M2 Bradley Show-and-Tell Tour with JB

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  • čas přidán 15. 05. 2024
  • Proud to present this active service member give us a tour of the M2 Bradley at the National Armor and Cav Collection at Ft. Benning in GA.
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Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @normanpotts3169
    @normanpotts3169 Před 3 lety +193

    I was in a federal prison a couple of years and worked at the UNICOR cable factory. I've actually made that curly black coms cable shown during the driver position portion. I hope those things worked well. We also made power lines, speaker splitters, etc. I always tried to make a good product for the troops.

    • @bradm3a3
      @bradm3a3 Před 3 lety +30

      We call those spaghetti cables, and yeah they worked very well, good job

    • @talktojerm
      @talktojerm Před 2 lety +30

      Not only did they work well, we often spliced into them so that we could play music through the headsets that everyone could hear, and they would last a hell of a long time. Thank you for doing your best to make a good product for the troopers like us!

    • @mrouncervideos2905
      @mrouncervideos2905 Před rokem +20

      Good job. Your work will travel to Ukraine 🇺🇦. Thank you

    • @christopherfisher7805
      @christopherfisher7805 Před rokem +12

      Your time on "The Noughty Step" was not wasted!! Hope that you get all the breaks in life and stay safe.

    • @DudeDudeDudeDudeDude
      @DudeDudeDudeDudeDude Před rokem

      117th like.
      The US is the most incarcerated country in the WORLD.

  • @svenjonsson392
    @svenjonsson392 Před 3 lety +185

    I like his wry sense of humor, especially about "if you have a bad driver, these storage boxes are going to be the first thing crushed" and "the last crewmember sits up there behind the driver, he has a terrible life"

    • @MozambiqueEnjoyer6097
      @MozambiqueEnjoyer6097 Před 3 lety +13

      They're all completely true too. We called the hole behind the driver the "hell hole" because if you had to sit in it was like you died and went straight to hell. It was torturous being a dismount in the back of a Bradley.

    • @spoton6906
      @spoton6906 Před 3 lety +14

      Alexis Beck TL/ SL had the best seat. Being able to jack in and listen to what the crew was saying helped take your mind off being in the back.
      Dust and diesel. Hot and cold. Being thrown around, up and down. Getting knocked out by a bad driver topped it all.
      I hate taking transit buses now because my brain goes Bradley.

    • @tankdestroyerno.2684
      @tankdestroyerno.2684 Před 2 lety +4

      You can tell he has sense of humor while he was explaining the vehicle. This makes it interesting to watch

    • @DRUMADDICT29
      @DRUMADDICT29 Před 2 lety +6

      @@MozambiqueEnjoyer6097 I was about to comment the same thing. It was the “Hell Hole”.
      Mech Inf. 1990-97

    • @BLUECHET
      @BLUECHET Před 2 lety

      Truth

  • @joshuar6580
    @joshuar6580 Před 2 lety +53

    Bradley driver vet here Iraq 2006-2008 1st cavalry division. My vehicle never went down. Got hit by 5 of the 155 rounds of HME in a deep buried IED. The blast was so powerful it blew the door off the CP 2 miles away in a patrol base. All the damage was a cracked dog house and I lost conscious for 10 or so mins. No explanation but God. I even had the drain hole plug open to dump urine out and we know those are known to shoot up and take the drivers head off in a good explosion. Never felt so safe then inside one of these things. We lived there in countless hours of pulling security. Longest stretch was three days and when we got out i had 7 empty MREs. Good times great crew lots of shit talk lots of sweat as it’s hot as fuck which I always used the NBC hoses to blow a little fresh slightly cooler air. My gunner is now dead thanks to drunk driver my platoon sgt BC is still alive. I’d do anything to be with the same group of guys for one more day.

    • @USAGERMANYM1A22A7
      @USAGERMANYM1A22A7 Před rokem +1

      I know a marine with ptsd he said he saw a abrams engaging 3 t72s and in the middle of it 3 taliban came up to the side of the Abrams and hit it with rpgs and the inside was on fire and he could hear the crew screaming inside that's terrible

  • @Devinci297
    @Devinci297 Před 3 lety +223

    We lost three soldiers last year in Ft Stewart when their Bradley fell off a bridge during training. May they Rest in Peace.

    • @mancaveveteran4975
      @mancaveveteran4975 Před 3 lety +5

      2-7 Infantry? I was in that Scout Plt. after that Incident back in 1994.

    • @Devinci297
      @Devinci297 Před 3 lety +2

      @@mancaveveteran4975 This happened in 2019 I think and it was 1st brigade. I don't remember which battalion though.

    • @youn1700
      @youn1700 Před 3 lety +2

      @@mancaveveteran4975 Pretty sure, this was the incident in 1994 where they rolled the bradley at the national training center off an waddi.

    • @GaCracker69
      @GaCracker69 Před 3 lety +2

      Similar incident happened in 1989, with 3-15 Inf. As we was leaving our motor pool, killed the BC and driver.

    • @youn1700
      @youn1700 Před 3 lety

      I mean, when you have a lot of them running, you have issues. The roll over at the National training center was multiple bradleys running along a ridgeline. National Training center for US army is north of 29 palms for the Marines. And I can guarantee marines have a ton of stories about things going wrong there.

  • @scottbscop1251
    @scottbscop1251 Před 3 lety +181

    It’s always great when you can get an actual crewmen to give you a tour.

  • @mattmerriman1894
    @mattmerriman1894 Před 3 lety +9

    I was a Bradley vet and served with JB. good to see you brother.

    • @bradm3a3
      @bradm3a3 Před 3 lety +1

      Hey man, how's it going

    • @mattmerriman1894
      @mattmerriman1894 Před 3 lety +2

      Things are going well. Video took me back. How are things with you?

    • @bradm3a3
      @bradm3a3 Před 3 lety +1

      @@mattmerriman1894 can't complain more than I normally do, bout to retire and head back to colorado. What about u

    • @mattmerriman1894
      @mattmerriman1894 Před 3 lety +2

      Can’t complain. Living in Maine, been here since 2010.

    • @mattmerriman1894
      @mattmerriman1894 Před 3 lety +2

      Congrats

  • @billyteflon1322
    @billyteflon1322 Před 3 lety +74

    When the driver throws the piss bottle behind him and thirty minutes later you can hear commotion from the crew compartment bwcause a dismount drank it...memories.

    • @spoton6906
      @spoton6906 Před 3 lety +6

      Or the times when a crewman gagged on the piss in his canteen.
      Or when all their MREs got ratfucked. Missing pogey bait.
      Not saying I took an MRE shit outside a certain Gunners hatch. Nor did I leave a piece of MRE toilet paper in it, standing upright like a flag, proudly blowing in the wind. No giggling off into the night from anyone, who were all, not there.
      11 Dirty Mike and the Boys. Thanks for the f-shacks and good times.

  • @user-sx1jb8gc6s
    @user-sx1jb8gc6s Před 3 lety +359

    The 4 dislikes are light infantrymen. Great video.

  • @edwo6648
    @edwo6648 Před 3 lety +55

    When you see the door in the ramp open, while driving in column, its a sure bet you'll also see a stream of piss exiting the vehicle.

  • @MARedleg
    @MARedleg Před 2 lety +17

    I was on the Bradley for 8 years in the National Guard in my home state of Texas. I started out as a dismount and moved up to driver since I really hated riding in the back. I got motion sickness riding in the back so I loved my time as a driver. It was a fun 8 years going to summer camp at Fort Hood, Fort Polk, and even Camp Shelby, Mississippi. In the regular Army I was on M109s and they were a lot roomier inside than the Bradley. I’m 52 now and I really miss those years of my youth.

