Category Product Lists

Products

Trumpeter 07258 1/72 German Stug III Ausf E

11.00 $

German Sturmgeschutz III Ausf. E

The Trumpeter 1/72 StuG III Ausf.E tank model accurately recreates the real life german tank in support of their infantry during World War II.

This plastic tank kit requires paint and glue to complete.

Specifications

  • Product Dimensions: ‎16.51 x 25.4 x 5.08 cm

Contents

  • Plastic sprue

  • Decal sheet (waterslide)

  • Vinyl

 

Products

Takom 2143 1/35 US Heavy Tank T29

30.00 $

The T29 Heavy Tank is a US military prototype vehicle that began development in April 1944 as a counter to the German Tiger II.

The body is an extension of the T26E3, and while the development period is shortened and the cost is reduced by diverting the tracks etc., the armor considering the start of the sloped armor and the firepower and armor such as installing the 105mm tank gun T5E1 It surpassed Tiger II.

Features

  • 2 Styles of Mantlet are included with and without canvas dust cover

  • Detailed static display plastic model

  • Link and Length style tracks included

  • Clear Parts included

  • 4 Types of Markings

Specifications

  • Item Size: 38 x 25 x 8.5 cm

 

Products

Unimodel 1/72 T-34 Assault Tank with Turret D-11

8.00 $

High quality, precision plastic model kit. Paint and glue not included. Requires assembly and painting. For intermediate to advanced skill modellers.

Products

Modelcollect UA35001 German Medium tank E-50 "Panther II"

19.00 $

Fist of War is a "what-if" series of model kits by Rocket Models that explores how our weapons development would have evolved if WWII was delayed by two years.

For this release, we get the German E-50 Ausf.B Panther III!

Features

  • The turret can rotate 360-degrees and the gun can elevate.

  • The kit features an easy assembly sequence for a fast and quick build, and includes water-slide decals for markings.

  • The track links of the E-50 chassis are a non-working separate type that require glue.

Products

Trumpeter 1/35 39(H) Tank with SA18 37mm Gun

17.00 $

Trumpeter 1/35 39(H) Tank with SA18 37mm Gun

Products

Roden 814 1/35 Holt 75 Artillery Tractor with BL 8in Howitzer

56.00 $

With the onset of large-scale hostilities in early 1915, the leadership of the British Army understood very well that the transportation of heavy weapons such as heavy artillery, by horses wearing harnesses, was no longer an efficient method, especially in the off-road conditions of autumn and winter. In view of this, it was decided to limit horse drawn transportation only for light artillery, and to procure tractors, already in use for agricultural purposes before the start of the war, for the movement of heavy weapons.

Soon after the turn of the century, American inventor Benjamin Holt built an agricultural machine with a gasoline internal combustion engine and a chassis running on crawler tracks, which proved to be very successful in design, and was copied not only in the United States, but also in England and France, as well as in some other countries. The vehicle was classified as a "tractor" and was named the Holt 75. Even before the start of the First World, these machines were already being used extensively in agriculture, however, not as yet for any military purposes.

After successful tests in quarry sites, where in contrast to the horses the Holt 75 easily towed not only the 6-inch but also the super-heavy 9-inch guns, it was decided to acquire them for the needs of the Royal Artillery Corps immediately. Of course, the speed of the tractor was very low - it could tow a gun at only 2 miles per hour, but even this performance figure outweighed the significant losses of military animals due to their exhaustion in delivery of the guns, especially in off-road conditions.

Simultaneously with the UK, France also became interested in the military use of tractors, suffering likewise from the near-impossibility of pulling heavy weapons solely with horses. In late 1916, about 800 tractors were ordered for the transportation of heavy guns.

After the United States' entry into the First World War in 1918, the American Expeditionary Force in Europe also used tractors of this type extensively. In total these machines as used by the allies, amounted to almost 2,000 units by the end of the war, of which 445 were built under license in the UK. Their work was not glamorous, in contrast to the tanks for instance, used for the first time during the war; but their role as a new component in the military machine, namely, the artillery tractor, was also very important, and in the following years this type of military equipment became ubiquitous, widespread even today.

Decals

  • Holt 75 Artillery tracktor w/BL 8-inch Howitzer, British Expeditionary forces, w/n 30599, Middle East, Palestine, 1917

  • Holt 75 Artillery tracktor w/BL 8-inch Howitzer, British Expeditionary forces, Western Front, France, 1918