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M4A3 (76) HVSS shipped to Antwerp

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  • Guest

    #1

    M4A3 (76) HVSS shipped to Antwerp

    The tank wrapped up for shipping has finally arrived :smiling3:

    [ATTACH=CONFIG]n[/ATTACH][ATTACH=CONFIG]n[/ATTACH][ATTACH=CONFIG]n[/ATTACH][ATTACH=CONFIG]n[/ATTACH][ATTACH=CONFIG]n[/ATTACH][ATTACH=CONFIG]n[/ATTACH][ATTACH=CONFIG]n[/ATTACH][ATTACH=CONFIG]n[/ATTACH]

    There was nothing really difficult left to do, except finding a way to make the strap that ties the gun barrel to the tow hook and the acid warning placard. The former took me a few tries with paper that didn’t want to be glued or tore, before I tried a strip cut from medical tape (the kind used to secure bandages) as that wouldn’t need glue. The placard I tried and failed to find online so I eventually made one on my computer in Adobe InDesign (which is a little overkill, but hey, I had it open anyway :smiling3. I couldn’t find a photo of what it actually says, so I just replicated the look. The only readable text in photos is DANGEROUS and ACID. For posterity, the whole of the sign on the model actually reads:

    This is just here
    so it looks like a real sign
    YOUR NAME HERE _________

    DANGEROUS
    ACID

    SOME TEXT YOU CAN’T
    Read at this size anyway
    so who cares
    What it
    says

    :smiling3:

    I had actually hoped it would be readable anyway with a magnifying glass, but unfortunately, it isn’t.
  • outrunner
    • Apr 2019
    • 2420

    #2
    Very nice.

    Andy.

    Comment

    • Steve Jones
      • Apr 2018
      • 6615

      #3
      Nice to see something a little different Jakko. A nice interpretation of the original photo

      Comment

      • Guest

        #4
        Thanks

        Comment

        • Jim R
          SMF Supporters
          • Apr 2018
          • 15746
          • Jim
          • Shropshire

          #5
          Hi Jakko
          That's come out really well. An unusual subject. The tape has worked very effectively. Love your "Dangerous Acid" sign :tongue-out3:
          Jim

          Comment

          • Steven000
            SMF Supporters
            • Aug 2018
            • 2830
            • Steven
            • Belgium

            #6
            Nice model Jakko, interesting subject :thumb2:
            Must have been a pain for the guy who had to 'untape' those tanks!
            Steven

            Comment

            • Si Benson
              • Apr 2018
              • 3572

              #7
              Nice work Jakko,
              The acid sign made me laugh :smiling5: :thumb2:

              Comment

              • Guest

                #8
                Thanks, all If you’re going to make a sign with unreadable text, you might as well make it say something funny, is my idea

                Untaping them seems like quite a job, but I really wouldn’t want to be the one who had to scrub off the par-el-ketone. I don’t quite know how they did that, though. Since these were simpler times, maybe they simply washed it off with some powerful solvent out in a field somewhere?

                Comment

                • papa 695
                  Moderator
                  • May 2011
                  • 22771

                  #9
                  Very nice work Jakko.

                  Comment

                  • scottie3158
                    SMF Supporters
                    • Apr 2018
                    • 14221
                    • Paul
                    • Holbeach

                    #10
                    Jakko,
                    That is a great result.

                    Comment

                    • Guest

                      #11
                      Thanks

                      Comment

                      • Graeme C.
                        SMF Supporters
                        • Apr 2018
                        • 1613
                        • Graeme
                        • UK

                        #12
                        Cracking build Jakko, the sign made me smile.

                        Comment

                        • Guest

                          #13
                          Originally posted by Jakko
                          ...maybe they simply washed it off with some powerful solvent out in a field somewhere?
                          Would you have time or the need during war time to wash something like this?

                          If it were me, and I couldn’t scrape it off or paint over it, I’d rub dirt in it to stop it being sticky. At least that’s how I approach most of my DIY...:tears-of-joy:

                          Comment

                          • Guest

                            #14
                            Thanks

                            To be honest, I’m still not quite sure what was and wasn’t done to these tanks after they were delivered. The tape was cracked open and the tanks driven onto railway flats, then taken to the units that needed them. Those took all the packed stuff out and made the tank ready, but I’m not clear on how much cleaning and repainting was done. If you look at photos, you can often see the residue of the black stuff (and where the tape masked the paint from it), by which you can recognise a tank that hasn’t been in use for long yet. However, it does look like an effort was made to remove the black par-el-ketone because it’s not as obvious in photos just after delivery as it is in photos of tanks being shipped.

                            Comment

                            • stillp
                              SMF Supporters
                              • Nov 2016
                              • 8098
                              • Pete
                              • Rugby

                              #15
                              It looks as if par-al-ketone cleans off with white spirit (mineral spirit across the pond) so I would think that petrol or kerosene would clean it off too.
                              Pete

                              Comment

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