The Rhodesia Mamba: Big Hype and a Big Flop

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  • čas přidán 2. 07. 2024
  • / forgottenweapons
    Cool Forgotten Weapons merch! shop.bbtv.com/collections/forg...
    The Mamba was originally conceived in a 1970s Salisbury, Rhodesia barroom bull session about the best elements of semiauto pistols. The project would wind up being pushed by an American expat named Joe Hale, and production of parts was contracted out to a South African engineering firm.
    The Mamba was hugely hyped at the time as being the best service handgun ever developed. It was an SA/DA system based on the Smith & Wesson Model 59, with ambidextrous safety, all stainless steel construction, and nary a single stamped part. Probably less than 100 were ever made (definitely not more than 200), as a result of massive technical problems. Many of these were ultimately because of an improper heat treating regimen insisted upon by Hale, but poor quality control in the manufacturing process didn't help anything. When the South African manufacturer bailed on the gun (having gotten a lucrative armored car contract from the South African government instead), the parts and IP were purchased by Navy Arms of the US. A small number of guns were assembled in New Jersey from South African parts, but there the project died.
    Today, the Mamba is a vary scarce pistol, for all the obvious reasons. Many thanks to the South African collection who provided this one for filming!
    Contact:
    Forgotten Weapons
    6281 N Oracle #36270
    Tucson, AZ 85704

Komentáře • 886

  • @Paelorian
    @Paelorian Před 5 lety +2508

    13:28: "Normally, notches cut in a gun reflect kills. In this case, I think this means this has fired three shots successfully." Oooo... that's a good burn!

  • @richardwillcox3571
    @richardwillcox3571 Před 3 lety +329

    I knew Joe Hale. He could talk the leg off a Donkey. He ended up running a small gun shop in Florida a Suburb of Johannesburg. The shop went belly up and Joe disappeared. Which I assume was quite normal for him. I can assure you he would be the last person I would allow to specify heat treatment of SS steel.Thanks for a highly interesting series.

  • @ThatBum42
    @ThatBum42 Před 5 lety +701

    So basically a Kickstarter scam before Kickstarter? Awesome.

    • @evanbarlow5534
      @evanbarlow5534 Před 4 lety +24

      Except nobody made any money

    • @yogsothoth915
      @yogsothoth915 Před 3 lety +13

      You think that was good, he's got a video on a Confederate production revolver that really takes the cake for scamming people.

    • @BiffBallbag
      @BiffBallbag Před 3 lety +9

      Yes, there were scams before the internet.

    • @joelarson1733
      @joelarson1733 Před 2 lety +3

      Delorean?

    • @Peyote1312
      @Peyote1312 Před 2 lety +1

      Them Rhodesian racists got their asses whipped so bad by the combined chad forces of Angola & Cuba that they had to resort to exit scamming. Sad.

  • @anortalot
    @anortalot Před 5 lety +474

    “No stamped parts” Oh, neat! “All cast parts” Oh, Yikes

    • @darrengarcia4937
      @darrengarcia4937 Před 2 lety +4

      @@0neDoomedSpaceMarine yeah but what was the last time anyone really bought a Ruger for a good gun? Just above Taurus but below S&W and Colt

    • @darrengarcia4937
      @darrengarcia4937 Před 2 lety

      @@0neDoomedSpaceMarine shot tons out of a 629. Shoots better than any Ruger or Taurus. Good woods gun.

    • @theinstitute1324
      @theinstitute1324 Před 2 lety +20

      @@darrengarcia4937 Well Colt is bankrupt, S&W is living off a practical but rather plain series of well-made carry automatics and revolvers (some of which I believe have even been adopted as service pistols), while Ruger is doing rather well with many well selling practical designs, from guns like the LCP, to the well-reviewed (although practically entry level as far as precisions go) Ruger Precision rifles and Ruger Precision rimfire (I own one, absolute tack driver), to it's AR series which is no slouch, to it's something like 60+ year production of the 10/22 and the .22 pistols it makes? How about that new, very well reviewed FiftySeven?
      Just above a taurus? Dude, what are you saying? Ruger is killing it, has been for the last decade.

    • @zelpyzelp
      @zelpyzelp Před 2 lety +14

      @@darrengarcia4937 Ruger produces quality firearms, "a step above Taurus" (y'know, guns that explode or go off unintentionally) is severely undervaluing them as a company

    • @classifiedad1
      @classifiedad1 Před 2 lety

      @@0neDoomedSpaceMarine Colt Anaconda. Buffalo Bore says as much.
      Not a S&W tho.

  • @warriorwolf77
    @warriorwolf77 Před 5 lety +790

    We really like the S&W59 but we can't import them so what do we do?
    I've got an idea, here's my Sniff and Lesson model pifty pine
    Wow you're a genius

    • @jonathandalton2921
      @jonathandalton2921 Před 5 lety +48

      hahaha thanks i had a chuckle at "Sniff and Lesson model pifty pine" !! lol

    • @michaelr.1709
      @michaelr.1709 Před 5 lety +23

      Then the Koreans said "Hold my beer..." and the K5 was born.

    • @Snubrevolver
      @Snubrevolver Před 5 lety +10

      *Smill and Welson

    • @MajimaGoro8
      @MajimaGoro8 Před 4 lety +6

      warriorwolf77 Swith & Messon

    • @michaelfrench3396
      @michaelfrench3396 Před 4 lety +2

      Wonder what John Browning would think of this. It's like someone said, "how badly can I bastardize a Browning hi power. " Pretty badly 🤣🤣

  • @jic1
    @jic1 Před 5 lety +121

    What I learned from this video was that in the late '70s, at least among southern African practical shooters, the Smith & Wesson Model 59 was considered the best combat handgun in the world.

    • @russelsellick3649
      @russelsellick3649 Před 2 lety +11

      No those folk used Browning Hi-power or Colts and so on.

    • @lafeelabriel
      @lafeelabriel Před rokem +4

      To be fair there are certainly worse pistols out there to use as a starting point. Like say this one. ;)

  • @turbowolf302
    @turbowolf302 Před 5 lety +800

    ...this is Mamba number five

  • @muffledgiraffe4303
    @muffledgiraffe4303 Před 5 lety +589

    But the question is... does it beat the zip 22 as THE worst?

