Busting Panzers: Why U.S. Tank-Destroyers Deserve More Credit in WWII History

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  • Опубліковано 4 лют 2025
  • During World War II, the battlefields of Europe were dominated by the fearsome German Panzers, striking fear into Allied forces with their formidable firepower and armor.
    In the heat of the war, the US Army rolled-out an ambitious strategy to counter the German Panzer force: the tank destroyer concept.
    Designed to be nimble and lethal, these specialized units were supposed to be the silver bullet against enemy armor.
    But as the dust settled and history was reviewed, questions arose about their effectiveness.
    Did these specialized vehicles live up to their promise? Were they truly necessary or was their impact on the war overestimated?
    Was this bold military doctrine a masterstroke of tactical innovation or was it a doomed endeavor from the start?
    Join us as we delve into the history and effectiveness of the US Army’s tank destroyer units, uncovering the strategic decisions, battlefield realities and lasting legacy of these controversial machines.
    #tankdestroyer #usarmy #ww2tanks

КОМЕНТАРІ • 450

  • @bobbressi5414
    @bobbressi5414 3 місяці тому +29

    Was watching a show about tank restoration. These guys pulled an M18 hellcat from a european battlefield. Brought it to their facility in Nevada if I remember correctly. They were able to match the serial number to an old photo from the war archives during their restoration. There was a man in the photo with the M18. Bear in mind this photo was taken during the war and at this point it is into the 2000s. Turns out the guy in the picture is still alive. He was the driver of this particular M18. And he lives along the same stretch of highway where the vehicle is being restored. They invited him to their plant and showed him his old hellcat. He was stunned. Said the last time he saw it was when he had to abandon it in Europe. They let him drive it and got a new pic of him standing beside it. I found the odds of all this to be amazing.

    • @jdove6883
      @jdove6883 2 місяці тому

      Great true story. Thanks for Sharing BB414!

    • @jdove6883
      @jdove6883 2 місяці тому

      Is the M18 now on display somewhere? And what tank restoration show was it?

    • @bobbressi5414
      @bobbressi5414 2 місяці тому

      I think it was a Disscovery chanel show. Tank Restoration was the name as I recall. It is on display with other tanks though Im not sure where

    • @bobbressi5414
      @bobbressi5414 2 місяці тому

      @jdove6883 I found the episode of the program It was called tank overhaul and you can find that episode about the hellcat on UA-cam

    • @davidtalkovic9369
      @davidtalkovic9369 29 днів тому

      I saw that show

  • @jaliranchr
    @jaliranchr 8 місяців тому +69

    My Dad was a gunner in the 807th TD Battalion. Thank you for this video. I've spent years since his passing researching to understand what he did in WWII because he was one that didn't talk.

    • @ironworkerfxr7105
      @ironworkerfxr7105 7 місяців тому +4

      Thanks for his service we are here,, my dad rarely talked about all his time there...

    • @ImDBatty1
      @ImDBatty1 7 місяців тому +4

      My mother inherited a book that may interest either of you, or may lead you in the direction of other books like it? My Grandfather was one of General Patton's assistants, and carried the rank of Captain, he was in the tank destroyers, but I don't know more than that... I will ask my mother for the name of the book, and perhaps we can find the equivalent for your family members? What I know about the book is it's supposed to essentially be a daily journal of WWII written in the perspective of the US Army, and gives stats, movements, supplies, etc.
      Do either of you have any interest?

    • @jimtom4878
      @jimtom4878 7 місяців тому +2

      Most didn't talk bc what they saw

    • @ImDBatty1
      @ImDBatty1 7 місяців тому +2

      The name of the book I mentioned is called: "Combat Record of the sixth armored division in the E.T.O.. from July 18,1944 to May 8 1945" and found a few digital copies of it online...
      I did some research and found out my Grandfather was in the 603rd Tank Destroyer Battalion...

    • @njlauren
      @njlauren 7 місяців тому +3

      My dad was a member of a TD battalion , as an adult I found out he had won a silver star by going back into his m36 whose engine had been shot out and while a sitting duck knocked out a number of german tanks when covering a retreat during the bulge .
      He told the fun stories. The best one was that when they travelled, the gun was covered with a sleeve. Women in the towns they passed through laughed, bc it.looked like a condom in use.

  • @beernd4822
    @beernd4822 8 місяців тому +59

    No music and a good narrator makes this a top class video.
    Bravo!!

    • @FactBytes
      @FactBytes  8 місяців тому

      Many thanks!

    • @noob.168
      @noob.168 7 місяців тому +2

      there was music tho. u deaf bro

    • @UPTHERAWT
      @UPTHERAWT 6 місяців тому +1

      @@noob.168the music was in the fire test videos not in the video itself

  • @LeveretteJamesClifford1955
    @LeveretteJamesClifford1955 8 місяців тому +258

