The Science of Land Mines - Featuring Combat Engineers (12B) and the Assault Breacher Vehicle

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  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024
  • If you like the land mine T-shirt get it here: www.bunkerbran...
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    Land mines essentially come in two families: Anti-Tank and Anti-Personnel. Anti-personnel landmines have been banned by numerous countries, but Anti-tank land mines are still used.
    If you ever see a mine or a piece of unexploded ordinance, remember that they are never safe to handle. Do not touch it, mark the area and leave the area.
    For uncensored video, check out my substack at:
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Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @RyanMcBethProgramming
    @RyanMcBethProgramming  Год назад +84

    If you like the land mine T-shirt get it here: www.bunkerbranding.com/products/mines-t-shirt?variant=43080164999299
    Or Hoodie:
    www.bunkerbranding.com/products/mines-hoodie?variant=43159426859139
    This video took over 300 hours to create. If you are not into T-shirts, consider subscribing to my substack here:
    ryanmcbeth.substack.com/
    Curious about mines? Join CAT-UXO and spread mine awareness.
    cat-uxo.com/
    Land mines essentially come in two families: Anti-Tank and Anti-Personnel. Anti-personnel landmines have been banned by numerous countries, but Anti-tank land mines are still used.
    If you ever see a mine or a piece of unexploded ordinance, remember that they are never safe to handle. Do not touch it, mark the area and leave the area.
    For uncensored video, check out my substack at:
    ryanmcbeth.substack.com
    Like my shirts? Get your own at:
    www.bunkerbranding.com/pages/ryan-mcbeth
    Watch all of my long form videos:
    ruclips.net/p/PLt670_P7pOGmLWZG78JlM-rG2ZrpPziOy
    Twitter:
    @ryanmcbeth
    Join the conversation:
    discord.gg/pKuGDHZHrz
    Want to send me something?
    Ryan McBeth Productions LLC
    8705 Colesville Rd.
    Suite 249
    Silver Spring, MD 20910
    USA

    • @jeromedenis-vb8kb
      @jeromedenis-vb8kb Год назад +1

      You should do a video about kop Keating

    • @aaronstanley6914
      @aaronstanley6914 Год назад +1

      Thanks I just learned the reason why in star gate they only use claymores

    • @montecorbit8280
      @montecorbit8280 Год назад +1

      At 7:40
      Off route mine:
      A song on a video on TV, (I think), of a mine, (maybe it was classified as a mine??), that used fuel-air to destroy vehicles.
      Is this common, or is it more improvised??
      Thank you for your time;
      Monte

    • @rocko7711
      @rocko7711 Год назад +1

      Great video

    • @rocko7711
      @rocko7711 Год назад +1

      Bad Boys II lied to me?

  • @p.j.albertson7379
    @p.j.albertson7379 Год назад +657

    Ryan,
    I am the Royal Canadian Engineer Corps Sergeant Major, I wanted to take a moment to acknowledge your fantastic Mine Warfare video.
    I have been involved in live mine actions in Rwanda, The Former Yugoslavia and Afghanistan as well as employed as a Mine Warfare and Booby Traps instructor at our Combat Engineer school. I have to say that you have neatly summarized in 27 minutes what our ETHAR or Explosive Threat, Hazard and Recognition training takes days to deliver. That said, well done!
    Lastly, the time you took to recognize a Canadian Sapper who collaborated in the production of this initiative is truly appreciated!
    CHIMO!
    CWO Paul Albertson, RCE SM.

    • @harrythej9683
      @harrythej9683 Год назад +7

      I agree. That was just awesome, especially the concise presentation.

    • @bear76009
      @bear76009 Год назад +1

      Kinda curious, I know how concertina can screw up a lot of things. What would it do to one of those mine flails? Say if you had a field with wire on it too. Or would they just use one of them rocket tossed breaching lines?

    • @yourmommashouse
      @yourmommashouse Год назад

      @@bear76009 that’s classified

    • @bear76009
      @bear76009 Год назад

      @@yourmommashouse Oh i am sure its come up before now. Maybe not here but in the field. And something that basic is not classified. However concertina getting all wrapped up in those mine flails is likely a thing. Hopefully UE has wire n stuff in their minefields to gum up the russians

    • @dianapennepacker6854
      @dianapennepacker6854 Год назад +2

      So I learned that armies uses a chart or something that reminds me of a spread sheet. Kind of blew me away.
      How accurate are those things ‐ specifically when you find the enemies charts and have to clear an area. I don't see how they can be accurate or safe enough and soldiers can be lazy or make mistakes.

  • @SuiLagadema
    @SuiLagadema Год назад +499

    I'm from Chile, former grunt and we used to have a minefield on the very northern tip of our country (rivalries with Peru and Bolivia). It took around 20 years to de-mine the area and the warning signs are still there because the army, although confident there are no mines, still can't guarantee it 100%.

    • @PeterPanMan
      @PeterPanMan Год назад +33

      Question: How do you defend a long, skinny country? Answer: With a huge number of land mines. 😁 Thanks for your input, bro. Did Peru and Bolivia de-mine their territory? Very few Yankees are aware of the intense territorial disputes in South America. Hard to imagine being a grunt in a country as mountainous as Chile. It's always a long way up and a short way down. 😆 I hope Chile has lots of helicopters because that's what I did in the US Marine Corps...just fly over everything. 😆

    • @chesthoIe
      @chesthoIe Год назад +9

      @@PeterPanMan The World Dictionary of Modern Military Aircraft says Chile has 31 helicopters.

