Free French M4A3 (76)

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hobo_keith
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Free French M4A3 (76)

Post by hobo_keith »

Hi,
I've had a week off of work at home doing all those odd jobs... Well a bit, but I also built up this - my second tank. It started from the bits I had left from putting metal tracks and whatnot on my Firefly attempt, and it's based on one on a plinth as a memorial in France which I found a pic of online. The turret is a Mato and I haven't worked out how to wire it to the Heng Long innards as yet. If anyone knows how please feel free to chip in! Still a few bits to do like the Free French symbol so I'll get some Tamiya Sherman decals, as I don't think I'm up to painting that - the lettering was about my limit...
Hope you like it. Cheers, Keith

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43rdRecceReg
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Re: Free French M4A3 (76)

Post by 43rdRecceReg »

Hi, Keith
Nicely taken photos, and I love that stone wall in the background!....and is that a brick man-cave lurking there too? I also appreciate your enthusiasm, and I'm sure I'm not alone in that.. :thumbup: Anyway, here's a link to a wiring digram Alwyn posted last year. It may give you an idea of what you're twiddling with for starters. You'll probably find a similar diagram for Mato models if you dig deep into the search box options.. :) ..or further afield on the 'Net'.
Anything with 'champagne' on it simply has to be tasty!
viewtopic.php?f=79&t=15032&p=142426&hil ... am#p142426
"Get your facts first, and then you can distort them as much as you please"- Mark Twain.
hobo_keith
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Re: Free French M4A3 (76)

Post by hobo_keith »

Thanks 43rd Recce,

Thank you very much - it's only a fairly inexpensive Fujifilm bridge camera but they've come out alright. By the way, I later found a pic of a sister tank with 'Flandres' on the side, which certainly would have been easier to paint on...
Most appreciate the wiring diagram link, I can see what goes where now. I guess I could get a connector for a HL upper and just join the wires, when I know what's what on the turret.
The wall's are a great backdrop - all local Mountsorrel granite which were apparently a part of a barn that stood here long, long ago. It's the toughest, heaviest substance known to mankind I think! Sadly not a brick man cave but the back of the house. I can dream though...
Once again - really appreciate you taking the time.
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43rdRecceReg
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Re: Free French M4A3 (76)

Post by 43rdRecceReg »

You're very welcome. Keith. Fuji make excellent cameras. In fact, their retro-look X series pro cameras bear comparison with the Likes of Leica, and so I imagine they're pretty good at the budget end too. Nonetheless, you obviously have a steady hand and a keen eye for detail, as witness the pics and the lettering on the tank- which was, in itself, no mean feat either :thumbup:
Roy... ('43 RReg'..my late Father's old unit in WW2)
"Get your facts first, and then you can distort them as much as you please"- Mark Twain.
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greengiant
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Re: Free French M4A3 (76)

Post by greengiant »

Looks very nice :thumbup: .
If you want a better look for the barrel cut off the plastic shroud over the airsoft barrel and just leave the aluminum airsoft tube in place and paint it. Will look much more like a 76mm barrel.
hobo_keith
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Re: Free French M4A3 (76)

Post by hobo_keith »

Hi,
Thanks Roy - yes it's a really decent little camera and I don't think I could have done better for the £120 or so it cost. That said you've reawakened my hankering for something a little better, and those X series ones caught my eye before. There's nothing better than a first-hand recommendation at the end of the day. Might be time to save my pennies. Also I've just been reading up about the 43rd Recconaissance Regiment - quite an outfit. He must have been a brave man. My own father was in the REME in Malaya, just after the war, so not many tanks out there but lots of Dodges, Chevs and Diamond T's etc, but he'd been around them in England before being shipped out, and was a life long, and very skilled model maker. He died only a few weeks ago after a mercifully very short illness but he was still very much in charge of his faculties and helped me out with a bit of advice on the right colour green for the Firefly as well as the commander's uniform (he'd somehow managed to purloin himself a set of lined tank overalls for riding his Norton around in the winter after he was demobbed!)

Also many thanks to you greengiant for the kind words a truly great tip. I did think the barrel looked a bit like a telegraph pole sticking out of the turret, and didn't realise that there was an aluminium inner - time for a bit more plastic surgery.