    The M18 Hellcat had the high velocity 76mm, not the M10. The M10 carried a canon which was based on the 3 inch naval gun and thus is described as having a 3 inch gun. Later starting in November, 1944 an improved version of the M10, the M36 Jackson, began arriving. It, like the M10 and the M18 had an open topped turret, but it was redesigned as horse shoe shape with the open part of the horseshoe having an improved gun mantle and like the M10 there still had be a counterweight at the back of the turret. Replacing the 3 inch naval gun, the M36 "Jackson" now had a 90mm high velocity gun, improving the killing power. The hull remained the same as the M10. At one point, manufacturers used surplus Sherman hulls, a version of the M36 had an armored hill with a bow mounted machine gun. Because doctrine called for the tank destroyers to be fast in order to find German armor, fire at it and them move quickly to another firing position. To obtain a faster speed than a tank, the M10 hull design had much thinner armor than an M4 Sherman. Before the Normandy invasion, a newly designed hull and turret came out which had slightly thinner armor than the M10, had road wheels and suspension with were totally different from the bogie design used on the Sherman and M10. It utilized a par of larger road wheels with a system more like some of the German tanks used. The track was different and the drive sprocket looked more like a clock gear than a traditional drive sprocket. This was the M18 and the doctrine of firing at a target and then disappearing from the location you fired from. Speed on this tank was close to 60 miles per hour, far faster than the M10 which made about 25-28 miles per hour. That made the M18 the fastest tracked vehicle in the world and would not be surpassed until the Abrams tank arrived about 50 years later. The open topped turret used the same 76mm gun as the later Shermans used but the M18 turret was much smaller and more cramped both in hull and turret sizes than the M10. To make the 76mm gun fit the breech is rotated so that the sides of the breech are not horizontal and vertical as they are in the later model 76 mm Sherman. Note that in the video the M10 is erroneously said to have the 76mm gun. Only the M18 had the 76mm gun. For some reason, the 76 was never provided with a high explosive shell, considered necessary to be of any real help to the infantry that the Sherman was supposed to work with. The M10 did received a high explosive shell and films made during the fight in Northwest Europe and Italy show that the M10 could be used as mobile artillery when needed. AS far as the Sherman is concerned, only the 75 mm Shermans also filled that role. It should be noted that the 75 mm gun on the Sherman was not considered to be highly accurate but an episode in Italy showed that it was the Sherman that was creating a rolling motion when fired. This was discovered when a British Churchill tank with a smaller caliber gun went through an experiment. It was noted that the larger caliber Sherman gun was in great supply because the tanks themselves had been damaged beyond repair. A British officer was given permission to see if the Sherman 75mm gun and mantlet could be fitted to a Churchill. I required some work because the mantlet of the Churchill was located inside the turret rather Han on the outside like the Sherman. The first example was completed and tested and it worked better than expected. In addition, the 75 mm gun was also noted to be more accurate on the Churchill than the Sherman. The reason was that the Churchill's unique hull and suspension provided the tank with a very stable firing platform. There was no rocking motion caused by the tall, narrow Sherman with a different road wheel suspension that caused the barrel to move slightly before the shell left the barrel.
    Another note. The towed 56 mm anti tank gun was not comparable to the 76mm. It was comparable to the British 6 pound gun and in fact was the same gun, using the same ammunition. The 6 pound gun was also the type gun that was on the Churchill MK 3, and which was replaced by the larger 75mm guns from destroyed Shermans in Italy. Later in the war, the 6 pounder received a new shell which was a discarding sabot shot that was able to pierce the frontal armor of a Panther. And once again, the M18 was not used in any real quantity in Italy, it was still in its testing phase and M10 crews did not like it because it used gasoline rather than desiel fuel and caught fire easily. After the breakout from hedgerow country and the beginning of the rapid advance toward the Seine and Rhine, the M18 was not just able to keep up with the rapid advance, but rather could move forward at twice the speed of a Sherman and the M10. I get my information from the Book Tank Destroyers, the book Mr. Churchills Tank, the Hayne manuals for the Sherman and the Churchill tank. I am not speculating nor am I repeating anything that I have heard on UA-cam. Tank Destroyers is a book filled with after action reports and individual and crew reports during the war, and is in general, following the time line of the war but includes grouping by topic as well. I have also used American Knights as a source.

    • @Dibamartindale1136
      @Dibamartindale1136 8 місяців тому +9

      what does ya book say about the FIREFLY or was it just an upgrade for the sherman ty in advance,also what about the pershing or was that just a tank not a destroyer ty

    • @simondancaster8334
      @simondancaster8334 8 місяців тому +5

      Useful comment. Cheers!

    • @cascadianrangers728
      @cascadianrangers728 8 місяців тому +6

      The 90mm was a hell of a gun, turned Tigers and Panthers from unstoppable terror weapons to sitting ducks and easy cannon fodder!

    • @papaaaaaaa2625
      @papaaaaaaa2625 8 місяців тому +7

      Two minor corrections.
      The 76mm gun had a HE Shell available.
      What was missing until the war ended was a WP Smoke Shell. (Leventhal, Lionel (1996). The American Arsenal.)
      The connection between Diesel or Gasoline as a reason is...at least questionable.
      The M10 was Diesel driven, but the M10A1 had gasoline and was seen widely superior to the M10 (Mostly of supply reasons).
      That is the reason that ALL M36 were M10A1 based and used Gasoline.
      I'll have to research for the correct source, but if I remember it was a book by Doyle, but I'm not entirely sure!
      The troops preferred the M10 over the M18 mostly because the armor of the M18 was paper thin. This vehicle was vulnerable to even lighter AT Guns/weapons.
      No problem in it's true role as an Tank Destroyer, but the TD Crews knew that they had to operate under difficult conditions sometimes.
      (Like in Normandy after DDay, were M10 had to operate as tanks between Bocages, a role that doesn't fit them well!)

    • @richardharmon647
      @richardharmon647 8 місяців тому +6

      Have a little bit to say?

  • @williamstel9330
    @williamstel9330 6 місяців тому +18

    My Pop was in the 818 TDB Co C. He drove a jeep with a trailer to supply the M10's with ammo. His job sounded simple as he probed for mines and directed tanks as well. Until I went to my first reunion with my parents, and I got to see some scrapbook of a couple of widowed ladies. And they made me cry as I saw piles of dead bodies that my Pop was around, and I saw and heard stories that my Pop never told me. And when I took care of my Pop before he passed, I walked down the hall to clean him up in the bathroom; he was apparently hallucinating and told me that he almost shot me and to get into the bathroom quickly, and that he had been shooting Germans all day and that it wasn't fun. I thank God that my Pop made it home OK after being injured at the start of Battle of the Buldge, driving to get or deliver ammo for the Tank Destroyers. He'll always be my hero.

  • @keithmalmberg8395
    @keithmalmberg8395 7 місяців тому +12

    The Tank Destroyer was a specialized concept that was born in a time that the technology was evolving as fast if not faster than the actual tactics and equipment could be delivered to the battle field.
    To sit here today and judge the decisions being made during the fight for freedom is very arrogant.
    That said we must look at the out comes from those choices and attempt to make better future predictions about what will be needed in future conflicts.
    The decisions are that rather than having specialized units for tank battles the military will have a heavy tank that does many roles very well and specialized ammunition for each role to maximize the effectiveness in each role.
    Great video.

  • @JackG79
    @JackG79 8 місяців тому +33

    I cant get enough of these excellent videos. Thank you!!

    • @FactBytes
      @FactBytes  8 місяців тому +4

      Glad you enjoy it!

  • @rogersheddy6414
    @rogersheddy6414 8 місяців тому +35

    I used to know a fellow David W Neff who was in the 69th division. He was in one of the early tank destroyers, as it was repurposed outside saint Lô.
    By that time it was called a scout car.
    He was among a group of them on a crest and watched as the American tank column. Going into that town was absolutely decimated by german fire.
    He himself took a severe head wound and took several months to recover.
    After that point they put him into radio communications, Intercepting german radio telegraphy.
    After the surrender, he was still listening to high ranking transmissions that were considered a supreme important by the americans.
    David w Neff was a true American hero and like most of them, A very quiet man

  • @davidcox3076
    @davidcox3076 8 місяців тому +29

    I read an account by an American armored combat command commander regarding an encounter with German armor. They had a TD battalion attached. He was impressed with their performance, noting that the crews were trained to hunt tanks and it showed. The Free French also made good use of M10s supplied to them, particularly from ambush positions.

