That One Terrible Gun Myth in Siege of Jadotville...

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Forgotten Weapons

Forgotten Weapons

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 3 100
@ChrisByers100
@ChrisByers100 Жыл бұрын
Having fired the 7.62mm LMG (Bren) a lot during my time in the British Army I can say that as far as machine guns go, it was very accurate (for a machine gun) and a two man team can keep the enemys heads down very effectively with it using short bursts. I too though, when I first saw this film some years back, threw some words at the TV screen regarding the use of the Bren with a single shot over distance. Apart from that though, it really is an excellent movie and well worth a watch as the Irish army does not get enough recognition for their (often very hairy) UN work over the decades since WWII.
@Diamond-bd5ox
@Diamond-bd5ox Жыл бұрын
They really don't, Ireland has contributed the most amount of soldiers per capita to UN peacekeeping forces, although recent neglect of the defence forces by the Irish government has resulted in a fall in the amount of soldiers being deployed on peacekeeping missions.
@TheOz91
@TheOz91 Жыл бұрын
A lot of smaller countries sent their troops into Congo, too, so many of them were newly independent nations. And many did see action like the Malayan Special Force of the Federation of Malaya (now Malaysia) who didn't face a dire of a situation like the Irish did face some combat
@rogerhudson9732
@rogerhudson9732 19 күн бұрын
The Bren is a great gun, the .303 version used an interesting blank fir system, special rounds with a small wooden 'bullet' and you used a 'masher barrel' with the top half of the exit cone blanked off. They blanking piece once broke off and we fired streams of the wooden pegs, probably lethal very close up.
@eamonngibney7572
@eamonngibney7572 4 күн бұрын
Was ot not .303?
@samopalusa5249
@samopalusa5249 Жыл бұрын
The Swedish Ks used in the movie were the ACTUAL Swedish Ks used in the conflict. Hire Arms in Johannesburg provided the firearms for the movie. Bruce Wentzel (friend) is the owner of Hire Arms and he traced the Swedish Ks by serial numbers using records in Ireland.
@shagakhan9442
@shagakhan9442 Жыл бұрын
That's really cool.
@samopalusa5249
@samopalusa5249 Жыл бұрын
@@eralehm It's not BS. Bruce went to considerable effort and confirmed it without doubt. But, if you don't believe it that's fine.
@slthbob
@slthbob Жыл бұрын
sounds like some marketing propoganda @@samopalusa5249 Like the kind an Irish patriot would want to believe... used car salesman style... the exploitation is real friend and every cultist needs their fantasy
@gravygraves5112
@gravygraves5112 Жыл бұрын
@@eralehm "There is no reason why any of them would have found their way to South Africa, certainly not in any numbers" See, that's a BS statement. After the Congo conflict, southern Africa saw the Rhodie Bush War, the Border war, and multiple revolutions and guerilla conflicts between African militias. There are so many reasons and ways that those guns would make their way down to that neck of the woods.
@EireGenX
@EireGenX Жыл бұрын
Where did you get this information? I was talking to an Irish army armour. He said that they cut up all the Carl Gustav smgs in Connelly Barracks with gas axes🤔
@50ShadesOfBeige
@50ShadesOfBeige Жыл бұрын
My dad had a great laugh at that scene about the Bren. In the National Service he actually earned a marksmans badge with the Bren. His comment was the Bren was to make the other side keep their heads down, and the sniper’s job was to take their head off.
@glidershower
@glidershower Жыл бұрын
Indeed. Many people just don't get that a _gunners'_ job is to lay _suppressive fire,_ not be accurate. If you can piss 100 rounds in a couple of seconds and paint several feet across in lead in that period, you and your hardware are doing _a fine job,_ which is to force the other bastards to cower in cover so your squad can get into a better position. You off a guy or two, _that's already an overachievement._ It breaks my heart when I see people roast gunners and their LMGs as "hurr, they couldn't get tight groupings". They just don't get how valuable gunners are in preserving the lives of their brothers in arms, much vidya.
@TamLe-ig2ey
@TamLe-ig2ey Жыл бұрын
Oh my dad yelled out Bullshit as well. He didn't carry the Bren but the BAR and of course they are the most inappropriate weapons to be used in that context
@Furzkampfbomber
@Furzkampfbomber Жыл бұрын
@@TamLe-ig2ey And here is the thing that always baffled me a bit when it comes to the Bar. I get that this type of gun is meant to deliver suppressive fire, but what I don't get is how that 20 round standard magazine of the Bar was enough to do the job. 20 rounds does sound awfully sparse with suppressive fire in mind.
@manofconstantgold
@manofconstantgold Жыл бұрын
@@Furzkampfbomber I know this is a bit late in answering, but the whole mag thing comes down to two different methodologies of the interwar-wartime period for ammo storage. The one that won out in the end was for the machine gunner to feed their lmg from a belt with assistance gunner carrying extra belts and helping with the loading. LMGs like the bren gun however, being mag fed, had the ammo a bit less exposed to the elements and in the British army each rifleman in the squad carried a few bren magazines in their basic pouches of their webbing. This meant that, while lower in capacity, the bren gun’s magazines were distributed through the members of a unit and readily available to resupply unless they all run out of ammunition.
@Furzkampfbomber
@Furzkampfbomber Жыл бұрын
@@manofconstantgold That makes sense, thanks a lot for the explanation! I still wonder about the usufulness of a weapon meant to suppress the enemy with only 20 rounds in the magazine though. My thought is, you fire 20 rounds, then you have to reload, which also means you have to suspend your suppressive fire. I guess it was a weighing up of all advantages and disadvantages and in the end, they would not have used it on such a large scale in case the disadvantages predominated, but still, I wonder how practical/useful the BAR was in combat due to this.
@johnm3907
@johnm3907 Жыл бұрын
The irish government denied this even happened for years. And the guys in this were called cowards because they surrendered.
@ForgottenWeapons
@ForgottenWeapons Жыл бұрын
Yeah, really unfair how the Irish soldiers were treated after they got home.
@ganndeber1621
@ganndeber1621 Жыл бұрын
They did surrender, why try a build a hero myth around them? They lost and surrendered it was not one of the great heroic last stands. In any other countries military history it would be a side note.@@ForgottenWeapons
@Matt-xc6sp
@Matt-xc6sp Жыл бұрын
@@ganndeber1621they literally fought till they were out of ammo and the their command couldn’t and wouldn’t resupply. You must be trolling.
@donkeysunited
@donkeysunited Жыл бұрын
@@ganndeber1621 You're only a hero if you die? That's a bit extreme. Take all the medals back from the living soldiers in the world, so.
@Charlie25068
@Charlie25068 Жыл бұрын
​@@ganndeber1621 Tell us, what unit did you serve in, where, and what did you do. I know by the comment you have done nothing, and never will.
@stalkingtiger777
@stalkingtiger777 Жыл бұрын
Not giving the Elbonian Army Bren Guns for Sniper Rifles was a missed opportunity!
@RodrigoRodriguezowl
@RodrigoRodriguezowl Жыл бұрын
and bicycle mounted Villar Perosas as GPMG 😆
@DustyGamma
@DustyGamma Жыл бұрын
Converted specifically for single loading.
@danielvahnke3369
@danielvahnke3369 Жыл бұрын
Sorry, but all ammo will run out FAST very soon. If you can't remake your own propellants w/ geo-resources (dig, baby!) you will wear out rifling & steel parts not easily replaceable. SOLUTION : the cardinal Three Self-Made Weapons : Atlatl / Blowgun / Sling (in all permutations of the 3 groups). Easy to master techniques (especially by feral children in treetops) & an unlimited number of variants possible with (previously) modern materials. "We'll vacuum the ocean bottom for precious plastic particles, Captain Crabs!"
@liammeech3702
@liammeech3702 Жыл бұрын
@@danielvahnke3369 Is this a numbers-station broadcast?
@wisemankugelmemicus1701
@wisemankugelmemicus1701 Жыл бұрын
Probably because its still a very accurate weapon
@MichaelKingsfordGray
@MichaelKingsfordGray Жыл бұрын
As an Australian sniper who specialised in the Lee-Enfield, but also trained with the Bren, I can assure you that you are 101% correct, from actual experience.
@edwarddailey21
@edwarddailey21 Жыл бұрын
Ya I have no idea why in that great film he said give me the bren gun, when the damn enfield was far more accurate and same caliber.
@vincentnastri7736
@vincentnastri7736 Жыл бұрын
Simply because he could!🇨🇦🇺🇸🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧
@matthewmclean9734
@matthewmclean9734 Жыл бұрын
There is also a myth about the Lee Enfield was inaccurate which is laughable. I constantly get flak about my hunting rifle being a LE and how inaccurate it is... I'm a terrible shot, but the bullet always hits exactly where its aimed, every time.@@edwarddailey21
@Edax_Royeaux
@Edax_Royeaux Жыл бұрын
@@edwarddailey21 The Chieftain just released a video addressing this point. On the range in Ireland, the Bren were heavily perceived to be a precision weapon by the soldiers, born from the Inter-Unit shooting contests. If the soldiers are absolutely convinced that the Bren can be used as a sniper rifle, they are going to use it as such, even if the actual ballistics don't back that up. The Irish Inter-Unit shooting contests even had the rule you couldn't single fire the Bren in competition to try to get them to use it more as a LMG, but this only made the Irish soldiers shoot 2 round bursts instead.
@spartan8705
@spartan8705 Жыл бұрын
@@edwarddailey21to add to the comments about Chieftain’s video, that reputation could well have been aided by the superior practical accuracy of the bipod-equipped Bren gun compared to the free-resting Enfield
@sbreheny
@sbreheny Жыл бұрын
The BREN scene bugs me, too. The absence of the armored cars bugs me, too, because it was key to how they managed to avoid having any of their troops killed. They used the armored cars as emplaced gun turrets which allowed them to suppress the attacking enemy with impunity because the enemy has no anti-armor weapons.
@paddy7812
@paddy7812 Жыл бұрын
That was definitely left out of the movie!! en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Jadotville#:~:text=The%20aircraft%20attacked%20several%20times,a%20French%2075mm%20field%20gun.
@gillesguillaumin6603
@gillesguillaumin6603 Жыл бұрын
And me too . Not the Vickers machine gun, after all Eireann was a neutral country, with a poor equipement ,but using a Bren like a sniper gun, I was very surprised and thought the shooter had a trick.
@HungrigerHugo89
@HungrigerHugo89 Жыл бұрын
oh THAT seems like a rather big exclusion/error... much bigger than the Bren thing oO
@LouiseSiefer
@LouiseSiefer Жыл бұрын
Armoured cars are pussy weapons. Get a tank if you want armour. Or grow some balls and fight. Don't hide in a girly wagon.
