Sherman Firefly

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  • čas přidán 6. 09. 2024
  • De vrijwilligers van het Belgisch Tankmuseum vervangen de kettingen van hun Sherman Firefly

Komentáře • 835

  • @taofledermaus
    @taofledermaus Před 7 lety +61

    Somehow, no one lost any body parts in the process.

    • @randymagnum143
      @randymagnum143 Před 6 lety +1

      TAOFLEDERMAUS, I'll bet someone lost their ass paying for those tracks! Or at least an arm and a leg!

    • @kentvesser9484
      @kentvesser9484 Před 3 lety +2

      Yeah, that whole process looks like it was just meant to take fingers and hands away. I wonder if they are former military tank mechanics or just volunteers that are mechanical. I wonder if this was this hard or time consuming for a WWII era tank crew and their mechanics to swap out an entire track or break it and replace several links?

    • @gerbandnl
      @gerbandnl Před 3 lety +2

      @@kentvesser9484 they are belgians and as a dutchman that says enough

    • @49BigPoppa
      @49BigPoppa Před 2 lety +4

      I assume you send off the old tracks to get re-rubbered

    • @khancrow7015
      @khancrow7015 Před rokem +2

      They are not unsafe I am not sure what you are whining about. Thousands of soldiers did the same procedure during war time in dirt/sand and mud....

  • @xwolfenx
    @xwolfenx Před rokem +15

    its amazing to learn how these tracks are changed... i am grateful to see this sherman kept alive and well taken care of... thanks to the crew!!

  • @jduff59
    @jduff59 Před 6 lety +10

    There was something very satisfying about seeing these gentlemen keeping history alive. It's a noble cause and thank God there are folks still interested in this kind of endeavour. WWII tanks still fascinate so many people, history buffs and just regular folks who like machines.

  • @michaelking3327
    @michaelking3327 Před 5 lety +9

    i've replaced tracks similar to this myself, and i can say, they done it the hardest way possible, you open the track, put in a follower link ( a modified link that is very easily removed because it has extra play) then hook the follower link to the new track, jack up the tank and pull the new track on using the old track. simple and quick. takes about 1 hour per track

  • @colincrispin7239
    @colincrispin7239 Před 6 lety +1

    My wife’s father was a gunner in a Sherman Tank, so this to us is a real treat to watch. Thanks.

    • @dukecraig2402
      @dukecraig2402 Před 6 lety

      I can assure you that stuff is no treat to do.

  • @MrMichaelpaul45
    @MrMichaelpaul45 Před 5 lety +10

    Thank you for showing this it just goes to show how much hard work goes into taking off and putting on new tracks, not a easy job but well done guys.

  • @5eugenic1
    @5eugenic1 Před 11 lety +12

    This 17 Pounder tank helped save the Allies. Thank you for the upload.

  • @cameronminke8588
    @cameronminke8588 Před 9 lety +255

    perfect,now i know how to change my tank tracks

    • @mglmouser
      @mglmouser Před 6 lety +4

      Seems to me it would have been a heck of a lot easier to lay the new track, face up, in front of the tank, cut the old track in front of the tank, tie new to old and back the tank to roll the new track around the whole wheel assembly.

    • @padfoot1178
      @padfoot1178 Před 6 lety

      mglmouser they may have needed to replace or repair the road wheels or the drive wheels which can’t be done when the tracks are on

    • @ryangrimm9305
      @ryangrimm9305 Před 5 lety

      IIRC the only time they had to break the track was to replace the drive sprockets or the idler at the rear.
      They'd just jack the road wheel axles, as needed, to replace those.

    • @ryangrimm9305
      @ryangrimm9305 Před 5 lety +2

      NO YOU DON'T, lol...you should attach the new track to the old, and that solves the problem of getting the new one(s) on, 99% of the time.
      Another thing they should have done was open the track clamp up all the way, to make it easier to hook onto the NEXT track clamp away from the join section. When you pull the track ends together, it gives you much more room to move the last set of track pins around as you need to, and apply the track joiners and clamp bolts.
      These guys did pretty much everything the hard way...on the second track, did you see the guy with the hammer whacking the idler lift cam wrench (the big mother) and damaging the lifting strap? That strap is now TOAST for serious lifts.....

    • @Arturas1244
      @Arturas1244 Před 5 lety +1

      i dont think they love it. Just tracks needs to be replaced end of story

  • @luisgeteme
    @luisgeteme Před 9 lety +99

    I am a mexican engineer, all my life I've wanted to work with tanks like Sherman, Hellcat, T-34 and panzers, they have the best job in the world, they do a big work.
    Congratulations

    • @davidjacobs8558
      @davidjacobs8558 Před 6 lety +1

      Don't Mexican Army have tanks? you can work for companies that maintains tanks for Mexican Army.

