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Titanium - The Metal That Made The SR-71 Possible 

Real Engineering
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Writer/Narrator: Brian McManus
Editor: Dylan Hennessy (www.behance.net/dylanhennessy1)
Animator: Mike Ridolfi (www.moboxgraphics.com/)
Sound: Graham Haerther (haerther.net/)
Thumbnail: Simon Buckmaster / forgottentowel
References:
[1] grantadesign.com/education/st...
[2]
www.metalary.com/titanium-pric....
[3] kyocera-sgstool.co.uk/titaniu....
[4] www.essentialchemicalindustry....
[5] www-eng.lbl.gov/~shuman/NEXT/M...
[6] link.springer.com/article/10....
[7] www.cia.gov/library/readingro...
[8] Page 77 www.springer.com/gp/book/9783...
[9] www.cia.gov/library/readingro...
[10] grantadesign.com/education/st...
[11] Page 11 ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/ca...
[12] inversesolutionsinc.com/why-i....
[13] www.cia.gov/library/readingro...
[14] www.kobelco.co.jp/english/tit...
[15] ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/ca...
[16] link.springer.com/article/10....
Thank you to AP Archive for access to their archival footage.
Music by Epidemic Sound: epidemicsound.com/creator
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Thank you to my patreon supporters: Adam Flohr, Henning Basma, Hank Green, William Leu, Tristan Edwards, Ian Dundore, John & Becki Johnston. Nevin Spoljaric, Jason Clark, Thomas Barth, Johnny MacDonald, Stephen Foland, Alfred Holzheu, Abdulrahman Abdulaziz Binghaith, Brent Higgins, Dexter Appleberry, Alex Pavek, Marko Hirsch, Mikkel Johansen, Hibiyi Mori. Viktor Józsa, Ron Hochsprung

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19 июн 2020

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Комментарии : 2,3 тыс.   
@justandy333
@justandy333 3 года назад
As a machinist myself I can concur that Titanium is an obsolute swine to machine! As stated the depths of cuts required because of titaniums elastic properties is just plain scary to a newcomer. And the tooling does indeed blunt incredibly quickly no matter how much coolant you drown the part in. Top marks on your research!
@deanstark9594
@deanstark9594 3 года назад
and then there is the heat treatment.
@donwright3427
@donwright3427 3 года назад
Yep sure is a pig to machine.The fine bits of swarf,(cuttings) burn really brightly.
@Capthrax1
@Capthrax1 3 года назад
i've made a few rings on my lathe and decided to open up the hole with a 1/2 inch drill bit before bring the boring bar in... jesus. little squirt bottle with coolant in it to help, i've never seen the corners of a drill bit round over in such a small amount of material . Beautiful material though. The rings have had up well to every day use too. Makes a god oweful ringing sound when dropped on concrete.
@kiwidiesel5071
@kiwidiesel5071 3 года назад
The airframe of the Blackbird after cooling down from each flight was actually retempered and as such never degraded in strength.
@johnpienta4200
@johnpienta4200 3 года назад
You mean it's just "plane" scary to machine? 😉
@Mr_Giraffe
@Mr_Giraffe 3 года назад
Just like titanium, the air is bulletproof with the right thickness.
@gildedbear5355
@gildedbear5355 3 года назад
Air is even better that most bulletproof materials. It self seals. Even if your second shot exactly follows the path of the first shot you still have the full protection afforded by the air.
@chouaibsam4381
@chouaibsam4381 3 года назад
Yeah ass thicc thickness
@Jaminhawk
@Jaminhawk 3 года назад
@@gildedbear5355 In racing, cars will drive close behind other cars to get better efficiencies due to less drag. If air provided the full protection each time, then this wouldn't be done.
@daanydoomboy5593
@daanydoomboy5593 3 года назад
@@Jaminhawk it takes a little bit of time to "restore". Maybe a second, depending on the speed. But that my dear is called aerodynamics, a very complicated matter.
@zombieaerospace5005
@zombieaerospace5005 3 года назад
Well yes, but actually... yes
@e020443
@e020443 3 года назад
Having recently retired after 40+ years in the turbine engine business, I know a bit about material science as it's actually applied. This video is head and shoulders above 99% of what's on RU-vid in terms of accuracy and depth. Very well done!
@joehalliday6081
@joehalliday6081 Год назад
Did you ever get titanium particles on your clip-on tie? Along with vanadium, aluminum and beryllium? D B Cooper's tie that he left behind when he skyjacked a plane in 1971 has been analyzed using an electron microscope and it showed small amounts of these metals.
@eldorados_lost_searcher
@eldorados_lost_searcher 3 года назад
"They could have just bought it from Australia." Yeah, but where's the fun in that?
@flagmichael
@flagmichael 3 года назад
Buying it from Russia, even through shells, has the advantage of it hiding in plain sight. If we had bought it from Australia the Russians would have wondered what was going on.
@sumitkrips2018
@sumitkrips2018 3 года назад
If you guys know this and putting it on youtube...means russian intelligence also knows all this and more...
@valeriofabrizi3497
@valeriofabrizi3497 3 года назад
@@sumitkrips2018 these are all declassified documents it isn't really a big information leak
@Jabba1625
@Jabba1625 3 года назад
Yeah I mean, it's not coal and all that tax free money couldn't be shifted offshore, whilst having political influence over the country. Where's the fun in that?
@ameralhamvi5680
@ameralhamvi5680 3 года назад
@@sumitkrips2018 this video auto-kicks all Russian kgb personal
@richardkelly5409
@richardkelly5409 3 года назад
The SR71 was developed through the sixties , it’s 50 odd years old and still looks futuristic., amazing .
@KuraIthys
@KuraIthys 3 года назад
More than anything else, aircraft designs are dictated by pure physics, not anyone's ideas about what stuff should look like. The faster it goes, the more you have to bow down to the laws of physics. Concorde also looks exceptionally futuristic. And it's solving basically the same problem as the SR-71 (high speed, high altitude flight), but with a focus on efficiency rather than raw speed.
