Anti-Tank Chats #4 | Bazooka | The Tank Museum
Join Stuart Wheeler for an Anti-Tank Chat and discover the US military's development of the Bazooka anti-tank weapon.
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Пікірлер: 325
Hello, Tank Nuts! We hope you enjoy this weeks Anti-Tank Chat with Stuart Wheeler, do let us know your thoughts in the comments.
@richardmoore609
2 жыл бұрын
I liked the video but I can't get over the fact that the man looks so distressed in the thumbnail.
@benjaminbenson8714
2 жыл бұрын
He's concerned about how close he needs to get to the Panzer to knock it out.
@Mrtweet81
2 жыл бұрын
Seeing how Russian armour are performing against modern antitank weaponry, do you think this is the end of tank warfare as we know it or is it all just down to the ineptitude of the Russians?
@lonjohnson5161
2 жыл бұрын
When covering the PIAT, please elaborate on the word spigot in this context.
@benjaminbenson8714
2 жыл бұрын
@@Mrtweet81 I would love to hear a military person's take on this. You could argue the writing was on the wall in ww2 with the efficiency of anti tank guns and later infantry weapons. Is there a better infantry support weapon that isn't a tank?
"Ahhh, a great new piece of kit. Let's call it the M-1" - every American procurement officer ever
@badcornflakes6374
2 жыл бұрын
M-1 Bazooka *
@ThePrader
Жыл бұрын
Well either it must be called am M-1, or am M-4. I was once issued an "M-4, Ground Effect implement, 1 Each". You would probably call it what it was, a shovel.
@johnh.tuomala4379
Жыл бұрын
@@badcornflakes6374 Only the Army (and civilians who've never been in the military) call it a "bazooka". In the Marine Corps it was always and still is, called a "rocket launcher".
@williamzk9083
Жыл бұрын
American Army typewriters must have been replaced when the Letter M wore out pretty soon.
@patrioticshitstain
Жыл бұрын
Just to be That Guy, the M just stands for "model", so M1 just means it's the first in that line. So while both the Sherman tank and the well-known automatic carbine have the designation M4, their proper names would be "carbine, 5.56mm, M4" and "medium tank, M4" respectively to distinguish them from previous models of carbines and medium tanks. Other militaries do it as well, for example the Swedish Carl-Gustaf recoilless rifle has models 1-4.
The bazooka-man has long been my favorite little green plastic army-man, ever since I was a kid in the 70s.
@garyhewitt489
2 жыл бұрын
I much preferred the prone machine gunner, and he's easier to hide and harder to kill with artillery rocks lobbed from behind the front lines.
@OldMusicFan83
2 жыл бұрын
@@garyhewitt489 My guys were at risk from the single piece lincoln logs hurled from across the basement. BUT! All through my active duty Army days, I carried the flame thrower man in my toiletry kit. Now my daughter is in the Army and she carries a 'pink' flamethrower man with her stuff. (Her friend gave her a pink set of the soldiers when she enlisted). So now, my veteran flamethrower man sits on a shelf beside one of her pink flamethrower men.
@user-ih7gc7dt9l
2 жыл бұрын
I agree! He’s a good keen man.
@Telamon8
2 жыл бұрын
I liked the radio guy, 'cause then he could call in support from the dart gun battery.
@handelnumber1
2 жыл бұрын
The day of the tank is over.
Lesser known fact: The bazooka is also effective against giant ants (Them!)
@longrider42
2 жыл бұрын
Ah yes, Giant Ants, I prefer the BAR or Flamethrower.
@pablomiranda7657
2 жыл бұрын
Haha nice.
The veterans I had the honor of talking with had a real appreciation of the Bazooka especially in regards to machine gun hard points .
@SonsOfLorgar
2 жыл бұрын
As someone with significant training practice on one of the spin-off successors to the bazooka concept (the CG recoilless rifle) I can definitely see why the ww2 soldiers loved it.
I can't wait to see the PIAT episode..... I was fortunate to meet (when I was quite young, so at the time I didn't know the significance) Mr "Smoky" Smith - a man who won the Victoria Cross with a PIAT in Italy!
