@@brandmotivo Playing it with the MK103 is fun. However, the MK103 is not the historical MK103, as the minimum size of the belt ever fielded for the MK 103 was 30 rounds. The closest we get to the one in the game is the MK 101, which is the earlier gun, fires the same 30x184mm round, however it was loaded a little hotter in the powder load, getting about 100m/s faster velocity (and more penetration due to this). Again, it is closer but the smallest box magazine for this gun was a 10 round box magazine, and later had a 30 round box magazine for it. Due to the box magazine, it would have been much quicker to reload (about half the time shown in game). The 101 also had about 100mm of penetration, so this is out. Basically, while the gun in the game is fun, it is massively nerfed compared to real life.
yeah, loved this thing in world of tanks, painful to grind at first due to being very slow with the stock engine and having somewhat of a poor gun selection, but once you got the top engine and 5cm auto cannon it became quite the quick little bugger and still able to damage heavier tanks and some higher tier tanks (most tanks with auto cannons are basically useless against anything above their own tier unless facing spg's and similar open top, lightly armored vehicles, being only useful for spotting targets and keeping them tracked long enough for heavier allies to take them out). this thing was a tier 4 vehicle and used to see up to tier 9 battles (mix of very late war and early cold war tanks like the jagtiger, m46 patton, t-54, and conqueror) much like the m5 stuart and tier 5 chaffee, before scout matchmaking was removed and it was added to the regular mix of vehicles it's own tier and max of tier 7.
@Niek Vels I don’t speak Dutch but it sounds fitting, at least in the sense that often words have more than one definitive meaning. In German when you call someone a “sturer Bock” it’s not exactly positive, you’re saying “you stubborn fool” basically. But in a way where sometimes negative things are twisted to be more positive there’s also the connotation that a sturer Bock doesn’t back down, doesn’t surrender, stands his ground. Also the animal is for sure considered to be tough, show off-e, and “manly”.
@@mebsrea Yes you are correct. That's what I meant but I fell in a bit of a false-friend trap. I would only add another suggestion and that's that actually were I live there are a lot of Steinböcke so one could theoretically also translate it to stubborn Ibex.
It's the one that would still find a place on the relatively modern battlefield. A low budget FV107 Scimitar. The vector to get the "man with the radio" where he needs to be. With a good chance of getting out of there in one piece.
Sadly, its successor, the VK 1602 Leopard never made it past the prototype stage. I too like the Luchs very much but I think the Leopard would've taken first place in my heart if it had gone into production. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VK_1602_Leopard
I'm with @Arthur Hucksake - I've been many times as a kid and back as an adult, I'm not a museum or history kind of guy, but something about the place is just wonderful - try to visit on a day they are running the tanks on show. Bloody impressive!
The Germans are famous for being proud of their welding qualities. Many had extra welding to have more structure. The Russians… I’ll leave that to your evaluation 😅 A large portion of T-34 crew and tanks were destroyed by not penetration, but by sprawling and armor plates falling off.
@@jinpark8879 If you aren’t following the Australian Armor And Artillery Museum website take a look at their UA-cam videos on their Tiger 1 “restoration”. They were able to gather together some hull plates from various wrecks in eastern Europe (I think mainly Latvia). They fabricated out of mild steel what pieces they didn’t have. They then assembled everything to form a Tiger 1 shell for display. It’s not a real restoration in the sense that it’s just an empty shell. Anyway, it took a skilled stick welder two weeks of welding to put it together. They commented that the Germans would have used 600 Volt welding with very large welding rods and assembly would have gone much faster.
Fun fact... 1930's N.S.D.A.P. Germany created a new welding process which Allies had no idea existed until they managed to examine German Panzers/AFVs. Their oxygen based welding process yielded not only the stoutest of welds but, too, made quicker the welding process time. Our subverted history.
Very happy with the tank museum shop, got a model kit that was delivered very quickly and was far cheaper than expected! Also the video is great as usual!
The Luchs and the Pz I Ausf F are two favourites of mine. There's just something very appealing about these two little bruisers scampering around the battlefield. Light tanks with a difference. Great video, as always.
When I saw the Luchs in the background during the tank fest stream, I was really hoping we would get a tank chat on it. Its one of my favorite panzers.