@SangheiliSpecOp
@SangheiliSpecOp 3 года назад
@@KuraIthys the most beautiful designs are often shaped by nature itself :)
@dannyboyemt
@dannyboyemt 3 года назад
@@SangheiliSpecOp very true
@emperorclaudias3316
@emperorclaudias3316 3 года назад
I, d marry it
@kaizen5023
@kaizen5023 3 года назад
See my comment above, I saw it in person, it is huge and awe-inspiring.
@biggsydaboss3410
@biggsydaboss3410 3 года назад
I remember back in the 80s, how titanium was seen as some sort of wonder material. Everything cool was made out of titanium. I think even The Terminator's endoskeleton was made out of it. Now it's all graphene & carbon nano-tubes lol
@slowerandolder
@slowerandolder 3 года назад
Carbon's way cheaper and (with the right marketing) way sexier. For aerodynamic shapes, carbon's better.
@swarupendranathchakraborty3500
@swarupendranathchakraborty3500 3 года назад
Tbh if you try to become a cyborg, a titanium skeleton is your best bet. Titanium tends to be rejected the least compared to other metals by the human body
@Buran01
@Buran01 3 года назад
But brittle, unable to endure Heat or even UV to the dame extent, etc.
@magisterrleth3129
@magisterrleth3129 3 года назад
Titanium is nice, but it's really just a cool name, not much special. Other, cooler metals exist. Osmium, for example, is blue.
@kevineckelkamp
@kevineckelkamp 3 года назад
Soon....METAMATERIALS.
@charlesballiet7074
@charlesballiet7074 3 года назад
1:40 I just paused to take a moment and appreciate the metallurgists, scientists and engineers who probably spent a good fraction of their lifespan figuring this out. Bless them for we can now stand on their shoulders
@jasonalbert6251
@jasonalbert6251 3 года назад
That’s human progress for you. They spent their lives advancing our understanding, now it’s our turn to do the same. We build upon each other, and little by little, humanity grows smarter. Yet another reason I hate Ian Malcolm from Jurassic Park. ‘You stood upon the shoulders of others to get here, invalidating your work!’ Man, shut the hell your mouth.
@miraflynn8935
@miraflynn8935 3 года назад
Jason Albert Another adaptation of the same common metaphor: “If I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants” -Isaac Newton
@wamyx8Nz
@wamyx8Nz 3 года назад
@@jasonalbert6251 Sure, but first he compared them to a bunch of kids who'd found their father's shotgun, i.e. it wasn't that they stood on the shoulders of giants, but that they didn't stop to consider the implications or what could go wrong (like using frog DNA). They were in a hurry to make money, not increase knowledge.
@calidude1114
@calidude1114 3 года назад
Please make sure you understand the difference between scientists and engineers. Scientists extend a specific body of knowledge while engineers utilize the existing body of knowledge for the benefit of mankind. Licensed Professional Engineers have a singular duty to protect and enhance the safety and welfare of the public. If a plane crashes or building collapses the engineer is held accountable. Scientists are not held accountable for anything.
@wamyx8Nz
@wamyx8Nz 3 года назад
@@calidude1114 In cutting edge fields there is increasingly an overlap. An airplane company may discover a new alloy and engineer around it. Similarly a scientist must often have some engineering background to set up a good experiment. Also the engineer is only held accountable if it is his fault. If a mechanic fails to follow the engineer's specifications, it is his fault.
@utsnow7952
@utsnow7952 3 года назад
The sr-71 engineers: “I used the soviet to spy on the soviet”
@toddie4usa1
@toddie4usa1 3 года назад
We also used a Russian equation to design the F117 ...😆
@myusername3689
@myusername3689 3 года назад
@@toddie4usa1 Until we found out its flawed and decided to add curves.
@StrangerHappened
@StrangerHappened 3 года назад
The USA were unable to spy on the USSR with that titanium due to the introduction of the now-famous Soviet/Russian air-defence missile systems (S-25, S-75, S-125, S-200, S-300, S-350, S-400, and the upcoming S-500).
@StrangerHappened
@StrangerHappened 3 года назад
@@myusername3689 It was not flawed; the slight curves were added for aerodynamics/better speed/thermal control.
@BobSmith-uu5kj
@BobSmith-uu5kj 2 года назад
Don’t worry the Chinese are doing the same with the Americans as we speak.
@sanjuansteve
@sanjuansteve 3 года назад
I was an aerospace machinist for about 7 years and then an aerospace manufacturing engineer for a few more years and my favorite of all of the exotic metals is titanium. :D
@madrox4132
@madrox4132 3 года назад
I love titanium for its properties but I really hate machining it
@tylerhansen9872
@tylerhansen9872 3 года назад
Any recommendation on cutters and speeds and feeds?
@johnokean8216
@johnokean8216 3 года назад
What do you think about refining TiO2 in space?
@devindykstra
@devindykstra 3 года назад
@@johnokean8216 I know I'm not the perso you asked, but I'm going to add my input if you don't mind. right now that would be way too expensive since we need to bring the heavy material up into space with expensive rockets (titanium is really really heavy), but hypothetically in the future it might be worth while.
@madrox4132
@madrox4132 3 года назад
@@tylerhansen9872 Max out your depth of cut and feed as hard as you can while still maintaining finish. Use high pressure coolant. You NEED to get that chip to break. If the material starts sparking there's a very real and very serious risk of it igniting the swarf. You want a very sharp insert. Something like a .002-.008 TNR. TiAlN PVD coating. Through tool high pressure coolant. Speeds low but chipload high. Starting Values of a Sandvik CCGT 3(2.5)0UM 1105 ap: .02 (.004-.041) fn: .002 (.001-.003) vc: 245ft/min (245-245)
@deanmc
@deanmc 3 года назад
Al: are you ready to battle Ti? TiO2: This isn't even my final form!!!
@MatthewMilton
@MatthewMilton 3 года назад
Fr
@Volodimar
@Volodimar 3 года назад
Not bad
@TheIdeanator
@TheIdeanator 3 года назад
I feel such joy whenever someone starts talking about how cool materials engineering is, it makes me feel very happy about the profession I picked.
