Air Force One – Crash Animation



The scenes in this video are from the movie White House Down (2013)

Music: Farewell Life
Artist: Arn Andersson
Watch: https://youtu.be/eD0XEH3qVCk

The plane crash in this movie doesn’t exist, It’s just a movie for entertain

I do not own ANY of the scenes and songs of this video.

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29 thoughts on “Air Force One – Crash Animation”

  1. Literally the dumbest part of the movie that had the potential to be the coolest. They didn't notice the missile? AF1 has the best anti-missile suite on any plane (aside from the SR-71, where the engine itself is the anti-missile lol). The two fighter jets didn't see the missile on the most sophisticated radar systems in the world? No ground observers witnessed the missile and tried to send a warning? There were so many ways they shouldn't have died. It could be excused if the hacker had shown that he'd disabled all of those systems, made the missile invisible, but they didn't.

    This could have been so cool if the hacker had fired a swarm of missiles- 15-20 high-tech SAMs that were spoofed one by one by both AF1 and its escorts before one finally broke through and knocked it out of the sky. Even London Has Fallen had a scene like that with the helicopters, even though I didn't particularly like that one either it at least showed them TRYING not to die.

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  2. or the current aircraft most commonly used as Air Force One, see Boeing VC-25. For the 1997 film, see Air Force One (film). For the Nike sneaker, see Air Force (shoe). For other uses, see Air Force One (disambiguation).

    SAM 29000, one of two VC-25As used as Air Force One, approaching Dayton International Airport in October 2012

    Air Force One is the official air traffic control designated call sign for a United States Air Force aircraft carrying the president of the United States. In common parlance, the term is used to denote U.S. Air Force aircraft modified and used to transport the president and a metonym for the primary presidential aircraft, VC-25, although it can be used to refer to any Air Force aircraft the president travels on.[1][2]

    The idea of designating specific military aircraft to transport the president arose during World War II when military advisors in the War Department were concerned about the risk of using commercial airlines for presidential travel. A C-54 Skymaster was then converted for presidential use; dubbed the Sacred Cow, it carried President Franklin D. Roosevelt to the Yalta Conference in February 1945 and was used for another two years by President Harry S. Truman.[citation needed]

    The "Air Force One" call sign was created in 1953, after a Lockheed Constellation carrying President Dwight D. Eisenhower entered the same airspace as a commercial airline flight using the same flight number.[3] Since the introduction of SAM 26000 in 1962, the primary presidential aircraft has carried the distinctive livery designed by Raymond Loewy.[4][5]

    Other aircraft designated as Air Force One have included another Lockheed Constellation, Columbine III, three Boeing 707s, introduced in the 1960s and 1970s, and the current Boeing VC-25As. Since 1990, the presidential fleet has consisted of two highly customized Boeing 747-200B (VC-25A) aircraft.[4] The USAF has ordered two Boeing 747-8s to serve as the next presidential aircraft, with designation VC-25B.

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