@@alexdobma4694 The Kleines Kettenkraftrad HK 101 could almost fit the bill. At least to English ears. Shame ketten is not German for kitten. The love child of a panther and BMW bike. With those cat like overlapping wheels.
A 2% survival rate for an Axis tank is, to my mind, pretty good and especially impressive is that both are in running condition. A fascinating little vehicle, definitely sounds like it's only flaw was sharing a factory with the Panther. I wonder how potent it would have been had it got the proposed rearmament with the 5cm gun, given how the Western Allies used their lightly armoured but rapid tank destroyers with good success. Always love it when a relatively unknown but damn good vehicle gets a Tank Chat. Can thoroughly recommend the beers that are produced for the Tank Museum by the way.
I'm a member of this Patreon and I have bought from the shop even over here in the US but I love the way each of these start. It's has to be a Brit thing. He always says "Join one of our membership schemes". To an American that sounds kind of sketchy even though I know full well it isn't. The Bovington museum is one of the most reliable and recognized museums in the UK. It just makes me laugh a little every time that I hear it.
@@marksimpson8577 -- Nah, keep it that way. Different ways of speaking denote different ways of seeing the world, and a diversity of those is nothing but good.
I would recomment the title of the cutest tank for the Pz.I ausf F. What you have is a tiny 2-man tank, with 80mm of armour protection and just two MG 34 in the turret... It was nicknamed the Mini-Tiger and would pretty much act like a puppy trying to go though a doorway with a big stick in its mouth.
@@insovietrussiavodka That is a tough little midget! firearmcentral.fandom.com/wiki/Panzerkampfwagen_I_Ausf._F?file=Panzerkampfwagen+I+Ausf+F+rear.jpg Kind of an odd tank, slower and more sluggish than a Tiger, armed with only mg's, but can at least take a hit from light AT guns. I'll take the Luchs which is more than twice as "snappy".
The rate of attrition of wheeled vehicles and halftracks under the conditions at the eastern front (and the mobility issues there) induced the necessity of producing a full tracked recce vehicle, or to lose the ability to do reconnaissance.
relax when the tankmuseum gets one of those coldwar/modern felines in the tank museum they make a video of it. The Fennek (a dessertfox ) recon vechicle will one day also be a part of the museum. but that will go in the Canines section.
Its interesting that these were produced from scratch in a factory. I always assumed they were upgraded from older Panzer2's that were getting obselete (like the Marder2).
Thanks for another excellent briefing! The Luchs was an excellent vehicle that could have made a major impact in 1942 in North Africa and southern Russia.
People who dismiss this tank as being "too elaborate for its armament" utterly fail to grasp the importance of reconnaissance. Nothing can substitute a well-made reconnaissance vehicle, especially one designed for reconnaissance-in-force, for which a 2cm main armament is perfectly adequate. To compare it to frontline breakthrough tanks is just silly. All field reports and technical data point to it being highly mobile vehicle, well-protected for its role and compared to its contemporaries, and that was overall quite successful as a design.
I started the Bordor model's Luchs today to see how it fairs up against this beautiful Tasca kit! I loved the way Tasca done the adjustable idles arms on the inside Academy were lucky to get the chance to rebox it! Not the easiest kit to find these days either
David can you do us a favour? Give us the little "clap" just before the start like you did in the summer please. Always like that. And I will try to post a photo of my Christmas Sweater ( sorry, Jumper over there), from your shop that Sanat brought for me. I love it.
They lost all their Luchs in Normandy? But I read book a few years ago. I think it was called 'Tip of the spear'. I can't remember exactly. In it was a status report from the end of november 1944 by the 9 panzer division reporting they still had 6 Luchs?
This isn't about tanks, well sought of. It's great ordering from the tank museums store. You get a txt message the next day and it turns up on time. Unlike some places the items always arrive whole and are of great quality. Thanks for the videos guys. When all this craziness is over mum and I will come to an event at the museum. I'm also saying all this from Australia; shipping time is still great.
If the Germans had had ride on lawn mowers in WW2 they would have found away to mount a 20mm cannon and an MG34 on each one of them. Very interesting video. It makes me wonder though why a fully tracked recon vehicle had to be designed from the bottom up instead of just using various outdated light tanks like the Panzer I and IIs that were still in inventory. They may not have checked all the 'want' boxes as far as requirements but I would think that they would have still been serviceable with enough radio equipment in them. Thanks again for doing these.
