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Ian M's Sd.Kfz.8 12t half track. Trumpeter. 1/35.

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Exactly the way I did mine, But I glued the front fender piece to the rear fender piece on the chassis. I also started building the storage lockers and glued the pieces together. It looked like this,
This is pretty much what I have gone for, so good to know I am on the right track.
 
Hi Ian
That's looking really good. Lovely neat work.

I'm waiting to see how you and Los tackle that issue :thinking: I have no doubt you'll come up with a plan.
The suspension set up on the later 7 I am building is slightly different to that of this early variant. I haven't built this kit but I would have thought you can build up the body as a seperate sub assembly though. The only dilemma could maybe be the steering wheel shaft through the bulkhead and whether the fully built up main bodywork integrates off the chassis with the metalwork over the engine.

I do know the engine will not fit in the bay once both the bulkhead and radiator housing are fitted.
 
Exactly the way I did mine, But I glued the front fender piece to the rear fender piece on the chassis. I also started building the storage lockers and glued the pieces together. It looked like this,


Once it had dried, I removed it as a total unit and continued to add other parts, including the side panels, only gluing them to the rear panel to get a good fit. Then added the firewall and other tidbits to it off the chassis,


You can see the side panels are not glued to the fender. The storage rack w/rails, hood (bonnet), radiator and rear seats are also not glued yet to insure a good fit all around. It's one complete unit and should fit on the chassis with no prob, even with the motor in place. Just double check how far the air-cleaners stick out on the right side. It should fit.....

Sorry again for the pics Ian, but it's better to see it, than me, trying to explain it in words.......

Prost
Allen
I guess cleaning up that rear to side panel joint will be easier to hide off the chassis. That's assuming it's not actually there on the real thing??
 
Thread owner
I guess cleaning up that rear to side panel joint will be easier to hide off the chassis. That's assuming it's not actually there on the real thing??
Not a picture from my build just a helpful picture from Allens earlier build of this model.
 
Thread owner
Been tinkering away today. Just sorting small things.
Also needed to order some paint and glue!

Oh and stuck 224 bits of track link together. Photos tomorrow:)
 
224 track parts in one session. No wonder you don't have the energy to give us photos today!! :smiling:
 
And on the 5th day he said "Bugger this for a game of soldiers" and took up knitting. :rolling: :smiling:
Try explaining that to my missus - she of the' lace weight, fingering weight, brioche, cable', and the occasional knit and purl expertise ... :smiling5:
Steve
 
A mini in box review to start the ball rolling!

Cheers chaps.
Having gotten a nice clear bench, Yes it happens, I got round to taking the sprue shots... LOADS of them.

Lots of plastic in the box. All in their own bag. Some had added protection by way of some foam padding to protect some of the more fine parts.

As Well as the good old fashioned assembly guide the over-view of the sprues reviles that there are no fewer than 14 sprues of tan plastic. TEN with the single link tracks, One clear, a fret of P.E. a bag with string and chain etc. 6 tyres A large part (rear bed of truck), and a partridge in a pear treeeeeee. phew. Oh a small decal sheet with the dials and number plates options. NO UNIT MARKS!
Colour call outs in the 20 pages of instructions can be seen in the bottom right of page two. So I know the rockercovers are steel! lol.

Time for a closer look at the plastic:

The detail looks OK, as to the accuracy, I'll leave that to the experts! Mouldings are reasonably clean!




Some sprues have more blind tabs* than others.


Would it had hurt them to have actual slats in the radiator guard?


Yeah. more Louvres to open out... grrr.






Not quite Tamiya but they look to be ok. Have to wait and see.


Final bit in the box, a colour paint guide.
Summary:
Some of the sprues are a tiny bit fuzzy here and there, but nothing a quick swipe with a sharp blade or a sanding stick wont take care of.
A few colour call outs along the way would be nice.

*blind tab: What I call those little bits of extra plastic that allows/ensures that the moulded part gets enough plastic by letting it fill and overflow. cut of and keep to make filler.

Right then. New blades in the Swanns, glasses cleaned and I am almost ready.
By clean bench do you mean you swept everything onto the floor again ! :smiling3:
Will follow this closely.
 
Hi Ian,

The 12 ton was built by Mercedes Benz, Krupp and Krauss-Maffei. The Famo was built by Fahrzeug und Motoren Werk in Breslau and by Vomag. Sköda, late in the war, built some Famo's with a 12-cylinder diesel motor in them....

Sorry, but I am kind of a nerd on these things and glad you saw the offset rollers on the drive sprocket fix on PMMS. I hope it won't be too hard to fix them. Most of all, have fun!!! If you get tired of the cannon towing idea, I have a suggestion that is more interesting.....

Prost
Allen
Really I am surprised ;)Dude 1
 
Looking good Ian, thinking of all those track parts has made me tired !
So good night all .
 
Thread owner
As much as it reads like I just down and made the tracks from start to finish, it was a bit here and a bit there. The sprues had 12 links on each. so it was a sprue or two at a time.
So they got made over a whole morning, between other things. ;)
And here they are:
20220926_100739.jpg
20220926_100746.jpg

20220926_100751.jpg
As can be seen quite mobil! a few links are a tad stiff but all can be moved. AND fit the drive sprocket! Yeah!
 
Great , I felt better after a nights sleep and waking to see these .
:thumb2:
 
As much as it reads like I just down and made the tracks from start to finish, it was a bit here and a bit there. The sprues had 12 links on each. so it was a sprue or two at a time.
So they got made over a whole morning, between other things. ;)
And here they are:
View attachment 463742
View attachment 463743

View attachment 463744
As can be seen quite mobil! a few links are a tad stiff but all can be moved. AND fit the drive sprocket! Yeah!
Good news Ian. The track links are quite hefty but they are strong once connected. Give the stiff ones a wiggle every 10mins, they soon start moving. If they do harden up just pop them on the bottom run and keep them away from the sprocket or idler.
 
I recall having to re-position a bunch of stuff on my DB9 12T kit. This was an earlier variant that Trumpeter also sell.

20190717_090618.jpg


As well as re-postioning parts I had a whole bunch of parts crack and split. The tolerences on some items were tight and I had to open them up but these cracks still appeared. Only kit this has ever happened on!

20190811_13405t2.jpg20190811_1338046.jpg20190811_134112.jpg
 
Just caught up with your build, so far looking really good. Compared to the Tamiya offering it looks so much better.
Mike.
 
Thread owner
Good news Ian. The track links are quite hefty but they are strong once connected. Give the stiff ones a wiggle every 10mins, they soon start moving. If they do harden up just pop them on the bottom run and keep them away from the sprocket or idler.
They are Mobil enough. Just a bit stiff, if that makes sense.
 
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