I just watched a video by you guys (I believe) about the steel ammo used by the Germans, Im curious if that could have had an impact by increasing recoil, or perhaps by wearing the weapon out faster.
There are a couple basic misconceptions that are repeated in the video that spurred this followup. 1) The MG34 and 42 are not inherently inaccurate as Lloyd proposes. There would be no problem using a 42 for flanking cover fire during an assault. In addition, the Lafette tripods used with the 34 and 42 are excellent at allowing the guns to be used very precisely at long ranges (much better than the Bren tripod, which was also not used nearly as much). The example of a man prone 80 yards from a 42 being impossible to hit for an extended period it not representative of the gun. It may indicated that the gunner was a very poor gunner, or that he never actually saw and targeted the British soldier, or maybe he just had his sights mistakenly set for a very long distance and never realized it (i.e., not a skilled gunner). 2) The Bren is an accurate weapon, but not to the point of being a flaw. People who say that you cannot provide area fire with a Bren have never fired a Bren - it's easy to do. A few minor points... Where does one find people who say the Bren is rubbish? I have never met an informed person who claims this, and most of them consider the Bren a serious contender for best LMG ever made. The obscure reason the the MG34 continued to be produced until the end of the war was than the 42's barrel changing procedure would not work in the mounts that were built for the 34. Simpler to continue making 34s for vehicular use than to redesign the mounts. While the 34 and 42 may have been called "Spandau" by some British soldiers, this was not the case in the US (not with the British collectors I know, FWIW). IMO, it is better to use proper names than inaccurate slang. This is why I would not call the MP38 and MP40 "Schmeissers" despite that term being widely used by American troops at the time For all that, though, Lloyd's original conclusion was basically correct: they are both excellent guns, and not directly comparable because they were used in different ways.
To find someone who says the Bren is rubbish simply ask the average Brit. If we've designed it, it must be terrible - either that or it's at the complete opposite end of the spectrum and it's the best in the world. There are a huge amount of misconceptions relating to the Second World War in the UK. For some reason people seem to blow everything German out of proportion and reduce everything British to comical levels of inferiority - leaving only the British man's fighting spirit as our most valued weapon. I suspect it's a way of making our role seem more heroic (especially with the Battle of Britain and the Blitz).
well now that's not true. ask who had the better aircraft us or the germans and 90% of people will say us. because they would be right. jokes. jokes. definitvely better stragetic bombers though. better than the damn yanks as well. oh yes look us with our 'flying fortress' oh la dee daaa.
Alistair Shaw Of course everyone in the UK would say the Spitfire was supreme. But the average person will overrate German equipment and underrate ours massively. The majority of people think of little old England fighting the Nazis against all the odds.
Alistair Shaw I never said you mentioned that. You mentioned ask who had the better aircraft, 90% of people will say us. I was reinforcing that by saying everyone automatically thinks of Spitfires being the top dogs, at least in the UK.
I think he has every right to be annoyed....having read some of the ridiculous comments made to his first video.. He makes wonderful videos, cut the guy some slack
@@lowesmanager8193 How was he wrong? I am confused so maybe you could enlighten me as to what points exactly he was incorrect? Precise as possible if you will please.
@@elijahshafer8956 Ian from Forgotten Weapons left an excellent comment on this video explaining many of the issues, it should be easy to find as I'm pretty sure it is the most liked comment. That being said I'll try to explain myself. 1. He claims that the MG42 was inaccurate, and in this follow up video he claims that it was accurate enough for purpose, but still inaccurate, which is still wrong. In reality the MG42 was very accurate up to 600 meters especially when fired in short controlled bursts. 2. He perpetuates the myth that the Bren's biggest problem was that it was too accurate, and that this prevented it from being used effectively for area fire, which is false. The Bren was accurate to be sure, but it wasn't as laser accurate as Lindy implies, and you can use it for area fire, quite easily in fact. 3. He claimed that you could not shoot an MG42 while standing without being thrown off balance. While it might be difficult, and it certainly wasn't the guns intended purpose, you could shoot it standing up if you held it porperly. 4. He claimed that while the Bren didn't leave British service until 2006, the MG42 had long been taken out of service, and I believe he aslo said that the Bren was more influential for the designs of future MGs. In reality the MG42 is still in service to this day with some European armies, and the MG3 which is only a slight modification of the MG42 is still in service with the German army, as well as several other armies. And in terms of influence, practically every belt fed machine gun has been influenced by the MG42. 5. He claimed that the MG42 had overheating problems, which makes it sound like the MG42 didn't have a cooling system, or that it was poor. The MG42 actually had a very effective air cooling system, and the heating of the barrel was perfectly manageable with a trained gun crew. 6. He claimed that "English speakers" use the term "spandau" to refer to the MG42. He clearly doesn't mean people from England, but rather all people who speak English which is just nonsense. As an American who loves WW2 history I had never even heard the term spandau until his first video, and this sentiment was shared in the comments as well. He tried to use a dictionary to defend himself, but apparently he doesn't realize that dictionaries don't dictate how people talk, they only explain the meaning of words, no matter how obscure. 7. Even after coming to the conclusion that both guns were better at different things, and that neither was inherently better, he goes on to imply that the Bren was better by saying that the British consistently won against the Germans. This is absurd because there were tons of factors that influenced these outcomes, and yet he absurdly tries to boil it down to two machine guns. He does bring this up in this video but he condescendingly dismisses the criticism without a satisfying response. He also claimed that the Germans using the MG42 were "very determined" when in reality German morale was practically nonexistent late in the war. This is mostly from memory as I didn't rewatch everything just to leave this comment, but once again I implore you to look for the comment left by Forgotten Weapons.
I thought fire arrows, but decided the pommel. Could be the katana, but the pommel destroys the katana anyway, and the katana has no pommel. Perhaps the Cromwell was effective?
Karabiner 98k, followed by the M1 which the yanks still paid the $10 surcharge to Mauser for every rifle they produced, whilst shooting Germans with them, proving business trumps poor people's lives everytime.
No velikiradojica you muppet because the Bren gun doesn't suck and no one thought it does. If it did the British Army wouldn't have used it for so bloody long!
The Iron Guild It's quite obvious that Lloyd is trying to correct the wide-spread opinion that Bren sucks. I had no reason to believe it did, since it's a licenced Czech gun that underwent heavy testing before it was approved for production. But it's not unheard that Brits used shit guns *cough cough L85A1 cough*.
Coming up next: Lloyd explains why Challenger 2's inability to use regular NATO tank shells is actually an advantage and thus makes it superior to Leopard 2, Leclerc and M1A2 combined.
+Heinrich Berndovsky you mean that terrible rifled gun? takes two piece ammo, has a miserably low rate of fire and short tube life? it's gotten to the point where the RM 120 is better the it in nearly every way, the M1 can manage a 7 second reload, the Challenger would be lucky to make a 15 in combat......also the LEP program is replacing the rifled gun with the smooth bore 120, even the Brits are starting to get that it's outdated.
Brass 'n Barrels Firearms Channel Well, to be perfectly honest with you, as a tank, Challenger 2 is better due to its excellent protection (in fact, M1s use the British Chobham armour plates that have been in use since Chally 2, if memory serves). The only problem with it is that the MoD is unwilling to throw as much money on it as is the DoD in terms of their Abrams fleet.
+Heinrich Berndovsky not really, the first M1 used pretty much a copy of the challengers armor, the SEP updated it, DU backer plates and some other armor ju ju, but as I was saying, the only real problem with challenger 2 is gun life, mobility and engine reliability.
"The MG34 continued to be used for bow machine guns, [et al.] for some reason..." The opening in the ball mount for a bow machine gun is round, not the square opening that an MG42 would require, and changing the barrel on an MG34 pulls the barrel straight back, while on an MG42 it is pulled out to the side; an MG42 would have to be pulled completely back into the vehicle for the barrel to be changed. It was simply more convenient to continue to use the MG34 instead of having to redesign the bow machine gun mount to accommodate the differences between the two weapons.
The problem I had with the original video was the omission of facts. When you would mention that, for example, the BrEn was used after the war and neglect to say anything about the use of the Mg-34/42, it's probably fair to think that you are saying the Mgs were discontinued. Saying that you didn't actually say the Mgs went out of service is missing the point of the argument.
Then you're just purposefully misinterpreting what he said. That's on you not on him. As he stated he mainly wanted to point out that the Bren wasn't completely awful and saying that it continued to see use was part of that.
If you want to be taken seriously in a discussion, don't start with naming people that point out your inaccuracies "fanboys" and comparing them to people that perpetuate misconceptions about the katana. You've got a lot of commenters that actually used the MG3, or at least read a lot about the MG line, because - surprise - that gun was used last century, so within the lifespan of many of our grandparents. "B-but a lot of people actually left short and stupid comments!" - why focus on them, then? Why wouldn't you just admit inaccuracy when it's pointed out with sources? Why not argue the comments that actually challenge you with those sources? This goes completely against what you've said in the "feel free to disagree with me" video.
First off, the MG 3 is not the MG42, it is a modernized version of the same design, although influenced by other guns. Second "People who've read about the MG42" So what? Do you honestly believe Lloyd hasn't read about it? He literally reads this stuff for pleasure, hell, he wanted to do a series of videos discussing war memiores
Well some of the factual errors were so obvious to anyone with a little bit of knowledge on the subject that if he did the research he used TERRIBLE sources.
Just a small correction. The MG42 is essentially still in use today in the form of the MG3, same gun different calibre. And in use by a impressive amount of countries including Germany, Italy, Turkey, Finland, Sweden Denmark and many others. So not only are there people that have used the MG42 but quite a few people would have been firing the MG3 within the last year.
+Dracarys Blackfyre the mg-3 is the exact same weapon as the mg42 the only thing that's change is the caliber used instead of 8mm Mauser(7.92x57mm) it uses 308 caliber (7.62x51mm) other than that the only thing that's changed Is they have added a rail on top in later models to added night vision optics. but the original mg-3 when it was first introduced quite literally where marked mg-42 and where rebarreled to fire 7.62 NATO.
When i served in the British Army in the 1980s, i used the Light Machine-Gun (LMG) which was a re-calibred Bren Gun. The weapon i carried had a manufacturing date of 1942.
Did that not make you a touch nervous? Obviously with parts getting worn down and replaced over time I doubt much of the original 1942 gun was there, but that must have been a little bit uncomfy?
@@awordabout...3061 I think wielding a weapon that has been proven in combat but perhaps worn is a lot less concerning than wielding a weapon that could have been shoe-horned into service by some rich gunmaker, a fancy rigged demonstration, and some bribed generals. I would be really nervous if my machine gun had batteries, or connected to my smart phone. 1920s technology was unfortunately insanely effective at its purpose of ending human life, 2020s technology is not really better at it just better at dealing with certain new political realities involved.
James Beil To draw a similar comparison, I would feel more nervous driving a car sold second hand with 2000 miles than a second hand car with 40,000 miles. (Provided both have a service history.)
As far as whether it's accurate in actual usage, line up a bunch of cardboard Tommys and go at it. Regarding supression, even if you're a veteran that was confident it was more spray-and-pray than targeted fire, I think it's still a safe conclusion that the more bullets you have flying by your head, the less you'll want to poke your head up, don't you?
Well, it was obviously able to hit targets...how many thousands died from machine guns in the Normandy and Stalingrad landings? His point was I think about sustained accuracy. Have you been able to try to simulate the sweeping suppression/area denial the gun was designed and used for? I'm sure you would want to, not many places to do it though, and the ammo must be quite expensive. If so what results? I've seen entire bursts hit a silhouette at 100 yards from a Bren. It doesn't seem like the 42 could do that, except maybe mounted? It sure seems to jump around a lot.
Why don't they just duct tape a katana to a Spandau? With that as a weapon the war would have been over by Christmas. Of course, katanas can cut through 18 machine gun barrels in a single stroke so you would be careful when attaching them together.
I heard the japanese Kamikaze fighters had a katana on their plane tips to cut through US battleships and carriers :P it was so sharp that you could cut yourself only by seeing the blade. Thats also the fact why japanese people have narrow eyes. The chinese just copied it.
Even better: katana bullets can't be THAT hard to manufacture. Instead of typical conical-ish bullets - load those little bastards into a spandau! You could slice through reality itself with a gun like that :D
So what we've established is that people on the internet nail their colours to the mast very quickly and get very defensive when you challenge their biases.
except he doesn't say the bren was better at everything, what he says was it was better for making accurate shots, while the spandau was excellent at suppression because of its comparative inaccuracy. that not fanboying.
+Ken Clark never. but that's irrelevant. my experience isn't in question. lindy's is. And he has based his opinion and argument on first hand accounts of the weapons and on the opinions of men who have used these weapons frequently.
+Ken Clark actually it kinda is. that's what is used in history. If there's actual data then that is used as well. But sources of people who have used the weapons are very valuable.
I was in the army from 86 - 90 and we still had the Bren or LMG as we knew it then and it was a brilliant weapon: reliable, easy to use and so accurate.
I don't mind entertaining the idea of the Bren being more battlefield useful, but most of your evidence was anecdotal and you were so clearly biased against the spandau that I couldn't take your video seriously. You also made unfair comparisons in that video and this one on the effectiveness of German units in ww2. There are way too many factors involved to say that the machine gun was the deciding factor and it is very ignorant to come to that conclusion based on that. Weapons don't necessarily win wars, battle tactics and overall strategies were much more important and that was especially the case in the Second World War. It is also frustrating that you brush off any critics as fanboys, which is utterly absurd. Hope I haven't offended.
Abso-fucking-lutely. I'd completely buy the Bren being a more useful battlefield weapon; I value aimed fire, its portability is great, easier to keep it fed, etc. I don't even like the Bren, magazine is too funky for me (which is probably where most of the criticism of it started). The problem is that it all comes across as "no, this gun is better than that gun, and see it won the war." Which is just wow. Even direct comparisons with weapons that are used similarly are difficult to make valid; then again, something tells me that Lloyd never much ventured into the sections of the internet rife with gun comparison arguments (ala AR vs AK, a topic so worn it's essentially banned on most forums where guns are discussed). And yes, brushing off the critics as wehraboos. There were plenty there, but I have a hard time believing he didn't see the legitimate criticism.
"Almost all the criticism coming in were for things I never actually said." You perfectly summed up what it's like to try to argue a point on the internet.
I spent many happy hours behind a British Army 7.62mm LMG (Bren) in the late 1970's and early 1980's. I recall it was a stunningly accurate weapon out to 800 yards and beyond, in the hands of a competent operator it could be like an awesome double or triple tap sniper rifle. The belt fed GPMG on the other hand was a much better tool for area denial or suppressive fire and was more similar in performance to the "Spandau". In some infantry operations (eg: counter insurgency or FIBUA, etc) accuracy may be valued more than spread or high rates of automatic fire thus the LMG lingered on. With the 7.62mm LMG we could shoot through concrete walls at close and medium range and worry targets out to 1000 yards and beyond. Another happy thing about the LMG (Bren) was that it's 30 round magazines would fit the SLR ( yes I know they could cause stoppages) and visa versa SLR's mags would fit the Bren, handy in a crisis. :-)
That was what Aussies did in Vietnam. They used their scrounged Bren mags on their chopped up L1A1s managing to keep their AO free of Viet Cong and NVA until the very end of the war. The FAL is an outstanding weapon, even today.
"What?! It's an MG42? Well that changes everything!" is probably the funniest thing I ever heard in my life. Which is kind of sad if you think about it ^^
Don't think so, his research seems varied and more importantly, from a variety of primary sources. Sources from the time. If the sources of the time record inaccuracy in the part of the German weapons, then surely it has to be of note for it to be in the books. At least if you accept that people will not record the common day stuff, assumed knowledge but only record those things of note, beyond and out of the ordinary.
There Be Game All of his sources was from British soldiers, those facing the gun. He never mentioned a source written by a German operating the gun in a battle scenario.
