Pistols Taken From the Walther Factory in April 1945

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  • Опубліковано 12 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 661

  • @SoWe1
    @SoWe1 5 років тому +436

    Walther Waffen Verkaufsstelle
    (literally Walther weapons selling place)
    The sign was for an outlet store right at the factory

  • @tomandtinadixon
    @tomandtinadixon 5 років тому +336

    Yup. Canadian troops too. There was a German writer who commented on that during WW I. "The Germans, French and British fight for Honour. The Canadians fight for Souvenirs"

    • @Sicarius888
      @Sicarius888 5 років тому +42

      "Sir, a man fights for what he lacks the most."

    • @tomshepard8473
      @tomshepard8473 5 років тому +23

      @@Sicarius888 And Canadians desperately need souvenirs :)

    • @EPWillard
      @EPWillard 5 років тому +15

      I mean for brits germany isn't that far away so the souvenir is probably less tempting but if you're from over here it'd probably get alot more interest

    • @owllymannstein7113
      @owllymannstein7113 5 років тому +31

      Well they were giving up years (possibly the last years) of their lives to go fight somebody else's war. Seems they are entitled to something besides a boat ride home.

    • @LadyAnuB
      @LadyAnuB 5 років тому +15

      Canadians: Polite until souvenirs are involved.

  • @roeng1368
    @roeng1368 5 років тому +110

    The term "kid in a candy store" springs to mind !

  • @quatro_quatro
    @quatro_quatro 5 років тому +215

    The older i get, the more i realize what a beautiful gun the Walther PP is.

    • @therealcrisis8439
      @therealcrisis8439 5 років тому +10

      same here! It looks a lot more dignified than those Accessory-overloaded Showpieces you see today.

    • @SteinerArts
      @SteinerArts 5 років тому +7

      Same here, my man. It's absolutely a beautiful blowback handgun.

    • @jonmeray713
      @jonmeray713 5 років тому +7

      Weird how i hate 380 but love 32 pp’s

    • @nomanmcshmoo8640
      @nomanmcshmoo8640 5 років тому +4

      @@jonmeray713 Same here. The .32 PP is one of the finest little pistols ever made.

    • @MichaelOZimmermannJCDECS
      @MichaelOZimmermannJCDECS 5 років тому

      I agree, in line with the 08!

  • @Taistelukalkkuna
    @Taistelukalkkuna 5 років тому +247

    That Franken-PPK is definitely coolest.

    • @dak4465
      @dak4465 4 роки тому +2

      I agree, in the white with rare grey grips!

    • @pokemaster123ism
      @pokemaster123ism 4 роки тому +3

      Don’t you mean Frankena-PPK’s Monster?

    • @magisterrleth3129
      @magisterrleth3129 4 роки тому +1

      I like mixing parts. The effect is striking looking at all those different German productions.

  • @Lockbar
    @Lockbar 5 років тому +99

    About twenty years ago at Ohio Gun Collectors Assoc. annual display show, (when the show was still at the IX center next to Cleveland Airport) there was an original German wooden shipping crate a GI had brought home containing 20 P-38's. I don't remember if they were from Walther or Mauser. Unfortunately the GI had been convinced by some friends to part with two of the pistols after he came home, but the case still contained 18 mint condition P38s. The case of pistols was not for sale, it was part of a historic display only, and It was very impressive.

    • @vikingsoftpaw
      @vikingsoftpaw 5 років тому +3

      I remember seeing that display also.

    • @albapantheratigris6071
      @albapantheratigris6071 5 років тому +2

      Probably had to part with them, one for the government and one for his “buddy”, to keep them both “preoccupied”.

    • @vikingsoftpaw
      @vikingsoftpaw 5 років тому +8

      Believe it or not, During WWII my father's infantry division was to spend a few hours in Ulm at the Walther factor.. They spent four days there! He grabbed a few P-38's and a few spare barrels. He mentioned some GI's in his unit filled as many as four duffle bags with goodies!

  • @suro5038
    @suro5038 5 років тому +640

    *permanently borrowed*

    • @Yanuaxu
      @Yanuaxu 5 років тому +63

      *liberated*

    • @tomwebb3081
      @tomwebb3081 5 років тому +30

      *reallocated*

    • @NeuroticLobster
      @NeuroticLobster 5 років тому +5

      They will be like both of ours, we’ll just keep them at my house.

