Bechowiec: Polish Teenager Makes a Resistance SMG

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  • Опубликовано: 21 окт 2024

Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @Jimtheneals
    @Jimtheneals Год назад +4403

    For a "homemade" gun by a teenager without any formal training and not even seeing the inside of an SMG, and made under enemy occupation, this is a fantastic gun. He deserves to be remembered, quite an accomplishment.

    • @radosaworman7628
      @radosaworman7628 Год назад +150

      if not for circumstances he could create his own Owen gun

    • @Jimtheneals
      @Jimtheneals Год назад +99

      @@radosaworman7628 True, but, at least to me, this seems to be "higher quality" for lack of a better term or perhaps less kludgy maybe. As I said at least to me. But definitely in the kids saves country realm.

    • @vyacheslavgrinko9993
      @vyacheslavgrinko9993 Год назад +85

      He was 20 when he designed the Bechowiec.
      Still young, still a massive feat.

    • @randomnobodovsky3692
      @randomnobodovsky3692 Год назад +31

      "and not even seeing the inside of an SMG" - there are conflicting version on this (and Ian told the most sensational, which is also most popular).

    • @Jimtheneals
      @Jimtheneals Год назад +82

      @@randomnobodovsky3692 And even if he did, he was still 20, no training and under Nazi occupation, way to shit on the fantastic accomplishment of a youngster. Kids today scream if they get their feelings hurt.

  • @d.plaguethedocter8542
    @d.plaguethedocter8542 Год назад +2199

    This gun looks extremely good for something built in a shed.

    • @notcardlinsytaccount1355
      @notcardlinsytaccount1355 Год назад +223

      And yet it looks exactly like something built in a shed. Totally smooth, unembellished, very simple, very effective.

    • @Matt-xc6sp
      @Matt-xc6sp Год назад +112

      More refined than a Lutey for sure

    • @comradeurod9805
      @comradeurod9805 Год назад +54

      @@Matt-xc6sp tbf being a refined firearm definitely isn't on the luty's to-do list haha

    • @jmi5969
      @jmi5969 Год назад +32

      Indeed. What's crude for Ian is almost perfect for me.
      Just finished carving a 200-Watt heatsink with supermarket-grade tools. Now that's crude, Mad Max meets Stone Age.

    • @Hamun002
      @Hamun002 Год назад +30

      built in a shed, but machined in real shops, as Ian said. I wish there was pictures of the first one he put together. That would reveal the kind of shed borne nature of the design better I think.

  • @wadebechtel5757
    @wadebechtel5757 Год назад +1830

    Ian: “Someone who doesn’t know the right and wrong way to do a gun”
    Henrick: ”I don’t know why I’m here, but I know I must build gun”

    • @tngtacticalmiata1219
      @tngtacticalmiata1219 Год назад +65

      Indeed. And build it he did. Successfully. Epic.

    • @markfergerson2145
      @markfergerson2145 Год назад

      Would bet the Germans it killed didn't care that it wasn't built "right".

    • @mapletreepower7038
      @mapletreepower7038 Год назад +11

      As soon as I read this comment that what he said in the video
      Love when that happens

    • @diooverheaven6561
      @diooverheaven6561 Год назад +16

      *Henryk

    • @FarmerDrew
      @FarmerDrew Год назад +4

      Many are called, few are chosen

  • @opridilol
    @opridilol Год назад +2100

    Ian, another worthwhile part of this story is how actually was more information on Bechowiec obtained by the museum.
    It was in late 70s (Bataliony Chłopskie and other conspirational armies' members were not very welcome to say the least by government in 50s and 60s) when museum dug out it's example (donated by commander of UB - polish KGB at the time) and started to sniff who has made it and how. Eventually they have got to Henryk, who after war got back to being a farmer. Initially they didn't really believe that he was capable of designing and making such complex firearm, but he just... brought parts for another example of Bechowiec. :)

    • @scrappydoo7887
      @scrappydoo7887 Год назад +31

      Need to get this to the top

    • @okancanarslan3730
      @okancanarslan3730 Год назад

      It seems a great talent was wasted by communist rule

    • @randomnobodovsky3692
      @randomnobodovsky3692 Год назад +3

      "Bataliony Chłopskie and other conspirational armies' members were considered traitors by government in 50s and 60s" - no, they weren't.
      By the way. Bataliony Chłopskie were THE largest underground partizan groups and a grassroots movement. Created from agrarian movement that was originally somewhat hostile to the pre-war Polish government (only allying itself with government in exile due to 1) necessity; 2) promises of major social changes after the war). When in dount, read up on Wincenty Witos. Anyway, back to BCh: and as such, were mostly left alone by People's Republic.

    • @justindunlap1235
      @justindunlap1235 Год назад +16

      That's awesome.

    • @kamilhernandez2543
      @kamilhernandez2543 Год назад +165

      my man chilling in his farm till the police arrives asking if he can produce obscure guerrilla guns

  • @Toxtoxer
    @Toxtoxer Год назад +950

    For anyone curious about Henry and being unable to find much info, not much is known about him but he did survive the war and went to a mechanical engineering school in a city called Sławięcice / Slawentzitz. Later in the times of the Polish People's Republic the Bechowiec has found itself in the Polish Army Museum in Warsaw, where FW is in this very video, Henry was invited there in order to prove that it was in fact him who designed and produced the weapon, which has been proven true of course.

    • @juliuszkocinski7478
      @juliuszkocinski7478 Год назад +151

      Allegedly pretty badass style, as when asked about how he can prove his involvement he immediately showed parts for never assembled prototypes and tools specifically made to do the rechambering

    • @Toxtoxer
      @Toxtoxer Год назад +35

      @@juliuszkocinski7478 That is quite badass actually

    • @fintherebel5000
      @fintherebel5000 Год назад +5

      It reminds me of the PA la puty smg also is that a sergal pfp?