@HaloFTW55
Жыл бұрын
Oh hey, the guy who took out an armoured platoon by himself. That guy is a local legend here.
Stuart did a good job! He’s not as relaxed as the Davids but that will come with doing more presentations. Well done. Can’t wait to see more on this topic.
Truely a revolutionary technology. Besides it's armor stopping power it also made enemy armor crews paranoid, a hard to quantify value in war. I recently learned about the use of the rockets inside their packing tubes being used in ambushes without the launcher. Really interesting stuff.
@henrysokol3466
Жыл бұрын
It's all the more impressive because unless you take a good close look, everything about it seems childishly obvious and simple.
US forces in the Pacific theatre found the original Bazooka useful for taking out Japanese bunkers in the same way Slim's 14th Army in Burma used the PIAT.
Will the anti-tank series be covering the use of farming equipment to capture enemy tanks?
@RTFLDGR
2 жыл бұрын
the GREAT RUSSIAN TANK GRAB!
@MazeFrame
2 жыл бұрын
Would be a good one for 1st April.
@thekinginyellow1744
2 жыл бұрын
John Deere: Military Edition!
@suryia6706
Жыл бұрын
You mean that actually happened said absolutely no Ukrainian .
13:50 I Love the Brits: "approximately ..." and then gives a number accurate to 14 decimal places. Awesome work though. Really appreciate it.
The ability to use the rockets from their shipping tubes as improvised launchers for boobytrap installation always impressed me as a great feature.
The Monroe effect is in essence what is known as 'plastic deformation', the steel is not liquid but rather the sheer concentration of pressure forces the steel out of the way.
The soundbite at around 17:00 was a great touch! Indeed, a crackerjack story!
That was a fantastic episode. Learned quite a bit. Looking forward to the PIAT!
This channel is awesome. Whoever manages this museums digital content/PR is a legend.
Always enjoy Stu's presentations, like being at school and having lessons with one of your favourite teachers. In truth, all TTM staff are like that... Thanks mate!
The perfect time to see an antitank video, showing one more step in how we got from the antitank rock to our modern top-attack, fire-and-forget, thermal sight wonder weapons.
My mother worked for the Budd Company in Chester, PA during the war on the bazooka rocket assembly line. She even rose to the position of supervisor of one of the assembly lines.
@ZGryphon
2 жыл бұрын
Oh man, if I had that job, I would insist on having business cards just so I could have the title "Supervisor of Bazooka Rocket Assembly" on them. Print them myself if I had to. :)
I got to fire one of these at cadet camp in the late '50's but by the time I joined up in '68 the Karl Gustav was in service
Thank You. A weapon that I've seen so often in American WW2 movies but knew little about.
15:38 that poor renault ft 17 got uptiered lmao
You should defiintely have Squire do the PIAT episode after his hilarious German Fury skit.😅😅😅
As told to me by a veteran of one the 7th U.S. Armored Division Infantry Battalions (and my next door neighbor) who served and fought during the Battle of the Bulge and the "Goose egg" . The Bazooka would penetrate the frontal armor of a German Panther. However, and he held up a dried blade of fine grass (smaller than a pin hole), the penetration was so small that all it did was let the tank crew know you were there. This was only one of the details he told me of, and they were always about someone else doing something which he observed.
Who remembers ‘Bazooka Joe’ bubblegum growing up ?
Please do more of these. I was worried this series was abandoned since there was so much time between videos. Big fan
@Blastoice
2 жыл бұрын
Same ❤
Excellent. I wondered when the next episode would be as I've found the series fascinating. The level of detail is excellent as usual, thanks Stuart.
A great concise explanation of the Bazooka. Thank you.
Nicely done. Thank you Stuart Wheeler.
I really enjoyed this. Straight info, concise history. And the best explanation of the shaped charge I’ve seen yet. Looking forward to seeing more of this. Thanks from Australia. Can’t wait to get back to Bovington.
Very good content! Keep up the good work! This AT-series is fitting addition to this fine channel. Well done!
One of the most informative videos on bazookas I’ve watched. Great video. Thanks
Quite a step up from the M1 anti-tank rock.
Excellent video, so action packed with knowledge
I feel very well entertained indeed. Thank you for that.
