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The publication of any images or informations related to nazism, fascism or any other totalitarian regimes must be understood as the reproduction of historical accuracy and not as apology to these regimes, leaders or symbols.
ATENÇÃO:
A publicação de qualquer imagem ou informação referentes ao nazismo, fascismo ou quaisquer outros regimes totalitários deve ser entendida como reprodução do rigor histórico e não como apologia a estes regimes, líderes ou símbolos.

Vickers 6-ton Mark E Type A light tank - case report

Poland!!  First to fight!!
      Continuing the Polish phase of the topics, it's time of the last vehicle from this triple building: 

       You followed the building of the other two models in this series: the 7TP-jw and the 7TP-dw with snow-plow.  Let's see now the Vickers 6-ton mark E type A.
Light tank Vickers 6-ton Mark E Type A - Polish colors
History:
      The Vickers 6-Ton Tank or Vickers Mark E was a British light tank designed as a private project at Vickers. It was not purchased by the British Army, but was picked up by a large number of foreign armed forces and was copied almost exactly by the Soviets as the T-26. It was also the direct predecessor of the Polish 7TP tank. By the start of World War II it was the second most common tank design in the world after the Renault FT.
Vickers 6-tons under construction
      The first Mark E was built in 1928 by a design team that included the famed tank designers John Valentine Carden and Vivian Loyd. The hull was made of riveted steel plates, 25 mm thick at the front and over most of the turrets, and about 19 mm thick on the rear of the hull. The power was provided by an Armstrong Siddeley Puma engine of 80–95 horsepower (60–70 kW) (depending on the version), which gave it a top speed of 35 km/h on roads.
Armstrong Siddeley Puma engine
      The suspension used two axles, each of which carried a two-wheel bogie to which a second set of bogies was connected with a leaf spring. Upward movement of either set of bogies would force the other down through the spring. This was considered to be a fairly good system and offered better than normal cross-country performance although it could not compare with the contemporary Christie suspension. High strength steel tracks gave over 5000 km of life which was considerably better than most designs of the era.
Vickers suspension
      The tank was built in two versions:
  • Type A with two turrets, each mounting a Vickers machine gun.
  • Type B with a single two-man turret mounting a single machine gun and a short-barreled 47 mm cannon OQF 3-pdr Gun.
     The Type B proved to be a real innovation, it was found that the two-man turret dramatically increased the rate of fire of either weapon, while still allowing both to be fired at the same time. This design, which they referred to as a duplex mounting, became common on almost all tanks designed after the Mark E.
Vickers 6-ton Mark E Type B
      The British Army evaluated the Mark E, but rejected it, apparently due to questions about the reliability of the suspension. Vickers then started advertising the design to all buyers, and soon received a trickle of orders eventually including USSR, Greece, Poland, Bolivia, Siam, Finland, Portugal, China and Bulgaria. A Thai order was placed, but taken over by the British when the war started. Vickers built a total of 153 (the most common figure) Mark E's.
      Experience with the Polish machines showed that the engine tended to overheat due to poor airflow over the air-cooled Puma engine. This was addressed by the addition of large air vents on either side of the hull.
Vickers 6-ton Mark E Type B with large air vents 
      For a new Belgian order the design was modified to use the Rolls-Royce Phantom II water-cooled engine instead. This engine would not fit in the rear, and had to be mounted along the left side of the tank, requiring the turret to be moved to the right and rearward. One example of the resulting Mark F was tested by Belgium, but rejected. Nevertheless the new hull was used, with the older engine, in the sales to Finland and Siam.
      The Mark E was also developed as a cargo vehicle, and purchased by the British Army in small numbers as artillery tractors to haul their large 60 pounder (127 mm) artillery guns. Twelve were ordered by the Army as the Dragon, Medium Mark IV', while China purchased 23 and India 18.
Vickers Dragon Mark IV cargo vehicle
      Poland was generally happy with the design, and purchased 50 and licensed it for local production. Modifying it with larger air intakes, their own machine gun, 360-degree Gundlach periscope and a Diesel engine, the design entered service as the 7TP. Only the original 38 entered service, 12 remained unassembled and later used for spares. Out of 38 original two-turreted tanks, 22 were later converted to single turret version with a modified turret and the 47 mm main gun (Type B standard).
      The Soviets were also happy with the design and licensed it for production. However in their case local production started as the T-26, and eventually over 12,000 were built in various versions. The Soviet early twin-turret T-26s had 7.62 mm DT machine guns in each turret, or a mix of one machine gun turret and one 37 mm gun turret.
T26 with twin MG turret
 Later, more common versions mounted a 45 mm gun in a single turret. The final versions of the T-26 had welded construction and, eventually, sloped armor on the hull and turret.
T26 with 45mm gun
      Because the T-26 was in such wide use and was a reliable platform, a variety of engineer vehicles were built on the chassis, including flamethrowers (OT-26)  and bridgelayers.
OT-26 flamethrower

