How does a grenade launcher work? - All about grenades Part 2

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  • Опубликовано: 13 янв 2025

Комментарии • 414

  • @kanmagoshi
    @kanmagoshi 2 года назад +89

    (7min mark) the way the 40mm has a safety mechanism with the bearing acting as a detonator block is the coolest thing ever. Whoever invented that is a pretty smart guy.

    • @Leit0
      @Leit0 Год назад

      thanks

  • @subhadeeppaul1349
    @subhadeeppaul1349 2 года назад +468

    Awesome. Ideal for home defence.

    • @mokadelic4037
      @mokadelic4037 2 года назад +35

      This, but unironically

    • @crack481
      @crack481 2 года назад +22

      You will destroy your own house.

    • @yoyomodiji
      @yoyomodiji 2 года назад +3

      Tu har jagah yeah hi comment kyon karta hain mortar wale video main bhi yehi comment kiya tha tune

    • @subhadeeppaul1349
      @subhadeeppaul1349 2 года назад

      @@yoyomodiji aap mujhe itni shiddat se follow kar rahe hai ... Thank you 🤣

    • @yoyomodiji
      @yoyomodiji 2 года назад

      @@subhadeeppaul1349 abey teri ID pe click karo toh previous comment aate hai koi follow nahi kar raha hoon , tujhe follow sea waves kar rahi hain teri photu ke peeche 🤣😂😂

  • @manoffaith2501
    @manoffaith2501 2 года назад +27

    In Vietnam I carried an M79 grenade launcher and also carried an side arm, 45 cal 1911 pistol for close-in protection.

  • @samuelclayton4405
    @samuelclayton4405 2 года назад +38

    I am an Infantrymen. I carried a m-203. Perfect Weapon for several different applications. Anti-Personal/ Anti-Material. Several different type of round were used. There was a HE, AP ( would go thru a door or a hood of a 6×6) Lightly skinned Vehicle, and APers (Anti Personal).There was a Shot round. It was like a shotgun shell full of .30 Caliber shot, and then there was the Flechette round. It kicked like an 8 Guage shotgun.

    • @ralphgreenjr.2466
      @ralphgreenjr.2466 2 года назад +9

      The old M-79, "Thumper", was an ambush buster. A good gunner could have a half dozen rounds on the way before the first one hit. The shot round and flechette round was devastating up close. The gunner also carried a 1911a1, .45 acp. Gun of my youth.

    • @smc1942
      @smc1942 Год назад +2

      @@ralphgreenjr.2466
      I knew a Vietnam Vet who carried Thumper and a cut down M2 carbine for backup.
      He prefered them to the M16!

    • @GeorgiaDawgAthens
      @GeorgiaDawgAthens Год назад

      @samuelclayton4405 I loved "the Blooper" as we called it in '69. It was, and still is, a sweet, well-manufactured weapon.

    • @BongRipper-l3s
      @BongRipper-l3s Год назад

      Hooah! ya that 203 got some kick! Was not that good with the 203 so they gave me the m249 which is heavier but worth the weight! W

    • @sarajevsky
      @sarajevsky Год назад

      I destroyed golf rabbit 2 Type with two granades from 40 meters distance.
      I was not precise , I was 19 year old rookie with lot of luck.
      Rabbit Golf was packed with 3 enemies of special assault unit, with heavy bulletproof vests and helmets. Didnt worked.
      First hit was front part of car, second directly beside driver, so the granade killed them with heavy wounds on lower body parts. So was destiny, poor bastards...

  • @udittlamba
    @udittlamba 2 года назад +192

    wow, the 40mm is low key a feat of engineering.

    • @patent6458
      @patent6458 2 года назад +15

      just like much other stuff used in war. it had to work so you grab some smart guys, say what you need and get an engineering overkill so far

    • @burtpanzer
      @burtpanzer Год назад +2

      @@flat-earther Sorry friend, but there are many ways to disprove flat-earth.

    • @theowlfromduolingo7982
      @theowlfromduolingo7982 Год назад

      Ugh two Antifas...