  • @michaelfrench3396
    @michaelfrench3396 Před 3 lety +177

    You should do more videos with this guy! I can see why he was volunteered to become an instructor. He's got the right amount of humor mixed in with the info to keep you paying attention. He's a fountain of information though! Thanks to him for the info!!😀👍👍

    • @topher174
      @topher174 Před rokem

      He looks like he could be Dave Landau's older brother.

    • @varjen018
      @varjen018 Před rokem +2

      I concur. He sure knows his stuff and spins a good yarn too!

  • @joselasmarias7215
    @joselasmarias7215 Před 3 lety +3

    Brings a lot of memories....I was a 63T.....Bradley System Mechanic. I used to work on them...HHC 1/32 AR “The Bandits” 2nd Brigade First Cavalry

  • @deduckster1828
    @deduckster1828 Před 3 lety +173

    Fun Bradley washing story. We had just come out of the field, and they put the Bradley's through what is called a bird bath. It's a giant ramped pool, with about 3 feet deep water, and several giant mounted water cannons to hose the vehicles down. They also wash Abrams tanks in these, and you can put 2 at a time in. Each driver is informed to flash the head lights if there is a problem, such as the engine has died. A new driver enters the bird bath, and parks for cleaning. After a the water cannons start spraying the vehicle, the lights start flashing. That means everyone stops washing and all the water cannons stop spraying. Then the driver opens his hatch, and notifies us that his hatch is leaking, and he is getting dripped on. At that moment, I instruct both guys operating the cannons to open up the water streams on his hatch. These cannons are like they put on fire trucks, so they move a lot of water. The driver did his best to close the hatch as fast as he could before he got flooded out. When all was said and done, he sloshed out of the drivers seat like a drowned rat and learned that a few drops of water are not that big of a deal compared to the alternative.

    • @johnr9282
      @johnr9282 Před 3 lety +17

      The inner wheel wells I'm the Bradley were the worst after they pretty much become concrete with Clay mud dried. Spent hours chiseling that shit

    • @briangaffney616
      @briangaffney616 Před 3 lety +3

      @@johnr9282 Same. Fort Knox

    • @earlwyss520
      @earlwyss520 Před 3 lety +9

      You should have told him to go ride in a Humvee during a rain storm. I was USAF Security Police, and I spent a lot of time in M-1026 & M-1044 Humvees. Every time it rained, the turret ring leaked, and if you were in the front seats, the leak went down the back of your neck.

    • @spoton6906
      @spoton6906 Před 3 lety +6

      Earl Wyss No way, GI Joseph. Thanks for your service.
      Like mentioned above, try laying down in cold water, getting completely soaked, as you try to dig out the inner part of the road wheels.
      Unless you have done so, you just don’t know. There’s not to much to compare it to. Only did bird baths in Fort Hood. We got snow there so it was cold enough at the bird bath.
      As a Dismounted Team Leader, I, like my predecessors, loved it when it rained. It let all the candyasses in our unit become visible. From the stoic to the spotlight rangers, rain brought out their best. My Team and I got to laugh at folks like that.
      As the Battalion Master Gunner’s driver, I got to learn to move fast and get shit done. No time to lay under a Bradley, bitching and moaning. You just got laughed at and made fun of. Biggest takeaway was couldn’t drink beer and chase skirts if you were slow at the bird bath and with recovery. My BC was a wise man.
      Good times.

    • @earlwyss520
      @earlwyss520 Před 3 lety +5

      @@spoton6906 I did spend several hours one night at Clark AB Philippines, trying to get an XM-706E2 unstuck. The driver was cruising along the base perimeter wall, thought he found a good road, and sank into the trench where they buried the power cables for the base perimeter lights, that didn't work because some Fillipinos tried to steal the power cables while hot. Needless to say, an M-1026 Humvee nor either a 1.5 ton or M-60 wrecker could pull it out alone. It took the two wreckers working in tandem to get it out. We still tried to dig it out to prevent having to call the motor pool to report it. I can't remember how many times I went home at the end of a shift at Clark covered head to toe in red Philippine mud. Thank god we all chose the hot water instead of AC in the dorm option.

  • @vtbmwbiker
    @vtbmwbiker Před 3 lety +207

    Wow--- had a toss up between a new Sofi video and a Mark Felton. Went with Sofi for this.
    Yeah, this guy's an NCO. He must've been a good one to have in the field. A good, world weary NCO with a great sense of dry humor. Priceless.

    • @fw1421
      @fw1421 Před 3 lety +9

      Yea,Sofi videos are usually great,and she’s fun to watch too. If I was a young trooper I’d be all over that! She’s a Babe!

    • @tommyblackwell3760
      @tommyblackwell3760 Před 3 lety +14

      He reminded me of several NCOs I've known, total pros every one.

    • @76dodge
      @76dodge Před 3 lety +15

      Justin is a great NCO I’ve known him for a long time.

    • @richardsledgecock2110
      @richardsledgecock2110 Před 3 lety +9

      Some of them ole nco had good solid wisdom..real solid ole guys

    • @johnroush237
      @johnroush237 Před 3 lety +7

      He is.

  • @doughudgens9275
    @doughudgens9275 Před 3 lety +2

    One of first M-1/Bradley training session at Ft Irvin in 85, they had to road March several dozen miles from the railhead to post. They did it a night, driving on the shoulder, and probably slowly. A Bradley driver dozed off and ran into a bridge pillar over I-5. I saw the track, and it barely scratched the paint. But the interstate was closed until engineers could inspect the damage! Tough vehicle.

  • @chrisclark5204
    @chrisclark5204 Před 3 lety +64

    One thing he didn't mention about the commander's hand station, when commander squeezes that grip it overrides the gunners hand station. This is incase the commander sees a target that is more of an immediate threat that the gunner doesn't see, he can override the gunner and engage the target.

    • @tommyblackwell3760
      @tommyblackwell3760 Před 3 lety +18

      I kept a tent peg for a GP medium next to me as a gunner's override for when the BC squeezed his grip, I'd whack him with it! lol

    • @Gergoth117
      @Gergoth117 Před 2 lety +5

      @@tommyblackwell3760 lmao, that's hilarious

    • @sethcoon9829
      @sethcoon9829 Před 2 lety +1

      There is a 14mm or screwdriver & possibly a (BC flutter kick)...for turret spats. - so I have ben told.

    • @aprilgeneric8027
      @aprilgeneric8027 Před rokem

      or stop them from making a critical mistake. such as the drivers ed passenger side brake pedal.

  • @jasonfrancis8465
    @jasonfrancis8465 Před 3 lety +3

    My driver hatch/ hell hole was set up like my barracks room! That sh*t was plush! I remember times that I would stick one foot out of my sleeping bag to drive and still be warm over in Germany in the middle of winter! Good times! Really miss my Bradley!

    • @spoton6906
      @spoton6906 Před 3 lety +1

      My friend drove a Bradley in Desert Storm. At one point, he stopped wearing his uniform and only wore a pair of fluorescent orange shorts. Seen pictures of him in his then-dirty shorts and CVC. Think he was the CO’s driver.
      Yeah, sleeping bag driving. Did the same. Best seat in the house until it was bird bath time. Road wheels suck.

  • @wipatriot510
    @wipatriot510 Před 3 lety +4

    A "Bradley Veteran"...well then, I was an 11M10Y1(Bradley gunner) back in 1983, was in Alpha Co. 2nd BN, 41st Infantry, 1st Tiger BDE, 2AD, Ft Hood, TX, 6/83-1-85...We were the second line BN to receive the M2 BIFV and the M3 CIFV in the entire Army, our sister unit the 1st BN, 41st Infantry, 1st Tiger BDE, 2AD, Ft.Hood, TX was the first...We participated in ReForGer '84, and were the first Infantry BN to draw brand new M2 and M3's from POMCUS in Germany...