    • @SuiLagadema
      @SuiLagadema Год назад +8

      @@PeterPanMan I can't say for certain, though they did sign the Ottawa treat as well.

    • @dwaynemadsen964
      @dwaynemadsen964 Год назад +2

      "Si vas para Chile, te ruego que pases por donde no hay landmines!" I was in Purén during the Falkland Islands War between Argentina and the UK. Stay safe and thank you for sharing this with us.

    • @blackcountryme
      @blackcountryme Год назад +7

      ​@@dwaynemadsen964 The minefields on the Falklands laid by Argentina were not mapped.

  • @colinboynton192
    @colinboynton192 Год назад +643

    It always hits hard when these videos get to moment that clearly Ryan has had a personal experience with.

    • @davidfraser9365
      @davidfraser9365 Год назад +7

      I haven’t arrived at these points. I’ll make a note and comment on relevant intel that I see.

    • @BooBooBlueBerry
      @BooBooBlueBerry Год назад +39

      20:30 is one moment

    • @colinboynton192
      @colinboynton192 Год назад +10

      At 7:30 in this video is the one I really remember:
      ruclips.net/video/4vx0sVcPojg/видео.html

    • @carguybikeguy
      @carguybikeguy Год назад +7

      😔 yeah. it does.

    • @carguybikeguy
      @carguybikeguy Год назад +14

      @@BooBooBlueBerry I felt that sigh.

  • @m-n18
    @m-n18 Год назад +204

    On the "sometimes that person got lucky that day" I was that guy one day in Afghanistan, I was a 12B, we were convoying to arena air base in herat from camp stone also in herat, it was like 6 km, in the dark to pick up some cargo. Because we were just running to grab cargo we didn't bring our mine roller RG31s. We hadn't made this run and went to the wrong gate and we're directed to the right gate on the east side, being engineers we took the quickest route between two points a straight line which went through what we didn't know was an active minefield. We drove through it without a strike and found out from the now paper white gate guard what we just did and the post action pucker factor was off the charts.

    • @SonsOfLorgar
      @SonsOfLorgar Год назад +41

      Yikes!
      No point in any of you buying a lottery ticket or gamble after that thou, as you probably used at least a life time supply of luck each in those few minutes😬

    • @dangeary2134
      @dangeary2134 Год назад +11

      I think you drained your lucky charm for the rest of your life!!!

    • @alexlindekugel8727
      @alexlindekugel8727 Год назад +12

      thats is a kinda luck thats amazing unforchnently my buddy dident have that kinda luck :(

    • @senatorjosephmccarthy2720
      @senatorjosephmccarthy2720 Год назад +4

      @@alexlindekugel8727 , Sorry to hear of that. Welcome home brother.

    • @fuzzydunlop7928
      @fuzzydunlop7928 11 месяцев назад

      What are the chances you drove through one of the "phony" minefields mentioned in the video?

  • @stanbasov42
    @stanbasov42 Год назад +255

    Almost 28 minutes of pure joy. Lets learn something today

    • @malloc7108
      @malloc7108 Год назад +5

      It was a great video, but that's kind of a weird choice of words.

    • @michaelvincent6126
      @michaelvincent6126 Год назад +3

      Talking about seeing your guys hit by mines and having to stop and not go help them is nothing resembling joy.

    • @stanbasov42
      @stanbasov42 Год назад +2

      @@michaelvincent6126 you would be surprised about how many people enjoy history content for example. I particularly enjoy Malk Felton's content which is solely about WWII which took away lifes of dozen(s) of millions of people including my grandgrandpa.

    • @padraics
      @padraics Год назад +1

      ​@@stanbasov42 Many people enjoy learning, find Ryan's videos interesting and entertaining, etc but "pure joy" is still odd at best

    • @stanbasov42
      @stanbasov42 Год назад +2

      @@padraics English is not my mother tongue mate give me a break

  • @danielsestina6457
    @danielsestina6457 Год назад +117

    @Ryan Mcbeth As a 12b Combat Engineer and veteran of both Iraq and Afghanistan, great video and thanks for covering this. Having placed, cleared, and moved all the mentioned systems, there's so much confusion and mythology surrounding minefields UXOs, and IEDs. Love your content, thanks brother!!

    • @RyanMcBethProgramming
      @RyanMcBethProgramming  Год назад +39

      You’re the reason why my T-shirts, Aren’t about my channel - I make them so guys like you can wear them under uniforms and have a little something if your own. Thanks for doing what you do.

    • @danielsestina6457
      @danielsestina6457 Год назад +11

      @@RyanMcBethProgramming thank you too. Your definitely earned it

    • @jdogdarkness
      @jdogdarkness Год назад

      I concur with everything I said. But can u co-sign that Ryan is wrong, that _pressure-release mines_ *DO exist* ?
      They aren't the most common, but they exist.

    • @airplanemaniacgaming7877
      @airplanemaniacgaming7877 Год назад +1

      @@jdogdarkness There's a reason that those kinds of stories would exist, and they wouldnt exist if such mines didn't.

    • @njjeff201
      @njjeff201 Год назад +1

      Thank you for your Service 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @PTNLemay
    @PTNLemay Год назад +160

    I remember seeing the Claymore used in Stargate SG1. That show was impressive when it came to military accuracy. And I remember the show producers had a bit of pride in it. During an interview they said "Those P90 blanks are surprisingly expensive. We hope the audience appreciates them!"

