Lead Adventure Forum
Miniatures Adventure => The Second World War => Topic started by: Fitz on 07 April 2016, 07:10:28 AM
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(https://images1.sw-cdn.net/product/picture/625x465_13863162_8561056_1460007354.jpg)
In 1941, with the possibility of a Japanese invasion considered very likely, New Zealand had no tanks, and no heavy industry capable of designing and building a proper tank from the ground up. Great Britain had problems of its own, and it was apparent that the Mother Country wouldn't be diverting any of its scarce supplies of armour to little old Kiwiland any time soon.
Bob Semple, at that time the Minister of Works, ordered this thing created, based on a D-9 tractor. It was top-heavy, very slow, under-armed and under-armoured, and if it had actually seen combat it's unlikely that it would have lasted more than a few minutes. Nevertheless, it was quite successful as a morale-building parade piece to keep up the spirits of the civilian population.
By 1944, the army had plentiful supplies of British and American tanks, and the "Bob Semple" was more of an embarrassment than anything else. They were disassembled and turned back into tractors, that being deemed their most useful possible contribution to the war effort.
I've long thought it a crying shame that there was no 15mm scale model of the Bob Semple tank to make its brave (but slow) way on to the wargames table. Now there is.
It's available from my Shapeways shop at http://shpws.me/M2lg (http://shpws.me/M2lg), starting at nineteen bucks for WSF.
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Very impressive ....... would the the print scale ok out to 28mm?
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It would, but the price already doubles going from 1/100 to 1/72 (http://shpws.me/M2mS (http://shpws.me/M2mS)). I suspect it would double again going to 1/56. Ay caray!
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Ok just checked the link properly, so maybe around $80 for it in 1/56th-28mm ..... mmmm yeah that's getting up there.
cheers
Brent
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Who would have thought... that is rather fantastic.
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Very nice. Look forward to a painted version to bring all that detail out.