    • @robertsettle2590
      @robertsettle2590 Před 3 lety +1

      I was in Delta Co. inthe exact same unit at Ft Hood. My track #0032 had been through a lot of Bradley Testing by the time I got there in 1987. Yeah 2/41- too much shit for one man to handle!

  • @ottohonkala6861
    @ottohonkala6861 Před 3 lety +2

    Serious experience talking there. You just know this guy knows everything there is to know about this vehicle. KUDOS.

    • @ottohonkala6861
      @ottohonkala6861 Před 3 lety +1

      And as an old soldier - no matter how uncomfortable he tries to make it sound.....I'll take a ride over walking any day!

  • @Nunyobu
    @Nunyobu Před 3 lety +33

    I was on M2 Bradley 0002 after its overhaul in 92 at Ft. Bliss, Texas. I used to fold out the trim vane on the front and sleep there.

    • @Scout19d19d
      @Scout19d19d Před 3 lety +8

      My M3A1 in Germany was serial number 0113. Funny the things we commit to memory. I think only remember that because i was in 11th ACR 3rd squadron...113.

    • @jimcross7938
      @jimcross7938 Před 3 lety +10

      I was on the M3 as a 19d and we would put down 2 jerry cans and lower the ramp down and sleep there. We didn't do that in Graf or Hoensfeld because of the wild boars you would wake up with. They weren't no fun at all.

    • @ktiger1766
      @ktiger1766 Před 3 lety +1

      You are lucky to have M2, back in the 1987, we 19D still have to use the old battle taxi M113s in the 3rdACR, while the 19k just have there news toy M1A1 transfer to the unit, it was the lowest point being a scout to servings for the tanker on the gunnery range being pulled guard duty! It sucks !

    • @ktiger1766
      @ktiger1766 Před 3 lety +2

      @@jimcross7938 never sleep on the tail gate on the field , there's a coyote running around & rattlesnake!

    • @jimcross7938
      @jimcross7938 Před 3 lety +5

      @@ktiger1766 In 85-86 I was stationed at Ft.Stewert with the 2/9th cav. We had tankers and scouts in each platoon. We had 113's and M60a3's. Just before I shipped to Germany the tank units on base received the first round of M1's. It wasn't till I was in Germany 86-88 we had the M3 BFV.

  • @schlirf
    @schlirf Před 3 lety +3

    Former Bradley Gunner with the 11th ACR. In my humble opinion that machine is a widow maker for any place other than the desert. Give my a good 360 degree free view with my binos or Mk 1 eyeballs; you know Delta style.

  • @paulb6293
    @paulb6293 Před 3 lety +4

    I was an Bradley instructor at Benning in 1990 - fun times swimming that vehicle.

    • @Jmitchking
      @Jmitchking Před 3 lety +2

      Went through 11m school in Dec of 90. You were probably one of my instructors.

    • @elimtevir1
      @elimtevir1 Před 3 lety +1

      And one of Mine too, (Sorry about the batteries on my turn...)

  • @uptone12111
    @uptone12111 Před 3 lety +2

    If this was once your mode of transportation.Thank you for your service !

    • @Fenncer24
      @Fenncer24 Před 3 lety +2

      Rode and drove two different versions While stationed in West Germany 1st ID 1st. BT 16th IF. 1988-1991 we got brand new M2A2 series Bradley's in May 1989.. Upgraded armor and engine, Nice ride. Got back state side 5th ID and these were 1981 or 1982 models and worn out. Worn torque converters tracks just old. But fjn and interesting times 30 years ago at this time. Yikes were did time go.

  • @uconnjames
    @uconnjames Před 3 lety +68

    Really like the way JB introduces the vehicle. Hope we can see him more often in the future.

  • @jSlazer1988
    @jSlazer1988 Před 3 lety +15

    Ft. Hood Vet here. During field training, my dismounts left am assault bag in the back of the ramp that had a smoke grenade in it. They gave me the OK to raise the ramp and ended up crushing the grenade which caused it to go off. Caused a small fire but no one was hurt. Also, there's a way to turn the driver seat into a recliner with the driver's seat belt. Just fasten it while looping the belt behind the seat. I spent many nights sleeping like that.

    • @bradm3a3
      @bradm3a3 Před 3 lety +2

      That's the best way

    • @talktojerm
      @talktojerm Před 2 lety +1

      My BC and Gunner piled all their stuff there, so no seatbelt needed! But they would get a little mad if I crushed their "Pogee bait".

  • @firstnamelastname9615
    @firstnamelastname9615 Před 3 lety +69

    It’s almost been 20 years for me and I can still remember what the inside smells like.

  • @kenmvilla
    @kenmvilla Před 3 lety +2

    JB was awesome, great run-down that took me back. Our unit got the M2A2 back in the day, was new for us since we rolled the old M113, but already beat up by the regular army. No firing ports, which we really couldn't imagine a scenario using them anyways. But yes I'm here to confirm - they're cramped, loud, hot, and you spend enough time around them, you know WTF a "Bradley Bite" is. She'll love you so much, she bites a lot.

  • @motorrebell
    @motorrebell Před 3 lety +74

    Ex 1A3 Marder driver here , Seems we had much more space for Ammo & Beer , Salute from Germany . :-D

    • @SonsOfLorgar
      @SonsOfLorgar Před 3 lety +2

      Well, didn't you have a gun pod instead of a turret, and no vehicle mounted ATGMs as those were assigned to the dismounts of tank destroyer formations?

    • @motorrebell
      @motorrebell Před 3 lety +13

      @@SonsOfLorgar Yes it has a similar kind of "turret" , Commander sitting beside & Gunner sitting under the weapon ( version 1A3 ) Armed with a 20 mm cannon - a MG3 Machinegun & "Milan" antitank missile system . 6 Panzergrenadiers .

    • @SgtBones
      @SgtBones Před 3 lety +4

      @@motorrebell Nope, your Marder is much smaller inside, I was shocked when I had a chance to get in one during tag der offene tür in Weratal Kaserne (mein sohn ist beim Bundeswehr) and seriously, a Bradley is really much higher in the back and wider, I am 1,86m tall, but the Bradley never felt cramped inside (M3 version, 84 to 90)

    • @motorrebell
      @motorrebell Před 3 lety +11

      @@SgtBones Well maybe i was wrong but there is more space behind the drivers seat , I was never inside a Bradley - the Marder is an older system , the first version also had a small Gunpod over the back latch wich was discontinued in the 70s , My father was in the US Army and i (Armybrat ) was drafted into the Bundeswehr in the late 80s . I was a Marder and Leopard driver - and then a Fallschirmjäger ( Airborne) Wiesel ( 20mm mk & TOW ) operator .

    • @SgtBones
      @SgtBones Před 3 lety +3

      @@motorrebell A good friend of mine was also Fallschirmjäger, he loved those Wiesel! (ich finde es komisch das du ein Army brat waren mit Ami Vater, weil in meinem familie bin ich der Ami Vater der beim Army war, und mein sohn der (freiwillig) beim Bundeswehr ist....und er möchte eventuell ein Falli auch werden! ;) )

  • @kurtbaker9908
    @kurtbaker9908 Před 3 lety +4

    "MY FIRST TOUR OF A "BRADLEY" AND ENJOYED IT VERY MUCH. I HAVE CROSSED SABERS TOO. BASIC @ FT. BENNING, 8/1 @ FT. KNOX & 7/1 IN VN. WE'RE IN THE CAV. ON HORSE, IN TANKS OR IN THE AIR. YES SIR, THIS CAV IS ALRIGHT!!"

  • @miken.4693
    @miken.4693 Před 3 lety +40

    “One sits behind the drive, he has a terrible life” that’s funny

  • @joeyd1404
    @joeyd1404 Před 3 lety +22

    wow this takes me back. i was on a bradley in 4-7 cav. hated it back then, but very much miss it today.

