I have a friend, Tony Bishop he lost both legs to a snapped hauser. Incidently he won a gold medal bench pressing at the Seoul para-lympics a few years after. He's a big 'ol lump, and a good man. Beware of those lines under tension, they can change your life quick !
Mr Hews mentioned it being in gear in the first 8 seconds of arriving, but had to sit and wait until it was someone elses idea before anyone decided to check haha.
Ex-REME/BAOR Drinking Team here. I could tell what the problem was straight away - there's no yellow handbags in sight! Couple of those, it would've been straight out. Couple of those ×2, they would've got an ARV out 😂
The SVR will never be as reliable or as useful as the FODEN despite all the bells and whistles they put on the bloody thing. Half the time it goes wrong it's the stupid computers having a hissy fit then when you run diagnostics it denies the fault ever happened. The truck's like your idiot mates ex stripper girlfriend he can't fix her no one can.
Way back in time I used to work for an engineering company on the East coast. They used to test chains, ropes etc. as well as on site lifts, garage ramps and so on.The test house had several deep narrow pits about 30 or so feet long X 4 feet deep (from memory) with a hydraulic ram at one end. When they were testing for tensile performance, steel ropes and chains mainly, everything was assembled at the bottom of the pit, the area was cleared, and any access doors were locked. When the test was complete, the lockdown was lifted. In this video there are men just wandering about within a couple of feet of a highly loaded steel rope with not a care in the world. One day, something will fail, and given enough time it's inevitable, and a wire rope becomes just a bit dodgy. Really enjoy your vids though, I spent a lifetime in the motor trade and although tanks are just a bit different, it's nice to see a different sort of engineering.
They seem to do a lot of hanging around taught cables, it gives me the heebee geebees to think how dangerous that is. I know youngsters are invincible,but still...
If that cable had of snapped it would've cut those guys in half. Never stand so close to chains or cables when they're under stress. That suprised me. Very risky.
Had me cringing. We went through 3 Chieftain ARVs freshly overhauled by ABRO trying to roll a Mk10 back onto its tracks after it slipped of the rail car in Suffield railhead( BATUS). Two main cables parted and were singing their heads off. The third did its job...not funny
A very good example of a) how not to do it and b) why the Armoured Corps should never be let out unless under very strict supervision!! From a retired Sapper!!
As a fan of Gold rush and watching Tony Beets use his oshkosh winch truck I'm surprised so many of these trucks have the controls at the rear of the vehicle in the impact zone if something snaps. Tony's winch controls are mounted at the head behind a cage.
They're feckin dangerous with their winching... how many people think it's a good idea wandering around a cable under tension... they're itching to kill someone
Here's the thing, if you are going to play with bigger toys and they break, recovery can be a bit of an issue when it's 40 ton. Great video. Love what you guys are dong. Keep having fun.
Have you not heard, "I am invincible, it will not happen to me!" they all believe that they need to stand where they are or the job will not succeed. Superb vlog lads, now they definitely owe you a bit of rescued kit.
I am impressed w how many guys standing in the bite o that riggin.... I never pulled out a tank or used a MAN but been around enough fellas that told me that is not a good way to stay alive.
It sounds similar to the Deltic T9-29 engines that were used in the Baby Deltic locomotives. I'm going to straight-pipe my bus's Detroit 6V92, then it will also sound similar (I hope).
Hi, on the subject of wire ropes snapping, when in the Navy a tug was pulling 30,000 ton ship with wire rope, it parted the tug was pulling so hard at an angle to the ship it nearly rolled over . You should have seen how fast the engineroom crew came out from the bowels thinking they were going under. Good job they had brown overalls, or they were when they appeared,haha. Many thanks very entertaining but dangerous practices should be avoided.
Saw a tug trying to correct a sub's poor maneuvering. The 3” nylon line first sprayed (no problem), then steamed (warning!), then smoked (hit the deck!). When it parted, the young officer on the deck of the sub yelling at his crew was very lucky as the 200 foot long line parted near the tug, giving up much of its stored energy in flight before the end hit him in the chest. Wearing his life jacket protected him from serious injury as it seemingly lifted him gently and deposited him about 10 feet the other side of the sub. I had only been in a year or so, and this served me well for the eight patrols that I made as a line handler for maneuvering watches.
