Thanks for watching. If you enjoyed this one consider checking out this video on another Japanese tank project: kzbin.info/www/bejne/n6iblYV4j7KLlcU
@admiraltiberius19892 жыл бұрын
Shame the Japanese burned and destroyed so many of their records at the end of WW2. I can't imagine what interesting and crazy designs were lost to the fires.
@Thekilleroftanks2 жыл бұрын
That's not the full truth. While some was burned by the Japanese, you also gotta remember the US was burning half of Japan with fire bombing raids. And then after the war a lot of Japanese prototypes and the like was thrown in the scrap because of a mix of racism and not knowing the importance.
@ConeOfArc2 жыл бұрын
Not sure how racism has anything to do with it. Sure there was racism towards the Japanese during and after WW2 but the reason for scrapping their vehicles would be due to them not being seen as important, which at the time they weren't. Plenty of German, Italian, and even American vehicles were scrapped as well following the war.
@admiraltiberius19892 жыл бұрын
@@ConeOfArc and alot of extremely important and interesting American prototypes were scrapped before or during the Korean War. I'm still hoping one or two of those like the T55 maybe turn up in an abandoned warehouse somewhere.
@zendell372 жыл бұрын
How much was self immolation versus the US fire bombing everything?
@admiraltiberius19892 жыл бұрын
@@zendell37 likely the US fire bombing did some damage yes but we know the Japanese purposely destroyed almost records, photos and models of the Yamato class. I can imagine quite a few projects that we can only speculate on ended up in the fire regardless.
@thegamingzilla62692 жыл бұрын
Honestly when it comes to World of Tanks and Japanese tanks. The game takes alot of liberties on what the vehicle could have been if it were actually built and what it would become as both tech and doctrines advanced, which i think is neat
@jwenting2 жыл бұрын
problem is they claim to be 100% historically accurate and a lot of people take their word for it and think every tank in the game is an actual vehicle. Same with Warthunder.
@nikoclesceri22672 жыл бұрын
War thunder is a lot better when it comes to that stuff than WoT still not perfect but definitely not nearly as bad
@kylegarner67532 жыл бұрын
Not as people, no, but as trained operators, yes.
@elitebeachgaming2 жыл бұрын
@@jwenting um no they don't they literally had a campaign of sealion world of tanks has the war end at a different year as well
@stzine74092 жыл бұрын
I wish you could used multiple guns like on Wot console, pc should have a multiple gun function we already have double barreled tanks
@DarkestVampire922 жыл бұрын
Had it not been for Army/Navy Infighting, Japan's tank industry could've been quite formidable. It was the right move to allocate more budget and resources to the Navy and Airforce given the war they'd be fighting, but underfunding the tank force is never a good idea.
@DoubleX86202 жыл бұрын
Maybe even the Chi-To and Chi-Ri could have seen full scale production that would be amazing. If they built a few of them I'm sure one of each would be around today for us to admire and learn from
@dont2592 жыл бұрын
With how notoriously shit Japanese steel is? Lmao. Sure, whatever.
@DarkestVampire922 жыл бұрын
@@dont259 Its better to have a lot of tanks made of crap steel that has a good gun and good optics, than very few tanks made of crap steel with crap guns and no optics. T-34 saved Russia from losing the war, and its one of the worst tanks ever made.
@patrickstewart34462 жыл бұрын
Too bad the Navy blew that budget on to massive battleships that this same navy had thoroughly demonstrated were just floating targets for carrier aircraft.
@VladislavDrac2 жыл бұрын
@@dont259 yeah, sure. Japanese steel sure is crap, that's why it killed a whole lot of Allied servicemen during the war, not to count the millions of civilians killed. Smh
@Norrikan2 жыл бұрын
Leaving aside the relative qualities of the Japanese tanks (or lack thereof) I find it astonishing that a nation that a mere 60 years earlier was more or less stuck in temporal stasis managed to not only come up with modern designs like these (as well as ships and planes and various other things), but also cobbled together the industry, educational system and economy to produce said designs in numbers.
@shellshockedgerman39472 жыл бұрын
Because Japan had already established everything that a major state needed. It had access to outside information and inventions, it had stable institutions, and it was already modernizing in the 1840s. What happened afterwards is pretty similar to what happened to European and American states after they industrialized.
