K-Wagen or "Grosskampfwagen"
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Just see i have to make some new pics of the finished tank. Now it rested for nearly 2 years in a dark place in cellar...time to show him light again, maybe i take it to Go-Modelling 2019 in Vienna.
Thx for watching and the nice words!!
Excellent, good job. Thank you for posting the pictures. The tracks look like they were a blast to built 🙂 I probably would've lost my mojo after 5 or so...
WOW! How did I miss this one? Stunning work Michael.
I've considered doing this one myself – so thanks for building it, so that I don't have to.😉
I did a St. Chamond 2 years before it was released as a kit...and i had to build these tracklinks...Each Tracklink consisted of 24 small Parts glued together to form the link...that was nerveripping...but i managed to finish 8 pieces a day, so after nearly 2 weeks i had enough tracklinks...and after finishing and showing my St.Chamond at an exhibition they produced one...Thank you Takom!!!
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On request i post some pictures of my some-years-ago-built K-Wagen aka "Grosskampfwagen".
As i said, its really big. I will ad a picture with a known built kit for size-measuring...
To the original: Germany at the end of WW1 was trying to break the stalemate on the western front, like they did many times before...but this time they tried out somethinbg completely new: Tanks that are REAL landships, landcruisers really with guns sticking out every edge and corner...so they startet do create the "Grosskampfwagen" or short "K-Wagen".
It should be powered with 2 U-boat-engines (2 x V6 Daimler,
650 hp), armed with 4 77-mm-guns and a lot of Machineguns.
It should hold a crew of 27 men (a commander, two drivers, a signaler, an artillery officer, 12 artillery men, eight machine gunners and two mechanics).
It should first have 165 tons, later sized down to 120 tons by shortening the hull. It should be divided up into 6 modules to be transportable. Sizes were 13 metres long, 6 metres wide, 3 metres high
2 prototypes w