Showing posts with label Revell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Revell. Show all posts

Full Units

5/28/2017 Add Comment

I like full units when I can do them.


These troops wear a mixture of traditional and WWII German uniforms.


German helmets and stripped to the waist for heavy work.


German uniforms on the men on the horses.


The mortar crews also enjoy a quick dance to entertain the troops.

More Sub Interior

9/09/2010 Add Comment

This close up of the bridge and command center shows several areas. Note the little hand wheel in the lower right corner of the photo. I put 44 men on board, the same number of troops as the crew of a Type VII C U-Boat. It's crowded.

This is the captains quarters, bunk, and desk. On the upper level you can see the armory with a few guns on the wall. I am all about the guns.

This is my engine room. It took all kinds of bits to make it.



Since my goal was to make a sub interior but not spend any money, and not spend two years on it, I glued all sorts of parts and sprue on the walls and floors of the hull to make it appear like a crowded u-boat interior.



Here you can see parts from trains, engines, halftracks, spure, sheet styrene all working together to be a sub.

U-Boats

5/24/2010 Add Comment

The 1/72nd scale Revell U-Boats have a lot of small railing parts.

These railing fit around the guns.


They really make a big difference in the detail and quality of the kit. They look complicated, but they fit very easily. The molds are very well done, there was no flash, and the parts had few connections to the sprue so they were easy to remove. They also aligned perfectly with the hull parts, which was very nice.


I used photos from this Osprey book to determine the different armaments to use on the one submarine with the quad 20 mm AA guns.



Side by side these two U-Boats look pretty awesome. U-Boats often nested together like this in port so they did not take up much room at dockside. The wooden decks are well detailed on these kits.

Life Rafts and U-Boats

5/22/2010 Add Comment


The conning tower for the German U-Boat Type VII/C 41 Atlantic. The AA guns are very nice.




The standard mounts were two twin 20 mm guns and one 37mm gun below. They also mounted two twin 20 mm mounts and a quad-twenty on the lower deck. I am doing one of each. Quad mount is from Eadai / Grip models.



The U-Boat crews sustained huge losses. One new technique to mitigate that high loss rate was the addition of rubber life rafts on the front hull in special compartments. These special containers are all in a row at the front of the ship.



If the ship were to go down the rafts could allow the crewmen the chance to be saved by German, Allied or neutral ships. The same icy water where the Titanic went down is the same waters cruised by many U-Boats. A few minutes in water like that meant death.



Subs

5/21/2010 Add Comment

When I cut the lower hull off of a ship model, I glue on a flat piece of styrene so the hull is stronger, and it will slide along on the wargame table easier.

Revell makes a WWII German submarine model, the Type VII C / Atlantic 1941. It is a mid to late war submarine. I have a couple of them under construction in this photo.


These 1/72nd scale models are about three feet long. When only doing the upper hull, there are not too many parts on the kit.


I taped the hull bottoms to the hull sides to help hold them in place while the glue is drying.



The late war versions of this submarine had a snorkel, it allowed the submarine to cruise underwater and stay hidden from Allied attacks.



Once the glue is dried, I have to trim the edges of the hull bottom flush with the sides. My long term plan calls for two of these submarines, and one early war Type VII C submarine. And maybe some others...




Submarines have great wargame potential. Build a dock or u-boat pen and then stage commando, resistance raid or even paratrooper drop on them. Play submarine vs Flower Class Corvette.




























Waterline Type VII C / Atlantic

5/11/2010 Add Comment

One of the first things to do when making a waterline model out of a full hull model is to determine where to make the cut.

This is the Revel Type VIIC / Atlantic 1/72nd scale U-Boat. I use tape to mask off the line where the hull will get cut.


I use a mini-table saw for the cut I got at Harbor Freight Tools.


The saw cuts so fast it actually melts the plastic. I use an X-Acto knife to clean up the edge after I am done.



The blade on this saw looks like it could cut off your arm, but probably only a finger. I am trying to avoid finding out for sure what body parts it can remove. A big cut with the table saw does most of the work in only a few seconds. The rest is just trimming by hand. I got the saw for about a hundred dollars a few years ago. I don't use it much, but it is well worth the money for what it can do.

Ships

5/05/2010 Add Comment

The Flower Class Corvette kit from Revell in 1/72nd scale is a great kit. It fits together well and it lends itself to conversion.

I built this corvette as a merchant ship. My other one I built as a US Navy version of the corvette.


While the corvette is a tiny ship, it is huge compared to the Revell Type VIIC U-Boat.

S-Boat Weapons

4/21/2010 Add Comment

The stern and mid-ships is filling up with equipment and weapons. Here the 37mm AA gun is ready for action.

The 20mm AA gun has been installed in the gun tube at the bow.


The new captain looks over the bridge before the vessel is commissioned.


Twin 20mm AA gun amidships is ready for action.



The 37mm AA gun, single 20mm AA gun, twin AA gun and four torpedoes and several depth charges make this a very heavily armed small ship.
Revell 1/72nd scale S-Boat with Revell WWII German Navy crewmen.

S-Boat AA Gun

4/20/2010 Add Comment


These bits make up a complex AA gun for the bow of the S-Boat.




Once constructed, it makes a nice gun.



Life ring at the stern.


I really like the very large binoculars on the bridge.





Most of the stern is still pretty vacant, but that will change soon.

SBoat Construction Continues

4/19/2010 Add Comment
The Odemars German Commanders check out the new ship from bow to stern.


The stern is pretty bare right now at this early stage of construction. There are many more parts waiting on the sprue, I mean dock, to be added to this vessel.



The bridge is highly detailed, the model sort of works from front to rear in construction.


The big hole in the front is for the gunner of a light AA gun. The armored bridge is a big improvement over the older SBoats with simple wooden bridges. This Revell 1/72nd scale kit fits together well, too bad they don't give you any crew figures. I will use the Revell WWII German Navy soft plastic figures in 1/72nd scale, but it would have been nice to have more choices by having a few guys in the model.