@lfox02
@lfox02 3 года назад
Rather wicked, innit?
@j.dragon651
@j.dragon651 3 года назад
I was a machinist for fifty years. You didn't have to work with it. You do know those machines can kill you?
@tuhinmia1967
@tuhinmia1967 3 года назад
Imagine being one of the few humans in history to pilot the SR-71!
@rickycollins4633
@rickycollins4633 3 года назад
This is why you go to college or trade school, not for gender studies or pc classes.
@j.dragon651
@j.dragon651 3 года назад
@@rickycollins4633 When I went to school there was shop, home ed, art and music.
@nsaadverse8794
@nsaadverse8794 3 года назад
I have a 91 year-old friend who flew the SR-71 and the U-2. They're the most difficult aircraft in the world to fly. He was the first SR-71 pilot to break 1000 hours in the SR-71, and that group is occupied by just eight pilots. He's told me some amazing stories about flying both planes. For a man who spent his career doing things the rest of us can only dream about, he is the most humble guy I've ever met.
@alengm
@alengm 3 года назад
The persistence of these engineers is amazing. Coming up with solutions to the most daunting problems.
@OCinneide
@OCinneide 3 года назад
That's the fun in engineering... the rest is cold hard maths.
@chippysteve4524
@chippysteve4524 3 года назад
By 'persistence' I assume you mean budget! :-)
@MauricioBarragan
@MauricioBarragan 3 года назад
they're kind of also the ones who came up with the problems in the first place lol
@Spooglecraft
@Spooglecraft 11 месяцев назад
tell an engineer a problem is impossible to solve and then give them whatever they need to solve it and not only will the problem be solved eventually, the engineer will be happy
@randompheidoleminor3011
@randompheidoleminor3011 3 года назад
Titanium, the metal that made the SR-71 possible. And the metal that forms the two twigs that hold up my overpriced bicycle saddle.
@orbchime2304
@orbchime2304 3 года назад
and the metal that holds my broken cheek bones in place
@shannonchurchill4556
@shannonchurchill4556 3 года назад
Also the screws holding my right tibia together, and the beautiful, gold, blue and purple metal on my motorcycle’s race exhaust.
@ryy1704
@ryy1704 3 года назад
Yall get beeped at airport scanner.
@muhammadaryawicaksono4232
@muhammadaryawicaksono4232 3 года назад
Cyborg gang
@dirtypure2023
@dirtypure2023 3 года назад
@Tessa Rossa And my axe!
@zam023
@zam023 3 года назад
The frame of my glasses are made of titanium. It doesn't "rust" from my sweat, like my previous stainless steel frames. I am so glad I got it.
@jackiworld
@jackiworld 3 года назад
if your previous glass was rusting, they were not made of real stainless steel. stainless steel is an alloy made exactly to not rust
@Aresu77
@Aresu77 3 года назад
@@jackiworld it's called stainless, not stainfree
@vasudevraghav2109
@vasudevraghav2109 3 года назад
@@bintjbeil7892 i think he stand by his point of Stainless-Steel rusting.... What rrally happening is, he is not taking enough shower and sweat ruined the frame with salts in it along with water😂
@miraflynn8935
@miraflynn8935 3 года назад
I also like titanium frames because they “feel” less “cold” because of their lower thermal conductivity.
@tz8785
@tz8785 3 года назад
@@jackiworld Not all stainless steels are stainless in salt water - which sweat is.
@vovacat1797
@vovacat1797 3 года назад
I love how there's concrete on the "aerospace material strength/density chart". I KNEW it! Concrete glider existence evidence right here.
@janmelantu7490
@janmelantu7490 3 года назад
The Civil Engineers are infiltrating Aerospace Engineering
@STARDRIVE
@STARDRIVE 3 года назад
On the positive, the glide path is very predictable.
@mykl1673
@mykl1673 3 года назад
@@STARDRIVE yeah because it goes straight down lmao
@ERROR204.
@ERROR204. 2 года назад
@@mykl1673 you ruined his joke by explaining it
@exnani
@exnani 2 года назад
i don"t know about glider, but concret boat exist and they are rather good
@sebastianelytron8450
@sebastianelytron8450 3 года назад
Why is titanium afraid of iron and argon ? Because there is nothing to fear but FE-AR itself.
@fbn7766
@fbn7766 3 года назад
Lol
@arrielradja5522
@arrielradja5522 3 года назад
Okay stop it's funny but stop
@vijeshkumar692
@vijeshkumar692 3 года назад
Au thats cute
@PseudoFiction
@PseudoFiction 3 года назад
Boo this man
@leogarcia8640
@leogarcia8640 3 года назад
This is quite the joke.
@hazel8.
@hazel8. 3 года назад
America: i used the Soviet Union to spy on the Soviet Union
@michaelusswisconsin6002
@michaelusswisconsin6002 3 года назад
Stonks
@bigfish92672
@bigfish92672 3 года назад
Also America: We eliminated the Soviet's rivals now we have to be their rival
@martinxy1291
@martinxy1291 3 года назад
Didnt russia do something similar with "The thing" ?
@livingcorpse5664
@livingcorpse5664 3 года назад
Russia: Wait that's illegal!
@Rwdphotos
@Rwdphotos 3 года назад
The aircraft is literally made of russia
@TheTonyMcD
@TheTonyMcD 3 года назад
1:00 I mean, with the right thickness, literally everything is bulletproof...
@judgeomega
@judgeomega 3 года назад
not quite. no amount of outrage is going to slow a bullet. then of course there is dark matter... and faith.
@hazza2247
@hazza2247 3 года назад
@Александр Лазарев in a *complete* vacuum it would never slow down surely, red shift only occurs to things moving *really* fast away from you
@steventhehistorian
@steventhehistorian 3 года назад
@@judgeomega and thoughts and prayers.
