Landships II

Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info TOPIC: Mark V* (1:35 model)


Brigadier

Status: Offline
Posts: 299
Date:
Mark V* (1:35 model)
Permalink   


 

Hello Landship-members!

I had one model on my wish list; the Mark V*. What a beast and I was waiting for the announcement that Meng or Takom would bring this model on the market....... But I could not wait any longer and have tried to make a Mark V* that looks like the real thing. In the building process I used the Meng Mark V, the wide tracks from Masterclub and lots of styrene sheet.

Hope you like it.

Best regards,

Willem

 

P1070469.JPG

 

P1070466.JPG

 

P1070468.JPG

 

P1070474.JPG

 

WP_20161119_16_21_59_Pro.jpg



Attachments
__________________


Lieutenant-Colonel

Status: Offline
Posts: 150
Date:
Permalink   

Nice and clean work

__________________


Lieutenant-Colonel

Status: Offline
Posts: 174
Date:
Permalink   

Excellent!

__________________

Regards

Denis



Lieutenant

Status: Offline
Posts: 66
Date:
Permalink   

Excellent work Willem.

John


__________________


Colonel

Status: Offline
Posts: 244
Date:
Permalink   

Such clean / accurate building. Chopping & matching both kit & raw styrene is a huge challenge.

Looking forward to seeing updates on this, and photos showing the roof & rear turret from various angles...

The V* Female is a firm favourite of mine, and I'd much rather build it than a normal length Mk.V - if only Takom or Meng would take the bait.



__________________
"You there on the port!". "S'gin actually, but thanks for noticing [hic]".


Brigadier

Status: Offline
Posts: 299
Date:
Permalink   

 

Hello Paul,

The roof, underside and the rear turret were the most difficult parts. Not much information on those parts. I have made the roof and the turret by looking at the available pictures and I think it looks right but to be honest not 100% like the original. I think it should be a little wider ...

 

But I am happy with the result and it was a pleasure to build this beast.

 

For you, as requested, some pictures attached.

 

Thanks and best regards,

Willem

P1070484.JPG



Attachments
__________________


Colonel

Status: Offline
Posts: 244
Date:
Permalink   

Looks like you did a fine job, from here... Converting tanks purely from archival photo materials is never 100% certain. I am building a Russian tank destroyer that was converted into a tractor for shunting freight wagons on the railways purely from shots of the thing being cut up with a gas torch!

Going to study your images really carefully - especially since I bought a Meng Mk.V Female super-cheap last night.

__________________
"You there on the port!". "S'gin actually, but thanks for noticing [hic]".


Major

Status: Offline
Posts: 145
Date:
Permalink   

This is fantastic work! I love the Mark V* and you are doing an amazing job! Keep it up.

__________________


Field Marshal

Status: Offline
Posts: 454
Date:
Permalink   

I couldn't agree more with everyone else's comments, fantastic and really cean build of one of my favourite tanks... great job!

__________________

Has anyone else noticed "new and improved" seems to mean it doesn't work as well as it used to?

 



Field Marshal

Status: Offline
Posts: 433
Date:
Permalink   

A great work!
Your scratch is crisp and clean.

The new kits are really beautiful remembering the old Ehmar I used to convert my own V* years ago!

About sources and accuracy. The Bovington museeum sold a lot of technical drawings about MarkV and MarkV*, the turret is detailled as the rear of the tank.

__________________


Brigadier

Status: Offline
Posts: 299
Date:
Permalink   

Hello Gilles,
Thanks for your reply. Are those technical drawings stil available from the Tank Museum?
I will be visiting next year, If so, they will be on the shopping list.
Best regards,
Willem

__________________


Colonel

Status: Offline
Posts: 210
Date:
Permalink   

I don't know about the Mark V*, but the staff of the Bovington museum is very helpful also for online purchases. I bought a lot of scans of blueprints from them via email, and the communication was very nice and fast.

Thorsten

__________________


Field Marshal

Status: Offline
Posts: 433
Date:
Permalink   

If I remember, I order my plan packs in 2010 or 2011, I don't knnow if they're still avaliable, but there was a lisiting on the Museeum online shop.

__________________


Brigadier

Status: Offline
Posts: 299
Date:
Permalink   

Hello Thorst and Gilles,
I was still able to order a "plan pack" for the Mark V* from the Tank Museum. Costs 10 pounds without postage.
Ordered them this week and they are on it's way by now (I hope
Thanks!
Best regards,
Willem

__________________


Brigadier

Status: Offline
Posts: 299
Date:
Permalink   

a next step....

After the primer (Chaos Black) i painted the model in the basic color.

I mixed Tamiya XF51 Khaki Drab with Tamiya XF15 Flat Flesh (5:1).

I think it is a good base to start weathering with oils and pigments (colors get darker during the proces)

P1170274.JPG

Comments are welcome .

Best regards,

Willem

 



Attachments
__________________
Ned


General

Status: Offline
Posts: 308
Date:
Permalink   

Excellent work Willem,  I really like how you dis the detail on it. the parts that you made to extend the Mk V. Very detailed, the bolts, nuts, rivets.

the scribbling. very good work, i'm looking forward to it's finish.. what did you use for the Mk V ? Takom, Emhar or Meng ?



__________________


General

Status: Offline
Posts: 360
Date:
Permalink   

Very impressive work. Just one question from a layman (I have not really concerned myself much with rhomboids ): Why some shade of grey?

 



__________________

"Siplicity is the ultimate sophistication" -Leonardo Da Vinci-

Ned


General

Status: Offline
Posts: 308
Date:
Permalink   

Willem what did you use for your rivets, bolts ? when i see the original unpainted pictures, the rivets / bolts all look the same color as the model.

a light tan color.. Very detailed work.



__________________


Brigadier

Status: Offline
Posts: 299
Date:
Permalink   

Hello Ned and Peter,

thanks for your replies. Much appreciated.

 

@ Ned: I used the Meng Mark V tank as a base.

And for the rivets: after building several Mark IV and V tanks you have a box with parts "not for use" (the spare box).

That box was my source for the nuts and the bolts that I used on the part that had to be scratched. 

@ Peter: the color is actually a very light green (it must be the lighting that makes it more grey).

That color will become darker green during the proces of painting and weathering. I see now that it almost looks like grey

Best regards,

Willem



__________________
Ned


General

Status: Offline
Posts: 308
Date:
Permalink   

Thanks Willem, I was wondering where did all the rivets / bolts come from.. it does look very good.



__________________


Brigadier

Status: Offline
Posts: 299
Date:
Permalink   

Thanks Ned!



__________________
Page 1 of 1  sorted by
 
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.

Tweet this page Post to Digg Post to Del.icio.us


Create your own FREE Forum
Report Abuse
Powered by ActiveBoard