1⁄35A39 Tortoise
9
Comments
Introduction
The A39 Tortoise traces its heritage back to 1943 when plans were drawn up in response to a requirement for an Assault Tank that it was anticipated would be necessary for the destruction of enemy fortifications during the closing, siege-like, stages of the war. In all, eighteen separate designs were submitted, with the Tortoise being the only one built, and although it went straight to production with no prototype, it failed to be ready before World War Two ended; such is the story of the Tortoise. It was armed with a modified 3.7 inch Heavy Anti-Aircraft gun fitted in a ball mount, instead of the more usual trunnions. The gun was more than a match for any armoured vehicle in German service, and for that matter anything in Soviet service at the time as well. Two of the six Tortoises did make it to Germany in 1948, where they demonstrated the same design weaknesses as the German King Tiger: it wrecked roads and very few bridges could handle the weight or width, which made it extremely difficult to get it to where it was wanted. The main gun did however prove to be extremely accurate and powerful, although the two-part ammunition storage was an issue, with a complete round weighing 45lb. The Tortoise shared its layout with the German STuGs which would have been on its target list had it made its debut in time. The six examples were manufactured by Nuffield Mechanisations Ltd, who had originally landed the contract for 25 tanks in February 1944. With the war’s end, the order was reduced to twelve, the first vehicle not being finished until 1946, and the order was then cancelled with only six vehicles having been completed. The following information comes from Bovington Tank Museum. The design that was actually produced by Nuffield Mechanisations Ltd, AT17, was submitted in February 1944. It mounted a 3.7in (93.4mm) gun carried in a ball mount or gimbal in the hull front. This gun fired an Armour Piercing Discarding Sabot projectile at 3,600 feet/sec and proved to be very accurate and destructive. The gun was capable of penetrating all the German tanks of the late war period and would probably have been a match for contemporary Soviet tanks. The tank rode on 36in wide tracks and had a double torsion bar suspension. The superstructure was a massive single casting. The armour had a maximum thickness of nearly 9 inches (225mm) and the tank weighed a massive 78 tons. It seems that all the physical constraints that British tank designers had laboured under were discarded for this project! These included the limits due to the railway loading gauge, the strength of Bailey Bridges and the width of landing craft ramps. In practice the Tortoise proved to be too slow and unwieldy for the conditions of modern warfare and was a nightmare to transport.Comments
Darren: Nice review. Any overall shots of your build? Or is it too big to fit in the camera frame?
NOV 08, 2012 - 09:11 AM
Thank you for your comment Zon and I wish I could provide pictures of the finished vehicle, It was when I was bringing the finished painted model down stairs that a combination of stairs, cat, and gravity came together with a less than pretty result.
NOV 08, 2012 - 09:52 AM
Ouch!!! Sorry to hear that. Perhaps a "What-if?" with battle damage is in order then? Bummer.
Happy Modeling, -zon
NOV 08, 2012 - 10:20 AM
I will simply say that you are not the only one who has had this problem during this time of year.
Thanks for what the great notes that you have been able to put together for the build, it would be nice to be able to download them in a compressed file or pdf. Perhaps your experience would provide adequate justification for obtaining a new Tortoise? Perhaps wishful thinking, but it's worth a shot
NOV 10, 2012 - 02:31 PM
I am afraid it was well beyond economical repair and so I saved some parts the rest was binned.
NOV 10, 2012 - 07:42 PM
Darren, on behalf of AFV club ( a Taiwanese model kit vendor) . We would like to know if you are willing to help us to provide the photos per our request. thanks
DEC 20, 2012 - 04:30 AM
Copyright ©2021 by Darren Baker. Images and/or videos also by copyright holder unless otherwise noted. The views and opinions expressed herein are solely the views and opinions of the authors and/or contributors to this Web site and do not necessarily represent the views and/or opinions of Armorama, KitMaker Network, or Silver Star Enterrpises. All rights reserved. Originally published on: 2012-11-07 23:37:07. Unique Reads: 21008