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September 20, 1944 — the Battle of Arracourt. Major Charles “Bazooka Charlie” Carpenter took an unarmed Piper L-4 Grasshopper observation plane, welded six M9 bazookas to its wings, and flew straight into the fog to face German Panther tanks head-on. What he did that day defied Army regulations, training doctrine, and common sense… yet it changed the battlefield. This WW2 documentary reveals how Carpenter destroyed multiple German tanks, halted a flanking attack, and pioneered a technique that spread across Patton’s Third Army long before it ever reached an official manual. For years, the story remained buried in dispatches, pilot rumors, and after-action reports. Today, we explore the real events behind the legend of “the Mad Major”—a man whose improvisation influenced modern attack helicopter tactics decades before the first Cobra or Apache took flight. 📌 In this video you’ll learn: – How Carpenter modified his L-4 Grasshopper with six bazookas – How he used fog, altitude, and surprise to strike Panther tanks – Why German commanders panicked at reports of a “rocket-firing plane” – How his ideas spread unofficially through Patton’s Third Army – The long-term impact on aerial anti-armor doctrine If you enjoy untold WW2 stories, battlefield innovation, tank warfare, and real historical combat analysis, this is a must-watch. 🔔 Subscribe for more real WW2 events: / @wwii-records 👍 Like the video if you learned something new. 💬 Comment: What other forgotten WW2 field innovations should we cover? ⚠️ DISCLAIMER: This video is entertainment storytelling based on real World War II events gathered from online and secondary historical sources. Some details may be dramatized or simplified for narrative clarity. This is not an academic source—please consult historians, primary documents, and archival research for verified history. Watch responsibly.