Chieftain: “Gives a multiple minute analysis of the advantages vs disadvantages of reindeer power vs tracks” Also Chieftain: “Im not known for my creative expression”
@richardcox79393 жыл бұрын
I wonder how many takes that answer took...
@JohnRodriguesPhotographer3 жыл бұрын
Yeah I thought that was rather cheeky of him as well.
@Username673573 жыл бұрын
He has a great sense of humor. I loved it :D
@petesheppard17093 жыл бұрын
That Irish dry wit...
@karlvongazenberg83983 жыл бұрын
And kept a straight face all the while :)
@roymuerlunos24263 жыл бұрын
Smoothbore could be a workable Heavy Metal Band name, can even start your own genre, Rhein-metal.
@CallanElliott3 жыл бұрын
To be fair, Rheinmetal would be a good band name too.
@mpetersen63 жыл бұрын
Depleted Uranium. That works.
@aliasalias84333 жыл бұрын
good!
@Silver-vy9ie3 жыл бұрын
Tungsten core, HEAT, discarding sabot, track tension, all seems good names
@mpetersen63 жыл бұрын
@@Silver-vy9ie Make mine above Undepleated Uranium
@bencejuhasz64593 жыл бұрын
For the band name in your case, I would go with Track Tension.
@allensteiner13 жыл бұрын
Good one Sir
@andrealeighv13 жыл бұрын
I was going to vote for "Oh bugger the tank is on fire" but I like Track Tension better. Shorter and rolls off the tongue better.
@MajesticDemonLord3 жыл бұрын
Liquid Track Tension....
@elliswatanabe3 жыл бұрын
@@henrykimberley5922 or "this silence offends me"
@Legitpenguins993 жыл бұрын
@@elliswatanabe "Things are about to get loud!"
@joaoie3 жыл бұрын
"IFR all-weather module" got me
@davidmunro39103 жыл бұрын
Tres clever.
@christophercripps76393 жыл бұрын
Code named "Rudolph" ...
@CallanElliott3 жыл бұрын
@@christophercripps7639 M1 IFR-AWM Rudolf
@beardo523 жыл бұрын
Re: Turret Attachment,, The instructors at Ft. Kox years ago answered the question thusly. " It screws on, if you traverse the Turret more than 12 times to the left, it will unscrew, and fall off"
@jackeyboy65383 жыл бұрын
The real answer
@CallanElliott3 жыл бұрын
"The obvious problem is that tracked vehicles are generally designed to stay on the ground, not to fly..." The Reformers would like to introduce you to the Aerogavin
@treyhelms52823 жыл бұрын
Hey, everything is "air-droppable" once.
@PobortzaPl3 жыл бұрын
That's what Maxims for Highly Efficient Mercenaries say.
@treyhelms52823 жыл бұрын
@@PobortzaPl Yes! *THOOOOM*
@looinrims3 жыл бұрын
Only if it can be put on an aircraft
@31terikennedy3 жыл бұрын
Santa wrote a TM on rein deer maintenance. Rudolph was an A1 upgrade
@KestrelOwens3 жыл бұрын
My understanding of why the Red Baron's Flying Circus was painted was to be visible and distinguishable to each other and thus reduce friendly fire incidents which apparently were not uncommon at the time.
@Michael-ix7fg3 жыл бұрын
Speaking of friendly fire, I'm sure some unintentional Sherman on Sherman actions were caused by that
@Alpostpone3 жыл бұрын
In earlier Q&A, Chieftain mentioned it was better to make US tanks distinguishable from air (by painting a star on the roof) than camouflaging them, given that US air to ground support was overwhelmingly more present than axis, so much so that friendly fire incidents were higher risk than enemy air attacks.
@ew36123 жыл бұрын
It also instilled fear among their enemies knowing that they are going to be fighting the best of the best rather than some guy in a plane.
@littlekong76853 жыл бұрын
@@ew3612 I think some top French aces lamented no Germans wanted to duel them when they saw their call signs on their wings.
@Riceball013 жыл бұрын
@@Alpostpone Sadly, that hasn't gotten much better in recent years. The USAF has something of a bad reputation for not being very good at telling the difference between a friendly and a not friendly vehicle. During Desert Storm the greatest fear of Marine Corps LAV crews was not any Iraqis they might encounter, not even their tanks, but it was being shot at by the USAF. It was so bad that Marines got into the habit of attaching Marine Corps flags or bright orange panels over the top-back portion of their vehicles as a form of visual IFF.
@JohnRodriguesPhotographer3 жыл бұрын
You should post the reindeer part of this q&A as a standalone. That was funnier than hell! You're really put your heart into that one! Kudos!
@viandengalacticspaceyards51353 жыл бұрын
If it was up to the soldiers,I could imagine some tanks in the "Year of the Rabbit" being fitted with giant ears&fluffy tails as Playboy bunnies.
