Bridge Layer
![Album image #1 Album image #1](/albums/img/5/2/8/1037528-26091-68-720.jpg)
![Album image #2 Album image #2](/albums/img/5/2/9/1037529-26091-21-720.jpg)
![Album image #3 Album image #3](/albums/img/5/3/0/1037530-26091-56-720.jpg)
![Album image #4 Album image #4](/albums/img/5/3/1/1037531-26091-42-720.jpg)
![Album image #5 Album image #5](/albums/img/5/3/2/1037532-26091-76-720.jpg)
![Album image #6 Album image #6](/albums/img/5/3/3/1037533-26091-24-720.jpg)
![Album image #7 Album image #7](/albums/img/5/3/4/1037534-26091-47-720.jpg)
![Album image #8 Album image #8](/albums/img/5/3/5/1037535-26091-63-720.jpg)
Plastic piston ram swapped for polished steel tube, from an empty glue bottle. Looks much better ?
![Album image #9 Album image #9](/albums/img/5/3/6/1037536-26091-97-720.jpg)
Steel tube for the ram.
Komentáre
3 24 July 2021, 15:51
![](/profiles/img/48972-166-s.jpg)
Cool! I love the look of Churchill tank in general, but this is one is outlandish (I have not known that it can move after assembly...I am just sorry that it is 1:76th scale not 1:72nd, but I think I will dig my Hasegawa kit very soon... 😉 )
24 July 2021, 16:04
Album info
Looking as smart as a new coat of paint, so next step is to weather everything a little.