Royal Marine Reacts To The Sten - It's a Toob, Innit?

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OriginalHuman

OriginalHuman

Ай бұрын

Original Video (The Sten - It's a Toob, Innit?)
• The Sten - It's a Toob...
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Пікірлер: 201
@revenantchild
@revenantchild Ай бұрын
It may be primitive, it may just be a toob, but that primitive toob has done alot of work for the British army and it's allies.
@landonhall4875
@landonhall4875 Ай бұрын
Don’t forget the grease toob
@revenantchild
@revenantchild Ай бұрын
@@landonhall4875 Ah yes, the M3 Grease Gun forty-five caliber never sounded so good. Cost effective and still very viable.
@DJWeapon8
@DJWeapon8 Ай бұрын
​@@revenantchildTOOBs make, pound-for-pound, some of the best combat SMGs.
@redmist6630
@redmist6630 Ай бұрын
me talking about my beautiful pipe bombs that the judge described as "improvised" explosives
@proudofyourroots9575
@proudofyourroots9575 25 күн бұрын
Nah, its a Tube, Toob is how the yanks say it. Past Doo. Toob. Twosday. They hate U's lmao
@ExUSSailor
@ExUSSailor Ай бұрын
The Sten's the perfect ecample of "good enough for government work". It NEVER would have been accepted in peacetime, but, in the mud, blood, and, filth of combat, it was cheap, quick to manufacture, and, it went "BANG" when you pulled the trigger.
@Darwinist
@Darwinist Ай бұрын
It was also perfect for sending to Resistance outfits on the continent, since it was *so* compact when disassembled, it could be hidden basically anywhere and the ammunition it used was also being used by the Germans.
@mykalpennings5968
@mykalpennings5968 26 күн бұрын
@@Darwinist it wasnt very reliable as the Czech resistance found out in the attempt on Reinhard Heydrich in Prague
@wadephillips3887
@wadephillips3887 Ай бұрын
He gets all of these through connections in the firearms business as well as a crippling gun broker addiction
@surplus3728
@surplus3728 Ай бұрын
How Brandon gets his MG's are one of two ways: Option 1.) He buys them outright. Anyone with the funds and an extensive background check can purchase automatic weapons made before the 1986 NFA ban. It essentially limited all autos in the country to those that existed at the time. These guns are called "Transferables." This is by far the more expensive option as "cheap" automatics still run for around $10-15k minimum. Your more desirable weapons will be tens of thousands more. Option 2.) He builds them. Brandon and/or his company has a type of license called an SOT, or Special Occupational Taxpayer. It allows his company to, among other things, build "post-sample" machine guns from widely available (and quite cheap) parts kits, as well as other NFA items like suppressors or making a short barreled rifle/shotgun. Excepting the military or law enforcement, the MG's that an SOT builds can never be sold or transferred to anyone who isn't also an SOT.
@robertkoonce8365
@robertkoonce8365 Ай бұрын
Not exactly correct. A post sample gun can be sold, but only to another class3 dealer that also has an SOT. This is how the number of post dealer samples doesn't diminish thru attrition. So, if you want to spend the $3k every 3 to 5 years as well as pay the $3k tax stamp price, you too can buy or build just about anything you want to build. Ain't America grand?
@surplus3728
@surplus3728 Ай бұрын
​​​@@robertkoonce8365I feel like I said that in my last sentence, but perhaps it wasn't clear enough. There's plenty of other nuances, of course. The ATF can't have anything be **too** simple now.
@eclipsegst9419
@eclipsegst9419 Ай бұрын
@@robertkoonce8365 Freemen don't ask permission :)
@edm240b9
@edm240b9 Ай бұрын
You’re correct about all of these things. That being said, I’ve seen Sten guns and Reisings go for under $10k. I’ve seen Stens go for $6k-$7k.
@eclipsegst9419
@eclipsegst9419 Ай бұрын
​@@surplus3728 Freemen don't ask permission
@BilisiFunfun
@BilisiFunfun Ай бұрын
Germans: "Superior German engineering." Brits with Sten and Americans with Greasegun: "He He, toob."
@proudofyourroots9575
@proudofyourroots9575 25 күн бұрын
Nah, its a Tube, Toob is how the yanks say it. Past Doo. Toob. Twosday. They hate U's lmao
@akkermanrik
@akkermanrik Ай бұрын
14:00 because the decision was if you lay flat you wont have the magazine sticking into the ground and you can lay flat with it
@timmooney7528
@timmooney7528 Ай бұрын
I think most viewers overlook the prone position probably being the most common shooting position a soldier taking cover would take
@Docktavion
@Docktavion Ай бұрын
@@timmooney7528too many movies never explore it.