@hellfun1337
@hellfun1337 3 года назад
@@hazza2247 What he says does make sense. lets say this is done in a perfect vacuum with no large gravity generators nearby (like a planet). Motion/speed is relative, a bullet fired from a point in space at a target has a speed relative to the point of origin (a) and the target (b). Now, given a rather short distance between (a) and (b) the speed of the bullet would be measured the same by both parties from beginning to end, with (b) eventually being struck by the bullet. As we increase the distance between (a) and (b), a different force comes into play called 'Dark energy' this is the phenomenon that causes space to expand, the more space there is between 2 objects, the more dark energy expands that space. Therefore, given enough space between the bullet and (b), the speed of the bullet as measured by (b) will decrease until it reads 0 m/s and begins getting farther away until it appears as if the bullet has begun accelerating in the opposite direction. Similarly, the speed of the bullet as measured by (a) will increase. As it approaches the speed of light it will begin to "redshift" and as space can expand faster than light, neither (a) nor (b) will eventually be able to measure the bullet at all. Space has effectively 'stopped' the bullet.
@hazza2247
@hazza2247 3 года назад
@@hellfun1337 u seem to have a much better grasp on this sort of topic than me! I don’t fully understand all of what you said but I have learnt a bit and I think your points are genuine and true, thanks for the input! I always appreciate comments such as yours
@SALZOPYRIN
@SALZOPYRIN 3 года назад
Titanium s great it is holding my injured spine together, that I can walk again.
@darioinfini
@darioinfini 3 года назад
Woooooowwww! I've always heard how hard to deal with titanium was in reference to the SR71 but didn't realize in any detail what was meant by that. What an audacious thing Johnson did to pursue building this plane with this metal. Makes this plane all the more amazing. Great video!
@tolga1cool
@tolga1cool 3 года назад
Well. And you can get the most beautiful colours anodising titanium
@marlinbegalke6427
@marlinbegalke6427 3 года назад
Actually you can do that with any metal and end up with a different prettier color it’s not unique to titanium
@D-B-Cooper
@D-B-Cooper 3 года назад
But you can’t polish it.
@nicolasbousquet7463
@nicolasbousquet7463 3 года назад
@@D-B-Cooper i know some watch brands that are polishing titanium. but on far smaller surfaces than they would do on stainless steel.
@devinwatson4594
@devinwatson4594 3 года назад
Yeah and it’s just plain fun to do
@tolga1cool
@tolga1cool 3 года назад
@@marlinbegalke6427 With titanium it is particularly easy though. And you have a really wide color spectrum
@MilitaryUpdate
@MilitaryUpdate 3 года назад
We Love this old bird
@jakojenhh5002
@jakojenhh5002 3 года назад
Have you really dedicated a entire channel to the worst, most pointless idea ever? How could you “love” something that has killed countless people and created so much bloodshed when the science and research used to create this abomination characterized by that of the worst idea ever presented by humans could have been spent on noble, long term goals that further the reach of humanity. Imagine how many engineers and inventors, explorers and musicians, doctors and explorers were killed needlessly in the wars of just this last century alone. Imagine where we would be if the library of Alexandria hadn’t been burnt, refuting generations of knowledge, hell imagine if the militaries budget would be spent on science instead of bloodshed. We could overcome war and violence while simultaneously both eradicating disease and learning to understand the inner workings of the universe. Our reach would be truly unimaginable, trillions of people could stand in unison and say that we are no longer defined by our worst, most violent but rather our best, most knowledgeable and noble when we meet extraterrestrial life and explain how we did it. But yet, here we are, with people like you who insist that “we love this machine of terror and destruction” when we really should be exclaiming how what a terrible idea that war thing was and that we’re glad we’ve moved past it.
@silvervens
@silvervens 3 года назад
@@jakojenhh5002 this explains something. Phenominal.
@FaffyWaffles
@FaffyWaffles 3 года назад
@@jakojenhh5002 you realize the sr-71 was a surveillance plane with no weapons, right?
@slyseal2091
@slyseal2091 3 года назад
@@FaffyWaffles He doesn't have the necessary self-awareness to know that nobody _actually_ wants war in any form, so why would he be able to look up stuff that probably doesn't show up in the little Wikipedia segments google gives you when you enter a word?
@kirioes
@kirioes 3 года назад
@@jakojenhh5002 you talkin bout “dedicating a channel” to something “pointless”. Where are your subs bruh?
@Shadogi
@Shadogi 3 года назад
After seeing this, I would love to see a video on the materials used in submarines to withstand both the corrosion from salt water as well as the crushing depths of the ocean (plus maybe some info on how it keep subs stealthy?). Or maybe a video on propeller design for stealth? Thanks for the great content!
@jmikronis7376
@jmikronis7376 2 года назад
Sorry, that video on subs depth abilities are going to be top secret. I’ve got some suspicions on the alloy being used, though.
@MrMarinus18
@MrMarinus18 6 месяцев назад
The pressure is more about shape than material and submarines actually don't go all that deep. Most US submarines can't go much below 500 meters which is not much considering the average debt of the ocean is 3.2 kilometers. The thickness is more so decided by buoyancy and the ability to withstand collisions with objects like whales or boats.
@phillyphil1513
@phillyphil1513 5 месяцев назад
re: "After seeing this, I would love to see a video on the materials used in submarines to withstand both the corrosion from salt water as well as the crushing depths of the ocean" well that materiel was/is TITANIUM. 13:28
@alfred9977
@alfred9977 3 года назад
Just woke up. New video about the SR-71. That’s a good way to wake up.
@user-ls9ff4cu9x
@user-ls9ff4cu9x 3 года назад
Im about to go to bed
@JohnPeter1940
@JohnPeter1940 3 года назад
Sleeping at 18.00 a day wooow u
@christianletzerich6523
@christianletzerich6523 3 года назад
Same lol
@christiandershem8157
@christiandershem8157 3 года назад
Me to
@christiandershem8157
@christiandershem8157 3 года назад
Orhan Ayyıldız for me it’s 12:20 rn
@KarlssonF
@KarlssonF 3 года назад
13:54 you wrote "valadium" instead of "vanadium", great video once again
@yonatanbeer3475
@yonatanbeer3475 3 года назад
I'm literally shaking. How could be make this mistake. Unsubscribed.
