Tank Chats #77 Jagdtiger | The Tank Museum
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- Опубліковано 13 чер 2019
- David Willey, Curator at The Tank Museum, presents a Tank Chat on the mighty WW2 German Jagdtiger.
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I'm stunned as to how big this tank is. He looks as if he's standing next to an exaggerated almost cartoonish representation of what a tank is. A great visual effect.
Wait until you see the TOG II.
And you are correct. That is a ridiculously large, cartoonish tank. It's like when I drew a tank when I was a kid. Perspective was not a part of my vocabulary.
That's what I was about to say.
@@FahboyMan2549 The P.1000 Ratte ua-cam.com/video/ciUNG-ajDro/v-deo.html
Close air support makes these heavy tanks so vulnerable. People in War Thunder try to play the Maus but sometimes it doesn't even make it to the battle, is wiped out by bombs before it reaches the area. Too heavy, too slow. Even the PzKmpfw Ausf B (King Tiger) had a turret which was much too slow, it cannot react. Shermans and T-34/85s, or faster medium tanks can drive around it and knock it out from behind even with short 75mm guns. So costly to build, too. Flawed design. Modern tanks have much faster turret traverses, amazing really. They definitely fixed that problem now.
@@PatriceBoivin except the video game is not even remotely analogous to real life.
The Germans even making 80 of these is CRAZY
Fr
It's been a rough day today. But a Tank Chat always makes things better!
It always amuses me to see that the Tank Museum actually has someone who reads our comments; it makes me wonder what they make of our fascination with David Fletcher's moustache! :D
agreed
Yep!
@Gerald Leonel well done
Totally agree 👍
The little bits of footage of the tanks moving around the museum and the historical footage as well add a lot to the video! Thanks for making these episodes! Great job :D
UA-cam channels like this are the reason I haven't used cable In almost 10 years now
I agree :D
"Guys, I think we may have lost the thread somewhere along the line." -Some German engineer in 1943, probably
Just Some Guy Ok you're probably right but I keep imagining some engineer going "BIGGER! BIGGER! BIGGER THE FUHRER WANTS BIGGER TANKS" whilst frantically drawing on a piece of paper.
All in German of course
*S C H N E L L*
@@Masada1911 "Grösser! Nein, nicht gross genug!" ;) (my german isn't very good but what i'm going for is: "Bigger! no, still not big enough!" )
@@Masada1911 If the choice is between a badly heated office in sennelager or sleeping in a snow filled ditch while the Russians shoot at you in Poland, i dont care what the Furhrers asking for i'm reaching for the pencil.
You want heavier, OK!
You want it semi-submersible, OK!
You want wings on it? Difficult but OK!
@@voiceofraisin3778 Nah, wings are easy, it's flying that's hard. Stick a spoiler on that SoB, but I'm not sure down force is going to do it any favors.
I love the new length of these episodes.
Fully agree!
tbh I don't understand people, who complain that videos are too long. If anything they are too short, you sit down with your hot drink, just get comfortable and it's already over. Kids have short attention spans today I guess
Yeah, I like the good analyzing long enough vid, mis the rough mustache though !
How difficult/expensive would it be to make two versions: A long version for the more detail-oriented crowd and a shorter, "Just hit the highlights lads" version? Might reach another audience.
Mr Mürk I might be more an issue of economics? But I fully agree, just take your time and flesh out the details in a calm thorough fashion, thank you
They are just monstrous though aren't they. I imagine soldiers facing these would feel a great sense of dread even if they only saw a knocked out Jadgtiger on the battlefield.
Walking through the grave of giants. Just dreading seeing one still alive
@@JoeWalker98 exactly
2:40 OMG WHO SHRUNK THE CURATOR?!
@Kabuki Kitsune The Gyro-Stabilized Sherman Syndrome strikes again!
Yes absolutely, I could only imagine the psychological effect of seeing this thing Rumble down a cobblestone Street towards you.