    • @remko1238
      @remko1238 Год назад +6

      : Toxy,, that was the main info i was missing,, thanks 🙏🏽

    • @TheInsomniaddict
      @TheInsomniaddict Год назад +5

      Did Henry eventually go back to being a farmer? Another comment mentioned above that he was found as a Polish farmer and not in some mechanical engineering profession.

  • @LN997-i8x
    @LN997-i8x Год назад +345

    Somehow, a teenager in a blacksmith shop in the middle of a war managed to create a double-stack, double feed magazine, a feat half the SMG designers of the 1930's couldn't replicate.

    • @Fstop313
      @Fstop313 10 месяцев назад +24

      People were different then. Their minds were more creative due to no phones. Their thoughts still came from inside of their minds for the most part.

    • @starstencahl8985
      @starstencahl8985 10 месяцев назад +74

      ⁠​⁠@@Fstop313Then why did he manage to design something like this while official gun designers at the time couldn’t come up with it?
      If anything, access to the internet and wise, conscious use of it brings us more ideas from around the world to think about and try.
      What you’re talking about it those mindless doom scrollers on social media

    • @manender1020
      @manender1020 10 месяцев назад +10

      ​@@Fstop313this guy was literally the only one to design a gun with no idea how to design a gun. Everyone else then was pretty much as smart as the modern gunsmiths are
      The only thing changed is that you are now able to actually hear the masses

    • @manender1020
      @manender1020 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@Fstop313and yeah, I can also say "TV/radio/news papers brainwash people, they were smarter in the Medieval age" lol
      The funniest thing is that people do repeat it for every generation of mass media. Are you a neo-luddite?

    • @cake_9510
      @cake_9510 10 месяцев назад +19

      ​@@Fstop313 did you take nothing from this? He literally made something that nobody has been able to replicate. Stop complaining about social media. Get off of it, because you're clearly chronically online and projecting to feel less sad.

  • @sebiwiessner
    @sebiwiessner Год назад +2267

    most normal polish teenage hobby
    I swear don't you have anything else to do than fight in social media comments 🧑🏻‍🦼

    • @TheGayestPersononYouTube
      @TheGayestPersononYouTube Год назад +166

      The rest of the world’s teenagers should take note

    • @Matt-xc6sp
      @Matt-xc6sp Год назад +80

      I have very little concept of Eastern Europe and I think that makes the memes better. But I know that calling Poland Eastern Europe is gonna upset people. Lol.

    • @blacktiger974
      @blacktiger974 Год назад

      @@TheGayestPersononRUclips how do you cope with being unable to produce offspring with the person you love? HINT: YOU DONT HAHAHAHA stay losing

    • @blacktiger974
      @blacktiger974 Год назад +1

      @@TheGayestPersononRUclips imagine being romantically and physically attraced to men. so lame lmao

    • @seanflorian4653
      @seanflorian4653 Год назад +51

      @@Matt-xc6sp not as much as referring to Russia as "Greater Poland"

  • @juliuszkocinski7478
    @juliuszkocinski7478 Год назад +408

    What's mind-blowing for me is that despite not having official expertise in the field and not being able to "stand on the shoulders of giants" he created something... pretty revolutionary at the time. Especially unified fire control and safety combined with closed bolt operation in SMG

    • @stevenbobbybills
      @stevenbobbybills Год назад +58

      Selective-fire, too!

    • @ArcturusOTE
      @ArcturusOTE Год назад +14

      I wonder how this would fare against its contemporaries?

    • @frankbrowning328
      @frankbrowning328 Год назад +36

      What if he would have had schooling in firearms, machining and an actual machine shop. Imagine what he would have produced

    • @alifr4088
      @alifr4088 Год назад +4

      @@frankbrowning328 boy imagine that

    • @madkoala2130
      @madkoala2130 Год назад +32

      @@frankbrowning328 he would have became Polish John M. Browning.

  • @Mesjasz
    @Mesjasz Год назад +500

    For those interested in the creator of that gun, i found couple of things ( like literally "couple" unfortunately) in the Polish sources: Henryk Strąpoć, nom de guerre "Mewa" ( seagull) survived the war, got awarded a Partisan Cross after the war, never got into gun making industry, but he did finished mechanical school. And that's it. No other info. At least he survived, and since he got that medal he apparently wasn't persecuted by the communist regime. Which is a happy end, I guess.

    • @roberts1938
      @roberts1938 Год назад +58

      The communists did not persecute him because they knew nothing about him. In addition, the Peasants' Battalions had a slightly different status in the communist state, as they were recruited from the inhabitants of the countryside and were not formally directed from London (to put it bluntly). The political peasant movement was a strong opponent in communizing Poland, which is why the communists could not openly fight it. Officially, there was talk of cooperation, while secretly murdered leaders and rigged elections.

    • @carlll6101
      @carlll6101 Год назад

      @@roberts1938 yep BCH were basically treated by communist as "their" bois. I learned later that was far from truth and that organisation was way more fractured than AK.

    • @tapmcshoe9677
      @tapmcshoe9677 Год назад +10

      I mean dude helped keep his people safe, then finished school and chilled for the rest of his life. Pretty great deal imo

    • @acomingextinction
      @acomingextinction Год назад +8

      @@tapmcshoe9677 Absolutely. Should call that move the Simo Hayha.

  • @jjforcebreaker
    @jjforcebreaker Год назад +361

    Considering the circumstances- it does look sleek and weirdly aesthetically pleasing!

    • @comradeurod9805
      @comradeurod9805 Год назад +23

      I kinda dig the giant slide, definitely a good looking firearm

    • @radosaworman7628
      @radosaworman7628 Год назад

      @@comradeurod9805 then look up PM-63 for sale

    • @comradeurod9805
      @comradeurod9805 Год назад +1

      @@radosaworman7628 also a gem of polish firearms design, but sadly I'm not American so that's out of the question haha

    • @radosaworman7628
      @radosaworman7628 Год назад

      @@comradeurod9805 i'm 90% sure they are on sale in poland under some kind of license. Also i know that there are some stl's of handguard that makes it acutally safe and eotech friendly.

