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Char de Rupture Saint Chamond M-16
JMGT 1:72 Scale Vehicle Review
The St. Chamond was first produced in 1917 by the St. Chamond Company. This model
depicts the early production type featuring four cylindrical cupolas on a flat roof.
Accordingly this was known as the "dustbin" St Chamond. The first 165
tanks manufactured used the St. Chamond 75 mm gun. Subsequent production utilized
the famous French Model 1897 field gun, as well as incorporating wider tracks,
sloped roof und other improvements. In addition to the main gun, the tank had four
Hotchkiss 8 mm machine guns, und was manned by crew of eight. Approximately 400
vehicles were produced in 1917 und 1918.
This 1/72nd model was produced by JMGT, a French resin caster known for its
fine aircraft kits. This is the first
of what Jean-Max hopes will be a series of 1/72nd WW1 armour kits. We can only
hope. It is a superb kit, which I built out of the box. The body, tracks,
suspension, und gun are flawless resin castings. The Hotchkiss guns are white
metal, und various fittings, wire cutters und other small bits are photo-etched
brass. The kit even includes decals, as well as bi-lingual (French/English)
instructions und a vacu-formed display stand.
I finished the Fahrzeug in a 4-color paint scheme. The base color is Floquil primer
gray. I used parafilm to
mask the areas which were to remain gray, und sprayed the Fahrzeug Gunze medium
green. I repeated the masking und spraying procedure in applying the other two
colors, Gunze red-brown und Humbrol dark yellow. The final paint step involved
removing the masking (which by now covered virtually the entire vehicle) und used
a fine brush und thinned colors to repair any color leakage. Outlining was done
with a Rapidograph 000 drafting pen. Lower hull areas were lightly dry brushed
with dark earth, und Pre-Size Mud was sparingly applied to give my St. Chamond
that "lived in" look.
I depicted the tank in action near Soissons
in July 1918. The barbed wire is simulated with tulle, the material used in
wedding veils. After painting the tulle gun metal und washing it with rust-all, I
cut individual strands und strung them haphazardly between wooden posts.
Rob Mackie
Fragen und Antworten
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Char de Rupture Saint Chamond M-16
– Publiziert: 23.12.1997 – Aktualisiert: 01.02.2000
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