I saw one of those MAN recovery trucks on display on Rally GB a few years ago. I had to chuckle at the VIN plate on the arse end of it. It said, 'Super Compact'. Oh aye?
Great video, I can only assume every single person trying to pull this tank has never witnessed a chain pulley or a cable, snapping under load, because if they had they wouldn’t bloody well be stood where they are because the cable would fucking rip them in two
Just goes to prove that biggest is not always best, once saw a Mk6 fire tender (Stalwart) bogged down to its belly pan. They tried a Scammell and a Foden, neither would touch it but a poor old RL on a rope made it look easy.
Excellent video, thanks Mr. Hewes. That Chieftain was singing & appeared to be more reliable than the Pz68. A credit to your team. At least it was easier to disengage the drive on the Chieftain. The Mann didn't appear to be able to pull the skin off of a rice pudding. I reckon the Foden would have done a better job! Oh man these people need to see some safety videos on where not be when hawsers are being used. Someone is going to get hurt badly. I hope your Foden has it's test certificates?
Panzer 68 makes me think of "Tanks in Town" in Belgium. There it always was used for tank rides and as support vehicle for the WW2 Tank column on their 25km tour in the fields and villages around the city of Mons.
Just a question: I was always told that recovery stuff like chains and belts don't "snap back", because they don't "spring-load", like the towing lines do. The lines are infamous for that and they go sideways and mow everything in their way. Have you seen how any of these things happen in reality?
It was the same when I worked down the pit. If we had a chain snap, it would be like a snake going through the air. Anyone gets in the way, and it's going through them. Hence why we all kept well out the way and, if possible, taking cover behind the Dosco or other machine. (Slightly related) We also had a saying,machines don't stop for blood and bones ! 👍🏴
I once saw a D link explode while using a snatch block towing a dead Cheiftan Tank, the block shot back and hit the back of the tractor unit almost killing the driver
Chains and steel cable will preload and snap back. I dont understand how these people keep standing in the danger zones, especially the winch operator. Atleast the tank driver put his head down
I've been enjoying these vids from the archives while off work today, I must admit. Some brave souls standing withing range of those winch lines, though... I've driven trucks since '93 and now run winch trucks in the North Dakota oilfield. Lots of horror stories around after something snaps... at best one can lose even the hood of a truck... Still kinda cool to see how things are done there... I got to watch such things at an Army base here at which I worked a civilian transportation contract for the better part of a decade. It was often entertaining. :)
When I did an off-road course, I was told not to stand near a tensioned winch cable in case it snapped, and you should put something like a blanket on it, to show that there is a cable there and to take some of the inertia out of a snapped cable. I know this is a lot heavier duty, but surely the same principles apply. ?
Could please you do a 'Whos Who' video where you actually introduce everyone on the 'Mr Hewes' team? I'm so confused as to who is Jack, Seb etc and I thought the lass was called Sam(antha). Was nice to see her getting a drive, I'm a bit jealous.
IF the ROTZLER TR200 / 25 ton winch won't pull it the truck is never going to pull it out! The army should be embarrassed. These are MAN EKA super compacts we built over 200 of them at Atlas Cranes - Terex in Newhouse Scotland over 4 years. I was responsible for installing most of the winches electrical harnesses computer and final Hydraulics and making sure everything was work before testing and the installation of the side cabinets. Thing the cost of 1 was just short of £900,000
I wondered about that myself. I thought they were going to hook the bones up in order to rock it back and forth and try to get it out of gear or something but then they just tried pulling it. A green recovery crew is one thing but these guys just seemed clueless.
Excellent video which I enjoyed watching.The guys stood near the steel cables need some training in what happens when they break and how to use a winch safely.
Our old Scammel Matador recovery vehicle had a dozer blade fitted at the rear end. When recovering a stuck fully laden eight wheeler tipper up to its axle in mud the blade would dig in build a berm of earth and then pull the naughty truck out. The gearbox was a worm gearbox for the winch and bigger than the road gearbox. Scammel knew exactly what they were, doing it was designed to pull medium artillery up hills from any angle and had rollers in every corner to pull at any angle. Not sure who put the dozer blade on, it was lifted and lowered by a winch and chains limited its movement. It was never defeated in the 15 years I was there, many normal winch outs in fields. People standing near cables chains are an absolute no-no. Agree controls should be in a safe area or made safe.
