That’s because most of those movies were shot in Spain and relied on the Spanish Army for technical support. In the movie Patton (1970) they used M48s for German tanks, and M41s and M47s for American tanks, as they were all used by the Spanish Army.
You forget to mention that Portugal was the first country in Europe to receive the M47 ! We received more or less 130 tanks in 1953. They are all new from factory. We (the portuguese Army tank museum, in Elvas, in the spanish/portuguese border) are rebuilding one of this M47.
@@Cohen.the.Worrier The threat of a Soviet block invasion, with their many many many tanks, ensured a healthy supply. The peace dividend & the mainly counter insurgency role of the 90's, 00's and 10's relegated the tank forces to become a fraction of the size they were. Plus, the ballooning costs due to how advanced tanks were becoming (like fighter jets, in that regard) only compounded that.
I still remember starting to learn just out of curiosity about the difference between M47 and M48 by firing range hard targets and tanks on display at German armour school during my first two courses of my officer's training. Thanks for bringing back memories and good luck and success with the restoration.
@@BeefIngotWell, that i learned about the various cold war US tank designs and how to distiguish them. As somebody barely knowing anything about tanks, that was a good start 😅
@@BeefIngot Sorry, for that i would have had to work for the Wehrtechnische Dienststelle. Also, when you got a hard target assigned, it often looked already quite destroyed, no chance to make any of those observations.
@@neiloflongbeck5705 I wouldn't say it's a problem. It's a feature. Stop gaps tend to not be stuffed with every untested geegaw, doodad and gizmo they can fit inside it. They tend to just be built with known reliable components. Because it's nobody's pet project they don't over complicate things. Tons of amazing weapons systems were stop gaps. The M1 Abrams for one. The Iowa class battleships weren't the biggest, bestest or most heavily armed. But they lasted a long time after others that were. Hell even the B52 bomber wasn't supposed to be long for this world. Just a temporary measure until supersonic heavy bombers came. Those supersonic heavy bombers never came. While the B52 still lives on. The M16 wasn't intended to be a standard issue weapon either. But it's simplicity made it great for that role as time would tell. There's lots of examples of similar.
@edwardscott3262 the problem is that stop-gaps because of their simplicity and reliability become the yardstick by which the real deal ends up being measured against by those who hold the purse strings.
Never found the M47 boring, it's one of my favorites, and one of the rare tanks I actually have a physical model of. It along with m48 are also the tank you will often see in-front of American legion posts or on display here in Michigan, so I was always fond of them driving by as a kid. I tend to be more fascinated by eastern block tanks, but I may go as far as to say the M47 is my favorite western tank of the cold war.. it has sleeker lines than the later 48
My faves from the US are the M47, and the M60. M103 is up there too just because it’s a proper heavy tank and the US never really did that at any other point.
My Grandfather served in M47 tank as a gunner in Pakistan Army. He took part in the battle of Chawinda (1965). He served in 19 Lancers regiment ... 6th armored division. He was a sweet guy and was proud of his service, never liked wars. He passed away 4 years ago.
You forgot to mention its service in Panzer Battalians at the Battle of Bulge. It fought valiantly against American M24 Chaffee tanks which were no match (the 90mm guns on the M47 Tigers turning at least one into a Chaffee convertible). However, many M47 Tiger IIs were destroyed when the Allies discovered that fuel drums did great damage against their lower front gracious plate. Colonel Hestler met his end in one of these 😔
German use of M-47s is often misinterpreted or misrepresented. Did you not notice the desert terrain? That is because the Battle of the Bulge was actually fought in Texas during the American Civil War. Yes, they had tanks back then. A famous Confederate tank designer was a Dr. Loveless, who later met his end at the hands of a Secret Service agent.
Some of the last US Army use of M47s were for driver training as it had the extra position for the bow gunner, which could be used by a driver trainee. This was in the 70s or early 80s.
My pops join the army in 1967. He went to Vietnam as part of the 1st ID. For some reason ne decided he'd rather be in a tank and the fastest way for him to do that was to transfer to the 101st combat engineer battalion. He first tank was a M48 with dozer blade and a short barrel called a CEV. His career went from the M48 all the way through to the M1A1 Abrams tank. The M60A3 was his favorite tank of all time!
My grandfather has quite the history with this vehicle (belgian army). 1. It was the first tank he had to drive on an antar tank transporter...and he flipped it on his first try. 2. He was ferrying m47 tanks over a street in hechtelt when he heard a loud bang. A citroen 2cv broke trough the MP barricade and collided with his tank on the sides. A young couple died, but dozens of empty bottles of beer were found and the driver was likely drunk
Was he professional soldier or conscripted? I remember my dad talking about driving an AMX13 as a conscripted soldier. Only the tank commander was a professional officer.
@@UnfollowYourDreams Oh yeah..There were photos taken back then but i was never able to find them. And since my grandfather passed away i cant ask him when it happened and such.
My late grandfather was a tank driver in Yugoslav National Army, he drove M-47, beside Sherman and T-34-85. By his words it had the best handling of the three.
We still had a few M48A5's in service at Ft. Knox in the 70's. National Guard units had the M48A5's. There use to be an M47 at the gate coming into Ft Knox.
My Dad did AIT at Knox in '79. While units had switched to M60s and the production prototype M1s were being trialed, he did most of his maintenance training on M48s.
@@nicholasmckenzie1075 I don't recall what gate it's at either but it's the one you go out of to go to The Black Angus steak house if it's still there.
