@@JamLeGull they are lucky brits decided to only fire solid shot AP and not explosive filled. 4 shells penetrated the turret and if they had explosive mass the crew would be mashed potatoes
Russian Mafia: Wanna buy tank? Few tanks? Tank Museum: Tanks? What tanks? Russian Mafia: Good tank. T-90MS, T-80BWM, maybe a T-90M Proryv-3 - this very good tank. Tank Museum: Well, no... thanks, Thank you. Russian Mafia: No? Cheap maybe T-72B4. Good price. Less than $1mln, You sure? Tank Museum: No, thank you. We are not interested. Russian Mafia: Okay, call me if you change your mind. Have a nice day.
remember the Soviet Army offering tanks that way. My mother was in Berlin around 1990, Soviet soldiers were selling everything that wasn't nailed down, from uniform patches to rifles and pistols, on the side of the street, quite openly. And officers had lists proclaiming in German what vehicles they could get delivered to you on payment of some dollars, pounds, or Deutschmark...
The Yanks did that on the Red Ball Express in WW2....Some of the drivers started to sell 20lt tins of fuel.....then found it was easier to sell the whole load and the vehicle that was holding it. They just jumped on an empty truck going back the other way and claimed it crashed.
Visited the museum yesterday. Very well organised, one-way system doesn't spoil the experience, can still see all the vehicles. The new WW2 display is excellent.
I recently received my order from the shop. Outstanding products,customer service, and shipping! All the way from the UK, to Coventry Rhode Island,USA. Thank you very much. Keep up the great work!
"Perhaps make a donation or join one of our schemes." Okay, David, that did it, you've guiilted me out, I got eff all at the moment but I'll scrape up some little bit of coin from somewhere and route it to the Tank Museum, just in thanks for how much I respect the expertise of everybody involved at Bovington, and how much I enjoy viewing the results. Thank you!
Right on mate Great to see these videos !! Love tanks especially WWII Sherman's, German Tigers , Russian Armor . Someday I hope to take my kids , I am a single dad, disabled veteran . US Army , for a visit to your museum. I hope....given the crazy world we live in. But anyway enjoy your vids Cheers And greetings from KY , USA 😁😁
It's worth it! Not only is the museum itself great fun, but the surrounding towns have some really lovely quiet pubs to take in the country if you go just outside the town itself. Especially if you've been in forces, lots of people in the area who were.
Dear Mr Willey and Finn Thanks so much from Eleanor and Harry for answering there question about the KV, Eleanor’s really happy it’s still there!. And who cares about an extra letter, Still looks cool! Sorry we didn’t get back sooner just all sat down to watch the last two episodes.
17pdr vs Modern Armour? Well...take this how you will, but one of my partners in figure gaming grew up as an Army Brat here in Australia and tells the tale of the early days of the Leopard in Australian service. The story goes that one of the first Leopards was delivered to Pucka and was driven around the range. Then it broke down and the crew, not being able to fix the problem straight away, left the tank where it was and went back to barracks in a support vehicle, safe in the knowledge that RAEME would recover the vehicle the next day. Then, again according to the tale, the local Reserves Anti-Tank unit was having their live fire day with their 17pdr and was allowed to basically go onto the range and shoot up the target. So they went on the range and promptly shot off their allocated collection of AP at the very realistic tank target they found down range. They then packed up and as they left the range spoke glowingly of the target quality. About then the range officer put two and two together and in panic realised what had happened. Fortunately because the tank was so 'modern' it wasn't badly damaged. Apparently. Personally I usually take a lot of salt whenever my friend tells this story but make of it what you will. :D Personally big grains of salt as I have never heard this story from anyone else.
In the UK we are obsessed with German tank such as the Tiger or Panther. Were there any British tanks that the Germans were impressed with? Thank you for doing the Q&A sessions I think they are great during these difficult times. BTW my partner loves Finn and now she is watching these videos with me.
Dr. Willy, I received my ill-gotten booty from the gift shop today. You did not say my Finn puppet would come with a dog tag. His autograph (and yours) are the best parts of the purchase. The books and all are also quite nice. Thank you and the museum gift shop so much. And thank you for all the cozy tank chats. Here's to clean living and pure thoughts. Cheers! Kurt Bullington
I just got Crisp's Brazen Chariots last weekend and am thoroughly enjoying it. Your book recommendations are excellent and I've enjoyed reading several of the books you've mentioned over these past excellent Q&A sessions. Keep up the great work and keep having Finn as part of these chats...