@jam34786
@jam34786 3 года назад
@@yonatanbeer3475 🤣
@OCinneide
@OCinneide 3 года назад
@@yonatanbeer3475 change.org/cancel_real_engineering_over_vanadium_discrimination
@chippysteve4524
@chippysteve4524 3 года назад
Now now.There's lo leed to be a lobhead! ;-)
@chanakyasinha8046
@chanakyasinha8046 3 года назад
Vodkadium was most suitable
@waddadawd
@waddadawd 3 года назад
I wrote a research paper on titanium for a materials class, and it was so cool recognizing everything you talked about. Your videos make my engineering classes super rewarding, and make me feel that I am actually learning useful stuff. Keep up the good work!
@danielm5633
@danielm5633 3 года назад
Titanium then: SR-71 Titanium now: Apple card
@ImKibitz
@ImKibitz 3 года назад
Hey I have to say I really like all the editing improvements you've been making, like what you did with the text at 5:19. Of course, the engineering explanation is on point as always too! Keep it up dude!
@lordtism3533
@lordtism3533 3 года назад
lol kibitz didn’t expect u here
@ThatOneBuilderGuy
@ThatOneBuilderGuy 3 года назад
oh hi there kibz
@demolition3612
@demolition3612 2 года назад
Hello there...
@EPru95
@EPru95 3 года назад
Of all of the educational youtube channels out there, this has the most material science involved. Considering how interesting and important it is to the modern world, this has to be one of my favorites. Keep it up!
@inconvenientexistenlism
@inconvenientexistenlism 3 года назад
I've completely underestimated how good and informative this would be. Nice editing and visuals making it probably the best education on titanium out there. Kudos!
@dmorga1
@dmorga1 3 года назад
Really brilliant. I remember reading Ben Rich's book (Skunkworks) about some of the trials and tribulations they encountered engineering and building the SR-71. He mentions the CAD-plated tools issue, which I thought must have been a nightmare to track down and identify at the time, but I had not heard about the seasonal effect on welds cooled by higher chlorine-content water in the summers. I can't imagine how hard that was to track down. Originally, they didn't track the lot numbers of each part, but they soon learned that because titanium quality could vary quiet a bit from their Soviet sources, they had to stamp and track every single part's lot number for traceability, long before the days of MS Excel. The management of the project awes me to this day.
@amaterasu964
@amaterasu964 3 года назад
Teacher: What is your body made of? X Æ A-12: I AM TITANIUM
@JohnVu10
@JohnVu10 3 года назад
Water, 35 liters. Carbon, 20 kilograms. Ammonia, 4 liters. Lime, 1.5 kilograms. Phosphorous, 800 grams. Salt, 250 grams. Saltpeter, 100 grams. Sulfur, 80 grams. Fluorine, 7.5, iron, 5, silicon, 3 grams, and trace amounts of 15 other elements…
@bryanhawk6052
@bryanhawk6052 3 года назад
pronounced "ASH"
@lfox02
@lfox02 3 года назад
@@JohnVu10 That is the material makeup of a single average adult human body, if you were to calculate it.
@wesleykirkland7150
@wesleykirkland7150 3 года назад
I love how we set up shell companies to buy Titanium from the county we spied on.
@user2144
@user2144 3 года назад
One side needed the money, the other needed the product. Quid pro quo.
@MikaTheAboveAverageDog
@MikaTheAboveAverageDog 3 года назад
even better, they were set up to buy sand!
@nosuchthing8
@nosuchthing8 3 года назад
Hush!
@EebstertheGreat
@EebstertheGreat 3 года назад
It's strange though, because it allowed the USSR to profit off American trade in violation of the sanctions we set up, and we could have just as easily bought the titanium from Australia, an ally. I guess Russian titanium was just cheaper, and clearly cost _does_ matter.
@pbj4184
@pbj4184 3 года назад
Hey, Stacy Peters copied your comment and posted it. Go do something about it
@kamikaze1827
@kamikaze1827 3 года назад
Great video as always! The SR-71 is one of my favorite airplanes ever. Also, minor error in visuals at 5:01: CO2 has a linear structure (instead of looking like water)!
@porsche558
@porsche558 3 года назад
All the work that went into just making the exterior reads like a Rolls Royce advert. 100,000 hours and $25,000,000,000 went into finely crafting the sleek exterior paneling.
@spacecatboy2962
@spacecatboy2962 3 года назад
i would like to been a fly on the wall in the kremlin when they had the meeting to talk about the new SR71 and what it was made of and where the metal for it came from
@T0rrente18
@T0rrente18 3 года назад
Comrade What? where is the titanium? its right there, i shipped it to usa to make consumer goods. You were supposed to cut them off the titanium supply dude im gonna oh really yes so go get the titanium back *sr 71 gets created* i see the problem oh do ya?!
@calvinnickel9995
@calvinnickel9995 3 года назад
Why? The SR-71 never flew over the USSR. And even if it did.. there were Soviet moles in the CIA telling them what they were seeing on the images.
@jeffbenton6183
@jeffbenton6183 3 года назад
@@calvinnickel9995 It was spying on the USSR; it didn't need to fly over it, it had side-looking cameras and radars. It also was useful in securing US interests in various parts of the world, interests that may contradict the interests of the USSR.
@DigitalvideotoolsOrg
@DigitalvideotoolsOrg 3 года назад
That's the story the US gave...
@wamyx8Nz
@wamyx8Nz 3 года назад
@@calvinnickel9995 I'm pretty sure they did do overflights of the USSR. They were so fast that standard evasive maneuvers when a SAM was fired was just to accelerate and outrun it. The Soviets eventually came up with the MIG FoxBat that in theory could catch an SR-71, but they had to burn up their engines to do it. After reaching the intercept speed *once* it needed totally new engines.
@alanwatts8239
@alanwatts8239 3 года назад
Fun fact about the SR-71: boi is he fast, he fast af
@mscir
@mscir 3 года назад
Well done. I love the mechanical engineering details, including the materials discussions and the charts. Great job. Big fan.
