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Did Australia invent the world's best fighter jet? 

Found And Explained
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In this video, we'll take you on a journey through the CA-23's development process, showcasing its sleek design, powerful engine, and impressive capabilities that made it a force to be reckoned with in the skies. From its maiden flight to its operational history, we'll uncover the pivotal role the CA-23 played in the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) and its impact on aviation enthusiasts worldwide.
Join us as we explore the technical specifications and armament of this legendary aircraft, learning about the dedicated engineers and skilled pilots who brought the CA-23 to life and maneuvered it in aerial combat. We'll share thrilling anecdotes and heroic stories that demonstrate the aircraft's prowess in defending the skies and its importance in Australia's aviation heritage.
In addition to its military significance, we'll also delve into the CA-23's post-war contributions, including its role in the civilian aviation sector. Discover how this remarkable aircraft became a symbol of ingenuity and engineering excellence, captivating aviation enthusiasts and collectors alike.
Whether you're an aviation enthusiast, a history buff, or just curious about groundbreaking engineering feats, this video is sure to leave you inspired and in awe of the CAC CA-23's enduring legacy.
Don't forget to hit the like button if you enjoyed the video and subscribe to our channel for more captivating content on aviation history, aircraft profiles, and incredible engineering achievements. Join our community of aviation enthusiasts as we celebrate the triumphs and innovations that have shaped the skies throughout history.
#CACCA23 #Mustang60 #AviationHistory #AircraftProfiles #AviationEnthusiasts

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25 июл 2023

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Комментарии : 1,3 тыс.   
@shiyian
@shiyian 10 месяцев назад
imagine seeing an overweight sabre coming at you at supersonic speeds
@magma-5291
@magma-5291 10 месяцев назад
Lol
@s.kirtivasen15699
@s.kirtivasen15699 10 месяцев назад
An overweight mig 21 i suppose
@ANDREALEONE95
@ANDREALEONE95 10 месяцев назад
@@s.kirtivasen15699 Or an horiziontal EE Lightining
@sebulbableves
@sebulbableves 10 месяцев назад
F100 Super Sabre moment
@pilotpat
@pilotpat 10 месяцев назад
thats one way to describe it
@intercommerce
@intercommerce 10 месяцев назад
Canadian here. We had similar experience here in late 1950's with the AVRO Canada CF-105 Arrow. Home-designed & built, it was one of the most advanced interceptors in the world at the time, with a speed of mach 2.3 or higher and a lot of advanced innovative features. So thoroughly researched and designed it skipped the prototype stage and went straight to production. 5 were built, when a change of government mysteriously and abruptly pulled the plug on the whole project, claiming it was too expensive, laid off all the expert design & build teams, and actually tore up the 5 working aircraft already built. Britain had a similar story with the TSR 2. And only now I am learning of this superb Australian design which should have served the Anglo-alliance well in its theater of operation. Apparent stupidity in all cases. All three of those planes should have been built, and our respective aircraft industries would still be thriving. For every doubter and naysayer out there, I say look to the example of the Swedish Air Force designs by SAAB, which kept producing local autonomous and independent aircraft designs that kept their Air Force in an advanced state of defense, and they are a much smaller country than Australia, Canada or Britain. We each should have kept our own independent aircraft industries, and then cooperatively bought all 3 designs and shared them throughout the Commonwealth for savings of money in larger production orders, to compete with US, Soviet, and Chinese aircraft industries. Short-sighted thinking by all governments of the day!
@johnpapworth433
@johnpapworth433 10 месяцев назад
All of the nations should have collaborated better and would have turned out some amazing kit
@BatMan-oe2gh
@BatMan-oe2gh 10 месяцев назад
I agree with you and your comment is spot on. Problem in Australia was lot of people considered themselves English first. Growing up, I met heaps of people who stated they were English Australians, not just Australians. So those people put England first. Even when we had a referendum to remove the Monarchy from Australian life, it was defeated. Many Australians still suck up to the UK.
@andrewanderson5297
@andrewanderson5297 10 месяцев назад
@@johnpapworth433 this is why I think CANZUK would be a benefit for our four nations.
@nizm0man
@nizm0man 10 месяцев назад
Gotta listen to big daddy USA hehe
@elroyfudbucker6806
@elroyfudbucker6806 10 месяцев назад
This smacks of interference by the Americans to force Australia & Canada to buy their aircraft. Australia had a promising space & missile industry in the '50's & '60's, but our ever British-loving prime minister at the time, Robert Menzies caved in to pressure from the British government to curtail our space & missile research because they were embarrassed that the "colonials" were ahead of them. As compensation in return, the British tested their nuclear weapons at the Montebello islands off NW Western Australia & at Maralinga in remote South Australia, which necessitated the forced removal of indigenous communities from the Maralinga region. Menzies never really cared much for anywhere outside of Melbourne. And whoever thought it would be a good idea to appoint a Brit as head of the RAAF? I always thought you had to have single citizenship of a country to be a member of that country's military. No wonder our aircraft industry was scuppered.
@Torth121
@Torth121 10 месяцев назад
Its not the prettiest looking bird by any means, but the fact its Aussie would have made my pride for it more than any other Jet Fighter, sad it never worked out
@tonamg53
@tonamg53 10 месяцев назад
“Not the prettiest”… That’s an interesting way of putting it. This thing puts Boeing X-32 to shame…
@P3x310
@P3x310 10 месяцев назад
@@tonamg53 It's the Owen submachine gun of the skies.
@bmdoes_stuff6861
@bmdoes_stuff6861 10 месяцев назад
@@tonamg53it’s not even bad, I’d proudly fly that thing for my Air Force
@pilotpat
@pilotpat 10 месяцев назад
honestly its not that bad visually its just like a wider... MiG-21
@flyingpizza7486
@flyingpizza7486 10 месяцев назад
It's terrible. It would be able to turn.
@rudyyarbrough5122
@rudyyarbrough5122 10 месяцев назад
I'm an old F-4 pilot and I can see similarities between the two. If the intake had been cut back to just behind the cockpit area, the nose cone could have been enlarged to house a radar that was sorely needed. A bad design that plagued the Phantom also was the embedded canopy that became part of the fuselage. After the WWII advancement of the bubble canopy, it still amazes me that the F-8 Crusader, A-5 Vigilante, F-105, F-106, and the F-4 all had this terrible canopy ignoring all that was learned during the war. I do know that the advancement of jets in the fifties and early sixties required huge amounts of money and talent to overcome things that were encountered as progress was made. I am not sure Australia had the manpower or the money at that time. When I was in Vietnam, I had to evacuate to Ubon Thailand and was billeted with an Aussie F-86 squadron that shared the airbase with the US Air Force. Being a Marine, the Air Force didn't want to handle us so they sent us to the Aussies. Never been treated better in my life by any group of men. However, they did trick us into giving up our tiger flight suits in dart games that they played us for fools. After many pints of really good Aussie beer, they conned us into dart games for fun. They let us win many games and then said why not play for something of value. They suggested our cool flight suits for their huge blossomy tan WWII suits. We laughed and an hour later we were all wearing their bloomy suits and they had on our tiger suits! Also, inside of every panel of our F-4s, there was a little Roo staring back at us!
