Тёмный

"THE MISSILE NAVY" 1960s U.S. NAVY FILM w/ CHET HUNTLEY LARK, SPARROW, TERRIER, SUBROC 80164 

PeriscopeFilm
Подписаться 721 тыс.
Просмотров 15 тыс.
50% 1

The Missile Navy is a late-1960s film reported by Chet Huntley that presents viewers with a history of rocket propulsion and missile development. The film opens with a shot of the Navy’s nuclear-powered attack carrier Enterprise at sea. On the ship, men run to their positions and a fighter jet is fitted with guided missiles. Navy jets take off from the carrier (01:58) and fly through the air. Chet Huntley reports on the deck of the ship. Men in the “nerve center” of the ship monitor radar equipment and communicate with pilots. Rocket-powered missiles emerge on the deck of the Enterprise. The film then shows viewers footage of naval battles during WWII (04:39). A submarine fires a torpedo. A depth charge is detonated. Navy gunners shoot down fighter planes. The film then takes viewers back to the 1920s. Dr. Robert H Goddard works on a liquid-fueled rocket with other men (06:36). An early rocket is launched. Germany’s Fritz von Opel and others work on developing rocket missiles (07:56). The film then shows a German V-1 Flying Bomb, as well as a V-2 rocket being fired; footage shows the destruction following Nazi Germany’s rocket attacks on Britain. A 1941 photo shows the launch of the first regeneratively cooled liquid-fueled rocket engine. Men load some of the first Navy rockets into a battery (10:33). The liquid-thrust rocket Gorgon (Gorgon II-A) is attached to a plane (11:08). Lark, a guided missile, is tested at the Naval Air Test Center in California (11:28). A Viking rocket is launched (12:12). The film shows slow-motion footage of the firing of a rocket-powered missile. Men work on Bumblebee surface-to-air missiles. Planes fly through the air fitted with Bullpup A, a deadly air-to-surface tactical missile (13:51). Footage shows Marines storming a beach. The air-to-air tactical missile Sidewinder is carted out onto the flight deck (16:23) and is loaded onto a jet. A Sidewinder is fired from a jet. A Sparrow 3 is prepared for loading onto a plane (18:44). Talos rockets are launched from the carrier (20:00); Terrier rockets are also fired from the ship. A Tartar missile is fired from another ship. The film then shows viewers the weapons being developed for anti-submarine warfare: ASROC is a weapons system used to fire on submarines using either a depth charge or an acoustic homing torpedo. A submarine surfaces (22:21). A Navy sub fires a SUBROC missile. The film shows the computer console for the system. A SUBROC missile leaves the water and flies through the air. A nuclear-powered sub armed with the Polaris missile cruises along the surface of the ocean. A Polaris missile is launched from the submarine (24:27). The film ends with a shot of what appears to be the Enterprise cruising at sea.
We encourage viewers to add comments and, especially, to provide additional information about our videos by adding a comment! See something interesting? Tell people what it is and what they can see by writing something for example: "01:00:12:00 -- President Roosevelt is seen meeting with Winston Churchill at the Quebec Conference."
This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit www.PeriscopeFilm.com

Опубликовано:

 

