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Rick.
Check it out.
Stop.
Is it loaded?
I don't know The flame fellow.
I think it is a flamethrower.
It's an M nine, a one flame thrower from Vietnam and its operational Oh my God!
Flame throwers and M nine a one flame thrower from Vietnam.
This is late sixties.
It's been civilian.
Eyes make safer.
So customers go out in the desert and shoot it.
The flamethrowers itself about $4500.
Soldiers hate carrying this because it was like walking around with, like a bomb on your back.
The early ones were, but the later models wasn't much of an issue.
You also have to remember like places like Iwo Jima and the Pacific campaign.
Marines use flamethrowers to pretty good success.
Because the Japanese were entrenched many times and caves many times, you couldn't get him out of holes and things.
And so the flamethrower operators would walk up, find the entrance and shoot the flame thrower inside, and it would clear it.
What were these things built with napalm?
There was a mixture of diesel gasoline and a picnic Damn flamethrowers air, really fun there certainly dangerous, and they're not to mess around with but a World War Two flamethrowers are sort of where you want to be a za collector, but they're expensive, and they're hard to maintain.
But a good Vietnam one.
It's still worthwhile to a collector work.
It does work.
Okay, now there's legal issues here, and I'll address them.
Most states in the US allow these especially heavy agriculture states like the Midwest, because farmers still use them to clear old crop.
But typically they're filled with diesel fuel.
Something more stable than napalm.
And they're considered farm equipment.
Okay, how much is something like this?
This is about $4500.
I love you for him to shoot it.
Hell, yeah.
I want to shoot that thing.
A flamethrower.
Now, that's pretty cool.
I just hope that after chum shoots the flame thrower, I'll still be alive to make the deal.
This will shoot a wall of fire 30 yards.
Ready?
That's enough.
Stop.
Pretty bad.
I was over too soon.
That that was the most terrifying thing I've ever experienced in my life.
Well, let me tell you what Oh, what was warm over here?
Let's take this thing off because we're definitely gonna have to buy this bad boy how I'd love it.
What do you think?
I mean, it works.
Great.
Works great.
No, it's bad.
It is badass.
And it's why they don't make them anymore.
You know, it was terrifying.
It was fairly efficient.
It was pretty useful in World War Two by the time Vietnam came along, You know, after that the U.
S.
Military stop making them and decommission all the ones that were there.
So it's a model and nine, it's Vietnam era.
Um, it is Maur or less original parts.
The parts that need to be replaced because of function and safety have been the wand is reproduction, which is common for flame furthers.
They're actually being used because the Vietnam wands are very rare and hard to find.
Ron, I know when you told us about the value, you said 4500 and I'm going to do something I rarely do.
Eyes actually say I think you're wrong.
I think the value is quite a bit higher, almost double I've seen these cell in this condition and this functionality for I would say, a minimum eight grand and sometimes more.
So I think you're being really generous.
All right, So you know what you said 4500.
He said it's worth, like, eight grand.
Can we just sell a five grand?
You being a Vegas guy for sure?
We can do it.
All right, Sweet five grand.