@@anuragrajkumar5406 Some say he puts rocket fuel on his Cheerios instead of milk.....and that he's actually the one driving that roadster that Elon Musk launched towards Mars. All we know is, he's called the Space Stig !.
I miss documentaries like this. A charismatic host we know, simplification of complex concepts and how they connect to other concepts to make it all digestible, as well as a bit of fun, well done Hamster.
At the beginning of the show he mentioned that the space shuttle has flown 130 times, Nasa's STS 130 was flown in 2010, so he couldn't have recorded this before 2010 and therefore it's more like the definition of 2010
@@terranrepublic7023 nobody accused Hammond of being up to date on style, and OP is right, the way he's dressed is extremely 2005. Just because the show was released between 2008-11, that means nothing in relation to Hammond's apparel choices. He is British, after all. A lot of Brits still dress like WWII hasn't happened yet.
17:50 Hammond timidly asking "..can we have a race" Guy: "Yes" - Clarkson hidden in the bushes finally shows himself - SPEEEEEEED AND POWEEEEEEEEEEEEER
I saw the shuttle take off in person when John Glenn returned to space. They are not in any way downplaying the power of the engine. You could feel it hit you like a wall when the shockwave reaches the viewing stands, and its louder than anything you have ever heard in your entire life. It can't be described how unreal it is.
meanwhile in the 21st century we've returned to simping some billionaires. worse perversion than the capitalists of the 19th century and their sweatshops.
Lucky man. I am from Germany and I have been in the USA, but missed a shuttle takeoff only by 1 week. Sadly I have been at the cape during landing and it landed in California :-( due to bad weather in Florida. Now there is nothing left like this remarkable flying machine. Only small rockets.
Most informative, easily understandable , creative documentary i have ever seen. Thanks to the presenter for making rocket science so interesting and easy. 👌👌
Richard is great in these programmes and his sense of humour makes it far less boring. These programmes should be shown in science lessons at school to get the young ones really interested in science
At 18:51 during the lead up to firing the rockets what is that thing moving through the air at a ridiculously high speed? It only there for a second and I had to back up a couple times to check that it wasn't just a play of light. You can see it again from 19:21 to 19:23 when the camera shot is replayed.
pretty good documentary, most of the information given is accurate with other sources i've seen. other than the columbia disaster section. that wasn't just caused by re-entry forces, it was caused by the NASA administrators' negligence to a large foam strike that punched a hole in the left wing.
happens every day in oceans. Download the app 'Windy' and enjoy the view. Sometimes its hard to spot one, but most of the time there is one or two wandering around :P
Thank you so so so very much Mr Richard Hammond and other members of your team and collaborators who produced this video and posted here. You have shared incredibly inaccessible sites and information about different systems with us. The inspirations that may have come from unthinkable places and technologies been amazing. Ofcourse you have produced a few other documentaries on these lines. To date I had seen only one. But now I am going to look for each one of those and will watch. Sharing knowledge and information with the world is one of the most noblest of things to do. God bless you and all those who endeavour to do this.
Where is the videos for uneducated unexpected un expensive Nu job ever Nu money to spend on polluted water rivers lakes oceans canals??worldwide humans cities farming more trash and wastewater Nu jobs ever yet for nature best animals insects fish from the rivers polluted yet?? Think 07
Simple physics and chemistry scaled up to gigantic proportions. Who knew rocket science could be this simple. Respect to all the brilliant minds that figured out the subtle nuances that made space exploration possible.
