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Master Box 1:35 Where are the damned roads? - Plastic Figure Model Kit #35112
This kit includes 60 parts to complete five figures, one vehicle and a dog. Glue and paint is not included in the kit.
Paints Required: VAL997, 880, 866, 947, 862, 950, 903, 904, 964, 866, 886, 988, 815 and 997.
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Master Box 1:35 'Urgent dispatch' - German Military Radio Car Sd. Kfz. 2 Type 170VK with crew - Plastic Figure Model Kit #35151
The kit includes parts for the assembly of four figures, one horse and one car - Mercedes Type 170VK.
£27.00 GBP
The T-37A, a Soviet amphibious light tank, was the first mass-produced fully amphibious tank in the world. The T-37A was based on the British Vickers tankette, and entered production in 1932. The Red Army used these tanks for communication, reconnaissance, and defense purposes. The T-37A tank was deployed during the Soviet invasion of Poland, the Winter War and in the beginning of the Second World War. Subsequently the configuration of the tank borrowed from its British prototype became a standard in Soviet amphibious tanks of the 1930s. The T-37 tank was put out of service in 1936 and replaced with the more advanced T-38 series.
Item No: 83819
Item Name: Soviet T-37A Light Tank (Podolsk)
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Static kit
Model Dimensions: Length 109.8mm, Width 59mm
Total Plastic Parts: 320+
Total Sprues: 17 sprues and lower hull
Photo Etched Parts: 2 pcs
Release Date: 2015-05
Additional:
- The kit consists of over 320 parts
- Multi-directional slide moulded turret and lower hull
- Photo-etched parts included
- 196 individual track links
£27.00 GBP
The T-37, a Soviet amphibious light tank, was the first series of mass-produced fully amphibious tanks in the world. The design was based on the British Vickers tankette and other operational amphibious tanks. Mass production began in 1933 and ran until 1936, when the T-37 was replaced with the more modern T-38. During the four years of production, the Soviet Union built 2552 T-37's.
The Red Army used this tank for communication, reconnaissance, and defense purposes, as well as for infantry support on the battlefield. The T-37 was used during the Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939, in the Winter War against Finland (1939–1940), and in the beginning of the Great Patriotic War. Some T-37's fought on the front lines until 1944.
Item No: 83818
Item Name: Soviet T-37 Amphibious Light Tank - Early
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Static kit
Model Dimensions: Length 110mm, Width 59mm
Total parts: 310+
Total Sprues: 17 sprues and lower hull
Photo Etched Parts: 1 piece
Release Date: 2013-11
Additional:
- The kit consists of over 310 parts
- Multi-directional slide molded turret and lower hull
- Photo-etched parts included
- 196 individual track links
£60.00 GBP
The Soviet T-35 was a multi-turreted heavy tank of the interwar period and early WWII that saw limited production and service with the Red Army. The T-35 was the only five-turreted heavy tank in the world to reach production; however it proved to be slow and mechanically unreliable. Most of the T-35's which were still operational at the time of Operation Barbarossa were lost due to mechanical failure rather than enemy action. The main turret was equipped with a KT-28 cannon also used on the Т-28 medium tank. The the 7.62mm DT machine gun was an auxiliary weapon in the main turret. The tank was large, but on the inside the spaces were cramped with the fighting compartments separated from each other. Some of the turrets obscured the entrance hatches.
Item No: 83844
Item Name: Soviet T-35 Heavy Tank - Late
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Plastic Model Armour Kit
Total Plastic Parts: 630+
Total Sprues: 17 sprues, lower hull and upper hull
Chromeplate Parts: n/a
Resin Parts: n/a
Metal Parts: copper cable
Photo Etched Parts: 3 pieces
Film Accessory: n/a
Release Date: 2015-10
Additional:
- The kit consists of over 630 parts
- Refined details
- Multi-slide moulded turret and lower hull
- Photo-etched parts included
£55.00 GBP
In the 1920s and 1930s several European armies favoured the concept of large, multi-turreted tanks. Designs for such tanks existed in Britain, France, and Germany. However, it was the Soviet T-35 that became the only five-turreted heavy tank in the world to reach production. The T-35 was a heavy tank of the interwar period and early World War II. The tank was large, but inside spaces were cramped with the fighting compartments separated from each other. The T-35 turned out to be slow and mechanically unreliable, and during Operation Barbarossa 90% of the T-35's were lost due to mechanical failures rather than enemy actions. From 1935 till 1940 the T-35 was used primarily for parade duties.
Item No: 83842
£43.00 GBP
HobbyBoss 1:35 - Soviet T-28E Medium Tank - Plastic model kit #83854
The Soviet multi-turreted T-28 entered production in 1932. The tank was intended to complement the multi-turreted heavy T-35 and break through fortified defences. The design was similar to the British Vickers A1E1 Independent tank produced in 1926. It had a large turret with a 76.2mm gun and two smaller ones with 7.62mm machine guns. From 1933 to 1941 the Soviet Union manufactured 503 T-28's. These tanks were in service during the Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939 and the Winter War against Finland in 1939–1940.
The T-28 was not very successful in combat and had significant flaws, but it did have a number of advanced features for the time and was superior to some enemy tanks. Soviet tank designers incorporated some of the ideas tried out on the T-28 in future models.
The T-28E was one of the T-28 versions. Its armour was improved, however it resulted in increased weight and speed reduction.
Item No: 83854
Item Name: Soviet T-28E Medium Tank
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Static kit
Model Dimension: Length 214mm, Width 82mm
Total Parts: 830+
Total Sprues: 20 sprues, lower hull, upper hull and turret
Metal Parts: copper cable
Photo Etched Parts: 2 pieces
Release Date: 2015-06
Photo Etched Parts: 2 pcs
Release Date: 2015-02
Additional:
- The kit w/refined details consists of over 830 parts
- Multi-slide moulded turret, upper hull and lower hull
- Photo etched parts included
- Individual tracks
- Figures are not included
Decal options:
- T-28, Soviet Army, Khaki
- T-28 Finnish Army, White, Khaki, Red Brown
You can download instruction sheets here.
£30.00 GBP
The T-26 was a Soviet light infantry tank based on the British Vickers 6-Ton tank designed by the Vickers-Armstrongs company in 1928-1929. The T-26 was one of the most successful tanks of its time. More than 11,000 T-26's were manufactured in the 1930s. The USSR developed more than 50 different variants and experimental vehicles based on the T-26 chassis, with 23 variants going into series production.
The T-26 was used by the Red Army since 1932. It saw combat in many conflicts of the 1930s and during the Second World War. Along with the BT, the T-26 was considered the main tank of the Red Army during the interwar period. The T-26 saw action in the Spanish Civil War, the Soviet-Japanese border conflict, and the Soviet invasion of Poland in 1939. In 1941 it could withstand most German tanks, but was inferior to the Panzer III and Panzer IV participating in Operation Barbarossa. The T-26 was then gradually replaced by the superior T-34. The remaining T-26's participated in the Battle of Moscow, the Battle of Stalingrad and the Battle of the Caucasus.