    • @jessestreet2549
      @jessestreet2549 Год назад +1

      definitely more "polished" than the Luty. (ian did a video on one awhile back, might have been the guy at Royal Armories.)

  • @alexissjc409
    @alexissjc409 Год назад +1530

    There truly is nothing more dangerous to evil than someone with a shed and a "where there's a will, there's a way" attitude. :)

    • @LavetnoSiberiade
      @LavetnoSiberiade Год назад

      It will either end up a gun or a child

    • @ericsfishingadventures4433
      @ericsfishingadventures4433 Год назад +96

      "where there's a mill, there's a way" I really like that one! Never heard of it before.

    • @therogers4432
      @therogers4432 Год назад +6

      Yup... ^This^ 😁👍

    • @CynicallySarcasticReserves
      @CynicallySarcasticReserves Год назад +66

      THE most efficient fuel for the engine of human race - guys with sheds.

    • @Qardo
      @Qardo Год назад +1

      Well, if I recall, there was a guy in the UK who literally wrote a DYI book on how to build a gun from common off-the-shelf stuff you can find in a Home Improvement Store. All to spite the government on their gun bans. In an attempt to prove that they can ban guns all they want. Yet, the idea and know-how are still out there. Cannot ban an idea. No, matter how hard you try. If a person really wants to have a gun. They will find a way.
      Though he lost the case. He made his point. The laws against guns only hurt those who follow the law. Being he was breaking the law by a loophole that didn't make his actions illegal. Though, the government took it as an insult. Thus making it illegal. Just to prove that the "Can Do" attitude is a crime to the governments of the world.
      And we have here with this gun. That "Can Do" attitude at work. Being this gun was thought up, built, and used against an invading army. Controlled by a government that was run by devils. If course, this was during time of war. Guess it is "justified" to fight an enemy of the world. Kind of hypocritical really, but hey, welcome to Earth, humanity exist is a hypocritical take on life. We just amazingly exist.

  • @wormsdonthaveeyes2888
    @wormsdonthaveeyes2888 Год назад +70

    “Crudely constructed but intelligently designed” is maybe my favorite way to describe a gun

  • @NekoColaQ
    @NekoColaQ Год назад +490

    I love this gun and everything it stands for. I'm glad we know even the bits we do about the guy who made it. Underground resistance type efforts like this are very easily forgotten but incredibly important. Really living up to your channel name

    • @opridilol
      @opridilol Год назад +14

      We actually know quite a bit of the constructor - he came to museum himself in 70s, when they were trying to find out who's done a weapon that complex.

    • @chrislloyd1505
      @chrislloyd1505 Год назад +5

      @@opridilol Did he ask for it back? It was his after all!

    • @reliantncc1864
      @reliantncc1864 Год назад +7

      Poland was in a tough place, caught between invasions by Germany and the Soviet Union. It says a lot about Poles that they maintained such a large and active resistance in the face of overwhelming force.

    • @opridilol
      @opridilol Год назад +6

      @@chrislloyd1505 I don't think it was formally his, nor it was legal for him to own it back then.
      For what we know, it was passed to museum by county commendant of UB (polish KGB back then) - so probably in 70s it was undisputably proprietary to a museum. Also it's not legal to own a full-auto firearm in Poland now - I don't suppose it was any easier back in socialist era.

  • @paulszymanski3091
    @paulszymanski3091 Год назад +328

    As a teen I ran into similar problem at machine class high school in Poland when I was making parts for my Mauser. The teacher caught me making firing pins and he did not believed my explanation that they were pounding pins. He was a former Home Army solider. He ban me from any power tools.

    • @reliantncc1864
      @reliantncc1864 Год назад +71

      That's a shame. He should have encouraged you to keep going. Poles should all know how to make their own firearms and should be extremely suspicious of any attempts to limit firearms.

    • @paulszymanski3091
      @paulszymanski3091 Год назад +124

      @@reliantncc1864 Yo have to understand the circumstances. He was protecting me. Yes, he was impressed but this was a different time. It was in a way funny. I still remember his face when I tried to bull shit him. It was like yeah.... keep talking, keep blowing smoke up my ass.

    • @pbxn-3rdx-85percent
      @pbxn-3rdx-85percent Год назад +59

      "They're knitting needles. It's for my mother. Honest. Me? A good boy making firing pins? Ha ha ha. You are mistaken sir." 😁

    • @Icec0ffee
      @Icec0ffee Год назад +14

      did you finish the mauser

    • @onomatopejaB
      @onomatopejaB Год назад

      🤯

  • @ric270
    @ric270 Год назад +952

    It's such a shame that this one is deactivated, they literally drilled holes in a piece of history

    • @MrRugbylane
      @MrRugbylane Год назад +66

      Yup. Sad

    • @williampratt1066
      @williampratt1066 Год назад +182

      But at least it isn’t to current EU spec, if it was it would be welded up as well😢.

    • @bensmith4563
      @bensmith4563 Год назад +110

      Fortunately it looks like to make it functional would be just making a new barrel

    • @AnthonyHandcock
      @AnthonyHandcock Год назад +144

      The fact it's deactivated means it can be on display without the amount of expensive security needed if it wasn't. I don't see how it really matters given that it's literally a museum piece and nobody in their right mind would want to shoot it anyway.
      Complaining about museum firearms being deactivated is like complaining about a railway museum having steam locos with dangerous boilers. It really doesn't matter for display purposes.

    • @sairassiili
      @sairassiili Год назад +30

      The alternative would have likely been complete destruction of the item. Due to the relative scarcity of modern firearms in Europe, especially fully-automatics, WW2-era weapons are semi-regularly found with organized crime.

  • @seizurejames5862
    @seizurejames5862 Год назад +62

    I swear I can hear the despair in his voice when he mentions the deactivation holes. What a way to destroy priceless artifacts.