      A novel radio-controlled demolition tank was built on the T-26 chassis also. During the Spanish Civil War the Soviet Union sent the T-26 to the Republican Army. The Italians, after suffering losses from Republican's T-26 during the battle of Guadalajara (1937), captured some of these tanks which served as a model for their M11/39 and M13/40 light/medium tanks.
 T26 of the Republican Forces, Spain, Battle of Guadalajara, March 1937
      In 1939, during the Soviet-Finnish Winter War, the Finnish armoured forces consisted of around thirty-two obsolete Renault FT-17 tanks, some Vickers-Carden-Lloyd Mk. IVs and Model 33s, which were equipped with machine guns, and 26 Vickers Armstrongs 6-ton tanks. The latter had been re-equipped with 37 mm Bofors AT-guns after the outbreak of the war. Only 13 of these tanks managed to get to the front in time to participate in the battles.
      At the Battle of Honkaniemi on February 26, 1940, the Finns employed their Vickers tanks for the first - and only - time against Russian armour during the Winter War. The results were disastrous. Of the thirteen available Finnish Vickers 6-ton tanks only six were in fighting condition and able to participate in the first assault on the Soviet lines - to make matters worse, one of the tanks was forced to stop, unable to cross a wide trench. The remaining five continued onwards a few hundred meters but ran into dozens of Soviet tanks in the village of Honkaniemi. The Finnish tanks managed to knock out three Soviet tanks but were soon themselves knocked-out. In the skirmishes that followed, the Finns lost two more Vickers tanks.
      In 1941, the Finns rearmed their Vickers 6-Ton tanks with the Soviet 45 mm gun and re-designated them as T-26E. These tanks were used by the Finnish Army during the Continuation War. 19 rebuilt Vickers tanks, along with 75 T-26s continued in Finnish service after the end of the Second World War. Some of these tanks were kept as training tanks until 1959, when they were finally phased out and replaced by newer British and Soviet tanks.
Finnish "modernization" of T-26.  Karelia, 1943
Specs:
Vickers 6-Ton Mark E Type A Light Tank
TypeLight tank
Place of originUnited Kingdom
Specifications
Weight7.3 tonnes
Length4.88 m 
Width2.41 m 
Height2.16 m 
Crew3

Armour13 mm
Main
armament
Hotchkiss 8mm machine guns (Type A only)

Secondary
armament
none
EngineArmstrong Siddeley Puma petrol
80–98 hp (60–70 kW)
Power/weight11–13 hp/tonne
Suspensionleaf spring bogie
Operational
range
160 km 
Speed35 km/h

The kit:
      The kit is from RPM, a very crude but interesting model... The box art is very good...
RPM model kit n° 35071
The box content...Notice the other two polish girls behind the box...
Starting the Vicker's hull. The 7TP in background is almost ready
Wheels and tracks. The vinyl tracks are very poor...
Vicker's bogies
Bogies in position...
      I choose to arm my Vickers tank with Hotchkiss MG, because the 7TP-dw was already armed with the Brownings. Thus, we have two similar tanks with different weapons.
Vickers with Hotchkiss 8mm MG
Vickers - rear view
Three girls ready for painting: 7TP, 7TP dw and Vickers
Primmer
Three tones Polish cammo 
With tracks...almost ready...
       And the British-Polish girl was ready:
Vickers Mk E Tipe A - 3rd Armoured Battalion- Poland, 1939.
Vickers Mk E Tipe A - 3rd Armoured Battalion- front view

Vickers Mk E Tipe A - 3rd Armoured Battalion - right side

Vickers Mk E Tipe A - 3rd Armoured Battalion - rear view
Vickers Mk E Tipe A - 3rd Armoured Battalion 
Three Polish light tanks
Obrigado pela atenção, Senhores !!!!

7TP-jw (7 tonne polish) light tank - case report

Żołnierze!
(Soldiers!)
       I'll show to you guys a project of recycling a scrap-kit, which I got from a friend. An old and odd kit that reproduces the  Seven tonne Polish Light Tank, the famous 7TP.  Polish rules !!!