    • @JakalLov3
      @JakalLov3 Před 5 lety +3

      mexico does not have an mbt

    • @davidjacobs8558
      @davidjacobs8558 Před 5 lety +1

      MBT maintenance in South Korea
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    • @corydodge2881
      @corydodge2881 Před 5 lety +1

      I hear North Korea is looking for engineers.?

    • @dukeofmecklenburg-strelitz8030
      @dukeofmecklenburg-strelitz8030 Před 5 lety

      Paraguay still has M3 stuarts,and M4 Shermans in service...Uruguay still has M24 Chaffees

  • @sabledriver
    @sabledriver Před 5 lety +3

    Makes my back hurt just watching! Keep history alive, good job.

  • @StonyRC
    @StonyRC Před 10 lety +6

    Fantastic video - it's wonderful to see so much care being taken of a historic machine. Bravo to you and all your volunteer colleagues. I MUST come to Belgium to see the museum.

  • @scottc977
    @scottc977 Před 4 lety +2

    Ah yes, I see it is. What a wonderful job you all have done. The exhibits are amazing.

  • @edmundcharles5278
    @edmundcharles5278 Před 10 lety +4

    Tough, back-breaking work! Imagine doing this under field conditions! Vehicle track mechanics were some of the biggest guys that I saw in the Army, they had to be tough, strong and possess high endurance.

  • @BobandBear1
    @BobandBear1 Před 11 lety +2

    He talked quite a bit about his experiences. We went over to Holland / Germany in 1991. Found the graves of 4 crew in the Reichwald cemetery from an action he was involved in. That's a moment I will never ever forget. His tank was stuck in a small copse and pounded all night by "stonk" everything was blown off the back of the tank by the morning. There's a well used photo of a Sherman called "Shaggy Dog" with a Firefly in the background.Pretty sure the old man is driving. A rare breed !!

  • @boomerdiorama
    @boomerdiorama Před 5 lety +3

    This video demonstrates why so many armored vehicles were abandoned in the field. Imagine all the non-combat related hand injuries as well for the tank mechanics during the war.

  • @tomw377
    @tomw377 Před 9 lety +45

    The Firefly was an up-gunned built and operated by the British. The breach of its 17-pounder main gun was so large that the radio had to be re-positioned outside the turret. That is the big box attached to the rear of the turret. The 17-pounder was one of the few Allied guns that could effectively destroy the German Panther and Tiger tanks. It was an EXCELLENT gun with tremendous stopping power, although its range fell off fairly dramatically at around 1,700 - 2,000(?) yards or so.
    The British could never manufacture the Firefly in sufficient numbers, so it was most often used in a tank destroyer role. There might be 1-2 Fireflys attached to a British tank company. Contrary to popular belief, not every German tank was a Panther or Tiger. Many/most were the regular Mark IV tank that be could defeated by a regular Sherman or Cromwell. But when a heavier German tank was encountered the Firefly TD would be called into action to deal with it.

    • @Akm72
      @Akm72 Před 9 lety +5

      Tom W "There might be 1-2 Fireflys attached to a British tank company"
      Not quite; it was 1 (later 2) Fireflies equipping every Sherman and Cromwell tank troop (platoon equivalent) from June '44 onward. This means that 1 in 4 tanks in the front-line of Sherman and Cromwell Regiments were Fireflies, not counting the HQ units. By the end of 1944, this had increased to 2 in 4, though by that time the Cromwell units had replaced their Fireflies with (A30) Challenger tanks.
      The Churchill regiments weren't equipped with Fireflies but, as I understand it, they tended to be supported by Achilles tank destroyer units if German Panzers were in the area.
      In total, between December 1943 and May 1945, the UK built between 4000 and 5000 tanks and tank destroyers equipped with the QF 17 pdr (including its little brother, the QF 77mm)*. While these numbers aren't earth shattering, they're not that bad either.
      *This includes the Sherman firefly, the Achilles & Archer tank destroyers, the Challenger tank and the Comet tank.

    • @LeonUK
      @LeonUK Před 9 lety +2

      Tom W Sherman Fireflys where snipers, 1500 is good for all tanks 2000 is like a Tank sniper

    • @jp-um2fr
      @jp-um2fr Před 6 lety +5

      The QF 17 pounder was adapted from a British anti aircraft gun that could fire to 30,000 feet. Effective range 6.5 miles. They were without a doubt the best tank gun the allies had during WW2 being capable of going through the front glacis plate of a Tiger at up to 1200 yards.