Hitler upon seeing the pz3: ".....double it."
>enthusiastic engineers create the Stug
Hitler upon seeing the Panther: "Double it."
>moderately worried engineers create Jagdpanther
Hitler upon seeing the Tiger 2: "DOUBLE IT"
>methed-up engineers create Jagdtiger
Hitler upon seeing Maus: ".....give it a coaxial 75mm."
>engineers realize they live in clown world, just roll with it
German tank development in a nutshell
Love it ! Would have loved to eves drop on those engineers and mechanics
Funny how people thinks that it all up to the fuhrer and in no way the german army had influence.
**You mention these terrible, misguided theories which are obviously destined to fail. But still the elites insist on moving forward with the bad ideas. This basic dynamic was common among 1940s era Nazis, and 1918 - 2019 era socialists!**
At some point, new tank designs actually need to take the curvature of the Earth into account. 😃
tragic that mr porsches contributions to the allied war effort have never been formally recognized. he should have a vc, a medal of honor, and an order of lenin at least.
I wonder how many lives his hairbrained ideas saved.
@@sdghtjsdcgs don't know
How many people died on average to a tiger
Then minus all of those lives by every tiger or tiger 2 he...worked on?
I missed the “allied” part in your comment and thought you were just a Nazi lolol
You're an absolute plonker.
@@jidk6565 henschel made those.
In Otto Carius memoirs he recollects seeing a gun sticking out behind a building. In the end they fire at the building, penetrating the building and the tank behind it; an M36 Jackson, knocking it out instantly. That's how powerful this gun is.
It's a 5-inch gun. Closer to naval caliber than anything. Actually, I'm fairly sure they used it because they already had the tooling for making 128mm guns for destroyers. A few adaptations and the development of an armor piercing round, and that's all you need.
@@magisterrleth3129 "The choice for 128 mm calibre anti-tank gun was made because of the availability of tooling due to the use of this calibre for naval weapons." According to Wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/12.8_cm_PaK_44).
The caliber also existed among their anti aircraft guns before the PzSfl V's 128mm Kanone was built, let alone the later Pak 44.
It has recorded kills at over 4000 metres, a remarkable feat for that time. Mark Felton has a couple videos about Jagdtiger engagements I think
I’m pretty sure almost any tank gun could do that. Buildings are very soft targets and a Jackson has 0 armor.
1:47 stuff like this always makes me smile, knowing our ancestors could be just as immature
true
In the summer of 1980 I was a Marine PFC going through the Small Arms Repair Course at Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Maryland. I was assigned to Area Guard one night. The post I was given was the Ordnance Museum. So after it was dark I was able to walk around all of the vehicles, and I climbed up on 331. It was pretty awesome getting a close up look at these pieces of history.
Yeah and that tank has seen better days😑
I’m so glad Germany had these vanity projects. Made the war easier to win for the allies and now we can marvel at these beasts👍
LOL "vanity project"
It is next generation TD/Assault gun, Germans weren't idiots.
After all, IS-3 was created to be frontaly resistant to 88L71
@@akujirule8441 of course they were idiots for wasting resources on weapons with no impact on the war. And there are dozens more examples for this. And thats the point of the OP.
@@Ganiscol look at the timeline they were produced, ignoramus. You are talking nonsense out of ignorance.
@@akujirule8441 the policy was made by idiots. The vehicle was intelligently designed
@@benjimain6 yeah
I never truly realized how huge the Jagdtiger is until I saw someone standing next to it.
Thanks to David Willey and the team at the tank museum for putting these together. Really appreciate the time and effort you guys put into this. Top Class.
Still, they always struggle in several ways. Imagine then what the German mechanics faced in 1945 just trying to keep these beast rolling. Yes, they are impressive but the strategy was all wrong.
Can we thank the Tank Museum for keeping this beast and the other tanks clean? I almost swallowed myself seeing the inside of the Jagdtiger...
