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These Failed WW2 Weapons Must Be Seen to Be Believed

Largest Air Conflicts of WW2

These Failed WW2 Weapons Must Be Seen to Be Believed

Any war is going to have its fair share of failed weapons and platforms. However, the Second World War takes the cake when it comes to bizarre weapons that didn’t make the grade. Today, we’re looking at the failed and bizarre weapons of World War 2.

Why Did These Weapons Fail?

Often failures can be attributed to a few determining factors. Not every good idea that leaves the drawing board is going to be practical on the battlefield. You can even see this with the earliest tanks. On paper, they were outstanding, but in practice, they were slow, cumbersome, and prone to failure.

Boulton Paul Defiant

©Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Country: Great Britain

The Boulton Paul Defiant was a two-seat fighter plane with four .303-inch machine guns behind the pilot, designed to allow the gunner to attack enemy aircraft flying alongside or below the plane.

While the unusual design allowed RAF pilots to combat dynamic formations of enemy bombers, the Defiant’s lack of forward-firing weapons made it vulnerable to conventionally designed fighter planes. The plane’s shortcomings were apparent during the Battle of Great Britain when two Defiant squadrons suffered heavy losses and had to be withdrawn.

A13 Mk Covenanter III

  • Country: Great Britain

Designed in 1939, the A13 Mk Covenanter III was a British cruiser tank designed to speed past gaps in enemy defense lines. While the tank had no glaring design flaws, by the time the Covenanters were delivered in 1941, its 2-pounder gun and 30mm armor were already outclassed. Other defects, like engine cooling problems, were soon discovered. While none of the 1,711 Covenanter tanks produced saw combat duty, the British army used them for training.

Cultivator No. 6

©Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Country: Great Britain

The Cultivator No. 6 is one of many examples of weapons designed to fight WWI-style warfare that proved disadvantageous in WWII. Nicknamed “White Rabbit” or “Nellie,” it was a trench-digging machine based on an idea first proposed by Winston Churchill during World War I.

“Nellie” was designed to burrow towards an enemy line, boring a trench wide enough for a troop of soldiers to follow behind it. The 130-ton machine proved ill-suited for the combined arms Blitzkrieg-style fighting characteristic of World War II, and was retired after a few had been constructed.

Goliath

  • Country: Germany

The Leichte Ladungsträger, or Goliath, was a remote-controlled vehicle designed to carry explosive devices into buildings, bunkers, and enemy troops and vehicles and then detonate them.

While the tracked vehicle could carry bombs with up to a 100 kg charge, the Goliath moved relatively slowly and had long trailing control wires vulnerable to being cut. Some 2,650 vehicles were built between 1942 and 1944, but they were largely ineffective in the field.

Japanese war balloons

©Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Country: Japan

Separated from Axis countries by two oceans, the United States was largely invulnerable to air attacks during World War II. In the final stages of the war, however, Japan embarked on an experimental bombing campaign against the United States, sending unmanned balloons laden with explosive devices across the Pacific Ocean to release and detonate over American territory. While 9,000 bombs were launched, few made landfall.

The only casualties from the campaign were six picnickers who, in 1945, accidentally discovered a balloon device in the woods of Oregon and tried to move it.

Kamikaze planes

©Keystone / Hulton Archive via Getty Images
  • Country: Japan

Amidst heavy losses and the overwhelming approach of American forces in the final stages of World War II, Japan developed a new strategy of suicide attacks, using pilots flying aircraft equipped with bombs as improvised missiles.

While the most infamous example is the Kamikaze flying force, the Japanese deployed other suicide craft, such as the Shinyo motorboats and Kaiten crewed torpedoes. While kamikaze warfare resulted in the deaths of about 7,000 allied personnel – and 3,800 Japanese pilots – the suicide attacks failed to stay the American military’s advance, leading historians to question the campaign’s efficacy.

Krummlauf

  • Country: Germany

The Krummlauf (literally “curved barrel”) was a German weapon attachment developed during World War II. While the design was intended to allow the Sturmgewehr 44 assault rifle to fire around corners, the intense pressure from firing rounds caused the attachment to distort and wear out rapidly.

Moreover, the bullets frequently shattered upon leaving the Krummlauf. Despite its failure during the war, the concept of a weapon that can fire around corners has been revisited in the design of some modern firearms.

Luftwaffe heavy bombers

©Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Country: Germany

While Germany had been developing a fleet of heavy bombers for strategic bombing – decimating an enemy country through a continued attack on its economy and population – efforts stalled in 1936 after the project head ironically died in a plane crash.

By the time the Luftwaffe could finally deploy a long-range heavy bomber in 1942 to match British and Soviet airpower, Germany had already suffered significant consequences from its lack of a strategic bomber force.

Maginot Line

©louismc / iStock via Getty Images
  • Country: France

World War I took a devastating toll on France, with more than six million French soldiers dying over four years of brutal trench warfare. In the runup to World War II, while Germany was still observing the terms of the Treaty of Versailles – banning the nation from possessing tanks, airplanes, and heavy artillery – France built a 300-mile series of underground fortifications along its eastern border to prevent an attack from Germany.