@jacktheaviator49382 жыл бұрын
How is it astonishing? The western powers had done all of the heavy lifting. The Japanese just took the best information from around the world and stole it for their own use. The Japanese even attempted to copy the M-1 Garand, rather unsuccessfully. I think the myth of Japanese technical prowess during WW2 if pretty funny. EVERYTHING they built was crap in 1941, and utterly useless by 1944. Just look at the Zero, the only advantage it had was weight, and that was because they offered Zero protection for the pilot. Horribly flawed thinking. An island nation with a limited population, especially skilled pilots, should probably place a high priority on survivability. But the Japanese place no value on human life, not even their own.
@destroyerinazuma962 жыл бұрын
Fun fact, they did the same millennia earlier with agriculture. While China and India were becoming agrarian nations, Japan maintained a hunter-gatherers model for thousands of years. Archeological proof shows they did grow the likes of pickles and some spices, but had otherwise enough to just fish/hunt/gather not to bother with agriculture. Agriculture got pretty much imported, and once they learned about it Japan adopted it very quickly, then it soon became the dominant method of food production, at least in the dominant kingdoms.
@LastGoatKnight2 жыл бұрын
2:06 I just noticed that poor driver left the anti-shrapnel mask on his face. And it looks like that the photo was made on a very sunny day.
@Penha-yz8vj2 жыл бұрын
I really think the O-I super heavy should get a video of him
@callmeclementine0w02 жыл бұрын
I love that Japan's ONLY heavy tank in War Thunder is a multi-turreted, paper-thin armored, WW1 esk WW2 relic that feels like its bolts will rattle off with every slight turn. & yet it is my favorite Japanese low-tier tank. Sure it's a premium, but it's pretty cheap. I just wish that War Thunder would stop modernization, and focus instead on late war, WW2, or even Post - WW1 designs, from all nations. There is more to Ground RB than Leopard variants...
@5peciesunkn0wn2 жыл бұрын
It is a lot of fun for sure.
@standard-carrier-wo-chan2 жыл бұрын
Honestly, the better move would've been to split everything up between WW1 to Post WW2 and Cold War to Modern era, but that's too much effort for Gaijin.
@grease48102 жыл бұрын
I’ve always wanted like Mark IV’s but I’m told it’s a bad idea and I agree but I think they are cool
@5peciesunkn0wn2 жыл бұрын
@@grease4810 It is a bad idea, which is why it's a *GREAT* idea! All the WWI tanks shooting at each other. Amazing.
@ThommyofThenn2 жыл бұрын
Just for the sake of erudition; it's spelled "esque" despite "esk" making more sense phonetically.
@senioravocado18642 жыл бұрын
No one: Vickers: Type 1 Type 2 Type C Type D
@ConeOfArc2 жыл бұрын
You don't even know how had that made it to find info on the vehicle, didn't help that there's ANOTHER Mark C made by Britain and Vickers also made the Mark III which, from what I can tell, is a further development of the Mark C. Not looking forward to researching that one in the future...
@senioravocado18642 жыл бұрын
@@ConeOfArc oof, non stamdardized naming conventions, at least on the companies end, really does make it hard to research
@Gothmetalhead132 жыл бұрын
The problem with researching Japanese tank projects is that a lot of data was lost during the end of the war. I have seen a photograph of a Japanese superheavy tank at an exhibition in the 30's that has a silhouette that matches no known tank, but there is no surviving data on the vehicle other than this. Likewise, Cone mentions the O-I, which we know did exist (there is a transcript of the tests the Japanese did with the prototype out there), but so little data survives that even Cone made the mistake of thinking it might not have existed. It is one of the sad facts of life, that we may never truly know the extent of the Japanese armour projects prior to the end of WW2.
@thenumbah1birdman2 жыл бұрын
- 100 ton tank casually rolls down hill, off road, and sinks a meter into mud-
@jacktheaviator49382 жыл бұрын
The Vickers catching afire because of a carburetor issue was an incredibly common issue in pre-war gasoline engines. The gasket technology had not caught up and all carburators leaked horribly. This is the reason almost all early carbs were side or up drafting designs. A downdraft carburetor leaked fuel into the manifold, and then past the valves, to hydrolock the engine. That was best case scenario. Worst case is a bad leak while running, which results in a fire.