    • @marcogram1216
      @marcogram1216 5 років тому +10

      Or STOLEN. "War Trophies" always seems like stolen to me. I guess if the tables were turned the Americans would've said the same thing. Yeah right.

    • @Regolith86
      @Regolith86 5 років тому +13

      @@marcogram1216 They were making guns for a regime that started a World War and slaughtered over 11 million people. If all we did was take a few pistols from them, they should count themselves lucky.

  • @Wonderfoolcomedy
    @Wonderfoolcomedy 5 років тому +43

    I own one of these. A Walther PP that looks exactly like the one in the video. When I researched it I found that some G.I.'s referred to these as "Cigarette Guns", because as Ian mentioned in the video they paid the liberated foreign workers ( many of which were Polish and had been slave laborers for years at this point) in cigarettes to assemble guns for them. I treasure this piece of history and was delighted to see a video on these forgotten weapons!

    • @jerryneal9006
      @jerryneal9006 5 років тому +4

      I would love to see pictures of the gun you have, This is really cool history.

  • @wes11bravo
    @wes11bravo 5 років тому +154

    I love vids like this, Ian. The stories behind how a particular weapon came to be in private hands is, to me, more fascinating than how that weapon came to be designed and made in the first place.

    • @prd6617
      @prd6617 5 років тому +7

      i do like both,
      to know the reason it was made give us background understanding why xxx have xxx reputation, for example why m38 carnaco rifle have bad reputation nowadays turn out people who shot it dont know what the real cartridge dimension that rifle should be using.
      or why these ww1 machine gun have top fed magazine and high rate of fire not make sense for ground use but turn out it was designed as airplane gun which is make sense for that purpose.
      it remind me of an comment on old Ian vid that say top magazine gun are crap, they should just stick with bottom fed one without knowing the history and the original purpose of the gun.

    • @Skyfox94
      @Skyfox94 5 років тому +4

      It'd would be kinda interesting to have a TV series focus on something like that - i imagine a tour guide in the present day, walking through a museum, stopping by one of the guns above and then telling the story - then the show cuts back to, in this case '45 and shows the story and the life of the person that found the gun.

    • @dronenoobFL
      @dronenoobFL 5 років тому +1

      @@Skyfox94 This would be such a great series. I hope Ian gets that opportunity but with that I would be afraid we'd see these videos possibly go by the wayside.

    • @buninparadise9476
      @buninparadise9476 5 років тому +1

      they were fucking stolen - remarkably fascinating

    • @wes11bravo
      @wes11bravo 5 років тому +1

      If they hadn't been "fucking stolen" they would have been melted down to make Volkswagen bumpers or some shit, so, there's that.

  • @franklinposner6304
    @franklinposner6304 5 років тому +8

    My dad was in the 11th Armored and told me stories of the taking of Zella-Mehlis and the Walther works. He remembered seeing GI's coming out of the showroom carrying engraved and plated pistols. He's gone now, so it's nice to see things like this that remind me of him.

    • @johncole2469
      @johncole2469 4 роки тому +3

      Franklin Posner
      My great uncle was in 11th Armored Division. George Hjelt.
      He told me about liberating the Walther plant when I was a boy. He passed age 80 in 2001.

  • @RichardCranium321
    @RichardCranium321 5 років тому +21

    I personally think the alloy frame unmarked ppk, almost in the raw, is absolutely gorgeous in its own way.

  • @Critisismsoldier999
    @Critisismsoldier999 5 років тому +613

    "Being American everything we occupy is liberated." lmao

    • @NeblogaiLT
      @NeblogaiLT 5 років тому +62

      At least it is mostly true in the case of Americans. Because, Russians also try to call themselves liberators- while they enslaved large part of Europe after WW2.

    • @pihlrau
      @pihlrau 5 років тому +53

      And looting is taking souvenirs.

    • @silentbigsteve3429
      @silentbigsteve3429 5 років тому

      @@NeblogaiLT ikr

    • @Critisismsoldier999
      @Critisismsoldier999 5 років тому +48

      @@NeblogaiLT the Soviets, for all their flaws, in my opinion did the lion's share of the fighting and dying and I have much respect for them because of it.

