"I know you probably haven't seen that video because it did terribly. It only partially worked and millions died through famine." Damn, I didn't realize your channel had that kind of influence
*The industrialization project did not cause the 1933 famine, corruption within the government did.* Also, the project has worked like nothing else anywhere in the history of mankind. Over 9000 (literally, it is not a meme) factories were built in the 1930s in the USSR. In regards to famines, on the contrary, industrialization has allowed to dramatically increase agriculture production which has meant that the 1933 hunger was the last major one ever (even during WWII there was no famine except for Leningrad which was genocided by the Nazis and Finland). So Simon is not correct on this point.
@@StrangerHappened You must be talking strictly about the Soviet Union regarding famine, right? Its my understanding that the the majority of the 60 million deaths in WWII were caused by hunger. Much of them in East and Southern Asia.
The T-35 transmission was actually remarkably reliable compared to other tanks of the time, however it was nearly always used for far longer than intended between maintenance cycles
Danny, is that you? Did he promise to let you out of the basement if you plug a video for him? ( it's a Business Blaze reference, if you're not a Business Blaze watcher)
Although the BT tanks were very fast and reasonably armed, they have some negative aspects such as poor crew layout and very thin armor. It didn't help much that the majority of those BT tanks were poorly deployed (although it did well abiet in some limited areas).
@@BHuang92 For the day, they weren't terrible. Armour was about the same as every early/mid '30s design, crew numbers about par too. Zhukov used them well at Khalkhin Gol. What hurt them was the USSR's pitiful electronics industry. When the Third Reich plus allies invaded in 1941, the BTs were in the process of being replaced. The other problem (apart from mobilisation issues) was the unbalanced nature of RKKA mechanised units (but only Germany had the balance right for much of the war).
Actually, in USSR created many unrealistic plannes. Projected many assault tanks, from 50 ton (T-35) to 600 ton (and, initiative - 1000 ton), T-35 was a "small brother" of 75-, 90-, 100-ton tanks (Sirken tank, TP-1, TG-5, T-42, T-39), but, these tanks also was a "small brothers" of 400-600 ton tanks (500-ton Danchenko tank, 400-600 ton tank with 8" main gun and with armour, "with protection of 150 mm guns", ~ more 200 mm). Also, projected huge airplanes (150-ton bomber with 200 m wingspan), huge ships (9x20" guns, 20" belt, 24-28 knots), and more crazy vehicles. But, Soviet industry wasn't a true powerful for this projects. Concept of T-35, in fact, was an old WW1 tank concept, created by engineer Gul'kevich in 1915. "We need a heavy assault machine, with 3" short-barrell main gun, two 37 mm light guns and 4 machine guns, on caterpillar base". Yes, Gul'kevich reckoned that 4 machine guns would be enough, not a 7 MGs :D
The T-35 was only really deployed in Barbarossa because they already had them so they literally might as well use them. The Soviets had already stopped development of multi-turreted tanks (and they did indeed have a few protoype heavy tanks competing to replace the T-35) as combat experience in the Winter War had immediately proven that the concept of a multi-turret tank just doesn't work. This is why the KV-1 won out as its replacement, as the only conventional heavy tank it was by far the most effective.
There was a reason that they only produced 60 of them in 10 years they had worked out that the tank was over weight and under armoured and just too big and clumsy. The tank had very marginal reliability the transmission regularly broke and the crews were perfectly aware of the tanks shortcomings. But the tank did look intimidating on parades and did show what the USSR was capable of as prior to 1930 they hadn’t made many tanks of any size and they made the first ones in 1933. It is easy to pick faults with the tank it was a logically designed bad idea that by 1940 was obsolete but I would argue that the T28 was one of the best tanks of the 1930s and the T26 and BT 7 were as good as all the other light tanks of the 1930s just that they were used very badly in the opening months of the German invasion.
Suggestion, you should look into covering the KV1 tank because of the pretty amazing story involving 5 of them and one Zinoviy Kolobanov at the Battle of Leningrad.
Who would have thought that a land battle ship would fare in ww2 as well as a sea battle ship.... Hmm.. Of course, at the onset of the war it was hard to understand what did and did not work. Almost everyone planned for a ww1 repeat in some way. What's interesting to me though is that Germany effectively positioned its military to be on the offense, everyone else on the defense.
Never thought I'd see you here. Anyway everyone was ready but not expecting it so quickly except for Germany using the panzers 1, 2 and 3 they could out match most larger tanks with speed, numbers and airsupport.
Soviet Union pre-purge was poised for aggressive war, they were the first ones experimenting with massed tank and airborne offensives, big military manoeuvres in early to mid 30s, experiences of which were used extensively by the wehrmacht later on. Nobody else in Europe had a lebensraum to achieve or revolution to export, hence defensive posture.
In a way it's still happening. The world still isn't sure if the Russian Armata tank is any good. It's either a great leap forward or an engineering dead end, it seems. Probably, in light of your observation, the Russians should test some of 'em in Ukraine to see if they "stick." But there's no sign they're itching to do that.