Or as I call it, The Heavy One That Porsche Saw Neccessary to Give a More Fragile Suspension System to For No Discernible Reason.
So THOT PSN GMF SS FNDR for short, then? :P
@@RugnirSvenstarr Now translate it into German!
@@Akm72 and yell it
@@Akm72 Der Schwere, den Porsche für notwendig hielt, um ein zerbrechlicheres Aufhängungssystem ohne erkennbaren Grund anzubieten!
Maybe Porsche was working undercover as a saboteur? Hmm...
High Command: "Mein Fuhrer, how big should we make the gun?"
Hitler: "Yes."
@Muro Hitler never said "I don't know" in his life. He would have put a 1228mm (not a typo) gun on his tanks if only he'd had the resources.
Zzz
@Muro Hitler: Bigger!!
Biden 2024
Great format excellent production, interesting and informative. Don't change a thing I love these videos.
Willey never fails to substantiate the tank chats, mentioning several of his sources along the way ever so often.
In spite of popular opinion around here, I prefer Willey to Fletcher. He's far more in depth.
My wife stopped watching her artsy video as soon as she saw you standing next to the world's biggest stick of butter. Her eyes were demonstrating extreme suprise. Then I told her , "that tank is much smaller than the Maus."
She's familiar with war thunder as we all play in our house . Sometimes the size and thickness of these vehicles is simply not realized til someone stands next to them. Excellent video please take care of our "mustache" . We here in Texas would knight the old timer, but that's not done. He will have to settle for a nice pair of jeans , snake skin boots and a neck tie .
Lol'd at "world's biggest stick of butter".
I like the jagdtiger in war thunder is fun to play
@@leopard2keilergg561 Great fun if you are high BR and go hull down.
I wish War Thunder could give the Maus similar optics as the Jagdtiger has.
2ft shorter than the maus but still huge none the less lol.
Germans was masters to make moving houses with guns.
Russian soldier: Sir there is a moving house coming towards us
I keep looking at the presenter, then at the house he’s standing next too.
I was at the tank museum only yesterday. This tank is just massive . The king tiger is a pretty impressive beast too.
my dad saw two of them in action at March 1945 when they did the spring awaking offensive in Hungary. He said his panther was a killing machine, like the Tiger I , The Tiger II was called the life insurance, but this JagtTiger was not from this World, he remembered. This two Monsters took out a dozens Russian heavy IS from 3-4Kilometer and paved the way for them to advance. They kept them always in the rear and were called in on demand. Just to remember , the 1.SS Leibstandarte Panzer had have in 1945 just 64 vehicles with tracks! Not all were main battle tanks! But they fought against three Russian elite divisions.....
The blueprints at 3:48 read "Tiger-Jäger mit 12.8 cm L/66". Because the Pak 44 wasn't powerful enough with just the L/55 long barrel :D
Thank you David Willey and all of you at the Tank Museum.
I would have never EVER thought I would heard the word LEGO in tank chats!
Sherman tank commander after the tank next to him was blown to shreds, trying to jump out of his own tank yelling down the turret:" LEGO of my leg! LEGO!!".....there ya go.^^
It is absolutely incredible, how much Mr. Willey knows about all his exhibits - and he gives an ad hoc lecture packed with information - without any script. Thank you!
No, Tank you
excellent! thank you Mr. Willey and to The Tank Museum. I have been waiting for this one for awhile!
I really enjoy watching these thank you for doing them! I hope they continue. Its also a great look at museum exhibits that most of us will never have a chance to see in person.
Another outstanding video, the brief wide shot of the lighting set up just shows that these aren’t just filmed but a lot of thought goes into their production. Well done guys.
Loved getting to see that very Jagdtiger and meet the curator himself back at the end of April earlier this year. Visit of a lifetime!
Another superb video. Educational, informed and clearly presented. Brilliant channel.