  • @mauricedevine7350
    @mauricedevine7350 6 місяців тому +4

    Overall, a cool presentation on a fighting vehicle type that is largely overlooked.
    Just a note on the 'half tracks'
    Half tracks (M3 Tank Destroyers) were not armed with 'French 75's'. These were initially armed with US M1897 Model A Mark 4 75mm guns. Later production models were up-gunned with the A5 gun and an improved armor piercing round.
    Keep up the great work!

    • @FactBytes
      @FactBytes  6 місяців тому

      Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @mhpjii
    @mhpjii 7 місяців тому +12

    You have included much footage that I have not seen elsewhere. Excellent.

  • @Gort-zs5ph
    @Gort-zs5ph 6 місяців тому +3

    The Panthers 75 L70 gun ballistics are indeed most impressive. The later G models started to include the chin mantle that really made this a combat proven tank that changed tank designs until the present day. Great show, many thanks.

    • @LeveretteJamesClifford1955
      @LeveretteJamesClifford1955 5 місяців тому +2

      I agree 100 percent! AS you know, the big cats including the StrumPanzer which was very nose heavy, had constant problems with the final drives breaking. Currently there is a Tiger E being fully restored in the Australian Armor museum, and while restoring it to running order, they decided to use metals in the final drives that were not around during WW2 and are far stronger. That way they can run the Tiger for audiences outside without the fear of wear and tear on the final drives. Otto Carius who said that the Tiger E was only good for driving about 100 miles on a road and then would have to be repaired. I got this from a UA-cam video that shows Otto getting into a restored Tiger E similar to his during the war, and then he was interviewed and explained quite a few things. He also said that the commander's hatch was actually quite tight for a man to get into but it was amazing how fast the man could get out if it was hit or on fire.

  • @stephenweaver7631
    @stephenweaver7631 7 місяців тому +1

    Excellent video. My father was in the 630th TD Battalion, and was one of those units equipped with the M5 3" towed gun until March of 1945, when they converted to the M36. Only (very minor) complaint I have is that, although well represented in the dialog, I only saw one M5 3" gun in the video. Most other times it was mentioned, there was footage of 57mm AT guns, 105mm or 155mm Howitzers, or 90mm Anti Aircraft guns. I imagine there is little footage of the 3" gun in film, though I have seen many still photos of them. Still, especially information-wise, this video is excellent!

  • @TheBruceGday
    @TheBruceGday 8 місяців тому +39

    Ill-fated defense of Elsenborn Ridge? From whose point of view? The defense of Elsenborn was a masterpiece of combined arms! Elsenborn became a breakwater, where the German tide broke repeatedly. Nothing got through! Every attack against that line failed. Mainly due to vast amounts of artillery. Not ill-fated at all.

    • @peppertrout
      @peppertrout 5 місяців тому +2

      Spoken like a true Englishman.

    • @jonathanlewis6473
      @jonathanlewis6473 3 місяці тому +3

      ​@@peppertrout-i think he's a Scot and he's talking about the 82nd Airborne.

  • @ranhat2
    @ranhat2 7 місяців тому +6

    I interviewed and typed up post-DDay stories of three M-18 guys (two of them medics) and they praised the gun, "We had a hot gun." Several Tigers were hit at a mile. I was surprised to hear that the M-18 had "highest kill-to-loss ratio of any vehicle type in the Army." 27:19. The guys would have been interested in that.

  • @ElysiumNZ
    @ElysiumNZ 6 місяців тому +3

    Only problem with those TDs is when commanders used them as tanks in urban or forest fighting which resulted in high crew casualties.

  • @ericjohnson8571
    @ericjohnson8571 Місяць тому +2

    My great uncle could drive anything so they put him in a tank destroyer. He had more than one shot out from under him. He lost a lot of buddies and didn’t like to talk about the war. He chain smoked and before he died I spent a couple of hours with him when he told me of some of the things he experienced. Other relatives told me I was the first person he’d spoken to about his experiences in the war including The Bulge.

  • @erichaider8162
    @erichaider8162 8 місяців тому +9

    Grandpa was 776th tank destroyer
    Forever grateful for what these stallions endured for our freedom
    Never ever forget and teach the youth what they went through
    Edward L Haider 776th TDD

    • @notlisted-cl5ls
      @notlisted-cl5ls 8 місяців тому

      lololo. go back to your room old man. story time is over.

  • @ArthurWright-uv4ww
    @ArthurWright-uv4ww 7 місяців тому +3

    It’s often easy to forget about the importance of the ammunition available.

  • @Mark-g4z2s
    @Mark-g4z2s 24 дні тому +1

    Excellent video thank you

  • @Ghatbkk
    @Ghatbkk 8 місяців тому +25

    The tank destroyer concept still lives in the US Army - they are called AH-64 Apaches.

    • @CarlEvans-t6h
      @CarlEvans-t6h 8 місяців тому +5

      A-10 Warthogs too ;-))

    • @Ghatbkk
      @Ghatbkk 8 місяців тому +5

      @@CarlEvans-t6h Not in the US Army.

    • @larryzigler6812
      @larryzigler6812 5 місяців тому

      Drones

    • @JimIAmDaniels
      @JimIAmDaniels 3 місяці тому

      The first tank destroyar was the Hurricane in the dessert war in 41 -42 they called them the tin opener.

    • @jonathanlewis6473
      @jonathanlewis6473 3 місяці тому

      The Bradley with TOW missiles.

  • @MrHyde-wv8wi
    @MrHyde-wv8wi 8 місяців тому +2

    Some Amazing Footage. My comment to show support and Appreciation for your Video is as follows. -Big Thumbs Up

    • @FactBytes
      @FactBytes  8 місяців тому

      Thank you very much!

  • @Jamespwickstromw
    @Jamespwickstromw 8 місяців тому +47

    the m10s and hellcats performed quite well actually if you read some battle accounts.

    • @tinman3586
      @tinman3586 8 місяців тому +17

      They did but what ended up happening was kind of funny:
      You started with the M10 TD. It didn't have enough firepower so they eventually put a new gun and turret on it creating the M36.
      The M36 eventually needed more armor, and they created a steel top for it's turret and improvised armor.
      Later they decided it needed more anti-infantry capabilities so they put a bow machine gun in it.
      It basically evolved into a medium tank.

    • @chippyjohn1
      @chippyjohn1 8 місяців тому

      Not really

    • @Jamespwickstromw
      @Jamespwickstromw 8 місяців тому +2

      @@tinman3586 It started out in north africa, where it was excellent for its time. It was always a glass cannon but crews were trained in ambush and move tactics. In Normandy in Europe you did not really need a better gun because there were not really much open plains there then lets say in Africa or Italy. They were highly succesful in scouting,ambush, getting off the first shot which was far more important and then move and reposition around the flanks to get a kill.

