Life inside a M4 Sherman (Cross Section)

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Simple History

Simple History

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 1 300
@corymorimacori1059
@corymorimacori1059 Жыл бұрын
“The tank was originally invented to clear the way for the infantry in the teeth of machine gun fire. Now it is the infantry who will have to clear a way for the tanks.” Winston Churchill
@marvinthemartian9584
@marvinthemartian9584 Жыл бұрын
The Russians had to learn that lesson to hard way in Ukraine.😂
@yungenvy436
@yungenvy436 Жыл бұрын
​@@randomclipsmilitary9056I wish I could be dumb and simple minded like you. Life would be so much easier 😢
@johnbooth5297
@johnbooth5297 Жыл бұрын
​@@randomclipsmilitary9056I need some of the copeiem you're on... Because Russia is doing so well in Ukraine now😂😂 how many days was this supposed to last... 2nd best army in the.. I mean 2nd best army in Ukraine 😂
@randomclipsmilitary9056
@randomclipsmilitary9056 Жыл бұрын
@user-ot5uc4ep5v Its called modern warfare. You cant just send infantry with tanks in open area’s. Most of Ukraine is flat and Ukraine is only still holding since they are supported by more then 20 nations constantly sending money and equipment to Ukraine. As i said keep coping.
@alvarocardinale8910
@alvarocardinale8910 Жыл бұрын
@@randomclipsmilitary9056 you "sound" a bit butthurt.... in Portugal we say to people that are butthurt: CHORA MAIS!!
@brennanleadbetter9708
@brennanleadbetter9708 Жыл бұрын
Allies: “Yo America, can we have some tanks?” America: “Sherman”
@pain6874
@pain6874 Жыл бұрын
I’m stealing this
@John-mf6ky
@John-mf6ky Жыл бұрын
😂😂
@tundranomad
@tundranomad Жыл бұрын
👍
@croom332
@croom332 Жыл бұрын
kek
@1963Austria
@1963Austria 8 ай бұрын
Yet on the battlefield, comparing Sherman to Tiger, I would have felt much safer in a Tiger.
@ColoradoStreaming
@ColoradoStreaming Жыл бұрын
They had a Sherman tank at a park in Nebraska back in the day. Someone forgot to weld shut the bottom hatch and someone had pried it open. As kids when we visited we found the hole and would go inside the tank to play it in it. It was a pretty cool experience.
@JTA1961
@JTA1961 Жыл бұрын
I'll bet
@moistcurtains
@moistcurtains 6 ай бұрын
That's awesome lol
@boxsterman77
@boxsterman77 Ай бұрын
God! I bet.
@RobGrognerd
@RobGrognerd 15 күн бұрын
several tanks & the Atomic Cannon in a park on Rock Island Arsenal, IL we played on them & in the cemetery where Confederate prisoners of war who died in the POW camp on the island were buried
@richtomlinson7090
@richtomlinson7090 13 күн бұрын
On a different tank subject, we had a more modern tank on display at a county fair, and some crazy guy in a cape jumped up and in the tank and he was starting it. The guys in uniform scrambled to get to him in time and grabbed him out of it. He was arrested.
@Ceege48
@Ceege48 Жыл бұрын
The M3 was not made in the hopes to be sufficient. It was made as a stop-gap. Made to be good enough until they could get the M4 out and going.
@mutingp
@mutingp Жыл бұрын
Was going to say...
@applepie1911e
@applepie1911e Жыл бұрын
Giving it a hull mounted gun was pretty dumb
@darnit1944
@darnit1944 Жыл бұрын
​@@applepie1911eIt's the best they have in 1941. They needed a 75mm equipped tank in the North African campaign immediately.
@MistahFox
@MistahFox Жыл бұрын
@@applepie1911e They didn't have the machinery to produce turret rings large enough to support the 75mm in quantity, so they made a tank with it in the hull to get it in the fight as fast as possible while designing the Sherman on the side with the plan of producing it as soon as they could produce it in numbers. It's also why the Lee had a riveted hull; America knew riveted hulls were dangerous but lacked enough experienced welders to create welded hulls for all of its tanks, so they waited until they built up enough manpower to switch to welded hulls.
@Suto_Ko
@Suto_Ko Жыл бұрын
yeah, the M3 was designed as a temporary solution until the M4 was ready to be deployed.
@Luis-be9mi
@Luis-be9mi Жыл бұрын
Also worth noting are the Sherman’s extensive use of rubber track pads. These help prevent the Sherman from tearing up paved roads which would have made roads impassable after a few tanks equipped with all steel tracks went over them.
@dj11o9er
@dj11o9er Жыл бұрын
Gotta love me some rubber
@NotAntury
@NotAntury Жыл бұрын
​@@dj11o9eralso CONDOMS!
@brendenburke272
@brendenburke272 Жыл бұрын
But with the rubber tracks some Sherman's would roll over. To fix this issue steel tracks were fitted.
@ChemySh
@ChemySh Жыл бұрын
there's even a website dedicated to identifying as many Sherman track pad patterns as it could
@WitchDoctor87
@WitchDoctor87 6 ай бұрын
Nice bit of info
@forensix78
@forensix78 Жыл бұрын
I watched this in memory of my grandfather. He was a Sherman Tank driver in WW2. Battle of the Bulge veteran, 5 Bronze stars, and European/African/Middle Eastern service medals. He seldom told stories, but I do recall him talking about how lucky he was during Battle of the Bulge, to have refuge from the cold while in the tank. My parents have his Bronze Stars and his Sherman Tank field maintenance booklet displayed at their home. He passed away 5 years ago. Strong, gentle man. May he rest peacefully.
@JTA1961
@JTA1961 Жыл бұрын
Tanks for sharing
@forensix78
@forensix78 Жыл бұрын
@@JTA1961 Amazing.
@joseocay3031
@joseocay3031 Жыл бұрын
​@@JTA1961I saw what you did there. Nevertheless salute to your grandfather for his service 🫡
@jamesmordovancey517
@jamesmordovancey517 11 ай бұрын
Puts a human touch to the video. Thanks.
@erickkurz3696
@erickkurz3696 6 ай бұрын
keep his history and awards in your family forever. be proud of this man and teach younger generations in your family about him. god bless
@matthewmarek1467
@matthewmarek1467 Жыл бұрын
Reliable, survivable, plentiful, transportable, and mobile. It ended up a great fit for the US Army doctrine of the time.
@jerithil
@jerithil Жыл бұрын
Yeah it was one of the few tanks that when you called upon a company of tanks, that had good odds of showing up with an entire company of working tanks ready to attack.
@nick-314
@nick-314 Жыл бұрын
A logistically lower strain tank for a military that could handle plenty of strain. Germany got that backwards
@scott91575
@scott91575 9 ай бұрын
and super easy to repair with lots of available parts (something that could not be said of the German counterparts). A knocked out Sherman was often back in action in a day or two.
@1122ss
@1122ss 6 ай бұрын
You are correct sir!!
@eggman830
@eggman830 Жыл бұрын
One of the best things about the Sherman is that it was extremely versatile. Need a more powerful gun? Sure (76mm). Need a howitzer? Done, (105mm). Flamethrower? Easy. Want wider tracks? No problem. This thing was designed so well it could be upgraded in almost every way.
@redsabre69
@redsabre69 Жыл бұрын
Which is the hallmark of being a MBT long before the slogan was even adopted.
@jehoiakimelidoronila5450
@jehoiakimelidoronila5450 Жыл бұрын
It's no wonder the tank lived long enough & eventually retired in the '70s
@bilbobagginses4941
@bilbobagginses4941 Жыл бұрын
Wanna make it float? Done! Is that a minefield? Get the chainsweep drum
@PowerPlant03
@PowerPlant03 9 ай бұрын
inadequate armor? J U M B O. inadequate armor AND gun? may I introduce the 76mm J U M B O. need more pen still? M4 90mm has entered the chat*
@justanothergermantankie9142
@justanothergermantankie9142 7 ай бұрын
*slaps ERA on sherman*
@pabcu2507
@pabcu2507 Жыл бұрын
M4 Sherman was one good tank, even Soviet tankers that operated it liked it better than the t34
@cookiedefender566
@cookiedefender566 Жыл бұрын
I remember reading this secondhand account from quora where a guy posted a Russian BT-7, later lend lease M4 tanker, where apparently the soviets censored part of the letters tankers sent to their families if they praised US export tanks as having “padded seats, non cloudy sights and ports”,
@GoBoryaschya_moBa_ye_cBoboda
@GoBoryaschya_moBa_ye_cBoboda Жыл бұрын
Because USSR made tanks only for number of them , but not for comfort for crew.