The higher leadership was probably right that it was too complicated for what it was, but this and the Paner II ausf H were easily the epitome of panzer II design. I would have like to see a Luchs with 30mm or 50mm gun.
Could have used the Leopards turret. Even though the Leo didnt see manufacturing, its turret was used in one of the sd.kfz. Puma models, sporting the very same high velocity 50mm PaK AT cannon. Would be a good way to improve its firepower, effective range and effectiveness against light enemy armour and emplacements. Not a T-34 killer by any means, but thats what the Panther and Stug are for.
Looks like you guys have been busy re organising the museum. I don't remember ever seeing the lynx in the many trips I have taken over the years. I'm going to have to look back through the photo's. I can't wait for this pandemic to go so I can make another trip.
@@mathewkelly9968 If you had paid attention to the video, you would notice that the runner they show is a different vehicle. You can see that it's painted differently, and indeed the footage of the running vehicle is the Luchs from the Saumur Tank Museum.
@@mathewkelly9968 well Matthew, that a great reply, there's only two left in the world, the runner on the video is the other one, which is French, so my question still stands
Firstly. Thank you for providing such in-depth information on all things regarding tanks. My question(s) come from referencing the Classy Hobby 1/16 Luchs. You said the vehicle did serve on both the European and Eastern front. There are 2 kit versions, with the differences being, Panzer Division delineation and a rain cover type shroud on one. Was this cover a field modification done to all with the 4th Pz Div? I was hoping to do an Eastern Front version, but purchased the 9th Pz Div version before doing a deep dive in referencing this awesome little tank. Thanks again.
always liked the panzer 2. wonder how the Luchs would have turned out if they put either a 2cm or 3.7 zwilling AA in the turret or if it would even fit. The 3.7 would give it some anti armor capability. The Italians had a quad 20 in a light tank that could shred infantry and soft targets until it was spotted but it had wet pasta for armor
Tiger Mini Me, and just the right size for the Morning Commute.
There also is a version with a 5cm pak. It looks even more like a tiger
Nothing says "Get out of my lane!" like a 20mm autocannon. ;-)
30mm with Gold rounds is the way to go.
@@pickeljarsforhillary102 is that a thing in world of tanks?
@@apocalypticsurvivor1881
And soon to become a part of WarThunder..
Love this little tank. Feisty and quick as a terrier.
@@brandmotivo Playing it with the MK103 is fun. However, the MK103 is not the historical MK103, as the minimum size of the belt ever fielded for the MK 103 was 30 rounds. The closest we get to the one in the game is the MK 101, which is the earlier gun, fires the same 30x184mm round, however it was loaded a little hotter in the powder load, getting about 100m/s faster velocity (and more penetration due to this). Again, it is closer but the smallest box magazine for this gun was a 10 round box magazine, and later had a 30 round box magazine for it. Due to the box magazine, it would have been much quicker to reload (about half the time shown in game). The 101 also had about 100mm of penetration, so this is out. Basically, while the gun in the game is fun, it is massively nerfed compared to real life.
It's a pretty cool looking mini Tiger wanna-be. I like it.
yeah, loved this thing in world of tanks, painful to grind at first due to being very slow with the stock engine and having somewhat of a poor gun selection, but once you got the top engine and 5cm auto cannon it became quite the quick little bugger and still able to damage heavier tanks and some higher tier tanks (most tanks with auto cannons are basically useless against anything above their own tier unless facing spg's and similar open top, lightly armored vehicles, being only useful for spotting targets and keeping them tracked long enough for heavier allies to take them out). this thing was a tier 4 vehicle and used to see up to tier 9 battles (mix of very late war and early cold war tanks like the jagtiger, m46 patton, t-54, and conqueror) much like the m5 stuart and tier 5 chaffee, before scout matchmaking was removed and it was added to the regular mix of vehicles it's own tier and max of tier 7.
I just have to point out that at 5:03 they called the little Luchs we see "Sturer Bock" which means "stubborn buck". Which is just lovely :)
@Niek Vels I don’t speak Dutch but it sounds fitting, at least in the sense that often words have more than one definitive meaning. In German when you call someone a “sturer Bock” it’s not exactly positive, you’re saying “you stubborn fool” basically. But in a way where sometimes negative things are twisted to be more positive there’s also the connotation that a sturer Bock doesn’t back down, doesn’t surrender, stands his ground. Also the animal is for sure considered to be tough, show off-e, and “manly”.