    • @WBatte1
      @WBatte1 Před 5 lety +206

      No the zip 22 is worse . It failed to even look like a gun and you have to put your finger in front of the gun to charge a round . This gun looks like a gun and doesn't require placing any part of your body in front of the weapon to operate .

    • @sonnyburnett2417
      @sonnyburnett2417 Před 5 lety +18

      Would that put the Rogak in 3rd place then? I'm not sure I can agree with that batting order. I don't think Ian would have even tried to fire the Rogak (I think he'd have deemed it unsafe). He did fire the Zip .22, and I think he'd be ok with firing this pistol.

    • @tarmaque
      @tarmaque Před 5 lety +36

      I think this one barely qualifies as a "production" pistol due to the small numbers produced, therefore it's difficult to compare to something like the Zip 22. This is more like an extended marketing campaign based on a couple hundred prototypes.

    • @simonmunden5046
      @simonmunden5046 Před 5 lety +20

      Don’t forget the Nambu Type 94...

    • @christopherzarcone1363
      @christopherzarcone1363 Před 5 lety +10

      Where does cobray’s catalog rank? Oh and the early 1903s with exploding receivers

  • @7411y
    @7411y Před 5 lety +539

    Joe Hale seems like a less successful version of his brother Saxton

    • @rgm96x49
      @rgm96x49 Před 5 lety +108

      I bet his chest hair isn't even shaped like Australia.

    • @tjthompson58
      @tjthompson58 Před 5 lety +16

      He's probably not even Australian in the first place

    • @goldendeadlydragon9826
      @goldendeadlydragon9826 Před 5 lety +5

      Saxton Hale is a boss in tf2, joe hale is named after the tf2 hale vs game mode.

    • @Potato79207
      @Potato79207 Před 5 lety +1

      @@TheRoyaltyofTurtles WTF!

    • @wesleyjones4036
      @wesleyjones4036 Před 2 lety

      Mann Vs Machine

  • @MikeHawke83
    @MikeHawke83 Před 5 lety +148

    If your S&W semi-auto needs a stunt double, get a Mamba.

    • @Dirtbag-Hyena
      @Dirtbag-Hyena Před 5 lety +1

      Hey,what is on Darth's helm??

    • @Potato79207
      @Potato79207 Před 5 lety +1

      Yeah WHATS on his helmet

    • @rc59191
      @rc59191 Před 3 lety +4

      @@Dirtbag-Hyena it's a camo cover and bullets

  • @thegunpenguin
    @thegunpenguin Před 5 lety +116

    "The project went to New Jersey, and died. There are very few of these left." A tale as old as time, amiright? You can't make something better by making it in New Jersey.

    • @crispyair3338
      @crispyair3338 Před 3 lety

      where did that story come from? i nvr heard of nj being this bad...

    • @JustIn-op6oy
      @JustIn-op6oy Před 3 lety +3

      ... clearly you have never heard of this wonderful little place called Edison labs

    • @visassess8607
      @visassess8607 Před 2 lety +1

      @@crispyair3338 It's more of an exaggeration

  • @squidbanter
    @squidbanter Před 5 lety +288

    I used to have a mate who owned one of these, but I don't remamba his name.

  • @John.VanSwearingen
    @John.VanSwearingen Před 5 lety +308

    After the Bush War, Joe Hale moved back to the United States and reentered the firearms industry under the name "Ron Cohen."
    That's the only possible explanation for Kimber and Sig.

    • @SamSneed0
      @SamSneed0 Před 5 lety +12

      Good one!

    • @codygranrud6212
      @codygranrud6212 Před 5 lety +6

      Haha holy shit

    • @shinobi-no-bueno
      @shinobi-no-bueno Před 2 lety +8

      @@justforever96 do you mean the P320s that shot people while holstered? Lol

    • @jordanwiser4192
      @jordanwiser4192 Před 2 lety +6

      @@shinobi-no-bueno sig p320 is much much better than Glock in modularity, trigger, accuracy, durability, and I've seen tons of negligent discharges from Glocks, actually my ex gf got shot by one. You have to pull the trigger to break down a Glock and it has no safety. Firing upon re-holstering is the only not dummy proof part of a striker design. I have fnx-45, fn 509, and a sig p320 with three different frames, one of which is metal. They are all SO much better than a glock

    • @jordanwiser4192
      @jordanwiser4192 Před 2 lety +5

      @@shinobi-no-bueno And one day if you ever carry a gun everyday you will soon see the merits of a striker fired pistol vs like a 3 pound steel 1911 with 8 shots

  • @ApurtureSci
    @ApurtureSci Před 5 lety +60

    I have a March 1978 issue of Guns & Ammo that reviews the Navy Arms Mamba. It says that almost everything is cast stainless steel including the barrel, and claims Navy Arms will import castings to be finished in the US. A quote from the article: 'The secret is in the heat treating of the cast barrels, and beyond that Navy Arms has nothing to say'. The author says he didn't test it thoroughly because it was a first prototype, but it appeared to be very reliable. Also stated is that the magazine holds 14 rounds, and the DA trigger weighed 22lbs!

  • @crominion6045
    @crominion6045 Před 5 lety +150

    Large DA/SA semi-auto in 9x19, made almost entirely of castings (including the barrel), with a 15 round magazine? Sounds a lot like the Ruger P89, except that the P89 is actually a functional gun. 😂

    • @Deadtileyedie
      @Deadtileyedie Před 5 lety +22

      I was about to say, p89 may be cast and ugly but it was my first semi auto I owned and I shot the crap out of it with everything I could find, hot hand loads, lead and even some Israeli Uzi surplus that was supposed to only be for smg and it never had a malfunction, I traded it later for a 92fs but it was definitely reliable and combat accurate lol

    • @derekp2674
      @derekp2674 Před 5 lety +3

      greg gentry - are there any Rugers that aren't awesome?