it's a controlled constant explosion in the direction you want to move towards, you could have learned it yourself by throwing a grenade at a stationary object and watch that stationary object move... basically just a missile that was sent into space in war time... THEN when peace took over, the civilians thought "hey, we could really do something meaningful for humanity, sure military would get our research too but he who keeps the lights on gets the spoils" - most times that has been beneficial to everyone but very critical for flight and environmental safety for the military.... such as memory foam and understanding aerodynamics to a minute level, aerodynamics wouldn't be used by you and me but for the military it means the difference between a jet making it from New York to Paris or not, memory foam is one of those eureka that benefits everybody from young to old and in most fields... including office chairs. Designs have assisted private ventures with skipping the harsh "learn by the hand of humility" and more about "learn from others"... Shame that governments don't go for a global front and pool money together to actually get a global space program together that is under the international law that no country has complete access, but all countries have benefits... could reduce the costs to $1B per country and get us quite far
@Fetus PC-TECH world war 2 was deviating to the world, Wernher von Braun wanted peace... Shame he was born under the wrong flag, wish he was Australian then America would have a fun time, we would have a heavy hitter scientist and you guys would have had your space tech decades earlier
So you know how when someone messes up something simple people often say “It’s not rocket science.” What do rocket scientists say in that situation? “It’s not quantum mechanics”?
"It ain't brain surgery!" To which Jim Gaffigan wondered what brain surgeons would say... "It ain't like...trying to talk to women!" (From his 'Beyond the Pale' set.) XD
They have a shirt at the cape where I live and is says “yes... it is” with the blueprints of the solid rocket booster. The engineers I know all wear that shirt
I've been a rocket enthusiast for years, and even I learned something. It's a good thing they didn't have Jeremy trying to explain. "Ooiohh and this cold stuff goes into the burner thingy and then comes out the back of the bellish bit like a stabbed rat."
Richard Hammond is to tech what David Attenborough is to nature. Both are just captivating to listen to, and it feels like nature intended for them to be there.
See when you said "but NASA designed the Shuttle to reduce the cost of space exploration", that should have been immediately followed up with "...and failed, miserably". lol
I think this episode was from back when everyone was dazzled by the word "reusable" and there wasn't much discussion amongst the general public about the actual turnaround cost of the shuttle.
Reminds me of the the great British show “Connections” in the ‘80’s with James Burke. He would follow the thread of inventions and innovations that led to modern (for the time) technology know how. Both great shows.
Cooling the engines with cooling tubes has been used for decades in coal fire electric generating plants.The large boilers in these plants are actually made of siamesed tubes so the water walls cool the boiler and pre-heats the water before getting super heated.This increases efficiency and cools at the same time.
The space shuttle was a great improvement to our space program. It brought new materieals and concepts to use for future space craft like Space X. I spent 12 years in the USAF as an aircraft mechanic jets 4 or more engines and I was a crew chief on the E-3A. I found one thing lacking in each mid flight of the shuttle. In the USAF before takeoff and after landing the pilot and crew walked around the airplane and looked it over. We had the Shuttle where they had the means to look over every inch of the space craft outsides without a space walk. Yet it was not done. There is a word for that and I can't think of it. I almost got it . and I know it now. COMPLACENCY. Taking things for granted. Had they examined the craft after connecting to the ISS they would have saw damage and those lives would have been saved. We need to learn by this or the loss of those crews mean nothing to us.Inspect before and after flights is all it takes.
I saw a program where they knew about some damage to the tiles (by replaying video of the launch where they saw the ice strike the wing), but did not take it further because there was nothing they could do to repair it, nor rescue the crew. Sad but true.
If not checked after flight how would one know how much damage air and rain & wind could have done? We always checked both before and after operation. Air Force.
"Some say... that he once urinated from the hatch of an orbiting space station, and that he will only respond to ground control if they call him "Unicorn One." All WE know is that he's called THE STIG!"
6000 DEGREES FAHRANHEIT AND AT 5:16 THEY HAVE WHAT LOOKS ALOT LIKE A THICK PLASTICKY RUBBER COVERING OVER A FITTING. ALSO LABELS ON ALUMINUM TUBES. I realize that engines on cars have rubber spark plug leads or boots. How ever they run 190-220 f and not 6000f
Agree. I wish I had my lap top in 1960s, I could have learnt more than the fkn useless teachers I had that called me stupid. I was a visual guy, I can follow this easily rather than a blackboard.
Mr. Hammond as usual very professional and straight to the point! Breaking the wall with sound - awesome! As much as the space shuttle of course! Good job!
