlleth in north Wales, from which the name is derived.
USAF aircraft out of Lakenheath are a common sight out that way.
Cool to watch but I wouldn't want to live near there with that racket
Yes I have seen other videos of the mach loop..
The turbine detached, not attached, and when a blade does that, half the turbine wheel is destroyed.
Why only half the turbine wheel? Isn't there some sort of unzipping effect when one blade falls out of the wheel?
That's what he said, but 'had' and 'detached' blended together, so it sounded like:
"Inspection later revealed that a turbine blade haddetached."
@@timschulz9563 Because the blades are spinning at engine takeoff speed and there is still thrust going through the turbine blades, so they would be blown out the back end and the loss of blades wouls unbalance the turbine wheel probably taking out vthe rear bearing von nthe shaft, so it would bounce around too. I used to work in the J57P64s in the CF-101 Voodoos and it would happen to them when the rear oil line broke from the jet jocks whacking the afterburner on and off.
@@ziggythomas1123 That's what happens when they use AI to voice the scripts.
@@Chuck59ishIt's not AI, and even so, a person can obviously make that mistake.
Wow the amount of thrust lost instantly after that explosion and the snake on it got!
Wow I completely missed the snake, apparently!
@@ninjalectualx snakes on a plane or planes on a snake?
The AB pilot @1:45 wasn’t fighting strong winds. He was fighting himself. The automated callout just before touchdown says it all!
Absolutely! This pilot did not understand the operation of Airbus joystick with smooth inputs and fly-by-wire. This is not a Boeing steering wheel! He should have a training asap.
@@jetcit I agree with you guys completely. Amateur at best.
Seeing the pilot landing in Mexico in strong winds reminds me of my flight from LAX to Guadalajara International Airport 2 months ago. When we started to descend, the plane started to suffer from turbulence. It turns out, there were strong winds messing with the plane. Luckily, the pilots did a fabulous job of keeping the plane as stable as possible, and we landed safely. It was my first experience with flying in strong winds.
Event the plane called him a retard. That is harsh.
0:34 a I thought turbine blades being attached was a good thing?
Yes, I was thinking the same thing.
I've wondered if English is the narrator's native language. In the opening statement in his videos, he used to mispronounced "aviation." Viewers kidded him about it, and after a while, he redid it. Don't get too pissed about this Lucaas. I'm a subscriber, and I always look forward to your videos.
@@walmartdog1142 Definitely not a native English speaker. Does pretty well, though.
@@walmartdog1142 Lucaas is Swedish if I'm not mistaken. Pretty sure he's said so.
@@andydufresne8034 Pettor of Mentour Pilot fame is Swedish and lives in Spain and flies for Ryanair. Some of his pronunciations are a little off to Midwest American ears, but it could just be that he is speaking in some kind of UK accent. There are lots of different sounding ones.😁😁😁
This exact scenario is practiced hundreds of times in a very realistic flight simulator during every pilot’s initial and recurrent training so, as you can see, the reaction looks almost automatic..because it is! Sim instructors of the world would be very proud of this pilot for a job, looking almost routine, done perfectly. Hurrah!
You know when you are running out of content and should maybe cut down on output?......"this plane has a dirty wing"
TBF, half the aviation internet has been watching that, as if it was something remarkable. Hardly surprising it made its way here.
At least the blurb wasn't "This plane's wing is TOO dirty!"
And the A330 engine failure was from 2013. Maybe it's a slow news week.
I couldnt believe it man, I thought people were just excited about the london landing at first not the dirty wing lol 😂@@PedroConejo1939
The March loop is use by military from a lot of countries, RAF , French , Belgium , German , Spanish, USAF and other nations this place is a hour drive for me and is amazing to watch also 20 mins away from me is Airbus wing factory and watch the Beluga and the Beluga XL take off all this in Wales
You mean Mach? just asking
@@joeylawn36111 yes
@@shaun30-3-mg9zs thanks
So you added some fire to the thumbnail image. Click bait.
I stopped watching and gave him a dislike
@@aoming6398 Nope. Even if you see it in 0.25x, you see he just edited the thumbnail.
Him, and everyone else falsefieing thumbnails, are just pieces of shit. Have never seen DDO do this. Maybe that's why ppl like him?
