
MiniArt 1/35 German MB 1500 A 4x4 Cargo Truck
26.00
$
<p>Set includes model of a cargo truck and five figures.</p>

MiniArt 1/35 British AEC MK1 Armoured Car
35.00
$
<h3>Features</h3>
<ul>
<li>Highly detailed model</li>
<li>436 plastic parts</li>
<li>60 Photo-Etched metal parts</li>
<li>Decals options for three vehicles</li>
<li>Full-color instruction</li>
<li>All New Tooling. State of the art engineering utilising slide mould technology</li>
<li>Fully detailed interior</li>
<li>Highly detailed engine compartment</li>
<li>Engine is accurately represented</li>
<li>Fighting compartment faithfully reproduced</li>
<li>Driver’s vision periscopes moulded in clear plastic</li>
<li>Driving compartment interior is fully detailed and accurately produced</li>
<li>All doors and hatches can be assembled open or closed</li>
<li>Slide-mould tyre tread pattern moulded in one part</li>
</ul>

AFV 35023N 1/35 Australian Army M113A1 MRV
42.00
$
<p>The development of a second tranche of FSVs began in 1972, when a requirement for further such AFVs was issued. It was decided that the new AFV would use the turret of a FV101 Scorpion fitted to the chassis of a M113A1 APC. This turret was armed with a 76 mm L23A1 gun. Buoyancy aids were also installed on the sides and front of the hull so that the vehicles remained amphibious. The prototype vehicles began to be constructed by the Ordnance Factory in Maribyrnong, Victoria, during 1974; three were completed in mid-1975. The design was approved for production in 1978, and another 45 FSVs were eventually completed by converting newly acquired M113A1s. The type was later designated the Medium Reconnaissance Vehicle (MRV).</p>
<h3>Features</h3>
<ul>
<li>AFV Club's 1/35-scale model kit of the Australian Army M113A1 MRV (Medium Reconnaissance Vehicle) comes with a new barrel and mantlet<br>
</li>
<li>Periscopes for the tank commander and loader. <br>
</li>
<li>Three types of coaxial guns are included, as are photo-etched parts and new decals. </li>
</ul>

Trumpeter 02357 1/35 Flakrakete Rheintochter I
32.00
$
<p>Rheintochter was a German surface-to-air missile developed by Rheinmetall-Borsig during World War II. Its name comes from the mythical Rheintöchter (Rhinemaidens) of Richard Wagner's opera series Der Ring des Nibelungen.</p><p>The missile was a multi-stage solid fuelled rocket. It had four small control surfaces, resembling paddles, in the nose, six fins at the after end of the top stage, and four at the end of the main stage. It stood 6.3 m (20 ft 8 in) tall, with a diameter of 54 cm (1 ft 9 in). The sustainer motor, located ahead of the 136 kg (300 lb) warhead (rather than behind, as is more usual) exhausted through six venturis between the first stage fins.</p><h3>Features</h3><ul>
<li>The kit consists of over 530 parts ,includes a piece of Photo Etched parts</li>
<li>Details finely represented by newly tooled parts</li>
<li>Rubber tires</li>
</ul><h3>Specifications</h3><ul>
<li>Model Brief: Length: 254.5mm Width: 152.3mm </li>
<li>Total Parts: 530+</li>
<li>Photo Etched Parts: 1 piece</li>
<li>Total Sprues: 22 sprues and tires</li>
</ul>

Unimodel 464 1/72 T35 Gun Motor Carriage
10.00
$
<h3>Plastic model 1:72 American self-propelled gun T35 (Unimodels 464)</h3>
<p>Good quality kit, easy to assemble. Suitable for both experienced modellers and beginners.</p>
<p>T35 Gun Motor Carriage 1942 tank destroyer prototype, also known as the T35 3-inch Gun Motor Carriage.</p>
<h3>The kit includes:</h3>
<ul>
<li>8 sprues with parts</li>
<li>decal (sticker)</li>
<li>photo-etched parts</li>
<li>scheme for painting model</li>
<li>detailed instruction</li>
</ul>
<h3>Specification</h3>
<ul>
<li>Model length, mm: 81</li>
</ul>