Forgotten: The German Egg Hand Grenade of WW2

2024 ж. 6 Мам.
21 140 Рет қаралды

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In this video we look at the Eihandgranate 39 (Egg Hand Grenade), while everyone thinks that the German stick hand grenade ("potato masher") was the typical German hand grenade in World War 2, the egg hand grenade was produced actually in larger numbers. In this video we look at the characteristics of the grenade, army regulations and production numbers.
Disclosure: This video is sponsored by free-to-play game World of Warships. Thank you to the Forum Wehrgeschichte Oberösterreich for inviting me.
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Reibert, W.: Reibert: Der Dienst-Unterricht im Heere. Ausgabe für den Schützen der Schützenkompanie. 13. Auflage, E.S. Mittler & Sohn: Berlin, Germany, 1943.
Oberkommando des Heeres: Allgemeine Heeresmitteilungen, 7. Jahrgang, Blatt 8, 8. April 1940. Oberkommando des Heeres, Abt. für Allgemeine Truppenangelegenheiten: Berlin, Germany, 1940.
OKH AHA/Stab: Heerestechnisches Verordnungsblatt, 2. Jahrgang, 20. Ausgabe, 15. Oktober 1944. Reichsdruckerei: Berlin, Germany, 1944.
Oberkommando des Heeres: Heeres-Verordnungsblatt. Teil C. Blatt 10. 25. Jahrgang, 19. Ausgabe. 1943. Reichsdruckerei: Berlin, Germany, 1943.
Altrichter, Friedrich: Der Reserveoffizier. Ein Handbuch für den Offizier und Offizieranwärter des Beurlaubtenstandes aller Waffen. Vierzehnte, durchgesehene Auflage, Verlag E.S. Mittler & Sohn: Berlin, Germany, 1941.
Kühlwein, Fitz: Die Gruppe im Gefecht. (Die neue Gruppe). Elfte, völlig neubearbeitete Auflage, E.S. Mittler & Sohn: Berlin, Germany, 1940.
H.Dv. 130/2a: Ausbildungsvorschrift für die Infanterie. Heft 2a: Die Schützenkompanie. (Entwurf). Nachdruck mit eingearbeiten Berichtigungen gemäß H.M. 41 Nr. 189 u. H.V.Bl. (C) Nr. 890, Verlag „Offene Worte“: Berlin, Germany, 1942.
Fleischer, Wolfgang: Deutsche Nahkampfmittel Munition, Granaten und Kampfmittel bis 1945. Motorbuch Verlag: Stuttgart, Germany, 2018.
Payne, Craig M.: Principles of Naval Weapon Systems. Second Edition, Naval Institute Press: Annapolis, Maryland, USA, 2010.
00:00 Intro
00:46 World of Warships
01:54 Eihandgranate 1939
03:03 Blast vs. Fragmentation
04:49 Fragmentation Sleeve & Ring
06:36 US Army Sources
07:04 Inside Look
07:33 Technical Data
09:01 Production
11:09 Summary
11:41 Get Free Goodies
#sponsored #handgrenade #ww2

Пікірлер
  • Play World of Warships here: wo.ws/46V9G57 Thank you World of Warships for sponsoring this video. During registration use the code BRAVO to get for free: 500 doubloons, 1.5 million credits, 7 Days of Premium Account time, and a ship! Applicable to new users only.

    @MilitaryHistoryVisualized@MilitaryHistoryVisualized6 ай бұрын
  • I remember seeing a blue colored egg shaped grenade in a color picture of a Wehrmacht soldier, was decades ago, and went searching. So many don’t know they existed.

    @c1ph3rpunk@c1ph3rpunk6 ай бұрын
  • But the egg-shaped grenade doesn't have an iconic photo showing it 'in action'.

