German soldiers figured out quickly that the ping meant the soldier was out of ammo and it clearly takes some care to reload. So many americans lost their lives due to this. Eventually US troops started baiting the Germans by spiking an empty magazine on the ground or having 1 guy fire a final round while others waited. They in turn killed many Germans who were expecting a single, unarmed American.
A friend of mine has 4 M1 Garand rifles, one from each of the companies that manufactured them. I have been fortunate enough to shoot each them out to a range of 500 yards and it's easy to see why it was such a successful weapon. What a pleasure to shoot!!!
@@ob2kenobi388They’re all the same. The only difference is what the stamping says on the parts and minor almost imperceptible differences in machining in a few areas, (and then things like stamped vs machined trigger guards) but all the parts are still interchangeable. Very few completely original guns exist anymore, most are mixed parts guns.
È scomodo ma ti stacca la testa... Ho fatto il militare nel 1993 e in Italia (leva obbligatoria all'epoca) andavamo al poligono ancora con quelli. Poi abbiamo avuto il Fall
En Nicaragua en la resolución de 1979 se dio combate casa a casa con ese fusil y otros pero ese es uno de los que más se usaron por qué era el arma que andaban la mayoría de las tropas regulares de la guardia nacional
Given that things like the maxim gun existed since the 1880, this gun is not ahead of its time. The big deal was that in WW2 there were a lot of bolt action in circulation, and this rifle outclases it.
@@gabrielmelnik6796 as a mass-producible, standard issue weapon it was very much ahead of its time. As you said, the standard issue weapons of every other country at the time were bolt actions with (generally) 5 round magazines. Compared to that, 8 rounds in semi automatic is a huge step forward, one that could definitely be described as "ahead of its time".
After WW1, the majority of countries focused on bolt actions for their troops. The United States however commissioned gunsmiths to develop a self-loading rifle. And thus, the M1 Garand. Years before WW2, the United States was able to arm it's troops with these as standard issue. This gave us a HUGE advantage during the war, because everyone else primarily had bolt actions as standard issue. Makes me wonder how the war would have gone if we stuck with a basic bolt action like everyone else.
@@gavinlamp5426not much difference the Russians stuck with the bolt gun and they won the war in the east again only about 10 of kills came from small arms the vast majority was artillery
Russians had numbers friend. And deserters were shot. They made up for a lack of weaponry in numbers. Plus the eastern push of Germans was burnt out towards the end.
I restored mine it was given to me in the worse shape possible stock broken in half and the rifle was rusted shut now my April 1942 Springfield M1 Garand is brand new and shoots awesome!!! My rifle is a 6 digit serial number 558XXX I wish I could show you all photos of my rifle before and after restoring it!
I have a 43 Springfield that's kinda dinged up that I plan to restore and I just won a bid on a Winchester M1 that looks almost new but I'm not sure about the year of manufacturing.
Loved the M1 Garand. I shot in two CMP high power service rifle matches and one practice match using loaners from the rifle club. It was a great experience and lots of fun. I never got to shoot the same course of fire with the club’s AR-15.
Mine is an all Springfield Armory Garand with all matching parts. Based on its serial number it was built in September 1952. It is unlikely that it ever went to Korea or served in any combat. The metal is nearly pristine, as is the rifling. I stripped the stock down to the wood and sanded it perfectly smooth. I stained with MinWax "special walnut" and then put 8 coats of Tru-Oil on it and added a 1941 leather sling on it. I took a thin Dremel cutting wheel and ground a narrow groove along the top of the front blade and filled it in with white paing. It is absolutely gorgeous and a 1.5 MOA shooter with my match grade handloads. Of all of the dozen or so rifles I own, this one by far has the best balance. I can hold it steadier offhand than with any of my other rifles. John Garand just got it perfect.
The M1 Garand or M1 rifle[nb 1] is a semi-automatic rifle that was the service rifle of the U.S. Army during World War II and the Korean War. The rifle is chambered for the .30-06 Springfield cartridge and is named after its Canadian-American designer, John Garand. It was the first standard-issue autoloading rifle for the United States.[13] By most accounts, the M1 rifle performed well. General George S. Patton called it "the greatest battle implement ever devised".[14][15] The M1 replaced the bolt-action M1903 Springfield as the U.S. service rifle in 1936,[16] and was itself replaced by the selective-fire M14 rifle on March 26, 1958.[17]
I first shot an M1 when my oldest was in the boy scouts and they went to shoot bb guns/pellet guns at a local range. Us adults were shown these rifles and were allowed to shoot them. Afterwards, we were told that we could buy them for $400 through the CMP Program. We all left but i never followed through on getting one. And now, they're at over a grand on average.
