The Fight for Sight: How Germany Set Unparalleled Superiority in Tank Optics During WW2

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  • čas přidán 23. 04. 2024
  • The optical aiming systems installed on German, Allied, and Soviet tanks varied significantly in their design and quality.
    Among these, German tanks stood out with multiple advantages in their gun sights.
    With meticulous design and unparalleled quality, German gun sights boasted advantages that set them apart from their counterparts. From wider fields of view to superior magnification, these optical marvels offered tank-crews a crucial edge on the battlefield.
    Designed by the renowned German optics manufacturer Zeiss, these devices became synonymous with precision and excellence on the battlefield.
    Whether prowling the deserts of North Africa or the snow-covered plains of Eastern Europe, German tank gunners could rely on their sights, to deliver accuracy and lethality when it mattered most.
    #ww2tanks #germantank #zeiss

Komentáře • 322

  • @thorstennommensen5105
    @thorstennommensen5105 Před 22 dny +64

    Joined German tank forces in 1984. Although we had optical range finders (Turmentfernungsmessgerät-TEM) half of our training was estimating range with the TZF (the Leopard 1 gunner had two optics, TZF and TEM). And even in the 90s, when the Leopard 1A5 got a laser range finder estimating range with the TZF was trained intensively.

    • @FactBytes
      @FactBytes  Před 22 dny +5

      Great insight👍

    • @richardbriscoe8563
      @richardbriscoe8563 Před 21 dnem +13

      Yeah, if your wonderful laser range finder goes down in battle the “old fashioned” skills are essential.

    • @thorstennommensen5105
      @thorstennommensen5105 Před 20 dny +7

      @@richardbriscoe8563 Sure. That was the reason.

  • @skelejp9982
    @skelejp9982 Před 25 dny +71

    Japanese Company, later called Nikon, hired a German Lens maker, in the 1920s.
    And they managed to improve their optics, to the point, that Imperial Japanese Navy had the best Night sight optics, when WW2 started.

    • @jackmoorehead2036
      @jackmoorehead2036 Před 25 dny +10

      And the came Fire Controll Radar.

    • @gargoyle7863
      @gargoyle7863 Před 19 dny +2

      What a bummer. US Navy had best Radar (at daylight and night :D

    • @herrakaarme
      @herrakaarme Před 18 dny +9

      @@jackmoorehead2036 The Japanese admirals didn't want a radar, even though the Japanese researchers weren't actually behind in developing radar technology. The admirals believed exposing your own location by using a radar was a worse drawback than the benefit of detecting enemies and their distance. It was with great reluctance they allowed installing air surveillance radars, eventually. Sometimes admirals, or generals, shouldn't be allowed to make big decisions.

    • @hazchemel
      @hazchemel Před 15 dny

      Yes, a video on Japanese naval night optics would be great.

    • @fenris6051
      @fenris6051 Před 7 dny

      @@gargoyle7863 - Americans were so stupid that they developed a GI helmet that would snap the users neck of they had it strapped and came within a blast shockwave...

  • @muctop17
    @muctop17 Před 24 dny +62

    Another important point was radio communication! At least every group leading tank had a radio set built in which gave enormous tactical advantage.

    • @daveybyrden3936
      @daveybyrden3936 Před 24 dny +11

      The policy in 1939 and 1940 was that every Panzer should have a radio receiver at least, even the little Panzer 1.

    • @1armeddrummerinaprisonrock244
      @1armeddrummerinaprisonrock244 Před 22 dny +4

      yeah every german Panzerkampfwagen was supposed to have a radio - unlike the soviet tanks, who suffered high losses cause of this issue

    • @Ixtzalit
      @Ixtzalit Před 21 dnem +3

      @@1armeddrummerinaprisonrock244 There were many other reasons why the Soviets suffered such high losses, bad coordination due to lack of radios was just one of them

    • @Jreb1865
      @Jreb1865 Před 21 dnem +1

      ​@@IxtzalitThey were still waving signaling flags at each other...lol

    • @warrun8681
      @warrun8681 Před 19 dny

      Brother is your channel is monitized?plz reply me.thanks

  • @fredliperson9171
    @fredliperson9171 Před 25 dny +152

    Zeiss Optics have always been and still are the benchmark other companies strive to attain hands down.....

    • @Keckegenkai
      @Keckegenkai Před 21 dnem +12

      German Zeiss today is fundamental in the coopaeration with dutch ASML and fundamental in the creation of computer chips.. they pretty much ditched their optical efforts and outsourced to Japan (the formulas are still german tho)

    • @Uli_Krosse
      @Uli_Krosse Před 21 dnem +22

      @@Keckegenkai Zeiss still makes lenses for glasses in Oberkochen and Wetzlar, spotting scopes and rifle scopes are also made in Wetzlar (former Hensoldt plant). Zeiss does have a close cooperation with Sony since the mid-90s, but that goes both ways. Sony produces Zeiss lens - including the Zeiss logo - in Japan, but lenses for video and film cameras are still made in Oberkochen. Also, all of the lenses for mirrorless Sony cameras are made there. Lower end stuff is made in Mexico and Brazil, Italy and of course in China - but not in Japan.
      The high end optics for ASML are all made by Zeiss - but that does not mean Zeiss gave up their core business.

    • @Keckegenkai
      @Keckegenkai Před 20 dny +4

      @@Uli_Krosse
      I mightve got my timing wrong, but I thought they are still produced by Cosina in Japan same as Voigtländer. I could be wrong but Sony and Zeiss parted ways much of the dismay of Sonys most recent line up of lenses as they lack the Zeiss look and are quite boring imo. I have no clue about scopes and the likes so I guess you are right.

    • @mahonjal
      @mahonjal Před 19 dny

      Nikon, Canon and Leica might beg to differ.

