Here are the wheels and bogies:
[ATTACH]454240[/ATTACH]
The white bolt heads on four of the bogies is because on the real thing, a plate could be bolted to them to lock out the suspension when lifting heavy loads with the crane. These bolts are screwed into the normal holes that are in the fronts of Sherman bogies anyway, so I only had to drill out the middle bogies to show those. The lip at the top of the front and rear bogies, above the bolts, is a shear plate that the bolt-on plate sits against, so the weight of the tank and load isn’t borne by the bolts.
Because of the heavy mine roller, I also adjusted the suspension so the nose of the tank will be down:
[ATTACH]454241[/ATTACH]
Tasca (and Asuka) provide plates to go inside the bogies to regulate the suspension height. I used A (1.5 mm) at the front, A+C (2 mm in total) in the middle and A+B (2.5 mm) at the rear. To do this, though, I had to cut and chisel out the track that the spring package sits in on the inside of the rear bogies, else it wouldn’t go down far enough. That, then, is why there is filler on the rear right bogie: I accidentally went through it with the chisel …
(Shermanophiles may not that I used a bogie with “high” return roller mount at the front left, basically because I can
The idea is that the sharp-eyed viewer may notice this is a replacement bogie.)
[ATTACH]454240[/ATTACH]
The white bolt heads on four of the bogies is because on the real thing, a plate could be bolted to them to lock out the suspension when lifting heavy loads with the crane. These bolts are screwed into the normal holes that are in the fronts of Sherman bogies anyway, so I only had to drill out the middle bogies to show those. The lip at the top of the front and rear bogies, above the bolts, is a shear plate that the bolt-on plate sits against, so the weight of the tank and load isn’t borne by the bolts.
Because of the heavy mine roller, I also adjusted the suspension so the nose of the tank will be down:
[ATTACH]454241[/ATTACH]
Tasca (and Asuka) provide plates to go inside the bogies to regulate the suspension height. I used A (1.5 mm) at the front, A+C (2 mm in total) in the middle and A+B (2.5 mm) at the rear. To do this, though, I had to cut and chisel out the track that the spring package sits in on the inside of the rear bogies, else it wouldn’t go down far enough. That, then, is why there is filler on the rear right bogie: I accidentally went through it with the chisel …
(Shermanophiles may not that I used a bogie with “high” return roller mount at the front left, basically because I can

Comment