@@vahlok1426 I know. I was being sarcastic but I appreciate you not being overly harsh on someone that might not know better. Sometimes the internet isn't as bad as people say
@@ilovemalechickens Nah, I'm not usually a harsh sort. Now I will be somewhat harsh on people who buy into the "Ping alerted Germans" and "Soldiers hit rocks with clips to draw out Germans" thing, because that's actual nonsense and never happened.
@@vahlok1426 hey man that happened G.I soldiers did hit clips on their helmets to trick germans into thinking the Americans were out of bullets!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!lol
@JimmyRatlegs even more fun fact, it's not true in any sense. You can't hear it from more than 10 feet away after it's shot without hearing pro on. I'm sure YOU know that, but these people who don't continue to spread this rumor. Source, I own one and fire it on a regular basis. Can't hear the ping from any distance beyond 10 feet.
I was trained in this piece of junk in the airforce. We had to take it apart and put it back together in two minutes. That's 57 individual parts... One time I got real stressed doing that, and the spring jumped out and cut off a millimetre of my right thumb; damn bloody! And for a couple of weeks I really learned how much we use that outermost piece of thumb!
This was such a distinct sound on the battle field that American GI’s would throw empty M1 Garand clips at rocks tricking German soldiers into popping their heads up thinking the American soldier was out of ammo. Love this rifle!
reasons why i love M1 Garand: *ding*
correction: *PING*
PING!!!!~ (final delicius shot)
we all know when there's no more bullets
Same I like it so satisfying
Ping!
This is hotter than any woman
Women are cold most of the time
No son, your mom is hotter
@@blackman5867not if you get to work within 2 hours
@@AmalekIsComing I STILL MAKE IT IN TIME, YOU OLD LADY
I'm gay :)
That ping is just 👌🏻🤌🏼 music to the ears.
Amen
Shot the M1 last Saturday it was amazing! The Clip flung straight into my shoulder😂
nothing better than the magazine ping
80 years later and this sound probably still haunts a couple of old-timers in 🇩🇪 .
And Japan
German soldiers figured out quickly that the ping meant the soldier was out of ammo and it clearly takes some care to reload. So many americans lost their lives due to this. Eventually US troops started baiting the Germans by spiking an empty magazine on the ground or having 1 guy fire a final round while others waited. They in turn killed many Germans who were expecting a single, unarmed American.
@@intermissionbuffalo
Thats BS Nobody hears the Sound after Shooting 8mm Mauser without ear protection
@@intermissionbuffaloold boomer meme
It's been fairly well proven that nobody could hear the ping in combat.
Sorry, boys. I know you want to feel all manly and superior.
All gun collections are lacking until it includes a Garand. PING!
I have 2, a Repro and an original that I completely refurbished.
@@scottmurphy650what's the repro called
💯
Now, this is a rifle
I like stripper clipps more than magazine
@@jmgonzales7701 Why?
@@ChandraGunawan-p8w its cooler
@@jmgonzales7701 But Impractical...
@@ChandraGunawan-p8w still cool
A friend of mine has 4 M1 Garand rifles, one from each of the companies that manufactured them. I have been fortunate enough to shoot each them out to a range of 500 yards and it's easy to see why it was such a successful weapon. What a pleasure to shoot!!!
Out of curiosity, did you notice any differences between the four guns, or were they all pretty much the same?
@@ob2kenobi388They’re all the same. The only difference is what the stamping says on the parts and minor almost imperceptible differences in machining in a few areas, (and then things like stamped vs machined trigger guards) but all the parts are still interchangeable. Very few completely original guns exist anymore, most are mixed parts guns.
that ping sound is so satisfying, every gamer's favourite
Awesome!!! The M1 Garand is my favorite rifle!!!!
Same
M14 is mine. It's the M1 Garand with a bonafide 20 round magazine!
Yes.. but kar98 is my favorite rifle !!