@robertmansfield7656
@robertmansfield7656 10 месяцев назад
The bug bare is. That that this design was in an advanced stage of development before the decision to build the f86 was made, UK RAE was slow walking high speed wind tunnel testing. So we built a less capable f86 which had a lower to speed, less ordinance to carry and no capacity for a radar. The cac ca23 platform would have greater scope for growth and development. The Avon sabre was about as far as you could push that design.
@foilist1
@foilist1 10 месяцев назад
I agree with you about the canopies on the F4 and other planes you mentioned. If a man is going to be shot out of the sky it will be from behind. The F4 needed a bubble canopy and I would go as far as turning the back seat around so the men are back to back. Talk about situational awareness.
@astatine5781
@astatine5781 10 месяцев назад
@@foilist1I think having someone facing backwards is a great idea especially for situational awareness but that only works in 3 seaters, in a two seater if you have one facing backwards they wouldn’t experience G force the same way as the pilot, that also brings up the concern about if the pilot blacks out or is injured/ killed, how will the 2nd pilot be able to operate the aircraft? Just pointing it out, back to back seating would be pretty cool but if you have two people the other person needs to be able to fly in case of an emergency.
@foilist1
@foilist1 10 месяцев назад
@@astatine5781 The engineers would figure out the G forces for the back seater facing the tail of the aircraft. In the F4 the navy back seater was the RIO (Radar Intercept Officer) and he had no flight controls. He handled the missiles and radar. The Air Force F4 had the WSO (Weapons Systems Officer) and he did athe same thing as the RIO but the Air Force did include a control stick and pedals. So the WSO could fly the plane but the back seater hated that part of the job because he had difficulty seeing in front, the front seat and pilot blocking his view. And I remember many years ago that I read about an F4 had a bird strike in the front cockpit either killing or seriously injuring the pilot. The back seater could fly the plane but he did not have the switches to lower the landing gear. So the back seater couldn’t completely fly the plane. The F14, the back seater handles the weapons and not flying the plane. The F15E strike Eagle the back seater can’t fly the plane. So it’s an idea I had b/c sometimes the best missile or fighter plane detector are the two eyes of the pilot and his back seater.
@astatine5781
@astatine5781 10 месяцев назад
@@foilist1 that’s true, there are plenty of 2 seaters that don’t have a set of controls or full controls for the back seater but I still don’t think we are considering all the potential problems with a back facing 2nd seat.
@modelermark172
@modelermark172 10 месяцев назад
Greetings from America! I'm 63, and I have been building plastic model kits since I was six. As an amateur aviation enthusiast, (kind of comes with the territory,) this is the FIRST I've ever heard of the CAC CA-23, from ANY source. This is a fascinating aircraft. I hope that some day, there will be a 1/72nd scale injection molded styrene kit of this fascinating Cold War Era aircraft. (All I could find online is a limited run resin kit.) Along with the Canadian CF-105, the British TSR.2, Argentina's Pulqui 2, and our own XF-103, XF-107, XF-108, and F-20; the CA-23 was a aircraft that we should have gotten. I hope that the CEOs at Airfix or MikroMir see this video.
@thickboi7570
@thickboi7570 10 месяцев назад
Holy crap, as an Australian I’m incredibly surprised that I haven’t heard about this iconic sounding jet.
@aerotuc
@aerotuc 10 месяцев назад
yes we had a lot of people with the"right stuff" then.But no reason we cant do the same today ,all we need to do id "boot out the backward thinking socialists.
@nfa_utube
@nfa_utube 9 месяцев назад
yeah because it's not nearly as iconic or prolific as the author makes it out to be
@grosvenorclub
@grosvenorclub 9 месяцев назад
@@nfa_utube Yes , I suspect it was much more in the "dreaming" stage than the Canadian and UK planes that got canned .
@nfa_utube
@nfa_utube 9 месяцев назад
@@grosvenorclub yeah, makes a good story though lol. and i say this as an aussie, even if it came to fruition it probably would have been shit considering that we were never actually any good at designing aircraft back then.
@SoloRenegade
@SoloRenegade 7 месяцев назад
@@nfa_utube the CA-15 wasn't nothing. For having a limited aerospace industry, rather impressive. And now working with the US on unmanned aircraft.
@jessebauer7372
@jessebauer7372 10 месяцев назад
As an American, I have great respect for the military legacy of the Australians during the World Wars. It would have been really cool to see this aircraft in service.
@exF3-86
@exF3-86 10 месяцев назад
So what about their legacies in Korea and Vietnam and Afghanistan and Iraq and..?
@FUS111ON_Vark
@FUS111ON_Vark 10 месяцев назад
​@@exF3-86he's american, the only thing they respect is their allies when it comes to technology as what i mostly see in other videos as well. But i think they support south korea as well. Just my opinion.
@mrblitzkrieg3376
@mrblitzkrieg3376 10 месяцев назад
​@@exF3-86 What does that have to do with the comment?
@mrblitzkrieg3376
@mrblitzkrieg3376 10 месяцев назад
​​@@FUS111ON_Vark Can't believe I have to say this but it's "he's" not "his"
@silentblackhole
@silentblackhole 10 месяцев назад
Thanks mate. We''ve always felt (as a whole I feel) the same about the USA's legacy and contribution :) We field a lot of US aircraft! One of my favs is the F-111!
@PaulR1200
@PaulR1200 10 месяцев назад
Even as a Kiwi, I am happy to acknowledge you Aussies were on to a winner! Beautiful design. The mere fact the UK killed it, proves it was superior to anything they had overall. Cheers NZCH
@mayortyranno4645
@mayortyranno4645 10 месяцев назад
Same here
@scotttait2197
@scotttait2197 10 месяцев назад
As a scot 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 (don't call myself British) I completely agree the English sense of self importance and this notion of "empire" rebadged as common wealth is enough to nake you puke , if it didn't suit their ideals or business dealings they ki-bosched it
@PhalanxFPV
@PhalanxFPV 10 месяцев назад
Yum i eat kiwi in Aus
@joshuabessire9169
@joshuabessire9169 10 месяцев назад
New Zeeland War Minister puts tin shed on crop duster, proceeds to drive Bear bombers back to Vadisvostok in fear. New Zeeland never invaded by USSR.
