I'm so grateful I got the opportunity to get within the personal space of this British Beauty with my cameraphone. Although this tank should have entered the war sooner, it still proved itself a match for the gas-guzzling bully boys on the battlefield. It had good armour, speed, and manoeuvrability (a legacy of it's elongated Cromwell basis), together with a low silhouette in the landscape. Above all, though, it had the much-feared (by Panzer units) 17-Pounder gun fitted.

CLICK on a pic to enLARGE it..
Here's a potted, or perhaps
canned history

:
http://tank-photographs.s3-website-eu-w ... rmany.html

- Comet profile

- Comet revealing its Cromwell DNA in the lower chassis design

- Comet front armour plate and two shackles

- A34 Comet. Driver's viewing porthole

- Comet. Mounting for 7.92mm Besa MG

- Shielded headlamp on Comet A34

- Comet mudguard support brackets

- Mantlet and periscope details-Comet A34

- Comet l.h. storage bin

- Turret profile and r.h. storage bin.Comet A34
As a footnote, if I ever finish my backlog of unfinished projects (six in all), I'd love to build the Ludwig version of the Comet, having already built his Cromwell offering. The Comet represented a major step forward in British
tank design, and paved the way for the Centurion and the MBT. It's already a mature and impressive design, and I'd love to see it whizzing around my garden...more than any other tank, in fact..well, almost
A 1:6 Pz IV would trump the rest... That's er..'trump' in the non-presidential sense. Incidentally, I've no idea why this tank was dubbed 'Ben Hur'. It's in the markings of a Scottish unit, and should have been called 'Oor Wullie'
'Desperate Dan', or 'Highlander'...

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