@teddy.d174
@teddy.d174 3 года назад
Another fantastic video! Your channel amazes me every time I watch a new (or older) video.....awesome content, every time. 👍🏻👍🏻
@erika002
@erika002 3 года назад
*_SR-71's Titanium, piloted by a 500-year old Romanian Vampire, and nosediving at Mach 3.5 to a British Aircraft Carrier captured by Vampire Nazis is the coolest thing I've ever watched during this quarantine._*
@burnerheinz
@burnerheinz 3 года назад
"so nice ship you got"
@martiddy
@martiddy 3 года назад
Nice Hellsing reference!
@yormumahoe6469
@yormumahoe6469 3 года назад
where did ui watch that?
@avroarchitect1793
@avroarchitect1793 3 года назад
@@yormumahoe6469 Hellsing Ultimate Abridged on Team4Star's channel
@erika002
@erika002 3 года назад
@@avroarchitect1793 uhh
@cavangriffin1514
@cavangriffin1514 3 года назад
I'd love to see a video on N95 masks, a lot of really interesting and creative solutions go into their design, plus I see so much misinformation surrounding them.
@RealEngineering
@RealEngineering 3 года назад
Minute Physics just did a great video on it
@cavangriffin1514
@cavangriffin1514 3 года назад
@@RealEngineering I'll have to check it out, cheers
@prjndigo
@prjndigo 3 года назад
N95 and N100 is only a silicosis/lung cancer rating... 0.300 microns is the "must not pass" because below that our lungs will almost always clear the material
@sportskid7022
@sportskid7022 3 года назад
As I’m going into my second year of mechanical engineering, your explanation of materials is awesome! Keep up the great work!
@macmaccourt
@macmaccourt Год назад
Absolutely fascinating! Thank you for explaining the intricacies of the SR-71's Titanium production process. Wow!
@FormulaJuann
@FormulaJuann 3 года назад
Imagine being one of the few humans in history to pilot the SR-71!
@kevineckelkamp
@kevineckelkamp 3 года назад
Like Neil Armstrong
@suhandatanker
@suhandatanker 3 года назад
@@bennylofgren3208 what he means is that neil armstrong is one of the few people to do things no other has done before
@BlackbirdSpecOps
@BlackbirdSpecOps 3 года назад
@@kevineckelkamp he never flew the blackbird.
@cynicalobserver1118
@cynicalobserver1118 3 года назад
This barely reaches the level of hardship my parents went through to go to school.
@FlorianSojka
@FlorianSojka 3 года назад
As someone who works with titanium almost every day I can confirm what you say. Thank you for the informative video. 👍🏻
@kodakoda5338
@kodakoda5338 3 года назад
I've been sober from drugs for months and I can say that, nebula was the best impulse purchase I've ever made
@xerxesmystic6544
@xerxesmystic6544 3 года назад
Good lad
@Acsion42
@Acsion42 3 года назад
Aluminum was once just as rare and expensive as Titanium before the bayer process was discovered, it's inevitable that we eventually find the titanium equivalent.
@codyblea3638
@codyblea3638 3 года назад
Pure aluminum was worth more than gold when a 10 kilogram topper was placed atop the Washington monument. About 5 years later, iirc, it was dirt cheap.
@OCinneide
@OCinneide 3 года назад
@stockart whiteman Is it inevitable? I ask myself that every day. Will humanity sustain this growth, or plateau.
@Piromanofeliz
@Piromanofeliz 3 года назад
@@OCinneide as long as it doesn't catastrofically crash...
@MrTomyCJ
@MrTomyCJ 3 года назад
All I want are nuclear forges: forget about being unable to reach high enough temperatures >:(
@jonghyeonlee5877
@jonghyeonlee5877 3 года назад
I think we already have it, it's called the Cambridge FFC Process. See www.asminternational.org/documents/10192/1884362/amp16202p051.pdf/c40e8850-2fc7-456b-a0ec-b4b6e650e9bd & link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11837-017-2664-4. Very exciting stuff for titanium and other interesting metals like chromium and tantalum.
@kyleburns9439
@kyleburns9439 3 года назад
I think this is one of your most in depth videos to date. Super impressed! I had always wondered why titanium was so expensive but just chalked it up to its unique properties
@seanwilson5516
@seanwilson5516 3 года назад
SR-71: From Russia with Love
@Attaxalotl
@Attaxalotl 3 года назад
Made for Russia Of Russia
@DonovinJones
@DonovinJones 3 года назад
Wait isnt that the Queens Royal Ship from Star Wars
@pyeitme508
@pyeitme508 3 года назад
Kind of, also in Star Wars Titanium is superior to the fictional Durasteel.
@KuraIthys
@KuraIthys 3 года назад
@@pyeitme508 That's surprising, since scifi tends to come up with fictional super-materials. Star Trek ships are often largely constructed from Tritanium. (though Duranium is also a common material.) Which is funny in itself, because it's a made up material but is clearly trying to ride on the reputation of Titanium...
@artemisfowl52
@artemisfowl52 3 года назад
The artist who came up with the royal ship explicitly said he used the SR-71 as its base concept.
@caesar7734
@caesar7734 3 года назад
Me too
@droplifter3435
@droplifter3435 3 года назад
Firstly because it's not space-worthy.
@callumbush1
@callumbush1 3 года назад
I've 4 titanium plates in my cheek and jaw bones wonderful metal! The boiling point of titanium is far higher than steel!
@thestudentofficial5483
@thestudentofficial5483 3 года назад
How and why do you have titanium plates in your cheek and jaw bones?
@alanwatts8239
@alanwatts8239 3 года назад
@@thestudentofficial5483 He broke his bones and got it fixed.
@user2144
@user2144 3 года назад
I have a large titanium screw in my pelvis. One day, the screw could be found, in perfect condition, at the bottom of my grave. My bones and clothes will turn to dust, but the screw will carry on. It saved me in surgery, and it will outlive me after my death, by decades and decades.