@wozzablog
@wozzablog 26 күн бұрын
Came here to say this. Yup. It's a long magazine that would just dig in to the ground
@wittsullivan8130
@wittsullivan8130 Ай бұрын
Forgotten Weapons has done deep dive videos on the STEN in general and the various versions of them. STEN stands for Shepherd (Major Reginald V.), Turpin (Harold J.), and ENfield (built in the Enfield factory). Shepherd and Turpin were well known and very experienced gun designers. It was basically getting Mozart and Beethoven to jam together and see what they came up with. The Mk 1 was slightly more complicated, the Mk 3 had a better stock, and the Mk 4 had a wooden stock and forearm, the least numerous and most valuable model. The STEN magazine is super reliable, the basis for the Sterling magazine, Uzi magazine, and inspired other magazines, along with the US M1 Grease gun subgun magazine. There were a few blowback subguns before and during WW1, but a lot of them were meticulously machined which made them really expensive. Basically, you could go to a well stocked DIY store like Lowes, Home Depot, or Tractor Supply Company and buy all the tools and parts you need to build one.
@TheFaceStabber
@TheFaceStabber 23 күн бұрын
For decades, I have described it as a tail pipe with some gun parts thrown at it. It was a very crude weapon, even compared to the M3 Grease gun.
@jacobwhitley2895
@jacobwhitley2895 Ай бұрын
I’ve been able to use a British Sten twice, fun gun! I believe the mag was on the side to make it easy to shoot from a trench? You can set the gun right on the edge and keep your head low. If the mag was at the bottom you’d have to peek up higher to here over the trench. Anyway simple is good. Easier to fix, cheap to make, clever.
@eddiel7635
@eddiel7635 22 күн бұрын
I think it was firing from prone and cover in general rather than trench.
@md_vandenberg
@md_vandenberg Ай бұрын
You'll find that Brandon's piss-takes are in direct relation to whether the gun he's using is any good. STEN? 3 piss-takes. The SA80? Fuck, we'd be here all day.
@DivusMagus
@DivusMagus Ай бұрын
I absolutely love the simplicity of the Sten and the Grease Gun. They are very similar and clearly a product of necessity but there is something strangely beautiful about their steam punk vibe.
@azurehorizon6097
@azurehorizon6097 26 күн бұрын
One thing I find funny is the Germans made a copy of the Sten in 1945 since they needed cheap weaponry, they made the Volkssturmgewehr and the Einstossflammenwerfer but they also made the MP-3008 which is a Sten, but with the magazine facing downwards like it was a normal Sten in storage mode.
@Darwinist
@Darwinist Ай бұрын
The Sten gun was designed to be as simple as possible not just to bring down costs, but to make it so the entire weapon could be made using the most common machining and stamping tools available at the time, so all kinds of metal fabrication shops could crank it out, not just dedicated gunsmithing outfits. This means you can, at least in theory make your own Sten if you have really any machining skills at all and the most rudimentary equipment. Rifling the barrel would be the only thing that would present even a little bit of a challenge.
@md_vandenberg
@md_vandenberg Ай бұрын
I've heard that there were blokes in bicycle repair shops making pieces. If someone had technical know-how, they were involved. The very epitome of "For King and Country".
@Anino_Makata
@Anino_Makata Ай бұрын
The design and manufacturing of the Sten had only gotten cheaper and simpler to make, too. There were five generations of Sten guns altogether, the Mk. III being the most recognizeable and the one demoed by Brandon here. But the Mk. IV is easily the cheapest, as it was designed and made in-house by a toy company that worked with sheet metal. The Mk. III was cheap because it was made mostly out of scrap cuts from Bren manufacturing, but the Mk. IV was all welded from sheet steel in construction. That model didn't really see action at the front lines, like any of the other Stens. Instead, they were relegated to the Home Guard.
@chrissouthgate4554
@chrissouthgate4554 27 күн бұрын
The Mk I was manufactured by the Singer sewing machine factory.
@lukemendel8197
@lukemendel8197 26 күн бұрын
Isn’t a smooth bore Sten just a Luty with quality control?
@Darwinist
@Darwinist 26 күн бұрын
@@lukemendel8197 Lol. Pretty much.