    • @hernerweisenberg7052
      @hernerweisenberg7052 Před 17 dny +2

      I have a Carl Zeiss artillery scope (Rbl.F. 40) that I found as a kid between some flower pots at my grandmas. After clearing off some rust, the optic is still crystal clear, adjustments work and it has an illuminated reticle :O

  • @KenjiMapes
    @KenjiMapes Před 25 dny +54

    Awesome video & great information. It’s covers deeper topics that aren’t covered in most videos. The tank crew also had to be great at estimating ranges & calculating firing solutions using various techniques. They had stadiametric range finders but also had to good at estimating ranges. The gun sights had various reticles for shooting at ranges & they also had special marks for lead, etc So besides knowing how to id enemy vehicles they had to know general sizes of enemy tanks for calculations.
    I was a tanker in the US Army & the Abrams has a laser range finder, multiple sensors for things like crosswind & vehicle cant, & a ballistic computer that gives us a firing solution. The gunner’s secondary or auxiliary sight (GAS) which is used if the primary sight (GPS) fails or is damaged is close to WW2 tank gunning as it lacks all the technology. Of course good optics helped & Germany had the best ones. Many of the finer details a out German tanks are covered in most WW2 armor videos which are the factors that made German tanks better overall. The German tanks had superbly trained crews, but also had better optics, radios, ammunition, etc Considering how crude the first tanks in WW I were it’s pretty amazing how advanced they became in some 20 odd years. They share the same overall build, layout & characteristics as modern tanks in many regards.
    Thanks for the greta video🙂👍

  • @uffa00001
    @uffa00001 Před 22 dny +32

    Italian Admiral Trizzino wrote several books, and one of those deals with the Italian submarines which operated in the Atlantic, from their Bordeaux base. I remember his mention of the Italian crews receiving German binoculars on their arrival in Bordeaux, which were superior to the Italian ones: they allowed to inspect the sea during hours without feeling eye fatigue.

  • @jb-xc4oh
    @jb-xc4oh Před 19 dny +12

    The mirrors used to focus the lasers to cut the substrate on the newest 5nm CPU chips are made by Zeiss. The mirrors are absolutely flat, so flat that if the mirrors were the size of the earth the highst point on the surface would be only 3mm, can you imagine that kind of precision and accuracy.

    • @touristguy87
      @touristguy87 Před 11 dny

      So not absolutely flat.
      I applaud you for making such a fool of yourself so easily.

    • @jb-xc4oh
      @jb-xc4oh Před 11 dny

      @@touristguy87 Clap harder, I can't hear you.

    • @touristguy87
      @touristguy87 Před 10 dny

      @@jb-xc4oh but you can feel me

  • @glennledrew8347
    @glennledrew8347 Před 22 dny +26

    Good presentation!
    A few notes:
    Additives to optical glass such as Lanthanum do nothing of any note as regards improved transmission efficiency. Indeed, some additives can reduce transmission. The base level transmission of decent glass is so good that it requires a thickness of order 1 meter (!) to begin to become of any concern.
    The purpose of additives like rare earth elements is solely to obtain specific values of refractive index and dispersion. The aim is the suppression or at least diminution of chromatic (color) aberrations.
    There are two principal chromatic aberrations:
    Longitudinal, mostly introduced by the objective lens. This causes halos of unfocused light in certain parts of the spectrum. Most commonly exhibits as a blue halo, due to the shorter wavelengths becoming more rapidly differentially refracted. Affects the entire field of view essentially equally.
    Lateral, mostly introduced by the eyepiece. The central portion of the image is fine, but at increasing angular distance from the optical axis the light is radially elongated into a miniature spectrum.
    At such low magnifications of these sights, standard, inexpensive optical crown/flint glass objectives are quite good enough. For the eyepiece, lateral color aberration will not impact the working central part of the image, where the aiming reticle is located. It's only an issue in the more outer parts of the field. And so eyepieces made using non-exotic glass are still serviceable.
    Field of view at given magnification is controlled by the eyepiece design. The eyepiece FoV as it appears on the observer's retina is called the apparent FoV (AFoV). For older designs this was typically 40-50 degrees. After WW1 designers were starting to create oculars possessing AFoVs of 60-70 degrees. (In the 60s a designer cooked up a monster eyepiece having a whopping 120 degree AFoV!) The Germans during WW2 used eyepieces commonly having wider AFoVs than did the Allies, which presents an advantage in detection by virtue of presenting a physically wider field of coverage.
    In multi-element optical systems like tank sights and binoculars, coatings are important more for the improvement in contrast via reduction of internal reflection intensity from all those air-glass surfaces. The increase in total transmission is more of an additional benefit; it is decidedly secondary to contrast transfer. Let me put it this way; a 10% reduction in contrast is worse than a 50% reduction in image brightness.
    The human visual system has a HUGE dynamic range in its ability to detect light. What might seem to be a debilitating diminution is not nearly so injurious as might be feared. Contrast transfer, however, is most crucial because it presents as an immediate degradation no matter the image brightness. Even a subtle internal ghost reflection superimposed upon a shadowed part of the scenery can hide from view that tank lurking there in the gloom. The 'cleanest' image possible, aided by efficient reflection-reducing coatings, is a highly prized characteristic.
    Finally, I might note the differences in sight design that result from the image erecting elements employed. If a sight uses lenses to invert the image as opposed to prisms, the additional refraction imposed by these intermediary elements can introduce additional optical aberrations which prisms do not (by virtue of their acting optically as simple plane parallel optical windows). Now, I don't know if any tank sights used lens-based image erection schemes. But I would not be surprised if one or more nations did so early on.
    Parenthetical, my interest in gun sights leans far more toward those for aircraft. And I might add that I have worked in optics fabrication professionally. ;)
    Cheers!
    Glenn

    • @FactBytes
      @FactBytes  Před 22 dny +3

      Thanks for sharing your insights!

  • @tasjan9190
    @tasjan9190 Před 20 dny +6

    The Germans are just amazing engineers. They were/are blessed with innovative, creative, inventive, genius across a wide range of technology. Love the Germans for that.

  • @scroungasworkshop4663
    @scroungasworkshop4663 Před 21 dnem +12

    I had aways wondered how tanks could be accurate at 2000 meters and now I know. I had no idea the tankers used tables to calculate their targets and they must have done a lot of training to be able to identify and accurately range an enemy tank quickly. Amazing.

    • @falconeaterf15
      @falconeaterf15 Před 20 dny +1

      Also amazing, a WW2 battleship travelling on ocean, firing at a moving target at ranges out past 15 miles.
      They used mechanical computers the size of a chest freezer to make required calculations.
      Subs also used a smaller mechanical computer to calculate torpedo trajectories.