I have a kind of "technical question" if you don't mind: I read on a forum that a track from an M48 break on a base and it was fixed using M47 patton treads but the thing its that the M47 treads are the same of the M 26 pershing or more or less the same..... My question is: That can be done? Also I bought metal treads for a scale model (M 47) but a friend gave me an M 48, aaaand I don't know if they can fit or not. I assume that if the M 48 could use M 47 treads the scale model should do the same also!. Thanks for everything! And have a nice rest of your day.
@@bocktordaytona5656 The M26, M46, and the M47 all share the same track dimensions. The M48s and M60s share the same track, but because they have slightly different dimensions from earlier tanks, those tracks are incompatible with earlier tanks. Fun fact, though the tracks are incompatible, the roadwheel hubs and bearings for the M47 are the same as those for the M48s and M60s.
Such great little details like Arnie serving in one and buying it at a later date. Cheers guys for the M47 chat.🍻🇦🇺 Just joined the channel to help in a small way.
I've long been a fan of the forgotten M-47. It often posed as a Tiger in 1960s war movies and TV shows, but I liked it for its appearance, particularly the shape of its turret. It was my second favorite tank after the M41 Walker Bulldog.
They were used in the Battle of the Bulge movie from 1965 as Tigers II, indeed. But the Patton movie from 1970 used M-48 for german tanks and Walker Bulldog light tanks for the US ones, all loans from the spanish army.
@@germen343 Hahah! He actually tried racing it and seeing how fast it could go and crashed through a building with it when he was a young man training in the Austrian army. He mentions the event fairly early on in his autobiography, Total Recall.
In much from the 1960's warmovies "Battle of the Bulge" / Anzio" / The Devil's brigade, they use this tank for the German King tiger. That's why we like the Patton tanks.
Yes! Spent all my cash on these 1:48 models early mid 70's air, and armor! Still have a few looking back, I was Good! REAL GOOD! Got no patience for it now? 76 I built my first kit muzzle loader white steel to timed cylinder and salts blued. Rode my beach cruiser to make the money with a paper route and get my Fix!
I miss David Fletcher very much, but Chris Copson is just wonderful. He has a very understated style that suits the descriptions of these wonderful machines perfectly.
While I was in the Air Force, back in the early 80's, I was assigned to the 1st SOW Hurlburt Field Fla. Which is across town from Eglin AFB. While overthere one day, I saw a mass of M-47 Pattons sitting around? Odd for a Air Force base. I later learned that they were used as range targets for aircraft ground attack training. What was even cooler, some of the runners were remote controlled. That way the pilots could practice hitting a moving target.
Used to see these at the mall in eastern Pennsylvania back in the early 80’s. First tank I ever climbed into as a kid. I guess it was the Army National Guard that used to put these out on public display. Pretty common back in those days.
OMG!!!! I am SOOOOOOO jealous! I have never touched a tank! LET ALONE GOT INSIDE ONE!!!! Man! that must have been really fun as a kid! Hell, i would probably have fun playing in one now and im 45!! lol
@@coodudeman If you're an American they are commonly parked in front of VFWs or in public parks. Being that you don't know this I'm guessing you're not.
@@BullMooseFox hell! where do you live???? i have been to plenty of parks in Ga, Fl, and Ny, and never saw any that were open... i played in an Apollo capsule in Al... but never saw a tank i could enter!
@@coodudeman I live in MN. We have a Patton chilling at a VFW in Royalton. A few Pattons in front of Camp Ripley. A tank museum on Camp Ripley open to the public. An F86 Sabre in a public park in Farmington. These are just the ones I remember off hand. There are a ton more. Artillery pieces outside VFWs as well.
Prior to the fall of the Shah, Iran got a bunch of M47 tanks. These are still in service with the current armed forces of Iran and they have done all manner of unholy modifications to them, creating some truly bizarre upgrades with names like Sabalan and Tiam.
It would be very interesting to know the changes made to make the Sabalan; when the picture of it presented as in modern service was shown, I had the thought that it would be quite likely unique for this tank museum to rebuild this or an M47 to that standard for its Tank Festival and display! Much in the way that this museum has several versions of the T-62, though sadly it only displays one. If only one can be displayed, choosing between an original, a most-common, or a particularly famous version must be a difficult choice!
It's only boring if you don't like the coolest looking turret design the U.S. ever came out with. The M47 is another one of those underrated and undervalued tanks.
@@bocktordaytona5656 I mean 1 inch or 25mm of armor wasn't that bad for the M41, it could stop anything 12.7mm and below while also being resistant to 14.5mm guns unless they make a solid hit on a flat spot
Under rated? It was objectively a terrible tank. The Indians discovered that if you just hit it, the shock of the hit would often rupture the internal hydraulic lines. No pens needed. The hydraulic fluid would ignite and you could scrap one more M47 or M48. Problem wasn't fixed until well into M60A1 production.
To me, the amazing thing is that it was a stopgap, in production for less than 2 1/2 years to use 'just in case', and they still made 8,500 of them. That's sort of crazy.
Back then they used to crank out stuff fast, 2-3 years of production was thousands of vehicles, not like today where 10 years of production can be less than 500 vehicles.
The Korean War scared the US to replace obsolete Sherman’s and M-26 etc., and the war was the case that allowed the Navy to receiving funding for the Forrestal Class carriers when no carriers were authorized after WW2 (Oriskany). We then rearmed Germany and Japan because the US just didn’t have the standing army to oppose a million drafted Soviet soldiers in Europe, and at its peak, 20,000 Soviet tanks stationed there.
Less workforce and more complicated machines these days. Plus it was the cold war countries were just a few steps away from a war time economy. It wasn't until the USSR dissolved that military spending nose dived so bad and only started picking up again. Companies just hire enough people and stretch their orders over the years to keep factories running unlike a war economy where massive orders need to be done in a few years. And the addition, Integration and installation of more advanced sensors, communucations, and optics complicate manufacturing.
