Wunderwaffe: Nazi Germany's "Miracle Weapons"

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  • Опубликовано: 24 авг 2024

Комментарии • 422

  • @christophereyton342
    @christophereyton342 3 года назад +212

    I've figured it out. "Simon" is actual a set of identical sextuplets. Their goal as "Simon" is to shock and awe all the other RUclips channels into submission and have "Simon" recognized as the Grand Overlord of RUclips, Master of the 1000 Channels. We support you in this cause, Your Excellency.

    • @theluftwaffle1
      @theluftwaffle1 3 года назад +7

      Maybe Simon has mastered cloning technology?

    • @IrishMike22
      @IrishMike22 3 года назад +14

      I, for one, welcome our new Simon Overlords. 👍

    • @christophereyton342
      @christophereyton342 3 года назад +2

      @@theluftwaffle1 I was thinking that could be an alternative explanation. Or time travel perhaps. :)

    • @The_Daily_Tomato
      @The_Daily_Tomato 3 года назад +2

      Already a slave to the Gnome salt mines.....*Whispers* I support a Whistlerite freedom movement ;)

    • @rickyduck
      @rickyduck 3 года назад +3

      I just watched a video on octomom... Literally the previous video 😂

  • @route2070
    @route2070 3 года назад +151

    Most RUclipsrs, "Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, Happy New Year, end of 2020, and retrospectives."
    Simon, "Nazi weapons!"

    • @letoubib21
      @letoubib21 3 года назад +3

      CU next millenium *. . .*

    • @IrishMike22
      @IrishMike22 3 года назад +6

      Whatever works mate; 14 million individual subscribers over his 27 channels can't all be wrong.....😉

    • @route2070
      @route2070 3 года назад +2

      @@IrishMike22 Not complaining, well I guess a bit from the topic whiplash.

    • @IrishMike22
      @IrishMike22 3 года назад +1

      @@route2070 I gotcha buddy, just making jokes. Happy new year 🤜🍻

    • @route2070
      @route2070 3 года назад +2

      @@IrishMike22 sorry half the time can't tell jokes from a fan that feels slighted .

  • @luminaether
    @luminaether 3 года назад +132

    Do we reach the singularity when Simon gets to the point of producing 25 hours of videos and podcasts every 24 hour day?

    • @theluftwaffle1
      @theluftwaffle1 3 года назад +7

      What if Simon has mastered cloning?

    • @luminaether
      @luminaether 3 года назад +2

      @@theluftwaffle1 you know, after I posted that, I could have sworn Simon glitched out and looked like Max Headroom for just a second .

    • @Johnnyoity
      @Johnnyoity 3 года назад

      @@theluftwaffle1 Time Turner

    • @ericstamps4717
      @ericstamps4717 3 года назад +3

      SIMONGULARITY?! I am ashamed...

  • @libertarian1637
    @libertarian1637 3 года назад +36

    The V1 was a pulse jet not a rocket; a jet uses atmospheric oxygen while a rocket uses a rocket motor which contains an oxidizer which provides the oxygen for the fuel. While you can qualify both as missiles they are not both rockets.

    • @jakekoontz4445
      @jakekoontz4445 3 года назад +5

      Simon called it a rocket but also described it and said it used a Pulse Jet engine so I think who every wrote the script is to blame here

    • @Jognt
      @Jognt 3 года назад +1

      If you're gonna "Well akchually," allow me to return the favor: *Akchually* the liquid oxygen oxidizer was stored in a seperate tank, not in the rocket motor. :P

    • @ruesmale6940
      @ruesmale6940 2 года назад

      Thank you for that nerds.

  • @pbxn-3rdx-85percent
    @pbxn-3rdx-85percent 3 года назад +35

    Wunderwaffe: Nazi Germany's Miracle Weapons.
    WunderWAFFLES: Delicious waffles miraculously fat free.

  • @tardvandecluntproductions1278
    @tardvandecluntproductions1278 3 года назад +121

    Ah yes, the Nazi side projects.
    Very, very expensive side projects.

    • @gudmunduringigudmundsson9287
      @gudmunduringigudmundsson9287 3 года назад +9

      I heard that the Vengence projects cost as much as the Manhattan project.
      Which is definitely a highly contributing factor for the allied success.
      I mean.. just..
      that's an expensive spicy meat-a-ball for a country of 1/4 the population of USA I belive..
      At war with basically everyone else..
      Being bombed a lot.. having 90% of its oomph freezing its nubs off in middle of nowhere somewhere in gurkistan..
      conducting mass genocide at home "relieving" much of its educated workforce of would be duty..
      With a management partying on on all them new "cocktails"..
      expensive is not even coming close to cost of that spicy V meat-a-ball..
      That and the lack of useage they got out of Bismarck and Prinz Eugen..
      And the fuel shortages..
      And the sonar..
      And radar..
      And the behavior that lead to the appearance to the rest of the world they needed to be ganked and stomped..
      Oh yes.. the V projects were.. like.. ruclips.net/video/ecH8tgass1A/видео.html

    • @ABrit-bt6ce
      @ABrit-bt6ce 3 года назад +2

      @@gudmunduringigudmundsson9287 Hey if they had just bought some Venuswalian oil everyone could have just got along. . . I'm not saying spoilers.

