Did Hitler Cancel the Sturmgewehr?
It is often said that Hitler personally cancelled the Sturmgewehr development...could that really be true?
Yes! He actually nixed the program three separate times, and the German Army General Staff continued the project behind his back. They knew the rifle was what the Wehrmacht desperately needed if it was to have any hope of victory in the East, and they were determined to bring it to fruition. He did ultimately relent, and approved it to replace the Mauser K98k in early 1944 - but by that time a great deal of opportunity had been lost. Today we will delve into the details of just how the program developed as it pertains to his approval...
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@roadsweeper1
Жыл бұрын
Ian, what about all your European / UK fans!!!! I'd love to have a chance to win that, but we aren't allowed full bore semi autos in the UK!!!
@michelguevara151
Жыл бұрын
unfortunately I can't enter the competition as a frenchman in france ..
@angelogarcia2189
Жыл бұрын
I entered and bought that $50 mat. When does my PTR44 get here???
@millenniumman7461
Жыл бұрын
THE 12 VIRTUES OF THE RESPONSIBLE GUN OWNER: HUMILITY: The quality of having a modest or low view of one's own importance. It involves the recognition of one's limitations, imperfections, and fallibility, and the willingness to acknowledge and learn from one's mistakes. A humble person is not overly concerned with status, recognition, or personal gain, but instead focuses on serving others and contributing to the greater good. TEMPERANCE: The quality of having restraint and moderation in one's emotions, behaviors, and desires. Temperance is an important virtue as it helps people maintain self-control and avoid impulsive or harmful actions. GRATITUDE: A feeling or expression of thankfulness or appreciation for something that one has received or experienced. It is a positive emotion that can be directed towards others or towards life in general, and is often associated with feelings of joy, contentment, and well-being. Gratitude can also be a practice, in which individuals consciously focus on the good things in their lives and cultivate a sense of appreciation for them. SOBRIETY: The quality of being free from the effects of alcohol or drugs. It can also be used more broadly to describe a lifestyle or attitude that emphasizes moderation, restraint, and self-control. MORAL DUTY: The obligation to act in a certain way that is consistent with moral principles or values. It is the responsibility that one has to do what is right and ethical, regardless of personal gain or benefit. PATRIOTISM: Patriotism generally refers to the love, devotion, and loyalty that a person feels toward their country. It often includes a sense of pride in one's country, its history, culture, and achievements. MINDFULNESS: The state of being present and fully engaged in the current moment, paying attention to one's thoughts, feelings, and surroundings. It involves being non-judgmental and accepting of what is happening in the present moment. Having situational awareness. CONSIDERATION: Involves taking into account the needs and feelings of others before making a decision or taking action. It is the act of being thoughtful and showing regard for the well-being of others. COURAGE: Involves taking action to protect others in the face of danger or adversity, and being willing to stand up for what is right, even when it is difficult or unpopular. It requires both physical and moral strength, as well as a willingness to take risks and face challenges in order to protect others. RESILIENCE: Refers to the ability of an individual or a system to recover from difficult or challenging circumstances. It involves adapting to adversity, maintaining a positive outlook, and bouncing back from setbacks. Resilience can apply to various areas of life, such as personal relationships, health, work, and business. It is not the absence of difficulty or hardship, but rather the ability to cope with and overcome them. Developing resilience can help individuals navigate difficult situations and emerge stronger and more capable. SELF-DISCIPLINE: Self-discipline refers to the ability to control one's behavior, emotions, and desires in order to achieve a goal or fulfill a responsibility. PRUDENCE: Someone who is prudent carefully considers all the available information before making a decision or forming an opinion. This involves being open-minded, objective, and patient in gathering and evaluating evidence, and avoiding hasty or impulsive conclusions. Such a person would be able to weigh the pros and cons of different options, assess the potential risks and benefits, and make a well-informed and reasonable judgment.
@Mr-6666
Жыл бұрын
Why did guns like the mauser c96 (pistol caliber carbines) became popular in ww1, then disappear in ww2?
KZread demonetisation bot sweating seeing both guns and Hitler on one video 😂
@FirstLast_Nba
Жыл бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂😂
@judsongaiden9878
Жыл бұрын
Without being able to analyze context, even, because Ian is clearly showing what a dunce Hitler was (one of the reasons his own generals wanted him dead).
@evanl8656
Жыл бұрын
@@judsongaiden9878 His generals were pretty stupid too, thought they'd just take Moscow and win as if the Russians would surrender like the French did even though they didn't when Napoleon took Moscow. Hitler says go to the Caucasus and get the oil but his generals are stupid as shit and think tanks and planes run on rainbows and magic. Such a complete joke of an army. Hitler was right about the supply issues too, STGs had problems getting enough ammo and magazines to be used consistently. The box magazines was too expensive to make reliably on that scale at that point. Look how expensive and uncommon SVT, G43, and STG mags are today compared to Garand clips. The STG is a very impressive gun for the time but for an army the scale of the Wehrmacht it was impractical. It might've been better for a smaller highly trained army like the Swiss or a Nordic country but not a several million man army on a 700 Mile front, it just wasn't enough to make a difference.
@vh1775
Жыл бұрын
@Ferro Equus really hope not
@aaron4820
Жыл бұрын
surely you mean salivating instead of sweating.
The "ammo transition in the middle of a war" was a legitimate reason to refuse the idea.