@Autobotmatt428
@Autobotmatt428 Жыл бұрын
Armored cars would have been awsone to see!
@willfrankunsubscribed
@willfrankunsubscribed Жыл бұрын
Everyone knows, the support weapon preferred by snipers is the M2 Browning
@The_Codstero1
@The_Codstero1 Жыл бұрын
Real
@somedayzo6
@somedayzo6 Жыл бұрын
Enough said.
@USAACbrat
@USAACbrat Жыл бұрын
They mounted scops on it; 37 mm anti-tank cannon works with scopes too.
@Panzeroflake
@Panzeroflake Жыл бұрын
Didnt the white feather use one?
@matchesburn
@matchesburn Жыл бұрын
"the support weapon preferred by snipers is the M2 Browning" Hold on there, sparky. You might want to reel that joke back in. One of the longest confirmed kills on record for decades was made by Carlos Hathcock with an M2 in semi-auto mode.
@shanemaddison9407
@shanemaddison9407 Жыл бұрын
There is one added aspect to the accuracy of the Bren and that is the replaceable barrel. No matter how good the fit might be when it locks in place, there will be movement and that will change trajectory. A sniper rifle has everything fixed that can be fixed in place. No unnecessary movement.
@theblondesiouxsiesioux
@theblondesiouxsiesioux Жыл бұрын
The bren was also heavier, and had a bipod. Which can help with accuracy. I'd still rather a use a scope for long range shooting doe.
@philgreen815
@philgreen815 11 ай бұрын
Good point, also the Lee Enfield has a free floating barrel for accuracy, which of course the Bren didn't have.
@JackosJingles
@JackosJingles 8 ай бұрын
I've used the L4 both in basic in JLR in 77 and on a refresher course with reserves in the 80s. I found with my limited experience with it that it was pretty accurate.MT Troop also had L4s to go with our SMGs and supposedly a Charlie G.
@marvindebot3264
@marvindebot3264 Жыл бұрын
I was in the Congo in the late 80s/early 90s, the situation then was far simpler and we still could have used a spreadsheet to keep all the factions in order in our minds. Nothing is simple in that crazy place. While I'm sure it would be possible to pull that shot off with a Bren if you know that particular weapon well enough, if you have a #4 sniper why the hell would you use a Bren? This kind of stuff is one of the reasons I don't generally watch movies about places I contracted.
@AnonymousAnarchist2
@AnonymousAnarchist2 Жыл бұрын
amazing what one crazed corrupt monarch with rubber on his mind can do to a group of individual tribes and kingdoms even 100 years later isnt it?
@itatane
@itatane Жыл бұрын
I think an applicable observation for African politics is a quote one of my professors lifted from the movie Congo. "When these little African countries get into a dispute, they tend to just murder everybody. They live for the opportunity to settle scores... and they have a lot of scores to settle." (We were discussing Rwanda at the time.)
@mkaz3997
@mkaz3997 Жыл бұрын
i'd heard the Bren accuracy 'myth'. I agree, an accurate weapon, relatively low ROF, but not up to par with No.4 MLE! It is a bit annoying in the film...unless it actually happened of course, maybe the Bren was close to hand in moment?( or most like, tall story from a squaddie!)
@jefferyboring4410
@jefferyboring4410 Жыл бұрын
I kick myself everyone I hear of a Bren for not buying a kit when they were 200$
@bronco5334
@bronco5334 Жыл бұрын
...and if you had to take the shot with the Bren, why not fire a burst? The first shot is going to go to exactly the same point of impact either way, the only difference is you're also putting out additional fire to ensure a hit. If you REALLY want to hit something, fire more bullets at it.
@MsJoao101
@MsJoao101 Жыл бұрын
That particular Bren was the legendary Irish magical one, blessed by St Patrick himself, it will not miss, even if you shoot it blindfolded, with no front sight and looking sideways at it...
@edwardschmitt5710
@edwardschmitt5710 Жыл бұрын
Using it the wind will always be at your back, and the road will rise to meet you....
@goldiefish72
@goldiefish72 Жыл бұрын
Ah more paddywhackery, blessed by St patrick nonsense. Everyone knows St Barbara is the patron saint of Gunners, not the welsh shepherd.... :)
@MsJoao101
@MsJoao101 Жыл бұрын
@@goldiefish72 Forgive my ignorance, i'm not Irish you see, i don't know those particulars... St Barbara it is then! 🤣🤣
@cillianomorain3619
@cillianomorain3619 Жыл бұрын
It was hammer forged with shilleaghs and stored in nitrogen flushed Guinness to reduce oxidisation and wear. Hand loaded rounds with propellant made from dehydrated whiskey and bullets made of post colonial spite. The exit wound was the size of a football. 😅 And cursed the family line of the target for all eternity 😂
@DjigitDaniel
@DjigitDaniel Жыл бұрын
This comment, and all of the replies therein, are pure gold. LMAO Thank you, all.
@PolenarTactical
@PolenarTactical Жыл бұрын
I remember this scene! It looked so stupid that started screaming in my screen - like WTF is that guy doing?!? At least now i understand what this was all about...
@Gallagher068
@Gallagher068 Жыл бұрын
I remember it sending me down a wikipedia hole cause I wasn't super versed on british guns... "Well maybe it's got a more appropriate round?.... same round. Maybe it's got a longer barrel? Same barrel length..... Maybe the sniper had parkinsons and needed the bipod to hold it steady...."
@PolenarTactical
@PolenarTactical Жыл бұрын
@@Gallagher068 i just thought the producers were re-tarded 🤣
@Furzkampfbomber
@Furzkampfbomber Жыл бұрын
@@PolenarTactical To be fair, this was one (very) stupid scene in a movie that otherwise is quite correct when it comes to the guns used. There are tons of movies that have send me into a 90+ minutes screaming fit, because of how historically inaccurate, stupid and silly they are and this movie was actually a refreshing exception in this regard. So calling the producers retarted because of that one scene seems a bit harsh if you ask me.
@theblondesiouxsiesioux
@theblondesiouxsiesioux Жыл бұрын
I thought it was pretty dumb also. Dude had an enfield (same bullet as bren) with a telescopic sight on it, why would you use the bren? T.B.H though, the Bren did have a bipod on it, which would help, and if you're a true marksman you should be able to shoot 300 yards at a human sized target no problem with those adjustable sights. Still really redundant and stupid, but there's at least a minimal amount of reason behind it, bipod n all.
@DernRern
@DernRern 8 ай бұрын
​@theblondesiouxsiesioux i thought the dude just did it for fun... good for story time later😂
@matchesburn
@matchesburn Жыл бұрын
The irony of substituting a magnified optic marksman/sniper rifle with a iron sight light support machine gun... I mean, at around 500 yards your front sight post on your Bren is going to be larger than the human target you're firing at. It's almost like... magnified optics are useful for shooting at range. Whoddathunkit.
@aritakalo8011
@aritakalo8011 Жыл бұрын
Funniest to me is the thing Ian mentioned last and his "there is no front sight". ..... I think something got crossed between the FX department and directing. The reason there is no front sight visible is..... that is supposed to be a sight view from magnified optic with hairline cross hair. One can see the big round silhuette. So FX people thought "well this is sniper shot, obviously we make up fake scope silhuette and hairline cross hair and stylize it with little out of focus and so on. It also gives the best view of the target aka action". Where as action director was "no this sniper is so bad as he makes that shot with bad ass Bren gun with iron sights". Since one must remember *they wouldn't have shot that shot in filming through any kind of sights* . You don't do that, way too much focus problems and so on. You shoot the aiming view through cinema camera on cinema quality with perfect lenses ..... and then ask the FX department to mess is up to make it look being silhuetted with iron sights or optical sight. If you want zoom, you don't use the telescope zoom. Trying to get the experience of all of both rear sight, front sight and target being in focus is not possible easily with limited focus lenses. So you fake it. Film the supposed shot (and input blood spatter) on cinema camera and then post process silhuette in the scope reticle and housing (and possibly distortions) or the iron sights. So it's... oopsie post processing thought this shot was supposed to be sniper shot with a scope, but ooopsie that is not what is actually in the script. They faked the wrong kind of sight in the shot. I think most likely also since, well the front sight would obstruct the view of the actor in the sights.
@DylanHatford
@DylanHatford Жыл бұрын
​@aritakalo8011 Doesn't look like they were going for a scope, that's just how the rear sight would look up close. If you look at the rear sight a little earlier in the video, you can see its round like it's shown in the close up. They still messed up not having the front sight though, so vfx could have been the problem there.
@HunterGargoyle
@HunterGargoyle Жыл бұрын
At 500 yards i've known plenty of people (including myself before my eye injury) who can hit better with irons than magnified optics i've only recently started using optics after losing partial sight in my dominant eye and i am having a lot of trouble hitting out to the same distances
@smolkafilip
@smolkafilip Жыл бұрын
@@HunterGargoyle And how exactly are these people getting better hits with an inherently less precise aiming device?
@thomasstevenhebert
@thomasstevenhebert Жыл бұрын
Meh, the Bren gun would be fine for that target, just needs a burst on target to do the job
@ClericalConsequences
@ClericalConsequences Жыл бұрын
The obvious solution is simply for Ian to work as a firearms consultant on every Hollywood movie made from now on
@DiggingForFacts
@DiggingForFacts Жыл бұрын
The key problem is that a consultant is always an advisor. The consultant ultimately doesn't get to decide something that is a director-level decision; if the director wants cool factor, the director gets cool factor.
@LD-Orbs
@LD-Orbs Жыл бұрын
With proper pay rates. Or at least free flights to wherever, whenever! (Gotta keep the masses happy with more new footage!)
@willemventer3935
@willemventer3935 Жыл бұрын
SARKY SARKY
@NiccoMinutoli
@NiccoMinutoli Жыл бұрын
As someone who was briefly a consultant, you're basically just there so they can claim they had a consultant. And all the production people have no frame of reference for your knowledge base. We had them film a stunt that from a K9 handlers perspective was an amazing showcase of dog and handler skill. The NSWDG guy and LEO SWAT handlers that were also brought in for consulting and stunt work thought it was the coolest thing in the world. But we were the only ones. The director and the rest of the production team were confused by it and didn't see what was so impressive about it. We only did one take and moved on and to the best of my knowledge none of that footage ever made it into the final project.
@Pakiu1306
@Pakiu1306 Жыл бұрын
@@NiccoMinutoliouch
@patricktracey7424
@patricktracey7424 Жыл бұрын
I carried and used both the GPMG and the bren or LMG whilst serving in the British Royal Marines Commandos ,the former was a very good spread pattern weapon whilst the Bren was slightly more accurate, the bren was lighter easier to use and i loved it, so much so i carried it on operational tours of Northern Ireland where the SLR was the normal weapon used. The only fault with the bren was the clip that held the barrel on when jumping over a drystone wall after an IED went off the barrel detached itself and i had to go back for it.
