Anyone who's been near a fighter jet maneuvering like this knows just how painfully loud these wondrous marvels are. Hearing these and knowing rockets like the RS25s on the Shuttle are significantly louder is both frightening and exciting at the same time.
I got TAD'd to Miramar during the last Tomcat offload from the Nimitz. Iirc. Did flight deck and perimeter cleaning with a hottie SeaBee PO to oversee in her truck. I helped dismantle and relocate the actual bar and tables/chairs of the Top Gun officers club there though I've never been to the Nevada facility.
I used to work on a farm in Tennessee and we'd be out in the hayfield on lunch and every day for about months there were a group of 4 F22s that would chase each other through the mountains and down the valley where at the end of it was our hayfield. One day they came down the valley and split right at the top of the mountain. 2 broke off to the right and the other 2 kept coming at us at mach Jesus. As they came over one went inverted over us and it was the the coolest thing I'd ever seen.
Agree!! Human manufactured aircraft are valued and appreciated by people across the galaxy. It must be scary fun to rip across the sky in an F22, with no inertial dampening whatsoever…earth pilots are a special breed indeed. 😼
Awesome! I had the same view once but a lot closer, two Blue Angels came around from the show and passed each other again right over my head. I know the pilots saw me because I was standing on a cart in a field, waving like mad, trying to watch both planes at the same time and when I realized what was going to happen it was wild. The planes were close enough I could see rivets. Thrill of a lifetime :) Kudos for some excellent footage!
The guy filming gets an A+ for filming in landscape, staying on a moving target, and keeping the phone steady. Great Job!! would love to see a jet do this in person too. Airshows are neat but seeing it in 'the wild' is somehow even better.
I have a vivid memory of a particular incident during my trial period at a construction site in Norway. As you may know, Norway is known for its breathtaking mountains and valleys. On that day, a startling event occurred that captured everyone's attention. Suddenly, a deafening sonic boom reverberated through the air, causing a momentary panic as if the world were about to end. However, we soon discovered that the source of this intense sound was an F-22 aircraft flying through the valley. The unique topography of our region, with its majestic mountains, contributed to the amplification of the sound, creating an exhilarating experience that sent an adrenaline rush through my body.
Sometimes I wish I didn't live my entire life around military installations. This is everyday stuff for a lot of us, and its hard to appreciate just how amazing it is.
That isn’t a military exercise, it’s an F-22 demo flight flown by an Air Force demo pilot. Where the plane is flying straight in the distance is most likely over the runway at a nearby Air Force Base. Military aircraft are exempt from the altitude restrictions civilian pilots must follow.
Who would name their child "Alexa"..... f'n tards nowadays. Glue a set of fingers and ears on the backdoor ChiComm / NSA surveillance device in your home.
After all these years of having the F-22 it's still awe inspiring to see in action. It's a testament to just how amazing the aircraft rly is. As the Brits would say.. what a fkn legend!
@@Theblacksmithe87 No, he means the plane was traveling below the speed of sound. Have to go above the speed of sound for a sonic boom, and that plane wasn't traveling fast enough. I doubt they were traveling 100 mph, but they were traveling under 760 to 767 mph.
I live right beside the blue ridge mountains and the jets fly way lower than that, I dont guess they touch the tree tops, but the tree tops all move a lot when one goes over them
What a great experience for you all. I grew up around military aircraft flying overhead -- North Island and Miramar in San Diego -- with this bringing back some memories of the 60's.
@G Sterling not really. not everyone is a fucking nerd like us youtube commenters and studies aircraft because we have most likely no jobs. a large amount of people probably don't know what an aircraft stall is.
I used to see this type of things all the time! And my fav part was when they fly by house and go 90 degree upward. Sleeping in afternoon was a nightmare because you never know when this thing comes
Dustin Shower The guy was talking about Guile from Street Fighter. Guile was off screen showing some of the neighbors his signature move. The fighter jet flying over head was just a coincidence.
Spooder No kidding and the fact that no US Military aircraft can exceed or even approach supersonic speeds within the US, save for areas under the control of the DOD. As noted this plane was flying just above its stall speed, meaning no sonic boom, just powerful and loud engines.