    • @ArcturusOTE
      @ArcturusOTE Год назад +3

      It looks like it should be an easy affair to reactivate it

    • @melonboi927
      @melonboi927 Год назад +4

      Oh yeah just look at it it's totally destroyed

    • @TmSh212
      @TmSh212 Год назад +5

      It’s like grinding the edge off of a medieval sword because it is “too dangerous” it’s not destroying it, but it sure as hell is defiling it

    • @Bialy_1
      @Bialy_1 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@ArcturusOTE It have holes in all the wrong places, it was destroyed by someone who knowed where to put this holes or was instructed by someone like that...
      Welding it the place where the pressure is the biggest during use is not so easy or safe for the end user...

  • @Matt-xc6sp
    @Matt-xc6sp Год назад +277

    Ian caught himself real quick after suggesting you sign your name on your illegally built submachine gun.

    • @alifr4088
      @alifr4088 Год назад +25

      Lmfao

    • @Ukraineaissance2014
      @Ukraineaissance2014 Год назад +8

      It seems a bit odd stamping any details on it at all

    • @JimYeats
      @JimYeats Год назад +17

      @@Ukraineaissance2014 That was my thought. Seems like something he might have gone back and done after the war was over out of pride for his creation.

    • @MrYfrank14
      @MrYfrank14 Год назад +15

      Some hide from the enemy, some stamp thier name in thier gun and some stand in front of a tank in China.

    • @bilbo_gamers6417
      @bilbo_gamers6417 Год назад

      I mean it's not really illegal if you're operating as a guerilla group. You'd be shot anyway if you were found, what's the point in keeping it a secret?

  • @mateuszgrzyb1181
    @mateuszgrzyb1181 Год назад +69

    My granpa Mieczysław was soldier of Bataliony Chłopskie, I loved his war stories ( especially when he talked about "improvided gunsmithing" with hacksaw performed on rusty Lebel rifle which fell into his hand). This video brought back memories :)

  • @kolosmenus
    @kolosmenus Год назад +351

    I'm polish and I've never even heard about this. Fascinating backstory and gun

    • @nilsmadej9091
      @nilsmadej9091 Год назад

      @@DrVictorVasconcelos It's the opposite my dude... but whatever. This gun is just pretty obscure in comparison to others. When showing the underground fighters they usually have just captured guns like mp40.
      There is no hidden agenda trying to hide Bechowiec...

    • @jakubb6020
      @jakubb6020 Год назад +26

      @@DrVictorVasconcelos 😆 chill out Poland is not USA

    • @radosaworman7628
      @radosaworman7628 Год назад +14

      then you never browsed polish wikipedia's pages on polish resistance guns

    • @rebralhunter6069
      @rebralhunter6069 Год назад

      @@DrVictorVasconcelos you have no idea what you're talking about. You're too brain rotted from American politics.
      Also Poland is up there in terms of its gun laws by European standards. None of the stupid BS like a lot of other EU states.

    • @alifr4088
      @alifr4088 Год назад +2

      @@radosaworman7628 gib link

  • @rogermac358
    @rogermac358 Год назад +80

    That is easily one of the coolest firearms ever covered on the channel! Great back story and very advanced design for an amateur gun designer.

  • @frankbrowning328
    @frankbrowning328 Год назад +58

    Sleek, thin, easier to conceal than most of the others of its day. The man took what he knew and created what was needed.

  • @yaqppl
    @yaqppl Год назад +24

    My great grandfather was in BCh. Neighbours denunciated him. He was taken to gestapo in Tarnów, and then to the Gross-Rosen KL. Last letter from him was written in summer '44.

    • @P_RO_
      @P_RO_ Год назад +5

      A fate suffered by many. I hope karma fell heavily on those who betrayed him and those like him.

    • @patrycjamikoajczak9371
      @patrycjamikoajczak9371 9 месяцев назад +1

      There are still holding cells of Gestapo in Tarnów, Urszulańska street, in the basement. Chilly, evil place. There is still blood on the walls.

  • @GazalAlShaqab
    @GazalAlShaqab Год назад +127

    When Ian "goes" Polish, it is always such a GREAT GREAT pleasure!!
    🤩

  • @MeFee100
    @MeFee100 Год назад +61

    There is a pretty fun story regarding to, how constructor of B.H. mp was caught with his first pistol. He simply brought his pistol to primary school to show it to his peers to impress them. During show they were cought by teacher who was suppose to, hunt illegal smoking habbits within schoolmates.

  • @cypressmarch6632
    @cypressmarch6632 Год назад +40

    I was making guns shaped and looked like this in my childhood out of wood. This dude brought it to a higher level.

  • @bumckfszful
    @bumckfszful Год назад +7

    Amazing to think that 11 of these were made, and nearly 80 years later one of these found its way to you.

  • @_Wiseguy7
    @_Wiseguy7 Год назад +37

    You know when something looks very funky, weird or ugly. There sometimes is a phrase or saying used to describe said thing. Something along the lines of "The creator has no idea what it is they are supposed to build, but they only have a rough description." This is literally it.
    But yet, it somehow still seems pretty good.

    • @beyondobscure
      @beyondobscure Год назад +5

      I believe what you're looking for is something along the lines of "A blind man is told what a gun is and asked to build one."

    • @_Wiseguy7
      @_Wiseguy7 Год назад +1

      @@beyondobscure Basically yes. But there many variations of this phrase to fit the context.

  • @Fragger-1
    @Fragger-1 Год назад +70

    Ever since seeing this firearm in Call Of Duty WW2, it's become one of my favorite firearm oddities. For something designed to be an underground resistance weapon, it feels fairly ahead of it's time conceptually, and feels like an early version of the CZ75, or Beretta 93R. It's arguably one of the nicer machine pistol style designs for the time too, as most concepts that were explored were simply converting pistol platforms already in use, and usually resulting in something less than ideal for any actual combat use. However, for a resistance fighter, a fairly machine pistol/small form factor SMG could be more than useful, especially when the alternatives that they could potentially get their hands on were much larger despite being compact designs

    • @ArcturusOTE
      @ArcturusOTE Год назад +10

      Didn't realize this was also in COD WW2, kudos to SHG for finding obscuring guns and giving them the spotlight

    • @radosaworman7628
      @radosaworman7628 Год назад +2

      wait what? it was there?