@@gagenater something really crazy is aviation production, in 6 years nearly 2,300 F100 super saber jets were manufactured. Nearly 1 per day which is actually really amazing.
Remember the 90's and one of these or its brother Ran a MUCK in San Deigo Ca, stole it from a base. I just missed it, got home from work when it came on the news.
No mention of Portugal use of the tank whatsoever. Portugal received 160 of these tanks and was one of the first European countries to receive them. 50 were delivered in early 1953. Because of these tanks, Portugal had one of the most advanced tank fleets in Europe until other countries, like Germany and France, received far superior numbers of M47 Patton tanks. The Portuguese M47 Patton was the only one to never receive any upgrades and remained in service until the mid-1980s.
Great video format! I got a good laugh out of "I can't wait!" - for some, there is an empowering feeling in restoring old machines; particularly military vehicles
I suggest you guys get in touch with the Belgian WHI. They have a lot of experience with the M-47 and its drivetrain. Maybe they some spare parts lying around out of old BA stocks.
Well done. As you stated, U.S. history barely gives this tank a passing glance. I had no idea there were so many built and serving in other countries. (It helps to know it was well liked by them as well🤠)
I've seen these Pattons up close at the Patton museum off of hwy 10 and Chiriaco rd. I had fun being able to identify the earlier models with that extra little wheel at the rear of the tank.
It gets me that this "short-lived" design had 8500 built and ended up serving in so many countries lasting into the 21st century. We really could build them back in the day.
Please consider doing a video wherein you introduce various tank aiming and rangefinding schemes and how they work. I really wanted to know how that stereoscopic rangefinder worked.
Thank you. Good video and project. Please do an Aus Armour type video series of this restoration. Should help you sell a few books, toys, mugs, tee shirts, etcetera. A documentary photo-book would also be a nice thing to see.
And that AV-1790 engine, upgraded, converted to diesel, and supercharged, is still in active service in the US as the AVDS-1790 engine in the M88 series of vehicles, and in various M60 tanks around the world.
As a kid i thought battle of the bulge was a great film but having a Dinky toy king tiger and M48 i knew i was being decieved. My mum still has the letter i wrote to my dad while he was away in the Navy. I qas very excited about seeing Kojak in Battle of the Blunge😂
I remember my own lack of understanding when i entered our local Plasticmodel Shop in the mid 80s (i think 84 or 85). My father loved to watch warmovies and Werstern. I remember my confusion when i saw the Modelkits showing some tanks i never saw before as Tigers or Panzers...while the Tanks i always saw as typical German (M47, Chaffee, Walker Bulldog) were all US tanks. The owner of our local store then explained the tanks to me, loved to spend my time and pocket money in this shop. Thanks for this memory.
A good entry on a vehicle that was more important as a stepping stone, even if was not known for its combat performance in the armed forces of the country that built it. I get the impression that either the M47 or its' predecessor that played the part of German tanks in a sate of 50s' and 60s' WW2 movies when studios could not get any more realistic than painting German insignia on U.S. vehicles. Looking forward to seeing footage of it running next year (fingers crossed!)
For some strange reason, these and the up gunned M47M variants were not exported to the ARVN units in Vietnam when they really needed tanks to help blunt PAVN attacks.
The logic behind that would probably be explained away as " it would be harder for ARVN crews to train on them " but that's pretty negligent if you ask me.
@@jamesworth4573 Sheesh! If any US ally needed armored vehicles it would have been South Vietnam. They did get some M41 Walker Bulldog light tanks late and did well enough with them, but they needed medium tanks from 1966/67.
@@AnthonyEvelyn Due to being used in some early coups, SVN armored units were tightly controlled with politically reliable commanders. Ky had a unit with M24s at Tan Son Nhut as an anti coup deterrent. They received M48s in the early 70s.
7:36 - wow - never saw that steering mechanism in my time in the Army - I only saw the tiller system, two bars and pull back on the right to brake the right track, etc - or a steering wheel - in the US Army 1985 to 1990 -
"I Think?" I have pics of my 4x4 RV pulling an original 66 Johnson Mil Surp trailer, while posed in front of these with my dogs pocking their heads out in the open air, at the Patton Museum on the Cherico summit So Cal Mojave next to one of our favorite 2nd amend training spots, just got back home from keeping history alive with stonners and capper muzzle loaders in same spot. Keep History Alive! Thanks! Greatest Generation and their Kids! Gave US about 75 plus years of world peace. RIP I Miss Y'all, YA'LL! All!
In the '70s I saw depo packs of these in POMCUS stocks. You guys could have saved yourselves a lot of work if you could have gotten one of those. Who knows, there are probably still some of those hidden away in the old FRG.
Lots of them ended as targets on west-german firing -ranges.Main disadvantage was the extreme high fuel consumption and the short range. T54/55 had more fuel-effective diesel-engines.
That there is a diesel version of the same engine still in current U.S. service and commonly used globally, I have to wonder how many M47 tanks in service with the numerous users were converted!
@@davidgoodnow269 West-Germany never undertook any modernisations of the M47 because it was decommissioned quite early in 1967, serial-production of Leopard 1 began in 1965. The diesel version was developed for M60? or upgrading M48?. Do you know something of upgrades of the M47 with 105mm guns in other Nato-countries? Would be interesting to learn somethink about the service history of the M47 in Turkey,Greece, Portugal,etc.