Where is the videos for uneducated unexpected un expensive Nu job ever Nu money to spend on polluted water rivers lakes oceans canals??worldwide humans cities farming more trash and wastewater Nu jobs ever yet for nature best animals insects fish from the rivers polluted yet?? Think 07
Fun fact: Originally, the Space Shuttle had a two-stage fully-reusable winged flyback design, (some of which could do all the TAOS shuttle could) but those were too expensive for NASA's shoestring budget. Later, there were proposals for Evolved Shuttle involving liquid fuel boosters, wingtip fins and an ejectable crew deck, but NASA couldn't afford those either. #FundNASA
@@kvltman782 the amount of work needed to turn each shuttle around ready for its next mission meant that it was pretty close to being a complete refurbishment. Unforseen at the start of the shuttle program and part of the reason for it's astronomical (no pun intended) cost.
everytime it came back they needed to look at the plates at its stomach everytime it landed and the engines and 450 million dollars was and is still epxensive
The space shuttle is damn near my most favorite thing in the world. Oh desperately hope to see one in person and will always regret never seeing one launch.
The soyuz capsule is also very blunt, consisting of the orbital module, the descent module, and the instrument module. After undocking, the soyuz separates into it's three pieces, and the descent module is positioned heat shield down. It's not like other crewed space capsules like Mercury, gemini, and Apollo, but also the upcoming capsules like crew dragon, starliner, or Orion. It's not cone shaped, but instead, soyuz's descent module is egg shaped. As of right now, the only proven crew vehicle capable of ISS crew swaps is the soyuz. If you're watching after crew dragon demo two splashes down in the Atlantic, then the crew dragon could potentially replace the soyuz, as well as it's cargo version called progress all together, as soyuz's hardware and design is 55 years old as of 2020. Who knows, soyuz might keep flying for years or even decades into the future
Crew Dragon is supplementing Soyuz. Humans now have two working rides to space. Soyuz has no set retirement and no reason to be retired. Upgrades over the decades have made it more and more efficient. Plus it's reliability is unmatched.
damn I wanted to comment about how much the guy in the thumbnail looks like Richard Hammond... crossed with nick nolte. turns out its just hamster after all
disagree, under the trump administration I suggest we put 600% more ads in and 30% of the funds get funnelled to off shore mysterious accounts for "taxation purposes"
and now its time to see how fast it gets 'round our track
Aaaaand they've set fire to the tarmac. No literally.
Space stig to test?
Some say......
@@anuragrajkumar5406
Some say he puts rocket fuel on his Cheerios instead of milk.....and that he's actually the one driving that roadster that Elon Musk launched towards Mars.
All we know is, he's called the Space Stig !.
You mean the Spig?
I miss documentaries like this. A charismatic host we know, simplification of complex concepts and how they connect to other concepts to make it all digestible, as well as a bit of fun, well done Hamster.
Agreed. I have watched this series a number of times and it never gets old.
This dudes style is the definition of 2005 and it’s great
At the beginning of the show he mentioned that the space shuttle has flown 130 times, Nasa's STS 130 was flown in 2010, so he couldn't have recorded this before 2010 and therefore it's more like the definition of 2010
@@terranrepublic7023 nobody accused Hammond of being up to date on style, and OP is right, the way he's dressed is extremely 2005. Just because the show was released between 2008-11, that means nothing in relation to Hammond's apparel choices. He is British, after all. A lot of Brits still dress like WWII hasn't happened yet.
17:50
Hammond timidly asking "..can we have a race"
Guy: "Yes"
- Clarkson hidden in the bushes finally shows himself -
SPEEEEEEED AND POWEEEEEEEEEEEEER
HAMMOND! YOU BLITHERING IDIOT!
Is it a problem that I hear Jeremy's voice?
@@jacobcoopervfx4674 it's not, actually it means that you are normal
@@marnoi8754 lol
He needs to do this again with spacex
space shuttle in 2020 is a little outdated XD
Icy Rhodes YESSSS
Icy Rhodes agreed but is the dragon capsule reusable?