@LibertyLou_
@LibertyLou_ Жыл бұрын
🫡That must have been quite an ass puckering experience my friend. Glad you made it back in one peace. 🥃🥃
@philgreen815
@philgreen815 11 ай бұрын
Yes the LMG 7.62 version of the Bren? I have seen the 7.62 30 round mags fitted to an SLR ! although I reckon that would be prone to jamming? as it was gravity fed in its normal configuration on the LMG?
@0p.4
@0p.4 8 ай бұрын
A damn shame the provos didn't get you
@unbearifiedbear1885
@unbearifiedbear1885 8 ай бұрын
​@@0p.4 They were usually too stupid to know which way to point their weapons, luckily.. Over a century spent resisting the British, only to surrender the country to Africans without a shot 😂🤦‍♂️
@severs1966
@severs1966 Жыл бұрын
The "Bren is too accurate" myth was so pervasive that actual British service personnel were taught that it was true during training, and continued to be taught this through the 1950s and 1960s.
@Kevin-mx1vi
@Kevin-mx1vi Жыл бұрын
Yep. My dad did his National Service from 1948 to 1950 and was taught that at the time.
@Charlie25068
@Charlie25068 Жыл бұрын
This Hollywood scene lets the film down a bit. The FN FAL (SLR in Britian), the rifle the Irish also had, was far more accurate than the Bren. I fired both, I know. And unit snipers at the time (if they had any) used the .303 Lee Enfield with scope, if they were equipped with it.
@Oligodendrocyte139
@Oligodendrocyte139 Жыл бұрын
@@Andy_Ross1962Well, my father-in-law was trained on the Bren in that time period, and he was taught that it was highly accurate. Whether they said “too accurate” I don’t know.
@verrueckteriwan
@verrueckteriwan Жыл бұрын
I think it is part of the good old WW2 propaganda, "E have the more accurate weapon, you have nothing to fear", similar to the American propaganda that "the bark of the MG42 is worse than its bite" or "our Thompson machine guns are way better than those mp 40s". The Brits were always proud of their high accuracy, so of course they needed the "most accurate machine gun". This is also the reason why Britain didn't have an SMG at the beginning of WW2, because they thought 10 rounds are enough if you can kill a guy with one shot, while an SMG would work great if you could kill the same guy multiple times over. But all of that Ideology didn't survive the first contact with the enemy...
@krissteel4074
@krissteel4074 Жыл бұрын
Somewhat anecdotal, but my grandfather was a Bren gunner from 1939-46 in the AIF. He was widely regarded and self confessed rotten shot with a rifle, so he got given a Bren gun- of which he qualified on and spent the next 7 years dragging it around through all manner of godforsaken, tropical hell holes. It wasn't so much he was a good shot or the Bren was any +/- better than any dodgy SMLE rifles they also got issued, but you just had plenty more rounds to get some effect on target!
@TheChieftainsHatch
@TheChieftainsHatch Жыл бұрын
Well, so here's the catch. I'm old enough to have been trained on the Bren by the Irish Army before even the reserves moved to the FN-MAG, and it had a serious reputation for accuracy. Whether the reputation is valid or not mechanically, it was there. You are correct that loading the single round instead of firing from the mag is silly. You are also correct that it was deliberately written, but the writer wouldn't have come up with it for no reason at all and I am very willing to believe it came up after interviews with the veterans. It's worth noting that on Irish fora, nobody complains too much about that scene apart from the magazine bit. One of the problems with the Bren in Irish service was convincing the troops to operate it in the manner it was intended, as a sustained fire weapon. The Army had (and presumably still has) annual inter-unit shooting contests. Personally I was on the Falling Plates team but there were other contests like pistol and, yes, Bren. The rules had to be written to specifically prohibit the use of single shot in competition and, indeed, as the ROF was so low that deliberately firing 2-round-bursts was very easy, the issued magazines in competition came with 15 rounds to ensure at least one three-round-burst would be fired. That way if the umpires heard seven double-taps, they knew they didn't even need to wait for the final round to be fired before penalising the team. Scoring took a while as the double-taps often ended up in 'single' elongated holes, requiring assessment from the guys in the butts and not infrequently arguments over whether two rounds had gone through the one hole. Were I the shooter in the movie, I'd have fired a two-round burst to be sure, but hey, ammo was limited in the siege. So, you have a very heavy gun, with a sturdy bipod you can really lean into, thus a very steady sight picture. Whether the gun is as accurate mechanically as the Lee Enfield is a bit academic if both are mechanically good enough to do the job, and the telescopic sight is kindof irrelevant if the target is bright white. Yes, the movie takes liberties for the sake of the story, but that the Bren could be taken in preference to the sniper rifle for specific shots (even if not necessarily that specific shot in the movie) is nowhere near improbable and would be doubtless relatable to the troops of the era.
@jamesjanson6129
@jamesjanson6129 Жыл бұрын
I personally believe this scene is a legend that was created and has become embellished throughout the years of the retelling of the tale of Jadotville. Those in the know of the Irish army will recognise the saying " A story of a mouse in Collins barracks in Cork at breakfast, is an Elephant by the time it reaches the Currach in Kildare at lunchtime!" I assume that at some point in the conflict, in the firefight one of the snipers was either seen near a Bren gun and/or had been complaining of some sort of problem with his rifle, and soon after a target of value was dropped with a single shot from the same position...Assumption the kill was made by the sniper using the Bren...Instant legend... I mean, there is the other legend of the aircraft attack of the Fouga jet fighter on the Irish troops. There was a legend going around the Irish army for years that that exact Fouga fighter had been inducted into the Irish airforce when Ireland actually had Fouga fighters as their main combat aircraft, and that it is on display in the Irish army museum .
@TheChieftainsHatch
@TheChieftainsHatch Жыл бұрын
@@jamesjanson6129 I admit, I had never heard the Fouga legend before.
@darrencantillon6377
@darrencantillon6377 Жыл бұрын
Agreed. While training on the Bren, I even heard instructors say it. Maybe more than a bit of myth and legend driving this :)
@FreeLearningHere
@FreeLearningHere Жыл бұрын
I remember being told the Mk1 bren was the more accurate model than the Mk3, as the Mk3 was designed to be used by paratroopers and had a larger "beating zone". However I think @GarandThumb should put this to the test
@christianhermansson8566
@christianhermansson8566 Жыл бұрын
Thank you. I agree, even if my experience is from using the FN MAG for many years and seeing soldiers use it.
@RedXlV
@RedXlV Жыл бұрын
One thing to remember, though, is that just because something is a myth doesn't mean soldiers won't *believe* the myth. The Bren's seriously inflated reputation for accuracy was something widely believed by soldiers.
@233kosta
@233kosta Жыл бұрын
I can attest to that. I've been told it by more than one TA guys, who in turn heard it from regular army soldiers.
@jameshealy4594
@jameshealy4594 Жыл бұрын
There's (still!) people in the comments here saying they were soldiers and the bren was more accurate.
@canadianbakin1304
@canadianbakin1304 Жыл бұрын
its like how people think the PIAT sucks, and in the hands of a novice its absolutely horrendous. but someone that knows its limitations and its benefits can do a lot of damage with one
@HO-bndk
@HO-bndk Жыл бұрын
No armourer believed the Bren myths. A Bren at its most accurate would have failed the acceptance tests for the Lee-Enfield.
@tyrontranter1763
@tyrontranter1763 Жыл бұрын
Bren was not typically fired in ten round bursts. Was more 2-4 this changes throughout ww2 as manuals show. The point well made why would you swap an already accurate scoped rifle for iron sights is purely cinematic for the myth. However (depending on the range) a single shot from the Bren (in the right hands) can be extremely accurate.
@fakjbf3129
@fakjbf3129 Жыл бұрын
I think the Bren myth started because it was slightly more accurate than other light machine guns like the MG 42, and then people took that nugget of truth and blew it way out of proportion.
@wingracer1614
@wingracer1614 Жыл бұрын
Exactly. By open bolt machine gun standards, it is very accurate. And of course most of the "sniper" rifles of the time it was introduced were not very accurate so by comparison, it was kind of a big deal. It didn't take very long for sniper rifles and even some machine guns to surpass it but the myth continued to this day, just ask Lindybeige, LOL
@henryturnerjr3857
@henryturnerjr3857 Жыл бұрын
I had a late Uncle who was a Korean War vet and later on the Army marksmanship team. He used to complain about how inaccurate the 1918 and 1919 machine guns were.
@Agouti
@Agouti Жыл бұрын
It was a pervasive myth amongst ANZAC troops in WW2 that the Bren was too accurate for use against light aircraft, even amongst several Vickers crewmen I met.
@abstractapproach634
@abstractapproach634 Жыл бұрын
STG 4tw
@BlokeontheRange
@BlokeontheRange Жыл бұрын
@@AgoutiIronically, since according to the training pamphlets the Vickers is significantly more accurate than the BREN in automatic fire...
@harrylime2842
@harrylime2842 Жыл бұрын
I spent the entire film wondering about the mercenary logistics with all the different calibres. I have issues.
@SgtKOnyx
@SgtKOnyx Жыл бұрын
Sounds like there weren't that many to me?
@neilhartigan7456
@neilhartigan7456 Жыл бұрын
I imagine you pick up ammunition and arms as they become available on the battlefield. 🤕
@Sturmischer
@Sturmischer Жыл бұрын
The secret ingredient is crime
@tarmaque
@tarmaque Жыл бұрын
Africa has always had a ridiculous hodgepodge of small arms in a wide variety of calibers, so I am unsurpised about this situation. Certainly it would make logistic sense for everything to use the same caliber, but in this case I think they brought what they had rather than what they wanted. This was a transition period after all. That said, there are only really 2 different cartridges we're talking here: 7.62x51 for the FALs and .303 for both the SMLE and the Bren Guns, and these would be impossible to confuse.
@darkshine5
@darkshine5 Жыл бұрын
Mercenaries.... ie French foreign Legion and Congonese free forces. Not just some random Mercs. Again we shouldn't have been there thanks alot De Gaulle
@larspandy5005
@larspandy5005 Жыл бұрын
Hi Ian. I love the "Gun Jesus" lectures. For me, the story of Jadotville is an example of the bravery, courage and sacrifice of Irish soldiers on the battlefield. It is proof that the unexpected could be expected. I have great respect for these brave people, even though Ireland did not welcome them upon their return as the heroes they are. I am not Irish but as a former active soldier I can appreciate courage.
