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IJA 28cm Howitzer & Zundapp KS750 w/ Sidecar

Pit Road's IJA 28cm Howitzer (Coast Guard) - by "Art Instructor":

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GreatWall's Zundapp KS750 w/ Sidecar - by "Art Instructor":

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This is from my latest page:

http://www.falconbbs.com/model55b.htm

Comments and suggestions are welcome! :)
 
I'd like to add some history of the IJA 28cm howitzer as appeared on the kit's instruction sheets:

"Since the Meiji Restoration, Japanese artilleries had depended on foreign products. In 1881, the Imperial Japanese Army decided to produce a howitzer on its own. The Osaka Army Arsenal, which took charge of its production, constructed a prototype referring to Italian 28cm howitzer. In 1884 the first prototype was completed. A test fire for checking accuracy was conducted at Shinodayama, Osaka in 1986. As the test fire proved excellent, the artillery was officially adopted in the next year.

In Russo-Japanese War, which began in 1904, the 28cm howitzer was mobilized. In the seige operation of Port Arthur including the battle of 203 Hill. 18 howitzers participated. The Army finished the construction of emplacement in only nine days, which commonly took as long as three weeks. The six howitzers gave a heavy blow to the enemy. After seizing the hill, they also made a shelling against the Russian Pacific Fleet into submission, contributing to Japan's victory in the war.

The 28cm howitzers continued to be used in subsequent wars. In 1930s the construction of the emplacement and the traction were further advanced. The howitzer became capable of being towed by the 13-ton tractor, though at the speed of 13km/h. When the Kwantung Army deployed 12 howitzers at the shore of the Amur River, they were capable of opening fire in only twelve hours."

(the text ends there)

Some figures and my guess:
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280mm - gun's caliber no.
2.863m - probably barrel's length
10,758Kg - probably weight
-10 - +68 - probably angle of gun elevation
360 - probably rotation (full)
217Kg - probably weight of shell
142-314m/s - probably velocity of projectile (metre/second)
7,800m - probably range of fire
 
I like the big gun...well I like the bikes too, but the gun looks cool. Is that 1/35?
James
 
Thanks for your kind response, James! Yes, both the gun and the bikes are standard 1:35 scale kits. That's why I didn't tell scale.
For other types of models (warplanes, warships and non 1:35 armors) I usually include scale in my post. ;-)
 
Beautiful work !!!

I really like the 28cm , ......... whenever I see this Pit Road offering I think of the batteries on Corrigidor [ sp ? ] .
 
I am pretty sure Glenn is saying Corregidor. The [sp] tag is an acknowledgment that spelling may not be correct. We are an informal group of folks here Model Maniac so some leeway will be extended in such cases.
 
I knew that [sp] suggests that spelling may not be correct. But I didn't know the correct spelling until last night I watched History Channel and it's about Japanese siege in 1942 around that Filipino island. Did the Japs use this howitzer to shell the Americans into submission?

wiewiorka, thanks for your kind words.
 
Just have one word for the gun .... delicious!!!!

Really nicely painted ... with very subtle but effective painting details. Figures are exquisitely painted. Just impressive.

The motorcycle are also great ... I particulary like the grey one.

Thanks for posting your work
 
Thanks for your kind words, Tom and jose! I really appreciate them!

Tom, I don't know P.Arthur. What is that?

jose, the grey one is BMW /w sidecar from Master Box - the one with PE set in-box. These are my collection but not my works. This is "Art Instructor" - the guy who's been building armors and dioramas for me for 10 years and has built hundreds of kits including these howitzer and motorcycles:

jeab.jpg
 
Thanks for your kind compliments, Gatto! This one is built as stand-alone artillery piece. Running out of display space, I can't afford a diorama of this howitzer. But more are coming for sure!
 
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