Not the only production multi turret tank . Some variants of the British Cruiser mk1 tank were fitted with 2 machine gun turrets mounted on the front corners of the hull.
Funny about that last statement, Hutts are actually incredibly agile, strong, and mobile - years of indolence and indulgence as the heads of one of the largest crime syndicates in the galaxy was what turned them into the fat sluggos we know today. Make them exercise a bit, and they’ll actually become super effective soldiers.
This literally sums up the soviet idea of big and scary. "Ivan new tank must have decent fire power. How do we increase combat capability?" "More gun!"
Simon releasing 5 videos on 6 different channels.., somehow.. or what we call Monday. Just an average day for the beloved Brit, who needs a bloody holiday!
I think a video on the Soviet move of factories east during WW2 would be interesting. Nevermind the tanks, how do you even move the things producing them?
The first thing I see when I see this tank is, "This thing is going to be very easy to kill", thanks to all those flat surfaces. Learning later than they were barely more than 20 to 30 mm think just had me shaking my head.
There used to be a huge tank factory in Kharkiv, its closed now and the buildings are used for other things. There is a churchill tank in the city center next to the museum of culture
@@thunderbird1921 dude, it's Ukraine. back in the 90s, the "businessmen" would privatized sugar producing factories and scrapping all the machines because steel was expensive. they probably did the same with the tank factory. they simply don't care
Excuse me! The BT series of tanks were one of the most influential tanks post World War One and was a very effective tank so give it the RESPECT it DESERVES! Also sonic meme haha tank jump 1:27 I think.
Peter Gray, well Russia used a lot of BT's and i am pretty sure it was used in the Spanish civil war, and I never talked about where the BT series of tanks came from and I don't care about 1941 as it is during WW2, also of course it isn't that good during WW2 genius I said "post war" as it had a canon, ok armor, and amazing mobility, and In the POST WW1 era this was very modern for a tank design, thus a very influential way of making tanks after the old way of slow, lots of guns, and large tanks of ww1. Thus is the reason you should give the BT tanks respect.
Aside from everything mention in the video it would have been almost impossible for the crew to co-ordinate effectively in battle. The "fightabliltiy" of vehicels is often never mentioned but would play an enormous role in its battle field performance. More so than having all the guns and thickest armour.
im gonna pressume it was intended for infantry support during a advance, ww1 style, so the little turrets would be working semi indepentantly, in the style of airfix kit model box art... all guns blazing :D. also nearly all ww2 tanks had that hull machine gun, which is just a poor (but cheap and easy) version of this multi turret idea
Regarding future episodes, you might want to consider one about the building of the Canadian Pacific Railway. Especially where it went through the Western Cordillera, and the Canadian Shield, it meant building through some of the most difficult terrain on the planet.
You should have a look at the Sherman Crocodile tank, a flame tank. One of the set of tanks known as "Hobart's Funnies" These were a very important set of designs drawn up for D-day.
@@jochannon What a bizarre typo on my watch! Of course it's the Churchill, I see the Croc almost daily, it's outside the D-Day museum where I live in Portsmouth, England. We've also got a sunken Mulberry Harbour! Thanks for the catch
Another great tank video! You might want to consider making a video on the planned successor to the T35, the SMK (and its competitor, the T-100). Also, the Char 2C being the dimensionally largest tank ever put into production would be a great video for the channel. If you need any info/sources etc. I just wrote an article for the Tank Encyclopedia on the 2C.
Just to elaborate, the SMK was a 2 turreted behemoth designed to replace the T35, it was used in the Winter War against the Finns, but the single turreted version (the iconic KV tank) performed better and would go on to mass production.
O-I is a bad idea for a video, there was only one prototype and there is close to none information about it. On the other hand, there were 60 t-35s and they participated in the war effort.
Mr Simmon Whisler I have a tank for you to check out. A tank made in co-operation with Swiss Army and Imperial Germany, made in the mid 1920's. It "Road Wheels" were truck tires, in one type lifted and lowered into position by hydraulic pressure systems. There a few pictures of the tank and few remaining today. One is in the Swiss Military Museum. They were trying to rebuild it.
Dear Simon, do not underestimate the big lumps mounted in tanks and other heavy vehicles. In heavy machinery Torque is key, not horsepower. My truck has “only” 470hp but it has well over 2000nm of torque. Result? It goes uphill at around 45mph while fully loaded... if you let those 4 minis tow the amount of weight my truck is capable of I don’t think they will get far... in fact I believe you would be able to overtake them by foot...
Another excellent video. Very professionally made, shot and edited. Have you ever done the TSR2? A fascinating story of engineering, politics and hubris.
You needed to coordinate with World-of-Tanks and their researcher "The Chieftain" on tanks as their setup is top notch on about every tank that has ever been produced.
Another great video! I’d love to see a future Side Projects on Hitlers Flak Towers. The Nazi AA towers are a masterpiece, as is Flak. Unfortunately no good videos as of yet but this is the channel for the job.