    • @ostiariusalpha
      @ostiariusalpha Před 5 lety +2

      @@derekp2674 The Ruger P345 was severely lacking in awesomeness.

    • @donwyoming1936
      @donwyoming1936 Před 5 lety

      The P85 was definitely a turd. The P89 wasn't that much better.

    • @snsm6730
      @snsm6730 Před 5 lety

      The P90 in 45 was a whole different matter...ugly but VERY serviceable... Ironically
      the "polymer" P95 as been a very good firearm to if bulky...

  • @fdmackey3666
    @fdmackey3666 Před 5 lety +63

    I recall reading any number of magazine articles about this "wonder pistol" and then nothing....The only modern pistol that got more attention than the Mamba was the Bren Ten.....And we know how that one worked out even with Jeff Cooper beating the drums for it.

    • @richardlahan7068
      @richardlahan7068 Před 5 lety +9

      The Bren Ten wasn't a bad or poorly designed pistol but getting spare mags was and still is nearly impossible. The gun really does work but it was poorly marketed (even though it was Sonny Crockett's gun of choice in the first season of "Miami Vice").

    • @marvindebot3264
      @marvindebot3264 Před 2 lety +3

      I carried a Bren 10 in Africa for years and I can assure you it's a fine piece of kit.

    • @fdmackey3666
      @fdmackey3666 Před 2 lety +2

      @@marvindebot3264 I cannot and would not argue the point with you. However, here in the U.S.A. it was a near total flop. I knew three or four people who purchased Bren 10s new in the box and all but one of them, a collector who is also an avid shooter, found their pistols to be unreliable due to poor or at least substandard quality. Problems with feeding and extraction, jamming (primarily smokestack jams) topped the list of failures associated with the pistols that I know of. All but one of the above-mentioned pistols were sold after multiple trips to quality gunsmiths failed to rectify the problems the original owners had with the. Two were replaced by CZ-75s and one by a Colt's in 10mm. The fourth pistol ended up in the owner's substantial collection as a "non-shooter" after he spent a LOT of money trying to get it up to a level of dependability that would have made it trustworthy as a daily carry pistol. I've always suspected that the Bren 10s that entered this country were, for some reason, ammo sensitive but since I only came close to buying one myself, I have no hand experience, except for a few rounds fired from the fourth pistol mentioned above two of which resulted in two smokestack jams out of a single magazine. IF I recall correctly Norma ammo was utilized at one time or another by all four owners and, compared to other 10mm ammo available at the time, was considered "warm enough" to cycle the action MOST of the time. Carefully crafted handloads brought the reliability up, on that fourth pistol, to around 90%. I must confess that even the least reliable of the Bren 10s I crossed paths with were very, very accurate when they worked. I came so close to buying a Bren 10 back then that I had made it a point to research a couple of holsters and even tracked down a reliable source for Norma ammo and two extra magazines but once the men I knew, who had far and away greater financial resources that I could lay claim to started having problems with their pistols I took a hard pass on a Bren 10 and purchased a "GI" Browning in 9mm (my least favorite but by far more abundant chambering and ammo).

  • @csours
    @csours Před 5 lety +128

    "The Rhodesian Mamba review, but it doubles in speed every time Ian throws shade"

  • @jorisjamroziak7024
    @jorisjamroziak7024 Před 5 lety +96

    Sounds like a 'what if a random gun video's comment section designed a gun' story.

  • @lir5048
    @lir5048 Před 5 lety +190

    Never mind that gun. I want to see a pan around that room

  • @grendelgrendelsson5493
    @grendelgrendelsson5493 Před 5 lety +636

    And the day came whereupon Gun Jesus did sit down amongst the serpents and did hold a mamba within his hands. "Lord Gun Jesus, " cried his followers, "be ye not afraid that the serpent taken up thusly may bite thee?"
    "No," spake Gun Jesus, "for this serpent is one of metal and is as dangerous and useful as is a scrotum upon a cow." And his followers did see the wisdom of his words and contemplated upon the scrotum burdened cow.
    Yet one questioned Him thusly; "But Lord, thou art the Gun Jesus. Can you not turn this thing of crap unto a thing of firing fun-ness?"
    Gun Jesus looked upon him and smiled upon him and it was as if the sun did rise for him, "No you tit," saith Gun Jesus, "I wouldst rather spend my time with the angel made Browning, Baretta, Smith and Wesson where it is known that ye can usually letteth rip more than 3 rounds before disappointment setteth in." And the one was chastened yet did he still follow Gun Jesus for He is good and righteous and he did know that he was a tit.

    • @distributeroffineopioidpro1703
      @distributeroffineopioidpro1703 Před 5 lety +48

      I fucking love this so much. Please make a bible!

    • @nubcake67
      @nubcake67 Před 5 lety +34

      I wish I could favorite this comment.

    • @theodorbutters141
      @theodorbutters141 Před 5 lety +46

      I'd pay you to make a gun jesus themed bible and read it

    • @Motoruven
      @Motoruven Před 5 lety +11

      That was beautiful :)

    • @roguereaver634
      @roguereaver634 Před 5 lety +25

      I always read these in my head with the voice of that dude that reads the book of armaments when the holy hand grenade of Antioch is unveiled

  • @ThorneyedWT
    @ThorneyedWT Před 5 lety +56

    At long last we see REALLY forgotten weapon.
    Not to tell that I skip any gospel from Gun Jesus, but still...

  • @winkeemanley1820
    @winkeemanley1820 Před rokem +3

    I recall seeing a Mamba pistol approximately forty plus years ago in City Guns Hout Street Cape Town South Africa.
    I think it was gold in colour and when I held it in my hand I noticed that the slide to frame fit was very loose.

  • @rosshenderson835
    @rosshenderson835 Před 5 lety +15

    What a blast from the past! I worked in Rhodesia in 1977 and 1978 and I remember the media hype about the Mamba. I recall reading about it in a South African magazine called SCOPE. People were wild about the idea that they might be able to buy a pistol. There were NONE for sale in Rhodesia - I had picked up a Star Super-B 9mm in Johannesburg on my way to Rhodesia. When I left in 78 I sold it in Salisbury for a good deal more than I had paid. Great video.