    • @randymagnum143
      @randymagnum143 5 років тому +11

      @@pihlrau to the victor go the spoils

  • @1SaG
    @1SaG 5 років тому +55

    It might be cobbled together from various parts-bins... but that PPK looks rather interesting to me. And while I'm usually not a huge fan of light colour metals/grips on handguns (except perhaps an ivory handled, nickel-finish Peacemaker), this gun looks kinda pretty.

    • @darthgavel
      @darthgavel 5 років тому +17

      It makes me wonder whether the GI 'commissioned' it, or a worker who built it was deliberately picking flashy or special bits to build a 'gucci' example. I mean, you might end up with a rare piece or two at random, but a rare frame, extractor, grips AND safetly lever?

    • @lwilton
      @lwilton 5 років тому +2

      And a trigger that looks like it has had the heck used out of it. That seems at least a little odd.

  • @nomanmcshmoo8640
    @nomanmcshmoo8640 5 років тому +5

    The grips on that "Franken PPk" are AWESOME!!!! That grey green is sweeeeet!!!!!

  • @nickimhoff7405
    @nickimhoff7405 3 роки тому +1

    Okay but that mix match ppk is beautiful. Those grey grips are awesome!

  • @derhesslonaut5344
    @derhesslonaut5344 5 років тому +13

    Im always happy to see videos about guns from Suhl, my place of birth , or Zella-Mehlis, the town next Suhl.
    I own also a Walther PP from 1941, it was a gift from my father.
    Thanks for your videos and greetings from Suhl,Thüringen.

  • @unclekazinski7751
    @unclekazinski7751 5 років тому +321

    Assembled by captured......well liberated workers lolol

    • @mmclaurin8035
      @mmclaurin8035 5 років тому +41

      Probably the first time they were happy to assemble one of those guns since the Nazis enslaved them. Yankee comes in, gives me my freedom, and offers me a pack of Luckys to put together a pistol? Fuck yes my dude, let me whip that up for you.

    • @LN997-i8x
      @LN997-i8x 5 років тому +27

      @@mmclaurin8035 It's more than likely that the initial occupying troops just regarded everyone working at the factory as captured enemies - after all, they were assembling the weapons being used against them. It was probably a much less happy arrangement, possibly at gunpoint.
      The romantic idea of "liberating the workers" almost certainly came later.

    • @mmclaurin8035
      @mmclaurin8035 5 років тому +21

      @@LN997-i8x Ian said they were on site for like a week. I'm sure that the soldiers knew the score there pretty quick. They probably figured some Polish guy (or gal) who is constantly thanking them for showing up that is working in a German firearms plant wasn't there by choice, so I'm sure they straightened that out pretty quick. German workers were probably eyed more cautiously, but by that time the Nazis use of slave labor was becoming much more well known.

    • @mantisgod2809
      @mantisgod2809 5 років тому +8

      @@cowmaneater1243 Boy are you wrong

    • @LuvBorderCollies
      @LuvBorderCollies 5 років тому +3

      @@mmclaurin8035 People of all nationalities were used as slave labor including some US POWs.

  • @Arthurzeiro
    @Arthurzeiro 5 років тому +229

    So, these were not taken from the factory, but merely liberated.

    • @marshaul
      @marshaul 5 років тому +7

      They always dreamed of being free.

    • @lifeofjoyandcreation
      @lifeofjoyandcreation 5 років тому +8

      @@marshaul and still dreaming.

    • @2tommyrad
      @2tommyrad 5 років тому +4

      when I was 12, my Schwinn Sting Ray was liberated from me.

    • @2tommyrad
      @2tommyrad 5 років тому +1

      @@iatsd the older bros raided the compound of the thief, beat him to a pulp and returned the property to the rightful land.

    • @Bert2368
      @Bert2368 5 років тому +2

      The traditional word for this soldierly pursuit is "looting". It is a venerable tradition, has been practiced nearly universaly among soldiers world wide ever since the first conquering army was orgaized and doesn't look to be ending any time soon...
      www.google.com/amp/s/www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6739763/amp/US-troops-looted-personal-possessions-massacre-deployment-2009.html

  • @noahcount7132
    @noahcount7132 5 років тому +3

    What an interesting bit of WWII history. Thanks, Ian! Of the three pistols on display in the video, my absolute hands down choice is the way too cool "model of mish-mash" Walther PPK 'Gray Ghost.'