Your not screaming about how Danny is chained up to a radiator in your basement, and that's become kinda weird. OG Business Blaze!!!! Simon's best channel!~!!!!$%^&
One thing not mentioned in the video, which I think adds even more of an ironic twist, is the Treaty of Rapallo - a 1922 agreement between the newly-created USSR and the Weimar Republic-era Germany. On the surface, it was simply a treaty to normalize relations and renounce any German claims on Russian-controlled territory (which the Bolsheviks gave away vast swaths of in 1918's Treaty of Brest Litovsk). But there was a secret protocol to the Treaty of Rapallo: because post-WW I Germany was massively restricted in the size of the military and type of military equipment they were allowed to have, they secretly began sending personnel to Russia to train in the latest forms of warfare and cooperate on technology. The biggest focus of this clandestine cooperation by far was in tanks and armored warfare - and it lasted well into the mid-1930s. Long before Soviet and German tanks got to face each other in the Spanish Civil War, both sides were intimately aware of each other's ways of thinking about tanks, and each other's technological know-how. All of which makes the T-35 even more bizarre - the Soviets both trained with German tank warfare experts, and then faced off against them in Spain, and STILL made and kept this monstrosity!
That T-35 is amazing! I thought I was a pretty big Dub-2 fan, but I've never heard of this one...wow, multi-turret, multi-caliber, like an old-school pre-dreadnaught battleship!
If you like this tank, there's a French tank that you aught to learn about. Like the T-35, it looked good in parades and made for great propaganda pictures, but it was even bigger -- some say the biggest tank of all time. It was an old design, and in some ways it was obsolete even as it was being produced, but the French were prepared to use it in WWII if they could. Unfortunately (or perhaps fortunately for its crews) it was caught up the debacle of that campaign and most were left stranded on a train and blown up to prevent their capture. Anyway, you should look it up: I think it was the Char Bis 1, but some tank nerd here can correct me if I'm wrong. 😉
The T-35 has been a minor obsession of mine. The two take away points I will raise: 1. This was the perfect Stalin tank. While there was a move for multiple turrets in the 30's, the main inspiration was rumours that the Germans where looking at a large tank and where dropping rumours around On hearing this, Stalin ordered the development and deployment on what ended up as the T-35 while the Germans really let the rumours out for a bit of trolling. 2. Three multiturrent tanks saw action in the Winter War with Finland. The results is even worse than you would expect....
I know it wasn't a 'mega project', but could you do a video on the KV series of tanks? Some of the stories about the early battles are amazing, plus I genuinely believe the KV-1 was one of the reasons the Soviets ended up winning (or at least not losing).
Hey Simon, while we're on the subject of massive Soviet tanks, could you please do a video on the Object 279? It was an experimental tank developed in the mid-late 1950s (Cold War Era!) and only a couple of prototypes were built, but it was an absolute monster!
You mentioned the 5 year program video you made, but you should link it in the description. That way people can easily find the video you are taking about. Love your stuff!
Oh, and as for the British inspiration - it definitely was a factor, although it was likely more indirect than that. The Soviets were already taking notes from Vickers designs during the mid-1920s, and both the T-26 and T-28 (which made up the vast majority of Soviet tanks at the outbreak of WW II) were heavily influenced by Vickers tanks. Before the T-35 was even conceptualized, the Soviets had already established a general design approach that, quite correctly, followed the cutting edge technology during the 1920s - which happened to be all made in Britain, as most other nations really weren't in the armored warfare game yet during that decade (Germany was banned from building tanks, France largely carried on building slightly improved versions of their light FT tanks designed during WW I, and the American military was rapidly downsizing, for example). Perhaps more importantly, Britain was the only nation during the 1920s to carry out serious field exercises in armored warfare and organizing dedicated tank units - not just creating technology, but also studying and proving how it could be used in the real world. Needless to say, everyone else paid close attention. In 1930, the Soviets sent a delegation to Vickers in Britain, and secured a deal to buy 15 Mk.E 6-ton tanks, which were promptly delivered to the USSR. All aspects of these were studied carefully, with design solutions and construction techniques then applied to new Soviet tanks, including improved versions of the T-28 and of course its "big brother", the T-35. It wasn't so much because the Soviets couldn't think for themselves - but rather, a sensible choice, following the lead of the one military that seemed to know what they were doing with tanks during the 1920s. (Spoiler: they didn't REALLY know what they were doing with tanks, and a number of concepts developed in the UK proved to be failures later on in actual warfare - but hindsight is always 20/20, eh?)
Great video once more ! Simon I've gotta ask? Why not do the T 54/55? That tank while basic is the most mass produced tank in history and has seen war almost everywhere. .......Also Simon I have that same exact shirt.
I hardly ever remember to thumbs up on videos, but I make sure to give ALL your vids a thumbs up BEFORE I finish the vid, because OBVIOUSLY they will ALL be amazing.
The reason tanks had multiple cannons in the 1930-era was that they didn't have one gun that was good for infantry support, and one that was good for anti-armor. You'd see a 75mm gun that fired low-velocity HE rounds and high-velocity 37mm guns that were intended for shooting armor.
