Vickers Mk IV .50 Caliber Water-Cooled Tank Gun

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  • Опубликовано: 9 сен 2024
  • / forgottenweapons
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    Development of the .50 caliber Vickers guns began during World War One, but stagnated after 1918, and was not really completed until the early 1930s. At that point, Vickers produced a series of the guns for use primarily as armored vehicle armament and for antiaircraft use. It was formally adopted in 1933, and declared obsolete in 1944. A total of 1,117 were made for ground use, plus more for naval use. The ground guns ran from MkI to MkV, with today's example being a MkIV.
    Contact:
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Комментарии • 651

  • @multisam8717
    @multisam8717 3 года назад +701

    Another interesting gun from Larry Vickers. The only thing more impressive than his contribution to firearms development is the fact that he is 189 years old. How does he do it?

  • @gutfinski
    @gutfinski 3 года назад +1087

    The British loved blued steel and brass. From an engineering standpoint it does make sense as brass is somewhat self-lubricating against steel.

    • @ozdavemcgee2079
      @ozdavemcgee2079 3 года назад +213

      British passed that brass thing to all commonwealth's. Brass, everywhere not just on weapons. Why? Purely so soldiers can polish it and make it pretty lol

    • @gutfinski
      @gutfinski 3 года назад +160

      @@ozdavemcgee2079 Probably part of it! Brass also machines easily and be easily cast to make various components. But today it also has the classic look of quality.

    • @DreweTube
      @DreweTube 3 года назад +57

      @@ozdavemcgee2079 I'd never thought about it like that...that stuff is literally on anything old and machined we love the stuff.
      My old man was a toolmaker..and turned / milled anything he could out it for decorative purposes 🤣

    • @MB5rider81
      @MB5rider81 3 года назад +40

      Casting, and a decent hardness.
      Great for seals. Great for sliding surfaces.

    • @professional_cynic98
      @professional_cynic98 3 года назад +27

      @@gutfinski and brass is fairly inexpensive

  • @enricopaolocoronado2511
    @enricopaolocoronado2511 3 года назад +1159

    I know it's highly reckless and impractical, but the pistol grip just makes me think of an 80's Action Movie style sequence where a soldier just fires this thing from the hip.

    • @LeadCodpiece
      @LeadCodpiece 3 года назад +89

      Or fallout games

    • @blank557
      @blank557 3 года назад +78

      Would work fine in the Warhammer 40K. universe.

    • @a.k47-74
      @a.k47-74 3 года назад +26

      More like from the shoulder, unless you're a 12-foot tall ogre, lol.
      But it definitely looks like it could be held like one of those 80's missile launchers, doesn't it? (think Schwarzenegger in Commando)

    • @Lemon_Inspector
      @Lemon_Inspector 3 года назад +36

      I'm sure the writers could contrive a scenario where a soldier wearing a futuristic powered exoskeleton has to fire a machinegun like this one-handed. Or better, one in each hand.

    • @lairdcummings9092
      @lairdcummings9092 3 года назад +20

      @@Lemon_Inspector Colonial Marines have entered the chat.

  • @lukebyrne141
    @lukebyrne141 3 года назад +306

    The real hero of this video is the Perspex display stand that beast is sat on.

    • @samholdsworth3957
      @samholdsworth3957 3 года назад +16

      Plastic. Our future food...

    • @joekewl7539
      @joekewl7539 3 года назад +8

      The only thing working harder than Gun Jesus in this video

    • @wills2140
      @wills2140 2 года назад +1

      I was surprised to see something that looks like lucite holding up that heavy beast, as well.
      XD

  • @stephenduffy5406
    @stephenduffy5406 3 года назад +261

    The Canadian Princess Louise Fusiliers was a heavy weapons support battalion of the 5th Canadian armored division in WWII. They used dismounted 50 cal Vickers in the ground support role, along with heavy mortars, in Italy in 1944.

    • @meepfanmeepster8620
      @meepfanmeepster8620 3 года назад +12

      that interesting thanks for that info

    • @natpeterson8856
      @natpeterson8856 3 года назад +4

      nice info my man

    • @bloke755
      @bloke755 3 года назад +5

      Sounds like it was these guys, ( with that firepower ) , who were the ones that destroyed Mount Cassino and not the allied bombers !!

    • @j.seagle6867
      @j.seagle6867 3 года назад +14

      they must have been chads. that thing looks like you can sit on it and fire it to go some place.

    • @teeford2504
      @teeford2504 3 года назад +2

      Rumour has it, they fired these(as well as the heavy mortars) from the shoulder..

  • @maxkennedy8075
    @maxkennedy8075 3 года назад +377

    “Ok, we need a bigger heavy machine gun. Any ideas?”
    *Gets picture of vickers gun in photoshop, Clicks on the image and expands it by about 50%*
    “I got it”

    • @Cacowninja
      @Cacowninja 3 года назад +12

      Bruh. That would be a major "Bruh" moment.

    • @KageRyuu6
      @KageRyuu6 3 года назад +7

      Great Scott! Who let a Welshman in here! Shoo I say shoo!"