@normandypilot88733 жыл бұрын
Main problem being an aroused tank platoon but a confused enemy when a giant bunny tank is rolling towards them.
@mikegonzalez18213 жыл бұрын
@@normandypilot8873 well there goes my drink. Good thing I missed my monitor. My cat is not to happy with me either.
@normandypilot88733 жыл бұрын
@@mikegonzalez1821 Mission acomplished! but i am sorry for your cat...
@mikegonzalez18213 жыл бұрын
Lol she's ignoring me.
@danieltsiprun80803 жыл бұрын
@@mikegonzalez1821 i am surprised she didn't attack you
@oldmangimp24683 жыл бұрын
My submission for the name of The Chieftain's band: . "Steel on Target" (I hear that seeing them in concert is a significant emotional event!) . . Alternate History Note: If The Chieftain had been present, the song "Smoke on the Water" by Deep Purple would have been named "Oh My God, The Venue is on Fire"
@ZGryphon3 жыл бұрын
My favorite Steel on Target song is "That Vehicle Offends Me (Remove It)".
@windwalker57652 жыл бұрын
Don't forget "Fire for Effect!"
@mcintoshpc Жыл бұрын
Oh bugger, the studio is on fire
@littlekong76853 жыл бұрын
"Most tracked vehicle drivers tend to have a definite preference to stay on the ground", With a notable exception of some Cromwell drivers and the odd locust driver of course.
@jonathangriffiths24993 жыл бұрын
“ driver , jump the canal “
@tokul763 жыл бұрын
And some oddball A.D.Bruce.
@durhamdavesbg49483 жыл бұрын
@@jonathangriffiths2499 Wasn't that a crusader?
@SergeantSarge3 жыл бұрын
@@durhamdavesbg4948 Seemingly not, Lindybeige has a whole video on the subject.
@richardmacdonald63033 жыл бұрын
My wife and her friend were watching Goldeneye with me and when it got to the start of the tank chase as he cut through the carriage way I said, meodified from Ralph Zumbro's 'Tank Sergeant" "There is only one thing tankers are really afraid of, Basements". Both got a laugh
@kemarisite3 жыл бұрын
Ah-hah, another fan of Zumbro. *waves*
@richardmacdonald63033 жыл бұрын
@@kemarisite Yes, getting into Hue they had to watch out for buildings with basements, something they did not have to worry about out in the boonies. Ad a great something to bring up when Pierce Brosnan is driven through the carriage way ( I have the stunt coordinators book)
@dylanmilne66833 жыл бұрын
ARL 44: a collection of spare parts and legacy tech dating back to WWI put together in the shape of a WWII heavy several years post war.
@catfish5523 жыл бұрын
Including bits of old battlecruiser.
@petethebastard3 жыл бұрын
Re: "what holds a turret on?"... At the (Aussie) First Armoured Regiment, the standing joke was "to remove the turret, traverse 13 times anti-clockwise, then connect a crane and remove!" ...Many believed us!
@slateslavens3 жыл бұрын
Same here. I was a Bradley Turret mech with 24 Inf Bn at Ft Stewart. We had the privates convinced it was a combination lock. Something like 10-5-38, which was a hoot when you see the turret spinning wildly in the motorpool. :P
@ineednochannelyoutube53843 жыл бұрын
@@slateslavens lol. I dont know which is better. Screwed on tureets, or safe lock turrets?
@memesmemes689311 ай бұрын
All you hear in the middle of sentry duty is “a little click out of one, two is binding…”
@frankdantuono25943 жыл бұрын
Band name: The Significant Emotional Events Hit single: Good Lord (the Tank is on Fire)
@timothyhayes97243 жыл бұрын
I like the single, but needs a retitle. Best would "Oh Bugger"
@Finwolven3 жыл бұрын
@@timothyhayes9724 One's for US market, the other's for other markets.
@MegaNato1113 жыл бұрын
Omg, "Chieftain Plays Combat Missions" would be amazing
@kindermord3 жыл бұрын
Agreed!
@Oddball_E83 жыл бұрын
@@killdizzle Too bad that it's only the modern stuff... I prefer the WWII setting.
@johnknapp9523 жыл бұрын
Played a ton of the Classic Combat Mission games but that was over a decade ago. Played the demo for the first Shock Force but that's about it.
@xXJAKMACKXx3 жыл бұрын
THE PEOPLE DEMAND IT
@EvilTwinn3 жыл бұрын
@@Oddball_E8 The WW2 stuff will get there eventually. They wanted to do modern first as they thought it had the best chance of selling, the WW2 games will be (supposedly) released quarterly.
@tarjei993 жыл бұрын
When a tank is in snow, the hull compresses snow beneath it. When the dept of the compressed snow is so big that the tracks don't reach anything solid, the tank stops. Just like a car.
@catfish5523 жыл бұрын
Tank Archives did a good video on that fairly recently, including some Soviet test reports of their own and captured German vehicles.