@stevenkerr1455
@stevenkerr1455 10 месяцев назад
Can’t have the Colonials having the better gear
@dannybouchard5520
@dannybouchard5520 10 месяцев назад
In Canada we made the same mistake with the Avro arrow. The Arrow could fly at mock 2 at 50000 ft and had the first fly by wire in any plane
@terrylong8894
@terrylong8894 10 месяцев назад
That was my initial thought too. The Arrow but Australia.
@gilmour6754
@gilmour6754 10 месяцев назад
The arrow was a little different in that it was designed as an interceptor and interceptors were less useful after nuclear strategy shifted away from bombers to ICBMS. It was a hell of a plane, but its role was no longer needed after nuclear first strikes shifted to missiles. They still should have done something with it. It was an impressive plane and killing the project basically destroyed Canada's aviation industry for decades.
@neildavies4674
@neildavies4674 10 месяцев назад
Mach 2
@mikepette4422
@mikepette4422 10 месяцев назад
@@neildavies4674 smoosh too
@juliane__
@juliane__ 10 месяцев назад
Only in production aircraft. There were fly by wire planes in the 40ies. Yes, fully electronically controlled.
@DoNotPushHere
@DoNotPushHere 10 месяцев назад
You gotta give credit to Australia for designing the first UAV with automatic "return to base" capabilities A swept wing design with asymmetrical lift and both rotating and translational wings that we know as... The boomerang (Boomerang enthusiast here)
@SoloRenegade
@SoloRenegade 7 месяцев назад
LOL The Boomerang is a neat plane, but the KA-15 is teh Australian aircraft of most interest to me personally.
@navneetkaur4763
@navneetkaur4763 Месяц назад
also doubles as a ucav, using kinetic energy and state-of-the-art homing tech to effectively uoset the target
@LiquidAudio
@LiquidAudio 10 месяцев назад
Mate, as an Aussie and an aviation lover, I'd never heard this fascinating story, thanks for sharing it. My Dad used to work for CAC back in the day.
@tonybonnici5920
@tonybonnici5920 10 месяцев назад
My Dad worked at GAF next door
@angushenry4882
@angushenry4882 9 месяцев назад
Pretty cool I currently work for BAA (CAC's successor)
@malusignatius
@malusignatius 10 месяцев назад
One thing I'd note that would have been a hindrance in the core design is the lack of an area-ruled fuselage. This severely restricts supersonic flight, but at the time of design this was not known about (it was only realised that giving the aircraft a 'coke-bottle waist' improved performance in the early/mid 1950s). It would have been interesting to see the design go to flight testing though, and maybe even see a revised version take flight with features like an intercept radar, the above modifications to the fuselage etc. I'm not saying it would have been a game-changer, but certainly an interesting design to see.
@andyman8630
@andyman8630 10 месяцев назад
i also noted this! the fuselage should have had a 'waist' at the wing roots in order for mach+
@pylon500
@pylon500 10 месяцев назад
That was noticed in the graphics, but one wonders if somewhere in the wind tunnel stage, maybe some Aussie boffin may have woken up to this point before that American guy at Convair did?
@AnthonyTolhurst-dw1nc
@AnthonyTolhurst-dw1nc 10 месяцев назад
Northrop F5 proves your point.
@hawkstable8889
@hawkstable8889 10 месяцев назад
11:47 The Royal Aircraft Establishment actually did question the Lightning's design for the very same reasons, but the design was proven to be ideal with the Short SB.5 test aircraft.
@Gaminggunzeller
@Gaminggunzeller 10 месяцев назад
Mate, that would've been really cool if we had this fighter jet made in Australia and what would've been cool back then if the Commonwealth Aircraft Corporation made commercial airliners for both Ansett and Qantas back in the day.
@flyingpizza7486
@flyingpizza7486 10 месяцев назад
Be thankful they cancelled it so no one died operating it
@CASA-dy4vs
@CASA-dy4vs 10 месяцев назад
@@flyingpizza7486lol pretty much every aircraft has a kill count besides a few that barely even fly for cost reasons even if it wasn’t cancelled it would probably get a normal death rate of like 8 people with early design crashes and a lot more in combat situations (pilots death not enemy)
@flyingpizza7486
@flyingpizza7486 10 месяцев назад
@@CASA-dy4vs yh but the difference is that thing would be a problem in service not only killing its test pilots but also fighter pilots
@CASA-dy4vs
@CASA-dy4vs 10 месяцев назад
@@flyingpizza7486 had the test pilots crashed without pilot error and entirely the aircraft I am pretty sure engineers would be crawling to find the mistake
@flyingpizza7486
@flyingpizza7486 10 месяцев назад
@@CASA-dy4vs the mistake is the entire plane. Can't really fix it, only replace it
@aaronleverton4221
@aaronleverton4221 10 месяцев назад
Lawrnece Wackett was an Aussie. Born in Queensland, died in New South Wales, flew with the Australian Flying Corps in WW1 worked in Victoria. He was knighted for his services to Australian aviation running the Commonwealth Aircraft Corporation (who designed this) designing the Wackett Trainer prior to WW2, overseeing the design and production of the Wirraway trainer/fighter-bomber, the design and production of the Boomerang fighter evolved from the Wirraway, In dealing with the BS reports about the CA23 he wasn't a member of the British government, he was the ultimate boss of the CA23 programme, as he had been for the cancelled Kangaroo fighter.
@TheRealNeill
@TheRealNeill 2 месяца назад
I'm mates with his great-grandson
@FinsburyPhil
@FinsburyPhil 10 месяцев назад
I think you're summary at the end of the video is about right. English Electric had completed its general arrangement drawings for a supersonic research fighter that would become the Lightning, in 1948 - so I don't think there was much in the way of influence when the CAC plans were circulated in 1953
@Treblaine
@Treblaine 10 месяцев назад
Australia has many military breakthroughs, like explosive reactive armor was pioneered in Australia.
@anothernamlesscommenter352
@anothernamlesscommenter352 10 месяцев назад
What do you mean by pioneered my friend as in invented? I thought the Soviets invented that?
@dwwolf4636
@dwwolf4636 10 месяцев назад
​​@@anothernamlesscommenter352One of the first into service maybe. The Aussies toyed with it in the later stages of WW2. Brits werent interested in it so it was dropped....