    • @jic1
      @jic1 3 года назад +16

      To be fair, substitute M1917 for Vickers gun and you have the genesis of the .50 Browning machine guns.

  • @13infbatt
    @13infbatt 3 года назад +156

    I’ve seen pics of this mounted on Chevy trucks used by Long range desert patrols in North Africa , always wanted to see it, nice work Ian

    • @crazysilly2914
      @crazysilly2914 3 года назад +4

      by isis?

    • @Davemte34108
      @Davemte34108 3 года назад +21

      @@crazysilly2914 WW2 British special ops.

    • @mudcrab3420
      @mudcrab3420 3 года назад +8

      The 1:76 scale Matchbox model kit has one on the back of the truck. Younger me took ages to realise it wasn't the 303 version.

    • @wills2140
      @wills2140 2 года назад +1

      Yes, this and the Vickers K guns that were also used by SAS in the North Africa theater were always interesting to see.

    • @H4CK61
      @H4CK61 11 месяцев назад +1

      My grandfather used this in the LRDG and was also on the bofors gun truck.

  • @HerrMann441
    @HerrMann441 3 года назад +523

    Humans throughout history: Water is the lifeblood of our race.
    Hiram maxim: It can also be the instrument of death!

    • @maverick9708
      @maverick9708 3 года назад +19

      gotta be careful with that dihydrogen monoxide

    • @axelpatrickb.pingol3228
      @axelpatrickb.pingol3228 3 года назад +11

      Chinese: We can torture you with it, and you WILL not like it...

    • @House_of_Caine
      @House_of_Caine 3 года назад +8

      @@axelpatrickb.pingol3228 Americans: Hold mah beer...

    • @Ragnar1001
      @Ragnar1001 3 года назад +2

      @@maverick9708 oh yes, thats very dangerous 🤣🤣🤣

    • @jasonreed1631
      @jasonreed1631 3 года назад +6

      Sailors since the beginning of history: Just figured that out did you?

  • @geodkyt
    @geodkyt 3 года назад +154

    The ".30 versus .50" argument over aircraft mounted guns continued even into the metal skinned monoplane era. And (surprisingly and counterintuitivly), the British arguments that .50 didn't offer a significant improvement in terminal effectiveness round for round, no noticeable improvement in *effective* range in air to air combat, and the ability to mount more guns or more ammo in the same space and weight when you stuck with .30 *was* a huge advantage were still valid.
    Airplanes (even today) just aren't armored (aside from oddities like the modern A-10) sufficiently well to handle .30 bullets (and those that are are generally also able to shrug off .50 hits). And since the limiting factor in air to air combat witbout computer aiming assistance is *not* the ballistics, it is the inability for pilots and bomber gunners to generally *hit* past 100 (or sometimes 200) yards.
    Which is why most nations other than the US tended to jump right past .50 to a 20mm or larger automatic cannon. The light autocannons *do* provide a noticeable terminal effectiveness advantage over .30 and .50 guns, one that is worth the space and weight to replace at least some of the .30 guns with cannons, usually replacing multiple .30 guns with single light cannon.

    • @BleedingUranium
      @BleedingUranium 3 года назад +17

      Yep. This is why you see most US WWII aircraft with lots of .50s, and very few with 20mms (P-38 comes to mind), most European aircraft on both sides used a mix of .30s and 20mms. Though later in the war most factions would replace those .30s with .50s (while keeping the cannons).

    • @travishutchings7068
      @travishutchings7068 3 года назад +18

      The RAF evaluated both the Vickers .50 and the Browning .50 in the 1930's, but standardized on the Hispano 20mm as their weapon of choice. It took a while to get into service reliably, hence why the RAF went to war in 1939/40 with primarily 8x Browning 303 in their fighters. Once the belt feed Hispano was sorted out, in 1941, 4x 20mm became the standard RAF fighter armament, with the exception of the Spitfire, whose thin wing made it difficult to mount 4 cannons.

    • @MrHrannsi
      @MrHrannsi 3 года назад +23

      @@travishutchings7068 There where versions of the Spitfire with 4 20mm Hispanos, for example the Mk. Vc. Take a note of the lette "c" here, that is the wing type and the kind of armament it could be configured with. So a quick rundown of Spitfire wing types and armament:
      A: 8 x .303 Browning
      B: 2 x 20mm Hispanos
      4 x .303 Browning
      C: called the "Universal" wing, it could use A or B configuration, or 4 x 20mm Hispanos
      D: unarmed, used on long range recon Spits
      E: 4 x 20mm Hispanos or,
      2 x 20mm Hispanos
      2 x .50cal M2 Browning
      And, yes, I'm a nerd.

    • @kimjanek646
      @kimjanek646 3 года назад +5

      True, but self sealing fuel tanks and armor plates made .30cal obsolete pretty quickly so the logical step was to replace them with .50cals. Of course 20mm cannons and larger where more weight efficient.