My 75mm inflatable shell arrived today and will make a beautiful addition to my mancave. In order to justify the shipping costs I also got the book ''By tank, from D to VE day'' by Ken Tout and I look forward to reading it. I also have a question: The Germans captured quite a number of allied tanks and put them into service. How did they keep them supplied with ammunition and spare parts? I reckon if a Sherman is captured there will be some ammunition left in its racks, but at some point you'll have to resupply a tank with ammunition. And when a tank breaks down you need spare parts to fix it. How did the Germans deal with these problems?
I’ve been reading a book on Dunkirk and it surprised me how often British tank crews drove up to German tanks not recognizing them as such, and the Germans seemed oblivious as well.
RE Blue on Blue - In a book on the Canadian 29th Armoured Reconnaissance Regiment (South Albertas) - When they were in France post D-Day they called in Air support and popped coloured smoke to indicate their position, Yellow smoke, which was the colour for the Day or Week. When the planes came in they attacked the South Albertas, not the target. They threw out more smoke, and the planes kept coming in. I don't think anyone was killed but a couple of tanks were damaged. Eventually they ran out of fuel or ammunition and left. Later the South Albertas, a bit pissed at the Air support, found out that the RAF had been briefed that yellow was a target indicator.
A Danish enthusiast has bought some surplus tanks and tracked Equipment from the former Eastern stores and has made a private "Panzer Museum" near the town Slagelse on Sealand, including a T34 and the largest radar, tracked vehicle, ever made. He has his own area to use them in also, for a pay of course.
Visited Arsenalen the other day. A lot of cars outside and a lot of people (meaning a lot more than I expected these days, but probably like a normal summer day). Thing is, that there were never any crowding. People kept distance very well. The museum is spacious in most places. I think the museum made a great job in adjusting. They had some extra signs, some hand sanitations stations here and there. Also they had changed so they no longer accepted cash (as many others in Sweden). A lot of people were outdoors, like at the fun looking mini-tanks (tracked), but again, distance were kept and being outdoors felt safer anyways. I am not trying to promote Arsenalen. Just thinking they seems to deal with the bad situation in a good way, keeping afloat for long term survival but still not being unsafe when it comes to covid-19 in Sweden. All, in all, Aresenalen is open. Good for them, good for me. A side note on leadership. Aside from in the early days of the current covid-19 situation when the caretaking of elders seemed to fail, we have done prettey well and we (as well as our politicans) tried to follow science, not politicans with short term economical goals. The latter seemingly leading to far worse long term problems in many countries but the former is doable to work out in the long run. The politican in power should show leadership for the people in harsh times and unite people. Instead, some leaders in a few countries seems to have a neurodevelopmental disorder or "just" strong narcissism and sociopathy. Leading by serving is not on the table for them. Neither is leading by example, neither is surrounding oneself with people being experts on what you are not expert in. I guess it is like war. Should Generals or Politicans run a war? Look up Sun Tzu to start with. Before Covid-19, people said they would do what Sweden did if there is a similar pandemic, but when the pandemic hit, they did not follow science. Instead of empowering the experts, some flat ignored realities and told everyone its "nothing". Yeah, a lot good that did. Yes, Sweden could have kept a better disaster preparation and perhaps should not have dismantled so much thinking that "nothing bad will ever happen" after the previous cold war. Also, if not the disasters had happend in the elder care in Sweden, I think we may have had hundres of deaths, instead of like five or six thousands, so no, we were NOT perfect (who is?). Yes, some types of business have been hit very hard, but it seems others have adapted and at least live on. When enough people are united and leaders are good enough, empowering experts and doing their job on visions and hope, a lot of very hard times can be endured.
I really enjoy this format. Very much an informal chat with someone who shares similar interests. Of course, the Pupper does add a dimension that is almost family - like. Sitting here lusting for that Tiger I. Where to put it? Or should I really go off the deep end and build a large Victory or another large Constitution? All that rigging will certainly fill many an evening...
I think that the NATO aircraft reporting names may have came from the plethora of nicknames given to enemy aircraft in WWII. It's not unlikely that this caused confusion especially with the difficulty of identifying aircraft in the first place. Also like how the NATO system refers to fighters with F names, bombers with B etc. The Soviet tanks were only of the T series, which meant anything T-xx would always be an MBT whilst anything else would be a different threat.
Hi David John Gardiner here, been coming to the Tank Museum now on and off for over 50 years, My question is. How many of the tanks in the museum are ervicable, or running vehicles Thanks
Another great Q&A. British troops seem to repeat that CR.2 is the best protected tank in the world. Is there anything unclassified to indicate this or back this up? While CR.2 does seem to be heavier than other vehicles in the same class, and Chobham/ Burlington seem to have been notoriously good at stopping shaped charge threats, there seems to be nothing indicating a high resistance to kinetic threats in the same way as that of Leopard 2A5+/ M1 HA mods. In your opinion, with rounds like Svinets and Vacuum now being manufactured, is the armour on CR.2 still up to the job?