    @avnrulz8587@avnrulz85876 ай бұрын
  • Blast grenades are also good because often a fragmentation grenade has an effective radius larger than what I person can throw. If you are in a defensive position and throw a fragmentation grenade you tend to have earthworks or similar cover to to use as the shrapnel goes past you. The usual sequence when throwing them on the range is: throw, see where it lands, duck.

    @whya2ndaccount@whya2ndaccount6 ай бұрын
  • Interesting to see how offensive focused the Heer was even during the late stages of the war. Nice video!

    @liagson@liagson6 ай бұрын
  • My dad told me that back in the 60s, while walking through the Ardennes in Luxembourg, you could find plenty of rusted Eihandgranate shells. Not much of them left.

    @georgewashington92@georgewashington926 ай бұрын
  • I remembered this one from Downfall (2004), especially in THAT particular scene.

    @fereise208@fereise2086 ай бұрын
  • Even more unknown is the WW1 version that saw widespread use, the Eierhandgranate M 1917. Eggs just don’t get any respect!

    @tacklengrapple6891@tacklengrapple68916 ай бұрын
  • Another advantage of the German grenades being blast-type offensive grenades was it allowed the German soldiers to throw them more liberally than their Allied counterparts. Throwing a fragmentation grenade with an effective range close to 100 m required the thrower to communicate and ensure the rest of his squad to stop and find cover, to avoid friendly casualties. However, a blast grenade with less effective range gave the German soldiers more leeway in throwing grenades, he did not have to check if others were already in cover or not, and more importantly other squad members could continue firing while the grenade was thrown. With less risk in using the blast-type German grenades, they were thrown much often than Allied grenades, allowing enemies to be suppressed effectively as they were bombarded with grenades more constantly.

    @sthrich635@sthrich6355 ай бұрын
  • I gather, you can see the stick grenade in contemporary photos, very distinctive. Egg, just a bump in a pocket. Only place I remember seeing it, was in an old PC strategy game, Silent Storm.

    @Kumimono@Kumimono6 ай бұрын
  • Did you maybe find any report on actual performance of these fragmentation sleeves? As from reading all the sources in my case the outcome is generally that frag sleeves and cases (like in MkII or Mills) are not providing reliable fragmentation and are generally responsible for minority of grenade's anti-personnel effectiveness, in case of both the main source of killing power being the blast force anyway. F1 and MkII for example produced just few fragments big enough to effectively wound, and of course chances of these actually flying in direction as to hit the enemy were slim; IIRC US findings were that German grenades (without frag sleeve) with their higher explosive filler were in fact more effective in majority of scenarios. I'm wondering how much of percieved advantage of RGD-33 in eyes of ostfront soldiers was just psychological effect, just knowing that there are fragments that can possibly fly for long distance which caused them to fear incoming soviet grenades more than actual killing potential would suggest to be advisable - which is understandable, as of course it's better to be safe than sorry and individual soldiers are just trying to not get themselves killed, but there's question whether it's actually worth to take it into consideration in their own weaponry. But then maybe there actually is truth to it, and german frag sleeves were more reliable than MkII and F1 frag cases? After all post-war designs like M26 were closer to mimic sleeve design than frag case. Sooo I maybe rambled too much but again, if you have any solid data on effectiveness of German frag sleeves for these grenades then it would be great to check it out - thanks!

    @czwarty7878@czwarty78785 ай бұрын
  • Much awaited, much appreciated, excellent insights as always from you.

    @marcusott2973@marcusott29736 ай бұрын
  • This is a great trivia question to separate the WW2 history virgins from the history Chads. "Describe the most common WW2 American hand grenade versus the most common German grenade."

    @charlesdexterward7781@charlesdexterward77816 ай бұрын
    • Let people live their lives

      @looinrims@looinrims6 ай бұрын
    • @@looinrims What if people want to live a life dedicated to history elitism?

      @alltat@alltat6 ай бұрын
    • Who the hell cares to be honest.. Tactics and strategies are more interesting.