    • @travishutchings7068
      @travishutchings7068 3 года назад +16

      The US Navy concluded that a single Hispano 20mm cannon was about equal in destructive affect to three M2 Browning .50 cals, but only weighed less than twice as much. The M2 Browning was an effective enough gun, it just had a large weight penalty for the average firepower it provided. Probably the best aircraft heavy machine gun was the Soviet Berezin UB, which weight almost half as much as a Browning, but fired a more powerful cartridge at a much higher rate of fire

  • @ethantaylor9613
    @ethantaylor9613 3 года назад +113

    Probably pound for pound one of the best early machine gun design families.

    • @ozdavemcgee2079
      @ozdavemcgee2079 3 года назад +16

      Undoubtedly. I forget gigures but Brit Army decided when they were retired to just shoot a couple. I think 3? Or 7? Days 24hr firing. Worked fine with no depreciable signs of war even with continuous firing.
      As fun as it would be, just imagine having to do a few 8hr shifts be boring as dog shite after a bit

    • @ParanoidCarrot
      @ParanoidCarrot 3 года назад +1

      just because it weighs a lot does not make it superior

    • @historysimplified4075
      @historysimplified4075 3 года назад +8

      @@ParanoidCarrot it’s not supposed to be carried around…

    • @beargillium2369
      @beargillium2369 3 года назад

      Sterling 😆

    • @JCGver
      @JCGver 3 года назад +6

      @@ozdavemcgee2079 I read a article about that. they took a fresh rebuilt vickers, and belt dumped 5 million rounds through it, only stopping to load a new belt and to replace the barrel once it was worn out (every 90 minutes), this took 7 days. After the 5 million rounds they took it apart and measured everything: It was all still within spec.

  • @jakraziel
    @jakraziel 3 года назад +83

    My copies of Thorneycroft to SA80 and Chaspot to FAMAS just arrived an hour ago. They pictures look fantastic, looking forwards to reading.

  • @ChalkyRN
    @ChalkyRN 3 года назад +78

    I’ve seen a quad Mark III mount on ROYAL OAK in the Orkney’s. I wish I’d been able to see this before diving on it. They’re still loaded and an amazing sight.

    • @swanner95
      @swanner95 3 года назад +6

      @@josedorsaith5261 If I'm not mistaken, he's referring to HMS Royal Oak, which was sunk at the beginning of WW2 by an intrepid German submarine and crew. Which would be a war grave in or around Scapa Flow in the very north of Great Britain.

    • @victorwaddell6530
      @victorwaddell6530 3 года назад

      @@swanner95 Wreck diving ?

    • @swanner95
      @swanner95 3 года назад +4

      @@victorwaddell6530 If he's being serious, yes, you would have to dive to see the Royal Oak as it is a sunken battleship.
      Although it should be a war grave, it was lost with about 800 hands.

    • @ChalkyRN
      @ChalkyRN 3 года назад +12

      @@swanner95 yes, I dived on ROYAL OAK when we changed her ensign in 2010 (I was a RN Clearance Diver). She’s rolled over at about 160 degrees. The quad mount is at the base of the bridge structure.

    • @mikepette4422
      @mikepette4422 3 года назад +2

      Nearly ALL pre -war Royal NAvy vessels had .50 cal Vickers as part of their light AA suite, Either in Singles Twins or Quad mounts. Most were being replaced even as the war was beginning but of course the process took time and even in 1945 there were still some of these Vickers .50's kicking around. However, everyone knew they needed 20mm Oerlikons at minimum as the speed and size of aircraft in WWII had quickly far outstripped the .50's usefulness.

  • @turbogerbil2935
    @turbogerbil2935 3 года назад +24

    A majority of the tanks in the BEF had these as their main armament during the Battle of France. By all accounts the guns were extremely effective against the majority of targets they encountered, less for the (relatively small numbers of) Panzer III and IV.

    • @simongaudin2506
      @simongaudin2506 3 года назад +11

      A pair of Matilda I's got in and amongst a German motorised column in 1940 & caused no end of havoc before withdrawing having run out of ammunition. Remember the majority tanks in German service in 1940 where Panzer I, II & 35/38(t)'s none of which had the armour to survive lots of hits from a .50 or a weapon which could do much damage to a Matilda I with its very thick armour unless it was a lucky shot.
      Panzer IV's where mostly still used to support infantry and Panzer III had the same gun as the 35/38(t) at this stage.

  • @evanacey1414
    @evanacey1414 3 года назад +78

    This thing epitomizes the steampunk aesthetic..

    • @culshie
      @culshie 3 года назад +6

      Damn I was just thinking that, Airships bristling with them like Israeli A.P.C.s.

    • @gabrielkeeling59
      @gabrielkeeling59 3 года назад +8

      You can pretty much smell the steampunk coming off of that gun

    • @jackhacker5738
      @jackhacker5738 3 года назад +9

      *Dieselpunk.
      Steampunk is late victorian style and this was made post-1910, which to me is the end of the steampunk style.

    • @gabrielkeeling59
      @gabrielkeeling59 3 года назад +1

      @@jackhacker5738 you're not wrong

    • @andersjjensen
      @andersjjensen 3 года назад +4

      @@jackhacker5738 You're factually correct, but the big brass feed block just makes this visually more in line with how classic steam punk is usually portrayed.