    • @herrhaber9076
      @herrhaber9076 Год назад +22

      Mhh, okay, I didnt expect to find another SG1 fan here but hey ! You brightened my day :)

    • @HalfInt
      @HalfInt Год назад +23

      @@herrhaber9076 I expect us to be everywhere, just unmarked.

    • @talscorner3696
      @talscorner3696 Год назад +12

      P90's are in a slightly unusual calibre, if I'm not mistaken, and not as much used in either militaries or cinema so it doesn't surprise me that much.
      Still, man, I loved that show to bits!

    • @TRAZ4004
      @TRAZ4004 Год назад +11

      @@talscorner3696 5.7mm. The price has dropped with many gun companies releasing pistol and sub variants. The idea was to create a round with little recoil and armor defeating capabilities.

    • @moritamikamikara3879
      @moritamikamikara3879 Год назад

      SG-1?
      Accurate?
      I uhh... wish you good luck shooting down that glider with your homing AT-4 buddy!

  • @acchaladka
    @acchaladka Год назад +223

    Thank you for doing this topic, Ryan. My cousin in the IDF was EOD and was killed by a command detonated device. It was his last week of service and he chose to go out in order to protect the new guys just arrived to replace him. RIP Noam, 1995.

    • @Dunkopf
      @Dunkopf Год назад +16

      RIP Noam. It's wild that "two weeks from retirement" is a joke, but also depressingly Accurate.

    • @SonsOfLorgar
      @SonsOfLorgar Год назад +10

      That's a really shitty way to loose a family member😬

    • @markfryer9880
      @markfryer9880 Год назад +7

      May Noam RIP!
      Lest We Forget!

    • @SteveWalkey
      @SteveWalkey Год назад +1

      RIP to a valiant and courageous warrior, and an inspiration to all. His story tells you all you need to know about who he was. 🇬🇧

    • @agnelomascarenhas8990
      @agnelomascarenhas8990 Год назад +1

      accha ladka = good boy in Hindi/Hindustani

  • @marvintpandroid2213
    @marvintpandroid2213 Год назад +244

    Spicy footpaths.

  • @seneca983
    @seneca983 Год назад +62

    26:23 In case anyone's curious, "pioneeri" is the Finnish word for "field engineer" and "vänrikki" is the lowest commissioned officer rank in the Finnish army, so basically equivalent to a 2nd lieutenant.

    • @dogefort8410
      @dogefort8410 Год назад +2

      You pronounce that v as a f?

    • @seneca983
      @seneca983 Год назад +1

      @@dogefort8410 No, (standard) Finnish doesn't have the 'f' sound for the most part, though it does appear in some loanwords (but eastern dialects use 'f' more). In older loans, like this one, Fs are often approximated with Vs.

    • @alaric_
      @alaric_ Год назад +4

      @@dogefort8410 The V is pronounced as the V in 'Vanish' or 'VTOL'. Finnish pronouncing never changes, so if you see V, it's pronounced the same way no matter what word is or where it is. No silent letters either, every letter is pronounced. In that regard Finnish is an easy language. On the word 'vänrikki', the Ä is pronounced as the A in 'cat'. The regular A is pronounced like in the 'car'.

    • @elementalgolem5498
      @elementalgolem5498 Год назад +1

      id like to add to that Corporal Sindre Rotegård. here we have conscription meaning that the equivalent ranks of Private, and Private first class for the US army are Conscripts serving their 12 months mandatory service (we have 19 months but the last 7 are divided as 10 days of training per year til the age of 44 for soldiers, and 55 for officers as a reservist) then there's vise corporal, the lowest ranking "employee" or professional soldier, corporal is the rank after. OR 4 for the NATO grading system this means he has probably 3-4 years of military experience

  • @drenk7
    @drenk7 Год назад +33

    Ryan a very informative presentation.
    I encountered Claymores in my Basic Training. This was in 1972 😮

    • @markmitchell457
      @markmitchell457 Год назад +1

      1972 was the year I was eligible, but not called up.
      I was a NJROTC guy, so good pickings for the draft board.
      It was incredible motivation to stay in college.

  • @bjrnmagnusson5351
    @bjrnmagnusson5351 Год назад +25

    I'm a 12B veteran and the one thing that I wished that you stressed more is that there are no friendly landmines. No matter how well marked or how dedicated your soldiers are, mines kill without discrimination.
    There are no friendly landmines.

  • @Davros-vi4qg
    @Davros-vi4qg Год назад +44

    As a very ex combat medic, I still remember being shown how to ‘clear’ an area of mines, to aid casualty extraction. We did this with a ‘non magnetic’ probe, or an aluminium tent peg to anybody else in the British Army of the time. We reckoned our chances of successfully doing this… yeah, not good. Keep up the good work and stay strong Staff.

    • @userequaltoNull
      @userequaltoNull Год назад +5

      That's how they did it in WW2. I don't envy them lol

  • @kerry9125
    @kerry9125 Год назад +9

    My wife uses the audio-triggered mines in the offensive mode. She follows me around and every time I say something, she explodes on me.

  • @chakra4735
    @chakra4735 Год назад +34

    I was raised on my dad's navy stories - ships and patrol aircraft. All these infantry stories are new to me. I've learned a lot from your videos. Thanks.

  • @theutoid5663
    @theutoid5663 Год назад +25

    I used to do civil UXO (unexploded ordnance) removal and worked with a lot of ex-Army EOD guys. They're pretty special.

  • @bc-guy852
    @bc-guy852 Год назад +19

    Very impressive - - for Some Guy in his bathrobe. The amount of work you put into this is clearly obvious and appreciated.
    Thanks Sgt Ryan and team.