      This topic is dedicated to my Canadian friend George Bradford ( the master of AFV Plans)  who like me, loves a weird kit!!!
Polska wiecznie !!!
7TP-jws in salute ...
History:
       The 7TP (siedmiotonowy polski - 7-tonne Polish) was the Polish light tank of the Second World War. A development of the British Vickers 6-ton, it was significantly better armed than its most common opponents, the German Panzer I and Panzer II. A standard tank of the Polish Army during the Polish Defensive War of 1939, its production never exceeded 150 vehicles. Its chassis was used as the base for C7P artillery tractor.
C7P artillery tractor in action
      The 7TP was the Polish development of the British Vickers 6-ton Mark E tank licence. Comparing to Vickers, the main new features of 7TP were: a better, more reliable and powerful diesel engine, a 37 mm anti-tank gun, thicker armour (17 mm instead of 13 mm on the front), modified ventilation, the Gundlach tank periscope, and a radio. About 132 tanks were produced between 1935 and the outbreak of the war, plus four iron prototypes. The designation 7TP meant "7 Tonne, Polish" (in fact its weight increased to 9 tonnes after the initial prototype).
      Although 7TP is often claimed to be the world's first (production) diesel-powered tank, this distinction actually goes to Japanese Type 89B I-Go Otsu, produced with a diesel engine from 1934 onwards. Barring that, the claim of a first purpose-designed diesel-powered tank is tied with Type 95 Ha-Go, whose series production also commenced in 1935. The diesel oil used as fuel had an important advantage of being much less flammable than gasoline.
typical smoke from a diesel engine

Diesel Saurer VBLDd engine
     Like its British predecessor, the 7TP was initially produced in two variants: twin turret version armed with 2 Ckm wz.30 machine guns...
7TP-dw with twin turrets
...and a single turret version, armed with 37 mm Bofors wz. 37 gun. After initial tests, it became clear that the twin-turret variant was obsolete and lacked firepower, so it was abandoned in favour of the more modern single turret design.
7TP-jw with single turret
      Prior to the outbreak of World War II most of the twin turret tanks were converted to single turret versions and only 24 twin-turret types remained in Polish service (as opposed to roughly 108 of the other type). It is to be noted that twin and single turret variants had no specific designations. In some modern books they are unofficially designated "7TP dw." and "7TP jw." (Polish abbreviations for dwuwieżowy - dual turreted; jednowieżowy - single turreted).
      In 1938 Państwowe Zakłady Inżynierii also produced 13 prototype models of a better armored version of the 7TP - the 9TP. Although the 9TP never entered production, these prototypes were used in the defense of Warsaw in September 1939.
Combat history:
      All 7TP tanks took part in combat in the Invasion of Poland of 1939. Most of them were attached to two light tank battalions (the 1st and the 2nd). The remaining tanks, that is the ones used for training as well as tanks that were finished after the outbreak of the war, were used in an improvised tank unit fighting in the defence of Warsaw. Although technically superior to any of the German light tanks of the era, the 7TP was too scarce to change the outcome of the war.
A 7TP-jw going to face the invaders
          The 1st Light Tank Battalion (49 single turret tanks) fought in the ranks of the Prusy Army as part of the strategic reserve force of the Polish Army. It entered combat on September 4, 1939 and fought with distinction in a variety of roles, mostly as a mobile reserve and for covering the withdrawal.
      It fought in a number of battles, most notably in the battles of Przedbórz, Sulejów, Inowłódz, Odrzywół and Drzewica. On September 8 it managed to stop the German advance on the centre of the Polish forces, but the following day it got separated from the main force and had to be withdrawn to the rear. Part of the battalion was destroyed in the Battle of Głowaczów, while the remainder on September 13 managed to break through to the other side of the Vistula, where it joined the Lublin Army and Col. Stefan Rowecki's Warsaw Armoured Motorised Brigade. As part of that unit, the battalion took part in the Battle of Józefów and formed part of the spearhead of the Polish units trying to break through to Lwów and the Romanian Bridgehead. After the Battle of Tomaszów Lubelski, on September 21, 1939, the remaining tanks were destroyed by their crews and the unit surrendered to the Germans.
      The 2nd Light Tank Battalion (49 single turret tanks) was attached to the Piotrków Operational Group of the Łódź Army. It entered combat on September 4 near the river of Prudka, Bełchatów.
      The following day it was ordered to lead the Polish counter-assault on Piotrków, but the attack failed and the unit suffered heavy losses. The battalion was then rallied and withdrawn to Warsaw and then to Brześć, where it shielded the mobilization of the Polish 60th Infantry Division. On September 15 it took part in a two-days long Battle of Włodawa, but suffered heavy losses due to air bombardment and was withdrawn southwards. The remaining tanks had to be destroyed by the crews due to lack of oil and on September 17, after the Soviet Union joined Germany in her war against Poland, the crews and the staff of the unit crossed the border with Romania.
      The remaining tanks found in Warsaw were formed into 1st and 2nd Company of Light Tanks by the Command of the Defence of Warsaw. The 1st company had 11 twin-turreted tanks, previously used for training. In the opening stages of the Siege of Warsaw the unit took part in heavy fights for the Warsaw's suburb of Okęcie and the major airport located there. 
      Due to lack of anti-tank armament, the tanks of the 1st company suffered losses and were withdrawn to the rear on September 12, where the unit was joined with the 2nd company.
7TP-dw - twin turret
      The 2nd company had 11 single-turret tanks, as well as an unknown number of other armoured vehicles. It took part in successful defence of the borough of Wola against German infantry and armoured units. It was also used for tactical counterattacks, among others for the village of Wawrzyszew, where the company managed to disrupt enemy preparations for the assault. On September 15 the company was ordered to form a spearhead of the Polish attack aimed at linking up with the forces of the Poznań Armywithdrawing after the Battle of Bzura through the Kampinos forest north of Warsaw. The attack ended up as a minor success, although the German aerial bombardment caused heavy losses both in personnel and in tanks. The remaining 7TP tanks were used on various sectors of the front until the end of the defence of Warsaw on September 27, when they were destroyed by their crews.
      The combat experience proved that the Bofors wz. 37 anti-tank gun used in the 7TP was able to penetrate the armour of any of the German tanks of the time, including the modern Panzer IV. On the other hand, the tank was armoured too lightly, especially against aerial bombardment.
     In the end of campaign, 20 were successfully withdrawn to Romania and Hungary, while almost 40 had to be abandoned due to engine problems and lack of fuel.
7TP-jw singles captured by the Germans
      At the same time, one 7TP was captured by the Soviets during their invasion of Poland. After the fall of Poland, the German military incorporated 20 captured 7TPs into Tank Battalion 203 of the 1st Panzer Division, as the Pzkpfw 731 (p). These 7TP tanks were used against Norway and France in 1940 and the Soviet Union in 1941.
font: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/7TP