@johngaither9263
Жыл бұрын
The M-1 Garand was originally designed for the .276 Pedersen cartridge. That was changed due to all the .30 ammunition and other guns on hand and ready.
@Willy_Tepes
Жыл бұрын
@@johngaither9263 And this was done by a nation that had very few supply and production problems. Replacing your main firearms caliber in the middle of a war is not a good idea, but in this case it was such a revolutionary firearm.
@_ArsNova
Жыл бұрын
Not when the weapon is so clearly vastly superior, and the advantage is inherently linked to the different ammunition. It'd be like refusing to switch to smokeless powder because "we already have all this black powder ammunition!" Logistical headache? Probably. Colossal battlefield advantage? Definitely.
@Willy_Tepes
Жыл бұрын
@@_ArsNova Though Adolf had extensive military experience, he was mainly a politician. Logistics are more important at that level, so the argument was a valid one. He is not the first one to make such a mistake. Remember all those conversions of muzzle loaders to breach loading? It probably made sense at the political level. Or just consider if a nation had jumped on the pinfire thing instead of waiting for centerfire cartridges. Hindsight is 20-20.
@_ArsNova
Жыл бұрын
@@Willy_Tepes I don't disagree that Hitler was certainly NOT a military tactician, and military logistics is often vastly overlooked. However the benefits really did outweigh negatives here. Was it an ideal time to shift ammo production? Of course not. But the huge advantage was undeniable, even to Hitler, a man who repeatedly did everything he could to squash the project.
On the other hand Hitler had to deal with people like Ferdinand Porsche being told repeatedly "no composite powertrains, definitely none" and *still* putting forward his Tiger prototype that used literally tons of strategically vital copper for a petrol-electric drive (I think a St Chamond must have scared Ferdy as a child) The antics of the Nazi industrial oligarchs are amazing to this day.
@MandoWookie
Жыл бұрын
The myth of 'Nazi efficiency' dies quickly when you actually start digging into how they actually operated. It wasn't until they were actually getting their cities firebombed flat that they actually started trying to do all the manufacturing efficiencies the US did by default.
@kaltaron1284
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, the Tiger P and later Elefant/Ferdinand are more testbeds for awesome ideas than practical weapons.
@fifthbusiness2591
Жыл бұрын
The Minister of Armaments and War Production was an architect, because Hitler liked him, not because he had any experience running a factory, or supply management. There is a reason the allies gave up plans to assassinate Hitler.
@jdl9679
Жыл бұрын
Lots of drugs gossip and infighting sums up ww2 German politics
@classicalextremism
Жыл бұрын
Hitler had to push them and the officer core back throughout the war. There were a lot of good technical specialists that did not see big picture problems - like logistics. Putting more troops on the ground than you can feed is a nonstarter - but Madman Hman wouldn't let them do it! Insane!
The whole "let's not switch calibers in the middle of a war" thing is kind of a more important point than most people realize. Especially since even the people proposing the gun didn't know how good it would actually end up being.
@FishTheJim
Жыл бұрын
I was going to say that exact thing but keeping an eye on improving weapons should have still been looked at. This is something we are still dealing with to this day.
@fleebogazeezig6642
Жыл бұрын
Kinda ironic that all 3 major Axis powers had trouble with this (Italy with the switch from the 6mm Carcano to the 7mm Carcano, Japan with the switch from 6mm Arisaka to 7mm Airsaka, and Germany with The 8mm Mauser to the 8mm Kurtz) although Germany had this problem to a lesser extent.
@Lykyk
Жыл бұрын
@@FishTheJim I wrote it in another comment already, but: "Instead of having generals and theorists write long paragraphs about why adopting a new gun and cartridge in the middle of a war was actually a really good idea they probably should've just let him have a conversation with the soldiers who actually used it in the troop exercises that tested the gun. If you read a lot about it you kinda get the feeling that he ended up trusting common soldiers more than his generals as the years went on and stuff like them refusing to upgun their tanks [before the invasion of France like he ordered instead of during the invasion of Russia] was probably one of the reasons for it."
@user-sz1ob7ok5e
Жыл бұрын
However, the American idea of having semi-automatic rifles, carbines and submachine guns (3 types of ammunition) was even more controversial if these carbines were (in theory) for rear troops. Theoretically, they could concentrate all their efforts on light automatic weapons with a slightly more powerful cartridge. Well, as the saying goes: "Who will forbid the rich?" ;)
@Treblaine
Жыл бұрын
Yes, it's a logistical challenge but it was the least worst option considering the manpower shortage and the need to increase firepower. If anything 8x57mm would never be redundant, the MG42 would be depended on more which is where most of the 8x57mm rounds were being used anyway, the Mauser just couldn't use up 8x57mm at a high rate anyway. It's not a bad thing for the Germans to use up ammo quicker, they NEEDED more firepower! Which is using ammunition quicker. It really would have been a nightmare scenario if the Germans had fully embraced assault rifles from 1942, though the Allied victory was inevitable (fuel, food, industry, Nuclear bombs) it would be with such devastating losses and after much longer period of time.
I like to believe the official SS weapon requirements were, in fact "Make it more Wolfenstein, and belt fed for more DAKA"
@PsychoDad89
Жыл бұрын
those were Himmlers own words
@ComicGladiator
Жыл бұрын
If only they'd painted all of their vehicles red, they'd have won the war.
