Weapons of the SAS: A Legacy of Innovation in WWII - Paddy Mayne

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  • Опубликовано: 3 янв 2025

Комментарии • 68

  • @UlyssesFiles
    @UlyssesFiles  2 дня назад +9

    Notes: WWII footage of Browning Hi Power pistols is hard to find, so I substituted similar automatic pistols of American manufacture at times, e.g. at 1:50 a 1911 .45 ACP is evident, whilst the guy firing tracers at targets (Maj. Rex Applegate) is also I think using a 1911.

    • @theedain
      @theedain 2 дня назад +3

      I think most viewers won't notice and those that do will get it...

    • @UlyssesFiles
      @UlyssesFiles  2 дня назад +3

      Agree - a few super critical haters but most are cool 😆🍻

    • @no48bus
      @no48bus 2 дня назад +3

      I have to admit I noticed but I used to sell them. I think the Hi Power was the best pistol of WW2.

    • @UlyssesFiles
      @UlyssesFiles  2 дня назад +3

      @@no48businteresting; I heard the hi power was a reliable piece of kit

    • @no48bus
      @no48bus 2 дня назад +3

      @@UlyssesFiles I never remember one with big issues. They are service pistols with a long history. Some individual guns will act up. I even had an unreliable Glock at one point and a SIG 226 break my heart but generally if its service it will go bang. I had a HK USP I put 5000 rounds through with three stoppages and two of those were from the same batch of ammo. Enfield No. 2 felt like a cap gun. So if I had a choice between a HP and an Enfield No. 2 its not a choice.

  • @Joe3pops
    @Joe3pops 2 дня назад +11

    The initial attack on the German desert airfield was so violent, thier signallers reported firstly they believed they were under aerial attack. A force multiplier with SAS Vickers machine guns was the .303 British Buckingham round. Armour piercing incendiary round, first developed WW1 to deal with Zepplins. When the SAS jeeps fled into the desert, they had expended all ammunition.

  • @UlyssesFiles
    @UlyssesFiles  День назад +5

    In hindsight I realize I ought at some point to have mentioned the LRDG and their mentoring role for the early SAS; an omission that I will try to make up in part with a future docu based entirely on them and their operations in the Desert Campaign.

  • @PETER-c4n
    @PETER-c4n 2 дня назад +5

    Just seen first episode, S2 of SAS Rogue Warriors on TV. The war is ramping up, and the creators have done so too! One word - Outstanding!

    • @alexfilma16
      @alexfilma16 17 часов назад +1

      You mean Rogue Heroes?

  • @UlyssesFiles
    @UlyssesFiles  2 дня назад +6

    A definition of the word “Innovation” from the title of this video: ‘the process of bringing about new ideas, methods, products, services, or solutions that have a significant positive impact and value…’
    Innovation can be seen in the Lewes bomb, as developed by Jock Lewes, but may also be observed in the novel ways the SAS used existing weapons and systems. For example their method of raiding air bases at first on foot, planting bombs on aircraft, and later by driving thru airfields in the jeeps - shooting up aircraft..

  • @richardcastle3204
    @richardcastle3204 День назад +5

    Paddy Maine won the DSO not once, but FOUR times!

    • @UlyssesFiles
      @UlyssesFiles  День назад

      That’s right, by the end of the war he’d won it 4 times and ought to have got the Victoria Cross.

    • @PaulGregory-y9t
      @PaulGregory-y9t 22 часа назад +1

      Yes but he should have had the victoria cross

    • @UlyssesFiles
      @UlyssesFiles  22 часа назад +1

      He was robbed

    • @PaulGregory-y9t
      @PaulGregory-y9t 22 часа назад +2

      @UlyssesFiles cos he was Irish

    • @UlyssesFiles
      @UlyssesFiles  22 часа назад +1

      @ and he clashed a few times with superiors

  • @mrjockt
    @mrjockt 2 дня назад +5

    The Vickers ‘K’ was used primarily because plenty of them were freely available when outfits like the LRDG, SAS and Popski’s Private Army went looking for machine guns to mount on their vehicles, the RAF had been using them as defensive machine guns on bombers and recce aircraft but had started to replace them with the belt fed .303” Browning.

