Wow, classics galore! Caravelle's (with a parachute!), Comet's (enormous flaps), a CV-990 Coronado, and numerous DC-8's and 707's. Love all those turbojet engines with daisy petal exhaust stacks and ejector rings too. This is a homerun for classic jetliner fans, thanks!
Quad jets rule! I flew on a DC-8 from London to Los Angeles in 1979. I used to love going to airports as a kid to watch the planes. So much variety then compared to the indistinguishable Boeing and Airbus twin jets of today.
Wow I’m in aircraft heaven! All these classics look and so much better than modern aircraft! I now have the perfect soundtrack to go to sleep! Thank you very much!
The improved Comet 4 was a fine airplane. Unfortunately, it never got the wide commercial acceptance of the American-built Boeing and Douglas jetliners. . . .
@@TOXOTIS63 *UPDATE* *_It's interesting that some of the aircraft on the list should really have been noticeably safer than the Comet due to being a similar type but of much later design & manufacture._* *_Fryed Ryce Muncherz krappenz kharzeestan DikterBummer etc shud note deferentially with huge gr8 awe much respect please too._* How things were back then - *_Accident losses - % of aircraft built._* DeHavilland Comet 4 UK 14% DeHavilland Comet all mks 17% Vickers VC10 UK 5% *_The DH Comet had better safety than or similar safety to many other commercial passenger aircraft of a similar era_* Douglas DC-1 99% Douglas DC-2 47% Douglas DC-3 30% Douglas DC-4 26% Boeing s300 72% Boeing 307 70% Boeing 247 48% Boeing 707 20% Lockheed Electra Turboprop 29% Fairchild FH-227 30% McDonnell Douglas DC-8 14% Sud Aviation Caravelle 15% All Comets, including some Comet 1s, had full civilian use certification at some point after 1954, civilian use certification only being withdrawn after commercial flying stopped. Examples were flying until 1997 - one example did a signals research global circumnavigation flight series in 1993 via Australia virtually without a rest travelling 28000 miles, only had an ice warning indicator issue during the flights. *The DH Comet - World Firsts.* 1st gas turbine jet powered airliner. 1st high altitude 8psi pressurised full fuselage length passenger cabin airliner, not a trivial feature as structure strength required for pressurisation considerably exceeded strength required for normal flying stress. Nobody else had done anything similar before the Comet. The b-47 used 2 relatively small, heavily built pressurised modules (the aircraft where 6 had their wings fold up in 2 months while flying & some had their wings fall off while parked). The 1937 Boeing piston engined airliner pressurised passenger cabin was pressurised to 2 psi only - in fact that could easily be done as the normal unpressurized fuselage cabin structure strength for flying stresses only was all that was needed to be adequate so no significant weight increase issues needed addressing. 1st all hydraulically powered flying surface controls & actuators airliner with under carriage wheel disk brakes + ABS. 1st jet airliner to cross the Atlantic. 1st jet aircraft to do a world circumnavigation flights series. *Of course De Havilland had prior experience building many all metal construction airframe aircraft including thousands of jet powered fighter aircraft that were primarily of metal construction with pressurised cockpits & jet engines built by De-Havilland & we know the world's first all metal construction airframe airliner was built in England in the 1920s by Handley Page.* *_De Havilland did indeed always work to better than industry standards at the time, no evidence of negligence ever being produced in relation to the DH Comet._*
What wonderful footage of these classic jet airliners. So sad that those days are now long gone. Thank goodness for archive film like this to keep the memories alive - thank you for posting.
I was thrilled to see Cairo Airport, exactly how I remember it. I flew on the comet 4c several times. Thank you for sharing this piece of brilliant history
*4:29**---**4:32** PIA Boeing 720B!* On January 2, 1962, Pakistan International Airlines′ first Boeing 720B - a Boeing 720-040B (registration AP-AMG) _piloted by _*_Captain Abdullah Baig_*_ and _*_copilot_*_ Captain Taimur Baig_ - set a *"WORLD RECORD"* during the *_London-to-Karachi leg_* of its delivery flight to Pakistan for speed over a commercial air route, making the flight in 6 hours 43 minutes 55 seconds at an average speed of 938.78 km/h (583.33 mph). Beautiful clip dear *Lyubomir Ganchev!* Far-reaching effects of GOLDEN memories even after 62-years! *_Golden era of PIA's world-class repo...from 60s thru early 90s!_* Keep it up DEAR! [RUH, KHI PAK]
Que preciosidade esse vídeo, em pleno 01/02/21 a gente contemplando essas máquinas do passado que fizeram história, e ainda por cima duas cias brasileiras Varig e Panair e cair o queixo parabéns pela postagem uma relíquia dessa tem ser compartilhada.