    • @DelAoc
      @DelAoc Před 17 dny

      On the vast open landscape of the Eastern front, Soviet tanks had to be easy target practices for the German tank gunners with good gun sights above normal combat ranges.

  • @steffenb.jrgensen2014
    @steffenb.jrgensen2014 Před 23 dny +43

    Zeiss rifle scopes for hunting still are outstanding and second to none. I use a Zeiss HT 3-12x56 as my general rifle scope and using it in the dusk is like turning on the lights.

    • @smokecrackhailsatan
      @smokecrackhailsatan Před 22 dny +3

      >zeiss rifle scopes are second to none
      >nightforce has entered the building
      >leupold has entered the building
      >trijicon has entered the building
      >Vortex has entered the building
      >shit, even primaryarms came out to laugh.

    • @adelbertschulz8049
      @adelbertschulz8049 Před 20 dny +2

      You forgot "Schmidt und Bender", some army use this in sniperrifles!

    • @steffenb.jrgensen2014
      @steffenb.jrgensen2014 Před 20 dny +7

      @@smokecrackhailsatan I have owned and used most of the scopes you mention. They are OK and not at least Leupold good value for money but none come close to a true Zeiss. But perhaps you only know Zeiss Conquest, a discount model developed for mainly the American market. They are OK, but in no way sublime. But it is always a good question when marginal utility has fallen too much to be worth another 1000 $. In bright sunshine at moderate distance a premium scope rarely is, but in dusk it is worth all the money.

    • @steffenb.jrgensen2014
      @steffenb.jrgensen2014 Před 20 dny +1

      @@smokecrackhailsatan I have owned and used most of the scopes you mention. They are OK and not at least Leupold good value for money but none come close to a true Zeiss. But perhaps you only know Zeiss Conquest, a discount model developed for mainly the American market. They are OK, but in no way sublime. But it is always a good question when marginal utility has fallen too much to be worth another 1000 $. In bright sunshine at moderate distance a premium scope rarely is, but in dusk it is worth all the money.

  • @daveybyrden3936
    @daveybyrden3936 Před 25 dny +36

    Wow, this video certainly contains a lot of "padding". Empty words of praise that convey no information. The actual knowledge posted in here is limited. We are told the German tanks had "TzF" scopes, but the individual models are not listed. The periscopic sights of SPGs and Stugs are not covered at all - but we see them on film several times. Shouldn't we be told that they exist, at least?
    We're shown the range markings on a later-model tank scope and how to use them, but what about the procedure for bracketing to determine range? I can guess which manuals the author has read and which ones they didn't read. And these paper "ranging tables" - how were they used? Did the gunner keep them in the tank and refer to them, or memorise them? Why don't we see a real one?
    The telescope of the hull MG is not mentioned, though we see it on film. What was THAT one capable of?
    The biggest defect of this video (in my opinion) is that the video doesn't mention the "open sight" system of early-war Panzers - a lensless "sighting bar" with a dedicated window. Why skip over that? Another manual that wasn't looked at, methinks.

    • @TheIzroda
      @TheIzroda Před 18 dny +1

      Thanks. I too was hoping for something with more hard data. You saved me a couple of minutes as this is not for me it seems. All the best to the uploader too. No disrespect and I'm sure many will enjoy the video.

  • @genekelly8467
    @genekelly8467 Před 21 dnem +6

    This was known in WW1 as well-in the naval battele of Jutland, British gunners missed hits because the British rangefinders were poorly shock insulated-one gunner wrote that the prisms moved out of alignment after a german shell hit. The RN ordered improvements as a result

  • @user-nx1oz6pc5k
    @user-nx1oz6pc5k Před 23 dny +13

    It's crazy , this "small" part was so important and had such advantage. But without steel ,tanks and/or ammo, this part was useless.
    Thank you for the video and information .

  • @user-bh4ge1pm2t
    @user-bh4ge1pm2t Před 23 dny +6

    Haven't watched yet, but I'm super excited. I've heard for years how German optics really made a difference, it will be great to get into the nitty-gritty.
    And since you brought up subsystems, how about a similar video on who had the best comm systems.

  • @jpmtlhead39
    @jpmtlhead39 Před 7 dny +2

    Even today the Carl Zeiss lenses are among the Best in the world,and the excellence of their Luxury Lenses are second to none.

  • @ralphhofmeier8840
    @ralphhofmeier8840 Před 25 dny +125

    Good video , and just mirrored the fact you need good equipment, like a Tiger or Panther with ZEISS Optics and a well trained crew. The crew make the tank to a killing machine, or failure. My Dad was confronted alone with his Panther by 11 T34/85 . They came with high speed head on in February 1945 at Hungary. They opened fire from1,100m and destroyed in less than 15minutes all 11 Soviet Tanks. They did not get hit at all from the wild shooting but bad aiming T34 crew. Every of the 11rounds fired from the Panther was a hit. The following but much slower two IS2 far behind the fast T34 were a different story . The Panther took them out , each IS absorbed one hit and need two rounds to get light up. The Panther got hit twice from the slow moving and two rounds a minute only capacity of the IS. They shoot five rounds at all and hit the Panther twice at the front which bounded off. But the heavy gun made a big dent and noise when his Panther was hit . On the end the class of the crew won over quantity . And yes, back in time the Russian T Tanks burned back in time on the first hit like they do today on the same fields , again….

    • @falconeaterf15
      @falconeaterf15 Před 21 dnem +15

      Ah, yes………Germans vastly superior in every measure. And yet they still lost. Does that tell you anything?

    • @freigeist2814
      @freigeist2814 Před 21 dnem +19

      ​@@falconeaterf15Germany having to fight an enemy with far superior numbers on 2 frontlines won the war for the Soviets/Allies.

    • @heermannmorrer
      @heermannmorrer Před 21 dnem +34

      Eastern front in a nutshell:
      -German Tank has 70 rounds of ammunition
      -Soviets send in 71 Tanks
      -Soviet victory

    • @falconeaterf15
      @falconeaterf15 Před 21 dnem +3

      @@freigeist2814
      Thanks Captain Obvious.
      But why would they choose to do something so stupid?

    • @freigeist2814
      @freigeist2814 Před 21 dnem +12

      @@falconeaterf15 oh and, without lend-lease and pre-lend-lease programs the Soviet Union would have been crushed by the (not so well prepared) German Army.