@kristiangustafson4130
@kristiangustafson4130 Жыл бұрын
My former student, Declan Powers, wrote the book the movie was based on. Quite proud of him. Lovely guy.
@xanx3572
@xanx3572 Жыл бұрын
oh that's so nice
@shaunw9092
@shaunw9092 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this, I just bought the book on audible.
@McDroney
@McDroney Жыл бұрын
That's awesome! Does the book mention this scene at all? Maybe for some reason he DID swap his sniper for the bren for some reason? (Possibly because it has a bipod and was more stable?)
@FabianMacGintyONeill
@FabianMacGintyONeill Жыл бұрын
Oh yeah, I had him as a lecturer in Ballyfermot! He definitely knew his stuff, although he did have a tendency to use artillery related metaphors a lot
@sorehammer
@sorehammer Жыл бұрын
I would love to see you try this on the range to completley dispell the myth
@fernandough2117
@fernandough2117 Жыл бұрын
might be hard to find a volunteer mine owner though
@stefanosiclari
@stefanosiclari Жыл бұрын
​@@fernandough2117it all depends on whether or not the miner believes in the myth
@temerityxd8602
@temerityxd8602 Жыл бұрын
He links to a video at the end of someone else who already did that.
@loddude5706
@loddude5706 Жыл бұрын
In fairness, you'd really need the very stoned girl from 'Lock, stock & two smoking barrels', a full mag-dump from ten feet away & not a scratch - impressive control : )
@christianjensen6425
@christianjensen6425 Жыл бұрын
It has already been done kzbin.info/www/bejne/rYSXdGyEgrtjmac
@Daniel-vl8mx
@Daniel-vl8mx Жыл бұрын
The Armourer's Bench tested this, running a No 4 Mk 1 (T) against four different marks of Bren at the range. The Lee Enfield sniper rifle came out in front, but only just.
@SilverMe2004
@SilverMe2004 Жыл бұрын
So would the Bren being mounted and the Lee not, make up the differences?
@mustafaabdelwahab1478
@mustafaabdelwahab1478 Жыл бұрын
Makes absolutely no sense, even if his rifle was broken for some reason it'd make more sense to use an FAL to take the shot or just saturate the area with the Bren
@VHS_Broadcasting
@VHS_Broadcasting Жыл бұрын
It’s what was to hand in his elevated position, plus the dude probably thought like Carlos Hathcock whom duct taped his armalite scope to a Browning M1 .50 in Vietnam…
@tomstokoe5660
@tomstokoe5660 Жыл бұрын
Why was that mine owner even out in the open like that what an idiot. It's not the 11th century anymore bro you don't actually have to be on the battlefield to command the battle do you want to wind up like Harold Godwinson?
@staringgasmask
@staringgasmask Жыл бұрын
@@VHS_Broadcasting except the M2 is very accurate up to long ranges, a scope was used, and .50 BMG is an anti-materiel round that will most likely kill you if you ever get hit by it
@VHS_Broadcasting
@VHS_Broadcasting Жыл бұрын
@@staringgasmask the .303 round hits with 50,000 psi of force, that’s 3,214.2 Tons of force, it took limbs off, the Bren weighs quite a bit and a fairly robust man on lean-in prone the muzzle climb - inaccuracy for a single round at that short a distance isn’t really going to be that much of a factor…
@lewjew666
@lewjew666 Жыл бұрын
Bro what? 3214 tons of force??? Even if you got the units wrong that’s still roughly 50% more muzzle energy than it actually has Also what in gods green earth are you talking about? He literally says is a 4-5moa gun that’s not a rifle I want to lean on to try to make a single shot on a man sized target at 500+
@davediesel90
@davediesel90 Жыл бұрын
I have a Jadotville veteran as a neighbour, he was my sergeant in the old FCA, now the Reserve Defense Force. I never knew he was there until the film was made
@davecutting8316
@davecutting8316 Жыл бұрын
Hi Ian. To probably muddy the waters about the Bren gun and its accuracy . My father went in at D Day with his regiment and fought through to the Rhine before the surrender . My uncle was a marine commando in the war. Both of them told me, as a lad, how the Bren could be used as a sniper weapon. It seems that the rank and file of the British army did really believe this and both of them were at the sharp end. Thank you for your great videos , always interesting , with great content. Dave Cutting
@ethelmini
@ethelmini Жыл бұрын
I was a better shot with a bren than a no 4, but I'm no sniper. Maybe that's it, it's easier to shoot if you can't shoot.
@joshuaapplegarth9566
@joshuaapplegarth9566 Жыл бұрын
My grandad told me the exact same thing he was a paratrooper who served with the Gurkhas in Italy. He used to joke and call it a squad automatic marksman's rifle.
@thecuttingsark5094
@thecuttingsark5094 Жыл бұрын
IMHO, the Bren would have been ideal as a Designated Marksman’s Rifle as it was the only weapon in the Platoon with semi automatic capabilities with rifle ammunition. When bolt action rifles were replaced by ‘assault rifles’ for the riflemen then the LMG with a magazine became less relevant and the move to the GPMG happened. The Bren was crucial for the British in WW2 because it filled a gaping hole in section firepower. A 1 man weapon that could be used for sustained fire with a second man, decent enough on single shot and it used a decent cartridge.
@GarethThompson-u1w
@GarethThompson-u1w 11 ай бұрын
4-5 MOA is accurate enough that you could reliably hit a man sized target out to several hundred meters away (1 MOA is 1/60th of a degree). 5 MOA is still only 0.36 meters wide at 250 meters, and I believe a typical person is about 0.4 meters from shoulder to shoulder. 250 meters is at the far end for typical combat ranges. So if Bren gunners were generally good enough marksmen that they could regularly hit German soldiers with single shots at 250 meters or less (which covers most of the ranges that combat actually takes place at) then it wouldn't be all that hard for the Bren to gain a reputation for accuracy. But 4-5 MOA isn't more accurate than a typical rifle of the time. I've seen videos of people achieving ~2 MOA with both the SMLE and Kar98k.
@davidfisher9026
@davidfisher9026 8 ай бұрын
Rubbish@@thecuttingsark5094
@Gizmomadug
@Gizmomadug Жыл бұрын
I'm reminded of the time the IRA used a Boys anti-tank rifle against the Royal Navy in 1965. They had no magazine and only a few loose rounds that had to be extracted with a screwdriver. They shot a couple of holes into HMS Brave Borderer.
@Slava_Ukraini1991
@Slava_Ukraini1991 Жыл бұрын
my username and profile picture already tell you that i am not at all biased when it comes to this conflict lol.
@Briselance
@Briselance Жыл бұрын
​@@Slava_Ukraini1991 😄
@r0bw1l73
@r0bw1l73 Жыл бұрын
@@Slava_Ukraini1991 No Surrender. FGAU. I.R.A. stands for I Ran Away
@GazalAlShaqab
@GazalAlShaqab Жыл бұрын
Come out Ye Black and Tans… 😂
@Slava_Ukraini1991
@Slava_Ukraini1991 Жыл бұрын
@@r0bw1l73 in the instance discussed here the british vessel literally went full speed ahead without returning fire after getting nailed with the boyes AT rifle. talk about "I Ran Away"
@dild0gagginz955
@dild0gagginz955 Жыл бұрын
8:03 id imagine they originally shot the scene using the Enfield to make the shot then someone came up with the awesome idea of using the bren because of the myth, they then spiced in a scene where the sniper was taking aim down the Enfield scope and edited out the cross hairs
@aaa72317
@aaa72317 Жыл бұрын
Shit, hadn't thought of that. Makes sense.
@WALTERBROADDUS
@WALTERBROADDUS Жыл бұрын
I thought the scope didn't have crosshairs?
@ferbherbs855
@ferbherbs855 Жыл бұрын
@@WALTERBROADDUS The bren should have a front sight post
@bassmentier
@bassmentier Жыл бұрын
Nah, just watched it 4 times. They filmed it through the brens iron sight. He adjusts it and everything. You can see the whole ring and what side it's attached to.
@katjamuller5503
@katjamuller5503 8 ай бұрын
I just injected my own headcanon that the sniper just wanted to show off
@Myomer104
@Myomer104 Жыл бұрын
Looking at the segment of scene you showed, I can think of one big reason for the swap: The shot of Bren's bolt sliding forward to trigger the round is more cinematically impressive than anything that the Lee-Enfield could show.
@NecramoniumVideo
@NecramoniumVideo Жыл бұрын
it was legit done that way as it was more cinematically impressive to make him shoot a bren gun, than him just taking his Lee Enfield sniper rifle and take the guy down within a second.
@kevinlc74
@kevinlc74 Жыл бұрын
Yep and remember, current Hollywood writers firmly believe a person hit with a 55gr round shot out of an AR-15 will explode.
@seadubhlanaig2498
@seadubhlanaig2498 4 күн бұрын
100%. It was my first thought when I watched the scene in the film. Feckin Hollywood stickin its nose in again......
@darthhodges
@darthhodges Жыл бұрын
The fact that they showed the bolt dropping forward makes me think that it might not have been the armorer but the director who had heard that myth and wanted to lean into it for interesting visuals. Showing the view through the rear sight without the front sight also fits with that decision.
@blahorgaslisk7763
@blahorgaslisk7763 Жыл бұрын
"What's that blob covering the mine owner?" "That's the front sight." "Well get rid of it! You can't see the action with that in the way!"
@wolfganggugelweith8760
@wolfganggugelweith8760 2 күн бұрын
I was for 35 years in the Austrian 🇦🇹army and we still have the MG-74 which looks like the MG-42 but with some differences inside which makes this MG better than the MG-42. We were shooting very often a single shot with it and it‘s accuracy always left us stunned. After we turned around the barrel and the same fantastic result. We did this with every single Machine gun. Greetings from Linz Austria 🇦🇹 Europe!
@kirkchapman80
@kirkchapman80 Жыл бұрын
These Soldiers did a remarkable feat of overcoming a huge attack. Their government basically shamed them for decades. I believe the recognition did come about and the movie did help by showing their valour . It would be interesting to dissect conflicts ,skirmishes etc with era firearms matched.
@TheBastardeo
@TheBastardeo Жыл бұрын
Irish governments from then to now the only reason they acknowledge it now is they were shamed into it even at that they only acknowledge a few of the troops also the UN "shower of useless ba$%£"!s", would not stand up and support those Irish heroes ..