    • @ChristophorosSokrates
      @ChristophorosSokrates Před 6 lety +1

      or Mark 3

    • @ricardosoto5770
      @ricardosoto5770 Před 5 lety +1

      The firefly was used mostly in a overwatch role. The 3 regular 75mm advanced and they the Firefly from a concealed position waited for the enemy to show up. Then the Firefly provided with long range AT fire.

  • @MarsFKA
    @MarsFKA Před 4 lety

    My father was a Sherman tank commander in the New Zealand Division in Italy, 1944/45. This would have brought back memories for him.

  • @reconmodelsvaughn469
    @reconmodelsvaughn469 Před 5 lety +7

    I wish we could get a English interpretation the videos are amazing. You're work on the restoration is some of the best I've ever seen. I would love to visit you guys .

    • @privaloffmagic
      @privaloffmagic Před rokem

      what do you say to that
      czcams.com/video/ZCx0O301DeE/video.html

  • @motoclonkdribblehead5423

    This is how to make a simple job look hard. All you needed to do is link the old to the new and use the drive to pull the new track on as has been said, I am sure before. Just like changing a motorcycle chain. Its a good job you weren't under fire in combat.

  • @fam.dezinger9244
    @fam.dezinger9244 Před 8 lety +1

    Interessant om te zien hoe dat in zijn werk gaat. Heb ooit zelf een Sherman zien rijden tijdens Nuts in Bastogne, jaren geleden. Thanks!

  • @h2energynow
    @h2energynow Před 6 lety +2

    Amazing difficult job, that through most jobs learned by trial and error, but succeeded in the end. Great work!

  • @joaocarlos6477
    @joaocarlos6477 Před 5 lety +3

    i have been in the army and honestly I have never seen anyone changing a track this way!!!!

  • @BobandBear1
    @BobandBear1 Před 11 lety

    My "Old Man" drove a Firefly during the war with the 4/7th Royal Dragoon Guards. He's 93 now. Will have to show him this one........no doubt he will have something to say !!. Fascinating, hard to imagine having to do that in the "field".Would love to visit and see her running...Great vid !

  • @jgarner1104
    @jgarner1104 Před 4 lety +1

    This makes me appreciate all those times in my youth when I had track chains to guide that new track along instead of almost losing a hand using a tankers bar to guide.

  • @Kohl423
    @Kohl423 Před 9 lety +6

    On the rare occasions that Firefly crews were properly trained in the best use of that tank/weapon it was a killer. It could knock out any German tank and the German army placed a priority on destroying a Firefly BEFORE taking on any other vehicles. One ex Panzer commander regarded the 17pdr as the British 88 and had no doubts about how dangerous this weapon was in the anti tank role.

    • @ricardosoto5770
      @ricardosoto5770 Před 5 lety +3

      Actually the 17 pounder has better AT penetration figures that the 88/56 of the Tiger I and sighty worse of the 88/71 of Tiger II. All in a gun that weight half of a 88 and could be mounted on mediun tanks. A lot of bang for the weight.

  • @julianhumphries995
    @julianhumphries995 Před 6 lety +2

    Did this job on Chieftain several times no power tools and just the crew of four. The forklift delivered the track in sections of six as that was about all we could lift off the pallet between us. The new track was laid out directly in front of the wagon getting harder and harder to lug the links further and further from the drop off point. Once the new track was on we had to split the old into sections of six and load it back on the pallet for the QMs fork lift or Eager Beaver ( yes that really was a thing) all in one day. Back breaking finger wrecking work. 15/19th Hussars

    • @williamcarrington3474
      @williamcarrington3474 Před 6 lety

      Julian Humphries , the last thing l ever wanted to be was a tank mech , in 1961 . Much to everyones surprise , l volunteered to do the Para . course . Getting away from 7 th Armd. Fallingbostel was worth it . Left 16 Para in 1977 from 3 Para Osnabruck . Best wishes to you and yours .

  • @merlin5by533
    @merlin5by533 Před 5 lety +3

    What's amazing to think about is Tank Mechanics doing this in the Field, during the War, and in the Rain and Mud.

    • @70ixlr86
      @70ixlr86 Před 2 lety

      In a life or death situation with eminent threats, they had to have a smoother progression for sure. I would hope!

  • @Surv1ve_Thrive
    @Surv1ve_Thrive Před 8 lety

    thanks Franz. lots of comments on other ways to do this, but you did it and it looks ready for duty again now with its new boots on. maybe I will visit this winter if open when I am back that way for work. Greeting from sunny Kent in England. All the best sir.

  • @HYPNOTICVIDEO
    @HYPNOTICVIDEO Před 9 lety +1

    You guys are amazing hard working and dedicated..

  • @jaybluff281
    @jaybluff281 Před 9 lety +18

    The perfectionist in me can't help point out they've put Ford and Fisher drive sprockets on a Chrysler built tank, but that takes nothing away from an excellent restoration.

