What’s this? an actual finished project? Yup, started on this Blog about 12years ago, and jeez that’s quite the damming inditement on how often I finish our own stuff. Apparently I move slower than the NZ government, who knew? Anyway, it was the second thing I completed when I restarted modelling, so here it is.
Project Recap
The original project was to update the Jagdpanther design (which to be fair, was pretty good as standard) but to make it look a little more “46” without any major surgery. The original plan was to add steel wheels and IR gear and pretty much leave it at that. When I picked up the project again a few years back I decided to update the main gun to a 10.5cm KwK L/68 and add some crew.

It all started originally using the Tamiya Late Jagdpanther as a Base with steel wheels and tracks from a donor Tamiya Sturmtiger. The wheels and the tracks were pretty easy to add to the Jagdpanther and I really like how the final look turned out. As a few older followers might know I have this weird obsession with how German tracks should “sag” and these turned out with a perfect catenary sag, a credit to Tamiya.


Painting
I used a pretty standard start to the painting by applying a primer/base coat with the ubiquitous Tamiya rattlecan, TS-3 Desert Yellow. Not much to see here but it ties all the assembly together nicely.


Camouflage
The tricky decision in this scale for me at least was always going to be the camouflage. I always have a worry that after getting the assembly right picking the wrong camo would stuff it all up, and at this size it’s a lot more plastic down the dunny.
I had an old, (really old – nearly as old as me) Tamiya Jagdpanther in a drawer somewhere that I’d made back when I was in High School. It was one of their early kits that still had the fittings for motorisation on the hull, rubber tracks etc . . . good times. As it turned out it would be perfect to test camo patterns on.
The first pattern tried was the one applied to the Jagdpanzer IV in my earlier post, and actually also served as a test for that model. The second was an attempt to jazz up a winter whitewash scheme that I’d been using on my 1/72nd German Project ’46 stuff. Good enough to try I thought and would tie it in theme to the smaller vehicles.


Whitewash
Again using the same process I use on the small-scale vehicles I’ve applied whitewash to, this would be the real base colour of the vehicle. Using very thinned white (all paints are GW acyrlics unless otherwise indicated) I pretty much just drag it in lines aiming for a rough patchy finish and trying to leave some of the base yellow showing. I also blocked in the tracks at this time.


Weathering
A bit more involved (and lacking step-by-step pics), is the weathering. Essentially similar in process to the Jagdpanzer IV below and basically similar to all my models, it’s edge highlighting, panel lining, chipping and shadow blending with a bit more streaking on this to give it a bit more of a worn look.
The base camo, just a grey splinter pattern, was laid in after the whitewash and base streaking. It’ll get weathered in to tie it all together later.




Infra-Red Optics
The IR gear was made up next with suitable mountings for both the drivers position and the fighting compartment top. The units were from the Bronco German Infrared Night-Vision Devices kit AB3577 with a bit of wire n plasticard “gizmology”.


Crew
I had a bunch of resin crew in the stash so they were dug out, assembled and base coated before picking a couple of “volunteers” from the line-up. The 2 selected were from TANK, T-35098 1/35 German Stug Crew. To be perfectly honest they look kinda like a couple of “hard men”, if not downright untrustworthy individuals. Perfect for my Project ’46 theme.




Final Weathering and Decals
With it all coming together now it got a good dose of final weathering, from my special pot ™. Unfunny jokes aside, the tracks got a mix of Mig pigments thinned with turpintine and the hull various thinned pigment shades flicked on in layers, hopefully simulating a bit of thrown up and dried mud. I also thought the whole thing needed a splash of colour to contrast all the white so added some classy red, yellow and black unit recognition stripes to the gun barrel.
The decals were stolen from my aircraft decals box, a mystery box of 30yr old brittle and yellowing waterslide magic. I think they were a mix of FW190 and Dornier17. All I know is some were so shit that I had to modify my plan as they broke up in the water.




Finis
Sorry this whole post has been so long, but we really have managed to make it to the end. It only took me 12years to complete this project, so it does deserve a few money shots just to finish it up.
Enjoy
Cheers
Brent



























































