Item No: 82496
Item Name: Soviet T-26 Light Infantry Tank Mod. 1935
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Static kit
Model Dimension: Length 132.2mm, Width 70.7mm
Total Plastic Parts: 970+
Total Sprues: 39 sprues, lower hull and tracks
Chromeplate Parts: n/a
Resin Parts: n/a
Metal Parts: n/a
Photo Etched Parts: 1 piece
Film Accessory: n/a
Release Date: 2012-12
Additional:
- Multi-directional slide molded lower hull w/fine detail
- 240 individual track links
- Photo-etched parts included
£35.00 GBP
The T-24 was a Soviet medium tank produced at the KhPZ factory (Kharkiv Locomotive Factory, Ukraine) in 1931. It had a 45mm main gun, a ball-mount 7.62mm DT machine gun in the hull, and two more guns in the turret and in the secondary turret. The vehicle was considered well-armoured for its time, but it had problems with the engine and transmission. Due to these problems the T-24 was found unreliable. Only 24 tanks were built, and they were used only for training and parades. However, this failure gave the KhPZ factory production experience which was applied later in adopting production of the U.S. Christie tank as the BT tank series.
Item No: 82493
Item Name: Soviet T-24 Medium Tank
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Static kit
Model Dimension: Length 182mm, Width 80mm
Total Plastic Parts: 380+
Total Sprues: 20 sprues, lower hull, upper hull and turret
Chromeplate Parts: n/a
Resin Parts: n/a
Metal Parts: n/a
Photo Etched Parts: 1 piece
Film Accessory: n/a
Release Date: 2012-10
Additional:
- Multi-directional slide molded lower hull and upper hull
- Multi-directional slide molded w/fine detail
- 144 individual track links
- Photo-etched parts included
£27.00 GBP
The T-20 Komsomolets was a Soviet artillery tractor used by the Red Army during the Winter War and the Second World War. Developed at the Ordzhonikidze Moscow Plant no.37, the tractor was produced between 1936 and 1941 and over 4,000 units were built during that period.
The T-20 was intended to tow artillery-type weapons including the 45 mm anti-tank gun and the M1938 120 mm mortar. It also carried a small quantity of ammunition supplies and up to six crew members. The driver and the commander sit in the forward compartment armoured with a Degtyaryov machine gun. The rear compartment had room for the rest of the crew seated back-to-back. A canvas top could be raised in case of bad weather conditions.
During Operation Barbarossa some T-20s served as combat vehicles, however after 1941 they were deployed only as armoured tractors.
Item No: 83848
Item Name: Soviet T-20 Armored Tractor Komsomolets 1940
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Plastic Model Armor Kit
Photo Etched Parts: 1 piece
Model Dimension: Length 97mm, Width 53.3mm
Total Plastic Parts: 300+
Total Sprues: 16 sprues, lower and upper hull
Release Date: 2016-07
Additional:
- The kit has refined details
- Multi-slide moulded cab and lower hull
- Individual track links
- Photo-etched parts included
£27.00 GBP
HobbyBoss 1:35 - Sd. Kfz. 223 Leichter Panzerspahwagen Funk - Plastic model kit #82443
The German Leichter Panzerspahwagen was a series of light four-wheel drive armoured cars produced from 1935 to 1944. The base model, Sd. Kfz. 221, was armed with a single 7.92mm Maschinengewehr 13 machine gun and was in production from 1935 to 1940 with at least 339 vehicles produced. The next version, Sd. Kfz. 222, had a 2cm KwK 30 L/55 autocannon and a 7.92mm MG 13 machine gun. A total of 990 vehicles were produced from 1937 till 1943. The Sd. Kfz. 223 was similar to the Sd. Kfz. 221, but was equipped with a frame antenna and a radio set. Initially it was armed with a 7.92mm MG 13 machine gun, but it was changed to a Maschinengewehr 34 in 1938. This model was manufactured from 1936 to 1944. At least 567 Sd. Kfz. 223 cars were produced for the army.
Item No: 82443
Item Name: Sd. Kfz. 223 Leichter Panzerspahwagen Funk
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Static kit
Model Dimension: Length 131.55mm, Width 60.5mm
Total Plastic Parts: 251 pcs
Total Sprues: 5 sprues, upper hull, lower hull and 4 tires
Chromeplate Parts: n/a
Camouflage Scheme: German Army
Resin Parts: n/a
Metal Parts: n/a
Photo Etched Parts: 2pcs
Film Accessory: n/a
Release Date: 2010-03
Additional:
- Multi-directional slide moulded upper hull
- Two-directional slide moulded lower hull
- Photo-etched parts included
£34.00 GBP
The ZIS-5 was a 4x2 Soviet truck that originated from the AMO-2 series. Its mass production started in 1933 at Moscow ZIS factory (ZIS - "Zavod Imeni Stalina" or Plant of Stalin's Name) and lasted long after the war.
The truck instantly became one of the most widely used vehicles of next two decades. Due to its high reliability and simple construction it gained popularity with Soviet troops in wartime: at the outbreak of Operation Barbarossa up to 100 thousand ZIS-5's were in service with the Red Army. During the war the ZIS-5 was deployed as both a cargo vehicle and a light artillery tractor. It was also used to transport soldiers and military supplies to the front lines.
The ZIS-5 was the second most used army truck of the early war period, surpassed only by the GAZ-AA. It played a great role in supplying provisions to Leningrad during the Blockade. The ZIS-5 was also the first Soviet truck consigned for export to such countries as Turkey, Afghanistan, Iraq, Spain, China, Romania and others.
Item No: 83885
Item Name: Russian ZIS-5 Truck
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Plastic Model Armor Kit
Photo Etched Parts: 1 piece
Model Dimension: Length 107.2mm, Width 61.4mm
Total Plastic Parts: 240+
Total Sprues: 7 sprues and tires
Release Date: 2016-06
Additional:
- The kit consists of over 240 parts including 6 clear parts
- Details finely represented
- Fully detailed main tires
- Photo-etched parts included
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The T-50 was a Soviet light tank developed in 1939 for the needs of the Red Army. After the Spanish Civil War it became obvious that the Soviet tank fleet consisted mostly of modified versions of foreign vehicles required an upgrade. The T-50 was planned to replace the T-26 light infantry tank which was a Soviet redesign of the British Vickers Mark E.
The production of the T-50 began shortly after the German attack on the USSR in June 1941. A torsion-spring suspension, a diesel engine, and a good slope of armour made the tank one of the most advanced Soviet designs of that time. One more advantage of the T-50 was a commander's cupola used in Soviet tanks for the first time (instead of panoramic periscopes). Similar to Soviet medium and heavy tanks, the T-50 also had a three-man turret.
However, despite of its remarkable design, the T-50 never entered mass-production due to a number of technical problems. One of the problems was the tank's new diesel engine which was proved unreliable and expensive to produce. Only 69 units of the T-50 were completed. Later the Red Army rejected the concept of light infantry tanks replacing them with cheaper SU-76 self-propelled guns and more efficient T-34 medium tanks.
Several T-50 tanks saw action on the Leningrad front. One unit was taken over by Finnish troops and now is displayed in Finland.