    • @ZombieSlayer-dj3wb
      @ZombieSlayer-dj3wb Год назад +4

      Atleast its not in vangarbage

    • @birbohex
      @birbohex Год назад +3

      WWII and it's multiplayer was *way* overhated. the historical and less well known firearms they added were always so fun and interesting, and really exposed me to some REALLY cool things!

    • @whiteoutTM
      @whiteoutTM Год назад

      @@birbohex had lots of fun in that one. It’s like a playable museum of cutting edge 1940s gun tech

  • @GazalAlShaqab
    @GazalAlShaqab Год назад +29

    Even if I am hardly objective here, it is such a CLASSY mp!! :)
    And BCh, the Peasant Battalions, such an incredible organisation with beautiful history of bravery!!
    The Polish are strong in IMPROVISATION, as the Germas are strong in craft ("Germany is a working machine and Poland is a living plant", as someone said).

  • @claymeistereu
    @claymeistereu Год назад +253

    The polish resistance truly is underrated.

    • @cetus4449
      @cetus4449 Год назад

      ...and Polish military intelligence. Even the ground in Africa for Operation Torch was prepared by a Polish spy. It was Mieczysław Słowikowski who organized a 70-person spy network in North Africa, which significantly influenced the success of the Allied invasion.
      Any mention of Poles was removed from the script of the famous Hollywood film Casablanca. Already in 1942, the Poles, although still very useful, became increasingly inconvenient for the Allies due to the growing importance of Stalinist Russia.

    • @vyacheslavgrinko9993
      @vyacheslavgrinko9993 Год назад +95

      Given how much attention in popular culture was devoted to the French resistance - yeah, Polish resistance deserve twice as many movies and games.
      But it's not likely to happen.
      Reminding the world of Polish heroes of the WW2 era would cause too many people to ask questions, why the Allies sold Poland to Stalin, and how they besmirched an entire nation as fascists to ensure their popular opinion didn't side with that betrayed nation.

    • @cetus4449
      @cetus4449 Год назад +24

      @@vyacheslavgrinko9993 Your words are bitter but true..

    • @claymeistereu
      @claymeistereu Год назад +19

      @@vyacheslavgrinko9993 Damn right. Damn shame.

    • @daviddura1172
      @daviddura1172 Год назад

      After 1 year of war fighting Germans and Russians
      1 million Polish deaths
      By wars end nearly 5 million deaths

  • @charleykeenan6171
    @charleykeenan6171 Год назад +16

    Proof that when your nation calls, every citizen is a soldier and every talent can be used.. Great episode 👏

  • @Shiruvan
    @Shiruvan Год назад +73

    3:40 'if you want ... anyone else to ever know ... who did it.' gave me some good laughs😂

    • @Tunkkis
      @Tunkkis Год назад +15

      Which, one might think, you wouldn't want to do when illegally building firearms in an attempt to expell an occupying force.

  • @RojastheBlackWolf
    @RojastheBlackWolf Год назад +23

    I would love to see the museum commission a functional barrel and set screw for this firearm just so it can see some range time. Preferably a barrel sourced from an old WW1 era firearm like the original, to preserve some authenticity with the newer part. Shoot, it'd be neat if someone were to produce a modern reproduction of it. Looks clean and has a unique beauty to it.

    • @ArcturusOTE
      @ArcturusOTE Год назад +5

      I don't think chopping up a WW1 piece would be a good idea, a repro, maybe, but I think one could source a matching barrel diameter from more modern guns

    • @Tacticaviator7
      @Tacticaviator7 Год назад +3

      What I want is a recontruction of the Wz.38M rifle, the original blueprint still exists and it just looks like an amazing construction.

    • @misiomor
      @misiomor Год назад +2

      @@Tacticaviator7 While the Wz.38M might have shot well, it was a disaster from manufacturing cost point of veiw. Locking of the bolt was far from the chamber, so the whole receiver had to be made of high grade alloy steel, which is costly itself as well as in terms of tooling wear. Maybe this is why it was not produced in significant numbers before the war.

  • @NuhUhNotTrue
    @NuhUhNotTrue Год назад +62

    This is one of my favorites just because it was made by young engineering talent.
    Also gotta love the whole making dangerous things in a shed stereotype.

  • @pastormarkpowell
    @pastormarkpowell Год назад +10

    My birth father was born in Kielce in 1928. Not a good time to be born in Poland. I admire his generation greatly. He was 11 when the Germans invaded and 17 when the Russians took control. His story echoes the courage and ingenuity of his generation of how to fight the oppressor and remain true to freedom. He made his way to the USA in 1949 after a few years in the DP camps. Needless to say my generation was blessed because of what his generation endured. 🇵🇱🇺🇲

  • @MaccusFNS
    @MaccusFNS Год назад +9

    Gets probation goes home immediately starts doing exactly what he got in trouble for. Sounds like a Polish guy

  • @rainetolentino4336
    @rainetolentino4336 Год назад +9

    It's truly fascinating how a very young person who is underage of 18 could literally get his hands on making advanced technologies, i mean he probably had a 1000 IQ compare to the other ordinary ones who manufacture in factory, real sick

  • @sir0herrbatka
    @sir0herrbatka Год назад +56

    The most interesting element of this gun is that it was made by a village blacksmith in his worhshop.

    • @Rixoli
      @Rixoli Год назад +3

      For what it's worth early firearms manufacturers were in fact blacksmiths with a greater knowledge of firearms, thus where we get the term "Gun SMITH" from.