@GallifreyanGunner
@GallifreyanGunner 27 күн бұрын
A few points: The proper way to hold the sten for aimed shots is like a regular rifle - front hand holding the barrel shroud. Holding the magwell/mag increased the likelihood of a jam. The magazine was on the side to help with ejection as the mag spring wasn't fighting gravity AND, when prone, the long magazine didn't stick into the ground.
@kurokaiman6198
@kurokaiman6198 Ай бұрын
quick fun fact, if you click on a blank space on any video that does write anything when you type, then type the word "awesome", the loading bar will begin to flash
@ashleystyles6888
@ashleystyles6888 Ай бұрын
Still being used in 1957. My father was a RAF armourer. I have a photo of him, in Singapore, having a beer with his Enfield No4 propped up against a tree.
@The_Phobose_Show
@The_Phobose_Show 29 күн бұрын
If I remember correctly, the US was going to supply the UK with a ton of Thompson SMGs and it was rejected because some ww1 vet General was concerned about the mags hanging off the bottom. Said in trench warfare the mags would get damaged or dirty and could compromise the position of the user (the Thompson was super expensive too)
@wozzablog
@wozzablog 26 күн бұрын
The Tommy gun was also monumentally expensive which was a big factor
@afriendlycadian9857
@afriendlycadian9857 25 күн бұрын
i was more so the price was very expensive for thompsons more than that ww1 general it was obvious we would have to pay for them
@mrjackpots1326
@mrjackpots1326 Ай бұрын
The correct way to hold the Sten was to grip the barrel sleeve. Holding the magazine caused stress on the magazine catch leading to misalignment of the magazine resulting in stoppages.
@TaZ101SAGA
@TaZ101SAGA Ай бұрын
14:15 It was done this way so the shooter could maintain a lower profile when prone.
@tenofprime
@tenofprime Ай бұрын
That it what it so often not thought of, having an extended magazine can make positioning in combat hard.
@OriginalLictre
@OriginalLictre 25 күн бұрын
I'd say it was 4 times he got a zap in on the British. The fourth was the comment that the British had been taking lessons from the French in dropping their weapon and running away.
@ZerkaiGG
@ZerkaiGG 26 күн бұрын
As Zach Hazard has said, "If it's a WW2 gun, they were ALL OVER the place in the Middle East!" There are a LOT of Sten guns still out there, especially since there were incredibly cheap to make and maintain.
@Stevarooni
@Stevarooni Ай бұрын
Simplicity is great for a machine gun. Cheaper parts, easier to make, and it has fewer places it can go wrong.
@brycealthoff8092
@brycealthoff8092 27 күн бұрын
Brandon didn’t talk about it here, but the Brits also made a version of this gun with an integrated suppressor for the super sneaky commando types. Not many of those were made though and I don’t know is any still exist.
@CloudFever
@CloudFever Ай бұрын
My favourite call of duty 2 gun,for no reason
@markaxworthy2508
@markaxworthy2508 23 күн бұрын
I had one in Rhodesia in 1978-79. I once dropped it while unlocking the gate of the farm security fence and it ran away for several shots. I was told this was because it didn't have the right 9mm rounds to throw the working parts far enough back to catch.
@wittsullivan8130
@wittsullivan8130 Ай бұрын
Shooters and collectors bought and brought pallets of them to the US after WW2. A lot of them came over as "parts kits" where they were cut with a torch and sold as scrap (but the barrels were full of gun "scrap". Then they could be shipped to the US, since it was scrap metal at that point. Before 1986, anyone who was 21 years old with no felonies could dig through a pile of parts and put the parts that fit best together like a puzzle, fill out the paperwork for the background check, pay the tax, and get to weldin' and they had a "brand new" STEN gun. After 1986, you can still buy a parts kit and figure out how to make it closed bolt semi-auto only and have a pistol (without a stock or with a brace) or a short barreled rifle unless you had a pipe welded to the barrel to make legally a 16" barrel. After 1986, only licensed machine gun dealers or manufacturers can build a fully functional STEN out of a parts kit or bits and bobs, just like they did when they developed it. :) Even though the supply is constantly dwindling from collectors snatching them up and the guns wearing out beyond repair, STEN guns are still one of the least expensive options to get into the machine gun collecting and shooting sphere, under $10,000 depending on the model and other details. MAC-10's and its derivatives are still sort of affordable, about $12,000 more or less, again, depending on the details. The only reason STEN's aren't worth as much is people have figured out how to make the M-16 "we have at home" using attachments for MAC submachineguns where they can add an upper receiver that takes AR-15 and M-16 upper receivers onto it. It's clunky, but a LOT cheaper than paying over $20,000 for an actual M-16 or legally converted AR-15 from the mid-80's or older. Any new machinegun you see on TV or movies (made after May, 1986), an average person cannot have. Age is NOT just a number. :(
@Seafish84
@Seafish84 Ай бұрын
You should watch a video on the MP18 as it is widely considered to be the first submachine gun and predates this one by 20 years. They are very close to each other in operation and construction its kind of wild. It is honestly, one of those weapons of WW1 that if it had been created a year earlier could have changed so much. Both Forgotten Weapons and C&Rsenal have amazing videos on depending on how in depth you want. C&Rsenal has one they shoot by the way.