@thosdot6497
@thosdot6497 10 месяцев назад
Not just military. Our computing was also in the world forefront, with Sydney University's Silliac being more powerful than any other computer worldwide at time of completion - as was related to me, the long-serving conservative government decided a tech industry wasn't a national core strength and that we'd be better leaving that to the mother country. Not the only field that happened in. We had the Ikara anti-submarine missile-launched torpedo (like ASROC), the Malkara ATGM, etc. The quality of our ideas was second to none but once things moved on from solid-state electronics and so on, we couldn't really compete (but ... Metal Storm)
@tonybarnes3658
@tonybarnes3658 10 месяцев назад
​@@thosdot6497not to forget the CAC kangaroo. Also Australia was the third nation to successfully launch a satellite
@thosdot6497
@thosdot6497 10 месяцев назад
@@tonybarnes3658 - ah yes, Space! That was another major area that Britain said we didn't need to be in, and Bloody Menzies gave it all away.
@Cannibal666Corpse
@Cannibal666Corpse 10 месяцев назад
This story, like many others, is super-interesting. Thanks for the tales of the (never) forgotten birds. They deserve love, after all.
@Splattle101
@Splattle101 10 месяцев назад
At 10.15: Lawrence Wackett was one of the founding designers and technological pioneers of Commonwealth Aircraft Corporation. He was an aussie, not a member of the UK govt. He was responsible for selecting the North American trainer designs that became the CAC Wirraway & Boomerang, the Pratt & Whitney air cooled radials produced by CAC for the Beaufort, Beaufighter, Boomerang, etc, for selecting the Mustang as the next fighter for the RAAF, then selecting both the F-86 and then the Mirage III! He's about as central to Australian aviation as it's possible to be.
@jaymorris3468
@jaymorris3468 9 месяцев назад
Wasn't the other founding designer an Austrian?
@zachfpv4493
@zachfpv4493 9 месяцев назад
​@@jaymorris3468Fred David?
@divyanshuranjan2637
@divyanshuranjan2637 10 месяцев назад
This fighter could be very useful similar situation like "The Great Australian Emu War".
@captaindouchebag1703
@captaindouchebag1703 10 месяцев назад
Yep. Especially since emus can't fly! Though by this point Australia had made peace with the emus and began farming them.
@BatMan-oe2gh
@BatMan-oe2gh 10 месяцев назад
It still would have been too late for that particular War. The Emu's had won, and we just had to lick our wounds. But then we conned them by telling them if they stayed in these paddocks, we would feed them and look after them. They didn't realise they were concentration camps.
@BatMan-oe2gh
@BatMan-oe2gh 10 месяцев назад
@@angrysausage-qj9eg They got them from Kangaroos.
@BatMan-oe2gh
@BatMan-oe2gh 10 месяцев назад
@@angrysausage-qj9eg When people asked the soldiers of the 10th, they replied they got them from Kangaroos, just to screw with them. Aussie humour.
@BatMan-oe2gh
@BatMan-oe2gh 10 месяцев назад
@@angrysausage-qj9eg Hahaha, like it. I only knew about it as I was in the Aussie Army. Cheers
@Wedgetail14
@Wedgetail14 10 месяцев назад
I am so glad you brouught this Aussie design to light. These CGI animations breathe life into it! Our imaginations into what could have been are more vivid as a result!
@robertmansfield7656
@robertmansfield7656 10 месяцев назад
I'd love to have a DCS mod to fly.
@Wedgetail14
@Wedgetail14 10 месяцев назад
@@robertmansfield7656 YES! Or Microsoft Flight Simulator, I'd so fly that!
@FoundAndExplained
@FoundAndExplained 10 месяцев назад
Lovely comment
@FoundAndExplained
@FoundAndExplained 10 месяцев назад
How do we make this happen
@Wedgetail14
@Wedgetail14 10 месяцев назад
@@FoundAndExplained I'm not sure. But there's definitely a way or two.
@audacity60
@audacity60 10 месяцев назад
Also in 1953, Britain cancelled the supersonic variant of the Hawker Hunter. The P1083 would have had a 50 degree swept wing & a RR Avon jet with reheat. That gave the market for single engine supersonic Western fighter to the French Mirage, which Australia, among many others, bought.
@projectcolonialviper2094
@projectcolonialviper2094 10 месяцев назад
As an Aussie and aerospace enthusiast I don't know why I've not heard even a whisper about this project before! Huge missed opportunity, but thanks for sharing the story
@SoloRenegade
@SoloRenegade 7 месяцев назад
probably because it was purely a concept and speculation more than anything else. The XF-108 saw more development effort than this particular airplane. And neither were ever built.
@jeffslade1892
@jeffslade1892 10 месяцев назад
Yebbut the Lightning had been on the drawing board a lot longer (1948) and P1 prototype first flew in 1954. It had a much deeper 60° sweep to the wings and a thinner profile, and the very low all moving tail plane. I suspect CAC drew on the English Electric and Short Bros plans more than the other way around. Its first flight was later found to have exceeded Mach 1. It's actual performance was shrouded in secrecy for a long time, climb rate, max altitude, etc.
@robertmansfield7656
@robertmansfield7656 10 месяцев назад
The cac was on the drawing board at the same time. What gets my goat is that firsts the RAE slanders the CAC ca23, with an "appreciation document which they increase the weights by 2500 lb above " weight decrease the sewage area of the design they were comparing it to the Dh109 and then after the program is cancelled very politely ask if they can farm the data out to British companies. Screwed by the Brits. As well ask the UK RAE slow walking the high speed wind tunnel testing until after the cancellation. Yes the RAE were out for UK aircraft industry interests.
@robertmansfield7656
@robertmansfield7656 10 месяцев назад
Design studies of the CAC ca23 began in 48, and initial prototyping was delayed in 51 after the RAE slow walked the testing until 53 after it was cancelled, the Brits then had the gall that the information gained could be spread amongst the UK aviation industry. The letter for that is on file in the national archives, it is accessible digitally. Before you ask for proof. The low tail of lightning wasn't settled until later.
@jeffslade1892
@jeffslade1892 10 месяцев назад
@@robertmansfield7656 The independent all moving low level tailplane of the lightning was almost below the fuselage. The Lightning started as a private venture Teddy Petter design (by May 1947 and for at least a year before, the original requirement being E.24/43 (which led to the Miles M.42 and Bell X-1) dated from 1942 but that got cancelled) and that tailplane was there from the very start and gave it a roll rate and turn that nothing else could match, most still cannot. The Lightning is also unusual in having ventral fins. Watching a Lightning playing with a Mirage or Starfighter was like watching a hawk taking a pigeon. The ill fated experimental Short SB.5 with the high or low (nb) tailplane is far more like the CA.23 but flew in 1952. The SB.5 was used to test the new aerodynamics for the Lightning and probably the CA.23 too. The RAF and especially RAE did not trust the new concept of a low tailplane until tested, so RAE ordered the SB.5 up. Then the gov dragged their heels as usual and delayed the Lightning entering service until 1960.