    • @seancrumby3241
      @seancrumby3241 Год назад

      That's my thought exactly

    • @randomidiot8142
      @randomidiot8142 Год назад +7

      The village blacksmith stereotype is often a bit inaccurate. We think of a burly brute forcing iron into compliance but the reality is they were some of the most talented artisans. Repairing a clock or a firearm was often their job, besides the usual heavy metal work. Forge welding a wagon wheel band to shrink fit to a wooden wheel? Not exactly easy either.

    • @sir0herrbatka
      @sir0herrbatka Год назад

      @@randomidiot8142 I agree completely, but still, I wonder how all those parts were manufactured.

  • @dorianosatane7244
    @dorianosatane7244 Год назад +7

    I'm from Poland and never heard of this gun so thank you! it's nice to watch you!

  • @alexadamson9959
    @alexadamson9959 Год назад +74

    I can already picture a meme. The wojac SS man “No YoU cAnT jUsT bUiLd A fUnCtIOnAl SMG wItH nO pRiOr ExPeRiAnCe!!!!”
    Chad Polish kid “machine pistol go brrrrrr.”

  • @ralfklonowski3740
    @ralfklonowski3740 Год назад +90

    Polish inventivness at its best

  • @jerzymikucki3778
    @jerzymikucki3778 Год назад +26

    Ian, not sure what brought you to Poland, but I love the whole series. Very interesting piece of history!

  • @ludercoarms
    @ludercoarms Год назад +8

    I absolutely love guns like this, so much history and 100% proof that you will never be able to disarm a determined people. Thanks Ian!!

  • @ultrajd
    @ultrajd Год назад +15

    It’s a very simple looking weapon, but I actually like that about it. The simple design has almost a level of elegance to it. And it’s clearly a artifact that has been cared for extremely well. Obviously, given the fact that it belongs to a military museum, it likely has been attended to buy conservators and other individuals. In fact, it probably receives similar treatment to like figurines and wax museum that regularly get touchups over time.
    One thing that I really like is not only do they have the weapon itself or the even have what I’m assuming is probably the original sling. Honestly, I think this weapon is anyone from either battlefield or call of duty or hell even anyone from rebellion is watching this it should be added to a video game. Specially, since the Polish underground very rarely gets any attention in video games.

  • @michelguevara151
    @michelguevara151 Год назад +36

    my godfather was a polish resistence fighter.
    I wonder if he ever got to use one of these.
    I miss him terribly.
    rest in peace Wladomir 'vladdo' Jannecki

    • @Litwinus
      @Litwinus Год назад +1

      I think polish full name was Włodimierz.Wladomir he used,because is easy to pronauce.

    • @weswolever7477
      @weswolever7477 Год назад

      Here’s to uncle Vladdo. 🥃

  • @filipstaroscinski2697
    @filipstaroscinski2697 Год назад +15

    Ah Ian! I was waiting for that video! When You have come to Warsaw Army Muzeum I was sure one day You will release episode about that particular piece of underground equipment. And I have a question for You. As, at lest one of those guns have been captured by germans, would You consider it went to some armaments manafactures in germany and they get A BIT inspired by it? Or rather its just a way people would have think about a machine pistol anyway.
    Great episode, thank You a lot!
    Greetings :)

  • @kbjerke
    @kbjerke Год назад +11

    That "kid" was a certified *genius.*

  • @thunderbeam9166
    @thunderbeam9166 Год назад +4

    I absolutely love things like this. He had an idea, and he made it a reality, and it’s wonderful that he did it for all the right reasons. We need more people with that kind of “go get it done” attitude.
    Outstanding job, Henryk.

  • @johnsanko4136
    @johnsanko4136 Год назад +5

    That auto sear is a very clever solution for achieving full auto with a closed bolt. Unfortunate that it's deactivated, would love to see it run.

  • @erict3728
    @erict3728 Год назад +1

    I love this fire control system. There is something really crappy about open bolt designs(it's the weight of the bolt and the "shock" of it suddenly beginning to move between pulling the trigger and firing the first round). I really wish we knew the rate of fire... I love seeing the clever solutions people came up with to make these things work. Every time I see a video breakdown of these crude or homemade type of "resistance weapons", I fear RUclips is going to censor and ban these types of videos. They already demonetize content showing the inserting magazines, or threading on a suppressor. I hope RUclips never censors these videos. Knowledge should never be suppressed.

  • @ericsfishingadventures4433
    @ericsfishingadventures4433 Год назад +10

    Just another great example that Banning anything won't do anything because when you need to build something out of necessity or other reasons people will do it!

  • @edwardloomis887
    @edwardloomis887 Год назад +1

    Ian doesn't hold back critiques when gun designers lack anything, so the admiration expressed for a young gun designer doing things that could have gotten him killed says a lot.

  • @mjriemen
    @mjriemen Год назад +3

    These clandestine/homemade machine gun type of videos are always some of the best.

  • @bigfuzzy84
    @bigfuzzy84 Год назад +3

    Absolutely amazing example of effort and ingenuity.

  • @FelixstoweFoamForge
    @FelixstoweFoamForge Год назад +5

    Fo r a weapon designed by a guy in his twenties, and built in extremely difficult circumstances, at the risk of the designer's life if he was caught by the occupying forces, this thing is amazing. That lad deserves to be much more known, and honoured.

    • @Trashcansam123
      @Trashcansam123 Год назад +2

      And not only him, he was risking his entire family facing reprisal

  • @chuckcochran8599
    @chuckcochran8599 Год назад +5

    Considering what he had to work with, the quality of his metalwork is really quite impressive. I can just imagine what he might have came up with if he'd had access to a machine shop.
    Thank you Ian and Poland for a look at a fascinating but relatively "Forgotten Weapon."

  • @spacewater7
    @spacewater7 Год назад +7

    This is a textbook example (the irony of the wording isn't lost on me;) of how education could have ruined true creativity. Had he known how its supposed to be done, how everyone else was doing it, he wouldn't have done something so original and showed that there are other ways.