    • @LeveretteJamesClifford1955
      @LeveretteJamesClifford1955 8 місяців тому

      @@tinman3586 I am fairly certain that the reason for the upgrade from the M10 to the M36 was to be effective at a longer range. The M10 had a gun sufficient for short range destruction, and the multiple angle turret took a longer time to make. It too, received the add on kits to protect the crew inside the turret from snipers. The M36 itself had the same hull as the M10 and they never put a bow machine gun it it. There was a surplus of Sherman hulls and because the turret ring was the same on both tanks, the M36 turret was put on those Shermans which came with a bow machine-gun. You are right, but I just wanted to add detail.

    • @Jamespwickstromw
      @Jamespwickstromw 8 місяців тому

      @@LeveretteJamesClifford1955 Well to be fair by 1944 they were facing king tigers,elephants,jagdpanthers ect so it would make sense to upgrade it to the m36. However all the comments i see on lacking anti infantry support i have to explain that tank destroyer battalions had their own eyes and ears, jeeps and scout cars like the m8 would go ahead of the m10s and report enemy infantry,tanks or ambushes. No they were not tanks and even maybe weaker then say a sherman but they operated diffrentLY and thats why they were quite effective.

  • @depleteduraniumcowboy3516
    @depleteduraniumcowboy3516 4 місяці тому +1

    An interesting look at the strategies of tank destroyers. Logistics win wars, it would have been nice to have seen that included.

  • @Wastelandman7000
    @Wastelandman7000 8 місяців тому +12

    One huge advantage of the Hellcats was they had the best flotation of any allied AFV. They could fly right past Shermans that were bogged down.

  • @davidca96
    @davidca96 8 місяців тому +6

    M36 was a beast, the 90mm gun was a match to the German 88mm, I wish they would have put the M26 turret/gun on the Shermans (they did but only testing).

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 8 місяців тому +1

      The commander of US 2nd Armored Division, Isaac D White, wasn't a fan of it. In his report to Eisenhower in March 1945 he wrote :
      "Tank Destroyer, M36: Has not lived up to expectations, but when HVAP ammunition becomes available it is hoped that it will be more effective. Fighting compartment precludes efficient service of the piece and available ammunition is not effective at required long range."

  • @aseriesguy
    @aseriesguy 8 місяців тому +7

    Commander of US Army Ground Forces Gen. McNair's stated policy was tanks do not fight tanks. Fighting tanks is the role of towed anti-tank guns. The Germans had a similar policy at the beginning of WW II. During the 1940 invasion of France Rommel ordered his anti-aircraft battalion with 88 mm guns to engage Allied tanks about to flank his bridgehead.The Wehrmacht anti-tank weapon was a towed 37 mm gun. German grunts came to call it the "door knocker" because it made no impression on the thick front armored French tanks. After the germans encountered the Russian KV and T-34 official opinion changed.

    • @Wastelandman7000
      @Wastelandman7000 8 місяців тому

      Maybe, but, if you look at the field manuals for both tank destroyers and tanks it stated clearly the tanks were intended to engage tanks. Technically McNair was right about one thing though, the best way to destroy tanks is with heavy artillery. But, if the tanks ran into them the were to engage and destroy. If the enemy got past the tanks then the tank destroyers would prevent a breakthrough.

    • @contumelious-8440
      @contumelious-8440 8 місяців тому

      Rommel knew the 37mm was too small to destroy French (or any) armor. Thus the 88mm was born as anti tank. I thought this happened at a different point in the war, but whatever.

  • @richardharmon647
    @richardharmon647 8 місяців тому +5

    My father was in a tank destroyer unit in world war II he was a radio man. His unit had the m10s

  • @cascadianrangers728
    @cascadianrangers728 8 місяців тому +1

    Great video, a few minor technical details are incorrect but the broad strokes are right on, i even learned a couple new things

  • @stevenewman1393
    @stevenewman1393 7 місяців тому +2

    😎👍Very cool and very nicely greatly well done and informatively explained and executed in every detail way shape and format provided on the U.S.Armys Various Tank Destroyer Battalions of M10's, M18's and M36's during WW2 on their roles and mission parameters during combat, A job very fabulously well done indeed Sir's!👌.

  • @callroland
    @callroland Місяць тому

    It feels that the concept of the Tank Destroyer has gone from Hell Cat to the TOW missile, to the Javelin missile and now is a Radio Shack 70 dollar drone. Thank God for Drones.. they have changed everything...

  • @raddirector99
    @raddirector99 8 місяців тому +1

    Well done. Im' a big WW2 fan boy and have been looking for a video on American TDs thats more than a passing refetence . A few gaps here and there but overall well done.

  • @HenrikFredriksson-oi4lz
    @HenrikFredriksson-oi4lz 7 місяців тому

    Very intresting, thank's for sharing😊👍🤘

  • @svenhillring3275
    @svenhillring3275 7 місяців тому

    I met Sgt. Early, the gunner on the Pershing at 23:56, in 2019 in Denver. There was a small parade in his honor and I was dressed as armored infantry. We didn't have a Pershing, but there was a Stuart and a couple of halftracks there at Union Station.

    • @svenhillring3275
      @svenhillring3275 7 місяців тому +1

      My mistake; Sgt Early was the commander and Cpl. Clarence Smoyer was the gunner I met.

  • @PeterOConnell-pq6io
    @PeterOConnell-pq6io 6 місяців тому +2

    the only problem with the tank destroyer concept is that it was conceived as a response to the success of early war German tank offensives, but, with the exception of El Guattar, Arracourt, and the Ardennes, by the time TDs got deployed, the Germans were on the defensive. As a result, TDs ended up taking on the same infantry support roles as existing, rapidly evolving tanks, and, while highly effective, became redundent.

  • @calvingrondahl1011
    @calvingrondahl1011 2 місяці тому +1

    My father liked the 90mm gun the best. Dad received a Silver Star by the order of General Patton for the Battle of Metz.

  • @AnthonyTobyEllenor-pi4jq
    @AnthonyTobyEllenor-pi4jq 8 місяців тому +10

    You also might want to ask why the German Stug does not more credit for destroying many Sherman tanks, why is it always the King Tigers and Panthers that get all the attention ??

    • @Wastelandman7000
      @Wastelandman7000 8 місяців тому +2

      TBH the Stug killed more of every kind of armor than the Tigers and Panthers combined. Technically it wasn't the best, but, as a practical matter it was the workhorse that kept Germany viable. War would have been over much quicker if they had to rely entirely on the Panzers.

    • @CarlEvans-t6h
      @CarlEvans-t6h 8 місяців тому +2

      Probably because they both have become mythical creatures, Otto Carius was one of the most well known STuG commanders. I own the Krim Shield of the Hauptmann who had earned his DKiG at the Dnepr river for halting several Russian divisions at a bridge there-with two STUGS and about a Kompanie of Infanterie. His name was Hauptmann Hans Augustin.