    • @Odessa45
      @Odessa45 Před 3 lety +7

      That's how it always goes, right?
      The day I walked out of the motor pool for the last time, I didn't look back once. No picture taking...nothing ... nothing all day!
      These days though, I'd do anything for a few pics of those guys and our Sheridans...

    • @ktiger1766
      @ktiger1766 Před 3 lety +1

      4/7CAV, you are on A trp ! Gerry Owen!😂

    • @ktiger1766
      @ktiger1766 Před 3 lety +2

      You miss the fun in B,C,D trp, it's Air CAV heaven!😂

    • @talktojerm
      @talktojerm Před 2 lety +1

      @@Odessa45 That's because we were sick of sweeping that huge bitch all the time! I was the same way. I came across the only pic of me I had back in those days and now here I am looking up BFV vids.

  • @egbertdefatt262
    @egbertdefatt262 Před 3 lety +14

    I was in the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment back in the early 80's. I think it was 83 when we were sent to Germany for REFORGER. We were issued M-60's and M-113's. It was during this exercise that we first came up against the M-1 Abrams (with the 105 main gun) and the Bradleys. Thought the damn things were starships by comparison. There's nothing more fun than going all out across an open field in an armored vehicle!

    • @MikeSherrin
      @MikeSherrin Před rokem

      I was with the 3rd ACR at Ft Lewis, WA. We didn't have Brads just m114's that I wouldn't what to go into battle with. We also had M60a1. Was supposed to go to Germany in 1970 to check out the equipment but it got cancelled because I think the equipment was trash. The unit was scheduled for REFORGER but was also cancelled.

    • @robochef63
      @robochef63 Před rokem

      Right on .. an old friend who I grew up with was a helicopter crew chief in reforger.. we have lost touch over the years since then. I have often wondered where he went from there.
      We had planned to go career army together but I had to move and we signed up at different times. I was rejected because of my vision. Pat took it all the way. I hope he is doing well wherever his career took him.
      After reforger he totally disappeared I went to his old home, which was a farm and the people that lived there had no idea what had happened to the family that lived there before they did.. which was kinda creepy cuz his mom owned the place. She had been my cub scout den mother and he had two other siblings.. this wasn't as if it was that many years since I had last seen him either... Anyways his name is John Pierce Lehmbeck, also known as Pat. Good guy and one of my closest friends right up until we lost touch due to both of us moving all over the damn place and life careers etc.
      Thanks for putting the work in and doing what you do and did.

  • @HB-xb2ee
    @HB-xb2ee Před 3 lety +38

    Former 11 Mike. This video brought back so many memories of Ft Hood and my Bradley. I was a driver. I miss those days now. I would lose about 10 to 15 pounds when we would do gunnery tables in the summer waiting for hours on the ready line with my hatch closed. God bless all the 11 Mike crews and dismounts.

    • @johnr9282
      @johnr9282 Před 3 lety +1

      I was 11 like fort Hood bravo company 2-7 cav and I concur I miss it I went from a driver to a gunner to dismount squad leader then company sniper got out 01

    • @bradm3a3
      @bradm3a3 Před 3 lety +2

      @@johnr9282 Garry Owen

    • @johnr9282
      @johnr9282 Před 3 lety +1

      @@bradm3a3 Garry Owen Sir!!!

    • @abyssiniahenry128
      @abyssiniahenry128 Před 2 lety +1

      Former 11M. Surprised he didn't mention the driver NBC unit. Turn it on and stuff that hose in the crotch zipper of your nomex suit. Only air movement in that hot can.

    • @talktojerm
      @talktojerm Před 2 lety

      I was 19D in 2-7 Cav at Fort Carson in the early 90's and I didn't realize that 11's could be in the CAV! I knew you guys had Bradley's, but I didn't think you were attached to the Cav, I thought you were armor div, how cool! We went from 2-7 Cav to 1/10th Cav during that time. Switched from Garry Owen to Buffalo Soldiers. So Garry Owen and Ready Forward!!

  • @bw1895
    @bw1895 Před 3 lety +13

    As a very old, but still serving BFV commander, if your driver is pissed at you he always did his best to smash the BCs ribs into the hatch opening. It never turned out good for the driver, but his mission was accomplished

    • @kcoop9999
      @kcoop9999 Před 3 lety +5

      SOP for an armored vehicle. Piss off the driver,he just waits till the TC is distracted and slams the brakes ! Attitudes corrected.

    • @stevegyles3190
      @stevegyles3190 Před 3 lety +2

      Speaking as a very old driver who is no longer serving I feel free to confirm this anecdote. Folded a BC in half one time when he ordered me to quote "haul ass" into a creek bed. I'll let your imagination fill in the rest of what happened when the glacis hit the far bank.

    • @williamt.sherman9841
      @williamt.sherman9841 Před 3 lety +3

      to which the Driver gets a good kick to the head from the TC

    • @stevegyles3190
      @stevegyles3190 Před 3 lety +6

      @@williamt.sherman9841 You could only do that in the 113's. In the Bradley the driver was in his own little world.
      But yes I've been kicked in the head by a TC.

    • @Fenncer24
      @Fenncer24 Před 3 lety +3

      @@stevegyles3190 so have I or hit in the head by the .50 cal. My TC did that to me more than once. West Germany 1988-1991. Good times.

  • @gregoryheim9781
    @gregoryheim9781 Před 3 lety +71

    Holy Cow! That thing is newer than the one I had. Now I feel really old.
    I know why the water jug dissapeared. In order to properly clean and sanitize it you had to unbolt the metal strap and pull it out. Many lazy crews wouldn't do that. And it didn't sit quite level and you couldn't drain all the water out, so bacteria had a place to flourish and give soldiers dysentery. So the Army got tired of soldiers getting sick, and in their infinite wisdom deleted it.

    • @thejoker9201
      @thejoker9201 Před 3 lety +2

      The one we had where M2A3. Not amphibious at all.

    • @gregoryheim9781
      @gregoryheim9781 Před 3 lety +5

      @@thejoker9201 the ones we had were supposed to be, but they weren't at all...

    • @jearlblah5169
      @jearlblah5169 Před 3 lety +1

      noone thought to have it made slightly differently so all the water would drain out?

    • @gregoryheim9781
      @gregoryheim9781 Před 3 lety +3

      @@jearlblah5169 You could remove one bolt and take it out and empty it just fine. But never underestimate the laziness of a soldier.

    • @thetruthseeker5549
      @thetruthseeker5549 Před 2 lety

      Yeah man it sucks to see the stuff we rode as young soldiers now in museums!

  • @Vince_A_Bull
    @Vince_A_Bull Před 3 lety +46

    'I close my hatch with a strap' is the Bradley version of 'I wash myself with a rag on stick'

  • @eio1971
    @eio1971 Před 3 lety +15

    ISU- Integrated site unit. Tow missile system repairer vet here spent 8.5 of my ten years in Bradley turret troubleshooting and fixing the TOW

    • @pgocon
      @pgocon Před 3 lety

      And then traverse drive assembly, (TDA) did not elevate the gun, that was the Gun Elevation Drives (GED) function.