  • @johnpaulvanson5170
    @johnpaulvanson5170 3 года назад +41

    Made me look up the MkIII and was rewarded by photos of the goofy looking quad mount the Royal Navy came up with for it.

    • @51WCDodge
      @51WCDodge 3 года назад +1

      Peter Scott's 'Battle of the Narrow seas' mentions them on Coastal Craft including SGB and trawlers.

    • @wesleygay8918
      @wesleygay8918 3 года назад +3

      Which sounds fantastically British, I will have to look that up.

    • @BleedingUranium
      @BleedingUranium 3 года назад +5

      Oh wow, I wasn't expecting them to be all lined up vertically hahahaha

    • @proph7543
      @proph7543 2 года назад

      Honestly I think that it looks very cool.

  • @maxkronader5225
    @maxkronader5225 3 года назад +30

    I would love to see Ian do a video on the prototype Rolls Royce WWII heavy machine gun chambered in .55 Boys. I believe there is still one extant in the UK.

  • @stevelewis7263
    @stevelewis7263 3 года назад +10

    " Well PUNK in all this excitement I can't remember if I fired 400 shots or 500 shots, and seeing this is a .50 calibre tank gun the most powerful gun in the world and will blow your head clean off your shoulders, I'm asking myself DO YOU FEEL LUCKY PUNK, well DO YOU"

  • @vickersmg
    @vickersmg 3 года назад +196

    If you want to take a look at the Mark V variant, we have one in the collection and a video here: ruclips.net/video/XbmCXf6kWdI/видео.html

    • @kubrick1969
      @kubrick1969 3 года назад +21

      You are obligued to invite Gun Jesus to your association RIGHT NOW.... You'll be blessed for him...

    • @vickersmg
      @vickersmg 3 года назад +31

      @@kubrick1969 he’s more than welcome.

    • @andersjjensen
      @andersjjensen 3 года назад +10

      @@vickersmg Direct invitation please! :P He gets a TON of comments per video, so I suspect he won't see otherwise.

    • @snidertom8971
      @snidertom8971 3 года назад +3

      Nice 👍

    • @user-hj7wt3tq9d
      @user-hj7wt3tq9d 3 года назад +5

      This should be pinned

  • @MEGALODONGERS
    @MEGALODONGERS 3 года назад +4

    It should be mentioned that .50 Vickers was developed from .600 Nitro Express. The Eley brothers originally necked down the cartridge to .50-caliber (designated .600/.500) for use in an anti-tank rifle developed by Philip Godsal just prior to Armistice. This cartridge was further developed for use with the Vickers machine gun shown here (designated .50 Vickers).

  • @Sandydog329
    @Sandydog329 3 года назад +6

    When my father was stationed in India with the British Army, Sherwood Foresters, in 1936 patrolling the mountainous regions of the Northern Territories they carried the Vickers machine guns on mules.

    • @johnfisk811
      @johnfisk811 3 года назад

      My father saw them doing the same in Italy in 1943.

  • @davidray6962
    @davidray6962 3 года назад +22

    Was somewhat surprised that Ian didn't mention the .50 Vickers cartridge saw much wider use than the .50 Vickers gun - it's virtually identical to the cartridge used in the French, Italian, and Japanese 12.7mm guns (I can't remember if it's the British or the French/Italian/Japanese version that's semi-rimmed, but the rimless one could be used in all those guns).

    • @jameslawrie3807
      @jameslawrie3807 3 года назад +4

      You've just sent me down a rabbit hole of French, Italian, and Japanese 12.7mm history

    • @sawyerawr5783
      @sawyerawr5783 3 года назад +1

      as far as I know the Japanese used 13.2mm Hotchkiss-style cartridges. all their naval heavy MGs certainly did, and the later Zeros usually traded at least one of the cowling-mounted 7.7mms for a 13.2 late war.

    • @mccarthy5825
      @mccarthy5825 3 года назад

      I love when I see comments from well read, interesting and cool people like yourself who can educate me and send me down a rabbit hole of learning. 👍 Thank you!

    • @davidray6962
      @davidray6962 3 года назад

      @@sawyerawr5783 the Japanese used the Ho-103 aircraft gun, which chambered the 12.7x81mm - which most literature refers to as a Breda cartridge. If you look at the literature on Breda 12.7 guns, you will eventually find they were chambered for a ".5 Vickers export" cartridge. So, the Japanese got it from the Italians, the Italians got it from the British.
      It's been too long for me to remember where I think the French come in.

    • @yangcheng-jyun8542
      @yangcheng-jyun8542 3 года назад +1

      It's Ho-103, a .50 Vickers caliber Browning machine gun. The Japanese even developed an effective explosive loading for the cartridge

  • @minhducnguyen9276
    @minhducnguyen9276 3 года назад +54

    It has electrolyte, that's what guns crave.

  • @Twirlyhead
    @Twirlyhead 3 года назад +2

    I say, Mr Vickers ! You've been working out.