  • @Ed-ig7fj
    @Ed-ig7fj 11 месяцев назад +5

    My buddy who was in Vietnam loved his M-79 "Blooper." Once, though, when he had it resting on his hip, he accidentally fired a round straight up. All the guys were looking up to see where it would land. Luckily, it landed at a safe distance. We miss you, Robert. ("Bobbie" R., 4th Inf. Div., 1967-69, around Pleiku, Dak To, etc., two tours) -Old Guy

    • @ThatSockmonkey
      @ThatSockmonkey 7 месяцев назад

      I was in the Australian army in the 90s and I've heard people call them the blooper, pooper, poop gun, poonka, and supershotty! I love the sound, and with practise, you can get pretty good accuracy.
      One kid on a recruit training course I was working landed a grenade right into his platoon commanders bush hat at 100m. (Aussie tradition, the COs bush hat get put on the range during grenade training. Usually results in a few frag holes and some laughs, it's good for unit cohesion and morale)
      I've fired many, many smoke and illum rounds from these on exercise, and a couple of grenade variants on the range. Probably the most fun range day of all the weapons I ever worked with.
      Excuse me, I gotta go listen to Bruce Springsteens Glory Days and talk myself down. "I'm not 22, I'm not 22, I'm not 22...."

  • @fratercontenduntocculta8161
    @fratercontenduntocculta8161 Год назад +8

    Grenade launchers are my favorite support weapons. Something about the arc trajectory of the projectile makes sense to me, and even at extended ranges, I have no problems getting a shot in thru a window or door. If you really think about it, the magic is in the ammo itself.

  • @poughkeepsieblue
    @poughkeepsieblue 2 года назад +41

    Its amazing how simple an RPG launcher really is. All the cool stuff is in the grenade itself.

    • @aperson336
      @aperson336 Год назад

      Wtf is a rpg launcher? My guy is out here launching ruchnoy protivotankovy granatomyot’s (hand-held anti-tank grenade launcher)

    • @poughkeepsieblue
      @poughkeepsieblue Год назад

      @@aperson336 are you fuckin with me?

    • @poughkeepsieblue
      @poughkeepsieblue Год назад

      @@aperson336 lmao

    • @LeSpongedeStardust
      @LeSpongedeStardust 10 месяцев назад

      @@aperson336 I prefer mortar launchers though

  • @recceeboy1237
    @recceeboy1237 2 года назад +51

    Knee mortars were never fired by resting on your leg, unless you wanted a broken bone. It was designed to rest on ground or a large branch

    • @andrewpaul3130
      @andrewpaul3130 Год назад

      That's right.

    • @theloudamerican2193
      @theloudamerican2193 Год назад +1

      They would shatter the shooters femor! Lol 😂.

    • @tacticalsapper
      @tacticalsapper Год назад +2

      Wow you repeat what the narrator in the video said, well done.

    • @martinbaumgardner4432
      @martinbaumgardner4432 Год назад +1

      @@tacticalsapper He said that much after he called it a knee mortar and showed the picture I'm surprised more people have not commented on it.

    • @myfavoritemartian1
      @myfavoritemartian1 Год назад

      @@joekano6952 I was also told you needed to "Take a knee" to fire it.

  • @VictorW23
    @VictorW23 2 года назад +6

    The centrifugal fuse to arm the explosive in the 40mm was genius

  • @silverseven5283
    @silverseven5283 2 года назад +28

    I'm really enjoying your videos so much Mscope. I keep coming to watch some of your videos. Please keep up the good work. I can't believe your channel with such informative, no over the top editing, to the point yet so easy to understand is so underrated! Btw, that 'Rotational-arming system' is so clever.

    • @mxcollin95
      @mxcollin95 2 года назад +1

      Agreed! Super well done videos with no added BS.

  • @MacksCurley
    @MacksCurley 2 года назад +21

    Wow, impressive design. At time 7:22 where it shows the arming and detonation sequence of counter leverage is a brilliant design and I like the safety feature with the ball. I have to wonder if you could throw it hard enough to arm it.

    • @silverseven5283
      @silverseven5283 2 года назад

      I know, right?! Assuming if you could throw it and it rotates that is.

