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By 1945, the German Kriegsmarine was no longer fighting for victory—it was fighting for time. In the shipyards of a crumbling Reich, engineers birthed the Biber (Beaver), a "midget submarine" so small, so cramped, and so dangerous that many of its pilots considered their mission a one-way ticket before they even left the dock. Displaced by just 6 tons and piloted by a single man, the Biber was intended to slip through Allied anti-submarine nets and wreak havoc on the supply lines fueling the invasion of Europe. But the greatest enemy wasn't the British Navy; it was the Biber itself. In this video, we investigate the "Iron Coffin" of the North Sea: The Gasoline Trap: Why the decision to use an Opel Blitz truck engine—running on highly volatile gasoline—turned the Biber’s interior into a ticking time bomb of toxic fumes. The "Sleep of Death": The terrifying reality of carbon monoxide leaks that caused dozens of pilots to lose consciousness and drift helplessly into enemy minefields. One-Way Engineering: How the lack of a conning tower and a periscope that barely cleared the waves meant that once a Biber pilot submerged, they were essentially blind and buried alive. The Anzio & Scheldt Disasters: A tactical breakdown of the missions where 70% of the Biber fleet was lost to mechanical failure and pilot exhaustion rather than combat. The Biber wasn't just a weapon; it was a symptom of a military that had run out of options. We look at the chilling firsthand accounts of the "K-Men" who manned these steel tubes and why the German High Command continued to send them out long after the war was lost. Inside the Investigation: 🌊 The 24-Hour Nightmare: How pilots used "Pervitin" (methamphetamine) to stay awake in a freezing, gas-filled cockpit for missions lasting over 20 hours. ⚓ The Torpedo Paradox: Why firing the Biber's two external torpedoes often caused the sub to pop to the surface like a cork, exposing the pilot to immediate fire. 🛠️ Captured Tech: What Allied engineers discovered when they finally raised a Biber from the seafloor and why they were horrified by what they found. Join the Discussion: 💬 Was the Biber an act of military genius or a criminal waste of life? Share your thoughts on the desperation of 1945 in the comments. ✅ Subscribe for more deep dives into the weird, rare, and lethal technology of WWII. 🔔 Turn on Notifications to join us for our next military history investigation. #History #WWII #Kriegsmarine #MidgetSubmarine #BiberSub #MilitaryHistory #NavalWarfare #WeirdHistory #Documentary