3 Hetzers could have been made for 1 Jagdtiger. Less height, less fuel, less likely to be stuck in soft ground, able to cross road bridges and more shells could be supplied to a Hetzer.
Only 3? Idk man if it’s only 3 hetzers I don’t this they would be much better. If it was like 5 extra hetzers then yea, but just 3??
good point, but a Hetzer cant one-shot a Churchill at 3000m! Apparently it didnt matter though haha
@@Phantom-bh5ru The Germans should have kept the Panzer III to use for StuGs, Panzer IV as a main tank, and poured all other resources into building Panthers. Tiger I, Tiger II, Ferdinand, Hetzer, Jagdtiger were all just a waste.
They had the Pak 43 towed anti tank gun which is the same gun on the Tiger II for much much MUCH cheaper.
Panther alone could go toe to toe with just about every allied AFV.
Probably coulda cranked out 15 to 20,000 Panthers.
@@Phantom-bh5ru these tanks were crap just like the tigers. They couldnt travel anywhere without getting stuck or breaking. They were beautiful and magnificent but at the end of the day, the t34 and shermans did over 10x more in the war
@@mails5054 I mean the Sherman was made to do a little of everything. Germans made some for each category so comparing a Sherman to something like a jagdtiger is kinda unfair lol.
Awesome episode!!! You've got so much knowledge - and history - to share and these longer videos are very well appreciated.
Most of us here are really into the finer details so don't worry about how deep and wide to go because we love it all!
Also the restoration videos is a real goldmine and there simply is nothing like it elsewhere.
Many thanks!!!
Brilliant informative upload ,thank you
Brilliant informative video with excellent exposure of this rare beast.
Thank you David for yet another fantastic piece of history explained.
Very well done presentation on a remarkable vehicle. Thank you very much to Mr. Willey and the Tank Museum.
One of my favourite Tank Chats , one the best series on the tube 🤗👍
As always lovely long video packed full of detail! Keep it up!
Need to get The Chieftain and David together to do the history and inside the hatch all at the same time.
These are great educational videos. I use them when I need historical references in building any kind of armor. The German paint video was awesome, it was extremely helpful in finding the right color schemes for German armor.
What a beast! As usual, great and authoritative material. Many thanks!
Amazing tank, amazing video. Thank you for sharing this with everyone.
Could also be titled “20 minutes of Roasting the Jagdtiger”
Everything which is reasonable ends up being a roast of the Jagdtiger. It was utterly awful. Really pretty. Cool for games. But a disaster in real life.
@@laurie1183 Well it depends. It is barrely take part in battles in 1945. Germany is collapsing. No food rations. No fuel. No bridges no trained crew. No testing and spent 2 months without maintenance shop. No offense but you can see my point. It was barelly 5 tons heavier than kingtiger. No great but not terrible eighter. Even if it was not really a dream tank the vehicle never really had the chance to bring it's potential to the battlefield. The reliability ration significantly elevated in march. But then it was 2 moths before end.
@@laurie1183 like using it in 1940 in battlefield lol
@@kstreet7438 Or when you finally get it after 600 hours of grinding in War Thunder.
@Superfly29rr Hardly a challenge if the enemy can't reliably penetrate your frontal armour, have turrets, have more reliable armour, and are some five times your speed. Just makes it more fun - if only because I'm not the one getting incinerated every time a heatfs comes through a recently developed frontal window.
Again, you provide an incredibly detailed look inside the desperate and fascinating world of the German war machine toward the end of WWll.
I am gratefull to these people for taking the time and investing the resources necessary to keep these amazing machines in good conditions and for giving us detailed information on their history. These machines are a very important part of our history and should never be forgotten.
Great story telling David i love your presentation and story telling skills very much giving me a good overview and contextual circumstances of each and every tank you talk about. Your the best David !!! your my David Attenborough of the tank world, i would love to meet you when i visit. Your the best thing about the Tank Museum,
Another quality vid, loved it. That thing is HUGE, holy crap!