Tiaan De Swardt And? Depending what you want to read about, there's only so many sources out there. Not only that, there's only so many sources in your language. Unless you have the time to offer a translation service for Lindy, then what else what was he to do? If he has primary sources (he has), from other sources outside his own country (he has) and referred to a variety of them. Research does not have to be 'balanced' or does it have to show sources from everywhere on everything. If he's got documents that support it, or the books he has are of good academic quality, hence my question in another post, then everything he said was on point and is hard to argue with. At least I find it hard to argue with, I can't find a whole in his stated position that in terms of the end product, the Bren and Spandau were both good and bad at things and that the Bren is under appreciated. If you're comparing an automatic weapon to a sniper rifle on rate of fire, the automatic weapon is going to win. So at least be fair in your comparison and the grounds on which they are done.
There Be Game There should be tonnes of autobiographies from German perspectives, even translated ones. I actually just googled 'German Common soldier autobiographies" and found these: In Deadly Combat: A German Soldier's Memoir of the Eastern Front Blood Red Snow: The Memoirs of a German Soldier on the Eastern Front I Was a German - The Autobiography of Ernst Toller Soldat: Reflections of a German Soldier, 1936-1949 They aren't hard to find. A person operating a phsychological weapon such as the MG 42 would give a different opinion than the person fighting a phsycological weapon. This would give his research more balance and credibility. Is his books of good academic quality though? They might be or they might not be. Therefore more info from more sources regarding the subject would better flesh out a persons knowledge on the subject. I agree that the Bren was a good gun. That wasn't what the hypothesis was about though. The question was, which gun was better, and from a scientific standpoint this hypothesis, and subsequent explanations, is flawed since the Bren and the MG 42 belonged to two different classes of guns. Both had their uses in different roles. And if we can use his criteria that the Bren was better than the MG 42, then logically we can assume that the MG 34 was a better gun than the Bren, up until it wasn't. The Germans won everything up until 1941-1942. Was the MG 34 then a better gun than the Bren? P.S: Sorry for my long comment :(
William Phillips Plot Armor. We train to be marksmen since we are first recruited, around 14 years old. Our helmets however... yeah, hard to see out of.
On a more serious note, all guns and swords have pros and cons. If they didn't have pros, they simply put wouldn't have been made. But if there were no cons, they'd probably be the only gun used by every military.
+LazyLife IFreak It is only wrong if the two were not competitors, which they were; for instance, fundamentally, the mp5 and AK-47 are terribly different; however, both competed against one another in many instances, and thus might be compared for those times. Likewise, the Bren and Spandau are different, but both were pitted against each other, and thus are viable for comparison.
Coupledyeti Vonvanderburg You mean the MG34. the MG42 or the german version of the Maxim MG? Both are referred to as the "spandau" but are two entirely different weapons.
LazyLife IFreak No, no they are not; that is like calling the 1903 and 1911 drastically different weapons; everything, save for the barrel, the single-fire capability, and very slightly different rate of fire, was practically the same, and both were used for the same purpose. But if eases the stress on your brain, we can just say the MG-42, okay, little Billy?
When I was growing up, I often heard of a WWII German machine gun referred to as a Spandau by my veteran uncles. I never understood that they were talking of the MG34 and 42. I always thought it was a reference to something like the Lewis gun for some strange reason. Nice to have the confusion cleared up, finally, lol.
Look man, there are a ton of problems here, but you are the #1 problem on this issue. You waffle more than Belgium in this video. But I will keep my comment to something you brought up in THIS video. You claim that 'the best troops' manning the MG42 lost to the Bren, but in reality for the majority of the later half of the war it was the M1919 and BAR at the squad/platoon level in the hands of US troops that met the MG42 most of the time (along the western front). Then when someone points out that the best trained and most seasoned German troops had already died in Russia, and the people manning MG42s in the later half of the war were either conscripts or kids just out of basic training, you completely dismiss the impact this has on those battles... How often did a German officer drop mid-combat just to have his entire company immediately surrender? So even if it was Bren vs MG42 the majority of the time, I have a 16 year old German kid scared out of his mind spraying bullets, and you have a seasoned British soldier that has used that Bren gun for years. Who are you putting a fiver on? Cause I sure as shit am not betting on my guy. You brought up the issue of later war skirmishes, which means you don't get to dismiss all factors at play in later war skirmishes as 'irrelevant'.
Out of curiosity, where did you get those numbers? Germans suffered very high casualties. How come, if they killed a platoon for every one of them? Everyone else should suffer more than they did...
so now you are basically doing the same as the previous commenters did, he never explicity said, the best german soldiers lost to the bren.... he just said overal the german lost the war every day
Myth. In small scale tactical engagement one soldier tended to be about as good as the other, perhaps the Soviets excepted, whose troop quality took a massive nosedive after the disasters of 1941 and 42 and took a long time recovering both individual training and junior officer leadership abilities. There were relatively minor difference in troop quality as the war progressed but the Germans certainly were not having it all their way. Strategic considerations tended to dominate individual combat skill. If you read up on small tactical fights you get the strong impression that the well trained British regulars ran rings around the less experienced Germans during the campaign in Belgium and northern France of 1940, right up until the Brits were standing chin deep in the waters of Dunkirk! German troop quality steadily climbed during the war, giving the Germans a slight (and I do stress slight) advantage until the casualties of the war started to weigh heavily on troop quality after which a steady decline in troop quality took place handing the advantage back to Brits in small scale infantry combat. It is also worth mentioning that the British wrote the book on most current infantry tactics and doctrine. The way sections are used today in modern western armies? British. House to house and urban combat doctrine? British. Mortar usage? British. They really had their shit together during WW2 even if it is popular to say they had not.
ThuleanPerspective back at you bro. 27 million - 17 million civilian deaths, versus 5 million german military losses on eastern front gives which ratio? Don't bother to answer. I've got all the answers I needed to hear from your last comment.
This is quiet different from the Katana videos. In the comments of the previous videos I don't see fanboys but I see people who know the subject with valid arguments. -Your video contained factual errors, like saying MG34 and 42 are "essentially the same guns" when they're entirely different in every aspects of the engineering. The barrel change system which you use as another point, are totally different. MG42 has one of the quickest LMG barrel change system ever designed. -You also said "Not everyone copied the "spandau" after the war!", which is another factual error. The MG42 design can be seen in a M60 or a M249 for instance. Let it be said that in the world of small arms enthusiast, this is part of "basic knowledge". Saying the MG42 was not influential would be like saying Elvis wasn't influential in Rock music. -There is a valid reason why German WW2 weapons are "overhyped", it's because most of them are at the roots of a lot of modern firearms designs. Maybe it's a lack of knowledge on firearms history on your parts. German weapons engineering during WW2 was a key moment in the history of small arms design and manufacturing. First intermediary cartridge, first assault rifle, first stamped steel weapon manufacturing, first portable individual rocket launcher, etc. etc. etc. All of that, on the industrial scale. -Another argument you use is "if the Bren was rubbish they would have stopped giving it to the troops", but that's not how military logistics works. Take the US troops still using the BAR in WW2 when it was already an outdated weapons at the end of WW1. Armies use what they have in stock, not what they can potentially develop from captured enemy weapons. -The "the German constantly loss" part was also, "heh?". It was true at the end of the war indeed, when the Germans were vastly outnumbered and barred from ressources. The quality of the equipment is not really a factor in this. But actually, one could make the counter argument by just looking at the kill/death ratio of Germans troop at the end of the war and despite their defeat. -To expand on that, I wanna add that Germany mainly lost for two reasons: the USSR, and the massive bombing of the civilian German population. But making a video on that is not really "British nationalist bias" friendly. "Let's not forget that the British consistently won from 1944 the Normandy landing onwards". Indeed, when the war was already won by the allies. There is nothing wrong with not knowing a specific subject, no one can be an expert at everything. Just don't go calling fanboys people who correct you on obvious factual errors.
Konine Guns are never "based on a single gun". I made a generalization, if you want to get into the specifics, the M60 belt feeding tray/mechanism is directly copied from the MG42's. And yes, the M60 also borrowed designs from the FG 42 (which is yet another ahead of its time German designed small arms). Proving again the point that German small arms in WW2 were way ahead of their time, and created designs still used today in small arms.
OH look, one of them can actually give examples instead of just insisting they're right and calling anyone who asks for examples an idiot. Bravo sir, bravo. (that probably comes across sarcastic. It isn't)
Yep, it would be like saying that "Allied airpower was technologically superior to German airpower" because they had air superiority during the waning years of the war. That's not really a fair assessment, because the Luftwaffe was already severely weakened by wartime attrition (you WILL lose enough planes given a long-enough war) and supply shortages. Strategic bombings and sabotage of supply lines destroyed crucial oil supplies, so a lot of the German airforce was essentially grounded by then.
Yo Momz Nothing beats a sharp piece of steel giving someone a major concussion. I myself bought a Judicial Sword, also known as an Executioners Sword, for personal protection. Designed to take off heads? Then hands should be pretty easy. And I would rather take off a hand then take a bullet myself.
To be fair, I thought people were quite reasonable with their disagreements in that video. I mean, this is the internet so I've seen much worse but the comments last time were mostly calm counter arguments.
+Top 4ce (Heiko Brunken) Yeah to be honest I find it ridiculous to call someone a fanboy of these weapons because let's be honest not many if any of us have used these weapons in a real life scenarios all we have to go on are statistics and anecdotes. These are guns that we will never use from a war that has long since ended. A lot of people tend to forget that these weapons are manned by people and their use will vary wildly from situation to situation.
I've handle and compared many historical weapons of the era, but I can only give those comparison in a controlled environment. I'm glad I don't have to use these weapons in real life scenarios, and have respect for those who did.
Not to mention that different countries utilize each weapon differently and each theatre of war was different. For example, F2A Brewster Buffalo aircrafts were considered flying coffins by the USMC and utter garbage by most other countries that used them, but when employed by Finland against Soviet Union, they racked up ridiculous amount of kills.
The MG-34 was in use with the Norwegian home guard until the early 90's, and by then they were simply worn out from years of use. From what I've been told by the older instructors who've used it, it was VERY accurate, and gunners could actually earn sharp shooter badges meant for the Mauser (also in home guard use) using semi auto. The MG3 (and also MG42, I guess) is not as inaccurate as you seem to think. The high rate of fire means that, when firing bursts, you have the rounds down range already by the time recoil knocks you off your sights.
According to the guy on Forgotten weapons, the reason the MG34 continued to be used in vehicles was likely due to the vehicles being designed to accommodate the method of changing the barrel
My grandfather absolutely referred to the German MG's (34 and 42) as a "Spandau". He said they knew this was not the official name but as everyone else he met in the British and American armies used the same nickname then he used it too. There were a lot of nicknames for all sorts of German weapons "potato masher" for the stick grenades is one example. Also the Bren had one advantage over the MG-42 that was essential in raiding - it fired less rounds, therefore you didn't need 7 guys carrying truckloads of ammunition to feed it just for a couple of minutes fire. Also box magazines have some advantages over belt fed - IE less dirt ingression, easier to re-load, and you don't need someone just "feeding" the weapon.
That's pretty much what Finnish soldiers called every version of the stick grenades. Straight translation of "perunanuija" would be "potato mallet", but you get the idea. No one ever called them by type, because who cares when you just want to quickly tell someone to throw whatever version they had of it :)
Whats weight got to do with it? Also WRONG! With the tripod mounting an MG42 is more like 10kg heavier. The main point is that with a Bren it's immediately ready to use and can be used in transit, an MG42 being belt fed should be moved by 2 people not just one, and should have the feed checked before firing after moving. try using your brain for once.
Not at all. Good point though. The band name is taken from the random motions associated when someone succumbs to said machine gun fire. Not dodging. Dying. This is a fast machine gun, "tactically" running around like a twat is going to get you murdered. I'm sure there are plenty of expressions for 'dodging bullets' but this isnt one of them.
the use of the term 'fan-boys' for people who disagree with you isn't appreciated. Your videos are becoming more and more populated with extremely polarized comments, where people are either raging and complaining about your bias, or jokingly mocking anyone who isn't agreeing with you in a condescending manner. This isn't a very nice environment for promoting knowledge and intellectual discussion, which is something I've liked about your channel over the years. And for the record i don't have an opinion about the Bren vs Spandau (i know too little about ww2) and i'm not saying i don't still thoroughly enjoy your content. I just think it's a shame that what could be reasonable debate is often descending into two groups trying to feel superior to the other.
I used an LMG in the British Army (the 7.62mm version) and I totally agree that the weapon was very, very accurate. I loved mine and knew that I could very quickly reach out 600m with a few three round bursts and take a target out. I would always prefer that to a less accurate weapon
Please make more realistic accusations, even in this video he said he handled a MG42 and a Bren, and perhaps even fired other weapons. You're whole argument is made invalid by one sentence, well done.
@SNIperofDARKness02 Go watch the ending of the video. He specifically says he hasn't fired guns. But he then also explains quite well why that doesn't really matter. FYI, I think he made quite a few factual mistakes in his first video (and repeated some of them in this video) and I find it childish he's calling people fanboys in this video.
No tactical difference indeed. The MG 34's double crescent trigger dictated either semiautomatic or fully automatic firing modes. So basically you can loose single shots out of a mg 34 not a bit of a difference to the hellfire gun that cannot hit single people. Your reserach seems to be amazing. Almost as amazing as your ability to handle critizism
And yet it was a feature removed in the updated MG42. And do you know why? Because the MG34 was not a rifle, and trying to use it as such was ineffective at best. It's a machine gun, not an assault rifle.
The MG34 was produced until 1945 at the same time as the MG42. The MG 42 was optimized for cheap and easy production, the MG 34 was not. So aehm sir you are full of cotton candy and its main ingredient, hot air.
the MG.34 was the MG used in tanks, the 42 was the section machine gun that replaced the 34. the 34 and 42 fulfilled the same role as a section machine gun, massed suppressing fire. ergo they are comparable weapons. he even specifically went on about this in the above video, mentioning the double crescent trigger specifically.
German doctrine in the day was to change the barrel every time a new belt of cartridges was used, usually 250 rounds & barrel change time was less than 10 seconds, three spare barrels where carried by support troop, if properly maintained the MG42 could fire continually the reason three spare barrels were carried was in theory that by the time you got to the fourth barrel the first one had sufficiently cooled to repeat the process. Keep up the great work Lindy, peace.
Provided the crew still had their asbestos glove. To get a real perspective on that as a problem read US remarks on the M60 in Vietnam as they copied things slavishly including the two worst points - the need for the glove that almost always got "lost" so guns went out of action unnecessarily and two that the muzzle deliberately spread fore being designed to increase the area or cone of effect
I served in the German Bundeswehr and trained with the mg3, the modernized version with less firerate of 1200rpm. Besides the firerate and the Nato bullets the mg42 and the mg3 are very similar. We actually trained to make the barrel change and the reloading together in less than 7 seconds. 7 seconds was the max time we had to beat.
As far as I know, calling the German MG 34 and 42 a "spandau" is strictly a British term. I am a yank who has talked to many WWII vets and read many WWII stories from the US point of view, and they never referred to the cursed German MG as a "spandau". But as LB points out, loads of British authors and Tommies did. Another example of a popular name for a German weapon being erroneous was the MP-40. Hugo Schmeisser was not involved with the development or production of the MP-40, but that didn't stop our G.I.s calling it that gun a "schmeisser".
Minedweller329 The worst thing about communication on the internet: social cues are missed since they don't translate well into text. So either you don't know I'm goofing around (personally I think the katana is an over-hyped rubbish weapon which should've never made it out of the 14th century) or I'm missing that *you* are adding to my sarcasm by saying I'm a katanatard. Kinda thought my initial comment was obviously sarcastic. I don't believe that even katanatards or katana-plonkers think that a single man with a katana could've conquered all of mainland Japan on his own... well, maybe *some* of them do.