@@hansulrichboning8551 The M-47 is quite new to me, but I have been picking up a lot in the comments on this video and checking those statements. The engine is currently in use in the M-88 Armor Recovery Vehicle, and used worldwide in a large range of military vehicles and construction equipment.
its not boring but a badass and iconic tank of the early cold war. No offense tank museum, I love your stuff but if you are asking people to raise £50,000 to restore one, STOP CALLING IT BORING!
The museums m47 was in good nick inside when we took out the power pack. The only thing that wasn't working was the donkey engine, which is in bits somewhere
I've never gotten those vibs. I always like the Walker Bulldog, and the m47 is just an updated version of that. Plus it has M60 vibes, and that's the sexiest tank ever designed. BTW its sort of a distortion to refer to the M60 as a Patton tank. Model manufacturers called it that. Reporters called it that. The crews did not call it a Patton - they called them M60s or sometimes 60s. I didn't hear Patton once in the four years I served in the cav with them. And I was a hex-n-counter wargamer and model builder at the time, so knew all nerdy stuff like. I think I was the only one who knew that civilians called it a Patton.
You didn't listen to the video then, they said in the video the lineage of the design, the M41 walker bulldog was an update of the Chaffey which iirc didn't leader onto anything. The m47 was built on the m46 Patton which was an upgrade of the Pershing not the walker
I am so so sorry Nigel. I feel your pain. Last Monday I had to say goodbye to my loyal and best mate Ferous, a fox red Labrador, of 12 years. I burried him in my wood where he used to run around and planted an Oak where he lay. Cheers mate.
No dodgy 1960s WW2 movie was complete without M47s doubling for German "Tigers".
That’s because most of those movies were shot in Spain and relied on the Spanish Army for technical support.
In the movie Patton (1970) they used M48s for German tanks, and M41s and M47s for American tanks, as they were all used by the Spanish Army.
Movie was "Battle of the Bulge".
"Die letzte Schlacht".
They were Spanish army M47. I knew them very well
But the director said he used authentic WWII vehicles and equipment.
@@mikey29211 It's because the director was lying, and he knew that most 1960's civilians weren't as educated as most people are now.
You forget to mention that Portugal was the first country in Europe to receive the M47 !
We received more or less 130 tanks in 1953. They are all new from factory.
We (the portuguese Army tank museum, in Elvas, in the spanish/portuguese border) are rebuilding one of this M47.
European countries used to field large tank armies back then.
@@Cohen.the.Worrier The threat of a Soviet block invasion, with their many many many tanks, ensured a healthy supply.
The peace dividend & the mainly counter insurgency role of the 90's, 00's and 10's relegated the tank forces to become a fraction of the size they were. Plus, the ballooning costs due to how advanced tanks were becoming (like fighter jets, in that regard) only compounded that.
There was a crucial moment during april 1974, when M47s played a important role.
Good fortune in that endeavor! It's a fine bit of history.
I saw a pic on Twitter that claims that Belgium received them starting in 1952.
I still remember starting to learn just out of curiosity about the difference between M47 and M48 by firing range hard targets and tanks on display at German armour school during my first two courses of my officer's training. Thanks for bringing back memories and good luck and success with the restoration.
Well, don't leave us hanging. What were the results?
@@BeefIngotWell, that i learned about the various cold war US tank designs and how to distiguish them. As somebody barely knowing anything about tanks, that was a good start 😅
@AN-nt3uv I was hoping to learn about the differences in penetration tests like the cast hull vs welded. I suppose that was a pipe dream 😅
@@BeefIngot Sorry, for that i would have had to work for the Wehrtechnische Dienststelle. Also, when you got a hard target assigned, it often looked already quite destroyed, no chance to make any of those observations.
For a stop-gap tank, it sure has a long service career!
That's the problem with stop-gaps.
I think history shows that's practically an inevitable outcome!
@@neiloflongbeck5705 I wouldn't say it's a problem. It's a feature.
Stop gaps tend to not be stuffed with every untested geegaw, doodad and gizmo they can fit inside it.
They tend to just be built with known reliable components. Because it's nobody's pet project they don't over complicate things.
Tons of amazing weapons systems were stop gaps. The M1 Abrams for one. The Iowa class battleships weren't the biggest, bestest or most heavily armed. But they lasted a long time after others that were.
Hell even the B52 bomber wasn't supposed to be long for this world. Just a temporary measure until supersonic heavy bombers came. Those supersonic heavy bombers never came. While the B52 still lives on.
The M16 wasn't intended to be a standard issue weapon either. But it's simplicity made it great for that role as time would tell.
There's lots of examples of similar.
always ends up that way doesnt it
@edwardscott3262 the problem is that stop-gaps because of their simplicity and reliability become the yardstick by which the real deal ends up being measured against by those who hold the purse strings.
Never found the M47 boring, it's one of my favorites, and one of the rare tanks I actually have a physical model of. It along with m48 are also the tank you will often see in-front of American legion posts or on display here in Michigan, so I was always fond of them driving by as a kid. I tend to be more fascinated by eastern block tanks, but I may go as far as to say the M47 is my favorite western tank of the cold war.. it has sleeker lines than the later 48
My faves from the US are the M47, and the M60. M103 is up there too just because it’s a proper heavy tank and the US never really did that at any other point.
There are two M60 Gate Guards at Fort Leonard Wood Missouri
Interesting you have so many M47s up there - in Ohio it’s almost exclusively M60s with the occasional Sherman
My Grandfather served in M47 tank as a gunner in Pakistan Army.
He took part in the battle of Chawinda (1965). He served in 19 Lancers regiment ... 6th armored division.
He was a sweet guy and was proud of his service, never liked wars. He passed away 4 years ago.
