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Modeling the M3 Medium Tank in 1/72 Scale |
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Article by
Stephen "Tank Whisperer" Brezinski
- sbrez1(at)comcast(dot)net
Edited by Al Magnus |
The British M3
Grant Medium is differentiated from the M3 Lee tank primarily in the lower and
wider cast turret. During development of the M3 Medium the British government
urged a lower turret with the radio set mounted in the turret bustle, rather
than having the radio in the hull like the Lee used by US forces. Other
differences are that the Grant turret dispensed with the machine gun cupola,
the Grant typically had sand skirts, a canvas cover around the gun mount, and
WE210 rubber block tracks with what was referred to as a waffle, double-H, or
double-I pattern. Looking at the Box Art, what is supposed to be inside. Hasegawa Kit
31105/MT5
The turret has the
M5 37-mm gun without counterweight underneath. On the turret and hull sides
are combination pistol and vision ports. The
sponson-mounted M2 75-mm gun has the canvas dust/rain cover. Below the turret
rear is the antenna pot and an antenna. The engine deck has storage bins on
each side with a large wood storage box straddling the engine deck. This box
is included in the kit but in WW2 period photos I have only seen it on a US
Army M3 Lee tank. On the side is the side hatch common to early M3 Mediums
with a grab handle above, and a sand skirt particular to British M3 tanks
covering the top of the track run. The M3 and the M4 tanks used a "live track"
so it has little if any track sag. On the bow we see the three part bolted
transmission (differential) cover. The tank is
depicted in a monotone sand color with the red and white Jerboa marking for the
British 7th Division. The vehicle number beginning with the white T
indicates a tank used by the British or allies they supplied (New Zealand,
Australia, and Poland, etc.) The road wheels are
the 5-spoke open type typical of the M3 and early M4 tanks with what I have
heard called a "fancy" sprocket wheel. Notice how the return rollers are
immediately above the bogie center with no track skid, typical of the M3 and
initial VVSS M4 bogies. The rubber block track is the T41 type rather than the
WE210 type. Mirage's Kit
72804
The main gun does
not have the canvas cover around the gun mount. In front of the gun and on the
other fender are metal racks for British "flimsies" fuel cans (not included in
the kit). On the glacis plate just above the 3-part bolted transmission
housing we see the muzzles of the two fixed machine guns. Like the Hasegawa
box art the road wheels are the 5-spoke open type typical of the M3 and early M4
tanks with what I have heard called a "plain" sprocket wheel. There are rails
on the side of track guards for hanging gear (stowage) but this rail is not
included in the kit. This rack is easy to replicate with plastic stock and it
is included in one or two of Dragon's M4 kits that we can steal it from.
Hasegawa's Grant model should probably also have this rail added. The tank is
painted in a green, brown and desert tan camouflage with the colors outlined in
black or dark gray; reminds me of the Polish and French camouflage of 1939 and
1940. On the fenders above the suspension bogies are unit markings of a rhino
and number 40 for the 1st Division. Another release by
Mirage Grant Mk 1 Kit #72805 is of the famous M3 tank Monty, a
command tank for the British 8th Army. The Grant Mark 1 is the version of
the M3 known as just the M3 in USA service, with the radial, air cooled, petrol
engine. Up on the turret is a mounted 30-caliber machine gun which the real
tank actually had and is included. Off the rear of the turret is a radio
antenna for the turret bustle mounted radio. Four crew figures
are shown but only one is included in the kit. The 75-mm main gun has a cover
over its gun mount, but the cover is not included in the kit. The main gun
appears to be the shorter M2 model and with no counterweight at the muzzle.