@aussietaipan8700
@aussietaipan8700 10 месяцев назад
It is a real pity this aircraft never came to fruition, I reckon it would have been much like the colins class sub, a few tweaks here and there and then formidable aircraft is born. Thanks for bringing this to light mate.
@panzertank938
@panzertank938 10 месяцев назад
To be honest the design kinda reminds me of a vougth F-8 crusader but with the Wings slightly lower even though they were developed year's away from each other I love that physics just say will "be like him"
@izak5356
@izak5356 10 месяцев назад
You're extremely talented in multiple ways, cheers for the high quality entertainment mate.
@uflux
@uflux 10 месяцев назад
It doesn’t appear that the Australian designers understood the Whitcomb area rule. So there is no way it would have reached Mach 1.5 (It probably wouldn’t have even past Mach 1) The Convair F102 Delta Dagger had to be redesigned using that area rule, as it had been unable to reach Mach 1 although its design speed was Mach 1.2.
@aaronleverton4221
@aaronleverton4221 10 месяцев назад
The F100 Super Sabre was designed in the late-'40s and first flew in 1953, it made Mach 1.4 with a shape that looks a lot like the Whaleshark.
@NathanPa-xo3zj
@NathanPa-xo3zj 10 месяцев назад
Never underestimate plane by it's looking alone, let the speed's and manuver decided your opinions 😂
@Cooldude-ko7ps
@Cooldude-ko7ps 10 месяцев назад
@@aaronleverton4221perhaps it made Mach just by brute force?
@aaronleverton4221
@aaronleverton4221 10 месяцев назад
@@Cooldude-ko7ps Perhaps. It was also single-engined, while this was designed to carry two Rolls Royce Avons. I think the power would have pushed it straight through the transonic drag the Delta Dagger was hampered by.
@coreyandnathanielchartier3749
@coreyandnathanielchartier3749 8 месяцев назад
F102 was equipped with a 'temp' engine that was drastically lower in power than the airframe design called for. The 'coke bottle' shape is a complicated formula, and often doesn't remotely resemble a coke bottle shape.
@francocarrieri1988
@francocarrieri1988 10 месяцев назад
The thin swept wing went right back to Power Jets, Rugby, Warwickshire, UK, cerca1940, and the British Fairey Delta (wing) in 1956, was the first aircraft to reach 1132 mph. It's hard to see how the UK took ideas from an unrealised aircraft.
@hairydonuts6024
@hairydonuts6024 10 месяцев назад
Absolutely right.
@dtrex2255
@dtrex2255 10 месяцев назад
As an Aussie it definitely pains me to see the Ca-23 receive a fate like this, would've been one hell of a fighter
@longtsun8286
@longtsun8286 10 месяцев назад
Looks like a Mikoyan-Gurevich Ye-152A or a Shenyang J-8A.
@Plupsnup
@Plupsnup 10 месяцев назад
So happy you did my suggestion!
@chriskortan1530
@chriskortan1530 10 месяцев назад
Very interesting project that seems at least on par with other contemporary jets, if not more advanced. The problems were it was severely underarmed and didn't even have a radar gunsight let alone full radar. Adding the weight and altered aerodynamics of canons or at least more machine guns and radar would likely counter the any advantages it had.
@ThePolishBader
@ThePolishBader 10 месяцев назад
One Of The Coolest Fighters I Have Ever Seen.
@silentblackhole
@silentblackhole 10 месяцев назад
Thanks for telling this story! The draw designs were especially awesome!
@robertsnary472
@robertsnary472 10 месяцев назад
The Aussie version of the Avro Canada Arrow, similar result
@WolfeSaber9933
@WolfeSaber9933 10 месяцев назад
Looks like a twin engine MiG-21.
@Torth121
@Torth121 10 месяцев назад
The lightning ticks that box
@WolfeSaber9933
@WolfeSaber9933 10 месяцев назад
@@Torth121 You should take a deeper look.
@semiedgv
@semiedgv 10 месяцев назад
​@Torth121 does it tho?
@Plupsnup
@Plupsnup 10 месяцев назад
MiG copied CAC through espionage
@user-jj4vl2fn9g
@user-jj4vl2fn9g 10 месяцев назад
Yes, It looks surprisingly like the Chinese J-8 jet fighter. But with a slightly flatter fuselage.
@astro._gaming
@astro._gaming 10 месяцев назад
Imagine if this happened, the future might have been a whole different future 😕
@IMCDundee
@IMCDundee 10 месяцев назад
The EE Lightnings tail plane was proven to be the correct design after a separate test aircraft was made to test both the official T-tail and the low mounted tail plane, the T-tail was a potential disaster due to wash out, the CA-23 models used in the vid had no area ruling ,no wing fences or dogtooth notches, and the tail plane is mid fuselage mounted not low mounted. 4x 50 cals is pretty poor, when most were shifting to 20/30mm cannons, and if the UK pinched the design ,how come the EE lightning put the Avons (pronounced ay-von, not Aa-von BTW) one above the other. The design needed side (a la F104) or chin intakes (a la P1103) to accommodate the radar .
@7thsealord888
@7thsealord888 10 месяцев назад
As an Aussie with a keen interest in both history and aviation, I am shocked that I did not previously know of this.
@mrrolandlawrence
@mrrolandlawrence 10 месяцев назад
5:45 i think you will find the avons (100 series) were at least 7,500 lbs thrust each for a total of 15,000 lbs. the EE lightening had the 300 series which had 16,000 lbs per engine for a total of 32,000 lbs with reheat :) the EE lightening has its roots in the late 1940s with teddy petter getting requirements for his ideas in 1948 with ER103 and subsequently with the short SB5 of 1950. this does not diminish the brilliance of the aussie engineers or even sir hardman wishing a low risk & commonality of airframes across the empire.
@robertmansfield7656
@robertmansfield7656 10 месяцев назад
The CAC ca23 was going to use an afterburner. 9500 lb thrust. Although the RA 9 was available by 56 the expected production date with 9000 lb dry thrust . Honestly compared to the Avon sabre it is a quantum leap. We could have built, not last wars plane but for the next war.
