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Vader’s Model Desk: PzKpfw VI Ausf B Tiger II
Posted on 3/22/26 at 3:07 pm
Posted on 3/22/26 at 3:07 pm
quote:
The Tiger II was a German heavy tank of the Second World War. The final official German designation was Panzerkampfwagen Tiger Ausf. B,[a] often shortened to Tiger B.[9] The ordnance inventory designation was Sd.Kfz. 182.[9] (Sd.Kfz. 267 and 268 for command vehicles). It was also known informally as the Königstiger[9] (German for Bengal tiger, lit. 'King Tiger').[10][11] Allied soldiers often called it the King Tiger or Royal Tiger.
The Tiger II was the successor to the Tiger I, combining the latter's thick armour with the armour sloping used on the Panther medium tank. It was the costliest German tank to produce at the time. The tank weighed almost 70 tonnes and was protected by 100 to 185 mm (3.9 to 7.3 in) of armour to the front.[13] It was armed with the long barrelled (71 calibres) 8.8 cm KwK 43 anti-tank cannon.[b] The chassis was also the basis for the Jagdtiger turretless Jagdpanzer anti-tank vehicle.[14]
The Tiger II was issued to heavy tank battalions of the Army and the Waffen-SS. It was first used in combat by 503rd Heavy Panzer Battalion during the Allied invasion of Normandy on 11 July 1944;[15] on the Eastern Front, the first unit to be outfitted with the Tiger II was the 501st Heavy Panzer Battalion.[16] Due to heavy Allied bombing, only 492 were produced.
LINK
Tamiya 1:35 scale PzKpfw VI Ausf. B Tiger II
Schwere Panzer-Abteilung 505
Poland, 1944
Posted on 3/22/26 at 3:10 pm to Darth_Vader
Do you play World of Tanks?
Posted on 3/22/26 at 3:13 pm to UptownJoeBrown
quote:
Do you play World of Tanks?
I use to. But I found it very frustrating because I tried to play it using how I was trained as a tanker in the real world. Doesn’t really work in the game though. I think when I retire in a few years, and have more free time on my hands, I’ll probably try it or War Thunder again.
Posted on 3/22/26 at 3:16 pm to Darth_Vader
I don't know anything about that armor, but enjoy the accompanying text and your craftsmanship.
Posted on 3/22/26 at 3:18 pm to Macfly
Thanks. I add the text and link so folks can get a little more background information on the subject I’ve built.
Posted on 3/22/26 at 3:30 pm to Darth_Vader
Nice work! I need to add a King Tiger to my stash. I just finished a Warhammer miniature, a thread is somewhere on the first page. What I'm working on right now is a 1/48th scale ICM models (which is an Ukrainian company, never built anything by them before) a Bristol Beaufort in RAF coastal command colors. So far so good it's a pretty good kit I'd rated up there with Tamiya.
This post was edited on 3/22/26 at 3:31 pm
Posted on 3/22/26 at 3:35 pm to choppadocta
I’ve done a couple of ICM kits. They’re pretty good. Don’t remember hitting any issues with them. Now that I’m done with that Königstiger, I’m laying out the Hasegawa 1/72 scale B-25 Mitchell do my next build. Looking over the instructions now and deciding which version I want to build.
Posted on 3/22/26 at 4:15 pm to Darth_Vader
only 492 were produced.
-I wouldn’t want to see even 1 of them headed in my direction.
Great job Darth. PS—How detailed is the undercarriage?
-I wouldn’t want to see even 1 of them headed in my direction.
Great job Darth. PS—How detailed is the undercarriage?
This post was edited on 3/22/26 at 4:18 pm
Posted on 3/22/26 at 4:21 pm to cypresstiger
quote:
only 492 were produced. -I wouldn’t want to see even 1 of them headed in my direction.