Item No: 83827
Item Name: Russian T-50 Infantry Tank
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Static kit
Model Dimension: Length 149mm, Width: 70mm
Total Plastic Parts: 700+
Total Sprues: 16 sprues, lower hull, upper hull and turret
Photo Etched Parts: 1
Release Date: 2015-04
Additional:
- The kit consists of over 700 parts
- Multi-directional slide molded turret & lower hull
- Photo-etched parts included
- 256 individual tracks links
£23.00 GBP
The M706 Commando was an American armoured car capable of travelling across water. It was designed to transport a crew, first-aid equipment, fire extinguishers and mortar shells. It also served as an anti-tank vehicle.
Featuring the Chrysler V8 engine, four-wheel drive and five-speed manual transmission, the car could move at a maximum speed of 100 km/h on land and 5 km/h across water. The Commando was widely used during the Vietnam War, at that time nicknamed the Duck, or the V. It also performed on the battlefield in Iraq during the Persian Gulf War.
Item No: 82418
Item Name: M706 Commando Armoured Car in Vietnam
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Static kit
Model Dimension: Length 164.2mm, Width 68.5mm, Height 79.5mm
Total Plastic Parts: 275 pcs
Total Sprues: 7 sprues, lower hull, upper hull, 4 rubber tires
Camouflage Scheme: US Army's Military Police Corps in Vietnam
Metal Parts: Metal chain
Photo Etched Parts: 1 piece
Release Date: 2008-07
Additional:
- The kit consists of 275 parts
- Photo etched parts included
- Rubber tires
£30.00 GBP
The Volkettenfahrzeuge 4502 (Porsche) Ausf. B, or VK4502 (P) Ausf. B, was an experimental German heavy tank designed by Porsche in 1942. It was based on the previous VK4501(P) design. Initially it was proposed that the chassis design for the VK4502 (P) could be adopted from the VK4501 (P) with minimum modifications. The tank was supposed to have a maximum speed of 35 km/h and weigh around 45 tonnes. The turret for the VK4502 was also designed by Porsche.
In 1942, a production contract for 100 VK4502 armour shells and 100 turrets was given to Fried Kruppe AG Essen. Kruppe planned to begin the production after completing 100 VK4501 hulls. Later Krupp was asked to complete only 30 Type 180 hulls. However, the project took a serious setback when the Porsche's 101/3 engine failed during the testing.
The contracts for the VK4502 hulls and turrets were terminated. By January 1943, Krupp had already manufactured 20 armour turret bodies for the VK4502 and around 40 to 50 were under construction at the time of cancellation. Krupp then got the permission to assemble three operational turrets for the VK4502. Porsche confirmed that three Tiger P2 VK4502 with electric drives were being completed at the Nibelungwerk. New vehicles were supposed to feature new hydraulic drives, a new suspension system and an air-cooled diesel engine. However, nothing more was heard about the fate of the VK4502 until April 1944 when Krupp reported that one of the turrets was completed and the other two were close to completion. In August 1944 the remaining turrets were converted for use on the Henschel chassis.
Item No: 82445
Item Name: German VK4502 (P) Hintern
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Static Armour
Model Dimension: Length 245.86mm, Width 99.10mm
Total Plastic Parts: 640+pcs
Total Sprues: 8 sprues, upper hull, lower hull and track links
Chromeplate Parts: n/a
Camouflage Scheme: German VK4502 (P) Hintern
Resin Parts: n/a
Photo Etched Parts: 1 piece
Film Accessory: n/a
Release Date: 2011-02
Additional:
- Multi-directional slide moulded upper hull
- Multi-directional slide moulded lower hull
- 216 individual track links
£30.00 GBP
Following the success of the 15cm Sturm-Infanteriegeschutz 33 in Stalingrad, Panzer IV chassis was used to develop the next Sturmpanzer, an armoured infantry support gun. Production started in May 1943 and continued until March 1945. Allied intelligence called this tank Brummbar ("Grouch"), but the Germans didn't use this name. The Brummbär was used in the Battles of Kursk, Anzio, Normandy, and Warsaw Uprising. Overall around 300 vehicles were built.
The Sturmpanzer IV had the StuH 43 L/12 gun which could fire both high explosive and shaped charge rounds. However, the high gross weight and massive armoured structure overloaded the Panzer IV chassis. It made the entire vehicle overweight and inclined to front. The tank was underpowered and suffered from transmission failures.
The Sturmpanzer IV had many variations. The tank's superstructure and the StuH 43 gun were successively modified to fix the flaws based on frontline reports and comments.
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The Leichter Panzerspähwagen was a light four-wheel drive armoured car produced by Nazi Germany between 1935 and 1944. It had the standard sPkw I Horch 801 chassis and a 67 kW (90 hp) Horch 3.5 petrol engine, which give it a road speed of 80 km/h and a cross-country speed of 40 km/h. The car had a maximum range of 300 km.
The Leichter Panzerspähwagen was used by the reconnaissance battalions of the Panzer divisions. It performed well enough in countries with good road networks, like Western Europe, but on the Eastern Front and in North Africa it was hampered by its relatively poor off-road performance and was gradually replaced in the reconnaissance role by the Sdkfz 250 half-track.
Item No: 83815
Item Name: German Sd.Kfz.222 Leichter Panzerspahwagen (1st Series)
Scale: 1:35
Item Type Static kit
Model Dimensions: Length 130.5mm, Width 59.5mm
Total Plastic Parts 310+
Total Sprues: 14 sprues, upper hull, lower hull and tires
Metal Parts: n/a
Photo Etched Parts: 3 pieces
Release Date: 2014-05
Additional:
- Fully detailed Interior
- Multi-directional slide moulded Upper hull
- Two-directional slide moulded Lower hull
- Four rubber tires w/fine detail
- Photo-etched parts included
£23.00 GBP
The Leichter Panzerspähwagen was a light four-wheel drive armoured car produced by Nazi Germany between 1935 and 1944. It had the standard sPkw I Horch 801 chassis and a 67 kW (90 hp) Horch 3.5 petrol engine, which give it a road speed of 80 km/h and a cross-country speed of 40 km/h. The car had a maximum range of 300 km.
Used by the reconnaissance battalions of the Panzer divisions, the Leichter Panzerspähwagen performed well enough in countries with good road networks, like Western Europe. However, on the Eastern Front and in North Africa these vehicles were hampered by their relatively poor off-road performance, and were gradually replaced in the reconnaissance role by the Sdkfz 250 half-track.
Item No: 83812
Item Name: German Sd.Kfz.221 Leichter Panzerspahwagen (3rd Series)
Scale: 1:35
Item Type Static kit
Total Plastic Parts 320+
Total Sprues: 13 sprues, upper hull, lower hull and tires
Metal Part: Stainless steel net
Photo Etched Parts: 2 pieces
Release Date: 2015-08
Additional:
- Fully detailed Interior
- Multi-directional slide moulded Upper hull
- Two-directional slide moulded Lower hull
- Four rubber tires w/fine detail
- Photo-etched parts included
£23.00 GBP
The Pz.Kpfw. 38(t) light tank was developed before the beginning of World War II. The initial design belonged to Czech engineers, but after the German occupation of Czechoslovakia the tank was included in the German combat arsenal.
Being a pre-war designed tank, the Panzerkampfwagen 38(t) had common features of the tanks from that period, such as riveted armour and a rear engine. Still some changes were made by the Germans, with increased armour thickness and a loader position added to the turret being the main ones.
