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Sixty four pounds of diesel fuel shaped like a life ring. Ten seconds of fire. Thirty yards of range. The soldier who carried it was the slowest, most visible man on the battlefield. His average life expectancy in combat was four minutes. And yet when every other weapon failed, he was the one they called forward. This is the Lifebuoy flamethrower, Britain's most feared infantry weapon of the Second World War. Developed by the Petroleum Warfare Department, the Lifebuoy carried four imperial gallons of diesel in a doughnut-shaped tank wrapped around a nitrogen sphere pressurised to two thousand pounds per square inch. Ten ignition cartridges gave the operator ten one-second bursts of flame reaching one hundred and twenty feet. On D-Day, soldiers of the Third Canadian Infantry Division carried Lifebuoys ashore on Juno Beach and used them to clear fortified houses in Tierceville when rifles and grenades failed. In Burma, Chindit columns positioned Lifebuoys at ambush sites deep behind Japanese lines, sealing killing zones with walls of fire. In this video we cover the full history of the Lifebuoy including the physics behind the doughnut-shaped fuel tank, the rushed development and manufacturing disasters, combat record from D-Day through Burma, comparison against the American M two flamethrower, German Flammenwerfer forty one and Churchill Crocodile flame tank, and why Britain produced fewer than eight thousand while Germany built over sixty four thousand. #WW2 #Flamethrower #BritishArmy #MilitaryHistory #WW2Weapons #DDay #Normandy #BritishWarArmory #WW2History #SecondWorldWar #BritishWeapons #JunoBeach #Burma