  • @adrianariaratnam5817
    @adrianariaratnam5817 Před 25 dny +36

    A very informative piece with excellent footage of an aspect of WWII that's not well covered. Thanks a whole bunch. 👍

    • @FactBytes
      @FactBytes  Před 25 dny +2

      Thanks for the visit ☺️

  • @jackmoorehead2036
    @jackmoorehead2036 Před 25 dny +13

    As the adge goes, "You got to see them before you kill them", the Germans could see very well.

  • @christopheglachet5760
    @christopheglachet5760 Před 25 dny +11

    Bravo, on oublie souvent les excellentes optiques Allemandes qui étaient un plus énorme pour leurs équipages..

  • @zillsburyy1
    @zillsburyy1 Před 25 dny +30

    cant beat ZEISS

  • @whiskey_tango_foxtrot__
    @whiskey_tango_foxtrot__ Před 25 dny +14

    Q. What did the Panther crews say to the Zeiss optics engineers?
    A. Tank you. Tank you very much.

  • @johanmetreus1268
    @johanmetreus1268 Před 23 dny +5

    With 4.2 percent light loss per lens, the sight only retain 65.1-50.3 percent of the light going from ten lenses to sixteen.
    The high-quality sights with 0.6 percent loss per lens is between 94.2 - 90.8 in the same range of ten to sixteen lenses.

  • @outlet6989
    @outlet6989 Před 21 dnem +4

    If you watch the movie Kingdom of Heaven, you can see how range-finding was accomplished by placing distance markers on the battlefield. It's Old School but still effective. While in the Army, I was taught how to measure distance using the pace method. A pace is the distance of one footstep. Depending on a person's leg length, 100 yards might be X paces. As Porky Pig says, "Th-th-th-thats all folks!"

  • @ThisOLmaan
    @ThisOLmaan Před 25 dny +6

    Been looking for this video for many years finally by chance this was sitting on my YT home Page. saving and making a copy fr personal video libaray Thank you for sharing don't know how much i Appreciate this video here.

  • @DrJMPrieto
    @DrJMPrieto Před 17 dny +2

    such an excellently scripted , illustrated and researched video, well done!

  • @williamashbless7904
    @williamashbless7904 Před 23 dny +8

    Informative and covers a topic rarely touched in general discussion.

  • @mohammedsaysrashid3587
    @mohammedsaysrashid3587 Před 25 dny +10

    Super 👌 wonderful mathematical explanation video of accurate aiming by German tank crews

  • @creightonleerose582
    @creightonleerose582 Před 15 dny +2

    This was/is an extremely well done presentation on an important subject matter usually overlooked by most WW2 armor channels....
    -German gunners, depending on how much TIME they spent, or how long theyd survived/seriously uninjured in that seat, gotten extremely intuitive @ acting extremely >> rapidly >>...
    -In absorbing tons of microdata from the optic, weather, other crewmen, ammo types needed, or on hand, T.C, unique machine, cannon, optical characteristics & scores of variable other factors @ play (As they werent always in the same Panzer everyday due to their own ride being under repairs, they maybe the same model/Ausf tank, but ALL had their very own idiosyncrasies due to previous/current wear or usage, maintenance schedules (Or lack of), prior repairs, un-repaired damage(s) or major parts/component re-fits, etc)
    As was often the case, most non-comm grade gunners who'd achieved a fair amount of time spent in that seat often got promoted to C.O of their very own Panzer, either due to rank, skill &/or T.C attrition rates. In spite of the gunner usually being the C.O's 'Nummer 2 man' I still believe the most important man, or position, held in any tank, even moreso with the WW2 German heavies was the DRIVER....
    -Odd thing too, that most competent C.O's of any Schweres, or even Panthers to a degree, if they had the choice to make, would often draft, or have transferred over, drivers from Assault Guns/StuG' III's IF available. Which seems ODD @ 1st glance considering the difference between tactics via an assault gun & turreted panzer, but considering they HAD to keep thickest armor & cannon to the >> front due to overall design, that together with the ultra -S-L-O-W- turret traverse rotational speed of the T1, even if sitting stationary & engine was @ max RPM's to assist rotational speed, only then does grabbing a former assault gun driver make perfect sense if replacement personnel are needed...(Even if not the usual 'Status-Quo' rules regarding 'proper' personnel transfer within tank battalions, just like wild looking, but completely effective improvised armor adaptations, the Germans got away with a literal shit-ton of non standard practices on the battlefield, as long as the practices WORKED & achieved objectives, or desired results)
    -As depending on ground type/terrain the tank is on, sloughing the entire chassis w/cannon & frontal armor @ 11-1 o clock position to the nearest threat, or target, w/gunner doing the finer gun laying/traverse adjustments, turns out to be MUCH faster, safer for the entire crew, the complicated traverse motor & the continued employment of the expen$ive machine in general (Of which, with the new Tiger 1's, crewmen were oft reminded of several times DAILY in an ad-nauseum manner;). The T1's final drives being planetary arrangement so they could sustain stout twisting/lateral loads, only its tracks & subsequent ground types poss being a track popping/wrenching affair (The reason why some PzAbt's removed the Tiger 1s 1st outer road wheel)
    -Its tranny being incredibly well designed for its day, if a bit fussy @ times, but only as good as the man operating it & his own knowledge base of the overall integrated system(s), its features, faults, limitations, uses & limits. This had only gotten worse with shortened training schedules, emergency transfer, or drafting of fresh, non-specialist crewmen later in the war. The looks on the faces of all those former Luftwaffe & Kriegsmarine personnel when they'd gotten transfer orders to other ground units was probably ALL the SAME?..."!WTF?!"....Ha!
    -The total gleaned wisdom came w/experience, both good & bad, as to properly employing all those varying factors towards continued successful outcomes. Which only worsened as the wars fuel, personnel, material shortages & ever looming closure date was within sight...
    VERY well done vid FB...;)

  • @h.r.puffnstuff8705
    @h.r.puffnstuff8705 Před 21 dnem +3

    A family member literally wrote the book on lens grinding in Germany and published in 1938. I suspect he was employed by Zeis or was a wheel with the company

  • @duniagowes
    @duniagowes Před 24 dny +5

    At last, been waiting for this topic. Thank you. This video deserves more view etc.