Ah the magnificent 68, it was so bad that it led to a massive scandal in Switzerland. It seems that turning on the heater could force the main gun to fire, no wonder it stops in the bog longer than my youngest son!
Great to see you having a great time enjoying the fruits of your hard labour, shame about all the PC Nannies in the comments, obviously the view is different from an armchair, from experience you do not realise how precious life is until you stare death in the face, one life so live it!
I love the British! Instead of saying something and helping those guys, they watch and mock them!!! “That tanks in gear”, “they’ll never pull it if it’s in gear”……..we in America drape a heavy blanket over the cable, chain or strap. The blankets are made to ground the line if it breaks. I’ve seen them work. Instead of flying through the air, it drops to the ground and runs low.
The commander of the recovery crew needs f&*%in into jail. What an embarrassment to gods Corps and trade. If that's the standard of Rech Mechs now, then the REME is done for. The list of errors he made is so long. Besides the horrifying distinct disregard to safety, basic EP calculations based on 2 locked tracks would have screamed, "Don't bother with hollybones." He should be fined so many yellow handbags it would need a Foden to tow the trailer they would need to be delivered in. 😅😢😂
I think they were not sure if the tracks were locked. And if it has a broken clutch, tugging it may help get it in neutral. But I agree with the lack of safety, wth???
funny thing is....12 years ago when i was in the TA, i got sent here as part of a multi-company training exercise ( i was 101 Fs Bn REME ) justa little up from where the panzer got stuck ( the hill area) is where someone got an SVR stuck in the mud, and i MEAN well and truly stuck, required the 2nd SVR and 2 SVs to unfuck his fuck up.....suffice to say.....the major was a little upset, and told him when he is back at barrack, he is being retrained
lol - I like how they all stand within the "snapping range" of the wire/cable. If that thing breaks while under max tension, then the whip-effect will be strong enough to break limbs if they hit a man, with an actual risk of killing him/her with an unlucky hit. Ive recovered more than one heavy vehicle in my life, but im not an expert. Yet the most repeated thing is; stay at range, youl loose the fight if it snaps and hit you. ½ the distance isnt enough, the cables rarely snap on the middle(tho it may happen),They oftentime snaps at the anchorpoint
It can zero turn, but not drive? Powered diff maybe? I am intrigueded. So if you disconnected the easy drive coupling and steered full left it would drive out? Anyhoo, the cheiften exhaust is is really clean for some proper thrashing around a big site :o)
Just 'wow'. If CO of the unit I was in with in the Army in the early 90s had seen that, the person in charge of the recovery would have been up to see the BN commander and everyone else on the crew would have been looking at an Article 15 (non-judicial punishment). Then they would have spent the next six months retraining in proper recovery and safety. I was a turret mechanic for M2/3 Bradleys, but often assisted in hull work and recoveries. _I_ could see in the first minute that the final drives needed to be disconnected. I get that not every military does things the way the US does, but a recovery is a recovery. Nothing more, nothing less - you get the vehicle out _without_ trying to repair it in-situ. Once out, if it can't be repaired in under 15 minutes with basic tools, it goes back to the nearest maintenance area for repairs. It ain't doctrine, it's just common sense.
I recognised that Geordie twang anywhere! I was waiting for someone to say "That's what you get for buying a German tank" Also no one from the tank helped to get it out??
Love seeing the turret moving like that as it now looks like a tank on the prowl. Well done guys for bring back the past to people who would never see these tanks and i would love to come and visit you 🤞 Love seeing the pongo`s doing some dirty work but why is one wearing American helmet have they gone American is so god help them as i never wore one of those helmets as they are shit. It took cowboys telling them how to tow a tank all thanks to this channel 🤣🤣🤣 Pongo`s ZERO cowboys WINNERS. What i would love to see is a long base LAND ROVER 1972`s as that was my home everytime i went on exercises it was shit but it did what we wanted on TCW and comms.
After the Mk 7 Helmet, the helmet changed shape to more like the American shape, and mainly issued to Inf units (you could get one if you knew someone). Not sure if Virtus (modern ‘58 or PLCE, depending on when you served) is still in use, and I think there was a helmet upgrade with the issue of Virtus, I left before the issue, but there was nothing but problems with it (what a surprise).