@@cameraman655 Indeed. I experienced a low-level supersonic pass on a carrier day cruise, and we had to sail 15 miles out to sea, before they could do it.
Yeah that made me LOL! I was watching an air show at Miramar NAS in San Diego (ummmm a few years ago 🙄) when an F-14 went supersonic over the tarmac. It broke a lot of windows in the neighborhood.
i'm used to seeing commercial jets fly and turn. To see a fighter jet make turn was impressive. Must be a proud time to watch this in a neighbour hood.
Years ago, in my town with 500.000 residents, Mig-29 broke the sound barrier.. All windows in town was shattered. Speed was above 1,2 Mach. This F22 is bellow 1 Mach.
When I was nine and growing up on USAF bases, a base commander got re-assigned. When he left the base, he flew a B-58 Hustler about 500 feet above the officer's housing area while I was outside watching. Some windows got broken. The entire universe shook. It was the greatest thing I'd ever seen.
I went to school in New Orleans and I had f 15 E flying over campus all the time. Amazing noise as they do low passes but I have never seen a 22 do low passes like that. Such a beautiful aircraft
Lol sonic boom funny i didnt see nobodys glass blow out of there house ....that range u here a sonic boom everyone in that neiborhood would be windowless lmfaorof
We live near Edwards AFB and about 7 miles from Plant 42, an AF maintenance facility in Calif. One day, we were sitting on our porch swing in our back yard when a B-1 Bomber came right over our house with full AB burning. Couldn't have been more than 500-600 feet. The sound was incredible. Blue flame coming from each engine. I'm told that the B-1 can be flown like a fighter.
Lol sebody went super Sonic at low altitude when I lived in Virginia Beach. Sounded like a fucking Canon went off from inside house and I was like a mile away. People closer had house windows break.
This video is gold! - Here Shawn, have a beer - You gotta put some man in your kid. "I know, he is afraid of his own shadow - Alexa, put your finger in your ears - Here comes the sonic boom *while Raptor Pilot hears the Stall warning sounding off in the cockpit*
The F-22 has a high angle of attack and post-stall maveuvers while maintaining complete control. You witnessed it in this video. This is an amazing warmachine.
@@alexanderzerka8477 It's all about air supremacy. The Japanese intend to blend characteristics of the Raptor F-22 with the F-35 to make their own air supremacy fighter. For tactical control beneath the umbrella of air supremacy, the USA will deploy light attack aircraft at much lower expense that the Raptor.
Hahhaa exactly.. "Put some man in your kid" Yet he tells his daughter two seconds later to cover her ears from a sonic boom thats never coming!!... 🤣🤣🤣 crazy how people just dont realise their own actions and the consequences of.
It's a once in a life time event, you will never see this again, if it is to fly back to you, you will here the sonic.boom, you and your whole family out to hear the Sonic boom, you better buy your finger in your ears🤣😂🤣
I live right next to PAX Naval base in Maryland. My shop is literally right across the street. I get to see and hear planes all day. I swear, when we all just start WW3, I won't notice because I'm so used to the noise of 40+ fighters a day. It'll be when the shockwave from the nuclear bomb is about to hit me that I'll be like, "Well shit."
As someone who has spent the majority of their adult life working around military jets it's easy to forget just how amazing and inspiring they are to the general public who is very rarely exposed to the raw power of fast jets.
@Leonardo Santuario Your response paints you as the 12 year old lol. These machines are incredible, and it's just contemplating the marvel of engineering, how is that an unreasonable thing to be impressed by?
LICKHER&STICKHER INTHEPINK Well I mean considering your name is Lick her and stick her in the pink and you’re complaining about the way a grown man filmed a video that you’re just lucky enough to watch instead of having bullets come after you in Afghanistan I’d say you might not want to go around so publicly questioning people’s intelligence.
Reminds me when I lived beside Oceana Naval Base in Virginia Beach back in the day lol. Took awhile to get used to F-14s flying over my house every hour, but eventually I could sleep right through it lol.
Wow, nice clip of this. I love under the approach to Moffet in Northern California and a few F-22's came in a couple weeks ago. I think there were 4. They come in on a hard turn over my house, straighten out a half mile east. When they are going this slow it almost sounds like the sky is tearing apart. I am used to it, but a lot of my neighbors are new residents. It always freaks them out the first time. Then you have the b17s or b24s for the heritage weekend. That sounds like four sputtering mustangs flying over your house.