@hadrianbuiltawall9531
@hadrianbuiltawall9531 22 күн бұрын
The main reason the Sten jammed was people holding the magazine. The correct way was to hold it around the shroud just in front of the ejection port. This is why one of the variants had a grip fitted under the barrel in the hope that people would stop holding the magazine.
@SuperTyrannical1
@SuperTyrannical1 Ай бұрын
I think the side loading is for the same reason as the bren gun. The idea being that the optimal firing position was prone, and so this in theory meant reloading would be easier.
@royboy69rt
@royboy69rt Ай бұрын
He does get some from Rock Island armory auctions. Check em out. They have almost anything to choose from. Depends on what is in the auctions. They also have an extensive collection.
@bonaggy
@bonaggy 27 күн бұрын
You have to remember that the STEN was designed and delivered on a very specific, very urgent, need. We required an SMG that was cheap and simple as could be. It would rearm not just the British Army, but be dropped into occupied territories to supply allied resistance movements to help them fight off their occupiers. Hence, it was designed to use the 9mm, so the resistance groups could raid German ammo stores. It isn’t the best, granted, but we did continue to develop it. We’ve certainly seen more reliable designs, true: the Australian Owen Gun, the Polish Błyskawica, and Russia’s PPS-43. The main factors were simplicity, speed, and volume. A gunsmith once told me; you can have great, but it will be slow and expensive. You can have cheap and quick, but it won’t be great. There is no process to have quick, cheap, and great. The design committee for the STEN were going to be against any design that required lengthy processing, or complicated cuts. The Germans were not going to give us time to retool. So they, as I’m sure other commenters have said, settled for “it’s good enough.” In the spirit of Patton; “a good plan violently executed now is better than a perfect plan executed next week.” That kind of mentality. To be honest, my favourite weapon design of WW2 is another example of British engineering, the DeLisle Carbine. I recommend you check it out. Great reaction. Keep up the great work.
@Broadsword999
@Broadsword999 Ай бұрын
Ian at Forgotten Weapons just did a set of video's on the whole Sten family and all the British issue sub guns.
@m2hmghb
@m2hmghb Ай бұрын
The nice thing about the sten was how easy it was to decentralize manufacture. You could have little shops all over a city making different parts taking them to other small shops where they assembled them without having the risk of a massive factory being a "shoot me" sign. The sten was not the most reliable or accurate - it was just "good enough". The Mk 5 was when they started trying to improve the reliability but that wasn't until 44. I'd rather have an M3 "grease gun" over it, and an MP 40 over either. (no thank you to the thompson - that is a heavy mother trucker).
@geordiegeorge9041
@geordiegeorge9041 25 күн бұрын
One of my personal weapons during my time serving was the Stirling smg , a modern Sten.
@Bottle-OBill
@Bottle-OBill 25 күн бұрын
The Sten was side-feed for the same reason the Bren and Owen runs were top-feed. The prone position!
@mykalpennings5968
@mykalpennings5968 26 күн бұрын
The direct blowback submachine gun is so simple that UK citizen Philip Luty made several homemade examples in his garage using only parts from a local hardware store and published his designs in a book and online. The home office did NOT like this one bit.
@billlovell5185
@billlovell5185 Ай бұрын
From what I have read, the magazine was placed horizontally to allow for it to be more readily rested or braced on something like a vehicle or sandbags. Also to make it easier to fire prone. In practice, this turned out to be rare.