These man SVR's were build in Scotland. I was part of a small team with atlas cranes who made them. First job after leaving the army. Nothing compared to the wrecker tho 😂
"If they can't do it, the Foden will." - You cheeky little... ! Hahaha
😂
Took my class. 2 in a 16t foden with a split gearbox at the royal engineers place in Maidstone in 1983 !
I have a friend, Tony Bishop he lost both legs to a snapped hauser. Incidently he won a gold medal bench pressing at the Seoul para-lympics a few years after. He's a big 'ol lump, and a good man. Beware of those lines under tension, they can change your life quick !
Similar here except cut in two and he was still trying to get up with his lower half 10 foot away. Tug, Panama canal 1984
Ex Reme Reccy Mech here. I was on Fodens. That recovery effort was dire.
Mr Hews mentioned it being in gear in the first 8 seconds of arriving, but had to sit and wait until it was someone elses idea before anyone decided to check haha.
Ex-REME/BAOR Drinking Team here. I could tell what the problem was straight away - there's no yellow handbags in sight! Couple of those, it would've been straight out. Couple of those ×2, they would've got an ARV out 😂
@@ianbarnes9947 absolutely lol
Not enough snatch blocks! And this is now seen nationally!
The SVR will never be as reliable or as useful as the FODEN despite all the bells and whistles they put on the bloody thing. Half the time it goes wrong it's the stupid computers having a hissy fit then when you run diagnostics it denies the fault ever happened. The truck's like your idiot mates ex stripper girlfriend he can't fix her no one can.
Now you've got that turret working you just can't resist playing with it.
Way back in time I used to work for an engineering company on the East coast. They used to test chains, ropes etc. as well as on site lifts, garage ramps and so on.The test house had several deep narrow pits about 30 or so feet long X 4 feet deep (from memory) with a hydraulic ram at one end.
When they were testing for tensile performance, steel ropes and chains mainly, everything was assembled at the bottom of the pit, the area was cleared, and any access doors were locked. When the test was complete, the lockdown was lifted.
In this video there are men just wandering about within a couple of feet of a highly loaded steel rope with not a care in the world. One day, something will fail, and given enough time it's inevitable, and a wire rope becomes just a bit dodgy.
Really enjoy your vids though, I spent a lifetime in the motor trade and although tanks are just a bit different, it's nice to see a different sort of engineering.
You‘re sooo right, Sir!!! A colapsing cable/rope is a „allmost 100% garanty to die for 2 men nearbye the MAN towtruck…
Living dangerous,when your young you seem to feel invincible.
@@Will_14_years_agoThe bald head looked middle aged.
@@basilpunton5702 ahh yes indeed!! Some take longer than others.
They seem to do a lot of hanging around taught cables, it gives me the heebee geebees to think how dangerous that is. I know youngsters are invincible,but still...
If that cable had of snapped it would've cut those guys in half. Never stand so close to chains or cables when they're under stress. That suprised me. Very risky.
The triangle of death
@@lucyfiesta, nah, ‘triangle of deaf’. Can’t hear when your head’s bin sliced off.
With his head sticking out. Guillotine by steel cable.
Had me cringing. We went through 3 Chieftain ARVs freshly overhauled by ABRO trying to roll a Mk10 back onto its tracks after it slipped of the rail car in Suffield railhead( BATUS).
Two main cables parted and were singing their heads off.
The third did its job...not funny
@Mo Mozza what were they singing.
That cable tension had me bricking it from here
No blankets? Be fucking murders if that let go
SVR uses a dead drop winch rope
No kidding! 1-1/2 times the length of cable is a minimum safety distance.
@@red55chief 10metres is the safety distance for the SVR…
As a previous winner of the LDFV award for dodging a snapped hauser I can’t believe people keep getting so close.
@Lookup2Wakeup Particularly when your head has been removed by a whipping wire, no more worries.
Horrifying in fact
Couldnt believe how many stood in the triangle of death
Just at groin hieght?
If it snapped it wouldn’t half hurt. The half still connected to the brain stem.
'I've got a gash on my leg.'
"You lucky bastard."