    • @silverseven5283
      @silverseven5283 2 года назад

      @SKIDROW NIUGINI I see. Too bad i can't shoot one of those.

    • @MacksCurley
      @MacksCurley 2 года назад

      @SKIDROW NIUGINI QSL

    • @rogerturner6737
      @rogerturner6737 2 года назад

      I don't think so

    • @samuellopez8425
      @samuellopez8425 2 года назад

      I like the m79 ues it in Vietnam.

  • @bob_the_bomb4508
    @bob_the_bomb4508 2 года назад +8

    Great explanation and excellent graphics :)

  • @anthonyc417
    @anthonyc417 2 года назад +2

    The illustration of the knee mortar is hilarious good luck with that broken femur

  • @NilfgardianNationalist
    @NilfgardianNationalist 2 года назад +4

    great video! incredibly underrated.

  • @fridaycaliforniaa236
    @fridaycaliforniaa236 2 года назад +2

    This channel's videos should be used for military courses

  • @poughkeepsieblue
    @poughkeepsieblue 2 года назад +5

    Thanks for this series, its fascinating and informative.

  • @paulredinger5830
    @paulredinger5830 2 года назад +5

    I used a M203 when I was in the army in 1982. Beautiful weapon. Kinda weighty especially carrying the grenade and the M16 rounds though.

  • @Brodrich
    @Brodrich 2 года назад +17

    Not sure when it came about but the "defence" problem mentioned at the end of the video forgot to mention that they made 40mm buckshot rounds. It basically makes a grenade launcher into a blunderbuss. And while I already knew about it this explains to everyone why EA made it so the grenade launchers in battlefield don't go off when you shoot an enemy with it at point blank range.

    • @aperson336
      @aperson336 Год назад

      The buckshot and flachet rounds were terrible in the m79 due to the m79 using low pressure chemical explosive rounds, whereas flachet/ buckshot are high pressure
      This causes the range to be terrible as well as velocity and spread

    • @Brodrich
      @Brodrich Год назад

      @@aperson336 Explains why they are so terrible in Arma 3. Thank you.

  • @upandaljm
    @upandaljm 2 года назад +3

    The tough part is keeping the thing on target while you're laughing your ass off because you know what's coming.

  • @dabprod
    @dabprod 11 месяцев назад

    In 1964 I was stationed at Ft Benning GA and assigned to the US Infantry Board. I tested small arms weapons and the M-79 was one of them. We had our own ranges because everything was classified and all personal held top secret clearance. The M-79 was my favorite of all. We worked on modifications to the weapon.

  • @jamesivie5717
    @jamesivie5717 Год назад

    Great video. To quote Arnold Schwartsneger, "Excellent".

  • @mechadonia
    @mechadonia 2 года назад +3

    Thank you for the explanation of High-Low! I remember reading about it when I was in middle school and just never being able to visualize how it actually looked inside a 40mm casing or how it actually worked. Still never really grasped it until now.

  • @alphasierra.
    @alphasierra. 2 года назад +2

    Excellent video, eagerly waiting for the one on UBGL

  • @dutyfree1663
    @dutyfree1663 Год назад

    Awsome vid. I was hoping to find out how 40mm grenade's safe distance work and satisfied

  • @mehranfreeman6192
    @mehranfreeman6192 2 года назад +3

    Very well presented, awesome 👌

  • @Midnight_101
    @Midnight_101 2 года назад +6

    In my college years in my rotc class wat back,they taught us about this launcher.we also got a chance to fire it. There was an incident that the grenade didnt launch.our instructors told us to carefully remove the ballistics and drop it slowly in the ground and leave the perimeter. 3 to 5 mins later,it went off! No one got hurt.but nowadays assault rifle mounted grenade launchers dont have to worry about this misfire.just click again to fire..👍👍👍❤❤❤

  • @scanthecode9974
    @scanthecode9974 2 года назад +1

    BRO KEEP IT COMING I LOVE THE TUTORI-

  • @426superbee4
    @426superbee4 Год назад

    What made the M16 so deadly! Can shoot bullets, and fire grenades. The person that put it on the rifle, Had to have war experience. It was a Brilliant Ideal