Having just found your UA-cam content in the last few days, I've had a bit of a binge and found them all to be fascinating. Listening to the controversy video about Brens and Spandaus reminded me of my dad's stories of when he was in the Royal Engineers in the 1950s and how his instructor told him off for holding the butt of the Bren too tightly when firing because this made the weapon too accurate when shooting as the desired effect was to spray rounds at the enemy rather than kill just one
Come on Lindy, calling people fanboys because you were called out doesn't make you look any better. There were many legitimate comments telling you what was wrong with you video. I'm not unsubbing, I still like this channel, but lets stick to medieval and miniatures, stuff we know you know
And who decides what subjects he understands well enough to talk about? You? So basically he should run every video idea he has by you first right? Here's an idea, if you don't like the video, don't watch it.
What? What the hell kind of argument is that? Knowledge is not subjective. You either know what you are talking about, and can back it up with facts, or you don't. Lindy shows he CAN know what hes talking about, AND back it up with logic and facts. But his video about the "Spandau" is not one of them. There is no "Who decides if he knows what hes talking about". What the fuck are you talking about hahaha
Why is Lloyd allowed to use the argument that the brits used the Bren for ages THEREFORE it's a great gun, but the fact that every LMG that came after the war was closely modelled after the spandau, influencing even up to what is used today (MG4, m249,, etc). Like it or not, the Bren as a platform was largely abandoned by manufacturers. Just because Britain used it for a while doesn't necessarily mean anything more than "well we have a bunch lying around might as well use them". Third-worlders still use the SKS and the Mosin for fucks sake.
I think what he was trying to say is that he made that point to praise the Bren because many people think it is rubbish. Making the same point about the Spandau is unnecessary because people already believe the weapon to be extremely good.
Only because of the American lineage of the M60, and of course the German lineage dating from the MG42. And guess who are among the world's biggest arms exporters today, and in previous decades: the USA (#1) and Germany (#5). It's no coincidence that you see what you claim are "descendants" of the MG42 everywhere. L/MGs are very, very diverse in their design and mechanisms around the world. What you claim sir, is BS.
From Wikipedia: "The gun was sometimes called "Spandau" by British troops, as was the MG 34, a traditional generic term for all German machine guns, left over from the famous Allied nickname for the MG 08 Maxim-derivative used by German forces during WWI, which was derived from its manufacturer's plates noting the city where some were produced." I think that's a good explanation. So you were right and wrong at the same time. The name Spandau was used but mostly by British and not "all English speakers" and the name was not referring exclusively on the MG34/42, though there were not many other German machine guns in WW2. I don't like that you refer that much on the memories of British soldiers. Their views are interesting for sure but of cause very subjective. There were German soldiers who were very accurate with the MG34/42 because they had a lot of practise and there were British soldiers who knew how to use the Bren very effectively.
Clarkson is the Clarkson of history. Look at his WW2 documentaries. They're a pretty good watch actually, covering actions I'd never heard of but that were truly incredible.
Yeah, but Clarkson is like R. Lee Ermey. If it isn't a jingoistic exaggeration ignoring the input of any other nation but his own, it doesn't get said.
You mention that studies after WWII showed that "only about 2% of soldiers actually aim to kill" (~7:22). I presume you're referring to the work of US Brigadier General S.L.A. Marshall, who interviewed Combat veterans after the war. His figures indicated that most of the killing in a unit was done by 15-20% of the men, not 2%. There has been some corroboration of these findings in other studies since then, but there is some controversy about whether or not Marshall actually carried out the research his findings were based on.
Thanks. I didn't have references but 2% seemed low. The numbers I have seen before were 15-30%, but I haven't seen the original papers. According to Grossman the number's estimated have been rather consistently low until the Vietnam War and new training that helped soldiers engage more.
Yes, I've read that training focuses more on getting people over their natural resistance to killing now, something that wasn't at all addressed in WWI, rarely in WWII but has been a focus since then as a result of Marshall's study. Personally, I find the fact that people have serious trouble killing others gives me hope for humanity.
Lindy, I dont feel like you were being attacked by "fanboys". The discussion under your video was very civil and informed, probably not only for UA-cam standard. Sadly you werent able to take the criticism and engage in meaningful discussion, but made a video defending your position without mentioning anything new. I dont have a problem with the topic or information presented (everyone makes mistakes), but your character and attitude towards criticism. There are few places better suited for discussions like these on the internet and its sad to see you disagree. Respectfully, one of your so called "fanboys"
He didn't provide the actual e-mails, now did he? It would be easy enough to show them on here, names redacted of course. Sorry heard claims like that too often in recent years, and I demanded proof of every single one, can't give Lloyd a pass there if I demanded the same of others.
@@BigHenFor then why he didnt answer them there? what now, if a teacher got some nasty emails he start doing shit in classrooms? Anyway, is not about emails here, is about people, his people, his watchers and followers having a different point of view, with arguments and called fanboys by lloyd, mocking them and noone of their arguments in disscution.
I completely understood the first episode. It's fairly straightforward. Unfortunate that others have missed the point. However, good on you for defending yourself in and such an amazing and in insightful way.
those guns are also based on completely different historical army doctrines. the British army was still in tact after the first war and was still trying to modernize and adapt to new battlefields with current weaponry. The Germans had to build a new army around its plans for conquest
Having served in the german armed forces as an officer for 8 years i can tell you the MG3 is perfectly accurate with the first few shots of a burst. Up to 400 meters i myself, being a horrible rifleman, managed to put 2-3 shots from every burst on target - that being man-high practice targets. That can be massively altered when on a gunmount, where every dud in the world could hit a man at 800+ meters. Not to be anal, just saying... ;) Also considering the rate of fire, the MG3 is essentially an MG42 with a lamella brake. This reduces the rate of fire because when the heat built up in the barrel of a 42 it would accidentally keep on firing without pulling the trigger until it ran dry. Hollywood inspiration? However i think that was two very entertaining videos, well done sir!
I feel that one of the main reasons people get the idea that british stuff was terrible and german stuff was so good, was to make us look like even more of an underdog, and thus making our victory a greater success.
CornishPasty it anoys me though as our stuff was just as good if not better than the germans eg. the halifax bomber the spitfire even the lee enfield was better than the kar98k even the churchil tank was able to trade blows with tiger tanks there is a story of a 12hour showdown brtween a pzkpfvi tiger where they kept bouncing of eachother so our stuff wasnt bad
Thank you for this nice video. An upside to this polemic: It confirmed for me the quality of all the three UA-camrs that were involved. Another upside: Nice to see my three favourite UA-camrs concerning WW2 interacting
I'm a big fan of the Bren gun. My Grandfather was a Bren gunner in world war two in the Welsh Guards. As good a weapon it was, I don't believe it was better than the MG42. Which was a superbly engineered support weapon for its time.
No doubt ot was superbly engineered. But answer me this. What country still used the german guns, in numbers, into the 90s. And as a follow up, how many countries still used the BREN on 7.62 into the 90s, and still in most lesser colonies now?? India, Timor, PNG, Fiji, Solomon Islands, that I know of. We gave PNG 184 000 in 90s alone.
@@ozdavemcgee2079 um, Germany, Austria and about 30 other countries. They use the MG3 which is nothing more than a product improve MG42 to the point where several parts are interchangeable. Not to mention the fact the concept of the universal machine gun that originated with the MG34 is used by almost every single military today and the countless design details of modern machine guns that were copied from it.
My Grandfather was a Bren gunner in WW2 in the Monmouthshire rifles. Attached to the 11th Armoured division. He always said the german equipment was better and that they would pilfer from dead German soldiers what they could especially Luger pistols and the ammunition because for short range personal defence that was the weapon to have.
I think this was a fair and sober comparison of the two guns, you clearly did a lot of good research on the subject, and I fully respect your review, I'm quite a fan of both guns myself, and they both have a ton of advantages and disadvantages, as you clearly stated. I say well done, just stick to these kind of videos, don't get into immigration or god forbid gun control like skullagrim did. You can't know a lot about everything, so stick to your thing. Please, please please please stick to your thing, you're the last military/weapons guy that isn't a strong conservative libertarian. Thank you very much!
That "katana breaking machineguns" thing is probably from the pacific theatre, against US marines, who used watercooled maxim-type MGs up to 1942-1943. It is the only way any WW2 machinegun could be destroyed by katana (or by any sword).
Of course the MG42 is made out of magic and is more awesome than everything ever made. My own MG42 is mounted on a unicorn and fires out candy at a rate of 3000 gumdrops a minute straight into the mouths of orphans and wizards!
Jwend392 HAH NICE JOKE. The BAR 1918 was a really good and high-tech gun, _in WWI_ but from 1925 on it was completely obsolete looking at contemporary designs like seriously, polish or Czech copies of the BAR were so much better, the US has this fucking habit of keeping weapons in service _for ages_
That would be Polish copies. In Czechoslovakia there was no need to copy the BAR as the BREN was a British variant of the Czech ZB vz.26, whose improved variants were only in 1961 by (also domestic) UK vz.59, which is now being replaced by the FN Minimi, mostly for ammo standardization.
In all my study of the war in North Africa until the end of 1942 I've never found one reference to Allied troops preferring to use a captured Spandau to say, a Bren. Yes, some troops did use captured Spandau's and they also used captured Italian weapons too. But Spandau's replaced rifles when they were used and basically they were used because they were automatic and could provide more firepower than a bolt action rifle. So I'd prefer to accept the experience and preferences of combat troops over any theoretical or wishful thinking contary advantage. And yes, some Allied troops were not stopped by rules and regulations from using captured weapons.
Bren used .303 and Spandau (MG42) used 7.62 mauser. Why'd they exchange for a spandau, a weapon which : they haven't been trained with, do not have the extra ammo for , and confuses their allies (like Mr.Lloyd mentioned about the soldier being mistaken by his pals that he's german cuz of the spandau) , etc? It only make sense that they didn't prefer Bren over a Spandau (both being mgs which eat ammos fast).
Defending the Stem is like defending Katanas, Lindy, not making the obvious statement MG34/42 is clearly superior. Drop it, it's a bad design, proof in case being, UK no longer use ANYTHING like it, while Germany and a lot other countries still use MG3 based machine guns.
edmundscycles1 Not surprisingly, not top fed, is it? Almost every army will use several machine guns for several roles nowadays. High RPM ones for suppression, low RPM for precision and ammo efficiency, high caliber for cover piercing, autocannons when you just need more range and penetration and have no problems carrying ammo, miniguns when you just want an area REALLY suppressed and also have enough ammo, etc, etc. Problem is not the caliber or rate of fire, is the top feed design. Belt x box is a non issue, both have their uses. It was a bad design and time proved it. If you can only field a single MG for logistic reasons, it's better to field both really functional MGs and assault rifles instead of a "less specialized MG". I'm sorry for Lindy, but germans invented the AR too.
The point is that LMG like the BREN are stil being used and while it my not have a top mounted magazine ( though when your prone it allows for fast changes and getting lower to the ground (see FG-42 and prototype M-60) . The use of a box can aide in mobility over a belt system if you are in a squad and don't want to rely on others helping you move quickly . During WWII the British army also had the Vickers light machine gun (which is very much comparable to the MG-34 with weight of fire and being belt fed)
edmundscycles1 The Vickers was an old design, based on the brilliand Vickers used since WW1. Too heavy and water-cooled. They just tough they didn't need to upgrade the Vickers, and the MG34/42 proved them wrong. Not too hard to accept,I take?
Erm not all Vickers were water cooled . The Vikers K gun was air cooled and quite light . often twin mounted on jeeps and used as aerial guns on bombers . The LDRF and SAS had up to 9 Vickers K guns mounted on jeeps for raiding patrols in North Africa and Normandy . A jeep would have a twin linked K gun for the front passenger , two twin linked K guns on the rear storage of the jeep one fixed for the driver and an optional twin linked in a central plinth
+RyanRyzzo it's such a great weapon that the special forces never wanted them, and commandos are getting new guns, that the sf use. fact remains that there's still better guns that the forces could be using, and it's a shame the engineers and manufacturers messed up with the l85.
Lloyd, I seriously think you should consult either Ian Holm from Forgotten Weapons or Alex C. from TFB TV and then make a video about their take on the "Bren Vs. Spandau" argument.
I enjoyed the first video and thought it was very good and well thought out. This video was just fun watching you handle the people attacking you. This video too is very well thought out.
Part 1 was full of mistakes and lacked of research. Now in part 2 he is not man enough to say "I was wrong". That's all. The people are not "attacking", they pointed out the mistakes. If everything was a misunderstanding, then part 1 was made bad anyway. And if I say "Bren Gun is good because it was used until 2006" and I do not mention that MG42 is used until nowadays in dozens of armies, than I made an unvalid point. A comparison without comparison is nonsense. He just was bad informed and did his homework in part 2. In part 2 he mentioned all this important points he should have made in part 1. I cannot compare two weapons without mentioning their roles and their influence in tactics. And after all I act like all the "german fanboys" are idiots while I made a bad video...............
I think the main issues with your previous video were exactly as you said, you focused on praising the Bren and ignoring many points that made the mg34 and 42 designs so successful and influential, such as their use as machine guns in vehicles and how influential they were after the Second World War on other designs, and generally not offering a balanced argument. Also the mg42 in short bursts is just as accurate as the Bren if there is a situation where that accuracy is needed. The bren's mane advantage was its light weight and reliability, as well as it's controllable fire rate, after the war it was not an influential design in the slightest with India producing the Bren out of necessity over choice.
you reference two videos, would be nice to see those links in the description text as many devices for viewing can't actually use the embedded link in the video.
Reminds me of the people that seem to think that the AK-47 was crafted by a god and it never has a single problem, will never have a malfunction and is the most accurate rifle ever while on full auto capable of shooting through 5 inches of solid AR500 steel.
The thing I like about Kalashnikov rifles is their simplicity. They are easily produced in very poor conditions. Assuming you can buy the barrel, you can basically build one from scratch. On an individual scale, the AR design is far better, but also far more costly. But I think the thing people forget is that it's an AK-47. As in 1947. Whereas the AR-15 design we know and love didn't come around till the eighties
+Dracarys Blackfyre the ak47 didn't see full mass production til late 49 and it didn't use stamped parted it used milled parts. the AK your referring to is the AKM which is a 60's designed weapon. and as for the AR-15 it was adopted into service around the same time.
Eugene Stoner designed the AR-15 in the 1950s. The modern AR-15 is based on a rifle that went into service shortly after the end of the Korean War. Some of the _design features_ are new, but the rifle itself is only a little younger than the AK.
Even if you didn't know a single thing about Eugene Stoner, the inventor of the AR15, you should have known the M16 was used in Vietnam and therefore came earlier than the 1980s...
+Xaro Xhoan Daxos The original M16 was a poor weapon. Modern designs based on that weapon are far better, but were not available until the 1980s, so the poster you replied to is correct. (You may have misread.) The AK design has also been modernised through several redesigns, and modern variants in service with Russia are also better than the original design.
Actually, the MG could be very precise if mounted on a Lafette Tripod, this assembly not only could remove much of the recoil vibration as it would add a second trigger in the tripod making the gun very accurate at long distances.
Love the bren hated cleaning it , great to fire , used it while training the Irish FCA par time lads was great craic in the early 2000s 3 round burst's. the bipod was a handy feature but made her heavy. I remember a young lad melting his hand after touching the barrel while replacing it
Actually a lot of the critical comments were pretty well presented and had profound arguments backing them up. Especially people like me, who have actual training and first hand experience with the weapon. Perhaps not very smart to call those people "fan boys" now, instead of taking their critizism and honestly discussing it in your video. Because even if your research might have been well done, there are a lot of points which still are very controversial, if not straight up wrong.
If you made a critical and well presented comment with a profound argument backing it up he never called you a fanboy. Why do you assume Lloyd called *every* criticizing commenter a fanboy? I see so many people in the comments who are offended for no reason. There we thousands of comments with absolutely no thought put into them blatantly calling the video bullshit and followed it up with namecalling. *Those* are the people he called fanboys, not you.