@edm240b9
@edm240b9 Ай бұрын
14:14 the reason the Sten magazine is out of the side is due to it being based off of the Lanchester submachine gun, which was an earlier subgun used by the Royal Navy, but not the Army. The Sten itself is really just a Lanchester subgun with as much stuff stripped off of it to ease manufacture. The Lanchester itself is basically a reversed engineered MP28/II. All three of these weapons have the magazine feeding from the side. The reason the MKII Sten magwell rotates was for better storage and to also create a gun for paratroopers. Before the MKII was the MKI, which had a lot more features on it including a folding foregrip.
@user-zu4io9qi5e
@user-zu4io9qi5e Ай бұрын
As for your question about the STENs lasting ability, well, they are still used around the world 80 plus years later. He has one in really decent condition.
@robertwalker7454
@robertwalker7454 28 күн бұрын
The germans at the end of world war two did create a version of the stin that looked like it was in storage, And I would say it worked pretty good
@CharlieFoxtrot128
@CharlieFoxtrot128 Ай бұрын
Holding it by Grabbing around the shroud was the proper way to hold the sten as per the British military.
@TheJimprez
@TheJimprez Ай бұрын
We had Sterlings when I was in the CAF (1980s-1090s). Basically, an upgraded Sten, with better everything. BUT it was still just a tube, with a spring pushing a breech block with a permanent firing pin that didn't retract into a recess. That became a real issue one fine day at the range when a corporal whose name I'll keep quiet, forgot all of his stopage drills. He used a screwdriver to get the stuck 9mm out, but somehow let go of the cocking lever, so the pin hit the primer, and a guy about 20 feet away (YES! He was actually aiming the barrel at us ...) and hit him with one of the luckiest shots I've ever seen. He hit the kid in the hand, and grazed one third of the inside and outside of three fingers. He was reloading mags, and had a weird hold on it that probably saved all three of those fingers. It's hard to explain without a drawing. NOTHING happened to that dumb and incompetent corporal, and the driver got lost trying to get out of the range in CFB Petawawa, so it took hours to get to the base clinic and get transferred to NDMC in Ottawa. A REAL shiatshow... The Sten AND the Sterling were BOTH unsafe weapons...
@checkityhold
@checkityhold Ай бұрын
I think you are right about the reason for the sideways magazine design, to assist with reliability. I think the Sten is reliable. Any automatic firearm can jam. Clearing a malfunction is just par for the course.
@mikeyunovapix7181
@mikeyunovapix7181 8 күн бұрын
He's able to get these guns without too much trouble is because he's an FFL SOT3, he's able to legally possess weapons most people in the US could only have as airsoft or in video games. His license is basically paying the ATF their "fuck off" money.
@ianjardine7324
@ianjardine7324 Ай бұрын
The sten is probably one of the most affordable and accessible guns ever produced we Brit's build millions during the war as did many others including hidden workshop's in german occupied territories with some small scale production in remote areas still being done today. I think the universal love for the sten comes from the fact it never pretended to be anything other than what it was a cheap way to throw lead in your enemies general direction but good enough to get the job done at close range.we were dropping them all over France Belgium Poland ect. While the yanks were dropping the "liberator" pistol and if you want to see just how bad a gun can be check out that abomination not only was it more dangerous to the user than any enemy but it used 45ACP a calibre not available much outside of the US because 'murica I guess.
@edm240b9
@edm240b9 Ай бұрын
Also at 11:40, that was just a glitch in the trailer. The Battlefield 1 announcement trailer had a similar glitch with the pump Winchester M1897 Trench Gun clipping into the reciever. It’s not as noticeable, but once you see it, you can’t unsee it.
@edwardsummey8843
@edwardsummey8843 Ай бұрын
From what I heard, the magazine was put to the side to allow troops to fire prone while remaining lower to the ground.
@mikethompson2650
@mikethompson2650 23 күн бұрын
My local Texas gun store/range has one for rent. On my birthday I wanted to shoot it, was born in England so hell why not. But the Sten had magazine feed problems, major sadness.
@hukaman88
@hukaman88 Ай бұрын
When in doubt return to toob
@MythicFool
@MythicFool Ай бұрын
5:43 I spy a sneaky 'Joe Medicine Crow' video tab up there. One of the more amazing stories from The War, in my opinion.