  • @edwalmsley1401
    @edwalmsley1401 5 років тому +81

    I'm taking these for erm "evaluation purposes "

  • @McDylanNuggets
    @McDylanNuggets 5 років тому +6

    This was great and I really appreciate the glass piece at the end.

  • @mmclaurin8035
    @mmclaurin8035 5 років тому +10

    The grey gripped PP is Beautiful

  • @SteinerSE
    @SteinerSE 5 років тому +9

    Love the speckled gray "camo" grips.

  • @mpetry912
    @mpetry912 4 роки тому +1

    this sub series on the Walthers was very interesting Ian! thank you

  • @MrPanzerDragoon
    @MrPanzerDragoon 3 роки тому +1

    I really like these history videos. Not so much about the gun, but how the gun came to be up till this point in time for all of us to see. Love the backstory! Please more of this Ian!

  • @HughesEnterprises
    @HughesEnterprises 5 років тому +5

    That PPK is super cool. Scrounging the last available parts from 6 forgotten contracts into one weirdo gun.

  • @silubr1
    @silubr1 5 років тому +37

    11:12 RKAUFSSTELL is probably Verkaufsstelle ("point of sale")

    • @Stoney3K
      @Stoney3K 5 років тому +2

      Looks like the sign used to read "Walther Waffen Verkaufsstelle" (Walther weapons dealership) so it would have been some sign that was 'liberated' from a dealership and damaged on the way to the US.

  • @Stopsign32v
    @Stopsign32v 5 років тому +1

    Those gray grips are just badass. That is the coolest of the bunch IMO.

  • @nomdemorte1302
    @nomdemorte1302 5 років тому +93

    Occupation... liberation... souvenir..... pillage.... same difference, right?

    • @TomFromYoutube
      @TomFromYoutube 5 років тому +31

      Depends who wins.

    • @Enthropical_Thunder
      @Enthropical_Thunder 5 років тому +8

      @@TomFromUA-cam
      Not really....

    • @tlshortyshorty5810
      @tlshortyshorty5810 5 років тому +6

      Spoils of war, all’s fair.

    • @calvingreene90
      @calvingreene90 5 років тому +8

      Liberation is when the occupation troop grant more freedoms than the previous controling authority.

    • @Enthropical_Thunder
      @Enthropical_Thunder 5 років тому +19

      @@calvingreene90
      Or when the occupation troop is called "US army" and the captured area contains vaste ammounts of oil fields ;D.

  • @mrbakerskatz
    @mrbakerskatz 5 років тому +1

    Very nice , my mothers late life husband had a couple weapons he brought home . A Luger that he said was only dropped once ,and a beautiful Stoger 16 ga shotgun . Thanks !

  • @Americanstruggle
    @Americanstruggle 5 років тому +1

    Love your videos and turned my son into them because he is a history buff about these things. Continued success and great content to you sir.

  • @rognvaldrasbjrn3972
    @rognvaldrasbjrn3972 4 роки тому +1

    My issue sidearm was a P38 with black plastic / bakelite grips, an 8 round mag and extremely accurate.
    I also bought a Manhurin manufactured Ppk in 9mm short which was a fantastic pistol. The finish was good but not exacting standard like the Walther Ppk.

  • @milgeekmedia
    @milgeekmedia 5 років тому +79

    Fascinating... I wonder what number of cigarette packets would have got you one of these?

    • @jeanbaptistevallee4500
      @jeanbaptistevallee4500 5 років тому +29

      One Uncle of mine got a Ruby .32 for a carton of Chesterfields.

    • @paulcollins8980
      @paulcollins8980 5 років тому +1

      58

    • @zzxxooooxxzz4964
      @zzxxooooxxzz4964 5 років тому +1

      Ohhh come on we all seen FURY you know what they were giving up for a chocolate bar.....
      😂😂😂🤣🤣🤣

    • @milgeekmedia
      @milgeekmedia 5 років тому

      @@zzxxooooxxzz4964 ...Actually, I *STILL* haven't seen it yet! LOL

    • @milgeekmedia
      @milgeekmedia 5 років тому

      @@jeanbaptistevallee4500 Geez! That's a LOT less that I would've thought!