@oisinmtom
@oisinmtom 7 ай бұрын
The government recognised them in like 2005
@JonathanFergusonRoyalArmouries
@JonathanFergusonRoyalArmouries Жыл бұрын
I am fairly certain this plot point is lifted from the famous Carlos Hathcock M2 'sniper' story. As for the myth of the "too accurate" Bren this first appears in print in the novel 'They die with their boots clean’ written by a Coldstream Guards chap in 1940-41, published 1942. Later the same year Oct 1942, the unofficial manual 'Know Your Weapons' No.5, Sten and Bren guns, by Nicholson & Watson (author anonymous) says the same thing. Every chance both of these originate in actual training but I've yet to find hard evidence of that.
@edwarddailey21
@edwarddailey21 Жыл бұрын
I thought the same thing but they shoot the same caliber so I'm like c Mon.
@Covey7342
@Covey7342 Жыл бұрын
Yeah it was definitely a ripoff of Carlos Hathcocks shot, but they failed to reconsider why Carlos used a.50 for that particular shot in the first place.
@plazzy9911
@plazzy9911 Жыл бұрын
Is the silenced sten 2 actually that accurate?
@JonathanFergusonRoyalArmouries
@JonathanFergusonRoyalArmouries Жыл бұрын
In theory, very slightly more accurate than the unsuppressed Mk.II. In reality, the same, basically. However, being integrally suppressed, you will get more bullet drop at range and thus be less accurate as a shooter@@plazzy9911
@kilppa
@kilppa Жыл бұрын
@@davidjob4909 If he had a scope on it, of course he had to test it. A scope is obviously pretty much useless if you don't zero it.
@TwinTalon01
@TwinTalon01 8 ай бұрын
That scene has always bugged me, even with no knowledge of the Bren's reputation. Thanks so much for clearing this up!!
@Paulysolo
@Paulysolo Жыл бұрын
It's great to see Ian dispel myths we argued about as kids in the schoolyard in Ireland. I am going on FB to send some links to some old buachaillí of mine.
@SteveDonaldson-r5k
@SteveDonaldson-r5k Жыл бұрын
Hi Ian, interesting video as always, thanks. I was in UK forces from the 80's to the nineties and trained and qualified on various small arms including the SLR and LMG (which as you know was the Bren with minor improvements). We were trained to fire single well aimed shots with the rifle and short bursts with the LMG. When we were on the ranges re-qualifying over the years if there were some rounds left over we'd have a go at firing the LMG from the hip and the shoulder. It was remarkably accurate in my experience, not a sniper for sure, but if I were firing at a man standing still (and wearing a white suit!) at the distance depicted, while prone and using the bipod I'd have hit him first round. But you're right, if I also had the SLR available it's a silly choice.
@PhansiKhongoloza
@PhansiKhongoloza Жыл бұрын
Interesting that you were not trained to double tap on the SLR?
@deanjohnwilliamson4787
@deanjohnwilliamson4787 8 ай бұрын
They recon the mark 1brens where so well made and tight that you could place round on round, then they started making the mk2s with less tolerance to add with the beaten zone effect, what I think has happened hear is film makers going with the wrong end of the myth!!
@christopherseivard8925
@christopherseivard8925 Жыл бұрын
This bounced off my eyes too. Thanks for the clarification! Because I am overly enthusiastic to contribute, I can only add; in the film “ a bridge too far,”during the first attack on the bridge, a British paratrooper makes a headshot, through a viewing slot in an SDKF.Z armored vehicle,causing a collision which halts the attack. It’s in the film, and depicted in the scene. It’s also in the book. Cornelius Ryan, the author, used impeccable research. It’s true! Thanks, I am recovering from a stroke, I live to try and contribute!
@RonOhio
@RonOhio Жыл бұрын
This summer I attended a literary convention and attended a panel where a bunch of authors were discussing writing and one of the writers made a remark that made me roll my eyes. "I'll blow off a major plot point for a good one liner in a heartbeat". Movies are so exciting now because of the same attitude toward visuals. Screw reality, it looks cool!
@Hybris51129
@Hybris51129 Жыл бұрын
As a writer myself that sounds like top tier lazy writing. If you want to add a one liner then you have to put in the work to make that scene happen *realistically* . It might take an entire chapter to shift pieces around to make it possible but it can be done in most cases, that said sometimes like or it not even when you go through the effort trying to make it happen you the writer have to be able to sit back and admit that this idea just isn't going to work and you will have to come up with another idea.
@Salamandaa
@Salamandaa Жыл бұрын
It does make sense from a writing perspective to do the scene like this. It makes it seem as though he's not just the only person with the skill but with the specific knowledge of what weapon and technique to use to make this shot, which adds interest and makes it feel more earned since the kill has such a large and immediate effect on the battle. It's like the equally unrealistic scene from Saving Private Ryan where he has to swap out his normal scope for a special one and carefully dial it in, it makes the scene more interesting and dramatic at the cost of realism in a way that most people won't be able to detect. Now, could you write both of those in different ways to be dramatic and also realistic? Yeah probably, and if they were going to such effort in every other scene it's weird they didn't, but still.
@de4dbutdre4ming
@de4dbutdre4ming Жыл бұрын
@@Hybris51129 theres a big difference between writing a book and writing a screenplay. a screenplay is intrinsically going to be made into a visual story, and the bottom lines of a visual story is that it should /look good/ otherwise theres no point in watching.
@xkavarsmith9322
@xkavarsmith9322 Жыл бұрын
The one liners make actors. The major plot points win Oscars. Good writers do both.
@DenDodde
@DenDodde Жыл бұрын
Hey! That's how The Rings of Power was made! Did you happen to catch any of the productions by the guy?
@lukavmineav3489
@lukavmineav3489 Жыл бұрын
Thanks Ian, I watch these videos with an 81 year old work colleague who has collected a number of fire arms and it's so interesting when he says something a few seconds before you do. It's also interesting when you debunk myths that I had never heard until this friend of mine brought them up (typically in the antique firearms department)
@daemonharper3928
@daemonharper3928 Жыл бұрын
The problem with knowing a little bit about weapons, is that every single movie you watch gets things wrong in a weird way, like them thinking it would be cooler to discard a pretty good sniper rifle for a Bren or attacking a broken down Sherman by running at it with Mausers rather than hiding behind a bush and Panzerfaust-ing it.
@TheIansanity
@TheIansanity 8 ай бұрын
This is true of basically any type of specialized knowledge. You're constantly noticing how movies/TV shows get it wrong. "that's not how that works. That's not how any of that works!" is constantly playing in my head; I have to bite my tongue to keep it from getting out my mouth.
@deknegt
@deknegt Жыл бұрын
Also reminds me when I watched Fury, and every tank was doing these outrageous skill shots (and general completely insane tactics like rushing Tiger tanks head on through an open field?!) that were taking off people's heads and legs with tank shells. Such a cool film ruined by the experts being ignored for the purpose of some throwaway gore in a film that already portrayed very well the dangers of tanking and infantry warfare without a gratuitous shot.
@DrygdorDradgvork
@DrygdorDradgvork Жыл бұрын
They also made me hate all the main characters so I wasn't sure who to root for lol
@killianlile173
@killianlile173 Жыл бұрын
Except it was a good idea to close the distance and try to flank the Tiger? Trying to take it head on from an extreme distance is the worst possible idea because that's where a Tiger would excel. The 76mm was a solid gun but you'd still want to try and go for a side shot not a frontal one. Maybe they could've pulled back, but once you're engaged it's very hard to disengage.
@CUbanageNT_24
@CUbanageNT_24 Жыл бұрын
You know it was based on an actual event in ww2
@justsomemainer1384
@justsomemainer1384 Жыл бұрын
@@killianlile173The 76 could have definitely killed a Tiger I within that range
@bronco5334
@bronco5334 Жыл бұрын
​ @killianlile173 The 76mm will penetrate a Tiger 1 from any angle, out to beyond the accuracy limits of tank guns. And that's without HVAP. Except, Fury was set in the very late war period (it kind of had to be, the featured tank was an HVSS late variant!), and would have had HVAP available. Charging was stupid, it was totally unneccesary ballistically and merely delayed their ability to line up an accurate shot. The better (and doctrinally taught) solution to this kind of ambush would have been for the 75mm-armed Sherman to immediately put smoke shell on the Tiger to blind it, then maneuver into a favorable position to engage. Which, in that scene, would have been to actually OPEN the distance and use the forest and embankments on the opposite side of the road as cover.
@IO-zg8md
@IO-zg8md Жыл бұрын
Private William Ready has the dubious distinction of being the first Irish soldier to be injured in combat on foreign soil. He passed away in 2016. RIP (n.b. official reports don't credit him as sniper or bren gunner, but he certainly did his duty in real life)
@seadubhlanaig2498
@seadubhlanaig2498 4 күн бұрын
Ar dheis Dé go raibh a hanam dílis.🙏🙏🙏
@captbeardy
@captbeardy Жыл бұрын
I was certainly told the Bren gun accuracy story as an army cadet back in the mid 70s. The source of the information was a former para who was dropped into Nijmegen during WWII. So it’s an old saw for sure.
@Kneon_Knight
@Kneon_Knight Жыл бұрын
Paratroopers in all armies are known for exaggeration and sarcasm. Source: Me, 82nd, Second to None.
@chaz8758
@chaz8758 Жыл бұрын
We were told the story when I was in the ACF as we had Brens with long and short barrels and were told the short barrel ones were an attempt to make it less accurate - in reality it was a jungle version to go with the No 5's we had - most of our instructors had served in Malaya
@markdesjardins3153
@markdesjardins3153 Жыл бұрын
As a cadet in Canada in the 60's we got the same stories from the vets of WW2 and Korea. We fired the Bren a fair bit because there was a ton of .303 ammo left over from Korea even though we had the FAL. When firing bursts we often spiked the bipod down to keep it from jumping around so ya, it had a short barrel as well and I doubt it would make a good sniper at any kind of distance.
@MzLunaCee
@MzLunaCee Жыл бұрын
@@Kneon_Knight Source; Me. None.
@bobhill3941
@bobhill3941 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic movie, thanks for the analysis of that scene Ian. When I saw Siege of Jadotville, I wasn't focused on the shot, I was mostly shocked that the mine foreman would stand there in a white suit as an easy target. I did think the group salute at the end was very powerful.
@MrMe345
@MrMe345 Жыл бұрын
I was talking to Jadotville veteran Tommy Gunn, who was a Bren gunner there. Frol talking to him, what inspired this particular scene in the context of Jadotville was at the real battle, since they were an entrenched group firing on targets advancing mostly across open ground the gunners were encouraged to fire single shots and chpose their targets to conserve ammunition
@davidfisher9026
@davidfisher9026 8 ай бұрын
'Tommy Gunn' ? LOL
@WhiskyBeard
@WhiskyBeard Жыл бұрын
Saving Private Ryan protrayed the 1903A4 as a much more effective sniper rifle than it probably was. Siege of Jadotville portrayed the Mk1T as less effective at range than an open-bolt gun with no magazine and no optic.
