Category Product Lists

Products

Military Wheels 7207-02 1/72 PARM-1 ZIS-6 and Rubber Wheels

13.00 $
<p>The PARM-1 (4x2) was a Soviet mobile workshop car from the interwar period and World War II. The drive was provided by a single 73 HP engine, which allowed the vehicle to accelerate to 60 km / h. The maximum driving range of the car was 200 kilometers, and its weight - when fully loaded - was 6,100 kilograms. PARM-1 (4x2) was developed on the basis of the ZIS-5 truck in order to shorten research and development works and reduce production costs. The car was designed to provide technical support to various types of aircraft operating from field airports. They are also dedicated to carrying out small and medium repairs in field conditions. For this reason, they received, by Soviet standards, relatively rich technical equipment, and in the case of the PARM-1 (4x2), its crew was 7-9 people. As a standard, there were 2 to 4 vehicles of this type per one hunting regiment. It is worth adding that in the years 1941-1944 about 700 PARM-1 vehicles were built.</p> <h3>Set contains:<br> </h3> <ul> <li>The assembly instruction.</li> <li>Frames with plastic parts.</li> <li>Decals.</li> <li>Rubber wheels.</li> <li>Transparent plastic elements.</li> </ul>
Products

UM Models 380 1/72 M4A3 HVSS Sherman Flame-Thrower Tank

10.00 $
<p>This model kit of a tank equipped with a turret and a flamethrower next to the dummy barrel comes to us courtesy of Unimodels. The body is based on the late M4A3 model equipped with a liquid-cooled V8 gasoline engine and HVSS suspension.</p> <p>Photo-etched parts and link-and-length tracks are included.</p> <p>The M4 Sherman tank was produced in several variants, a result of mass production spread across several manufacturers and several years. It was also the basis for a number of related vehicles, and Shermans have been modified by several nations, ranging from upgrades to complete hull conversions for another task.</p> <h3>Specifications</h3> <ul> <li> <p>Item Size: 24.0cm x 15.3cm x 3.5cm</p> </li> </ul> <h3>This set includes</h3> <ul> <li> <p>5 sprues with parts</p> </li> <li> <p>decal (sticker)</p> </li> <li> <p>photo-etched parts</p> </li> <li> <p>metal barrel</p> </li> <li> <p>scheme for painting model</p> </li> <li> <p>detailed instruction</p> </li> </ul>
Products

Roden 817 1/35 Ford V8-G81A Special 1938

25.00 $
<p>In the late 1920s, many leading American companies began to invest heavily in the Weimar-era German economy. Many industries, including the automotive industry, had significant industrial potential as the country emerged from its economic crisis. Germany, as the birthplace of the automobile, had always been one of the innovators in fashion and new technology in car production, but at that time the country was in significant financial difficulties and needed significant investment.</p> <p>Henry Ford, the father of the automotive industry in the United States, had great ambitions to expand sales of his model line in Europe amid oversaturation of Ford's home market. In 1928, a cooperation agreement was signed between Ford and the leaders of the state of Rhine-Westphalia, and two years later in the presence of Henry Ford and the mayor of Cologne Konrad Adenauer, the grand opening ceremony of the new car and truck manufacturing plant took place. Ford’s company had supplied a quantity of critical equipment to unify cars built in the United States and the subsidiary in Germany.</p> <p>German-made cars were very similar to their American cousins, differing only in minor details such as small exterior features. After the Nazis came to power, led by Hitler, cooperation between the United States and Germany did not stop but increased as the new government set a course for gradual remilitarization, and, consequently, for an increase in the number of vehicles in the newly formed army. The Ford concern transferred more and more developments to its established enterprise in Germany.</p> <p>Among the company's cars, the most popular was the Ford Eifel 20C - from 1935 to 1939, they produced more than 61,000. Later they produced the V8-48 model (more than 5,000). Production of the G78A began in 1937, and a year later the G81A. These cars had a more powerful 8-cylinder engine, improved body shape and increased chassis strength.</p> <p>With the beginning of World War II, a significant number of cars, including private ones, were requisitioned for the army. This fate befell the G81A, which from the first months of the war was used as a light staff vehicle by Wehrmacht, Luftwaffe and police units. This car was used mainly in the first years of the war and at the beginning of Germany's Eastern Campaign, because in off-road conditions and the USSR's winter mud, its use was significantly limited.</p> <p>Vehicles operated in European countries, which had a developed network of roads of a better standard, lasted much longer, and some cars of this type were in use as late as 1943. In Germany, G81A police cars were used almost until the end of the war.</p> <p>The redevelopment of Ford's plants, which had long since been nationalized by the Nazi regime to produce only trucks, needed by the army in large quantities, resulted in a lack of spare parts for many types of cars, so in 1944 cars of this type were the exception rather than the rule. Although their contribution to the war was relatively minor, they were often found in military units, and still played their part.</p> <h3>Features</h3> <ul> <li> <p>Plastic elements for assembly</p> </li> <li> <p>Decal sheet with markings</p> </li> <li> <p>1:35 Scale</p> </li> <li> <p>Instructions</p> </li> </ul> <p> </p>
Products

Rye Field Model 5020s 1/35 M551A1/M551A1 TTS Sheridan

37.00 $
<p>The M551 Sheridan was an Armored Reconnaissance/Airborne Assault Vehicle which entered service in the US Army in 1967. Within the next few years, the upgraded M551A1 was rolled out, which featured a newly installed laser measuring system, equipped ballistic computer and environmental sensors. The TTS (Tank Thermal Sight) it was equipped with was the same AN/VSG-2B unit featured in the M60A3 TTS.</p> <p>This "2 in 1" kit from Rye Field Model allows you to build the tank in either its M551A1 or M551A1 TTS form. The tracks are easy to assemble "Link &amp; Length" type, and clear parts, photo-etched parts, and decals are included so you can recreate the M551A1 in all its glory.</p>
Products

Trumpeter 09501 1/35 AT-T Artillery Prime Mover*

37.00 $
<p>After the war, the Soviet Weapons Department resumed its heavy-duty battlefield tractor in 1946 and designed a tractor based on the T-54 tank site. With 5 tons of load capacity, 25 tons of traction, and excellent performance at speeds of up to 35 km/h, and designed to carry a variety of special engineering equipment to meet the engineering requirements of harsh battlefield terrain, including BAT-M , BTM-3, MDK-2M and other models.</p>