Must say being a newcomer to radio control tanking, it's an extremely welcoming hobby full of encouraging and interesting folk, and that makes it all the more of a pleasure. Cheers, Keith
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43rdRecceReg
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Re: Free French M4A3 (76)

Post by 43rdRecceReg »

hobo_keith wrote:Hi,
Thanks Roy - yes it's a really decent little camera and I don't think I could have done better for the £120 or so it cost. That said you've reawakened my hankering for something a little better, and those X series ones caught my eye before. There's nothing better than a first-hand recommendation at the end of the day. Might be time to save my pennies. Also I've just been reading up about the 43rd Recconaissance Regiment - quite an outfit. He must have been a brave man. My own father was in the REME in Malaya, just after the war, so not many tanks out there but lots of Dodges, Chevs and Diamond T's etc, but he'd been around them in England before being shipped out, and was a life long, and very skilled model maker. He died only a few weeks ago after a mercifully very short illness but he was still very much in charge of his faculties and helped me out with a bit of advice on the right colour green for the Firefly as well as the commander's uniform (he'd somehow managed to purloin himself a set of lined tank overalls for riding his Norton around in the winter after he was demobbed!)

Also many thanks to you greengiant for the kind words a truly great tip. I did think the barrel looked a bit like a telegraph pole sticking out of the turret, and didn't realise that there was an aluminium inner - time for a bit more plastic surgery.

Must say being a newcomer to radio control tanking, it's an extremely welcoming hobby full of encouraging and interesting folk, and that makes it all the more of a pleasure. Cheers, Keith
Well, thanks for the thanks, Keith.
Elements of 43RecceReg were the first to cross the Rhine into the German heartland, I think. Their job, as the spearhead of the British Army was to locate the German positions by tearing (often blindly) into enemy territory in armoured cars, and Bren carriers...There, they would stir up the hornet's nest with mortars, brens, and 2-pounders...and anything else they could lob. My Dad had an elder brother in the same
unit (a sergeant, and mortar instructor), and he did his best to keep the wain ('young un' in scots) out of trouble. As I recall, the Reichswald Forest campaign (Kleve area) was the one that made them both look the most reflective; though 'Hill 112' after D-Day took a severe toll on the unit and its division- the 43rd Wessex. (Though they were actually part of the Royal Armoured Corps too) They had got as far as Bremen when the war ended., where they witnessed germans living in cattle trucks, and there's a terrible irony in that, of course.....Still.. More importantly, though,they came home in one piece.
Sorry to hear about your Father, but I'm sure you'll have fond memories of him to cherish and smile about in the decades to come. Sadly, my old man (also a Norton fan, by the way!) survived the war only to die in a car crash in Largs, Scotland 25 years ago....But he didn't suffer, apparently. That's life, eh?
As the youngest son of the youngest son, I have cousins who were born in the 1930s. One of them was in the RAF in Malaya, and another contracted malaria so badly there, that after years of torment, he hanged himself from a lamp post in 1960. It was one of those old heritage victorian gas-powered ones; though quite why I always recall that particular detail eludes me.
While we can revel in, and build the tools of the soldiers trade, all too often we overlook the consequences...(PTSD etc..'Shell shock' in WW1..amputations, and above all: death :S )
Incidentally, there was a re-enactment group dedicated to the 43rdRReg, and I contacted them some years ago to see if they could put me in touch with others veterans; but I think they've all gone to the ultimate demob by now..
My son is a massive fan of photography, and has the X-Pro Fuji, two vintage Leicas (35mm film) and a Canon 5D...but then he works in a Swiss bank, and earns more in a month than I get in my various pensions in an entire year! I'm happy with my old Canon SLR and my new iPhone 6 camera...they do the job, and that's what counts.
If you feel the urge to upgrade: just do it. I'm sure many on this forum would support the 'I'm just treating myself..I deserve it" imperative :haha: Just look at the massive collections of model tanks on here.!
"Get your facts first, and then you can distort them as much as you please"- Mark Twain.
hobo_keith
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Re: Free French M4A3 (76)

Post by hobo_keith »

Hey Roy,

I really enjoyed reading your very poignant post, in fact it alone has made posting the pics of the tank more than worthwhile. As you say we enjoy the miniature panoply of war, but it's important to take the time to respect those who suffer the effects of conflict. I drive past the forthcoming site of the National Rehabilitation Centre that's now being built between Loughborough and Nottingham every day, and it always gives me pause for thought.
Is the reenactment group still going? If so I'll look out for them at the Victory Show in a couple of weeks (which is actually where I first saw 1/16 tanks en masse, and realised that I wouldn't need a second mortgage for a Tamiya Sherman thanks to the HL offerings. In the meantime... I'll get that flaming turret working!

Very good to make your acquaintance.
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43rdRecceReg
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Re: Free French M4A3 (76)

Post by 43rdRecceReg »

Ditto, Keith :thumbup:
"Get your facts first, and then you can distort them as much as you please"- Mark Twain.
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