+eggo Yes, I see there is a difference, but Lindy did not make the difference clear in his video and did not discuss quite a few arguments despite them being presented kindly and constructive in the comments of the other video. No offense I still enjoy watching Lindybeige a lot, but it shows, we're all just humans... :)
Lloyd, while I appreciate it that you dont back down even under pressure from your supporters, you have to sometimes face the realities. When you compare two MGs and point out different facts about the guns (and admit it, you were a little biased towards the Bren Gun [which is perfectly fine since I am willing to admit that I am perhaps a little biased towards the MG42/Spandau due to being german]). For example, you never adressed the really SMALL magazine size of the Bren Gun (what is it exactly? I think 20-30 bullets?) which is redicilous for a machine gun, seeing how a machine gun's purpose is to lay supressive fire and lay down heavy fire to pin/mow down the enemies while more accurate weapons (rifles for example) pick off single targets one by one. Or for guys with submachine guns to close in on the flanks (or to smoke them out with granades if they are sheltered somewhere). In that regard you got to admit that the bren gun is terrible at that role (simply because you chew faster through a magazine than you could say 'Spandaus come from Spandau'.) In that regard, couldnt we agree that the Bren gun might be a sur-pas machine gun, but perhaps the first step in the direction of a very bulky assault rifle? (good range, good accuracy, full-automatic and around 30ish magazine size?) I mean you could have done it quite simply, lisitng some very simple facts (like effective range of fire, usual magazine sizes, rate of fire etc.) and then establish what the general definition of the role of a machine gun is in a modern army and then etablished the various army/military doctrines of the time and the role of their respective weapons. (for example the part where you kind of painted the germans to flee as soon as their MG was taken out, you could have simply explained that due to the fact that the germans mainly used bolt action rifles (except a few exceptions of the G43 and later on the Stg 44 (Sturmgewehr/Assault rifle) and perhaps the FJG (Fallschirmjäger Gewehr/Paratrooper Rifle) which meant that while they were accurate and reliable and effective on long ranges, they were ill suited for engagments on a lower range or against enemies with a higher rate of fire. (for example in an engagment on 50 yards/Meters or lower if it was a K98 against a Garand, I'd usually put my money on the Garand, simply because the Garand has a higher ammo capacity and higher rate of fire and requires less input to work properly in contrary to the bolt action rifle.) Which is the reason why most german positions were hard to hold against a determined attack once the MG was taken out. (though that is the case with most infantries on all sides of the war I'd claim.) In any case Lloyd, thanks for the video though. (since you adressed a few points which I mentioned earlier which came not so clearly across during your last video) Still you shouldnt call your own supporters fanboys either due to word of mouth of personal experience with an MG which with slight alterations is still used all over the world, while the Bren Gun is... well probably less known. :) Still cheers mate, still love your other content, dont hate my because I disliked your Bren vs. Spandau video :'(
17:50 Becaue you made it a frikkin comparison! "Let me compare these two cars. Car A is very fast. Car B looks really nice." You will immediatly assume that A is faster than B, and B is better looking than A.
I am glad you pointed out that infantry, actually had to take the ground in order to hold it, I have been in many conversations where people just act like you can do everything with aircraft and tanks. Eventually tanks and planes run out of fuel and ammo and need to be resupplied, they are then vulnerable to enemy infantry, if you do not have any of your own, to hold the ground, you will win in the short term and lose in the long term.
Lloyd, I don't care how horrible the things are that they say about you, you're alright. ;-). Great video as always mate. Cheers. PS Although a different style of comparison due to circumstances during the war, if you could do a video regarding the Bren vs BAR, that would be lovely. I would love to see your take and the firestorm that would ignite. Again, brilliant job, cheers. *Edited to add PS
Really? Really? People got butt hurt over someone talking about a TOOL?! I'm a gun lover from the States and own firearms, I own an AR-15 which a lot of people say the AK-47 is better. Do I care? No. People need to grow thicker skin and take it like a man or woman. Good job Lloyd.
@Comrade Serb MG-34 was the first multi role GPMG. Other countries had different types of machineguns for different roles. So yeah Germans came up with that idea. and MG-3 (7.62 NATO version of MG-42) is still used by quite a few nations even to this day.
There is a huge difference between Spandau on Tripod which was a Platoon / Heavy weapon asset vs the bipod. The description were on the tripod and the tripod has a mechanism where bullets are sprayed to get even spread over an area ( it can be turned off I believe) . This was the same role as the Vickers and the Vickers 50. Note the tripod had sights as well and could be devastating at very long ranges - In fact it was probably more accurate at mid to long range than short due to the spraying mechanism though I do not know exactly how this works. In the squad role it used a bipod and is comparable to a Bren but it was also accurate when fired in short bursts , ammo was not bountiful esp on the eastern front. German logistics was never up to US / UK. Not as accurate as a bren but pretty close and probably made up by the rate of fire ( even if both fired in short bursts) . Under sustained fire the heavier recoil will make it inaccurate but the bren would simply be out of ammo at this point. This was the strength of the gun it could be used in all 3 roles and fire the same ammo the rifles did - very useful with average logistics. Germans did use their rifles normally especially in defense or from a flanking position if this could be achieved but yes they were supposed to be moving to get into better / flanking position while the MG is used on the enemy. This is a good thing which allied squads including the brits also did but was not doctrine like the germans. re performance in 1944 , I don't think this is correct because the same Bren vs Spandau as used in 1940 in France. In 44 far more likely large amount of 25 pounders , Shermans and air were the reason - Not to mention the fact the Russians already did the job in 42-43 . ;-p
I was a section machine gunner in the New Zealand infantry,we used both roles,carried the GPMG for section battle drills and in the SF role for heavy defence etc.In Malaya we also used the Bren as well sometimes,they were re-chambered to 7.62.Loved using them on the range too,we would still use them for competition shoots between companies etc.
The “tripod” for the MG42 was a highly complicated damped parallelogram frame thing that was actually many times more expensive than the gun it mounted.
Spanny was too superfluous and the bren was only useful because infantry had bolt action rifles. Neither are particularly good at being general purpose mgs because spanny wasn't flexible enough and the bren wasn't specialized enough for its roll. Fight me.
You are completely right. As someone else pointed out, the Bren was more similar to modern assault rifles than an MG, and the Spandau wasn't that well suited to most situations. I say sir, good show!
Nah, I agree. I'd take the Bren over the MG 34/42, just because it'd be more useful on the battlefield. But it's a shit general purpose MG, with funky design elements.
I think the main advantage of the Bren could well be that it basically took one man to operate and a few other guys could carry a spare mag or two. the Spandau on the other hand took basically the whole section to supply and operate, so wasn't a very tactical gun
All 6 riflemen in the British infantry section carried 106 rounds for the section's Bren. 2 mags with 28 rounds each plus a bandolier with 50 rounds in chargers. The Bren gun was operated by a team of 3 men with 4-5 magazines carried per man.
NOTE BEFORE I GO FURTHER: I have a high respect for Lloyd and he makes good points, but on this I have to disagree It's not quite the same thing as katana worship, because katanas and European longswords had pretty much the same purpose and function so that was apples to apples, but comparing the MG42 and the Bren is more like comparing Scotch and Bourbon or Apples and Pears. Saying one is better than the other isn't exactly wrong, but it doesn't convey the whole truth either. The MG42 was made specifically for pinning down enemies and keeping them from advancing due to the endless barrage of bullets. A better comparison might be the FG42 to the Bren or the Japanese type 99 light machine gun. The Battle of Tilly and the other books you show are written from the point of view of a British Soldier, Americans didn't call it that, Canadians may have but I couldn't find any info about them or the Australians using it. It is NOT an effective and clear term for a specific weapon. In the context of world war 2 it could mean the MG34 or MG42, similar but distinct weapons. It would be like calling the Bren and the Besal Lewis Guns. You see how it makes no sense? The rebuttle video you showed gave many of the points stated by the "fanboys" in the comments. The people on your first video about this weren't saying the MG42 was magical like Katana Plonkers, they were actually making decent points which is why their comments got so many thumbs up but the Katana Plonkers get very few. Also, calling people fanboys just for giving points refuting your inaccuracies is rather disrespectful, so try not to do that.
Maybe the Brits called it Spandau but for example the Americans also called it MG 34 and 42. Also the "best troops" were by 1944/45 well behind the training standarts of the Allies and mostly regular people
I would generally agree with your points with one exception. The Russian front, contributing to the western allies' massive superiority in air power & materiel meant that attacking infantry had most of the time massive support. In these circumstances even moderately inferior infantry (which they certainly weren't) could triumph. The consistent strategic victories on the western allies' side therefore cannot be attributed to a particular tactical weapon when (I would assert) the strategic & operational conditions were the dominant factor.
Its relevant only in so far as stating the British could have consistently won from D-day onward even if the Bren was crap (which it wasn't) thanks to their overwhelming material & aerial superiority. (They were also very tactically/operationally competent) So saying the Brits consistently won cant prove the Bren was either good or bad.
Oranges. They are higher in sugar but also higher in vitamin C than an apple. The children might end up more obese but their immune systems will be stellar.
If you compare guns and you list something like accuracy as an advantage for one it very much is a statement about the other gun too. Unless its advantage is so minimal that you probably shouldnt mention it in the first place...
thank you for mentioning my video. Glad you liked it!
keep up the work
We all love you videos mate!
I just watched a video by you guys (I believe) about the steel ammo used by the Germans, Im curious if that could have had an impact by increasing recoil, or perhaps by wearing the weapon out faster.
As a further compliment, I totally knew it was your work (by name) without having seen that particular video. You definitely have a 'brand'
There are a couple basic misconceptions that are repeated in the video that spurred this followup.
1) The MG34 and 42 are not inherently inaccurate as Lloyd proposes. There would be no problem using a 42 for flanking cover fire during an assault. In addition, the Lafette tripods used with the 34 and 42 are excellent at allowing the guns to be used very precisely at long ranges (much better than the Bren tripod, which was also not used nearly as much). The example of a man prone 80 yards from a 42 being impossible to hit for an extended period it not representative of the gun. It may indicated that the gunner was a very poor gunner, or that he never actually saw and targeted the British soldier, or maybe he just had his sights mistakenly set for a very long distance and never realized it (i.e., not a skilled gunner).
2) The Bren is an accurate weapon, but not to the point of being a flaw. People who say that you cannot provide area fire with a Bren have never fired a Bren - it's easy to do.
A few minor points...
Where does one find people who say the Bren is rubbish? I have never met an informed person who claims this, and most of them consider the Bren a serious contender for best LMG ever made.
The obscure reason the the MG34 continued to be produced until the end of the war was than the 42's barrel changing procedure would not work in the mounts that were built for the 34. Simpler to continue making 34s for vehicular use than to redesign the mounts.
While the 34 and 42 may have been called "Spandau" by some British soldiers, this was not the case in the US (not with the British collectors I know, FWIW). IMO, it is better to use proper names than inaccurate slang. This is why I would not call the MP38 and MP40 "Schmeissers" despite that term being widely used by American troops at the time
For all that, though, Lloyd's original conclusion was basically correct: they are both excellent guns, and not directly comparable because they were used in different ways.
To find someone who says the Bren is rubbish simply ask the average Brit. If we've designed it, it must be terrible - either that or it's at the complete opposite end of the spectrum and it's the best in the world. There are a huge amount of misconceptions relating to the Second World War in the UK. For some reason people seem to blow everything German out of proportion and reduce everything British to comical levels of inferiority - leaving only the British man's fighting spirit as our most valued weapon. I suspect it's a way of making our role seem more heroic (especially with the Battle of Britain and the Blitz).
well now that's not true. ask who had the better aircraft us or the germans and 90% of people will say us. because they would be right. jokes. jokes. definitvely better stragetic bombers though. better than the damn yanks as well. oh yes look us with our 'flying fortress' oh la dee daaa.
Alistair Shaw Of course everyone in the UK would say the Spitfire was supreme. But the average person will overrate German equipment and underrate ours massively. The majority of people think of little old England fighting the Nazis against all the odds.
XXXpallisterXXX where did I mention spitfire? did I say that no Lancaster's Lancasters
Alistair Shaw I never said you mentioned that. You mentioned ask who had the better aircraft, 90% of people will say us. I was reinforcing that by saying everyone automatically thinks of Spitfires being the top dogs, at least in the UK.
Neither the Spandau or the Bren could ever match half a dozen guys shooting off fire arrows.
lols
Good one there XD
I used to be an explorer, but then I got a fire arrow into my knee
Or one man Tossing a Pommel
Artificial Avocado ha ha.
The nearest I've seen him to genuinely annoyed.
I think he has every right to be annoyed....having read some of the ridiculous comments made to his first video.. He makes wonderful videos, cut the guy some slack
@@rmcguire7033 Most of the comments on his first video were perfectly reasonable, and his annoyance doesn't change how wrong he was.
@@lowesmanager8193 How was he wrong? I am confused so maybe you could enlighten me as to what points exactly he was incorrect?
Precise as possible if you will please.
@@elijahshafer8956 Ian from Forgotten Weapons left an excellent comment on this video explaining many of the issues, it should be easy to find as I'm pretty sure it is the most liked comment.
That being said I'll try to explain myself.
1. He claims that the MG42 was inaccurate, and in this follow up video he claims that it was accurate enough for purpose, but still inaccurate, which is still wrong. In reality the MG42 was very accurate up to 600 meters especially when fired in short controlled bursts.
2. He perpetuates the myth that the Bren's biggest problem was that it was too accurate, and that this prevented it from being used effectively for area fire, which is false. The Bren was accurate to be sure, but it wasn't as laser accurate as Lindy implies, and you can use it for area fire, quite easily in fact.
3. He claimed that you could not shoot an MG42 while standing without being thrown off balance. While it might be difficult, and it certainly wasn't the guns intended purpose, you could shoot it standing up if you held it porperly.
4. He claimed that while the Bren didn't leave British service until 2006, the MG42 had long been taken out of service, and I believe he aslo said that the Bren was more influential for the designs of future MGs. In reality the MG42 is still in service to this day with some European armies, and the MG3 which is only a slight modification of the MG42 is still in service with the German army, as well as several other armies. And in terms of influence, practically every belt fed machine gun has been influenced by the MG42.
5. He claimed that the MG42 had overheating problems, which makes it sound like the MG42 didn't have a cooling system, or that it was poor. The MG42 actually had a very effective air cooling system, and the heating of the barrel was perfectly manageable with a trained gun crew.
6. He claimed that "English speakers" use the term "spandau" to refer to the MG42. He clearly doesn't mean people from England, but rather all people who speak English which is just nonsense. As an American who loves WW2 history I had never even heard the term spandau until his first video, and this sentiment was shared in the comments as well. He tried to use a dictionary to defend himself, but apparently he doesn't realize that dictionaries don't dictate how people talk, they only explain the meaning of words, no matter how obscure.
7. Even after coming to the conclusion that both guns were better at different things, and that neither was inherently better, he goes on to imply that the Bren was better by saying that the British consistently won against the Germans. This is absurd because there were tons of factors that influenced these outcomes, and yet he absurdly tries to boil it down to two machine guns. He does bring this up in this video but he condescendingly dismisses the criticism without a satisfying response. He also claimed that the Germans using the MG42 were "very determined" when in reality German morale was practically nonexistent late in the war.
This is mostly from memory as I didn't rewatch everything just to leave this comment, but once again I implore you to look for the comment left by Forgotten Weapons.
For American viewers that think firing a gun makes them an expert
"What was the #1 weapon? That's a subject for another video."
*Looks at newest video*
My god. It was fire arrows.
I believe it's the PIAT.