    • @gudmunduringigudmundsson9287
      @gudmunduringigudmundsson9287 3 года назад +1

      @@ABrit-bt6ce Britain rocks!
      And.
      We might have had a full on
      Command & Conquer Red Alert situation instead
      ruclips.net/video/ezHtdBusZd4/видео.html
      if WW2 hadn't played out just like that.
      Except it would probably have been a lot saltier Red Alert with a lot more nukes and no chronosphere.
      No spoilers indeed. 👊😇
      Merry Christmas.
      Love. Respect. Responsibility.
      🦋

    • @danieldestree3235
      @danieldestree3235 3 года назад +1

      they weren't side projects to hitler. bigger is not always bigger . dude was such a narrssasist

    • @hernerweisenberg7052
      @hernerweisenberg7052 3 года назад +1

      I doubt that any project in WW2 was as expensive as the manhattan project. Whatever the case, i don't think it would have made any difference if we germans had put all the manpower and resources from stupid projects like V-weapons, Battleships, Giant Artillery and so on into tanks and planes. We allready had way more tanks and planes then we could fuel anyway.

  • @phoenixdundee
    @phoenixdundee 3 года назад +127

    To be fair, although these were infective, they were incredible feats of engineering.

    • @lordgarion514
      @lordgarion514 3 года назад +11

      They were effective. It was their numbers that were ineffective.
      If they could have launched a couple thousand in a couple of days, the Battle of Britain would have had a different outcome.

    • @phoenixdundee
      @phoenixdundee 3 года назад +2

      @@lordgarion514 Probably wouldn't have made a difference to the Battle of Britain as that was much earlier in the war and relates to air superiority. And something is ineffective as a fact, whether that is due to design, numbers or fit for purpose. Fat Boy wasn't a particularly good nuclear bomb, but it was effective.

    • @JohnFrumFromAmerica
      @JohnFrumFromAmerica 3 года назад +2

      @@lordgarion514 i dont think you understand the word ineffective. There is no way 1000 v2 could be produced per day. The reason they are ineffective is that the cost to produce them is significantly greater than the distruction they cause on aggregate.

    • @lordgarion514
      @lordgarion514 3 года назад

      @@JohnFrumFromAmerica
      Who said they had to be built the same day they were fired.
      Build X number per day?
      Want to launch X number per day for x number of days?
      Simple math.....
      No one ever said they had to launch everything they made each day.
      Some rule I don't know about?
      They might have been shooting rockets, but we're not actually talking about rocket science here. Just 3rd grade math.
      But Germany always had trouble with that concept.
      Doenitz wanted 300 subs at the beginning of the war. If he had gotten them, England would have been royally screwed.😃
      But Hitler was always in a hurry. So by the time that he got his 300 subs, the allies already had the technology, the equipment, the tactics, and enough ships and planes, that the number of subs were absolutely irrelevant.

    • @JohnFrumFromAmerica
      @JohnFrumFromAmerica 3 года назад +2

      @@lordgarion514 you are living in a fantasy land where the Nazis get to build all the weapons they want and everyone else just stands still. The manufacturing capabilities of the allies was far greater than the Nazis. The only true wonder weapon of the war was the atomic bombs and the US detonated 2 independent designs the Nazis were never going to win once the Manhattan project was started. They had already lost but just didn't know it yet.

  • @brianartillery
    @brianartillery 3 года назад +10

    The comedian Paul Merton once said:
    "My dad was a kid in the war, and his dad told him that it was said there was a bullet with your name on it. Grandad wasn't that bothered - but his neighbours, Mr and Mrs Doodlebug were shitting themselves."

    • @nobleman9393
      @nobleman9393 3 года назад +2

      "Well I thought that if I owned the bullet with my name on it, I'll never get hit by it. Cause I'll never shoot myself, And the chances of there being two bullets with my name on it are very small indeed." - Private Baldrick

  • @KarlKarpfen
    @KarlKarpfen 3 года назад +46

    Hey Simon, in German, an "s" after a name, even in combined words, is like the " 's" in English. So it isn't "Wilhelm shaven", but rather "Wilhelm's haven". But no worry, I did it wrong the other way 'round with the English town of Faversham in Kent, which I had pronounced "Faver's ham".