Incredible.
God bless, and thank you for sharing.
I am sorry for your loss. My grandfather's have both gone, and I miss them!
Respect to your grandfather and howdy, from Texas.
My late Grand uncle served in indian Centurion tank n he participated in Battle of Asal uttar in 1965
You forgot to mention its service in Panzer Battalians at the Battle of Bulge. It fought valiantly against American M24 Chaffee tanks which were no match (the 90mm guns on the M47 Tigers turning at least one into a Chaffee convertible). However, many M47 Tiger IIs were destroyed when the Allies discovered that fuel drums did great damage against their lower front gracious plate. Colonel Hestler met his end in one of these 😔
German M-47's were also quite formidable at Kasserine pass.
Yes they were! 😉 They also served us well in Patton’s 3rd later on in the war as well
German use of M-47s is often misinterpreted or misrepresented.
Did you not notice the desert terrain? That is because the Battle of the Bulge was actually fought in Texas during the American Civil War. Yes, they had tanks back then. A famous Confederate tank designer was a Dr. Loveless, who later met his end at the hands of a Secret Service agent.
@@mikearmstrong8483 Nonsense. It obviously was the Spanish-American war!
@@memonk11
Couldn't have been, unless Dr. Loveless' designs outlived him (and changed from spider legs to tracks).
Some of the last US Army use of M47s were for driver training as it had the extra position for the bow gunner, which could be used by a driver trainee. This was in the 70s or early 80s.
My pops join the army in 1967. He went to Vietnam as part of the 1st ID. For some reason ne decided he'd rather be in a tank and the fastest way for him to do that was to transfer to the 101st combat engineer battalion. He first tank was a M48 with dozer blade and a short barrel called a CEV. His career went from the M48 all the way through to the M1A1 Abrams tank. The M60A3 was his favorite tank of all time!
My grandfather has quite the history with this vehicle (belgian army). 1. It was the first tank he had to drive on an antar tank transporter...and he flipped it on his first try.
2. He was ferrying m47 tanks over a street in hechtelt when he heard a loud bang. A citroen 2cv broke trough the MP barricade and collided with his tank on the sides. A young couple died, but dozens of empty bottles of beer were found and the driver was likely drunk
Was he professional soldier or conscripted? I remember my dad talking about driving an AMX13 as a conscripted soldier. Only the tank commander was a professional officer.
2CV against tank... ouch!
@@Cohen.the.Worrier Professional. Well..i think, im not sure ill ask my grandmother!
@@UnfollowYourDreams Oh yeah..There were photos taken back then but i was never able to find them. And since my grandfather passed away i cant ask him when it happened and such.
@@F4Wildcat i'm not sure i want to see such pictures. I remember the 2CV as little more than a motorized umbrella
My late grandfather was a tank driver in Yugoslav National Army, he drove M-47, beside Sherman and T-34-85. By his words it had the best handling of the three.
We still had a few M48A5's in service at Ft. Knox in the 70's. National Guard units had the M48A5's. There use to be an M47 at the gate coming into Ft Knox.
My Dad did AIT at Knox in '79. While units had switched to M60s and the production prototype M1s were being trialed, he did most of his maintenance training on M48s.
That m47 is still there, I forget which gate. As a kid, my Dad would bring us to the Patton Armor Museum, I loved climbing on the tanks
@@nicholasmckenzie1075 I don't recall what gate it's at either but it's the one you go out of to go to The Black Angus steak house if it's still there.
I have a kind of "technical question" if you don't mind: I read on a forum that a track from an M48 break on a base and it was fixed using M47 patton treads but the thing its that the M47 treads are the same of the M 26 pershing or more or less the same.....
My question is: That can be done? Also I bought metal treads for a scale model (M 47) but a friend gave me an M 48, aaaand I don't know if they can fit or not.
I assume that if the M 48 could use M 47 treads the scale model should do the same also!.
Thanks for everything! And have a nice rest of your day.
@@bocktordaytona5656 The M26, M46, and the M47 all share the same track dimensions. The M48s and M60s share the same track, but because they have slightly different dimensions from earlier tanks, those tracks are incompatible with earlier tanks. Fun fact, though the tracks are incompatible, the roadwheel hubs and bearings for the M47 are the same as those for the M48s and M60s.
Such great little details like Arnie serving in one and buying it at a later date. Cheers guys for the M47 chat.🍻🇦🇺 Just joined the channel to help in a small way.
I've long been a fan of the forgotten M-47. It often posed as a Tiger in 1960s war movies and TV shows, but I liked it for its appearance, particularly the shape of its turret. It was my second favorite tank after the M41 Walker Bulldog.
They were used in the Battle of the Bulge movie from 1965 as Tigers II, indeed. But the Patton movie from 1970 used M-48 for german tanks and Walker Bulldog light tanks for the US ones, all loans from the spanish army.
Life is not measured by the breaths we take, but by the moments that take our breath.
Hey Tank Nuts! We hope you enjoyed our latest video. What are your thoughts on the M47? Let us know below.
Arnold drove it, so it isn't boring.
@@germen343 Hahah! He actually tried racing it and seeing how fast it could go and crashed through a building with it when he was a young man training in the Austrian army. He mentions the event fairly early on in his autobiography, Total Recall.
Great job by Chris, as usual, but Most Boring Tank Ever? Need to rethink that title.
@@germen343 He owns one now.
I am fond of the tanks of the 1950s. My time with armor units was spent on M-60A1s.
In much from the 1960's warmovies "Battle of the Bulge" / Anzio" / The Devil's brigade, they use this tank for the German King tiger. That's why we like the Patton tanks.