  • @williambuchanan77
    @williambuchanan77 2 года назад

    Toys that go boom are my favourite, they make for a wonderful day

  • @nd-iy3dx
    @nd-iy3dx 2 года назад +2

    RPG is a shockingly effective weapon, that and the IED

  • @alaric_
    @alaric_ 2 года назад +2

    Wow, the quality is awesome! The subscriber amount really does not reflect the quality that this channel is providing. I'll do my little part to increase that number :)

  • @jamesdoesitmatter
    @jamesdoesitmatter 2 года назад +5

    Thank you for covering the high-low. Most have no idea it's not like a bullet. Close but not the same.

  • @pretzelogic2689
    @pretzelogic2689 2 года назад +4

    So when our company got to pull Green Line duty for 2 or 3 days on a remote LZ, we would play a little game with these on guard at night. You put one in the tube and 2 on the sand bags in front of you. Fire the first at a high angle, reload the 2nd and fire medium angle, and the last at low angle. The winner was the one who got all three rounds to impact at the same time. It was called H&I, harass and interdict, so it was "officially" approved.

  • @DeadPollo
    @DeadPollo 2 года назад +1

    Demoman course 101: "what makes YOU a good Demoman"

  • @thebookwasbetter3650
    @thebookwasbetter3650 2 года назад +8

    Knew a Vietnam vet who had a cool story. He said a guy in his platoon shot a tiger with a blooper (grenade launcher) He said the thing was running at him and he shot it. The reason it didn't explode is because it was very close and the safety mechanism worked with centrifical force. The round has to spin something like 40 times before the centrifical force disengages the safety. So the round didn't detonate and pretty much acted like a big shotgun slug. The guy had a picture of his platoon posing with the tiger with a four inch gash in it's side and he wore one of it's claws around his neck. Sorry if you like tigers, but I thought it was a pretty cool 'hunting' story.

  • @paulie12345ish
    @paulie12345ish Год назад

    Really well bloop

  • @pelonehedd7631
    @pelonehedd7631 Год назад

    I was waiting for You to correct that misconception about the Knee Mortar . Good thing you saved Me the trouble . A Friend 4:57 of Mine was a LRRP in the 101st Airborne in Vietnam. They had captured a large cache of weapons and were informed that command did not want them destroyed on site and could not effect extraction till the next day. They felt that the enemy knew about the discovery and would try to recapture the weapon’s . They spent the night doing reconnaissance by fire , firing the captured weapon’s and ammo including “ knee mortar’s” into the darkness to deter any attempt at recovery.

  • @terridebord8858
    @terridebord8858 2 года назад +2

    The M79 was called the thumper for the sound it made

  • @mrgatis1531
    @mrgatis1531 2 года назад +1

    is there more precise animation work? awesome work 10/10

  • @catherineharris4746
    @catherineharris4746 2 года назад

    Now this one is well made and factual👏👏👏👏👍👍👍

  • @amitaimedan
    @amitaimedan 2 года назад +1

    Excelent video and explanation.

  • @bb1040
    @bb1040 Год назад

    In Vietnam I liked the M-79 because it was easy to clean ,by just pulling a towel through the barrel. LOL

  • @elforeigner3260
    @elforeigner3260 2 года назад

    I love bloopers

  • @thewheezychieftain5488
    @thewheezychieftain5488 Год назад +5

    Actually the Russian RPG is a 40mm grenade, since the inside of the tube is 40mms, whereas many widely different warheads that sit outside of the barrel can range from 40mm Anti-personnel shrapnel rounds or 90mm enlarged armor penetrating warheads.

  • @anasosama8148
    @anasosama8148 2 года назад

    That's an extremely hard and great work👏👏

  • @entropyachieved750
    @entropyachieved750 2 года назад

    Good channel, love the graphics

  • @HDX539
    @HDX539 2 года назад +1

    Hi MSCOPE channel, one word i can tell you, that is an impressive channel, stun, animations and explain how things work,
    i do not hesitate to like and subscribe to your channel and type some words here,
    and please make more video like this, and remember don't forget to add English substitutes on each of videos.
    many thanks.