While the Maginot Line successfully deterred WWI-style ground attacks, by WWII the German army had adopted a strategy of bombers and armored vehicles that could advance on difficult terrain. The Germans crossed into France at a weak point in the Maginot Line in May 1940 and forced a French surrender within six weeks.

Panzerkampfwagen VIII Maus

  • Country: Germany

The embodiment of Hitler’s aspiration for an indestructible armored fighting vehicle, the Panzerkampfwagen VIII Maus, was a super-heavy tank designed by Ferdinand Porsche. The first proposed tank was in 1942, but the development of the tank was slow.

While a Daimler-Benz aircraft engine powered the Maus, its 200-ton weight dragged it down, allowing it to reach a top speed of just 12 miles per hour. Trials for the tank started in 1943, but there were consistent mechanical issues, particularly with the drivetrain. While five Maus tanks were ordered, only two were ever built.

Messerschmitt Me 163 Komet

  • Country: Germany

Designed to intercept American bombers flying over Germany, the Messerschmitt Me 163 Komet was a small rocket-powered plane powered by a liquid fuel composed of two volatile substances that would ignite when mixed.

While the highly reactive fuel allowed the tiny fighter to reach an altitude of 39,000 feet in just 3.5 minutes and a top speed of over 550 miles per hour, the Komet had a flight time of only seven minutes and was difficult to pilot. Additionally, accidents caused by mishandling the volatile fuel were common, killing numerous pilots during testing and training flights.

Panjandrum

©Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Country: Great Britain

Named after an 18th-century nonsense poem, the Panjandrum was devised by the British Admiralty’s experimental Directorate of Miscellaneous Weapons Development as a weapon intended for use against Hitler’s Atlantic Wall beach defenses. The mechanism comprised two 10-foot rocket-propelled wheels linked by a cylinder filled with explosives and was designed to be launched from a landing craft, speed up the beach, and blast a hole in the sea wall or other concrete barriers.

During tests, however, the wheel rockets frequently malfunctioned or detached themselves, causing the Panjandrum to veer off in random directions. It was never deployed in actual combat.

Schwerer Gustav

  • Country: Germany

In the build-up to World War II, France fortified its eastern border with the now infamous Maginot Line to prevent an attack from Germany, while Germany devised ways to bypass French defenses. One concept that saw fruition was the Schwerer Gustav, a 1,350-ton, 80cm gun mounted on a railroad car that could launch a 7-tonne shell 29 miles.

The gun was completed after Germany invaded France in 1940 and was used in 1942 against the Soviet city of Sevastopol, making it the largest-caliber rifled weapon ever used in combat. However, the barrel wore out during the attack, and a second Schwerer Gustav gun was produced but never used.

Smith Gun

©Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Country: Great Britain

Colloquially known as the “Dad’s Army,” the British Home Guard was a citizen militia stationed within the U.K., intended to be a last line of defense against a Nazi invasion. The rag-tag militia was underfunded and under-equipped, frequently having to improvise uniforms and weaponry.

The Smith Gun was an anti-tank gun designed for the Home Guard that had to be tipped on its side to fire its 3-inch mortar rounds and was only accurate to about 200 yards. While it went into production in 1941, the weapon developed a reputation for killing those who tried to man it and was never used in combat.

TOG

  • Country: Great Britain

The TOG was a heavy tank concept designed by “The Old Gang,” a committee of tank designers from World War I convened by the Ministry of Supply. The TOG 1 was long and heavily armored, able to cross trenches and shell-laden terrain—advantages more pertinent to the First World War than the Second.

The committee designed a second prototype, the TOG 2, with more modern weapon attachments like a revolving turret, but the outdated design made the TOG too bulky to be used in war.

V-2

  • Country: Germany

The second of Hitler’s “revenge weapons” after the V-1 rocket that launched the Blitz against British targets, the V-2 rocket was a technically advanced yet wastefully expensive ballistic missile. The world’s first long-range guided ballistic missile carried a one-ton warhead and would ascend to the Kármán line – the edge of space – before descending vertically on its target.

While the V-2 successfully bombed London and Antwerp, the total payload delivered by the missile was relatively low in comparison to what a heavy bomber could carry. While 9,000 people were killed in V-2 attacks, more than twice as many slave workers died building the weapons.

V-3

©Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Country: Germany

The Vergeltungswaffe 3 was a German supergun designed to bombard and destroy London at a rate of 600 shells an hour from an underground complex 100 miles away. The V-3 gun incorporated multiple chambers, whereby secondary gas charges firing along the main barrel gave the shell the extra velocity it needed to reach its target. While 25 gun tubes were positioned and aimed toward London, the V-3 was ultimately destroyed by a 1944 raid before any rounds had been fired.

War dogs

©Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons
  • Country: Soviet Union

While dogs were used during World War II as messengers or for mine detection, from 1941 to 1942, the Soviet Union attempted to use dogs as anti-tank weapons, training them to run towards enemy tanks with explosives strapped to their backs. Many dogs became confused and ran back towards their handlers, blowing them up, or were shot on sight by German soldiers. The Soviet Army quickly abandoned the war dogs program.

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