Thank you for a very informative presentation on the bazooka.
excellent episode! very informative.
What a great video! Very educational!
Thank you Ringo Star.
@Sturminfantrist
2 жыл бұрын
Starr ;)
Very interesting, thanks for this video - Anti-Tank Chats is an enlightening series.
My favorite video in some time. Looking forward to the PIAT in the next go!
I had a patient in my training who had operated a bazooka in the pacific theater: he was blind in his right eye and deaf in his right ear from repeated shock waves
Excellent video i hope to see more on this series
I never knew I needed that much information about the bazooka.
Great video as always
Excellent. Thank you very much
It was so revolutionary that the Germans managed to copy the captured Bazooka and with it designed the Panzershreck.
Nice presentation! You are getting there!
This is why I appreciate TM so much. We get the scientific history as to realizations among scientists at the time and how that directly influenced the weapon designers trying to find new ways of grinding bones to make bread.
YAY more antitank chats I really like these.
Fantastic and informative thanks.
Anti-Tank Chat! SWEET!!
A well timed video given the amount of tanks being whacked by NLAW and similar weapons in Ukraine at the moment.
My father in-law was sent to Korea by the Army possibly after that war. He had an opportunity to practice with the bazooka on a firing range. His partner and him decided it was a bit warmer than when they got up so they took off their greatcoats before firing the weapon. After a few rounds they noticed that their coats were on fire from the exhaust of the rockets!
Great work Sir thank you
Thanks + pleased to hear imperial and metric equivalents being given in armour thickness.
That poor unsuspecting Renault FT that got hit by a Bazooka.....
From a linguistic perspective, it seems interesting that portable anti tank rocket launchers did not continue to be called "bazookas" in US service. I wonder if when the M20 super bazooka was in service concurrent with the M67 recoilless rifle and later the M72 LAW if the M20 was "the bazooka" and the others were referred to by their M series numbers. Then, when the M20 went away so did the name bazooka. I would be curious to see if servicemen called the LAW Bazooka ever. I could imagine a world where we still called current SMAW and AT4s Bazookas as the weapon category.
@lavrentivs9891
2 жыл бұрын
I can't speak for the (swedish) military, where we went by weapon designations (minus the numbers as we only used one type of AT-recoilless rifle and one type of single use AT rocket, so no need to differentiate further). But growing up as a child, every type of tube type weapon was called a bazooka, regardless of origin =)
@korbell1089
2 жыл бұрын
No, I joined in 1980 and we just called it the LAW, by that time a bazooka was something our grandfathers used.
@gg.youlubeatube6249
2 жыл бұрын
@@korbell1089 How do you express the CAPITAL letters in an ordinary spoken sentence?
@thequietcraftsman
2 жыл бұрын
@@gg.youlubeatube6249 do you mean LAW as law or L-A-W?
@korbell1089
2 жыл бұрын
@@gg.youlubeatube6249 I'm not sure if you are being sarcastic or genuinely asking so I will give a serious answer. LAW is an acronym for Light Anti-tank Weapon and when you write about the M-72 you capitalize the LAW. I hope that answered your question.
I really enjoy these anti-tank videos, they're well put together and informative. Is there an anti-tank section at the museum? I am due to visit there in a few months.
Thank you
Thanks for a very interesting video.
I was surprised at the type of batteries being put into the M1's handgrip. Eveready was around in WW2?
@gglovato
2 жыл бұрын
Eveready is from before ww2
@wilsonj4705
2 жыл бұрын
Eveready was founded in 1896. D cells date to 1898 and AAs to 1907
@thurin84
2 жыл бұрын
yes. and those same type of batteries were used in the bc-611 "handie talkie". there was even an adaptor to use them in the bc-1000 "walkie talkie" backpack radio.
@LeeMcc_KI5YPR
Жыл бұрын
Handheld flashlights used various AA, C, D, etc., cells.
My father invaded Normandy with the 29th ID. During urban fighting, they’d use Shermans and bazooka crews to kill snipers. Infantry would identify a sniper then call for support. Both the bazooka and tank crews fired their rounds under the window to destroy the entire floor. In Isigny-sur-Mer, they used this tactic until German troops realized their life expectancy would be brief, and some 230 surrendered. He would be wounded later that day during the obligatory German counter-attack..