@John Smith if its not in the public domain then why is Johnny so sure? There must be something a little more concrete indicating this in the public sphere. Im not looking for RHA numbers, maybe just what rounds the CR1 was designed against from what distances or some thing like that
Were there tigers present at Stalingrad ? When I was 10 I remember reading a book about Stalingrad... I read it over and over at the school library. Anyway, it mentioned the German October push when five divisions attacked on a narrow front against the Russians defending the tractor works, I believe. The book noted that the Germans used their full array of weaponry on this attack. It included flame throwers, stukas, nebelwerfers and their newest super-heavy tanks. In October 1942, the only tank that would fit that description is of course a Tiger. I've researched off and on lately and I can't get a definite answer. So, were there a small number of Tigers deployed to Stalingrad ? I personally don't think that there were... but that's been a constant nagging question over the years. I hope that you can answer my little question ? Thank you, again.
If anyone wants to buy a Haynes Manual from the museum,right now it is the time. At the moment,they are not simply affordable,as they usually are,they really have bargain price.
Perhaps an addition to the video's intro could be a brief bit of footage of Finn playing fetch! Im sure the fans would absolutely love it! Im no camera guy or editor but I would think it wouldn't add too much work to the process 😁
My haynes manuals are stuck in the office of exchange at heathrow. It's been there for a month. I don't know when I'll receive it ☹️ probably it's been stuck since there's no flight to my country currently. If you're shipping to SEA, particularly Indonesia, my suggestion is to use ups/dhl, don't use royal mail, because it may be difficult for your country's postal service to ship it from the office of exchange.
Hi, I'm secretly writing to you without my hubby Chris knowing 😊. He loves listening to all your videos over n over 🙄, well every holiday we have he always thinks of places the kids would like but this year I've said we should come visit the tank museum as it's something he often mentions. We are coming to visit on the 17th August which will always be our 1st wedding anniversary. Just wondered if you'd make his day and give him a mention in your next video? His name is Chris Cooke from Glemsford in Suffolk my name is Debbie. Looking forward to our visit and buying memorabilia. 👍🏻 Xxx
If the king tiger had been introduced to the war in adequate numbers and had been manned by a properly trained crew, could it have helped turn the tide of the war, and or stayed on par to the bigger and better tanks the allies started producing later on?
A local museum has a fantastic collection of 17th century Meissen porcelain. A while back, a family made the claim that an extremely ornate lid, of all things, was through no fault of the Musem looted by the Nazis in ages past. The museum undertook a background check for the lid, but in the meantime they actually sent sent it to the claimants for them to keep it in their possession as an act of good faith while the background check was undertaken. I thought that spoke very well to the Museum's reputation. And ultimately it was determined that the lid, one of 3 known to exist, did in fact belong to the claimant. So they prevailed. I guess my point is, sometimes it is what the museum does not have in its collection as opposed to what it does which makes it great.
PLEASE PLEASE have Jingels do an audio tour of the museum. Maybe with a few of his dirty jokes and navy stories put in. Nowdays it can simply done as a MP3 download and ran from visitors own phones for people who are interested or are a fan of jingles. Doesn't have to be for the general public and all to serious. Jingles loves to waffle on about things anyway so i'm sure he would do a recording for/with you guys. I am sure a lot of people would really love that experience. Even if it is only 45 minutes or an hour long or so and doesn't cover the entire collection. People can do it as an extra bit when they visit. It would be a bit of promotion for you guys as well.
Or maybe it can be an introduction to the museum. Have him tell people where the toilets are and where to get coffee. Where to find certain exhibits and what the must buys are in the shop or something. Just a bit of fun in the jingles style people are so fond of. I think it would be pretty succesful.
How do Cobi that are partnered with the Tank Museum such as the Tiger 131 set come about? What's the process of a tank from the collection being chosen? The 131 is my favorite set. I love the channel and these Q and A videos, and I actually really enjoy you going through the shop items.
I have a question, why is the Char d'Instruction (Renault FT) at the Tank Museum painted entirely black? It was previously in artillery grey which as far as I know was historically accurate. Thanks for these videos!