  • @hakkonen27
    @hakkonen27 Před 5 lety +59

    I don't really know anything about metallurgy, so the whole thing about the heat-treating cycle is flying over my head. Is a 24-hour cycle too long or too short? How does it affect/what does it have to do with the gun not working? In what specific way(s) does it "not work?" Basically, I think Ian left out a lot of important info on this one.

    • @Herr_Scheissemann
      @Herr_Scheissemann Před 4 lety +20

      I think carburizing stainless is a lot harder than carburizing just steel. I heard carburizing steel is quite an easy process. Put the steel in a sealed container, heat it up to critical temperature and it's done. Green beetle channel demonstrated that quite a while ago. This process can "infuse" the carbon element up to 1 mm into the steel as far as I remember.
      However, I doubt this carburizing procedure cause this gun not working properly. Nevertheless I had never own a gun and had never carburize steel before so don't count me on this one.
      But I agree that gun jesus this time might cause me to have sleep deprivation due to this question.
      Why the hell does this gun not work.

    • @DerisiveandViceral
      @DerisiveandViceral Před 4 lety +8

      It all really depends on the base alloy. Carburizing is forcing carbon atoms into the spaces between the iron atoms to increase the hardness through diffusion. The time is only one piece of the equation temperature also matters. This can be very finicky as you end up with metal of different hardness and or microstructure. If not done properly you have a surface or area of depth that is either to hard and brittle or too soft and weak. Hope this clears things up a little.

    • @sukhoifockewulf9371
      @sukhoifockewulf9371 Před 2 lety +3

      @@justforever96 Most carburizing is done by heating components in either a pit furnace, or sealed atmosphere furnace, and introducing carburizing gases at temperature. Gas carburizing allows for accurate control of both the process temperature and carburizing atmosphere (carbon potential). Carburizing is a time/temperature process; the carburizing atmosphere is introduced into the furnace for the required time to ensure the correct depth of case. The carbon potential of the gas can be lowered to permit diffusion, avoiding excess carbon in the surface layer.
      The 24 hours is critical because truncated Decarb begins well under 10 hours into the process, big fail.

    • @finlaymcdiarmid5832
      @finlaymcdiarmid5832 Před 2 lety +2

      @@justforever96 well metal can be too hard and shatter under pressure, or too soft and deform under pressure. Probably too hard in this case as i think the gun would still work if bits were slightly deformed with every use but just one shot and it shatters even one bit and obviously its not gonna work at all.

    • @atinofspam3433
      @atinofspam3433 Před 2 lety +2

      I think the issues with this are similar to the L85a1, in that the design itself is mostly sound with a few flaws, but the real issue is the method of manufacture, so things like an inadequately heat treated hammer or firing pin causing it to break, or things like brittle springs etc.
      Basically, decent design, but poor manufacturing leading to parts that easily break or malfunction.

  • @MrHws5mp
    @MrHws5mp Před 5 lety +397

    So, Lessons Learnt:
    1. Never go away and actually build anything that got designed by a bunch of guys in a bar,
    2. Never let a draughtsman double as a production engineer unless they're actually qualified to do so.
    Who'd a thunk it?

    • @jasondoe2596
      @jasondoe2596 Před 5 lety +53

      Harold Weaver Smith, the draughtsman isn't the one who was insisting on the weird engineering decisions (regarding the heat treatment). I'd suspect he was actually more qualified than that guy.

    • @SamSneed0
      @SamSneed0 Před 5 lety +36

      3. Don't make semi-auto handguns out of metal that will gall.

    • @derekp2674
      @derekp2674 Před 5 lety +19

      More lessons:
      a) the Browning Hi-Power wasn't so bad after all... (just look how widely it was used and for how long)
      b) John Browning and Dieudonné Saive really were genius gun inventors.

    • @neutronalchemist3241
      @neutronalchemist3241 Před 5 lety +15

      1) It depends on who the guys at the bar are. IE, the Ferrari Dino project started as a bar conversation between Enzo Ferrari, Dino Ferrari and Vittorio Jano on what would have been the best angle between the banks of a V6 engine.

    • @imagifyer
      @imagifyer Před 5 lety +13

      IRRC the M82 Barrett was the same, couple of guys drinking and someone said 'Bet you can't make a rifle that shoots .50', Ronnie Barrett decided it was a bet worth taking

  • @brianweydert9881
    @brianweydert9881 Před 5 lety +45

    This is the gun from far cry 2, I always thought that it was just a shitty design of a 1911

    • @sterkriger2572
      @sterkriger2572 Před 4 lety +9

      Brian Weydert well it is a shittier design of the 1911

    • @t.k.326
      @t.k.326 Před 4 lety +8

      I thought the FC2 pistol was a Spanish model 1911?

    • @Miller_Time
      @Miller_Time Před 4 lety +2

      Holy hell it is

    • @joeymobb8438
      @joeymobb8438 Před 3 lety +9

      @@t.k.326
      It was. A Star Model-P which is just a Spanish clone of the 1911.

  • @MarineVet
    @MarineVet Před 5 lety +6

    To prevent cracking and breakage of cast parts, even some stamped parts, I grind and polish cast flash and sharp edges. I also do it for aesthetic purposes. It's unfortunate that most manufacturers don't use this practice, but it is labor intensive and greatly increases manufacturing costs. It is a task left to end users and rebuilders.

  • @vettekid3326
    @vettekid3326 Před 5 lety +60

    Sounds like the Chevy Vega of the handguns. Started out with a great idea but ended up being poorly engineered and produced. Both were of similar time periods by the way.

    • @jackvernian7779
      @jackvernian7779 Před 5 lety +6

      yeah, there are four stages to design and production on which you can do a massive flop. 1. Market, 2. Design, 3. Technology, 4. Communication.
      Arguably the 1,3 and 4 are the most important bits.

    • @xXBoo56Xx
      @xXBoo56Xx Před 5 lety

      Excellent comparison.