    • @chaosXP3RT
      @chaosXP3RT 7 місяців тому

      Tigers and Panthers were bigger and scary! The STuG was so effective because it was used in the defensive, ambushing Allied tanks.

  • @lordbyron8927
    @lordbyron8927 8 місяців тому +1

    Who's going to argue against Patton? lol. But the fact the army was able to successfully re-purpose their TD's says a lot about how much they had grown as a professional army.

  • @TheBruceGday
    @TheBruceGday 8 місяців тому +8

    The TD’s were useful in situations where the Army was fighting a mobile defense. Employing a “shoot and scoot” action, attacking, then repositioning. The U.S. Army did not have a situation as they pushed quickly across Europe, to effectively use TDs. It was the battles where Germany counterattacked, such as Arracourt, and the Bulge, that they were more effective.
    American doctrine for both using TDs and tanks was incredibly foolish.
    The M18 was the best design for a shoot and scoot defensive battle. The M36 had the most effective weapon, but not fast. A super Hellcat would have been very effective in an effective role. Had they been built and deployed alongside Pershings and Sherman 76s, (even T29, T30, 32, 34) they might have been even more effective.

  • @Idahoguy10157
    @Idahoguy10157 8 місяців тому +14

    After WW2 the TD branch was considered redundant. Once the medium tank was armed with the same gun and anti-armor ammo. When the tracked TD’s were used as designed, within their doctrine, they worked well. But by 1944 that rarely occured

    • @Wastelandman7000
      @Wastelandman7000 8 місяців тому +3

      Yet, ironically, we still have AFVs that can still do the job of tank destroyers, only they're armed with missiles.

    • @Idahoguy10157
      @Idahoguy10157 8 місяців тому +1

      @@Wastelandman7000 …. And helicopters, and jeep’s carrying anti-armor teams. Pull the army used to use recoilless rifles. So TDs never really went away

    • @chuckhaggard1584
      @chuckhaggard1584 3 місяці тому

      @@Wastelandman7000 I thought the same. For a few years my guard unit had the ITV, Improved TOW Vehicle on our MTOE, it's was a straight up tank destroyer, no other good purpose for it.

  • @galesams4205
    @galesams4205 7 місяців тому +3

    My dad was in artillery in WW2, i don't know what cannon but the 105mm was said. He talked of the 175mm was a real beast,

  • @Fiasco3
    @Fiasco3 Місяць тому

    Essential stop-gap before the Perishing's arrived. The 90mm was one of the few guns stopping heavy German armor during the Battle of the Bulge. The tank destroyers bought time to stop the German advance.

  • @lyleslaton3086
    @lyleslaton3086 8 місяців тому +15

    Abrams said "We don't need tank killers,we need killer tanks".

    • @muskokamike127
      @muskokamike127 8 місяців тому +1

      that's true, and the guns on the sherman were inadequate in the early stages but as some have noted, they rarely encountered tigers and panthers.

    • @Wastelandman7000
      @Wastelandman7000 8 місяців тому

      That is true....yet we still have them. Its just that modern tank destroyers use missiles. They may not be officially designated such, but, they still do the same job.

    • @Wastelandman7000
      @Wastelandman7000 8 місяців тому +1

      @@muskokamike127 This is true to a point. But, one reason Allied armor had such high casualty rates was because the German armor was very good at playing defense. Which means too often we were driving into their ambushes and not the other way around. If you look at the Battle of Arracourt where the Allies forced the Germans to come to them the Shermans (mostly armed with 75's) did quite well. And they were mostly facing Panthers and Stugs.
      After the battle the butcher's bill was that of the 262 tanks and assault guns the Germans threw into the fight 86 were destroyed outright. 114 were badly damaged and broken down, and only 62 were operational. The allies lost lost 25 tanks and 7 tank destroyers. As a division, the 4th AD lost some 41 M4 medium tanks and 7 M5A1 light tanks during the whole month of September.
      So tactics and position trump armor and firepower.
      Besides, Panthers and Tigers had their weak points. And even the Jagdtiger was vulnerable on the sides and back.

  • @WizzRacing
    @WizzRacing 7 місяців тому +1

    The issue was could they be transported and unloaded at any dock.. The up side was they didn't need special bridges to support heavy tanks..Something the Germans learned. As they had to have bridges strong enough to support them. Which come back to bit them in Battle of The Bulge.

  • @Wastelandman7000
    @Wastelandman7000 8 місяців тому +1

    Used properly, they did their jobs. Mind their job was to stand in the rear and stop counter attacks. At least in theory. In practice they sometimes had to be more aggressive than they were designed to be.

  • @jimmyd1299
    @jimmyd1299 7 місяців тому +1

    Great video

    • @FactBytes
      @FactBytes  7 місяців тому

      Thanks for the visit

  • @andrewhaycox
    @andrewhaycox Місяць тому

    you barely touched the m18! obviously the best ground vehicle of the war

  • @lukasunjic750
    @lukasunjic750 6 місяців тому +4

    StuG is a daddy for all of these😊

  • @drmarkintexas-400
    @drmarkintexas-400 8 місяців тому +11

    🏆🤗🙏🎖️
    Thank you for sharing this

    • @FactBytes
      @FactBytes  8 місяців тому +2

      Thanks for visiting

  • @TonyGarrett-p1c
    @TonyGarrett-p1c 6 місяців тому

    Excellent video; thank you. Is the narration AI? It's good though. Many others are not.

  • @clovergrass9439
    @clovergrass9439 8 місяців тому +3

    I'm with Patton on his post war assessment.

  • @crabapple1951
    @crabapple1951 2 місяці тому

    My Uncle Bill Dunne was in the 609th TD as a T-4 mechanic I believe.

  • @kerrybassett4468
    @kerrybassett4468 8 місяців тому +1

    Tank Overhaul episode 4, m18 Hellcat. If a tank destroyer is no longer needed, then why do we still operate the Republic A10 Thunderbolt 2?

  • @awf6554
    @awf6554 10 днів тому

    I've thought for a while that the TD concept has a bad rap. I'd certainly rather be in one than manning a towed AT gun.

  • @rsfaeges5298
    @rsfaeges5298 8 місяців тому +1

    Interesting, judicious. Lots of good video.

  • @festusthecat
    @festusthecat 8 місяців тому +3

    Decent video, but M10's had a 3 inch gun. Yes, in measurement it was 76mm, but it was not considered a 76mm. The M5 3 inch towed gun was the gun for the M10, not the actual, true 76 mm. They were a different case. Now the M18 did use the 76mm, NOT the 3 inch

    • @echohunter4199
      @echohunter4199 7 місяців тому

      Yup, not confusing at all….got it.