    • @FactBytes
      @FactBytes  Před 24 dny +1

      Glad you enjoyed it!

    • @duniagowes
      @duniagowes Před 24 dny

      @@FactBytes I think the optics also played important role in U-boat periscope? How about producing a video about it 😍

  • @LMyrski
    @LMyrski Před 22 dny +6

    Fascinating! Someone should send this to the Chieftain. He keeps knocking German tanks while praising the superior sight arrangements on the Sherman. It seems he doesn't realize that his analysis doesn't take into account the German optic's wider view.

    • @SgtBrendanN
      @SgtBrendanN Před 14 dny

      Yes he does. The distinction NOT mentioned here is that the Sherman had TWO sets of optics. A 1.4 wide view periscope, and a x3 coaxial sight. The Sherman gunner could use the wide view to set the initial sight while in a turret down position, but then move forward. The Shermans gun stabilization would maintain the aiming position until the main gun cleared the cover. The Sherman gunner could then take a quick resight ( knowing that the gun was already aimed towards the target), then fire. The more limited field of view of the x3 optic was offset by the wider field of view of the x1.4. So end result, German optics would outperform Allied optics on flat, open terrain (Kursk). US optics would outperform the Germans in broken terrain (Normandy).

    • @TheChieftainsHatch
      @TheChieftainsHatch Před 9 dny +1

      @@SgtBrendanN This. I make no statements as to the engineering quality of German optics vs those of other nations. That isn't my field, and I've not looked up reports. (Though people more versed than I have certainly challenged the general rule of "German optics were usually better"). My issue is with their functionality. A Panzer or Tiger or Panther gunner cannot see a target if the tank is in a hide position behind a defilade. It doesn't matter what your zoom or field of vision or light transmission percentage is if there's a bush or hill in the way. That is a tank design flaw, entirely separate to what is going on at Zeiss, and why the Germans refused to give their gunners more optics despite every other nation doing so is a question I have not yet found an answer to. Except possibly a shortage of glass: Removing a periscope from the bow gunner when Panther got a new bow MG mount seems churlish unless there's an industrial reason behind it. Worth noting, though, that vision just doesn't seem to have been a thing for German tanks. A US loader has a 340 or so degree field of vision from inside the tank. A German loader? Not so much. German tank sights were fantastic for the accurate firing part of an engagement, but the winner of a fight is usually he who fires first, and for aquisition purposes, German tanks were generally more blind.
      Video also spends a lot of time on the German use of mils (strichs) in their sights, but seems to completely omit that US sights also use mils and did from the very first M3 light tank. For whatever reason, the US one uses 1, 5 and 10mil graduations instead of the 2s and 4s the Germans used. It was hardly a novel concept. I have not looked into the British or Soviet sights to verify their use of mils, but it wouldn't surprise me. The bit about the German gunner having to aim off due to parralax effect was eventually solved by later US reticles having the offset built into the reticle. (The aiming points make a sort of a 'curved line')

  • @jojoanggono3229
    @jojoanggono3229 Před 19 dny +1

    Zeiss Optik in Jena. After WW2, it ended up in East Germany territory. So there is another Zeiss Optik in West Germany. The one in the East is known as Zeiss Jena. I believe their vapour deposition technique was leading edge at that time. It was crucial to produce low light lenses, one with very high light transmission factor.

  • @miroslawkaras7710
    @miroslawkaras7710 Před 24 dny +9

    During WW2 most used periscopic optic on tanks was develop by Polish offcer Gundlah. I was patented in 1936.

    • @joannsissy4768
      @joannsissy4768 Před 20 dny

      What did the Polish kid say when told there's a war:'there's a war where 😂

  • @healer378
    @healer378 Před 20 dny +3

    Finally a video worth watching and learning from. Thank you.

  • @reddevilparatrooper
    @reddevilparatrooper Před 22 dny +3

    Tank gunners needed extensive education and experience when using their optics. During my time as a gunner later as tank commander one of the most important gunnery training is using the GAS sight once properly bore sighted with the main gun using the SABOT and HEAT type ammunition. In the modern world tank crews have used computer generated simulators to train bother commander and gunner combination to train on the GAS for non-tankers is the Gunner Auxiliary Sight which has no magnification but relying on the Mil radiant markings to estimate range and aiming points. Basically almost like using and aiming the emergency optic on the tank if the GPS or Gunners Primary Sight is knocked out during combat.

    • @FactBytes
      @FactBytes  Před 21 dnem

      Thanks for the great insight👍

  • @morstyrannis1951
    @morstyrannis1951 Před 25 dny +19

    An interesting video. There's endless anecdotal evidence of the superiority of German optics. German binoculars were highly valued by Allied sailors and soldiers. Those men obviously had the opportunity to compare the captured equipment with what they were issued.

  • @SmokinLoon5150
    @SmokinLoon5150 Před 17 dny +2

    This is one of the things I ALWAYS bring up in the various "better/best" tanks of WW2 discussions... the Germans had far superior optics in their tanks and guns. When looking through Soviet optics it was like looking through a glass of iced tea. I can't find much data but the Japanese were touted to have excellent optics as well. Mixed in the middle between the pinnacle (Germans) and the bare minimum (Soviets) were the US, British, French, Italians, and everyone else. Binocs, range finders, tank optics, gun topics (Pak, infantry guns, etc). CONTENT CHALLENGE at 07:53. It wasn't the gunner using the tank gun sight that found enemy targets, it was usually the commander using his binocs or range finders. He then called out a bearing, estimated range, and the gunner moved the turret and gun accordingly and hoped to visually identify the target ASAP.

  • @ToddiusMaximus
    @ToddiusMaximus Před 25 dny +11

    Excellent. Thank you for this video

  • @brucepoole8552
    @brucepoole8552 Před 20 dny +2

    My father was 101st airborne, fought in Bastogne, his advice to me as a young man, " if you go into the military, whatever you do, stay out of those gd tanks".

    • @2adamast
      @2adamast Před 19 dny +1

      Then there are statistics and unsurprisingly a tank is a safer place than no tank or a plane.

  • @GarySpeight-cv5sw
    @GarySpeight-cv5sw Před 24 dny +12

    Ziess really took care of their workers too which contributed to a superior product.