Thank you, I was trying to figure out what airport that was. So hard to recognize from this era. And, yes, it was spectacular! I wonder what movie it was taken from.
Thank you for this posting. I’m old enough to remember each and every aircraft type filmed from the Vickers Viscount to the DC-8-62. The only one I haven’t flown on was the Comet. My favorite/s will always be the B-707 and the DC-8. That said, I can still remember the sensation of the CV-990 on takeoff. It was like being in a rocket!
David Harris ... were they 61s? All I remember is flying on Delta DC-8s ORD/FLL and ORD/TPA. And of course ORD/ARN to see my Swedish Marmor & Farfar (Grandparents). It really doesn’t matter to this 65 year old. This video brought back happy memories for me. 👍
United flew a handful of the Caravelles which I traveled on once from DCA to Chicago (probably). It puzzled me at first expecting a DC-9 but with the verticals on the wing.
@@PeterNGloor 707s were louder than the aircrafts that followed a while later such as 727s, MD80s, DC9s, 737s, etc. I remember noticing that back in the early 1980s that the 707s had louder engines, and so did the VC10 with the double engines on both sides of rear of aircraft. I guess they were louder because their engines were older models. Less fuel efficient too? Was that part of reason why airports had such strong smells of jet fuel in the late 1970s? (which I remember also)
Very cool stuff. Just popped up on my suggested viewing list. I used to fly on the 880s and 990s from SFO to DAL in the 60's. Great airplanes and they went faster than todays jets.
A time when a small bus still took the passengers to the aircraft. In1965 and 9yo we flew in 707 London->Zurich->Damascus->New Delhi>-Singapore->Darwin->Sydney and then a Viscount to Melbourne. 36hours London->Sydney and vomited all the way followed by a broken seat on the fully loaded viscount with no empty seats available.
I think 1962 my mom booked a flight from El Paso Texas to LA. As we were going thru terminal to our gate/ plane I was hoping it was a jet. I did not know at that time but there were a lot of Connies and one jet on the tarmack. I was shocked to board the one jet, which I now regret. Sure I was on cloud 9 at the time, but later regretted not flying on the constilation.
Panair do Brasil DC-8 is from french movie "L'homme de Rio" with Jean Paul Belmondo and Françoise Dorleac (elder sister of Catherine Deneuve, died at 25 in 1967).
Imagine you’ve never seen a jet airplane irl before and the first plane you see is a Comet. Just think how crazy that would look to someone used to a DC-3
@@robertpolnicky3262 Yeah, and you can say the same thing about cars, too! Remember the early '60s Lincoln Continentals? The early '60s Ford Thunderbirds? The nostalgia is killing me! . . .
Ridden on nearly all of those ... Caravelle, Vickers Viscount and Vanguard (turboprops) and VC10, Trident, Electra (okay another turboprop), DC8, 707, 720, Comet 2B and 3C, BAC 111, Convair 880 and 990 as well as the early DC9-10s and Boeing 737-100s. Favorite? Vickers VC-10. So awesomely quiet in the cabin. Oddballs? Carvair DC-4, Britain Norman TriLander (okay, NOT jets)
Remember that most of these planes are from the 40/50’s, but they look like something from the 2000’s. Just amazing how aviation has changed in this range of time
Brilliant footage. More views of the Comet here than I've seen, but must remark that its landing attitude was unexpected. Actually, a number of bouncy landings - probably by first officers.
Interesting airplanes. These days even I, who has 50 years of spotting experience, has difficulty telling the difference until the airplane is within a few hundred meters.
Back in the days when World aviation was the Kellogg Variety pack! and when the UK had a aircraft industry the Caravelles were beautiful really miss those classic livery's too,(PanAm,TWA) the first PanAm was a taken from 'DrNo'
Must've been a badge of honour to bounce the wheels once before final touchdown, eh? I landed at SFO on June 30, 1982 in a Hughes Airwest 727. Now, this once didn't bounce, as much as I think it owed money to the gate agents and was short of funds. It did NOT want to stay on the ground.