@briandstephmoore4910
@briandstephmoore4910 Жыл бұрын
Yep and that shows how dumb they are. How great you fighting while you can barely breathe and move while being almost cooked alive.
@matty6244
@matty6244 Жыл бұрын
I don't remember where, but I read something along the lines that the Soviet M4 Tankers had to guard their tanks because others might try to steal the leather and padding of the seats Meanwhile some T34s didn't even have seats or a proper turret basket
@Swagmaster07
@Swagmaster07 Жыл бұрын
@@GoBoryaschya_moBa_ye_cBoboda that only applies to the ww2 period. After the war things change for the better.
@NoFlyZone31
@NoFlyZone31 Жыл бұрын
Sherman was good enough for most of the war, and the real best part was how often crews would survive.
@NoFlyZone31
@NoFlyZone31 Жыл бұрын
@@jakefirth2557 Yeah, T34s had a lot of issues, one of many being so cramped all the crew had difficulty getting out in case of a fire.
@brennanleadbetter9708
@brennanleadbetter9708 Жыл бұрын
@jakefirth2557 Belton Cooper is one of them
@sapiensiski
@sapiensiski Жыл бұрын
@@brennanleadbetter9708 belton cooper wasnt even a crewman, he was a mechanic lol
@bingobongo1615
@bingobongo1615 Жыл бұрын
It was a great tank but Soviet sources all indicate they didn’t like it. This is likely politically motivated but still, not sure I ever read the Soviets saying something positive about it
@dj11o9er
@dj11o9er Жыл бұрын
​@@bingobongo1615tbf its the soviets. They made the blasted T-34
@brennanleadbetter9708
@brennanleadbetter9708 Жыл бұрын
The Sherman was literally the Swiss Army knife of tanks, just look at all the jobs it could do.
@ikat_tracer
@ikat_tracer Жыл бұрын
No not really. The sherman chassis was used in many other tanks. As was the Panzer 3 and 4 chassis. Panzer 4, Panzer 3, StuG 3, Jgpdz. 4, Jgdpz. 4/70, Ostwind, Wirbelwind, there were ammo supply tanks which were converted Pz. 4 chassis, Hummel, Bison, Möbelwagen (all artillery or AA, all Pz. 4 chassis), Sturmpanzer, Panzer 4 C as infantry support, Panzer 4 J/H as anti everything and many more. The german counterpart to the sherman was the Panzer 4 and it fulfilled just as many jobs, it was a Tank, Tank destroyer, Artillery, AA, Supply vehicle, howitzer, storm cannon and i think it's a safe bet to put early recovery vehicles in as well.
@brennanleadbetter9708
@brennanleadbetter9708 Жыл бұрын
@ikat_tracer True, that’s because the Pz. IV was Germany’s workhorse.
@thesupreme8062
@thesupreme8062 Жыл бұрын
​@@brennanleadbetter9708thats the pz 3
@Norwagen
@Norwagen Жыл бұрын
@@thesupreme8062the workhorse of the German army was literally just horses lmao.
@brennanleadbetter9708
@brennanleadbetter9708 Жыл бұрын
@thesupreme8062 technically both are
@marcelh.170
@marcelh.170 Жыл бұрын
7:48 By far one of the best animations ever on this channel. The bed and the piano already got me, but when Patton came to scold the soldiers, I lost it. :D
@fishingthelist4017
@fishingthelist4017 Жыл бұрын
They forgot the kitchen sink.
@pabcu2507
@pabcu2507 Жыл бұрын
So much freedom in one simple tank
@NguyenMinh-vs1vm
@NguyenMinh-vs1vm Жыл бұрын
Literally. Such freedom allowed so many variants being created from the original design.
@averagejoe112
@averagejoe112 Жыл бұрын
It will never defeat ONE SEMPLE TANK
@spongememefunnypants9101
@spongememefunnypants9101 Жыл бұрын
​@@averagejoe112I agree, the Semple tank is the best tank in history!!😂
@darnit1944
@darnit1944 Жыл бұрын
​@@averagejoe112Bob Semple MBT when
@robertmiller2173
@robertmiller2173 10 ай бұрын
My father was a tank commander in a M4 Sherman in Italy, his tank was powered by the famous and most powerful Sherman Engine the mighty Ford GAA V8 which developed 550hp from its 18 Liter Alloy engine. My dad only drove a Ford Car/ Wagon for the rest of his life back here in New Zealand!
@EdcelJannMCorre
@EdcelJannMCorre Жыл бұрын
The Sherman Fireflies and Easy 8s were the definition of "float like a butterfly, sting like a bee."
@CharlesPoss
@CharlesPoss Жыл бұрын
More like slink like a slug. slowest tanks in the European theater outside of Italy. Turret traverse was pretty abysmal too but at least they could sting at all.
@Ohmygodstfu2045
@Ohmygodstfu2045 Жыл бұрын
@@CharlesPossAt least they could be repaired on the field if they broke down.
@CharlesPoss
@CharlesPoss Жыл бұрын
@@Ohmygodstfu2045 for sure. They're the best tank in the war for the road march. Comfortable, good suspension, easy to repair with tons of spare parts in the trucks at the back of the advance. Wouldn't exactly want to be in one during a tank duel but for 99% of your war, nice tank to work.
@aletron4750
@aletron4750 Жыл бұрын
@@CharlesPossFirefly had manual traverse, Easy 8 had electrical turret hydraulics and stabilizers, they were also faster than most other vehicles present. They were pretty average regarding speed, faster than Churchills, Panthers, and Tigers.
@joekrafft7125
@joekrafft7125 Жыл бұрын
@@CharlesPossthey were faster than the main british tanks about as fast as a pz3 faster than a tiger, faster than anything the japanese out out and faster than the itialians so idk what you’re saying
@davea6314
@davea6314 Жыл бұрын
My paternal grandpa built Sherman tanks during WW2. I had a great uncle in the US Amy who was killed fighting Nazis at the Battle of the Bulge when he was only 18 years old. RIP to both of them. 🪦
@zanelarson6473
@zanelarson6473 Жыл бұрын
L great uncle, W Nazis glad he died
@scottanos9981
@scottanos9981 Жыл бұрын
We should have let the Soviets and Germany grind each other down even more before even joining the war. Or at least before D-Day.
@Nemesistyx
@Nemesistyx Жыл бұрын
Brothers killing brothers for the lies of satans followers. what a tragedy
@juancarlos-uv4lh
@juancarlos-uv4lh Жыл бұрын
​@@Nemesistyxthey lost, also the Nazis were pretty awful guy's.
@zbignieff
@zbignieff Жыл бұрын
Germans, not nazis. Remember that.
@midwaykrazy
@midwaykrazy Жыл бұрын
One of my favorite tactics when facing something with more firepower and armor is to fire smoke rounds at the enemy target and get closer/flank the target to get a more favorable shot. I think they actually did this in WW2.
@Swagmaster07
@Swagmaster07 Жыл бұрын
Yes. But you can still "disable" Tigers without even piercing their armour incase you choose to not use smoke, not sure about panthers etc.
@YoBoyNeptune
@YoBoyNeptune Жыл бұрын
In war thunder I like to shoot their gun barrel and .50 cal their tracks so I can go around the side
@toastedt140
@toastedt140 Жыл бұрын
​@YoBoyNeptune That was an official Ally strategy for tiger engagement wasn't it? The sherman guns couldn't penetrate their armour so their goal was to disable their tracks and turret
@midwaykrazy
@midwaykrazy Жыл бұрын
@@toastedt140 from my understanding yes it was but do your own research rather than take it for word from me.