Did Finn help you rearrange the merchandise? It all seems to have moved between books 😀. Great Q&A, and the WWll exhibition if brilliant, I spent 6 hours there last week while it's still reasonably quiet looking at and reading everything 🤓
Why not have a patreon link for the tank museum videos, you produce them regularly anyway so it would be "free" money and not ringfenced for any particular project....... I am sure a lot of viewers would be happy to support you
ref audio guides. Has the museum considered some kind of app which would give people the option. No issue of loss of equipment although there would be some investment in the audio but much of it is probably already covered in your tank chats. The family group aspect would of course still be there but its a thought
Yeah this perks my boring day and picks it up makes it better besides building on my 1/35 scale hey I have ah question do you guys have more info on the tortoise like ah book cause I am interested in it and why it was built
Agree with the why no emphasis on British Tanks videos & time for Valentine is especially poor on UA-cam with just a few minutes of tank chat ever crusader seems barely cared about, would be nice to get a video on them both
Any of the shells used by WWII tanks, even the King Tiger, would simply bounce off Chobham armour. Even the 125mm guns on Iraqi T-72 tanks are almost totally ineffective against Chobham, so WWII tanks' guns would be like squirting water pistols at them.
I purchased that tiger 1 model on the table on May 19th and it still has not arrived... I've come to the conclusion the liberty ship bringing it to the USA was sunk by a u-boat. 😔
It varies, but many of them are decidedly cramped - any more space for the crew either increases the size (so your tank becomes heavier and a bigger target) or means you have to do without something else (less ammo storage, say, or have a smaller gun). This is why outside storage for kit etc is so valued... I'm not sure if you still can, but at one point you could go inside the museum's cut-open Panzer III. That was reasonable compared to many others, but you still had to be very careful not to bang your head against all the metal.. and that one was completely stationary and no-one was shooting at you or otherwise making you hurry. Some of the tall American tanks were roomy in comparison. Soviet tanks could be very cramped and their solution was to have an upper height limit on crew. I wish the museum would do more interiors, not accurate to the millimetre but 'here's roughly the sort of interior space this sort of tank has for the crew to move around in'. Make them from soft play stuff for the reason above and let people try them.
Concerning audio guides, in most cases I find them tedious, because they provide the information too slowly. I much prefer a guidebook with written information, because I can read it quickly and linger on the information I am particularly interested in. For me, reading is much quicker than listening to spoken information. Where museums have an audio guide I usually refuse them, unless they are compulsory.
Finn and the jigsaw puzzle! The way he put his head on his paws as if to say "Blimey, that took some doing", was brilliant!
It was our pleasure! Her name is Georgia. We had a fantastic day, really loved getting back down there.
Really good friendly staff also.
Ripper. Greetings from Australia. Love these films. And Finn rocks.
That story about the friendly fire incident was fascinating, Rather shocking if you think about it.
The commander of the tank he shot forgave him, the gunner he commanded to fire probably didn’t.
@@JamLeGull they are lucky brits decided to only fire solid shot AP and not explosive filled. 4 shells penetrated the turret and if they had explosive mass the crew would be mashed potatoes
emelgiefro I’m thinking more puréed tomatoes but you’re absolutely right.
Russian Mafia: Wanna buy tank? Few tanks?
Tank Museum: Tanks? What tanks?
Russian Mafia: Good tank. T-90MS, T-80BWM, maybe a T-90M Proryv-3 - this very good tank.
Tank Museum: Well, no... thanks, Thank you.
Russian Mafia: No? Cheap maybe T-72B4. Good price. Less than $1mln, You sure?
Tank Museum: No, thank you. We are not interested.
Russian Mafia: Okay, call me if you change your mind. Have a nice day.
remember the Soviet Army offering tanks that way.
My mother was in Berlin around 1990, Soviet soldiers were selling everything that wasn't nailed down, from uniform patches to rifles and pistols, on the side of the street, quite openly.
And officers had lists proclaiming in German what vehicles they could get delivered to you on payment of some dollars, pounds, or Deutschmark...
You have some nice tanks around here...it would be a shame if anything happened to them.....
The Yanks did that on the Red Ball Express in WW2....Some of the drivers started to sell 20lt tins of fuel.....then found it was easier to sell the whole load and the vehicle that was holding it. They just jumped on an empty truck going back the other way and claimed it crashed.
@@jwenting that's extremely interesting, thanks for sharing!
@@jwenting LOL...I guess I missed my chance at T-72 darn
These shows must continue after lockdown finishes...I'm hooked!
Visited the museum yesterday. Very well organised, one-way system doesn't spoil the experience, can still see all the vehicles. The new WW2 display is excellent.
I recently received my order from the shop. Outstanding products,customer service, and shipping! All the way from the UK, to Coventry Rhode Island,USA. Thank you very much. Keep up the great work!
I love the way you've got the ball throwing while continuing to talk down pat.
Practice, practice, practice!
"Perhaps make a donation or join one of our schemes."
Okay, David, that did it, you've guiilted me out, I got eff all at the moment but I'll scrape up some little bit of coin from somewhere and route it to the Tank Museum, just in thanks for how much I respect the expertise of everybody involved at Bovington, and how much I enjoy viewing the results. Thank you!
I THINK I LOVE THIS MAN
Right on mate
Great to see these videos !!