    • @juhbellz
      @juhbellz Год назад

      The Bath Robe Barbarian

  • @roanokevalleyiwla
    @roanokevalleyiwla Год назад +24

    As a former Army Combat Engineer you did a great job with this video - kudos to you sergeant! If your pondering future military explainer videos, I think military engineering would be an interesting topic for your audience. Especially the aspects of how military engineers support operations through mobility, counter-mobilty, and survivability. Thanks and keep up the good work.

    • @antonnurwald5700
      @antonnurwald5700 Год назад +1

      Absolutely, I would love to hear about this topic!

  • @schlirf
    @schlirf Год назад +19

    When the wall went down my lady and I headed up to OP Alpha to cross over the "Grenz". She asked if the Mines (SM-70s and the like) had been removed. I told her yes, except for the anti-tank mines; and to be careful because they trigger at 400 lbs. And trust me, it was a Long ass walk back to Fulda.

    • @ghandimauler
      @ghandimauler Год назад +1

      You had to know it would be....

    • @joblo341
      @joblo341 Год назад +2

      Telling your old lady she is big enough to trip a 400lb tank mine is going make any trip longer than a step, a long ass walk!😂

  • @lewisderfuss7537
    @lewisderfuss7537 Год назад +17

    While stationed at Ft Irwin I had the honor of seeing a Miclik in action during a huge training exercise back around 2004(?). It was incredible to watch. I was a MP snd K9 handler so I got to experience a lot of interesting things.

  • @AgentX2006
    @AgentX2006 Год назад +42

    What are your thoughts on the usage of RAAMS in Vuhledar where they were deploying them behind advancing armor so that they were hitting them when retreating though an area they though was clear because they passed through it safely just beforehand. Would this be considered a Situational minefield?

    • @RyanMcBethProgramming
      @RyanMcBethProgramming  Год назад +23

      Yeah-I guess it would

    • @ronblack7870
      @ronblack7870 Год назад

      yes the videos of those attempted assaults by the russians are great.

    • @Kaboomf
      @Kaboomf Год назад +4

      @@RyanMcBethProgramming Ukraine is reportedly using these a lot, either directly into enemy units or to re-mine areas the muscovites have previously cleared. Drone spots a lot of tank tracks suggesting frequent traffic in one spot? Mine that spot with artillery. Kind of a combination of nuisance and situational mining.
      Mainly though, it seems like artillery delivered mines are proving to be an effective anti vehicle weapon when fired at enemy units. Unlike a cluster munition that detonates on impact, these have a chance of a miss becoming a hit when the vehicle moves. There's several drone videos now where you see the little puffs of smoke in the air where the artillery shell breaks open to eject the mines over russian armour units, then one or more vehicles hit mines as they keep driving.

  • @BoxheadHakx
    @BoxheadHakx Год назад +21

    You're a real inspiration for other veterans. Thank you for the entertainment, and thank you for all of your service at home and abroad.

  • @cognisant307
    @cognisant307 Год назад +8

    20:40 That sigh said more than every word in this video combined.

  • @matthewmclean836
    @matthewmclean836 Год назад +7

    I think the Ukrainians used situational mine fields to extremely good effect in and around bakhmut/vuhledar (forget which). Enemy would push through/clear mines with their armor and then the ukrainians would fire artillery laid mines in behind them so that when forced to retreat they would be retreating through a minefield once thought cleared. Might wanna fact check that but thats how the story goes i think.

  • @christ3737
    @christ3737 Год назад +10

    As a former Canadian Engineer (041), I really wish you were giving these lectures years ago. Accurate, memorable and non-sleep inducing. Chimo. Well done.

  • @jeffroberts9116
    @jeffroberts9116 Год назад +5

    1 hour to hand clear a meter of ground?! Drill SGT would disagree. 15 minutes in MOPP 4! Man that sucked (summer of ‘93 Ft. Benning school for wayward boys)

  • @MESMURDA
    @MESMURDA Год назад +5

    YES FINALLY SOME ENGINEER LOVE

    • @bryan55622
      @bryan55622 Год назад +2

      All I say is we demolish mines, doors, and 40 beers

    • @RyanMcBethProgramming
      @RyanMcBethProgramming  Год назад +4

      That’s one of the reasons that my merchandise isn’t about me and my channel, it’s about you. I make my shirts so that they can be worn stealth under your uniform.

    • @MESMURDA
      @MESMURDA Год назад

      @@bryan55622 lmao toooooo true

    • @MESMURDA
      @MESMURDA Год назад

      @@RyanMcBethProgramming keep it secret keep it safe, secret squirrel mode.

  • @effsixteenblock50
    @effsixteenblock50 Год назад +10

    Right before you said, "This video took over 300 hours to make...", I was thinking, "Man, he put a lot of work into this one!" Thanks for your hard work and accuracy!

  • @robsmith4374
    @robsmith4374 Год назад +5

    How long do you have to wait for the engineers to get you out of a mine field? You have the rest of your life.

  • @ZaphodHarkonnen
    @ZaphodHarkonnen Год назад +10

    That sigh @20:45 is a perfect acknowledgement of how difficult it is to suppress that massive urge to go help a friend or colleague in danger. Even when you know in your head it’s the right thing to do. Your heart is screaming every obscenity you ever learnt getting you to charge on in. Even if it’s right you’re still going to feel shit.