    • @TSPhotoAtlanta
      @TSPhotoAtlanta Před 5 lety +2

      IIRC, the Vega had an aluminum block. It was marketed well as they sold a bunch, but there was a a problem with step 2 -improper cooling and shifing cylindervsleeves.

    • @jamesgalatioto7227
      @jamesgalatioto7227 Před 5 lety +5

      Vegas are awesome. You throw out the anchor of an engine stuff in a hot small block and bam you have a deathtrap

    • @petesampson4273
      @petesampson4273 Před 5 lety +2

      I am one of the few people who got a good Vega. The worst problem I had with it was that the horsepower dropped to near zero when I would hit about 3,500ft above sea level. You know something is wrong when a VW microbus hauling a trailer can pass you but it made for some hilarious times wondering if we would make it to the top of a pass.

  • @ZGryphon
    @ZGryphon Před 3 lety +16

    "I think it's worth pointing out that this is, in fact, objectively the INcorrect way to hold a pistol." Epic.
    As Ian describes him, Joe Hale reminds me a bit of Malcolm Bricklin, whose eponymous '70s car company was basically the prototype for DeLorean (gull wings doors, massive government grant scams in a place where no reasonable person would build a car factory, and all), and who then went on to found YugoCars, Inc., the company that imported the Zastava Koral to the US, badged as the notorious Yugo. Mind you, Bricklin also founded Subaru of America, so, y'know, stopped clock twice a day and all that. But the whole "super-confident serial entrepreneur who lurches bombastically from disaster to disaster" thing sounds very similar.

  • @pgprentice
    @pgprentice Před 2 lety +4

    My local gun shop in Johannesburg had a gold plated one for sale. Serial number 003 if I remember correctly. Nobody back then wanted to buy a gold paper weight. Took them ages to sell it. Wish I had bought it but I was young and broke.

  • @bobthompson4319
    @bobthompson4319 Před 2 lety +3

    Today, the Mamba is a vary scarce pistol, for all the obvious reasons. Many thanks to the South African collection who provided this one for filming!
    e ⬆ typo in the description. I'm surprised it hasn't been caught in all these years.

  • @lwilton
    @lwilton Před 5 lety +61

    A justifiably forgotten weapon!

  • @theliberalrepublican5910
    @theliberalrepublican5910 Před 2 lety +5

    Ian, I remember reading about this when it was being developed, and much hype was made of the 2 and 3 round bursts, both claimed to be effective, by not climbing too far out of the center mass of a human target.

  • @matyaspalffy958
    @matyaspalffy958 Před 5 lety +81

    I miss Lifesizepotato :( great video as always

  • @thelonerider9693
    @thelonerider9693 Před 4 lety +19

    "The project went to Nj and then died."
    As someone who lives in Nj I can attest this is not uncommon lol.

  • @russelsellick3649
    @russelsellick3649 Před 2 lety +7

    I remember this horror story, didn't help using the same grade of stainless steel for all the parts! I'm in South Africa and I bought all the Man and Man Magnum magazines for over forty years...

  • @NormReitzel
    @NormReitzel Před 2 lety +12

    I worked the first 30 years of my adult life in the electronics industry, and there were lots and lot of much-hyped epic failures. Marketing types are cast from the same mold, just different alloys. Some actually did not lie through their teeth, but these tended to be less successful -- failures were always the fault of the Engineers (of which I was one). The more things change the more they stay the same. zNice vidoe - Very Interesting!

  • @kodiakkeith
    @kodiakkeith Před 5 lety +22

    Had they got the galling issue fixed it still would have been a flop. Look at the profile of the pistol; extremely high bore axis and almost square grip angle. That's a recipe for muzzle flip and I suspect discerning buyers would have dropped it pretty quick.

    • @RyTrapp0
      @RyTrapp0 Před 5 lety +9

      And, to think, this was created from a "best features ever" list by IPSC competitors. Field fillers, surely...

  • @Efreeti
    @Efreeti Před 5 lety +22

    Funnily enough, one of the armoured vehicles Sandock-Austral ended up manufacturing was the Mamba Mk2 APC

    • @russelsellick3649
      @russelsellick3649 Před 2 lety +1

      Well vehicles were their forte!

    • @IanCoxAfrica
      @IanCoxAfrica Před 4 měsíci

      And the Mamba Mk2 went on to be a quite successful design.. even made in the USA now.

  • @DavidLLambertmobile
    @DavidLLambertmobile Před 4 lety +4

    It looks like a S&W 645 but with a rounded trigger guard. The .45acp was very popular up until 2015 or so. Smith & Wesson had a few problems with the 645 but they were already going to roll out the 3rd gen lines in different calibers.

    • @zz377zz
      @zz377zz Před 4 lety

      Have a 645 i bought when they first came out,other that a broken firing pin years ago never have had a problem.

  • @175jfs5
    @175jfs5 Před 3 lety +6

    In that era stainless steel guns, even revolvers (what few there available), were ALL prone to galling with any kind of prolonged use. Its taken decades to get the right combination of metallurgy and heat treating to get it right. Guns & Ammo magazine did a light-weight puff piece article on the Mamba, with no test firing. Everyone wanted one. Nobody could get them. So in the end, we all went back to shooting tricked out 1911's and hi-powers. Because that's all there was, if you were serious about combat pistol craft. Nobody shot Smiths (39's or 59's).

  • @morelenmir
    @morelenmir Před 5 lety +7

    It is very, very *difficult* to re-heat treat any metal part after it has been initially carburized, annealed, tempered and whatever else this had done to it. It is _possible_ though, but you would probably have to go through several frames to get the process working properly.

  • @DaveStarr100.3
    @DaveStarr100.3 Před 5 lety +42

    "in this case, I think it's to indicate three rounds successfully fired..."
    SICK BURN!!!

  • @JerryEricsson
    @JerryEricsson Před 5 lety +2

    If I recall properly, the Add in Merc News said they would produce a "Black Mamba and a Green Mamba" I don't recall the differences other then the finish available on the guns though, wish I had my old copy. I never thought of merc work, sounded to off beat to me but I had a buddy who dreamed of it every day, and talked about it every damn time we were assigned to the same squad car.