@comradeurod9805
9 ай бұрын
@@ComicGladiator300 mph tiger II, if they had just painted it red
Hearing Ian refer to firepower as dakka put a smile on my face.
@skittycat213
Жыл бұрын
WAAAGH! MORE DAKKA!
@TheRogueWolf
Жыл бұрын
Ditto for the _Wolfenstein_ reference.
@NeedsMoDakka
Жыл бұрын
Nice
@flannagan3799
Жыл бұрын
Ian is one of us
@giadalussu1922
Жыл бұрын
What's HAPPENING, first the pro gamer move, now dakka, want a willd time line
Hitler: "Nah, too complicated"; Hitler, later on: "Let's deploy the Maus!"
@bezahltersystemtroll5055
9 ай бұрын
i picture him saying that in the "Release the Kraken!" tone 😆
@alecmiller2270
9 ай бұрын
lollll and jets
@nickrollstuhlfahrerson8659
5 ай бұрын
@@alecmiller2270To be fair jet engines are not much more complicated than regular piston aviation engines, it’s just that weren’t aswell researched and industrialized.
@AnimeSunglasses
21 күн бұрын
@@nickrollstuhlfahrerson8659 they aren't much more complicated in operation, but they definitely are to manufacture
Ian mentioned "MacArthur's excuse", which was that the US had so much surplus 30-06 ammo left over from WWI that it made no sense to adopt the M1 Garand in .276 Pederson. According to "Hatcher's Notebook", all of the WWI ammo was gone by 1936, the year the M1 Garand was introduced, so "MacArthur's excuse" was not valid. Ironically, .276 Pederson was less expensive and used fewer strategic resources (copper and lead) than 30-06, so it ended up costing the US quite a bit more money in the long run.
@kiwigrunt330
Жыл бұрын
That is exactly what I got out of the book. There was also a differnece between M1 and M2 ammo. Imagine an M1 Garand and Bren LMG combo in .276P.
@thhseeking
Жыл бұрын
Yes, it wasn't "NATO" that wanted a full-power cartridge, it was the U.S.. European countries were looking at getting an intermediate cartridge. The FAL was apparently originally meant to use an intermediate cartridge, but had to be redesigned to use the 7.62x51mm round. I imagine that there were more than a few words said when the U.S. decided to bring in the 5.56mm round :P
@jfess1911
Жыл бұрын
@@thhseeking Yes. The US brass had decided that their grandfathers had perfect performance with the 1906 load and essentially replicated it with the slightly shorter 7.62x51. The test of the world disageed.
Having just finished Volker Ullrich's 2 part biography of Hitler, this sort of "work around HItler's whims" thing happened all the time and got more common post-1939.
@_ArsNova
Жыл бұрын
Just a byproduct of Führerprinzip, where everything the leader thinks or believes essentially becomes law. The same way Hitler ordered his troops to 'just stop retreating' in the east, forcing generals like Walter Model to have to hatch convoluted schemes just to perform elementary strategic withdrawals.
@cash142
Жыл бұрын
Almost as if he was a pretty reasonable guy and not some irrational maniac 🤔
@LRRPFco52
Жыл бұрын
@@cash142 Or propped up to destroy Germany from within...?
@cash142
Жыл бұрын
@@LRRPFco52 Weimar Republic was doing that just fine on its own.
@LRRPFco52
Жыл бұрын
@@cash142 Did they effectively almost erase the prime age males of Germany in 5 years?
Interesting that this gun was redesignated MP to hide its true nature from Hitler, yet the Soviets later deliberately designed the AK as a submachine gun replacement and had the SKS as a rifle replacement. Of course, the Soviets later realized the AK could do both and adopted it universally, but it is an interesting observation. I remember Ian in his AK vs. Stg-44 video stated that the Germans viewed the Stg-44 as a rifle that can do the role of an SMG while the Soviets viewed the AK as an SMG that can do the role of a rifle, or something to that effect.
@LucYGaming_
Жыл бұрын
Exactly! I remember that video, it was an interesting one, sad it had to go
@bravo_cj
Жыл бұрын
In fact the Chinese exactly called their AK-47 (a legit one with the original Soviet data pack, not just some random 762*39 AK) an SMG. The official name of the Type 56 "Assault" is actually "Model 1956 Submachine Gun (1956年式冲锋枪)" 😂
@smith7602
Жыл бұрын
I interpreted it as make the STG a faster Kar98 while the AK was make a bigger PPSh. The mid point between the two happened to be the assault rifle.
@LRRPFco52
Жыл бұрын
It should have been named Selektiver Feuerkarabiner (SFk-42/43/44). It's not a machinegun (like a Maxim, M1919, or MG42) submachinegun (MP38, MP40, Thompson, or PPSh), or automatic rifle (Chaucer, BAR). Most firearms of that time that were machineguns were automatic fire mode only. Most SMGs except the M1921 and Kp31 were open bolt, full auto only, so putting "machine" in the nomenclature of the MKb42 only made sense if it was full auto fire mode only. Select-Fire Carbine more accurately describes the weapon, without adding a purpose in the name like "Sturm", since soldiers will use their assigned weapons for both the defense and offense.
@capcamouflagepatterni6162
Жыл бұрын
@@bravo_cj It's also interesting that the Soviets realized the AK could do everything the SKS could and more fairly quickly, discontinuing it's production in 1959 in favor of the AKM while the Chinese stuck with the original Soviet doctrine (albeit with the partial switch to the Type 63) until the 1979 Sino-Vietnamese war where they faced the Vietnamese who had also realized the AK was superior to the SKS during the Vietnam war and had almost completely equipped their front line units with AKs, ironically most of them from China, as well as M16s captured from the ARVN. China quickly realized their mistake and began development of the Type 81.