@vijeshkumar692
@vijeshkumar692 3 года назад
Are you the terminator? How's the future?
@ieuanhunt552
@ieuanhunt552 3 года назад
You are a cyborg. Congratulations
@MrLjm74
@MrLjm74 3 года назад
Your transitions to promotional material is freakin' seamless! You do it in such a way that i think it's still part of the video and that you've gone off on a semi-relevant tangent. But it takes me a good 2 minutes to realise what has happened. Top marks for marketing, well done sir!
@kcgfy81
@kcgfy81 3 года назад
Money: The Real Thing That Made The SR-71 Possible
@henrywalker8287
@henrywalker8287 3 года назад
U could say that for anything tbh, even humans
@nauuwgtx
@nauuwgtx 3 года назад
That's humans though
@user6826
@user6826 2 года назад
This is fascinating, makes me respect a titanium flashlight I own even more. Seeing what's involved in machining the stuff, I'm actually surprised it didn't cost even more than it did...
@jonseon5952
@jonseon5952 3 года назад
I'll be honest I thought that was Padme's ship in the thumbnail for a sec. Edit: Apparently Padme's ship was inspired by the SR 71 and chrome hood ornaments on fancy cars.
@davidgoncalvesalvarez
@davidgoncalvesalvarez 3 года назад
Galvanic corrosion has been a fun discovery, not only did the name surprise me but when I saw what is it made me think about it after blowing my mind. Really interesting and great video as always, keep up the good job and stay healthy.
@Sentmassen
@Sentmassen 3 года назад
This was the one that made me sign up for curiosity stream. This was fascinating, well done.
@roundysquares
@roundysquares 3 года назад
I once did an internship for mechanical engineering at the German Aerospace Institute in Cologne. They have a big training facility for their machinists, and I was learning to use the machines alongside them. Every time someone would start to work on a piece of titanium, the entire building could hear it.
@Dimension640
@Dimension640 3 года назад
This was really interesting, in depth yet easy to understand
@itetecnun
@itetecnun 3 года назад
Congratulations for the video. I really enjoyed watching this. It is very well explained and the SR-71 is one of my favourite human made machines!!
@misugita
@misugita 3 года назад
I LOVE titanium! Especially when it is insanely pure titanium processed from TiCl₄ using a plasma quench reactor. Great video!
@gabrielmataleo4573
@gabrielmataleo4573 3 года назад
And there is Apple: Let make a credit card
@User-hb7xv
@User-hb7xv 3 года назад
To be honest, It is Insulting
@hkr667
@hkr667 3 года назад
@Tessa Rossa Please go see a psychologist.
@tobiasrud
@tobiasrud 3 года назад
@Tessa Rossa lmao what? so if you don't like an American company you automatically dislike the US as a whole? ok.
@fiveainone
@fiveainone 3 года назад
​@Tessa Rossa The original joke was about contrast, not about hate. Comparing the high tech material developed and used for the most advanced aircraft in history to withstand extreme circumstances, to be used on a credit card that has absolutely no use for the durability and its properties. Your mind going directly to defending US is quite a left turn from the joke.
@macaroon_nuggets8008
@macaroon_nuggets8008 3 года назад
@Tessa Rossa Who is Boris?
@daveanderson718
@daveanderson718 3 года назад
Thanks for the engineering technical specs combined with the practical aspects of titanium use.
@sohammahendrakar4247
@sohammahendrakar4247 2 года назад
Your content is amazing. There is not a day that goes by that I don’t watch your videos, I am surprised that I am able to understand your explanations. Thanks!
@JohnSmith-we1tb
@JohnSmith-we1tb 3 года назад
Yay, material science!
@TwoWheelWarrior
@TwoWheelWarrior 3 года назад
I owned a couple Titanium bicycles. They made me as fast as the SR-71...
@mikeorr3333
@mikeorr3333 3 года назад
while it was being towed across the tarmac, right?
@martijn9568
@martijn9568 3 года назад
Those must have been some hella expensive bicycles
@1jtwister
@1jtwister 3 года назад
my titanium wheelchair had me soaking up all the poon in the old folks home
@mbrunnme
@mbrunnme 3 года назад
@@martijn9568 you can get a Ti frame for ~$650-$700 USD. Expensive but rides very nicely, and if the welds don't suck they last forever. IF.
@brandon.4451
@brandon.4451 3 года назад
@@mbrunnme my father's Ti frame cracked. But he rode the distance of the earth's circumference before it cracked.
@koreyjeffers6963
@koreyjeffers6963 3 года назад
Dude the logistics of D-Day series looks awesome. Definitely signing up to nebula through curiosity. Really wish I was taught like this by someone like you when I was in school. Kids need to be engaged and partially entertained for them to truly learn and retain information. Great vid as always my dude.
@josephplatania5593
@josephplatania5593 6 месяцев назад
Love that plane. The engineering involved boggles the mind. Great video. Great material
@henrrypoop7570
@henrrypoop7570 3 года назад
This is more understanding than 3 hours of chemistry class nothing but words
@nazamroth8427
@nazamroth8427 3 года назад
Material engineering and "exciting" in the same presentation? Impossible.
@squalo8196
@squalo8196 3 года назад
Yeah right. Doing material science research is like cooking where you just mix any ingredients then hope that the output is good. :D
@misterdumbad
@misterdumbad 3 года назад
Holy CRAP this was interesting! This video inspires a whole new level of respect for not only Titanium and the SR-71, but also for engineering development and practices! Even the smallest details like keeping track of material and heat losses led to entirely new developments in tooling and material design. This should be necessary viewing for all entering the engineering, machining or manufacturing fields.
@n00bma5ter69
@n00bma5ter69 3 года назад
This knowledge is phenomenonal. Had no idea of the challenges involved with just working with Ti alone back in those days!
@lucasm3452
@lucasm3452 3 года назад
Never thought I’d find a video about the making of titanium this interesting
@tony_5156
@tony_5156 3 года назад
Random fact: When hornets attack a hive to carry off bees to eat, a group of worker bees quickly surround the intruder. The bees vibrate their wing muscles to generate temperatures of about 46oC for more than 30 minutes, enough to kill the hornets.