  • @charles_wipman
    @charles_wipman Před 5 lety +108

    Most of what i hear in bars it's rubbish; even most of what i say in the bar it's also rubbish to be honest... i don't think that a bar is "the best place" to design a firearm.

    • @warriorwolf77
      @warriorwolf77 Před 5 lety +6

      I don't know about that, probably lots of lighters there and some vodka would set fire to your arms real nice.

    • @WBatte1
      @WBatte1 Před 5 lety +15

      The Marine Corps started in a bar. It seems to have worked out . I can't think of another example so it becomes more of the exception rather than the rule .

    • @DopamineSink
      @DopamineSink Před 5 lety +6

      If I'm not mistaken, Gaston Glock started working on his pistol after some people made fun of him during a conversation at a cocktail party. Not a bar, but enough alcohol for some shit talking and Glock to get passed.

    • @tarmaque
      @tarmaque Před 5 lety

      @ Dustin Eward: Word.

    • @sfall616
      @sfall616 Před 5 lety +2

      Dustin Eward or no friends...

  • @mrpibb7781
    @mrpibb7781 Před 4 lety +4

    I've heard of Ian mostly through other gun channels, and I have to say, I immediately love this guy. Great demeanor on screen, obviously very knowledgeable and VERY entertaining both through his thoroughness and obvious passion for the subject. Keep up the good work!!

  • @blazer6248
    @blazer6248 Před 5 lety

    Thank you for doing these, Ian. I think the only other place I've received this much gun knowledge is when I watch old episodes of American Rifleman/Tales of the Gun that use to come on the History Channel back in the day. They actually have full episodes all over CZcams. Thanks again!

  • @kendog84bsc
    @kendog84bsc Před 5 lety

    That was fun watching as always!:) I don't know about how guns work at all (I really should do some study, I know), but I like to learn about the history behind them. Cheers!

  • @stevelewis7263
    @stevelewis7263 Před 5 lety +16

    On the wall behind you is a Walther P-38 with a "silencer" is that a 'Man from Uncle' Walther

  • @Elc22
    @Elc22 Před 5 lety +20

    "We made the best combat handgun ever!"
    -ALL THE PARTS ARE CRUDE CASTS...
    talk about ghetto...
    "Normally, notches cut in a gun reflect kills. In this case, I think this means this has fired three shots successfully."... ROFL

  • @RyTrapp0
    @RyTrapp0 Před 5 lety +28

    Who the hell are these guys that created a list for an "ideal semi-auto" - that's made of CASTINGS instead of STAMPINGS???
    And, they didn't even consider the truly superior, if completely unnecessary(I take it every idea in the list was completely unnecessary, sooo...), choice of them all - forgings???
    It's like saying "I'm going to build the best engine ever - let's start with a cast crank, cast pistons, and cast rods!" - HUH???
    I'm really REALLY into extremely weird, ridiculous, over the top, unnecessary, and even uniquely bad firearms(my dream arms collection would be a largely unshootable disaster of oddballs...), but I can honestly say that there is absolutely NOTHING redeeming about this. It isn't even noteworthy as a failure...

    • @neutronalchemist3241
      @neutronalchemist3241 Před 5 lety +9

      Among the desiderabile features of a firearm "no stamped parts" is probably at the bottom of the list. IE, in the same timeframe, the Benelli B76, that was a high quality firearm, with a competition-level trigger out of the box, had completely stamped frame and slide.

    • @Echin0idea
      @Echin0idea Před 5 lety +6

      Yeah. Massive race to implement this amazing game-changing stamping technology a few decades before, and these guys are like "nah, we like the lower quality old expensive way better".

    • @Anomaly188
      @Anomaly188 Před 5 lety +3

      A race to the bottom fueled by hubris and ego. Giving control of technical details to a random jackoff worker who doesn't know what the hell he's doing is never a good idea.

    • @gabrielfraser2109
      @gabrielfraser2109 Před 4 lety

      Ironically, your description makes it quite appealing as a collector's item - the stupidest gun on earth. It's not stupid in any novel or interesting way, like the Zip22, and that just makes it even more stupid.

  • @JerryEricsson
    @JerryEricsson Před rokem +1

    While I never saw a Mamba in the wild, I did drool over the adds. I did, however around that time have a Smith Model 59 that I carried as a duty weapon. I liked the gun overall but the trigger pull was awful, that was why I sold it off and went to a 1911A1. So much easier with a single action cocked and locked .45ACP pistol, the trigger, of course on the 1911 was lovely and I did have an adjustable for over travel long trigger installed in the pistol that made it even better, and a flat mainspring housing with the nice Pacmayer grips to help with the recoil of the full house FMJ rounds that I fed her. The Dakota's offer an interesting place to carry a .45, the cold winters mean that most everyone you encounter that might need shooting have a LOT of cloths between them and the outdoors what with sub zero weather common in winter. So I figured FMJ would give better penetration when the snow flies, and even in summer the extra punch of a FMJ just sounded right to me. Perhaps it was my 8 years as a Soldier back in the 70's that added to this thought, plus I liked the added functionality of FMJ rounds while I saw some fellows with .45's feeding them hollow points have jam problems where I never had a burp giggle or fart out of my old war horses.

  • @heikkiaho6605
    @heikkiaho6605 Před 4 lety +8

    A sad reminder of how a great idea and some good planning can turn into a complete mess with only one or few mistakes.

  • @Jannie303
    @Jannie303 Před 5 lety

    Very interesting, thanks man. I actually live in Harare, Zimbabwe (formerly Salisbury, Rhodesia).

  • @craigstewart6194
    @craigstewart6194 Před 5 lety +18

    Might not be a good shooting weapon, but it looks heavy enough to be a bludgeoning weapon. Still kinda useful, I guess.

    • @medicalmanport1136
      @medicalmanport1136 Před 5 lety +1

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @JunkCCCP
      @JunkCCCP Před 5 lety +4

      Heavy is good. Heavy is reliable...

    • @Dirtbag-Hyena
      @Dirtbag-Hyena Před 5 lety +1

      Like a pocket tomahawk 😂
      With a dull blade😆👏

    • @donovanchilton5817
      @donovanchilton5817 Před 4 lety +1

      @@JunkCCCP If it does not work you can always hit him with it.