Почему любите ?! ...ведь столько звона и вылетающего металла ??
Same
Cannot imagine urban combat/house to house with that beast.
In a situation a M1 carbine or a grease gun would be better
I can Hell let loose
House Thru House
È scomodo ma ti stacca la testa...
Ho fatto il militare nel 1993 e in Italia (leva obbligatoria all'epoca) andavamo al poligono ancora con quelli.
Poi abbiamo avuto il Fall
En Nicaragua en la resolución de 1979 se dio combate casa a casa con ese fusil y otros pero ese es uno de los que más se usaron por qué era el arma que andaban la mayoría de las tropas regulares de la guardia nacional
- Name a sound that all men love: 👠
+ Wrong
- 🔫*ding*
One of my favorite sounds is Mg-42 "singing"
*ping
I still have a K98k from 1937 with a walnut stock from my grandfather. The rifle still shoots better than many new standard hunting rifles
We all know what's the highlight is here 🤣 sounds like pure bliss
everyone got here thinking "alright, just be done with the bullets"
😂😂😂😂😂
The greatest battle implementation ever devised.
@liamrichardson6830 George S. Patton
Esse barulhinho é clássico demais. Não tem um que não conheça!
barulhinho da morte kkkkkkk
Call of Dutty 2 kkkk
vdd kk
Good COD and Medal of Honor vibes, idk how to explain
"The greatest battle implement ever devised" - George S. Patton
Dann kannte der wohl keine Deutschen Waffen
MG42
@@riderzinc right
@@anonymanonymus3286USA 2, Germany 0. German weapons were overly complicated.
@@travishicks6074 Why USA?
Germany 0 , WORLD 2
I'm no firearms expert but that thing seems way ahead of it's time in sophistication-impressive.
Given that things like the maxim gun existed since the 1880, this gun is not ahead of its time.
The big deal was that in WW2 there were a lot of bolt action in circulation, and this rifle outclases it.
@@gabrielmelnik6796 as a mass-producible, standard issue weapon it was very much ahead of its time. As you said, the standard issue weapons of every other country at the time were bolt actions with (generally) 5 round magazines. Compared to that, 8 rounds in semi automatic is a huge step forward, one that could definitely be described as "ahead of its time".
After WW1, the majority of countries focused on bolt actions for their troops. The United States however commissioned gunsmiths to develop a self-loading rifle. And thus, the M1 Garand. Years before WW2, the United States was able to arm it's troops with these as standard issue. This gave us a HUGE advantage during the war, because everyone else primarily had bolt actions as standard issue. Makes me wonder how the war would have gone if we stuck with a basic bolt action like everyone else.
@@gavinlamp5426not much difference the Russians stuck with the bolt gun and they won the war in the east again only about 10 of kills came from small arms the vast majority was artillery
Russians had numbers friend. And deserters were shot. They made up for a lack of weaponry in numbers. Plus the eastern push of Germans was burnt out towards the end.
Probably one of the best creations ever .. it’s just a beautiful sound
Ese sonido siempre se me ha hecho precioso!!
He dropped those clips on the table like he was salt bae
"but better"
the M1.. the Freedom Blaster. thr legendary and infamous, Elder Gat
Now I understand what was that beautiful sound
Yes, that sound when you run out of ammo, it's so beautiful.
I restored mine it was given to me in the worse shape possible stock broken in half and the rifle was rusted shut now my April 1942 Springfield M1 Garand is brand new and shoots awesome!!! My rifle is a 6 digit serial number 558XXX I wish I could show you all photos of my rifle before and after restoring it!
Upload it to your Instagram and share your handle my man
❤️❤️🥳🥳😁
I have a 43 Springfield that's kinda dinged up that I plan to restore and I just won a bid on a Winchester M1 that looks almost new but I'm not sure about the year of manufacturing.
That is fantastic. You deserve a medal for that.
O som dela no primeiro COD é muito bom de ouvir
Demais, no MOH também.
The almost raw metallic sound makes my peen move, beautiful sense of modernisation of simplicity... I love it.
finally someone loading this properly! you dont have to risk getting garand thumb if you load it like this guy
Better safe than sorry
Loved the M1 Garand. I shot in two CMP high power service rifle matches and one practice match using loaners from the rifle club. It was a great experience and lots of fun. I never got to shoot the same course of fire with the club’s AR-15.