Speaking of Sturmgewehr, I visited a firearms/weapons exhibit at the historic Idaho State Penitentiary yesterday. It was the type of place I expected Ian to show up at to examine something in their back room. Yes, they had a Sturmgewehr along with a Stoner M63 that was Stoner’s personal rifle. Cool place, even more cool because I had no idea it was there. It’s in a re-purposed building within the penitentiary walls, the tour guide casually pointed it out at the tour’s conclusion.
@WALTERBROADDUS
Жыл бұрын
How did they come about acquiring those? Odd weapons for a prison collection.
@haroldburrow4363
Жыл бұрын
@@WALTERBROADDUS Idaho
@larsdejong7396
Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this utterly irrelevant piece of information.
@DunsonDrums
Жыл бұрын
I went there in 2017 and was expecting a collection of shanks/prison guard weapons. When I walked through the door, I was shocked at the displays, similar to a museum you'd see in Europe or at Dragon Man's.
@WALTERBROADDUS
Жыл бұрын
@@haroldburrow4363 that doesn't quite answer the question why a Idaho prison has these items?
As far as I read into the book "Sturmgewehr 44 Vorgänger, Entwicklung und Fertigung der revolutionärsten Infanteriewaffe" by Dieter Handrich the reason for the renaming from MKb to MP was following incident: The MKb was rejected, but moustache man requested other weapons, one of those weapons was a sub machine gun with better range. And some coordinators thought, what about this MKb thing? Let's skip this "all soldiers get one" thing and just use is as a SMG replacement. The MKb guys were happy because they were able to continue the development and the coordinators were happy because they thought to present moustache man an improved MP.
@_ArsNova
Жыл бұрын
Only in German? Or are there translations?
@okaro6595
Жыл бұрын
What I understood the original plan was to replace all weapons including MG34/42 with the MKbs. Then they switched the program to more modest to just add SMGs.
@Grasyl
Жыл бұрын
@@_ArsNova As far as I know the book is the original German version of "Sturmgewehr! From Firepower to Striking Power" were I think Ian got his information from. Therefore I'm wondering why his story sound a little bit different. I don't own the English version, so I can't tell if its because of a variation or a mistranslation or something else.
@kiwigrunt330
Жыл бұрын
@@Grasyl I don't own the German version, partly because it is next to unobtanium and expensive, and partly because my German is far too rusty to bother. It may be the case that a lot was lost in translation and the fact that the English version would have been heavily edited by Collector Grade.
@Grasyl
Жыл бұрын
@@okaro6595 The original plan was to replace all weapon expect the MGs. But moustache man prevented this. What he wanted was more reach to keep "the Russians" at bay. Therefore he ordered a semiautomatic rifle with a scope for every soldier and later a SMG with ~300m range. The rifle would have been the G41(w) later G43/K43 with ZF-41 and the 300m SMG would be the MKb.42(h) later MP43/1 but moustache man declared the MKb.42(h) to be to clumsy and big. The idea to replace the MGs in the lMG role was a later one. The sMG role was not in question. All MG34/42 would have been removed from squad level and moved to company level as SMG on tripos.
"Belt-fed-individual-intermediate-cartridge-assault-blasters" Sounds pretty dope, not gonna lie.
@killer3000ad
Жыл бұрын
They just described a belt fed light machine gun
@John-un3lj
Жыл бұрын
@@killer3000ad Not if it does not contain the word 'blaster' it ain't.
@Getoffmycloud53
Жыл бұрын
WAAAGH!
@948320z
Жыл бұрын
This is almost word-for-word what an average democrat thinks an AR15 is lol
@bom2717
Жыл бұрын
Mini MG42's
Funny that it ended up being the first edition of what almost every soldier carries today lol
Nazis and their superweapons/experimental weapons could be a multi-part series all on their own.
@danieldykstra3079
Жыл бұрын
have you heard of the History Channel?
@donkideck7180
Жыл бұрын
@@danieldykstra3079 thats all fake propaganda stuff to make Hitler look bad
@alun7006
Жыл бұрын
@@danieldykstra3079 they're bloody awful. Coming out with deliberate nonsense like "ZOMG the Ho229 was a stealth jet in 1945!!1one" which is patent bollocks to anyone with the most basic understanding of the timelines of the technology. Actively ahistorical. Never mind all their ancient aliens shit.
@ComicGladiator
Жыл бұрын
@@danieldykstra3079 I think he means the real ones, not UFOs and moon lasers.
@comradeurod9805
9 ай бұрын
@@ComicGladiatorbut UFOs and moon lasers are way radical
They really pulled the classic little kid/parent argument of, "Hey, can we have this?" "No" "Hey, how about now?" "I said no." "Heeeeeyyy....so....about the thing." "I said NO and it's final!" "You know, they have a good point, just do it." "*sigh* Okay, fine. Do the thing." "YAY!"
I made a face when he mentioned thoughts of replacing the MG-42 with this. But then I thought about it. I mean, in modern times, the AR has become so universal that it can be anything from a standard assault rifle, to a compact carbine, to a DMR, to a light machine gun. It would actually be interesting seeing more specialized STG models, had it evolved like current assault rifles.