@YoBoyNeptune
@YoBoyNeptune Жыл бұрын
@@toastedt140 there were plenty of ways to kill a tiger even before the M4 had the 76mm gun
@inductivegrunt94
@inductivegrunt94 Жыл бұрын
The true American tank. Not the best, but still very reliable. Myths still exist denouncing it, but not during its hayday, so the legacy still shines over them. God Bless America! And the brave souls who crewed these venerable engines of war!
@nickellison2785
@nickellison2785 Жыл бұрын
I’d say it was one of the best tanks, can’t think of anything that is a better overall vehicle.
@inductivegrunt94
@inductivegrunt94 Жыл бұрын
@@nickellison2785 The "Easy 8" Sherman. Or maybe 2 Shermans.
@inductivegrunt94
@inductivegrunt94 Жыл бұрын
@jakefirth2557 All I know is that the M4A3E8 is a late war upgrade to the 76mm Sherman and not a tank in it of itself. Like comparing an early Tiger 1 ausf E to a later one as Germany tended to make every few tanks slightly different with a different modification to some part of the tank, radio, transmission, whatever. So the "Easy 8" is just a Sherman 76mm but with an upgraded suspension and not a standalone tank.
@inductivegrunt94
@inductivegrunt94 Жыл бұрын
@@dogwoodhillbilly And probably the second highest casualty rate behind the T-34 as well.
@inductivegrunt94
@inductivegrunt94 Жыл бұрын
@deepsouthgaming I was just making a joke at how many Shermans were lost, at least exaggerated, during the war. "Destroy a hundred Shermans, there's a hundred twenty more." But don't forget, T-34s can be dragged back and repaired behind the lines so many T-34s were recovered, repaired, and sent back into combat. That's why German kill counts aren't entirely accurate, many Tanks they "killed" were just knocked out and were recovered for repairs. Tanks aren't just repaired in the field, they can ve recovered and brought back to base for repairs where the spare parts are.
@Phike9391
@Phike9391 Жыл бұрын
It's one of if not the best tank of WW2 and it was the best tank by far for what America needed. A reliable and easily fixable tank with decent firepower and survivability. They had to ship all the tanks over seas so needed to be light enough for the cranes to transport it and reliable with parts easily available because they are FAR from home.
@VariaBug
@VariaBug Жыл бұрын
That's the problem the US is having with the Abrams. Its a huge effort to ship them around the world, especially with conflict brewing in the Pacific. Thus they developed the lighter Booker to work in that capacity.
@el_blanco_loco
@el_blanco_loco Жыл бұрын
The Sherman is my favorite piece of armor in history. She's not just a tank, she's a heavily armored utility vehicle with a gun. She wasn't just built for warfare, she was built for transport, rescue operations, vehicle recovery, reconnaissance, and if she was damaged enough, a few half-effort "repairs" make her a fantastic decoy. A very powerful and efficient tool at a very good price $45,000 - $64,000 (equivalent to $608,000 - $880,000 in 2017) per unit. Compared to the modern day M1 Abrams at over $10 Million ($588,000 in 1945)
@angelosusa4258
@angelosusa4258 Жыл бұрын
Makes me think of Fury and how the crew operated the Sherman’s, Such an iconic tank
@nicholasmoore2590
@nicholasmoore2590 11 ай бұрын
I met a German WW2 on a visit to Essen. He'd been a tank crewman and we got to talking about Shermans. He told me that the German nickname for them when the British first took them into action in North Africa was Tommy cookers. The tank would usually catch fire when hit due to being petrol engines rather than diesel and the crew often couldn't escape before being burnt to death. He only had respect for the Firefly version and only then because of the gun.
@Nixie_noobionlassie
@Nixie_noobionlassie Жыл бұрын
7:49 The goofiest scene done so far in this channel’s run 😂😂
@michaelinsc9724
@michaelinsc9724 Жыл бұрын
Good overview and glad you addressed its undeserved poor reputation. I would add 3 aspects of the Sherman than made it successful: logistics, logistics, and logistics. They were made in the USA, but had to be transported to Europe and be able to traverse most European bridges. The reliability and simple design also simplified the parts supply train, meaning less had to be shipped over.
@skadoodle8503
@skadoodle8503 Жыл бұрын
Amateurs talk strategy, pros talk logistics
@Simplehistory
@Simplehistory Жыл бұрын
Experience warfare like never before! Click the link and wishlist Men of War II on Steam, or sign up for the final open beta that begins on August 10th and concludes on August 14th: bit.ly/Men-of-War-II_Simple-History
@Green-aider
@Green-aider Жыл бұрын
Can you talk about the Sherman jumbo/ M4A3E2
@iniyanprabhakaran
@iniyanprabhakaran Жыл бұрын
Talk about the Sri Lankan Civil War which include the JVP troubles, Indian Invasion, Coup in Maldives in 1988
@iniyanprabhakaran
@iniyanprabhakaran Жыл бұрын
Talk about the indigenous weopons and tactics the Tamil Tigers used during the Sri Lankan Civil War
@BanjaranBandung-ns2jd
@BanjaranBandung-ns2jd Жыл бұрын
Make the panzer 2 version pls
@PhilippBrandAkatosh
@PhilippBrandAkatosh Жыл бұрын
thank you very much
@rtasvadam1776
@rtasvadam1776 Жыл бұрын
Over the years the Sherman had been slandered as a deathtrap, much of this damage done by the book that shall not be named! Justice for my boi.
@thecoolnerdplaysvr5674
@thecoolnerdplaysvr5674 Жыл бұрын
"The t34 had better armour cause muh slope" that was thinner and more brittle and made it incredibly cramped even the smaller NK had low chances of living upon being hit. Sherman generally survived fine and was rarely going against heavy armour so the 75mm he was plenty. And saved tons of infantry
@biggerdickus
@biggerdickus Жыл бұрын
​@@thecoolnerdplaysvr5674 We can't really compare in general, SU had quite a bit of issue being invaded, so their tanks are all over the place in quality terms. But if I wanted a good tank, I will choose Sherman over T-34, I rather die comfortably.
@rtasvadam1776
@rtasvadam1776 Жыл бұрын
@@thecoolnerdplaysvr5674 4 of the 5 crew had spring loaded hatches for the crew to escape if the tank was on fire. as oppose to those on the tiger that required the strength of thor. Ammunition was kept in wet storage, making it less likely to explode when hit, It was far more comfortable and spacious than the t34 whose crew would be constantly getting bashed around, so much so that they were exhausted by the time they got to battle.
@NokotanFanCentral
@NokotanFanCentral Жыл бұрын
@@thecoolnerdplaysvr5674 wasn't there a possibility that even if the shell bounced the inside armor would shatter and still send shrapnel?
@thecoolnerdplaysvr5674
@thecoolnerdplaysvr5674 Жыл бұрын
@curtissp-40warhawk25 om the t34 yes. Due to the way they treated it. Basically they made it super hard. But it would turn brittle. Think punching glass. It could bounce it fairly easily sure. But enough force would shatter. Not pen. But cause it to shatter the armour causing everyone inside to get killed. Normal tank armour is softer. It bends a bit. Which helps absorb a penetrating shot.
@randallbelstra7228
@randallbelstra7228 Жыл бұрын
Many years aga, as an Army 2nd Lieutenant in an armored battalion, I had extra duty as the partnership officer and spent time with a Bundeswehr Panzer battalion. While there, I spoke with two company commanders . One who was a former Wehrmacht Panzer officer and another who was former Waffen SS. Panzer officer. They had both trained on Mark V Panther tanks, a later on Mr Shermans. They both said the same thing. They would rather have the Sherman in an attack and the Panther in the defense.
@christiandauz3742
@christiandauz3742 Жыл бұрын
The Allies wished they had SuperShermans at the start of WW2
@DKWalser
@DKWalser Жыл бұрын
@@christiandauz3742 Heck, the Allies wished they had M1 Abrams tanks, F35 fighter jets, and B-52 bombers -- not to mention a few modern, fully equipped, aircraft carriers. The point being that none of that stuff was available at the start of WW2 anymore than was an M4 Sherman, let alone a SuperSherman.