  • @peacekeeper9687
    @peacekeeper9687 2 года назад

    Your channel is amazing keep making such videos I like it 👍👍👍

  • @bronyguy6103
    @bronyguy6103 2 года назад +1

    love the video

  • @jeffyoung60
    @jeffyoung60 2 месяца назад

    The Imperial Japanese Army from 1932 to 1945 developed and employed the effective intermediate distance Type 10 and later Type 89 grenade 'discharger'. It is surprising no other army adopted this effective weapon. It would not be until the Vietnam War that the U.S. Army deployed its own M79 grenade launcher, which proved successful and popular. Post-Vietnam, the U.S. Army went one better. It withdrew all M79 grenade launchers and replaced it with the M203 system, a combination M16 with a modified M79 mounted beneath. The M203 proved effective, successful, and popular.

  • @АлексСлободян-г1м
    @АлексСлободян-г1м 2 года назад +1

    Суперский обзор!
    ХОЧУ такой гранатомет!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @mxcollin95
    @mxcollin95 2 года назад

    Super interesting channel! 👍

  • @AFriendlyUnit
    @AFriendlyUnit 2 года назад +1

    "what's makes me a good Demoman?"

  • @brustar5152
    @brustar5152 2 года назад +3

    My line of machines at Canadian Arsenals Ltd in Longbranch Ontario made thousands of barrels for hose things for the U.S. during the Vietnam war. The barrels were black anodized aluminum.

  • @michaelmcclaryjr3752
    @michaelmcclaryjr3752 2 года назад +1

    The guy who had made the. M.79 must have been sick and tired of being called a wimpy person who can't throw a grenade for s..t to save his life

  • @TheGearhead222
    @TheGearhead222 2 года назад +2

    Great video! I've handled M-79's while in the USN, but never fired one:(-John in Texas

    • @rogerturner6737
      @rogerturner6737 2 года назад

      Now they have one that mounts on a m4 rifle same 40 mm shell

    • @opiumtrail7032
      @opiumtrail7032 2 года назад

      @@rogerturner6737 hush now fool.

  • @andrewparrott7260
    @andrewparrott7260 Год назад

    Yes, the M79 grenade gun. Here in Australia we had a nickname for it, the wombat or thumper gun. When I served, had an absolutely fun time using it. Didn't like carrying it around on the back of my webbing though, a bit uncomfortable.

  • @iceberg789
    @iceberg789 Год назад

    that rotating alignment fuse sounds tricky.

  • @garikm24
    @garikm24 2 года назад

    3:30
    "Pineapple on pizza isn't that bad-"

  • @gaveintothedarkness
    @gaveintothedarkness 2 года назад +16

    0:46 The Knee mortar didnt actually go on your knee. You would be in for a lot of pain if you did that. Forgotten Weapons has a pretty good vid on this one

    • @Ohlom111
      @Ohlom111 2 года назад

      and to add.. it was actually ni mortar as in 2 in Japanese

    • @platyhelminthes2877
      @platyhelminthes2877 2 года назад +1

      They address this misconception at 2:10 in the video.

    • @platyhelminthes2877
      @platyhelminthes2877 2 года назад

      @@Ohlom111 Do you have a source for this? The actual Japanese name for the weapon is Type 89 grenade discharger. "Knee mortar" is just an allied colloquialism.

    • @Ohlom111
      @Ohlom111 2 года назад

      @@platyhelminthes2877 spent a few years army EOD, had an instructor harp on the subject, seen a few pubs on them but that was some 30+ years back and in all honesty my memory is swiss cheese anymore. But anyway basically it goes to it being referred to as a "2 inch mortar" somewhere along the line. 50mm=1.97in, and 2 in Japanese is ni, pronounced just like knee. Maybe coincidence because I can't remember where I may have seen it and can't find references to it in any of the books i have now. But for what ever reason it's one of the strange things that stuck in my head.

  • @patrickshea5955
    @patrickshea5955 2 года назад

    You have to have some real balls to use that knee grenade launcher 😭💀😳

  • @danielgreen3715
    @danielgreen3715 2 года назад

    Just what im looking for!