@treywall9078
@treywall9078 27 күн бұрын
“Where does he get these guns?” America baby! We’ve got them in every era
@Robertlynschultz
@Robertlynschultz 28 күн бұрын
Brandon is a legitimate arms manufacturer and holds all the licenses…
@ianjardine7324
@ianjardine7324 Ай бұрын
The Sten's reliability was highly dependent on having consistent ammunition and magazines as well as skilled armourers in theatre to prep them. The armourers would test each gun then adjust the recoil spring by cutting off enough that he gun would cycle reliably with the issued ammo in the prevalent conditions. If the issued ammo was under powered or they hadn't cut enough of the spring the gun could fail to feed but if the spring was too short or the ammo was over filled the breech would open to early causing split casings and all sorts of ejection problems. The early production magazine's often suffered with weak springs due to rushed production and supply issues but mounting the mag sideways made the magazine springs less prone to cause firing issues. The tolerance on the mainspring ajustment was fairly wide but bad ammo combined with extremely cold or hot weather would cause issues.
@BoricuaDBO
@BoricuaDBO Ай бұрын
I'm willing to bet that this weapon was the inspiration for the sub2000. It's functionally the same but with a pistol grip and different magazine location
@CharlieFoxtrot128
@CharlieFoxtrot128 Ай бұрын
Probably not specifically. Most sub guns operate from direct blowback, the sten operating mechanism is not unique in anyway
@babybel7924
@babybel7924 Ай бұрын
Forgotten Weapons has a realy good series of videos of all the sten variants
@edm240b9
@edm240b9 Ай бұрын
Check out Ian on ForgottenWeapons, he did a series of videos on all the Sten variants, from the MKI to the MKV. He’s even shot a genuine Sten MKII(S). Don’t get me wrong, I like Brandon, but Ian is much better when it comes to learning about the nitty gritty about the history and mechanics of it.
@lauriea2971
@lauriea2971 Ай бұрын
I love using the sten
@Oddball_E8
@Oddball_E8 25 күн бұрын
The actual doctrin way of gripping the Sten was actually around the barrel shroud, believe it or not. This is what was being taught at training.
@jrfailma
@jrfailma 20 күн бұрын
the reason for the magazine on the side was for the user to go really low when firing in the prone position.
@TheMajorActual
@TheMajorActual Ай бұрын
Like the Grease Gun, the Sten's only real problem was its magazines, which were frequently dodgy-AF. Simplicity works, which is why you still find WW2 Sten's fighting in odd places all over the world.
@ScarriorIII
@ScarriorIII Ай бұрын
Administrative Results has 2 vids where he modernizes the sten and the sterling with mixed results. Also, he really screws with the Brits, so there's that.
@Beuwen_The_Dragon
@Beuwen_The_Dragon Ай бұрын
Toob is simple. Toob needs to make a comeback in British life.
@user-zw4fm1hy3n
@user-zw4fm1hy3n Ай бұрын
I heard that one of the specs was that they could be produced by the Underground.
@edwardsummey8843
@edwardsummey8843 Ай бұрын
You want to see him take the piss? Try the AR-180 video. He leans into The Troubles.
@locoloboxiii
@locoloboxiii Ай бұрын
You sounded like The Joker, when he asked "Where does he get these wonderful toys?"
@davidcanoy8579
@davidcanoy8579 Ай бұрын
Brandon is a licensed gun dealer. He has a very expensive federal 🔥 arms license, as such he can buy things that are not normally available for purchase. But they love story time, and filming reactions... they have lots of toys any you really should go hang out with them, i would love to watch that stuff.
@Darth.Fluffy
@Darth.Fluffy Ай бұрын
The Sten was good enough. It worked
@muppeteer
@muppeteer 27 күн бұрын
its offspring the sterling SMG was my personal weapon in the army...come in ya pants when emptying a mag on auto...coolest thing I ever fired. Handle it with care or it was likely to kill the user first, it had a habit of firing if you banged it on anything, unfortunate due to it mostly being issued to troops in armoured vehicles or support units, lots of banging around in a AFV
@thewinterprince1731
@thewinterprince1731 27 күн бұрын
"Where does he get these weapons from?" I can answer that. You may not know this (somehow), but the US has very lax gun laws that have only recently been under heavy controversy. There are many ways to legally import or build firearms in the US, as well as many gun stores, auctions, etc. Even Walmart has a gun section as part of its hunting/camping/outdoorsman section. Frankly, I'm all for it, though I do believe gun laws need just a slight revision to require licenses to own or weild guns, with potential for a pardon if it was some sort of self defense emergency. The license should be fairly easy to get, cheap and only requiring one to take a short one-time class on gun safety and gun use.