@myplane150
@myplane150 Жыл бұрын
The M3 did have a rotating turret (1:21). It housed a 37mm canon as that was enough for most enemy tanks at the time (ie., Panzer 2s and 3s). The 75mm in the tank body was for anti-structure and personnel. The tank was fine for its day and, as @Ceege48 pointed out, was an interim solution until the Sherman arrived. One interesting bit of information was that the crews would use only baby grand pianos and not the full sized ones (7:57). The baby grand were easier to adjust after getting hit so it was the preferred choice. In a pinch, they could even use a bass guitar when available. Violens needed to be numerous so they were not a good option...☺
@nahoy350
@nahoy350 Жыл бұрын
Soviet tank crew: No way, There's a comfortable tank like a hotel? Landless: SHER,MAN
@SuperDrake85
@SuperDrake85 8 ай бұрын
The majority of M4 losses were from 88mm field guns and not enemy tanks. The 88mm was cheap, easy to use, and could be used against both aircraft and tanks. Probably one of the best overall weapons of the war.
@hunterkiller232134
@hunterkiller232134 17 күн бұрын
Not solely 88s but anti tank guns of all types. That's for all sides. Artillery (which anti tank guns were classified as) accounted for the most tank kills. The highest rate of casualties for the Shermans was during the Normandy breakout, which saw US forces aggressively attacking out from the Normandy beach heads against the Germans in perfect defensive terrain.
@OscarOSullivan
@OscarOSullivan Жыл бұрын
The Sherman and the T-34 may have been on paper technically inferior to the German tanks but they were standardised, simple, mass produced on conveyor belt production lines and vastly more reliable
@nickellison2785
@nickellison2785 Жыл бұрын
Except the T-34 was made terribly, and hence was awful. The Sherman, however, was certainly one of, if not the best tank of the war.
@azimisyauqieabdulwahab9401
@azimisyauqieabdulwahab9401 Жыл бұрын
Tigers
@kosrules1884
@kosrules1884 Жыл бұрын
​@@azimisyauqieabdulwahab9401only 1,347 Tiger I and 492 Tiger II tanks were produced. And those tanks were infamous for the breakdowns the tiger had an infamous terrible transmission.
@brennanleadbetter9708
@brennanleadbetter9708 Жыл бұрын
@kosrules1884 “Hanz ze transmission broke again for the fifth time today”
@A-Warthog-cc1wm
@A-Warthog-cc1wm Жыл бұрын
@@kosrules1884 love when bring up the tigers as if they are better because they can beat a sherman. While a tiger can win you a battle, the Sherman can you win the war.
@197205den
@197205den 7 ай бұрын
Мой дед воевал на Шермане который был поставлен по Ленд Лизу в СССР, отзывался всегда об этом танке положительно, основные минусы его он обозначал так-Слишком высокий силуэт и очень требователен к качеству топлива.
@roguevector1268
@roguevector1268 Жыл бұрын
"hoped to be sufficient for future conflict" - not really. The American military knew that the M3 was a stopgap measure, something that let them field a 75mm gun in the present rater than having to wait for the M4 Sherman to be ready for war. Lastly, the 75mm wasn't just 'sufficient' for the anti-tank role vs the 76mm, but it was actually superior; when using HE shells, the 75mm proved far more effective because the lower velocity of the gun meant that you could build shells with thinner casings and more explosives inside. Even so, 75mm Shermans could penetrate the most common German armor systems - the StuG III and the Panzer IVs - from the front. It really is overstated because of video games and movies how often Tigers and Panthers showed up to fight Shermans and other Allied tanks on the Western Front, since most of the time they were shot up by the air forces or were encountered by infantry and destroyed by bazookas or other anti-tank weapons. But Tiger Terror was a very real thing, to the point that - there were only a handful confirmed encounters between Tigers and Shermans; most often it was due to tank crews misidentifying any Panzer as a 'Tiger' due to fog-of-war.
@Danjiano
@Danjiano Жыл бұрын
The 75mm wasn't superior to the 76mm for anti-tank role. Thinner casings with more explosives isn't what you need when fighting tanks - it's what you want vs infantry and bunkers.
@ChaosWolf3
@ChaosWolf3 Жыл бұрын
The Sherman was a very solid platform for just about anything the army needed. The simple design allowed it to be modified heavily and made repairs easy. While a Tiger might’ve been a bigger threat, fixing a damaged Tiger I was very difficult, often requiring heavy equipment and dismantling a large amount of the tank to get to damaged parts. The Sherman was an excellent example of how US logistics in WWII were streamlined so significantly that parts, ammunition and anything else you could need were able to be brought where you needed it, when you needed it. This wasn’t the case for other forces like Germany, whose blitzkreig tactics often left their supply lines thin and vulnerable. The Sherman was an excellent vehicle for its intended role.
@FLJBeliever1776
@FLJBeliever1776 Жыл бұрын
The M4 Sherman was actually a very survivable Tank. The Armor was only 3 inches, but its 30-degree angle gave it protection actually superior to that of Tiger A's 4 inches of armor at 10-degrees (and only in some places), with about 4.5 inches of equivalent protection (Sherman) to 4.1 inches of equivalent protection (Tiger). The German guns were simply so high velocity, that there was literally nothing short of a Battleship that could deflect the fire. The German 8.8cm was designed as an Anti-Aircraft Gun and meant to knock Heavy Bombers flying at 15,000 feet out of the sky. No Tank would be able to stop that kind of fire in 1942-1945 at 1,500 yards. In addition, the US Army used a novel approach to its Armor. Rather than use Hardened Steel like the Germans, the US Army designed its Armor with Crew Survivability in mind. The Armor was designed to be proofed up to a certain point, which is why German 5cm guns failed to penetrate at any angle and early German 7.5cm guns larger than the 25 caliber Infantry Support Gun found on Panzer IV Ausf D, would actually bounce off Sherman's Frontal Armor initially. The US Army's approach would stop opposing ammunition at a point, reduce the dangers to the crew after that point, or if overwhelming, like a 8.8cm or 12.8cm round, let the round through in hopes it didn't hit anything important or the crew and if all went well, the exploding ballistic cap would be delayed long enough for the crew to get out before it exploded inside the Tank. Apparently went as well as could be expected as the US Army's Tank Causalities were actually very low, including being less than 5% of all fatalities. In fact, the US Army lost more Tankers in accidents and operational mishaps than in actual Tank vs Tank combat. One factor was surprising the introduction of a Tanker Helmet, which saved lives by preventing cracked skulls and broken necks, the real killers in Tank Operations in the Second World War shockingly enough. Even then, most US Tanker fatalities were caused by being outside of their Tanks or hitting mines, and the Germans LOVED doubling up their mines to the point the Churchill was known to have air beneath its tracks. Unfortunately, due to running into too many heavily armored Tanks from the Low Countries and France in 1940 to the Matilda IIs in North Africa along with later Churchill Mark IIIs to Soviet Tanks in the East from 1941 onward, the Germans were already working to keep ahead in terms of firepower and so the Germans increasingly went after much higher velocity guns and ammunition as a general rule, though, that did sacrifice their Anti-Personnel capabilities and German Tanks struggled to engage Infantry in the open due to not having effective Anti-Personnel ammunition as a result of thicker walled ammunition to survive the velocities they were being fired at. As for the 'Low Velocity' M3 75mm Gun, it actually wasn't Low Velocity. That was issue was actually the propellant and was not related to anything the Armored Forces, Army Ground Force, or the Army Research departments did. It was, like with the US Navy, an action of the US Army's own Bureau of Ordnance. They wanted to save costs on replacing the Gun Barrels and so directed that lower velocity ammunition, not LOW Velocity just LOWER velocity, was to be used. The US Army Bureau of Ordnance also never bothered to tell anyone that needed to know. So, when it was found out, Eisenhower demanded the proper ammunition be made and sent while General Marshall apparently blew his top and went Admiral King on his Bureau of Ordnance. That said, the M4 Sherman's 75mm was an ideal Infantry Killer. Very effective and had the second most effective Shrapnel spread of any Gun before the 105mm Howitzer. Even with corrected ammunition propellants finally achieving