  • @LecherousCthulhu
    @LecherousCthulhu Год назад +5

    Ukraine actually has a great use of tactical minefields. They allow Russian Troops and Vehicles to walk into their minefields and once the enemy is close enough they use artillery placed mines behind the enemy to cut of their escape route or increase the casualties that Russia suffers on retreat. They used it in the Volhedar tank battle where they placed several anti-tank mines behind the enemy after they entered the anti-tank mine field so the route Russia thought was safe no longer was.
    I think that's a great usage of mines because the enemy probably won't know that they've just been surrounded by a mine field until it's to late

  • @weeliano
    @weeliano Год назад +15

    Former sapper during my National Service here. This episodes brings back memories of my mine planting exercises over a football field sized area with dummy AT-mines. We also live fired the Swedish FFV-013 which is essentially a giant claymore mine designed for beach defense and low flying aircraft attacking airfields. I remembered firing a mine field clearing device known as the comet which fires a rocket pulling a string of explosive packets and after landing detonating them. Cleared a lot of blinds during my time... not a fun experience.

    • @SonsOfLorgar
      @SonsOfLorgar Год назад +3

      Saw a mine effect demo at Ravlunda once, the defense munition 13 and 13R sure as hell didn't leave much more than perforated scrap of the metal dumpsters, junk cars or plastic water barrels used to represent a soft skin and APC column with crews...
      (For non Swedish viewers, the Swedish defense munition 13 and 13R(reduced) are claymore type command detonated mines of 21kg and 12kg respectively, while the US M18 claymore is around 1kg... The 13R also has multiple blasting cap sockets to be easily daisy-chained or fitted with more than one method of ignition both are often mixed with Anti-vehicle mine 14 which is a tree mounted EFP mine)

    • @terencew3840
      @terencew3840 Год назад

      SCE?

    • @weeliano
      @weeliano Год назад +1

      @@terencew3840 Pioneer 2nd Guards but received my FESC with the now defunct Armored Engineers in the 90s.

  • @jasonh6262
    @jasonh6262 Год назад +7

    Great episode. McBeth, you're an HNIC. Love content. Love you're a goofball. Keep up the great work.

  • @RinAldrin
    @RinAldrin Год назад +2

    Hearing about the EOD specialists reminded me of a quote "If you see an EOD tech running, follow him".

  • @sheldoniusRex
    @sheldoniusRex Год назад +7

    I wish my battalion had the Assault Breacher Vehicle back in '03.

  • @dudester7876
    @dudester7876 Год назад +9

    I'm former USN EOD. I just wanted to say great job on this video you covered a ton of material on a very short amount of time which I know was not a easy feat. I'm going to save this video for the next time someone asks me about land mines so it doesn't have me babbling incoherently for an hour or so talking about them.

    • @ghandimauler
      @ghandimauler Год назад

      Would that be in the line of Clearance Diver or is there other EOD folks in the USN? (curious!)

  • @stevekissel605
    @stevekissel605 Год назад +7

    I worked at a testing/proving ground. The different vehicles and attachments were so different. We tested everything u talked about. We still found mines from General Pattons testing days.

  • @Flamechr
    @Flamechr Год назад +6

    The tilt rods in yugoslavian trees was really scary.
    The story goes like this. A Danish mechanised squad driving in a M113 on a rutine patrol in a forrest is brougt to a stop because the command yelled stop over the intercom.
    When the rest of the squad look at him his face was white as a ghost and infront of his face was a tilt rod antitank mine.

  • @rebellord91
    @rebellord91 Год назад +12

    I love these videos, and his desire to educate and inform.

  • @dr.tankenstien
    @dr.tankenstien Год назад +4

    I am so glad to see that Ryan gave a glimpse of the APOBS System currently used by the US Army and US Marines... It was designed and built by the Ensign-Bickford Aerospace and Defense Company. EBAD's unofficial motto is ... "Designing new ways to blow sh*t up since 1836!" 😂

  • @kittymervine6115
    @kittymervine6115 Год назад +4

    RUclips, leave this man alone! I now have two neighbor students who are watching these videos. Information, given truthfully without the BS. He's a great role model, well most of the time, and the teens like him.

  • @monkeystealhead
    @monkeystealhead Год назад +2

    3:00 Mines also can move if not properly installed near a river. There were incidents on the german-german border.

  • @GruntHumor
    @GruntHumor Год назад +8

    Learned quite a few things from this video, thanks. I remember hearing animals (presumably ) hitting ordnance in guantamo bay, cuba back in 2011. Lots of un accounted for ordnance. Some mines from the sea, some from land, ect. And while some are in operable, some are waiting to maime and/or kill.

  • @AllanSitte
    @AllanSitte Год назад +2

    General: "Have you ever been in a mine field?"
    Reporter: "No"
    General: "There is all that has gotta be is one mine. And that is intense."
    The General - Gen. H. Norman Schwarzkopf
    The Context - Answering questions of a reporter after giving the "Mother of all Briefings" after the first few days of Operation Desert Storm
    R.I.P. Gen Schwarzkopf

  • @primo1331
    @primo1331 Год назад +6

    Fantastic and knowledge filled as always sir. Thanks for the education!

  • @ericcadman1329
    @ericcadman1329 Год назад +4

    Man, that sigh when you said "burning alive in their vehicles" said alot without saying any words.
    That being said, incredible video! Your ability to make military minutiae interesting is awesome

  • @gravitydefeater
    @gravitydefeater Год назад +4

    Ryan: "you cannot charge through a minefield"
    Zhukov: "well no, but actually yes"

  • @whitescar2
    @whitescar2 Год назад +3

    The best way to make a phoney mine field is to add in a few real mines at the "front" and then just leave empty pits or disturbed areas for the rest of the field.
    Someone may likely drive into the first mine, and once detected, the entire "field" needs to be cleared before anyone dares proceed at pace.