Love tanks especially WWII Sherman's, German Tigers , Russian Armor .
Someday I hope to take my kids , I am a single dad, disabled veteran .
US Army , for a visit to your museum.
I hope....given the crazy world we live in.
But anyway enjoy your vids
Cheers
And greetings from KY , USA
😁😁
It's worth it! Not only is the museum itself great fun, but the surrounding towns have some really lovely quiet pubs to take in the country if you go just outside the town itself. Especially if you've been in forces, lots of people in the area who were.
Thank you so much for serving. My deepest admiration. :-)
Dear Mr Willey and Finn
Thanks so much from Eleanor and Harry for answering there question about the KV, Eleanor’s really happy it’s still there!.
And who cares about an extra letter, Still looks cool!
Sorry we didn’t get back sooner just all sat down to watch the last two episodes.
@12.10 David Fletcher is back.....Best news all year.
17pdr vs Modern Armour?
Well...take this how you will, but one of my partners in figure gaming grew up as an Army Brat here in Australia and tells the tale of the early days of the Leopard in Australian service.
The story goes that one of the first Leopards was delivered to Pucka and was driven around the range. Then it broke down and the crew, not being able to fix the problem straight away, left the tank where it was and went back to barracks in a support vehicle, safe in the knowledge that RAEME would recover the vehicle the next day.
Then, again according to the tale, the local Reserves Anti-Tank unit was having their live fire day with their 17pdr and was allowed to basically go onto the range and shoot up the target. So they went on the range and promptly shot off their allocated collection of AP at the very realistic tank target they found down range. They then packed up and as they left the range spoke glowingly of the target quality.
About then the range officer put two and two together and in panic realised what had happened. Fortunately because the tank was so 'modern' it wasn't badly damaged. Apparently. Personally I usually take a lot of salt whenever my friend tells this story but make of it what you will. :D
Personally big grains of salt as I have never heard this story from anyone else.
Has the museum shop considered partnering with some one in the USA. This would avoid over seas shipping and customs issues.
maybe if American museums do the same with European shops...
@@jwenting That is the whole idea of a partnership. They would each offer the others items for sale and work out a profit split so they both profit.
Great content as ever David.
I hope these Q&A videos continue once we return to "normal" even if they're less frequent.
I love my inflatable 88 shell, people are always so confused why I have it but it makes for an excellent conversation!
thank you for these great q and a, finn and informative. hope all of you are safe, thanks again
In the UK we are obsessed with German tank such as the Tiger or Panther. Were there any British tanks that the Germans were impressed with? Thank you for doing the Q&A sessions I think they are great during these difficult times. BTW my partner loves Finn and now she is watching these videos with me.
Early war, the Matilda.
Dr. Willy, I received my ill-gotten booty from the gift shop today. You did not say my Finn puppet would come with a dog tag. His autograph (and yours) are the best parts of the purchase. The books and all are also quite nice. Thank you and the museum gift shop so much. And thank you for all the cozy tank chats. Here's to clean living and pure thoughts. Cheers! Kurt Bullington
I just got Crisp's Brazen Chariots last weekend and am thoroughly enjoying it. Your book recommendations are excellent and I've enjoyed reading several of the books you've mentioned over these past excellent Q&A sessions. Keep up the great work and keep having Finn as part of these chats...
My 75mm inflatable shell arrived today and will make a beautiful addition to my mancave. In order to justify the shipping costs I also got the book ''By tank, from D to VE day'' by Ken Tout and I look forward to reading it.
I also have a question: The Germans captured quite a number of allied tanks and put them into service. How did they keep them supplied with ammunition and spare parts? I reckon if a Sherman is captured there will be some ammunition left in its racks, but at some point you'll have to resupply a tank with ammunition. And when a tank breaks down you need spare parts to fix it. How did the Germans deal with these problems?
Can confirm the half-speed comment
1/4 speed is even funnier! 😁
@@GWorsfold 2x is kind of amusing too.
Me: Instantly goes and checks it out, burst into laughter
Can't confirm it, since I was also drunk while listening at half speed
Also can confirm 👍😅
I’ve been reading a book on Dunkirk and it surprised me how often British tank crews drove up to German tanks not recognizing them as such, and the Germans seemed oblivious as well.
Border Collies for the win, Alex.
12:00 I've never thought of that! It's fantastic! Lol
Thanks very much for answering my question. I've got a better understanding of how the museum works, and is organised now. Much appreciated :).