    • @pegasusted2504
      @pegasusted2504 3 года назад

      except Faversham is due to syllables and the first is 2 separate words. Not the same thing ;~)

  • @domgiblin4280
    @domgiblin4280 3 года назад +4

    Although 2020 has been a year to forget I’m really glad with all this extra time spent at home I was able to find this channel and learn so much.

  • @serveaux
    @serveaux 3 года назад +7

    Simon: I've got a new project called "Ingredients" where I read off the ingredient list on product labels.
    Me: yeah, ok, subscribe.

  • @heckinmemes6430
    @heckinmemes6430 3 года назад +13

    "I shot for the stars, but kept hitting England."

    • @robg9236
      @robg9236 3 года назад +4

      "I just send them up
      where they come down
      is not my department
      said Werner Von Braun"

  • @stephenbritton9297
    @stephenbritton9297 3 года назад +12

    My dad was a QM on a destroyer off Anzio. One day they notice a puff of smoke every few minutes from the mouth of a railroad tunnel. Realizing its a nazi rail artillery piece, his ship and the other DD's opened up on the tunnel mouth with all 5'/38's they had and brought the tunnel mouth down. That definitely put a damper on the rail gun pounding of the beach.

    • @Jcompton69
      @Jcompton69 3 года назад +1

      My grandpa was on the beach in Anzio and his company ended up taking the other gun. There was a picture taken of them standing on it and a few years ago a family member of one of the officers shared it in the fb group for the 88th infantry division.

  • @alex-ul3dp
    @alex-ul3dp 3 года назад +37

    How do you manage so many channels and a podcast? This man is a god

    • @joeyr7294
      @joeyr7294 3 года назад +6

      #nosleepsimon

    • @caw25sha
      @caw25sha 3 года назад

      They are quins.

    • @Mattman993
      @Mattman993 3 года назад +9

      He has a team of writers and support staff

    • @chadimirputin2282
      @chadimirputin2282 3 года назад +30

      He has slaves chained to radiators, and plenty of coke, "allegedly".

    • @SkunkApe407
      @SkunkApe407 3 года назад +10

      He has a very solid roster of writers and producers that handle a good deal of the logistics. Thanks to them, Simon is able to juggle his myriad of channels with a bit more ease, and we get the pleasure of seeing more of his face and glorious beard. We all love Simon, but the people behind the scenes are the unsung heroes of the Whistler-verse.

  • @bradbrad6521
    @bradbrad6521 3 года назад +5

    I feel sorry for any of the very small number of people that became fans of 'Business Blaze' first, only then to discovered Simons main channels.
    It has to be a shocking!
    Thanks for everything you 3 do for us ; )

  • @thomaszielke866
    @thomaszielke866 3 года назад +7

    Either Simon is a cyborg hellbent on becoming the most prolific RUclipsr of all time, or "Danny" and "Sam" are his identical siblings who stand in for him so he can get some sleep at some point. How many projects are we up to now?

  • @hotcreamyfart
    @hotcreamyfart 3 года назад +2

    Dear Simon and Danny,
    An episode of Side Projects covering the hit film "Space Cop" would be super neat.

  • @kaltaron1284
    @kaltaron1284 3 года назад +22

    Having this many channels should be a crime!
    Keep on going.

    • @lordgarion514
      @lordgarion514 3 года назад +2

      He ain't gonna be happy till he's got enough channels that it becomes a felony.

  • @henriroggeman7267
    @henriroggeman7267 3 года назад +2

    Dicke Bertha actually means Fat Bertha, not Big Bertha ;-)

  • @carlfromtheoc1788
    @carlfromtheoc1788 3 года назад +1

    380mm guns on the Tirpitz? The Iowas class (and others) chuckle in 406mm, and the Yamato class laughs in 460mm.

  • @oldenweery7510
    @oldenweery7510 3 года назад +2

    Simon, I was a bit confused at your statement that the huge Tirpitz could "hide" in a Norwegian "ford," since a ford is a shallow _river crossing._ "Fyord," mate! Keep up the good work, though. Continue to keep yourselves safe, everybody, and Happy Holidays.

  • @mbryson2899
    @mbryson2899 3 года назад +6

    Slartibartfast is disappointed that you cannot pronounce "f'yord" properly. He spent a long time designing them, even won an award IIRC.

  • @ProbablyNotLegit
    @ProbablyNotLegit 3 года назад +1

    You forgot about Terpitz being stuck in the fjords largely due to the commando raid on the Saint Nazaire naval base, where there was one of the only dry docks that could hold it for maintenance and refuelling. Truly awesome story, that. Otherwise, awesome video dude

  • @mavericktheace
    @mavericktheace 3 года назад +15

    "And after allll
    youre mein wunderwaaaaffe!"