Marvelous piece of engineering for its time
now that’s a clip, not a magazine guys
If you are watching shooting videos...im sure you know what a clip is. That said, Penguinz is pretty cringe.
@@ydontubegray Imagine calling him penguin instead of moist. That's how we know you're cringe. Oh and the typical anime picture.
@@ydontubegrayhe is literally the most based person out there wdym
@@ydontubegrayhe be talkin shi about moist with an anime pfp 💀💀😭
@@ydontubegray you cant smack abt people with an anime pfp lil bro
Love the sound of the ping early in the morning. 🤪🇺🇲
Yeah...the " ping" at the end of the 8 bullets is fantastic..I like it very much
the ping is as famous as the BRRRTTTT from the A-10.
One of the most beautiful guns ever made.
Very clean angles, nice video 👍
The ping sound is music to my ears.
I understand your sentiment but remember the “ping” means you’re empty 🥺
favorite weapon still to this day
One of the most beautiful sounds of all time
this is one of the most beefy rifles ever made. deff on my top three semis
I knew it was gonna happen one way or another, oh the music to my ears.
This and the Lee-Enfield 😍
СВТ-40 лучше.
@@avtoserveladzeG43
General Patton was right when he called this rifle "the greatest battlement ever devised." I NEED TO GET ONE, ASAP! 😍🤤
My favorite guns are the deagle and the M1 garand and the clip sound is just... So good...
Love it my old hunting pal had one you guys keep your new toys. I love this one.
Garands are fun, their recoil impulse is nice and light due to the weight and the sights are nice.
Gas opperated also 😊
This is ASMR. One of the best weapon ever designed
The world’s most iconic battle rifle
Sounds like freedom!!
It sounds like my opponent has a reload around the corner.
@@hellorhighwater3854 1911 has entered the chat.
😂😂😂😂
That iconic sound❤️
Just got me a 1942 Winchester M1. I love it.
Oh, simply beautiful ! And there it is ! That wonderful ‘ ting ‘ that some still insist is simply mythological !
I used to like the m1 but then it changed to Enfield but the m1 still a solid rifle even today.
Mine is an all Springfield Armory Garand with all matching parts. Based on its serial number it was built in September 1952. It is unlikely that it ever went to Korea or served in any combat. The metal is nearly pristine, as is the rifling. I stripped the stock down to the wood and sanded it perfectly smooth. I stained with MinWax "special walnut" and then put 8 coats of Tru-Oil on it and added a 1941 leather sling on it. I took a thin Dremel cutting wheel and ground a narrow groove along the top of the front blade and filled it in with white paing. It is absolutely gorgeous and a 1.5 MOA shooter with my match grade handloads.
Of all of the dozen or so rifles I own, this one by far has the best balance. I can hold it steadier offhand than with any of my other rifles. John Garand just got it perfect.
Can't beat that auto eject ping. Music for the ears. And hopefully for generations to come.
Great rifle, old school, surely powerful!
What a Beautiful gun
That sound brings memories even if they’re not from real life
The M1 Garand or M1 rifle[nb 1] is a semi-automatic rifle that was the service rifle of the U.S. Army during World War II and the Korean War.
The rifle is chambered for the .30-06 Springfield cartridge and is named after its Canadian-American designer, John Garand. It was the first standard-issue autoloading rifle for the United States.[13] By most accounts, the M1 rifle performed well. General George S. Patton called it "the greatest battle implement ever devised".[14][15] The M1 replaced the bolt-action M1903 Springfield as the U.S. service rifle in 1936,[16] and was itself replaced by the selective-fire M14 rifle on March 26, 1958.[17]
The M1 Garand: The Rifle of Walter Kowalski (Clint Eastwood) from Gran Torino (2008).
I can't quote the stacking line, but you know...
@@BawlsMahoney Know what?
@@BoxerMustangLoverAndChristian the line from the movie where Clint has the Asian kid at gun point in the yard telling him to leave
@@BawlsMahoney Oh, right. 🙂
I had one it was great .
Such a beautiful piece of craftsmanship. Wish I could afford one.
That was a war rifle that packed a punch !! When it pinged just be sure to reload quickly! Because "they" are coming! Great gun! Helped win the war.
This is like the action performed by World War 2 American soldiers.