@DeeEight2 жыл бұрын
The Canadian Ram I and early production RAM II Cruiser tanks had its "hull" MG in a turret of sorts beside the driver, and the RAM IIs had a 6 pounder gun which is effectively a 57mm gun, so maybe this also inspired Japan. As it happens, those Rams which had the MG turret and also had hull side doors, which were converted to Kangaroos (which in many ways were the first fully tracked APCs), had a much greater field of fire to support the infantry squad with than a ball mount like M4s and late production Ram IIs used. The turret had around a 150 degree arc of traverse from about 30 degrees to the front right (the hull casting of the driver's compartment and hatch being raised and in the way to prevent going completely to the right) to about 30 degrees to the rear left (before bumping the barrel into the hull casting again) with around -15 degrees and +30 degrees of elevation. Some of the Command/OP conversions also retained this MG turret which was pretty much their only weapon given the dummy gun barrel replacing the 6 pounder so as to carry two extra radio sets in the turret.
@ConeOfArc2 жыл бұрын
If the RAM hadn't entered production about 15 years after the Type 87 was built that could have been the case. Unless the Japanese had some sort of time travel though it was just British influence. The inclusion of the MG turret on the RAM itself was influenced by British design.
@CZ350tuner2 жыл бұрын
The Japanese 57mm. L.18.5 type 90 tank gun only fired a 2 pound shell. The Allied range test results, for both types of ammunition issued for the gun, were: APHE shell = Up to 34mm. @ 0 degrees @ 100 yards. AP solid shot = Up to 40mm. @ 0 degrees @ 100 yards.
@builder3962 жыл бұрын
I mean of course. Everyone knows that the shape of horse shoes was inspired by Tiger I turrets with their mantlet missing.
@NashmanNash2 жыл бұрын
@@ConeOfArc Awefully polite way to write"Mate,do you even read and backcheck what you post"
@PitFriend12 жыл бұрын
It still amuses me that the Type 95 Heavy tank weighs less than an M4 Sherman medium tank.
@michaeltelson97982 жыл бұрын
Look at Italian tanks, their P26 weighed the same as a Sherman was equipped with a 75mm gun but was classified as a heavy tank by them. The Tiger tank that the Japanese bought never left port because of the fighting in France and was used by the Germans.
@egoalter12762 жыл бұрын
Dont forget that the sherman is 8 years younger and involves 3 years of war experience in its development. For example the panzer 4, a fairly good paralell to the sherman, also started life as the heavy tank of the germans in the interwar period.
@danielburgess77852 жыл бұрын
Resource logistics with the IJA fighting the IJN for steel and other scarce materials meant the IJA was always doomed to be the last puppy getting fed.
@YourFriendlyOfficeAssistant7 ай бұрын
Japanese military politics can best be described as a clusterfuck, but during the 1930s the Army held as much influence as the Navy and Tojo's government (he being an Army general) balanced the IJA and IJN carefully. The problem was that while the IJA was reasonably well funded, the war against China in 1937 it became a sort of money sink and most of its own funding went to keeping the war machine in China going with precious little for tank research. The last genuinely good Japanese designs dated from before the war.
@DoubleX86202 жыл бұрын
So interesting. You're the only one I know that makes detailed videos about Japanese tanks. I really apprechiate your hard work you put into researching accurate information. I had no idea the Vickers C was sold to Japan I knew about a Vickers 6 ton which catched fire during trials as well. I mean, the O-I story would be very interesting, but seeing how difficult the research is these two tanks are already very impressive. Thumbs up from me 👍👍🎌
@macroglossumstellatarum59322 жыл бұрын
Speaking of Japanese tanks, what are your thoughts on the submarine-deployed vehicles, like the Type 3 Ka-Chi and Type 4 Ka-Tsu? They've got a cylindrical pressure hull to be tied to the deck of a sub for stealthy deployment. Seems like one of the worst ways to deploy a tank. The crew inside is screwed if things go wrong, and whats even the point of the stealthy deployment? I don't think you can invade much with only a few tanks.
@morzemus18052 жыл бұрын
Would the tank need to crewed during transport? Seems like there would be no real time save if the tank is already tied to a submarine. But it does sound like an application with really small niche.
@egoalter12762 жыл бұрын
Japan had an idea of submarine coastal raiding. They even had submersible aircraft carriers. In the end Italies idea of submarine born spec ops teams would prove to be the viable execution of this strategy.
