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1:35 Sturmgeshutz IV (Tamiya kit)

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  • mrtintheweb
    • May 2020
    • 292

    #1

    1:35 Sturmgeshutz IV (Tamiya kit)

    Whilst Stugs seem to be the current build of choice for so many I looked to do something similar. Found this kit cheap on eBay for £15. I had hoped to do a Marder but the kits were either not available or above my £30 max spend.
    I finished a Panzer IV not too long ago and a quick look shows a lot of similar parts, particularly the chassis which with hindsight is like...... DERRRRRRRR!
    T
    Attached Files
  • mrtintheweb
    • May 2020
    • 292

    #2
    Slow start on this as I had an Airfix Jag to finish first which was hateful. This kit is like deja-vu so far having already done a Panzer 4 which shares a near identical lower hull and tracks. Not sure on paint job as I am thinking of doing some kind of dessert camo but struggling on images to copy. Found one (attached). Might just make one up that fits other Africa Corps vehicles of the era, even though the Stug IV never went to Africa. The below scheme used in Italy is my go-to at the moment.
    T
    Attached Files

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    • mrtintheweb
      • May 2020
      • 292

      #3
      On the build I've done the easy bits.
      T
      Attached Files

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      • JR
        • May 2015
        • 18273

        #4
        Toby, Steve Jones is the man for camo, he finds things in the strangest of places. Drop him a pm.
        I've got the same kit in my stash, so will watch yours being built if you don't mind.

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        • Guest

          #5
          Originally posted by mrtintheweb
          Not sure on paintjob as I am thinking of doing some kind of dessert camo but struggling on images to copy. Found one (attached). Might just make one up that fits other Africa Corps vehicles of the era.
          StuG IV production started only in December 1943, when the Axis armies in Africa had already been defeated about six months before. Desert camouflage would be unlikely on one of them

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          • mrtintheweb
            • May 2020
            • 292

            #6
            Originally posted by Jakko
            StuG IV production started only in December 1943, when the Axis armies in Africa had already been defeated about six months before. Desert camouflage would be unlikely on one of them :smiling3:
            I was thinking that myself, but the kit is presented in a yellow camo. What would be the relevant campaign for such a scheme? Or was it just another example of them using what they had in stock I wonder. Trying to research Stug IV's is not all that easy it seems. But seems they were used in France, Russia and Italy. I suppose I will likely try to resemble that shown in the photo above.
            The picture looks like a mix of green, primer and desert yellow.
            T

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            • Steve Jones
              • Apr 2018
              • 6615

              #7
              Hi Toby

              On 18 February 1943, all vehicles were ordered to be painted in a base coat of Dunkelgelb RAL 7028 (dark yellow).They were also allowed to add a camouflage scheme of Olivgrün and Rotbraun. Hence the two pictures of one all yellow and the other in a camo pattern. Your museum photo shows patterns that were popular in Normandy as well as Italy.

              If you search Stug IV camo schemes in pinterest you will get a lot of comprehensive schemes to chose from as well as pictures from all sides of the vehicle

              Steve

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              • mrtintheweb
                • May 2020
                • 292

                #8
                Originally posted by Steve Jones
                Hi Toby

                On 18 February 1943, all vehicles were ordered to be painted in a base coat of Dunkelgelb RAL 7028 (dark yellow).They were also allowed to add a camouflage scheme of Olivgrün and Rotbraun. Hence the two pictures of one all yellow and the other in a camo pattern. Your museum photo shows patterns that were popular in Normandy as well as Italy.

                If you search Stug IV camo schemes in pinterest you will get a lot of comprehensive schemes to chose from as well as pictures from all sides of the vehicle

                Steve
                Thanks Steve, though it does require me to join the quagmire of Pinterest lol.
                So glad I joined this forum. Really keeping me sane in lockdown!
                T

                Comment

                • Guest

                  #9
                  Originally posted by mrtintheweb
                  I was thinking that myself, but the kit is presented in a yellow camo.
                  Like Steve said, dark yellow (a kind of greenish tan, not desert sand!) was the basic colour for German vehicles from early 1943 on, with olive green and red-brown camouflage over the top of it. Basically, if you paint the model dark yellow and then add patches or stripes of one or both the other colours, you’ll have a plausibly painted StuG IV. If you want more historical accuracy, you can find pictures of real ones and copy the patterns, but really, any reasonable-looking camouflage is not wrong as such.

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                  • mrtintheweb
                    • May 2020
                    • 292

                    #10
                    So I completed the commander paint-job. Not sure on the paler colour on his coat. Might re-look at that.
                    First try the yellow was wayyyyyy to bright, the new colour better and the German Grey trousers are a better colour too.
                    Attached Files

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                    • mrtintheweb
                      • May 2020
                      • 292

                      #11
                      The vehicle itself is moving on fine. The fiddly bits to create the up-armouring was a faff but I think it will look good when finished.
                      Attached Files

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                      • JR
                        • May 2015
                        • 18273

                        #12
                        That's some nice paint work Toby, all progressing well .

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                        • mrtintheweb
                          • May 2020
                          • 292

                          #13
                          Originally posted by John Race
                          That's some nice paint work Toby, all progressing well .
                          Thanks John. Now comes the tougher bit to get the camo looking authentic. I got a tin of Humbrol enamel 100 but having put on a layer it deffo looks too orange. Need to rethink the paint I will use for the reddish/brown.
                          Any ideas? Note I'd rather not mix and don't have an airbrush. Will cycle down to my local model shop later today to see what he has.
                          T

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                          • Steve Jones
                            • Apr 2018
                            • 6615

                            #14
                            Hi Toby

                            I'm Mr Vallejo through and through so I would use Vallejo Model Air 71041 Armour Brown for the Rotbraun and Vallejo Model Air 71092 Medium Olive for the Olivgrun. The Tamiya equivalent would be XF9 and Humbrol 160 for the Brown. There are no exact equivalents for the green but if you go for a medium shade of Green I'm sure you will be fine

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                            • JR
                              • May 2015
                              • 18273

                              #15
                              Toby, like Steve I use acrylic paints A-MIG and Vallejo, so can't offer any help I'm afraid.

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