A Varig foi até os dias de hoje, a única empresa no mundo a operar os quadrirreatores das 3 grandes fabricantes ao mesmo tempo! 707, DC-8 e Convair 990 Coronado!
Which model is the one with the engines built into the wing? Hard to imagine with some of engines on these airliners, you'd need nearly a dozen of them to equal the thrust of one GE90-115B. . I love looking at these old planes but I'm glad I'm able to fly in much safer planes today.
Sud Est tested the first caravelles with a drogue chute and they were painted in Air France livery but this drogue was never used for sheduled services. I don't believe it was ever a production model feature.
Not a -50 series, which had fanjets with the fan reverser cascades in the sides of the nacelles. That one is an earlier turbojet series, a -21 based on a quick lookup of the N-number.
That air India Boeing 707
😍😍😍😍 My grandpa was in tears watching this
Wow, classics galore! Caravelle's (with a parachute!), Comet's (enormous flaps), a CV-990 Coronado, and numerous DC-8's and 707's. Love all those turbojet engines with daisy petal exhaust stacks and ejector rings too. This is a homerun for classic jetliner fans, thanks!
Quad jets rule! I flew on a DC-8 from London to Los Angeles in 1979. I used to love going to airports as a kid to watch the planes. So much variety then compared to the indistinguishable Boeing and Airbus twin jets of today.
Which airline was using DC8's on the London - Los Angeles route in 1979?
@@Ben-xe8ps It was World Airways. I think it was charter. The flight was via Maine.
Capitol/Saturn / Pan Am/ TIA / Overseas National have been seen at LHR/LGW but no idea where they were going to hope this helps
Wow I’m in aircraft heaven! All these classics look and so much better than modern aircraft! I now have the perfect soundtrack to go to sleep! Thank you very much!
Incredible invaluable golden piece of a bygone era of commercial aviation, thumbs up.
De Havilland Comet is an absolute beauty!
And a sure killer! 😉
Indeed and also the square windows ones are also an absolute hazard
The improved Comet 4 was a fine airplane. Unfortunately, it never got the wide commercial acceptance of the American-built Boeing and Douglas jetliners. . . .
@@TOXOTIS63
*UPDATE*
*_It's interesting that some of the aircraft on the list should really have been noticeably safer than the Comet due to being a similar type but of much later design & manufacture._*
*_Fryed Ryce Muncherz krappenz kharzeestan DikterBummer etc shud note deferentially with huge gr8 awe much respect please too._*
How things were back then -
*_Accident losses - % of aircraft built._*
DeHavilland Comet 4 UK 14%
DeHavilland Comet all mks 17%
Vickers VC10 UK 5%
*_The DH Comet had better safety than or similar safety to many other commercial passenger aircraft of a similar era_*
Douglas DC-1 99%
Douglas DC-2 47%
Douglas DC-3 30%
Douglas DC-4 26%
Boeing s300 72%
Boeing 307 70%
Boeing 247 48%
Boeing 707 20%
Lockheed Electra Turboprop 29%
Fairchild FH-227 30%
McDonnell Douglas DC-8 14%
Sud Aviation Caravelle 15%
All Comets, including some Comet 1s, had full civilian use certification at some point after 1954, civilian use certification only being withdrawn after commercial flying stopped. Examples were flying until 1997 - one example did a signals research global circumnavigation flight series in 1993 via Australia virtually without a rest travelling 28000 miles, only had an ice warning indicator issue during the flights.
*The DH Comet - World Firsts.*
1st gas turbine jet powered airliner. 1st high altitude 8psi pressurised full fuselage length passenger cabin airliner, not a trivial feature as structure strength required for pressurisation considerably exceeded strength required for normal flying stress. Nobody else had done anything similar before the Comet.
The b-47 used 2 relatively small, heavily built pressurised modules (the aircraft where 6 had their wings fold up in 2 months while flying & some had their wings fall off while parked).
The 1937 Boeing piston engined airliner pressurised passenger cabin was pressurised to 2 psi only - in fact that could easily be done as the normal unpressurized fuselage cabin structure strength for flying stresses only was all that was needed to be adequate so no significant weight increase issues needed addressing.
1st all hydraulically powered flying surface controls & actuators airliner with under carriage wheel disk brakes + ABS.
1st jet airliner to cross the Atlantic.
1st jet aircraft to do a world circumnavigation flights series.