I built this as a model in the late ‘70s. Brings back memories. Good luck with the restoration!
I also built a model of this as a teen
Yes! Spent all my cash on these 1:48 models early mid 70's air, and armor! Still have a few looking back, I was Good! REAL GOOD! Got no patience for it now? 76 I built my first kit muzzle loader white steel to timed cylinder and salts blued. Rode my beach cruiser to make the money with a paper route and get my Fix!
I miss David Fletcher very much, but Chris Copson is just wonderful. He has a very understated style that suits the descriptions of these wonderful machines perfectly.
While I was in the Air Force, back in the early 80's, I was assigned to the 1st SOW Hurlburt Field Fla. Which is across town from Eglin AFB. While overthere one day, I saw a mass of M-47 Pattons sitting around? Odd for a Air Force base. I later learned that they were used as range targets for aircraft ground attack training. What was even cooler, some of the runners were remote controlled. That way the pilots could practice hitting a moving target.
When I was in the US Army, 78-90, the M47 was the main target on the ranges. Beasties were always full of holes.
Used to see these at the mall in eastern Pennsylvania back in the early 80’s. First tank I ever climbed into as a kid. I guess it was the Army National Guard that used to put these out on public display. Pretty common back in those days.
OMG!!!! I am SOOOOOOO jealous! I have never touched a tank! LET ALONE GOT INSIDE ONE!!!! Man! that must have been really fun as a kid! Hell, i would probably have fun playing in one now and im 45!! lol
@@coodudeman If you're an American they are commonly parked in front of VFWs or in public parks. Being that you don't know this I'm guessing you're not.
@@BullMooseFox lol ok... did Georgia secede again??? Or is it because Georgia's in Florida??? lol
@@BullMooseFox hell! where do you live???? i have been to plenty of parks in Ga, Fl, and Ny, and never saw any that were open... i played in an Apollo capsule in Al... but never saw a tank i could enter!
@@coodudeman I live in MN. We have a Patton chilling at a VFW in Royalton. A few Pattons in front of Camp Ripley. A tank museum on Camp Ripley open to the public. An F86 Sabre in a public park in Farmington. These are just the ones I remember off hand. There are a ton more. Artillery pieces outside VFWs as well.
I’ve loved the M47 look. I don’t know why, it just looks neat!
Built a model of the M47M variant
Prior to the fall of the Shah, Iran got a bunch of M47 tanks. These are still in service with the current armed forces of Iran and they have done all manner of unholy modifications to them, creating some truly bizarre upgrades with names like Sabalan and Tiam.
It would be very interesting to know the changes made to make the Sabalan; when the picture of it presented as in modern service was shown, I had the thought that it would be quite likely unique for this tank museum to rebuild this or an M47 to that standard for its Tank Festival and display! Much in the way that this museum has several versions of the T-62, though sadly it only displays one. If only one can be displayed, choosing between an original, a most-common, or a particularly famous version must be a difficult choice!
Unholy?
In Iran?
How dare you sir.
Iran is actually the last user of the M47 I believe
@@billspence1799
Yes, unholy!
I tried getting a permit to open a kosher deli in Tehran, and the sobs turned me down.
you know its a good day when thetankmuseum uploads
It's only boring if you don't like the coolest looking turret design the U.S. ever came out with. The M47 is another one of those underrated and undervalued tanks.
Honestly the M47 looks like an M41 scaled up to a medium tank lol
The M41 has a cool turret also "yep its made out of tissue paper" But is quite cool... Cadillac of course being cadillac
@@bocktordaytona5656 I mean 1 inch or 25mm of armor wasn't that bad for the M41, it could stop anything 12.7mm and below while also being resistant to 14.5mm guns unless they make a solid hit on a flat spot
Thank you! Yes it is a very good looking tank!
Under rated? It was objectively a terrible tank. The Indians discovered that if you just hit it, the shock of the hit would often rupture the internal hydraulic lines. No pens needed. The hydraulic fluid would ignite and you could scrap one more M47 or M48. Problem wasn't fixed until well into M60A1 production.
Forgot one of the first users of this tank. Portugal. Never saw combat while in Portuguese service but took part in the carnation revolution.
To me, the amazing thing is that it was a stopgap, in production for less than 2 1/2 years to use 'just in case', and they still made 8,500 of them. That's sort of crazy.
Back then they used to crank out stuff fast, 2-3 years of production was thousands of vehicles, not like today where 10 years of production can be less than 500 vehicles.
The Korean War scared the US to replace obsolete Sherman’s and M-26 etc., and the war was the case that allowed the Navy to receiving funding for the Forrestal Class carriers when no carriers were authorized after WW2 (Oriskany). We then rearmed Germany and Japan because the US just didn’t have the standing army to oppose a million drafted Soviet soldiers in Europe, and at its peak, 20,000 Soviet tanks stationed there.
Less workforce and more complicated machines these days. Plus it was the cold war countries were just a few steps away from a war time economy. It wasn't until the USSR dissolved that military spending nose dived so bad and only started picking up again. Companies just hire enough people and stretch their orders over the years to keep factories running unlike a war economy where massive orders need to be done in a few years. And the addition, Integration and installation of more advanced sensors, communucations, and optics complicate manufacturing.
@@dominuslogik484 I realize that - just pointing out how far we've fallen.
@@gagenater something really crazy is aviation production, in 6 years nearly 2,300 F100 super saber jets were manufactured. Nearly 1 per day which is actually really amazing.
The M47 is a good looking tank, and according to you at the Tank Museum an evolutionary step in American tank design, great video, I loved it.