    • @UlyssesFiles
      @UlyssesFiles  2 дня назад +3

      Yeps. Still, innovative in the way they used them, though granted the LRDG were key there

    • @kettleions
      @kettleions День назад +1

      Bulletproof glass ? Off a plane !? On a jeep !!!🤩

  • @jbkerns
    @jbkerns 2 дня назад +5

    After watching this, I went to The Operations Room channel where they broke down the actual airfield raid. No affiliation, just a recommendation.

    • @UlyssesFiles
      @UlyssesFiles  2 дня назад +2

      Great recommendation. We also cover it somewhat in another video on Paddy Mayne

  • @g.l.1421
    @g.l.1421 2 дня назад +6

    Well done, thanks!

  • @UlyssesFiles
    @UlyssesFiles  3 дня назад +12

    Please enjoy this docu on the weapons used by the SAS in WWII - illustr. with a section on a raid led by Lt. Blair "Paddy" Mayne. Wishing all viewers a good New Year!! 🥳

    • @7071t6
      @7071t6 3 дня назад

      all copied by the sao from the germans full stop, none of this would have happened if they did not copy what the german commando units lead by Otto Johann Anton Skorzeny , the first real behind the lines special forces units of ww2 👌👌🦘🦘

  • @deniahmadhendra8842
    @deniahmadhendra8842 2 дня назад +6

    nice documentary...the badass the British SAS

  • @kleinjahr
    @kleinjahr 2 дня назад +7

    Who dares,wins.

  • @metalmick
    @metalmick День назад +4

    8:45 Conclusion. Don't f**k with the SAS!

  • @59patrickw
    @59patrickw 2 дня назад +6

    Happy new year to all lets hope 2025 is better
    you forgot one thing the LRDG who helped to save the new SAS at the start and I believe the welrod was still in use in the mid 1980

    • @UlyssesFiles
      @UlyssesFiles  2 дня назад +4

      Yes true I noticed that; would have been good to mention the LRDG. Must do something on them one of these days..

    • @UlyssesFiles
      @UlyssesFiles  2 дня назад +4

      Ah the Welrod, when researching it I think I saw it was still in use. There’s mention of it being used as recently as Op Desert Storm.

  • @crocodiledundee8685
    @crocodiledundee8685 3 дня назад +6

    Nice work. BTW you cover do a video on Operation Tombola, also known as the SAS Italian Job when they attacked two German HQs to assassinate a German General.

    • @UlyssesFiles
      @UlyssesFiles  3 дня назад +4

      That's a great idea for a video! Heard of it but must look into it again. Happy New Year Croc 🐊🎊🍻🎉🎆

    • @crocodiledundee8685
      @crocodiledundee8685 3 дня назад +4

      @ Happy New Year too 🎉🍾🇦🇺

  • @stephenduffy5406
    @stephenduffy5406 2 дня назад +4

    At 1:21, note the Thompson's Cuts Compensator twisted upside-down!

    • @UlyssesFiles
      @UlyssesFiles  2 дня назад +4

      Eagle eye! 😆🍻

    • @craigthescott5074
      @craigthescott5074 2 дня назад +3

      That’s strange because they are pined on.

    • @stephenduffy5406
      @stephenduffy5406 День назад +2

      @@craigthescott5074 They are threaded on, then locked in with a pin. I suspect that picture is a movie still, as the guy is too muscular to be of the WWII generation, so the set armorer might have been screwing with the barrel for blank-adaptation. My guess, anyway.

  • @self-studyenglisheveryday3952
    @self-studyenglisheveryday3952 3 дня назад +6

    Thanks for this! 🙏🎄🥇🏆💯🥳🎊

    • @UlyssesFiles
      @UlyssesFiles  2 дня назад +2

      You are very welcome! Happy New Year! 🎄🍻

  • @bluetruffle4349
    @bluetruffle4349 3 дня назад +5

    Happy New Year Sir

    • @UlyssesFiles
      @UlyssesFiles  3 дня назад +3

      Cheers - may your year be filled with happiness! 😄🎊🥂

  • @Pattern51lover
    @Pattern51lover 2 дня назад +3

    I definitely thought that was Harrison Ford in the thumbnail

  • @steadynumber1
    @steadynumber1 4 часа назад +2

    Notable by its absence in the presentation is the Chevrolet open truck (9:05) much used by both the SAS & the Long Range Desert Group. I enjoyed the video nonetheless. Cheers !