@memofromessex
@memofromessex 10 месяцев назад
To note, English Electric did multiple studies on the exact configuration of the swept-wing (30%, 45%, 65%) and where the tail would go - annoying the bureaucrats in the process - before it completed the design of the Electric. I don't think it's a conspiracy.
@GregBland-zw9rc
@GregBland-zw9rc 10 месяцев назад
There we go. We Aussies were quick off the mark. Thanks for this. I served in the RAAF between 61-7- and have never heard of this before. In 66 I visited CAC in an a upper room there was a mockup of a CA31 delta wing super sonic trainer as a leadin to the Mirage that was coming on strength at the time. Thanks for the great viodeo. Keep it up. You could well do on on the CA31 another Aussie aircraft that never was.
@johndavenport7281
@johndavenport7281 10 месяцев назад
Don't forget the UK's BAC TSR-2 fighter project that went through a similar set of circumstances that beset this and the Avro Canadian jet planes. Life is full of these "whatif" stories that normally turn out to have complicated reasons for ultimate failure. I found the video very interesting to watch but will not be looking back with regret at what might have been.
@deanspanos8210
@deanspanos8210 10 месяцев назад
Just like with Avro Arrow, count on the U.S. to just come in and-wait, what?
@edwinkjellzahn
@edwinkjellzahn 10 месяцев назад
The real crime is that no one thought to call it the Chunderjet
@clarencehopkins7832
@clarencehopkins7832 10 месяцев назад
Excellent stuff bro
@jesusplays7079
@jesusplays7079 10 месяцев назад
Always enjoy the content
@user-ov7dh6lj2b
@user-ov7dh6lj2b 10 месяцев назад
There ls a rule in aviation that if aircraft has more than 50% innovations in compare to previous model it's doomed to fail. This plane has like 200% comparing to preveous Australian planes
@Edax_Royeaux
@Edax_Royeaux 10 месяцев назад
So the B-2 Stealth Bomber averts this by being the first of it's kind?
@deegsupreme3796
@deegsupreme3796 10 месяцев назад
@@Edax_Royeauxthe B-2 wasn’t exactly a unique design - as it was built based on the design of the preceding XB-35/YB-49 which itself was unable to complete development.
@janksolid
@janksolid 10 месяцев назад
Hi, mate. More top quality content as usual. It's pronounced Ayvon. It's named after a British river, as are a lot of RR engines.
@clasdauskas
@clasdauskas 10 месяцев назад
Actually, it IS pronounced 'Affon' (which is Welsh for River; imaginative of the poms: River River); 'Ayvon' is an American brand of cosmetics.
@stevenkerr1455
@stevenkerr1455 10 месяцев назад
He went the Western Australian pronunciation lol
@YouTube_user3333
@YouTube_user3333 10 месяцев назад
This author doesn’t give a rats arse about correct pronunciation. He has been told repeatedly. There’s even apps to get it right. Yet he still cocks it up.
@PixelThe2nd
@PixelThe2nd 10 месяцев назад
Amazing Video! I would love to see you make a video on the CA-15 Kangaroo
@Doggeslife
@Doggeslife 10 месяцев назад
That spine down the back and the near 90° angle where it meets the main fuselage would have made the plane look like a bright spotlight on radar by forming a near perfect retro-reflector. The B-1A bomber had a smaller spine that was removed on the B-1B as well as receiving special intakes to make it less observable.
@tonygedalovitch8958
@tonygedalovitch8958 10 месяцев назад
I am a bit confused by your time line, English Electric had pretty much settled on the basic design of the Lighting by 1949 including the wing shape and low set tail plane, this was the same year that Australia was in talks about buying Panthers from the US, so it must have been after this that the layout of the CA23 was decided, so how did EE steal the ideas you mentioned when they had already submitted their design. There are too many Videos saying that this plane was the best in the world but never flew, the main reason these projects didn't make it to production is always that there was another option that was, better, cheaper or already proven.
@ulardox8629
@ulardox8629 10 месяцев назад
The Argentinian IA-33 Pulqui II suffered a simmilar destiny. I understand the pain of seeing your national production aircraft cancelled when was one of the top fighters of the age.
@Samuel_613
@Samuel_613 10 месяцев назад
Could you please make a video about the EFW N-20?
@Jedi.Toby.M
@Jedi.Toby.M 10 месяцев назад
God bless those aussies! Being a Canidian, I love my neighbors from the other hemisphere...while we were playing around with our aircraft procurement nightmare, those loveable Australians hooked us up with surplus jets we badly needed while my government was doing....whatever nonsense it does to get us exactly what we said we couldn't afford. Another excellent video! Thank you for excellent entertainment, and detailed information! Cheers!
@AnthonyTolhurst-dw1nc
@AnthonyTolhurst-dw1nc 10 месяцев назад
F18’s?
@anothernamlesscommenter352
@anothernamlesscommenter352 10 месяцев назад
The longer and longer I live the more I realize Canada and Australia are mirror reflections of each other. And today I now have found out that our Aussie brothers have even had their own Avro Arrow. This just adds to the long list of similarities we both have in my opinion I believe that there is no other nation to Canada that is more of the same as us other than Australia. We both are common wealth country's ,we both have vast land that's underpopulated ,we both were founded by English people, we both punched above our weight class in WW2, Australia is a country known for extreme heat and Canada is known for it's extreme cold, Australia is mostly hard for big city's to exist in due to large amounts of desert and so is Canada except due to Artic tundra, We both were used as shock troopers in both world wars, have many famous talented celebrities and singers that come from our small country's, have many immigrants, are similar in military power and GDP. I could go on longer but basically we're so similar we're almost twins
@markfryer9880
@markfryer9880 10 месяцев назад
Nicely said and I believe that you are quite correct. There are many similarities between Australia and Canada in population size vs land mass, history, culture, GDP and many connections were formed by the many Australian Air Crew training in Canada during WWII. Mark from Melbourne Australia
@anothernamlesscommenter352
@anothernamlesscommenter352 10 месяцев назад
@@markfryer9880 People will do what I'm about to do with just about any country but factually speaking and sentimentally 🇨🇦🤝🇦🇺
@anothernamlesscommenter352
@anothernamlesscommenter352 10 месяцев назад
@@Rodney_1984 Thanks I'm glad to see Aussies feel the same about us Cunucks as I do your people
@sealteamsix1784
@sealteamsix1784 10 месяцев назад
never been to canada, but in my opinion australia is so close to north america in general that visiting there feels just like going to another state or something.
@Ghostriderr25
@Ghostriderr25 10 месяцев назад
After watching this I’m convinced now. Australia really is the world’s penal colony.