  • @Foobar888
    @Foobar888 3 года назад +49

    Ian we gotta watch you shoot this standing up terminator style!

    • @beargillium2369
      @beargillium2369 3 года назад

      Ikr?! With a mag dump

    • @MarvinCZ
      @MarvinCZ 3 года назад

      At 63 pounds, I'd be very impressed.

  • @tigercustardman3567
    @tigercustardman3567 3 года назад +43

    All my homies love water

    • @AceDupuy
      @AceDupuy 3 года назад +8

      A hydrohomie?

    • @diamonddude1029
      @diamonddude1029 3 года назад

      (Old Boy Scout summer camp saying) DRINK MORE WATER!!!!!!

    • @maverick9708
      @maverick9708 3 года назад

      preach it brother

    • @lucius6667
      @lucius6667 3 года назад +1

      Grim fact if u run out of water u can use urine as a substitute was done in WW1 when using Water cooled machine guns

  • @foznoth
    @foznoth 3 года назад +7

    Some of these would have been lost in France at the withdrawal at Dunkerque. Approx 1 in 3 A11 Matilda I tank were fitted with this, the other 2/3 had the .303 Vickers.

  • @BBHexKey
    @BBHexKey 3 года назад +15

    That must be one hell of an acrylic base to be able to hold up a 55lb gun.

    • @DAUGHTEROFBABYLON
      @DAUGHTEROFBABYLON 3 года назад

      That's interesting, an "Acrylic" base.. Yes (with heavy sarcasm) they found it was absolutely necessary because the typical "white-wash"
      just didn't last but a couple of days with the sea air and all. It is after all quite difficult to fight a proper war while abiding by the currant
      Eco standards of All paints having to be water based.

    • @jimyeats
      @jimyeats 3 года назад +1

      @@DAUGHTEROFBABYLON What in the hell are you talking about? The OP was just referring to the little plastic (likely acrylic) base that was holding the gun while Ian was displaying it.

  • @incapableunicorn8252
    @incapableunicorn8252 3 года назад +2

    The perfect combination of brass, hardwood and blued steel. Beautiful gun.

  • @ianforder2886
    @ianforder2886 3 года назад +8

    The Vickers .50, for when you want your gun to weigh more than your tank!

  • @bitterdrinker
    @bitterdrinker 3 года назад +3

    The machining on guns of this era really is beautiful and presumably all done by hand.

  • @johnhall3824
    @johnhall3824 3 года назад +2

    I love how, in other videos like this one, he just happens to have a .303 Vickers feed block handy to compare for us. Bloody legend, he is.

  • @brendonbewersdorf986
    @brendonbewersdorf986 3 года назад +11

    I've been really hoping he would cover this weapon someday it's really cool

  • @ItsYaBoySkinnyPenis69420
    @ItsYaBoySkinnyPenis69420 3 года назад +6

    one of the coolest guns of all time

  • @lordofthemfl9899
    @lordofthemfl9899 3 года назад +10

    Water is *cool*

  • @astridvallati4762
    @astridvallati4762 2 года назад

    This example Mismatched Feed block;
    "VA" marking, Vickers Armstrong, an Interwar Merger, which became Vickers Ltd. After WWII.
    Armstrong was a Locomotive, large Ordnance, and Shipbuilder in Northern England. VA followed " VSM" Vickers Sons & Maxim of WWI.
    Doc AV

  • @Bigrignohio
    @Bigrignohio 3 года назад +4

    That grip safety is an interesting feature. Not sure I have ever seen anything like it.

  • @alexwest2573
    @alexwest2573 3 года назад

    Real hero here is that stand for holding that huge tank mg

  • @jfakoggl
    @jfakoggl 3 года назад +30

    I wonder when and why Ian stopped reviewing guns which come up for auction with Rock Island Auctions. I follow their auctions and they still have tremendous stuff.

    • @ScottKenny1978
      @ScottKenny1978 3 года назад +13

      RUclips kinda lost their mind, they don't like it when someone shows a firearm for sale.

    • @iododendron3416
      @iododendron3416 3 года назад +15

      I think he makes videos in bulk and releases them later. Maybe it's the same with this auction.

    • @GamerGuy1157
      @GamerGuy1157 3 года назад +4

      I think it's because RIA have their own RUclips channel

    • @MortRotu
      @MortRotu 3 года назад +8

      I think Scott got it right, RIA has had their own channel for years. Ian does.make them in bulk but I don't think he lives close to RIA so travel restrictions because of Covid may be a thing too. I do recall Ian saying if you want to see this listing head over to Forgotten Weapons in prior videos though.

    • @ForgottenWeapons
      @ForgottenWeapons  3 года назад +31

      We decided to parts ways over professional differences.

  • @Matt_The_Hugenot
    @Matt_The_Hugenot 3 года назад +3

    Just shows how ahead of its time the M2 was.

  • @blackstone777
    @blackstone777 3 года назад +3

    Space orks: "oi! Needs more dakka!"