@christofferwillenfort40353 жыл бұрын
some video from the norwegian trials of AFV's. the diference between the bradley and CV90 is stagering. kzbin.info/www/bejne/fnLWg2qjZtyLg5I
@Anlushac113 жыл бұрын
Reindeer units: Self repairing and all terrain.
@fire3043 жыл бұрын
And self replicating!
@Alpostpone3 жыл бұрын
"Yes it does and no it doesn't." - The Chieftain, 2021
@teaandmedals76773 жыл бұрын
Love the python reference, It’s just a rabbit...
@petesheppard17093 жыл бұрын
I thought about Bun-Bun...
@treyhelms52823 жыл бұрын
@@petesheppard1709 Ka-Click!
@petesheppard17093 жыл бұрын
@@treyhelms5282 Yeppers!
@petesheppard17093 жыл бұрын
And don’t forget it, Nerd-boy!
@treyhelms52823 жыл бұрын
@@petesheppard1709 lol. Love Sluggy.
@tangero34623 жыл бұрын
Your ability to deliver the absurd absolutely bloody deadpan is truly amazing
@trevorlong98313 жыл бұрын
I was the crew commander of a Centurion tank when we had a misfire with a HE round. We had wait 15 mins before I dismounted the crew and had to carry the round down range....you can bet my imagination went wild as the round was electrically fired. When I got back to the tank the instructor asked whether I had placed a UXB sign over it so back I went!
@lavrentivs98913 жыл бұрын
"Significant emotional event" would probably work rather well as a metal band name^^
@Alpostpone3 жыл бұрын
Could be a live tour's name
@Lumpytusk3 жыл бұрын
Better an album!
@ZGryphon3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I think that should be the band's Difficult Second Album. :)
@alan-sk7ky3 жыл бұрын
nah that a Blues band.
@grandadmiralraeder96083 жыл бұрын
what about Mamma M1A 1 ?
@michaelkarnerfors95453 жыл бұрын
21:46 "Five if you're including installation of the IFR all-weather module" I lost it... :D
@alastairmellor9663 жыл бұрын
The CVRT (Scorpion and Simitar) were air droppable by the RAF using the Heavy Stressed Platform (HSP). Minimum drop height was 600 feet when I conducted the flight trials in 1984 /5.
@alanbare83193 жыл бұрын
The Reindeer/Tracked vehicle comparison was brilliant!
@Stanupnorth3 жыл бұрын
RG - just a stab but the RG on the Aden round probably refers to Radway Green factory for things that go bang in Cheshire, UK.
@derekp26743 жыл бұрын
Agreed and the accompanying two digits would be the year of manufacture.
@davidorf39213 жыл бұрын
Case made in 89 by Radway Green, filling added in 1990 at ROF Chorley (that's what the CY designation is) that late date likely means it was fired from A Jaguar, Hawk or Harrier aircraft all of which could mount an Aden cannon
@prjndigo3 жыл бұрын
To add: under extended field operations and lack of supply the crews are very unlikely to eat the engine of a tank. Band name? "The Chobhams" of course, name is already in the tank! First album could be named "Ablation"
@bozo56323 жыл бұрын
I am grateful that you start the video when the countdown counts down. More KZbinrs could afford to know what's countdown is supposed to be.
@janosocsai3353 жыл бұрын
22:20 I bet your first album would have a lot of TRACKS! on it I'll see myself out...
@SirDaffyD3 жыл бұрын
That story about the Raindeer has me in stitches. Somewhat because of the story, but moreso because you kept a straight face through it all. lol.
@velqt3 жыл бұрын
18:24 I love how he legitimately answers this question
@KushiakaSquig3 жыл бұрын
Speaking about storing reindeers in a shed for a year with a perfect straight face. I wonder how many takes it took not to smile ...
@TheChieftainsHatch3 жыл бұрын
First take worked, actually
@fredorman24293 жыл бұрын
Love his humor: reindeer powered tanks landing on the roof!
