I've had a chance to look at the big 1/16th Tiger that Ron and Tony 'persuaded' me to buy (Tony held me down and Ron beat me with a big stick while young Ian stood in the background urging them on!).
It's apparently the old WSN/Torro R/C moulding without all the R/C motors and toys! Clearly not highly detailed but it looks a simple build (even with individual track links) and the parts are reasonably flash free.
It's about 530mm long by 220mm wide, which is roughly the same size as the biggest 'kit' that Ron obtained today (Pictures please Ron - you know you want to!) so it's quite imposing. And I'm certainly not going to argue with a £60 price tag for a brand new kit!
With the range of aftermarket parts available for Heng Long etc. and perhaps some bits of scratchbuilding I see no reason why you couldn't end up with a nice, big, cheap Tiger.
With the all-singing, all-dancing Tamiya Tiger running to about £700, you could afford a lot of aftermarket bits to improve it considerably and still show a good saving, but super-detailers may well prefer to spend the extra money on one of the uber-kits.
Gern
It's apparently the old WSN/Torro R/C moulding without all the R/C motors and toys! Clearly not highly detailed but it looks a simple build (even with individual track links) and the parts are reasonably flash free.
It's about 530mm long by 220mm wide, which is roughly the same size as the biggest 'kit' that Ron obtained today (Pictures please Ron - you know you want to!) so it's quite imposing. And I'm certainly not going to argue with a £60 price tag for a brand new kit!
With the range of aftermarket parts available for Heng Long etc. and perhaps some bits of scratchbuilding I see no reason why you couldn't end up with a nice, big, cheap Tiger.
With the all-singing, all-dancing Tamiya Tiger running to about £700, you could afford a lot of aftermarket bits to improve it considerably and still show a good saving, but super-detailers may well prefer to spend the extra money on one of the uber-kits.
Gern