    • @TacticalOni
      @TacticalOni Před 9 lety +4

      +Jay Bluff You there! Here's your rivet counter award for the day! :P

    • @kerbalaerospacelabs3445
      @kerbalaerospacelabs3445 Před 6 lety +1

      Jay Bluff it was probably like that when they got it thanks to the ease of maintenance compared to other vehicles of the time. Common practice during the war was to replace the entire transmission and final drive assembly if there were issues with it. The procedure would take about two hours.

    • @rcdogmanduh4440
      @rcdogmanduh4440 Před 6 lety

      @the machinist He put Henry Ford on the map, Johanson that is!

    • @jefftheriault7260
      @jefftheriault7260 Před 5 lety

      Likely happened in the field anyway.

    • @Framlife351
      @Framlife351 Před rokem

      Chrysler multi bank engine in it?

  • @anno.nym.faceless
    @anno.nym.faceless Před 9 lety +1

    Jullie doen geweldig werk, prachtig exemplaar. En dan ook nog eens een Firely!
    Mooi filmpje!
    Groeten uit Noord Nederland

  • @nceaida4436
    @nceaida4436 Před 6 lety +2

    When I was a child, I liked making plastic model of this tank very much, from Tokyo

  • @fireshorts5789
    @fireshorts5789 Před 10 lety

    Great video. Never seen one on the tracks being changed before. Thanks very much.

  • @patrickwentz8413
    @patrickwentz8413 Před 6 lety +2

    Ah yes,​ breaking track! Lots of fun! At least you are not doing it in the mud, rain or snow! Interesting that the bow gun was welded over on that model of the Sherman.

    • @moonbod8623
      @moonbod8623 Před 3 lety

      All fireflies are like that. They used the bow gunners place for storing extra ammunition as the shells were so large.

  • @philstaples8122
    @philstaples8122 Před 5 lety

    Having served in a tank regiment and changed lots of tracks both on a good surface like the one they had or in the field, you don't do it like that. You use the track rope connected to the track, wrapped around the drive sprocket a few times and then looped over a sprocket horn to wind the track on, you also line the new track up with the old so you can drive straight onto it. I've changed both tracks on the Cheiftain and Challenger 1 tanks including joining up all the new sections and breaking down and pelleting up the old track in under two hours with the only use of a forklift to drop of the pelleted up new track sections and remove the old ones. Mind you they were old guys and maybe hadn't done this before or not for a very long time so they did ok, no one lost any limbs or fingers anyway.....

    • @cf6282
      @cf6282 Před 4 lety

      Phil Staples They are volunteers doing this work. But they say it is a museum restoring these tanks. They might have checked with a professional like you. Looking atbthe V shape of the rubber, I eeven think the put them on the wrong way. Am I correct?

  • @mikecimerian6913
    @mikecimerian6913 Před 10 lety +7

    Looks better than it was when out of the factory during the war :-)

    • @bluemarshall6180
      @bluemarshall6180 Před 5 lety

      This Germans are Good. 😄😄😄😄😄😄

    • @ArenBerberian
      @ArenBerberian Před 5 lety +2

      @@bluemarshall6180 Pretty sure they are dutch.

  • @larryg.9187
    @larryg.9187 Před rokem

    ..... I've changed tracks on M60-A1 tanks ... I did three of the four positions, as a crew member... All but tank commander... Jan '72 - Dec '74 ... AIT was in Fort Knox... Got sent to Bamberg Germany in the 2/2 Armored Cavalry Regiment, H-Co, tank H-34 ...
    We did Border duty and patrol near Colberg, watching East German troops, as they watched us ...
    ... Wasn't until later in life, that I realized, those were the best years of my life ..... Toujours Pret 🇺🇸 🪖

  • @battlecat4791
    @battlecat4791 Před 4 lety +17

    last translation: "hey guys, we put it on backwards"

  • @Rickster5176
    @Rickster5176 Před 9 lety +4

    I can't imagine doing this in the field. I'll bet they had a lot of special tools for this operation back in the day.

    • @kentvesser9484
      @kentvesser9484 Před 3 lety

      Or maybe they just did it more often and got better at doing it from repetition. The tools look pretty standard based on things that Chieftain has discussed on his channel some regarding tank maintenance with the bars, wrenches, and sockets. Though maybe this was as time consuming as this shows. It's hard to imagine a crew in the field doing this at all on a timely enough basis that they don't become a sitting duck standing around a disabled tank that some artillerist or tanker isn't going to start trying to kill it from a distance if some infantryman reports a disable tank waiting to be wrecked. I'd guess much of the time you didn't work on a tank until your own infantry had cleared anything in the area that is in visual range.

  • @AndyHeim
    @AndyHeim Před rokem +1

    Excellent video!