4:38 It should read Krupp not crap.
Another fine, long-form tank chat!
I just love these chats, they make my day.
Thank you for posting such an excellent video.
omg . i never knew the tank was THAT huge !! you almost look green screened in next to it ...great video Please keep them coming!
Nice Porsche Suspension, would be a shame if it was unreliable...
I mean.... at least it works better than most of the transmissions..... right?
@@Kar4ever3 not really.
@@venator5 That was the joke.
yeah bad bad german tanks, we all know allied got far superior tanks,giving nicknames like coffins by their own soldiers back then....jealous Teeboos
@@drachenoger7635 its because the allies could actually say how bad their tank was without getting shot unlike the germans
Absolutely excellent content. Loved this
Beautifully done video! Thank you for helping to make my Friday morning here in Colorado. I had not really considered building one of these in 1/16 RC ( as I already have a Porsche King Tiger looking for an upgrade and an Elefant RC Kit ) but looking at it again here, I will probably reconsider.
Wow, I am from St. Valentin, Austria, where this machine has been built. Unfortunately there is nothing left of the factory but a plaque.
Happy to hear him give a nod to gamers loving it :D
Bravo!!! Bravo!!!
Yes sir!!
Tank chats are incredible
Thank you!!!!!
How am I just finding this channel now? Awesome videos, this guy knows his stuff!
It’s all history of sad times & grate men & women to whom we owe our very existence.🙏🏻❤️🙏🏻
Porsche done more to defeat Germany than one allied general.
yea, the guy was full of ideas that had no correlation with reality.
My vote is for Herman Goering, with a ego to make promises that he just couldn't keep, but Porsche did seem to have a truly strange concept of the real world.
Porshe: I have done so much wrong for the wermacht.
Erhard Milch: Hold my beer
German War effort: Oh Sh..t !
After the war. American generals sayd, that Milch have done more damage to German war effort than all Allied generals and spys together !
Hitler was horny for bigger and bigger machines.
@@yankee1376
Dank maymay but completely inaccurate especially considering how many projects Hitler had canceled.
I love these videos wwii history is my favorite and these videos are the best thank you David willey
Excellent video. Clear, informative and pertinent.
Jagdtiger , more like , Chadtiger .
Still my favorite WW2 German tank.
...I'M SO GLAD YOU GUYS RE-PAINTED THIS VEHICLE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Thank you for these videos.
Despite how impractical it was, the Jagdtiger is such a badass vehicle/tank destroyer.
The s.Pz.Jg.-Abt. 653 was extremely pleased with the Jagdtiger, they admired the strong armour and the extremely powerful gun. Being familiar with the Ferdinand/Elefant, they felt much more at home in the Jagdtiger than Otto Carius, who came from a Tiger Ausf. E and has zero experience in a tank destroyer. The s.Pz.Jg.-Abt. 653 also acheived much better results with the Jagdtiger because of this when compared to the s.Pz.Jg.-Abt. 512.
It should be noted that the 1. Kompanie of s.Pz.Jg.-Abt 512 was mostly manned by people who had served on the Nashorn and Jagdpanther and was commanded by Albert Ernst, a Panzer Ace on the Nashorn, they too fared undeniably better with the Jagdtiger compared to Otto Carius' Kompanie
I completely agree. There is also a more than a little bit of Carius in his book blaming his personal lack of activity in 1945 on the JagdTiger. Pz.Jg.-Abt 512 often seemed more than a little shy about actually getting into action in 1945. I also always kind of disliked the idea of a Carius as the company commander blaming "lack of training" for the mistakes of the men under his command with the JagdTiger. In particular, if men in his company didn't know how to pull out of an engagement with the JagdTiger, that reflects very poorly on Otto Carius.