The tank saw active service during the military incursion into Poland, France and the Soviet Union, but it became obsolete in 1942 for it no longer proved effective on the battlefield. However, the Pz.Kpfw. 38(t) served as a prototype for the Marder III and partly for the Jagdpanzer 38 tank destroyers.
The Pz.BfWg 38(t) was a command tank also originated from Czechoslovakia and used by the German Army during World War II. It was equipped with a radio station and a frame antenna. The total of 300 Pz.BfWg's were produced.
Item No: 80138
Item Name: German Pz.Kpfw./Pz.BfWg 38(t) Ausf. B
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Plastic Model Armor Kit
Total Sprues: 12 sprues
Photo Etched Parts: 1 piece
Release Date: 2015-10
Additional:
- Refined details
- Photo etched part included
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Panzerkampfwagen I Ausf. F, also known as VK.18.01, was as different from the Ausf. C as it was from the Ausf. A and B. The Pz. Kpfw. I Ausf. F was originally designed as an infantry support tank. It had a maximum armour thickness of 80mm (3.15 in) and weighed between 18 and 21 tonnes. To compensate for the increased weight, the Ausf. F had a new 110 kW Maybach HL45 Otto engine installed, allowing a maximum road speed of 25 km/h (15.5 mph). The Ausf. F was armed with two 7.92mm MG-34's. In 1940-1941, thirty Ausf. F's were produced, and the second order was cancelled. Eight of these tanks were sent to the 1st Panzer Division in 1943 and saw combat in the Battle of Kursk. The rest were given to several army schools for training and evaluation purposes.
Item No: 83805
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Panzerkampfwagen I Ausf. F, also known as VK.18.01, was as different from the Ausf. C as it was from the Ausf. A and B. The Pz. Kpfw. I Ausf. F was originally designed as an infantry support tank. It had a maximum armour thickness of 80mm (3.15 in) and weighed between 18 and 21 tonnes. To compensate for the increased weight, the Ausf. F had a new 110 kW Maybach HL45 Otto engine installed, allowing a maximum road speed of 25 km/h (15.5 mph). The Ausf. F was armed with two 7.92mm MG-34's. In 1940-1941, thirty Ausf. F's were produced, and the second order was cancelled. Eight of these tanks were sent to the 1st Panzer Division in 1943 and saw combat in the Battle of Kursk. The rest were given to several army schools for training and evaluation purposes.
Item No: 83804Model Dimension: Length 125mm, Width 75.6 mm
Total Plastic Parts: 280+
Total Spruew: 10 sprues, upper hull and lower hull
Chromeplate Parts:n/a
Resin Parts: n/a
Metal Parts: n/a
Photo Etched Parts: 1 piece
Film Accessory: 1 piece
Release Date: 2013-01
Additional:
- The kit consists of over 280 parts
- Multi-directional slide moulded lower hull w/fine detail
- Photo-etched parts included
£30.00 GBP
The German Panzerkampfwagen IV (or Panzer IV) was a medium tank developed in 1930s. It was the only German tank continuously produced throughout the war, and the most widely exported German tank. Over 8,800 Panzer IV's were produced between 1936 and 1945.
The Ausf. C was introduced in 1938. Due to the increased turret armour (30mm), the tank's weight went up from 16 to 18.14 tonnes. After assembling forty Ausf. C's, the tank's engine was replaced with the improved HL 120TRM.
From October 1938 to August 1939, 134 Panzerkampfwagen IV Ausf. C's were produced, and production moved to the Ausf. D. In August 1939, six of the 3.Serie/B.W. chassis were assembled and converted into bridge-laying tanks.
Useful Product Review on Armorama
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The U.S. Assault Amphibious Vehicle (AAV, or AAV-P7/A1) is the current amphibious troop transport used by the U.S. Marine Corps Assault Amphibian Battalions. It is a fully tracked amphibious landing vehicle equipped with an MK19 40mm grenade launcher and an M2 HB CAL 50 machine gun.
Item No: 82413
Item Name: AAV-P7A1 w/mounting bosses
Item Type: Static kit
Model Dimensions: Length 233mm, Width 94.2mm, Height 93mm
Total Plastic Parts: 803 pcs
Total Sprues: 20 sprues, lower hull, upper hull, 192 track links
Chromeplate Parts: n/a
Camouflage Scheme: United States Marine Corps Assault Amphibian Battalions
Resin Parts: n/a
Metal Parts: n/a
Photo Etched Parts: two frets
Film Accessory: n/a
Release Date: 2008-10
Additional:
- Fully detailed interior
- Multi-directional slide moulded lower hull
- The entry door can be fixed in an open or closed position
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The T-37A, a Soviet amphibious light tank, was the first mass-produced fully amphibious tank in the world. Based on the British Vickers tankette, the T-37A entered production in 1932. The Red Army used these tanks for communication, reconnaissance, and defense purposes.The T-37TU was a late modification of the T-37A, equipped with a radio station and a handrail antenna.
Item No: 83820
Item Name: Soviet T-37TU Command Tank
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Static kit
Model Dimension: Length 109.8mm, Width 59mm
Total Plastic Parts: 320+ pcs
Total Sprues: 17 sprues, lower hull
Photo Etched Parts: 2 pcs
Release Date: 2014-04
Additional:
- Fully detailed interior
- Multi-directional slide moulded turret, lower hull and 196 individual track links
£23.00 GBP
The first model of the Leichter Panzerspähwagen series, the Sd.Kfz.221 was a light four-wheel drive armoured car equipped with a 7.92 mm Maschinengewehr 13 machine gun and designed for carrying a two members crew. Later, the Maschinengewehr 13 was replaced with an anti-tank rifle Panzerbüchse 39 in order to increase the fire power. Due to its small size and thin armour the vehicle was recognised as inefficient; the production stopped in 1940 with over 300 vehicles produced for the army.
Item No: 83814
Item Name: German Le.Pz.Sp.Wg (Sd.Kfz.221) Leichter Panzerspahwagen - Late
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Plastic model armour kit
Model Dimension: Length 134mm, Width 57.2mm
Total Plastic Parts: 340+ pcs
Total Sprues: 14 sprues, upper hull, lower hull, tires
Photo Etched Parts: 2 pcs
Release Date: 2015-11
Additional:
- Fully detailed interior
- Multi-directional slide moulded upper hull
- Two-directional slide moulded lower hull
- Four rubber tires
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Friulmodel 1:35 - T-90 Steel tracks with rubber, ATL-137
Fully workable white metal tracks for the Russian T-90 tank in 1/35 scale. Intended to replace the standard rubber or plastic tracks.
The kit includes: 160 links and a wire for assembly. You will also need side cutters for the wire and a hand drill to assemble these tracks.
£36.00 GBP
Academy 1:35 - U.S. Tank Destroyer M36B1 - Plastic model kit #13279
The M36 tank destroyer, also known as the '90mm Gun Motor Carriage - M36', was an American tank destroyer used during World War II. The M36 was essentially an improved M10, replacing the M10's 3 inch (76.2mm) M7 with a more powerful 90mm gun.