Notice the MG 34 used as main armament
Specs:

7TP Light tank
Type
Light tank
Place of origin                 
 Poland
Service history
Used by
 Poland
 Germany
Wars
World War II
Production history
Produced
1935–1939
Number built
149
Variants
twin-turret 7TP
Specifications
Weight
9.9 tonnes
Length
4.6 m
Width
2.4 m
Height
2.27 m
Crew
3 (commander, gunner, driver)

Armor
17 mm
Main armament
1×37 mm Bofors wz. 37
Secondary armament
1×7.92 mm Ckm wz.30
Engine
Diesel Saurer VBLDd
110 hp (80 kW)
Power/weight
11 hp/tonne
Suspension
leaf-spring bogie
Ground clearance
381 mm
Operational range
150 km
Speed
37 km/h
The kit
      As I said, I got this kit already built by a colleague. He still had the original box. The kit was from Spojnia
Old, very old 7TP from Spjnia
      So was the little beast ...
7TP built in very simple way...Turret was glued in the hull, missing gun...
Good news: the tracks with no defects...Vinyl, but ok...
Notice the bogies built in wrong position.
The front bogies had to be inverted
Notice the bogies disassembled. Blue arrows: closing the mantlet gap
Red arrows: making the rotational turret device with plasticard
The screw that allowing the movement of the turret
       Together with this 7TP scrap, I built one 7TP (virgin) with twin turret and snow-plow.
7TP DW from Mirage
The double turreted kit
The version built in parallel...But this story, you guys have ever seen
7TP snow-plow - Based on a George Bradford drawing
The two 7Tps under construction - Notice the metal gun from RB Models (Matilda)
I used Archer decals for the turret rivets
Other side...
Exhasut muffler - texturized with dental acrilyc...


Metal grabs...

Headlights from my spare-box 
Open slits in the turret 
       As I was building two Polish girls, it seemed fair that I called for the party another polish girl... Taking advantage of the opportunity, I built a Vickers double turreted light tank, which was also used by the Poles. But this will be our future history ... Stay tuned ...

        But back to the building, the girls ready for a bath of beauty. Primer firstly ...
Polish girls in primer...Notice the Vickers girl in the right...
Base color: yellow...
Polish cammo : 3 tones...

The real beast
The little beast painted...Future and decals...
3rd Armoured Battalion - Poland, 1939
The 3 girls in cammo...
Adding weight to the vinyl tracks...
       And the Polish girl was ready:
7TP-jw - 3rd Armoured Battalion - Poland, 1939
7TP-jw - 3rd Armoured Battalion - Poland, 1939
Polish Girls lightweight in row...
Vickers, 7TP-Jw and 7TP-DW with snow-plow

Thanks, Gents !!!