  • @keepsake327
    @keepsake327 Před 10 lety +2

    Nice new set of tires for that Firefly :)

  • @StanTheObserver-lo8rx
    @StanTheObserver-lo8rx Před 4 lety

    Veddy Interesting.....
    First time I've ever seen tracks up close. Good job.

  • @Jazzglenn
    @Jazzglenn Před 11 lety

    I read a book about about that mysterious camouflage on the barrel on the firefly, its to conceal its distinctive signature of the over-extended barrel of the 17 pounder gun mount. German tank commanders used to focus more on the fireflies since they're the most potent tank killers that the Allies on the north have at the moment. Even at the game CoH I love them fireflies. Love them dearly

  • @MikesMovies
    @MikesMovies Před 9 lety +4

    what a fascinating video and process, One wonders how such a complex things was done in the field in battle!

    • @jefftheriault7260
      @jefftheriault7260 Před 5 lety

      Well, it wasn't done IN battle.

    • @ryangrimm9305
      @ryangrimm9305 Před 5 lety

      It was usually dragged away, and temporarily fixed at a forward repair point.
      If it was just a broken track joiner or shot-away link, they carried spares on the tanks for field fixes....providing they weren't being SHOT at during the moment.

  • @geoffdearth8575
    @geoffdearth8575 Před 6 lety +1

    It gives you some appreciation of what it must have been like in wartime.

  • @offworldatom8850
    @offworldatom8850 Před 3 lety

    My Favourite Tank! 👍😁👍

  • @philippejarbinet6095
    @philippejarbinet6095 Před 10 lety +3

    Wonderful, Frans ! I've got a great passion for WWII, specially in Bastogne. I'm the author of AIRBORNE 44 comic strip and your 2 videos are very interesting. I shared one of mine, in HD, made on 14 et 15 december 2013. You'll find it under tags "Nuts Days 2013", "Jarbinet". However, yours are most acute and it's a pleasure to learn how lives a Sherman in a garage ;-).
    Thanks a lot.
    Philippe

    • @TheHawk1202
      @TheHawk1202 Před 5 lety

      Je crois que j'ai lu une de tes BD.

  • @jaymac7203
    @jaymac7203 Před rokem +1

    Great problem solving on the fly. They are effectively relearning old skills employed by mechanics of Wartime 1940's.

  • @olesleepy6633
    @olesleepy6633 Před 9 lety +2

    The 17 pounder was the only Allied gun landed on "D day" that could penetrate front armor of the Panther and Tiger 1 from 1,000 yards or less, on Aug 1944 the U.S. Army tested both the Brit 17 lbs and the 76mm guns on three capture Panthers outside Paris, the Brit 17 lbs penetrated all three Panthers, the U.S. 76mm failed to penetrate any of the three

    • @ricardosoto5770
      @ricardosoto5770 Před 5 lety

      Ike even made a comment on that. Saying he was mislead about the 76mm performance by them.

  • @WorldEagleKW
    @WorldEagleKW Před 6 lety +2

    I have never done track replacement myself, and it’s a great video and a good crew. But in my humble opinion they should have hooked up the rope and rolled the end of the track onto the last wheel and start pulling the rope to make the track go over the support wheels on top as soon as the tank clears the old track, instead of waiting for the tank to reach the end of the new track and try to reverse it to use the sprocket wheel to get the track on.

  • @fancyjoltik6259
    @fancyjoltik6259 Před 9 lety +4

    I love how the British were able to turn the Sherman- a entry-level medium tank only fit to fight Panzer IVs, and turned it into a deadly tank destroyer.
    The American's best version of the Sherman was the Jumbo with the 76mm, something that could take a few hits and do a lot of damage, but not as much as the 17-pounder

    • @firepower7017
      @firepower7017 Před 7 lety +1

      Fancy Joltik what about the M4a3e8

    • @slavvodkaman9359
      @slavvodkaman9359 Před 6 lety

      Fire Power701 i think he forgot to say

    • @Fast85FoxGT
      @Fast85FoxGT Před 6 lety

      The differences we're minimal actually. There wasn't much a 17 pounder could do that a 76mm m1 couldn't... Hence why the US chose not to use them

  • @myholm
    @myholm Před 5 lety +2

    And....no fingers were lost...amazing

  • @ZnenTitan
    @ZnenTitan Před 10 lety +8

    They seem to have gotten the track replacement technique down by the second one. Like anything else, the more you do it the fast and better you get.

  • @rbovenzi
    @rbovenzi Před 6 lety

    Thank you for making this video, it is very interesting indeed. Fantastic effort.

  • @1339LARS
    @1339LARS Před 9 lety

    Smooth and subtle, a good wack makes everything working !