@grahamstrouse11652 жыл бұрын
@@egoalter1276 the problem is even the I-400 class could only carry 3-4 light floatplanes…🙂
@flashsentry17912 жыл бұрын
I remember playing an old WW2 strategy game back on the Xbox 360 called R.U.S.E. and they had a Japan as DLC. Well there super heavy tank Type 105 O-I had a flamethrower, rockets, and a 105mm gun and I always thought how ridiculously OP it was.
@black_reaperbk201311 ай бұрын
O-I and the FCM F1 were some of the strongest tanks in that game, it's sad the game never got a sequel.
@TheArklyte2 жыл бұрын
Even if slightly underpowered, Type 95 is still a statement that back then japanese could produce a tank chassis with suspension, transmission and engine capable of supporting the 26 ton vehicle. Something not every other major country of the time could do cementing place of japanese military industry as one of the leading in the world. After all, japanese tanks are seen as almost afterthought to their navy and aircraft, but they were still able to pull out cards like this from their sleeve;)
@bwilliams463 Жыл бұрын
Informative as always. I respect how thorough your research is.
@TetravaultActual2 жыл бұрын
I do hope more info for the O-I is gone over, I would love to see it in War Thunder at some point
@bobmcbob492 жыл бұрын
A Japanese model company owns the surviving known O-I blueprint. Honestly I'm surprised Gaijin hasn't purchased access to them.
@Hatsuzu Жыл бұрын
@@bobmcbob49 Wargaming got access and made it according to the official records that the company so Gaijin can do some homework copying and we'd have a great O-I at about 5.7 since you know..gaijin Brs any higher and it's pointless
@daylight399 ай бұрын
For a future fake tank friday, wot blitz added a czech tank that is a porch tiger early prototype with an IS turret. It looks cursed.
@obsidianjane44132 жыл бұрын
@5:00 Having the hatch in the front is great incentive for the crew to not try to abandon the vehicle when the going got rough. Since the Japanese aren't going to dishonor themselves in any such fashion, they at least get a comfortably and dignified way of boarding the machine that was going to take them to their doom... I mean glory!
@destroyerinazuma962 жыл бұрын
I believe the Type 89 appeared in "Flowers of War". The Chinese threw everything and the kitchen sink at those tanks cause most Chinese small arms could do nothing.
@TheFirstVonGunther2 жыл бұрын
Reject Modernity, RETURN TO R I V E T
@parrot8492 жыл бұрын
Outstanding video. I wonder if enough technical data exists for the major model companies to create a few kits of these obscure Japanese heavies.
@apr0l Жыл бұрын
established titles🤡🤡🤡
@deeznoots6241 Жыл бұрын
Btw that sponsorship is a scam company, do not give them money
@CMDRFandragon2 жыл бұрын
I find it hilarious how tank designers considered "heavy tanks" a tank that has *all the guns*.
@ConeOfArc2 жыл бұрын
It more had to do with weight as well as firepower I believe. It varies from nation to nation.
@CMDRFandragon2 жыл бұрын
@@ConeOfArc It honestly amazes me how we've now made tanks that weigh as much as those old WW1 and 2 Heavy tanks, but they are soooooooooooooooo much more capable. THings like the Char 2C with its like 47mm main gun and being the size of a friggin railroad locomotive weighed like 68 tons, but now we have the likes of the T-90, which is only like 46 tons and has composite armor thats a few hundred mm, a 125mm gun and so on..... Or you take the Abrams, 68-72 some odd tons and compare it to the weight of the Char 2C or even the King Tiger....... Advances in technology are amusing.
@samwill72592 жыл бұрын
I mean, how important was the safety of the crew REALLY to the Japanese army? Something tells me concern for soldier survivability is not top on the fascist empire's to do list.
@deleted_2152 жыл бұрын
You’re talking safety to the same country who strapped bombs to planes and ordered men to crash them into enemy ships while having soldiers charge at machine guns with bayonets and swords…I don’t think they cared too much
@dexexmachinatu41512 жыл бұрын
It's pretty ironic how the actual nazis values the lives of their "suicide pilots" more than imperial japan by engineering ejection systems or just by giving them the chance to bail out.
@filmandfirearms2 жыл бұрын
@Allesnur Nochkrank Yeah, but Japanese military culture has an unhealthy obsession with death. Sometimes it works out, like with the kamikaze, which the US Navy figured had a higher success rate for lower casualties than a conventional attack. Other times, it led to the loss of men that didn't need to die. The latter was far more common
@giroromek84232 жыл бұрын
Part and parcel of Bushido.