@DiggingForFacts
Жыл бұрын
Wasn't that basically what they had originally intended for the Marine Corps with the M27 IAR? Have a heavy barrel so individual troops can provide more sustained fire in the absence and fill the role of the 249 in a pinch?
@temper44
Жыл бұрын
The German infantry squad was based around the machine gun, so it would be very tricky to change tactics in the middle of war.
@nutyyyy
Жыл бұрын
Basically, everyone tried to do that with select fire rifles. The M14 was supposed to replace the M1 and BAR, and the M16 was intended to do the same. But each time, they eventually reintroduced a SAW.
@alecmiller2270
9 ай бұрын
they kinda did with the bent barrel attatchment. woulda been cool if they slapped a scope and bi pod tho
@nomnomxddd7341
11 күн бұрын
@@temper44 exactly, the German doctrine dictates that the squad will stand as long as the MG is operational Your squad can be wiped out except the MG and it will still be a squad but only our MG can get shot and your whole squad is dispersed The MG was more important than even the SL
I'm not even a gun fan, and although I grew up in the North of Ireland during the 80s and 90s, and _saw_ a wide variety of firearms on a daily basis for most of my young life, I never developed any great love of guns. however, the history which Iain imparts into his videos makes the most fascinating videos.😊 I love watching your work, Iain. all the best, Chief.
@grzegorzbrzeczyszykiewic3338
Жыл бұрын
since you lived in north ireland in the 80's/90's i got a feeling those werent guns from a gunstore lol
@joshmitchell1002
Жыл бұрын
Strange to see you on a firearms channel.
@mpetersen6
Жыл бұрын
@@joshmitchell1002 One can appreciate the engineering behind a firearm. Or be interested in its history. One can even participate in and enjoy shooting sports. One can appreciate a firearm in its performance. But love a firearm? I reserve the word love for my wife, my kids and family.
@alecmiller2270
9 ай бұрын
guns are so interesting(cuz im a pyro)
Did Luger cancel Hitler?
@riseld4
Жыл бұрын
I believe that was Walther
@bosewicht2389
Жыл бұрын
@@riseld4Jesse
@anditcomesbacktoyou
Жыл бұрын
Was a Walther as matter of fact
@dge4560
Жыл бұрын
Walther the butler did it
@AllanFolm
Жыл бұрын
Walter cancelled Hitler.
Thank you for your your detailed look at this. You are one of the few firearms historians that are around anymore. One of the good guys. Me and mine watch you often.
I’d like that gun, but I’m not buying a $49 coffee mug for a chance to win it.
@drg5352
Жыл бұрын
Yep.
Great video on a fascinating firearm, with a lot of historical details I wasn’t wholly aware of. Thanks Ian!
Ian, that was a small arms acquisition analysis at the Master level. Thanks!
Kennedy and McNamara thought the same way as Hitler when the AR-15/M-16 was first proposed to stream line weapons procurement, staying with the over costly and time consuming M-14.. It was the troops in the field requesting more M-16's that changed their minds..
"Wolfenstein level stuff" is a turn of phrase I wasn't expecting. Hmm, who dubbed it Sturmgewehr, I ponder...
Sadly as much as I would love to enter, I don't think it'd get safely through customs around here. But thank you for the video non the less Ian^^
@blacky2397
Жыл бұрын
Same with me, hopefully they can make some sort of deal for these problems!
Keep up the good work Ian! Your content is some of my favorite
My wife got me one when they first came to the United States. It came in a wooden box like the ones the Nazis would have shipped it in. My wife got it for me for Father's.
@burtdanams4426
11 ай бұрын
Based
@vornamenachname989
2 ай бұрын
Definetely a keeper
Hitler: I was a combat veteran of WWI who was awarded the Iron Cross! No one can tell me what is the best infantry rifle! Himmler: I was a chicken farmer with a club foot. If my field officers think this is a good rifle, I'll take their word for it. It's a weird situation when Himmler can play the role of the reasonable man.
@florinivan6907
Жыл бұрын
Himmler was never just a chicken farmer. He was an agronomy student. This is just wartime Allied propaganda. This is the equivalent of calling a construction engineer a worker. Its disparaging to the profession. Yes he dealt with animals and birds on a farm but only as part of his college level studies for a year. Read up on the guy he was solid middle class. And by the way Himmler would have never called himself just a chicken farmer in a disparaging way. He was always proud of going to college in an era when that was still unusual.
@christineshotton824
Жыл бұрын
@@florinivan6907 Somebody needs a sense of humor.
So can we expect a belt-fed StG44 upgrade in the next Sniper Elite game?
@Calvin_Coolage
Жыл бұрын
Or a Gold order weapon for Enlisted. If it was actually made anyways.
@KA-dx2kz
Жыл бұрын
Was hoping for a 8mm mauser belt-fed
In my time in the Dutch army, my personal weapons were a FN FAL 7.62 and an UZI 9 mm. Later in my life, I had the luck of shooting a Sturmgewehr in the wood behind the farm of a Czech friend of mine, his grandfather captured the gun at the end of the war. I must say that it is in full auto very controllable. At least compared to the FAL.
Another important event was that these things were air dropped into the Korsun Pocket and the soldiers quickly figured out how to use them to keep the momentum of an assault which is impossible with a bolt action rifle. The realized they could fire AND move all the way to the target instead of having to wait for the MG42 to reposition. You can argue the StG-44 was key in the night breakout which took the Soviets by surprise initially.