    • @hobinrood710
      @hobinrood710 3 года назад

      Underrated comment.

    • @johnbarber4549
      @johnbarber4549 3 года назад

      What was the name of that band?. I remember them saying that they would be bigger than the Beatles. Guess not.

    • @thehummusgavemeaids1596
      @thehummusgavemeaids1596 3 года назад

      @@johnbarber4549 What are the Beatles?

  • @vrod665
    @vrod665 3 года назад +1

    Anzio Annie was one of my playgrounds growing up. Living next door to US Army Ordinance Museum meant that every tank or artillery piece became a point of interest. I was sorry to see the collect get “speed to the wind” ...

    • @johnbarber4549
      @johnbarber4549 3 года назад

      Fort Sill?.

    • @vrod665
      @vrod665 3 года назад

      @@johnbarber4549 actually Aberdeen Proving Grounds. APG hosted the museum prior to the collection being split apart and being sent to different places. Some of the German artillery pieces, both static and self-propelled, went to Fort Sill, OK. I went there a few years ago to visit a few pieces of armor that I played on as a kid. Shared the story with Mr. Blaker the curator at the artillery museum. He thought it was it was pretty interesting that a 50-something would come halfway across the country to see armored artillery that sat in a field across the street from where he (I) grew up. Needless to say...I have a love for armor.

  • @ThomasCallahanJr
    @ThomasCallahanJr 3 года назад +8

    Do “The boneyard” at Davis-Monthan AFB... worlds largest Air Force

    • @ronidude
      @ronidude 3 года назад

      Already done

  • @kampfgruppepeiper501
    @kampfgruppepeiper501 3 года назад +2

    Your deliverance of videos is very impressive. Thank you for your time and effort! Merry Christmas Simon! 🎄❄️🎁

  • @simonbeaird7436
    @simonbeaird7436 3 года назад

    A fact not often mentioned is that more V-2s were fired at Antwerp (1,610) than at London (1,358). The Germans were desperate to knock out the port in Belgium as most of the Western Allies supplies were landed there.

  • @OBIIIIIIIII
    @OBIIIIIIIII 3 года назад

    The komet was very popular with the Japanese. They tried to ship several - some assembled, some disassembled, plus many more engines via submarine. And yet every single sub was sunk with its cargo by allied navies before they could get it to shore. The only thing that survived the journey was an instruction manual with Mitsubishi had to use to make their own version

  • @MotherBiscuitLover
    @MotherBiscuitLover 3 года назад +2

    I think The Horton 220 is still the most interesting "Miracle Weapon".

  • @feliks8748
    @feliks8748 3 года назад +12

    Wilhelm shaven xD
    get your beard oil away from poor Wilhelm!

    • @KarlKarpfen
      @KarlKarpfen 3 года назад

      @Feliks87 In English you would pronounce it in that manner: Heysham, for example, is "hey sham" not "heys ham"

  • @mandymayne8759
    @mandymayne8759 3 года назад +1

    11:08 If it is “jettisoned after takeoff” it stands to reason that it is not on the aircraft at the time of landing. Thus, it cannot be “landing gear.” It is in fact “takeoff gear.”

  • @missyd0g2
    @missyd0g2 3 года назад

    Merry Christmas from the mountains of Prescott Arizona.

  • @KaiNeknete2012
    @KaiNeknete2012 3 года назад +1

    Hi Simon! Another great video! Just one comment from my side: The city "Wilhelmshaven" is pronounced like 2 words: "Wilhelms-Hafen" ("William's Port"). In German grammar we put words together, making it look like one word (which it basically is, but you get the point).

  • @puppetguy8726
    @puppetguy8726 3 года назад +43

    Hey Simon, pronouncing "Braun" as Brown is a lot closer to the German pronounciation than Brawn.

    • @KantoShakerOfShimmies
      @KantoShakerOfShimmies 3 года назад +9

      Maybe Simon doesn’t speak German, and perhaps he apologizes in advance in the majority of his videos about potential mispronunciations. Cheers mate, merry Christmas.

    • @puppetguy8726
      @puppetguy8726 3 года назад +12

      Sean Clifton Well yeah, that's why I'm trying to help him with his pronounciation.

    • @KarlKarpfen
      @KarlKarpfen 3 года назад +4

      @@KantoShakerOfShimmies Well, people, who are aware of their mispronunciation and apologize in advance, often would like to lower their error rate.

    • @Black-Sun_Kaiser
      @Black-Sun_Kaiser 3 года назад +4

      @@KantoShakerOfShimmies yeah quit simping and help spread knowledge.