“Bock” is not “buck,” but “billy goat”.
@@mebsrea Yes you are correct. That's what I meant but I fell in a bit of a false-friend trap. I would only add another suggestion and that's that actually were I live there are a lot of Steinböcke so one could theoretically also translate it to stubborn Ibex.
Please never stop keeping the spirit of old tanks alive
Now this is a great way to start 2021! My favorite german light tank!
It's the one that would still find a place on the relatively modern battlefield. A low budget FV107 Scimitar. The vector to get the "man with the radio" where he needs to be. With a good chance of getting out of there in one piece.
Sadly, its successor, the VK 1602 Leopard never made it past the prototype stage. I too like the Luchs very much but I think the Leopard would've taken first place in my heart if it had gone into production.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VK_1602_Leopard
@@gusgone4527 I wouldn't turn one down 😂
Always liked this little guy. Sorta reminds me of a German version of the Stuart. Zoom Zoom!
Rather better than the Stuart, excepting the gun.
@@lairdcummings9092 and the production numbers...
My brother who is a model maker was amazed by all the gear we all got him from the Tank Museum :) now to stock up for his birthday in April !
be sure yo include photoetch and stowage, lol.
what nonsense
Thank you for a good video about a rare and rarely shown vehicle.
Screw ATV’s I want a Luchs.
Dear Santa i'd be ever so grateful if you could put a Luchs in my x-mas stocking this year.😇👍
The Luchs, also known as one of/if not the most cutest german tank built during ww2!!
The only cute thing created in Germany at that time...
Beep beep
@@PobortzaPl The Panzer 1 is pretty cute too
Panzer II Ausf.J (VK 16.01)
Tiger: FEAR ME
Luchs: *quietly* fear me too!
Once the worldwide COVID madness is over a trip to the UK on my agenda. The Tank Museum definitely on my list of places to visit!
It's absolutely worth it- I love the place!
I'm with @Arthur Hucksake - I've been many times as a kid and back as an adult, I'm not a museum or history kind of guy, but something about the place is just wonderful - try to visit on a day they are running the tanks on show. Bloody impressive!
It is worth a visit for sure! 👍🇬🇧
Amazing how many people here adore this recon thingy. Thanks for another tank chat episode!
Being a boilermaker by trade I always look at the welding on structures for quality indications. From just what I can see, looks pretty damn sweet.
The Germans are famous for being proud of their welding qualities. Many had extra welding to have more structure. The Russians… I’ll leave that to your evaluation 😅 A large portion of T-34 crew and tanks were destroyed by not penetration, but by sprawling and armor plates falling off.
@@jinpark8879 If you aren’t following the Australian Armor And Artillery Museum website take a look at their UA-cam videos on their Tiger 1 “restoration”. They were able to gather together some hull plates from various wrecks in eastern Europe (I think mainly Latvia). They fabricated out of mild steel what pieces they didn’t have. They then assembled everything to form a Tiger 1 shell for display. It’s not a real restoration in the sense that it’s just an empty shell.
Anyway, it took a skilled stick welder two weeks of welding to put it together. They commented that the Germans would have used 600 Volt welding with very large welding rods and assembly would have gone much faster.
@@bobjohnston8316
Thanks for the information I will check out the Australian Tank Museum on YT 👍
Fun fact... 1930's N.S.D.A.P. Germany created a new welding process which Allies had no idea existed until they managed to examine German Panzers/AFVs. Their oxygen based welding process yielded not only the stoutest of welds but, too, made quicker the welding process time.
Our subverted history.
@@DerSchleier Hitler known for his welding skills was he? Germany =/= nazi party
Willey- It got a 2cm gun.
Me- Willey, wtf? You're drunk. It got a 20mm gun.
Then I look at my empty vodka glass and decides it's time to go to bed..
Someone's drunk, just not Willey.
@@catzo_5762
Can't be me..
@@bongfuhrer nope, just the Germans
the Germans used Cm in WWII for gun calibre eg 7.5cm, 8.8cm, 12.8cm 15cm, 38cm
Germans would have called it 2 centimetres not 20 millimeters
Amazing that with only 100 produced, two still survive!
Probably my favorite german tank of WWII. Thanks for another excellent Tank Chat!
Damn, that's an impressive report on the tank. Really impressive. They figured all of that out fast.