the maximum out of the 75mm M3, the gun remained excellent at killing Infantry in the open or in cover, especially after the introduction of highly specialized ammunition for clearing trenches and buildings, something that was not seen in Fury or any movie for that matter let alone games. As for taking on German Tanks, even with the lower velocity ammunition, the 75mm M3 could still surprise a Tiger at ranges out to 500 yards and could even, on occasion, put a round through the Frontal Armor of a Tiger out to 1,000 yards. Usually one round was enough, as the German Harden Steel would come apart and turn into Spalling killing or incapacitating the entire crew with a good hit or taking out at least three men in all. In addition, despite claims to the contrary, which is more grounded in myth to start with, German Tanks, Tank Destroyers, and Assault Guns had vulnerable flanks. So much weight was concentrated forward, the Germans had to thin armor or move things around internally to maintain balance and even then, the Germans had a higher wear out rate among the forward locomotive components than any other nation. If the AFVs survived that long given that Panther's Side Armor was so thin in places, Soviet 14.5mm Anti-Tank Rifles from before the war would penetrate, let alone the 75mm M3 Gun slamming into the broadside of the Panther. Tiger was little better with only 2 inches of armor on the Tail and Sides. Meaning that Sherman could kill Tiger at any range from 75% of the combat zones. And that was before corrected ammunition arrived. On that topic, the 76mm was always planned. The 3-inch gun had been successfully installed. According to RnD, but Armored Force said no it wasn't. Yeah, the gun was in. But it wasn't a very good fit and complicated crew operations so severely it was rejected. The 76mm was available in June 1944 but was intentionally left behind because the typical encounter for a M4 Sherman wasn't a German Tank, but German Infantry in a defensive position somewhere. And if not German Infantry, then a German Tank Destroyer with a Fixed Gun and thin side armor, if any armor like on the Marder III which had only Splinter Shields. When more Panthers were encountered, it was found that information on what was to be encountered had been off due to a miscalculation by both American and British Intelligence. They thought that Panther was going to be a Limited Production Heavy Tank, not a Mass Production Medium Tank. When that was found, it was pointless to bring in the 76mm Shermans as not long after, the Allies managed the Normandy Breakout and the Panther was notoriously a poor distance performer. Expectations were once again going to be Infantry, Tank Destroyers, and the odd Panzer IV. Still, the 76mm Shermans were prepared to be inserted into US Tank formations as a backstop guarantee. Then there is the Gun Stabilizer. Again, blame US Army Bureau of Ordnance. Like the US Navy's Bureau of Ordnance with the Navy's Torpedoes, the US Army Bureau of Ordnance hid the few manuals for the Gun Stabilizer considering it so advanced as to be a Classified Top Secret secret. Not even top commanders in the Field, like Patton and Bradley, let alone others like Ike and Hodges among others, especially Commanders in the Divisions in the field even knew the system existed. Eventually it was discovered and figured out. One Division even wrote their own manuals for it which they shared with other units and by 1945 most experienced Tankers knew of the system and how it worked. Marshall had another profanity filled word with US Army Bureau of Ordnance and so the official manuals were finally released, after being updated with input from the field and improvements made once understood and it was a surprisingly easy to understand system once the crews knew about it and how to maintain operate it.
@christiandauz3742
@christiandauz3742 Жыл бұрын
The Allies, especially Poland and China, wished they had Sherman Fireflies at the start of WW2
@foxymetroid
@foxymetroid Жыл бұрын
​@@christiandauz3742Not sure about China. Even the original M4 models were more than enough for Japanese tanks. The Japanese simply didn't have that many natural resources and didn't need anything heavier than a light tank until the US got involved.
@br-sb6vu
@br-sb6vu Ай бұрын
@FLJBeliever1776 The Shermans armour was not 3 inches it was 2 inches (50.8mm) on early varients and 2.5 inches (63.5mm) on later varients. Early varients were sloped at 56° and late varients at 47° both have an effective thickness of 3.5 inches (90mm). The tiger is closer to 4 inches (101mm) So no the frontal armour of the Sherman is not superior to the Tiger but yes it is closer than people think. However, based on US, UK and Canadian studies 50% of allied tanks were knocked out by a shot through the side armour. So we can assume that in combat it is likely you are facing fire in a 180° arc. A Sherman only has 38mm side armour while a tiger has 80mm wich gives the Tiger a definite edge. You may say “but the Sherman had applique armour!” that boosted a very limited part of the hull from 38mm to 63mm, studies on the effectiveness of the applique say that not once did it hold up to enemy fire. You then may say “it only a 20mm difference the Tiger side armour was probably just as useless” but you have to remember you average German gun (a 75mm) can penetrate 132mm of armour at 90° from 500m whereas your m3 75mm on the Sherman can penetrate about 90mm at 90° from 500 yards (457m). So it can still go through the side armour but average engament range was actually 800 yards (731m) and the sherman would have to fire directly from the side so that the 80mm isn't at an angle. Are you implying face hardened armour wasnt safe? “designed to be proofed up to a certain point” yeah that how literally every tank development goes. Reading further ahead…wow you are badly misinformed. No the high velocity German guns didn't struggle to engage infantry. They simply lowered the amount of powder inside the HE shell and a lower velocity was achieved, something the US could never figure out and resulted in the failure of the 76mm. I won't speak on the development of the 75mm m3 More weird incorrect information about the Tigers armour and what could penetrate it. A 75mm m3 was not going through 101mm at 1000 yards. No a single shot from a 75mm did not kill the entire Tiger crew, the armour was face hardened not the entire plate so it wouldn't behave much differently to other tanks when penetrated. Panthers were still relatively common along with the pz iv after Normandy
@Bodkin_Ye_Pointy
@Bodkin_Ye_Pointy Жыл бұрын
From my point of view the Sherman was an excellent vehicle. The presentation did not mention the distances it covered from Normandy to Germany. It was easy to upgrade and one of the other innovations was the implementation of a water jacket for the tanks to minimise detonation from enemy strike. They had a while to study tank design and the Brits to test their builds but the tank was very good. Don't forget that the Panthers and Tigers were defensive weapons which gave them the advantage in combat.
@SithFTW4072
@SithFTW4072 Жыл бұрын
The 75mm M3 gun wasn't low-velocity. It was a general-purpose, medium-velocity gun
@jerithil
@jerithil Жыл бұрын
Also sure while it may have lacked punch when dealing with Panthers and Tigers, the gun performed better versus most lighter vehicles and was considerably better versus infantry and anti tank guns.
@andresamaya6187
@andresamaya6187 Жыл бұрын
Anything not fast enough to pierce a Panther is slow in my book /jk
@chaosXP3RT
@chaosXP3RT Жыл бұрын
I wonder why so many people, like this channel, continue to lie about the Sherman (like about how it had a low velocity gun)? What are these channels using for sources???
@chaosXP3RT
@chaosXP3RT Жыл бұрын
​@@jerithilThe most produced German tank of WWII was the Panzer IV. The Sherman's 75 was extremely good at knocking out Panzer IVs. So why would you say it was considerably better against infantry and anti-tank guns?????
@jerithil
@jerithil Жыл бұрын
@@chaosXP3RT I was saying it was much better versus infantry compared to the 76mm or 17 pounder as it had more ammo capacity, a better HE shell and was handier/easier to reload then the other two.This is especially important as for the US in the European Theater only around 15% of the targets were enemy tanks.
@tomservo5347
@tomservo5347 Жыл бұрын
I think Chieftain looked up statistics-Sherman crews had a 97% survival rate. It was still high even after a direct hit thanks to the easy egress and hatches. He also stated the big thing people forget is that it had to be shipped across an ocean before even getting into combat and it's relative ease of shipping, simple design, ease of maintenance and reliability were the real war winning capabilities.