The problem with soviet tanks is that you can’t rely on the specs they claim on paper. Cause most places cut so many corners to make quota that half the time they didn’t meet even half of the specs listed, but no one said anything to the higher ups cause no one wants to get gulag’d for failing Stalin
"I know you probably haven't seen that video because it did terribly. It only partially worked and millions died through famine."
Damn, I didn't realize your channel had that kind of influence
"I really enjoyed making it!" -Simon or Stalin regarding the 5-year plan, who said it first?
*The industrialization project did not cause the 1933 famine, corruption within the government did.* Also, the project has worked like nothing else anywhere in the history of mankind. Over 9000 (literally, it is not a meme) factories were built in the 1930s in the USSR. In regards to famines, on the contrary, industrialization has allowed to dramatically increase agriculture production which has meant that the 1933 hunger was the last major one ever (even during WWII there was no famine except for Leningrad which was genocided by the Nazis and Finland). So Simon is not correct on this point.
@@StrangerHappened You must be talking strictly about the Soviet Union regarding famine, right? Its my understanding that the the majority of the 60 million deaths in WWII were caused by hunger. Much of them in East and Southern Asia.
@@billd.iniowa2263 Yes, I was talking about the USSR since Simon's video mentioned was about the USSR's industrialization program.
Where's the link to this video that did so terribly?
That Sound Effect at 7:53 got me good lol
It was the second time in that video... thought i had some over weird Tab open haha
It's a guy saying in spanish "I'm going to kill myself woooooooo" in a funny way. I think that it was a meme and they use the clip without knowing
Imagine how the crew must've felt after that landing
I laughed good, it was just unexpected.
How about the sound effect of his voice starting phrases loud and clear, then many times fading away to almost nothing.
I'm outta hear!!!
The T-35 transmission was actually remarkably reliable compared to other tanks of the time, however it was nearly always used for far longer than intended between maintenance cycles
Simon really likes that jumping tank footage doesn't he?
Who doesnt love a tank designed by a race car driver
BT-7 go wheeee
seems like a BT-5 or a BT-7
WEEEEEEE
He also likes jumping sharks
The tank pictured at 6:08 is, in fact, the T-32 heavy tank prototype. It was much shorter and featured 6 bogie wheels per side.
The Russian 5 year plan IS a great video. He's not paying me to say this. It's actually one of my favourite ones.
Danny, is that you? Did he promise to let you out of the basement if you plug a video for him?
( it's a Business Blaze reference, if you're not a Business Blaze watcher)
@@TerenceClark Yo Bro. I'm OGBB. 😉✊
Can't call myself OGBB if I skip any of fact boi's videos. I definitely gave that its watch time
I'm trying to decide whether or not I should watch it. Could you make a video about it?
"... and some tanks that pretty much sucked."
_Shows footage of a BT-7._
*DON'T YOU DARE.*
BT7 in close combat 3 . If you train up the crew it was pretty good
@Pope Francis It was use them or the T-26, which was just as bad but s l o w e r
Although the BT tanks were very fast and reasonably armed, they have some negative aspects such as poor crew layout and very thin armor. It didn't help much that the majority of those BT tanks were poorly deployed (although it did well abiet in some limited areas).
@@BHuang92 For the day, they weren't terrible. Armour was about the same as every early/mid '30s design, crew numbers about par too. Zhukov used them well at Khalkhin Gol. What hurt them was the USSR's pitiful electronics industry. When the Third Reich plus allies invaded in 1941, the BTs were in the process of being replaced. The other problem (apart from mobilisation issues) was the unbalanced nature of RKKA mechanised units (but only Germany had the balance right for much of the war).
I was about to give the comment section a fun fact, but Mega Projects beat me to it. Bravo.
Fun Fact: Megaprojects beat you to it
:p
@@afrog2666 Second time now lol.
@@afrog2666 e
"Comrade Stalin, what is your command for glorious new Soviet tank?"
"Go big or go gulag!"
Actually, in USSR created many unrealistic plannes. Projected many assault tanks, from 50 ton (T-35) to 600 ton (and, initiative - 1000 ton), T-35 was a "small brother" of 75-, 90-, 100-ton tanks (Sirken tank, TP-1, TG-5, T-42, T-39), but, these tanks also was a "small brothers" of 400-600 ton tanks (500-ton Danchenko tank, 400-600 ton tank with 8" main gun and with armour, "with protection of 150 mm guns", ~ more 200 mm). Also, projected huge airplanes (150-ton bomber with 200 m wingspan), huge ships (9x20" guns, 20" belt, 24-28 knots), and more crazy vehicles. But, Soviet industry wasn't a true powerful for this projects.