@nightraptor22
@nightraptor22 27 күн бұрын
“I support the 2nd Amendment, but…” renders your opinion null and void. You either support the right to keep and bear arms, or you do not, there is no in-between. Your proposal of a license, no matter how ‘easy’ to obtain, is the sort of thing that already exists in certain areas, and leads to outright denials. Let’s use a different right… You enjoy using the internet, and are free to espouse your opinion online, and barring certain things, are free to say whatever you want. Now imagine, the government has said that you can still do so, but you have to take a small test and once passed, are free to use whatever language you want, at your discretion. Sounds good, right? Well, what happens when you can’t take the class because the system is down, or when the test is graded by someone who doesn’t believe you should be able to say bad words or things that they don’t agree with? Now they can just change the rules to keep you from using the internet. A real world example is New York City. You can technically get a permit there, but the process is so draconian, and the laws so unjust, that it’s illegal for you to even touch a handgun at a gun store in the city if you don’t have the permit. Imagine if you weren’t even allowed to use the keyboard on your computer on the internet without the permit. The founding fathers knew what would happen if they didn’t protect the right of the people to keep and bear arms. As a country, we literally fought the best, most well trained army on the planet, who were so good at fighting they wore high visibility redcoats and would win, and we beat them. While I may disagree with your opinion, I believe you have the right to say it, and will gladly defend your right to do so, no matter how much I disagree with it. I’m a constitutional absolutist, and if anyone wants to make changes, there is a process for it. I would challenge you or anyone else who may think similarly to look at what happens when you grant even a modicum of power to authority. I hope maybe you will dive into the nuances around such things and maybe change your opinion. ☮️
@Max-ep5ir
@Max-ep5ir Ай бұрын
It's a fohken chewb, innit?
@Snowtail07
@Snowtail07 Ай бұрын
You need to check out Brandon's video about the 9mm lutty another iconic British gun
@Ol-T1864
@Ol-T1864 23 күн бұрын
“Where did he get this from?” That’s what happens when you’re free of monarch bro lol God bless America
@robpayne1956
@robpayne1956 Ай бұрын
What I can tell you is that those tee shirts are made by bunker branding Matt and Mere's business that they have built from literally nothing. The shirt designs are by no means cheap and they last a long time with the prints intact I have had one for 2 years now and it's still bright and colorful as it ever was. The best part is there is no tag in the back to drive you nuts. Get in touch with any of them they will respond to you. The nice thing is all the US guntubers support one another and have for years. It's one of the major ways that they have all become so popular. That and the fact that they are all genuine nice people.
@gunnargundersen3787
@gunnargundersen3787 28 күн бұрын
A brand new Thompson SMG in 1940 cost $250. A sten cost £2 which was $8. Thereby you could have 31 Sten's or 1 Thompson. Not exactly a tough choice. Interestingly enough, the MK 4 which was coming in late 43 used Lee Enfield stocks and bayonet mounts so it got a lot more comfortable. Less dangerous to the user as they solved the slamfire issue of the mk 2. And you got a pig sticker bayonet so in the end it wasn't bad.
@jacobs.9230
@jacobs.9230 Ай бұрын
Those shirts are availible still, Bunker Branding is the one that his merch is thru, "the AK guy" along with a bunch of other creators have their merch thru them
@mymartianhome
@mymartianhome 23 күн бұрын
He would get a lot fewer stoppages if he held the gun properly. Holding it by the magazine misalignd the receiver so you get the jams.
@robertwalker7454
@robertwalker7454 28 күн бұрын
Fun fact this was cheaper to make then the M3 grease gun. M3A1: $15~ Sten Gun: $10-$12, during their times
@ExUSSailor
@ExUSSailor Ай бұрын
If it won't for the brave, stalwart actions of the French rear guard units holding the beaches at Dunkerque, the entire BEF would have been wiped out before they could have been evacuated.
@arthurhucksake2665
@arthurhucksake2665 Ай бұрын
You are correct, of course. The sheer tenacity and bravery of the French military in the face of overwhelming odds in that action is so overlooked that it is criminal- and that's coming from a British guy.
@MeanLaQueefa
@MeanLaQueefa Ай бұрын
🇬🇧 has the Sten 🇺🇸 has the grease gun
@eddiel7635
@eddiel7635 22 күн бұрын
You can’t fire from prone with the magazine at horizontal, it’s for special forces.