@@georgewendell yes
Yes pleeease 🙏
I saw the shuttle take off in person when John Glenn returned to space. They are not in any way downplaying the power of the engine.
You could feel it hit you like a wall when the shockwave reaches the viewing stands, and its louder than anything you have ever heard in your entire life. It can't be described how unreal it is.
meanwhile in the 21st century we've returned to simping some billionaires. worse perversion than the capitalists of the 19th century and their sweatshops.
@@madmoench okii
Unreal… Exactly… Now wake up.
Lucky man. I am from Germany and I have been in the USA, but missed a shuttle takeoff only by 1 week. Sadly I have been at the cape during landing and it landed in California :-( due to bad weather in Florida.
Now there is nothing left like this remarkable flying machine. Only small rockets.
Guess you never heard me after Taco Bell. Oh and dumcan, why you even watching something about space? Flatearther clown.
[Jeremy Clarkson voice] HAMMOND!
Mist got in the way.
"...YOU IDIOT"
@@Erodius he wasn't an idiot this time . except the chocolate kettle lol
(Jermey watching richard flying the rocket)HAMMOND YOU IDIOT YOU'VE REVERSED INTO THE SPACE STATION!
"37million horsepower" DAMN! I need to get that in my Civic
At 37:19 those robot noises are added in. Killed that whole scene for me.
"The red one was a lot faster" - car show presenter.
:D ))
@@MrAnarius iookkmkmmllollllllklolkkiikiiiì2
*Journalist.
Most informative, easily understandable , creative documentary i have ever seen. Thanks to the presenter for making rocket science so interesting and easy. 👌👌
for stupid people
I love Hammond's voice, I wish I also had a presenter like voice, so I could have my own Hamster show too.
Richard is great in these programmes and his sense of humour makes it far less boring. These programmes should be shown in science lessons at school to get the young ones really interested in science
What part of that was boring?
Science is awesome!
They do!!
Very nice documentaries Hammond. I love your shows.
These documentaries inspired me to become an engineer
The narration from 3:28 about the main engines make chills run down my whole body....
At 18:51 during the lead up to firing the rockets what is that thing moving through the air at a ridiculously high speed? It only there for a second and I had to back up a couple times to check that it wasn't just a play of light. You can see it again from 19:21 to 19:23 when the camera shot is replayed.
Dave
yup, just an air plane
pretty obvious actually?
"37million horsepower" DAMN! I need to get that in my Civic
Ricer 💯
You dont have V-Tec? whit a muffler ending?
ofc you need to inject spray into your manifold, Red gives most power, if its colored red its extra 132%.
@@timorouw5555 Not every civic owner is a ricer
@@imadizzapointment8354 but most of them are ricer
@@Rioderio yeah most civics is riced as hell, and miatas too
Gotta love the brits. They have a great way of explaining things. Best quick science doco I’ve seen in a while... and it’s quite old too
pretty good documentary, most of the information given is accurate with other sources i've seen. other than the columbia disaster section. that wasn't just caused by re-entry forces, it was caused by the NASA administrators' negligence to a large foam strike that punched a hole in the left wing.
isnt that the small dude from that car show
lol nice name btw biomechanism!
yes, Richard Hammond
lol
yea Top Gear, ex-dude
you mean the guy from the most succesful tv show in history worldwide? yeah, thats him
@@rShadowFace true, top gear is going back to the old top gear before 2002 , very boring for me
So are we just going to ignore the massive hurricane at 40:40?
woah ! XD nice one myan
happens every day in oceans. Download the app 'Windy' and enjoy the view. Sometimes its hard to spot one, but most of the time there is one or two wandering around :P
Nick Luther *IT CUD JUST B CLOUDS*
Nope 😂
Yes. This isnt a doc about hurricanes.
For all the flaws of the STS program, the startup sequence of the RS-25 SSME is one of the most beautiful things man has ever created.