  • @clintstinkeye5607
    @clintstinkeye5607 Год назад +3

    I had a friend, an American, who's dad made him join the Rhodesian army during the Bush War.
    He said he planted at least 10,000 land mines.
    He said he'd never forgive himself and donates as much money as he can afford to organizations that are dedicated to removing land mines.
    Interesting fact - Westerners call that war the Rhodesian Bush War, Zimbabweans call it the Liberation War.

  • @positivelynegative9149
    @positivelynegative9149 Год назад +2

    I have some great fotos, that I made, of a tank that ran over its own plow... Yeah. 🤣
    It was the plowtank in my platoon, 1/72 AR, 2nd ID, S. KOREA.
    Great video, Ryan. 👍

  • @gunpowdertimothy5644
    @gunpowdertimothy5644 Год назад +7

    Love your videos man, I can always expect a great and well put together breakdown from you. Do you have any thoughts on the US-China situation or the viability of a Chinese victory in a conflict relating to Taiwan (The Russo-Ukrainian War seems to overshadow the potential China-Taiwan conflict). Also, a video on how defensive fortifications/positions are typically structured, constructed and used effectively in conflict would be interesting, especially seeing as they're being employed quite a bit in Ukraine.

    • @deriznohappehquite
      @deriznohappehquite Год назад

      He’s an Army guy, not Navy or Marines, so he might not feel comfortable giving an opinion.

  • @jerrythurston4644
    @jerrythurston4644 Год назад +3

    Big Sgt laying down the high speed block of instruction.... probably more 411 in 30 minutes than most joes get in their career.

  • @Jadiaz-ev9hm
    @Jadiaz-ev9hm Год назад +4

    As a 12B, all mines are anti-personnel mines when you're up close and personel with them.
    Fortunately, we have lots of fun tools to take them out at a distance. Unfortunately, that isn't always an option...

    • @bryan55622
      @bryan55622 Год назад +1

      Yea also 12b, depends on the weight requirement for the mine but yea any mine will fuck you

    • @karls4777
      @karls4777 Год назад +1

      Yeah Light Div we had the Bangalore and that was about it.

  • @asajcad
    @asajcad Год назад +4

    Sent Ryan a question about mine probing on Twitter a week ago and not only did he respond to me but now delivered an incredible longform piece describing every aspect of mine warfare. This guy is legit.

  • @ivyking4149
    @ivyking4149 Год назад +2

    #20:40
    That was a memory.
    I can see it in year eyes and hear it in your breath.
    I want to say I appreciate you and your content.
    Thank you Ryan.

  • @TealJosh
    @TealJosh Год назад +3

    Bangalore torpedoes are wicked to blow up. You push it in place, evacuate just barely far enough and then set it off. You will feel the heat of the blast. Anyways, this was my biz as finnish conscript. Good memories. Unfortunately I was a troop transport truck driver with combat engineers, so I received most of the powerpoint presentations the actual combat engineers were taught, but just some of the practical training and none of the qualification tests. My duties with maintaining vehicles got in the way of the stuff that actually would've been cool.

  • @wtfbuddy1
    @wtfbuddy1 Год назад +4

    Great presentation, touched the surface but not down a rabbit hole, here we had a saying "Follow the Sapper" and I've worked with many EOD who don't get the respect they deserve. Cheers

    • @RyanMcBethProgramming
      @RyanMcBethProgramming  Год назад +4

      That’s one of the reasons that my merchandise isn’t about me, it’s about you. I wanted to offer shirts that soldiers could wear under their uniforms to reflect the pride they have in their occupation.

  • @Alain.Robert
    @Alain.Robert Год назад +4

    Very well done. You're a great teacher !

  • @germnbill
    @germnbill Год назад +12

    Great video and very informative! As a former Panzerpionier of the Bundeswehr I can only add a few things from my point of view and knowledge. For breaching minefields or Minensperren (mine barriers in German) we use a mine flail instead of a plough or rollers (as did the US in WW2 for example), as well as a ladder charge instead of a line charge (same result though :D ). Our EOD platoons are also mostly equipped with a M82 Barrett and/ or AWM in order to just kinetically set of a mine by shooting it or the detonator . Another method of clearing/ breaching through openly laid minefields is to just drag them out of the way with a rope or whatever means you have at your disposal. I have a suggestion for another video following up this one in order to inform your subscribers: Indications that you are in a minefield before anybody actually triggers one.

    • @germnbill
      @germnbill Год назад +1

      Also. Thanks for educating me! I did not know about these new top attack mines. I've been out a while.

    • @daminox
      @daminox Год назад

      There's a youtuber named "UA EOD" who conducts mine and UXO removal in Ukraine, and in some of his videos he uses the rope technique when dealing with antivehicle mines.

  • @richardgeslison5937
    @richardgeslison5937 Год назад +3

    Thank you for the video, can tell you put a lot of work into these! I think I speak for a great many of us all in saying I hope the future of land mines is that there isn't one... but that could only happen if war itself stopped

  • @Tore_Lund
    @Tore_Lund Год назад +2

    So machine scattered mines, the ones deployed from moving vehicles or from air, do these vehicles have a system that generate a map too, similar to if deployed by hand? Not only because of utility from a military perspective, but the idea to be able to remove them easily after a conflict.

