UPDATE: Many of you are already familiar with the 761st but there are some that aren't and I'd just like to share why I chose this project in the first place. The 761st Tank Battalion was the first African American armored unit to see combat duty. They were committed to combat in November of '44 and fought for 183 straight days through France, Belgium and Germany, where they linked up with elements of the Soviet Army (Ukranians) at the River Steyr in Austria. The Battalion eventually received the Presidential Unit Citation in 1978 after many years of lobbying for the recognition that had been denied them for their outstanding combat record. When I heard about this unit, I really wanted to model them as I had never before seen African American WWII troops represented in 1/35 models. (Not to say no one had ever done it, I just hadn't ever seen it.) Anyway, history lesson over...on to the project.
I worked on the PE parts for the .50 cal last night. Haven't put the whole thing together yet but here's all the components that make up the assembly:
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I'm using the Eduard set for the Dragon M4A3 and the parts for the .50 were included as part of that set. I haven't soldered anything yet...I'm going to try to get the tray and the ammo box to stay together with super glue since the folding went pretty well and everything is lining up OK. I haven't done much soldering before and especially not on parts so delicate. After getting the pieces folded to the right shapes without much trouble, I'd hate to muck them up with big globs of solder while I "learn" how to do it correctly.
I also got this in the mail today:
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They're very nicely done and even though I haven't examined them too closely yet I don't see any obvious air bubbles or blemishes. It's also a bonus that the heads are all separate so swapping in the Hornet African heads will be a snap.
With the arrival of these, I've been seriously considering putting the "build" on hold so I can get started painting the figures. I've got a much stronger background in that area anyway and it's where my idea for the project actually started. But I know I really need to keep plowing forward on the model itself before I get too sidetracked painting figs.
Well, maybe I'll do just one...