@itscaptainterry
@itscaptainterry 3 года назад
I saw that video on my recommended toi
@Francois_Dupont
@Francois_Dupont 3 года назад
100% BS
@ottopike6000
@ottopike6000 3 года назад
@@Francois_Dupont nope. Only true facts here.
@mbotnd6050
@mbotnd6050 3 года назад
@@Francois_Dupont it was in a National Geographic magazine recently. It's legit
@tony_5156
@tony_5156 3 года назад
mbotnd i wonder if humans could possibly do something like that, the issue is the death is squally from suffocation and not cooking alive so some demented brainstormers will likely come up with a way to do such.
@eprofessio
@eprofessio 6 месяцев назад
I’ve seen three of the sr-71 variants in person. They are beautiful machines.
@Spidapida006
@Spidapida006 3 года назад
I knew that titanium is extremely hard to produce as I read it from a random periodic table's description, but I never knew why until I watched this. Thanks for such an explanation, it's really fascinating.
@edfire5777
@edfire5777 3 года назад
Problem: Strong metal Solution: moneys, lots of moneys.
@einundsiebenziger5488
@einundsiebenziger5488 3 месяца назад
... money*
@devindykstra
@devindykstra 3 года назад
2:19 Laughs in SpaceX's Starship
@DrHarryT
@DrHarryT 3 года назад
Very nice detail. My dad used to work for Rockwell in Anaheim CA in the 80's, he ran a triple head stylus [non CNC] where three parts were cut at the same time by running a stylus ball around a template part. They were Titanium aircraft parts and he said that 1 raw block of material was around $500 each and if he screwed up he would scrap 3 parts at the same time. He was an old time veteran from the 60's so the good news is he didn't scrap parts which probably helped him to keep his job. :-)
@jamesdavison6290
@jamesdavison6290 3 года назад
Incredible content delivered with incredible quality. This is one user who appreciates it! Thanks!
@USSAnimeNCC-
@USSAnimeNCC- 3 года назад
I hope those engineer got paid rally good for the development of the SR-71 with how hard they had to work
@tymgamerz
@tymgamerz 3 года назад
Im pretty sure, just like the manhattan project, they were hailed as heros and received lots of cash for their works that helped america
@livethefuture2492
@livethefuture2492 3 года назад
Engineers used to get well paying jobs back then.
@sircrapalot9954
@sircrapalot9954 3 года назад
Live The Future they still do. Source: Am aeronautical engineer. I do OK.
@semiexpat2469
@semiexpat2469 3 года назад
My father helped design the camera for the SR-71. They had a reunion a while back in Oregon for all the people who worked on it.
@andrewmagdaleno5417
@andrewmagdaleno5417 3 года назад
Love this kinda content. Thanks for your hard work on these!
@GouchuInc
@GouchuInc 3 года назад
I don't think I've seen a video more worthy of an upvote and a subscription! Brilliant!
@08jag81
@08jag81 2 года назад
Lockheed also developed a material that was given the name "Lockalloy" for the YF-12/SR-71. It consists of 62% beryllium and 38% aluminum and was used as a structural metal because of its high specific strength and stiffness.
@Then.72
@Then.72 5 месяцев назад
You mean alloy
@Luke..luke..luke..
@Luke..luke..luke.. 3 года назад
One of the smoothest Segway slides into the Nebula plug 👌
@Luke..luke..luke..
@Luke..luke..luke.. 3 года назад
@@mercian9425 autocorrect. Brrrrrr
@makarin1
@makarin1 3 года назад
Waited for this video for 15 years.😇 I knew how much work went into Sr 71, it s still an inspiration. Thank you.
@cmpe43
@cmpe43 3 года назад
Great job covering this! Thanks.
@fritzwalter1112
@fritzwalter1112 3 года назад
just seeing the title: "nice, that is a cool topic".
@densealloy
@densealloy 3 года назад
4:32 Australia is also the location for Bauxite ore which is the source for Aluminum.
@joshhenderson9492
@joshhenderson9492 3 года назад
WA gang
@autodidact537
@autodidact537 3 года назад
Jamaica
@skizzik121
@skizzik121 3 года назад
I'm still impressed how quick this channel grew, along with all the other channels in the Nebula Gang seems like most of them put on a couple million subs im the least year
@basanupatil5208
@basanupatil5208 Год назад
Very Helpful, Thank You for the video in such a detail.
@notbrandon721
@notbrandon721 3 года назад
"DO YOU EVEN READ MY CHRISTMAS LIST?!"
@nobody9613
@nobody9613 3 года назад
When the most futuristic thing on this earth was made 50 years in the past
@test-mm7bv
@test-mm7bv 3 года назад
that's public we have insane things now that make titanium look like play dough
@kiwidiesel5071
@kiwidiesel5071 3 года назад
50 years on and still chairman of the board🙏
@kaiser7695
@kaiser7695 3 года назад
What about the F-117 or the F-35 or B-2 or F-22. Stealth planes in general are super futuristic looking.
@martijn9568
@martijn9568 3 года назад
@@fexilsehn6445 That's still a miniscule amount compared to modern stealth aircraft.
@wamyx8Nz
@wamyx8Nz 3 года назад
@@martijn9568 The SR-71 was so fast it didn't need to be stealth. Standard evasive maneuvers were to just outrun the missiles...
@cheyennereynoso4116
@cheyennereynoso4116 3 года назад
I like when educational RU-vid channels go into such extensive detail. Most only give a general explanation. Thank you, Real Engineering, for teaching us REAL engineering.
@steventhehistorian
@steventhehistorian 3 года назад
8:05 That is some next-level problem solving. Isolating the problem down to the water treatment plant... Incredible! Much respect to the person behind that revelation.
@jive3341
@jive3341 3 года назад
titanium: _exist_ SR-71 engineers: *screams inside*
@pyeitme508
@pyeitme508 3 года назад
Titanium forever!
@sivagurum3480
@sivagurum3480 3 года назад
Vibranium forever
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