Gotta respect the British Intelligence Services. They had the Luchs' number.
I mean, in fairness, they were the ones who were blowing up the factories..
@13:00
Beauty ! Well preseved, excellent camo scheme. Carries a bit of “oompf “ ?! Love that expression 👍🏼
Very happy with the tank museum shop, got a model kit that was delivered very quickly and was far cheaper than expected! Also the video is great as usual!
The Luchs and the Pz I Ausf F are two favourites of mine. There's just something very appealing about these two little bruisers scampering around the battlefield. Light tanks with a difference. Great video, as always.
Great way to start the decade with David and his Luchs.
When I saw the Luchs in the background during the tank fest stream, I was really hoping we would get a tank chat on it. Its one of my favorite panzers.
Sometimes small is beautiful. Almost a baby Tiger or would that be a Tiger Cub?
Imagine if the Germans had an armored vehicle called the "Kitten"
@@alexdobma4694 Enemies would go "awwww" instead of fighting it or flee : ))))
If there was ever tank that could truly called "cute" I think it's this one. Love the damn thing.
@@alexdobma4694 The Kleines Kettenkraftrad HK 101 could almost fit the bill. At least to English ears. Shame ketten is not German for kitten. The love child of a panther and BMW bike. With those cat like overlapping wheels.
Tigerchen! But it wouldn't sound cute to a non-german speaker.
A 2% survival rate for an Axis tank is, to my mind, pretty good and especially impressive is that both are in running condition. A fascinating little vehicle, definitely sounds like it's only flaw was sharing a factory with the Panther. I wonder how potent it would have been had it got the proposed rearmament with the 5cm gun, given how the Western Allies used their lightly armoured but rapid tank destroyers with good success.
Always love it when a relatively unknown but damn good vehicle gets a Tank Chat.
Can thoroughly recommend the beers that are produced for the Tank Museum by the way.
I'm a member of this Patreon and I have bought from the shop even over here in the US but I love the way each of these start. It's has to be a Brit thing. He always says "Join one of our membership schemes". To an American that sounds kind of sketchy even though I know full well it isn't. The Bovington museum is one of the most reliable and recognized museums in the UK. It just makes me laugh a little every time that I hear it.
"Psst. Hey buddy, wanna buy a tank?" ;-)
I couldn't agree more. I'd recommend changing the wording just in case. Why ask for more headaches?
@@marksimpson8577 -- Nah, keep it that way. Different ways of speaking denote different ways of seeing the world, and a diversity of those is nothing but good.
The cutest tank around.
I would recomment the title of the cutest tank for the Pz.I ausf F.
What you have is a tiny 2-man tank, with 80mm of armour protection and just two MG 34 in the turret... It was nicknamed the Mini-Tiger and would pretty much act like a puppy trying to go though a doorway with a big stick in its mouth.
I think the Pz 38t is adorable myself. Looks like a cartoon tank.
M22 locust would like to know your location
I guess technically, the Hetzer is not a tank...
@@insovietrussiavodka That is a tough little midget!
firearmcentral.fandom.com/wiki/Panzerkampfwagen_I_Ausf._F?file=Panzerkampfwagen+I+Ausf+F+rear.jpg
Kind of an odd tank, slower and more sluggish than a Tiger, armed with only mg's, but can at least take a hit from light AT guns. I'll take the Luchs which is more than twice as "snappy".
What a great thing to see in my YT feed.. a Tank Chat !
Nice video you all produced. It nice to learn something when watching videos. Thank you.
If they weren't so rare Lloyd and Croftwould have used this one as my little tankie for Lieutenant Gruber in Allo Allo.
You might be right.
Started building the new Bordor model's Luchs kit today! Very highly detailed! Loads of nice parts n goodies!
New year. Luchs tank chat.
Off to good start for 2021.
Such great content from leading experts alongside the real thing. Who actually clicks thumbs down on these?!
The rate of attrition of wheeled vehicles and halftracks under the conditions at the eastern front (and the mobility issues there) induced the necessity of producing a full tracked recce vehicle, or to lose the ability to do reconnaissance.
Why is the luch so cute? Like legit.. it just has this cuteness about it.
it lowkey wants to kill you tho.
You have to love this tank, it is like the small little, cute and speedy Panther.