The vehicle first began to appear in September 1944 in European Operations. About 1,400 M36's were produced in total during the war. The requirement for 90mm gunned tank destroyers was so urgent that during late 1944, 187 conversions of the standard Medium Tank M4A3 (Sherman tank) hulls were produced by Grand Blanc Arsenal. These were designated M36B1, rushed to operations and used in combat alongside other M36's.
The M36 proved to be a match for any German tanks. It also later saw use in the Korean War, and was able to defeat any of the Soviet made tank armour it faced. Some were supplied to Korea as part of the MAP (Military Assistance Program), others served in Yugoslavia, which operated into the 1990s, two remained in service with the Republic of China Army until 2001.
American soldiers referred to M36's as TD's or 'tank destroyers'. The US Army assigned the nickname Jackson in 1944 to honour the Civil War Confederate General, but this name did not stick during the war, only becoming popular later in the 1970s.
Kit details:
10 plastic sprues
1 small photo-etched fret
1 length of string
1 small decal sheet
Instruction Sheet
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Academy 1:35 - Tiger I Early Operation Citadel - Plastic model kit #13509
The German heavy tank Panzerkampfwagen VI Tiger Ausf. E or Tiger I was the first German AFV to mount the 88mm KwK 36 gun. The Tiger I was produced from 1942 until 1944 with 1347 tanks built in total. The tank weighed around 56 tons and apart from the 88 mm KwK 36 was armed with two 7.92mm MG 34's.
After the Germans had encountered the Soviet T-34 and KV-1 tanks during Operation Barbarossa, it was decided to build a heavy and powerful tank to combat those vehicles. When the first Tiger I's were used on the battlefield, the tank was still at the prototype stage and a number of changes were made to the design over the course of production. The early Tiger I's were used in 1942 near Leningrad and many of those vehicles and transmission problems due to the vehicle's weight. The Soviets managed to capture one of the first Tigers which had been stuck in the ground and abandoned by its crew, and used it to study the design.
After Leningrad, in 1943 units operating at Kharkov received early Tiger tanks, and following that a great concentration of Schwere Panzer-Abteilung's was prepared for Operation Citadel. Operation Citadel - the German offensive against the Soviet army in Kursk - began on the 5th of July 1943 and became the final strategic offensive that Germany launched on the Eastern Front.
The following markings are provided:
8th SS Pz. Abt. 'Das Reich', Kursk, Russia, July 1943
9th SS Pz. Abt. 'Totenkopf', Kursk, Russia, July 1943
Pz. Abt. 503, Kursk, Russia, July 1943
Download instructions for this kit here
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Academy 1:35 - M60A2 US Army - Plastic model kit #13296
The M60A2 was an updated version of the M60 Patton main battle tank developed by the USA in the Cold War era. Redesigned many times during its term of service, the M60 series was popular with the US Army and among US Cold War allies.
Appearing during the 'Space Age', the M60A2 got the nickname 'Starship'. The tank was equipped with a 152 mm gun which could fire both artillery shells and the Shillelagh antitank missiles. It also had a machine-gun cupola giving it a good view on the battlefield.
Nevertheless, the M60A2 showed poor results in combat and was quickly replaced by its later modifications.
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Academy 1:35 - M1025 Hummer A.A.C. (Replaces ACA01350) - Plastic model kit #13241
The American Motors Hummer entered military service in 1983, and today it represents the power and mobility of the modern U.S. Armed Forces. Its official designation is High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicle (HMMWV). Hummer is very versatile and performs a wide range of tasks, from carrying troops to serving as a heavily armed TOW missile transport.
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Academy 1:35 - German Jagdpanzer 38(t) Hetzer (Early production version) - Plastic model kit #13278
The Jagdpanzer 38 (Sd.Kfz. 138/2), later known as the Hetzer ("pursuer/hunter"), was a German light tank destroyer, based on a modified Czechoslovakian Panzer 38(t) chassis, inspired by the Romanian "Mareşal" tank destroyer.
The Jagdpanzer 38 was a common late-war German tank destroyer. It was produced in relatively large numbers and was for the most part mechanically reliable. The tank first entered service in July 1944. Armed with the 7.5cm PaK 39 L48 main gun with limited traverse and featured sloped armour on its very low profile. An MG34 was mounted to the vehicle roof. It was well liked by crews, fairly reliable and concealable. Drawbacks were that it was very cramped inside the tank, had limited ammo and very thin armour. It was first used in the field in July of 1944 and would go on to serve on both fronts. Approximately 2,800 were built. The name Hetzer was unofficial and used by German troops in the field, then adopted by post war publications.
Due to the large number produced, the Jagdpanzer 38 is probably the most abundant WWII German tank destroyer remaining today.
If you need a preview or replacement PDF copy of the instructions manual for this kit please contact us.
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Academy 1:35 - M36/M36B2 US Army "Battle of the Bulge" - Plastic Figure Model Kit #13501
The American tank destroyer M36 was designed in 1943 when the US Army needed a powerful vehicle to combat German Panther and Tiger tanks. This new tank was nicknamed "Jackson" in reference to the Confederate General of the Civil War, Stonewall Jackson. The M36's turret mounted the 90 mm gun M3 allowing the tank to nail down any known German tanks at 1000 to 2500m range depending on the armour thickness. However, due to its open-top turret the tank was vulnerable to shell fragments and snipers. Field modifications, particularly additional roof iron plating, were hastily performed by the crews. Later on folding panels were developed for protection against shell fragments, these were adopted by the M36B2.
Kit details:
- Can be built as M36 or M36B2
- 90mm main gun
- .50 caliber machine gun
- Over 600 plastic parts
- Photo-etched parts included
- Detailed driver's station
- Detailed hull interior with crew and ammo stowage
- Detailed turret interior including stowage and gun breech
The following markings are provided:
- M36, US Army 82nd Airborne Div, Belgium, 1944
- M36, US Army 703rd TD, Belgium, 1944
- M36, US Army 2nd Cavalry, Germany 1945
- M36B2, ROK Army, 53rd Tank Company, 1953
- M36B2, France Régiment Blindé Colonial d'Extrême-Orient, Tonkin, 1951
- M36B2, France Régiment Blindé Colonial d'Extrême-Orient, Tonkin, 1953
Download the manual here
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Academy 1:35 - M3 Stuart "Honey" British version (Replaces ACA01399) - Plastic Model Kit #13270
The M3 Stuart was an American light tank that had been delivered to British forces by the US Government during WWII, before the Americans officially entered the war. Subsequently it was deployed by the Allies until the capitulation of Germany.
"Stuart" was a nickname given in reference to James Stuart, an American Confederate States Army general of the Civil War. When a British tankman saw the tank for the first time, he remarked "She's a honey". That name stuck and in British service the M3 was often referred to as "Honey".
Compared to the previous Light Tank M2, the Stuart had an improved suspension, better gun recoil mechanism and thicker armour, unusual for a light tank. The vehicle was armed with a 37mm M5 gun (which was later replaced with a longer M6 version) and a several Browning machine guns. The tank production lasted from 1941 to 1943.
In 1941 the British army had 700 Stuart tanks in service, 170 of which were deployed in Operation Crusader in North Africa. Though Stuarts surpassed most of the Axis tanks in many respects, the operation was unsuccessful due to the poor tactics of British troops.