@alistairevans1428
@alistairevans1428 Ай бұрын
If he doesn't like the sideways magazine, then don't show him the Aussie Owen Gun 👀
@checkityhold
@checkityhold Ай бұрын
Simple but extremely effective, light weight. What more could you ask for?
@stonegiant4
@stonegiant4 Ай бұрын
I had a veteran friend of mine tell me a story where his unit found a stash of weapons in Iraq including one sten with a homebrewd suppressor and a red dot mounted on the suppressor. Lol
@orenthalsimpson
@orenthalsimpson 7 күн бұрын
I feel like I could make one of these myself with minimal machining equipment
@hordegaming4771
@hordegaming4771 Ай бұрын
If you think the Stens recoil spring is large, check out the MP40s lol. It's, hard to explain like a very long segmented captive needle that goes through almost the entire receiver and through the bolt. It's weird but it's design does mean you feel, practically no recoil when firing it. Seriously if you struggle to fire an MP40 even one handed I'd laugh at you 😂😂
@manualuser
@manualuser Ай бұрын
Just now realizing the lack of grip.
@Mountain8ear
@Mountain8ear Ай бұрын
$11 for a Sten in 1940 would translate to about $240 today.
@michaelbracho3956
@michaelbracho3956 26 күн бұрын
Still relatively cheap, but I would rather have something more reliable
@tadeuszprzyszlak
@tadeuszprzyszlak Ай бұрын
he buys them like everyone else.
@Nomad59696
@Nomad59696 28 күн бұрын
We need a Bobby-basic counter
@wilomica
@wilomica 27 күн бұрын
So the Brits put the magazine on the side so you could fire it from the prone position easily. I know a few Canadian vets and I'm old enough to have asked questions like that.
@MichaelScheele
@MichaelScheele Ай бұрын
As the saying goes, necessity is the mother of invention. Wartime needs often creates some "bare minimum" weapon designs. WW II: Sten (UK), M3 (USA), PPSh-41/PPS-43 (USSR), etc. Some functional weapons today >> better weapons years from now. These wartime design sometimes persist for decades in secondary roles.
@russellcallaway8034
@russellcallaway8034 Ай бұрын
The luty review is a good one he does
@tarmaque
@tarmaque Ай бұрын
Personally I'd rather have a Sterling than a Sten, but you can't deny how cheap the Sten was to manufacture in volume. Then again, of all the "cheap, stamped" sub guns I think the M2 Grease Gun is my favorite. Simple and cheap to make, simple to operate, relatively rugged, and they literally used them all the way to Desert Storm for tank crews. (Edit: Go watch the _Forgotten Weapons_ video on the M2 and M2A1)
@CharlieFoxtrot128
@CharlieFoxtrot128 Ай бұрын
M3 grease gun, not M2. And the Sterling was the post war replacement for the sten. So yeah everyone would probably take it over the sten.
@tarmaque
@tarmaque Ай бұрын
@@CharlieFoxtrot128 My mistake. M3. I like the Sterling but you'r right. It's not the same era.
@davebetch9918
@davebetch9918 Ай бұрын
Check out his Luty, MP40 and Grease gun vids for more open bolt adventures x
@prizrak-br3332
@prizrak-br3332 Ай бұрын
You should see his video on the AR-180
@alexithymia6288
@alexithymia6288 27 күн бұрын
He has the one thing that is able to circumvent any and all regulation, as it has been since the beginning of said regulation: money.
@dannynaylor5485
@dannynaylor5485 Ай бұрын
Great video's dude. I'm not sure if it's the sten or another toob gun, but one of them, you can put a DD battery in the back of it to up the cyclic rate. Brandon or Garand maybe even both have a video of it.
@CharlieFoxtrot128
@CharlieFoxtrot128 Ай бұрын
The Swedish K. Garand thumb and admin have a video on it. Not Brandon
@dannynaylor5485
@dannynaylor5485 Ай бұрын
@@CharlieFoxtrot128 I knew someone would know lol
@Whiteknight-xg2pq
@Whiteknight-xg2pq Ай бұрын
Toob. I love the Sten/Stearling and A1/A3 Grease guns but I'll do you one better OH, you want British pride watch his Luty video. The one made by a crazy diamond who in short said, "fuck parliament for taking our guns watch this shit."
@jenksie2094
@jenksie2094 20 күн бұрын
Brandon has a crippling gun broaker addiction.
@elementxghilliejoshf.2844
@elementxghilliejoshf.2844 Ай бұрын
2:26 Freedom, government surplus, and expendable income
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