  • @DrIudwig
    @DrIudwig 2 года назад +1

    *”Oh there gonna half to glue you back together IN HELL.”*

  • @almadlicka2410
    @almadlicka2410 2 года назад +1

    We used them here in the Angolan War. It's nickname was the "snotneus" (snot nose).

  • @Rohit-nm3je
    @Rohit-nm3je 2 года назад

    Nice explaination ❤️❤️

  • @crack481
    @crack481 2 года назад

    Awesome videos!!!!

  • @charlesmangum2100
    @charlesmangum2100 2 года назад

    Have not seen one of these sense the 70's.

  • @muhacnt7988
    @muhacnt7988 2 года назад +4

    Dying to know how those soviet caseless grenade rounds works

    • @muhacnt7988
      @muhacnt7988 2 года назад +1

      @@grey886 The AGS fire the same round from UGBL gp 25 and 35,The have propellant and primer inside the round

  • @piconano
    @piconano 2 года назад +1

    I'll bet they'll make a model that can be dropped by a small drone.
    I appreciate the hard work that goes into making these videos.

    • @bob_the_bomb4508
      @bob_the_bomb4508 2 года назад

      ISIS started dropping rifle grenades from drones a few years ago.

  • @socialiteclefceo5592
    @socialiteclefceo5592 Год назад

    Fantastic❤

  • @vishnuraj8285
    @vishnuraj8285 2 года назад +1

    Terminator 🔥

  • @Kyroshi899
    @Kyroshi899 2 месяца назад

    Perfect for a Airsoft Proyect

  • @jimward89
    @jimward89 Год назад

    excellent

  • @HandlingItAll
    @HandlingItAll Месяц назад

    The AI voice narration not only hurt my ears and brain but damaged my soul.

  • @snoooozel7404
    @snoooozel7404 2 года назад

    danke für deine arbeit

  • @MrPrist-kp8fp-theonetrueprist2
    @MrPrist-kp8fp-theonetrueprist2 2 года назад +1

    rpg: rocket propelled gernades

  • @fredrickmillstead2804
    @fredrickmillstead2804 10 месяцев назад

    Love the M79. Carried one for a while in RVN. Kept it loaded with a buckshot round for 1st contact. Flechette round was not very effective.

  • @youngtactical9292
    @youngtactical9292 Год назад

    always wondered why when you shoot the GL straight at the ground it would not explode i would yell all the time "cheap grenade" an would be like this damn thing only works when you shoot it at some one. but its because the orb has not spun in to alinement with the striker pin AMAZING !!! THXFOR SHOWING THAT

  • @workhardplayharder4924
    @workhardplayharder4924 2 года назад

    Perfect explain.

  • @poughkeepsieblue
    @poughkeepsieblue 2 года назад +1

    So, the m79 is a rifled grenade round
    I know rifling makes any weapon more accurate and travel farther, but i assumed the thump gun just lobbed grenades, i naively never even considered it was a rifled round.

    • @poughkeepsieblue
      @poughkeepsieblue 2 года назад

      On top of that, the ball/rotation safety design is something i never knew, and makes sense.
      The 40mm is a big boy, waiting to hear about the 25mm...
      I really am learning something here.
      Thanks again.

  • @littlebear1520
    @littlebear1520 2 года назад +1

    I was lucky enough to see some of the original blueprints for the m79 apparently it was developed in Duluth or Superior or the inventor was from that area

  • @ZombieB
    @ZombieB 2 года назад

    Nice👌

  • @shadsa9503
    @shadsa9503 2 года назад

    40 Millimetres grenade is a good grenade 😮 it looks special

    • @shadsa9503
      @shadsa9503 2 года назад

      I like the M 79

    • @shadsa9503
      @shadsa9503 2 года назад

      I also like the site Carrier

  • @aperson336
    @aperson336 Год назад

    0:22 m79 (a grenade launcher)
    RPG 2 (anti tank weapon, not a grenade launcher)
    Type 89 mortar (definitely not a grenade launcher)

  • @gamercatsz5441
    @gamercatsz5441 2 года назад

    Ideal for consumer drones

  • @eded9157
    @eded9157 2 года назад

    Very usefull against certain big pharma bioweapons.