@colbeausabre88423 жыл бұрын
1. MISFIRES - Back in the day, when on the range, it was the job of the Range Safety Officer to clear the round after the crew executed misfire drill. The crew would be told to bail out and get well clear, the RSO would drive out and board the tank. Then he would gingerly open the breech, remove the round, and taking extreme care not to bump anything, climb halfway out the loader's hatch and pitch that sucker overboard! We'd tell range control about it when we finished firing and they had the privilege of disposing of it. 2. . TANK VS BUILDING - In Ralph Zumbro's book, “Tank Sergeant”, he related that he learned that the thing to do was hit the corner of the building, not to plow into the a wall head on. They had a newbie driver and he tried the second approach, and the building came down on top of the turret, so you had a blind tank with a bamboo hut on top from under which there was much cursing and taking the Lord's name in vain by the TC. 3. ICE - I commanded a cav troop in Germany and you just haven't lived until you've seen an AFV skid on ice. Every time it happened, I wondered what I was going to tell the court martial to explain the deaths and damage. For a mild example, the Jarheads, in Norway with their desert camouflaged M1's, try some drifting www.popularmechanics.com/military/weapons/a19489/american-tanks-drift-in-norwegian-winter/ Remember that's 70's tons out of control.... 4. LVT'S - ETO didn't seem to welcome the LVT until very late in the war. Makes you wonder if the 36th Infantry Division could have avoided being slaughtered on the Rapido and if Omaha Beach could have been less of a horror story. 5. 5 REINDEER - For real Russian Soldiers Go Native For Arctic Ops Using Reindeer And Dogsleds (defence-blog.com) 6. WOMBAT - 120mm Recoilless used the 50 caliber M8C spotting rifle like the US 106mm M40A1, so your souvenir might have been made in the US. 120 mm BAT recoilless rifle - Wikipedia 7.WOBBLING - NAVWEAPS Technical Section and Armor God Nathan Okun are national treasures History and Technology - NavWeaps
@elanman6083 жыл бұрын
Your comments about the ARL44 ring true of most atempts to save money by using "stuff we've already got" the engineering challenges required to couple existing components from different projects almost always exceed the effort required to design and manufacture an all new solution. A prime example of this NASA's SLS rocket, Will the bean counters never learn.
@mpetersen63 жыл бұрын
One of the problems with SLS has been repeated mission changes. Add in changes in administration's. For a Heavy Lift Vehicle we just should have gone with Shuttle C
@JohnRodriguesPhotographer3 жыл бұрын
The LVT was based in civilian vehicle, Roebling tractor.it was designed for use in the Everglades in the search for black crude or oil. The Marine Corps sought and said gosh that looks neat! And it was consequently adapted for military use. Further adaptions resulted in armor being added as stated, the drivetrain was moved from the rear to the front, the m3 Stewart drivetrain was adapted to power later versions of the lvt. They also use the m3 Stewart tank turret to create a fire support version. One had the 37 mm gun in it which was slightly underpowered! The other had the excellent 75 mm pack howitzer. I would love to see a modern version of the pack howitzer. Essentially replace heavier components with lighter weight metals and composites as much as possible but keep the design simple as is. The only thing you might want to change is the speed of traverse, maybe a little longer barrel bigger chamber for a somewhat hotter round. But those are dream items. The basic pack howitzer was highly effective throughout World War II.
@Zajuts1493 жыл бұрын
The band should obviously be called "The Track Tensioners"
@marklambert34283 жыл бұрын
Re: the blue 30mm round. The Aden gun (and it’s twin, the French DEFA cannon) was an aircraft gun used in many British aircraft. The harrier among them. It’s most unusual feature is a single barrel but five chambers, like a revolver. Spits out 1,700 rounds per minute of 30mm high explosive rounds. Most impressive for a gun designed in 1946.
@thequeensowncameronhighlan78833 жыл бұрын
The Mighty Tim has spoken !
@SgtBeltfed3 жыл бұрын
As far as projectiles wobbling, this article goes into some of the why at least with naval cannons. navweaps.com/index_tech/tech-043.php As far as why some wobble is a good thing, it's just proof the shell is doing what it's supposed to on the shallow arc of it's flight path. If you could have a perfectly flat trajectory, the shell wouldn't wobble.
@brianj.841 Жыл бұрын
Arrows (and quarrels) both wobble after being released; the rear end is accelerated and has to fight inertia.
@billd.iniowa22633 жыл бұрын
Yes, I found it both interesting and informative. The Reindeer Driven System response was superb! Best deadpan comedy since Buster Keaton.
@barrytaylor65653 жыл бұрын
the round you were talking about is a 30mm Aden Cannon shell that used to be fitted to several RAF aircraft, I know this because a friend of mine who used to be a armaments fitter in the RAF gave me one, it still has pride of place on my bookshelf now .
@Stardude783 жыл бұрын
Same round for M230 chaingun on the AH-64 Apache as well.
@jimlaker65523 жыл бұрын
In your interview with Tom Sator, he mentions, at around the 51.00 mark, when he encountered a Sherman from the 9th PzD.
@BobSmith-dk8nw3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Nick. Yes. _Both_ interesting _and_ informative. As to tanks and basements - my time playing Steel Panthers taught me to avoid cavalierly driving through houses. As to the US vs. Warsaw Pact - NATO trained to fight outnumbered 8 to 1 and win. They also had the experience of 4 Arab vs. Israeli's wars to learn from. .
@GCJT19493 жыл бұрын
Thank you, excellent as always. Geoff Who remembers the M-60A2 with no fondness, they kept coming back to maintenance.
@999torino3 жыл бұрын
The tank round wobble also happens with small arms, and it self dampens over distance. A strange result is better groups at longer distances where the bullet has finished yawing.
