Incredible, thanks. That's actually a gold mine. I would buy those Panther tracks and the STUG return wheel in a second! The spinning wheel is ghostly.... war indeed is hell.
Wow, bits of everything, thanks for taking us along on your tour. Model 1942 and 1942 T34s, some Panzer IV remnants and looks like Panther tracks. Some US pieces too, no doubt from the "field crematorium" M3 Lee. The shattered turrets are impressive. It takes a lot of force to crack thick steel like that, much less force to shatter a human body, sad to say.
80 years later and the bearing on that road wheel is still pristine. That tank at 6:43. Is it an internal tank? or one that was mounted on the outside back?
At 4:08 is that a “live” artillery projectile with a fuse (bright metal in nose) intact? Yikes. In some places the authorities would close down the entire neighborhood for one F-1 hand grenade (I exaggerate). Those bearings and rubber tire on the one, spinning T-34 road wheel sure were made well. They outlasted most of the remainder of the tank.
Have you in your detecting found any early British tanks captured by the Germans in 1940 Fall of France which were then sent to the east like the A9 A10 or A13 British tanks, i wondered were they ended up and if any survived or bits of them.
No. This is an exhibition next to the WWII Museum/Memorial. Due to the condition of these "exhibits", they apparently did not consider it possible to include them in the main exposition and chose this option. The children came on an excursion ;-)
Incredible, thanks. That's actually a gold mine. I would buy those Panther tracks and the STUG return wheel in a second!
The spinning wheel is ghostly.... war indeed is hell.
That cracked turret, damn. Those lot got vaporised...
Wow, bits of everything, thanks for taking us along on your tour. Model 1942 and 1942 T34s, some Panzer IV remnants and looks like Panther tracks. Some US pieces too, no doubt from the "field crematorium" M3 Lee. The shattered turrets are impressive. It takes a lot of force to crack thick steel like that, much less force to shatter a human body, sad to say.
There were no Lees at Kursk.
@@michaelchristiansen1497 Oh you were there?
Endlessly fascinating. God rest their souls
The aircraft bomb fins are from a German SC50 ground attack bomb.
80 years later and the bearing on that road wheel is still pristine. That tank at 6:43. Is it an internal tank? or one that was mounted on the outside back?
Must be a German or Swedish bearing, Ha!
Can not believe what's left is still there.
Mihinkäs ne katoaisi?
The roller still rolling to the battlefield,marching to the unknown.
There was some German track linkage there also.
Vestígios de um combate intenso, bom vídeo
What a grave yard think of the lives lost as well, noticed one turret with a shell still in the breach of the gun "sad".
That is a plug.
Here in the US some damn meth head would grab all the smaller pieces to sell for scrap
That ain't no lie!!
and build a "house" out of the bigger ones
@@apollobad1105An Armoured Meth "House"?
For a non-desert environment - surprising amount of steel and rubber left after 80 years of rain.
And Soviet shell cases were steel not brass.
T-34 (1942)? Or am I wrong?
Você está certo, é um T34 com canhão de 76mm
@antoniomanuelcaetano6770 Thank you. I thought the welding looked like an earlier model. (And the muzzle is always a giveaway.)
Да, это старенький, т 34-76, потом пошли т 34-85
Это Т-34-76 1941г
Yes the t 34 /75 had a longer barrels
At 4:08 is that a “live” artillery projectile with a fuse (bright metal in nose) intact? Yikes. In some places the authorities would close down the entire neighborhood for one F-1 hand grenade (I exaggerate).
Those bearings and rubber tire on the one, spinning T-34 road wheel sure were made well. They outlasted most of the remainder of the tank.
Нужен хороший сварщик и получится музейный экспонат танк пушка и ещё что нибудь, классное видео.
The damage to all that...crazy the ammunition must have flamed up
Quite the yard sale.
All you can carry in two hands ... $20 bucks.
A DIY tank-kit
Can someone tell me the specific place where it is?
Прохоровка Белгородская область РФ
Музей "Огненная дуга"
Russia
6:48 sherman track?
Yes
Pieces of everything, I did recognise a T34 turret, I think and the front of a panther turret!
Have you in your detecting found any early British tanks captured by the Germans in 1940 Fall of France which were then sent to the east like the A9 A10 or A13 British tanks, i wondered were they ended up and if any survived or bits of them.
So those prices are just strewn about next to a playground??
No. This is an exhibition next to the WWII Museum/Memorial. Due to the condition of these "exhibits", they apparently did not consider it possible to include them in the main exposition and chose this option. The children came on an excursion ;-)
The groundskeeper must hate curting the grass there.
cutting*
Didn't you hear the mower in the background.
Someone was cutting grass. Lol
85 years after that battle, and the rest is still here.
Go South of Stalingrad and there's a steppe known as the "field of bone's",1000's of scattered remains
0:45=Tiger oder Pantherkette.
T34 Kette
Très jolie mise en Scène 😢
T 34
If only they could talk.
Questo T34 è stato sotto il fuoco di un 88mm.
That is one small turret
what fantastic memorial to conflict and sacrifce, ta man.
То, что оставалось от танков после взрыва боекомплекта...
Kalo disitu ada orang Madura,udah bersih dikilo bang...😅
Besi = Uang
T 34 is like Ford Pinto junk only they produced 35000 of it
😛😛😛😛😛😛❤❤❤❤❤👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Why did they not clear up this mess? Sharp edges, metal: this is crazy.
I am guessing this is an open air battlefield exhibit.
How many men died here…….with this destruction 😢
Viel zu viel Menschen und niemand ist schlauer geworden.😢
I hear kids outside. Not anymore in US 🤦♂️
👍✌
I see very little evidence of battle damage.
Да хабара накидали, прости Господи.
🤝🤝🪽🌳🐎👈