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#88mm #TigerTank #WW2History #TankBattle #MilitaryStories When a squad of American infantry was cornered by invincible Tiger tanks, they should have retreated. Instead, they hijacked the enemy's most feared weapon. The Problem: The German 88mm Flak 36 was a "scientific instrument," not a battlefield toy. Designed to shoot down bombers at 30,000 feet, it required a fire-control computer, complex optics, and a highly trained crew of mathematics experts to operate. For a group of muddy, exhausted GIs with no training and no manual, the gun was a useless heavy paperweight—and the Tigers were closing in fast. The Risk: To survive, Sergeant Miller had to turn a precision anti-aircraft gun into a crude shotgun. He ignored the missing sights and the complex dials, choosing to "boresight" the weapon by looking through the open barrel. This forced the crew to wait until the 60-ton monsters were at point-blank range, turning the engagement into a suicidal game of chicken where a single missed shot meant instant annihilation. They Called His Captured 88 'Useless' — Until He Vaporized 3 Tigers ✅In this video, we uncover: -The "Splash Method" Miller used to blind a superior enemy when he couldn't aim. -How a "Sky Gun" was manually cranked to decapitate a heavy tank at 20 yards. -The physics-defying moment an improvised AP shell liquefied a Tiger's turret ring. -He Pointed The "Sky Gun" At The Ground — And Decapitated A Tiger 🔔 Subscribe for more Untold WW2 Stories: @WW2ChroniclesWithAndrew ⚠️ Disclaimer: This video presents dramatized storytelling based on historical WW2 events researched from publicly available sources. While we strive for accuracy and engaging narratives, some details may be simplified or contain inaccuracies. This content is for entertainment purposes and should not be cited as an academic or authoritative historical source. For verified historical information, please consult professional military historians, official archives, and peer-reviewed publications.