In the following years the British usually avoided using Stuarts in tank-to tank fights, deploying them mostly in reconnaissance operations. In some cases the turret was removed for the sake of lighter weight and better mobility (such versions were known as "Stuart Recce"), some other units were transformed to either armoured personnel carriers ("Stuart Kangaroo") or command vehicles ("Stuart Command"). The M3 served with the British army till the end of the war, though in smaller numbers than those used by the Americans.
£33.00 GBP
Academy 1:35 - M2A2 Bradley Iraq 2003 - Plastic Model Kit #13205
The M2 Bradley is an American infantry fighting vehicle (IFV) of the Bradley Fighting Vehicle family. It is used by US infantry units mainly for transportation and reconnaissance. Highly maneuverable and fast, it is able to protect the crew from small arms fire. Armed with the 25 mm M242 Chain Gun and TOW anti-tank missiles, the M2 Bradley is effective against major threats on battlefield. The vehicle is designed for a three-member crew (a commander, a gunner and a driver) and six soldiers carrying the necessary equipment.
The M2A2 version was issued in 1988. Featuring a better engine (600 hp or 447 kW) and a number of armour improvements, the M2A2 also had the ability to mount explosive reactive armour. The new armour also made the M2A2 amphibious. The turret of the vehicle acquired a semicircular shield which served as additional armour and provided more space for ammo storage.
The M2A2 and other M2 vehicles saw action during the the Gulf War in 1990 and Invasion of Iraq in 2003. In 2007 the production of the M2 Bradley was stopped and it was replaced by MRAPs which proved to be more durable in combat.
Click here to download the kit manual.
Includes:
- 387 total parts
- 369 yellow-sand styrene parts
- 16 sand vinyl parts
- 2 dark silver-grey vinyl parts
- Decal options
Decal options:
- M2A2 Bradley, US Army (1775-Now), Operation Iraqi Freedom 2003, Desert Tan
- M2A2 Bradley, US Army (1775-Now), Operation Iraqi Freedom, Bagdad 2003, Desert Tan
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Academy 1:35 - M113A1 APC Vietnam version (ACA01389) - Plastic Model Kit #13266
The M113 is an American armoured personnel carrier (APC) that was introduced in the 1960's and first saw action with the US Army during the Vietnam War. The carrier featured aluminium armour that significantly reduced its weight, improved its amphibious performance, and also was able to stop small arms fire. The most extensively deployed armoured carrier of the US Army in Vietnam, the M113 was nicknamed "Green Dragon" by Viet Cong as it was able to move through thick undergrowth and jungle in order to attack enemy positions.
The M113 had many modifications adapted for the use in various countries. Over 80,000 M113s of all types have been used around the world, as such the vehicle is considered the most widespread armoured carrier ever produced. In the US Army the M113 has already been phased out, but a number of units still serve as utility vehicles.
The M113A1 model was issued in 1964. Unlike the original version equipped with a gasoline engine, the M113A1 was powered by a 215 hp diesel engine. The suffix A1 became the designation of diesel-engined vehicles of the series.
Kit details:
- Various types of cupolas and added arms included
- Fully detailed interior of crew and engine copartments
- Includes 5 figures and various accessories
- Choice of one-piece flexible or individual tracks
£55.00 GBP
Academy 1:35 - US Army M1A2 TUSK II Limited Edition - Plastic model kit #13504
The M1 Abrams is a modern U.S. 3rd-generation main battle tank in service since 1980. The M1 is used by the U.S. Army and Marine Corps, as well as the armies of Iraq, Egypt, Australia, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. There are three main versions of the M1: the M1, M1A1, and M1A2. The M1A2 features a number of improvements compared to previous versions, including a commander's independent thermal viewer, position navigation equipment, weapon station, an improved cooling system, and digital maps.
Download instructions for this kit here
Option 1:
1st Battalion, 66th Armour Regiment
3rd Armoured Brigade Combat Team
4th Infantry Division, Germany, Feruary 2017
Option 2:
1st Battalion, 66th Armour Regiment
3rd Armoured Brigade Combat Team
4th Infantry Division, Germany, May 2017
£45.00 GBP
The German tank destroyer Marder III was deployed from 1942 until 1945 on all fronts of the Second World War. The Marder used the chassis and the roofless fighting compartment of the Panzer 38(t). Its main armament was either the Soviet 76-mm divisional field gun M1936 or the German 75-mm Pak 40 anti-tank gun.
The Sd.Kfz.138 Ausf.M was the latest variant of the series armed with the 75mm Pak 40. Unlike the previous models, this variant featured sloped armour and an improved fighting compartment which was closed in the rear for better protection of the crew. The rear-mounted engine of the vehicle was replaced with an engine installed between the driver and the crew. This gave the crew more room in the fighting compartment decreasing their exposure to enemy fire. However, the compartment remained open-topped.
The crew of the Marder III Ausf.M included a commander, a gunner, a loader and a driver. About 1,000 units of the Ausf.M were built between 1943 and 1944.
Item No: 80169
Item Name: Marder III Ausf.M Tank Destroyer Sd.Kfz.138 - Early
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Plastic Model Armour Kit
Model Dimensions: Length 148.2mm Width 61mm
Total Plastic Parts: 500+
Total Sprues: 10 sprues and lower hull
Metal Parts: gun barrel
Photo-Etched Parts: 1 piece
Release Date: 2017-10
Additional:
- The kit consists of over 500 parts
- Refined details
- Multi-slide moulded lower hull and turret
- Individual tracks
- Photo-etched parts included
£64.00 GBP
Trumpeter 1:35 - Soviet Object 268 Heavy Tank Prototype - Plastic model kit #05544
The Object 268 (Obiekt 268) was a Soviet tank destroyer manufactured at the Kirov Plant, Leningrad, in 1956. Its development was led by Joseph Kotin. The chassis of the Object 269 was designed on the basis of the T-10 heavy tank. The Object 268 was equipped with 152 mm M-64 cannon which ensured excellent penetration, high shooting accuracy and fast rate of fire. The tank destroyer successfully passed the tests, however it was never actually used on the battlefield because it lacked enough gun power to fight against newly-designed English Chieftain and American M60 Patton battle tanks.
Item No: 05544
Item Name: Soviet Object 268
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Plastic Model Armour Kit
Model Dimensions: Length 269.3mm Width 100.6mm
Total Parts: 310+ pcs
Metal Parts: copper cable
Photo Etched Parts: 3 pcs
Total Sprues: 23 sprues, upper hull and lower hull
Release Date: 2016-04
Additional:
- The kit w/refined detail consists of over 310 parts
- Multi-slide moulded lower hull
- 180 individual tracks links
£33.00 GBP
Trumpeter 1:35 - Soviet KV-8S Heavy Tank - Plastic model kit #01572
The Soviet KV tanks were heavy tanks used by the Red Army during the Second World War. KV stood for Kliment Voroshilov, the Soviet politician and defense commissar. The KV tanks were famous for their heavy armour protection. The KV-1 was invulnerable to most German weapons except the 8.8cm Flak gun, until the Germans developed more effective guns. The KV-1 outclassed the French Char B1, which was the only other heavy tank in service at that time.