@jonnykelly5563 жыл бұрын
For your Lionel train set, I would recommend a Cruise Commander kit from The Electric Railroad. www.3rdrail.com/err-3rdrail/index.html This will allow you to upgrade the control system of the locomotive and you'll get much more realistic sound effects.
@davetalley3 жыл бұрын
In SA you might check Hobbytown or Dibbles
@thebog113 жыл бұрын
@@davetalley Austin also had a Hobbytown. Not sure if it's still there. There was also a shop in the northern part of the city that had a large HO train set inside it, it was a thrill as a kid to go in there and see them running it.
@johnladuke64753 жыл бұрын
Rabbit description earns like.
@MatoVuc3 жыл бұрын
I had the opportunity to sit inside an M84A4 derivative of the T72. I'm 1.83m tall and weigh between 105 and 110 kg with a sports build. Had no problem fitting inside it.
@ThanatosZine3 жыл бұрын
The band should be called Dakka dakka and play AC/DC covers.
@jakobc.25583 жыл бұрын
Shells wobbeling when fired from world war 2 guns today seems to be quite common. I remember watching a german PaK 40, which was about to be auctioned, being fired. In the slow motion footage you could see the shell litteraly turning 180° so that the front part was facing the wrong direction when impacting its target. So yeah I assume that keeping the rifleing on the inside of a barrel from rusting/degrading for over 70 years is a impossibility. That might even be one of the reasons why all the post war M4 Shermans got their guns exchanged very soon.
@arabiandarkstone28353 жыл бұрын
Love the AAVP7A1 on your desk
@mathieu44323 жыл бұрын
Your Raindeer rant got to me man Well done.
@mancubwwa3 жыл бұрын
On the first question: UN vechicles are painted white with giant black letters UN. And yes, this includes tanks.
@davehopkin95023 жыл бұрын
Adeb Cannon was indeed an aircraft weapon, a 30mm revolver beastie with a rate of fire around 1500 RPM, the name ADEN is a acronym of the Armament Development Establishment and eNfield where it was made
@mooneyes2k478 Жыл бұрын
Things wrong in Patton, relating to tanks: An M37 SPG in North Africa, it didn't enter service until 1950. While not a tank, and also common in movies, some of the "Jeeps" in the movie are actually civilian CJ-2A rather than military vehicles. M41 Walker Bulldogs stand in several times for both Sherman's and Chaffee's. Patton passes by an M44 Howitzer at one point, which didn't enter production until 1953. Again, not a tank, but Bradley's command center is towed by a Mack B-61 fro 1964. There are a whole heap of other anachronisms and failures, but they're not tank-or-vehicle related.
@aaronc46713 жыл бұрын
Chieftain, it is actually well known in well-researched small arms circles that small arms bullets leave the muzzle with a bit of a wobble, and, given 100 yards or so, it smooths out or "goes to sleep" for the remainder of it's stable flight. I would not be the least bit surprised if this were to happen to larger caliber projectiles even though I have never seen it discussed (but I am not commonly involved in artillery-size ballistics discussions). :)
@WildBillCox133 жыл бұрын
Hi Major Nick! My Nvidia GeForce GTX 1080 Ti is a bit long in the tooth, but it provides flawless gameplay on maximum settings for MW5, while listening to you chatting or presenting. I have no issues with it, performance-wise. It never gets hotter than 41C. With it and my headphones in place I am transmogrified into Old Man Gaming, a charter member of the Legion of Substitute Heroes. And earner of over 50 Battle Buddy awards when that was a thing.
@doncarlton48583 жыл бұрын
Your discussion of reindeer powered vehicle was hilarious!
@B9oyd3 жыл бұрын
"Breach face" sounds pretty metal for a band name :D
@dfostman60143 жыл бұрын
In addition to being used for building demolition. I believe that Morpac Industries, in Canada still uses Sherman chassis for specialized vehicles used in logging.
@iro993 жыл бұрын
Band name submission: "Nicky and the Nebelwerfers"
@Cinn3573 жыл бұрын
They werf nebels.
@peterbrazier71073 жыл бұрын
Sherman v Sherma , Egypt had Shermans with AMX 13 Turrets , Iarael had Sherman M50s with the 75mm gun from AMX 13s in their Turrets.
@davetalley3 жыл бұрын
The Germans 2nd SS iirc had an entire battalion if T34s at Kursk, target ID must have been a bitch
@WildBillCox133 жыл бұрын
Your positive appraisal of the Pz III and IV turret positions seemed to indicate you were willing to accept the TC at the rear paradigm. My brain perked up when you spoke against it here.
@TheChieftainsHatch3 жыл бұрын
That's because the guns for those vehicles were so short and the ammunition so small that no unnecessary compromises were required in the positioning. For later (and future) tanks, though, that doesn't apply any more.
