My next deed:
An armoured self propelled railcar. The idea was from 1943 when the Wehrmacht decided for armoured railway stock that should be able to fight tanks (the current armoured trains were mainly artillery support or anti-partisan purpose).
Photos are from the book "Deutsche Panzerzüge" and were taken at the Steyr factory after the end of war. Three should have been built, but it seems unlikely that one of them had seen action.



The little box that arrived from Texas (thanks to Brian/Kampfgruppe Cottrell! :hello: ):

The rather heavy and most solid block of resin that was inside:

The free hand drilled (or should I say milled) out interior:

A H0 scale locomotive that I bought cheap (20€) at railway model flea market. It has the perfect length that will fit into the hull of the railcar:

Body removed to motorize the railcar:

Some would say now that H0 is way too small for 28mm gaming. Right, this is correct. Though some may have noticed my efforts to collect a few narrow gauge railway models which are properly scaled, but run on H0 tracks. This is what I am aiming at with this build too.
Now it comes in handy that the locomotive model has six axles where the prototype armoured railcar had only four. It is common use at railways to adapt rolling stock for weaker lines by adding axles/changing bogies to lower axle weight. Being in the lucky position that the prototype was never really in use, I can say it is a "what if" model for alternative WW2 and can be used on narrow gauge lines now. There were quite a lot of those all over Europe, Africa and the middle east.
This is a modern example of what I´m telling here: A standard gauge Diesel engine (normally on bogies with two axles each) is set on bogies with three narrow gauge axles each to be used on the Brockenbahn in the Harz mountains in Germany (notice the small narrow gauge carriages behind that standard gauge engine):