No reason a 12.8mm heavy TD with a rate of fire 1/3rd of a medium tank should be sniping Shermans in the West. The terrain rarely allowed for the range the gun was capable of and worsened all of the many deficiencies in the powertrain. In retrospect, the whole program was a Pyrrhic effort from start to finish; to quote a business expression, "little investment requires little returns; big investment requires HUGE returns".
In short, investment scales logarithmically; I realize everybody loves to cite the KD ratio of the Elefant/Ferdinand, for example, and it does look impressive compared to other vehicles, but being that expensive means you need to kill a much higher ratio of tanks to make up for not merely the extra cost to build it, but the kills that COULD have been gotten with a lesser vehicle. Consider that most of the things an Elefant or a Jagdtiger killed could have also been killed by a StuG III or a towed 7.5cm AT gun, and at a much cheaper cost. To be blunt: none of the German heavy panzerjager vehicles killed enough or frequently enough to justify that standard.
I recall hearing about a company of Jagdtigers in the west that lost 11 of the tds for only one kill (Holland possibly). I think that they were scuttled by their own crews due to mechanical breakdown, immobility, or lack of fuel. That's a pretty lousy return on investment.
@@yyz4761 There never were any Jagdtiger in the Netherlands
@@jasoncarswell7458spoken like a true economist😀👍
Another fantastic presentation from Mr David Willey, that is 21:12 of pleasure to our ears. Sheer brilliance in seeing inside this monster also!
Excellent as ever and a very clear analysis of the misdirection of the german late-war effort.
Ah Ferdinand Porsche. Great car designer, poor tank designer.
Pit Friend So bad it is fitting the Ferdinand was named after him.
@@cgaccount3669 Everybody was doing that in 1940s lmao
@@cgaccount3669 You said very ignorant and are fueling the nazi apologists
@W For something they didn't want to do, they sure did a lot of it.
Sure, the rank and file probably mostly joined the party because they didn't want to be accused of treason, but the party leadership organized death camps and death squads and actions speak louder than words.
Weren’t the Maybauch engines designed for aircraft ?
I've seen 66% of all still existing Jagtigers still out there. This one and the one in Aberdeen Proving Grounds, haven't gotten to Kubinka yet.
It's a shame how Aberdeen can't or won't care about it's massive vehicle collection even if the vehicles are really novel. Most of them are just rotting away under the clear blue skies.
@@Szalami When I was there a tree was growing through a Grille prototype ...
@G G What rotting are you talking about? Here's a Jagdpanther I saw in Kubinka the other day: live.staticflickr.com/4537/37583220904_c1cb9b1f7c_b.jpg
Here's Jagdtiger: ic.pics.livejournal.com/tankist_31/83419838/5288116/5288116_1000.jpg
@@bbcmotd I think he's commenting on whether the interiors of their Jagdtigers are intact and restored or are they gutted and rusted out like the Maus is?
And you probably never will. Getting into Kubinka as a normal person is very hard, nigh impossible if you're not some kind of career academic.
That picture of the soldier sitting astride the tank's cannon like a giant phallus is the epitome of "Toxic Masculinity"& his "Animalistic Combative Barbarity".I give you a BIG THUMBS UP!
Love this series. Keep up the great work.
to the blokes that disliked the video: what didnt you like about it? i honestly want to know
Probably SJWs that hate anything german ww2
I am part German and I dislike German WW2. Though, I did not click the Dislike button. I can respect a good history video about tanks.
My best guess is that it is wheraboos that are mad that this isn't a masturbation video.
@@supakritpulmanausahakul1650 SJW?
@@mattsmith87 Social Justice Warriors- google it for better meaning than I can give.
Textbook case of "Awesome But Impractical". Fantastic gun, but put on a hull that's far too heavy for German resources/engineering/logistics to handle. And without a turret, removing the main armament to replace the transmission is an utter nightmare.
love the tank chats!
A clearly very knowledgeable speaker keeps these videos so excellent. Theirs a part of me that wishes none of these tanks survived. That we killed them all in battle! But the history behind them needs to be remembered forever.
