Patton wrote: |
For my diorama, I'm going to have a Panther A Late Type scoping out a destroyed M-10. How do I make the M-10 look destroyed? Thanks! |
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Patton, please don't take this wrong, but I actually had a healthy chuckle at your question
; if nothing else for the fact that, for anyone who has undertaken the "grail quest" of modeling a truly destroyed tank, it's a little like asking "how do I clone a Tyrannosaurus!!
. It is perhaps the hardest thing you can attempt-even beyond scratchbuilding, becuase not only are construction skills vital, but imagination and plausible execution as well. In my opinion.BUt seriuosly, do you mean "DESTROYED" , as in blown apart, or are you trying to show that the tank is out of service/operation? For the former, you need oodles of reference material, of the vehicle itself, and then of other m10's actually knocked out. There's gonna be a lot of scratchbuilding and trial-and-errortest fitting, and more research. You basically have to "dissect" the model, showing not only the interior, but the effects of explosion and fire. It took me appproximately 4 months to do a gutted PzIV. It's a heck of an involvrd, frustrting and labor-intensive project, but the end result is quite worth the effort!
To show it out of operation, you could put a shell penetration hole in it, and break the track; you may need an aftermarket set for this.Let the track play out behind it like it rolled to a stop--again, check references! You could depict the roadwheels as being burnt, although that's a lot of work involving a lathe; I don't think I know of any kits with seperate "rubber" parts. You could add burn/scorch marks around the engine deck, or better yet, open the hatch and drop a smoke-blackened resin engine into it. Skew some gear/equipment around it and position it off the road or in a ditch. Like I said, look at reference photos and - at the risk of sounding simple - model what you see.
Masters like Shep Paine have opined that modeling a burnt-out tank is about the toughest thing you can do as an armor modeler;its more than just putting a hole in the side-- he says don't attempt it until you're ready. You might try to do it as out-of-service, by employing some of the later suggstions here if your skill level is still growing right now. Good luck!