      @Ealdorman_of_Mercia@Ealdorman_of_Mercia5 ай бұрын
  • Big ups and shout outs to world of wartanks for supporting the big homie B. 🙏🤙

    @DCI_LeoDan_@DCI_LeoDan_4 ай бұрын
  • What’s with militaries naming grenades after food? First the US with the “pineapple” grenade, then the Germans with the “egg” hand grenade, what’s next?

    @Bobafett-lc2vx@Bobafett-lc2vx6 ай бұрын
    • To be precise, the first is a fruit and the second is "unborn animal" or whatever the technical term is for an egg, both can be food, but technically I would say a Wiener Schnitzel is food.

      @MilitaryHistoryVisualized@MilitaryHistoryVisualized6 ай бұрын
    • @@MilitaryHistoryVisualized True, when you put it that way. Still funny though

      @Bobafett-lc2vx@Bobafett-lc2vx6 ай бұрын
    • ​@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized An egg is technically a chickens menstruation.

      @T.efpunkt@T.efpunkt6 ай бұрын
    • I seem to remember that pilots were refering to their bombs as "eggs" (because they are "laid" on the target) as far back as WW1... But, the pineapple grenade looks like pineapple, the egg grenade looks like an egg, the potato masher looks like a potato masher... If you rephrase your question as: "Why nickname things like things they look like?" it answers the question. You can reasonably make the argument that they don't look VERY like a pinapple, egg, or potato masher, but that is a subjective question.

      @jmackmcneill@jmackmcneill6 ай бұрын
    • @@T.efpunktMenstruation refers to shedding the uterine lining, birds don’t have an uterus.

      @cm275@cm2756 ай бұрын
  • Thank you Bernhard et al. Good video.

    @michaelguerin56@michaelguerin566 ай бұрын
  • Nice stuff man!

    @stankmiester101@stankmiester1015 ай бұрын
  • Quite an explosvie topic. Thank you for the Video.

    @Sabelzahnmowe@Sabelzahnmowe6 ай бұрын
  • Great video as always, thanks for all the information! I wish you'd also talk a little about operating the grenade as well. It always baffled me that the Germans used a screw-like mechanism for activating the grenade rather than going with a simpler mechanism such as the one used in Americans grenades.

    @unknown0soldier@unknown0soldier5 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for an awesome video. I've never heard of this grenade before

    @Nudgeworth@Nudgeworth6 ай бұрын
    • Glad you enjoyed it!

      @MilitaryHistoryVisualized@MilitaryHistoryVisualized5 ай бұрын
  • i haven't forgotten this

    @CthulhuInc@CthulhuInc6 ай бұрын
  • I know it mostly from the old Battlefield 2 Mod "Forgotten Hope 2"

    @TheAlexkon3@TheAlexkon36 ай бұрын
  • Literally forgotten, i do have q faint memory of learning of it 2 years ago but ive forgotten everything else Always a great feeling when you rember things and get new information thank you

    @theromanorder@theromanorder6 ай бұрын
  • I'd expect that the stick grenade could be thrown further due to the extra Wang effect

    @mattheweagles5123@mattheweagles51236 ай бұрын
  • 1:47 wow! That is one manouverable ship!

    @ThommyofThenn@ThommyofThenn6 ай бұрын
  • I had no idea. Wonderful info as always. Now, exactly how did this Egg grenade work?

    @billd2635@billd26356 ай бұрын
  • Egg grenades were"boring". Everybody had them. Similarly, Luger and MP-40 gained great fame because they were different then weapons you could usually get in USA.

    @mladenmatosevic4591@mladenmatosevic45916 ай бұрын
  • Post scriptum had it in the early war french maps. Nice detail.

    @johnpeterson8674@johnpeterson86746 ай бұрын
  • The einhandgranate gets a fairly prominent, brief, role at the end of Der Untergang, murder suicide of family at table...

