So... it's quiet.
A simple and easy one to continue on.
So... it's quiet.
A simple and easy one to continue on.
Aure entuluva!
So you can stick two magazines into the butt.
Eats, shoots, and leaves.
Grumman Panther.
Eats, shoots, and leaves.
The Grumman F9F Panther indeed.
Your turn, Condottiere 40K.![]()
Aure entuluva!
Vehicle
Eats, shoots, and leaves.
Maybe easy, maybe not.
Aure entuluva!
G-13. Easy to discern from the Hetzer because it has a different gun. The mountains in the background also helped. I saw a real G-13 on Wednesday but it had a modified gun to look like a Hetzer.
Last edited by Jagdpanzer; April 30, 2012 at 10:31 AM.
What line of work are you in?
G-13 has a muzzle device while the Hetzer doesn't... IIRC
Aure entuluva!
Last edited by Jagdpanzer; April 30, 2012 at 11:26 AM.
G-13 is correct.
Eats, shoots, and leaves.
Next picture.
:O awesome
Some sort of carrier (Kangaroo?) from Cromwell?
Aure entuluva!
No, not a Kangaroo. Not a carrier. Not based on the Cromwell.
A five point white star is usually a Yankee brand, captured, borrowed or otherwise.
Eats, shoots, and leaves.
No, the white star was applied on all allied military vehicles from D-Day until the end of the war.
In North West Europe for the Overlord landings of June 1944 a white five-pointed star was worn on all Allied vehicles. On trucks and the like, it was painted on the cab doors and on the bonnet or roof, the upward-facing mark being contained within a white circle. Tanks were similarly marked. The stars remained in use officially until the end of the war, though in practice they were often painted out, particularly on vehicle sides, as they offered too good a sighting mark for German gunners."
Crusader gun tractor.
Eats, shoots, and leaves.
Thats why I said awesome, didn't think any existed.