  • @Cryogenius333
    @Cryogenius333 2 года назад

    I love when my grenades fly stab-ly.
    And they stably my enemy tank with a properly ignited catridge.

  • @poughkeepsieblue
    @poughkeepsieblue 2 года назад

    All i can picture, is the stoned black guy in apacolypse now, who fires one grende shot, and then the enemy fire stops...
    He knew his weapon, knew how to place the shot based on sound distance, and he was close enough, like they say about horseshoes and hand grenades.
    The thump gun also had its moment in terminator 2, which also displays the smoke firing drum launcher, that the terminator uses on the swat team
    I think imma go watch some movies now

  • @j7ndominica051
    @j7ndominica051 Год назад

    I was wondering how grenades in fallout don't explode entirely at the moment of firing. Speech synthesizers are getting better.

  • @henryparent1157
    @henryparent1157 2 года назад

    M79 it did the job. Great for top of tree yep 👍

  • @paulmicelli5819
    @paulmicelli5819 2 года назад

    Carried a M-79 in Nam, also had side arm Colt 1911A1 .45 cal. pistol.

  • @wastedangelematis
    @wastedangelematis 2 года назад

    CAn't wait for neXt VId

  • @KalanYore
    @KalanYore 2 года назад +1

    You missed one detail of the 40mm being armed as it takes 3 revolutions after firing within the launcher tube of the M-79... there is a reason for this so when a solider accidentally drops the munition will not explode to cause death or injury...
    the max range is 400m beside the fragmentation grenade there is other types like white phosphorous and smoke...
    In the army we trained with M-79s, just for familiarization while the actual M16A1-M203 attached grenade launchers for training using training markers rather than real frags - the targeting aperture is actually called the 'Leaf-Sight'...
    I was at Ft. Dix back in 1987 for boot camp - the only live munitions we used was 5.56 NATO, .50 cal BMG, 7.62, and live hand grenades... everything else was non-live training munitions or simulators... claymore mines we used real detonators [wired blasting caps] for training but the mine itself was a dummy... still wired blasting caps were dangerous can remove some fingers or even the entire hand from 'static' energy - have to be well grounded when using wired caps... training grenades used live fuse detonators as well - I and a few others were assigned to screw in all fuses and also load all 20 & 30 round magazines with fresh ammo including tracers when we had night fire exercises.
    Spent 8 years in the army... got out as the Clinton Administration was destroying and reducing the entire military and cut programs and pay to freezing promotion slots to slow and reduce E-5 & E-6 slots and NCO school intake - I had enough of the BS and ETS out.

  • @AlexanderNewman-n7n
    @AlexanderNewman-n7n Год назад

    wonderful

  • @colinvanrensburg4652
    @colinvanrensburg4652 10 месяцев назад

    A friend had his hand over the muzzle of an M79 when it fired accidentally - that arming mechanism saved him from losing his life - just a nasty dent in his hand and a bruised ego....

  • @matthiuskoenig3378
    @matthiuskoenig3378 2 года назад +2

    What you didn't mention is that high-low propulsion system was developed by Germany in ww2 for anti-tank guns (the PAW 600 and PAW 1000)

  • @jamiemiller8678
    @jamiemiller8678 9 месяцев назад

    @2:51 the sight distances are explained backwards

  • @renatopacheco5122
    @renatopacheco5122 10 месяцев назад +1

    Demoman lore:

  • @Stirl2
    @Stirl2 2 года назад +12

    It's not "millimeters", just "millimeter" in this instance.

    • @ericlondon5731
      @ericlondon5731 2 года назад +3

      I also thought that sounded strange. It could be that the speech is a 'bot' program that reads this to different languages, as the tone is very staccato and monotone. ( If a real dude, may just be a nervous reader )

    • @bob_the_bomb4508
      @bob_the_bomb4508 2 года назад +2

      Millimetre if we’re going to be pedantic.