    @alexhubble@alexhubble6 ай бұрын
  • When I was little there was Yugoslav era TV series about resistance in Belgrade, and they always used this type of grenades that you have to unscrew. And I always wondered what are they, so finally an answer I been looking for so long.

    @Puch300G@Puch300G5 ай бұрын
  • both grenades could be used as booby traps by taking out the delay element of the fuse. the ears sticking up on the grenades is for wire to tie them to a static object to make such traps.

    @michaelbevan3285@michaelbevan32856 ай бұрын
  • Mind the ones with the Red Fuse cap.

    @davidbrennan660@davidbrennan6605 ай бұрын
  • Hope u could do some depths on the Soviet deep battle doctrine in the future

    @mukhtarsyajaratun1025@mukhtarsyajaratun10255 ай бұрын
  • First time I saw this grenade was its depiction in Forgotten Hope 2😅 the battlefield 2 mod

    @sovinr8658@sovinr86586 ай бұрын
  • Interesting.

    @bigsarge2085@bigsarge20856 ай бұрын
  • How did the fuse and trigger of the egg grenade work?

    @bwilliams463@bwilliams4635 ай бұрын
  • I remember seeing a photo of a German trench in the Leningrad sector showing both stick and egg grenades located on the edge of the trench ready for immediate use in case of a Russian attack.

    @davey7452@davey74525 ай бұрын
  • Im surprised that since they had a hand grenade and a stick grenade (with no clear discernable doctrinal difference to my knowledge) they didnt just slightly modify the shape and add some threading to the bottom of the hand grenade so soldiers can pick their preferred throw.

    @Captain-Jinn@Captain-Jinn6 ай бұрын
  • I think it is due to the stick showing up in movies. I don't remember any Germans using the egg grenade in any movies I've watched.

    @rutabagasteu@rutabagasteu6 ай бұрын
    • Likewise the Pineapple (US Mk2 Fragmentation Grenade) is common in mass made WWII movies immediately post-war while the cylindrical (Mk3 Concussion Grenade) I’ve seem more often in WWII movies made after 1975 (possibly a Vietnam influence). This also might be the influence of veteran armorers being required to handle this kind of hardware on movie sets by that point.

      @MsZeeZed@MsZeeZed6 ай бұрын
    • @@MsZeeZed yup, the pineapple one I have seen in the same movies.

      @rutabagasteu@rutabagasteu6 ай бұрын
    • In Downfall is a scene. I have seen it in several other movies as well.

      @swunt10@swunt105 ай бұрын
  • My Grandpa carried a few "explosive easter eggs" all the way from Athens to Triest.

    @comentedonakeyboard@comentedonakeyboard6 ай бұрын
  • "Forgotten"??? If memory serves, they were the most commonly used German grenades. The only people who've forgotten them are moviemakers.

    @ChicagoDB@ChicagoDB6 ай бұрын
  • Disclaimer: in 2019 I was invited to play World of Warships at a mate's house. _

    @UncleJoeLITE@UncleJoeLITE5 ай бұрын
  • Although Sven Hazels books are fiction, he mentions often the egg Handgranate

    @gertandersen3609@gertandersen36095 ай бұрын
  • The numbers of produced grenades seems kinda low, it is only around 11 handgrenades per german soldier over the whole war.

    @Dark_Wooki33@Dark_Wooki336 ай бұрын
    • Not all soldiers are frontline soldiers. You need clerks, drivers, logisticians. Unless you're frontline infantry you may not even have gotten training in how to use these.

      @Kyoptic@Kyoptic6 ай бұрын
    • It could be cause Germany captured so much equipment early on, I mean they literally took Austria and Czechoslovakia without resistance.

      @robertkalinic335@robertkalinic3356 ай бұрын
    • @@Kyoptic Fair point, but even if we go with a 1 to 10 ratio that is still only 110 grenades, or 9-10 days of urban fighting.