@fewtoes3 жыл бұрын
The Chair Force also had a "Century" series at that time also. Arrows have yaw, and it helps in accuracy. I had Egyptian officers in my MG class. Was not impressed. Armored vehicles slide on ice as easy as wheeled vehicles. Maybe more. Snow can be a problem, especially when it has frozen to you tracks while you slept. The turret ring on M109 and M48/60/M1 is basically a ball bearing laid on its side. The outer race is bolted to the hull, the inner race is bolted to the turret.
@philstaples81223 жыл бұрын
Very cold temperatures and frozen ground are great fun in a tank, I've drifted Chieftains with great success and enjoyment but you can only do it if you maintain your track discipline, lose tracks will come off and that isn't fun, far from it. Any hard work in sub zero conditions when you're using metal hand tools and aren't issues with good cold weather gear ( British Army ) is a pain in the ass and takes rather longer than it would in better conditions.
@jerry23573 жыл бұрын
Armoured vehicles used by UN peacekeeping forces are often painted conspicuously. Yellow noses on Bf109s in the Battle of Britain were for recognition purposes, like the stars on the roofs of allied tanks and the black and white stripes on allied aircraft after D-Day. I suspect von Richthofen’s planes were painted red for the same reason.
@johnsalt11573 жыл бұрын
On the subject of steel rabbits, WW1 fans will recall that the first idea for the defensive employment of tanks by the Tank Corps (later Royal Tank Regiment) was known as the "savage rabbit" concept (as Hugh Elles said, the tanks would emerge "like savage rabbits from their holes").
@thetanksofworldwarii-tanka43683 жыл бұрын
There is an M4 at the Russel Museum in Zion Illinois that was supposedly used for house demolition in New Jersey if I am remembering the story the museum owner told me correctly. The only thing it was missing was the main gun, which he was able to restore to the vehicle.
@ret7army3 жыл бұрын
I heard about that tank as a kid back in the 1960's ... guy would run it into the corners of the house and down it would come.
@Lintary3 жыл бұрын
I have learned from Star Trek to never underestimate the engineers so when it comes to bridges I put my money on the engineer in a jeep with some things that go boom vs a tank platoon :)
@HanSolo__3 жыл бұрын
I can easily put my life on this choice.
@treyhelms52823 жыл бұрын
Yes, and IRL I imagine any serious offensive would rely more on a small unit of engineers than a small “combat” unit. And in Star Trek, the Dominion learned to respect the Federation engineers who could “make replicators out of rocks”.
@slateslavens3 жыл бұрын
"There are no personal problems that can't be solved with a suitable application of high explosives" As a trained 12B10, detcord is the _bomb._
@looinrims3 жыл бұрын
I’m not sure Star Trek is any place to take any life advice George Takai’s moronic self notwithstanding
@spdaylight13 жыл бұрын
For the Lionel Locomotive there's really only two options. Assuming the board is in the tender it may be best to buy a working tender or sound unit off ebay or a local show and swap the shells/boards of them. Normally it's a few screws to hold the shell on, although it has to be a same tender. The second option is to go through he board your self and find the short or solder joint that has given way, had it happen on a family members 50's locomotive. I think your model is a Lionel 6-21787 CNJ 4-6-2 pacific, good place to start looking for answers.
@prjndigo3 жыл бұрын
The rounds cast for the tank place are intentionally sub-caliber and don't really engage the rifling. This lets them use cleaner powders etc.
@glenndean63 жыл бұрын
On the Aden round ... the Aden cannon fires the same 30x113mm round as the Apache M230 cannon. So that round on your shelf is the same config as the M788 TP that Apache fires, and given NATO-standard colors and markings is marked identically.
@bok10803 жыл бұрын
Projectile wobble (yaw), without watching the film in question, this is an educated guess. When a projectile is travelling down a rifled barrel, the projectile rotates around it's 'geometric' axis (held by the barrel and rotated by the rifling), when it exits the barrel, it is no longer constrained by the barrel, the laws of physics dictate that it wants to rotate around it's 'mass' axis (centre of mass/gravity etc.) if the projectile is correctly shaped, and the material is properly distributed etc., the 'geometric' axis will be the same as the 'mass' axis and all is well, no wobble. If the 'geometric' axis is not the same as the 'mass' axis (the projectile is bent, filling is offset, jacket thicker on one side, or some such) then as the projectile goes down the barrel, the 'centre of gravity will be 'wobbling' and the rotating mass will be 'unbalanced' (think wheel wobble when a car wheel is 'out of balance', once the projectile leaves the barrel and is no longer constrained in it's movement, the projectile will 'wobble' (yaw) as the projectile transitions from a 'geometric' axis of rotation to a 'mass' axis of rotation, once this 'transition' has happened the wobble will go away, this is also seen in some 6.5mm (usually x55mm Swedish) rifles where sometimes it is observed that the rifle is more accurate at 200m/yd that at 100m/yd.
@sideshowbob15443 жыл бұрын
Depleted Uranium would be a great name for a heavy metal band!!
@richardboll87633 жыл бұрын
I would love to have the Reindeer explanation for next Christmas!