Kinda crazy that they only made 88 of these and we had 4 of them in my small home town, until the commanding officer surrendered them to the Americans
get that officer shot!
@@lucasc5622 only an idiot can say, if the US Army offers you to surrender in mid april 1945 and spare your city from destruction, after witnessing how the Ruhrgebiet looks a couple kilometers to the north, you surrender
woah pete calm down, it was only a joke
@Peter I am confused. Hasn’t this video shown rhat they shouldn’t have bothered making any at all? The whole idea was flawed ... same as the Yamato & Musashi for the Japanese navy.
@@lucasc5622 if it was a joke ok, but there are a lot of idiots out there, that actually believe, that sacrificing thousands of innocent is more preferable than surrendering
Brilliant content as always, keep up the good work. Mr fletcher needs a section of the museum named after his moustache. Such a glorious fine piece of English engineering 👌
My Gf & myself visited the tank museum, bovington yesterday. We thoroughly enjoyed it there.....such a wealth of information, tanks & military hardware etc....Weve just booked Tiger Day for April 2020. :)
You always watch these tank chats and think, "Huh yup that's a tank and it looks pretty cool.", but then they show some of the pictures of real men capturing these vehicles and fighting in them and such and you think about it more and then it hits you that real people fought and died in and around and to these vehicles and you think about what it must have been like to fight in this way and it's very eye opening. Truly great tank chat as always. If y'all run out of money; rob a bank! Never stop.
Imagine seeing/hearing these beasts rumbling down the road and firing. It had to be one incredibly scary sight as at that time we had nothing that could take a hit from that 128mm round.
Calm down it’s only a 28kg bullet wrecking your Sherman from 3500m away
As was so often the case, it was a lot of over-engineering for no tactical advantage due to operational limitations and strategic influences. Like the FG42, which never came close to the value of the STG44 despite all the expense, the JagdTiger program never lived up to even the basic STGIIIg
I still would prefer the FG42 in my fantasy armory
@AKUJIRULE yes, you can definitely compare the FG42 and STG44. The latter was designed cheaply and inexpensively WHILE being designed around a new, lighter weight cartridge. The FG42 TRIED and FAILED to do what the MG34 and MG42 (and others from Czech manufacturers) were already doing. In the end it was an Over-engineered full cartridge design that didn't meet the sustained fire needs of a true LMG and didn't even achieve the results of the STG44 in a personal automatic weapon. Expensive, tiny magazine, inaccurate in full auto. Prime evidence of Germany's 'divide and rule' mini-empore. Imagine how much more could have been achieved adopting the STG44 years earlier
@@danepatterson8107 Nope, the FG was a paratroopers MG and rifle. It could be used with (I lack the right translation) opening shooting and closing shooting breach when semi or full auto, making it very precise and so easy to handle you could even shoot it full auto from the hips.The FG42 and the Stg44 a different types of weaponry.
@@void1968able You miss my point. The Stg44 was cheaper, and performed better than the FG42 (and Kar98) in every way. The FG42 produced a beautiful weapon that was a net negative for the armaments industry (too long to produce, too expensive, and inferior to the STG44). Same as these Over-engineered beasts vs. a Sturmgeschutz 3
Saw it in person. Its BIG!
whenever i'm bored of War thunder i just watch one of these videos and i'm hyped again!
Basically a 5" navy gun on tracks. We must give this German a wide berth.
maxsmodels one ping only?
At the time the project started, it made perfect sense. They needed something serious to kill the IS-2 at long range.
Running out of trained tankers and officers was probably not part of the plan.
I'm not sure it did make sense. What sense is there in building a tank so heavy that it breaks down every couple of miles and can only be repaired by sending it back to its factory to be disassembled in an enormous operation. A tank so heavy, drinks so much precious fuel, that even if it doesn't break down the crew ends up destroying it themselves when they abandon it after using it to destroy one single enemy tank.