    • @sashakazmar6142
      @sashakazmar6142 3 года назад +2

      I think it’s his British accent 🤣

  • @explorer1968
    @explorer1968 Год назад

    The Anzio Annie and Anzio Express railway guns were more effective during the Battle of Anzio precisely: hidden in railway tunnels they took turns alternatively for firing their giant shells. So those big guns kept the Allied troops stalled for three months...

  • @twocvbloke
    @twocvbloke 3 года назад +2

    The need for them to make weaponry so big just screams "small manhood issues" so much that it's no surprise ol' hitler was such a grumpy bastard... :P

  • @QqJcrsStbt
    @QqJcrsStbt 3 года назад

    The 'tipping' of V-1's was very rare. Pilot narratives indicate that no contact was the intention. The very close proximity of the fighter wing under the V-1 wing caused aerodynamic asymmetry thereby flipping it.
    The V2 production consumed more deaths in the forced labour force than to London.

  • @followthewhiterabbit7504
    @followthewhiterabbit7504 3 года назад +4

    Merry Christmas Simon.
    The "London Gun" (V3) used multiple propellant charges to accelerate the projectile along the barrel as this placed less stress on the gun than a single, large charge at the breech. The chambers for these additional propellant charges can be seen in the photo, protruding at right angles from the barrel at regular intervals. The Germans encountered considerable difficulties developing a mechanism that could reliably trigger these charges as the shell passed them. The gun wasn't just one barrel either. It was a whole battery, capable (in theory) of firing hundreds of shells per hour.

  • @avengerXable
    @avengerXable 3 года назад +1

    just finished binging all megaprojects videos, thanks simon for having more channels

  • @Daleymop
    @Daleymop 3 года назад +5

    Another podcast? Oh my likely non-existent gods, Simon! Do you ever sleep?
    .... Of course I'm subscribing!

  • @rogerhinman5427
    @rogerhinman5427 3 года назад +1

    The Tirpitz was hiding in fjords primarily because there wasn't a functional dry dock on the Atlantic coast of occupied Europe capable of holding her. The one at St Nazaire having been wrecked by the British. There was no way to repair her should she suffer battle damage.

  • @nateniezgoda1964
    @nateniezgoda1964 Год назад

    I've seen a V1 in person at the air museum in Olypia washinton. I can't imagine seeing one tumbling toward my home.

  • @mho...
    @mho... 3 года назад

    12:32 "the production began in "WilhelmShaving"" 🤣 gotta shave ur wilhelm before war! 🤣 hillarious!

  • @tdyerwestfield
    @tdyerwestfield 3 года назад +3

    My middle name is Leopold, and I've now got a new chat up line regarding an 11 inch barrel.

    • @azjeepguy83
      @azjeepguy83 3 года назад +1

      When I hear Leopold I think of the former Belgian king who enslaved the congolese people in order to produce rubber. The king who committed countless atrocities, chopping off hands if some workers did not meet quota's. I have even seen a picture of a poor Congolese father sitting next to the severed hands and feet of his daughter.... Al because he didn't meet the days quota.. glad your name of Leopold is so near and dear to you!

    • @tdyerwestfield
      @tdyerwestfield 3 года назад

      @@azjeepguy83 Yeah that's the massive down-side to the name. I think King Leopold II of Belgium committed the biggest mass genocide in history.

    • @BlastinRope
      @BlastinRope 3 года назад

      @@tdyerwestfield i didnt know there were top genocider awards

  • @stevepodleski
    @stevepodleski 2 года назад

    The Luftwaffe had much less problems taking out Lancasters than B17s since the Lancasters had no fighter escort and few night interdictors such as the Mosquito.

  • @tedstrong3990
    @tedstrong3990 3 года назад

    Your channels are the best Simon, I’m rarely here this early because I’m trying to catch up on all of your other content!

  • @guidor.4161
    @guidor.4161 3 года назад +1

    The V1 was not a "rocket" but a cruise missile (the 1st one ever).

  • @TheKeyser94
    @TheKeyser94 3 года назад

    If you ever played the original Valkyrie Chronicles you can find the two variations of Anzio Annie and the Anzio Express, used by the empire, they are basically mortars, but very effective, you cant disarm them, you cant destroy them (unless in the Fouzen mission) in the latest game, Valkyrie Chronicles 4 are just regular mortars, now called Grenadiers, like the units used during the Napoleonic wars.