@isuzu68513 жыл бұрын
During the snow storm that pulled over the germany's in 1978/1979. The NVA and Bundeswehr used tanks and APC's to get to cut off hamlets and villages in northern germany. I remember the interview of a East German Doctor riding along with a T-55 tank to a farm where a woman was going to have a baby. The tank got stuck in the snow and the doctor had to continue on foot.
@aritakalo80113 жыл бұрын
Unlucky and careless tank driver can beach tank like whale on snow. If one drives in deep enough snow a wave of packing snow can starts to form under the center front hull. Until if one isn't carefull this is deeply packed enough and high enough to lift the tank to air from it's center hullbelly. At which point tracks mean nothing, since the tracks are churning loose snow or air. One then has to have another tank pull the tank of the snow bank it has beached on or dig the now due to pressure probably nearing ice solid snow bank from under the hull to collapse the bank enough to get the tracks back on ground. To aid in this tanks usually have this nice front edge with slopes up and DOWN. this down slope though acts to give nice extra angling also works as nice snow scoop and compressor.
@ZGryphon3 жыл бұрын
@@aritakalo8011 When I was just a little kid, my dad beached a bulldozer on a rock in the middle of a field he was trying to level. It was a very formative experience, since it was the very first time in my life that I realized my father was a mortal man capable of spectacular incompetence, and my mother's reaction taught me a valuable lesson about the difference between "laughing with" and "laughing at", to boot.
@p51cMustangFUYTGIVEMEBACK3 жыл бұрын
the way he talk about the perks od reindeer propulsion is a piece of art. its perfect comedy and somebody that talks no tech at all wouldnt even know what nonesense it is. if you ever done with tanks (pls dont) comedy might be god for you!
@ericgrace99953 жыл бұрын
The basement windows are by no means unique to Grozny. They're common in Germany and I read some time ago that they were required by German building regulations...as a civil defence measure !
@paulcompton78613 жыл бұрын
An aside. My father purchased a Staghound Armoured Car in the early 50's and constructed a Hydraulic ram on the front to use pushing down dead (ringbarked) timber - at least that was his excuse! It worked very well, was much safer than using an open topped dozer, thanks to the armoured roof - and got burned in a bushfire before all the clearing got done. Damn!
@johnkoenig3263 жыл бұрын
I kinda wish this had been called "Wabbits, Weindeer and Wombats."
@Mishn03 жыл бұрын
You had WAY to much fun with the reindeer segment, and "Stürmgeschütz" for a tanker related heavy metal band. At least it's got the minimum number of ümlauts for a heavy metal band name.
@666Blaine3 жыл бұрын
My guess with the the Slo-Mo guys 76 footage was that it wasn't a full power round. They probably down-load them to save on barrel wear. The lower velocity would mean that the round wouldn't be spun as fast by the rifling, resulting in a poorly stabilized round. Just a guess.
@fire3043 жыл бұрын
Red Baron painted his plane red so his squadron could quickly find/see him in combat. I believe Soviet command tanks had a white stripe around the turret for the same reason.
@PobortzaPl3 жыл бұрын
Wasn't white horizontal stripe a thing only during Berlin operation, to avoid friendly fire incidents?
@fire3043 жыл бұрын
@@PobortzaPl I know they added markings (it appears it was usually a white cross, though stripes are also mentioned) to avoid being strafed by allied units, but there are pictures of pre war T-26's with white bands which I believe was the indication of unit commanders.
@tripod2223 жыл бұрын
OMG: I always thought to myself: why not drive a tank through light buildings (e.g. for flanking or to get out of trouble) and my mind is blown by the simple answer: it might have a cellar. Thanks chieftain, my IQ just increased by 1. :D
@timengineman2nd7143 жыл бұрын
Q&A: With the M-551 & M-60A2, since the Missile Launcher/Cannon had difficulties of using the "Tube" as a Missile Launcher after firing the HESH round (as a Cannon), any idea why the US Army just didn't make a Spin-Stabilized or Folding Fin Stabilized (Unguided) Rocket with a HESH warhead? Or was there too many other issues with the M-551 that made the US Army just want to forget the whole thing?
@wolfhound1133 жыл бұрын
The gun system had way too many problems. Electrical and mechanical faults. Probems with the standard ammunition - the casings could not tolerate humidity and therefore the rounds had to be kept in plastic bags. They could also cook off in a hot barrel. Also an agonisingly slow rate of fire due to the electrical-mechanical breach operation. I heard 4-6 round per minute, whereas a good M48 or M60/M60A1 crew could do more than 12, and also keep the gun aimed at the target while they did it. And there were problems mechanically - overheating being a constant problem. Also the aluminium alloy M551 could not take battle damage. The M551 was actually not really a tank, but a tracked, amphibious and air-portable reconnanisance vehicle - but why then the massive gun?? Then they got to thinking: what's wrong with an M151 jeep with a TOW missile launcher? I know, it was fielded way too early, and went straight into a war for which it was not suited. The ex-M113 units loved it for its firepower. The ex-M48 units hated it for its weaknesses and unreliability. Gun/missile problems were enough for the Army to drop the M60A2 and use the hulls into regular M60A1/A2's or armoured bridge layers. The base vehicle was good. The entire idea of the M551 was flawed and it was witgdrawn from service (with the exception of an airmobile division - I forget which.)
