Well this turned into a fine mess. You may remember I was going to start on the motorized Tiger.

Things went along without much trouble. Not no trouble, but correctable minor problems. Things went fine with the chassis.



At this point you may notice the tilting red bricks where the turret would have to attach to and all I can say it was really hard to get the bricks to lock properly with the completed turret. But eventually I succeeded.

Now the real problem. I charged up the battery and got the remote ready and then…
nothing. Nothing worked. The only problem may have been the connections to the motor and, dummy that I am, I didn’t not check to see if they were working properly before proceeding with the build. That means my only recourse is to take it all apart and start from the tank body before motor installation. I may do that, probably, but I’m leaving this aside until later.
After this fiasco I did some other builds which will show up in the previous build section. I have put in an order for the HMS Hood to go with my Bismarck build and I await delivery. In the meantime I am going to start this one next.

Less than 500 bricks, should be a quick build.
Previous Builds

Panzer III Ausf. J
The Panzerkampfwagen III, commonly known as the Panzer III, was a medium tank developed in the 1930s by Germany, and was used extensively in World War II. The official German ordnance designation was Sd.Kfz. 141. It was intended to fight other armoured fighting vehicles and serve alongside and support the similar Panzer IV, which was originally designed for infantry support.
Initially the Panzer III had the same 3.7 cm gun as the infantry used for anti-tank work but later models were given 5 cm gun. However, this was the largest gun that could be fitted within the limitations of the turret ring and it was insufficient against Soviet T-34 and KV-1 tanks. Instead the Panzer IV which had a larger turret ring, was redesigned to mount the long-barrelled 7.5 cm KwK 40 gun and became the main German tank. The Panzer III effectively swapped roles with the Panzer IV; from 1942 the last version of the Panzer III (Panzer III N) mounted the short barrelled 7.5 cm KwK 37 L/24 that the first Panzer IVs had been fitted with.
Production of the Panzer III ceased in 1943 but the Sturmgeschütz III assault gun which had been developed from the Panzer III chassis continued in production until the end of the war.
The most common variant of the Panzer III, which served in North Africa and the Eastern Front. Hull and turret front armour increased to solid 50 mm plate. Spaced armour was placed around the gun mantlet.

Stug III Ausf. F/8
(I also did one of these as the Flammpanzer variant)
The Sturmgeschütz III (StuG III) was an assault gun produced by Germany during World War II. It was the most-produced fully tracked armoured fighting vehicle, and second-most produced German armored combat vehicle of any type after the Sd.Kfz. 251 half-track. It was built on a slightly modified Panzer III chassis, replacing the turret with an armored, fixed superstructure mounting a more powerful gun. Initially intended as a mobile assault gun for direct-fire support for infantry, the StuG III was continually modified, and much like the later Jagdpanzer vehicles, was employed as a tank destroyer.StuG III Ausf. F: (Sd.Kfz 142/1; March–September 1942, 366 produced) The first real up-gunning of the StuG, this version uses the longer 7.5 cm StuK 40 L/43 gun. Firing armour-piercing Panzergranat-Patrone 39, the StuK 40 L/43 could penetrate 91 mm of armour inclined 30 degrees from vertical at 500 m, 82 mm at 1,000 m, 72 mm at 1,500 m, 63 mm at 2,000 m, allowing the Ausf. F to engage most Soviet armoured vehicles at normal combat ranges. This change marked the StuG as being more of a tank destroyer than an infantry support vehicle. An exhaust fan was added to the rooftop to evacuate fumes from spent shells, to enable the firing of continuous shots. Additional 30 mm armour plates were welded to the 50 mm frontal armour from June 1942, making the frontal armour 80 mm thick. From June 1942, Ausf. F were mounted with approximately 13 inch (334 mm to be exact) longer 7,5 cm StuK 40 L/48 gun. Firing above mentioned ammunition, longer L/48 could penetrate 96 mm, 85 mm, 74 mm, 64 mm respectively (30 degrees from vertical).

Have you ever thought about building the Nazi Flying Saucer? That would be awesome.
Walrus…just a bit of a half track mind…
Haven’t really even begun to do the American builds.
You should contact Sweden and discuss the purchase of your vast array of brand new Military Equipment for their upcoming Military needs.
It’s a metaphor for government – you put together an extremely complex system, and nothing works when you need it to…