Of course, after WWII, the US had Rene Studler, who was militantly opposed to intermediate caliber cartridges. He seemed to have most of the same reactions as Hitler.
@ForgottenWeapons
Жыл бұрын
The argument is a bit different when you are starting with semiauto rifles instead of bolt actions...
Another excellent video! Thanks again, Ian!
I love, love, love your history videos! Please give us more of these. ❤❤❤
nice video. Love this video where you go back in history and try to see what people had to deal with and live through.
Fantastic work as always. Much appreciated!
I encountered a gentleman who owned a Hanel some years back at the Big Reno Gun Show. When chatting with him I mistakenly ID the gun as an STG-44 but he was quick to correct me that it was actually a Haenal - Schmeiiser MKb.42(H). He had an interesting story about the gun (recovered by a US GI during the Battle of the Bulge), and he allowed me to handle and take photos of it. I knew that Larry Vickers was in the market for one and as it turned out the gun was indeed for sale to the right buyer. I passed the owner's contact info on to Larry, but I don't believe a deal was ever made as the asking price was not within Larry's budget. One thing about the Haenal that I distinctly remember was the heft. I was far heavier than I expected even though it was a stamped sheet metal gun. My little wife also hefted the Haenel and she commented that it was far heavier than it appeared. This chance encounter still stands out as a truly unique highlight for me as a WWII arms fan. - Steve Gibbons - US Night Vision Corporation
18:18 never thought I would hear Ian make a Warhammer reference
@stephen9894
Жыл бұрын
Immediately following a Wolfenstein one
@kingchirpa
Жыл бұрын
Needs more dAkka. I've also heard the chieftain use that reference too.
@rainman2222
Жыл бұрын
@@kingchirpa chieftain admitted that he played imperial guard a while back, so it kind of makes sense
From a firearms development perspective it would have been interesting if it would have been adopted earlier. I could see the germans developing an open bolt model with a long heavy barrel and a bipod a la RPK
It reminds me a bit of the story of the Me 262 and Hitler's intervention of it being a used as the Blitzbomber and the Luftwaffe's (largely successful) attempts to work around that
@mrkus-nc7od
6 ай бұрын
Should of been a Fighter 😂 but he made it a bomber , ? See what meth does to people.
“It’s a bit more complicated” sums up most things in life.
That was riveting! Thank you very much, sir.
A good presentation as usual, Ian. The US didn't adopt an assault rifle until the Vietnam War when they realized that US soldiers and marines were seriously outgunned when facing the VC and NVA troops in Vietnam jungles. US troops on the Western Front in World War II never came up against massed numbers of German troops all armed with StG44's like the Russian troops on the eastern front.
Whatever the case, any well studied history, that's explained in audio or video, is just awesomeness itself.
A few years ago at the CLA game fair in the UK one of the major gun manufacturers was showing completed apprentice projects. One was a fully working reduced size STG44 in 22lr. OMG it was a beautiful.
PSA are in a pre-production of making the “clone accurate” STG 44. There making them in 55.6, 7.62, 300 black out, and it’s original round 8mm. Will be cool if you can do a side by side comparison between a WW2 and PSA STG 44 in the future.
Unfortunately we are going to have to relearn the benefits of intermediate cartridges after the introduction of the fury.
@zedhiro6131
Жыл бұрын
Is that why they were shooting 8mm mauser, 30-06, and 303 British at one another?
"We were just following orders." "Didn't you all ignore direct orders from your commander in chief three separate times on a single project?"
Stellar work as always good sir.
That's a very attractive gun. Thank you for bringing it and the history for us to see and learn.
@bezahltersystemtroll5055
9 ай бұрын
would be a perfect looking gun if not for that unaesthetic buttstock IMO
BTW Gewehr could mean almost anything although these days it is mostly used to describe long handheld guns but to the present day a German soldier's Seitengewehr (lit.: side arm) is his bayonet. Generally Gewehre fall into one of two types: Büchsen (rifled) or Flinten (smooth bore).
You don't do many contests. When you do have one, it is no holds barred. WOW!
Great video Ian, even if I was already familiar with the material! Any books you'd recommend on the subject? I'm specifically interested in the early troop trials of the Mkb 42 and MP 43.
@ForgottenWeapons
Жыл бұрын
Definitely the best one is "Sturmgewehr!" by Hans-Dieter Handrich, published by Collector Grade. Get the second (expanded) edition.
@_ArsNova
Жыл бұрын
@@ForgottenWeapons Thanks so much!
@roygardiner2229
Жыл бұрын
@@ForgottenWeapons Ian, I am not a gun nerd but I AM interested in the history of their development. Can you recommend a book that explains that, and defines gun categories?
@kiwigrunt330
Жыл бұрын
@@roygardiner2229 The introductory chapters of an older copy of "Small Arms of the World" may be a good start. If you are in the US you should be able to pick one up fairly cheaply.
@roygardiner2229
Жыл бұрын
@@kiwigrunt330 Thanks very much! I appreciate that!
Here's an interesting thought. I wonder if production simplification was a factor for the adoption of the MP44 to replace the MP40 in any way, aka producing more standard 8mm bullets and less 9mm bullets? Was there standardization of bullet weights/sizes between the standard 8mm Mauser and 8mm Kurtz where even though the shell case of 8mm Kurtz itself was a new round? Was there at least an ability for the new cartridge to at least use the same 8mm bullets they already had and were producing?