Nothing can beat the raw spectacle of the Saturn V ignition
@@cleverusername9369 No argument from me, I love that just as much.
The SSME was a license production of MBB (Messerschmidt-Bölkow-Blohm).
This is a very interesting and informative documentary from Richard. I enjoyed every second of it. Thanks to the team that made this possible👌
Thank you so so so very much Mr Richard Hammond and other members of your team and collaborators who produced this video and posted here. You have shared incredibly inaccessible sites and information about different systems with us. The inspirations that may have come from unthinkable places and technologies been amazing. Ofcourse you have produced a few other documentaries on these lines. To date I had seen only one. But now I am going to look for each one of those and will watch.
Sharing knowledge and information with the world is one of the most noblest of things to do. God bless you and all those who endeavour to do this.
This was a TV series 15 YEARS AGO...
Calm down...
@@NicTheGreek1979 😂
I will say this Richard really does make his programs interesting especially with the added ingredient HUMOR.
Happy to watch this one. Really miss seeing Richard on nat geo. Greetings from Pekanbaru, Indonesia.. 🇮🇩
Where is the videos for uneducated unexpected un expensive Nu job ever Nu money to spend on polluted water rivers lakes oceans canals??worldwide humans cities farming more trash and wastewater Nu jobs ever yet for nature best animals insects fish from the rivers polluted yet?? Think 07
You rock star!! You've done it again. Awesome video. Thank you for sharing
Simple physics and chemistry scaled up to gigantic proportions. Who knew rocket science could be this simple. Respect to all the brilliant minds that figured out the subtle nuances that made space exploration possible.
it's a controlled constant explosion in the direction you want to move towards, you could have learned it yourself by throwing a grenade at a stationary object and watch that stationary object move... basically just a missile that was sent into space in war time...
THEN when peace took over, the civilians thought "hey, we could really do something meaningful for humanity, sure military would get our research too but he who keeps the lights on gets the spoils" - most times that has been beneficial to everyone but very critical for flight and environmental safety for the military.... such as memory foam and understanding aerodynamics to a minute level, aerodynamics wouldn't be used by you and me but for the military it means the difference between a jet making it from New York to Paris or not, memory foam is one of those eureka that benefits everybody from young to old and in most fields... including office chairs. Designs have assisted private ventures with skipping the harsh "learn by the hand of humility" and more about "learn from others"...
Shame that governments don't go for a global front and pool money together to actually get a global space program together that is under the international law that no country has complete access, but all countries have benefits... could reduce the costs to $1B per country and get us quite far
@@SkashTheKitsune
Great thinking.
@@SkashTheKitsune it's a stomach wrenching shame bro, the possibilities...
@Fetus PC-TECH world war 2 was deviating to the world, Wernher von Braun wanted peace... Shame he was born under the wrong flag, wish he was Australian then America would have a fun time, we would have a heavy hitter scientist and you guys would have had your space tech decades earlier
If this was the BBC they would be pushing the narrative that Zimbabwe Robert Mugabe children where the rocket scientists behind Space Shuttle.
Very nice and descriptive documentaries Hammond!
So you know how when someone messes up something simple people often say “It’s not rocket science.” What do rocket scientists say in that situation? “It’s not quantum mechanics”?
"It ain't brain surgery!"
To which Jim Gaffigan wondered what brain surgeons would say... "It ain't like...trying to talk to women!" (From his 'Beyond the Pale' set.) XD
"Its not music theory"
They have a shirt at the cape where I live and is says “yes... it is” with the blueprints of the solid rocket booster. The engineers I know all wear that shirt
@@F82TwinMustang the real answer
It's the O-rings!
26:50 “Chief take us down to 200 meters.”
Thanks Richard, Mr. Tyler and I would see each other once again, for the 7th time now due to this episode.
I've been a rocket enthusiast for years, and even I learned something. It's a good thing they didn't have Jeremy trying to explain. "Ooiohh and this cold stuff goes into the burner thingy and then comes out the back of the bellish bit like a stabbed rat."