    • @ryangrimm9305
      @ryangrimm9305 Před 5 lety

      Like the watch maker said, don't force it, use a larger hammer.
      Incidentally, largest I've ever used weighed 50 pounds......great for whacking.

  • @DeltaSoldier121
    @DeltaSoldier121 Před 6 lety

    looks like they waited too late to use the rope trick, if they had started to use it just after the last bogie wheel on the rear it would have worked out better I think. You could also do it in reverse using the drive sprocket to pull the track on while a few guys tug on it with a rope to keep it from binding. but man its always nice to see these old tanks running. thanks for the vid.

  • @GunsNRoosendael
    @GunsNRoosendael Před 10 lety

    wauw dit is geweldig... en dan nog op eigen bodem! :) ik zou het uitermate geweldig vinden om dit een in het echt mee te maken, of hieraan te helpen! ;)

    • @FransGeens
      @FransGeens  Před 10 lety +1

      Dat kan door lid te worden van de vzw Tankmuseum, meer info op www.belgian-tankmuseum.be/index.php/nl/

    • @GunsNRoosendael
      @GunsNRoosendael Před 10 lety

      ik zal zeker eens een kijkje nemen! dank voor de info

  • @tvnshack
    @tvnshack Před 8 lety

    Excellent ! Thanks for posting.

  • @1339LARS
    @1339LARS Před 8 lety

    There´s not much left on the rubberblocks, but there a overhauled ones ! And had I waited long enough I´d seen them !!

  • @TheBritishLegions
    @TheBritishLegions Před 10 lety

    This is fantastic! I so want to visit this place!

  • @granskare
    @granskare Před 10 lety

    the us army could have had the firefly system but it was the old not made here philosophy that presented that.
    I like the way these guys are working out things here.

    • @peterson7082
      @peterson7082 Před 8 lety

      The gun was too big and slow loading our M1 76mm gun did the job fine

  • @deadfreightwest5956
    @deadfreightwest5956 Před 4 lety +5

    Neat work, but around here, I just take my Sherman to Discount Tire. Free balancing, and they rotate the tracks every 8K miles for free, lol
    16:36 - Ooh, don't drag chains or slings!

  • @sappersteve1443
    @sappersteve1443 Před 10 lety +11

    They made a bit of a pigs ear changing the tracks,but it looked liked they have never done it before,so credit due where it belongs! I bet all the old tankies watching were cringing?

  • @emdae921
    @emdae921 Před 5 lety +1

    I think its awesome to watch maintenance on old tanks! But how these men did this job with no gloves is beyond me haha

  • @stephenthomson2196
    @stephenthomson2196 Před 6 lety

    we attached the new track to the old and used the front drive sprockets to pull it back on simples, they doing it the wrong way around

  • @stuarthamilton5112
    @stuarthamilton5112 Před rokem

    Their mistake was allowing the road wheels to fall off the tread. They should've pulled the new tread right up to the end of the old one, would've made the process a lot easier. And, they should've used to drive sprocket to lift the new tread into place instead of pulling it from the back. A couple guys lift the end of the tread over the sprocket so the teeth engage, and kick it into reverse. It would've pulled the tread up and they could've used some shims to guide it over the return rollers, all the way back, and attach the ends.
    They did this the hardest way possible.

  • @Shaver755
    @Shaver755 Před 4 lety

    One hell of an alignment job!

  • @paulrichards2713
    @paulrichards2713 Před 5 lety +5

    I laughed so hard, have changed tracks on tanks , heavy equipment many times with only two guys .

    • @oldundead
      @oldundead Před 4 lety

      New tanks?

    • @user-xh2ip6bv2w
      @user-xh2ip6bv2w Před 4 lety +1

      I agree with you. A lot of unnecessary movements. It could have been done faster and easier. I think so. And in General-a decent job. Good luck!!

  • @zaapa311
    @zaapa311 Před 9 lety

    clearly, those guys haven't servrd in the armored forces.
    nice job.

  • @notyou6950
    @notyou6950 Před 4 lety

    Tracks.
    The best thing on the Sherman.

  • @DCHZS
    @DCHZS Před 9 lety +38

    Theres definitely a lot of trial and error in this video. Changing track on modern American tanks today is still very similar!
    When they lined-up the new right-side track in front of the old, and drove forward on to the new track, they ran into problems. They tried wood blocks; however, the easiest way is to align the new and old tracks as closely as possible, as if they were a single, continuous track. Then, just drive foward onto the new track.

    • @jansolo55
      @jansolo55 Před 6 lety

      Nice restoration . But German engineering of wheels, sprockets and caterpillars were very much better ... At 11' , not the same caterpillar on right and left side 😉

    • @Uts9000
      @Uts9000 Před 6 lety +2

      just a question, why not use the old track to pull the new track into position?