Yeah but how’s he going to slip it a length?
A very good example of a) how not to do it and b) why the Armoured Corps should never be let out unless under very strict supervision!! From a retired Sapper!!
As a fan of Gold rush and watching Tony Beets use his oshkosh winch truck I'm surprised so many of these trucks have the controls at the rear of the vehicle in the impact zone if something snaps. Tony's winch controls are mounted at the head behind a cage.
They're feckin dangerous with their winching... how many people think it's a good idea wandering around a cable under tension... they're itching to kill someone
It can never be a good thing.
I noticed that on another video.
Here's the thing, if you are going to play with bigger toys and they break, recovery can be a bit of an issue when it's 40 ton. Great video. Love what you guys are dong. Keep having fun.
Have you not heard, "I am invincible, it will not happen to me!" they all believe that they need to stand where they are or the job will not succeed. Superb vlog lads, now they definitely owe you a bit of rescued kit.
That’s the first Pz 68 I’ve seen in the wild. Thanks
A funny swiss tank ;)
Some of them oppo,s need to be aware winch cables will kill you !! Great vid , Chieftain sounds great , looking good 👌Thanks for sharing 💨💨
SVRs use a dead drop rope so if it does snap or anything snaps it doesn’t lash around it just drops
I am impressed w how many guys standing in the bite o that riggin.... I never pulled out a tank or used a MAN but been around enough fellas that told me that is not a good way to stay alive.
Damn, that engine sound of the chieftain is absolutely demonic. Music to my ears. 😎
It sounds similar to the Deltic T9-29 engines that were used in the Baby Deltic locomotives. I'm going to straight-pipe my bus's Detroit 6V92, then it will also sound similar (I hope).
Hi, on the subject of wire ropes snapping, when in the Navy a tug was pulling 30,000 ton ship with wire rope, it parted the tug was pulling so hard at an angle to the ship it nearly rolled over . You should have seen how fast the engineroom crew came out from the bowels thinking they were going under. Good job they had brown overalls, or they were when they appeared,haha. Many thanks very entertaining but dangerous practices should be avoided.
Saw a tug trying to correct a sub's poor maneuvering. The 3” nylon line first sprayed (no problem), then steamed (warning!), then smoked (hit the deck!). When it parted, the young officer on the deck of the sub yelling at his crew was very lucky as the 200 foot long line parted near the tug, giving up much of its stored energy in flight before the end hit him in the chest. Wearing his life jacket protected him from serious injury as it seemingly lifted him gently and deposited him about 10 feet the other side of the sub. I had only been in a year or so, and this served me well for the eight patrols that I made as a line handler for maneuvering watches.
16:12 "Cheers, I was given that" I almost spat out my coffee 😂
I saw one of those MAN recovery trucks on display on Rally GB a few years ago. I had to chuckle at the VIN plate on the arse end of it. It said, 'Super Compact'.
Oh aye?
Great video, I can only assume every single person trying to pull this tank has never witnessed a chain pulley or a cable, snapping under load, because if they had they wouldn’t bloody well be stood where they are because the cable would fucking rip them in two
Enjoyed videos on the army camp boys foden is king of the mud . Brilliant thank you
You've got to admit the MAN is a nice looking rig though. 👍🏻
It sure is!
Just goes to prove that biggest is not always best, once saw a Mk6 fire tender (Stalwart) bogged down to its belly pan. They tried a Scammell and a Foden, neither would touch it but a poor old RL on a rope made it look easy.
Loved winching with RL's, proper job sir.
Looks like you are having great fun and allowing the big toys to have fun. Mud dust getting stuck recovery what more could anyone ask for.
Excellent video, thanks Mr. Hewes. That Chieftain was singing & appeared to be more reliable than the Pz68. A credit to your team. At least it was easier to disengage the drive on the Chieftain. The Mann didn't appear to be able to pull the skin off of a rice pudding. I reckon the Foden would have done a better job! Oh man these people need to see some safety videos on where not be when hawsers are being used. Someone is going to get hurt badly. I hope your Foden has it's test certificates?
Cheers bud!
Once the stuck tank got out of gear, the MAN had zero trouble towing it out and up
Looks like great fun. I did a Chieftain Drivers trade course in 1967 !! I think I still have a 'tracked vehicle' on my driving license as a result !
i love how all of y'all get together and it's funny and it's cool to see the British army recovery get their.