  • @hugebartlett1884
    @hugebartlett1884 Год назад +4

    Few people today can imagine the hellish risk those guys were taking every day,making these weapons. The Nazis fully intended to wipe Poland off the map,and had any Resistance member,actual or suspected,been caught,they would have been killed,along with friends and family. Poland can be very proud of those men and women who earned their nation's gratitude and respect for all time.

    • @bratbrata4974
      @bratbrata4974 Год назад

      Many people in the west are not aware of how the Germans treated the Poles during WWII.
      Many Jews accuse us of collaborating with the Germans, and even that we were co-creators of the Holocaust.
      Meanwhile, for giving a glass of water to a Jew or a piece of bread, you could get a bullet in the head. No judgment. Nevertheless, in Poland, the only organization in occupied Europe called Żegota was established, which systemically helped Jews. At least 10 people had to be involved to help one Jew. These people risked their lives and the lives of their families.
      This is how the Ulma family died. 7 people went to the sand for helping their Jewish neighbors. The Germans murdered everyone, children, father and pregnant mother. And, of course, a Jewish family.
      When I hear Jews from America talking nonsense... a knife in a pocket opens by itself.
      The first on the list were Jews, second were Poles.
      Many also do not understand that Jews were citizens of Poland, it was not a separate state within a state. Jews served in the Polish army, were scientists and doctors. It was the same on the Russian side. They were murdered for having a Polish surname.

    • @Pracaupodstaw
      @Pracaupodstaw Год назад

      Guys and girls. Girls served in the Resistance just as heroically. They smuggled materials, weapons, and were enforcers of traitors and Nazis.

  • @onyx9943
    @onyx9943 Год назад +5

    my heart goes out to the microphone's family RIP...

  • @Melanie-Shea
    @Melanie-Shea 11 месяцев назад +2

    Criminal that they put deactivation holes in that.

  • @ArcturusOTE
    @ArcturusOTE Год назад +3

    Wow, 15 year old and made his first gun, truly kids rock

  • @paperman9708
    @paperman9708 11 месяцев назад +1

    It's incredibly well built. Almost looks like a full production piece.

  • @christinepearson5788
    @christinepearson5788 Год назад +4

    Very interesting, he found some unique or nearly so ways to do things

  • @PuerRidcully
    @PuerRidcully 9 месяцев назад +2

    >have the only surviving example
    >drill a hole in it because of imaginary safety reasons

  • @yesthecrumbs5806
    @yesthecrumbs5806 Год назад +3

    Very interesting episode Ian! Ever since i saw this smg in a computer game i had always been curious about it. I had never seen it anywhere else and wanted to know more. Thank you! much support

  • @tomlobos2871
    @tomlobos2871 Год назад +2

    the polish genious. now imagine such a guy getting education and employment in some kind of major arsenal.

  • @saneavenue356
    @saneavenue356 Год назад +2

    When I was younger we took a trip to Polish Army Museum in my home town in north east Poland. I remmeber they were having one full room full of guerilla weaponry - mostly cut down (Obrez?) versions of Mauser bolt action rifles and mosins to a quite big pistol versions and other german weapons.

    • @bratbrata4974
      @bratbrata4974 Год назад +1

      "Obrzyn" That's what it sounds like in Polish. A weapon with a shortened barrel or stock. Easy to hide when carrying. It lost some properties, but gained new ones.

  • @farmerboy916
    @farmerboy916 Год назад +1

    The mix quality takes me back.

  • @gijake1989
    @gijake1989 Год назад +3

    I would love to see a competition of resistance designed and manufactured weapons to get a better idea of which designs worked and which did not.

  • @JerryEricsson
    @JerryEricsson Год назад +2

    I often see guns on your channel that I would love to own. This is one that belongs on that list. I simply love the design, it sort of makes me wish I still had my old gunsmith tools and machines again, I would love to build one but in semi-auto only, of course since any other would be illegal. Like the idea in chambering for the 7.62 round as well, I have always had a soft spot in my heart for that round, ever since I had my first Russian Tokarov that a buddy brought home from Vietnam. He traded it to me for an old Star BKM that I had. Later he wanted it back, and I had to retrade several guns to get it back from the old fart that had purchased it from me later. I got it back for him and purchased several hundred rounds of surplus 7.62 Mauser ammo so he could fire it. He had been trying to fire 30 Luger ammo in it but it didn't function well and really straightened out the brass.

  • @rdrekin954
    @rdrekin954 Год назад +6

    One of The pride and joys of my home country 🇵🇱making weapons in dire times

  • @thundergod111
    @thundergod111 Год назад +1

    Looks like a double stack, double feed mag. Props to him for improving on the MP40/Sten mags that most cobbled together SMGs use.

  • @nashtheneet
    @nashtheneet Год назад +5

    This was added into Call Of Duty WW2 at the end of its life cycle and ive loved it in game and always wanted to know more about it

  • @roeberdt-bT.1021
    @roeberdt-bT.1021 10 месяцев назад

    ...man, thank you for the post always absolutely appreciated.
    (These types of posts about unique examples are always my favorite. Would probably have never known about it without your post and presentation. So thanks again for helping history not be lost.)

  • @cleidsonaraujopeixoto163
    @cleidsonaraujopeixoto163 Год назад +8

    Incredible - hammer-fired and closed bolt?

  • @tonyloechte9994
    @tonyloechte9994 Год назад +2

    Bloody good job for a young man
    Great video Ian

  • @CarburetorThompson
    @CarburetorThompson Год назад +3

    It looks really sleek for a crude homemade gun

  • @Tezorus
    @Tezorus Год назад +2

    I love those unique, weird, and forgotten weapons.
    Great episode.

