With the M4A3E2 built, but not yet painted, I decided to start on the next one, an early M4A1, with the idea that I can then paint them both at the same time in a little while. This is what Asuka calls a “value kit”, meaning you don’t get etched parts, decals or even a box-top painting:
[ATTACH]408736[/ATTACH]
In the box, you get the following sprues:
[ATTACH]408737[/ATTACH][ATTACH]408738[/ATTACH][ATTACH]408739[/ATTACH]
(I left the instructions and the sprue with poly caps out.) As per usual with this brand, it’s all very modular to suit the particular variant of the Sherman, and you get plenty of leftovers for the spares box — for example, this kit has both a three-piece and a one-piece final drive housing, but you only need the former.
The kit represents an early, but not a very early, medium tank M4A1 as built by Pressed Steel Car Company (PSC). It has the riveted lower hull that was unique to PSC, as well as the early medium-duty suspension bogies with the return rollers on top rather than behind the bogie. These were more commonly seen on the M3-series medium tanks, but were also used on early M4s. Because the springs weren’t quite suitable for the heavier M4, though, the bogies were soon redesigned with bigger springs that needed more height, so the roller was moved back to accommodate them. The kit has an upper hull with periscopes in front of the drivers’ hatches, though, rather than vision flaps, meaning it’s not a truly early production variant. It probably represents a tank from mid-1942 or so.
As for what I’ll actually build from this … the usual subject would be something like an American tank in North Africa, or from a training unit in the USA, or perhaps in Italy in 1944 or so. My subject will be slightly more unusual, for a Sherman anyway. Look at this photo, from a Sherman book by Steve Zaloga (title not available at the moment because the book is in my hobby room and I am not
):
[ATTACH]408740[/ATTACH]
The Sherman on the right is an early or very early M4A1 — you can’t really tell which because the sandbags obscure whether it has the direct-vision flaps or periscopes for the drivers. The interesting part is that this tank seems to have almost no upgrades that would (should) have been applied in 1943 or 44 in preparation for the Normandy landings, like armour plates on the hull sides, and it still has the medium-duty bogies and spoked idler wheels — yet this photo was taken in Alsace on 1 February 1945. It does have replacement drive sprocket rings, with the simple circular centre hole rather than the elaborate pointed style, and a replacement road wheel on the second station.
All I’ve done so far is build the lower hull and final drive housing:
[ATTACH]408741[/ATTACH][ATTACH]408742[/ATTACH]
As you can see, the lower hull is riveted, and this photo shows Asuka clearly did their homework: the frontmost plate is thicker than the rest of the floor, which is a feature of early PSC M4A1 tanks.
[ATTACH]408736[/ATTACH]
In the box, you get the following sprues:
[ATTACH]408737[/ATTACH][ATTACH]408738[/ATTACH][ATTACH]408739[/ATTACH]
(I left the instructions and the sprue with poly caps out.) As per usual with this brand, it’s all very modular to suit the particular variant of the Sherman, and you get plenty of leftovers for the spares box — for example, this kit has both a three-piece and a one-piece final drive housing, but you only need the former.
The kit represents an early, but not a very early, medium tank M4A1 as built by Pressed Steel Car Company (PSC). It has the riveted lower hull that was unique to PSC, as well as the early medium-duty suspension bogies with the return rollers on top rather than behind the bogie. These were more commonly seen on the M3-series medium tanks, but were also used on early M4s. Because the springs weren’t quite suitable for the heavier M4, though, the bogies were soon redesigned with bigger springs that needed more height, so the roller was moved back to accommodate them. The kit has an upper hull with periscopes in front of the drivers’ hatches, though, rather than vision flaps, meaning it’s not a truly early production variant. It probably represents a tank from mid-1942 or so.
As for what I’ll actually build from this … the usual subject would be something like an American tank in North Africa, or from a training unit in the USA, or perhaps in Italy in 1944 or so. My subject will be slightly more unusual, for a Sherman anyway. Look at this photo, from a Sherman book by Steve Zaloga (title not available at the moment because the book is in my hobby room and I am not

[ATTACH]408740[/ATTACH]
The Sherman on the right is an early or very early M4A1 — you can’t really tell which because the sandbags obscure whether it has the direct-vision flaps or periscopes for the drivers. The interesting part is that this tank seems to have almost no upgrades that would (should) have been applied in 1943 or 44 in preparation for the Normandy landings, like armour plates on the hull sides, and it still has the medium-duty bogies and spoked idler wheels — yet this photo was taken in Alsace on 1 February 1945. It does have replacement drive sprocket rings, with the simple circular centre hole rather than the elaborate pointed style, and a replacement road wheel on the second station.
All I’ve done so far is build the lower hull and final drive housing:
[ATTACH]408741[/ATTACH][ATTACH]408742[/ATTACH]
As you can see, the lower hull is riveted, and this photo shows Asuka clearly did their homework: the frontmost plate is thicker than the rest of the floor, which is a feature of early PSC M4A1 tanks.
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