The f-22 has an odd maneuver it does that it can only do thanks to its thrust vectoring it can do this flat spin where its just hovering and spinning. Then when they exit that maneuver they power through and get to like 450 knots within 4 seconds its crazy
@@johnnyw7008 Definitely impressive but nothing odd. Russian jets are doing thrust vector since three decades. F-22 was the response against it. But my god F-22 is an beauty. My top three are Su 35 Terminator, Rafale F4 and F-22. The predators to watch out for.
@@SoumendraBagh The F-22 wasn't designed just because of some weird useless tricks the Russians could do lol, super-maneuverability is useless at subsonic trickshow speeds. It was designed intently to out maneuver any available super maneuverable aircraft that they had or may develop, and integrate stealth technology. Beat anything in the sky.
Am I the only one that tears up seeing fighters fly? Support from above saved my grandpa back in WW2 a few times, if it weren’t for them in the sky I wouldn’t be here
We were at an air show one time a few years back and my dad knew someone at the airbase. So he walked us through to his office which included seeing armed guards and a F-35 before it was in service. I didn’t know at the time how valuable that experience was at the time. I remember another plane in that hangar but I forgot what it was tho.
Pretty sure when they're flying over residential areas like that, at low altitudes, they're not allowed to fly fast enough to break the sound barrier. The sonic booms would shatter much of the glass in that area.
Repent to Jesus Christ! “But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.” Matthew 6:33 NIV G
I lived on Edwards Air Force base in California. Sonic booms over your house , even, at low latitude, will not break windows or eardrums. The T.V. show called Myth Busters showed by example that the window breaking idea is pure fiction.
@@ibgrimes8706 ...the sky is blue! And this plane is still going way too fucking slow to create a sonic boom, like the doofus in the video said was about to happen. So what's your point bro bra bruh?
Very cool! Every year we have Thunder Over Michigan and usually the Blue Angels or the USAF Thunderbirds fly over my house several times. I get a rush every time I see them, it never gets old.
I'm lucky enough to live in a area in the UK where the RAF test jets and do their practice. Every 2 or 3 days I get to see the jets flying over the ocean doing crazy maneuvers. Sometimes a HUGE military cargo plane flys about 200ft over my house. The first time it happened I genuinely thought I was going to die. I thought it was a passenger plane about it crash because it was so loud.
@@supercarsnaviation6148 Depends on where you're stationed. I was at Kadena in Okinawa and we had a bunch of 22s, 35s, and 15s (and the last few Japanese F-4s, beautiful planes) flying every day. Some bases will only see transport craft.
Damn you’re lucky, when I was in the Air Force (1989-2004), the only jets we saw and heard on a daily basis were eagles, vipers, and in Iraq and the Gulf, the occasional Hornet and Tomcat
Nothing else sounds like the F22. I dunno if its the shape of the exhaust or what, but yeah. It's in it's own category for sound. It's in it's own category for a LOT of things actually.
Went to an airshow back in 2022 where the F-22 Demo Team was performing. Hearing it fly overhead is phenomenal and its something ill never forget. Oh, and its extremely loud lol.
I’ll never forget, I was in our pool real late, out in rural central California, close to 1am. This was around the time North Korea was doing some rocket testing and saber rattling in 2019. Two Jets flew so damn low and fast overhead and I never felt more safe in my entire life at that moment.
I think he was full of adrenaline and assumed the lack of noise at that bit to be due to a sonic boom. This kinda shit is why I’d never post online, everyone is an armchair expert after a comfortable google search
Kzero I agree. Also, I don’t think ANY sonic booms happen over the United States anymore. I remember reading about 2 things: 1. The Concorde SST which was plagued by noise complaints from the few cities it operated in due to the sonic booms of its “SuperSonic Transport” (SST). 2. Perhaps during the 1960’s (?) there was some government testing where they regularly flew supersonic aircraft over populated areas to measure the public’s tolerance for sonic booms. The feedback was overwhelmingly negative and the project ended. I’m sure some aviation enthusiast will recall what the specifics were.