Thatd be the VK16.02, prototype to replace this. Never entered production though (hence VK instead of Panzer)
I really want to see this little guy run beside Tiger 131 some day.
The thing about the Luchs is it just looks so damn cool 😅
Nice did know that there are still some of them existing, once the coof is finally over, I will really need to pay you a visit, keep up the good work.
thank you Mr. Willy really enjoyed this what I consider a Lecture cuz I learned a thing or 2 or more I had no idea of.
introducing the most fearsome German tank of all time; the "house cat"
The Haunting tank know as " pissed off cat "
the Rheinmetall KF52 Orangenkatze (excuse my bad german)
Told to stay away from the 'mouse'
Happy new year to all you guys and girls at the tank museum and fans!
And here I had been hoping it was the 8-wheeler recon armoured car from mine own Bundeswehr days. Oh well.
There, there. I hope we get that one also.
relax when the tankmuseum gets one of those coldwar/modern felines in the tank museum they make a video of it.
The Fennek (a dessertfox ) recon vechicle will one day also be a part of the museum.
but that will go in the Canines section.
I think the Panzermuseum has a video on that. I saw that already. It’s nice. Made me want to buy one.
Here: ua-cam.com/video/Z_4HdhZ_3YA/v-deo.html
Its interesting that these were produced from scratch in a factory. I always assumed they were upgraded from older Panzer2's that were getting obselete (like the Marder2).
Always been fascinated by this little vehicle.
Superb. Thank you.
The Panzer II L is the cutest tank ever. Such a great Pz II 😍
Thanks for another excellent briefing! The Luchs was an excellent vehicle that could have made a major impact in 1942 in North Africa and southern Russia.
Not really, an upgrade from the older panzer 2 and wheeled armoured cars but in no way going to make any real difference
Yet another great video - thanks so much folks.
This is the one I've been waiting for for years. Today is a good day
The VK abbreviation does not stand for Vollketten (fully tracked), but for Versuchskonstruktion (trial construction)
Always interesting and informative!
Thank you .
People who dismiss this tank as being "too elaborate for its armament" utterly fail to grasp the importance of reconnaissance. Nothing can substitute a well-made reconnaissance vehicle, especially one designed for reconnaissance-in-force, for which a 2cm main armament is perfectly adequate. To compare it to frontline breakthrough tanks is just silly. All field reports and technical data point to it being highly mobile vehicle, well-protected for its role and compared to its contemporaries, and that was overall quite successful as a design.
-How did they come up with that name?
-The Enigma machine was broken.
I started the Bordor model's Luchs today to see how it fairs up against this beautiful Tasca kit! I loved the way Tasca done the adjustable idles arms on the inside Academy were lucky to get the chance to rebox it! Not the easiest kit to find these days either
Always interesting, and as I've said before ; I even look forward to the sales pitch.
Thank you for another great video.
An adorable-looking vehicle. Has a significant presence in many video games :)
Great chat. Not surprised that the Germans would probably use the Luchs as a display shelf for other products
Thanks for the coverage.
a great start to a new year! 👍🎉
Always been one ofmy favourite AFV's
David can you do us a favour?
Give us the little "clap" just before the start like you did in the summer please.
Always like that.
And I will try to post a photo of my Christmas Sweater ( sorry, Jumper over there), from your shop that Sanat brought for me.
I love it.
They lost all their Luchs in Normandy? But I read book a few years ago. I think it was called 'Tip of the spear'. I can't remember exactly. In it was a status report from the end of november 1944 by the 9 panzer division reporting they still had 6 Luchs?
This isn't about tanks, well sought of. It's great ordering from the tank museums store. You get a txt message the next day and it turns up on time. Unlike some places the items always arrive whole and are of great quality. Thanks for the videos guys. When all this craziness is over mum and I will come to an event at the museum.
I'm also saying all this from Australia; shipping time is still great.
Good call with integrating the available models in your shop!
Nice! I alway thought the Lucy’s was a great looking tank but didn't know much about it's history and I am glad you have a surviving model of one.
If the Germans had had ride on lawn mowers in WW2 they would have found away to mount a 20mm cannon and an MG34 on each one of them. Very interesting video. It makes me wonder though why a fully tracked recon vehicle had to be designed from the bottom up instead of just using various outdated light tanks like the Panzer I and IIs that were still in inventory. They may not have checked all the 'want' boxes as far as requirements but I would think that they would have still been serviceable with enough radio equipment in them. Thanks again for doing these.
