[ATTACH]427738[/ATTACH]
Rare Medium Tank M3 variant, from a MiniArt kit
Collapse
X
-
Guest
-
-
Its an M3 modified by the US army for trainees to get used to the look of an enemy tank. Here is a link for more information Crack That Tank
I must say Jakko from a modelling prospective this is a wonderful choice of subject to build. Also you have done an exceptional job with the transformation. Its been a real joy to watch it come together. Good luck with the wet stuffComment
-
Guest
Bonus point to Steve!
Like I said earlier: it’s definitely a real tank, but it was very rare — I highly doubt more than one was modified. It dawned on me a while after I started building that it is probably meant to look like this:
[ATTACH]427753[/ATTACH]
The so-called Neubaufahrzeug (literally “New-Construction Vehicle”) that the Germans built about half a dozen of, but paraded around Norway in the spring of 1940 so it looked like they had large numbers of them.
It is puzzling why the Americans would go to all that trouble to make one of their own tanks resemble a real German one as closely as they reasonably could, when just painting crosses on a standard American tank would work fine too — as they did for other training films.
I like somewhat oddball subjects, and this is certainly one of them.
Comment
-
Guest
Great work there Jakko, bet Steve was drooling over the rivets, very neat by the way. Personally I was just waiting for Steve to find it, out very own Wikipedia.:thumb2::nerd:
At least we can now relax and as Mark has said and stop trawling the internet.Comment
-
Comment
-
Its an M3 modified by the US army for trainees to get used to the look of an enemy tank. Here is a link for more information Crack That Tank
[ATTACH=CONFIG]n1154905[/ATTACH][ATTACH=CONFIG]n1154906[/ATTACH][ATTACH=CONFIG]n1154907[/ATTACH]
I must say Jakko from a modelling prospective this is a wonderful choice of subject to build. Also you have done an exceptional job with the transformation. Its been a real joy to watch it come together. Good luck with the wet stuffComment
-
Guest
[ATTACH]427805[/ATTACH]
The film includes a good amount of footage of other countries’ tanks intercut with the American mock-up. Much of it is from German propaganda films, of early models of Panzer IV etc. driving around, and also KVs and other tanks knocked out, including the Somua above.
Of course, the real reason is that a tank is a tank to almost anyone, including the soldiers supposed to be trained by this film.
By the way, here’s a direct embed of that film, but without the annoying and distracting time bar at the bottom that Periscope Films insists on adding:
Comment
-
Guest
ThanksI’m still debating whether to paint it OD or panzer grey — I suppose OD would be the more likely colour of the real thing, but panzer grey more in keeping with what it’s intended to be. So probably the latter.
I must say I was quite amused by a lot of the suggestions, serious and not-so-much both
Comment
-
Guest
The other day, I gave the whole model a coat of Vallejo grey primer, from an aerosol. I then sprayed the areas where the crosses are to go with white and once it had dried, masked off the crosses themselves with tape. After measuring stills from the film, I estimate their size in 1:35 scale to be 14 mm large with 6 mm wide legs, so 6 mm Tamiya tape cut to 14 mm lengths worked quite well.
[ATTACH]428266[/ATTACH]
Then I just sprayed Tamiya XF-63 German Grey over everything, including the tracks:
[ATTACH]428265[/ATTACH]
My normal method for painting rubber is to give it a coat of dark grey and then add a black wash, so rather than use a different dark grey I thought I might as well do everything with the paint I had in my airbrush anywayComment
-
Guest
Got round to doing some more painting, using Tamiya Neutral Grey to highlight the panels:
[ATTACH]429027[/ATTACH]
That didn’t go as well as intended because somehow, I kept turning the air valve (in the air line, just below the airbrush) the wrong way when trying to give it more air so it would spray better … :rolling: I only noticed my mistake when I went on to spray something else with my other airbrush that didn’t want to spray at all, and I took a good look at the valve. Not sure what went on there in my head
Anyway, after it had dried, I added an overall wash of old Games Workshop Devlan Mud to shade the model:
[ATTACH]429028[/ATTACH]Comment
Comment