*Of course De Havilland had prior experience building many all metal construction airframe aircraft including thousands of jet powered fighter aircraft that were primarily of metal construction with pressurised cockpits & jet engines built by De-Havilland & we know the world's first all metal construction airframe airliner was built in England in the 1920s by Handley Page.*
*_De Havilland did indeed always work to better than industry standards at the time, no evidence of negligence ever being produced in relation to the DH Comet._*
What wonderful footage of these classic jet airliners. So sad that those days are now long gone. Thank goodness for archive film like this to keep the memories alive - thank you for posting.
Great footage. I could watch these old birds for hours. Thanks!
Best ever jets moments , that feeling will never be replace again, golden age 👍
I was thrilled to see Cairo Airport, exactly how I remember it. I flew on the comet 4c several times. Thank you for sharing this piece of brilliant history
THE best vintage aviation montage EVER! Amazing productions values: feels and sounds like we are airside in 2018.
Thank you!
Thank you 😊💞 this was very enjoyable.
I went back with my father to planes spot.
In the 60s
Tg Caring Coronado,as the Caravelle are both very elegant and Beautiful 😉 airplanes
Amazing sound and footage!! Was lovely to see the Comet and the Caravelle! Thank you!
What a change to see aircraft that don`t all look the same, especially in good quality film
What a video! Thank you!!++
I thoroughly enjoyed this clip
Panair Brasil with a DC8!!!! Amazing!
Nice.....the opening landing of the United DC-8...anyone notice the USAF MATS C-124 Globemaster taxing in the background?! What memories...thank you.
Jim Fowler UAL DC8 the best...well Pam Am came in at a close 2nd!
*4:29**---**4:32** PIA Boeing 720B!*
On January 2, 1962, Pakistan International Airlines′ first Boeing 720B - a Boeing 720-040B (registration AP-AMG) _piloted by _*_Captain Abdullah Baig_*_ and _*_copilot_*_ Captain Taimur Baig_ - set a *"WORLD RECORD"* during the *_London-to-Karachi leg_* of its delivery flight to Pakistan for speed over a commercial air route, making the flight in 6 hours 43 minutes 55 seconds at an average speed of 938.78 km/h (583.33 mph).
Beautiful clip dear *Lyubomir Ganchev!* Far-reaching effects of GOLDEN memories even after 62-years!
*_Golden era of PIA's world-class repo...from 60s thru early 90s!_* Keep it up DEAR!
[RUH, KHI PAK]
How did I miss this before!? Absolutely riveting footage. I especially love the Comet footage! Well Done! and Thank You!
Que preciosidade esse vídeo, em pleno 01/02/21 a gente contemplando essas máquinas do passado que fizeram história, e ainda por cima duas cias brasileiras Varig e Panair e cair o queixo parabéns pela postagem uma relíquia dessa tem ser compartilhada.
Varig Convair 990 ?
Sim, Convair 990
OMG that MEA Comet landing.....delicious
0:43 Hahahaha did they overdub the sound of the landing Pan Am 707 with a passing Diesel truck?
Those are some very fast & loud landings!
The sight of the Philippine Airline landing at Kai Tak was spectacularand breathtaking.
Thank you, I was trying to figure out what airport that was. So hard to recognize from this era. And, yes, it was spectacular! I wonder what movie it was taken from.
Thank you for this posting. I’m old enough to remember each and every aircraft type filmed from the Vickers Viscount to the DC-8-62. The only one I haven’t flown on was the Comet. My favorite/s will always be the B-707 and the DC-8. That said, I can still remember the sensation of the CV-990 on takeoff. It was like being in a rocket!
none of the 8s were a 62 series 1 clue is the engines
David Harris ... were they 61s? All I remember is flying on Delta DC-8s ORD/FLL and ORD/TPA. And of course ORD/ARN to see my Swedish Marmor & Farfar (Grandparents). It really doesn’t matter to this 65 year old. This video brought back happy memories for me. 👍
look like below 50 series early 8s but still great the 61-62-63 were newer and the 61 and 63s were stretched
Wow the flaps on that Comet landing were enormous!
I love those Pan American DC 8's!
thank you very much, so fascinating. 🙇
Another gem. Great Stuff! Thanks for sharing!!
United flew a handful of the Caravelles which I traveled on once from DCA to Chicago (probably). It puzzled me at first expecting a DC-9 but with the verticals on the wing.
Love the sound of those old turbojets.
