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HR Products Oerlikon 20mm 1:24 scale

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  • Guest

    #1

    HR Products Oerlikon 20mm 1:24 scale

    I discovered the HR Products line while on an annual search for a 20mm Oerlikon for my 1:24 Silverfin submarine miniature. Arrived a few days ago and I've given it the basic clean-up of flash and sprue and modification for a submarine installation. Wax-cast white-metal material (color doesn't show correctly here due to fluorescent lighting and blue shop-towel background). Here's the bits, except the base which I had already fixed up.



    The submarine installation does not, as a rule, use the splinter-shield, so the yoke must be modified with razor-saw and needle-file; this was done with reference to illustrations in the squadron/signal publications WARSHIPS NO.2 U.S. SUBS in action, and the manual at hnsa http://hnsa.org/doc/gun20mm/index.htm:



    I had already smoothed up the mating edges of the two-piece cast base (i.e., the original was a one-piece solid iron casting) with 320 before assembly with CA. Here's the necessary bits assembled:



    Note that neither the standard spider sight nor the Mark 14 were submersible; the Mark 14 was a fixed electro-optical-gyro sight used on surface ship installations, and the spider sight required a spanner to remove or install, so it seems unlikely they were actually used on subs due to the need to "clear the bridge; Dive! Dive!" and no time to spend playing with spanners! Sorry that the spider sight did not make it into the parts pix.

    Painting will be the same gray as the vertical surfaces of the sub. Detail is good. Source is HR Products "Supplier and manufacturer of white metal castings in Assorted Scale for World War II Ship Modelers, Dioramas, and Miniatures."

    http://www.hrprod.com/index.html

    Regards, John
  • Alan 45
    • Nov 2012
    • 9833

    #2
    That's an American Orelikon I never thought there was any great difference to the ones used on British warships , it looks like it's got a longer barrel

    Great job I am looking forward to seeing it mounted on the sub

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    • Guest

      #3
      I was watching the program "Sons of Gun" and they were restoring an Oerlikon, they are bigger than I thought. IT was interesting see it fire and the way it's made.

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      • Guest

        #4
        Originally posted by \
        That's an American Orelikon I never thought there was any great difference to the ones used on British warships , it looks like it's got a longer barrelGreat job I am looking forward to seeing it mounted on the sub
        The US Navy manual referenced mentions the British manufacture and describes some minor differences; HTH

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        • Alan 45
          • Nov 2012
          • 9833

          #5
          Yeah there's not a big difference between the two , maybe they had different length barrels for distance purposes

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