  • @elmerofairo
    @elmerofairo 4 роки тому +1

    A rare instance of mismatched serial numbers actually making a gun more valuable

  • @Breakfast_and_Bullets
    @Breakfast_and_Bullets 5 років тому +1

    That Durell one is oddly beautiful. I love the coloration and finish.

  • @hanktorrance6855
    @hanktorrance6855 4 роки тому

    Definitely one of the more fascinating presentations ever, thanks Ian

  • @mrijk1946
    @mrijk1946 5 років тому

    Love storys like this..... cody you and youre channel are truelly one of a kind !!

  • @kennethbowers2897
    @kennethbowers2897 5 років тому +2

    I have a Walther PP with those exact grips and same stampings along with the "AC" letters

  • @polduseri909
    @polduseri909 5 років тому +1

    I am a Walther proud owner and can say with total confidence, having almost all brands but Springfield, that their guns are the best money can buy.

  • @robertdougherty349
    @robertdougherty349 5 років тому +4

    I gotta say that wood grip is a just as nice as the Bakelite one.

  • @MegaJJ1968
    @MegaJJ1968 5 років тому

    Super interesting as usual. I’m not even a gun nut. Your way of presenting stuff is simply great.

  • @polomat14
    @polomat14 5 років тому +1

    The last one was probably a result of "Hey, I've got a bottle of whiskey. And I'm willing to swap it for the nicest souvenir it can get me!" moment.

  • @dongies5834
    @dongies5834 5 років тому

    Ian: I was in Germany ( 58-60). Purchased 2 Post War Commercial P-38's, with Consecutive Serial #'s. They were $62.50 Each. I took them to H. & H Zehner,in Neiderad, Germany and had them engraved with Oak Leaf and my Monogram,and new Walnut grips. The engraving and grips cost at the time, 440DM ($110.00 -US) Serial #'s were 003073-E & 003074-E. Was told the "E" was ment for export. Only Ammo they have fired was a 50 rd. box of Geco Ammo, also from Germany. My best souvenier from Germany.

  • @USSEnterpriseA1701
    @USSEnterpriseA1701 5 років тому +3

    Reminds me of a certain Russian capture K98 I have that has a receiver with some markings oddities. It has the bcd factory code for Gustloff and a 4 stamped under that, but only a 4, suggesting an incomplete date marking. It's also missing most of the proof marks that you'd expect and I've never found a serial number on the receiver, so when we bought it (my dad and I) and in our records it goes by the mismatched barrel's serial number instead. Also has some other interesting features, like a laminated stock with a significant gouge, right where your support hand would be, suggesting a shrapnel hit. My suspicion is that it was assembled by the Russians from a mix of new parts and parts of rifles that were in for repair or captured and put into storage for handing out to friendly revolutionaries at a later date, as with many of the Russian capture K98s.

    • @B52Stratofortress1
      @B52Stratofortress1 5 років тому +3

      Gustloff Werke (bcd) marked all their 1944 guns just with a "4" instead of 44. Rumor has it that BCD 4 guns were made at a concentration camp.

    • @USSEnterpriseA1701
      @USSEnterpriseA1701 5 років тому +2

      @@B52Stratofortress1 Considering who was running Gustloff, I wouldn't be surprised. Still, there are a number of proofs missing, so who knows what the real story behind it was.

  • @John_jingle_hiemer_schmit
    @John_jingle_hiemer_schmit 3 роки тому +1

    Me learning history from Ian:
    Ian: these were obviously made in *obscure country I’ve never heard of.
    Me: obviously

  • @gewamser
    @gewamser 5 років тому +1

    I personally knew a GI who was there when the Walther factory was captured. He told me that the workers had fled, but that there was a short running firefight among the machinery, by local militia in defense of the place, but it was more for show than serious and the Germans quickly surrendered. My friend, captured his P38 from an officer that surrendered to him, and that the pistol itself was thrown in the mud, where he retrieved it. He said much of the factories roof was missing, there was bomb damage, but that Walther was up and running right up until they arrived. It was raining hard. Today that pistol rests with his son, a war bring back.

  • @ericgleixner4074
    @ericgleixner4074 Рік тому

    We should be grateful to those soldiers for salvaging these historic guns as well as for their service.