  • @ryanfischer6550
    @ryanfischer6550 Год назад +3

    This video, this topic, coming on the anniversary of one of the worst days of deployment. RIP SSG Mac.
    Thank you Ryan. Your commitment to the troops and producing high value training is unmatched. And even after a ten year career as a 19D; it’s incredible how much I didn’t know.

  • @jeffjr84
    @jeffjr84 Год назад +3

    You know there is one mine clearing vehicle that seems absolutely terrifying.. the flail tank man.. or that thing that the UN uses that also has the flails.. those terrify me.. the rest are cool af man.. and i didn't know you were COE.. respect.

    • @RyanMcBethProgramming
      @RyanMcBethProgramming  Год назад +4

      Mine foils really don’t work that well, which is why you don’t see them much anymore

    • @TheNapalmFTW
      @TheNapalmFTW Год назад +2

      @@RyanMcBethProgramming top gear used one to tear down a house. It worked okay 😂

    • @jeffjr84
      @jeffjr84 Год назад +1

      @@TheNapalmFTW yeah thats the source of my terror.. seeing that in action lol.. i worked with combine harvesters as a kid and had some close calls lol.. not sure what to call that but anything high speed spinny bulls*** worries me as a mech in general without guards.. might be the training idk.

    • @jeffjr84
      @jeffjr84 Год назад

      @@RyanMcBethProgramming also good man.. i mean they work.. like they did on shermans at dday but that was one of hobarts funnies.. i don't think they meant to keep on doing that from what ive read.

  • @brett76544
    @brett76544 Год назад +3

    12 B, here and this was a nice summary. It is interesting seeing what other engineers from around the world do with mines. Some are creative, innovative or downright sadistic.

  • @shortlivedglory3314
    @shortlivedglory3314 Год назад +2

    If you're afraid of landmines, just be sure to wear your PT belt and you'll be fine.

  • @johnathanstupar9617
    @johnathanstupar9617 Год назад +3

    I recall a time when I was working in Europe and had the opportunity to speak with EPD Personnel and learn a bit about their role and their job in a training environment. It was a wonderful experience and I'll never know how they fit themselves into the bomb suit with their great amounts of courage.

  • @BFB_tg
    @BFB_tg Год назад +3

    Thank you for the video, my friends at AFU watch you regularly and topics like field engineering or UXO-related training is time consuming, thus often skipped for regular troops, so we have to educate ourselves) what about a video for the field fortifications? That would be just awesome

  • @QALibrary
    @QALibrary Год назад +2

    Ryan a question for you... Western Desert campaign of the Second World War the trope is due to such large usage of land mines the Allies used bombers to clear the land mines - a) did this really happen? b) how well would this work? C) would the area be very hard to traverse afterwards due to holes everywhere or as you explained the explosions are meant to go upwards?

  • @i_like-planes
    @i_like-planes Год назад +1

    I’d like to add a remark about what to do if you find a Land mine (advice for civilians) from a person who’s from a country that is heavily mined: if you find a land mine, STAY WHERE YOU ARE!!! DONT MOVE AND CALL THE POLICE.

  • @oceanexploration
    @oceanexploration Год назад +1

    I spent several years working with EOD as a UXO geophysicist. They have...shall I say, a different sense of humor than most folks.

  • @akizeta
    @akizeta Год назад +1

    Weird tangential question: Does CAT-UXO have anything about nuclear weapons?

  • @LeftFlamingo
    @LeftFlamingo Год назад +1

    good and educational video, as always. Note on the "pioneer" credited. Pioneers in the FDF are mostly equivalent to the Army Engineers. They blow shit up and then build new shit =) Vänrikki is his rank, ensign or second lieutenant.

  • @donchaput8278
    @donchaput8278 Год назад +2

    Another absolutely excellent video! Thank you!

  • @Casper8x
    @Casper8x Год назад +1

    Strangely land mines were a big part of my enlistment into the Marine Corp. My first unit cleared the minefields in GTMO 1999/2000 and second unit breached Iraqi mined defensive lines in 2003 with scud clearing EOD follow on ops.

  • @euunul
    @euunul Год назад +1

    After seeing developments in Ukraine:
    1. Contrary to the thumbnail mine clearing vehicles dont eat mines for breakfast.
    2. In theory you have so many mine clearing/removal/breaching but in practice you don't because the enemy won't just watch you deploying MICLICs and rollers and plough through their fields. In practice they'll rain artillery on you.

  • @Sammy_SillyPilot
    @Sammy_SillyPilot Год назад +1

    There are 2 people in the military you never want to see, and probably will never.
    EOD Soldiers, and CBRN Specialists.

  • @markmitchell457
    @markmitchell457 Год назад +1

    300 hours. That's dedication. Thanks! Good video, scary as hell.
    🇺🇦🇺🇸

  • @timsullivan4566
    @timsullivan4566 Год назад +1

    Great video!
    (nit-pick poinr : when you referred to IUDs as "popular" in the Iraq war, suspect you meant to say "prevelent" or "made infamous"...)

  • @vijfmei4720
    @vijfmei4720 Год назад +2

    Ryan ,
    Thank you very much for creating this informative video. I have to say as a physician, every minute of this video hurts. As a physician you train for at least 10 to 13 years to learn how to save or alleviate someone and seeing what we have build as a species to hurt a fellow mankind is hurtful. I got a visceral feeling watching it as to the level of mayhem our weapons can create. Nevertheless, your detailed video is very informative and I have to thank you for it. I really do hope as a species with such a capable creativity that we will focus our creativity toward more constructive tools.