@FunDipFobs2 жыл бұрын
Not really important but wasn’t Japan a Imperial (Empirical?) system? Not Fascist? Or was it technically both?
@calessel31392 жыл бұрын
It sounds crazy to have a crew hatch on the front of the vehicle, but remember one of the most successful tanks of WW2 had just such a feature -- the T-34 (well for the driver, anyway).
@ConeOfArc2 жыл бұрын
A drivers hatch is one thing but having the entire crew enter/exit from one hatch in the front is not a great design option. I'd have to do more research to know for certain but I would guess this was done because WW1 tanks tended to have a door on them and with smaller designs this couldn't really be placed on the sides or rear so they just stuck it on the front.
@calessel31392 жыл бұрын
@@ConeOfArc Yes, I'm just saying having a door on the front of this tank looks crazy on this vehicle, but designs that allowed crewmembers an exit from the front of the tank arent that odd of an idea during WW2. It's just that in the accepted popular designs (like the T34 & M3 Stuart) the hatch doubles as a driver's visor which makes it appear normal.
@ethanedwards4222 жыл бұрын
@@calessel3139 driver hatch's are very normal. It's far better to have the driver have their own escape in case of a needed escape from the vehicle. They are still used today, on every tank that's worth a dime. So yes, driver hatches are very normal
@jarink12 жыл бұрын
Is it a crew door or a sally-port? (from whence to charge the enemy and engage in close combat) 😜
@calessel31392 жыл бұрын
@@ethanedwards422 You're missing the point completely. My argument isn't about driver's hatches, it's about driver's hatches located directly on the front of the vehicle. During WW2, and the inter-war years, designer's deemed it acceptable to locate crew hatches directly on the front of the tank. The T34, T70, T80, H38/39 and R35 all this configuration. Furthermore, the US M2 & M3 light tank series had their entire front superstructure plate double as escape hatches for both the driver and bow gunner. Yes, nearly all modern tank designs have driver's escape hatches but they're effectively located on the roof on the vehicle, not the front of the glacis. That said, the Type-89's door on the front plate, in which the entire crew enters and exits the tank, is a bad idea.
@kustosz83832 жыл бұрын
0:24 O-I prototype existed, but was never finished. Onther tanks from WoT tech tree (tiers VII - X) are completely fake and their designs are based on misinterpreted photos of coastal btteries
@hammergon5872 жыл бұрын
Not even coastal battery's, at least in regards to the inspiration of the Type4/5 Heavy. The turret that inspired those fakes are fortress turrets from Koto Fortress in Manchuria.
@kustosz83832 жыл бұрын
@@hammergon587 Exactly, sorry for my mistake.
@oliverstianhugaas74932 жыл бұрын
I am still amazed how nations with weak industrial capacity did not start with the SPG concepts right out of the gate.
@AFT_05G2 жыл бұрын
Japan didn’t have a weak industrial capacity,they still had a larger industry than 90% of other nations.Their industry was weak only compared to Big Three of Allies and Germany.
@Alexlinkerd2 жыл бұрын
Japanese heavy tanks make as much sense as Slovakian dreadnoughts
@joshk962 жыл бұрын
Always appreciate your research and work 👍
@TheROMaNProject Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the generally excellent videos, also for the info on Scottish titles; one on my ancestors was a minor Laird, and I just used your code when buying titles for my wife and I.
@AR_1192 жыл бұрын
Another amazing video as always 👍
@samm15612 жыл бұрын
It's better to show the only available images of the subject in question for the entire video rather than show images of unrelated material just to fill the time. (As far too many other military KZbin channels do. as an example talking about a specific variant of the Mig 23 and continuously showing videos of an F18)
@od14522 жыл бұрын
I find this all interesting, so thanks for taking the time and effort . I really appreciate it. I have to kinda laugh at the water cooled MGs on the rear of the turrets... They were prepared to do a lot of shooting...lol. So did they think they would be surrounded because of break through or just not worried about shooting their own supporting infantry. ?? lol ..I get if ones penetration of the enemy was so successful... the enemy might climb on the tank.. but wouldn't a submachine gun be enough to take care of that rare problem? lol. I understand the idea of the O1 was to transport in pieces and assemble at the battlefield.. Novel I think. Did anyone else think of that Idea? Regardless.. I love the oversized tanks. lol Not practical but really cool. I was thinking.. The Japanese used a yellow star on their vehicles but also white .. I think.. Maybe a future subject.. National Emblems on Tanks.
