Wednesday, January 27, 2021

On The Bench - Revell/Italeri 1/35 Pzkw 38(t)

Rescued from the Box of Shame while doing some cleaning up, this little survivor had been mostly built, and then, for reasons lost in the lore of my past, was stored and ignored. 
All it needed was a little paint and some decals.
Not looking for a hyperaccurate match of a prototype (See Tiger 222 post), I used on hand materials for a generic 38 on the first day of Fall Gelb, so freshly shopped, not heavily worn or weathered. GS H32 Field Gray stood in for Panzer Gray, decals were salvaged from the ever-growing pile of Not On This Kit leftovers.
So. Many. Rivets. Need to get the Armor Wash and good brush. This may take a while...
Quite a contrast with the late war behemoths I typically model. 
I still had to complete the Tank Commander figure. 
Flat spray helped tone down the sheen.
A coat of black and flesh enamels as primer leaves him looking zombie-ish.
Acrylic flesh tones. 
A full set of acrylic colors and shades, and a little enamel semi-gloss on his belt. He doesn't look like an Aryan Conqueror much, but the sculpt is the sculpt ;-).
Ready to invade France. 

Thursday, January 21, 2021

On the Bench - Odds and Ends (1/21/21)

I'm filling in while I wait for a new shipment of tank riders to make its way from the UK. 
Doing some aircraft painting:
Unfinished many years ago due to paint adhesion issues, this Trimaster TA152H has been cleaned, prepped, and is now back in the booth. Naturally, I can no longer locate the decals, so...
AFV Club T51 tracks for my M36 it is. 

Acrylic matt varnish to seal those decals and dull the finish. Oil pin wash to enhance shadows and panel lines.
Don't forget to dirty up the interior.
Wash complete. Now for some dirt on the hull before I install the tracks.

Dry pigment, thinner, and some finely chopped scale dry grass stippled on with short brush. This is the Dry dirt layer,  to be followed by a darker earth application for the Still Wet areas.
Tracks get the same treatment. Then they can be installed. 
As I was pondering my approach to chipping, the mail arrived. My RLM81...so...
Chipping will wait for another day :-)
..................
Of course, now I'm waiting fot the decals, as the originals have failed to materialize. Back to the Slugger.
...................
I  want to try a Bulge winter camo look,  so I'll skip the normal chipping and go right to a Hairspray/white acrylic enamel. First the Tresseme, and let it dry. Then Testors acrylic white, carelessly applied. 
Followed by wetting and abrasion with q tips and a mildly stiff brush. This combo makes it chip easily, so be slow and gentle.
Now we can put the tracks back on and add the final dry/wet mud splatters using the pigments and thinner as before.
I touched them up after drying with a stiff brush to blend in some of the dark splatters and provide a more natural look.
Taking a break, I cleaned all the pigment dust from my table and did some nice relaxing decal-ing:
The Eaglecals sheet provides 4 options, none of which I could exactly match due to years earlier decisions, so it will become "nearly green 6". After researching and painting it in an 81/82 scheme per the published Oberflachenschutzliste 8 Os 152 of 11/44, Eaglecals directions are for 82/83. And if you're wondering what in creation I'm going on about, this is the RLM paint scheme rabbit hole, which will have a Lovecraftian effect on your sanity; don't go in too deep or too long. 
I've learned to love my color choices.  😍
Of course, now that I've begun, I should of course have masked and painted the red and yellow RVD bands on the fuselage already, so it will be back to the booth for paint before more decals go on. Unless of course those tank rider figures show up before I do....
Masked and sprayed the area with whiye enamel, followed later by yellow. I'll give it overnight and mask for red.
..............
Vallejo matte vsrnish to seal on the dirt. Time for a few glamor shots:
I'll see if it can get it outside tomorrow for some natural light and snowy backdrop.
Sure would look good with some crew figures...
I just noticed I didn't install tow cables or tools. Gotta fix that. Meanwhile, 
decaling the TA152H continues, with a seemingly endless assortment of stencilled warnings and instructions. 
The above is what happens when you don't paint before you install...
Have to admit, the supplied spiral decal looks good once it's sufficiently "decalset".
Back from Vallejo acrylic matte varnish application. 
A few paint touch ups, replace the canopy and cowling, time for a few glamor shots. 
A clean, mean machine. 