I certainly enjoyed this video mate. I don't have much practical experience with any firearms but what I do have is a certain thirst for this sort of historical knowledge. I do hope you pop more of these armchair videos in the future, cheers.
Almost. When he heard that soldiers loved the emidate firepower the weapons had, he ordered rushed production. Though they were never fully tested and had stoppage problems out in the field. They where the precursor to the assault rifle.
I've always wanted to know more about this! I'm far too lazy to look it up though. So, once again, thank you Ian for reading books so I don't have to.
If they could get Ian on Drunk History to tell a story like this while sipping on glasses of Scotch then I could die a happy man
@OspreyKnight
Жыл бұрын
please let this happen
Thanks for the video and your research. Many excellent facts revealed here :)
Okay, I need to know more about this MPSS-42...
One of the coolest weapons ever created.
With regards to the lack of grenade launching ability, I'm sure that would have been developed had the rifle had more time before the war ended. The alternate-WWII anime series World Witches features StG 44s fitted with underbarrel launchers derived from the Leuchtpistole/Sturmpistole, not especially redesigned besides removing the pistol grip; the Brave Witches IMFDB page has some examples (I say semi-selfishly, as I built all those pages lol). I've seen photoshops of similar setups too, and it's kind of a shame it didn't actually happen, as it's a remarkably similar setup to what we now think of as the standard way to give rifles grenade launching capability (underbarrel launcher).
@williamzk9083
Жыл бұрын
Given that the Panzerfaust and Panzerschrek were coming into use and that probably reduced the need for grenade launcher. A StG 44 modified to fire a grenade would probably only have about 40% of the range. I'm thinking the 12 man squad would end up still with the MG42 maybe 1 or two G.43 with the rest of the squad StG44.
@davidschaadt3460
Жыл бұрын
And earlier versions had a threaded muzzle.
@jamesrussell5196
5 ай бұрын
Well hitler was an idiot so that’s good
Awesome clip, thanks Ian.
Love the Atgeirr in the background
Pro gamer move: Standard issue FG-42's
@brettnelson6710
Ай бұрын
They only made 8000 lol 😆
Caught it just as it uploaded for once
"A lot more of these new rifles!" "What rifles?!" "Well, at that time, the cat was pretty much out of the bag."
Always fun hearing Ian teach gun , history need stuff !
When is PSA gonna release their STG44?
Wait so the SS got Sturmgewehre and came back asking for a belt fed version. So basically M249 SAW? They really were ahead of their time in small arms development.
Every time Ian pauses to point at the gun, I think, "Elbonia ... I'm talking to You."
That was a nice clarification of an interesting story.
To correct your ending, Ian. Most of NATO wanted to adopt an intermediate cartridge from the start & the US forced 7.62x51mm on us, only to abandon it 10 years later when the US figured out intermediate cartridge “assault rifles” were the way to go after all.
@claytonmachine12
Жыл бұрын
Uhh. For its day 7.62x51 WAS an intermediate cartridge. Hell half the point was using advancements in powder to make a smaller cartridge with the same ballistics of 30-06. All the documentation of its development states as much. And the cartridge NATO liked wasn't much better. Like .280 Enfield is about the same size (in length) to .308. There's not much difference there. All you have to do is even look at the Magazine for the original trials EM1/2 and FAL. Those are the size of M14 mags. No matter WHICH round we chose, it was eventually going to be replaced by a true intermediate cartridge later on.
@nicholsliwilson
Жыл бұрын
@@claytonmachine12 LOL! You claim 7.62x51 is an intermediate cartridge, then in the very next sentence explain that it’s a full power cartridge. 😂 The physical dimensions of the cartridge tell you nothing about chamber pressure, muzzle energy, velocities etc. Don’t comment if you don’t know what you’re talking about kid. Although starting your nonsense with “Uhh” did make me literally LOL, thanks for the laugh.
@claytonmachine12
Жыл бұрын
@@nicholsliwilson No I explain the purpose of the round. Go read the documentation from the day. The US Ordinance Department LITTERALY calls it an intermediate cartridge. And an intermediate cartridge by definition does not need to be weaker. Than an OLDER. OUTDATED. cartridge, using OUTDATED powder. Again. which was part of the point of the program. An intermediate cartridge is a smaller lighter cartridge. Which .308 IS to 30-06.
@therealgod9859
Жыл бұрын
And now we’re going back to a large cartridge (6.8x51mm)
@claytonmachine12
Жыл бұрын
@@nicholsliwilson And yes. The size tells me nothing about things like chamber pressure etc. So if we go by your thoughts. the .280 Brit must be WEAKER than .308. Since you scoff at an intermediate cartridge being ballistic similar to a full size rifle cartridge. So then .280 brit is WEAK than .308, while being the same size and weight. Your not making the case for .280 with that argument.
Amazing this video is not restricted by my company user filter hahah great work with the community guidelines Ian
Can there be an updated video on the gorat 06h? It was basically the stg45
i'm glad there is now a good central source for this, when i was first researching this 15 year ago i kept finding all sorts of nonsense or contradictory information (in part due to how infested forums where back then with "those" guys" and it was very time/effort consuming sifting trough the bad info to get the more credible parts
I read somewhere that early versions of the weapon were air-dropped into the Demyansk and/or Kholm pockets in the winter of ‘41-‘42, and that the survivors of those pockets credited their survival to the effectiveness of those weapons. If that’s true the guns were probably the Walther versions, which would be pretty interesting.