@GLEN1061
@GLEN1061 10 месяцев назад
Always has been! Just ask the Aussie State and Federal Police that monitor these comments 24/7!
@limescaleonetwo3131
@limescaleonetwo3131 10 месяцев назад
Outstanding video m8!
@rohittaurus911
@rohittaurus911 10 месяцев назад
An absolute gem of a YT channel.
@reddeath4242
@reddeath4242 10 месяцев назад
Im getting serious Avro Arrow vibes from this project. Poor commonwealth defense projects :(
@lootrat4556
@lootrat4556 10 месяцев назад
I think the mig-19 is closer to the ca-23 than the su-7
@parrotraiser6541
@parrotraiser6541 10 месяцев назад
In many ways, the criteria were similar to those of the Canadian Avro Arrow, but more realistic. It actually had weapons, and avoided the design baggage that came with Mach 2.2.
@mickymikehodge3510
@mickymikehodge3510 10 месяцев назад
interesting video never heard of the CA23 a nice piece on Aussie aviation history not many knew about
@AnitaWilliams-gn9tt
@AnitaWilliams-gn9tt 10 месяцев назад
Hey guys, I know nothing about the market and I'm looking to invest, any help? As well who can I reach out to?
@Wahabadams
@Wahabadams 10 месяцев назад
Making touch with financial advisors like Julio Castillo he can assist you restructure your portfolio, would be a very creative option. Personal financial management will be crucial to navigating the next difficult times.
@Tallulahdoris
@Tallulahdoris 10 месяцев назад
That's true. Its really needful for beginners not to settle for videos alone or they will see themselves losing all their money just like me when I newly started trading with this videos here on RU-vid
@admin....1727
@admin....1727 10 месяцев назад
He's awesome he has managed my investment so well and my weekly returns are mind blowing. Could someone kindly leave his details here?
@JackBremdom
@JackBremdom 10 месяцев назад
HE'S ALWAYS ACTIVE ON HIS TELEGRAMS APP WITH THE PROVIDED NAME 👇
@Castillolowis
@Castillolowis 10 месяцев назад
.
@adamfrazer5150
@adamfrazer5150 10 месяцев назад
The Arrow, the TSR-2 and this amazing Australian jet, join the ranks of legendary designs that all met undeserved, disheartening fates.
@adamfrazer5150
@adamfrazer5150 10 месяцев назад
When the TSR-2 was showing promise......some visitors arrived in England, politely 'suggesting' they buy the amazing, the astounding, the totally-not-a-lame-duck F-111 !! The Aussie's had a hit or their hands and........so odd, they too receive a visit from some friends, this time politely 'suggesting' they buy the F100. No need to pursue your own national achievements and contribute to our collective understanding, nope. Just buy from your (ahem) 'friends'. "Oh, while we're here, we'll just go ahead and leave this brochure - don't worry, we'll give you time to save up. It'll be called the F-35 and I'm telling you folks, it'll be a bargain" 🤤
@TheRogueAdventurers
@TheRogueAdventurers 10 месяцев назад
I'd love to see you take on Flyout, if you can get early access or when the game comes out, it would be awesome to see you make some of these weird planes in Flyout and see how they handle
@GTrainRx7
@GTrainRx7 10 месяцев назад
I love the "Wait don't skip..." as you click skip, LOL!
@_TheUpsetGerman
@_TheUpsetGerman 10 месяцев назад
The Su-7 wasnt a copy, it was a competing design to the MiG-21, which had just taken the MiG-19 airframe and reworked the wings, which took from the MiG-17, which took from the MiG-15..... either way the Su-7 got its design from MiG, not the Australians. There was also the Su-9, which was closer to the actual MiG-21.
@stevenkerr1455
@stevenkerr1455 10 месяцев назад
Often wondered why the only pictures of the CA-23 were to be found from Russian sources
@robertmansfield7656
@robertmansfield7656 10 месяцев назад
The Russian one come from older web pages which you can find on way back machine. Their are other images from the national archives and more original photos from the cac program at Moorabbin airport museum. boxes of designs and calculations their. I have too get back to Moorabbin on day.
@dsr0116
@dsr0116 10 месяцев назад
With that intake, I might have called it a basking shark. Funny how if you watch the PBS documentary on battle of the X planes, it seems a major factor for Lockheed being awarded the contract for the F-35 was that it looked good (and the Boeing looked pretty ugly). Very interesting how focus on function over form can lead to impressive specs.
@rajdmohan
@rajdmohan 10 месяцев назад
In electronics we have a concept called polarization (horizontally / vertically) - EE Lightning - Vertically polarized V/s the CA-23 - Horizontally polarized that is in terms of engine layout in fuselage.
@seanlander9321
@seanlander9321 10 месяцев назад
Australia is interesting, the more migrants who make it their home, the less it manufactures, and also the less influence and power it has in the world. Proves the point that smaller more unified countries like Sweden for example have a social philosophy of cohesion that achieved far more.
@seanlander9321
@seanlander9321 10 месяцев назад
@@angrysausage-qj9eg Not necessarily correct. Again the example is Sweden where labour is also expensive but as it’s partnered with government, Sweden is as a consequence one of the worlds most industrialised societies. That was also the Australian model. Then the population was tripled but industry has been reduced, to almost an irrelevance, so the question becomes, why have all those additional people?
@guyh9992
@guyh9992 10 месяцев назад
You are comparing apples and oranges. Australia has the 13th largest GDP in the world comparable with countries with much larger populations in Russia, South Korea, Mexico and Spain. Sweden has the 25th. Australia has considerable influence in the Indo-Pacific by virtue of its GDP, military strength and strategic location between the Indian and Pacific Oceans. On the other hand, Sweden is a small country in Europe with limited influence in the Indo-Pacific.
@707liner8
@707liner8 10 месяцев назад
I'd never heard of this plane before this video, and all I can do is agree with the various comments below on how Australia, Canada, and ultimately the UK, all ended up 'abandoning' world leading designs of the day and wonder at what could have been with a bit more collaboration. You only have to look at Airbus today to see how that can play out . . . .
@_-Freeman-_
@_-Freeman-_ 9 месяцев назад
Fascinating, I've never heard of this before.
@TheSybermedic
@TheSybermedic 10 месяцев назад
I love the looks of the CA-23 in your video. I wonder what wind tunnel testing would have revealed. The body design reminds me of the F-102 and that had issues going super sonic. It wasn't until the F-106 and "Area Rule" the the Ultimate Interceptor came into its own.
@girthbloodstool339
@girthbloodstool339 10 месяцев назад
Actually, it was just the YF-102 prototype that was not area ruled: the second prototype, the YF-102A, was so altered and could fly supersonically, at mach 1.22.