    • @UPTHETOWN
      @UPTHETOWN Před 5 lety

      @@Uts9000 Exactly

    • @UPTHETOWN
      @UPTHETOWN Před 5 lety

      @@jansolo55 Later WWII German tanks were very much over engineered in the suspension, try changing a wheel bearing on a Tiger or Panther, VVSS were much easier to maintain, T34 even simpler

    • @jansolo55
      @jansolo55 Před 5 lety

      @@UPTHETOWN thankfully !! because Tiger tanks 1 and 2 were much heavier and less easy to move than Sherman 😉
      T34 was a very simply, light and powerful machine . German engineers have studied on the T34 to design their Panther...

  • @haloreachlover99
    @haloreachlover99 Před 8 lety

    Heh, just a US tank with a British anti tank gun in place of the stub cannon it normally used, these were taken more seriously as a threat then the standard Sherman by the panther and tank destroyers as they could actually penetrate their armor at long range.

  • @Roadghost88
    @Roadghost88 Před 5 lety

    Didn't know they made replacement tracks for old Shermans. Of course they made fifty thousand of them so there might be an aftermarket, even after 1/3 of them were blown to bits by Tigers.

  • @andresmaidana4606
    @andresmaidana4606 Před 4 lety +3

    invaluable!!!

  • @petercofrancesco1620
    @petercofrancesco1620 Před 2 lety +1

    Are those tracks World War II , Japanese or Israeli replacement , or total reproduction new ? Great Video !

  • @highwatercircutrider
    @highwatercircutrider Před 9 lety

    Good video, However, It is Extremely dangerous to put blocking material on top of a jack! Always "crib" a jack up to the object to be lifted/moved. Trust me on this, 35 years as a house mover, Gary

  • @Legendarychannel3
    @Legendarychannel3 Před 3 lety +2

    잠시 멍때리고 차마시며 보면 좋은 영상 ㅋ 꽉 조여진 나사하나 풀려고 고무망치로 때릴줄알았는데 나사의 기름칠하고 나무토막끼워 유압기중기로 살며시풀고 또 다른 나사안빠져 절단하고 인간의 지능이란 참..
    탱크가 새로운 괘도에 올라탈때 잘 안끼워져 여러시도를 하는것이 인상적임ㅋ 그런데 한짝끼우고 다시 한짝 키우구나 또 어느나라든 아저씨들 맨손으로 작업하네ㅎㅎ;

  • @richaroodledoodle
    @richaroodledoodle Před 9 lety +4

    I can't imagine what it must of been like to have to work on a tank out in the field while a war was going on.

    • @davidfusco6600
      @davidfusco6600 Před 3 lety

      My dad was in a M4. In the last days of the war, they were spearheading through Germany just to gain real estate. Dads tank threw a track, there was no time for repairs, so his tank was pushed off the road to let the column past. The crew stayed with the tank, trying to put the track back on, to no avail. They were able to ride the track like you see in this video. Don’t forget, there was still a war going on. Once off the road and in the woods they used tree branches to camouflage the tank. They stayed on the radio, and alternated between calling for help, and listening to Axis Sally. First, they ran out of gas, running the motor to keep the battery charged, then they killed the battery. They waited for days. Sometime during this, 3 Germans appeared, with hand up, wanting to surrender. Everybody grabbed their weapons, somebody climbed up into the ring mount and trained the .50 cal on the Germans. My dad defused the situation by suggesting that instead of shooting first, they just take their rings and watches, and tell them to keep walking west with their hands up until they reached more Americans. Dad did say that they kept seeing P-47’s flying overhead. On the third day, their lieutenant pulled up in a Jeep, demanding to know, where the hell were you? To which they replied, where the hell were YOU? It turns out the P-47’s were searching for the lost tank, but it was camouflaged, their captain had already written missing in action letters to their families, but hadn’t yet sent it.

    • @richaroodledoodle
      @richaroodledoodle Před 3 lety

      A lot of things could have happened while they were trying to fix the tank. Enemy snipers and friendly fire from the P-47's I'm sure was on their minds . Hard to focus on repairing the tank when a war is going on all around you . Lucky for you he got through it alright or you wouldn't be here today

  • @thejudge-kv2jk
    @thejudge-kv2jk Před 6 lety

    I like the camo on the barrel making it look like a standard 76mm.

  • @1961ruud09
    @1961ruud09 Před 7 lety

    Mooi om te zien......even wat anders dan een fietsketting!

  • @scoutcar100
    @scoutcar100 Před 5 lety

    I'm a ex tankie on chieftain and challenger main battle tanks yes they got there in the end but they made hard work of that

  • @majorsiwy_
    @majorsiwy_ Před 5 lety

    1 dzień świąt, a ja oglądam jak ściągają z szermana gąsienicę.

