Hey I really appreciate the kind words. My videos might not be well produced ( something I'm trying to improve) but I try to cram a lot of facts in them.
This is very interesting. One thing that occurs to me is; there’s so many different types of mortars, & so many different calibers, how on Earth did they manage to keep up with supplying all the ammunition? It seems extremely complicated.
With great difficulty one imagines. Some of the cruder variants didn't see service to the end of the war. I think when taken into service in 14-15 no one yet imagined a multi year war with the consumption of men and materials eventually seen. It was a mad scramble to get weapons to the front the Germans definitely seemed more willing to accept the logistical burden of an array of trench artillery than the alies. As the war went on generally any NEW weapons system that was not a direct response to being out gunned or novel use by the enemy (think tanks gas flame thrower s) had a better chance of being approved if it didn't require skilled machining and scarce resources. Cruder, economic and easy to make.ike think Stokes or Livens. It was a winning strategy.
Ok. Thanks for the feedback. Less is more w transition s I'm told. Did you find the content acceptable? My editing skills are poor at best. Working on that slowly...
@@17hmr243 ok feedback taken. I was actually going w creator studio suggestion on still image timing. 'Flashing images 2-3 seconds in quick succession stimulate the limbic system and drive smart device addiction behaviors' Maybe I got that mixed up w some other junk. I'm about to drop the follow up video on imperial German granatenwerfer so will try longer timing thanks
In german language ,th' is spoken ,t'. The ,ch' sound is not ,k', it is the sound, an angry cat makes, but spoken slower and softer.
Dunka. I like the references
Wow great video great channel. So much information. Well researched. Thank you for the video.
Hey I really appreciate the kind words. My videos might not be well produced ( something I'm trying to improve) but I try to cram a lot of facts in them.
Why the ai voice at the beginning
Thanks.
This is very interesting. One thing that occurs to me is; there’s so many different types of mortars, & so many different calibers, how on Earth did they manage to keep up with supplying all the ammunition? It seems extremely complicated.
With great difficulty one imagines. Some of the cruder variants didn't see service to the end of the war. I think when taken into service in 14-15 no one yet imagined a multi year war with the consumption of men and materials eventually seen. It was a mad scramble to get weapons to the front the Germans definitely seemed more willing to accept the logistical burden of an array of trench artillery than the alies. As the war went on generally any NEW weapons system that was not a direct response to being out gunned or novel use by the enemy (think tanks gas flame thrower s) had a better chance of being approved if it didn't require skilled machining and scarce resources. Cruder, economic and easy to make.ike think Stokes or Livens. It was a winning strategy.
What is the intro song called?
Sorry I missed this: it's just a stock bit from KineMaster 'Gypsy Jazz' I changed up tone, upped base and played w reverb.
@@acmelka Thank you very much!
too chaotic slow down the clip transitions
Ok. Thanks for the feedback. Less is more w transition s I'm told. Did you find the content acceptable? My editing skills are poor at best. Working on that slowly...
@@acmelka content was all there slow down the clips so we can see them. Its Its something that people want to take longer then micro secon to absorb.
@@17hmr243 ok feedback taken. I was actually going w creator studio suggestion on still image timing. 'Flashing images 2-3 seconds in quick succession stimulate the limbic system and drive smart device addiction behaviors' Maybe I got that mixed up w some other junk.
I'm about to drop the follow up video on imperial German granatenwerfer so will try longer timing thanks