@Nathan-jh1ho
@Nathan-jh1ho Жыл бұрын
Atleast he didn't drop it and pick up a BAR loading a single round
@MzLunaCee
@MzLunaCee Жыл бұрын
Plus the scopes were wrong for SPR, and anything after the beach scene is pure Hollywood bollocks.
@Sagaleon14
@Sagaleon14 Жыл бұрын
Wow! Just this week I talked about this with my British History professor. Thank you Ian.
@Oligodendrocyte139
@Oligodendrocyte139 Жыл бұрын
Hope you weren’t calling the Irish British 😊.
@Sagaleon14
@Sagaleon14 Жыл бұрын
@@Oligodendrocyte139 ???? So on edge. That’s the name of the subject my professor teaches. I wasn’t saying this IS British history.
@Gungho1a
@Gungho1a 11 ай бұрын
I can tell you where the accuracy myth came from...it was that because of the gun being magazine fed, with 30 round magazines, and air cooled, it was not used for 'sustained fire', as per Brit and Empire terminology...it didn't generate a sustainable beaten zone, and gunners were encouraged not to use it in the sustained role. The myth grew out of that. I can testify it was no more or less accurate than other mg's of similar type...I carried and used one in the early eighties in the australian army.
@jeffpowers8526
@jeffpowers8526 Жыл бұрын
For what it’s worth this is The Chieftain’s thoughts on that scene “You may underestimate the reputation that the Bren had for accuracy in the Irish military, to the point that the shooting competitions with it had to have rules to penalise single-shot fire. The weight, and solid bipod lean to accuracy at the cost of flexibility of the Lee-En”
@jmackmcneill
@jmackmcneill Жыл бұрын
Under-rated comment. The issue isn't really "Is this technically probable?" it is "Is this something a soldier of the time would have tried?" and a lot of people asses these myths from the perspective of a modern hindsight that is directly contrary to what was "conventional wisdom" at the time. I don't know about the Irish Army, but the doctrine of the British Army was to give the Bren to the designated marksmen, and the myth of the insane accuracy was well established there.
@92HazelMocha
@92HazelMocha Жыл бұрын
Forgive me if I take a tankers perspective on rifle accuracy with a big grain of salt lol.
@M10-z1q
@M10-z1q Жыл бұрын
@@92HazelMocha Well the chieftain doesn't refute the points Ian makes, just points out its a bit more nuanced than looking purely at the mechanics of the guns. Plus he did serve in the Irish Army (albeit well after Jadotville) and was trained on the Bren, so he probably has some first hand experience of the perception of the weapon among the soldiers.
@Grimshak81
@Grimshak81 Жыл бұрын
@@92HazelMochathe tanker isn’t refuting any of Ian’s arguments. The tanker Leads the viewers perception on psychology because not-worth-it-but-soldiers-felt-better-so-it-was-probably-worth-it is a very real thing in the tanker world because “upgrades” of tanks that were sometimes even counter productive are a real thing. It happens quite now actually with the so called “cope-cages” on Russia tanks. They never helped against top attack ATGMs and yet I bet the crews felt better with it (initially). So if you’re a tanker or a handgun expert is totally irrelevant here: it’s about the common soldiers psychology.
@92HazelMocha
@92HazelMocha Жыл бұрын
@@Grimshak81 I mean you kind of just contradicted yourself; thinking something is more capable than it is, is just plain dangerous in warfare. The cope cages are a perfect example. They don't actually add protection, but they do add weight and make it harder to get in and out of the vehicle. Additionally thinking you're protected from something your not protected from is a lethal mistake on the battlefield, and Russia's armored losses just reinforce that. "Feeling invincible" inevitably leads to dying and soldiers dying leads to losing strategically.
@FIREBRAND38
@FIREBRAND38 Жыл бұрын
I love _Forgotten Weapons_ and debunking sniper fallacies. Imagine my joy when _Forgotten Weapons_ debunks a sniper myth. Top marks, Ian!
@daneaxe6465
@daneaxe6465 Жыл бұрын
One myth I like to smash is the regarded knuckleheads who claim scopes were not mounted on top of M2's and used as long distance "sniper" weapons. In semi auto mode NOT MG mode.
@joeldanikabartley327
@joeldanikabartley327 Жыл бұрын
General sir leslie morsehead is quotes as saying that the bren was an exceptional firearm but was too accurate for the support gunner role.
@denniscima2418
@denniscima2418 Жыл бұрын
Very happy you commented on this movie. Even though the Bren scene was questionable, this was a great movie and depicted great leadership by the Irish commander and his troops.
@foxybaz
@foxybaz Жыл бұрын
Not happy he's wearing issued gear though.
@denisonsmock5456
@denisonsmock5456 Жыл бұрын
@@foxybazwhat do you mean by that? Are you referring to his jacket?
@capnstewy55
@capnstewy55 Жыл бұрын
The French mercenary is the really interesting character in that movie. I believe it's the only time he lost and pulled off a bunch of other coups across Africa.
@jamesr792
@jamesr792 Жыл бұрын
He’s supposed to be Bob Denard, right? That guy was incredibly hardcore
@jorm916
@jorm916 Жыл бұрын
rene faulques? that dude was a horrific piece of shit. interesting guy though.
@sdesigan85
@sdesigan85 Жыл бұрын
@@jamesr792 Roger Louis 'Rene' Faulques. He was Denard's buddy and an absolute legend in his own right, having fought in every dirty war the French found themselves in between Dunkirk & the Biafra crisis.
@samb2052
@samb2052 Жыл бұрын
At least it’s a movie depicting the French as the bad guys for a change. Got something right. 😉😁😁😁
@ostrowulf
@ostrowulf Жыл бұрын
​@@samb2052As a Canadian of English descent, I aprove of this comment. 😉 Kidding, I like my Francaphone bretheren too.
@davidhoffman6980
@davidhoffman6980 Жыл бұрын
In Call of Duty: World at War, there's a mission where you play a Soviet sniper in Stalingrad. You infiltrate the German rear area and assassinate a general with your rifle at a hundred yards or so. But there's an achievement you can unlock if you can kill him with your pistol instead. It's really hard. It took me so many tries, but I did it. Obviously, the writer for Siege of Jadotville played the same mission and took inspiration from it.
@MervynPartin
@MervynPartin Жыл бұрын
Despite pistols being close range weapons, It's not impossible to achieve a hit at that distance. One of the competitions in the annual Bisley meeting (in the 1980s) was Long Range Service Pistol, which at the time involved using my Browning Hi-Power 9mm with the standard open sights- no optical sights allowed. The ammunition was military issue. If I remember correctly, the target was a figure 11 at 200 yards. Hitting something at only half that range, is certainly possible, so if it will improve your score on Call of Duty, go for it!
@deildegast
@deildegast Жыл бұрын
"In Call of Duty: World at War, there's a mission where you play a Soviet sniper in Stalingrad. You infiltrate the German rear area and assassinate a general with your rifle at a hundred yards or so." Yeah, we all have seen Enemy At The Gates... as if COD did something original there.
@tommasop.3174
@tommasop.3174 Жыл бұрын
Actually there's an easy way to achieve that trophy: you simply have to glitch yourself on a certain wall and well... you can shoot the general literally from the backseat of his car
@davidhoffman6980
@davidhoffman6980 Жыл бұрын
@@tommasop.3174 I didn't know about that. I had to do it by aiming carefully and shooting quickly. Lol (and a little bit of luck)
@alexplace4628
@alexplace4628 Жыл бұрын
I highly doubt he took inspiration from a call of duty game. It's not the kinda film where a sniper would make his job harder just for the sakes of showing off. It's trying to reinforce that old urban legend of the "Super duper accurate bren" (which even my own grandad beleives after a 48 year army career!)
@pcka12
@pcka12 Жыл бұрын
The Bren was always described as 'if anything too accurate' BUT that is for it's application as a light machine gun NOT to describe it as accurate enough to use as a sniping weapon.
@scratchy996
@scratchy996 Жыл бұрын
That's exactly the myth. There is no such thing as "too accurate". Even a laser gun would not be "too accurate", once you add recoil in the mix.
@Charlie25068
@Charlie25068 Жыл бұрын
I fired the Bren and SLR (FN FAL), the Bren was not "too accurate" the SLR was more accurate than the Bren, so in reality, if the Irish there had no scoped .303 lee Enfield the shot would have been taken with the FN FAL on single shot, which was also a very accurate weapon.
@pcka12
@pcka12 Жыл бұрын
@@scratchy996 I fired all three, my dad was trained on rifle, sub machine gun, Bren & Lewis 1939-45. Dad was trained amongst other things to use the lmg to knock down brick buildings by shooting the corners off. It was Dad's trainers whilst training in 'the bombed area' of Birmingham UK who remarked that the Bren was 'if anything too accurate' for an lmg, since there were amongst them veterans of WW1, they probably knew what they were talking about. Dad passed those observations on to me along with 'useful' information like the likely 'kill rate' of a mills bomb thrown into a room (it was urban warfare training after all!).
@scratchy996
@scratchy996 Жыл бұрын
@@pcka12 f anything too accurate' for an lmg - yeah, I'm sorry, but that's bullshit. Even the official tests showed that the Bren has 5 MOA. As Ian pointed out in another video, even a laser pointer would not be "too accurate" , when you shake it around due to recoil. Edit : The US Marine Corps replaced the SAW LMG with the M27 IAR, because the M27 is more accurate. They found out in Afghanistan that experienced Taliban were maneuvering under MG fire, because the SAW LMG wasn't accurate enough. With the M27's increased accuracy, less bullets were needed to pin down enemies, as they landed closer. Again there is no such thing as "too accurate".
@pcka12
@pcka12 Жыл бұрын
@@scratchy996 the Bren is (you might even be unaware of this!) A British machine gun adopted in the 1930s. The British had at that time immense experience of warfare on a global scale (the US apparently had an army smaller than Romania & with quite limited international experience, the US military was described as arriving in France in World War 1 in time to shore up France which was in danger of collapse, but too late in too limited numbers & with too little experience to greatly influence the outcome which was: - the '100 days' campaign of 1918, finally bringing Germany to it's knees). British trainers with such a wealth of experience tended to the opinion that the new LMG (a weapon in calibre 303 with which I was trained extensively over a number of years (section in attack from the manual)) was 'in comparison with other LMGs if anything too accurate'. That was the considered opinion of very experienced infantry trainers!