Thanks for answering my question. I thoroughly enjoy these Q and A's
RE Blue on Blue - In a book on the Canadian 29th Armoured Reconnaissance Regiment (South Albertas) - When they were in France post D-Day they called in Air support and popped coloured smoke to indicate their position, Yellow smoke, which was the colour for the Day or Week. When the planes came in they attacked the South Albertas, not the target. They threw out more smoke, and the planes kept coming in. I don't think anyone was killed but a couple of tanks were damaged. Eventually they ran out of fuel or ammunition and left. Later the South Albertas, a bit pissed at the Air support, found out that the RAF had been briefed that yellow was a target indicator.
its like grandad telling his children stories tell me more...
Thans 4 the Finn merchandise! Got the delivery verry quickly. The socks are comfie and i love the signature!
The friendly fire incidents really were eye opening there 😳 well done guys.
Great show old chap! I do so enjoy these chats.
Great job David as usual but (for me) the blue on blue stuff was pure gold.
War is literaly a meat grinder. More jaw please.
A Danish enthusiast has bought some surplus tanks and tracked Equipment from the former Eastern stores and has made a private "Panzer Museum" near the town Slagelse on Sealand, including a T34 and the largest radar, tracked vehicle, ever made. He has his own area to use them in also, for a pay of course.
Task list first throw the ball. Second answer q&a, another great video tks David
Love me some of that Willey!
Excellent as always.
Magnetic note pads, not for your fridge -
but for the inside of your turret.
Perfect. That's why I watch these.
Need one for my mate's 432
Visited Arsenalen the other day. A lot of cars outside and a lot of people (meaning a lot more than I expected these days, but probably like a normal summer day).
Thing is, that there were never any crowding. People kept distance very well. The museum is spacious in most places.
I think the museum made a great job in adjusting. They had some extra signs, some hand sanitations stations here and there. Also they had changed so they no longer accepted cash (as many others in Sweden).
A lot of people were outdoors, like at the fun looking mini-tanks (tracked), but again, distance were kept and being outdoors felt safer anyways.
I am not trying to promote Arsenalen. Just thinking they seems to deal with the bad situation in a good way, keeping afloat for long term survival but still not being unsafe when it comes to covid-19 in Sweden.
All, in all, Aresenalen is open. Good for them, good for me.
A side note on leadership.
Aside from in the early days of the current covid-19 situation when the caretaking of elders seemed to fail, we have done prettey well and we (as well as our politicans) tried to follow science, not politicans with short term economical goals. The latter seemingly leading to far worse long term problems in many countries but the former is doable to work out in the long run. The politican in power should show leadership for the people in harsh times and unite people. Instead, some leaders in a few countries seems to have a neurodevelopmental disorder or "just" strong narcissism and sociopathy.
Leading by serving is not on the table for them. Neither is leading by example, neither is surrounding oneself with people being experts on what you are not expert in.
I guess it is like war. Should Generals or Politicans run a war? Look up Sun Tzu to start with.
Before Covid-19, people said they would do what Sweden did if there is a similar pandemic, but when the pandemic hit, they did not follow science. Instead of empowering the experts, some flat ignored realities and told everyone its "nothing". Yeah, a lot good that did.
Yes, Sweden could have kept a better disaster preparation and perhaps should not have dismantled so much thinking that "nothing bad will ever happen" after the previous cold war. Also, if not the disasters had happend in the elder care in Sweden, I think we may have had hundres of deaths, instead of like five or six thousands, so no, we were NOT perfect (who is?). Yes, some types of business have been hit very hard, but it seems others have adapted and at least live on. When enough people are united and leaders are good enough, empowering experts and doing their job on visions and hope, a lot of very hard times can be endured.
Off to see your tiger 2 prototype at Soesterberg NL soon. So glad everything is starting to open up again. I miss my Tanks.
Great video, THANK YOU.
This helmed/backpack is very tempting!
Smart thinking on the audio guides. Plus it gives all of us armchair experts a chance to talk everyone's ears off
I’m going to the museum in a few days I have been looking forward to it for a while
I really enjoy this format. Very much an informal chat with someone who shares similar interests. Of course, the Pupper does add a dimension that is almost family - like.
Sitting here lusting for that Tiger I. Where to put it? Or should I really go off the deep end and build a large Victory or another large Constitution? All that rigging will certainly fill many an evening...
These are a great start to the day, seriously appreciate your work on these. Go Finn ! you're famous now doggo.
Great video thanks and Good boy Finn!
I think that the NATO aircraft reporting names may have came from the plethora of nicknames given to enemy aircraft in WWII.
It's not unlikely that this caused confusion especially with the difficulty of identifying aircraft in the first place.
Also like how the NATO system refers to fighters with F names, bombers with B etc. The Soviet tanks were only of the T series, which meant anything T-xx would always be an MBT whilst anything else would be a different threat.
Hi David
John Gardiner here, been coming to the Tank Museum now on and off for over 50 years,
My question is.