  • @saltybits9954
    @saltybits9954 Před rokem +7

    I'm a Desert Storm vet and 19D3M certified Cavalry Scout with Spurs. I was a driver and gunner on a M3A2 Bradley during the war and after for 3 years while stationed at 1st ID Ft. Riley, Ks. I spent a total of 8 years active duty with about half on Bradley's and half on Scout Humvee's.
    Thank you for showcasing my beautiful whip! The Bradley is an amazing vehicle and has served the Army well. I am very fond of the time I spent in my Bradley. It protected me well and kept me warm and dry and was my home for a short period of my life. It really was my home. Along with my crew. We all lived in them. Played cards. Listened to music like the man said. I never caught his call sign. We spent a lot of time working on them too but you gotta take good care of them if you want them to take good care of you ya know?
    I was trained at Ft Knox on the A0-A2 M2/M3 and I love seeing how far the vehicle has come in upgrades. If I remember correctly the Bradley was awarded more confirmed enemy vehicle kills during Desert Storm than any other vehicle in the Army during the war. People like to compare the Soviet BMP to our Bradley but there's no comparison in my book. The Bradley is simply a better made vehicle with much higher standards & quality technology and armor. I know. I have driven both and I have destroyed a few of them. I concur with everything the man said in the video. I look forward to watching more of your videos! I have lots of pictures b.t.w. of me and my Bradley during the war. And many other tanks. Both dead and alive! Scout Out...lmao 😂

    • @mtik000
      @mtik000 Před rokem +1

      I was a fresh 11M, right out of AIT, assigned to 1/4 Cav during Desert Storm! Thank god I got to go back to 2/16 Inf after 😂

    • @saltybits9954
      @saltybits9954 Před rokem

      @@mtik000 b.t.w. I think I know who this is. ha ha 😉🤔

    • @saltybits9954
      @saltybits9954 Před rokem

      @@mtik000 You were my JAFO on A21 weren't you?

    • @mtik000
      @mtik000 Před rokem +1

      @@saltybits9954 just a scrawny E1 humping the 60 through the desert for no fucking reason... A Troop sounds familiar... but, like, it was 3 months, 32 years ago. 🥲

    • @saltybits9954
      @saltybits9954 Před rokem

      @@mtik000 Does your last name rhyme with bologna?

  • @SolidMikeP
    @SolidMikeP Před 2 lety +1

    A great contractor I work with lost his son inside of one of these, he keeps a model of it on his desk with toy soldiers around it. Sometimes I catch him just staring at it, with a stoic sad look on his face. We do what we can to comfort him...but I could not imagine his pain, his loss.

  • @Love_rainy_days
    @Love_rainy_days Před 3 lety +50

    This video is very interesting to me. My son did three tours in Iraq and Afghanistan in the US Army infantry in the 1ID and the 1AD in Bradleys. Thanks to all the vets who served in the Bradleys. I been told by vets the
    enemy feared the Bradley over M1Abrams . Have a Merry Christmas

    • @BFVgnr
      @BFVgnr Před 3 lety +15

      Because when the Bradley stopped, the infantry came out.

    • @Bosniarat24
      @Bosniarat24 Před 3 lety +2

      @@BFVgnr And they were there, while the M1a2s were no where near the troops.

    • @ktiger1766
      @ktiger1766 Před 3 lety +7

      25mm eat more enemy than M1A1 main guns

    • @elektronischemusik1903
      @elektronischemusik1903 Před 3 lety +11

      Heard the same from german afghanistan veteran, as soon as marder was on the table the taliban stopped any form of combat. It seems that consistent autocannone fire is the worst thing for soft targets.

    • @ktiger1766
      @ktiger1766 Před 3 lety +6

      @@elektronischemusik1903 20mm HE round powerful kill the enemy behind mud wall !🔥

  • @top-secret996
    @top-secret996 Před 3 lety +24

    I was on an M6 varient. The launcher carried FIM-92 Stingers instead of the TOW. We didn't keep them loaded in Iraq after the invasion so we put MREs in there instead.

    • @jonboring2877
      @jonboring2877 Před 3 lety +6

      I fielded the first BSFV's (Bradley Stinger Fighting Vehicle) at Ft. Hood with 4/5 ADA in 1994. When did they add the M6 designation? We had brand new M2A2's, and then had them modded with the stinger racks and the battery cooling station, which made an awesome table to play spades on. This was before they came out with the 4 shot stinger pod that replaced the TOW launcher. They named it the Linebacker.

    • @janko7245
      @janko7245 Před 3 lety

      The linebacker in my opinion is the coolest variant. Shows what the possibilities are with the bradly's weaponry

  • @GTLandser
    @GTLandser Před 3 lety +25

    That's (one of) the great thing about experienced NCO's: he was able to spit all of that knowledge in a fairly non-technical way, and he paid extra attention to safety and "ease of use" factors, which is exactly what soldiers need to hear. I bet he has been instructing for a long time, and has had several opportunities to use that "640 turns of the hand wheel for a 360 traverse" bit of trivia when it was needed "for instructional purposes"!
    Now if you really want to be blown away, go up the block to the Master Gunner school, and watch them set up and take apart that M242! Not sure any of that would be open though. But the tech nerds would swoon.

    • @Mr.Thermistor7228
      @Mr.Thermistor7228 Před 3 lety +4

      sadly, in my experience an nco like him is very hard to come by

    • @tommyblackwell3760
      @tommyblackwell3760 Před 3 lety +2

      @@Mr.Thermistor7228 Sad to hear that, in my day most were like him.

    • @ancientserpent9974
      @ancientserpent9974 Před 3 lety

      spit?

    • @nickferzacca1786
      @nickferzacca1786 Před 3 lety +1

      As a Mike Gulf I approve of your comment

    • @spoton6906
      @spoton6906 Před 3 lety

      Nick Ferzacca Respect.
      Got to drive our Mike Golf around.
      Learned a lot from him which helped me later.

  • @WickedScott
    @WickedScott Před 3 lety +2

    I drove one of these in 1st Cav out of Ft. Hood. Mine was the BFist for a tanker company. I had a layout flashback watching this! That and 18 hours in the driver's hole in 130 degree heat! My initial training consisted of "Get in there and drive it to the motor pool!"

  • @rwes2940
    @rwes2940 Před 3 lety +8

    Cav Vet here, thanks for bring back some memories. Swimming those was always a trip

  • @rtfm2986
    @rtfm2986 Před 3 lety +12

    I served on Strykers as a medic (on MEVs, RVs, and ICVs) and now on the M1A2 as a tanker. The Bradley looks like a super funky fusion of the two, really cool to see the commonality in controls and layout.

  • @elfhighmage8240
    @elfhighmage8240 Před 3 lety +4

    11-Mike! 2/7 Inf, 24th Division here. Desert Storm. I can still remember details about this vehicle even after 30 years! I was a driver for the M2. Lots of elbow room. Had my own personal MRE box under my seat, my own supply of food and water in the hellhole. With the hatch closed, nobody of higher rank than I could see me with my BDU top and boots off in training. Good times.

  • @mancaveveteran4975
    @mancaveveteran4975 Před 3 lety +4

    Drove one during Operation Desert Storm. We were Cavalry but when we got new vehicles before the ground war they ran out of the CFV’s and I got a brand new Infantry version. We had to modify the back to hold our combat load. Lots of crew seats got lost at night during movements....
    That drivers compartment brought back some memories. All not good.

  • @patches6309
    @patches6309 Před 3 lety +4

    As a 19 Delta SGT fighting in Ramadi 2005-06, we loved having "Brads' support us in our M114 up armored Humvees while patrolling. Once I stood next to an M3 CFV while firing my M4 at bad Haji's firing from a building when suddenly I heard the distinctive sound of that Hammerhead raising. The Bradley fired 2 TOW missiles into the building( 1 on each floor) and silenced the fire coming from it quickly. After the firefight, I ordered a few of my men to search the destroyed building for "BDA", & they exited the rubble shaking their heads saying there was no way they could tell how many enemy were killed due to the fact the bodies were utterly shredded? I told em, go back & count the feet! The lads got a real kick out of that, but it actually did work.

    • @bradm3a3
      @bradm3a3 Před 3 lety +1

      Gunner, missle, building

    • @abyssiniahenry128
      @abyssiniahenry128 Před 2 lety +1

      Count the feet. Got a real "kick" out of it....no pun intended? HUAH

  • @bidenhasdementia8657
    @bidenhasdementia8657 Před 3 lety +21

    26:15 Nothing better than a good ole lashing strap. A dude can never have too many. Like guns

  • @johncrowley9649
    @johncrowley9649 Před 3 lety +29

    The water cooler was removed because of the bad design. As you can see to the left and right of the water spicket are 2 depressions, they would end up growing mold there, since the water would stagnate in those spots. Thus the removal of the water tank to be replaced with orange igloo water coolers.