@GuagoFruit
@GuagoFruit Жыл бұрын
The myth probably started as something like "The Bren gun was found to be relatively accurate for its intended purpose; a joke would go around that you can use it as a sniper rifle if needed". And then over time the front drops more and more until you get "Use as a sniper"
@johnsalt1157
@johnsalt1157 Жыл бұрын
I believe the "wiggle it to stop all the rounds going through the same hole" tale goes back to WW2, and must be almost as old as the Bren gun itself. Like many others here, I heard the same story when I was allowed to play with Brens on government time in the TA from 1978, although those of course were L4s. WW2 doctrine was I believe to train section Bren gunners to use the change lever, and fire single aimed shots when it was useful to do so (I found it easy on the L4 to tick off singles with the change lever on auto). This was for ammo conservation as much as anything else. The Bren on singles was more accurate than the No. 4 rifle (numbers below), so I suppose some people might think of it as the section's "sniper" weapon. I think that's slack language in the same tradition as calling desultory single shot fire "sniper fire", or fragments "shrapnel", or oh dear don't get me started. As to the relative accuracy of the Bren and the No. 4, the Bren's mass, bipod, longer barrel and lesser recoil seem to have more than made up for the open bolt. According to some figures I calculated from data given in WO 291/476, "“Comparison of rifle, Bren and Sten guns”, 1944, the s.d. of expected dispersions at 25 yards were 1.05 mils for a rested rifle 0.98 mils for a Bren on single shot 1.35 mils for a Bren on bursts Of course some weapons are in better nick than others; these I think came from the School of Infantry at Barnard Castle, so I expect would have been well looked after. The biggest factor that makes the scene ridiculous for me is the sights. I did once have the pleasure of firing an L42, a later adaptation of the No. 4 rifle for sniping, re-barrelled in 7.62 NATO. The weapon belonged to a gentleman from the sniper platoon of 1st Devon & Dorsets, and he provided the match ammo to shoot as well, in return for beer. As it was his personal weapon, we UOTC cadets were not allowed to fiddle with the zero. Even so, at 200m the telescopic sights made the Fig. 11 target look as big as a barn, and if you couldn't pick where on the black you placed your shot, well, you couldn't hit a cow on the arse with a banjo.
@paddymcnamara9147
@paddymcnamara9147 Жыл бұрын
Well put Ian, this was one of thefew things in the movie that bugged me too.Its an accurate enough recreation of the events that occured . As a young soldier in the 1980s in Ireland I had the great fortune to be trained and got to soldier with a few of the remaining serving Jadoville and Congo veterns as they neared the end of their careers. They were the most unassuming soldiers you could meet but so professional . They had a brilliant CO in Comdt Quinlan and the Irish Defence Forces never truly acknowledged their bravery and his leadership. Its a great reflection that many of the veterns had family who continue to serve Ireland and indeed Comdt Quinlans had two sons serve in the IDF and currently two of his gransons are IDF Officers in the rank of Comdt.
@Lord.Kiltridge
@Lord.Kiltridge Жыл бұрын
Back in '82, I trained on the FNC2A1 in the Canadian Army. I won't claim to be an expert, but I got the strong impression that it was a very accurate LMG when in semi auto. Mind you, it fired from a closed bolt.
@evanhayes3342
@evanhayes3342 Жыл бұрын
Probably at least as accurate as the C1. Possibly slightly moreso because of the heavier barrel.
@redfoure
@redfoure Жыл бұрын
I dunno about the actual battle, but I found single loading an M240 was quite accurate, just over a 7 inch shot group at 500M. I did this to confirm a 10M zero to prep my gunners to compete in competition and it paid off.
@christophercripps7639
@christophercripps7639 Жыл бұрын
If a precision rifle hadn’t been available the BREN wouldn’t be a bad choice as long as one used all 30 rounds in short bursts.
@Leffe123
@Leffe123 7 ай бұрын
Exactly, makes no sense to shoot one bullet when you might as well spray
@_ArsNova
@_ArsNova Жыл бұрын
These videos might seem "nit-picky", but they are actually very important. So many laypeople see these misconceptions portrayed in film, then form genuine beliefs around these things which are complete myth which they spread to others. Great stuff Ian.
@jurassic9664
@jurassic9664 8 ай бұрын
The bren gun was very accurate the accuracy was however hyped by the soldiers. But remember on of the reasons it was retired as a suppourt weapon was because it was too accurate.
@AHalz
@AHalz Жыл бұрын
Would love to see this channel break down different sniper scenes in movies. A specific one would be the shootout in The Hurt Locker
@Zoraxon
@Zoraxon Жыл бұрын
Okay I i thought it was just me that thought it was off for them to swap to the Bren instead of literally any of the other rifles they used. Lee-Enfield, FAL/L1A1, literally anything else. It felt weird they'd take the open bolt gun for that shot for various reasons. I didn't know that the myth was a thing, which I find pretty funny.
@WTFisTingispingis
@WTFisTingispingis Жыл бұрын
Bren is bigger, and bigger better, is my guess.
@Nathan-jh1ho
@Nathan-jh1ho Жыл бұрын
I have heard many people claiming BREN being "accurate" as in its supposedly very controllable in automatic fire. And you can see how it ended up into this Similar to how people keep saying the horrible UCP was designed to be hidden from drones. My theory how it happened is as follows, the grey color is due to it being less reflective in the near infrared range for night vision, people confuse night vision with thermal, drones have thermal imaging + pixel looking pattern = stupid myth
@JessHull
@JessHull Жыл бұрын
I love hearing rants and nit picks like this about movies. Would sincerely enjoy more videos such as this!
@Andersen720
@Andersen720 Жыл бұрын
I've never heard of this Bren gun myth before, but when I saw the movie I didn't question that scene at all. In fact my mind went to the story of Carlos Hathcock using an M2 Browning on single shot to make a sniping shot in Vietnam.
@rippervtol9516
@rippervtol9516 Жыл бұрын
I would have believed it if they upgraded to .50 BMG but only if they needed the range or hitting power like Hathcock did, but with both the Enfield and Bren in .303 it just makes no sense. hell the Enfield probably has a longer barrel too
@stevencox1651
@stevencox1651 Жыл бұрын
They actually did that. The weight of a .50 on a tripod with that rather large sight would keep the gun very static when firing single shots, but the recoil would make it jump around a bit.
@etiennelamarche7796
@etiennelamarche7796 Жыл бұрын
The bren is open bolt not the M2 that makes a big difference
@ripvanwinkle2002
@ripvanwinkle2002 Жыл бұрын
yes because it was OUTSIDE the range of his M70.. not because it was cool
@ripvanwinkle2002
@ripvanwinkle2002 Жыл бұрын
@@etiennelamarche7796 uh the M2 is open bolt USMC 87-89 0331 ( heavy weapons)
@christianwilliams1690
@christianwilliams1690 Жыл бұрын
I want to see this myth pushed further. As you previously discussed with Bloke on the Range, expected mechanical accuracy for a service rifle of the period was around 5MOA. Of course the accurized Mk4 is going to beat that by a country mile, but considering the Bren could reach the same precision with burst fire, I'd be willing to bet that many soldiers of the time did consider it to be exceptionally accurate. Not too accurate for area suppression, but the mechanics of suppression were still not much discussed until the 60s, so I would let that part of the myth slide.
@USArmy19DScout
@USArmy19DScout Жыл бұрын
Take a Bren to the range and do some myth busters work. Would be interesting to put it to the test regardless.
@k9turrent
@k9turrent Жыл бұрын
At least anecdotally, I witnessed our FN MAG gunner show off to the Marines that he could reach out and hit the man-sized gong at 500m with irons, He single loaded and hit 5-8 times in a row. This was after the marines laughed at us for not having "modern" M240B with optics etc.
@Bojangles6
@Bojangles6 Жыл бұрын
I qualified at 800 yards with an open sighted m249.
@anthonyboatright6960
@anthonyboatright6960 Жыл бұрын
Sometimes a skilled shooter can Overcome inferior equipment
@joeblow8379
@joeblow8379 Жыл бұрын
"anecdotally"... "I witnessed" I'd still take an M240 with an optic
@Slava_Ukraini1991
@Slava_Ukraini1991 Жыл бұрын
@@Bojangles6 aren't those MG targets absolutely huge? a 12 moa MG is not mechanically accurate enough to make sustained man sized hits at 800. purely mechanically the weapon already limits you to a roughly 76 inch diameter circle. then you have the lock time discussed in the video. and if you expect to hit with bursts the recoil (although very small) is enough to throw you completely off of a man sized target at an insane distance like 800 yards.
@sherwinaragon7282
@sherwinaragon7282 Жыл бұрын
This screams "muh iron sites"
@jenHry-ng3pw
@jenHry-ng3pw Жыл бұрын
Third thing is that almost nobody is accurate with a first shot on a completely unknown weapon. An especially there is so much uncertainty. In most cases if you have only one important shot, you are better shooting it with a less accurate gun you are very familiar with than trying something new for the first time.
@haloboy456
@haloboy456 Жыл бұрын
I love that someone says they made some content about this movie at all :-) awesome job
@coopersand911
@coopersand911 Жыл бұрын
I AM SO GLAD YOU MENTIONED THIS!! My girlfriend always gets mad when I comment on gun mistakes, and this one I flip out over
@davidgillon2762
@davidgillon2762 Жыл бұрын
Couple of family anecdotes: my dad's National Service was very abbreviated (100 days, released on compassionate grounds), but he was insistent that he was much more accurate with the Bren than whichever rifle he was being trained on. Which might just represent the state of the weapons in the armoury at the training depot in the late 50s. OTOH, my great uncle, when he set out at Arnhem to stalk a German sniper, elected to take a Bren. I don't know what range he engaged at, but for a counter-sniper engagement, he preferred the Bren over whatever else was available. (His medal citation specifically mentions the Bren).
@WhiteCollarCrimeDNB
@WhiteCollarCrimeDNB Жыл бұрын
I wonder if the "accuracy" is more an effect of the mag acting like a horse blinder and keeping your eye down range.
@HO-bndk
@HO-bndk Жыл бұрын
​@WhiteCollarCrimeDNB The bipod and lack of recoil helped soldiers shoot accurately with the Bren (to within the limits of the gun).
@rthomas42069
@rthomas42069 Жыл бұрын
My grandad served in the congo in 1961 as an Irish peacekeeper.
@kenrasmussen4270
@kenrasmussen4270 Жыл бұрын
thanks Ian I've watched this move a couple of times and always wondered why you do that the Enfield would have been my pick for a shot like that, even the L1A1 would have been a better choice than the Bren, liked the bit where they used all the used brass as mines, it was sad how these men were treated after the war.
@simonrook5743
@simonrook5743 Жыл бұрын
I was certainly more accurate with a Bren than a no4 SMLE, but I think that says more about my (lack of) marksmanship abilities than the weapons’!