  • @robstone4537
    @robstone4537 3 года назад +1

    During the Angolan Bush war in the 80’s the South African army had some of these in fixed bunker positions in forward operating bases. As far as I can recall (I might be wrong because I never fired one, I only saw them and it was 30 years ago) they had been rechambered for 12.7x99 NATO. I was quite surprised when I saw them as I considered myself a bit of a gun buff and had never heard of a .50 cal Vickers so I went to have a good look at them.
    They were pretty devastating in the sustained fire roll. They had a distinctively different sound to a 50 cal browning, a much slower rate of fire but could fire very long bursts.

  • @dylanmilne6683
    @dylanmilne6683 3 года назад +1

    Hard to find much on these guns. Thank you Ian.

  • @bjorntrollgesicht1144
    @bjorntrollgesicht1144 3 года назад +2

    This looks like an end tier gun from some post apo, or dieselpunk game. I love it.

  • @capt.bart.roberts4975
    @capt.bart.roberts4975 7 месяцев назад

    To me a Beeza was a motorcycle brand and air rifle manufacturer. When you say Beeza, I always see one of the old B40 army dispatch bikes. Of which I owned two. My first street legal bike was a Beeza Starfire 250cc.

  • @andrewwoodhead3141
    @andrewwoodhead3141 3 года назад

    As I write this I am sitting in my hotel room , watching Ian playing with his vickers gun. I am quite naked...

  • @romanbrough
    @romanbrough 3 года назад +10

    The SAS used these with some success against Italian tanks But there seemed to have a shortage of ammunition.
    They would have been devastating in the Malayan and Burmese campaigns.

    • @romanbrough
      @romanbrough 3 года назад

      @@zoiders That's accurate. My point being that the gun was very effective against light armour. If these had been available in numbers in Malaya and Burma used in, for example, Bren Carriers, they would have been effective against Japanese tanks.

    • @marcstirrup9262
      @marcstirrup9262 3 года назад

      Pretty sure there is a reference (Calvert?) to the Chindits having scrounged a few of these from the Indian Army for the White City battle, before Stilwell was able to supply them with M2’s.

    • @bob_the_bomb4508
      @bob_the_bomb4508 3 года назад

      @@zoiders the first SAS ops were in North Africa in WWII

  • @kevinoliver3083
    @kevinoliver3083 Год назад

    The Commonwealth navies used .5 Vickers guns, it twin power turrets on MTBs (PT-Boats), MGBs and ML throughout WW2.

  • @romanbrough
    @romanbrough 2 месяца назад

    I seem to recollect that these were used as vehicle mounted weapons on raids behind Italian and then German lines in the Western Desert. They could penetrate any Italian armoured vehicles and most of the lighter German ones.

  • @maggotpudding
    @maggotpudding 3 года назад +13

    Now that's a gun I'd pay good money to get.

  • @mudcrab3420
    @mudcrab3420 3 года назад

    The main naval mount was a quad beast and, if I am informed correctly, the guns were angled off slightly from each other to increase the spread.
    From all accounts they aged quickly as aircraft got bigger and faster and these mounts were replaced by 20mm cannons on RN and commonwealth ships as soon as the 20mm weapons became available. Due to refit cycles you will find evidence of these quad mounts still on ships for a lot longer than they should have been as well as on the more second line ships (minesweapers, boom defences vessels) until the end of the war.
    The guns in a powered(?) twin mount were also used on RN MTB/MGBs for most, if not all, of the war.
    Always liked the this gun. I know it wasn't completely impressive as a performer but I like the Interwar/Early War armoured vehicles.
    Good vid :)

  • @brucelee3388
    @brucelee3388 3 года назад +1

    Vickers made a .45" Vickers/Maxim MG before WW1. I think the major purchaser was the Royal Navy for anti-torpedo boat duty, but the Royal Navy Air Service did fit them to fighter aircraft. The cartridge was known as .45 British Machine Gun (I can see confusing acronyms) was a long, semi rimmed tapered thing.

    • @demonprinces17
      @demonprinces17 3 года назад

      Didn't Ian do a video on one? Sounds familiar

  • @TheKsalad
    @TheKsalad 3 года назад +9

    Ian is just reviewing an Ork Shoota now?

    • @notgraham.7215
      @notgraham.7215 3 года назад

      Not nearly enough teeth involved. This looks like an ork asked a mechanicus to help him make a new shoota and only gave a vague description, so the mechanicus didn't add nearly enough grim dark

  • @OntarioRimrunner
    @OntarioRimrunner 3 года назад

    The .5 Vickers on the Vickers Light Tank Mk. VI was used in the Western Desert until 1942. Many of the Mk. VIs in France in 1940 lacked their .5s or the .5s were only mounted on the tanks after they arrived in France. Some served with a sheet of plywood until the guns arrived.

  • @SergeantSarge
    @SergeantSarge 3 года назад +2

    Always loved just how over-engineered the early machine guns were!