  • @StrilanGaming
    @StrilanGaming Год назад +1

    “If you see EOD, it’s because you got yourself in sticky situations.”
    Me, being a combat engineer doing route clearance having EOD with us almost every op: Orly, sarnt? 😏

  • @rot7296
    @rot7296 Год назад +1

    Just to add: "modern" AT mines like the AT2 are relatively immune to sympathetic explosions. Just ask the Russians, lol.

  • @dennistate5953
    @dennistate5953 Год назад +1

    I was verifiably the only member of a certain humanitarian organization supporting Ottawa saying "...long as our boys are across the DMZ from them boyz them damned land mines can stay there far as i'ze concerned..." popularity conditions failed...again not the prom king...

  • @chuckboise
    @chuckboise Год назад +2

    I was on mine roller tank in Korea and worked with Engineers on 2 live fire MICLIC exercise. We would detect edge of minefield(simulated) back up the tank a few feet and Engineers would blow the MICLICs up right next to us creating a huge path. Years later we used them on Route Predators in Baghdad during the 2004 uprisings to destroy IED/mined barricades put up overnight, awesome shit.

  • @dirtrepairman
    @dirtrepairman Год назад +1

    Firstly, thanks for all the excellent information. I appreciate your professionalism. Personally, I don’t know if I could have been so impartial when reviewing that insulting interview with Douglas MacGregor.
    My question is this:
    Has anyone considered using beehive rounds in an anti drone role?
    Obviously placement would be critical due to possibility of collateral damage. But due to the nature and area of effect of the rounds, it seems to me that any drone in this proximity would be destroyed or at least disabled.

  • @TheRedNate
    @TheRedNate Год назад +1

    Sea mines aren't all that different, just bigger and for ships. We "Department of Boat People" sorta know about them, and have Minesweeper ships to take care of them.

  • @richardcaldwell5313
    @richardcaldwell5313 Год назад +1

    Seems clearing landmines have improved since the mid 90s when I trained for it. When I was in all engineers had mine and explosive training, kind like all soldiers get trained to be infantry, but there is still people with the advanced specialized training. My main job was equipment operations so I was trained in using the min dispersion systems and mine clearing vehicles. Even after my Airborne and Ranger school the Army did not put me in a Ranger regiment but sent me back to do my main job (I wanted to be in the Ranger regiment btw). My commander told me that they could not afford to lose me as not many people had the Vehicle training and exsperance like myself. Sucked but that's the military for you. You do what they need you to do.

  • @thomasfx3190
    @thomasfx3190 Год назад +1

    We had claymores in our gear, but someone else was dealing with Tank Mines and such. I blew up one in training (Klak-Klak-Klak) and wanted to watch it go off, but my E-7 instructor saw it differently and he jumped on me and gave me some corrective instruction while my face was in the dirt.

  • @benhertz9826
    @benhertz9826 Год назад +1

    My biggest concern for the coming Ukrainian counter offensive is mines, I hope the Ukrainians have some great plans in place to breach the minefields quickly.

  • @jacquelinetaylor8683
    @jacquelinetaylor8683 Год назад +1

    I know, as a Grandma I shouldnt enjoy videos about killing equipment but these are so interesting.

  • @JeffreyBlair
    @JeffreyBlair Год назад +2

    Thanks for all your hard work @Ryan McBeth

  • @carsonw8223
    @carsonw8223 Год назад +1

    Essayons! US Sapper, and experienced minefield planner here. Great video! You probably know more about mines now than any other grunt! Some of your generalizations must have come from our allies and partners, because they are simply not true for the US, and in a couple cases, the opposite is true. I hesitate to point them out so that our capabilities and tactics remain obtuse. Your video is so good at helping people understand mine warfare, I don't want it to be TOO good! Even I learned a thing or too. Keep up the good work!

  • @IRBitterSoB
    @IRBitterSoB Год назад +1

    New merch: Ryan McBeth Dual-Purpose Dinner Plate.

  • @johnloman2098
    @johnloman2098 Год назад +1

    My step-brother was an EOD Marine he destroyed all kinds of stuff in Iraq and Afghanistan

  • @stewpacalypse7104
    @stewpacalypse7104 Год назад +1

    My son is USAFEOD and leaving for S. Korea in 2 weeks. Very proud of my boy!

  • @marks8259
    @marks8259 Год назад +1

    This was very helpful for the dog poop in the backyard 😂

  • @ggoddkkiller1342
    @ggoddkkiller1342 Год назад +1

    ''Such ineffective and time taking solutions i must say! If there is a mine field send cheap vehicles and soldiers one after another until a path is cleared'' Vladimir Facistirovich Putin

  • @mikeblair2594
    @mikeblair2594 Год назад +1

    Hey Ryan, it !looks like there was a situational mine field in Vulidar when the artillery were picking off the Russian tanks. During the chaos, apparently the artillery chucked a couple a shells full of mines behind them. When the last tanks turned around and boogied the hit the mines that weren't there before.
    This is just What I was told by my friend who's fighting in (I think) the zaporisia(sic?) Oblast. I got sent home with mortar measles on my butt and right leg, but I get call enough to keep me in the loop.

  • @TheGreg6466
    @TheGreg6466 Год назад +1

    Claymores are also triggered when the enemy crosses one of the two red laser beams and they don't hurt team mates.......playing call of duty taught me how they work. 😁

  • @NorthParrot
    @NorthParrot Год назад +1

    Fun fact about The Ottawa Treaty, every signatory of it had to sign the document with a French fry that they pulled out of a poutine that each country was given. The gravy was the ink for the document.