Hey, if you needed to shoot at Godzilla or any Sci-Fi monsters in Japanese movies or TV shows, THIS was the tank to call.
Yes, it tended to melt quite nicely.
this or the Type 61
Can you imagine if the United States was still using M47's the way Russia is still using the contemporary T-54?
U mean T-55s? But yeah that'd be insane, I wish more of them were built just for that purpose lol.
@@jamesworth4573A good amount of T-54s are mixed in with the T-55s. It’s a whole mixed bag of models that escaped the scrapper
@andrewstickley6681 to me the T-54 is a rare tank between the T-34-85 and the T-55. I hardly ever see pictures of the T-54 or countries fielding them.
Remember the 90's and one of these or its brother Ran a MUCK in San Deigo Ca, stole it from a base. I just missed it, got home from work when it came on the news.
@davefellhoelter1343 Yeah it was that M60. I'm surprised the security was so lax.
No mention of Portugal use of the tank whatsoever.
Portugal received 160 of these tanks and was one of the first European countries to receive them. 50 were delivered in early 1953. Because of these tanks, Portugal had one of the most advanced tank fleets in Europe until other countries, like Germany and France, received far superior numbers of M47 Patton tanks.
The Portuguese M47 Patton was the only one to never receive any upgrades and remained in service until the mid-1980s.
Would love to see a video on the South African Olifant MBT
Great video format! I got a good laugh out of "I can't wait!" - for some, there is an empowering feeling in restoring old machines; particularly military vehicles
Portugal also used the m47!
I love the M-47 Patton.
I always liked the M47 - that turret, with the range finder, looks like a rattlesnake's head!
Absolutely love the Patton family!
Boring? isn't this the typical toy tank with army men packs for decades.
no it would be more the M48, M60, T-55. M47 was really the gapfiller before M48 and then M60
In the toy soldiers bag I bought as a child. Contained centurions, M48A5 or M60A1s.
I remember making models of it as a kid in the 60s. Loved that tank.
Thanks
Get Drachinifel's rust-stripping laser! He did an amazing demonstration on the USS New Jersey in one of his videos.
Yes would love to see it running again!
I suggest you guys get in touch with the Belgian WHI. They have a lot of experience with the M-47 and its drivetrain. Maybe they some spare parts lying around out of old BA stocks.
My hat is off to you hard working guys doing the restorations!
Well, it looks as though you have the right man for the job at hand and hopefully it all comes together as planned. Great video, Jersey Bill
As we grow as unique persons, we learn to respect the uniqueness of others.
Well done.
As you stated, U.S. history barely gives this tank a passing glance.
I had no idea there were so many built and serving in other countries.
(It helps to know it was well liked by them as well🤠)
Thanks!
No one can see this??
My favourite German tank , iv seen all the films! Along with the American halftrack, which ice cold in Alex, could not of been filmed
We have one in Vukovar Croatia as part of Homeland war museum. Unfortunately it is stored outside but you can stand on it and take a selfie.
5:02: ooh, what a lovely shade of pink that rusty turret has! More pink tanks please.
I've seen these Pattons up close at the Patton museum off of hwy 10 and Chiriaco rd. I had fun being able to identify the earlier models with that extra little wheel at the rear of the tank.
Incredible History
Great work
2:40 Just starting?
Nah, they’d been out of date
The best tank museum remaining the best tank museum
Arww - thank you for the lovely comment, and for your support!
I served on a m48a5 in the early eighties in Korea 1/72 armor . I miss that tank it was pure tanking in my eyes
It gets me that this "short-lived" design had 8500 built and ended up serving in so many countries lasting into the 21st century. We really could build them back in the day.
Been waiting for a tank chat for a while!
Amazing that this guy is willing to take this year long restoration-job on.
To me, the M47 is the best looking US Tank ever made.
It's the most tank looking tank
To me it’s just one of those tanks that was just there not that special nor cool
@@THECHAIR.That's kinda part of the appeal to it though ngl 😂
Hewes two's....maybe. can't wait to see the end result at tankfest25. Good luck on undoing.
You say its boring but it sure is pretty
The m47 is a cool tank and a bloody good one
Please consider doing a video wherein you introduce various tank aiming and rangefinding schemes and how they work. I really wanted to know how that stereoscopic rangefinder worked.
Rather timely video. Been discussing this vehicle recently.
Thank you. Good video and project. Please do an Aus Armour type video series of this restoration. Should help you sell a few books, toys, mugs, tee shirts, etcetera. A documentary photo-book would also be a nice thing to see.
Used to have a big green plastic to use with the 1980s GI Joes. IIRC, the engine deck even opened up for storage.
And that AV-1790 engine, upgraded, converted to diesel, and supercharged, is still in active service in the US as the AVDS-1790 engine in the M88 series of vehicles, and in various M60 tanks around the world.
That must be one impressive engine! That long of a run makes me think of the Ford 302 V-8.
The M-47M of the Iranian army have this upgrade.
The fact that there's a stairway to heaven and a highway to hell explains life well.
Good luck with getting your M47 ready in a year
All tanks are beautiful.
As a kid i thought battle of the bulge was a great film but having a Dinky toy king tiger and M48 i knew i was being decieved.
My mum still has the letter i wrote to my dad while he was away in the Navy. I qas very excited about seeing Kojak in Battle of the Blunge😂
You won't ever here me call it that. I've had great success with the Bundeswehr version of it in War Thunder Mobile.
Not boring just unloved excellent vid tho guys look forward to TF 25 !
I remember my own lack of understanding when i entered our local Plasticmodel Shop in the mid 80s (i think 84 or 85).