Bob Smith Yay, TWA!
Great film!DC-8 for me,and of course,the VC10!❤😎👍
What a great video in 1960's ..thanks
You're welcome! Glad you like it!
@@lyub4o69 thanks
Amazing footage, takes me back to my teens at Heathrow. The M.E.A Comet what a sound when Britain made her own aircraft.
I think some of the sounds were taken off Viscount planes.
@@PeterNGloor 707s were louder than the aircrafts that followed a while later such as 727s, MD80s, DC9s, 737s, etc. I remember noticing that back in the early 1980s that the 707s had louder engines, and so did the VC10 with the double engines on both sides of rear of aircraft. I guess they were louder because their engines were older models. Less fuel efficient too? Was that part of reason why airports had such strong smells of jet fuel in the late 1970s? (which I remember also)
Wonderful compilation!
Philippine Air Lines @ 0:32-0:41 at Hong Kong. Wow! I wonder what movie that was from.
Very interesting, United DC-8 landing at the beginning with a C-124 Globe master in the background
When flying was MANMADE, great noisy early warriors of the sky, not like the computers with wings we have today!!
Very cool stuff. Just popped up on my suggested viewing list. I used to fly on the 880s and 990s from SFO to DAL in the 60's. Great airplanes and they went faster than todays jets.
flight speed is secondary nowadays what with the hours of standing in line for security control and check-in.
These are real pilots ,nice upload
At the very beginning, lumbering in from the left, a Douglas Globemaster...cool !
PURE GOLD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Excellent nostalgia !
Thank you for this great video 1000x thank you!
A time when a small bus still took the passengers to the aircraft. In1965 and 9yo we flew in 707 London->Zurich->Damascus->New Delhi>-Singapore->Darwin->Sydney and then a Viscount to Melbourne. 36hours London->Sydney and vomited all the way followed by a broken seat on the fully loaded viscount with no empty seats available.
Caravel used the nose design of the COMET for their great "little" aircraft. Flew on one in France in 1967 !
I allways thought it looked like a comet from the front
👍👍das wahren noch zeiten
The Varig's Coronado was taken from a movie? It´s very rare to see Varig's Convair 990 films.
I’m pretty sure these are all movie clips
I think 1962 my mom booked a flight from El Paso Texas to LA. As we were going thru terminal to our gate/ plane I was hoping it was a jet. I did not know at that time but there were a lot of Connies and one jet on the tarmack. I was shocked to board the one jet, which I now regret. Sure I was on cloud 9 at the time, but later regretted not flying on the constilation.
Yes, the Lockheed Constellation. One of the most beautiful planes ever built, with its triple tail and sharklike fuselage.
An iconic airliner.
Fantastic clip.
Glad you like it!
They were beautiful ❤️,and noisy as hell.
Strait jet ,and the Caravelle nothing short of a French model.
Amazing Lyubomir, thanks!
Glad you like it! :)
The Convairs were very elegant,and still the fastest.
Panair do Brasil DC-8 is from french movie "L'homme de Rio" with Jean Paul Belmondo and Françoise Dorleac (elder sister of Catherine Deneuve, died at 25 in 1967).
Great work, Lyubomir. Let's have some more!
Those Comets tho
Douglas C-124 Globemaster II sleazing around in the background at the beginning of this video. MATS livery too.
0:10...C-124 Globemaster on taxi!!!
woohoo love those
Those Caravelles are so cool.
Imagine you’ve never seen a jet airplane irl before and the first plane you see is a Comet. Just think how crazy that would look to someone used to a DC-3
Those Convair 880/990's meant business: Fast, Loud & Thirsty.
First gen jetliners were so interesting, unlike the computer-designed modern twins we see these days.
I think the designers had more of an eye for looks back then. And it wasnt all about profit margins. Life was actually exciting back then.
@@robertpolnicky3262 Yeah, and you can say the same thing about cars, too!
Remember the early '60s Lincoln Continentals? The early '60s Ford Thunderbirds? The nostalgia is killing me! . . .
The De Havilland was a elegant , majestic jet.
Rough landings back then......
Sir I don’t know who u r but I can tell one thing ur a legend thx I love this much love from japan 🇯🇵
The airplanes were, 707, 720, DC-8, Aerospatiale Caravelle, DeHavilland Comet 4, Convair 880 and the Convair 990 Coronado.