  • @ziggy2shus624
    @ziggy2shus624 3 года назад +1

    Perhaps mentioned in other videos, one of the long-lasting war implements was the MP-44 which was the worlds first "assault rifle".
    It was originally developed in 1942 as the prototype MP-42, then modified to the MP-43 and modified again to become the MP-44.
    Hitler tried to kill the program saying " no more rifle designs". The manufactures ignored Hitler and started producing the rifle and sending it to the front line calling it the Machine Pistol (MP). Hitler found out about the rifle and went into a rage, until he tried one out himself. Hitler liked the rifle and ordered a million more, but this was near the end of the war , so few got to the frontline.
    Both the US and Soviet generals studied the MP-44 rifle after the war. The Soviets modified the internal mechanism and it became the AK-47, which is still one of the most popular assault rifles used today. The dumb-dumb US generals looked at the MP-44 and thought it was a piece of junk and threw it into the trash. It was 20 years later that the US finally developed a similar rifle the M-16.
    Hitler upon seeing the Mp-44 called it the Sturmruger , or assualt rifle.

  • @jsnsk101
    @jsnsk101 3 года назад +1

    side project idea: studio tour and what it takes to run 37 youtube channels simultaneously

  • @observerfrequency4725
    @observerfrequency4725 3 года назад +1

    Have you ever seen the Warner van Brahn in the Walt Disney videos? Was that old Walt or the government trying to change your opinion of the Germans in operation paper clip?

  • @DavidSiebert
    @DavidSiebert Год назад

    1. The V1 was not a rocket. It was a pulse jet-powered cruise missile.
    2. The Spitfire was not the weapon of choice for intercepting the V-1 That went to the Hawker Tempest, The P-47m, and the Meteor. All of them were faster than the Spitfire at low altitudes which is where the V-1 flew.
    3. The allies were not far behind the Germans in jet engines if at all. German jet engines had a life of 20 hours or so.
    The UK and US jets had much longer TBOs.
    4. The allies well the US and UK were much farther ahead in Electronics, Logistics, Physics, Naval power, long-range aviation, and of course physics.
    5. The Me163 was useless at night. So the Lancasters which flew at night the Me-163 were useless.

  • @benjamincrom7276
    @benjamincrom7276 3 года назад +1

    Merry Christmas everyone.

  • @carrielange2692
    @carrielange2692 3 года назад

    So happy for another podcast, thank you!😊 I listen to Brain Food show on Stitcher, and I've add The Casual Criminalist now too. Thanks again, podcasts are actually my favorite form of media 💖

  • @deanbuss1678
    @deanbuss1678 3 года назад

    I've seen all these weapons in separate videos.
    Having them in one collection with to the point history and descriptions is cool.👍

  • @MartinTwomeyFilm
    @MartinTwomeyFilm 3 года назад

    Simon - how many of you are there? Now a podcast! Do you get any sleep? Someone in the future may do a Biographics on you - what title would they give it folks?

  • @everythingsalright1121
    @everythingsalright1121 3 года назад

    The Krupp K5 railway guns were hardly wonder weapons, though. They built quite a few of them for conventional artillery purposes.

  • @anthonyxuereb792
    @anthonyxuereb792 3 года назад +1

    The V1 was so clever, it is simply amazing. Simon didn't mention radar, yes, the Germans had radar. A British expert visiting Germany before the outbreak of WWII thought
    the Germans didn't have radar because he couldn't see the tall towers the British had. He didn't know that the Germans had gone beyond the towers. The British also staged daring
    commando raids to get their mitts on German radar.

    • @branon6565
      @branon6565 3 года назад

      It was a Luftwaffe pilot who flew I think an FE 109 that was equipped with radar in its nose to an English base where he surrendered himself and the plane to the allies, that's how the Brits learned of Germany's radar knowledge....

  • @shida420
    @shida420 3 года назад +2

    Please make the podcast on RUclips too. I don't use any of the other platforms and since I use premium I don't want to switch.

    • @sandybarnes887
      @sandybarnes887 3 года назад +1

      Try listening here. www.stitcher.com/show/the-casual-criminalist

    • @shida420
      @shida420 3 года назад +1

      @@sandybarnes887 I'd still love for it to be on RUclips but this is good too, thanks!

  • @brandnamevideos8419
    @brandnamevideos8419 3 года назад +3

    Simon watch letter kenny. Need it for the history of alegedly.

  • @skwervin1
    @skwervin1 3 года назад

    The 617 Squadron - Dam Busters were the guys who wiped out Peenemunde and the Tirpitz using Barnes Wallis's Tallboy and Grandslam earthquake bombs. You should do a video on both the squadron and just how accurate they became and on Barnes Walllis who designed not only the earthquake bombs, but the bouncing dam bomb and several bomber aircraft.

  • @m.showers1242
    @m.showers1242 3 года назад

    Enjoying each of your channels! Thanks! Onward strong!