    • @UlyssesFiles
      @UlyssesFiles  Час назад

      Sorry about that, I did consider talking about it but I needed to draw a line somewhere otherwise I could have gone much deeper. I really should, in hindsight, however, mentioned the LRDG (and the chevvie truck), so I’m thinking of doing something about that in a future presentation. Thanks for commenting 🍻

  • @michaelpiwcewicz1412
    @michaelpiwcewicz1412 2 дня назад +3

    THEY USED THAT IN THE RAT PATROL //IT SHOWED US SOLDIERS AND NO ENGLISH TROOPS BUT 1//WHEN IT WAS ALL ENGLISH GOOD OLD TV

  • @catinthehat906
    @catinthehat906 2 дня назад +6

    Actually the Aussie Owen had it been available to choose, would have been better than the Thompson, it was more reliable in dusty and sandy conditions as this comparison with the Thompson and Sten clearly demonstrates.
    ruclips.net/video/mTc2fXqWD5I/видео.html

    • @UlyssesFiles
      @UlyssesFiles  2 дня назад +5

      The Owen was really good and reliable too 👍🏻🍻

    • @craigthescott5074
      @craigthescott5074 2 дня назад +2

      The Owen gun is a very good WW2 subgun but the Thompson was better known and was a higher quality build. They were very reliable at least my 1928 Bridgeport WW2 Thompson is. There’s no comparison with the Sten gun it was junk.

    • @UlyssesFiles
      @UlyssesFiles  День назад +2

      Sten gun was mass-produced and yes not well built; but still v useable. You’re right about the Thompson - beautifully made and v high end

  • @Idahoguy10157
    @Idahoguy10157 2 дня назад +6

    The recent assassin of the health care insurance executive used a weapon similar to the Welrod pistol

    • @craigthescott5074
      @craigthescott5074 2 дня назад +3

      No that’s been debunked by looking at the video. It’s a standard 9mm pistol with a homemade suppressor.

  • @theedain
    @theedain 3 дня назад +4

    That 'Welrod' pistol, some were saying it was used to assassinate the guy in New York.

    • @UlyssesFiles
      @UlyssesFiles  3 дня назад +3

      Yeah, but it wasn’t a Welrod.

    • @geordiedog1749
      @geordiedog1749 3 дня назад +3

      It was thought it was a welrod because the pistol had a suppressor that inhibited the action of the gun so he had to operate the slide manually after each shot. This mimicked the single shot action of a welrod.

    • @UlyssesFiles
      @UlyssesFiles  3 дня назад +3

      Yes, true. I saw a video here on the tube earlier by @ForgottenWeapons where he goes into it:
      ruclips.net/user/shortsPOubd0SoCQ8?si=KT57GlE-OIYkafkq

    • @wor53lg50
      @wor53lg50 День назад +1

      There's literally only a few left in the world and most if not all are in museums or rich collectors, not everyone in the squadrons was issued them only one man, or SOE operatives who had a mission to assassinate someone, they would then dispose of it by burying it or chuck into deep water.

  • @pilgrum23
    @pilgrum23 12 часов назад +1

    Not bad not 100 %correct sas used what was avaliable for job Thomson was to that good yes. I used one many times sas in it time where buch from all over not well liked because of how they carried out ops

  • @markyinbelfastxx9088
    @markyinbelfastxx9088 18 часов назад +1

    My grandad got punched in the face by blayre mayne in 1948 in laverys bar in shaftsbury square belfast
    Quite proud of that lol

    • @UlyssesFiles
      @UlyssesFiles  18 часов назад +1

      That’s an epic story to tell over a glass of ale 🍻😂

    • @markyinbelfastxx9088
      @markyinbelfastxx9088 18 часов назад +1

      @UlyssesFiles usually potcheen

    • @UlyssesFiles
      @UlyssesFiles  18 часов назад +1

      @@markyinbelfastxx9088 love it 😋