    • @jerrysneed250
      @jerrysneed250 Před 3 lety +8

      The water was always hotter than piss

    • @jasonfrancis8465
      @jasonfrancis8465 Před 3 lety +3

      Glad they removed it because when I was a dismount at sat in the seat on that side against the turret. It had a perfect spot to wedge my kevlar in when dozing asleep on long trips. And they did not ride like they were on glass unless you were on hardball the whole time! Hit my head hard plenty of times and when I was a driver I gave my gunner a black eye from hitting a ditch that was steeper than we thought.

  • @Neutercane
    @Neutercane Před 3 lety +21

    I remember being a young Private back in 1991, when we were issued the (then) brand new M2A2 Bradley and I was so excited because I'd originally been assigned to the M901 ITV's, and that vehicle wasn't exactly confidence inspiring. I was a Bradley driver for a short period of time and no matter how hot it got in there, the guys in the turret always seemed to be freezing and were constantly demanding more heat. As he stated, the hellhole was usually full of all sorts of gear which was both bad and good. Bad because it made it all that much more cramped, but good because if you had that seat behind the driver, all of that gear (fully loaded duffel bags were best) directly behind the seat made a pretty decent mattress, plus, there was a heater vent right by your left foot. You simply slipped your upper body behind the backrest onto the pile of gear, properly position that left foot and presto! A nearly perfect snooze. One thing that wasn't so good was the vibration caused by the tracks hitting the ground. At low speeds, it wasn't anything to worry about, but at certain higher speeds ( I can't remember the exact speed), the effect was a high frequency hammering on your kidneys.

  • @ccapehart1980
    @ccapehart1980 Před 3 lety +8

    Im also a Veteran M2A3 Bradley Crewmember Was a Driver Gunner and eventually vehicle commander while i was deployed with 1-8 cav OIF 06-08
    he is on one of the old Aluminum and magnesium hulls with out the reinforced steel armor plating on the front and sides

    • @talktojerm
      @talktojerm Před 2 lety

      @Charles Yuditsky The M1A2 had the "rounded" looking armor. The M1A3 had the armor that looked like plates bolted to the side.

  • @terifarley4770
    @terifarley4770 Před 3 lety +7

    Bradley became famous in 91 after DS. I thought it was goofy when first in the news but soon appreciated its use and coolness

  • @jimplaysbadly3881
    @jimplaysbadly3881 Před 3 lety +18

    I was dismounted and support for my first four years and a turret goblin for my next four years, and I trained on M2s like this one and M2A1s. Fort Hood had the newest Brads and Germany had the oldest. We took ours across the Sava River on floating bridges on Christmas Day '95, and spent nearly all of '96 in northern Bosnia around them. Being a dismount wore me out, but being a gunner was big fun. We worked with tankers a lot, who were usually pretty cool-- especially if they helped you dry your gear out.

    • @SonsOfLorgar
      @SonsOfLorgar Před 3 lety +2

      How much interaction did you have with service members of other KFOR/SFOR countries and, if any,what was your impression of their vehicles and kit?

    • @jimplaysbadly3881
      @jimplaysbadly3881 Před 3 lety +4

      @@SonsOfLorgar Some, O Bearer of the Word, though I was IFOR. Mostly, we ran into NORBAT (friendly, shorts in the summer, MOWAG Piranhas), the Russians(UN-marked BMPs, MTLBs, loved to barbecue, awful smokes), and Brits(two flavors: DPM/battle bowlers/L85s/distant, and desert DPM/wrinkles, deep tans, long hair/old, beat up, spray-painted gear/friendly). Other nationalities would come and go-- this Nigerian, that Czech, the odd Frenchman, all with little flag patches and UN hats. Out of everyone there, we-- and the locals-- seemed to take the situation the most seriously. the FWF guys all looked beat, filthy, hungry, and sad. Things calmed down pretty early, and were looking a bit better by the time we redeployed back to Kirchgoens.

    • @SonsOfLorgar
      @SonsOfLorgar Před 3 lety +2

      @@jimplaysbadly3881 interesting to hear, because my previous home guard militia company was sprinkled thick with Bosnia/Kosovo veterans among the platoon and squad leaders, especially my own platoon.
      A lot of them told stories in the tents during field exercises.

    • @thejoker9201
      @thejoker9201 Před 3 lety +1

      I served as a driver and a dismount. And much preferred being dismount any day

    • @abyssiniahenry128
      @abyssiniahenry128 Před 2 lety +1

      11M's always fought with those soft tankers and their lazy boy seats but you sure could dry out a wet mummy bag in no time with that Abrams exhaust. And heat up an MRE pouch too.

  • @alwayschasingplanes6253
    @alwayschasingplanes6253 Před 3 lety +2

    I MISS driving the Bradley! Camp Ripley, MN. Canada /US Army exchange. Awesome video!

  • @phillbosque2183
    @phillbosque2183 Před 3 lety +43

    Been years since I been in a Bradley but I feel I can hop in one and shoot gunnery right now no problem. All that knowledge is so ingrained in me, to bad it's basically worthless on the civilian side.

    • @BFVgnr
      @BFVgnr Před 3 lety +7

      GUNNER MISSILE TANK!

    • @phillbosque2183
      @phillbosque2183 Před 3 lety +9

      BFVgnr IDENTIFIED! 1600 METERS!

    • @BFVgnr
      @BFVgnr Před 3 lety +12

      @@phillbosque2183 you'd really like the updated M242. They added quick releases to the feeder so you could get jammed kinks out faster. The feeder drive was a little more torquey, and didn't bind up as much at hi rate. The hand station went to mostly button operation for zoom, and tilting the hand station was the new slew.
      The best was kinematic lead with the LRF which meant no more sensing rounds. You track it, you lase it, you blaze it. First round impacts and the computer adjusted for as long as you would track the original lase.
      So much easier, except that the IBAS took away some of the space for accessing the top left side of the 25.

    • @TransFluidGotKkkKick
      @TransFluidGotKkkKick Před 3 lety +2

      Yeah stuff like that does not leave you ever, I feel the same way I feel I could shoot tables any day without worry, although they probably changed allot since back in the late 80's early 90's.

    • @johnr9282
      @johnr9282 Před 3 lety +2

      Troops in the open 50 m identify fire

  • @renemiller7082
    @renemiller7082 Před 3 lety +7

    I was at Fort Knox in 80 when Abrams and Bradley were just coming out. Michigan Guard had M-48s and M- 60s with 113s. Was like going from hang gliders to jets. Amazed at the ability to shoot on the move, speed, and how much quieter the M-1 was then the 48. Liked the 113 for room and the fact it did float. Watched M2 sink. Everyone got out but what a mess getting pulled out and cleaned up.

  • @Jetdrag
    @Jetdrag Před 3 lety +34

    Very interesting video. JB was really engaging, I ended up wanting to just take a peek, but sat through the whole thing!

  • @earitfx
    @earitfx Před 3 lety +2

    I like the way you did this one. Do some more.

  • @sedav4500
    @sedav4500 Před 3 lety +6

    Nice to see the original version of the M2 again....My battalion at Ft Hood was the first and only one with them for a while until more were produced to equip our sister battalion and other batts in Germany....every time we went to the field the civilian contractors and techs from FMC were always out there checking on things and asking us about how it was performing....back in garrison there were a lot of VIP visits by the brass and foreign exchange officers to check them out and many demonstrations were done on the ranges to show its capabilities....some platoons had to do photo and video shoots with media and public affairs as well.