@miket2120
@miket2120 Жыл бұрын
I think the scene (8:03) without the sight was deliberate for cinematic purposes. The viewing public is used to seeing a round "scope image" of what is being aimed at. Couldn't use crosshairs, for that would be a huge continuity detail that even non-shooters would recognize, at least in the back of their minds. Putting a front post in the image is far more accurate, but also far less recognizable, making the audience wonder what that thing is. It would also obscure what's at your 6 o'clock in the image, the 3 advancing soldiers, lessening the dynamics of the scene. Two possible reasons for using the Bren as a precision weapon: 1. The perception that machine guns have a longer range than a rifle. 2. The Irish soldiers were getting desperate so they used something heavier, thus upping the tension.
@TheRanger0ne
@TheRanger0ne Жыл бұрын
My father was a Bren gunner in the British infantry during the Suez crisis and he always asserted that the .303 Bren gun was often used as a single shot "sniping" weapon out to 750 yards.
@garybiggs9010
@garybiggs9010 Жыл бұрын
That was only when the QD gyroscopic stabilized lazer sight was installed
@holdintheaces7468
@holdintheaces7468 Жыл бұрын
You ever tried to hit a man sized target at 750 yards with a decent mag scope? You ever try to see a person 750 yards away with no glass? The absolute best shooters in the world would struggle doing that in a single shot with irons out of a precision weapon. Your dad was telling "fishing stories".
@garybiggs9010
@garybiggs9010 Жыл бұрын
@@holdintheaces7468 and the guy he shot was even running away zig zag pattern. Downhill!
@balinthehater8205
@balinthehater8205 Жыл бұрын
@@holdintheaces7468 thats a bit under 700 meters, i remember range shooting with irons to six hundred meters and it was very much doable, if that is a tricky shot for the 'best shooters in the world' then they need to get their eyes checked.
@christophermercer2632
@christophermercer2632 10 ай бұрын
I bet ur dad also received that gun from the queen herself
@ivanconnolly7332
@ivanconnolly7332 Жыл бұрын
My friend was dumped by his mother in one of Irelands terrible Magdalen homes ,recently after more than 60 yeare=s he found his aunt and other family members,.he learned that His uncle was a Bren gunner in the Irish 24th infantry Battallion engineer company , and was killed by friendly fire ain a night action in Elizebethville 2 days prior to the Jadotville siege.
@meatpuppet5036
@meatpuppet5036 Жыл бұрын
Magdalen was for women and girls only. He would have been in a state school.
@milanondrak5564
@milanondrak5564 Жыл бұрын
I reckon the sniper was having a 'hold my beer' moment. 😂
@nextcaesargaming5469
@nextcaesargaming5469 Жыл бұрын
When it comes to WWII myths and "myths" (things that aren't myths at all but are treated as such in recent times), the whole 'Bren is a sniper!1!!' myth is one of the most irritating, and it ranks up there with 'Carcano's are innacurate trash!1!!' nonsense, since it is so mechanically obvious that it's false and it's so easy to demonstrate as being false. All someone has to do is grab a Bren and try to shoot sub-MOA with it, and they'll find the answer is obvious. I am immensely happy you are bringing attention to this myth and calling it out.
@grahambamford9073
@grahambamford9073 Жыл бұрын
All the Irish defence forces personal over a certain age, that I've spoken too, are obsessed with the "Bren gun". Apparently it's the bee's knees...... we will have to have a range video 300 yards with Bren on single shot Vs lee Enfield sniper to see this in action, sorry Ian it's a must... nice Irish camo jacket by the way.👍 Also as a fun fact, the Swedish K in the Irish defence forces was known as just the "Carl Gustaf".
@heritage195
@heritage195 Жыл бұрын
Well, guess who made the Swedish k?
@jeremielebrun3637
@jeremielebrun3637 Жыл бұрын
besides the myth maybe it was an opportunity to do some cool shots of weapon moving parts and brass case ejecting?
@MartininitraM
@MartininitraM Жыл бұрын
My service-gun was a MG3, basically the MG42. During a NATO manouver we also tried out the Bren. Tagents was full size person cardboard supported with a wooden cross. Unlike the MG3 who disperded bullets all over the target the Bren cut the wooden crosses and the targets folded in two. Compared with the MG3 they are very accurate.
@natthaphonhongcharoen
@natthaphonhongcharoen Жыл бұрын
You compare a gas operated gun with a short recoil gun of course Bren is more accurate than MG3
@goldiefish72
@goldiefish72 Жыл бұрын
In competition shoots before removal from service in the Irish Defence Force, the Bren was found to be just as accurate at 200 and 300m as a rifle of the same calibre, in the right hands. If you couldn't get all your rounds within a 12 inch circle consistently in single shot, you went home early.
@KageNoTora74
@KageNoTora74 Жыл бұрын
Bundeswehr?
@GaldirEonai
@GaldirEonai Жыл бұрын
You're missing the point. The Bren is indeed very accurate _for an open-bolt machine gun._ In its own category, it's near the top. But dedicated sniper rifles are in a whole damn other class.
@IrishMcScottish
@IrishMcScottish Жыл бұрын
​@@KageNoTora74 no, the peace corps 🤦
@Irskin
@Irskin Жыл бұрын
I love that movie, it's one of my comfort films, but I did always think that particular scene was a little weird. Thank you for all the education you do, Ian!
@brittgardner2923
@brittgardner2923 Жыл бұрын
I remember loving this movie overall, but being confused as hell as to why you would ditch your scoped, accurized, purpose-built sniper rifle for a machine gun with iron sights to make a critical long-range shot. Thanks for the vindication, Ian.
@Trucksofwar
@Trucksofwar Жыл бұрын
My grandfather did his national service with the 27th Battalion Royal South Australian Rifles in the 50’s as a Bren Gunner he believed to his dying day it was too accurate for a machine gun and the Bren Gunners in his unit would go to great pains to obtain worn barrels from the armourers in order to cause more spread.
@austin9301
@austin9301 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the great explination! I always just chalked this scene up to "He must have needed the bren guns higher caliper for range or something."
@alesd2120
@alesd2120 Жыл бұрын
I think it would be more appropriate and no less "cinematically well looking" if they did the scene in reverse - first covering/supporting fire with the Bren, then, when convenient target appears, grab the sniper rifle and fire the one shot you need. (apart from the question why is the Bren gunner also a sniper at the same time?)
@CarlowMilitaryMuseum
@CarlowMilitaryMuseum Жыл бұрын
The armoured cars were actually Irish made too, so another reason that it would of been nice to see them. We have original Irish issue versions of most of the small arms included in the film, in our collection if you're ever in the area and want to have a look. Nice DPM barrack jacket by the way!
@soldierray153
@soldierray153 Жыл бұрын
I understand the inaccuracies but I think the whole idea was to have a bigger cartridge for a longer distance even if I’m wrong look at it from a filmmaker perspective
@oldmangimp2468
@oldmangimp2468 Жыл бұрын
In my personal view, I think that this scene is really about showing that, despite the circumstances, Irish snipers can't resist the urge to show off when they know people are watching them. . I could be wrong.
@Charlie25068
@Charlie25068 Жыл бұрын
More like Hollywood can't. Irish snipers at the time actually used a scoped Lee Enfield or their FN FAL both of which were more accurate than the Bren.
@GAMER123GAMING
@GAMER123GAMING Жыл бұрын
Yes... you are 100% wrong. tf is this logic
@JimYeats
@JimYeats Жыл бұрын
@@GAMER123GAMINGI think it’s called sarcasm.
@Nathan-jh1ho
@Nathan-jh1ho Жыл бұрын
Just wait until I pull out a Mauser C96, set the sights to 800m, and load a single round
@caeserromero3013
@caeserromero3013 Жыл бұрын
Imagine you're in a Ferrari and you need to chase someone...this scene is like jumping out of the Ferrari and into a Golf Buggy to give chase....why would you drop a sniper rifle and use an MG for a long range shot?
@markaxworthy2508
@markaxworthy2508 Жыл бұрын
I certainly used the Bren for more accurate aimed single shot fire than rifles could produce in Rhodesia. My unit were from a second line force with African troops armed with German H&K G3 rifles. We got South African .303 Brens as our first section support weapons early in 1979. In encounter actions they had not prepared themselves (i.e. vehicle ambushes, or revving farms), the Terrs often tended to open inaccurate fire at extreme ranges at which our return rifle fire was also not very accurate. Assuming that we could identify well where the fire came from, I therefore used the Bren, which was more steady on its bipod, initially to keep the Terrs' heads down with single aimed shots at specific targets while we skirmished up. Only being issued four mags per Bren and having to recharge them also led us not to be too liberal with our fire. However, as the Terrs invariably gapped it before we reached their positions I can't swear to the effectiveness of the Bren in this role. This wasn't exactly sniping and was only due to the limitations of our training and the rifles themselves as we had no scoped rifles. Such bloodless actions tended to favour us, as the Terrs had to walk their ammunition in from Moczambique and it could take weeks for them to get resupply, leaving them passive for a similar period. They also tended to leave bits of kit, particularly AK magazines, behind as they gapped it. The best haul included a Tokarev pistol.
@bozothedog9024
@bozothedog9024 11 ай бұрын
I served with 2 veterns of this battle in 1981, one of those veterns told me there was no Lee Enfields with the Irish in Jadotville, the FN FAL replaced the Lee Enfield about 6 months before. All the Irish marksmen were issued FN FAL's, another weapon that was used to great effect by the Irish (as well as the Vickers) was the 84mm Carl Gustav which took out bunkers including a house where a sniper was using it as a hide. They were great men who were treated terrible by the UN, Irish Government as well as the Army Top Brass. At least their CO was awarded the Distinguished Service Medel for his leadership but he nominated 8 soldiers for awards but they never received them. By the way Ian love the Irish Army DPM, soon to be replaced by MultiCam.
@nathang4570
@nathang4570 Жыл бұрын
I was told this myth as "fact" by a staff member at a WW2 museum in Britain. I can't remember which museum it was but it was a Rifles museum in the South somewhere. I did think it odd being that it is an open bolt and mentioned this, but the staff member assured me there were recorded instances of the Bren gunner being told to take precision shots at MG-42 nests.... Which I again found odd being that the British were armed with rifles that would be far more effective for that use... Great video as always 😁
@zacharyrollick6169
@zacharyrollick6169 Жыл бұрын
And the British data sheet Ian showed contradicted the myth as well.
@Charlie25068
@Charlie25068 Жыл бұрын
It's horse dung. I fired both the BREN and the SLR (FN FAL) regularly, including a lot of single shot on the Bren, and the SLR was more accurate, and the Lee Enfield .303 would have been more accurate than both them. Yes the Bren was a good(ish) section level fire support weapon in its day. Being magazine fed was a major drawback though.
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