Universal Carrier, Mk2 Tamiya

BarleyBop

Active Member
Joined
Sep 4, 2022
Messages
181
Probably everyone has built one of these, by Tamiya.
I thought I'd give it a try, had just finished reading about the Kasserine Pass debacle, and of the combined forces 'minding the gate'

Not too many photos in 2016 when I built it, but I had started being more diligent about pics that I would then share with my brother 12 hours away!

First contact with ridiculously tiny aftermarket PE!

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some scratch built Bren ammo boxes

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I like the paint job and weathering.
Thanks Kevin, it was mostly by accident!
I'm just now getting to the point where I can predict a bit how something might turn out;
so what do I do?
I keep trying new techniques! I suppose that keeps it interesting and fresh.

...and just having really joined since Dec 19th, I've seen so many great techniques and builds, there is no end in sight to what I can learn!
 
Do you have any pictures from the left or right side of that carrier, by any chance? It's extremely hard to tell from this angle, or from the other photos in your album, if it really is a Scout Carrier — but if it is, somebody made a right hash of the paint job, in terms of historical accuracy …
 
nope, I rushed the photos as I was with other (let's say slightly less enthusiastic) folks on our way to dinner.
I surmised it was a Scout from the (gun racks?) mounted right next to the open (slanted) engine cowling, behind the crew compartment on left side of vehicle.

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here is a photo from the Resicast Scout Mk1 kit sitting in my stash... similar, but not exactly... could it be a later version?

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The Resicast kit is indeed a Scout Carrier: enclosed on the right, open on the left. Universal Carriers were enclosed on both sides, and there are very few Scout Carriers left in the world. I was recently told there's exactly one, and it could be that you came across that, of course. The problem is that your photos don't appear to show anything that allows easy identification :) If the left-hand side was open, like on the model, of course, then it was one.

I don't think there were early and late versions, though — they only made 647 of these, after all (says AFV Profile No. 14, Carriers, by Peter Chamberlain and Duncan Crow; Windsor: Profile Publications, ca. 1970). That's a drop in the ocean compared to its replacement, the Universal Carrier, which is the most-produced armoured vehicle ever at something around a hundred thousand vehicles …
 

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