  • @snowminkankles1401
    @snowminkankles1401 2 роки тому +1

    I work in a factory as a mechanic and I can second the fact that nothing gets thrown away…it all gets thrown into a bin somewhere. Makes sense they had a bunch of mish mash parts and assembled them hell I do that in the modern day so

  • @damienairalay552
    @damienairalay552 5 років тому +5

    Love ur channel and the historical aspects, just rewatched the episode when you on Sons of Guns, hoping you do a video on that silenced dart gun conversion for a 1911

    • @ForgottenWeapons
      @ForgottenWeapons  5 років тому +11

      ua-cam.com/video/7Bgb4SGTgDY/v-deo.html

    • @damienairalay552
      @damienairalay552 5 років тому +5

      @@ForgottenWeapons I must've missed this episode, about to watch it. Thank you for replying, and for the link, Please keep up the great content!

    • @ForgottenWeapons
      @ForgottenWeapons  5 років тому +6

      That video is what prompted them to ask me to be on the show. :)

    • @damienairalay552
      @damienairalay552 5 років тому

      @@ForgottenWeapons that's awesome, I found ur channel by accident a year ago, scrolling through recommended vids at 2am, (typical UA-cam story) And I I realized, "I know that guy!" Lol. Being a history dork myself, you gained a subscriber. I enjoy ur channel, and thanks again for replying!

  • @ph5832
    @ph5832 5 років тому

    Great video .. as usual... awesome historic video
    Can’t wait to see the value of these pistols

  • @terencehardy9303
    @terencehardy9303 5 років тому +20

    Personally I find these guns far more interesting than the mass produced stuff this is real history

  • @edrick57
    @edrick57 5 років тому

    At 4:15 in the video, you can see indications how the serrations in the slide were cut. They were cut all at once by a single tool. There are tell-tale irregularities in the serrations that are perpendicular to the direction of the serrations. Of course, it would be ridiculous for the serrations to be cur one at a time in production.

  • @gustavosanches3454
    @gustavosanches3454 5 років тому

    My father currently owns a Walther PPK that belonged to the Kriegsmarine (if I'm not mistaken) and that my grandfather managed to purchase from a WW2 veteran during the late 40s. Or at least that's the story he told me. It truly is a beautiful, well made gun, good to handle gun.

  • @K-Anon-30
    @K-Anon-30 5 років тому

    Great video as always Ian!

  • @GammaZeta
    @GammaZeta 2 роки тому

    Very interesting video (as always) - thank you Ian. I have 45 AC P38 w/ mismatched grips (one black one brown) and mismatched frame and slide serial numbers. It does have proof marks. There are no import marks. Now I have a good idea how it was likely captured. Thank you.

  • @shawnr771
    @shawnr771 5 років тому +5

    All soldiers are really good at getting souveniers.

  • @kristokirov
    @kristokirov 5 років тому +3

    UA-cam unsubbed me from your channel. No idea why. I watch a couple of your videos every week.

  • @lesterdiamond6190
    @lesterdiamond6190 5 років тому

    so much great content on this channel. this is an especially cool one.

  • @dronenoobFL
    @dronenoobFL 5 років тому

    God, every night you are my favorite channel to watch for a long time now. Ian never disappoints. I suppose I should do the Patreon thing.

  • @wernesgruder1
    @wernesgruder1 2 роки тому

    ‘byf ’ slidemarkings are from the Walter factory at Oberndorf. Famously three German gentlemen knicked two precision milling machines from the factory. One was a Mr Heckler and another was a Mr Koch. When the Germans were allowed to make weapons again they started up as Heckler and Koch. A legend was born

  • @mulletjocks
    @mulletjocks 5 років тому +1

    Legacy Collectibles haul has been epic. Congrats on getting the access Ian. MORE!

  • @wubaru
    @wubaru 5 років тому

    Awesome video Ian!

  • @robbrown5702
    @robbrown5702 5 років тому

    My Dad was in Pattons 3d army's heavy artillery and told of having shelled an area in which a Luger factory was part of the target. He said he had a knapsack half full of various pistols he picked up when they mopped up the area and were looking for buildings they might use as quarters. As he was part of a mechanized outfit weight was no problem he just kept it in the guns tractor. (the 155 long rifle) When the war was over he was informed by an officer that the paper work would take at least a month to process to bring back these weapons. So he took the backpack and left it in a vacant house. The last time he saw them or that officer they were both leaving in the same jeep!