Jeremy can explain things normally also, he has done some war documentaries and I liked them. He is really calm in those video's.
@@Mex1145 what he says is often incorrect or badly simplified for the sake of entertainment
his documentaries arent that bad either.
Richard Hammond is to tech what David Attenborough is to nature.
Both are just captivating to listen to, and it feels like nature intended for them to be there.
The most remarkable thing about the space shuttle is that Hammond hasn't crashed any of them.
Yet. 😂
you must not have watched the reliant shuttle episode
Love this show, very informative. Today, they would take one of the segments and stretch it out to one hour length
“Well, it works better then our Reliant Robin shuttle!”
Hey! Don't be mean. The Reliant Shuttle was glorious 😂
Not much to be honest, it's an amazing example of the art of the bodge lol. Really not the best rocket design but certainly interesting.
Del boy would be impressed nether the less
I fuckin hate people who quote what was said in the comment section. Your a fuckin parrot
Well lots of rockets fail on their first test flight...
Always been fascinated by space but this episode was very educational and fascinating
See when you said "but NASA designed the Shuttle to reduce the cost of space exploration", that should have been immediately followed up with "...and failed, miserably". lol
I think this episode was from back when everyone was dazzled by the word "reusable" and there wasn't much discussion amongst the general public about the actual turnaround cost of the shuttle.
And yet it was able to do what other Space programs could only dream about doing :V
@@MidnightmoonRR And was able to spend an absurd amount of money that other space programs could only dream of spending.
@@MidnightmoonRR what exactly is that? exploding twice in the space of a few years, killing all aboard without any safety or escape mechanisms ?
@@parapobabam you think there aren't risks? theres always gonna be risks
Reminds me of the the great British show “Connections” in the ‘80’s with James Burke. He would follow the thread of inventions and innovations that led to modern (for the time) technology know how. Both great shows.
Thank you Richard Hammond, from Bangladesh. Very informative video.
I have learned more things in this video. Simple questions I have always had. Answered wonderfully! GREAT!!!
3:46 Breath taking! I feel like a kid again
Cooling the engines with cooling tubes has been used for decades in coal fire electric generating plants.The large boilers in these plants are actually made of siamesed tubes so the water walls cool the boiler and pre-heats the water before getting super heated.This increases efficiency and cools at the same time.
The space shuttle was a great improvement to our space program. It brought new materieals and concepts to use for future space craft like Space X.
I spent 12 years in the USAF as an aircraft mechanic jets 4 or more engines and I was a crew chief on the E-3A. I found one thing lacking in each mid flight of the shuttle. In the USAF before takeoff and after landing the pilot and crew walked around the airplane and looked it over. We had the Shuttle where they had the means to look over every inch of the space craft outsides without a space walk. Yet it was not done. There is a word for that and I can't think of it. I almost got it . and I know it now. COMPLACENCY. Taking things for granted. Had they examined the craft after connecting to the ISS they would have saw damage and those lives would have been saved. We need to learn by this or the loss of those crews mean nothing to us.Inspect before and after flights is all it takes.
The Columbia did not go to the ISS on it's last mission. It was 14 days of pure science, not a delivery run to the ISS.
I saw a program where they knew about some damage to the tiles (by replaying video of the launch where they saw the ice strike the wing), but did not take it further because there was nothing they could do to repair it, nor rescue the crew. Sad but true.
Seriously, you're comparing a walk around on the ground to one in space, once again, seriously?
Instead of a walk-around, they used the robotic arm to inspect the TPS.
If not checked after flight how would one know how much damage air and rain & wind could have done? We always checked both before and after operation. Air Force.
46:36 guy reminded me of the german artillery gunner from band of brothers for some reason..the way he yelled 'fire'...
this was a great show.. they need to make more
That "ice cream" experiment cooling by cold fuel, was a really good demonstration.
Very interesting documentary. Thanks
Well aren't you very welcome. I'm sure the guy appreciated your support and compliment.