@timengineman2nd7143 жыл бұрын
@@wolfhound113 Yeah, I had heard that the "Caseless ammo HESH round had several problems and when fired in the M551 had enough recoil to jar loose the Missile Guidance System's Electronic. Hence my question about why they didn't change it out for a Rocket with a HESH warhead for bunkers, etc.
@GoredonTheDestroyer3 жыл бұрын
Another good example of the -1xx designation system is fighter aircraft - the F-100 Super Sabre, F-101 Voodoo, F-102 Delta Dagger, F-104 Starfighter and F-105 Thunderchief. The F-117 Nighthawk, while having a tri-numerical type suffix (and an F-prefix, for Fighter) doesn't count as it's a dedicated ground-attack aircraft with no real offensive armament.
@Punisher94193 жыл бұрын
I sit me or is storing a faulty round inside the tank a really really bad idea. I'd rather just dump it outside the tank instead. Maybe mark it on a map for pickup later on but storing it in the tank isn't something I would be comfortable with.
@doughudgens92753 жыл бұрын
I agree. In a combat situation, I would skip the part about turning the round 180 degrees and trying to fire it again. It’s overboard, and use a new round!
@OhSome1HasThisName3 жыл бұрын
this, surely just chuck it out of a hatch
@kosakuito94963 жыл бұрын
Note how we have been told what procedure is. Not necessarily what crews actually do ;)
@Punisher94193 жыл бұрын
@@kosakuito9496 I would imagine though you would get a bollocking from the CO though.
@calvingreene903 жыл бұрын
I would certainly want to discard the powder before storage.
@samcollins82913 жыл бұрын
They used to use and manufacture log yarders made with Sherman tank hulls. I got to advance one 50 ft.
@Omegasupreme10783 жыл бұрын
I can talk a LOT about wood gas systems. The city of Helsinki used a wood gas system for light heat and power until I think after WWII similar to how many US, UK and Euro cities used coal gas.
@jsn12523 жыл бұрын
In regards to tanks and ice, a story from my cousin one snowy day at the Yakima training facility. The miss was to assault a mock town at the top of a hill. IIRC, after the first two tanks the snow over the road was so compacted that all the others would just slip back down the hill and had to take alternate routes. Afterwards, they for all intents and purposes sledded back down the hill in their tanks. For what it's worth, they hadn't fitted the ice cleats to the track.
@NathanOkun2 жыл бұрын
Yaw, in a small amount, a desired thing in a spin-stabilized projectile. The bottom-of-the-barrel point is that a known, fixed oscillation is better than a random oscillation when it comes to accuracy of fire, even if the random oscillation is smaller. At closer ranges this does not mean much, but at longer ranges, especially with cross-wind, earth curvature, and/or the spinning of the earth as a shell moves up and down and is subject to conservation of angular momentum effects (effectively moves sideways in some cases to the aimed trajectory), a known error-causing effect can be put into your firing solution and cancelled, while a random error, even a small one, cannot. Thus, the spin will cause the nose of the shell to "nutate" in a small spiral about the trajectory line due to air resistance turbulence, so making this spiral error a fixed, if slightly larger, quantity gives you more accurate fire, on the average, at the longer ranges where such forces have more time to act.
@mooneyes2k4783 жыл бұрын
Royal Small Arms Factory ADEN 30mm revolver cannon, indeed an aircraft weapon system, used primarily by RAF and Fleet Air Arm, but a number of other nations including the US(as two of them were underslung the Hawker Harrier)
@donnut9993 жыл бұрын
Your band would definitely have some mighty „Tracks“ 💪🏻
@basher203 жыл бұрын
AS for the band names, Trakks (with inappropriate diacritical marks added) or The Tank is On Fire would both work. And they would have to be the house band a the Tanker Bar.
@wraithcadmus3 жыл бұрын
I was going to suggest a spelling of TRAXX and making a thrash band, but it seems that spelling is taken by a Korean EDM group.
@jeffreytam7684 Жыл бұрын
With regards to the 30mm round, the Aden cannon featured most famously on the Hawker Hunter
@CAP1984623 жыл бұрын
Incredibly dumb question, best pair of private purchase combat boots you’ve had. I’m fond of the IDF I used to have before I inherited a pair of Vietnam era “lucky boots,” from my father. P.S. please note that reindeer based propulsion systems require additional adjustments of “tack tension,” as leather can stretch and the reindeer motive units are not of uniform size. Additionally, having an always on illumination source attached to a power pack is probably not a good idea.