  • @markbrandon7359
    @markbrandon7359 8 місяців тому +24

    It wasn't that US TD's didn't perform well it had more to do with a lack of targets. After the D day landings the British (as per Monty's plan) faced the majority of German Panzers the vast majority of Panzers fought in Russia. I saw a Pic of M 10's parked on the slope of a hill for elevation of the gun they were being used ad indirect artillery

    • @wolfganggugelweith8760
      @wolfganggugelweith8760 8 місяців тому +1

      Panzer, not panzers please.

    • @markbrandon7359
      @markbrandon7359 8 місяців тому

      @@wolfganggugelweith8760 The German translation of panzer is armor but I'm not German

    • @castlerock58
      @castlerock58 8 місяців тому +3

      Fireflies played a big role in the heavy fighting between British and Canadian armor and German tanks in Normandy. It was still tough going since a lot of the German tanks had high velocity guns that could kill Shermans. The allies lost a lot of tanks but they also killed German tanks that could not be replaced and kept most of them away from the Americans who were able to build up reletively unmolested for the breakout.

    • @wolfganggugelweith8760
      @wolfganggugelweith8760 8 місяців тому +1

      @@markbrandon7359 It depends if You mean the tank or the armor. The knights of the late middle age had a „Panzerung or a Panzer (armor) on their bodies too. So it means this and a tank. They called them also Panzerreiter (Armor rider).

    • @markbrandon7359
      @markbrandon7359 8 місяців тому +3

      @@wolfganggugelweith8760 so wouldn't the plural of tank (tanks) be panzers???

  • @richsmith7200
    @richsmith7200 6 місяців тому

    Having an open top turret seems like a constant reminder of how little armor is protecting you...

    • @GeorgiaBoy1961
      @GeorgiaBoy1961 3 місяці тому

      The TD crew regarded the open tops with mixed emotions. On one hand, their visibility of their surroundings was improved over being "buttoned up" in a closed tank hull or turret. And if their vehicle was hit and they had to bail out, it was easier in an open vehicle than one sealed shut. But they were exposed to the elements, and vulnerable to airburst shell-fire, infantry attacks and assorted other hazards. Which may be why later in the war canvas and sheet-metal awnings or tops were often fitted. These offered little ballistic protection but at least kept some of the sun, rain and snow off of them.
      The quip amongst TD Command men was that the open tops were there to remind them they were not tank crew but TD crews.....

  • @ZacharyBurgard
    @ZacharyBurgard 8 місяців тому +1

    Where did you get the source for the m10 having a 80 second turret rotation

  • @RonaldReaganRocks1
    @RonaldReaganRocks1 8 місяців тому +3

    Specialized vehicles were too inflexible. When a unit comes across the enemy, they just don't know if they are going to face foot soldiers or tanks. Thus, you need ONE vehicle that can do it all, thus the main battle tank. Tank destroyers would just be in the wrong place at the wrong time. Modern battle was just too unpredictable.

    • @muskokamike127
      @muskokamike127 8 місяців тому +1

      That was the big thing about shermans, even though they could be knocked out with ease by tigers, they encountered them so rarely. Shermans were mostly used as anti personnel and assault vehicles. (from what I have read)

    • @jeanr5544
      @jeanr5544 7 місяців тому

      @@muskokamike127 Kretschmer ( 12 SS.) en a détruit allégrement 36 avec son vieux Panzer 4
      Les 14 Panzerjäger de la même unité en ont détruit 96 blindés US. Ratio 6 US pour 1 JgPz IV, cependant plusieurs PzJg IV (3 ou 4 il existe des photos ) ont pu passer la Seine. Les USA reconnaissent la perte total de plus de 900 chars rien que pour la Normandie. Les allemands 1200 . Mais les chiffres anglais, canadiens, polonais, français , NZ, australiens et belges ne sont pas donnés. Pourquoi?

  • @thegreatdominion949
    @thegreatdominion949 8 місяців тому

    The TD concept was a good one in principle, though prior to the appearance of the M36 Jackson, the success of American TDs was limited by guns that were inadequate for the jobs they were expected to accomplish.

  • @thatbeme
    @thatbeme 6 місяців тому

    Thank you 😊

  • @brennanleadbetter9708
    @brennanleadbetter9708 8 місяців тому +4

    Great video as always

  • @mattskustomkreations
    @mattskustomkreations 4 місяці тому

    5:25. Pronunciation tip: Barrages is pronounced “buh-RAHJ-uzz”, the emphasis on the second syllable, like “mirages”.

  • @johnvan6082
    @johnvan6082 8 місяців тому +4

    You left out the M 36 B .
    This was M36 turrent sitting on top of the M 4 Sherman hull .
    My father served in a M 36 B in the 813th tank destroyer battalion , company B .

  • @Chiller11
    @Chiller11 День тому

    WW2 US armoured doctrine assumed US tanks would engage enemy tanks from the start. US tanks were designed as offensive weapons to support the infantry and to exploit breaches in enemy lines. They would inevitably encounter enemy tanks in these maneuvers. Tank Destroyers were conceived to counter such breaches by German attacks as were evident in the battle of France and Poland.

  • @madelief47
    @madelief47 8 місяців тому +1

    Hitting and destroying a Panther at 4 km with a 90 mm gun? As a gunner on a Leopard 1 tank in the 80's, it was for us difficult to hit a target at 2.5 km's.... We used to target tanks at 1 til 1.8 km's away. The terrain also would not allow it. Housing, forest, hills etc.

  • @maxmccain8950
    @maxmccain8950 8 місяців тому +2

    If we would have had a decent tank at the start of the war we never would have needed tank destroyers.

  • @DanielLehan
    @DanielLehan 8 місяців тому +7

    The 894th, the 749th the 601st,and several other Tank Destroyer Battalions were critical to both the survival,and breakout for the capture of Anzio,Italy in 1944. One made a confirmed kill of a German tank from almost 10,000 yards!

    • @jonathonhass4178
      @jonathonhass4178 8 місяців тому +3

      That is not accurate at all. 10,000 yards is 5.68 MILES and no WW2 tank has EVER had a confirmed kill at anything even remotely close to that.

  • @casparcoaster1936
    @casparcoaster1936 8 місяців тому +2

    good story, great footage, great editing!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @FactBytes
      @FactBytes  8 місяців тому

      Glad you like it!

  • @charlesfiscus4235
    @charlesfiscus4235 8 місяців тому +4

    The Panther had the high velocity 75 mm main gun and the Tiger had the 88mm main gun.

    • @01Bouwhuis
      @01Bouwhuis 8 місяців тому +4

      So?

    • @Swellington_
      @Swellington_ 8 місяців тому

      no shit sherlock

    • @thatonecousin
      @thatonecousin 8 місяців тому +1

      No shit 😂and ?