Concept of T-35, in fact, was an old WW1 tank concept, created by engineer Gul'kevich in 1915. "We need a heavy assault machine, with 3" short-barrell main gun, two 37 mm light guns and 4 machine guns, on caterpillar base". Yes, Gul'kevich reckoned that 4 machine guns would be enough, not a 7 MGs :D
The T-35 was only really deployed in Barbarossa because they already had them so they literally might as well use them. The Soviets had already stopped development of multi-turreted tanks (and they did indeed have a few protoype heavy tanks competing to replace the T-35) as combat experience in the Winter War had immediately proven that the concept of a multi-turret tank just doesn't work. This is why the KV-1 won out as its replacement, as the only conventional heavy tank it was by far the most effective.
There was a reason that they only produced 60 of them in 10 years they had worked out that the tank was over weight and under armoured and just too big and clumsy. The tank had very marginal reliability the transmission regularly broke and the crews were perfectly aware of the tanks shortcomings. But the tank did look intimidating on parades and did show what the USSR was capable of as prior to 1930 they hadn’t made many tanks of any size and they made the first ones in 1933. It is easy to pick faults with the tank it was a logically designed bad idea that by 1940 was obsolete but I would argue that the T28 was one of the best tanks of the 1930s and the T26 and BT 7 were as good as all the other light tanks of the 1930s just that they were used very badly in the opening months of the German invasion.
I like how the medic covers his patient as the beast rolls by at 14:55.
One of my favourite tanks! Not because it was good or practical but because it has flippin' five turrets!
I’ve got the 5 year plan queued up after this one just for you. And because you make my morning routine easier.
Suggestion, you should look into covering the KV1 tank because of the pretty amazing story involving 5 of them and one Zinoviy Kolobanov at the Battle of Leningrad.
Who would have thought that a land battle ship would fare in ww2 as well as a sea battle ship.... Hmm..
Of course, at the onset of the war it was hard to understand what did and did not work. Almost everyone planned for a ww1 repeat in some way. What's interesting to me though is that Germany effectively positioned its military to be on the offense, everyone else on the defense.
Never thought I'd see you here. Anyway everyone was ready but not expecting it so quickly except for Germany using the panzers 1, 2 and 3 they could out match most larger tanks with speed, numbers and airsupport.
@@LockKey06 I'm a ww2 nut
Soviet Union pre-purge was poised for aggressive war, they were the first ones experimenting with massed tank and airborne offensives, big military manoeuvres in early to mid 30s, experiences of which were used extensively by the wehrmacht later on. Nobody else in Europe had a lebensraum to achieve or revolution to export, hence defensive posture.
Now if everybody got on board with land aircraft carriers, things would have gone down differently!!
I have no idea what y'all saying but I'd still listen
I love how tank innovation was like throwing stuff at the wall and seeing which stuck.
In a way it's still happening. The world still isn't sure if the Russian Armata tank is any good. It's either a great leap forward or an engineering dead end, it seems. Probably, in light of your observation, the Russians should test some of 'em in Ukraine to see if they "stick." But there's no sign they're itching to do that.
Not the only production multi turret tank . Some variants of the British Cruiser mk1 tank were fitted with 2 machine gun turrets mounted on the front corners of the hull.
Funny about that last statement, Hutts are actually incredibly agile, strong, and mobile - years of indolence and indulgence as the heads of one of the largest crime syndicates in the galaxy was what turned them into the fat sluggos we know today. Make them exercise a bit, and they’ll actually become super effective soldiers.
It’s interesting to see historical points when a weapons platform’s designation, landships in this case, is taken literally.
This literally sums up the soviet idea of big and scary.
"Ivan new tank must have decent fire power. How do we increase combat capability?"
"More gun!"
"Not enough gun. Still more gun"
Germans: more armor
Soviets: more guns
Americans: more sandbags
British: more tea
@@cattibingo fun fact: the IS-7 heavy tank prototype had like 8 machine guns mounted on the tank, some even facing backwards lol
Sound more like a stereotypical America than a Soviet XD
It's spelled tonk for Russians.
I know someone that built a 1/16 RC T35. Custom build! I am still in awe of it's size next to other tanks. Cheers!
"Bigger is not always better"
Except when it is
That's what she said
Especially when it's a KV- .....
My Hard drive agrees!
@@arnowisp6244 so much porn online must download it all.
Simon releasing 5 videos on 6 different channels.., somehow.. or what we call Monday. Just an average day for the beloved Brit, who needs a bloody holiday!
fact boy delivers the goods
@@megaprojects9649 As a Business Blaze watcher (Your best channel), I get the fact boy part
@opener of the world ..........huh?
@opener of the world 🚫😭
"[...] or rather, Jabba the Hutt, with plenty of guns." HILARIOUS! 😂
It’s more hilarious when you realize that he really doesn’t like Star Wars at all.
1:20 - Chapter 1 - Soviet Tanks
3:45 - Chapter 2 - Developments
6:30 - Chapter 3 - The T35
8:20 - Chapter 4 - Combat
12:20 - Chapter 5 - The strange case of the german T35
14:05 - Chapter 6 - A glorious failure
Thanks!
I think a video on the Soviet move of factories east during WW2 would be interesting. Nevermind the tanks, how do you even move the things producing them?