@geekmechanic14732 жыл бұрын
Not really the water cooled mgs were most likely maxim guns that they had from ww1
@od14522 жыл бұрын
@@geekmechanic1473 I know maxims were water cooled. I don't know about these guns but they looked like water cooling jackets to me.
@SgtBeltfed2 жыл бұрын
A lot of the thinking in the 20's and 30's revolved around breaking WWI trench warfare. The tank could overrun a trench, and fire back into it with the rear turret. It could also park on top of a machine gun nest, and fire all 3 turrets into the trenches on either side of the vehicle, in a way that there's no cover for the troops in the trenches. (the troops would be stuck in a trench they have to climb out of in a hurry, into the waiting guns of the tanks supporting infantry, or stay in the trench and get machine gunned to death by the tank itself.) Works best when the troops you're attacking have no way of actually killing a tank, which pretty much sums up a lot of fighting in China. As far as how the guns were cooled, there's 2 possibilities for why they look like that. Water cooled machine guns were the standard infantry MG at the time, and they were built using the same guns for commonality. The other possibility is the Japanese did put aluminum cooling sleeves on WWII tank machine guns, and I don't know when they started that, so those could be early cooling sleeves.
@BenersantheBread2 жыл бұрын
Shouldn't the correct pronounciation of the letter "i" in O-I be with "i" sounding like the english letter "e"? I mean, I could be wrong since I've never heard anyone say it phonetically but I've always felt that's way more likely to be the correct way to say it.
@MrZpeppers2 жыл бұрын
Wouldn’t it have been smarter for them to make stugg like tanks? The would have made a light simple tank they could easily transport, make, and use. It would make sense as far as setting them up on an island and providing covering fire to troops in the front.
@TheAllAroundMan2 жыл бұрын
I love the O-I it's so silly It looks like a prop from Takeshi's Castle
@titan_fx2 жыл бұрын
Good Lord those rivets 😵
@Perclocept5 ай бұрын
8:00 perhaps the version including the dedicated turret housing was a command version of the vehicle. Only unsupported conjecture though.
@Aeunion2 жыл бұрын
I see japanese tanks, I like.
@kommandantgalileo2 жыл бұрын
2 episodes in the span of a week, nice
@firnen_2 жыл бұрын
Quick question, do you have any insight on that one photograph that claims to show a turret of what WoT calls the Type 4 Heavy? I'm sure you know which one I mean, but I am not sure if I can post links here. It seems to show a large tank turret (and maybe hull) in the background, with 2 Soviet soldiers posing in front of it. Do you know if this picture is real, and if so, what it might depict?
@hydrolox39532 жыл бұрын
that was most probably a naval defense turret
@andrewwoodhead31412 жыл бұрын
Really great presentation. Really enjoyed it. Very informative. Waiting with baited breath for your presentation on the OI ! 😃Be as skeptical as possible is my advice.
@thatonedudenextdoor78402 жыл бұрын
Established titles DOES NOT make you the owner of land. It is not recognised by any governmental entity in Scotland or the UK.
@danielross10332 жыл бұрын
Glad you’re getting to the Japanese heavy’s hard saying if there’s any true blueprints for the wot tanks though little info is available from what I have looked for
@AinKrab2 жыл бұрын
There was 100% an OI prototype since there's a track link left
@wweminehead2 жыл бұрын
Indo love listening to youe videos whole I drift off and this couldn't have been timed any better.
@nicksande68802 жыл бұрын
Idea for when a tank lacks images like with the vickers: apart from the full picture shots maybe zoom in to focus on specific details if the resolution allows for it?
@trainpuns22 жыл бұрын
ConeOfArc + The Armchair Historian collab = heaven on Earth.
@pacificostudios2 жыл бұрын
A 57 mm or even 70 mm gun in a turret would make it one of the most heavily armed tanks in the world at the time!