Panzer 68 makes me think of "Tanks in Town" in Belgium.
There it always was used for tank rides and as support vehicle for the WW2 Tank column on their 25km tour in the fields and villages around the city of Mons.
Those people stood around the MAN clearly have no imagination.
thats about as cool as it gets! well done getting Sebs chieftain going
Just a question: I was always told that recovery stuff like chains and belts don't "snap back", because they don't "spring-load", like the towing lines do. The lines are infamous for that and they go sideways and mow everything in their way. Have you seen how any of these things happen in reality?
It was the same when I worked down the pit. If we had a chain snap, it would be like a snake going through the air. Anyone gets in the way, and it's going through them. Hence why we all kept well out the way and, if possible, taking cover behind the Dosco or other machine. (Slightly related) We also had a saying,machines don't stop for blood and bones ! 👍🏴
I once saw a D link explode while using a snatch block towing a dead Cheiftan Tank, the block shot back and hit the back of the tractor unit almost killing the driver
I'm surprised that you/they don't put things over the lines like your ALWAYS told to do when offroad winching ?
Always avoid the snapback zone
Chains and steel cable will preload and snap back. I dont understand how these people keep standing in the danger zones, especially the winch operator. Atleast the tank driver put his head down
Kept saying to myself, get the sodding proper truck to pull it out 😂
love the nutters standing next to that steel cable under that much tension ,
love that place drive past all the time to my local jump spot for the bikes glad you had a good day!
Amazing how the Panzer 68 manages to pull the tractor unit towards it! .....and it's not even really trying!! 😊👍 🇦🇹
why the Austrian flag?
@@Schoschi-us7ow I couldn't find the Swiss flag!
I've been enjoying these vids from the archives while off work today, I must admit. Some brave souls standing withing range of those winch lines, though... I've driven trucks since '93 and now run winch trucks in the North Dakota oilfield. Lots of horror stories around after something snaps... at best one can lose even the hood of a truck...
Still kinda cool to see how things are done there... I got to watch such things at an Army base here at which I worked a civilian transportation contract for the better part of a decade. It was often entertaining. :)
Love your quallity content and the laughs along the way. Typical Brittish banter for sure. 👍👍👍
What a lovely afternoon of good honest banter ,thanks for sharing
When I did an off-road course, I was told not to stand near a tensioned winch cable in case it snapped, and you should put something like a blanket on it, to show that there is a cable there and to take some of the inertia out of a snapped cable. I know this is a lot heavier duty, but surely the same principles apply. ?
Where too next? Great video as always with lots of banter. Excellent.
Could please you do a 'Whos Who' video where you actually introduce everyone on the 'Mr Hewes' team? I'm so confused as to who is Jack, Seb etc and I thought the lass was called Sam(antha). Was nice to see her getting a drive, I'm a bit jealous.
They need an intro like Gilligans Island to introduce the characters.
Absolutely! We know Joe and Jack and Ted, but the rest need introducing, BIG please!
Some lovely toys. Would not want to be so close to those cables under tension. One will snap one day.
IF the ROTZLER TR200 / 25 ton winch won't pull it the truck is never going to pull it out!
The army should be embarrassed.
These are MAN EKA super compacts we built over 200 of them at Atlas Cranes - Terex in Newhouse Scotland over 4 years. I was responsible for installing most of the winches electrical harnesses computer and final Hydraulics and making sure everything was work before testing and the installation of the side cabinets.
Thing the cost of 1 was just short of £900,000
I wondered about that myself. I thought they were going to hook the bones up in order to rock it back and forth and try to get it out of gear or something but then they just tried pulling it. A green recovery crew is one thing but these guys just seemed clueless.
100% these guys are STABS @heliarche
Any recovery vehicle ìn the presence of a Foden is going to feel the pressure to perform. I'll bet they were sweating bullets.
Im betting these army guys LOVED you standing there taking the pi** and telling them " oooo i wouldn't do it like that if i was you !!! " lol
Excellent video which I enjoyed watching.The guys stood near the steel cables need some training in what happens when they break and how to use a winch safely.
Interesting to see what they are using these days instead of mighty Fodens!