The higher leadership was probably right that it was too complicated for what it was, but this and the Paner II ausf H were easily the epitome of panzer II design.
I would have like to see a Luchs with 30mm or 50mm gun.
Could have used the Leopards turret. Even though the Leo didnt see manufacturing, its turret was used in one of the sd.kfz. Puma models, sporting the very same high velocity 50mm PaK AT cannon.
Would be a good way to improve its firepower, effective range and effectiveness against light enemy armour and emplacements.
Not a T-34 killer by any means, but thats what the Panther and Stug are for.
@@BasedMan T-70 killer maybe?
A most interesting and enjoyable episode, a compact and smart looking Panzer. Happy New Year !!!
That interior is almost unbelievable after the advent of Sloped Armor, and Turret Baskets.
Looks like you guys have been busy re organising the museum. I don't remember ever seeing the lynx in the many trips I have taken over the years. I'm going to have to look back through the photo's.
I can't wait for this pandemic to go so I can make another trip.
Another great review. Love it and am especially happy to have it, as a jump off to the new year.
Really enjoyed this video, great work!
Luch cutest tank, no bully please
Love your tank chats.
5:34 very specific arrangement of tow hooks (?) on the rear-left fender...
Great video thank you, a very nice little tank.
The company that got the contract to build the lynx is called not Man, but M. A. N. and was the Augsburg Nuremberg machine factory.
A very good Video with a fair story
Luchs! Cutest tank ever built!
Always been a fan of the Hetzer, although of course another role. Lenny of Möterhead had one !
Finally my favorite tank of all time!!!!!!
Thanks for this interesting story.
This tank is so cute. I want one for my daughter.
HA! Crowder fan, I see
idk if it existed but the Sdkfz "Stubentiger" was probably a bike. It means "housecat"
What a great way to start the New Year off right! Thank you, Tank Museum! ;o)
That's a small tank for four people to fit in . Very neat tank though .
Was looling for this just a few days ago, good to see it's up now.
Baby Tiger. Need one. Should fit into my garage 👍
I’ve wanted this for so long!
Luchs a weapon of destruction but also kinda cute.
Not a Tiger cub, but a Tiger Kitten. And the Lynx purrs nicely, but has sharp claws.
Thank you soooo much, finally, my favorite tank ❤️
Excellent presentation as always. Happy New Year to all my fellow Tank Museum friends.
7:00 "Its not gonna have any real anti-tank capability."
*cries in T-26 and BT-7*
Yep! Perfectly good enough to deal with enemy armoured cars as well.
*APCR belt goes BRRRRRRR*
By late 42 going into 43 there are not that many Soviet T26 and BT series left facing the Axis so its a moot point
@@chaz8758 They regularly face Panzer IIs with HVAP belts in the video game War Thunder, which I'm pretty sure the OP was referring to
@@PorktatoesSSRB up until the 3 or so rounds which actually were in the tank (if at all) ran out...
it looks so much fun to drive
Another great tank chat, the question is, is it a runner
If you'd watched the video you would have seen it running
@@mathewkelly9968 If you had paid attention to the video, you would notice that the runner they show is a different vehicle. You can see that it's painted differently, and indeed the footage of the running vehicle is the Luchs from the Saumur Tank Museum.
@@mathewkelly9968 well Matthew, that a great reply, there's only two left in the world, the runner on the video is the other one, which is French, so my question still stands
Firstly. Thank you for providing such in-depth information on all things regarding tanks. My question(s) come from referencing the Classy Hobby 1/16 Luchs. You said the vehicle did serve on both the European and Eastern front. There are 2 kit versions, with the differences being, Panzer Division delineation and a rain cover type shroud on one. Was this cover a field modification done to all with the 4th Pz Div? I was hoping to do an Eastern Front version, but purchased the 9th Pz Div version before doing a deep dive in referencing this awesome little tank. Thanks again.
always liked the panzer 2. wonder how the Luchs would have turned out if they put either a 2cm or 3.7 zwilling AA in the turret or if it would even fit. The 3.7 would give it some anti armor capability. The Italians had a quad 20 in a light tank that could shred infantry and soft targets until it was spotted but it had wet pasta for armor
Saw a 1-1 replica of a luchs here in the US. That was a spiritual experience not gonna lie