    • @Clingerman93
      @Clingerman93 8 місяців тому

      Ummm yes, yes they did. I'm fair certain 99.654% of motherfuckers knows that.

    • @dovidell
      @dovidell 8 місяців тому

      @@01Bouwhuis both had greater range and accuracy than most allied tanks / tank destroyers , so unless you got off the first shot where it counted , at close range , it was curtains

  • @JonathanJBoyle
    @JonathanJBoyle 8 місяців тому +1

    I’ll bet the Firefly isn’t mentioned. It was the main protagonist against Tigers and Panthers. A Sherman with a British 17-pounder anti tank gun mounted. If you want to know how tank destroyers fared, read about the Kasserine Pass. They were destroyed by Nazi armour.

    • @joeysausage3437
      @joeysausage3437 8 місяців тому +1

      Under a british command.

    • @joeysausage3437
      @joeysausage3437 8 місяців тому +1

      Under a british command.

    • @kenneth9874
      @kenneth9874 7 місяців тому

      That's funny, the overall kill ratio says otherwise 🤣

  • @shawndyer8140
    @shawndyer8140 7 місяців тому

    While thy tank crews are awesome can you do a video of about the mechanics who often work ed through the night to get the tabnis ready to fight asap

  • @cambium0
    @cambium0 6 місяців тому +1

    Gimme a Hellcat baby. Aside from their speed and lethality, they probably were less likely to get into trouble traveling through the muddy fields and streets. Several Tigers got bogged down and were subsequently abandoned.

  • @rogersheddy6414
    @rogersheddy6414 8 місяців тому

    5:20.
    Even today highway fifteen in pennsylvania has an infamous reputation.

  • @kenglasson2920
    @kenglasson2920 5 місяців тому

    How many times are we going to be shown the same footage?

  • @billd2635
    @billd2635 8 місяців тому +11

    Visibility. An open topped tank can see targets much better than a closed tank. First shot usually equals first kill.

    • @muskokamike127
      @muskokamike127 8 місяців тому

      yeah, hence the hit and run tactic but you have to find them first. That's why modern tanks have stabilized guns so they can shoot on the move.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 8 місяців тому +1

      First shot first kill is largely a myth. It depended entirely on the AFV type and the range plus whether or not the target is frontally or on its flank. Etc.

    • @taylor-t1y
      @taylor-t1y 8 місяців тому

      😆😆😆

    • @muskokamike127
      @muskokamike127 8 місяців тому

      @@lyndoncmp5751 dude, he said usually and this is assuming you have the capability of damaging the enemy ffs.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 8 місяців тому +1

      @@muskokamike127
      I'll repeat, it's a myth that's it's 'usually'. It all depended on the situation.
      Are you even aware that the mean range in Europe was 800 yards?

  • @bwilliams463
    @bwilliams463 8 місяців тому

    3:50 "This is for the newsreels, boys, so act interested."

  • @axelweinrich1166
    @axelweinrich1166 7 місяців тому

    The picture at the beginning of this video, the Sherman with all the sandbags up on front of the two soldiers sitting behind! I guess the designer of the Sherman never saw that picture!🤷🏻‍♂️

  • @kniespel6243
    @kniespel6243 Місяць тому +1

    In ww2 ,almost entire period, the americans and brits was incapable to developed a good rival for german tanks . This is the truth.

  • @chrismair8161
    @chrismair8161 7 місяців тому

    The M-10 and the M-18 were a "Stop Gap" that worked. How to put the biggest gun the American Armory could provide. The 76 mm Cannon sucked. The British 17 Pounder was very effective! Move and fire while moving as a pack worked as the open terrain suited them. Limited units got the 90 mm gun which was not that hard to mount into the Mantle of an M-10. Just like the limited deployment of the M-26. The crews made this work. Blood sweat and tears.

  • @CarlEvans-t6h
    @CarlEvans-t6h 8 місяців тому

    Well said but, I disagree your assessment of Tank Destroyers. My former roommate's father-was a Tank Destroyer commander in WWII. You're correct on them being used as a scout, but they were a scout with a heavy punch. They took up slack for Shermans. That said, I have a few photos of them in action. But can't find a way to post them here. My former roommates father, was a Sergent in the 704th?? sorry I can't accurately remember?) Tank Destroyer battalion. One of his thoughts was penciled on the back of a photo he took off a Hitler Youth after losing 10 men assaulting their bunker. It said: "We lost 10 men taking this bunker from those bastards." The photo was a photo of the several Hitler Youth manning that bunker. These men were in the M-10 and M-36 TD's.

  • @jimmiller5600
    @jimmiller5600 8 місяців тому +1

    Bottomline - everybody stopped making tank destroyers and focused on tanks, APCs, IFVs and anti-tank weapons for the infantry.

    • @samobispo1527
      @samobispo1527 8 місяців тому +1

      The Cobra and Apache helicopters, the Sheridan, the Improved TOW vehicle, and the Strykers in both missile and 105mm gun variants would disagree with you. The attack helicopter embodies the Tank Destroyer doctrine perfectly. Future tank destroyer units might be composed of small remote controlled vehicles packing dozens of launchers for drone guided from operators in vans miles away.

    • @jimmiller5600
      @jimmiller5600 8 місяців тому

      @@samobispo1527 Excellent response, except for the Stryker-105mm. Like the Booker it was supposed to do everything but fight MBTs.

  • @js-willard4014
    @js-willard4014 8 місяців тому +6

    We forget how desperate we were at the time, the 76 gun was our antitank weapon 75 high explosive was better anti personnel anti bunker . With our long logistics lines it would take months for our latest greatest weapons to arrive if they were any good. Pershing tank was better but weight and size prevented it from getting to the front in a timely manner, where m4 , m10 and other TD’s could travel on rail , ships, and bridges as is

    • @01Bouwhuis
      @01Bouwhuis 8 місяців тому

      76mm shermans were in England well before d-day....the development of the pershing was a long one, could never make it on time..

  • @edwardpekot7925
    @edwardpekot7925 8 місяців тому

    My father was in the 801st TD Batallion ....does someone know what tank they used from Normandy through the Bulge?? M10 is the best info I have but not definitive.......thanks

  • @BobSmith-dk8nw
    @BobSmith-dk8nw 8 місяців тому +2

    The Interwar Years saw a lot of theoretical ideas - most of which were of varying degrees of inaccuracy.
    Tanks, Submarines, Aircraft - it didn't matter - there were all kinds of Theories but not enough based on experience - since there was only scant experience from WWI.
    The Concept of the Main Battle Tank - came out of the Experience of using Tanks during WWII.
    Essentially, while the Theories had thought up a lot of variations on the types of tanks that could be used - mostly - people tended to use whatever they had on hand - regardless of the purpose behind it's design.
    Thus - the idea of a General Purpose Tank.
    .