Fantastic 👍✌
Wow a Philippines airline...i miss this plane....what a gold memory
That footage of the United Airlines DC-8 at the beginning of this video was used in the 1961 Elvis Presley film 'Blue Hawaii'.
Ridden on nearly all of those ... Caravelle, Vickers Viscount and Vanguard (turboprops) and VC10, Trident, Electra (okay another turboprop), DC8, 707, 720, Comet 2B and 3C, BAC 111, Convair 880 and 990 as well as the early DC9-10s and Boeing 737-100s.
Favorite? Vickers VC-10. So awesomely quiet in the cabin.
Oddballs? Carvair DC-4, Britain Norman TriLander (okay, NOT jets)
Those VC10s were built a Brooklands now a museum blooooody short runway for a VC10
Was it me, or did that DC-8 that took off not rotate?
If you're referring to the one at 4:32, then yes, it did (by approximately 6 inches).
Awesome. Luv it. 0:12 Curious where? Burbank, CA? (Mountains around it.)
Is that a Caravelle at 2:47?
Yes, Caravelle
Remember that most of these planes are from the 40/50’s, but they look like something from the 2000’s. Just amazing how aviation has changed in this range of time
Incorrect. These pictures are from the 1960's
@@Ben-xe8ps i mean the airplanes, not the year it was taken! :)
Never realised Caravelles used a drogue parachute, not sure if it was all variants?. I did fly on them as a boy, with Iberia and maybe Aviaco too.
Brilliant footage. More views of the Comet here than I've seen, but must remark that its landing attitude was unexpected. Actually, a number of bouncy landings - probably by first officers.
So I guess soft landings weren't a thing back then eh? Lol so many bounced once or twice on the runway.....
The Caravelle as well,but PanAm were very handsome lookers
Luvly
What were all the airports involved? I saw Kai Tak and I assume Cairo.
HNL, HKG Kai Tak, SEA, CAI, BEY, Rome FCO, ZRH, CAS, RIO...
Comet shots are a rare find, those flaps extended are a site
Panair do Brasil 💚💛
0:51Do you think that was the Tower controller's actual voice? And would he really say "Hello New York"?
Epic!
Olha a Varig e Panair representando o Brasil
Varig ☺
Panair do Brazil
Interesting airplanes. These days even I, who has 50 years of spotting experience, has difficulty telling the difference until the airplane is within a few hundred meters.
Back in the days when World aviation was the Kellogg Variety pack! and when the UK had a aircraft industry the Caravelles were beautiful really miss those classic livery's too,(PanAm,TWA) the first PanAm was a taken from 'DrNo'
If there any with propliners would love to see and hear a Bristol Britannia and a Breguet Deux Points.
WE SAW AN AIR PLANE OF EL AL THE FIRST FLIGHT OF EL AL TO CAIRO WAS ON 1979
At least i'm happy i lived to see many of these planes during their active duty.
Nowadays the variety is much less.
Varig and Panair do Brasil!!
Must've been a badge of honour to bounce the wheels once before final touchdown, eh? I landed at SFO on June 30, 1982 in a Hughes Airwest 727. Now, this once didn't bounce, as much as I think it owed money to the gate agents and was short of funds. It did NOT want to stay on the ground.
Oh my God, Varig and Panair do Brasil!!!!
A Varig foi até os dias de hoje, a única empresa no mundo a operar os quadrirreatores das 3 grandes fabricantes ao mesmo tempo! 707, DC-8 e Convair 990 Coronado!
0:24 i know this is kai tak airport what are amazing looking
Thanks for the videos ,do you have any from Caracas Venezuela Simon Bolivar intl.?
Which model is the one with the engines built into the wing?
Hard to imagine with some of engines on these airliners, you'd need nearly a dozen of them to equal the thrust of one GE90-115B.
.
I love looking at these old planes but I'm glad I'm able to fly in much safer planes today.
2:58 Didn't know that airliner had drag-chute too....
Sud Est tested the first caravelles with a drogue chute and they were painted in Air France livery but this drogue was never used for sheduled services. I don't believe it was ever a production model feature.
I think it was used for flights into Stockholm-Bromma airport.
0:01 United McDonnell-Douglas DC-8-50?
Not a -50 series, which had fanjets with the fan reverser cascades in the sides of the nacelles. That one is an earlier turbojet series, a -21 based on a quick lookup of the N-number.
I saw the old Hong Kong airport Kai Tak airport.