During the Winter War, the KV's proved to be highly resistant to Finnish anti-tank weapons, and the first order of 50 KV's was placed. However, the KV tank had serious flaws: it was difficult to steer, the transmission was unreliable, and the ergonomics were poor. These flaws were rectified with the introduction of the KV-1S. The KV-1S was lighter and had thinner armour and a smaller lower turret.
The KV-8S was based on the KV-1S and had an ATO-42 flamethrower (improved version of the ATO-41 used in the KV-1 and KV-8). However, after a few years it turned out that the expensive KV tanks could be replaced by the T-34 medium tanks which had a better performance. The KV series became a base for the development of the IS tanks (IS - Josif Stalin).
Item No: 01572
Item Name: Soviet KV-8S Heavy Tank
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Static Kit
Model Dimension: Length 197.8mm, Width 94.8mm
Total Parts: 430+ pcs
Metal Parts: brass wire
Photo Etched Parts: n/a
Film Parts: n/a
Resin Parts: n/a
Total Sprues: 23 sprues and lower hull
Released Date: 2014-06
Additional:
- The kit w/refined detail consists of over 430 parts
- Multi-slide moulded lower hull
- 192 individual tracks links
£64.00 GBP
Trumpeter 1:35 - Soviet JS-4 Heavy Tank - Plastic model kit #05573
There were two Soviet tanks named JS-4: Object 245 JS-4 and Object 701 JS-4. The Object 245 was an improved version of the JS-2 armed with 100mm D-10T cannon. The other JS-4 tank was a new design developed by the Kirov Plant in Leningrad. Also based on the JS-2, the Object 701 featured a longer hull and an additional set of road wheels. It was powered by a better engine and equipped with thicker armour on both the hull and the turret. A 122mm gun was used as an armament. The engine cooling system of the tank was adopted from the German Panther tank of WWII.
Batch production of the JS-4 lasted from 1947 to 1949. It was ended due to the tank's low speed and mobility. Only 250 units were issued, most of which were sent to the Russian Far East.
Item No: 05573
Item Name: Soviet JS-4 Heavy Tank
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Static Kit
Model Dimensions: Length 285.8mm, Width 96.5mm
Total Parts: 530+
Metal Parts: copper cable, spring, gun barrel
Photo Etched Parts: 1 piece
Total Sprues: 23 sprues, upper hull, lower hull and turret
Release Date: 2014-04
Additional:
- The kit consists of over 530 parts
- Refined detail
- Multi-slide moulded lower hull and upper hull
- 180 individual track links
- Photo-etched parts included
£60.00 GBP
Trumpeter 1:35 - Soviet JS-2M Heavy Tank Early - Plastic model kit #05589
After it became clear that the JS-1 was incapable of destroying the German Tiger and Panther tanks, the Soviet engineers came up with an upgraded model of the JS series - the JS-2 heavy tank. The production of its early version began in 1943 in Chelyabinsk. The JS-2 was equipped with the A-19 gun, also known as the 122 mm gun, with higher armour-piercing qualities. In addition, compared to the JS-1 and its prototype models of the KV series, the JS-2 had thicker front armour and a muzzle recoil compensator. Besides, it was much lighter and faster.
In 1944, the model was modernised once again and renamed the JS-2M. The changes mainly transformed the chassis construction; the transmission and fighting compartments were relocated to the back of the tank. Later the same modifications were made to almost all JS-2 tanks remaining after the war.
Item No: 05589
Item Name: Soviet JS-2M Heavy Tank - Early
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Plastic Model Armour Kit
Model Dimensions: Length 270mm, Width 220mm
Total Parts: 360+
Metal Parts: copper cable, gun barrel
Photo Etched Parts: 1 piece
Total Sprues: 13 sprues, lower hull, upper hull and turret
Release Date: 2016-03
Additional:
- The kit consists of over 360 parts, 1 piece of Photo Etched parts
- Multi-slide moulded lower hull and turret
£64.00 GBP
Trumpeter 1:35 - Soviet JS-2 Heavy Tank - Plastic model kit #05588
After it became clear that the JS-1 was incapable of destroying the German Tiger and Panther tanks, Soviet engineers came up with an upgraded model of the JS series - the JS-2 heavy tank. The production of the early version began in 1943 in Chelyabinsk. The JS-2 was equipped with the D-25T gun, also known as the 122 mm gun, with higher armour-piercing qualities. In addition, compared to the JS-1 and its prototype models of the KV series, the JS-2 had thicker front armour and a muzzle recoil compensator. Besides, it was much lighter and faster.
The JS-2 and Tiger I were able to hit each other at a range of less than 1,000 m which was an average combat distance. Moreover, due to high-explosive fragmentation shells of the D-25T gun the JS-2 could do severe damage to the heaviest German tanks even without piercing their armour.
The JS-2 first saw combat in February 1944 during the Korsun–Shevchenkovsky Offensive. In spring of the same year JS-2 tanks destroyed up to 40 German tanks (including Tiger Is), 10 anti-tank guns and several AFVs.
After the end of the war, the production of JS tanks continued and in the 1950's remaining JS-2 units were modified to a new JS-2M version. In the late 1960's, when heavy tanks were replaced with medium tanks, the JS vehicles were no longer in active service with the Red Army.
Item No: 05588
Item Name: Soviet JS-2 Heavy Tank
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Plastic Model Armour Kit
Model Dimensions: Length 230mm, Width 200mm
Total Parts: 360+
Metal Parts: gun barrel, copper cable
Photo Etched Parts: 1 piece
Total Sprues: 21 sprues , upper hull, lower hull and turret
Release Date: 2016-07
Additional:
- The kit consists of over 360 parts
- Refined detail
- Multi-slide moulded lower hull and turret
- Photo-etched parts included
£64.00 GBP
Trumpeter 1:35 - Soviet JS-1 Heavy Tank - Plastic model kit #05587
The Soviet heavy tank JS-1, a modernised version of the KV-1 and KV-2 series, was put into service in the midst of the Second World War. High production rates and quick testing of the JS-1 resulted from the appearance of the newer German Panther and Tiger I tanks and the lack of adequate military equipment to fight against them. However, even after several modifications of its design, the JS-1 proved to be unsuccessful in combat because of its armament that was not strong enough to defeat German tanks. The JS-1 was soon replaced by the improved JS-2.
During the war, the JS-1 was also known as the JS-85, where "85" stood for the calibre of the tank gun, and "JS" - for Joseph Stalin (Russian: ИС - Иосиф Сталин). The JS-1 marked the beginning of the well-known "Joseph Stalin" tank line.
Item No: 05587
Item Name: Soviet JS-1 Heavy Tank
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Plastic Model Armour Kit
Model Dimension: Length 230mm, Width 200mm
Total Parts: 360+
Metal Parts: copper cable
Photo Etched Parts: 1 piece
Total Sprues: 21 sprues, lower hull, upper hull and turret
Release Date: 2015-11
Additional:
- The kit consists of over 360 parts, 1 piece of Photo Etched parts
- Multi-slide moulded lower hull and turret
£60.00 GBP
Trumpeter 1:35 Russian BMPT-72 Terminator-2 - Plastic model kit #09515
The Russian BMPT-72 "Terminator 2" is the successor of the BMPT, an armoured fighting vehicle manufactured by Uralvagonzavod. As well as the BMPT, the BMPT-72 uses the T-72 hull. The vehicle was first shown to the public in 2013 at the Russian Arms Expo.