@@RecluseRiderthe brightness on the picture is higher as you can see so stop hating it’s not clickbait
Go cry about it
The first video was really cool. Spoilers were out less than 2 seconds after the engine failure. Good job. But the Go-Around after a late touchdown was absolutely brilliant. The pilots did a clean and flawless job. Perfect pitch and execution of the go-around. Should become a training-video.
Spoilers come out the moment the throttles are yanked back.
2:06 amazing de-crab
2:30 ~ My OCD makes me want to grab a pressure washer and a ladder!
You probably don’t have OCD. It’s a debilitating mental illness. Also you will want for fix the leak before you clean it.
@@MeppyMan sounds like you belong at an asylum yourself
That engine explosion was heard approximately 9 seconds after it was seen.
The speed of sound is approximately 343 meters per second.
The camera location was therefore approximately 3087 meters (roughly 3 kms) away from the location of the plane at the time the engine exploded.
Simon Lowe is known for the quality of his plane spotting videos. He's using a massive zoom lens here.
0:32 A turbine blade had attached, and thankfully, no one was injured. 🙂
Detached
Exactly! I've had flights where the blades have been attached for the entire flight! We need an investigation. Think of the children!
@@billkgeorge No No, Uploader says it was Attached.
English is not his first language - Don't pick. You understood him.
@@ROGER2095 Where is he originally from? 🧐
Great reaction time. That/s why they have V1 and V2 and hands poised on throttle, but still, well done!
V2 is an airborne speed. Has nothing to do with this.
The sound wave from the first one took a lifetime to reach the microphone.
It's crazy how slowly sound travels despite travelling at close to 1000mph.
I've noticed it a lot with lightning where the sound takes forever to arrive.
Wow, stunning footage this week, better than the "usual" great stuff posted. Thanks!
🇮🇪 brilliant video sharing its totally awesome scenery of the airplanes ✈️ 🛩 🛫 🛩
Mach loop is a great day out, as is going to raf Lakenheath and watching the F15 and F35
9103.67 feet is the estimated distance this cameraman is from the approaching Airbus. 13.60 seconds explosion 21.69 sound....Crazy!
Awesome vlog. Those A330 engines are known to be excellent. Hopefully it got repaired smoothly. Very very nice. Please keep coming out with more vlogs!!
It's not really a vlog though is it? It's just publishing other people's content.
@@DinoDiniProductions It's ok. He just wanted to use the word 'vlog' and since he cant find an appropriate situation to use it he decided to use it now since nobody cares what the recent and fancy word is.
The first clip is probably the best example of how much faster light is than sound
the left rudder input was immediate😮💨
@2:02 he seemed to land ok after being verbally attacked by a robot 🤣
Let's appreciate how the firefigthers spawned on the runway. Such quick response times
Fine camera positioning within the cockpit - good perspective.
3 seconds to deploy reverse thrust? That's flipping amazing taking into account the actual process is 1 to 2 seconds, so he reacted within 1 second, while applying max brake at the same time
Turbine blade had attached? To what? The fan casing, someones head, the tarmac? Did you mean detached? Either way, I'd hate to see the repair bill.
1:53 ~ Did you notice how far off center he was initially lined up? Those are some hella strong cross winds but he handled it like a boss!!!
a complete amateur who should be sent back to training immediately. A disgraceful display of incompetency.
Flying so low down in mountainous terrain must be terrifying
Great video brother from the imperial county California 👍🇺🇲
That F-15 in the mach loop.... nice!
flaps, thrust reversers, rudders all in action at same time, pretty cool
Love how most clips are in the uk🇬🇧
the first scene happened some 10 years ago
0:33 the fan blade had *attached* bro stumbled there
don't worry bro we all stumble sometimes ; )
He said the right words. It was just his accent.
The pilot landing in Mexico.
I thought that the computer calling the pilot a "Retard" 4 times in a row was a bit harsh.
I didn't think his control and landing of the plane was THAT bad!! ✈️🤣🤣
Solid reaction time by the pilots in that first one
You mean detached😂 ❤love your vids ❤
Short but very interesting. Thanks !!
wow so beautiful sharing my friend❤❤❤
Mach loop videos and pixs always awesome
2:01 Pilot responds to plane computer: "¡No me llames retrasado!" 😉🙃🤣
Love it. LOLOLOL
@@christopherescott6787 Just curious - Do you know Spanish or did you use Google (I did)
@@christopherescott6787 Thanks
Glad they weren't at v1 yet in that first clip
new sub thumbs up from dublin
2 years ago I was in Brecon Beacons in the UK and saw some airplanes going that low...
