Hi Guys,
I pulled this one out of the stash last night. I've had it for around 3 years so time to get it built. This will be pretty much OOB with maybe a little detailing and some crew figures added. I may also get aftermarket tracks as the kit version seems very similar to the Meng Gepard I built, and the tracks on that were a PITA.










After following a couple of builds on here recently I had planned on using True Earth products to replicate the anti slip texture, but Meng have thoughtfully moulded this in.

So I got cracking last night and completed stages one to five before calling it a night.
I pulled this one out of the stash last night. I've had it for around 3 years so time to get it built. This will be pretty much OOB with maybe a little detailing and some crew figures added. I may also get aftermarket tracks as the kit version seems very similar to the Meng Gepard I built, and the tracks on that were a PITA.
After following a couple of builds on here recently I had planned on using True Earth products to replicate the anti slip texture, but Meng have thoughtfully moulded this in.
So I got cracking last night and completed stages one to five before calling it a night.

The explosion serves to send (usually) two steel plates into the missile’s path: one on the outside of the ERA panel that gets blown outward directly, the other on the inside that will bounce off the tank itself and then flies out too. These are not intended to deflect the missile or disrupt its armour penetration, but rather, to continually feed “fresh” material into the path of the missile’s HEAT warhead,* giving it something to “eat” through and thereby absorb its penetrating power. The idea is, basically, that rather than having to put very thick armour on the tank, you can put a thin armour plate on and make that move relative to the penetrator so it acts as much thicker armour. This is necessary because a well-designed HEAT round has such extremely high armour penetration** that it’s pretty much impractical to do anything else.
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