Good joke
I thought fire arrows, but decided the pommel. Could be the katana, but the pommel destroys the katana anyway, and the katana has no pommel. Perhaps the Cromwell was effective?
nuclear weapons
Karabiner 98k, followed by the M1 which the yanks still paid the $10 surcharge to Mauser for every rifle they produced, whilst shooting Germans with them, proving business trumps poor people's lives everytime.
I think you could have avoided the shit storm if you simply named your original video: "Bren gun - why it doesn't suck."
He couldn't. He's a Bren gun fanboy!
No velikiradojica you muppet because the Bren gun doesn't suck and no one thought it does. If it did the British Army wouldn't have used it for so bloody long!
+CLIn7 l33tW00d tru dat
The Iron Guild
That's a crappy argument. Armies have tendencies to use outdated guns and tactics. WW1 being the best example.
The Iron Guild It's quite obvious that Lloyd is trying to correct the wide-spread opinion that Bren sucks. I had no reason to believe it did, since it's a licenced Czech gun that underwent heavy testing before it was approved for production.
But it's not unheard that Brits used shit guns *cough cough L85A1 cough*.
Coming up next: Lloyd explains why Tornado ADV is better than an F-15
Lol
Coming up next: Lloyd explains why Challenger 2's inability to use regular NATO tank shells is actually an advantage and thus makes it superior to Leopard 2, Leclerc and M1A2 combined.
+Heinrich Berndovsky you mean that terrible rifled gun? takes two piece ammo, has a miserably low rate of fire and short tube life? it's gotten to the point where the RM 120 is better the it in nearly every way, the M1 can manage a 7 second reload, the Challenger would be lucky to make a 15 in combat......also the LEP program is replacing the rifled gun with the smooth bore 120, even the Brits are starting to get that it's outdated.
Brass 'n Barrels Firearms Channel
Well, to be perfectly honest with you, as a tank, Challenger 2 is better due to its excellent protection (in fact, M1s use the British Chobham armour plates that have been in use since Chally 2, if memory serves). The only problem with it is that the MoD is unwilling to throw as much money on it as is the DoD in terms of their Abrams fleet.
+Heinrich Berndovsky not really, the first M1 used pretty much a copy of the challengers armor, the SEP updated it, DU backer plates and some other armor ju ju, but as I was saying, the only real problem with challenger 2 is gun life, mobility and engine reliability.
"The MG34 continued to be used for bow machine guns, [et al.] for some reason..."
The opening in the ball mount for a bow machine gun is round, not the square opening that an MG42 would require, and changing the barrel on an MG34 pulls the barrel straight back, while on an MG42 it is pulled out to the side; an MG42 would have to be pulled completely back into the vehicle for the barrel to be changed. It was simply more convenient to continue to use the MG34 instead of having to redesign the bow machine gun mount to accommodate the differences between the two weapons.
The problem I had with the original video was the omission of facts. When you would mention that, for example, the BrEn was used after the war and neglect to say anything about the use of the Mg-34/42, it's probably fair to think that you are saying the Mgs were discontinued. Saying that you didn't actually say the Mgs went out of service is missing the point of the argument.
Then you're just purposefully misinterpreting what he said. That's on you not on him. As he stated he mainly wanted to point out that the Bren wasn't completely awful and saying that it continued to see use was part of that.
he did a really bad job showing that the Bren was a good machine gun, and mostly seemed like he was saying it was better than the MG34 and MG42.
Fun fact: Germany is still called "Deutschland" in Germany.
And to get more Formal you can add a Bundesrepublik before.
and the 'Weimar republic' was officially called das Deutsches Reich.
Soon to be known as "ألماني"
Hagen thanks for the supplement, I'll continue to learn.
+maglorian you're welcome! Thank you for nit flipping out because of me being a 'grammar nazi'
If you want to be taken seriously in a discussion, don't start with naming people that point out your inaccuracies "fanboys" and comparing them to people that perpetuate misconceptions about the katana.
You've got a lot of commenters that actually used the MG3, or at least read a lot about the MG line, because - surprise - that gun was used last century, so within the lifespan of many of our grandparents.
"B-but a lot of people actually left short and stupid comments!" - why focus on them, then? Why wouldn't you just admit inaccuracy when it's pointed out with sources? Why not argue the comments that actually challenge you with those sources? This goes completely against what you've said in the "feel free to disagree with me" video.
First off, the MG 3 is not the MG42, it is a modernized version of the same design, although influenced by other guns. Second "People who've read about the MG42"
So what? Do you honestly believe Lloyd hasn't read about it? He literally reads this stuff for pleasure, hell, he wanted to do a series of videos discussing war memiores
Well some of the factual errors were so obvious to anyone with a little bit of knowledge on the subject that if he did the research he used TERRIBLE sources.
Just a small correction.
The MG42 is essentially still in use today in the form of the MG3, same gun different calibre. And in use by a impressive amount of countries including Germany, Italy, Turkey, Finland, Sweden Denmark and many others. So not only are there people that have used the MG42 but quite a few people would have been firing the MG3 within the last year.
+Dracarys Blackfyre the mg-3 is the exact same weapon as the mg42 the only thing that's change is the caliber used instead of 8mm Mauser(7.92x57mm) it uses 308 caliber (7.62x51mm) other than that the only thing that's changed Is they have added a rail on top in later models to added night vision optics. but the original mg-3 when it was first introduced quite literally where marked mg-42 and where rebarreled to fire 7.62 NATO.
Anusideral
"OMG He was so wrong I'm not even gonna bother supporting my argument, because he's so wrong!"
When i served in the British Army in the 1980s, i used the Light Machine-Gun (LMG) which was a re-calibred Bren Gun. The weapon i carried had a manufacturing date of 1942.
Did that not make you a touch nervous? Obviously with parts getting worn down and replaced over time I doubt much of the original 1942 gun was there, but that must have been a little bit uncomfy?
@@awordabout...3061 I think wielding a weapon that has been proven in combat but perhaps worn is a lot less concerning than wielding a weapon that could have been shoe-horned into service by some rich gunmaker, a fancy rigged demonstration, and some bribed generals. I would be really nervous if my machine gun had batteries, or connected to my smart phone. 1920s technology was unfortunately insanely effective at its purpose of ending human life, 2020s technology is not really better at it just better at dealing with certain new political realities involved.
James Beil To draw a similar comparison, I would feel more nervous driving a car sold second hand with 2000 miles than a second hand car with 40,000 miles. (Provided both have a service history.)
British manufacturing at it's best :)
@@francissaunders4050 ummmm akchuly....
You should ask forgotten weapons to test the two.
He already posted a comment. And he mentioned, that the german guns were not at all that bad for aimed fire...
All 4, BREN and BAR vs MG 42 and MG 34
As far as whether it's accurate in actual usage, line up a bunch of cardboard Tommys and go at it. Regarding supression, even if you're a veteran that was confident it was more spray-and-pray than targeted fire, I think it's still a safe conclusion that the more bullets you have flying by your head, the less you'll want to poke your head up, don't you?
I have shot and hit man sized targets out to 600 m with an mg 42. Its accurate enough.
Well, it was obviously able to hit targets...how many thousands died from machine guns in the Normandy and Stalingrad landings? His point was I think about sustained accuracy. Have you been able to try to simulate the sweeping suppression/area denial the gun was designed and used for? I'm sure you would want to, not many places to do it though, and the ammo must be quite expensive. If so what results? I've seen entire bursts hit a silhouette at 100 yards from a Bren. It doesn't seem like the 42 could do that, except maybe mounted? It sure seems to jump around a lot.
Why don't they just duct tape a katana to a Spandau? With that as a weapon the war would have been over by Christmas.
Of course, katanas can cut through 18 machine gun barrels in a single stroke so you would be careful when attaching them together.
better yet,attach katandaus to tigers and panzers, tge war would've been won in 7 hours
I heard the japanese Kamikaze fighters had a katana on their plane tips to cut through US battleships and carriers :P it was so sharp that you could cut yourself only by seeing the blade. Thats also the fact why japanese people have narrow eyes. The chinese just copied it.
Hahaha jolly good!
That would a truly glorious sight to behold, MG42/MG34 with katana bayonets
Even better: katana bullets can't be THAT hard to manufacture. Instead of typical conical-ish bullets - load those little bastards into a spandau! You could slice through reality itself with a gun like that :D
So what we've established is that people on the internet nail their colours to the mast very quickly and get very defensive when you challenge their biases.
except he doesn't say the bren was better at everything, what he says was it was better for making accurate shots, while the spandau was excellent at suppression because of its comparative inaccuracy. that not fanboying.
How often have you fired Brens and MG 42s?
+Ken Clark never. but that's irrelevant. my experience isn't in question. lindy's is. And he has based his opinion and argument on first hand accounts of the weapons and on the opinions of men who have used these weapons frequently.
Chris Mearns Anecdotes are not data.
+Ken Clark actually it kinda is. that's what is used in history. If there's actual data then that is used as well. But sources of people who have used the weapons are very valuable.
I was in the army from 86 - 90 and we still had the Bren or LMG as we knew it then and it was a brilliant weapon: reliable, easy to use and so accurate.
I don't mind entertaining the idea of the Bren being more battlefield useful, but most of your evidence was anecdotal and you were so clearly biased against the spandau that I couldn't take your video seriously. You also made unfair comparisons in that video and this one on the effectiveness of German units in ww2. There are way too many factors involved to say that the machine gun was the deciding factor and it is very ignorant to come to that conclusion based on that. Weapons don't necessarily win wars, battle tactics and overall strategies were much more important and that was especially the case in the Second World War. It is also frustrating that you brush off any critics as fanboys, which is utterly absurd. Hope I haven't offended.
Abso-fucking-lutely. I'd completely buy the Bren being a more useful battlefield weapon; I value aimed fire, its portability is great, easier to keep it fed, etc. I don't even like the Bren, magazine is too funky for me (which is probably where most of the criticism of it started). The problem is that it all comes across as "no, this gun is better than that gun, and see it won the war." Which is just wow.
Even direct comparisons with weapons that are used similarly are difficult to make valid; then again, something tells me that Lloyd never much ventured into the sections of the internet rife with gun comparison arguments (ala AR vs AK, a topic so worn it's essentially banned on most forums where guns are discussed).
And yes, brushing off the critics as wehraboos. There were plenty there, but I have a hard time believing he didn't see the legitimate criticism.
''battle tactics and overall strategies were much more important''
thats another point for bren
+Mongis Lort No, it's a point for allied tactics and strategies. Learn to logic.
+Lambert2191 Which is not what he said at all, or I'd have agreed. Learn to read.
+Lambert2191 You don't seem to realize that something being more versatile does not make it strategically more useful or better.
But my grandfather during WW2 grabbed his mg-42 and sliced through an ancient magic katana with a single slash!
LOL
Sadly he was shot immediately afterwards. By a Bren gun😂
@@simonmorris4226 *katana
My comrades sliced through 10000 people with 2 artillery batteries in the battle of Mukden
"Almost all the criticism coming in were for things I never actually said."
You perfectly summed up what it's like to try to argue a point on the internet.
@Avery Chance I see what you did there.
@@fornsphin lol
I spent many happy hours behind a British Army 7.62mm LMG (Bren) in the late 1970's and early 1980's. I recall it was a stunningly accurate weapon out to 800 yards and beyond, in the hands of a competent operator it could be like an awesome double or triple tap sniper rifle. The belt fed GPMG on the other hand was a much better tool for area denial or suppressive fire and was more similar in performance to the "Spandau". In some infantry operations (eg: counter insurgency or FIBUA, etc) accuracy may be valued more than spread or high rates of automatic fire thus the LMG lingered on. With the 7.62mm LMG we could shoot through concrete walls at close and medium range and worry targets out to 1000 yards and beyond. Another happy thing about the LMG (Bren) was that it's 30 round magazines would fit the SLR ( yes I know they could cause stoppages) and visa versa SLR's mags would fit the Bren, handy in a crisis. :-)
Nick Randall-Smith - there is no room for reasonable people with sound experience here! Kindly move along.
Well said...
@@77thTrombone this cracked me up
Had an LMG mounted on the ferret survey vehicle in Germany in early 80s. Loved putting the 30 round mag on my SLR. BSM didn't like it though...
That was what Aussies did in Vietnam. They used their scrounged Bren mags on their chopped up L1A1s managing to keep their AO free of Viet Cong and NVA until the very end of the war. The FAL is an outstanding weapon, even today.
A Spandau that shoots pommels and has a katana as a bayonet = The ultimate weapon
*A Panzer that has Spandaus that shoots pommels and has Katanas as bayonets.
The ultimate way to end your enemy rightly. :)
*A spandau with a pommeled katana bayonet that shoots fire arrows
You're thinking of the Japanese Type 99 light machine guns, with their somewhat incongruous bayonet fittings. :)
Ryan Hall is that a skallagrim reference by any chance?
This is completely and 100% true.
I'm happily picturing Basil Fawlty screaming, "Who won the bloody war anyway!?"
To acurate
Don´t mention the war, hahahaha.
"Well, that changes everything!" xD
"What?! It's an MG42? Well that changes everything!" is probably the funniest thing I ever heard in my life. Which is kind of sad if you think about it ^^
Oh no. Describing those with legitemate opinions as fan-boys, thereby trying to discredit them. Bad, Lloyd, bad
ThuleanPerspective Yeah, I agree with you. Some perspective is lost.
Don't think so, his research seems varied and more importantly, from a variety of primary sources. Sources from the time.
If the sources of the time record inaccuracy in the part of the German weapons, then surely it has to be of note for it to be in the books. At least if you accept that people will not record the common day stuff, assumed knowledge but only record those things of note, beyond and out of the ordinary.
There Be Game All of his sources was from British soldiers, those facing the gun. He never mentioned a source written by a German operating the gun in a battle scenario.
Tiaan De Swardt And?
Depending what you want to read about, there's only so many sources out there. Not only that, there's only so many sources in your language.
Unless you have the time to offer a translation service for Lindy, then what else what was he to do? If he has primary sources (he has), from other sources outside his own country (he has) and referred to a variety of them.
Research does not have to be 'balanced' or does it have to show sources from everywhere on everything. If he's got documents that support it, or the books he has are of good academic quality, hence my question in another post, then everything he said was on point and is hard to argue with.
At least I find it hard to argue with, I can't find a whole in his stated position that in terms of the end product, the Bren and Spandau were both good and bad at things and that the Bren is under appreciated.
If you're comparing an automatic weapon to a sniper rifle on rate of fire, the automatic weapon is going to win. So at least be fair in your comparison and the grounds on which they are done.
There Be Game There should be tonnes of autobiographies from German perspectives, even translated ones.
I actually just googled 'German Common soldier autobiographies" and found these:
In Deadly Combat: A German Soldier's Memoir of the Eastern Front
Blood Red Snow: The Memoirs of a German Soldier on the Eastern Front
I Was a German - The Autobiography of Ernst Toller
Soldat: Reflections of a German Soldier, 1936-1949
They aren't hard to find. A person operating a phsychological weapon such as the MG 42 would give a different opinion than the person fighting a phsycological weapon. This would give his research more balance and credibility.
Is his books of good academic quality though? They might be or they might not be. Therefore more info from more sources regarding the subject would better flesh out a persons knowledge on the subject.
I agree that the Bren was a good gun. That wasn't what the hypothesis was about though. The question was, which gun was better, and from a scientific standpoint this hypothesis, and subsequent explanations, is flawed since the Bren and the MG 42 belonged to two different classes of guns. Both had their uses in different roles.
And if we can use his criteria that the Bren was better than the MG 42, then logically we can assume that the MG 34 was a better gun than the Bren, up until it wasn't. The Germans won everything up until 1941-1942. Was the MG 34 then a better gun than the Bren?
P.S: Sorry for my long comment :(
Hey, watch Star Wars and look carefully and you'll see the stormtroopers main weapons are the Stirling smg and the Mg 34, so they must be good.
even han solo has a mauser :)
PROOF! The stormtroopers couldn't hit a derned thing with them either....