People saying it’s clickbait, no flames. But you can clearly see it exploded even on 0.25x speed, you clearly see the exact frame of the explosion, “it’s still not the same”??? All he did was make it brighter.
2:01 When my teammate pushes alone
1:55 Crazy pilot did not understand the operation of Airbus joystick with smooth inputs. This is not a Boeing steering wheel!!
LOL! Yes it really needs a wash!
Man aviation is crazy sometimes...
0:47 I watched it go around got some nice photos not bad for my first ever viewing of a go around.
and they're saying Airbus planes never have a incident? 💀
Exzellent Video
LET'S GO FLYING !
HAVE A NICE VACATION !
Still haven't found MA - 370
HAVE A NICE DAY !
How did the plane touch down too late? What time was the plane suppose to touchdown?
Question of location, not time. It went beyond the touchdown zone. In that case a go around is mandatory
@@MrSchwabentieryou dont understand sarcasm or humor
@@justing42 how should i tell if people are joking or stupid? It’s the internet, assuming people being stupid is always the more likely call
@@MrSchwabentier I concur. Case and point
that jet2 pilot must have trouble walking. he's got balls as big as church bells.
That's why these engines are tested that they are able to contain the blade by blowing one up on purpose.
The low flying Mach loop is in Wales 🏴
2:26 I wouldn’t feel safe on that plane😂😂😂
very nice Thank you..
To answer before you ask...It was not a Boeing
The second thing also happened to me when I flew from Istanbul to Shanghai
Last plane was dirty
A turbine blade detatching is my biggest fear sitting near an engine. These TITANIUM pieces shouldn't be flying off, and when they do, they're sharp, fast, and deadly. They'll bring down the whole plane with fuselage depressurization and breakup.
Same. Sharp, fast, and out of control 🙀. I’ve never flown on a large turboprop, but being able to SEE the huge blades spinning right next to me would be even more nerve wracking. Though probably really cool too 😅
I'm yet to hear of a major disaster based on your comment so i guess the risk is very acceptable, and they say you're more likely to be in a car crash enroute to the airport rather than an aircrash, so i'll gladly take the risk.
Uncontained failure is serious. Thankfully I think the closest to a disaster in recent memory is the Qantas A380.
0:56 I guess, it should’ve been a go around even at this point
Had the same thing happen on a long haul leaving JFK just before V1 , Hell of a bang & shake, The Air hostess facing me went white as a ghost. We then sat for an hour down the main runway waiting for the tug which then took another hour dragging us back. Was always curious what the dozen or so aircraft lined up behind were thinking.
"A series of valleys in the UK" ... that would be the Mach Loop my dude.
(Which has nothing to do with the sound barrier, it's an abbreviation of the name of a nearby town.)
the airplane was 1.6 miles away from the camera. - it took 8 seconds for the sound to arrive.
I'm just gonna come right out and say it...Luckily no one was injured
That looked expensive.
0:35 how did the emergency Response Come so quick? Was there a cut in the clip?
Yes there was a cut
Video: Airplane engine exploded!
Music: *Wii shop channel*
_uhhhhhh_
It wasn’t the pilot action on the rudder, it was the flight control yaw damper function.
Very nice
It was probably not an explosion 💥 but a compressor surge event.
I like the way the emergency vehicles were prepositioned so they knew something was going on. Not as presented.
They weren’t prepositioned. There is a cut in the video with a substantial amount of time missing
@@MrSchwabentier must be, I did not notice that, that would explain it.
The Boeing A330 is a disaster!
Wait for it!
That flew over my head....someone care to explain since i only know about Airbus A330.
Please make your videos at least 8 to 10 mins long - They are such fun 😃
Good videos
welcum bahhk to another wikly duzz of evvy eshun
1:20 bruh that camera shutter sounds like a silenced UZI. 😅🤣
Incredible how once the engine failed, the rudder immediately yawed left, pilot insane reaction or just computer?
All pilot reaction there. No computer.
Awesome 😮
The sound took 9 seconds to transmit to the cameraman.
Next up on Barn Finds, a classic Boeing 777.
First clip is really old, and one of the turbine blades was found a mile away.
bro what is going on in manchester bru
Detached
That was not nice that the plane was calling the pilot names. I guess that was the A330 short bus.
0:25 a stroke of luck the engine got fire before taking off so the pilot had enough time to stop the plane!
i missed the explosion part