@JerKKeR2 жыл бұрын
You mentioned that World of Tanks introduced many of the tanks featured in the video but in the case of the O-I there was a game that had it YEARS before World of Tanks did. I'm talking about R.U.S.E. a WWII RTS Game from Eugen Games published by Ubisoft. They released the game in 2010 where back then they already featured many prototype tanks such as the FCM F1, the King Tiger and the Super Pershing. In 2011 they released a DLC which added Japan into the game which featured the O-I but also the Chi-Ri as well as the Ho-Ri. In the game the O-I was given 60mm of armor, the main turret being 105mm AP and the 2 secondary turrets were made into a flamethrower and rocket launcher respectively. It is probably the strongest tank in the whole game.
@chunkycornbread4773 Жыл бұрын
RUSE is such a gem
@morgandaoust29812 жыл бұрын
7:43 it’s a new product for the first heavy tank requirements
@silkyz682 жыл бұрын
Yes, more Japanese Land Navy videos!
@milkapeismilky54642 жыл бұрын
Big boy intro so much better!
@jojojaja129 Жыл бұрын
Finally people who talk about japanese tank and not bias about it, to me the japanese 1920-30s tank is a decent tank for sure, i am like soviet T-54/T-55/T-62/T-64 tank but i know they weaknesses and performance in the war from documentaries but many people just stupid bias and overrate them (before ukraine war)
@JohnSmith-of2gu2 жыл бұрын
I wasn't aware of the recent discovery of new O-I documents noted at 13:48. If you end up unfortunately unable to get your hands on the documents themselves, could you at least inform us in the community tab or such about what details have supposedly been revealed? I don't want to be left hanging like that!
@nighthawk81042 жыл бұрын
9:04 everytime I see those way to loose tracks in WoT I start shaking my head... The tracks would fall of every few meters, it bother me so hard that they don't model it correctly
@zovaynezovanyari54422 жыл бұрын
I'd like to thank the 1930s and 40s Japanese for making tanks that actually make the Sherman look good.
@johngrey58062 жыл бұрын
Good research considering the difficulty.
@jansandman69832 жыл бұрын
I saw a movie once an old japanese 70's or 60's movie which sported an OI tank charging towards a chinese DP. maybe that was the basis of world of tanks to put it in their game. :D
@markgarin63552 жыл бұрын
4:34 white star on front? You put the exit door on the front of export model...cause you might have to fight them later...ha Interesting small road wheels.
@BaoBao09232 жыл бұрын
I didn’t know you had a bunch of 1/72 scale tanks ( i think it’s that scale due to Lego space ship in comparison to the tanks), cool. 1:25
@thegreatsageofenlightenmen11522 жыл бұрын
WAR THUNDER SHOULD AND MUST MAKE THESE JAPANESE TANKS THEY ALL LOOK GORGEOUS ❤❤❤❤
@jwoldmanbf32 жыл бұрын
Love the videos man!
@zombieraptor9wot3122 жыл бұрын
Good research sir
@TheCrowShow8272 ай бұрын
I love how fast the tiger P collapses in the intro
@Cassette-Cryptid2 жыл бұрын
Hey, just a psa, the sponsor is based in Hong Kong, 1 Square foot is too small to even be sold in Scotland, and lords/ladies- aren't actually recognized by literally anyone other than this company, also, we don't know how much they donated to the charity
@davidmiller-vu4pr2 жыл бұрын
If you see this can you do a video on taffy 3
@kyleclark44492 жыл бұрын
6:25 Duck Team, assemble!
@Nico-ul5bo2 жыл бұрын
Ay, suggestion for the next video, the A 38 valiant. It is considered one of the worst tanks ever built!
@gustavandersson34982 жыл бұрын
You should really look into the Krupp Raumer S. A really really overlooked vehicle for this serie :D
@sergeantkazotsky56162 жыл бұрын
idk what it is about these two tanks, but to me they just seem eerily unnatural. they look so old and out of date that it seems like some ancient relics were awakened and decided to start shooting things.
@ferdonandebull2 жыл бұрын
My father in law was a real island hopping marine in WW 2. He said that he and another marine came up on a tank and took it out. I asked about the bazooka and he said he never shot one. I laughed and said satchel charge? The engineers had all the explosives.. I asked “Grenades?” We don’t have any.. I asked how the destroyed the tank.. The answer was? We were marines we had our rifles and ammunition…
@Luke146162 жыл бұрын
Yes another video!!!!
@NukieDookie2 жыл бұрын
The I-O tank would be a cool video, not sure how much info exists on it
@morzemus18052 жыл бұрын
The soviet teletanks look like an interesting topic for a video.