9:20 the Battle of Brody involved more tanks than the Battle of Kursk.
simon didn't say
The numbers, as you probably know, looked different before the archives were opened when the Soviet Union fell.
The first thing I see when I see this tank is, "This thing is going to be very easy to kill", thanks to all those flat surfaces. Learning later than they were barely more than 20 to 30 mm think just had me shaking my head.
There used to be a huge tank factory in Kharkiv, its closed now and the buildings are used for other things. There is a churchill tank in the city center next to the museum of culture
Bet they're regretting closing that factory now...
@@thunderbird1921 dude, it's Ukraine. back in the 90s, the "businessmen" would privatized sugar producing factories and scrapping all the machines because steel was expensive. they probably did the same with the tank factory. they simply don't care
Excuse me! The BT series of tanks were one of the most influential tanks post World War One and was a very effective tank so give it the RESPECT it DESERVES! Also sonic meme haha tank jump 1:27 I think.
Except that the BT series was just a Christie tank design, and not an indigenous Russian design. And by 1941 it was obsolete due to thin armor.
Peter Gray, well Russia used a lot of BT's and i am pretty sure it was used in the Spanish civil war, and I never talked about where the BT series of tanks came from and I don't care about 1941 as it is during WW2, also of course it isn't that good during WW2 genius I said "post war" as it had a canon, ok armor, and amazing mobility, and In the POST WW1 era this was very modern for a tank design, thus a very influential way of making tanks after the old way of slow, lots of guns, and large tanks of ww1. Thus is the reason you should give the BT tanks respect.
I watched the 5 year plan video when it first came out. I really enjoyed it, one of this channels best!!!
we need a video on the sinking of the USS Indianapolis.
lots of interesting things happened to it the day prior and right after the sinking.
Aside from everything mention in the video it would have been almost impossible for the crew to co-ordinate effectively in battle. The "fightabliltiy" of vehicels is often never mentioned but would play an enormous role in its battle field performance. More so than having all the guns and thickest armour.
im gonna pressume it was intended for infantry support during a advance, ww1 style, so the little turrets would be working semi indepentantly, in the style of airfix kit model box art... all guns blazing :D. also nearly all ww2 tanks had that hull machine gun, which is just a poor (but cheap and easy) version of this multi turret idea
Regarding future episodes, you might want to consider one about the building of the Canadian Pacific Railway. Especially where it went through the Western Cordillera, and the Canadian Shield, it meant building through some of the most difficult terrain on the planet.
I’m so happy Danny decided to write a script for this!! And every video never ceases to amaze me and this video was no different!😁❤️
Shut up, Danny. Stop tooting g your own phone. Haha
“Any tank is better than no tank”..... a Red/Soviet Army formula..... the Wehrmacht 1945 understood that as well.
Thank you for all you do
You should have a look at the Sherman Crocodile tank, a flame tank.
One of the set of tanks known as "Hobart's Funnies"
These were a very important set of designs drawn up for D-day.
The Crocodile was built on the Churchill, not the Sherman.
@@jochannon
What a bizarre typo on my watch!
Of course it's the Churchill, I see the Croc almost daily, it's outside the D-Day museum where I live in Portsmouth, England.
We've also got a sunken Mulberry Harbour!
Thanks for the catch
@@MostlyPennyCat you've got a mulberry?! That's so cool!
Another great tank video! You might want to consider making a video on the planned successor to the T35, the SMK (and its competitor, the T-100). Also, the Char 2C being the dimensionally largest tank ever put into production would be a great video for the channel. If you need any info/sources etc. I just wrote an article for the Tank Encyclopedia on the 2C.
Just to elaborate, the SMK was a 2 turreted behemoth designed to replace the T35, it was used in the Winter War against the Finns, but the single turreted version (the iconic KV tank) performed better and would go on to mass production.
You should check out the japanese O-I heavy tank...now that is a land battleship
My dumb brain read that as "oi tank"
@@cattibingo "oi mate, do you have a loicense for that tank? A bit rude to drive over some cars, innit?"
O-I is a bad idea for a video, there was only one prototype and there is close to none information about it. On the other hand, there were 60 t-35s and they participated in the war effort.
How bout Char 2C? French giantt tank developed for WW1 and used in small numbers in WW2.
@@DefinitelyNotEmma "Quite right, apologies guvna! Just takin' me mum on 'oliday, I was."
Mega Project suggestions: Benban Solar Park, Aswan High Dam, Bar Lev Line and Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam.
That cutaway image at about 1:45 is a t34/85. 85 because a 85mm gun not 76. The t34/85 has a distinctive turret from the t34/76 you show just before.
Mr Simmon Whisler I have a tank for you to check out. A tank made in co-operation with Swiss Army and Imperial Germany, made in the mid 1920's. It "Road Wheels" were truck tires, in one type lifted and lowered into position by hydraulic pressure systems. There a few pictures of the tank and few remaining today. One is in the Swiss Military Museum. They were trying to rebuild it.