    • @BFVsnypEz
      @BFVsnypEz Před 21 dnem +3

      Germany had the world's most efficient and effective economy before and at the start of WW2, with perhaps the greatest Commonwealth/working class ever created. So yes they took care of their workers, that's what happens when you kick the international bankers out of your country and create your own currency and redesign your economy. It proves European countries, (including North America) and working class wealth explodes when the leeches are stripped off our backs.

    • @stevenshea990
      @stevenshea990 Před 20 dny

      Ziess used Jewish and other minority slave labor in their factories during the war. They certainly weren't the worst German company during the war, but they were no Oskar Schindlers

    • @roryhennessey8836
      @roryhennessey8836 Před 20 dny

      ​@@BFVsnypEz I know what you're saying and I agree 100 percent

    • @roryhennessey8836
      @roryhennessey8836 Před 20 dny +1

      That's the benefit of nationalism

  • @rubensrojas
    @rubensrojas Před 19 dny +2

    That was an amazing video! Thank you for the work you put into it!

  • @gregw.335
    @gregw.335 Před 25 dny +8

    Thank you for the interesting vid from Germany!

  • @easygroove
    @easygroove Před 20 dny +2

    Zeiss / Jena (East Germany) NVA Binos are the best Binos i ever had in my Hands during Service.
    Never wanted "Steiner" Binos again...

  • @GeneralGayJay
    @GeneralGayJay Před 20 dny +4

    The allied has stabilisers that is a huge advantage. You don’t have to wait for the vehicle to fully stop.

  • @jeffreymcdonald8267
    @jeffreymcdonald8267 Před 20 dny +2

    Also an interesting topic, the Germans were the only ones who employed optics on their tripod mounted machine guns. Another tremendous advantage.

  • @FindanDandy
    @FindanDandy Před 21 dnem +3

    finally truth about sights and optics

  • @gaborbakos7058
    @gaborbakos7058 Před 19 dny +1

    The pronouncination of Zeiss is about "Tzeis" and the Panzer is "Pantzer"

  • @robert-trading-as-Bob69
    @robert-trading-as-Bob69 Před 11 dny +1

    A good officer wasn't interested in collecting a Luger, but rather the Germans Zeiss binoculars.
    I've read accounts of British tank commanders in North Africa envying their fellow crew commanders who had Zeiss optics, and the search for a pair of their own after a battle.

  • @mussnasir8587
    @mussnasir8587 Před 19 dny +2

    Always wondered on each counteies tank and anti tank optics, this just answered a lot of My qestions....thank you!!

  • @charles2241
    @charles2241 Před 8 dny +1

    Loved seeing these optics. Not sure I've seen anything like this before.

  • @EuropeAryan
    @EuropeAryan Před 25 dny +4

    awesome video, thanks!

  • @Cronoviajero
    @Cronoviajero Před 10 dny +1

    This channel is a jewel. Thanks!

  • @jb-xc4oh
    @jb-xc4oh Před 19 dny +1

    All my Hasselblad lenses are made by Zeiss they are simply amazing..!!

  • @michaelmarshall55
    @michaelmarshall55 Před 25 dny +31

    badly needed article ,as battle accounts over and over make clear that the fewer and weaker germany tanks and anti tank guns, still regularly destroyed opponents tanks from long range before they got into range to fire back - this had to be due to better sights and better layout in the tank for rapid fire

    • @simonthieriot5596
      @simonthieriot5596 Před 23 dny +3

      Also training.

    • @Daniel-du7pv
      @Daniel-du7pv Před 22 dny +2

      German soldiers and doutrine were leaps ahead than their enemies.
      (Also, their motivation, fighting to stop preemptively the invasion of Europe by USSR and the biggest tank army ever assemble together is a really good reason to give your best

    • @DonAbrams-hq7ln
      @DonAbrams-hq7ln Před 22 dny +2

      Problem was the crews became less efficient, used more fuel and range lead to many tanks being captured a ND the crews WALKING BACK TO BERLIN. ERGO
      KRAUT DEFEAT HURRAH FOR MASS PRODUCTION OVER
      Size and technology.

    • @simonthieriot5596
      @simonthieriot5596 Před 22 dny +1

      THE GERMAN PANZER MEN USED TO SAY “DON’T WORRY ABOUT THE RUSSIANS THEY ALWAYS MISS THE 1ST SHOT, WE’RE TRAINED TO NEVER MISS IT”

    • @matovicmmilan
      @matovicmmilan Před 22 dny +2

      ​@@Daniel-du7pv
      What was there for the USSR to invade when Germany itself already invaded & occupied all of Europe?

  • @billwilson-es5yn
    @billwilson-es5yn Před 25 dny +6

    The Germans did use high quality sights in their tanks and AT guns that had to be sent back to the factory for internal cleanings, adjustments and repairs. That caused problems when they started to run short on spare sights to install and the bombing of factories delayed having them serviced and made. American sights were adequate and could be service or rebuilt then adjusted by a tank mechanic out in the field in 30 minutes.

    • @jandoernte3312
      @jandoernte3312 Před 25 dny +9

      Thats one complaint I've never read in all my memoirs and readings? We ran out of zeiss optical sights! It's ok to admit that the german optics were just better. Germans were always tops with optics- till today.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před 25 dny +5

      @jandoernte3312
      Ive never read that German tanks were without sights while they were being sent back to the factory to be cleaned either 😂.
      These Shermanboos are hilarious.

    • @billwilson-es5yn
      @billwilson-es5yn Před 25 dny +2

      @@lyndoncmp5751 They didn't go without sights while waiting for replacements. The gunners learned how to adjust their aim.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Před 25 dny +2

      @@billwilson-es5yn
      What is your source for this claim? And you've contradicted yourself.

  • @user-pr1jg6kl5v
    @user-pr1jg6kl5v Před 25 dny +5

    Rally very detailed, congratulazioni.

  • @robinbrowne5419
    @robinbrowne5419 Před 25 dny +4

    Amazing optics technology 👍

  • @davejohns6694
    @davejohns6694 Před 23 dny +3

    This is a very informative video, it is this sort of information that I am interested in.

  • @chrisgrantham8442
    @chrisgrantham8442 Před 19 dny

    The American Stuart, Grant and Sherman tanks were the first to feature a gun stabilization system in the vertical plane, able to keep the gun barrel from dipping or climbing while crossing uneven ground giving them a limited shoot on the move capability.