  • @mcqueenfanman
    @mcqueenfanman Před 5 lety +28

    The Delorean of firearms! Even in the same time frame.

  • @richardjensen7186
    @richardjensen7186 Před 5 lety +3

    Always love your stuff, Ian. Your knowledge is encyclopedic, and you have a very engaging presentation style.

  • @JuiceJive
    @JuiceJive Před 5 lety +2

    I'm curious what the final "best of combat pistols" list was, because this pistol seems to suggest "Model 59, but what if it had a trick safety lever, was made of cast stainless, and it didn't work?"

  • @yevgenz
    @yevgenz Před 5 lety +3

    I am subscribed to South African magazine Man Magnum you mentioned since 2003, it is a great magazine. They even published my letter on the Arisaka cartridge that my father had found in a garden. Now it is possible to get an electronic subscription. Regards from Yevgen, Ukraine.

    • @baneofbanes
      @baneofbanes Před 5 lety

      I take it your father lives in Ukraine as well?

    • @yevgenz
      @yevgenz Před 5 lety

      Yes, but he died this spring.

    • @baneofbanes
      @baneofbanes Před 5 lety

      yevgenz Sorry to hear about that. Still an interesting find.

  • @Mrgunsngear
    @Mrgunsngear Před 5 lety +6

    very cool

  • @JerryEricsson
    @JerryEricsson Před 5 lety +2

    I recall seeing these as a full page (Back Page no less) Add on some Mercenary magazine that a buddy gave me years ago. Man I was drooling at the gun, thought it would be the best I could get by that add, thankfully I never got an opportunity to buy one, because I would have, I had a real knack for buying pretty much junk guns and thinking I had a collectors dream.

  • @RavenPRRP
    @RavenPRRP Před 5 lety +17

    STOP TEASING US LIKE THIS GUN JESUS. GIVE US THE G11.

  • @charleshills8540
    @charleshills8540 Před 5 lety +1

    Loved it especially since I am originally from N. J. New to guns so to hear there is a gun manufacturer in N. J. Is pretty cool.

  • @JimFortune
    @JimFortune Před 5 lety +44

    I'm surprised that you say it didn't work, but don't give details. Was it just that nothing worked?

    • @petesheppard1709
      @petesheppard1709 Před 5 lety +58

      The 'galling'; Ian could have gone into a bit more detail, but stainless steel doesn't like to slide against itself under heat and pressure. With all-stainless guns, the slide and frame have to be heat-treated differently to prevent galling. Until this became practical, stainless autos were not practical. For their other issues, Colts got it right; my stainless Combat Commander has been flawless.

    • @Tfaonc
      @Tfaonc Před 5 lety +34

      The normally separate pieces of the gun will spontaneously weld themselves together in small spots. Then when they are forced apart you're left with little tears and bumps in the parts' surface. Generally terrible.

    • @patrikhjorth3291
      @patrikhjorth3291 Před 5 lety +5

      I was just going to ask the same thing. The replies have been very informative, thanks!

    • @petesheppard1709
      @petesheppard1709 Před 5 lety +1

      Matt HW Thanks; I was at a loss how to describe the effect.

    • @TSPhotoAtlanta
      @TSPhotoAtlanta Před 5 lety +1

      Great explanation

  • @brian-8674
    @brian-8674 Před 5 lety +6

    So its likely close to being blister steel, it has cast parts and they probably werent heat treated right. That sounds really, really safe.

  • @kurtvanduran7725
    @kurtvanduran7725 Před 5 lety +4

    So the mamba had the hype of Hudson with the quality of a Rogak... sounds lovely.

  • @DrRob-gr5br
    @DrRob-gr5br Před 5 lety

    Glad you got to show this thing off, I've never seen one in person.

  • @Texas240
    @Texas240 Před 4 lety

    Freedom Group owned Remington is now making ACRs that have barrels working loose after a mag or two, resulting in a failure to feed along with a redesigned safety selector that uses screws, which also loosen and back out.
    How long before the Remington ACR is on Forgotten Weapons?

  • @ghhg-je8wv
    @ghhg-je8wv Před 4 lety +8

    When you love Forgotten weapons and the algorithm pulls a "Mamba" out of context.
    Lol RIP Kobe I guess.

  • @lukaszpokoju
    @lukaszpokoju Před 5 lety +23

    Those angles and curves and very ugly, like what a Chinese S&W semi-auto pistol knockoff would look like if it would exist.

  • @exit13d
    @exit13d Před 5 lety

    God I miss Navy Arms in Ridgefield NJ. It was a little storefront on their warehouse stuffed to the rafters with surplus arms. Mausers and SMLEs and everything else you could imagine. Sigh

  • @rztrzt
    @rztrzt Před 5 lety +3

    How did you come to do so many videos on South African weapons? You taught me as a South African more about local weapons than anybody else did. Really enjoy your videos and subscribed.

    • @burmaconda
      @burmaconda Před 5 lety +1

      Ian was here a couple months ago.

  • @artfact2
    @artfact2 Před 5 lety

    Love these kind of stories.
    Is it part of that big Dutch collection you showed off a while ago behind you?

  • @jeffstanley4593
    @jeffstanley4593 Před 4 lety

    I remember pictures of that gun on magazines of the day. As an aside, I bought an Egyptian Hakim from a fellow who said it belonged to Val Forgett of Navy Arms. I don't know whether he was telling the truth or not but it was the nicest Hakim I ever saw and I no longer own it.

  • @glaws365
    @glaws365 Před měsícem

    Ian the Mamba was never touted as a weapon for the military.. in the field and in combat over the 1970 - 80 period we used Brownings, Barettas (branded as Vektor), CZ and a few old Colt pistols in this order .. all struggled with the fine dust in the bush and required lots of cleaning and oiling to be reliable and safe.
    Sandock never produced any firearms of note for SANDF but we're HUGE and world class in armoured vehicle production

  • @diggLincoln
    @diggLincoln Před 4 lety

    I have a 72 model 59 and I love it wish you would do a video on it

  • @kennythemeat
    @kennythemeat Před rokem +1

    this reminds me of the guy in africa that build a shed out of wavey sheetmetals. called it a controlroom. and now they try to build airplanes out of heavy steelbeams. motorized with a bikeengine. they crashed every time(of course!) the goal is to set up an international airport....