  • @AlainLePape
    @AlainLePape Před 8 lety

    Great work. Hope to see Little John at the next Tanks in Town.

    • @FransGeens
      @FransGeens  Před 8 lety

      +Alain Le Pape That is a decission for the Belgian Military Museum, but if not, You can find him at Bastogne, ... Heinz Baracks.

    • @AlainLePape
      @AlainLePape Před 8 lety

      +Frans Geens Thanks for the answer!

  • @nikko5354
    @nikko5354 Před 5 lety

    The video was good.! but guys you spent a lot of time moving the tank back and fort. i myself change tracks on dozers. you just clip the new boots to the old one and let the sprocket pull it you can also do the replacement on both sprocket at the same time.I know that you are being cautious not to damage the tank you have my respect for that. I hope you find my comment as an advice not an insult.

  • @memikell
    @memikell Před 9 lety +7

    Try this in the field, four guys, a new track and no power tools or other vehicles to help. This crew got it done but sort of backwards, break the track using track jacks, run the tank off the track and back it onto the new track using the sprocket to pull it on. Not a lot of fun but a good crew can get it done in less than two hours.

  • @ErichLudendorff739
    @ErichLudendorff739 Před 3 lety

    I love this video!

  • @billhanson4921
    @billhanson4921 Před 6 lety

    gotta agree connect the new to the old, drive it forward onto the new let the old come round until its all off then disconnect... no pissballing around job done. Bet an old tanker would tell them that! pull the old track off forward with the fork life that way it pulls the new track on at the same time.

    • @FransGeens
      @FransGeens  Před 6 lety

      I am also a old tanker, but, to do it that way You need the place, two track lenght minimum.

    • @billhanson4921
      @billhanson4921 Před 6 lety

      ok i bow to your wisdom thank you.

  • @49BigPoppa
    @49BigPoppa Před 2 lety

    I could only imagine doing this in combat, in the weathering and mud

  • @MrDavkoz
    @MrDavkoz Před 9 lety

    A great upload. Imagine having to do this with the Tiger I. Due to the width of their tracks, a narrower version was used when they traveled by rail. Once disembarked, the wider combat tracks would need to be put on.

    • @charlesrichardson4032
      @charlesrichardson4032 Před 9 lety

      20 tiger's get off the flat beds and have to change out tracks because you leave the rail head complete pain in the ###

  • @rocksteel44
    @rocksteel44 Před 5 lety

    ...THE BIG DUDE IS GETTING HIS WORK ON!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @Asymmetrical-Saggin
    @Asymmetrical-Saggin Před rokem

    Now imagine you had to do this in an active warzone and war torn countries. WW2 vets had some serious fucking balls to do what they did. Pieces of history like this need and should be preserved for education etc.. Then again i am a WW2 buff/nerd so that plays a role in my thinking lol.

  • @jedrek4444
    @jedrek4444 Před 5 lety +2

    widać pasję w pracy, profi!

  • @janusprzykorski7127
    @janusprzykorski7127 Před 5 lety

    Cały dzień stracili , a wystarczyło rozpiąć starą gąsienice dopiąć nową i na Lewym hamulcu (pełna gąsienica) wciągnąć nową :D

  • @Gregoryt700
    @Gregoryt700 Před 9 lety

    Frans - thank you, I will read it with interest. I do note it has a 1988 publ date, which predates many declassified Soviet docs. Will try to find some of my references, though I don't know if you read Russian ( I'm a Ukrajnian-American, Russian is not a problem for me)

    • @FransGeens
      @FransGeens  Před 9 lety

      Gregoryt700 I am Belgian, read Dutch, English, German and French ... that is all.

  • @Finglesham
    @Finglesham Před 5 lety

    So how did they do this with the Germans shooting at them? No angle grinders or fork lifts in WW2 battlefields but they rescued many tanks to reuse. My dad was in the 13th RHA that advance through Holland with Cromwell tanks. They avoided the larger Germans tanks so he came home.

  • @Lehmann108
    @Lehmann108 Před 4 lety

    You get a good workout wrenching on that tank!

  • @jimjonrs3932
    @jimjonrs3932 Před 4 lety

    Baby got a new pair of shoes!

  • @anibalbabilonia1867
    @anibalbabilonia1867 Před 5 lety +2

    Damn! This thing is built like a tank!!! Lol👋🤣👍

  • @Ramiiam
    @Ramiiam Před 9 lety

    Clever mechanics. It was fun to watch them problem solve. Was it this hard back in the day?

  • @migliaracer1
    @migliaracer1 Před rokem

    No goggles with that massive angle grinder!