    • @spoton6906
      @spoton6906 Před 3 lety

      We had two general officers get into a fist fight in the back of one of our tracks. Was like two third world dictators in a Wrestlemania. Sooo funny.
      Our unit got fancy cots for doing SINGARS testing. Later, we fought over those as they broke and/or disappeared when guys got out.

    • @robertsettle2590
      @robertsettle2590 Před 3 lety

      So what battalion were you in at Hood. I was in 2/41 Inf. 2AD 87-91

    • @sedav4500
      @sedav4500 Před 3 lety

      @@robertsettle2590 1-41 2AD
      1983

  • @sheepdoglogic
    @sheepdoglogic Před 3 lety +4

    I was a gunner on a Bradley for a short time. My TC, Driver and I got New Top Gun during our transition from M113 to the Bradley. HOOAH!!!

  • @ssgadamjunemann
    @ssgadamjunemann Před 3 lety +9

    I was Bradley mechanic pain in butt to work on but still loved it. The sight on gunner side is ISU(Intregraded Sight Unit).

    • @transcendentalidiot3321
      @transcendentalidiot3321 Před 3 lety +3

      Yeah Adam, you are correct. He said it was the IBAS (Improved Bradley Acquisition Subsystem) but those are the features (Target Acquisition, Night Vision, Missile Control, ect.) that tie into the ISU.

  • @travisbrown5895
    @travisbrown5895 Před 3 lety +16

    I still have all of the little scars on my hands we used to call “Bradley bites” from tearing down the gun so much during gunnery and beating your hands up manhandling that heavy receiver and feeder.

  • @Soulessdeeds
    @Soulessdeeds Před 3 lety +5

    I was a Bradley mechanic for 15 yrs. The Bradley was is a good vehicle but does need to be replaced. The one in this video is definitely a much older version of the vehicle than the ones I worked on. But the vehicle that I loved the most driving and operating was the M88a1. Just a beast of a machine.

    • @bholdwick
      @bholdwick Před 10 měsíci

      16 years Brad mech, almost always on the 88a1 or a2. Yes, we love our Cadillacs. Where did you serve?

  • @Kelleyshro
    @Kelleyshro Před 3 lety +5

    I remember racing through a ford site in the Imjin River during a brigade exercise one summer in Korea with our M2A2 Bradleys.
    I also remember almost freezing to death in the back of the same vehicle the following February up near the DMZ.
    I will always love that track.

  • @yodawg3469
    @yodawg3469 Před 3 lety +3

    I joined back when we were still called 11M's before the switch to B's.I enjoyed riding on these bad boys.

  • @toddmetzger
    @toddmetzger Před 3 lety +2

    Always a bucking bronco of a good time with JB giving the nuts and bolts tour.

  • @frankwalder3608
    @frankwalder3608 Před 3 lety +7

    He confirmed what I thought all along, driving would be the most fun!

    • @Jmitchking
      @Jmitchking Před 3 lety +2

      If you did not like the gunner and BC much, the low and spacious drivers position was way less violent that the turret.

    • @spoton6906
      @spoton6906 Před 3 lety

      Mitch King I was detached to our Echo Company. Supposed to be short time gig but things were changing.
      They got a new CO who was recently my old CO. He wanted to make me his driver after my recently being the Battalion Master Gunner’s driver for several months. I wanted back to being a Dismount so I bottomed out my hull the first chance I got to drive the Captain. We were going full clip when I did it. He almost broke his arm. Was back in my old company later that day.
      :)
      As for fun, I got to do some Duke Boys shit with our track. Broke an M16A2 from the impact of one of our jumps. Could feel the impact hit my body. Same jump almost killed a new corporal who just came to us from the airborne. Told him not to touch any straps in the back. He’s lucky we didn’t uncover his corpse after all the shit we had hooked up to them straps came out and all over the place. We had the kitchen sink with us in the back, heading out to gunnery, and he caught a ride with us. LOL
      Might have driven for a total of 6 months but we did a lot in a short period. Was the most fun I have had driving. Before and since.

  • @richardsledgecock2110
    @richardsledgecock2110 Před 3 lety +4

    So cool I was in Aberdeen proving grounds when the first of the Bradley fighting vehicles came into service.so cool I was 18 years old back then lol.we were so proud of those machines the xm1 and the Bradley. I was a 63 hotel I was the last cycle befor training began on these two newest war machines.but I learned them later...so cool...

  • @hiphopman72
    @hiphopman72 Před 3 lety +3

    Solid guy for the review! He made it that video

  • @pedrogonzales4669
    @pedrogonzales4669 Před 2 lety +1

    Brings back memories......I was a gunner in 588TH EN BN 4TH ID, and were tasked to test the BFV as an Combat Engineer vehicle.

  • @tgray505
    @tgray505 Před 3 měsíci +1

    You brought back a lot of memories for me. I trained on that version of Bradley during my time at Ft Benning,(1985-89). Going from M-113's to this was a shock! But we learned to love them.

  • @MililaniJag
    @MililaniJag Před 3 lety +3

    Great info! JB thanks for your service!!! LOVE the LONGER vid!!! Thx!!

  • @TheGrainSideUp
    @TheGrainSideUp Před 3 lety +5

    Great video. Many years ago, I shared a hospital bay in recovery with a young private who was swept by the turret gun on an M2. He was in bad shape, but I never really understood what happened to him even after he explained the situation. Thanks to this vet, I understand the power of that little black button on the turret handle.

  • @butterbean4195
    @butterbean4195 Před 3 lety +2

    awesome! i was a BFV guy for years in the guard even was a instructor for several years. great stuff 11m30 retired

  • @arthurwielga970
    @arthurwielga970 Před 3 lety +6

    This was awesome!!! Its always great to hear someone who actually drove 'em rather than some engineer in a lab coat!!! The little anecdotes and tidbits of sidebar are priceless!!

  • @GaCracker69
    @GaCracker69 Před 3 lety +6

    Great video! Brought back alot memories, I was a Bradley crewman 1987-1991. Started out as a dismount, then I was a driver and was a gunner during Desert Storm. My M2a1 was named "Lethal Tendencies" during Desert Storm. I served with C 3/15 Inf. 24th ID. Love to hear that M242 thumping rounds down range

    • @abyssiniahenry128
      @abyssiniahenry128 Před 2 lety +1

      11M dismount turned driver 1992-1995 C Co 1/18 3/24 "El Jefe" HUAH!

  • @denegillespie5767
    @denegillespie5767 Před 3 lety +15

    Loved it and JB's down to earth insight on this vehicle. Would love to see more of this kind of thing

  • @johnr9282
    @johnr9282 Před 3 lety +1

    I was 11 Mike out of fort Hood Texas bravo company 2-7 cav I went from being a driver to a gunner to squad leader dismount to sniper company and I absolutely love the Bradley. I spent a lot of time in that thing and do not regret one second this really hit home since I got out in 01

  • @tauruszuma
    @tauruszuma Před 2 lety +2

    Must have said it a thousand time by now, but that's a thousand very sincere Thank You for your service.

  • @marcosspagnol7488
    @marcosspagnol7488 Před 3 lety +3

    Definitely, this video is special. Thanks, JB for share your knowledge and humour and Sofi for spending time filming and editing.

  • @georgegrierson
    @georgegrierson Před 3 lety +13

    Thank you Sofilein! I've viewed a considerable number of MBT reviews, etc... but never an M2 Bradley. Learning something new every day!

  • @bobrat
    @bobrat Před 3 lety +1

    It was interesting getting a tour of this newer track.
    I drove the M577and M113's 1973

  • @romellerodrigueza6695
    @romellerodrigueza6695 Před 3 lety +3

    I love your video dude! I love the history of tanks and IFV, especially Bradley.