@Wonkt
@Wonkt 10 месяцев назад
Never forget Avro Arrow
@stephenphilp1380
@stephenphilp1380 10 месяцев назад
Excellent video. If only things could have been different.
@glenn_r_frank_author
@glenn_r_frank_author 10 месяцев назад
at the end of the video... isn't the Boeing program called "Loyal Wingman" not just "project wingman"? Great video once again. I had never heard of this fighter jet. Sad that once again bureaucracy won out over innovation!
@raviscott4853
@raviscott4853 10 месяцев назад
Correct. Loyal Wingman
@badrinair
@badrinair 10 месяцев назад
NIce comic themed art work mate. I lik that .
@silentblackhole
@silentblackhole 10 месяцев назад
Dude, watching this video on this Australian aircraft and you mentioning you were Austraian (duh) along with your distinctive voice, I only just made the connection to your other RU-vid videos on space that I've seen!! Anyway I'v really enjoyed it, and I hope to bump into you here down under! Until next time... Marcus ;)
@canicheenrage
@canicheenrage 9 месяцев назад
Had never heard of it. Very interesting. Though "The year is 1955." 1956, the Mirage III was making its first flight...
@ianyoung106
@ianyoung106 9 месяцев назад
Great stuff as always. My dad did his apprenticeship (electrical) at CAC in the early 50s. Pretty cool this was all brewing in the background. I have some tools he made from left over bits of Merlin engine. A pity we couldn't have an indigenous jet like this!
@robertmansfield7656
@robertmansfield7656 9 месяцев назад
The CAC was brewing up some interesting stuff in the fifties/ sixties. The Menzies gov didn't want to rock the boat with the Brits or the Yanks. Menzies being very much an empire man. In the early 1950 the notion of ww3 not being far off is evident in the national archives.
@ianyoung106
@ianyoung106 9 месяцев назад
@@robertmansfield7656Makes sense - we were a lot more dependent back then. I had no idea CAC was so innovative. Fast forward... the notion of ww3 not being far off is back.
@DominusRexDK
@DominusRexDK 10 месяцев назад
I do like many of these cold war designs, both the ones that happened and didn't happen. this one is a real cool looking one.
@NSAspyvans
@NSAspyvans 9 месяцев назад
Surprised it didn't use the Hispano MK5 instead of the browning .50 cal. Sad that the plane didn't make it to production but at least we got the CAC Saber
@Rogesindustries
@Rogesindustries 10 месяцев назад
Id tlike to that same “swatting the flys away from my tinny” attitude brought back. We are a country super rich in resources, extremely rich in talent, full to the brim in pride and I believe that’s there’s nothing Australian/Australians should be buying from overseas. Unfortunately that ship has long sailed but doesn’t mean that some things can be taken back and made our own again. Aussie Aussie Aussie. Thanks for the share F&E 🙏🏻
@HypnoticChronic1
@HypnoticChronic1 10 месяцев назад
Out of curiosity would you possibly consider doing a Bell/Boeing Quad TiltRotor video, I've always found it to be quite the interesting idea despite it never getting off the drawing board.
@marcbrasse747
@marcbrasse747 10 месяцев назад
As presented here it misses area ruling. In short: the shape including the wings and tailplanes should have no sudden changes in it’s cross section area because this massively increases supersonic drag. Thats’s why the “cola bottle” style later became fashionable. The US learned this the hard and VERY expensive way when designing the Delta Dart / Delta Dagger line. Accepting the rest of the story it is very improbable the designers would have avoided this problem. A design without windtunnel testing is always speculative to a degree.
@jayartz8562
@jayartz8562 10 месяцев назад
That tunnel along the top of the fuselage narrows as the wings go out, like the Lightning, which could definitely break the sound barrier.
@kilicm
@kilicm 10 месяцев назад
"You call that a knife, THIS is a knife" nice Crocodile Dundee quote.
@seavixen125
@seavixen125 10 месяцев назад
At first from the thumbnail i thought the video was on the supermarine 545, but I'm pleasantly surprised to hear about plane from across the ditch that i hadn't heard of before.
@hairydonuts6024
@hairydonuts6024 10 месяцев назад
"Strikingly similar SU-7" er, that's stretching things a little isn't it mate?! Apart from being nothing like it (Single-seat, single-engine, swept-wings etc) nose intakes were very common options for trans-sonic & early supersonic jets fighters, especially for Soviet designs. As for the lightning, that was a test-bed turned into a fighter: it's lineage can be traced back even further than this thing. That video relay system sounds like a disaster waiting to happen, & the armament seriously deficient, even against, earlier machines, like the Mig-17, Mig-19 etc (which is waaay closer to this beast, but no way a copy) . I think you're letting your Ozzie pride cloud your judgement, mate.
@Phantom_Edits7203
@Phantom_Edits7203 10 месяцев назад
Did not know this, and i'm Australian!!! Thanks Found & Explained.
@namehere4519
@namehere4519 9 месяцев назад
"Where did my 5 fridges go?" Me with the suspiciously 5 fridge shaped stomach:
@NSASpyVan
@NSASpyVan 10 месяцев назад
As an aussie you should make a video on the CAC SABRE.
@jchpeff
@jchpeff 10 месяцев назад
Wow!! I had no idea. I knew that CAC did a lot of work but didn't know about this
@catallaxy
@catallaxy 6 месяцев назад
It is interesting that we had a similar story in Canada with our Canadian Avro Arrow fighter which was also considered to be advanced. Suddenly, the project was cancelled.
@ALEX70077
@ALEX70077 10 месяцев назад
please do a vid on the CAC CA-17
@Cjm794
@Cjm794 9 месяцев назад
Ironically the British had there own similar story for a plane called the TSR-2 which was meant to be our version of Americas f-111. Even though it went a bit further into development compared to this aircraft the stars never aligned for it and it never got past test flights. Still tho. Such a beautiful aircraft from the Aussies and I’m sorry we helped bring it down.
@randomperson8695
@randomperson8695 10 месяцев назад
I'm no expert and this is my very first time seeing this aircraft but I have to say it looks like a A-7 Corsair II had a baby with a Mig 21. Which I think is quite a compliment to the Commonwealth Aircraft Co.
@lqr824
@lqr824 10 месяцев назад
Interesting to hear about the plane. Tech was moving so fast at that time that I think it'd have been obsolete the day it went into service though--just as many American fighters were too. There were a lot of cool-looking aircraft that were simply a bad fit to fast-changing requirements, whether the Avro Arrow, the BAC TSR, or North American Rapier.
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