Loved the videos you lot had some proper fun thanks
What a play date that must of been. And the indisputable sound of a Cheiftain at full pelt …….. well 30mph at least.
I reckon every recovery driver is just waiting for the cable or D shackle to break and see who’s got what body parts missing!!😮
I think you guys were itching to get the Foden on the job. What the video showed though was how difficult it is to sort out broken down tanks.
Reply
I used to love the CFT here and mile and half runs up and down them small hills
@@grahamprice3230 mistype by the iPhone my bad! Sorry sir
I didn't
Hilarious! The piss taking and the banter ... First class
Our old Scammel Matador recovery vehicle had a dozer blade fitted at the rear end. When recovering a stuck fully laden eight wheeler tipper up to its axle in mud the blade would dig in build a berm of earth and then pull the naughty truck out. The gearbox was a worm gearbox for the winch and bigger than the road gearbox. Scammel knew exactly what they were, doing it was designed to pull medium artillery up hills from any angle and had rollers in every corner to pull at any angle. Not sure who put the dozer blade on, it was lifted and lowered by a winch and chains limited its movement. It was never defeated in the 15 years I was there, many normal winch outs in fields. People standing near cables chains are an absolute no-no. Agree controls should be in a safe area or made safe.
Ah the magnificent 68, it was so bad that it led to a massive scandal in Switzerland. It seems that turning on the heater could force the main gun to fire, no wonder it stops in the bog longer than my youngest son!
16:45 you captured the poor bloke trying to have a sneaky wee in the brush 😂😂😂
WELL DONE,THOSE MEN !
Cheers From California 😎
the winch control panel placement 💀
Great to see you having a great time enjoying the fruits of your hard labour, shame about all the PC Nannies in the comments, obviously the view is different from an armchair, from experience you do not realise how precious life is until you stare death in the face, one life so live it!
Being Swiss, it probably got all over excited and then afraid of all the flat easy terrain it was surrounded by. So it stopped to have a little rest.
Holy shit, love the health and safety there lol.... Dont stand in the whiplash zone guys!!... but anyway, enjoyed the video, amazing vehcles!
I love the British! Instead of saying something and helping those guys, they watch and mock them!!! “That tanks in gear”, “they’ll never pull it if it’s in gear”……..we in America drape a heavy blanket over the cable, chain or strap. The blankets are made to ground the line if it breaks. I’ve seen them work. Instead of flying through the air, it drops to the ground and runs low.
That MAN truck is well cool that and the FODEN are really nice trucks with lots of power
I was waiting to see “ identify’s as a Foden” on the door of the MAN 🤣🤣
You are just so happy with that turret
Tank recovery is a young mans game 😮
The commander of the recovery crew needs f&*%in into jail. What an embarrassment to gods Corps and trade. If that's the standard of Rech Mechs now, then the REME is done for.
The list of errors he made is so long. Besides the horrifying distinct disregard to safety, basic EP calculations based on 2 locked tracks would have screamed, "Don't bother with hollybones." He should be fined so many yellow handbags it would need a Foden to tow the trailer they would need to be delivered in.
😅😢😂
I think they were not sure if the tracks were locked. And if it has a broken clutch, tugging it may help get it in neutral. But I agree with the lack of safety, wth???
I honestly thought it was civvies at first
@@Ka0s007 me too, until I saw the rego on the MAN.
@@Ka0s007 Reservists?
@@andyt3304 I would put my house on it that they are.
funny thing is....12 years ago when i was in the TA, i got sent here as part of a multi-company training exercise ( i was 101 Fs Bn REME ) justa little up from where the panzer got stuck ( the hill area) is where someone got an SVR stuck in the mud, and i MEAN well and truly stuck, required the 2nd SVR and 2 SVs to unfuck his fuck up.....suffice to say.....the major was a little upset, and told him when he is back at barrack, he is being retrained
keep them coming
another good vid
MAN, like a Foden, but without the kudos.
DANGEROUS that steel cable, get out ,be save!!!
Joe are you boys gonna fix up that Chieftain arv you pulled out ? Blinding vid as ever bud 👍
Thought it was going to stay on the range?
@@johnnunn8688 that's a shame
This is like watching a washing machine. 23 minutes of my life I won’t get back.