Good video. Thank you.
You need to do more of the anti tank chats they're great
Love this series
Please more anti-tank chats, this series is awesome.
@ducomaritiem7160
2 жыл бұрын
Time for the "Anti-tank museum"
Great stuff, really interesting.
super-bazooka is the most childishly awesome weapon name in existence.
@badcornflakes6374
2 жыл бұрын
Panzer Shrek named after the big green Ogre
This gentleman's presentation is by far the easiest from The Tank Museum for this Yank to follow.
7:04 Wooo @LazerPig sighted. 🚨🐷
Great video, very interesting 👍🏻🇦🇺
7:02 lazer pig gang represent!
Great video. I prefer the early M1 bazooka for handling. it had two grips and a ambi sight system that could be used with both left or right hand shooters. The last of the 2.36 models was the M18, similar to the M9.
The panther in the background looks personally attacked by this presentation in front of it.
Thanks once again for a great video! One nice addition would be if you could somehow show the measurements also in the format that is used and understood in most part of the world, that is International System of Units.
you have brought back many happy memories of beating my brother at worms on the ps1, thank you.
Fantastic
Saw one of the prototypes fitted with grips and stock from an M1928 Thompson SMG.
There with come a time whey KZread videos like these form school history lessons. Keep up the good work guys. 👍
@tonyjedioftheforest1364
2 жыл бұрын
Is this a joke or have you not got a spelling check?
@allanstott6999
2 жыл бұрын
@@tonyjedioftheforest1364 will* 😁
Interesting, i wonder what viscosity copper has at 800C? It melts at about 1,100C so nowhere near it's point of liquidity. It's purely the shock which causes it to _act_ like a liquid, i believe it's called shockwave induced plasticity. It's implied that there's a copper jet followed by a slug, is that correct?
I served in anti tanks , my service weapons were 95mm recoiless gun, and APILAS.
Band of Brothers episode 3 had a great portrayal of a bazooka in action.
interesting history! i would like to see more anti tank chats pls
@amazinghuppifluppi359
2 жыл бұрын
thought you would be more into bunkers and stuff ;-)
@enverhoxha545
2 жыл бұрын
@@amazinghuppifluppi359 sorry i have a next project to steal 4 more russian submarine and put at my pasha liman base
Good piece. I suspect Stuart Wheeler may be in demand for his expertise on the history of anti-tank weapons right now ... to help inquiring minds understand the history of this category of weapons ...
Sterling content, as usual. Clear and concise explanations. Think I have to get one of those, now. Neighbours are getting noisy.
@webtoedman
2 жыл бұрын
Please be aware that back blast may cause minor damage to wallpaper and soft furnishings.
@The_Modeling_Underdog
2 жыл бұрын
@@webtoedman Planned on using it from the street, so the house should be ok. Thanks for the reminder, anyway. Very kind of you.
@PadraigTomas
2 жыл бұрын
The rules of engagement state that you may leave a flaming bag of dog excrement on their door step after ringing their bell or otherwise attracting attention with an air horn. However you are expressly forbidden from firing upon them with antitank weapons.
@The_Modeling_Underdog
2 жыл бұрын
@@PadraigTomas a darn shame.
I’d always thought the bazooka had its debut in the pacific. I remember reading a Commando or similar Annual back in the 80’s where it had a short comic strip on the Bazooka’s first combat usage in where a bazooka armed U.S. Marine forced a Japanese pillbox to surrender after demonstrating its utility by blowing a hole in their wall.
@Treblaine
Жыл бұрын
Hmm, Japanese forces surrendering before 1945 was astonishingly rare. There was no concept of surrender, it was seen as the highest treason and cowardice to "give up". The surrender in 1945 was more of an order to deposit their arms and assemble into camps, it was just another order for them to follow.
love these anti tank weapons gives a whole new perspective on tank warfare and what tank crews would of had to think about. Eager to see the PIAT but would also like to see some axis like the panzerfaust
Almost first!!! Love you guys! Keep up the great work at the Museum!!