How many of the tanks in the museum are ervicable, or running vehicles
Thanks
lot's of thanks from bexhill .
One Russian museum had a nearly-new T-90. The driver had sold it to them, then the Army turned up wanting it back!
Ah yes David Fletcher, the man, the myth, the legend...
the moustache.
Another great Q&A. British troops seem to repeat that CR.2 is the best protected tank in the world. Is there anything unclassified to indicate this or back this up? While CR.2 does seem to be heavier than other vehicles in the same class, and Chobham/ Burlington seem to have been notoriously good at stopping shaped charge threats, there seems to be nothing indicating a high resistance to kinetic threats in the same way as that of Leopard 2A5+/ M1 HA mods. In your opinion, with rounds like Svinets and Vacuum now being manufactured, is the armour on CR.2 still up to the job?
Yes it is.
@@JohnyG29 I hope so, but is there anything to back that up?
@John Smith if its not in the public domain then why is Johnny so sure? There must be something a little more concrete indicating this in the public sphere. Im not looking for RHA numbers, maybe just what rounds the CR1 was designed against from what distances or some thing like that
The modern wheeled recovery vehicle of the bundeswehr is also called Bison
Were there tigers present at Stalingrad ? When I was 10 I remember reading a book about Stalingrad... I read it over and over at the school library. Anyway, it mentioned the German October push when five divisions attacked on a narrow front against the Russians defending the tractor works, I believe. The book noted that the Germans used their full array of weaponry on this attack. It included flame throwers, stukas, nebelwerfers and their newest super-heavy tanks. In October 1942, the only tank that would fit that description is of course a Tiger. I've researched off and on lately and I can't get a definite answer. So, were there a small number of Tigers deployed to Stalingrad ? I personally don't think that there were... but that's been a constant nagging question over the years. I hope that you can answer my little question ? Thank you, again.
Fabulous Q&A as always! Thank you - a highlight of the Day
Had to have a glass of port after that - Ruby, in this case 😊
If anyone wants to buy a Haynes Manual from the museum,right now it is the time. At the moment,they are not simply affordable,as they usually are,they really have bargain price.
Thank you for answering my question. I would have never guessed the Russian translation for extra armour was a female country singer :)
Perhaps an addition to the video's intro could be a brief bit of footage of Finn playing fetch! Im sure the fans would absolutely love it! Im no camera guy or editor but I would think it wouldn't add too much work to the process 😁
Port and Kelly's Heroes mentioned in one video, can't be bad.
My haynes manuals are stuck in the office of exchange at heathrow. It's been there for a month. I don't know when I'll receive it ☹️ probably it's been stuck since there's no flight to my country currently. If you're shipping to SEA, particularly Indonesia, my suggestion is to use ups/dhl, don't use royal mail, because it may be difficult for your country's postal service to ship it from the office of exchange.
Hi, I'm secretly writing to you without my hubby Chris knowing 😊. He loves listening to all your videos over n over 🙄, well every holiday we have he always thinks of places the kids would like but this year I've said we should come visit the tank museum as it's something he often mentions. We are coming to visit on the 17th August which will always be our 1st wedding anniversary. Just wondered if you'd make his day and give him a mention in your next video? His name is Chris Cooke from Glemsford in Suffolk my name is Debbie. Looking forward to our visit and buying memorabilia. 👍🏻 Xxx
If the king tiger had been introduced to the war in adequate numbers and had been manned by a properly trained crew, could it have helped turn the tide of the war, and or stayed on par to the bigger and better tanks the allies started producing later on?
Just noticed the angle of dangle of the tree!
Brazen Chariots a good read on the North Africa campaign.
Question: What kind of hearing and eye protection would tank crews use?
Thank you.
A local museum has a fantastic collection of 17th century Meissen porcelain. A while back, a family made the claim that an extremely ornate lid, of all things, was through no fault of the Musem looted by the Nazis in ages past.
The museum undertook a background check for the lid, but in the meantime they actually sent sent it to the claimants for them to keep it in their possession as an act of good faith while the background check was undertaken. I thought that spoke very well to the Museum's reputation. And ultimately it was determined that the lid, one of 3 known to exist, did in fact belong to the claimant. So they prevailed.
I guess my point is, sometimes it is what the museum does not have in its collection as opposed to what it does which makes it great.
Please can we have Finn's top 5 tank rides? Whippet, Mastiff....
PLEASE PLEASE have Jingels do an audio tour of the museum. Maybe with a few of his dirty jokes and navy stories put in.
Nowdays it can simply done as a MP3 download and ran from visitors own phones for people who are interested or are a fan of jingles. Doesn't have to be for the general public and all to serious. Jingles loves to waffle on about things anyway so i'm sure he would do a recording for/with you guys.
