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Why Corporal Tony Stein turned a salvaged aircraft machine gun into an infantry weapon during WW2 — and made 8 barefoot runs under fire to save 9 Marines. This World War 2 story reveals how a Jewish toolmaker from Ohio ignored every expert who said aircraft guns couldn't work on the ground. February 19, 1945. Corporal Tony Stein, 28th Marines, 5th Marine Division, hit the black volcanic sand of Iwo Jima carrying a weapon he'd built in a maintenance shed in Hawaii. The "Stinger" was a Browning AN/M2 aircraft machine gun — designed to be cooled by 300-mph airstreams — fitted with an M1 Garand stock and BAR bipod. Every armorer said the thin barrel would melt without aircraft slipstream. Sergeants called it a "plane gun" that would jam on the first burst. Battalion officers called it a death trap. They were all wrong. What Tony Stein discovered that morning on Iwo Jima wasn't about following regulations. It was about volume of fire — 1,200 rounds per minute that could suppress pillboxes faster than any standard weapon, even if it meant running barefoot to the beach eight times for ammunition. By the end of February 19 — the day that would earn him the Medal of Honor — other Marines were asking where they could get a Stinger. And the weapon that wasn't supposed to work kept firing. This improvised weapon spread through the 28th Marines, gunner to gunner, demonstrating principles of suppressive fire that military doctrine would later formalize. The toolmaker from Dayton proved that sometimes the best solutions come from breaking every rule in the manual — and his innovation changed how Marines thought about firepower on the battlefield. 🔔 Subscribe for more untold WW2 stories: / @wwii-records 👍 Like this video if you learned something new 💬 Comment below: What other WW2 tactics should we cover? #worldwar2 #ww2history #ww2 #wwii #ww2records ⚠️ Disclaimer: This is entertainment storytelling based on WW2 events from internet sources. While we aim for engaging narratives, some details may be inaccurate. This is not an academic source. For verified history, consult professional historians and archives. Watch responsibly.