@@zythran c96, they aren't blasters... Those are just tracer ammunition
William Phillips Plot Armor. We train to be marksmen since we are first recruited, around 14 years old. Our helmets however... yeah, hard to see out of.
A lot of them carried lewis guns without the magazine
That shirt's off-white, not beige.
The standards for this channel have really dropped.
On a more serious note, all guns and swords have pros and cons. If they didn't have pros, they simply put wouldn't have been made. But if there were no cons, they'd probably be the only gun used by every military.
In this case Lindy decided to lump together a washing machine and a dish-washer and call them the same thing. Sorry but that's just plain wrong.
+LazyLife IFreak
It is only wrong if the two were not competitors, which they were; for instance, fundamentally, the mp5 and AK-47 are terribly different; however, both competed against one another in many instances, and thus might be compared for those times. Likewise, the Bren and Spandau are different, but both were pitted against each other, and thus are viable for comparison.
Coupledyeti Vonvanderburg
You mean the MG34. the MG42 or the german version of the Maxim MG? Both are referred to as the "spandau" but are two entirely different weapons.
LazyLife IFreak
No, no they are not; that is like calling the 1903 and 1911 drastically different weapons; everything, save for the barrel, the single-fire capability, and very slightly different rate of fire, was practically the same, and both were used for the same purpose.
But if eases the stress on your brain, we can just say the MG-42, okay, little Billy?
When I was growing up, I often heard of a WWII German machine gun referred to as a Spandau by my veteran uncles. I never understood that they were talking of the MG34 and 42. I always thought it was a reference to something like the Lewis gun for some strange reason. Nice to have the confusion cleared up, finally, lol.
Look man, there are a ton of problems here, but you are the #1 problem on this issue. You waffle more than Belgium in this video. But I will keep my comment to something you brought up in THIS video.
You claim that 'the best troops' manning the MG42 lost to the Bren, but in reality for the majority of the later half of the war it was the M1919 and BAR at the squad/platoon level in the hands of US troops that met the MG42 most of the time (along the western front).
Then when someone points out that the best trained and most seasoned German troops had already died in Russia, and the people manning MG42s in the later half of the war were either conscripts or kids just out of basic training, you completely dismiss the impact this has on those battles... How often did a German officer drop mid-combat just to have his entire company immediately surrender?
So even if it was Bren vs MG42 the majority of the time, I have a 16 year old German kid scared out of his mind spraying bullets, and you have a seasoned British soldier that has used that Bren gun for years. Who are you putting a fiver on? Cause I sure as shit am not betting on my guy.
You brought up the issue of later war skirmishes, which means you don't get to dismiss all factors at play in later war skirmishes as 'irrelevant'.
@ThuleanPerspective So the Russians lost 13 soldiers for every 1 German and ended up with ~1:2 KIA ratio how?
Out of curiosity, where did you get those numbers? Germans suffered very high casualties. How come, if they killed a platoon for every one of them? Everyone else should suffer more than they did...
so now you are basically doing the same as the previous commenters did, he never explicity said, the best german soldiers lost to the bren.... he just said overal the german lost the war every day
Myth. In small scale tactical engagement one soldier tended to be about as good as the other, perhaps the Soviets excepted, whose troop quality took a massive nosedive after the disasters of 1941 and 42 and took a long time recovering both individual training and junior officer leadership abilities.
There were relatively minor difference in troop quality as the war progressed but the Germans certainly were not having it all their way.
Strategic considerations tended to dominate individual combat skill. If you read up on small tactical fights you get the strong impression that the well trained British regulars ran rings around the less experienced Germans during the campaign in Belgium and northern France of 1940, right up until the Brits were standing chin deep in the waters of Dunkirk!
German troop quality steadily climbed during the war, giving the Germans a slight (and I do stress slight) advantage until the casualties of the war started to weigh heavily on troop quality after which a steady decline in troop quality took place handing the advantage back to Brits in small scale infantry combat.
It is also worth mentioning that the British wrote the book on most current infantry tactics and doctrine. The way sections are used today in modern western armies? British. House to house and urban combat doctrine? British. Mortar usage? British.
They really had their shit together during WW2 even if it is popular to say they had not.
ThuleanPerspective back at you bro. 27 million - 17 million civilian deaths, versus 5 million german military losses on eastern front gives which ratio?
Don't bother to answer. I've got all the answers I needed to hear from your last comment.
I believe that Lloyd's apartment has a wooden floor.
Every time he gets excited the image wobbles slightly as he leans forward.
This is quiet different from the Katana videos.
In the comments of the previous videos I don't see fanboys but I see people who know the subject with valid arguments.
-Your video contained factual errors, like saying MG34 and 42 are "essentially the same guns" when they're entirely different in every aspects of the engineering. The barrel change system which you use as another point, are totally different. MG42 has one of the quickest LMG barrel change system ever designed.
-You also said "Not everyone copied the "spandau" after the war!", which is another factual error. The MG42 design can be seen in a M60 or a M249 for instance. Let it be said that in the world of small arms enthusiast, this is part of "basic knowledge". Saying the MG42 was not influential would be like saying Elvis wasn't influential in Rock music.
-There is a valid reason why German WW2 weapons are "overhyped", it's because most of them are at the roots of a lot of modern firearms designs. Maybe it's a lack of knowledge on firearms history on your parts. German weapons engineering during WW2 was a key moment in the history of small arms design and manufacturing. First intermediary cartridge, first assault rifle, first stamped steel weapon manufacturing, first portable individual rocket launcher, etc. etc. etc. All of that, on the industrial scale.
-Another argument you use is "if the Bren was rubbish they would have stopped giving it to the troops", but that's not how military logistics works. Take the US troops still using the BAR in WW2 when it was already an outdated weapons at the end of WW1. Armies use what they have in stock, not what they can potentially develop from captured enemy weapons.
-The "the German constantly loss" part was also, "heh?". It was true at the end of the war indeed, when the Germans were vastly outnumbered and barred from ressources. The quality of the equipment is not really a factor in this. But actually, one could make the counter argument by just looking at the kill/death ratio of Germans troop at the end of the war and despite their defeat.
-To expand on that, I wanna add that Germany mainly lost for two reasons: the USSR, and the massive bombing of the civilian German population. But making a video on that is not really "British nationalist bias" friendly. "Let's not forget that the British consistently won from 1944 the Normandy landing onwards". Indeed, when the war was already won by the allies.
There is nothing wrong with not knowing a specific subject, no one can be an expert at everything. Just don't go calling fanboys people who correct you on obvious factual errors.
M60 is based on the Fallschirmjägergewehr, not the MG42
Konine
Guns are never "based on a single gun".
I made a generalization, if you want to get into the specifics, the M60 belt feeding tray/mechanism is directly copied from the MG42's. And yes, the M60 also borrowed designs from the FG 42 (which is yet another ahead of its time German designed small arms).
Proving again the point that German small arms in WW2 were way ahead of their time, and created designs still used today in small arms.
The M1918 BAR outdated by 1918?
OH look, one of them can actually give examples instead of just insisting they're right and calling anyone who asks for examples an idiot. Bravo sir, bravo.
(that probably comes across sarcastic. It isn't)
Yep, it would be like saying that "Allied airpower was technologically superior to German airpower" because they had air superiority during the waning years of the war.
That's not really a fair assessment, because the Luftwaffe was already severely weakened by wartime attrition (you WILL lose enough planes given a long-enough war) and supply shortages. Strategic bombings and sabotage of supply lines destroyed crucial oil supplies, so a lot of the German airforce was essentially grounded by then.
nonsense bren and the spandau have nothing on a man throwing a pummel to end someone rightly
Still?
Yo Momz Nothing beats a sharp piece of steel giving someone a major concussion. I myself bought a Judicial Sword, also known as an Executioners Sword, for personal protection. Designed to take off heads? Then hands should be pretty easy. And I would rather take off a hand then take a bullet myself.
whyamihere Stalin yes psycho very good
Aye aye!
To be fair, I thought people were quite reasonable with their disagreements in that video. I mean, this is the internet so I've seen much worse but the comments last time were mostly calm counter arguments.
Yeah but you are commenting on a lindybeige video there is a higher standard of comment.
+avenger1312 Hence, calling the people who had counter points fanboys doesn't help the discussion. (not saying you called anyone a fanboy)
+Top 4ce (Heiko Brunken) Yeah to be honest I find it ridiculous to call someone a fanboy of these weapons because let's be honest not many if any of us have used these weapons in a real life scenarios all we have to go on are statistics and anecdotes. These are guns that we will never use from a war that has long since ended. A lot of people tend to forget that these weapons are manned by people and their use will vary wildly from situation to situation.
I've handle and compared many historical weapons of the era, but I can only give those comparison in a controlled environment. I'm glad I don't have to use these weapons in real life scenarios, and have respect for those who did.
Not to mention that different countries utilize each weapon differently and each theatre of war was different.
For example, F2A Brewster Buffalo aircrafts were considered flying coffins by the USMC and utter garbage by most other countries that used them, but when employed by Finland against Soviet Union, they racked up ridiculous amount of kills.
The MG-34 was in use with the Norwegian home guard until the early 90's, and by then they were simply worn out from years of use. From what I've been told by the older instructors who've used it, it was VERY accurate, and gunners could actually earn sharp shooter badges meant for the Mauser (also in home guard use) using semi auto.
The MG3 (and also MG42, I guess) is not as inaccurate as you seem to think. The high rate of fire means that, when firing bursts, you have the rounds down range already by the time recoil knocks you off your sights.
why not call the Spandau *"PFFRRDD"* instead?
its just one syllable and accurately describes what youll hear when it fires
The minigun already took that name
TheCompleteMental Don’t you mean the Americana 180?
I don't think you'd be able to hear much when a spandau fires
@@johnnysack2404 You forgot the "R" in "REEEEEEEEEEE"
@@TheCompleteMental aha, it hasn't though. That's Brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrt!
According to the guy on Forgotten weapons, the reason the MG34 continued to be used in vehicles was likely due to the vehicles being designed to accommodate the method of changing the barrel
My grandfather absolutely referred to the German MG's (34 and 42) as a "Spandau". He said they knew this was not the official name but as everyone else he met in the British and American armies used the same nickname then he used it too. There were a lot of nicknames for all sorts of German weapons "potato masher" for the stick grenades is one example. Also the Bren had one advantage over the MG-42 that was essential in raiding - it fired less rounds, therefore you didn't need 7 guys carrying truckloads of ammunition to feed it just for a couple of minutes fire. Also box magazines have some advantages over belt fed - IE less dirt ingression, easier to re-load, and you don't need someone just "feeding" the weapon.
Gordon Lawrence Mhm, I've heard "potato masher" referred to a lot also.
That's pretty much what Finnish soldiers called every version of the stick grenades. Straight translation of "perunanuija" would be "potato mallet", but you get the idea. No one ever called them by type, because who cares when you just want to quickly tell someone to throw whatever version they had of it :)
The Quack nope cos the Bren is far more mobile. That counts for a lot in a battle where things can change in 5 seconds never mind minute to minute.
Whats weight got to do with it? Also WRONG! With the tripod mounting an MG42 is more like 10kg heavier. The main point is that with a Bren it's immediately ready to use and can be used in transit, an MG42 being belt fed should be moved by 2 people not just one, and should have the feed checked before firing after moving. try using your brain for once.
Ah now I get it your just a troll. You didn't even read my reply.
So a Spandau Ballet is literally dodging MG fire?
It for sure dodges my weariness of 80's GOLD ua-cam.com/video/ntG50eXbBtc/v-deo.html
..... good one! :)
Not at all. Good point though. The band name is taken from the random motions associated when someone succumbs to said machine gun fire. Not dodging. Dying. This is a fast machine gun, "tactically" running around like a twat is going to get you murdered. I'm sure there are plenty of expressions for 'dodging bullets' but this isnt one of them.
Yes . Dying from a Spandau not dodging its bullets
I always heard that spandau ballet is the name given to the way that German officers feet moved and twisted after execution in spandau prison
the use of the term 'fan-boys' for people who disagree with you isn't appreciated. Your videos are becoming more and more populated with extremely polarized comments, where people are either raging and complaining about your bias, or jokingly mocking anyone who isn't agreeing with you in a condescending manner. This isn't a very nice environment for promoting knowledge and intellectual discussion, which is something I've liked about your channel over the years.
And for the record i don't have an opinion about the Bren vs Spandau (i know too little about ww2) and i'm not saying i don't still thoroughly enjoy your content. I just think it's a shame that what could be reasonable debate is often descending into two groups trying to feel superior to the other.
I used an LMG in the British Army (the 7.62mm version) and I totally agree that the weapon was very, very accurate. I loved mine and knew that I could very quickly reach out 600m with a few three round bursts and take a target out. I would always prefer that to a less accurate weapon
Did u shoot the MG34, 42 or 3? Can you confirm that they are less accurate?(On a Mg42 i could imagine that they are less accurate but not with an 34)
They're not Katanaplonkers or whatever. They're called: Weaboos.
Aka weebs
lazzer+FISK004 actually a weaboo is some one who is obsessed with modern japanese culture not anything japanese
Found the weeb :^)
Mentelpe Jenkins no im friends with a Grammer nazi who is
Gman Grammar*, if you were really a friend with a grammar nazi, you'd know this.
>Has probably never so much as even touched a gun in his life
>Still claims to hold authoritative opinions on firearms technology
Lloyd. Please, no.
Please make more realistic accusations, even in this video he said he handled a MG42 and a Bren, and perhaps even fired other weapons.
You're whole argument is made invalid by one sentence, well done.
boohoo boohoo boohoo WAAH WAAHH WAAHHHHHH
Seems like somebody didn't finish the video. 18:10
@SNIperofDARKness02 Go watch the ending of the video. He specifically says he hasn't fired guns. But he then also explains quite well why that doesn't really matter. FYI, I think he made quite a few factual mistakes in his first video (and repeated some of them in this video) and I find it childish he's calling people fanboys in this video.
No tactical difference indeed. The MG 34's double crescent trigger dictated either semiautomatic or fully automatic firing modes. So basically you can loose single shots out of a mg 34 not a bit of a difference to the hellfire gun that cannot hit single people. Your reserach seems to be amazing. Almost as amazing as your ability to handle critizism
And yet it was a feature removed in the updated MG42. And do you know why? Because the MG34 was not a rifle, and trying to use it as such was ineffective at best. It's a machine gun, not an assault rifle.
The MG34 was produced until 1945 at the same time as the MG42. The MG 42 was optimized for cheap and easy production, the MG 34 was not. So aehm sir you are full of cotton candy and its main ingredient, hot air.
the MG.34 was the MG used in tanks, the 42 was the section machine gun that replaced the 34. the 34 and 42 fulfilled the same role as a section machine gun, massed suppressing fire. ergo they are comparable weapons. he even specifically went on about this in the above video, mentioning the double crescent trigger specifically.
And stated it makes no tactical difference. Remember? The production technology is not to Lindy but to Mr. " the second trigger was useless"
You're making a big point about the bloody trigger. How does this change the arguments that are being made?
German doctrine in the day was to change the barrel every time a new belt of cartridges was used, usually 250 rounds & barrel change time was less than 10 seconds, three spare barrels where carried by support troop, if properly maintained the MG42 could fire continually the reason three spare barrels were carried was in theory that by the time you got to the fourth barrel the first one had sufficiently cooled to repeat the process. Keep up the great work Lindy, peace.
Provided the crew still had their asbestos glove. To get a real perspective on that as a problem read US remarks on the M60 in Vietnam as they copied things slavishly including the two worst points - the need for the glove that almost always got "lost" so guns went out of action unnecessarily and two that the muzzle deliberately spread fore being designed to increase the area or cone of effect
I served in the German Bundeswehr and trained with the mg3, the modernized version with less firerate of 1200rpm. Besides the firerate and the Nato bullets the mg42 and the mg3 are very similar. We actually trained to make the barrel change and the reloading together in less than 7 seconds. 7 seconds was the max time we had to beat.