  • @zadzad4353
    @zadzad4353 Před 25 dny +2

    Just like Imperial Japanese Navy before the advent off Radar..IJN has very good Gun range optics also their secret early version off NVG range optics for their Gun ranging system..
    But,by 1943 after Allied has perfected the used off radar,IJn starts to loose every Naval battle..

  • @boldrin2219
    @boldrin2219 Před 25 dny +2

    Very very high quality video like always !! If someone could tell me what is the "klink" noise after each tank fired , i assume it is in relation with the barrel or culass or the empty shell , but i'm curious for what is precisely make that noise .

    • @UnderTheBanner
      @UnderTheBanner Před 25 dny +6

      Łuska spada na dno czołgu po wystrzale

    • @heinrichfuchs
      @heinrichfuchs Před 17 dny +1

      Ammo shell dropped to the bottom of tank hull.That make this metallic noise...

  • @geckoquest
    @geckoquest Před 21 dnem +1

    What a Great Upload , no Recycling.

  • @VincentNajger1
    @VincentNajger1 Před 20 dny +8

    I'm already getting really sick of these AI written and narrated vids. InVideo AI will even use appropriate public domain pics and vids now, or make them. You just have to feed it the right prompts. This vid is a bit harder to spot if its entirely AI, but the script certainly seems like it....and the narration def is AI.

  • @AlexHalt100
    @AlexHalt100 Před 19 dny

    Regarding the range calculation:
    it is still used and not based on specific tank models and it is used in binoculars as well. there it is called "Strichplatte".

  • @Ente_Tangente
    @Ente_Tangente Před 19 dny +1

    The Narrator keeps calling them "TZF" when videomaterial says "TFZ"

  • @kandeu4u
    @kandeu4u Před 24 dny +3

    Germany was Most Advanced in many areas!

  • @moss8448
    @moss8448 Před 10 hodinami

    the triangle aiming deal is a lot like stadia which I imagine is the same for WWII subs in calculating distances (along with a recognition chart) remember Ziess being the gold standard in surveying optics then Nikon came along later and was just as good and a whole lot less dollar wise.

  • @Cornel1001
    @Cornel1001 Před 10 dny +1

    The technical cooperation between Berlin and Moscow lasted until June 21, 1941. The CCCP was constantly acquiring military equipment from Germany and Italy. The Soviets paid immediately and quickly. This is how the Blue Cruiser "Taskent" arrived in the Black Sea in 1940, from Italy. Some weapons were bought by the Soviets even though they were under development and untested. You should know that the Red Army already had night vision systems for tanks available since 1939. I am surprised this is not mentioned . Suggesting the optics of KV 1 - 1941 was inferior to a Tiger 2 - 1944 are jokes ! Soviet tanks had very good optics by inception. But not all the tanks were used to hunt other tanks !

  • @amptechron
    @amptechron Před 25 dny +3

    Great analysis!

  • @helloxyz
    @helloxyz Před 19 dny

    Excelent video. Thanks.

  • @antoninbesse795
    @antoninbesse795 Před 20 dny +6

    Is this AI generated content? It’s over long and repetitive and the voiceover pronunciation sounds a bit robotic at times. Just saying. I could be wrong.

    • @2adamast
      @2adamast Před 19 dny +1

      It's a natural suspicion in today's world where AI is becoming more prevalent in content creation. You might have seen it in articles, videos, or even in the voices of virtual assistants.
      The lengthiness and repetition might be a giveaway. AI sometimes struggles to maintain concise and varied writing styles. It might loop back on itself, saying the same thing in slightly different ways. That's where the "over long and repetitive" part comes into play.
      Then there's the voiceover. Sometimes it sounds a bit off, like it's trying too hard to sound human. Those slightly robotic moments give it away.
      But here's the thing: being wrong is absolutely okay. AI technology has come a long way, and it's often hard to tell the difference between human and machine-generated content. Plus, AI is continuously improving. What sounds robotic today might sound human tomorrow.
      So, the next time you find yourself questioning if something is AI-generated, you might just be onto something. But don't worry if you're wrong. After all, AI is all about learning and evolving, just like we do.

    • @DukeExeter
      @DukeExeter Před 18 dny +4

      ​@@2adamastI hope you are just being cheeky cause your response even sounds like an Ai generated answer to his question

    • @LemonHead-sq5ws
      @LemonHead-sq5ws Před 18 dny

      @@2adamastbro write a book or something cuz you lost me after the first sentence 😅

    • @2adamast
      @2adamast Před 18 dny

      @@DukeExeter is indeed a ChatGPT response

  • @MGB-learning
    @MGB-learning Před 24 dny +4

    Great video

  • @Manuelslayor
    @Manuelslayor Před 18 dny

    15:22 now i do not now how true this is but i heared that the t-34 originaly had the best sights of any tank but the production facility for those was relativly close to the frontlines and as such no longer in soviet control shortly after the production of the t-34 began.

  • @zeedesertfox7573
    @zeedesertfox7573 Před 15 dny +1

    Excellent video, but please use variety for the gunfire sounds. The same one again and again is rather grating.

  • @kiliandrilltzsch8272
    @kiliandrilltzsch8272 Před 12 dny +1

    I live in the city where Zeiss originated.

  • @RememberingWW2
    @RememberingWW2 Před 2 dny

    The problem is when the enemy has more tanks than you have shells...

  • @jasonz7788
    @jasonz7788 Před 19 dny +2

    Great job thanks

  • @ulrichkalber9039
    @ulrichkalber9039 Před 7 dny

    Interesting fact: ZEISS JENA was in the GDR after the war, Warsaw pact tanks got sights from there.
    With the collapse of the Warsaw pact and the soviet union that advantage was lost.

  • @shelonnikgrumantov5061
    @shelonnikgrumantov5061 Před 19 dny +2

    Russian optics were particularly bad during WWII - to a substantial degree due to the fact that they had to relocate the respective optics producing factory to the East - where the quality of everything - starting from the sand and ending up with the additional labor force - was inferior.
    One Russian tanker recollected his experience in looking through the optics of a German Tiger knocked out by him a couple of days before: “I was shocked with the quality of a slightly bluish picture allowing to see the details at the distances which would be far beyond the capabilities of the T-34 gunsights”.
    The more respect I have to the Soviet tankers, who, undertrained and otherwise disadvantaged in too many ways against their German counterparts had the outmost courage to fight and eventually to win.