Wednesday, January 20, 2021

On The Bench - Rubicon 1/56 Scale M10/M36 Tank Destroyer 01-20-2021


It is January 20, 2021; hopefully a day of calm reflection and celebration of what is still the greatest Democracy the world has ever known.  Now back to a most difficult time in World History - WAR;  WW2, the Big One (it was in all  the papers).  My third build for Bolt Action.  My brother and I have so much German armor, we need more Allied.  This beauty was a Christmas present (to myself) from my brother, just as his Tiger II was a Christmas present (to himself) from me - get it?  It arrived on Dec. 23rd, but I had already planned on building my Monogram TBF first, so this little gem languished until Jan. 17.


Once the three trees in the box were disgorged I went  right to work on assembly of the drive wheels/tread and chassis.  A single track assembly - much easier than the four part tread concept of the Warlord models I previously built.

After reviewing the instructions I selected the M36 option which was developed with the 90mm gun and started to see action in Sept. 1944.  I have painted the interior of the turret and added the ammo rack and sighting scope. I also drilled out the 90mm breach and painted it as well. There are several options included as will be seen as I also did chose an alternate M10 turret configuration.

One of the first self inflicted challenges was to make the 50cal Browning able to rotate.  I pinned drilled the pintle mount and inserted a bent over gauge 22 wire secured with cyano.

I chose this photo to follow for detailing the Browning.  Note the color difference in the weathered ammo can bracket and the ammo can itself.  Below is how it turned out.  Green for the ammo can.  silver and olive for the weathering and a mix of silver and black to get a gun metal color.


These pics showed that I closed up the turret quickly but I had to do the same thing with the muzzle break that I did with the Warlord kits - drill out the gun bore????  Oh well.


I took the above two photos simply to show the rotation of the 50 Cal.


The next job was painting and weathering the rear engine panel.  First a black fill in of the panel lines and engine "grill", followed by the Olive coat - carefully dry brushing over the engine grill - then application of some of my Tamiya "makeup" (Weathering Master) for grime and oxidation.


After masking off the front end that I had hand weathered I put the body and chassis into the spray both , after which I started applying various colors to the tracks and wheels to simulate road grime, oil, rust etc.  The Tamiya kit came in handy again here along with using silver and black where it made sense after researching various photos of the real thing.  I didn't want it too dirty looking as these had just arrived in Sept '44.

Next came the decals.  Again looking at photos for commonality I chose what seemed like a standard identification.  Rubicon decals come off the paper backing fast and easy.  Next came finishing details on the rear end with silver and brown and Tamiya.

More views follow.....

Now recall I mentioned an M10 turret?  I followed the same procedure as putting together and painting the M36 turret.  Some obvious differences besides the angular turret plates is the 3 inch gun with no muzzle break (yep, had to drill out the bore on this one too!) and the ammo storage racks.



Here is what it looks like on the chassis.  In my opinion the kit should have been designed for the chassis to accept either turret, but the flanges on the bottom are different diameter forcing one to chose one turret or the other.  Again, I chose "door number three" and simply snipped the flange from the M10 turret.  Okay, it does not lock in as the M36 turret does, but because the M10 is the larger diameter it does sit nicely on the chassis and so can still be displayed or used in gaming😄

 
The M10/36 comes without crew, but of course Rubicon sells crew separate!  I bit since it was not overly expensive and I am glad I did, although I did not know they were Pewter!  I have never worked with pewter, so I consulted with LittleBro and got some Rust-oleum primer.  The crew came with a driver but I had already buttoned up the hull hatches so I only had the three turret men to deal with.


Here is what I was going for.  Two with tanker helmets and the leader with the pot over the top.  The colors I had to mix to get close to this picture.  Here is a progress photo...

.....and here is the result.  I glued the torsos down to the seat ring then added added the heads in the direction I wanted.  First a top view.

Now here they come at you!

The one in the middle with the pot is a "Top kick" and the other two are privates.