D-day 80th anniversary tribute build - 5th June -Sept 24.
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Guest
That’s what I’m thinking too, but I would really like to find a cheap Asuka (or old Tasca) Sherman III Mid-Production kit for it (No. 35-018). If I have to I’ll buy one new, but as I only need the hull with a few of its detail parts and the suspension, I’d prefer not to.
1:48? Or did Hobby Boss also do them in other scales?
Only on here, though
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They claim the Hobby Boss is incorrect on the hull slope but I really don’t care that doesn’t bother me. Jakko the one I have is a Sherman M4A3 (76)W will it work using they Wading? Black Dog models say to use the earlier one what’s your opinion.Comment
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Guest
I don’t know much about those kits, so I really can’t say.
There were no 76 mm Shermans in the Normandy invasion — off the top of my head, they only began to be introduced in late July, early August, and it was all M4A1s at that point. The US Army did deploy M4A3s fairly quickly in the invasion, but only the small-hatch ones at first (“small hatch” means the tank has the more steeply sloped glacis plate, with projecting “hoods” for the driver and co-driver; there are no small-hatch 76 mm Shermans). Only later, around the autumn/winter IIRC, did the M4A3 become the standard tank, instead of the M4 and M4A1, and the 76 mm tanks began appearing in earnest.
Short answer: building the model you’ve got as a tank in Normandy would be unrealistic
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Guest
Your safe bet would be any small-hatch M4 or M4A1 with 75 mm gun. If I take a quick look at Scalemates, that seems to limit you to Tamiya Nos. 32505 (M4) and 32523 (M4A1). You would need to fit the appliqué armour plates that both kits include, because these were a major refit that happened to pretty much all Shermans intended for Normandy.Comment

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