"Hey guys, Oleg and interpreter here from Eagle Dynamics and in this DCS MI-24P video, we will be going over the start-up procedure for the Hind. Let's get started. "
@@vamick9531 AHAH I believe at 3.50 it's because she was supposed to keep her finger on the APU OFF button in case the temp rose too much, but she still had it on the APU start button
@@hollowkos it was because he told her to hold the start button for 3 seconds and let go then move the finger to the OFF switch incase of fire.....buuuut she wasnt lol
You could buy them for like 23,000 USD in the 2000s. They were all over the place online in military surplus after the Yugoslav civil war in the 90s. Anyone who ordered 5.45x39 7N6 knows exactly what I’m talking about. _(I was a teenager thinking 120 dollars for 1080 rounds of 7N6 was expensive)_ Those same helicopters are probably about 750k ish, depends if someone is selling multiple. Look them up.
I don't think most people understand the importance of how everything is described as "about" and not exactly this or that. I bet off screen he hit the APU with a hammer to get it fired up the second time. Marvelous engineering.
Somehow this feels like the quick once over they give you before sending you out with a hire car on holiday. Except it's the best holiday you've ever had, and there's a higher risk of dying.
Pretty similar to any other Turbine Rotary start....biggest difference is the location of the start buttons, where on US and Euro designs everything is mounted on the collective so tyoy arent "Swatting Rats" throughout the cockpit and can pay close attention to TOT and P1 values
@phadil Lol. Because there's not just one engine. There are three. And if systems get damaged during battle you need to be able to shut them off individually as well. Starting with turning 1 keys is just impossible :P
0:30 looks like some kind of mechanical analog paper map display with a test pattern inserted. Works like today's moving map displays but completely analog. I guess it doesn't use GPS/GLONASS at all either. Though i don't know if the sheet actually moves inside or it stays in its place while some kind of pointer that you can zero to a certain position before starting up moves over it.
There is a crosshair that moves. It uses doppler radar and inertial navigation... Very basic but setup properly it works, and uses standard maps, but only for two scales
@@ollyk22 Oh well, now you have EFBs with TBs of satellite map data, GPS, GLONASS, Beidou, Galileo and laser gyros, but back at that time it had to be some kind of novelty
@Ouija121085 They proved impractical as a transport. For that reason most of them are flying mission without troops who are vulnerable in their compartment. Mi-28 is entering service replacing Hind.
Odkryty (uncovered), zakryty (covered) cause MI24s are used in Poland even now. Some Polish MI24s stationing in afganistan. Its somwhere in Poland? Im from Poland and i looking for places like this.
He says Открытый (Otkritiy) - Opened, and Закрытый (Zakritiy) - Closed, which are ofc. russian words. Instructor isn't Polish at all, Polish people have slightly different accent. I think instructor is from arabian country.
Exported helies had instructions in native languages. Where did they get this one with Russian instructions? My guess is from one of the former Soviet republics. Maybe from Baltic countries or Ukraine.