@danielebrparish4271
@danielebrparish4271 11 ай бұрын
The key was the Shermans had spring assist hatches which allowed the crew to pop them open quickly. The Panzer hatches were much heavier and harder to open.
@joshuabridle3182
@joshuabridle3182 10 ай бұрын
Chieftain was great! Even still out of that 3 percent 70 percent allegedly was because of head injuries inside the tank
@apropercuppa8612
@apropercuppa8612 9 ай бұрын
@@joshuabridle3182My Great-Uncle was hit in the head by a Sniper. Although I am not 100% sure if he was in the Tank at the time, or if he was outside it. It's documented the area he was killed at the time had a lot of Sniper activity, but crews still needed to get out of their Tanks to perform other tasks or duties and as such were hit. This was earlier in the morning. By the afternoon and evening, it was all battle. So who knows.
@aidanlouw4274
@aidanlouw4274 Жыл бұрын
There was even eye witnesses by American soldiers serving in the Invasion of Iraq 2003 seeing abandoned M4 shermans still in working order. Some were taken as trophies and sent back to the states and restored
@Tomcatx4321
@Tomcatx4321 Жыл бұрын
Don’t forget that the Sherman tank was designed to be fielded an entire ocean away from the factories that produced them. These machines needed to be beat on used and abused on a battlefield far away from a refit facility, repaired quickly and in the field. This combined with such a high crew survival rate is all the more reason why the Sherman deserves to be considered a huge success.
@josecarlosgarcia3945
@josecarlosgarcia3945 5 ай бұрын
0:16 it really takes a whole village to operate one tank
@TheSaturnV
@TheSaturnV 10 ай бұрын
Excellent job setting the record straight. 2 things: The floor escape hatch was on the right hand side, just behind the assistant driver/bow gunner position. The M4 was very survivable due to its excellent hatch arrangement. Statistically, 4 of the 5 crewmen survived the initial knock out blow.
@spoonyspoonicus4648
@spoonyspoonicus4648 Жыл бұрын
It was the addition of wet storage for the ammo that stopped them cooking off. Not additional armour and ammo was stored in the turret throughout its entire service.
@FirstDraftHistorian
@FirstDraftHistorian Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the video. I like that the M-3 was originally named Lee but changed to Grant when given to the Brits in Lend/Lease. My Dad (741st Tk Bat) was in a Sherman from Omaha Easy Red, thru Paris and the Bulge, to Prague and he said the ammunition around him in the turret was a subject of great concern. He also lost a couple of TCs who had led with their heads above the turret rather than under the closed hatch.
@randallbelstra7228
@randallbelstra7228 Жыл бұрын
When the 76mm main gun was added, it was found the Sherman could defeat the German Mk VI Tiger tanks frontal armor at 850 yards with standard ammunition. With the addition of the HVAP tank round, it was able to defeat the frontal armor of the Mk V Panther at 800 yards. However, I recommend a reading on the battle of Arracourt where the 4th Armored took out a Panzer Corps with standard 75mm armed Shermans. It appears that the story of pure numbers needed to kill German tanks was also horse manure. Using good tanking procedures worked just as well, along with combined arms warfare which the US Army was also very good at doing.
@DKWalser
@DKWalser Жыл бұрын
It also helped that most of the Germans defeated in that battle were green and poorly trained. The German tanks may have been superior to the American tanks, but they weren't so much better that the tanks could withstand being poorly used. The Germans failed to coordinate their attack, never coming enmass so as to overwhelm the American defenders. In addition, unit after unit, the Germans allowed the American tanks and tank destroyers to ambush them at point blank range. Better frontal armor doesn't count for much when you keep allowing yourself to be attacked from the side! So, while the Sherman was a darn good tank -- better in many ways that its opposition and not as good in a few -- the Sherman crews got the best out of their tanks. By that time in the war, the German crews could not get the best out of their tanks. The difference in crew performance was a larger factor in the American victory at Arracourt than the differences in equipment quality.
@hb9145
@hb9145 9 ай бұрын
They Wehrmacht tank crews in this encounter were barrel scrapings.
@br-sb6vu
@br-sb6vu Ай бұрын
Very good misinformation. HVAP would not go through the upper glacier of a panther neither could a 17 pounder
@teaser6089
@teaser6089 Жыл бұрын
1:30 No the main gun was the top mounted 37mm, the 75mm was mainly a howitzer designed to mainly shoot HE rounds to support the infantry, not as an anti tank gun, although it could be used to do such tasks. 9:15 and the firefly, cause the gun had to be mounted sideways making using the gyrostabiliser impossible 11:02 this is a common myth
@ezzz42
@ezzz42 8 ай бұрын
easy enough for a city boy to drive and simple enough for a farm boy to fix
@kinocorner976
@kinocorner976 Жыл бұрын
People always look at the hard factors of tanks, but don’t realize it’s the soft factors that make the tank good. The Soviets even loved the tank so much. When elite crews got it, provided detail of how great the tank was for a crew. Not to mention, the Sherman had the best survivability of any tank that’s to its spring powered hatches. The Sherman was the best tank of the war. It’s the F-series of tanks.
@wasserkocher_official4324
@wasserkocher_official4324 Жыл бұрын
3:44 I watch your videos for more than a year and this is the first time I see the men behind the voice 😂
@kennetth1389
@kennetth1389 9 ай бұрын
After the development of 'wet storage'. The M4 had the highest crew survival rate of any tank in WW2.
@bluemax73
@bluemax73 Жыл бұрын
I always read about the Sherman's inferiority to German armor, but the point that's never brought up is that the Sherman was a medium tank 32 tons as opposed to the panther and tiger which were almost twice the weight. Sherman's problem was its low velocity gun . The Firefly version proved that. Also overlooked is that it was easy to maintain and easy to restore after being knocked out. The M-26 Pershing should have been brought out a lot sooner
@chadjustice8560
@chadjustice8560 Жыл бұрын
Let's start with the first part, a Sherman had almost as much frontal armour as a tiger 1 so it would be fine against most things outside the 88mm. Second the 75mm killed anything and everything outside of tiger 2 so the 75mm was just fine. The firefly proved that yes the 17 pounder was the better gun no argument but it had terrible accuracy especially in the Sherman and was the worst of the sherman variants. The Pershing couldn't have came any faster and the united states knew about the failures of panther at kursk so they didn't want to do that and add a different ammo type and more training. When Korea starts the Pershing is the main tank but is quickly withdrew with issues and were replaced by shermans and some m48s but the sherman saw more tank engagements in Korea than the other two. The Sherman was a better tank than the Pershing.
@ryanbarker5217
@ryanbarker5217 Жыл бұрын
as far as i'm aware, it did what it was designed to do admirably, if not exceptionally, well. seems people expect it to go one-on-one with a tiger, and when it can't they label it a failure. in other words, i don't think most people have very realistic expectations.
@apersondoingthings5689
@apersondoingthings5689 Жыл бұрын
I wouldn’t say the 75 was woefully inadequate. 75 Sherman’s only really had to get to the sides on these bug cats to destroy them. With its hvap rounds both tigers and panthers were vulnerable from the front. Shermans did rack up impressive positive kds against both panthers and tigers
@NokotanFanCentral
@NokotanFanCentral Жыл бұрын
haha funny HE got kablooey and give Tiger crew concussion :D
@apersondoingthings5689
@apersondoingthings5689 Жыл бұрын
@@NokotanFanCentral when in doubt HE the thing
@JNF590
@JNF590 Жыл бұрын
Love to see comments not hating on the M4 and is getting it's reputation back. Thanks to independent KZbin Tank content Creators especially Major Moran the Chieftain.
@flyingsquirrell6953
@flyingsquirrell6953 Жыл бұрын
“Limited armor decreased survivability” (Looks at the 80% survival rate of Sherman crews) Not by much it seems.
@lilyfurley9833
@lilyfurley9833 Жыл бұрын
Because the sherman was a infantry support tank it wasnt designed to fight tanks if it did the numbers wouldn't be higher losses
@LeroxYT
@LeroxYT Жыл бұрын
60.000 shermans so 80% means 12.000 Crews did not survive... The survivability is good if the Sherman survives the first hit... But thats unlikely with such thin armor
@flyingsquirrell6953
@flyingsquirrell6953 Жыл бұрын
@@LeroxYT 60,000 Shermans were hit during the war?