  • @CZ350tuner
    @CZ350tuner 2 года назад

    Used in the following British AFVs:
    Lanchester armoured car.
    Guy armoured car.
    Vickers Infantry Tank A11 Matilda I (sole armament).
    Vickers Light Tank Mk.VIa
    Vickers Light Tank Mk.VIb

  • @MegadethTillDeth
    @MegadethTillDeth 3 года назад

    How do these videos never get old? Man I love history, and firearms. I need way more firearms.

  • @literallyjudas2157
    @literallyjudas2157 3 года назад

    VIckers .303, Vickers .50, and a Pom-Pom.
    The vickers is just the pokemon of guns

  • @ArkadiBolschek
    @ArkadiBolschek 3 года назад +5

    Tried and true. The Imperium of Man still uses these 40.000 years later.

  • @johncashwell1024
    @johncashwell1024 3 года назад +1

    That is definitely a rare bit of kit and certainly a "Forgotten Weapon".

  • @davidcollishaw2771
    @davidcollishaw2771 3 года назад

    So shoulder stock, single shot and a 50 round belt for patrolling with the coolant tank on your back to balance the load.
    Slap a few rails on it to pimp it up.

  • @sandwhich1050
    @sandwhich1050 3 года назад +7

    Seeing the pistol grip makes me think the ergonomics would make this thing a nightmare to shoot. Plus, as a non-shooter, that grip safety doesn't seem super comfortable/practical. Probably wrong on a couple of accounts but if given the choice between this and an M2 to shoot, I'd pick the M2.

    • @ulissedazante5748
      @ulissedazante5748 3 года назад +1

      I can see why they came up with this contraption.
      The gunner/commander had to push around the turret with his shoulder.
      He had to tug on the pistol grip to have leverage to move the turret right or left. The safety avoided any accidental discharge.

    • @sandwhich1050
      @sandwhich1050 3 года назад +1

      @@ulissedazante5748 Yeah I can see that making sense. Unfortunately Ian isn't in a position to show us how the weapon would be mounted and then my comments would be moot because we would have a bit more context for some of the design choices.

  • @jackhacker5738
    @jackhacker5738 3 года назад +68

    As impractical as it is, I do adore the aesthetics of water-cooled guns, that water jacket is always visually appealing, I wish we didn't stop using them, but I do understand why given how heavy they are.

    • @remcodenouden5019
      @remcodenouden5019 3 года назад +9

      But why don't we still use it in vehicles? I mean the extra couple dozen pounds added by the water jacket doesn't really have an impact on a vehicle which weighs multiple tons.

    • @user-hj7wt3tq9d
      @user-hj7wt3tq9d 3 года назад +6

      Naval guns such as 57 an 76 do have watercoled systems if you interested

    • @overboss9599
      @overboss9599 3 года назад +1

      @@remcodenouden5019 i suspect the perceived vulnerability to damage is the biggest reason. Punch a hole in the jacket and you have a gun that's going to lock up before you spit out another hundred rounds. Add in the fact that you're never going to carry the millions of rounds that would require the capacity for continuous cooling, and a replaceable air cooled barrel is simply better for the military requirements. Would still be cool to see a water cooled armored vehicle packed to the brim with ammo instead of troops.

    • @astrotrek3534
      @astrotrek3534 Год назад +2

      @@remcodenouden5019 Metallurgy is a big reason, we have steel nowadays that can handle high temperatures for longer than back then, steel quality is responsible for alot of firearm development.

  • @loupiscanis9449
    @loupiscanis9449 3 года назад

    Thank you , Ian .

  • @jameslawrie3807
    @jameslawrie3807 3 года назад +1

    You often see on early armoured cars protective 'ears' on the turrets that covered the sides of the water jacket like on the Great War cars such as the Austin and the Garford Putilov. So while the gun is quite light the actual mounting can be pretty heavy. I think those 'ears' were long gone by the time of the Mark III though.

  • @5150warpig
    @5150warpig 3 года назад

    i think my fav thing about vickers. is just how well it can scale to damn near any caliber

  • @Siarawaszympanemjest
    @Siarawaszympanemjest 3 года назад

    That's a very brave plexi stand.

  • @Subsidiarity3
    @Subsidiarity3 3 года назад +1

    Great to see a rather forgotten weapon. I don't think I'd ever heard of these.

  • @lucius6667
    @lucius6667 3 года назад +2

    Always been curious about these since I first heard about them being used on inter war tanks

  • @mikepette4422
    @mikepette4422 3 года назад

    So glad you brought this to us. I've always liked the .50 cal Vickers. I find it such a curiosity and also I'm a tank nut as many of us are I am sure but I had an obsession with the little British Light Tank series, especially the final version the Mark VI C with the 15mm Besa gun. I just get such a kick out of seeing these nearly useless armoured vehicles racing across the desert But of course they began with an earlier version which Ian shows in the video carrying the Vickers .50 cal and also a .303 for fun. Can't say why but I just love those little weird tanks and these guns are of course part of their development

    • @oliverreeder5991
      @oliverreeder5991 3 года назад +1

      "Nearly useless" is a bit unkind, as they were vastly superior to the PzKpfw I and the CV33/35. Even the elderly Rolls Royce armoured cars of 11th Hussars routinely outgunned the CV33s in Libya.