Like with kit 72804 a rail along the side is shown but is not included within
the kit. The track appears to be the T41 rather than the WE210 type. (An odd thing
about this kit is that when it arrived it had the correct decals and
white-metal figure and roof machine gun, but mistakenly came with the M3 Lee
turret, not the Grant turret' all sealed in plastic bags and a shrink wrapped
box. How odd.) The Grant is
painted in desert tan and olive green camouflage. The markings are for General
Montgomery's command tank during the El Alamein battles in 1942-43. Above is an M3 Lee
vehicle silhouette with measurements helpful for later checking our model to
check for scale accuracy. The M3 Grant does not have the Lee's cupola so will
be lower in profile, but the M3 Lee and the Grant Mk 1 will have the same
length and width. The Kits Hasegawa M3 Grant model kit #31105/MT5 1. About 60
gray color, injection molded styrene plastic parts. The issues with the Hasegawa
M3 Grant wheels, tracks, and minor detail fittings also go with their M3 Grant
model also (see article Modeling the M3 Lee Medium Tank, the "Iron
Cathedral" in 1/72 Scale Part 1, The M3 in Soviet Service for further
information on the Hasegawa model. 2. The figures
with this kit are the same as that with the Lee version and are American
uniformed tankers, not British or Australian tankers. Like with the Mirage
model we'll have to use after-market 1/72 or 1/76 scale crew members. 3. The Grant
turret is a cast steel turret designed for the British to be of lower
silhouette and is different in having no cupola and has a rear bustle for the
tank radio, a British requirement. The Hasegawa Grant turret is poorly
shaped. Like the Lee turret, it will need a gun-sight. The commander's hatch
can be modeled open or closed. No interior detail is included. 4. The 37-mm
turret gun is the same part as with the Lee version however the Grant's 37-mm
gun did not have the counterweight under this gun, so cut off this rod when
assembling the turret. 5. I recall
seeing one photo of an American M3 Lee Medium with a large wood box resting on
the rear metal storage boxes and over the engine deck , but not one on a
British Grant as depicted in the Hasegawa models. What is inconsistent
is that Hasegawa offers two storage boxes that are the same size. In
reality, the Grant rear-storage boxes were of different sizes and shape than what
Hasegawa gives us (making it hard to rest a large wood box atop two bins
of different heights). Hasegawa offers the same boxes with both the Lee
and the Grant versions. It is not consistent to have this box on the Grant
engine deck with metal boxes of different height. 6. The
Hasegawa T-41 rubber block tracks are too narrow and the wheels are 5-spoke
type but not open. This tank should use the WE210 rubber block tracks anyway. 7. Hasegawa's
road wheels are sold with no rear-side detail. These are fine for a wargaming
model but can be replaced with aftermarket resin wheels available or stolen
from a Trumpeter or other M4 kit. The Mirage M3 Grant kit 72804 and 72805 i. Mirage's Grant kit has about the same number of
parts as the Mirage M3 Lee model: about 110 injection molded styrene
parts, a small etched-brass fret with eight parts
and a sprue of soft band tracks and single tow cable, but comes with a new
turret sprue and with the sand skirts. The wheels, tracks, and hull are the
same, but the correct British-style storage boxes are given. ii. The Grant
kit comes with the same hull parts as their Lee model and comes with the same
sink holes, but take heart, while some modelers report their kits also have
sinkholes, some modelers I have communicated with say they do not have
sinkholes in their kits. A recent purchase of an additional M3 Lee also
confirms fewer sink holes so this must be a production run problem. iii. Mirage's Grant has the protruding counterweight
below the 37-mm gun barrel indicating the gun has a horizontal stabilizer. In
historical photos some Grants appear to have the counterweight but about 75% do
not. Do not mistake this for a machine gun barrel. iv. Mirage gives us the standard issue T-41 rubber
block tracks though the British M3's typically used the WE210 track which has a
double-H raised pattern to provide additional traction. We can either purchase
resin WE210 tracks from MR Models or purchase Mirage's etched
brass detail set if available (Kit # 72804) to convert the Mirage T-41
tracks into the WE210 tracks. v. Kit 72804
comes with no crew figures, while kit 72805 comes with one white-metal
half-figure that resembles General Bernard Montgomery. The Parts Above is a scan of the Hasegawa
and Mirage M3 superstructures, with the gasoline (petrol) engine deck
common to both their Grant and Lee versions. Both superstructures have similar
dimensions and angles except for the front upper glacis plate where the
driver's visor is: Mirage offers a less vertical glacis plate which
looks more correct. The roof hatch on the Hasegawa
hull is open but the hatch underside has no detail if you do model it opened.
Mirage gives us more accurate bow machine gun ports visible on the front left
of the glacis. Notice that the Hasegawa engine deck is missing one fuel
filler cap on the port side. Note also Mirage's sink holes on the fuel
fill caps. Both hulls are missing the ventilation domes on the roof common to
late production M3 Mediums. (A resin conversion/update set for both of these
kits including the ventilation domes and interior parts would be appreciated.