  • @austinpacker5395
    @austinpacker5395 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for hours of content gun Jesus. My favorite part of these videos is you can always tell how much disdain you have for elements of firearms you don't like and or that never worked but you still give massive amounts of unbiased information. Thank you Ian

  • @ssechres
    @ssechres Před 2 lety +1

    Hey Ian,
    I would like to know more about what pistols were actually used in the Rhodesian Bushwar. Thanks Steve

  • @Galvanidze
    @Galvanidze Před 5 lety

    So what did the heat treating actually do to the gun? Having trouble imagining what "not working at all" even looks like in the case of a gun. It wouldn't even fire a shot? Wouldn't reload properly? What was it?

  • @TheAngler2210
    @TheAngler2210 Před 5 lety +1

    You know, the casting marks arent even that bad. What really makes me worry are the obvious shitty file marks on the bolt hold-open lever and the barrel.

  • @44hawk28
    @44hawk28 Před 3 lety +1

    In the late 70s and early 80s everybody who started making all stainless steel Firearms with suffering exactly the same problems. You must use differential types of stainless. You cannot use the same type of stainless on parts that have to interact with each other. Stainless has a natural tendency to gall especially against another piece that has to interact with it that is also the same type of stainless. It was a learning cycle in Metallurgy at that time.
    Some people even had the bright idea to soak their firearms down in WD-40 before they went into a shooting match. That only ended up with guns locked in mid cycle and unable to be disassembled because WD-40 is not a lubricant, it is a solvent

  • @stewartw.9151
    @stewartw.9151 Před 4 lety

    Ever heard of Hege Waffen in West Germany?
    I bought one of these pistols for my wife. It was a copy of a Walther PPK and of high quality manufacture. The one I bought was chambered for 380 ACP and the mag held 8 rounds. A very nice carry gun.
    Wish I had never sold it, and have never seen the make again anywhere - maybe do a run down by FW on these, they seem to be well "forgotten"!

  • @jb428
    @jb428 Před 5 lety

    Super interesting video again. Great channel, Thanks!

  • @geoffdobbin9512
    @geoffdobbin9512 Před 5 lety

    Hi Ian, What is the long serial # on the chamber at 8.25. You did not mention its significance, if any? Thank you.

  • @sqeeye3102
    @sqeeye3102 Před 5 lety +4

    Wow, Gun Jesus is bringing the fire at 13:30.
    Thanks for showing us this (thankfully) rare but interesting gun.

  • @herrcobblermachen
    @herrcobblermachen Před 4 lety

    Those three marks on the grip are for Monster Energy Drink company.
    Years ago Sarco was selling these. Was tempted but knew nothing about them. Havent given them any thought till seeing your video.

  • @sarjim4381
    @sarjim4381 Před 5 lety +1

    A working home production handgun would have held obvious advantages for countries with international arms embargoes against them. Why they chose stainless steel castings for a gun that was not going to have much in the way of sales outside the area is a mystery. Selling a gun with poor rifling as a feature is kind of an uphill battle in the best of times.

  • @meahoohenehene
    @meahoohenehene Před 4 lety +2

    Looks a hell of a lot like the Colt Double Eagle. BTW magnum magazine is still going strong.

  • @crosstimbers2
    @crosstimbers2 Před 5 lety +1

    Any reference on stainless steels such as the Carpenter Steel Blue Book will tell you that you use different hardness or heat treat will prevent some galling of stainless.
    Surgical instrument designers deal with those issues everyday.
    For the most part you are better off designing pistols out of carbon steel.

  • @SharpForceTrauma
    @SharpForceTrauma Před 5 lety +1

    I like how the gun looks. Wonder if one could get a hold of the scematics and actually build it right and functional, in a production setting rather than handmade

    • @SharpForceTrauma
      @SharpForceTrauma Před 2 lety

      @@justforever96 Im a hobbyist gunsmith lol. Building it myself is just for fun

  • @Skyhawk1998
    @Skyhawk1998 Před 5 lety +4

    You know it's a good video when it starts with what sounds like a bad joke. "So two guys are sitting in a bar in Rhodesia..."
    Turns out it was a bad joke. All of it. This gun didn't even stop firing with certain ammo, or in certain environments. It's truly a failure when you can pull it straight out of the box and have it misfire on its maiden cartridge.

  • @Bob_-Ross
    @Bob_-Ross Před 2 lety +1

    Good ending: Ian decides to fix the Mamba, and shoots it
    Bad ending: Ian decides to shoot the Mamba without fixing it, the slide exploding off and hitting him in the nuts
    True ending: Ian never shoots it, it was never meant to be shot

  • @lowrads3653
    @lowrads3653 Před 5 lety

    I'm curious as to whether a bit of attention to trouble friction spots would make it serviceable. We are quite spoiled by the industrial revolution's development of standardized tools and measures. Before that time, every gun was an expensive, unique piece made start to finish by a master gunsmith.

  • @dbaider9467
    @dbaider9467 Před 5 lety

    Casting "flash" is the term for where the two(+) mould parts meet and there is some excess. It is also called "flashing".

  • @VICTORYOVERNEPTUNE
    @VICTORYOVERNEPTUNE Před 5 lety

    Your video are always friggin interesting and awesome.

  • @georgekontalexis8436
    @georgekontalexis8436 Před 5 lety +1

    I love the people that have good ideas ! Even if they screw it, in the end somebody else will finish their work.

  • @pelufaz8435
    @pelufaz8435 Před rokem +10

    big floppa

  • @traiyer2508
    @traiyer2508 Před 5 lety +3

    After maybe 12ish videos I can say this. You sir are one knowledgeable guy.

  • @patmald
    @patmald Před 5 lety +2

    had to say the lighting is on point