Correction needed at 1:23. The narration should say, "Until July 2011 it launched from the Florida sky..."
what can I say ...N.A.S.A has their way to create fast machines and smart solutions to solve huge or fatal problems ! Well done !
America gets a lot of Criticism but hats off American Shuttle Engineers are Incredible
Wow most educated video I have ever seen! This is so well planned and explained! Well done! Wow this is sick
Anybody else see the shooting star @19:21 ?
Its a plane in timelapse video
"Some say... that he once urinated from the hatch of an orbiting space station, and that he will only respond to ground control if they call him "Unicorn One." All WE know is that he's called THE STIG!"
Really Amazing these Advanced Technology
How can people dislike videos like that ?
Flat earthers 🤣
Absolutely brilliant it really is well worth a watch.
I'd like to see Captain Slow's long winded explanation of the science.
James May is actually very good at explaining engineering. You should try this website called TH-cam, its got a lot of his stuff on.
Man!!! All I can say is thanks a trillion times ✨
6:45 for the original Hammond Organ ^^" (doesnt sound like Deep Purple though)
as far as I know it looks like it though, apparently he bashes it rather a lot.
6000 DEGREES FAHRANHEIT AND AT 5:16 THEY HAVE WHAT LOOKS ALOT LIKE A THICK PLASTICKY RUBBER COVERING OVER A FITTING. ALSO LABELS ON ALUMINUM TUBES. I realize that engines on cars have rubber spark plug leads or boots. How ever they run 190-220 f and not 6000f
nvm i just seen their ingenious 1880 solution
The rocket equation. It's a beautiful thing.
His enthusiasm is infectious
John Launch working in the launch pad, brilliant parenting-giving name
Another proof that it is all just a big circus................... and money fraud.
Great video....amazing AS ALWAYS. THANKS GUYS. BETTER TEACHING THAN AT SCHOOL OR UNIVERSITY
Agree. I wish I had my lap top in 1960s, I could have learnt more than the fkn useless teachers I had that called me stupid. I was a visual guy, I can follow this easily rather than a blackboard.
Mr. Hammond as usual very professional and straight to the point! Breaking the wall with sound - awesome! As much as the space shuttle of course! Good job!
I like how he talks about the shuttle like it's our latest space tech, and not an obsolete deathtrap of a moneypit.
Where is the videos for uneducated unexpected un expensive Nu job ever Nu money to spend on polluted water rivers lakes oceans canals??worldwide humans cities farming more trash and wastewater Nu jobs ever yet for nature best animals insects fish from the rivers polluted yet?? Think 07
might have been inefficient and dangerous but the shuttle is incredibly impressive and cool
Fun fact: Originally, the Space Shuttle had a two-stage fully-reusable winged flyback design, (some of which could do all the TAOS shuttle could) but those were too expensive for NASA's shoestring budget. Later, there were proposals for Evolved Shuttle involving liquid fuel boosters, wingtip fins and an ejectable crew deck, but NASA couldn't afford those either. #FundNASA
I have learned so much more in this video than I have at school
International Space Station is now known to be the BEST concretisation for humanity HONOR FOR SPACE SHUTTLE today COUNTINUE WITH SPACE X
At 19:22 something appears to streak across the sky... I'm curious if that is a glitch of some sort or an actual object caught during filming.
It was just an airplane.
Don't worry, there's not a world wide, thousand year old conspiracy.
43:45 - "that's six times the speed of sand."
that's some pretty quick sand, m8
lol
I heard that too lol.
I wish richard taught my shop, science , and history class I learn so much more from him than my teachers
The shuttle was refurbishable, not reusable. :P
The shuttle was reusable, the launch system was refurbishable.
@@kvltman782 the amount of work needed to turn each shuttle around ready for its next mission meant that it was pretty close to being a complete refurbishment. Unforseen at the start of the shuttle program and part of the reason for it's astronomical (no pun intended) cost.
everytime it came back they needed to look at the plates at its stomach everytime it landed and the engines and 450 million dollars was and is still epxensive
@@insulting_bjorn2354 So is 250 million per astronaut to be sent into orbit on a russian rocket.