That's a nice-looking garland looks almost new
One of the best rifle ever made!
Just an absolutely outstanding weapon... Love that rifle!!!
I first shot an M1 when my oldest was in the boy scouts and they went to shoot bb guns/pellet guns at a local range. Us adults were shown these rifles and were allowed to shoot them. Afterwards, we were told that we could buy them for $400 through the CMP Program. We all left but i never followed through on getting one. And now, they're at over a grand on average.
Красота! Обожаю этот звук!
I just got my mitts on one. Now all I need is a bunch more clips
Ummmmmmm don't you mean magazines!!!!!!!!!!??????? Lol
@@ilovemalechickens Nope, they're clips in this case. The actual housing the clip sits in is an internal magazine.
@@vahlok1426 I know. I was being sarcastic but I appreciate you not being overly harsh on someone that might not know better. Sometimes the internet isn't as bad as people say
@@ilovemalechickens Nah, I'm not usually a harsh sort. Now I will be somewhat harsh on people who buy into the "Ping alerted Germans" and "Soldiers hit rocks with clips to draw out Germans" thing, because that's actual nonsense and never happened.
@@vahlok1426 hey man that happened G.I soldiers did hit clips on their helmets to trick germans into thinking the Americans were out of bullets!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!lol
George Patton: The M1 "is the greatest battle implement ever devised."
Ping sound is more addictive than smoking cigarettes ngl
Fun fact: US soldiers used to intentionally drop empty clips on the ground as Axis forces would wait for the *ding* to leave cover
Metagaming
Fun fact, this comment is posted on literally every single M1 video on youtube
@@wrastlinape brilliant
@JimmyRatlegs even more fun fact, it's not true in any sense. You can't hear it from more than 10 feet away after it's shot without hearing pro on. I'm sure YOU know that, but these people who don't continue to spread this rumor.
Source, I own one and fire it on a regular basis. Can't hear the ping from any distance beyond 10 feet.
@@MrGorgothmadd Okay then multiple dozens of US and Axis sources that state this are all wrong just because you said so 🤣 get a grip lad
“7.62 millimeter…full metal jacket…”. Damn I love the M1 and the M1A.
That thing is in pristine absolute mint condition!
I'm a simple man, I see an M1 Garand post. I like.
Пальцеломка прекрасна!
Всегда!
God I love the M1…. I was born in the wrong era.
You’d be dead in that other era you’re implying..
Who knows you died shooting that rifle in your past life🤣🤣
I love them too I was born also in the wrong era
And Glocks are ugly!
@@nocturnalrecluse1216 absolute truth👌👌
о да, этот легендарный звук вылетающей обоймы
Just love the sound it.. & miss having it by my side (part of Marshall aid)
Nice! Dont mean a thing if it ain’t got that ping.
I love the sound of the clip when jumps out
I was trained in this piece of junk in the airforce. We had to take it apart and put it back together in two minutes. That's 57 individual parts...
One time I got real stressed doing that, and the spring jumped out and cut off a millimetre of my right thumb; damn bloody! And for a couple of weeks I really learned how much we use that outermost piece of thumb!
Powerful and nice to look at. And that ding after every 8 rounds ...so satisfying.
This sound + headshot is perfect
After a 5 years of searching I found a 1943 Winchester M1 garand rifle I love my M1 it was worth the search
One of my favorite weapon when I used to play COD. Beautiful sound
This was such a distinct sound on the battle field that American GI’s would throw empty M1 Garand clips at rocks tricking German soldiers into popping their heads up thinking the American soldier was out of ammo. Love this rifle!
M1 Garand is one of the most my favorite gun ever
Bro went saltbae with the garand clips
We love that ting sound but how many of our grandfathers hated it mid fire fight
Such a magnificent piece of hardware.
That catridge ejection DING sound. Sooooo gooood!!! ❤❤❤
as soon as I saw the name garand I immediately click the video
It's always a fascinating gun no matter what time you look at it. I'll get one in the future.
First 3 seconds, what we're all here for. We stick around for the rest of the beauty
That ring is music to my ears😌
This Bell sound makes me happy 😊
The greatest battle implement ever devised.
Hearing this, most of the games managed to make an accurate representation of the shooting sound. It's soooo iconic!
I dont think there is a another gun in the world that sounds as beautiful as the m1 grand