  • @Matt-md5yt
    @Matt-md5yt Год назад +3

    This is pretty cool SMG you covered

  • @craighansen7594
    @craighansen7594 Год назад +2

    I wouldn't call its build quality crude. The fit and finish if parkerized would surpass many factory made arms. Although I cringed at the sight of the deactivation drill holes, the barrel looked simple enough to just make a replacement. The drill hole in the barrel trunnion would be easy to repair, or could probably just be left alone.

  • @gabriellimson
    @gabriellimson Год назад +3

    Something so badass about the name Peasant Battalions

  • @jaromirkrol3950
    @jaromirkrol3950 Год назад +1

    Henryk Strąpoć's first self-made weapon was a shotgun, which he had constructed at the age of 13. He followed it at age 15 with the oft-mentioned semi-automatic pistols, which resulted in a visit by a policeman, the confiscation of the constructions, and the promise: "Next time I'll confiscate you as well, boy!". When the war broke out, he actually did not stop at his most famous creation: in addition to bechowiec, he also made grenades and even land mines. Before building the first bechowiec, he would sit down in places where Feldgendarmerie patrols armed with MP-40s would regularly walk, and he would watch their weapons, return home, sketch their details from memory, and attempt to guess by their shapes how they worked.
    In the 70s, when a reporter for a local periodical from Kielce visited him in his village to seek an interview, Strąpoć, with considerable excitement, told him in detail how to construct those - understandably, the printed article omitted those explanations.

  • @sokmund1780
    @sokmund1780 Год назад +3

    he did mp5 before it was cool, also the gun looks badass, also in my opinion its the most interesting of the homemade guns in the world (barring maybe homemade 50 cal guns from the cartels but i dont think they were more than a bolt action lookalike)

  • @demonyakku3710
    @demonyakku3710 9 месяцев назад +1

    Amazing I never thought someone would mention this gun

  • @Lukelikesmissiles
    @Lukelikesmissiles Год назад +5

    Amazing piece of history, really brilliant video 👍

  • @anxboxharddrive9348
    @anxboxharddrive9348 Год назад +1

    It was my favorite SMG in Call of Duty WWII. Fast, easy and good at CQB and mediumish distance.

  • @Mesjasz
    @Mesjasz Год назад +3

    03:36 "wise to do if you're building something like this" love the flat delivery of that joke 😂

  • @Satori-Automotive
    @Satori-Automotive Год назад

    thats insanely complex and well made for the circumstances.
    most people could not come up with this design if they had to. really talented and smart kid.

  • @Heywoodthepeckerwood
    @Heywoodthepeckerwood Год назад +3

    Modern video game designers need to put this weapon in their games like an Easter egg. Make it capable of taking down hordes at once. Something like unlimited ammo and 10,000 round per minute cyclic rate….

  • @TheMightyGoldenWest
    @TheMightyGoldenWest 9 месяцев назад

    It's really quite a beautiful gun, I'm incredibly impressed. The simplicity of the design and accuracy of the craftmanship. Look at how the grip is is curved aesthetically and ergonomically at the top , how everything is equal and smooth, everything serves a purpose. Double stack magazine. Recoil operation. I think it's gorgeous as well I really wouldn't call it crudely built at all.

  • @RaDeus87
    @RaDeus87 Год назад +5

    I was kinda confused as to why the ejection port wasn't opposite to the magazine, which is the normal on SMGs, then the penny dropped 😅

  • @dfdbbrb
    @dfdbbrb Год назад +2

    Given the limitations he had in terms of access to knowledge and material this is an amazing piece of engineering

  • @gijake1989
    @gijake1989 Год назад +3

    Didn't the soviets use off spec mosin barrels for smg production? It seems I read that somewhere.

  • @Waterlooplein1
    @Waterlooplein1 Год назад +1

    That kid was a genius! I would love to have seen you fire it.

  • @aaronskuse2207
    @aaronskuse2207 Год назад +10

    While the front sling mount is in a weird spot, this is a really neat design. Wonder how it would handle with a conventional shoulder stock.

    • @therogers4432
      @therogers4432 Год назад +5

      I'm guessing that the front sling loop doubled as the charging handle?
      ie a quick yank on the sling would rack the slide back and chamber a round?

    • @XtreeM_FaiL
      @XtreeM_FaiL Год назад

      I wonder how you would fire that from shoulder. A fast moving slide can't feel good against your face.

    • @adamcichon6957
      @adamcichon6957 Год назад +1

      There ware an big article about that smg in polish gun magazine, couple years ago. It was designed as a conceal carry, "get close, than hit and run" gun.
      The Steyr MPi 69 smg also had a front sling mount on the bolt, so it was doubling as a bolt charging handle. Ian got a video about Steyr as well.

    • @adamcichon6957
      @adamcichon6957 Год назад

      @@XtreeM_FaiL it was probably thought as a conceal carry, hip fired hit and run, resistance gun, not a open carry battlefield ready type of smg...

    • @paidwitness797
      @paidwitness797 Год назад

      @@adamcichon6957 Yep, the gun you use to get more guns.

  • @patricklonergan3
    @patricklonergan3 Год назад +1

    I've seen a lot worse from a few major manufacturers. The workmanship on this firearm is amazing, and to make the magazine from scratch rather than use one from another gun is brilliant.

  • @danielhoadley2679
    @danielhoadley2679 Год назад +32

    Now that's a forgotten weapon 🇺🇲❤️🇵🇱

    • @kjote
      @kjote Год назад +1

      Indeed.

  • @umaikakudo
    @umaikakudo Год назад +2

    The OG FGC-9. Cody Wilson, eat your heart out!

  • @kodiakkeith
    @kodiakkeith Год назад +3

    Whenever I see the media or a politician creating hysteria over 3D printed guns I bring up the Poles in WWII. They were knocking together very effective subguns with minimal tooling.

  • @LarryDeSilva64
    @LarryDeSilva64 Год назад +1

    It never ceases to amaze me how many talented people there are around the world that can build machine guns. This is just one more example of someone who took the idea and made what he thought would work and it did. Thanks for sharing Ian.