  • @GreasyBeasty
    @GreasyBeasty 3 года назад +1

    Simon you're going to take over the internet at the rate you're pumping out channels and podcasts

  • @jd-si5us
    @jd-si5us 3 года назад

    My small town has a V-1 buzzbomb mounted in the town square! I’m in the midwestern U.S. I’m not sure how many are left, or even in America.

  • @markrowland1366
    @markrowland1366 3 года назад

    WW I French giant railway guns were such a threat that their discovery alone was presumed to confirm Germany must stop the war. The Shnider Obousier 520, at a 20 inch bore fired shells twice as heavy as the German Gama and Big Birther. Germany refurbished and dispached two to destroy Petrograd.

  • @Hobbes4ever
    @Hobbes4ever 3 года назад +2

    and yet they couldn't make a working proximity fuse

    • @lordgarion514
      @lordgarion514 3 года назад

      It was tricky. How to make the antenna work inside a shell had them stumped for a bit.

  • @theemissary1313
    @theemissary1313 3 года назад +1

    I heard once that for the cost of Tirpitz, Germany could have had two aircraft carriers or around thirty U-boats. Not sure about the correctness of it, but sounds plausible

    • @peterson7082
      @peterson7082 3 года назад

      They would have been a nasty bunch if the aircraft were comprable to Fleet Air Air aircraft, not war changing, but definitely could prolong the war and be a headache for the Royal and eventually U.S. navies. That being said, they had no aircraft for them, and those considered or being refitted for such were quite poor performing.

  • @baukemiedema2420
    @baukemiedema2420 3 года назад

    hi Simon. The V3 London Cannon wasn't a rocket powered cannon, but a so called Multi room/stage cannon. Allong the muzzle there are additional explosives propelling the projectile to a higher speed. ;)

  • @PbFoot
    @PbFoot 3 года назад

    i LOVE the casual criminalist! love that danny writes the scripts (you can really feel the blaze spirit), but its kind of not the same just hearing the voice and not seeing the reactions/expressions that come with a video.

    • @Battledongus
      @Battledongus 3 года назад

      Callum writes the CC scripts but he was given Danny's scripts to look at so it feels blazey

  • @sandybarnes887
    @sandybarnes887 3 года назад

    Merry Christmas 🎄 to you and yours, Mr Whistler. Thank you for the entertainment during my most difficult times this year. 🎅

  • @kaiying74
    @kaiying74 3 года назад +1

    Wilhelm Shaven made me lol. You're a bad man Simon Whistler, I see what you're doing. :P

  • @rodchallis8031
    @rodchallis8031 3 года назад +2

    Sometimes people renting cars ask me about some of the Volkswagen's we have on offer. "German engineering," I say, "It's what won them two world wars....." There's often a pause before that sinks in.

  • @markrowland1366
    @markrowland1366 3 года назад

    V1s were mostly referred to, in England, as Robot Bombs.

  • @domgiblin4280
    @domgiblin4280 3 года назад +1

    Don Simon really doesn’t miss when he makes videos.

  • @PercyPruneMHDOIFandBars
    @PercyPruneMHDOIFandBars 3 года назад

    Couple of small drawbacks you missed about the 163 Komet. The fuel was so incredibly volatile if any was left in the tanks, it had a tendency to explode. Also if it leaked into the cockpit, it would dissolve any organic matter, much to the consternation of the pilot!

  • @reecedawson6113
    @reecedawson6113 3 года назад +1

    Can you cover the English electric lightning pls,
    Merry Christmas

  • @nikolaaswright6028
    @nikolaaswright6028 3 года назад +2

    The Rideau Canal! Vote Canada!

    • @caw25sha
      @caw25sha 3 года назад +1

      As projects go would you say it was Mega or Side?

    • @nikolaaswright6028
      @nikolaaswright6028 3 года назад

      mega would be my guess.... because it was finished in 1832 and its 200 kms long I would say that's pretty mega, also it's got a good story cause the engineer responsible for the build got court martialled when he got back to England because the river/canal was not deep enough for military ships.

    • @sandybarnes887
      @sandybarnes887 3 года назад +1

      Merry Christmas from Newfoundland. 🎄 Go Rideau Canal. 🇨🇦 🎅

    • @nikolaaswright6028
      @nikolaaswright6028 3 года назад +1

      Same to you Sandy! Merry Xmas from Ottawa!

  • @Fishallies
    @Fishallies 3 года назад

    A good number of weapons on this list were given a loving touch by 617 squadron. V1, V2, V3 and Tirpitz. The bombs that destroyed the V3 sites and ripped the bottom off the battleship were tallboy, the first earthquake bombs.

  • @maxpayne2574
    @maxpayne2574 2 года назад

    Germany was not as far ahead of the allies as is commonly thought. They were desperate enough to use unperfected weapons. The much-hyped ME 262 had engine parts that wore out in minutes not hours. The Englishman Sir Frank Whittle developed the jet engine parallel to the development in Germany.