@LeroxYT
@LeroxYT Жыл бұрын
@@flyingsquirrell6953 no but instead of playing around you should rather get my point below that 🤔
@lilyfurley9833
@lilyfurley9833 Жыл бұрын
Also most of the Shermans were sold to the UK plus losses crossing the ocean
@AnonPanzer
@AnonPanzer Жыл бұрын
3:52 No way my dude! I've awaited this one since the first trailer was launched! I've played the MoW AS 2 since 2,015 till now... Got my Like and closer follow to your channel!
@tuckmanstudios
@tuckmanstudios Жыл бұрын
I love men of war, and it’s launch day is on my birthday. Don’t forget it has a gem editor where you can create and design your own battlefield and build your own armies! 😀
@stevestruthers6180
@stevestruthers6180 Жыл бұрын
In the Canadian and British armies, the Sherman Firefly was used mainly as a command tank. By the time the First Canadian Army (which was a coalition comprised of Canadian, British, Polish, American and Free French units), had entered the Netherlands and cleared the Belgian port of Antwerp the armour war in northwestern Europe was more or less over. The last major tank battle happened in the Hochwald in northwestern Germany from early February to March 1945. Despite heavy losses, Canadian tank units prevailed.
@rustbuster69
@rustbuster69 Жыл бұрын
The m4 was a good tank and doesn’t deserve the slander
@The1stDukeDroklar
@The1stDukeDroklar 11 ай бұрын
The real benefit of the Sherman was it was good enough for most situations and was able to be quickly manufactured in large numbers.
@glenchapman3899
@glenchapman3899 9 ай бұрын
Well the proof in the pudding is simple. Did it get the job done? A resounding yes is all we have to consider
@Ceege48
@Ceege48 Жыл бұрын
1:23 “M3 Lee didn’t have a rotating torrent” torrent sitting on top of it: am I a joke to you. 😂
@notcrazy6288
@notcrazy6288 Жыл бұрын
American doctrine at the time called for tank destroyers to combat German tanks. An argument can be made that the Sherman was the best tank of the war. It was easy to maintain, had good gas mileage, and was an amazing breakthrough tank. Once a column of Shermans was past the front line it they wouldn't encounter anything more armored than a truck anyways.
@corymorimacori1059
@corymorimacori1059 Жыл бұрын
“I was saving the planet from an Axis of Darkness, while you were back home opening National Parks! Yes!” Winston Churchill
@briandstephmoore4910
@briandstephmoore4910 Жыл бұрын
Yal would of lost without lend lease from America. Real life lol
@grandpadreadnought8870
@grandpadreadnought8870 Жыл бұрын
​@briandstephmoore4910 Yes, the other countries would have a harder time without the resource and such from the Americans, but making it sound like it was the "biggest main reason" for winning the war is a bit egotistical on your side bud. Cause America wasn't the only one doing a lot during that time period.
@averagejoe112
@averagejoe112 Жыл бұрын
​@@grandpadreadnought8870I mean the US economy supplied the UK and Europe, Australia and the Western Pacific, Russia, and then had enough resources for their own major air bombing and campaigns followed by their own major invasion of Europe while at the same time defeating, assaulting, and invading Japanese held islands and destroying their fleets, with the war being thousands of miles from both shores of the US. US economy is the only winner of WW2, and without it the Allies don't win. Axis doesn't win either though, they had atrocious logistics.
@averagejoe112
@averagejoe112 Жыл бұрын
"Listening to you, took everything I had left. After your raps, I am become Deaf" -Robby J Oppenheimer
@Swagmaster07
@Swagmaster07 Жыл бұрын
@@averagejoe112 I have become deaf, the destroyer of worlds. - Barbenheimer
@joshua891
@joshua891 Жыл бұрын
My grandfather was a Sherman tank Commander in WW2 and was one of the few tanks that ended up making it to the beach at Normandy during D-Day. He fought in France and Belgium before his tank got destroyed. He ended up with multiple purple hearts and bronze stars. Outside of what our grandmother told us. He didn't really say much about what happened over there.
@danielebrparish4271
@danielebrparish4271 11 ай бұрын
What historians don't mention is the stench of burning or rotting corpses. The Nazis used horses for freight hauling throughout the war and those slaughtered animals lay on the roadsides for days or weeks before removal. Those odors mixed with the smell of burning buildings and vehicles made for some sickening smells.
@WolfeSaber
@WolfeSaber Жыл бұрын
The Germans did have their own 75mm cannons for many of their tanks, including the Panthers.
@Swagmaster07
@Swagmaster07 Жыл бұрын
German 75s are diffrent, their barrel lenghts are longer and they use diffrent shell types and diffrent designs for the said shells that lean more to the AT role not Infanty Support
@YoBoyNeptune
@YoBoyNeptune Жыл бұрын
Yes but they very in velocity a lot
@sapiensiski
@sapiensiski Жыл бұрын
Okay?
@pointer1119
@pointer1119 Жыл бұрын
@@sapiensiski he meant that the 75 on the german tanks have more faster velocity due to having a longer barrel and better shells
@daniellee2343
@daniellee2343 Жыл бұрын
Short barreled 75s for the panzer 4 but long barreled ones for the panther and jagd panzer 4.
@ChaplainDMK
@ChaplainDMK 8 ай бұрын
The M4, M4A1, M4A2 etc. designations aren't evolutions as used today but variants often developed and used simultaneously. The M4 was a welded hull model, the M4A1 a cast hull, M4A2 had a diesel engine, the M4A3 was a gasoline model with a Ford engine instead of the Continental in other models, M4A4 was had a longer hull to accomodate the Chrysler Multibank engine, the M4A6 had a diesel engine and some modification for use by the Marines etc..
@gammarey7070
@gammarey7070 Жыл бұрын
But the M3 grant was one of the main tanks used after Britain pushed italy to retreat countering the Panzer III's and IV's.
@terraflow__bryanburdo4547
@terraflow__bryanburdo4547 Жыл бұрын
The M3 75mm gun was weak against heavy armor but its high explosive round was excellent in troop support, which is the main role of a medium tank. A few M10s and or Fireflies mixed in could do the job of antitank suppression.
@gsyt2356
@gsyt2356 Жыл бұрын
Fun fact: the survivability rate of a penetrated M4 Sherman was 80%, the T-34s was 15%.
@MasterMind75427
@MasterMind75427 Жыл бұрын
More like false fact
@gsyt2356
@gsyt2356 Жыл бұрын
@@MasterMind75427 how so?
@MasterMind75427
@MasterMind75427 Жыл бұрын
@@gsyt2356 Do you have source to support your claims? Because 80% survability after penetration seems way off
@JTA1961
@JTA1961 Жыл бұрын
​@@MasterMind75427that's what she said...
@L884ERU
@L884ERU Жыл бұрын
@@MasterMind75427 It can be found from numerous sources, though numbers I've found put it closer to 70% than 80% for the Sherman. The numbers I'm finding for soviet tanks paint a more confusing picture though with 30%-50% fatalities being the more average number?
@Croissant-123
@Croissant-123 5 ай бұрын
Germans say it takes 5 shermans to knock out a Tiger, Until a Firefly or an Easy Eight shows up
@neofulcrum5013
@neofulcrum5013 Жыл бұрын
Can you guys the history of guerrilla warfare tactics?
@syahareensharani6869
@syahareensharani6869 Жыл бұрын
6:22 Commander: The drivers hit we're moving slowly, The gunner has bought the farm we can't load very fast
@dvasavertik7629
@dvasavertik7629 Жыл бұрын
I always considered tank crews one of the bravest soldiers in war (after submarine crews) despite the fact that they are protected by heavy armor. The SU lost most of their tanks but they just kept going and going. It must be a terrifying thought that everyone at the enemy lines is going to hunt YOU the second they see your tank. Other tanks, infantry with anti-tank weapons, 88s, hostile citizens, Hitler's grandma, everyone. You are not just a soldier anymore, you are the primary target. It's even worse now that guided anti-tank weapons exist and the enemy can blast you from like 3 miles away. Tank service sucks, Russians are learning it the hard way nowadays.