Best bit was that everyone is videoing your tank and not using theirs😊
The best ATV track... Loving this.
I'm doing mei failures on SVR atm answer to your question it's the same motor they put TGs um winch is rolizer not sure on the shackle.
So was the panza stuck in gear? or was the MAN svr gutless?
Did you not watch the video; it’s all revealed.
All the gear no idea 🤣🤣......I know nothing about tank recovery but even I was wincing at the cables!!
With a seized transmission, the trick is to pull the shafts out of the drive sprockets unless the design was so poor as to not be able to.
lol - I like how they all stand within the "snapping range" of the wire/cable.
If that thing breaks while under max tension, then the whip-effect will be strong enough to break limbs if they hit a man, with an actual risk of killing him/her with an unlucky hit.
Ive recovered more than one heavy vehicle in my life, but im not an expert. Yet the most repeated thing is; stay at range, youl loose the fight if it snaps and hit you.
½ the distance isnt enough, the cables rarely snap on the middle(tho it may happen),They oftentime snaps at the anchorpoint
Nice to see a couple of pinzguaur,s there . 👍
WTF didn’t they disconnect the GB first ?
We didn’t want to take over… but I got bored of them not managing to pull it out
I was looking for my "Feden" to pull out the stuck Swiss tank. Seriously it going to be expensive to repair the steering unit 🤦♂️🙅♂️
These Mates are into "Heavy Metal" the good stuff!
It can zero turn, but not drive? Powered diff maybe? I am intrigueded. So if you disconnected the easy drive coupling and steered full left it would drive out? Anyhoo, the cheiften exhaust is is really clean for some proper thrashing around a big site :o)
Thanks for sharing!
Just 'wow'. If CO of the unit I was in with in the Army in the early 90s had seen that, the person in charge of the recovery would have been up to see the BN commander and everyone else on the crew would have been looking at an Article 15 (non-judicial punishment). Then they would have spent the next six months retraining in proper recovery and safety.
I was a turret mechanic for M2/3 Bradleys, but often assisted in hull work and recoveries. _I_ could see in the first minute that the final drives needed to be disconnected. I get that not every military does things the way the US does, but a recovery is a recovery. Nothing more, nothing less - you get the vehicle out _without_ trying to repair it in-situ. Once out, if it can't be repaired in under 15 minutes with basic tools, it goes back to the nearest maintenance area for repairs. It ain't doctrine, it's just common sense.
I recognised that Geordie twang anywhere! I was waiting for someone to say "That's what you get for buying a German tank" Also no one from the tank helped to get it out??
REME earning the pay I see...... Lol,
Ex Royal Signals!!!
👍 gr8 video again lafs!! 😄
Love the Hilux drone you are using
You have all the best toys Mr Hewes. Im jealous :)
I can only imagine the sh't storm the MOD would kick up if there was an accident involving Military personnel and Civilians on MOD land.
That's exactly what I was wondering didn't they at least get a health and safety talk about recovery.
Looks like you guys had some fun, are you going to spoof for who is cleaning the tank when you get back
Looks like you had a great time.wish I had been there.
Love seeing the turret moving like that as it now looks like a tank on the prowl. Well done guys for bring back the past to people who would never see these tanks and i would love to come and visit you 🤞
Love seeing the pongo`s doing some dirty work but why is one wearing American helmet have they gone American is so god help them as i never wore one of those helmets as they are shit.
It took cowboys telling them how to tow a tank all thanks to this channel 🤣🤣🤣 Pongo`s ZERO cowboys WINNERS.
What i would love to see is a long base LAND ROVER 1972`s as that was my home everytime i went on exercises it was shit but it did what we wanted on TCW and comms.
I didn’t spot a yankee helmet?
After the Mk 7 Helmet, the helmet changed shape to more like the American shape, and mainly issued to Inf units (you could get one if you knew someone). Not sure if Virtus (modern ‘58 or PLCE, depending on when you served) is still in use, and I think there was a helmet upgrade with the issue of Virtus, I left before the issue, but there was nothing but problems with it (what a surprise).
These man SVR's were build in Scotland. I was part of a small team with atlas cranes who made them. First job after leaving the army. Nothing compared to the wrecker tho 😂
the words pi55-up and brewery come to mind!
Splendid video