@@morgangrey4020 Where do you get that info? It costs NASA roughly $82 million per seat on the Soyuz, to get to the ISS, last I checked...
Great Documentary Richard !
If only Richard knew this before making top gears own space shuttle 😂
The space shuttle is damn near my most favorite thing in the world. Oh desperately hope to see one in person and will always regret never seeing one launch.
It doesn't beat the Saturn V that brought people to the Moon!
One of the best documentary's i'v seen!
this is an awesome episode. it aired on June 2011 and the last shuttle flight was on July 2011
The soyuz capsule is also very blunt, consisting of the orbital module, the descent module, and the instrument module. After undocking, the soyuz separates into it's three pieces, and the descent module is positioned heat shield down. It's not like other crewed space capsules like Mercury, gemini, and Apollo, but also the upcoming capsules like crew dragon, starliner, or Orion. It's not cone shaped, but instead, soyuz's descent module is egg shaped. As of right now, the only proven crew vehicle capable of ISS crew swaps is the soyuz. If you're watching after crew dragon demo two splashes down in the Atlantic, then the crew dragon could potentially replace the soyuz, as well as it's cargo version called progress all together, as soyuz's hardware and design is 55 years old as of 2020. Who knows, soyuz might keep flying for years or even decades into the future
Crew Dragon is supplementing Soyuz. Humans now have two working rides to space. Soyuz has no set retirement and no reason to be retired. Upgrades over the decades have made it more and more efficient. Plus it's reliability is unmatched.
48:55 what's with the aircraft noise? the shuttle glides home.
Come on how hard can it be to launch it?
It isnt rocket science
Wow what a great video SO informative!!!
I'm sure the BBC director made sure they visited Florida in early February to film this documentary. It is too fkn hot any other time of year
Brilliant, a pure joy to watch.
Dont drive rockets, Richard.
Remember that (if you can)
awesome video, a million thumbs up to Richard Hammond....
Thank you, Richard, for educating me. This was fascinating.
Richard Hammond, you are the best
damn I wanted to comment about how much the guy in the thumbnail looks like Richard Hammond... crossed with nick nolte. turns out its just hamster after all
Hugh Jackman you mean.
I knew it, they tried to trick me. But I didn't fall for it, I knew it wasn't a man, I knew it was a hamster.
Insane . Soon this will be just a Tuesday
It bugs me how he says ‘I scream’ instead of ice cream
"I scream; you scream; we all scream for ice scream." :)
I’m glad you said this
And the way he pronounces aluminum. It's gives me an ice cream headache.
@@AdriaanVerburg but it's aluminium for the rest of the world
Adriaan Verburg I cant remember how he says it but it’s pronounced A-Loo-Min-Nium in England
at 15:00 when he uses the aluminium to cut through steel is extremely similar to the processes of gauging steel
19:22 time finds us a new UFO sighting tell me more i discovered it??
Also 18 50, check it out something flying true at incredible speed .
Am in love with this.good lesson.
And let's not forget that it is the most dangerous space vehicle ever!
Bandit GSGNein
You all cry space, but it only can go in Orbit!!!
Science noobs, car people?
@paul sticks Just a failed dream.........Too complex...
Now private parties took over!
Do i need to go back to Call tech? You got skills?
Damn this thread is sooo juicy xD
@@leobeelen290
Mind passing the popcorn? I've brought the drinks.
@@Twiggy163 yea sure imma go get Trump and Kim too they could learn from these highly professional argumentation tactics xD
At 18:52 some thing streams across the sky what is it?
too many ads on this video
agreed
adblock^^
disagree, under the trump administration I suggest we put 600% more ads in and 30% of the funds get funnelled to off shore mysterious accounts for "taxation purposes"
install adblock
adblock
Very good chanal I like it thanks again
For all the shortcomings it really was a fantastic vehicle, wish I could have seen it in person.
The way he is saying ice-cream, I scream 💀💀