@unclexeres
@unclexeres Жыл бұрын
True that, tanker's and the silent service. One can hide with no chance of recovery, the other is a sitting duck.
@seanodwyer4322
@seanodwyer4322 Жыл бұрын
new Zealand Army landed in Italy- 1943 with 360 Sherman tanks, when war ended in may 1945, they had only 50 left. Dad told me somewhere in Italy someone took out a New Zealand Sherman tank column. - at first they assummed it was a whole lot off germens that did it, but later on they took prisoner a German with a Panzer- fuast - bazzooker.- and he bragged too them all that it was Him who destroyed all those kiwi Shermans with his bazooker panzer- faust. Dad said he looked like a perfect Aryan race German with white hair and square jaw.''
@jaredsedoris6736
@jaredsedoris6736 Жыл бұрын
I love the M4 Sherman! My favorite US tank of World War II!
@wweminehead
@wweminehead Жыл бұрын
The indepth detail on the thumbnail is superb
@13lueBomber
@13lueBomber 11 ай бұрын
*Simple* *History* I always found it interesting how the Sherman had to be smaller due to having to transport it far distances. *Edit* Ah, so THAT’S the man behind the voice! 🫡
@IshmaelDoe
@IshmaelDoe Жыл бұрын
People that believe the US didn't care the solider life and mass produce Sherman instead of some super tank, let me tell you, you are stupid. It is really simple, because the main fighting force is always the infantary, so you would rather have small amount of super tank, which can't be avaliable to the infantry everytime? Or a a decent tanks (which btw as mentioned can already kill most of the tank from Axis) that avaliable and in dozen every time?
@rgoldberg5294
@rgoldberg5294 11 ай бұрын
My father was a tank platoon commander during the Battle of Okinawa, in the 713th TBT. According to the unit’s “actual “after action” report, written in 1945, their Sherman’s had their 75mm guns replaced with “modified RONSON flame throwers.” These tanks were capable of firing streams of napalm up to 100 yards. They were exceptionally effective when used against enemy soldiers in caves and pillboxes. These Sherman’s were on occasion referred to as Ronsons and Zippos because of their firepower, not because they burned when hit.
@Mr_x_19922
@Mr_x_19922 Жыл бұрын
The tanks that liberated Europe!
@tommyrockstar100
@tommyrockstar100 Жыл бұрын
Great video and love the details about it, It would be good to see one of the British Churchill tank
@nsb8816
@nsb8816 Жыл бұрын
Awesome content man. Wish I could patronize it. By now can only like subscribe etc. Cheers from Poland man.
@quintrapnell3605
@quintrapnell3605 7 ай бұрын
We had to cram them onto boats and wanted to cross bridges. The constraints were made up for by mass production without interruption by aerial bombardment.
@Andrew_Sword
@Andrew_Sword Жыл бұрын
the sherman was actually the most crew survivable of the war.
@DraxTheDestroyer
@DraxTheDestroyer Жыл бұрын
My favorite is the Jumbo Sherman, that thing is a beast!
@corymorimacori1059
@corymorimacori1059 Жыл бұрын
“Don’t worry, the US will give you a pass. Just change your poster to ‘Keep calm and kiss my cousin’s a**!’” Theodore Roosevelt
@Wingspan_5
@Wingspan_5 Жыл бұрын
Reliability and ease of repair are always the most important aspects. The abilities of your tank are irrelevant if you are constantly broken down and waiting for specialized repairs
@lucky_lynx7867
@lucky_lynx7867 Жыл бұрын
The workhorse of the US army armored divisions in ww2
@SMC01ful
@SMC01ful 10 ай бұрын
I really enjoy these videos. You aren't scared to voice an opinion, but you have a good sense of humour and keep things well balanced. I also love your voice work. Top notch stuff for beginners, but its not so dumb an old hand won't find it boring. Well done. Moreover, I love the Sherman, a great little tank. I am a Panzer IV H and T34 fanboy, but anybody can argue for a Sherman over either, and I won't complain.
@T29Heavy
@T29Heavy Жыл бұрын
One Thing that Simple History forget to mention about the Sherman is the Prototype Sherman Medium Tank T6
@patrickmccrann991
@patrickmccrann991 Жыл бұрын
The T6 was the heavy tank prototype version and not a Sherman. It was later put into production as the M6. However, shipping concerns led the U.S. to concentrate on the M4 Sherman until late in the war. In January 1945, approximately 100 T/M26 Pershings were sent to Europe for combat testing.
@WatcherMovie008
@WatcherMovie008 Жыл бұрын
"M4 is clearly a death trap. Like a Ronson burner, lights up once and burns everytime." - Belton Cooper Belton Cooper's source: *TRUST ME :^)*
@b.elzebub9252
@b.elzebub9252 Жыл бұрын
0:21 fistpumping was an incredibly important part of ww1 tank-combat.
@willerwin3201
@willerwin3201 Жыл бұрын
The Sherman was one of the most survivable tanks of the war. 85% of crewmen stayed alive and effective when their Sherman got knocked out. Compare that with the T-34, in which about 87% died when their tanks got knocked out.
@RandomStuff-he7lu
@RandomStuff-he7lu Жыл бұрын
The much vaunted Panther tank had a burn rate as high as 80% and yet no one acts like it ever caught fire.
@Ohmygodstfu2045
@Ohmygodstfu2045 Жыл бұрын
Because wheraboos think Germany is the best
@WarInHD
@WarInHD Жыл бұрын
Hands down the best tank made during WW2
@toomuchyoutube
@toomuchyoutube Жыл бұрын
One of the most important aspects of the M4 was how it could be easily transported.
@jadentetzlaff1108
@jadentetzlaff1108 Жыл бұрын
This tank is the definition of strength in numbers.
@Joe_Spier
@Joe_Spier Жыл бұрын
**russians**
@averagejoe112
@averagejoe112 Жыл бұрын
And strength of quality and reliability
@chaosXP3RT
@chaosXP3RT Жыл бұрын
That's the T-34
@aidanlouw4274
@aidanlouw4274 Жыл бұрын
Of all the variants the M4A3E8 76 was my favorite. There were more serving in Korea than M26 Pershings because they were more reliable and easy to maintain and the crew loved them
@armandoventura9043
@armandoventura9043 Жыл бұрын
One thing that no one can deny is that the M4 and T-34 were the most useful tanks of the war for the simple fact of being easily manufactured and repairable German tanks were much better built, but why would you want a perfect tank if it will be destroyed anyway?
@NguyenMinh-vs1vm
@NguyenMinh-vs1vm Жыл бұрын
The concept of ‘perfection’ itself is paradoxical. It means the thing is so good that you simply cannot improve it any further, and it’s so great it simply doesn’t need any improvement or upgrades, but German tanks are anything but perfect.
@NoFlyZone31
@NoFlyZone31 Жыл бұрын
German tanks suffered from the fact that they all seemed to have some sort of reliability issue, and even when working great they didn’t have enough numbers. America hit the right spot with quality and quantity, while Russia had too low quality.
@Elisângela8968
@Elisângela8968 Жыл бұрын
​@@NoFlyZone31Not really T-34 had good enough quality and was good enough to the problems it faced
@toastedt140
@toastedt140 Жыл бұрын
​@germangecko7328 It's interesting they still occasionally find german tanks abandoned during the war. Lot of transmission issues iirc
@nickellison2785
@nickellison2785 Жыл бұрын
@@Elisângela8968T-34 absolutely did not have good quality, it was awful in battle.
@cliffordnelson8454
@cliffordnelson8454 8 ай бұрын
My one issue with your video was that failure to mention that the 75mm was a much better soft target weapon than the 76mm
@johnmyers1926
@johnmyers1926 Жыл бұрын
The British perfected it adding their 17 pounder gun. The Firefly
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