  • @bobthompson4319
    @bobthompson4319 3 года назад +1

    The side opening top cover seems like it would be better then the forward opening ones for a scope to stay sighted in. Because this has more contact area to keep it from warping or bending.

  • @naughtydorf18
    @naughtydorf18 3 года назад

    Lanchester Armoured Cars in Malaya were armed with them but read somewhere they had no ammo for them.

  • @mcp8063
    @mcp8063 3 года назад

    Thanks for making these videos all these years, It’s really interesting to see history from the engineering and technical aspect that history of firearms presented in your style provide.

  • @Ashfielder
    @Ashfielder 3 года назад

    .50 cal Vickers? Now that’s what we refer to as the Thiccers.

  • @Pilot4prophet661
    @Pilot4prophet661 3 года назад

    I'm happy to see your library on display, I see quite a few titles that we share.

  • @txgunguy2766
    @txgunguy2766 3 года назад +1

    He said the .50 Vickers cartridge was 12.7x80mm.
    The US .50BMG cartridge is 12.7x99mm.

  • @Lockbar
    @Lockbar 3 года назад

    Incredable machining. Those machinists earned thier money.

  • @dbsommers1
    @dbsommers1 3 года назад

    An iconic look to that weapon. Lots of info.

  • @jubuttib
    @jubuttib 3 года назад +2

    I shall call him "Biggus Vickus".

    • @davidmunro3910
      @davidmunro3910 3 года назад +1

      Gotta love a Monty Python reference.lol

  • @peppercorn9022
    @peppercorn9022 2 года назад +1

    Vickers machine gun : ma deuce I’m going to tell you what finally happened to your father vickers mk iv

  • @alexanderthomas2660
    @alexanderthomas2660 3 года назад

    3:21 That reminds me a lot of Grübers little tank from Allo Allo…

  • @erikm12
    @erikm12 3 года назад

    Looks like Bookshelf Guy is really starting to give Fireplace Guy a run for his money!

  • @modulo3664
    @modulo3664 3 года назад

    You above even The Vick. I hereby award you the title of Big Vick.

  • @bobbytrill420
    @bobbytrill420 3 года назад

    That plexiglas base/stand is screaming

  • @TheNextGreatApe
    @TheNextGreatApe 3 года назад

    Seriously though, as an engineer it's hard for me not to admire the sheer design and workmanship.

  • @blisstube9697
    @blisstube9697 3 года назад

    What an absolute unit.

  • @51WCDodge
    @51WCDodge 3 года назад

    A vickers version 'The Bigger Hammer'. I've heard of .5 Vickers, on MGB, MTB, SGB and trawlers for years. But never seen one till now.

  • @rougenarwhal8378
    @rougenarwhal8378 2 года назад

    When the water tank heats up we'll use it to boil a spot of tea dear chaps!

  • @TheArklyte
    @TheArklyte 3 года назад +4

    Ian, can you make a video on Italian 12.7/13.2/14mm HMGs and specifically on career of Scotti?

  • @josiahgibson6373
    @josiahgibson6373 3 года назад

    Acrylic stand: I'm strong enough for you to display a full sized rifle on me!
    Ian: Hold my Vickers tank gun.

  • @ScottKenny1978
    @ScottKenny1978 3 года назад +4

    Super chonk Vickers!
    And then there's the 1pdr pom-pom guns, but those might as well be a Mk19 grenade launcher.

  • @leepeel7129
    @leepeel7129 3 года назад

    Not hiding, Ian. You're accompanying the large machine gun.

  • @eljamo93
    @eljamo93 3 года назад

    These weapons are terrifying. It’s great that Ian can talk about them in a way that puts me to sleep like a baby…

  • @Ren4rd_o7
    @Ren4rd_o7 3 года назад +3

    Oi oi!! Nice to see that gun here!

  • @stevelewis7263
    @stevelewis7263 3 года назад

    I'd love to see the shoulder holster for it..." That's not a gun...THIS is a gun"

  • @dksdg
    @dksdg 3 года назад

    The only known example in the US, thank you gun Jesus

  • @martinh4982
    @martinh4982 3 года назад

    Stick some sort of pressure gauge on it and that would be *the most* steampunk .50 cal ever.

  • @nathanridgway7009
    @nathanridgway7009 3 года назад

    Never knew this big dog existed. Fascinating video. Thanks Ian!

  • @nicolatesla9429
    @nicolatesla9429 3 года назад

    At some point in the '20s Vickers adapted the cartridge a tiny bit by making it Semi Rimmed, and in that form this caliber eventually found its way into the Italian Air Force and the Imperial Japanese Army Air Service.

  • @TheNextGreatApe
    @TheNextGreatApe 3 года назад

    Hey, a shoulder stock and a folding bipod on the front and you're the talk of the club range!

  • @ALGA.11
    @ALGA.11 3 года назад +4

    Boys play with water guns
    Men play with the Vickers Mk. IV .50 Caliber Water-Cooled Gun