I'll take 5 Stug III's instead.
@@Aethelhald if anything, they should have put the gun on a lighter chassis, open top even.
@@DrDrift-rl6cc They just didn't need that gun out in the field. It's stupidity. They probably only made it because Hitler himself demanded it. Real engineers would never have made such a thing.
@@Aethelhald no. They wanted it because they were preparing in advance for larger, heavier, and more powerful soviet heavy tanks. And because they wanted the superior tank the Germans would always try to one up what they believed the soviets would field, and thus resulting in massive tank projects like the Maus, jagdtiger and the E100
@@Phantom-bh5ru How many track-busting anti-tank mines could you produce in place of one Jagdtiger? They'd have been better off producing those instead.
This is like when you see a 12-year old say "the Tiger was the best tank, it could destroy any tank!" Well, sure, technically that's true, but there is so much more to think about when putting a tank in the field than "can it destroy anything it comes up against?" Like:
Do we realistically have the resources to produce these in large enough quantities to make a difference? (Spoiler: No)
Do we realistically have the abundance of fuel to move these things around in the field? (Spoiler: No)
Does it move fast enough to be effective in combat? (Spoiler: No)
Is it mechanically sound? Can it travel more than 3 kilometers without breaking down and needing to be sent back to the factory in Dusseldorf for labour-intensive repair? (Spoiler: No and no)
Can it travel over bridges without the bridge collapsing? (Spoiler: No)
Can it travel up a slight incline without spontaneously bursting in to flames? (Spoiler: No)
And so on and so forth. The best tanks in WW2 weren't the tanks that scared the enemy to death and could destroy literally any other tank they came across. The best tanks were those that you have the resources to produce in enough of an abundance to get the job done that needed to be done.
Heading to the Museum next month, cannot wait to see the Tigers again.
How can you not like listening to an expert of a subject that has done his research, and has the REAL THING sitting there to talk about?
When I saw those destroyed Jagdtigers, I was wondering what could have knocked them out, but then I remembered that they probably were blown up by their own crews when they broke down.
German hubris.
Artillery is the god of war
My guess is a) by the own crew after mechanical failure or b) from air by a plane or artillery shell. There are no reports a Jagdtiger was ever blown up by another tank.
Ground attack aircraft certainly could reduce the combat effectiveness of tanks usually more logistically; knocking out the railways used to move tanks over distance, destroying bridges and if the tanks were immune to strafing .50 cal MGs the fuel and ammo trucks certainly weren’t. Many a Tiger was just abandoned undamaged for want of fuel or ammo.
@@nomenestomen3452 I believe Otto Carius in his book talks about one being knocked out by Allied tanks, in fact the host of the video above cites the example. There are a couple of others knocked out by tanks as well. But with only 80 made, and the strategic circumstances in 1945, something like this is gonna break down or run out of fuel more often than be knocked out.
Nuts. Meanwhile, Centurion is trotting around Bovington...
Thank you for this excellent Video.
Not to worry Andre.
I love this channel. If it's a big heavy machine I love it. If it's a big heavy tank that goes boom I am even more interested.
If I ever win a lottery I'm gonna find a crew and build me one of KingTiger and Jagdtiger to play with !
"Huh, what are we going to do with all these gun barrels we were going to put on destroyers?" "Hans, I've got a cunning plan that might just win the war for the fatherland!"
0:45 aww, just look at that smile 😄
The Henschnel Tiger PzVIE was used for the tank version, but the PzVI(P) Porsche chassis which had lost out in the competition was used for the tank destroyer for this generation/role. 1354 PzVIE, and 90 StuG VI(P). Both had their own recovery vehicles - a conversion of 3 gun tanks for the VIE, and of 3 of the prototype chassis for the VI(P)
The Tiger chassis was used to convert 18 gun tanks into the Assault Mortar role, and these did use the PzVIE hull.