  • @arachnonixon
    @arachnonixon 5 років тому +22

    oh man, what amazing war-loot

  • @ErulianADRaghath
    @ErulianADRaghath 5 років тому

    The bronze coloured frame of the first p38 looks very good with the blacks and the grays.

  • @garvey2510
    @garvey2510 5 років тому

    Love these models and the video as always

  • @colinmikolaichik3781
    @colinmikolaichik3781 5 років тому +1

    Keep it up man love the vids

  • @lfr5007
    @lfr5007 5 років тому

    I purchased a P38 cigarette gun last year with some interesting features, nothing like the PPK here but it's got a hammer still in the white and no acceptance marks.

  • @iLLeag7e
    @iLLeag7e 3 роки тому +2

    My mind's eye is laughing watching 50 grunts and a few officers wandering around with pistol handles bulging out of their pockets, smirking at each other while they give lip service to the honor of doing what they're supposed to do with all of these captured guns lmao hey if we have to float across the ocean to save you guys, we're leaving with a few guns. don't @ us

  • @TheTaderf
    @TheTaderf 5 років тому +1

    As a guy who lives in Zella-Mehlis I think the video is very interesting... By the way, the last few leftover buildings from the Walther factory were demolished this summer...

  • @josephlicata4304
    @josephlicata4304 5 років тому

    Thank you. I love your videos.

  • @Vallhalla61
    @Vallhalla61 5 років тому

    Thank you! Once again,I learned something very very cool!

  • @Arthurzeiro
    @Arthurzeiro 5 років тому +3

    By the looks of the comment section here Ian should make a quick video about the whole 'arms liberation' thing throughout the years, maybe point us a good book that gets into that topic.

  • @HypocriticYT
    @HypocriticYT 3 роки тому

    Those plastic grips with mottled color are made by changing colors and the two colors mix until the old color plastic is expended. I
    Usually only takes under a dozen to switch colors

  • @henleinkosh2613
    @henleinkosh2613 5 років тому +3

    I like to imagine thet the 53 marking on the last gun was put there buy the worker who assembled it, as a serial nr. of the line of miss-matched guns he made for the Soldiers who wanted a to take home a gun.

  • @richh3690
    @richh3690 5 років тому +11

    dont have factory guns but have battle field pick up from my grand father

  • @ceterfo
    @ceterfo 5 років тому

    That dog is the ultimate liberator.

  • @stevenkeegan6260
    @stevenkeegan6260 5 років тому

    Really interesting presentation. Thanks!

  • @davidegaleotti94
    @davidegaleotti94 5 років тому +17

    I honestly like the late war PP better. The pre-war one screams "officer gun never to be shot out of parties" all around.

    • @RichWhiteUM
      @RichWhiteUM 5 років тому +4

      That PP, being in the rough, has a beauty all of it's own. The way the light caught the machine markings on it, when Ian was turning it, was cool looking.

  • @oldmanandguitar
    @oldmanandguitar 5 років тому

    My favourite firearm channel,

  • @angrymike2423
    @angrymike2423 3 роки тому

    I actually came across 2 P-38's from March and April of 45, picked each up for just over $200 each. I almost tripled my money to collectors. One was all matching but the finish was messed up on one side and it was phosphorus instead of salt blue. The other was non matching but was put together for a GI.

  • @A50S2D
    @A50S2D 5 років тому

    My step-father was one of those who strolled through the Walther factory and assembled a pistol. Though I have seen it many years ago I have no idea where it now is.

  • @Kraakesolv
    @Kraakesolv 5 років тому

    Love the story and the guns, thanks!

  • @wompus_king
    @wompus_king 5 років тому

    Hey! Legacy collectibles! Great new channel.

  • @Flederratte
    @Flederratte 5 років тому

    Great Video! This is what I like to watch!

  • @EagleSix52
    @EagleSix52 5 років тому +12

    fun fact about Ian:
    if u search "gun jesus" on UA-cam u will find this channel

  • @13Lonewolf1775
    @13Lonewolf1775 5 років тому

    Just got my first p38 from a late friend of mine collection, he had about 30 something of them.