      @Dark_Wooki33@Dark_Wooki336 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Dark_Wooki33 throwing ten grenades in a day would seem to be something that you would be worth noting as some kind of record, as opposed to routine, even for a major battle. How often would you assume a platoon or a company to engage in the kind of close skirmish that calls for 3-6 grenades, over the course of a day?

      @jmackmcneill@jmackmcneill6 ай бұрын
    • @@Kyoptic I can confirm weird sets of people got grenade training. Like marine anti-aircraft units on the german channel islands, who would be too few in number for an actual invasion attempt which was not gonna happen anyways because of the shallow sea and easy reach of german everything.

      @demrandom@demrandom6 ай бұрын
  • I keep trying to read the name as einhandgrenate instead of eihandgrenate. Like, you know, as opposed to those two-handed grenades 🙄

    @zstewart@zstewart6 ай бұрын
    • 😂

      @MilitaryHistoryVisualized@MilitaryHistoryVisualized6 ай бұрын
  • I have a reproduction of one but for some reason it's heavier than what I've seen the real thing weighing in at.

    @JagerLange@JagerLange6 ай бұрын
  • Last time I saw one of these was in the Book of Armaments: Chapter 2, verses 9 to 21.

    @redspecial4102@redspecial41026 ай бұрын
  • I think the US Army missed an opportunity in not producing a blast effect grenade similar to a baseball in weight ( that is an egg grenade) in the WWII era EVERY kid in America could throw a baseball accurately 200’, Baseball was the most popular sport back then. Nowadays kids play soccer and basketball );

    @richardschaffer5588@richardschaffer55885 ай бұрын
    • They did, it was the Beano T13 hand grenade, but it had premature detonation issues and was scraped.

      @reaperundergroundexplorati2232@reaperundergroundexplorati22323 ай бұрын
  • Ah yes, the forbidden Fabergé egg.

    @h.a.9880@h.a.98805 ай бұрын
  • geil

    @Rostov_red_beard@Rostov_red_beard6 ай бұрын
  • Eggs are scary but Pineapples try to eat you

    @looinrims@looinrims6 ай бұрын
  • Nine million times more than stick grenade. Looks up stick grenade production. Wow, more than 54 trillion of these were made!

    @frederf3227@frederf32276 ай бұрын
  • If you wanna talk about real forgotten grenades try the Italian Red Devils.

    @Pyrrhus1ofepirus@Pyrrhus1ofepirus6 ай бұрын
    • Or vz 21 Janček.

      @DOMINIK99013@DOMINIK990136 ай бұрын
  • Potato mashers look better in movies. The egg was more useful. To any goal? But the stick form of grenade isn't used now

    @frankbarnwell____@frankbarnwell____6 ай бұрын
  • I expected it to be a normal grenade but attached to an Eieruhr :/

    @Oxyleya@Oxyleya6 ай бұрын
  • this is a Eierhandgranate you take the egg in your hand and granate

    @kleinweichkleinweich@kleinweichkleinweich6 ай бұрын
  • Uses Salmonella as shrapnel

    @V77710@V777106 ай бұрын
  • I first found out about these from Call of Duty 3 of all damn places...

    @cnlbenmc@cnlbenmc6 ай бұрын
  • Seriously. Are horseshoes and handgrenades close enough? A-bombs are another thing. Thanks Bernard

    @frankbarnwell____@frankbarnwell____6 ай бұрын
  • egguuuuuu --^^

    @FeintMotion@FeintMotion6 ай бұрын
  • I don't see how a grenade in the boot is gonna be comfy at all..

    @Drownedinblood@Drownedinblood5 ай бұрын
    • All relative, in bootcamp during winter the buttstock of my assault rifle was a really comfy pillow out in the field.

      @MilitaryHistoryVisualized@MilitaryHistoryVisualized5 ай бұрын
    • @@MilitaryHistoryVisualizedI mean it's just an odd place to stick a grenade. I'd imagine it get on your nerves very soon.