5 июл 2019

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 21   
@PosthumousAddress
@PosthumousAddress 4 года назад
Wow! That footage at 12:39 of the solid-rocket booster separating from the main body of the Talos missile, and seeing its fiery, hellish ramjet exhaust, is absolutely amazing! It's really extraordinary that so many things that we are just going back to now, or consider advanced now (for example, using Ramjets to power tactical missiles when Talos and Bomarc did it in the 1950s, or people getting all fangirly about S-400s up to 400km range when the US BOMARC had a range of up to 370km in the 1950s, and the UK Bloodhound missile, also ramjet propelled, had a range of around 300km). Even ESA radars which we consider so modern now, were first deployed on the USS Long Beach cruiser which had the electronically-scanned SCANFAR radar by the late 1950s.
@mikes.4136
@mikes.4136 Год назад
When my dad was a young chemical engineer, he helped to develop and refine the propellant for both the AIM-9 (Sidewinder) and AIM-7 (Sparrow) at the Naval Propellant Plant, Indian Head. He also worked on the propulsion systems for both Poseidon and Polaris. Ultimately, he worked for the Navy Scientific and Technical Intelligence Center (NAVSTIC).
@billhuber2964
@billhuber2964 5 лет назад
When I was a kid I built model kit of ships and missiles.
@daleburrell6273
@daleburrell6273 5 лет назад
LOTS OF US DID-!!
@alangee79010
@alangee79010 5 лет назад
Terrier, Tartar, and the Standard Missile series that is used today. We used to assemble bullpups and are the modern Jdam weapons used today. Awesome history and much of my early Navy ordnance training over 34 years ago.
@wessonkillian7241
@wessonkillian7241 3 года назад
dunno if you guys gives a shit but if you are stoned like me atm you can stream pretty much all of the new series on InstaFlixxer. Have been watching with my brother for the last couple of months :)
@apollotony3741
@apollotony3741 3 года назад
@Wesson Killian yup, I have been watching on InstaFlixxer for years myself :)
@jamesbugbee9026
@jamesbugbee9026 7 месяцев назад
Classic ❤❤❤ ❤❤❤
@nicholasmaude6906
@nicholasmaude6906 3 месяца назад
Since this documentary was made in the 1960s and only the AIM-9B Sidewinder is shown (Neither the more advanced AIM-9C or -9D are shown) then this film was shot in 1960-1963.
@hckyplyr9285
@hckyplyr9285 5 лет назад
Based on many clues I would date this picture to the 1963-4 timeframe. Bullpup was widely discredited in Vietnam. A-4s were largely replaced on supercarriers by 1968 by A-7s. There was no reference to SEA in the film. Love the uploads sorry to nitpick.
@Vektorer
@Vektorer 5 лет назад
hckyplyr9285 Seconded. Chet (& David) was from whom the folks took their tv news back then. Chet’s necktie was no different than the one’s in Dad’s tie drawer from ‘58 til ‘67 or so when neckties evolved into bibs.
@fawnlliebowitz1772
@fawnlliebowitz1772 2 года назад
Between the A4 and F4 the navy got their moneys worth.
@allandavis8201
@allandavis8201 5 лет назад
Another excellent insight into our historic use of better and quicker ways to kill each other, something that is truly frightening and sad. Thanks for sharing this interesting and informative film, keep up the good work Periscope Films. 👍.
@daleburrell6273
@daleburrell6273 5 лет назад
What year was this film released?
@nicholasmaude6906
@nicholasmaude6906 2 года назад
I'd say some time in the early 60s before the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin incident.
@nicholasmaude6906
@nicholasmaude6906 3 месяца назад
It would appear that in his time Chet Huntley ( en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chet_Huntley ) is a minor celebrity.
@hatuletoh
@hatuletoh 3 года назад
This is basically a long way of saying, "don't worry, our shiny, new 'splosion-makers are way better than anything those godless commies have." And strangely enough this was both true, and an important factor in preventing a US/Soviet war. Because the godless commies really didn't have anything to match the US arsenal, but what they did has was vastly superior intelligence and espionage. The fact that they basically knew all the US military secrets allowed them to see how outmatched they were, and they didn't like their chances in an all-out war. So the weird combination of outstanding technological development, and laughably sub-par secrecy was a major factor that prevented the Cold War for kicking off into WWIII. I find that to be the most hilarious and terrifying irony in history.
@blackiechong4344
@blackiechong4344 5 лет назад
I worked on the terrier missile system and these guys are total bullshit. The average hit is about one in six missile shots and I do know and that is a fact. What they do not tell you is that the terrier missile system of that time period 1965 to 1970 is either beam riding or radar guided homing system. Today thou its a more accurate systems on these ships. Our ship in training made a total of three missile shots 1963 to 1964 and all three failed to destroy the target flying in a straight line.
@gotanon9659
@gotanon9659 Месяц назад
The North Vietnamese Pilots that got sniped by the Talos WISH that was true
@jerrynewberry2823
@jerrynewberry2823 5 лет назад
Figures only snowflakes comment. Actually had models with these rockets. And. Some models of the rockets.
Далее
LISA - ROCKSTAR (MV Teaser)
00:10
Просмотров 10 млн
How an 18th Century Sailing Warship Works
25:27
Просмотров 10 млн
Talos Missile Handling • Cruiser Installation
11:59
Who Touched the Sky
7:11
Просмотров 48 тыс.