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Toys > Model Kits > Tanks
1/35 Scale unassembled plastic Model Kit requiring Paint and Glue to complete. The "General Stuart" M3 light tank was considered one of the best light tanks of World War II. Thoroughly reliable, quick and maneuverable, with longer range, it was well liked by its crew. The M3A1s were produced by the American Car Foundry between May 1942 and February 1943
Fully detailed interior and exterior. Movable gun elevation. Various accessories. Two types of tracks are provided: Flexible continuous tracks, Individually molded track sections, Waterslide decals, Detailed pictorial instructions.
Specifications:
- This is a plastic Model Kit, which comes unassembled and unpainted
- So glue, model paints and other basic modelling tools are additionally required
Academy 13312 1/48 K9 Self-Propelled Artillery MCP Plastic Model Kit
1/35 Scale unassembled plastic Model Kit requiring Paint and Glue to complete. The Sd.Kfz.182 Konigstiger would be the last tank series to reach production and combat operations before the end of the war. The design was an evolutionary development of the Tiger I featuring thicker armor than the Tiger I while also incorporating the sloped surfaces of the Panther series for more effective protection. The main gun was the 8.8 cm KwK 43 L/71 which provided the already formidable 88mm projectile with even greater muzzle velocity.
Specifications:
- This is a plastic Model Kit, which comes unassembled and unpainted
- So glue, model paints and other basic modelling tools are additionally required
At the beginning of the WWII on 01 September 1939 the Wehrmacht was equipped with 11.200 anti-tank guns 3,7 cm Pak 35/36 that could effectively fight Polish and Soviet light tanks of the early period with their light anti bullet armor, however it couldn't penetrate medium tanks such as British Matilda and Russian T-34 and KVs which resulted in the nickname Door Knocker by the Germans. The Pak 35/36 was used on all fronts during WWII, proven by the fact that in March 1945 the Wehrmacht had still 216 units of this gun in combat service with other 670 guns stored in arsenals.
Named after a General of the Northern States army during the American civil war, the M4 Sherman was the largest mass-produced tank used by the U.S. Army in World War II. Reliable and maneuverable, the Shermans were also quite technologically advanced. The diesel version of the M4A2 was supplied to all lend-lease countries (Soviet Union, UK and France) from 1943 onwards and became the most important tank of foreign production used by the Red Army. The main armament was the 75mm US- gun M3 L/37,5. Soviet tankers called this tank "emcha" (Russian transliteration of M4). During World War II, the Red Army received more than 2000 tanks. The M4A2(75) was also in service with the US-Marine Corps in the Pacific campaign.
Plastic Model Construction Kit requiring paint and glue for assembly.
1/35 Scale unassembled plastic Model Kit requiring Paint and Glue to complete
Academy has produced a number of Merkava variants over the years, with the first Merkava Mk.IV kit released about two years ago. Academy has tooled a new tree and new photo-etch fret to bring the LIC configured Mk.IV.
This kit is molded in tan styrene and presented on six parts trees, plus separately provided upper and lower hull halves. A fret of photo-etched details rounds out this kit.
Specifications:
| This is a plastic Model Kit, which comes unassembled and unpainted
| So glue, model paints and other basic modelling tools are additionally required
The Elefant (German for "elephant") was a heavy tank destroyer used by German Wehrmacht Panzerjager during World War II. Ninety-one units were built in 1943 under the name Ferdinand, after its designer Ferdinand Porsche, using tank hulls produced for the Tiger I tank design abandoned in favour of a Henschel design. In 1944, after modification of the existing vehicles, they were renamed Elefant. The official German designation was Panzerjäger Tiger (P) and the ordnance inventory designation was Sd. Kfz. 184.
Academy German Panzer IV Battle Charriot plastic model, 1/35 Scale unassembled plastic model kit requiring Paint and Glue to complete.
The Panzer IV series was developed in the early 1930s as the next step in the evolution of German armor.
Where the Panzer I and II were light tanks that spearheaded the early Blitzkrieg, the Panzer III series was envisioned as the tank fighter while the Panzer IV was to be the infantry support tank, initially armed with the 75mm L/24 main gun.
At the end of World War II, new tanks with strong armor, Tiger and Panther, appeared in German tank units. To fight them, it was necessary to arm the American Sherman tanks with a stronger cannon instead of the former 75mm cannon. The result was an M4A3 (76) W with a 76 mm cannon. Another attraction was the special "wet" ammunition. In such tanks, water was mixed with the antifreeze mixture and the corrosion inhibitor in the spaces between the shells in the containers. The risk of detonation in the event of an enemy intervention or fire was therefore much lower. Production of the M4A3 (76) W variant lasted from March to December 1944, during which time 1925 such tanks were built.
Plastic Model Construction Kit requiring paint and glue for assembly.
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