
FMJ
Moderators: dnichols, GHQ, Mk 1
The gun shield might work,but you have the recoil mechanism above the gun tube,and it looks generally oversized in comparison to a 37...RoughRIder wrote:From some pics that i have seen on the internet. It looks like the soviet 57mm AT gun looks closer to the United States 37mm AT gun. Just my opion, but would look closer than the polish model. Looks like if you would cut down the barrel a little it would be a close enough match.
By God sir! You are correct. Those could easily be turned into the "terror" of Tunisia....Donald M. Scheef wrote:I suggest that you get a pack of G-56 - Support Weapons - WWII German. This contains four of the 3.7 cm PaK. Basically, this is the same weapon as the US 37 mm anti-tank gun. The German gun shield is different in shape, but this can be ignored at 1/285 scale (or, if you are ambitous, cut off and replaced with card stock or such in the US shape). Be sure to remove the hollow-charge grenade from the two German guns that have this - nothing like this was used on the US 37 mm.
D. Scheef
I would strongly disagree.Donald M. Scheef said:
I suggest that you get a pack of G-56 - Support Weapons - WWII German. This contains four of the 3.7 cm PaK. Basically, this is the same weapon as the US 37 mm anti-tank gun. The German gun shield is different in shape, but this can be ignored at 1/285 scale (or, if you are ambitous, cut off and replaced with card stock or such in the US shape). Be sure to remove the hollow-charge grenade from the two German guns that have this - nothing like this was used on the US 37 mm.
...I know I had some of those German things laying about from 25 years ago. I snipped off the curved gunshield and fashioned one from left over brass from GHQ rotor blades. I don't think it takes any imagination to tell its a US 37mm ATG...Thanks for the idea Donald BTW everything here is GHQ,ironic.Isn't it!Mk 1 wrote:I would strongly disagree.Donald M. Scheef said:
I suggest that you get a pack of G-56 - Support Weapons - WWII German. This contains four of the 3.7 cm PaK. Basically, this is the same weapon as the US 37 mm anti-tank gun. The German gun shield is different in shape, but this can be ignored at 1/285 scale (or, if you are ambitous, cut off and replaced with card stock or such in the US shape). Be sure to remove the hollow-charge grenade from the two German guns that have this - nothing like this was used on the US 37 mm.
Contrary to popular belief (and more than a few histories), the U.S. 37mm cannon was NOT a copy of the German gun. It may well have been inspired by the German gun, and perhaps even developed from the German gun. But it was not a copy.
It fired a different cartridge. (The German gun fired a 37mm x 249r tapered cartridge, while the US gun fired a 37mm x 223r necked cartridge of greater capacity.) As a result of the differences in cartridge it had a different breech. It had a notably longer barrel. The shield of the German gun was tall, tapered in from the sides, and was sloped, while the US gun had a short, wide, rectangular and vertical shield. In appearance it hardly resembles the German gun in any way, other than that it is a relatively small, split-trailed gun with a shield.
To wit:
The U.S. Gun, Anti-Tank, 37mm, M3
The German 37mm PAK35/36.
Nope, I can't see using one as the other if I have any choice, even at this scale. I prefer to mix manufacturers, than to call a Me-109 a P-51.