  • @justinthomas85
    @justinthomas85 Před 20 dny

    I'm not a tanker, but now a days, typically the other task would also have a comparable sight. So i don't think you can actually say that it isn't as gritty. Both crews need to have laser focus and really quick reactions. Now if there was an Abrams vs a T34, that's something different.

    • @jonny2954
      @jonny2954 Před 18 dny

      No, Russia and China haven't catched up to the west in optronics. It's not the lenses now but thermal imagers.

  • @kdegraa
    @kdegraa Před 20 dny +1

    Did the anti tank guns get similar gun sights?

  • @touristguy87
    @touristguy87 Před 11 dny

    So...how did you manage to contradict yourself despite starting with a simple subject like gunnery?
    Do you kick yourself often or did this require extreme effort on your part?

  • @videre8884
    @videre8884 Před 19 dny

    In CZcams videos it is common to first explain the beginning of all life, then what a human being is and how it works, then what metal is, etc. until you get to the actual topic of the video after 45 minutes.......

  • @davidhamelech5612
    @davidhamelech5612 Před 23 dny +1

    Though very interesting, hard to listen with all these noises. I dropped in the middle.

  • @Eunegin23
    @Eunegin23 Před 19 dny +1

    As the granddad of my best friend said: we had the better tanks, the Russian tanks were more like tractors but they had a lot.

  • @LeicaM11
    @LeicaM11 Před 21 dnem +2

    Germany had Leitz/Leica, Zeiss, Rollei and Voigtländer. Others had what?

    • @amogusenjoyer
      @amogusenjoyer Před 20 dny

      They had Zeiss too, once they got Germany ;)

    • @jonny2954
      @jonny2954 Před 18 dny

      @@amogusenjoyer Zeiss is still based in Germany. Ironically selling a lot of stuff to the US Military.

    • @amogusenjoyer
      @amogusenjoyer Před 18 dny

      @@jonny2954 ah yes I was referring to immediately after the war haha. But yes Germany is still very good at optics, I work for a corporation that does optics in both Germany and Japan :)

  • @oloflarsson7629
    @oloflarsson7629 Před 9 dny

    The flip side of the coin though, is that post war, every nation (including West Germany) copied the US concept for optical systems for tanks, as the US system (roof mounted maginifying sight, roof mounted non-magnifying sight and a gun mounted magnifying sight as back-up) had shown to be superior to the german system (with only a a gun mounted magnifying sight) in getting the first shot of.

  • @vanroeling2930
    @vanroeling2930 Před 25 dny +2

    German engineering in the house!

  • @HarupertBeagleton-dz5gw

    2:12 "aimed at improving..." lol

  • @fredokigbo2982
    @fredokigbo2982 Před 25 dny +6

    Despite the superior optics,crews, ammo etc..of the Germans it still eventually was a game of numbers and quantity over quality.

    • @robinbrowne5419
      @robinbrowne5419 Před 25 dny +2

      Agreed 👍

    • @matovicmmilan
      @matovicmmilan Před 22 dny +1

      Indeed but in order to benefit from any mass produced piece of equipment, it has to satisfy certain levels of quality. The T-34/76 was an excellent tank in 1941 but by early 1943 it became mediocre and the Red Army high command concluded that they couldn't eternally rely on its mass production.

  • @christophercripps7639
    @christophercripps7639 Před 24 dny +3

    Wasn’t the most important optic the eyeballs and binoculars in the hands of the tank commander. The TC had the widest FOV as he could pan a wider angle and commanded the rank with target location & selection, ammo type and range estimation. Sucked to be crewing a tank with no dedicated TC (T34/76, some Brit tanks, M3 light and virtually all French).
    I seem recall the Sherman had a periscope gun sight and a coaxial sight allowing the Sherman to start an engagement from a turret down position.
    The Zeiss optics sure paid off on the Steppe and Western Desert. But wasn’t the typical range in Western Europe something like 800 yards? Shooting first was to win. And later when the Soviet horde of T-34s, IS-2s, SU & JSU beasts swarmed, quantity had a quality all its own. One old WW II war-game advised the Soviet player if you didn’t lose half your T-34s you were being too timid.

  • @rv_at_the_beach2603
    @rv_at_the_beach2603 Před 20 dny

    The problem with German tank sights is that there weren't enough of them and the tanks using them needed fuel to move.

  • @SA-xf1eb
    @SA-xf1eb Před 16 dny +1

    Very interesting.

  • @paologramigna4916
    @paologramigna4916 Před 22 dny +3

    You failed to explain how the Zeiss gunsight worked to set the superelevation, which was its most critical advantage. Other sights did not have this possibility.

  • @johnhopkins6260
    @johnhopkins6260 Před 24 dny

    vs. the Norden Bombsight?

  • @LLiivveeeevviiLL
    @LLiivveeeevviiLL Před 19 dny +2

    A lot of the success of the StuG III came from superior optics, compared to German tanks (Gunner both 4x panoramic and 5x gun sight and commander 10x scissor optics). That along with many of the crews coming from the artillery branch, being accustomed to a tactic which meant engagement in the distance, which the optics and the gun allowed up to the later part of the war.

  • @cristianchelba4621
    @cristianchelba4621 Před 17 dny +1

    Germans good AT optics,waw,who knew?

  • @aleksankazakov
    @aleksankazakov Před 18 dny +1

    In todays World War, it doesnt matter what tank you are in, What matters is that it can shoot shells because regardless if its any modern or futuristic tank it will be taken out either with a precision guided artillery or a drone or a mine and if that does not suit it there are many other ways it gets put out of service with entire crew. The 70-90s era is over , nothing is superior or invincible at this point. The Hollywood movie just ended.

  • @HiTechOilCo
    @HiTechOilCo Před 21 dnem +1

    15:35 - "Compared to their Soviet and allied counterparts"? The U.S.A., England and the Soviet Union were all allied.

    • @1996Horst
      @1996Horst Před 21 dnem

      Yes but the phrase is "Soviet and Allied counterparts"
      The US England and France where part of the "Alllies" this group was allied to the soviets during the war. The Germans were at war with the allies and the soviets.