  • @parker1ray
    @parker1ray 6 місяців тому +1

    The Germans had tank destroyers long before the Americans! The Stug III was by far the most successful. and was responsible for more enemy kills than any other German armored vehicle!

    • @tetraxis3011
      @tetraxis3011 5 місяців тому

      The Stug is not a tank Destroyer. It’s an assault Gun

  • @billballbuster7186
    @billballbuster7186 8 місяців тому +5

    The Tank Destroyer was just a self-propelled anti-tank gun with similar vehicles in most armies. However General McNair, Chief - Army Ground Forces, set up his Tank Destroyers as the only anti-tank force, in doing so he neglected the tank and relegated it to Infantry Support armed with weak low power guns. During his time in office all improved tanks with thicker armour and better guns were cancelled. After his death in 1944 the Tank Destroyer development was cancelled and the entire Tank Destroyer Command was disbanded in late 1945.

    • @01Bouwhuis
      @01Bouwhuis 8 місяців тому +1

      Because they were not needed or defective. Go check the chieftains hatch.

    • @aitken1965
      @aitken1965 8 місяців тому +4

      Good tactics and coordinated operations made the 75mm armed Shermans more than capable of dealing with the heavier German tanks. No, they could not engage head-on, but they regularly knocked out tigers and panthers from the side and rear. Sherman loses reflect the fact that they were often attacking embedded and well-prepared German defenses.

    • @leonardkellum6984
      @leonardkellum6984 8 місяців тому +1

      @@aitken1965 Sacrificing a few tanks so one could get a kill shot, might have been good on paper. My uncle was in the sherman's , had hip troubles from being bounced around. I read that Patton decided against having bigger tanks available in the book, Death Trap, written by an officer in the tank maintenance units

    • @coachhannah2403
      @coachhannah2403 8 місяців тому

      You are absolutely misinformed.

    • @coachhannah2403
      @coachhannah2403 8 місяців тому +2

      @@leonardkellum6984- That book has been debunked.

  • @jamesalias595
    @jamesalias595 8 місяців тому +3

    Tank destroyers should have been looked at as mobile artillery with tank destroying being secondary. Towed artillery is too slow.

    • @Wastelandman7000
      @Wastelandman7000 8 місяців тому

      I don't think they had the gun elevation for that. If you look at arty it usually fires at very high angles for indirect fire. The TDs were designed for direct fire. They'd have to design a new turret and replace the gun.

    • @davidcox3076
      @davidcox3076 8 місяців тому

      As the war drug on, the TDs were more and more used as self-propelled artillery, party due to lack of targets. And, to Westelandman's point, since TDs weren't designed as SP artillery they were sometimes driven onto ramps to boost elevation.

    • @jamesalias595
      @jamesalias595 8 місяців тому

      @@Wastelandman7000 Thanks, That might be true but they should have been designed for mobile artillery and secondary as tank destroyers. You can never have enough artillery support.

  • @Gungho1a
    @Gungho1a 7 місяців тому

    At the start of the Cobra offensive in mormandy, the US had forty five battalions of tank destroyers available, the equivalent of fifteen tank divisions of vehicles, none of which were capable of offensive action, and none of which ever, in the entire war, fought as battalions.
    The doctrine was flawed, the number produced was a waste, and the quantityof fuel used simply to move them around was near criminal neglect in terms of the ongoing western allied supply shortages. Creating a massive force of defensive weapons to face an enemy on the strategic and mostly operational defensive was a case of 'let's have this because we can', rather than any critical analysis of need.

  • @chrisdonnelly5904
    @chrisdonnelly5904 8 місяців тому +1

    Thanks for another great video! Love all your content!

    • @FactBytes
      @FactBytes  8 місяців тому +1

      You are so welcome!

  • @olivier3847
    @olivier3847 3 місяці тому

    2:42 what model halftrack is this?

    • @olivier3847
      @olivier3847 2 місяці тому

      and the cars in the next shot?

    • @tvgerbil1984
      @tvgerbil1984 2 місяці тому

      It looked like a Ford Marmon-Herrington T9 half-track truck but with the cabin roof removed.

  • @arthurwellsley2715
    @arthurwellsley2715 8 місяців тому

    Sherman Firefly? Saint-Aignan-de-Cramesnil on 8 August 1944 when a single Sherman Firefly knocked out three Tiger tanks.

  • @johngaither9263
    @johngaither9263 8 місяців тому +1

    I believe the tank destroyer concept was flawed and its disappearance after the war supports that conclusion. The TD strategy didn't merge well with the overall nature of the allied offensive nature while TD's tasks were basically defensive. Another problem arose because they looked like a tank and too many commanders figured if it looked like a tank it could fight like a tank. So they tried to use them like tanks if no real tanks were available. That was bad news for the TD because their light armor was vulnerable to about everything that was shot at them.

    • @kenneth9874
      @kenneth9874 7 місяців тому +1

      It didn't disappear, it became airborne..

  • @paulpowell4871
    @paulpowell4871 7 місяців тому

    So basically what is the final answer? More tanks? what cost? what was the ROI in financial terms and in Lives? would low cost bazookas been a better way to flood the fields? Considering war is a fluid field sometimes items like this are cost effective or cost the enemy time and money creating countermeasures.

  • @chrissimmonds3734
    @chrissimmonds3734 8 місяців тому

    The success of the Wehrmacht in France 1940 was not due to packing hundreds of tanks in a small attacking front but rather the concept of ‘all arms’ warfare.

    • @jimmythehammer3825
      @jimmythehammer3825 8 місяців тому

      Yes and no. The Panzer divisions in the Ardennes (which I know I'm spelling incorrectly) did send large numbers of tanks to overwhelm the defenses in that sector. It's called hitting the schwerpunkt (I'm spelling that wrong too ...) or concentrating their forces in a single area to overwhelm the defenders, rather than across a wider front. Across the theater during the Battle of France I agree with you, the Germans were better at combined arms warfare. The fact that they DID send overwhelming numbers of tanks to a single point was the reason the US came up with the Tank Destroyer doctrine in the first place. See Nicholas Moran's book "Can Openers"

  • @manininikolas9310
    @manininikolas9310 8 місяців тому

    Mostly of tank crew from panzerdivvision in 1944 where young whithout experience on western front mostly of veteran have disappeared on the eastern front The right answer to the heavypanzer was the firefly and the Pershing the beast

  • @JohnSavis
    @JohnSavis 3 місяці тому

    Nah, I know a lot of people who praise this tank including me. She ain't forgotten

  • @teaflavouredcoffee83
    @teaflavouredcoffee83 7 місяців тому

    4:04 are we gonna talk about that m2?

  • @Mark-g4z2s
    @Mark-g4z2s 8 місяців тому +2

    Excellent!!