Go to Tindal Air Force Base near Pensacola Fl. and the blue angels will do it over the water in-front of our hotel. Best way to wake up at 7am every morning
I used to work at a car dealership close to an airport. One morning at 7 A.M. a whole squadron of these guys started taking off and the whole building shook like it was an earthquake. The sound is something you have to experience first hand for sure
He's flying over a residential of thousands of homes with childs at home, possibly weekend of holidays, and he's driving something that is heard from miles away, no shit he knows he got an audience 😧
Not seen one of these live yet, but I live in hope that I will. Best thing not at an airshow I saw performing for 'spectators' was two F-15's dogfighting. They were over our home, and others, and one of them got low enough I could see the pilot as he whizzed by. The noise was very loud but glorious to hear. The sound of freedom. These people were very lucky.
100%. The sensors/cameras on those jets can easily pick up that small group of people standing in the yard at that distance. Cool of the pilot to recognize and bring the jet closer the second at what sounded like 100% thrust. Im sure if any of us was a pilot and had clearance for thise maneuvers that close/low to residential area, we'd all do the same lol. Those kids (and parents too) will always have this memory of the F22 for the rest of their lives, and could be the seed planted in those kids to become a future pilot
Thank you for this! This plane is an engineering masterpiece. It is the single, deadliest fighter plane ever invented. It has the radar cross-section of a GNAT. It sends chills of terror through our enemies. If used in Ukraine without starting WWIII, that war would be over very quickly. If a Russian Mig went up against it the conversation would go like this: "Ivan! Do you see the Raptors anywhere?" "No Gorky! I thought I saw one to the west, but now............" "Ivan. Do you copy?? Ivan!!"
I love experiencing how loud jets are and then thinking about that level in Ace Combat 7 where you have to fly down a canyon avoiding the spotlights so the enemy doesn’t know you’re coming. *FWOOOOOOOOOOOOOORHHHRHMMMMMM* “What was that?! … Probably nothing.”
Speed of sound is around 765/770 mph (aprox 1235km/h) = Mach 1 The guy recording is a bit caught up, you see the shockwave before you hear the "sonic boom" (passing through the sound barrier generates the shockwave)... And you could literally see no shockwave lmao. Unless he thought the pilot was going to speed up to Mach 1 when he maneuvered the jet into the point he says "here comes the sonic boom"
Todays kids are delicate snowflakes. They get a medal for just showing up. For Christ sakes parents, life will eat you up and spit you out...prepare your kids for that.
I live in Norfolk, VA, work all over the 7 cities. Mostly in VA Beach you can just watch them fly by in singles or doubles, cant recall if Ive seen more than 2 at once, but its legit constant all day like every 5 minutes roughly. Can barely hear your co workers sometimes. Its a awesome sight. Shear sound and power behind that thing is insane lol..
@@aesieaiyahcloe They wouldn't do that period over a normal residential area, in Aus it's illegal unless they are over a certain designated area and or it's war time or responding to a threat etc. Pretty sure similar rules apply in the US.
@@SherLock55 Correct. We're reconsidering establishing corridors for the new supersonic passenger planes, which somehow reduce the ground effects of going supersonic. Our ban was partially responsible for Concorde not gaining a larger foothold in the industry. As of now, only approved over bombing ranges/proving grounds and ocean.
I live close to an airforce base and sometimes get to flybys when they are doing training exercises About a month ago I saw 2 f22 Raptors flying side by side in a wing and it was the coolest shit ever seeing them both turn at the exact same time
Either Sean With The Beer is overly protective of his electronic home assistant, or he has made the devastatingly bad call of naming his daughter, Alexa.
@@OutyMan ahaha. I have a co-worker named Alexa and I had to move mine out of my home office because she kept trying to respond to questions for Alexa the co-worker.
Haha...i thought the same. My Alexa piped-up and said Sean's mate was an asshole for suggesting his child man-up! And when he said he heard a sonic boom she laughed for hours...the dog's now scared of her!
This is great... But I feel for him. My wife and I named our daughter Alexa 2 weeks before Amazon announced their new virtual assistant. Thankfully she thinks it's funny and rolls with it pretty well.