@pavelslama55432 жыл бұрын
Japanese army while looking at this: "It may not be much, but its an honest crap. We are not gonna use it!"
@Combat_Dummi2 жыл бұрын
Omg, did coneofarc say bri’ain at 2:09
@chrism20272 жыл бұрын
Echt sehr Informative ich finde es sehr schade das es kaum, bestätigte Entwicklungs Dokumente der Japanischen neueren Panzer Typen gibt. Die nicht in hoher Stückzahl gebaut worden sind.
@828enigma62 жыл бұрын
Good report.
@ZhiChe9272 жыл бұрын
This tank is literally the best tank of japanese tier 1
@houkevin65062 жыл бұрын
The vk4501p of the intro. What is your cursed by design ?
@maxpayne25742 жыл бұрын
Japan got the idea for attacking Pearl Harbor from watching AAF practicing over the Harbor.
@AikenDrum1715CE2 жыл бұрын
I appreciate the correct pronunciation of Bri'ain.
@Leatherman1542 жыл бұрын
"Soooooo, what's your name?" "Greg?" "Nooooooo." ... "Yeeesss?" "I changed it." Those who know, know lol.
@zondazerda22302 жыл бұрын
What about Type 5 heavy tank? A picture of it's turret surfaced in the mid 2000s and funnily enough, the picture in question predates World of Tanks. Type 5 heavy project to my knowledge was not completed due to resources and only the turret was made and it was used in a bunker as a costal defence gun and the photograph of the turret was taken by the Russians. Let me add an extra fun fact. The most historical accurate tanks in WOT are the Russians ( don't laugh I'm serious) because they got access to those tanks and their historians have access to a vast number of documents. And the Japanese tanks because their historians are apparently really good at documenting their tanks.
@AHappyCub2 жыл бұрын
The thing with Japan is that all those late war designs are just that, designs They have no hope in actually doing any extensive test in the first place
@AllMightyKingBowser2 жыл бұрын
@Yackythegacky "cruiser turret that was repurposed for coastal defence" i mean thats exactly what the Type 5 was supposedly designed for
@zondazerda22302 жыл бұрын
@Yackythegacky Can you please name the cruiser? The only cruiser that I know that has a one gun turret configuration is the Furutaka and it's turret is nothing like this one and how can you explain the commander hatch? Ship turrets have no commander cupola and I don't see a reason for Japan to modify a turret with tripe or double the fire power to only have one gun. That's dumb, don't you think? I think you missed the point. By acknowledging the fact that the picture is way older than the game, you acknowledge that there is no reason for it to be photoshoped so it fits in the game. Also, in case of the arguement " This is clearly photoshoped," why would any one photoshop a tank from a nation that was known for navy and air force during WW2?
@zondazerda22302 жыл бұрын
@@AHappyCub Yeah, that's really sad.
@hammergon5872 жыл бұрын
Type 5 Heavy is completely fake. The turret in the picture you're referring to is a turret emplacement purpose built for Koto Fortress in Manchuria, it was never intended or was planned to be used on a tank or mobile platform.
@jimzhangzhang2 жыл бұрын
If “三109” stand for “Mitsubishi(三菱) 109”, than i guess “石108” stand for “Ishikawajima Shipyard(石川岛造船所)108”
@DAH_WHAFFLEZ2 жыл бұрын
The "Ishi" Looks like an A1E1 Independent, Almost to every Detail Is the "Ishi" a A1E1copy!??!! Please cone of ark awnser my question
@dosidicusgigas13762 жыл бұрын
Man if I was in charge I would have named it the Sumorai
@mod.ts762 жыл бұрын
Wait a minute, you mean to tell me the Japanese have taken a BMW engine and put it in their vehicles before 2020???
@FlapJacks72 жыл бұрын
Damn that's a lot of road wheels
@meismagiic47792 жыл бұрын
What is the story of the type 5?
@aynersolderingworks70092 жыл бұрын
Wasn’t there a turret of the OI used as coastal artillery ? I saw pic a few years ago looked very real but could be fake
@Kalashnikov4132 жыл бұрын
No, there's none It was not an O-I turret, but a pure coastal defence artillery turret
@davegibson96412 жыл бұрын
What about the Type 4?
@Specss2 жыл бұрын
4:55 well... They don't
@95keat Жыл бұрын
I think you'll find Arc that these are actually just pictures of the British Independent.