When you change all your officers and replace them with new people, the army is not very good. The US would do well to take note of this.
Dear Simon, do not underestimate the big lumps mounted in tanks and other heavy vehicles.
In heavy machinery Torque is key, not horsepower.
My truck has “only” 470hp but it has well over 2000nm of torque.
Result? It goes uphill at around 45mph while fully loaded... if you let those 4 minis tow the amount of weight my truck is capable of I don’t think they will get far... in fact I believe you would be able to overtake them by foot...
Another excellent video. Very professionally made, shot and edited. Have you ever done the TSR2? A fascinating story of engineering, politics and hubris.
I loved the 5 year plan video! Granted I fell asleep and therefore need to watch it again, but I really did like it.
Could you do a video on the M1 Abrams? Or any modern day tank?
Tank you for this video
Suggestions: chieftain, centurion and the English electric lightning or even the SMK soviet multi turreted tank
I saw the video on the 5 year plan, it was super interesting and a great video!
You needed to coordinate with World-of-Tanks and their researcher "The Chieftain" on tanks as their setup is top notch on about every tank that has ever been produced.
I love these military-related videos. Always good stuff.
1:44 a T-34-85 with a 76.2 mm gun... god job well done.....
well what do you expect from some one who reffer about T34 in 1940 as "most modern"..........
@@Tamburahk and the 70mm, uhh no it's 30. He must've read the smk ?
@@narellebenson3047 yea, i just hate when some "influencer" presents history in such shit way
MAAAAAN I thought my wife was watching another insta reel when I heard that WHEEE, then realized she has her earbuds in.
Well done,sir
Tanks for this!
The T35 was based off the independent concept for a breakthrough tank to defeat trench warfare.
_>The Chieftain, Sofilein, and Potential History have entered the chat_
Potential history 🙌🙌
The track tensioning system will be covered in detail.
Oh bugger, the tank is on fire.
Yeah, your vid on the Five Year Plan is very interesting. Thanks for recommending it, in fact.
The 5 year plan video was great Simon !! Keep it up x
Thanks for another brilliant video, Simon! Wonderfully put together. As usual :)
I really appreciate the effort you put into your videos ...on this channel and other ones ...very nice...
Another great video! I’d love to see a future Side Projects on Hitlers Flak Towers. The Nazi AA towers are a masterpiece, as is Flak. Unfortunately no good videos as of yet but this is the channel for the job.
Soviets march into berlin.
"Hey Mark, I think I found Bertha"
"BERTHA ITS BEEN SO LONG"
"Jabba the Hutt with plenty of guns" 🤣🤣🤣 as a Star Wars fan that's a good one Simon
Your not screaming about how Danny is chained up to a radiator in your basement, and that's become kinda weird. OG Business Blaze!!!! Simon's best channel!~!!!!$%^&
Have you ever done a video about how the Soviets pulled off the massive move of their factories further east?
One thing not mentioned in the video, which I think adds even more of an ironic twist, is the Treaty of Rapallo - a 1922 agreement between the newly-created USSR and the Weimar Republic-era Germany. On the surface, it was simply a treaty to normalize relations and renounce any German claims on Russian-controlled territory (which the Bolsheviks gave away vast swaths of in 1918's Treaty of Brest Litovsk). But there was a secret protocol to the Treaty of Rapallo: because post-WW I Germany was massively restricted in the size of the military and type of military equipment they were allowed to have, they secretly began sending personnel to Russia to train in the latest forms of warfare and cooperate on technology.
The biggest focus of this clandestine cooperation by far was in tanks and armored warfare - and it lasted well into the mid-1930s. Long before Soviet and German tanks got to face each other in the Spanish Civil War, both sides were intimately aware of each other's ways of thinking about tanks, and each other's technological know-how. All of which makes the T-35 even more bizarre - the Soviets both trained with German tank warfare experts, and then faced off against them in Spain, and STILL made and kept this monstrosity!
I think Simon really likes the bt-7
That T-35 is amazing! I thought I was a pretty big Dub-2 fan, but I've never heard of this one...wow, multi-turret, multi-caliber, like an old-school pre-dreadnaught battleship!
If you like this tank, there's a French tank that you aught to learn about. Like the T-35, it looked good in parades and made for great propaganda pictures, but it was even bigger -- some say the biggest tank of all time. It was an old design, and in some ways it was obsolete even as it was being produced, but the French were prepared to use it in WWII if they could. Unfortunately (or perhaps fortunately for its crews) it was caught up the debacle of that campaign and most were left stranded on a train and blown up to prevent their capture. Anyway, you should look it up: I think it was the Char Bis 1, but some tank nerd here can correct me if I'm wrong. 😉
I guess I'll be the nerd. It was the Char 2C and this channel already has a video on it.
The T-35 has been a minor obsession of mine. The two take away points I will raise: 1. This was the perfect Stalin tank. While there was a move for multiple turrets in the 30's, the main inspiration was rumours that the Germans where looking at a large tank and where dropping rumours around
On hearing this, Stalin ordered the development and deployment on what ended up as the T-35 while the Germans really let the rumours out for a bit of trolling. 2. Three multiturrent tanks saw action in the Winter War with Finland. The results is even worse than you would expect....