  • @chrismaverick9828
    @chrismaverick9828 3 года назад

    You forgot the fact that the Komets were known to leak their hypergolic fuels at the drop of a hat and resulted in the slow, torturous, fatal flesh melting of several pilots.

  • @andrewlanford2378
    @andrewlanford2378 3 года назад

    I kid ye not- my first cousin was imported to the US in 1946 with von Braun and worked on the early NASA programs.
    My cousin also sounded (and looked) quite like Henry Kissinger...

  • @RB-yg7jw
    @RB-yg7jw 3 года назад

    Wunder? What’s so wonderful? Impractical or maniacal might be a better description. Take the German 88 mm gun, arguably one of the best pieces of artillery ever produced in terms of range, accuracy and versatility, especially for its time. Problem was, it damn near took 6 Engineers to fire the thing compared to 2 or 3 Nebraska farm boys for an American howitzer. Taking out an 88 and its crew was devastating to the Germans. Like so many other things, Germany simply ran out of trained gun crews. Even force multipliers are subject to diminishing returns.

  • @jonnda
    @jonnda 3 года назад +1

    The v3 had the multi stage “rocket” motors in the barrel.

    • @caw25sha
      @caw25sha 3 года назад

      The photo is of the prototype n Poland. I don't think they got that far with the French version.

  • @KeithSchultz1989
    @KeithSchultz1989 3 года назад +2

    @SIMON remember to spend some family time tomorrow

  • @cnocspeireag
    @cnocspeireag 3 года назад

    V3 projectiles were not rocket boosted. The gun had several side chambers, intended to be fired as the shell passed, so maintaining pressure in the long barrel. It was colloquially referred to as a 'hochdruckpump', or high pressure pump for that reason. There is no evidence that the Germans could have got it to work. The barrel was not rifled and mis-timing of the charges could have been catastrophic.

  • @darrenjohns8694
    @darrenjohns8694 3 года назад

    No mention of the 80cm Schwerer Gustaf railway guns?

  • @hukaman88
    @hukaman88 3 года назад

    Simon is just the gift that keeps on giving

    • @mbryson2899
      @mbryson2899 3 года назад

      Like the Jelly of the Month Club.

  • @davidhunter1538
    @davidhunter1538 3 года назад

    I think it was sheer genius leaving Tirpitz in the fiords by which the British admiralty had to guard against by tying up huge naval resources to counter any moves against the Russia bound convoys. Genius.

  • @anthonyciccariello8089
    @anthonyciccariello8089 3 года назад +1

    Holy cow that was one tough battleship.

  • @I_THE_ME
    @I_THE_ME 3 года назад +2

    *AH! Die Wunderwaffe DG-2! My favourite!*

    • @JamVar
      @JamVar 3 года назад

      Could it be? Za DG-3? Za DG-3 zat's just for me?

  • @chiroquacker2580
    @chiroquacker2580 3 года назад

    I can easily imagine Hitler ordering the construction of a real life giant mecha robot similar to Voltron. It seems like the exact kind of thing he would be into: expensive, unrealistic, impractical, wasteful, but super imposing and cool.

  • @ebikeengineer
    @ebikeengineer 3 года назад

    Tirpitz as 15" guns, making it among the largest... Americans snicker in Iowa class noises.

  • @michaelhowell2326
    @michaelhowell2326 3 года назад +1

    I wonder how much the development of wonder weapons actually impeded the German war effort?

    • @samsignorelli
      @samsignorelli 3 года назад

      Given the financial and material resources required....I'd say quite a bit.

  • @stephenphillip5656
    @stephenphillip5656 3 года назад

    Sticking my neck out here, correcting the usually accurate Simon, but according to my info, the first V-1 landed on London in June *1944* not 1943 as stated.

  • @darthhatchet775
    @darthhatchet775 3 года назад

    It's scary to think if the Nazis would have developed nuclear weapons early on and strapped them to V2s.

  • @PaulAJohnston1963
    @PaulAJohnston1963 3 года назад

    Think your analysis of damage caused to the Tirpitz by X craft is a quite off. The damage was considerable as the Tirpitz never went to sea again and by the time she was capsized in Tromso the Germans well knew this.

  • @AshenDruid
    @AshenDruid 3 года назад

    Speaking of the Bismark, I'm looking forward to hearing you tell *that* story sometime

  • @TheWhizKid007
    @TheWhizKid007 3 года назад

    Simon and Salt Bae both practice the multiple versions of themselves approach to conquer their respective kingdoms!

  • @markrowland1366
    @markrowland1366 3 года назад

    V1s were most often robot bombs. Doodle bugs was an Americism.