  • @loquat4440
    @loquat4440 5 років тому

    There is a story of the British looting the mauser factory museum/archives at the end of WWII and the loot was put on a train. American officers stage a raid of the own and taking what they wanted from the train. A friend Pensacola, FL has a factory cut away mauser 96 pistol from that raid. He was showing it to a group of us at the end of the meeting for the Escambia River Gun Club. Every month he shows us something new.
    His collection of smith and wesson revolvers which goes back to one of those early bottom break revolvers in .22 short RF would be worth a session or two for forgotten weapons.

  • @metaldeadman2441
    @metaldeadman2441 2 роки тому

    I have a P.38 stamped AC 45 that I inherited from my grandpa. He was stationed in Germany after the war and picked it up at some point during that time. Unfortunately he’s passed and I don’t know any details on how it made its way into his hands. Cool little piece of history though!

  • @californiasurvival8271
    @californiasurvival8271 5 років тому +1

    Recently I talked to a bunch of veterans while I was in a film production, apparently war trophies are a thing of the past. One can't even bring back a simple makarov or the legendary tokarev anymore, a shame really.

    • @sparkplug1018
      @sparkplug1018 5 років тому

      Im sure guys still pick up little odds and ends, just not weapons.

  • @eyalserussi665
    @eyalserussi665 5 років тому

    7:00 I actually find the late production the one with the better looks, mostly because of the wood grip

  • @iamscoutstfu
    @iamscoutstfu 5 років тому +1

    "hey guys"
    love hearing that.

  • @bertraminc9412
    @bertraminc9412 4 роки тому

    As the war pressed into the final days, Germany ran short of resources, like leather. They began making PPK holsters out of paper. The paper was tanned similar to leather and it is very difficult to tell a paper holster from a leather holster. Also, Walther experimented with Aluminum alloy frames and called them Duraluminum guns. They can be spotted by the milling lines in the softer metal. I sold a black Duraluminum with paper holster years ago and I still regret that sale. Some lucky person has this set with capture card included. Also, never dry fire these guns. The cylinders that make up the safety are notorious for cracking, especially on the 90 degree safety models where the safety points directly down in the safe position. The milled out channel through the shaft was thinner and those safety shafts broke more readily than the 60 degree safety models. Wonderful guns. I kept my best specimen.

  • @chrismr368
    @chrismr368 4 роки тому

    My father was part of a Royal Air Force disarmament wing based at Travemünde on the Baltic coast, one the Luftwaffe's secret test centres, in 1945. It wasn't far from Rheinmetall-Borzig's test centre a hundred miles to the south at Unterlüß. The wing records suggest a German involved in trials of the MK 101, MK 103 and MK 108 automatic cannon at Tarnewitz, the Luftwaffe's weapons testing centre further along the coast, was captured by this unit.

  • @VegasCyclingFreak
    @VegasCyclingFreak 5 років тому

    Very interesting pieces. That P38 had a nice finish considering it was produced at the end of the war.

  • @Deecups510
    @Deecups510 3 роки тому

    I would be in absolute heaven as a GI in a "liberated" German weapons factory putting guns together out of odd parts. That is right up my alley

  • @xGSFxGoat
    @xGSFxGoat 5 років тому +2

    Hi Ian, I doubt this comment will get a lot of views but could you find a Walther P38K to take a look at? The West Germans made them in the 70's as concealed handguns for the KSK, they're a short-barreled P38 with an automatic firing pin safety added.

  • @donaldbarden6294
    @donaldbarden6294 Рік тому

    I've always considered the P-38 to be pleasing to the eyes.

  • @jamesbulldogmiller
    @jamesbulldogmiller 5 років тому

    thanks for showing those

  • @matusfekete6503
    @matusfekete6503 5 років тому

    Thanks for interesting video. Would you consider do informative one about "war trophies", what were rules regarding them and how they changed during past century?

    • @sparkplug1018
      @sparkplug1018 5 років тому

      I believe after WW2 they started doing the DEWAT stuff, where you could take just about any weapon home as a trophy, provided you filled out the paperwork and the weapon was deactivated to a certain standard. I think they stopped that though to be honest. Aside from that I think most other things were kind of a just don't make a big deal of it.
      And of course there were guys who ignored the rules and just mailed it home. My father knew a guy who went to Vietnam, would mail a stereo or something similar home every few weeks. Of course it was what was inside it that he wanted, not the stereo. Im sure lots of guys were doing that.