Love your stuff thanks again
I always find your videos interesting Simon!
I know it wasn't a 'mega project', but could you do a video on the KV series of tanks? Some of the stories about the early battles are amazing, plus I genuinely believe the KV-1 was one of the reasons the Soviets ended up winning (or at least not losing).
Hey Simon, while we're on the subject of massive Soviet tanks, could you please do a video on the Object 279? It was an experimental tank developed in the mid-late 1950s (Cold War Era!) and only a couple of prototypes were built, but it was an absolute monster!
The number Jelly Babies is the only valid unit of comparison.
You mentioned the 5 year program video you made, but you should link it in the description. That way people can easily find the video you are taking about. Love your stuff!
Simon is the busiest man on youtube and perhaps even the galaxy if not the entire universe!
I lost it at 1:24 with the jump lol
Haha tank go "wooo"
Can you imagine what it was like in that tank when it landed?? Talk about hitting your head on the roof. 😵😵😵😂😂😂😂😂😂
BT5’s very insane
He hasn't shown film of the aerial deployment of a T-37 into a lake.
Spectacular!
I hope you were mistaken when you showed a T-34-85 at 1:46 because you said it had a 76mm instead of a 85mm gun
Oh, and as for the British inspiration - it definitely was a factor, although it was likely more indirect than that. The Soviets were already taking notes from Vickers designs during the mid-1920s, and both the T-26 and T-28 (which made up the vast majority of Soviet tanks at the outbreak of WW II) were heavily influenced by Vickers tanks.
Before the T-35 was even conceptualized, the Soviets had already established a general design approach that, quite correctly, followed the cutting edge technology during the 1920s - which happened to be all made in Britain, as most other nations really weren't in the armored warfare game yet during that decade (Germany was banned from building tanks, France largely carried on building slightly improved versions of their light FT tanks designed during WW I, and the American military was rapidly downsizing, for example). Perhaps more importantly, Britain was the only nation during the 1920s to carry out serious field exercises in armored warfare and organizing dedicated tank units - not just creating technology, but also studying and proving how it could be used in the real world. Needless to say, everyone else paid close attention.
In 1930, the Soviets sent a delegation to Vickers in Britain, and secured a deal to buy 15 Mk.E 6-ton tanks, which were promptly delivered to the USSR. All aspects of these were studied carefully, with design solutions and construction techniques then applied to new Soviet tanks, including improved versions of the T-28 and of course its "big brother", the T-35. It wasn't so much because the Soviets couldn't think for themselves - but rather, a sensible choice, following the lead of the one military that seemed to know what they were doing with tanks during the 1920s.
(Spoiler: they didn't REALLY know what they were doing with tanks, and a number of concepts developed in the UK proved to be failures later on in actual warfare - but hindsight is always 20/20, eh?)
Bloody Hell - the ED-209 of the tank world? Very informative and interesting, as always - thank you.
That "Yahoo" easter egg at 7:55 - can confirm, it made me chuckle
Weeeee!!!!
Thank you for the time and effort in making your content. :)
I've seen the Independent tank at Bovingdon. It is amazing, and you can see how terrible it would be in combat (or even getting to the battlefield).
Great video once more ! Simon I've gotta ask? Why not do the T 54/55? That tank while basic is the most mass produced tank in history and has seen war almost everywhere. .......Also Simon I have that same exact shirt.
lol the tank jump sound is hilarious!! xD
I hardly ever remember to thumbs up on videos, but I make sure to give ALL your vids a thumbs up BEFORE I finish the vid, because OBVIOUSLY they will ALL be amazing.
Brilliant video as always keep it up
I missed that Danny wrote this, but it all clicked when I heard beds and Mini Coopers used as units of measurement.
Do a mega project on Mosin Nagant rifles. Soviet factories were masters at cranking out tanks; but they also were voracious gun manufacturers.
The reason tanks had multiple cannons in the 1930-era was that they didn't have one gun that was good for infantry support, and one that was good for anti-armor. You'd see a 75mm gun that fired low-velocity HE rounds and high-velocity 37mm guns that were intended for shooting armor.
please do a video about glorious TOG 2
The problem with soviet tanks is that you can’t rely on the specs they claim on paper. Cause most places cut so many corners to make quota that half the time they didn’t meet even half of the specs listed, but no one said anything to the higher ups cause no one wants to get gulag’d for failing Stalin
You should make a video on the tiger tank. The most feared tank during WWll
A video on the Harrier series would be great
Do another Five-Year Plan Video. I will watch the whole series of them. Promise. The first was excellent!
Quite literally just watched your Soviet 5 Year Plan video a few videos back. I'd watch videos on the other 12 5 year plans
That Soviet evacuation of industry to the Urals is a mega, Mega project. I'll have to check on one of the million channels you're on right now.lol
Jabba the Hutt with guns? Perfect!