I am sure a lot of people would really love that experience. Even if it is only 45 minutes or an hour long or so and doesn't cover the entire collection. People can do it as an extra bit when they visit.
It would be a bit of promotion for you guys as well.
Or maybe it can be an introduction to the museum. Have him tell people where the toilets are and where to get coffee. Where to find certain exhibits and what the must buys are in the shop or something.
Just a bit of fun in the jingles style people are so fond of.
I think it would be pretty succesful.
How do Cobi that are partnered with the Tank Museum such as the Tiger 131 set come about? What's the process of a tank from the collection being chosen? The 131 is my favorite set. I love the channel and these Q and A videos, and I actually really enjoy you going through the shop items.
Well, I just ordered 4 books from the shop for my father. 5 books doubled the shipping cost to the US ...
Going to need a Finn Museum Annex.
I have a question, why is the Char d'Instruction (Renault FT) at the Tank Museum painted entirely black? It was previously in artillery grey which as far as I know was historically accurate. Thanks for these videos!
Omg dude was right it's awesome at half speed 👌
Did Finn help you rearrange the merchandise? It all seems to have moved between books 😀. Great Q&A, and the WWll exhibition if brilliant, I spent 6 hours there last week while it's still reasonably quiet looking at and reading everything 🤓
Why not have a patreon link for the tank museum videos, you produce them regularly anyway so it would be "free" money and not ringfenced for any particular project....... I am sure a lot of viewers would be happy to support you
are there any accounts of the Bruckenleger IV playing any significant role during the war?
18:45 someone walking on the backlane...
A superfan loitering with intent? 🤔
Finn went on full alert right after that, super adorable!
Does the Brazen Chariots book mention what sort of tank he mistook for a Panzer III? Looking, I'd guess an A9 or A10, depending on just when it was.
ref audio guides. Has the museum considered some kind of app which would give people the option. No issue of loss of equipment although there would be some investment in the audio but much of it is probably already covered in your tank chats. The family group aspect would of course still be there but its a thought
Can you stock pen and sword books please
Thanks for answering my question. Yeah I should have been more clear with my question, I was talking about the German Bison SPG.
Looking forward to part two of the answer!
Yeah this perks my boring day and picks it up makes it better besides building on my 1/35 scale hey I have ah question do you guys have more info on the tortoise like ah book cause I am interested in it and why it was built
British tank markings.....astrophysics is easier :-)
Agree with the why no emphasis on British Tanks videos & time for Valentine is especially poor on UA-cam with just a few minutes of tank chat ever crusader seems barely cared about, would be nice to get a video on them both
Any of the shells used by WWII tanks, even the King Tiger, would simply bounce off Chobham armour. Even the 125mm guns on Iraqi T-72 tanks are almost totally ineffective against Chobham, so WWII tanks' guns would be like squirting water pistols at them.
want to review a tank movie... sahara ,humphry bogart
it isn't dead we had fury a few years back
Possibly my favorite tank movie.
God save davied F!!!! preach brother preach!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
He's right about the half speed though XD Lol love these vids mister Willey :p
I purchased that tiger 1 model on the table on May 19th and it still has not arrived... I've come to the conclusion the liberty ship bringing it to the USA was sunk by a u-boat. 😔
Of course you need to show the oppositions tanks, from WW2, equally for the cold war and after
It's been really great.....pleased...hello to Finn......
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Two Finn Plushies? Not allowed in the same video! Overrrrrrrrrrlllloooooaaaadddd
How comfortable are the insides of various tanks?
It varies, but many of them are decidedly cramped - any more space for the crew either increases the size (so your tank becomes heavier and a bigger target) or means you have to do without something else (less ammo storage, say, or have a smaller gun). This is why outside storage for kit etc is so valued...
I'm not sure if you still can, but at one point you could go inside the museum's cut-open Panzer III. That was reasonable compared to many others, but you still had to be very careful not to bang your head against all the metal.. and that one was completely stationary and no-one was shooting at you or otherwise making you hurry.
Some of the tall American tanks were roomy in comparison. Soviet tanks could be very cramped and their solution was to have an upper height limit on crew.
I wish the museum would do more interiors, not accurate to the millimetre but 'here's roughly the sort of interior space this sort of tank has for the crew to move around in'. Make them from soft play stuff for the reason above and let people try them.
Concerning audio guides, in most cases I find them tedious, because they provide the information too slowly. I much prefer a guidebook with written information, because I can read it quickly and linger on the information I am particularly interested in. For me, reading is much quicker than listening to spoken information.
Where museums have an audio guide I usually refuse them, unless they are compulsory.
17 pounder can penetrate the roof, floor and any part without special armour. E.g. The area behind the wheels.
7:30 Respect. High moral standards are in short supply these days.
More Finns!