Denne hjemmeside sætter cookies for at opnå en funktionel side og for at huske dine foretrukne indstillinger. Ved hjælp af cookies laver vi statistikker og analyserer besøg på vores side så vi sikrer, at siden hele tiden forbedres, og at vores markedsføring bliver relevant for dig. Hvis du giver dit samtykke, så tillader du, at vi sætter cookies (enten i form af egne cookies og/eller fra tredjeparter), og at vi behandler de personoplysninger, som indsamles via de cookies. Du kan læse mere om cookies i vores cookiepolitik, hvor du også altid har mulighed for at trække dit samtykke tilbage.

Herunder kan du vælge cookies til eller fra. Navnet på de forskellige typer af cookies fortæller, hvilket formål de tjener.

Indkøbskurv
0 vare(r) i kurven
I alt:0,00 DKK
Vis kurv
Indtast din søgning
 

Airfix A1360 M10 GMC (U.S. Army) 1/35

Airfix A1360 M10 GMC (U.S. Army) 1/35
Varenr.: a1360
  • Før539,00
    Pris ved køb af 1 ,431,20  DKK
Antal
Køb
På lager Lev. 2 dage

M10 GMC (U.S. Army)

The American M10 tank destroyer served during WWII. After the US entry into World War II and the formation of the Tank Destroyer Force, a suitable vehicle was needed to equip the new battalions. By November 1941, the Army requested a vehicle with a gun in a fully rotating turret after previous models were criticised for being too poorly designed. The prototype of the M10 was cdeveloped in early 1942, and was delivered in April of that year.

After requested changes to the hull and turret, the modified version was readied for production in June 1943, appearing as the 3-inch Gun Motor Carriage M10. It mounted a 3-inch (76.2 mm) Gun M7 in a rotating turret on a modified M4A2 Sherman tank chassis. Productions ran from September 1942 to December 1943. The M10 was numerically the most important U.S. tank destroyer of World War II.

It combined thin but sloped armor with the M4 Sherman"s reliable drivetrain and a reasonably potent anti-tank weapon mounted in an open-topped turret. Despite its obsolescence in the face of more powerful German tanks like the Panther and the introduction of more powerful and better-designed types as replacements, the M10 remained in service until the end of the war.