The BMPT-72 can be used independently or alongside main battle tanks to destroy enemy tanks and other armoured fighting vehicles. With its antitank weapons systems and grenade launchers it is also effective in suppressing infantry and firing emplacements of the enemy. The BMPT-72 is 3.33 m high and 3.6 m wide and weighs 44 tons.
Item No: 09515
Item Name: Russian BMPT-72 "Terminator"
Item Type: Plastic Model Armour Kit
Model Dimensions: Length 211mm, Width 110mm
Total Parts: 950+
Metal Parts: copper cable
Photo Etched Parts: 3 pcs
Total Sprues: 27 sprues and lower hull
Release Date: 2017-06
Additional:
- The kit consists of over 950 parts
- The kit w/refined detail
- Multi-slide moulded lower hull
- Individual tracks
- Photo etched parts included
£47.00 GBP
Trumpeter 1:35 - PLA Type 62 Light Tank - Plastic Model Kit #05537
The PLA Type 62 light tank, also known as the Norinco Type 62 or WZ131, was manufactured in China in the early 1960s. Its design originated from the Chinese Type 59, however, due to thinner armour and smaller 85 mm Type 62-85TC rifled gun its weight was reduced, which made it much more appropriate to the geographical environment of Southern China with its lakes, rivers and rice paddies.
The maximum range of the gun was 12,200 m and maximum aimed range was 1,870 m. The fire range could amount to 5 rpm. The Type 62 was additionally equipped with 12.7 mm Type 54 anti-aircraft heavy machine gun (a Chinese copy of 12.7 mm DShK 1938/46 heavy machine gun) and two 7.62 mm Type 59T medium machine guns. Another 7.62 mm Type 59T machine gun could be added to the left side of the turret hatch.
The Type 62 tank appeared on the battlefield during the Vietnam War, Ho Chi Minh Campaign and Sino-Vietnamese War, however eventually it was recognised as ill-equipped for warfare because of its thin armour and poor armament.
At present the Type 62 is withdrawn from use in China, however it still operates in other countries as fire support or against lightly armoured vehicles.
Item Name: PLA Type 62 light Tank
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Static Kit
Model Brief: Length 229.4mm Width 82.7mm
Total Parts: 390+ pcs
Metal Parts: copper cable
Photo Etched Parts: 1 piece
Total Sprues: 12 sprues and lower hull
Released Date: 2015-09
£37.00 GBP
Trumpeter 1:35 - Puma 4×4 Wheeled AFV - Plastic model kit #05525
An Italian light-wheeled armoured fighting vehicle, the Puma is produced in two variants: the Puma 4x4 and the Puma 6x6. Started in 1988, the development resulted in five testbed vehicles issued in 1990.
Initially, the Puma was designed to support the Centauro tank destroyer used by the Italian Cavalry Regiments, however nowadays the vehicle serves with the Italian Infantry corps as well. The 4x4 variant is mainly used for reconnaissance. It has room for two soldiers, the gunner and the driver.
In 2013 Italy donated 20 4x4 Puma vehicles to the Libyan National Army for the struggle against terrorism.
Item No: 05525
Item Name: Italian PUMA 4×4 AFV
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Static Kit
Model Dimension: Length 145.4mm Width 79.6mm
Total Parts: 410+
Photo Etched Parts: 2 pieces
Film Parts: n/a
Resin Parts: n/a
Total Sprues: 8 sprues, upper hull, lower hull and tires
Release Date: 2012-08
Additional:
- The kit consists of over 410 parts, 2 pieces of Photo Etched parts
- Refined details
- Rubber tires
- Multi-slide moulded upper hull
Decal options:
- Iveco-Fiat Puma 4x4, Esercito Italiano, United Nations contingent UNIFIL-8058, White
- Iveco-Fiat Puma 4x4, Esercito Italiano, E.I.-119832, Light Green, Wood Brown, Black
£42.00 GBP
Trumpeter 1:35 - Grille L/16 Morser Bär (Bear) - Plastic model kit #09535
The Sturmpanzer Bär (Bear) was a German anti-tank self-propelled gun developed in 1942. Although this project was not put into production, the Sturmpanzer Bär influenced the design of other self-propelled guns including the Sturmtiger assault gun.
The Sturmpanzer Bär was based on the modified chassis of the Tiger I and had 130mm frontal armour. It was to be armed with a 305mm KwK L/16 anti-tank cannon and powered by a 12-cylinder Maybach HL 230 P 30 engine (700 horsepower). According to the design, the vehicle would be operated by a 6 men crew - a commander, a gunner, two loaders, a radio operator and a driver.
Had the Sturmpanzer Bär been produced, its total weight would be 120 tons.
Item No: 09535
Item Name: Grille 30-30.5 cm (Grw) L/16 Morser ‘Bär' (Bear)
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Plastic Model Armour Kit
Model Dimensions: Length: 244.8 mm, Width 105.4 mm
Total Parts: 310+
Metal Parts: Copper cable
Photo Etched Parts: 1 piece
Total Sprues: 7 sprues, upper hull, lower hull and tracks
Release Date: 2017-04
Additional:
- The kit consists of over 310 parts
- The kit w/refined detail
- Multi-slide moulded lower hull
- Rubber tracks
- Photo etched parts included
£40.00 GBP
Trumpeter 1:35 - German Neubaufahrzeug Rheinmetall Tank - Plastic model kit #05528
Development of the Neubaufahrzeug ("New construction vehicle") started in 1933. It was the first attempt to create a heavy multi-turreted tank for the Wehrmacht. In 1926 the British built their version of a heavy multi-turreted tank, the Vickers A1E1 Independent, and the Germans bought its technical details from a British officer who acted as a spy. Both Rheinmetall and Krupp were designing a German heavy tank. Their designs turned out to be very similar, the main difference being the weapons placement. Both tanks had a main turret armed with a 75mm KwK L/24 main gun and secondary 37mm KwK L/45. Rheinmetall's design was called PzKpfw NbFz V, and Krupp's design was designated PzKpfw NbFz VI. However, both designs proved to be too complex, unreliable and slow to serve as heavy tanks. Only five tanks were produced and they were primarily used for propaganda purposes. Three out of five Neubaufahrzeug's took part in the Battle of Norway in 1940, but none of them survived the war.
Item No: 05528
Item Name: German Neubaufahrzeug (Rheinmetall)
Scale: 1:35
Item Type: Static Kit
Model Dimension: Length 195.21mm, Width 82.87mm
Total Parts: 1120+ pcs
Metal Parts: gun barrel
Photo Etched Parts: 2 pcs
Film Parts: n/a
Resin Parts: n/a
Total Sprues: 14 sprues, turret, lower hull, upper hull and tracks
Paint Schemes: German Army
Released Date: 2011-06
Additional:
- The kit w/refined detail consists of over 1120 parts
- Multi-slide moulded lower hull, upper hull and turret
- Over 250 individual tracks links