    • @bradm3a3
      @bradm3a3 Před 3 lety

      Thanks man, appreciate it

  • @Billygoat_27
    @Billygoat_27 Před 3 lety +6

    CZcams’s algorithm actually sent me something I’m interested in thank you for blessing me with knowledge

  • @TheMichaelBeck
    @TheMichaelBeck Před rokem +2

    "Amphibious." Riiiiiiight. I was the M113A3 driver for my battalion commander in 4th Battalion 68th Armored, 4th Infantry Division, Ft. Carson while I waited for my 19K assignment in West Germany. I wouldn't have tried to "swim" my M113A3 let alone one of those.

  • @alanwernik1773
    @alanwernik1773 Před 3 lety +2

    4 years 11M back in 80s Infantry/Armor Hybrid true freak of nature. My body aches watching this!

  • @khanricksteele
    @khanricksteele Před 3 lety +5

    Thank you JB for your service and the tour! Now I want a Bradley. I like that bit about making your own parking spot.

  • @gregmatthies8128
    @gregmatthies8128 Před 2 lety +3

    This guy is great and should be the commentator describing other vehicles he is so real. PS I am australian and have many army friends but this guy is was great thanks.

    • @bradm3a3
      @bradm3a3 Před 2 lety

      Cheers mate! I honestly don't know if I'm using that right, don't hate me. Thanks for the compliment. I'll see what else I can find to babble on about

  • @murchman0
    @murchman0 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for doing this as a former 63T Bradley Mechanic with the 24th and 3rd ID at Kelly Hill this brought back a lot of great memories. During AIT at Knox we were taught on those early Brads only to get to our units and have the newer A2's. Hell is changing out the batteries on the vehicle since the batteries are in the hell hole under floor. Driving was fun but you could always tell a new driver as they would stall trying to turn.

    • @abyssiniahenry128
      @abyssiniahenry128 Před 2 lety +1

      Former 11M driver C Co. 1/18 3/24 Kelly Hill. I grounded out the other end of a wrench(I believe) loosening the grounding cable to remove those batteries from my floorboards. Rode the lightning. Arcs and sparks. Stiffened up straight as a plank, swore it stopped my heart, sore the next day. Still unclear of what exactly went wrong. Buddies found it absolutely hilarious though.

  • @diversecompanies2575
    @diversecompanies2575 Před rokem +1

    I love JB. He is a terrific presenter. I'm prior military. 3ID, 1/7 INF, 11M MOS and was everything from dismount to driver on the Brad. Stationed in Germany. Hooah.

  • @mfree80286
    @mfree80286 Před 3 lety +22

    11:15 Here, there be Dragons! (M-47 Dragon storage labels).

    • @tommyblackwell3760
      @tommyblackwell3760 Před 3 lety +5

      Yeah, I spotted those too, that's an OLD Brad!

    • @StabbinJoeScarborough
      @StabbinJoeScarborough Před 3 lety +3

      I saw a Dragon fire once in basic , I was 11H , TOW missile

    • @ktiger1766
      @ktiger1766 Před 3 lety +2

      Dragon is piece of shit,Tow much better!

    • @niekbeentjes8849
      @niekbeentjes8849 Před 3 lety

      They still use those?

    • @mfree80286
      @mfree80286 Před 3 lety +1

      @@niekbeentjes8849 This is ye olde MANPATS, tankers fling Javelins now.

  • @Utahpatriot72
    @Utahpatriot72 Před 2 lety +4

    Wow, I want to thank you for providing an insight on this vehicle. My son is currently about a year into his career and is a driver. You have given me an idea of what he has to deal with. Thanks again. Thank you all for your Service.

    • @bradm3a3
      @bradm3a3 Před 2 lety

      NP, any questions just hit me up

  • @robertthomas9803
    @robertthomas9803 Před 3 lety +2

    I was M2 crew in Garlstadt, germany from 86-88. Our M2 was A13, and serial #666. We swore it was possessed. sometimes, for no reason, the lights would flash. Also, the CO signed for the vehicle with no heater and no paper work for a heater---so it was impossible to get a heater. But he had a heater. If he was a real leader, he would have given us his heater. F-ing west point parasite. And northern germany was supposed to be the warm part. But all the exercise areas were in the south. such fun cleaning them with fire hoses in the winter...and no heater to warm up...for 12 hours.

    • @ktiger1766
      @ktiger1766 Před 3 lety +1

      You are lucky! Back to 80s in 3rdACR, there's only one heater works on the hold plt pc, went on the field hold weeks without heats !

  • @halofan9793
    @halofan9793 Před 3 lety +2

    I am still in the Army as a 11B (infantry) and I will say the last thing I ever thought I would do as a infantrymen is drive a Bradley. Tbh I hated driving the Bradley. It brakes easily, it's outdated and requires so much work just to maintain it. Mabey it's because are M3s where so old but still. Actually driving the M3 was fun sometimes and I drove at NTC as well as Ft bliss gunnery at range 88. I will say this, driving at full speed with a line of other Bradley's, tanks, ect and attacking a village was awesome (even though it was just training) but let's just say I'm glad to be a dismount now.

  • @lchris2703
    @lchris2703 Před 3 lety +6

    The primary reason the water tank went away, was that the soldiers never kept them clean. I remember when the Brad's first came out, many an infantryman contracted the "trots" from drinking stale water from these tanks. I was a Bradley Master Gunner in the late 80s early 90s. I got to serve on the M3 A-nothings to the M3A1s. My unit went to the First Gulf War with some of the original production M3s. Then around Christmas 1990 my unit was sent back to port to pick up Brand New M3A1s, best Army Christmas present ever! LOL

  • @ster6222
    @ster6222 Před 3 lety +3

    HUA! Awesome vid, ty. 🤙🏻
    Edit: Army 13F Vet here and love vids with presentations from Army Vets that know wtf was going on with the vehicles, gear, situations, etc. Adding some jargon too and anecdotes give the vids a true sense of reality. 👍🏻👍🏻

  • @Fenncer24
    @Fenncer24 Před 3 lety +2

    I was in from 1988-1992 and drove old worn out M-113, and a brand new straight out of the factory M2A2 Bradley while serving in the 1st Infantry Division 1st Battalion 16th Infantry Regiment Bravo Company Panzer Kaseren, West Germany 1988-1991. Then drove this version shown with the 5th Infantry Division, 4th Battalion, 6th Infantry Division Delta Company Fort Polk, Louisiana 1991-1992. The one I drove was a 1982 model and worn torque converter made for fun while trying to park in the motor pool lining up as you would push the accelerator and nothing would happen for 5 seconds and then boom your jumping forward a foot or two and backwards and so on for 5 minutes trying to park.
    While in the 5ID we had a a driver somehow brake the rear ramp of his Bradley completely off. I was behind him while we drove back to camp and could see 2 dismounts in the back staring at me even though it was 2300 hrs +. Messed up as it was the Captians Bradley. Don't know how they recovered the ramp or how it was fixed. Just funny.
    While in Germany doing the fording my Bradley nearly sank as it was drifting towards some submerged trees. The instructor was yelling at me and a dismount tapped me and said turn left. Showed him as the yoke was against me left knee. Had to have the M-88 that's is hooked up pull us a shore. But fun times as a driver and dismount. Would sit in the seat behind the driver on the older model and the seat further behind the driver on the A2 model. Wow how time flies. 30 years ago this year I'm stationed at 5ID. Damn

  • @all4humanityplz
    @all4humanityplz Před 2 lety +1

    1981-9, worked @San Jose,Cal's FMC,on parts-assembly-tested: M113s, AVP7s,MLRSs,Bradleys. Drove/swam/repaired 'em. Loved the job/pay/& esp all the gr8 friends! THNQ for your detailed video, & gr8 memories! ..🤗

  • @wunderschatze
    @wunderschatze Před 3 lety +5

    Greetings to the veterans and thank you for sharing your knowledge and experiences.