      @Drownedinblood@Drownedinblood5 ай бұрын
  • EGG 🌊🐕

    @mikelangelo1232@mikelangelo12326 ай бұрын
  • Ah, yes, the testiclehandgrenade.

    @r3d3y3dstranger@r3d3y3dstranger6 ай бұрын
  • It made it into Iron front Liberation 1944. The game was obviously a rough Arma clone and crashed every time anything remotely interesting happened, but I remember.

    @KorporalNoobs@KorporalNoobs6 ай бұрын
    • it was arma 2.

      @King.Leonidas@King.Leonidas6 ай бұрын
  • Showing a demonstration sure would be handy to go with ALL the data…sigh. In other words, “show me don’t tell me”.

    @shakeypudding6563@shakeypudding65636 ай бұрын
  • german people do be pronouncing "world war" like "vulva"

    @AltCtrlSpud@AltCtrlSpud6 ай бұрын
  • Your video appears to have 12k likes and your views are below 2k at this moment. ?

    @BD90..@BD90..6 ай бұрын
    • The KZhead frauds had messed with the like counts the past several days. Every video I watched remarkably had 964 likes regardless of the number of views.

      @johndilday1846@johndilday18466 ай бұрын
  • 🙂🙂🙂🙃🙃🙃🙂🙂🙂

    @beepboop204@beepboop2046 ай бұрын
  • I can't leave a review on the website of their merch so I will here. I purchased a "premium" StuG Life Hoodie for 50 bucks, I've had it for 1 and a half weeks, and, the printing has started to chip, there is a hole along the seem line, loose threads everywhere, I'd hardly call this premium, and I'd sure as shit wouldn't pay 50 bucks for it. Please don't waste your money on this this stuff. I get it isn't MHV's fault its the tee shirt company, but the quality control on these obviously suck. (Edit) To be clear, I have not done anything rugged with this hoodie, the most "extreme" thing I've done in it, was wear a seat belt over it. I am very worried to wash this. 3/10

    @SuperBuildsInMC@SuperBuildsInMC5 ай бұрын
    • Sorry to hear about that, please contact them here: community.teespring.com/training-center/teesprings-customer-support/

      @MilitaryHistoryVisualized@MilitaryHistoryVisualized5 ай бұрын
  • 0:39: 9 million times more? Am I hearing it right..and 7:19 who is the unfortunate b*****d trying to surrender

    @outofturn331@outofturn3316 ай бұрын
  • -50% fat Bruh.

    @ReySchultz121@ReySchultz1216 ай бұрын
  • please do a video on these (this is a copy and paste list for a few channels) units and tactics/evaluation of loadouts of troops (from different jobs (and other branches) the tank doctrine of countries evaluation of tank veiw ports evaluation of tanks/armored vehicles of different countries navil ship cross sections (all the rooms and how it all works) evaluation of types of ships or evaluation of navil warfare air craft carrier strike group formations exsamples (from different countries) ancient persan ships, ancient veneti ships (gauls that fought ceaser) tactics used so far in the Ukraine war, better for squads to be 2 teams of 5 or 3 teams of 3, and probably the easiest, better to keep troops well feed or starved like an animal how dose age effect comsnders eg napoleon got older so took less risks, ancient urban warfare ww2 tactics in Asia, tactics in the Chinese age of warlords, tactics in the ruso jap war cold war navil tactics, Korean war tactics, strange tactics or unque battles from the American war of independence and America civil war types of bombs lunched by drones comands given on sailing ships (like ease the sheets and get ready to chine, or slack n beases, basically things you hear movie capitns say) why did the nazis never return (or a video on best occupations) why did the Japanese empire fall, dont just say "America" like things like how there army and navy argued alot

    @theromanorder@theromanorder6 ай бұрын
  • Stick grenade with fragmentation sleeve.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stielhandgranate#/media/File:Stielhandgranate_43_MHM_noBG.png

    @tarjeijensen9369@tarjeijensen93693 ай бұрын
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