With all these open hatches these models are calling for an interior!) The Hasegawa main gun is the shorter M2 75-mm
main gun with no breach on the gun. Mirage offers a choice of long M3
or short M2 75-mm gun with or without counterweight, both with breach and
recoil cylinders. Mirage's and Hasegawa's superstructure sides, doors and rear are comparable
but with noticeable differences. Mirage gives us a more accurate rear
plate (top) and side doors (far left) though both the side plate and the door
visors have vexatious sink holes. This scan compares the teardrop-shape Hasegawa M3
Grant turret at left with the larger and rounder, more accurate, M3 Grant
turret. Mirage puts their turret hatch correctly on the port side of the
turret. At the rear starboard corner of the Mirage turret is the location of
an antenna mount. The Mirage instructions in step-XIII advise us to mount two
stretched sprue antennas but includes no mounting post for the antennas. The Mirage Grant turret is missing what looks to be a
smoked grenade launcher, seen as a large hole on the forward turret roof to the
right of the gun. Sometimes this hole is covered by a thick metal plate. Assembly Instructions Though Hasegawa's
painting and markings diagram shows open spoke road wheels, the ones in the kit
are molded closed (see photo of the Hasegawa kit to the right of the diagram.
There are markings for two British Grants serving in North Africa. I do not
have a set of the decals with my kit but you may see them at
Henk of Holland
website. I the Hasegawa kits only the early 75-mm M2 main gun
is offered, without counterweight. Note that on the 3-piece bolted
differential cover there are no bolt heads. On Mirage's kit they do mold on
the bolts. The Grant kit's T-41 tracks are the same as in the Hasegawa
Lee kit but British Grants and Lees predominately used the WE210 waffle-type
tracks (available from Mirage and in OKB Grigorov and MR Models). Hasegawa's
exploded-view instructions are clear and pretty standard for Hasegawa and other
manufacturers. An exception to this is that there are written assembly
instructions in English/American. The instructions show the simplicity of the
kit. The molded on hand tools do not lend the model to a great display model. In Step 6 we see
the two crew figures which are in American tanker uniforms not British.
We should
appreciate the choice of etched brass brush guards for the headlights of simple
plastic guards, and the separate hand tools. My notes on the
instructions describe sinkholes on the rear engine plate, side plates and the
storage boxes. This bit of Mirage
Kit 72805 instructions shows the Grant turret assembly including assembly of
the white metal 30 calibre machine gun for the rooftop, and painting
instructions for Monty. Above is the
scan of Mirage's M3 Grant kit 72804 decals, from the El'
Alemain version. The Mirage version of the British Grant turret is
still flat at the rear bustle but is more round than Hasegawa's Grant
turret. Mirage offers us a choice of decal markings for
at least six British tanks in North Africa and extra, assorted unit markings
for us to play with: 2nd Dragoon Guards of 1st Armoured
Division, a Grant in service with US Army under Major Henry Cabot Lodge, 4th
Armoured Brigade of 7th Armoured Div. The etched brass
fret at right has parts for the side door interior, light brush guards, and the
engine deck vent. Mirages painting
and marking guide for Kit M3 Grant kit 72805 Monty included
information and markings for one British tank Monty, three Australian
Grants and one Polish Grant tank. At lower left are some additional,
supplemental markings for one of the Australian Grants. At right is the
etched brass fret which is the same as for kit 72804. References [1] Gunpower
32 M3 Lee/Grant Vol. 1, by Patryk Janda, A J Press., ISBN 078 83 7237 203 1. This is one
of the best references on technical details of the M3 Medium tank. [2] BRITISH
AND AMERICAN TANKS OF WORLD WAR TWO , Peter Chamberlain and Chris Ellis. Cassel & Co.,
(2001). A great reference book on most all of the tanks and many other AFV's
used by the American and UK forces. [3] M3
Lee/Grant In Action, Armor Number 33 , by Jim Mesko & Don Greer, Squadron Signal
Publications (1995). An excellent and inexpensive modeling and historical book
on the M3 Medium tank. [4] The
LEE/GRANT Tanks in British Service, Osprey Vanguard 6 , by Bryan Perrett, Osprey Publishing Ltd.
(1978). [5] Sherman
Medium Tank 1942-1945, New Vanguard 3 , by Steve Zaloga & Peter Sarson. Osprey
Publishing Ltd. (1993). A very good soft cover book on the M4 but also covering
the 75-mm gun and engines common to the M3. [This review was written before
Osprey released their Vanguard book on the M3 medium.] [6] Military
Miniatures In Review (MMIR) Magazine, Volume 2, Number 2. The Sherman Tank: A Fragmented Look.
Part 2a: M3 Glacis Armor. An excellent comprehensive treatise on details of
the M3 Medium tank. |
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Article Last Updated: 02 March 2015 |