@ForgottenWeapons
Жыл бұрын
It is possible that some of the very first test batch of MKb-42(H) rifles were air-dropped into Cholm, but there is no hard evidence proving it. The Soviets claimed to have captured one there (s/n 505), but they say it was taken a few months before it could have been there.
@LuvBorderCollies
Жыл бұрын
@@ForgottenWeapons Yes, just as the Russians today repeatedly claim destroying more NATO weapon systems before any entered Ukraine. They must have fortune tellers in the Krem.
STG44 It was the beginning of "Assault rifle" Look at the appearance of it. It has been produced since 1944. Its design is beautiful that transcends time.
@highjumpstudios2384
Жыл бұрын
Federov avtomat would like a word with you.
@454FatJack
Жыл бұрын
@@highjumpstudios2384 Imp Russian gun Full size rifle no intermediate like MP 43/44 Stgw. Japanese 6,5mm not 7,62 X54R
@noobsaibot7006
Жыл бұрын
@@highjumpstudios2384cei rigotti says hi
@stc3145
Жыл бұрын
@@highjumpstudios2384 Not an intermediate cartridge rifle.
@Seb-Storm
Жыл бұрын
@@highjumpstudios2384 that's more of a "battle rifle" similar to the BAR
Awesome video! Cheers!
As much as I'd love to enter the contest, even if you're willing to ship internationally the PTR-44 will be so illegal for me to own north of 49. But it's a fun way to drive engagement!
It's too bad I can't enter, being Canadian.
this is that gun in the first ww2 themes fps game you played that you picked up and never dropped til the end of the game
Full value of the Stg could only be realised after changes in infantry tactics. They are substantially different with select fire availability, even compared to semi-auto rifle equipped units. Obviously replacing the MG42 with Stg isn't sensible given the general purpose functionality and belt-fed, quick change barrel allowing for continuous metal rain on the enemy even beyond the effective range of the Stg. The Stg works better with the MG42 by providing substantial supporting fire while an MG is being moved to capitalise on gains during an engagement.
Great video, thanks for it.
Hi Ian, great narrative. I have a question. Was there also a shortage of STG-44 magazines? How many magazines were issued per rifle? In order to sustain suppresive fire you need more magazines. Unless 2-man team one reloads the magazine and the other fires. thank you. -Joe
I have the MKB -42(H) all steel model by Shoei ,and an MP -44 dummy from IMA.Its all original parts on a solid aluminum receiver. They don't fire but I love them both ,and within my budget.Great program ,Ian.
@davidschaadt3460
Жыл бұрын
MKb-42(H). Is on the title photo.
Fascinating history lesson!
Everytime Ian says "daka" it makes my day
Hey Ian, when I was doing research for a presentation I did on the development history of the stg44 i thought the initial mkb42s and the 1st troop trial rifles were 8mm Mauser and the kurz wasn't used until they switched to the mp43 designation
@ForgottenWeapons
Жыл бұрын
No, that is not correct. The MKb-42s were all in 8x33.
@508Snipe
Жыл бұрын
@@ForgottenWeapons my mistake then. Was there a version in 8mm Mauser? Or was the whole mkb project in 8mm kurz?
@ForgottenWeapons
Жыл бұрын
Gustloff did work on an "MKb" in 8x57, but it never went beyond prototypes: kzread.info/dash/bejne/k4CGj8hwoba5k7g.html
@BobtheHobo324
Жыл бұрын
Might not be what you were thinking of, but a similar situation nonetheless: the SKS began as a 7.62x54r prototype. If you ever see a source referring to the SKS being used in troop trials at the very end of World War 2, it was this version. The war ended before any variants in 7.62x39 could be fielded.
Hitler came around when Speer gave a thumbs up.
@dalemoss4684
Жыл бұрын
Speer was Hitler's favourite in the late war; until he tried to convince Hitler that "Maybe this scorched earth, burn Germany to the ground stuff is a bit extreme.."
@bobbylee2853
Жыл бұрын
@@dalemoss4684 Hitler trusted Speer above all others. Appointing Speer as armaments Minister was Hitler’s best decision ever. Speer performed miracles of production that lengthened the war by at least a year.
Probably the best summary of the Story I've heard sofar
Great video!!!👍
That robe is as iconic as this channel😂
Always remember that none of this going a different way could have changed the outcome of WW2. It may have increased the cost in men and materials to the allies, it may have made Berlin glow in the dark for a few decades but that’s all. Germany lost because the allies had more men and vastly more industrial capacity. Those are what win big wars.
Thanks for a great video! Could you please give your opinion on the "possible MKBs at Stalingrad" debacle? They are literally in every WW2 video game now, and fanboys are defending it saying there was the Kholm pocket drop of MKBs or something. But there aren't really any logical sources of why would they appear in Stalingrad.
Very interesting video, thanks!
Imagine going to war and being the beta tester for some of your most critical equipment.
@vornamenachname989
2 ай бұрын
@@ryantogo8359 Having an Stg44 in WW2 is like when you´re in a nerf war and your dad gives you a pellet gun
The Stg 44 would have made a massive difference had it been adopted when it initially came out, it would have increased the average soldiers volume of fire by 10 x, used in urban combat it would have rivaled the PPSH.