Thought I would chime in with one of my favorite posts on any forum concerning accuracy of a model. This is off the Missing-Lynx forum from a discussion of German paint colors.
"Gentlemen: Thoughts on Dunkelgelb from the advice column of a now sadly defunct newsletter.
Dear Kudo King,
I have spent an enormous amount of time researching German paints specs for my models. Recently I discovered a heretofore unknown shade of Dunkelgelb.
Early in the morning (around 8:34 am.) on June 14, 1943, an employee of the Reich Paint Factory, one Fritz von Krylon, after a hard evening of fraulines, bratwurst, and beer, paid the piper and performed the technicolor sieg heil into a drum of dunkel gelb paint. This additive unknowingly affected the color.
The drum was shipped to The Reichs Sprayun der Painten onder Panzerun, where it was applied to 6 1/2 Stug lll ausf G, one of which was commanded by a left handed Feldwebel named Karl.
This vehicle was later photographed outside the Russian village of Ineedtogetalifski, where it is parked next to a field of rutabaggas, after a shower, about 3 in the afternoon. This vehicle is instantly recognizable due to its unusual coloring that I will call Rolfen-dunkelgelb.
My question is, would it be wastefull and expensive to replicate this color, and do you have any hints to help me remember my childrens names? I think one of them is Bob or Bill or something.
Signed Paul E. Scale
Dear Paul
I commend you for the outstanding research, there is no limit to the price one must be willing to pay for accuracy. As for the kids names, have them legaly changed top something easily remembered, like Sprue, or Hatch.
Kudo King"
this was posted by Donald Puckett on March 6 2003, 11:06 PM
I still get a laugh out of it