Hope for m10, m18, and m36 chats very soon!!
Like the Look and the electric (Trick) primer/ignition , the late modell Bazooka was in use during the early years in Bundeswehr service but we used the le.Panzerfaust "Lanze" ( looks a bit like a RPG) but disadvantage was you have to load a primercartridge ( a little blank cartridge) to fire/ignite the Rocketset, found this solution (primer cartr. plus warhead and rocketset) unsatifactory the Bazookas magneto powersource is much better. but on the pro side it was a light one Man Antitankweapon, easy to reload even when i was laid on the ground. The Army had another Type in service called schwere (heavy) Panzerfaust a swedish type "Carl gustav"
My father learned to use the bazooka in basic training in 1945. He was taught to skip the rocket off the ground up under a tank where the armor was thin. I don’t understand how the shaped charge would work well with that technique, but that’s what they did.
@johnsturm9344
2 жыл бұрын
I think its because it won't detonate unless the rocket hits at a close to 90 degree angle. I've heard of a similar idea with Sherman tanks. They'd bounce shots off the gun mantlet of a Panther so it hit the roof armor right above the driver where it was thinner. Although I've only ever heard it anecdotally so take that with a grain of salt.
@curiousentertainment3008
2 жыл бұрын
@@johnsturm9344 the earlier variants of the panther and I want to say panzer 4 had a shot trap on the mantlet that were later fixed
@johnsturm9344
2 жыл бұрын
@@curiousentertainment3008 You learn something new every day! Thanks man. I was always a little uncertain about those stories. But if they had to redesign parts of the tank to counteract it, It shows it happened enough for them to worry about it.
@XtreeM_FaiL
2 жыл бұрын
I think someone is trying to pull a leg here. Things bounce differently depending on what they hit, but most of the time the angle is the same or less. Bouncing off a ground is unpredictable. Ground can be soft or hard and most of the time it is not flat, so the impact angle can be what ever. Firing from a standing position, the angle over a 50m+ is so shallow that the projecctile most likely just do minor bounces and keeps going on.
@CharlesStearman
2 жыл бұрын
I wonder if this is actually referring to the tactic of aiming at the underside of a tank as it climbs over the crest of a ridge.
I keep looking at the Panther tank behind you.
I’m looking forward to the PIAT episode.
Nice
The munroe effect is best displayed when doors open on Black Friday.
Nice to see this series. I assume that the two part bazooka was only used by airborne, but that is not specifically stated. Would like to have seen some comparison to what was developed in other countries, but maybe after go through review of all the weapons, you can have a summary that looks at the advantages and disadvantages of each country's solution.
@redjoshman
2 жыл бұрын
It was called for in the February 1944 T/O&E for the regular Infantry Rifle Company. However, they do not start appearing in regular rifle companies until August-September 1944, which is similar for parachute units. By the late fall-early winter of 1944, they are the predominant type seen with rifle companies. Some units, like the 2nd Infantry Division, kept their old rocket launchers in order to increase their anti-tank firepower. This lead to devastating effects against German armored forces during the Battle of the Bulge, most notably during the fighting for Krinkelt-Rocherath (aka the Twin Villages) where of the 139 German AFVs knocked out, 37 were from bazookas. The balance of 49 and 35 came from M4 tanks and M10 tank destroyers respectively.
When talking about American Anti-Tank development you forgot to mention the top secret Anti-Tank rock. Yes they tried using rocks to jam tank tracks, didn’t really work though!
@SlavicCelery
2 жыл бұрын
Clearly it was a development of the French Rock that Ian covered a few years back.
@kirbyculp3449
2 жыл бұрын
Well, Sgt Rock was expert at shooting his Colt 1911 down the gun barrels of tanks.
You have to give the Bazooka Shooter the balls to use one. When in 1944 he wouldn't have seen a German Tank from the City or town where he came from. There just wasn't a quick way to show movie or photos. These were rare to see even in public life. He would only have a basic education which would be relevant to a Primary school kid. They were only in their 20's. Then one day in battle out in a field he hears a Tractor bellowing exhaust noise and screeching tracks near a road or Farm!
Rocket PLUS Explosive. What's NOT to love? 😉