If you really want to see people arguing over weapons, just compare the British Enfield and the American Garand rifles, oh boy the shitstorm
Is there even an argument between those 2.
The only bolt gun that can come close to keeping up with a semi-auto.
@@helmsscotta
Still not very close
For the Lee Enfield guys, their fire rate is a huge deal until it comes to comparing it to an M1
@@helmsscotta K31 is faster than the SMLE rifles
As far as I know, calling the German MG 34 and 42 a "spandau" is strictly a British term. I am a yank who has talked to many WWII vets and read many WWII stories from the US point of view, and they never referred to the cursed German MG as a "spandau". But as LB points out, loads of British authors and Tommies did.
Another example of a popular name for a German weapon being erroneous was the MP-40. Hugo Schmeisser was not involved with the development or production of the MP-40, but that didn't stop our G.I.s calling it that gun a "schmeisser".
I would like to just say the American guy who picked up a water cooled browning and held off a Japanese attack was a total badass that is all
If he had a Spandau, he could've killed a Japanese officer, nicked his katana, and conquered all of Japan in a matter of days by himself.
No, because the Spandau was not designed by our lord and savior, John Moses Browning.
B DeWit uh oh, katana fucktard is here to weebify the comments -_-
Minedweller329
The worst thing about communication on the internet: social cues are missed since they don't translate well into text.
So either you don't know I'm goofing around (personally I think the katana is an over-hyped rubbish weapon which should've never made it out of the 14th century) or I'm missing that *you* are adding to my sarcasm by saying I'm a katanatard.
Kinda thought my initial comment was obviously sarcastic. I don't believe that even katanatards or katana-plonkers think that a single man with a katana could've conquered all of mainland Japan on his own... well, maybe *some* of them do.
'Manilla John' Basilone.
Having just found your UA-cam content in the last few days, I've had a bit of a binge and found them all to be fascinating.
Listening to the controversy video about Brens and Spandaus reminded me of my dad's stories of when he was in the Royal Engineers in the 1950s and how his instructor told him off for holding the butt of the Bren too tightly when firing because this made the weapon too accurate when shooting as the desired effect was to spray rounds at the enemy rather than kill just one
Come on Lindy, calling people fanboys because you were called out doesn't make you look any better.
There were many legitimate comments telling you what was wrong with you video.
I'm not unsubbing, I still like this channel, but lets stick to medieval and miniatures, stuff we know you know
So he should only make the kind of videos you agree with?
He should only make videos about subjects he knows. How hard is that to understand?
He should? He never signed any contract as far as we're all aware. Let him do what he loves, and go fuck yourself while we're at it.
And who decides what subjects he understands well enough to talk about? You? So basically he should run every video idea he has by you first right? Here's an idea, if you don't like the video, don't watch it.
What? What the hell kind of argument is that?
Knowledge is not subjective. You either know what you are talking about, and can back it up with facts, or you don't.
Lindy shows he CAN know what hes talking about, AND back it up with logic and facts. But his video about the "Spandau" is not one of them.
There is no "Who decides if he knows what hes talking about". What the fuck are you talking about hahaha
Why is Lloyd allowed to use the argument that the brits used the Bren for ages THEREFORE it's a great gun, but the fact that every LMG that came after the war was closely modelled after the spandau, influencing even up to what is used today (MG4, m249,, etc). Like it or not, the Bren as a platform was largely abandoned by manufacturers. Just because Britain used it for a while doesn't necessarily mean anything more than "well we have a bunch lying around might as well use them". Third-worlders still use the SKS and the Mosin for fucks sake.
I think what he was trying to say is that he made that point to praise the Bren because many people think it is rubbish. Making the same point about the Spandau is unnecessary because people already believe the weapon to be extremely good.
His video wasn't "why the bren is good", but directly pitting it against the spandau, and his conclusion was that it was better.
Only because of the American lineage of the M60, and of course the German lineage dating from the MG42. And guess who are among the world's biggest arms exporters today, and in previous decades: the USA (#1) and Germany (#5).
It's no coincidence that you see what you claim are "descendants" of the MG42 everywhere. L/MGs are very, very diverse in their design and mechanisms around the world. What you claim sir, is BS.
From Wikipedia:
"The gun was sometimes called "Spandau" by British troops, as was the MG 34, a traditional generic term for all German machine guns, left over from the famous Allied nickname for the MG 08 Maxim-derivative used by German forces during WWI, which was derived from its manufacturer's plates noting the city where some were produced."
I think that's a good explanation. So you were right and wrong at the same time. The name Spandau was used but mostly by British and not "all English speakers" and the name was not referring exclusively on the MG34/42, though there were not many other German machine guns in WW2.
I don't like that you refer that much on the memories of British soldiers. Their views are interesting for sure but of cause very subjective. There were German soldiers who were very accurate with the MG34/42 because they had a lot of practise and there were British soldiers who knew how to use the Bren very effectively.
We in Germany call the Bren actually "Beanbag" or "Hastings" i dont no why we just call it that way..........for no fucking apparent reason !!!!
and start admitting mistakes.....british biased
He is that. Particularly against the USA.
Clarkson is the Clarkson of history. Look at his WW2 documentaries. They're a pretty good watch actually, covering actions I'd never heard of but that were truly incredible.
Yeah, but Clarkson is like R. Lee Ermey. If it isn't a jingoistic exaggeration ignoring the input of any other nation but his own, it doesn't get said.
GunFun ZS Yup. Still a good watch though.
You mention that studies after WWII showed that "only about 2% of soldiers actually aim to kill" (~7:22). I presume you're referring to the work of US Brigadier General S.L.A. Marshall, who interviewed Combat veterans after the war. His figures indicated that most of the killing in a unit was done by 15-20% of the men, not 2%. There has been some corroboration of these findings in other studies since then, but there is some controversy about whether or not Marshall actually carried out the research his findings were based on.
Thanks. I didn't have references but 2% seemed low. The numbers I have seen before were 15-30%, but I haven't seen the original papers. According to Grossman the number's estimated have been rather consistently low until the Vietnam War and new training that helped soldiers engage more.
Yes, I've read that training focuses more on getting people over their natural resistance to killing now, something that wasn't at all addressed in WWI, rarely in WWII but has been a focus since then as a result of Marshall's study. Personally, I find the fact that people have serious trouble killing others gives me hope for humanity.
Lindy, I dont feel like you were being attacked by "fanboys". The discussion under your video was very civil and informed, probably not only for UA-cam standard. Sadly you werent able to take the criticism and engage in meaningful discussion, but made a video defending your position without mentioning anything new.
I dont have a problem with the topic or information presented (everyone makes mistakes), but your character and attitude towards criticism. There are few places better suited for discussions like these on the internet and its sad to see you disagree.
Respectfully, one of your so called "fanboys"
The One The discussion under the video was not the only input as he said. He was emailed too by not so polite people.
He didn't provide the actual e-mails, now did he?
It would be easy enough to show them on here, names redacted of course.
Sorry heard claims like that too often in recent years, and I demanded proof of every single one, can't give Lloyd a pass there if I demanded the same of others.
@@BigHenFor then why he didnt answer them there? what now, if a teacher got some nasty emails he start doing shit in classrooms? Anyway, is not about emails here, is about people, his people, his watchers and followers having a different point of view, with arguments and called fanboys by lloyd, mocking them and noone of their arguments in disscution.
I completely understood the first episode. It's fairly straightforward.
Unfortunate that others have missed the point.
However, good on you for defending yourself in and such an amazing and in insightful way.
those guns are also based on completely different historical army doctrines. the British army was still in tact after the first war and was still trying to modernize and adapt to new battlefields with current weaponry. The Germans had to build a new army around its plans for conquest
Having served in the german armed forces as an officer for 8 years i can tell you the MG3 is perfectly accurate with the first few shots of a burst. Up to 400 meters i myself, being a horrible rifleman, managed to put 2-3 shots from every burst on target - that being man-high practice targets. That can be massively altered when on a gunmount, where every dud in the world could hit a man at 800+ meters. Not to be anal, just saying... ;)
Also considering the rate of fire, the MG3 is essentially an MG42 with a lamella brake. This reduces the rate of fire because when the heat built up in the barrel of a 42 it would accidentally keep on firing without pulling the trigger until it ran dry. Hollywood inspiration?
However i think that was two very entertaining videos, well done sir!
I feel that one of the main reasons people get the idea that british stuff was terrible and german stuff was so good, was to make us look like even more of an underdog, and thus making our victory a greater success.
Is a very good point.
That might be overthinking the issue just a bit
CornishPasty it anoys me though as our stuff was just as good if not better than the germans eg. the halifax bomber the spitfire even the lee enfield was better than the kar98k even the churchil tank was able to trade blows with tiger tanks there is a story of a 12hour showdown brtween a pzkpfvi tiger where they kept bouncing of eachother so our stuff wasnt bad
I think Kar 98 vs Lee-Enfield is probably hair-splitting. I don't think you could definitively say one outclassed the other.
Brit Lurker well the enfield could fire faster had more stopping power and looked cooler thats what matters
Thank you for this nice video. An upside to this polemic: It confirmed for me the quality of all the three UA-camrs that were involved. Another upside: Nice to see my three favourite UA-camrs concerning WW2 interacting
I'm a big fan of the Bren gun. My Grandfather was a Bren gunner in world war two in the Welsh Guards. As good a weapon it was, I don't believe it was better than the MG42. Which was a superbly engineered support weapon for its time.
He didn't explicitly say it was better. Just because they are different doesn't necessarily mean that one is better than the other.
No doubt ot was superbly engineered. But answer me this. What country still used the german guns, in numbers, into the 90s. And as a follow up, how many countries still used the BREN on 7.62 into the 90s, and still in most lesser colonies now?? India, Timor, PNG, Fiji, Solomon Islands, that I know of. We gave PNG 184 000 in 90s alone.
@@ozdavemcgee2079 um, Germany, Austria and about 30 other countries. They use the MG3 which is nothing more than a product improve MG42 to the point where several parts are interchangeable. Not to mention the fact the concept of the universal machine gun that originated with the MG34 is used by almost every single military today and the countless design details of modern machine guns that were copied from it.
Nah. The MG34 is the Go-To. the Mg42 was meant to be cheaper and easier to manufacture than the 34.
My Grandfather was a Bren gunner in WW2 in the Monmouthshire rifles. Attached to the 11th Armoured division. He always said the german equipment was better and that they would pilfer from dead German soldiers what they could especially Luger pistols and the ammunition because for short range personal defence that was the weapon to have.
I have a feeling the comments arn't going to be kind to you here Lloyd.
RIP
And for once, the comments would be right.
*****
Listen to both sides, do a bit of your own research and read between the lines. That's the probably the best thing you could do.
*****
Oh no, I didn't mean that you'd choose someone to side with. It was an advice in general.
Good. Let the Fanboy butthurt flow like wine. They deserve every bit of discomfort they can get in their lives.
I think this was a fair and sober comparison of the two guns, you clearly did a lot of good research on the subject, and I fully respect your review, I'm quite a fan of both guns myself, and they both have a ton of advantages and disadvantages, as you clearly stated. I say well done, just stick to these kind of videos, don't get into immigration or god forbid gun control like skullagrim did. You can't know a lot about everything, so stick to your thing. Please, please please please stick to your thing, you're the last military/weapons guy that isn't a strong conservative libertarian. Thank you very much!
That "katana breaking machineguns" thing is probably from the pacific theatre, against US marines, who used watercooled maxim-type MGs up to 1942-1943. It is the only way any WW2 machinegun could be destroyed by katana (or by any sword).
Of course the MG42 is made out of magic and is more awesome than everything ever made. My own MG42 is mounted on a unicorn and fires out candy at a rate of 3000 gumdrops a minute straight into the mouths of orphans and wizards!
I'm sorry but I have to interject here. Do you count orphaned wizards double?
They don't count since they can magic themselves new parents.
When have you ever read about wizards with parents? Aren't they all orphans? I think it's a requirement.
Øyvind Bløff
Aren't they just so old that their parents are dead from age?
+Wat? I think it's down to a problem with there vanishing cabinets, those things were always tricky to work.
Would you ever compare the Bren and the BAR?
The BAR definitely has it's use, but the M1917 is the Browning that should be compared in this particular role.
Jwend392
HAH NICE JOKE.
The BAR 1918 was a really good and high-tech gun, _in WWI_
but from 1925 on it was completely obsolete looking at contemporary designs
like seriously, polish or Czech copies of the BAR were so much better, the US has this fucking habit of keeping weapons in service _for ages_
Jwend392 bar vs a japanis mg
That would be Polish copies. In Czechoslovakia there was no need to copy the BAR as the BREN was a British variant of the Czech ZB vz.26, whose improved variants were only in 1961 by (also domestic) UK vz.59, which is now being replaced by the FN Minimi, mostly for ammo standardization.
+Pierre LeDouche R Lee Ermey tested the BAR and Bren. He said the Bren wins hands down,
In all my study of the war in North Africa until the end of 1942 I've never found one reference to Allied troops preferring to use a captured Spandau to say, a Bren. Yes, some troops did use captured Spandau's and they also used captured Italian weapons too. But Spandau's replaced rifles when they were used and basically they were used because they were automatic and could provide more firepower than a bolt action rifle.
So I'd prefer to accept the experience and preferences of combat troops over any theoretical or wishful thinking contary advantage. And yes, some Allied troops were not stopped by rules and regulations from using captured weapons.
Bren used .303 and Spandau (MG42) used 7.62 mauser. Why'd they exchange for a spandau, a weapon which : they haven't been trained with, do not have the extra ammo for , and confuses their allies (like Mr.Lloyd mentioned about the soldier being mistaken by his pals that he's german cuz of the spandau) , etc? It only make sense that they didn't prefer Bren over a Spandau (both being mgs which eat ammos fast).
@@sweetrumman6496 MG42 used 7.92mm Mauser...............
Count me as liking part one and part two. Great videos.
Defending the Stem is like defending Katanas, Lindy, not making the obvious statement MG34/42 is clearly superior. Drop it, it's a bad design, proof in case being, UK no longer use ANYTHING like it, while Germany and a lot other countries still use MG3 based machine guns.
HM Armed forces do use something almost exactly like the BREN it's the SA-80 LSW (Light Support Weapon) Box fed (30 round) .
edmundscycles1 Not surprisingly, not top fed, is it?
Almost every army will use several machine guns for several roles nowadays. High RPM ones for suppression, low RPM for precision and ammo efficiency, high caliber for cover piercing, autocannons when you just need more range and penetration and have no problems carrying ammo, miniguns when you just want an area REALLY suppressed and also have enough ammo, etc, etc.
Problem is not the caliber or rate of fire, is the top feed design. Belt x box is a non issue, both have their uses.
It was a bad design and time proved it. If you can only field a single MG for logistic reasons, it's better to field both really functional MGs and assault rifles instead of a "less specialized MG".
I'm sorry for Lindy, but germans invented the AR too.
The point is that LMG like the BREN are stil being used and while it my not have a top mounted magazine ( though when your prone it allows for fast changes and getting lower to the ground (see FG-42 and prototype M-60) .
The use of a box can aide in mobility over a belt system if you are in a squad and don't want to rely on others helping you move quickly .
During WWII the British army also had the Vickers light machine gun (which is very much comparable to the MG-34 with weight of fire and being belt fed)
edmundscycles1 The Vickers was an old design, based on the brilliand Vickers used since WW1. Too heavy and water-cooled.
They just tough they didn't need to upgrade the Vickers, and the MG34/42 proved them wrong. Not too hard to accept,I take?