My father loved to watch warmovies and Werstern.
I remember my confusion when i saw the Modelkits showing some tanks i never saw before as Tigers or Panzers...while the Tanks i always saw as typical German (M47, Chaffee, Walker Bulldog) were all US tanks.
The owner of our local store then explained the tanks to me, loved to spend my time and pocket money in this shop.
Thanks for this memory.
A good entry on a vehicle that was more important as a stepping stone, even if was not known for its combat performance in the armed forces of the country that built it. I get the impression that either the M47 or its' predecessor that played the part of German tanks in a sate of 50s' and 60s' WW2 movies when studios could not get any more realistic than painting German insignia on U.S. vehicles. Looking forward to seeing footage of it running next year (fingers crossed!)
Definitely in my top 3 Pattons
For some strange reason, these and the up gunned M47M variants were not exported to the ARVN units in Vietnam when they really needed tanks to help blunt PAVN attacks.
The logic behind that would probably be explained away as " it would be harder for ARVN crews to train on them " but that's pretty negligent if you ask me.
@@jamesworth4573 Sheesh! If any US ally needed armored vehicles it would have been South Vietnam. They did get some M41 Walker Bulldog light tanks late and did well enough with them, but they needed medium tanks from 1966/67.
@@AnthonyEvelyn Due to being used in some early coups, SVN armored units were tightly controlled with politically reliable commanders. Ky had a unit with M24s at Tan Son Nhut as an anti coup deterrent. They received M48s in the early 70s.
7:36 - wow - never saw that steering mechanism in my time in the Army - I only saw the tiller system, two bars and pull back on the right to brake the right track, etc - or a steering wheel - in the US Army 1985 to 1990 -
At the Museum of American Armor in NY, we have an M47 on display. The main data plate and many other labels are written in Italian.
Look forward to seeing this becoming a runner
Fascinating. Thank you.
"I Think?" I have pics of my 4x4 RV pulling an original 66 Johnson Mil Surp trailer, while posed in front of these with my dogs pocking their heads out in the open air, at the Patton Museum on the Cherico summit So Cal Mojave next to one of our favorite 2nd amend training spots, just got back home from keeping history alive with stonners and capper muzzle loaders in same spot.
Keep History Alive!
Thanks! Greatest Generation and their Kids! Gave US about 75 plus years of world peace. RIP I Miss Y'all, YA'LL! All!
Yes, I have always "resented" the M47 four "doubling as a German tank". But now as I look at it, the tank does have beautiful and unique lines.
Good luck with restoration!
In the '70s I saw depo packs of these in POMCUS stocks. You guys could have saved yourselves a lot of work if you could have gotten one of those. Who knows, there are probably still some of those hidden away in the old FRG.
Lots of them ended as targets on west-german firing -ranges.Main disadvantage was the extreme high fuel consumption and the short range. T54/55 had more fuel-effective diesel-engines.
That there is a diesel version of the same engine still in current U.S. service and commonly used globally, I have to wonder how many M47 tanks in service with the numerous users were converted!
@@davidgoodnow269 West-Germany never undertook any modernisations of the M47 because it was decommissioned quite early in 1967, serial-production of Leopard 1 began in 1965. The diesel version was developed for M60? or upgrading M48?. Do you know something of upgrades of the M47 with 105mm guns in other Nato-countries? Would be interesting to learn somethink about the service history of the M47 in Turkey,Greece, Portugal,etc.
@@hansulrichboning8551 The M-47 is quite new to me, but I have been picking up a lot in the comments on this video and checking those statements. The engine is currently in use in the M-88 Armor Recovery Vehicle, and used worldwide in a large range of military vehicles and construction equipment.
I love the M47.
its not boring but a badass and iconic tank of the early cold war. No offense tank museum, I love your stuff but if you are asking people to raise £50,000 to restore one, STOP CALLING IT BORING!
Bovys M47 was received in decent shape when they got it… then it sat outside and weathered.
Her scream silenced the rowdy teenagers.
L' M 47 ha costruito il grosso delle forze corazzate dell' Esercito Italiano fino agli inizi degli anni '70 , quando fu sostituito dal Leopard 1 .
The museums m47 was in good nick inside when we took out the power pack. The only thing that wasn't working was the donkey engine, which is in bits somewhere
I've never gotten those vibs. I always like the Walker Bulldog, and the m47 is just an updated version of that. Plus it has M60 vibes, and that's the sexiest tank ever designed. BTW its sort of a distortion to refer to the M60 as a Patton tank. Model manufacturers called it that. Reporters called it that. The crews did not call it a Patton - they called them M60s or sometimes 60s. I didn't hear Patton once in the four years I served in the cav with them. And I was a hex-n-counter wargamer and model builder at the time, so knew all nerdy stuff like. I think I was the only one who knew that civilians called it a Patton.
?
You didn't listen to the video then, they said in the video the lineage of the design, the M41 walker bulldog was an update of the Chaffey which iirc didn't leader onto anything. The m47 was built on the m46 Patton which was an upgrade of the Pershing not the walker
The M-47 is the tank Arnold drove in his mandatory Army service in Austria! Boy did this fella ever get around.
Great project and I am sure a lot of fun!
I am so so sorry Nigel. I feel your pain. Last Monday I had to say goodbye to my loyal and best mate Ferous, a fox red Labrador, of 12 years. I burried him in my wood where he used to run around and planted an Oak where he lay. Cheers mate.
I like the M47 much more than the M48. It is much nicer than the newer ones.
I quite like that joystick steering!
Would be awesome to see a Conqueror driving around at TF25!
Awesome work
Will there be Workshop Diaries about this restoration?