Really, it was a monumental waste of resources; which you could say the same thing about most of the late war vehicles the German rolled out. And what’s really crazy is they used the same Maybach HL230 V12 engine that was used in the Panther. This engine struggled to power the 45 ton Panther, but the Germans still slapped this same engine into the 70 ton Tiger II.
quote:
Great job Darth. PS—How detailed is the undercarriage?
The suspension, road wheels and sprockets were quite detailed. The tracks though are the usual rubber-style one piece track that Tamiya Hayes on their armor kits. They’re quick and easy to use, really all you have to do is connect the two ends, paint, and weather them. But thy tend to be very tight and don’t allow for track sag. Thankfully, the side skirts on this tank hide that.
This post was edited on 3/22/26 at 4:26 pm
Posted on 3/22/26 at 4:44 pm to Darth_Vader
quote:The germans were so poor they couldn't afford to buy a vowel.
PzKpfw VI
Great work as always Darth!
Posted on 3/22/26 at 5:22 pm to Darth_Vader
quote:
I use to. But I found it very frustrating because I tried to play it using how I was trained as a tanker in the real world. Doesn’t really work in the game though. I think when I retire in a few years, and have more free time on my hands, I’ll probably try it or War Thunder again.
Great work, as always.
I don't have formal military armor training, but I have found War Thunder realistic battle mode to be much more like what I understand things to be. Comms with your "team" are extremely limited, so you can't do much coordination, but every now and again if you pair up with someone else who knows what they are doing, you get great results. The physics models are also considerably more realistic than WoT.
Posted on 3/22/26 at 5:24 pm to Darth_Vader
quote:Fuel, coolant & ordinance was a bit of that but damn! That’s a bunch of Krupp.
The tank weighed almost 70 tonnes
The only thing that a stuck 70 ton tank responds to in the field is something weighing the same or more. Must have been a nightmare to try to recover.
I’ve done enough non-military recovery of stuck heavy shite to know the really stuck shite generally needs something more massive than itself to have a decent chance to free it. Or multiple pieces of equipment in concert.
PS: Nice build as usual. Thanks for sharing.
This post was edited on 3/22/26 at 5:25 pm
Posted on 3/22/26 at 5:25 pm to Taxing Authority
quote:
The germans were so poor they couldn't afford to buy a vowel.
You know the Germans love to make their words as long and complicated as possible. The more syllables, the better. In English, we simply call them a “tank”,only four letters long. The Germans? They call tanks “ Panzerkampfwagen”, “PzKpfw” is the abbreviated version.
Posted on 3/22/26 at 5:31 pm to soccerfüt
quote:
The only thing that a stuck 70 ton tank responds to in the field is something weighing the same or more. Must have been a nightmare to try to recover.
The Tiger II weighs as much as my M1A1 Abrams. We had the M88 “Hercules” when we needed a recovery vehicle…
I’m not sure if the Germans had anything capable of recovering a disabled Tiger II. I say that because of how many of them, an its cousin the Jagdtiger, were simply abandoned by their crews when they either ran out of fuel, broke down (which they frequently did), or became disabled.
Posted on 3/22/26 at 6:07 pm to UptownJoeBrown
quote:
Do you play World of Tanks?
I played WOT Blitz for a good while but the manipulation of the player base turned me off. They’d reveal a new tank and the best/OP players would earn it quickly and put up great numbers. More and more people would get the tank and Wargaming would nerf it because of the initial stats from the OP players. Rinse and repeat.
AOL used to have a game called Air Warrior that was a WWII Pacific theatre flight sim. But they had a tank and an antiaircraft vehicle you could drive and that was a great way to take a break from the planes.
The model looks great!
Posted on 3/22/26 at 7:32 pm to Darth_Vader
Now do "Sdkfz". It's a mouthful IIRC
Posted on 3/22/26 at 7:44 pm to TheRealTigerHorn
quote:
Now do "Sdkfz". It's a mouthful IIRC
Indeed it is. It’s short for “Sonderkraftfahrzeug”, which translates to “special purpose vehicle.” Pretty much all German vehicles had a Sdkfz number during WWII I believe.
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