Erm not all Vickers were water cooled . The Vikers K gun was air cooled and quite light . often twin mounted on jeeps and used as aerial guns on bombers . The LDRF and SAS had up to 9 Vickers K guns mounted on jeeps for raiding patrols in North Africa and Normandy . A jeep would have a twin linked K gun for the front passenger , two twin linked K guns on the rear storage of the jeep one fixed for the driver and an optional twin linked in a central plinth
if the British actually held the idea to keep the good stuff and get rid of the rubbish then they wouldn't be using the l85's
Your claims based on what? After being upgraded by H&K the L85A2 is a great weapon.
+RyanRyzzo Took them long enough, though.
Charlie Massey
What 15 years?
History is a long time.
+RyanRyzzo it's such a great weapon that the special forces never wanted them, and commandos are getting new guns, that the sf use.
fact remains that there's still better guns that the forces could be using, and it's a shame the engineers and manufacturers messed up with the l85.
Lloyd, I seriously think you should consult either Ian Holm from Forgotten Weapons or Alex C. from TFB TV and then make a video about their take on the "Bren Vs. Spandau" argument.
I enjoyed the first video and thought it was very good and well thought out. This video was just fun watching you handle the people attacking you. This video too is very well thought out.
Part 1 was full of mistakes and lacked of research. Now in part 2 he is not man enough to say "I was wrong". That's all. The people are not "attacking", they pointed out the mistakes. If everything was a misunderstanding, then part 1 was made bad anyway. And if I say "Bren Gun is good because it was used until 2006" and I do not mention that MG42 is used until nowadays in dozens of armies, than I made an unvalid point. A comparison without comparison is nonsense. He just was bad informed and did his homework in part 2. In part 2 he mentioned all this important points he should have made in part 1. I cannot compare two weapons without mentioning their roles and their influence in tactics. And after all I act like all the "german fanboys" are idiots while I made a bad video...............
that is very sad calling people who have a different opinion fanboys. That really takes away a large amount of respect I had for you.
"Spandau"? more like "Spamdau" amirite?
Spam,spam,spam and spam with MG42
I think the main issues with your previous video were exactly as you said, you focused on praising the Bren and ignoring many points that made the mg34 and 42 designs so successful and influential, such as their use as machine guns in vehicles and how influential they were after the Second World War on other designs, and generally not offering a balanced argument. Also the mg42 in short bursts is just as accurate as the Bren if there is a situation where that accuracy is needed. The bren's mane advantage was its light weight and reliability, as well as it's controllable fire rate, after the war it was not an influential design in the slightest with India producing the Bren out of necessity over choice.
That's it. He talked nonsense in part 1 and in part 2 he tries to conceal this by attacking the commentators .............
'A gun is good because the British used it for a long time'
[Laughs in L85]
This is me when I shoot an l85a1 and the magazine just falls out
you reference two videos, would be nice to see those links in the description text as many devices for viewing can't actually use the embedded link in the video.
+1
Reminds me of the people that seem to think that the AK-47 was crafted by a god and it never has a single problem, will never have a malfunction and is the most accurate rifle ever while on full auto capable of shooting through 5 inches of solid AR500 steel.
The thing I like about Kalashnikov rifles is their simplicity. They are easily produced in very poor conditions. Assuming you can buy the barrel, you can basically build one from scratch.
On an individual scale, the AR design is far better, but also far more costly.
But I think the thing people forget is that it's an AK-47. As in 1947. Whereas the AR-15 design we know and love didn't come around till the eighties
+Dracarys Blackfyre the ak47 didn't see full mass production til late 49 and it didn't use stamped parted it used milled parts. the AK your referring to is the AKM which is a 60's designed weapon. and as for the AR-15 it was adopted into service around the same time.
Eugene Stoner designed the AR-15 in the 1950s. The modern AR-15 is based on a rifle that went into service shortly after the end of the Korean War.
Some of the _design features_ are new, but the rifle itself is only a little younger than the AK.
Even if you didn't know a single thing about Eugene Stoner, the inventor of the AR15, you should have known the M16 was used in Vietnam and therefore came earlier than the 1980s...
+Xaro Xhoan Daxos The original M16 was a poor weapon. Modern designs based on that weapon are far better, but were not available until the 1980s, so the poster you replied to is correct. (You may have misread.) The AK design has also been modernised through several redesigns, and modern variants in service with Russia are also better than the original design.
At 18:00:
I've seen historical footage of a ss-man going full rambo with a "spandau" somewhere.
could u sent a link? would be amazing
Thoroughly enjoyed both videos. Thank you.
Actually, the MG could be very precise if mounted on a Lafette Tripod, this assembly not only could remove much of the recoil vibration as it would add a second trigger in the tripod making the gun very accurate at long distances.
Love the bren hated cleaning it , great to fire , used it while training the Irish FCA par time lads was great craic in the early 2000s 3 round burst's. the bipod was a handy feature but made her heavy. I remember a young lad melting his hand after touching the barrel while replacing it
Ouch
Actually a lot of the critical comments were pretty well presented and had profound arguments backing them up. Especially people like me, who have actual training and first hand experience with the weapon. Perhaps not very smart to call those people "fan boys" now, instead of taking their critizism and honestly discussing it in your video.
Because even if your research might have been well done, there are a lot of points which still are very controversial, if not straight up wrong.
If you made a critical and well presented comment with a profound argument backing it up he never called you a fanboy. Why do you assume Lloyd called *every* criticizing commenter a fanboy? I see so many people in the comments who are offended for no reason. There we thousands of comments with absolutely no thought put into them blatantly calling the video bullshit and followed it up with namecalling. *Those* are the people he called fanboys, not you.
+eggo It's the internet; youtube, no less. Why should he bother to reply to those, it's just something to ignore.
farmerboy916
I agree, but he still mentioned it. However the wrong people got offended.
+eggo Yes, I see there is a difference, but Lindy did not make the difference clear in his video and did not discuss quite a few arguments despite them being presented kindly and constructive in the comments of the other video.
No offense I still enjoy watching Lindybeige a lot, but it shows, we're all just humans... :)
I would like to see this mystical arguments because all I saw were people attacking positions he never held.
"My sidetrack got sidetracked" - Lloyd's whole being summed up in one utterance
Lloyd, while I appreciate it that you dont back down even under pressure from your supporters, you have to sometimes face the realities. When you compare two MGs and point out different facts about the guns (and admit it, you were a little biased towards the Bren Gun [which is perfectly fine since I am willing to admit that I am perhaps a little biased towards the MG42/Spandau due to being german]). For example, you never adressed the really SMALL magazine size of the Bren Gun (what is it exactly? I think 20-30 bullets?) which is redicilous for a machine gun, seeing how a machine gun's purpose is to lay supressive fire and lay down heavy fire to pin/mow down the enemies while more accurate weapons (rifles for example) pick off single targets one by one. Or for guys with submachine guns to close in on the flanks (or to smoke them out with granades if they are sheltered somewhere). In that regard you got to admit that the bren gun is terrible at that role (simply because you chew faster through a magazine than you could say 'Spandaus come from Spandau'.)
In that regard, couldnt we agree that the Bren gun might be a sur-pas machine gun, but perhaps the first step in the direction of a very bulky assault rifle? (good range, good accuracy, full-automatic and around 30ish magazine size?)
I mean you could have done it quite simply, lisitng some very simple facts (like effective range of fire, usual magazine sizes, rate of fire etc.) and then establish what the general definition of the role of a machine gun is in a modern army and then etablished the various army/military doctrines of the time and the role of their respective weapons.
(for example the part where you kind of painted the germans to flee as soon as their MG was taken out, you could have simply explained that due to the fact that the germans mainly used bolt action rifles (except a few exceptions of the G43 and later on the Stg 44 (Sturmgewehr/Assault rifle) and perhaps the FJG (Fallschirmjäger Gewehr/Paratrooper Rifle) which meant that while they were accurate and reliable and effective on long ranges, they were ill suited for engagments on a lower range or against enemies with a higher rate of fire. (for example in an engagment on 50 yards/Meters or lower if it was a K98 against a Garand, I'd usually put my money on the Garand, simply because the Garand has a higher ammo capacity and higher rate of fire and requires less input to work properly in contrary to the bolt action rifle.) Which is the reason why most german positions were hard to hold against a determined attack once the MG was taken out. (though that is the case with most infantries on all sides of the war I'd claim.)
In any case Lloyd, thanks for the video though. (since you adressed a few points which I mentioned earlier which came not so clearly across during your last video) Still you shouldnt call your own supporters fanboys either due to word of mouth of personal experience with an MG which with slight alterations is still used all over the world, while the Bren Gun is... well probably less known. :)
Still cheers mate, still love your other content, dont hate my because I disliked your Bren vs. Spandau video :'(
17:50 Becaue you made it a frikkin comparison! "Let me compare these two cars. Car A is very fast. Car B looks really nice." You will immediatly assume that A is faster than B, and B is better looking than A.
I am glad you pointed out that infantry, actually had to take the ground in order to hold it, I have been in many conversations where people just act like you can do everything with aircraft and tanks. Eventually tanks and planes run out of fuel and ammo and need to be resupplied, they are then vulnerable to enemy infantry, if you do not have any of your own, to hold the ground, you will win in the short term and lose in the long term.
Lloyd, I don't care how horrible the things are that they say about you, you're alright. ;-). Great video as always mate. Cheers.
PS Although a different style of comparison due to circumstances during the war, if you could do a video regarding the Bren vs BAR, that would be lovely. I would love to see your take and the firestorm that would ignite. Again, brilliant job, cheers.
*Edited to add PS
Really? Really? People got butt hurt over someone talking about a TOOL?! I'm a gun lover from the States and own firearms, I own an AR-15 which a lot of people say the AK-47 is better. Do I care? No. People need to grow thicker skin and take it like a man or woman. Good job Lloyd.
Dude the MG42 has out lived and remained relevant on the modern battlefield far longer than the BREN. As a concept it is superior.
@Comrade Serb MG-34 was the first multi role GPMG. Other countries had different types of machineguns for different roles. So yeah Germans came up with that idea. and MG-3 (7.62 NATO version of MG-42) is still used by quite a few nations even to this day.
There is a huge difference between Spandau on Tripod which was a Platoon / Heavy weapon asset vs the bipod. The description were on the tripod and the tripod has a mechanism where bullets are sprayed to get even spread over an area ( it can be turned off I believe) . This was the same role as the Vickers and the Vickers 50. Note the tripod had sights as well and could be devastating at very long ranges - In fact it was probably more accurate at mid to long range than short due to the spraying mechanism though I do not know exactly how this works.
In the squad role it used a bipod and is comparable to a Bren but it was also accurate when fired in short bursts , ammo was not bountiful esp on the eastern front. German logistics was never up to US / UK. Not as accurate as a bren but pretty close and probably made up by the rate of fire ( even if both fired in short bursts) . Under sustained fire the heavier recoil will make it inaccurate but the bren would simply be out of ammo at this point.
This was the strength of the gun it could be used in all 3 roles and fire the same ammo the rifles did - very useful with average logistics.
Germans did use their rifles normally especially in defense or from a flanking position if this could be achieved but yes they were supposed to be moving to get into better / flanking position while the MG is used on the enemy. This is a good thing which allied squads including the brits also did but was not doctrine like the germans.
re performance in 1944 , I don't think this is correct because the same Bren vs Spandau as used in 1940 in France. In 44 far more likely large amount of 25 pounders , Shermans and air were the reason - Not to mention the fact the Russians already did the job in 42-43 . ;-p
I was a section machine gunner in the New Zealand infantry,we used both roles,carried the GPMG for section battle drills and in the SF role for heavy defence etc.In Malaya we also used the Bren as well sometimes,they were re-chambered to 7.62.Loved using them on the range too,we would still use them for competition shoots between companies etc.
The “tripod” for the MG42 was a highly complicated damped parallelogram frame thing that was actually many times more expensive than the gun it mounted.
Any weapon being fired at you is an effective weapon. Great video by the way!
Spanny was too superfluous and the bren was only useful because infantry had bolt action rifles. Neither are particularly good at being general purpose mgs because spanny wasn't flexible enough and the bren wasn't specialized enough for its roll. Fight me.
You are completely right. As someone else pointed out, the Bren was more similar to modern assault rifles than an MG, and the Spandau wasn't that well suited to most situations.
I say sir, good show!
Nah, I agree. I'd take the Bren over the MG 34/42, just because it'd be more useful on the battlefield. But it's a shit general purpose MG, with funky design elements.
I think the main advantage of the Bren could well be that it basically took one man to operate and a few other guys could carry a spare mag or two. the Spandau on the other hand took basically the whole section to supply and operate, so wasn't a very tactical gun
Loyd, just read this comment to the camera and all will be solved.
All 6 riflemen in the British infantry section carried 106 rounds for the section's Bren. 2 mags with 28 rounds each plus a bandolier with 50 rounds in chargers.
The Bren gun was operated by a team of 3 men with 4-5 magazines carried per man.
NOTE BEFORE I GO FURTHER: I have a high respect for Lloyd and he makes good points, but on this I have to disagree
It's not quite the same thing as katana worship, because katanas and European longswords had pretty much the same purpose and function so that was apples to apples, but comparing the MG42 and the Bren is more like comparing Scotch and Bourbon or Apples and Pears. Saying one is better than the other isn't exactly wrong, but it doesn't convey the whole truth either. The MG42 was made specifically for pinning down enemies and keeping them from advancing due to the endless barrage of bullets. A better comparison might be the FG42 to the Bren or the Japanese type 99 light machine gun.
The Battle of Tilly and the other books you show are written from the point of view of a British Soldier, Americans didn't call it that, Canadians may have but I couldn't find any info about them or the Australians using it. It is NOT an effective and clear term for a specific weapon. In the context of world war 2 it could mean the MG34 or MG42, similar but distinct weapons. It would be like calling the Bren and the Besal Lewis Guns. You see how it makes no sense?
The rebuttle video you showed gave many of the points stated by the "fanboys" in the comments. The people on your first video about this weren't saying the MG42 was magical like Katana Plonkers, they were actually making decent points which is why their comments got so many thumbs up but the Katana Plonkers get very few.
Also, calling people fanboys just for giving points refuting your inaccuracies is rather disrespectful, so try not to do that.
Maybe the Brits called it Spandau but for example the Americans also called it MG 34 and 42. Also the "best troops" were by 1944/45 well behind the training standarts of the Allies and mostly regular people
regular children
Yes in the last weeks of the war there were even Child soldiers
Americans had nicknames for all the Japanese aircraft that did not coincide with the Japanese nicknames. What is your point?
The point is that i am not talking about Aircrafts. I am talking about the MG 34/42.
MCEDIXX And Lloyd is talking about the spandau. Which happen to be the same things in this scenario. Have fun.
Good for you, Lindy, for rebutting these critics. The Bren .303 was a truly excellent light machinegun that served the British well.
You do know that there is really, technically nothing wrong with comparing apples with oranges. Honestly why not?
I would generally agree with your points with one exception.
The Russian front, contributing to the western allies' massive superiority in air power & materiel meant that attacking infantry had most of the time massive support. In these circumstances even moderately inferior infantry (which they certainly weren't) could triumph. The consistent strategic victories on the western allies' side therefore cannot be attributed to a particular tactical weapon when (I would assert) the strategic & operational conditions were the dominant factor.
Is that relevant to comparing the Spandau and the Bren?
Its relevant only in so far as stating the British could have consistently won from D-day onward even if the Bren was crap (which it wasn't) thanks to their overwhelming material & aerial superiority. (They were also very tactically/operationally competent)
So saying the Brits consistently won cant prove the Bren was either good or bad.
You dolt, he means that the comparison between the two weapons doesnt change because of the russian front are you american by any chance
If my English version is to be believed, then Guy Sajer refers to them as Spandaus in The Forgotten Soldier.
Oranges. They are higher in sugar but also higher in vitamin C than an apple. The children might end up more obese but their immune systems will be stellar.
And here I am thinking of all the water wrapped around the exit pathway.
If you compare guns and you list something like accuracy as an advantage for one it very much is a statement about the other gun too. Unless its advantage is so minimal that you probably shouldnt mention it in the first place...