Ken MacLean Posted January 20, 2008 Posted January 20, 2008 A new display in the Lebreton Gallery, Canadian War Museum.
Guest IMHF Posted January 21, 2008 Posted January 21, 2008 Beautiful WWII German Panzer love the Zemmerite............ Thank you for sharingSSG Luna, Lorenzo
Gordon Williamson Posted January 21, 2008 Posted January 21, 2008 Nice to see another of the big cats being properly looked after.
Paul R Posted January 21, 2008 Posted January 21, 2008 Nice to see another of the big cats being properly looked after.It looks like it just rolled off the assembly line!! They did a great job.
Guest IMHF Posted January 22, 2008 Posted January 22, 2008 The Panther G is my Favorite WWII German Panzer Tank.....SSG Luna, Lorenzo
Guest Darrell Posted January 22, 2008 Posted January 22, 2008 I agree it looks nice ... but they should have left it late war dull grey camo as the color. Not sure how many fought in the desert .... (or at least that's what that camo reminds me of).
Brian Wolfe Posted January 22, 2008 Posted January 22, 2008 Hi Ken, Welcome and thanks for the great post.Yet another reason to avoid visiting Parliament when in Ottawa. Cheers Brian
Tiger-pie Posted February 6, 2008 Posted February 6, 2008 (edited) I agree it looks nice ... but they should have left it late war dull grey camo as the color. Not sure how many fought in the desert .... (or at least that's what that camo reminds me of).Depends how late war you are talking Darrell (I can only see red X's, so I assume it is dark yellow or dark yellow/ brick red). RAL 7021 (dark grey) was used in 1945 in the last months of the war due to shortages and/or expediancy. Prior to this in 1944 tanks were leaving the factory in dark yellow (RAL 7028). Tanks units would then apply paint (if they had the time or supplies!!) that best suited the local enviroment. One scheme ordered by OKH was on October 31st of 1944 was that dark yellow (RAL 7028) was to be replaced by primer red oxide (RAL 8012) as a base colour with dark yellow (RAL 7028). OKH orders regarding paint schemes for armour toward the end of the war were many, some units ceased to exist before the changes could be implemented, or were simply ignored. Regards;JohnsyEdit: No Panthers served in the desert, only Tigers were sent to North Africa, and not many of them either. Edited February 6, 2008 by Tiger-pie
zipperheads9 Posted March 31, 2008 Posted March 31, 2008 I have seen the Pics and they did a buetiful job.This was a war trophy brought back to Canada .The color may have been done from original found on the vehicle as it did have zimmerit left on it. It did run into the 1950's so is a possible runner .That is not the policy of that particular museum though. Still it is now inside and looks Buetiful.Mark
Paul R Posted April 9, 2008 Posted April 9, 2008 I love it when entire threads are ruined by broken image links....
Guest IMHF Posted July 29, 2008 Posted July 29, 2008 I agree it looks nice ... but they should have left it late war dull grey camo as the color. Not sure how many fought in the desert .... (or at least that's what that camo reminds me of).I agree with you, I love the panzer gray color..... with a little mud on it.Lorenzo
Guest IMHF Posted July 29, 2008 Posted July 29, 2008 I have seen the Pics and they did a buetiful job.This was a war trophy brought back to Canada .The color may have been done from original found on the vehicle as it did have zimmerit left on it. It did run into the 1950's so is a possible runner .That is not the policy of that particular museum though. Still it is now inside and looks Buetiful.MarkI would love to see it in person and wish they would let you go inside and look at the interior.That would be great:Lorenzo
Ed_Haynes Posted July 29, 2008 Posted July 29, 2008 One of the problems with thinking that online sources are in any way "real"?There is, of course, always the Wayback Machine (are any of you old enough to recall that?).http://www.archive.org/web/web.php
Guest IMHF Posted July 29, 2008 Posted July 29, 2008 One of the problems with thinking that online sources are in any way "real"?There is, of course, always the Wayback Machine (are any of you old enough to recall that?).http://www.archive.org/web/web.phpWow 85 billion websites from 1996 to a few months ago that would take more than a life time to review..Lorenzo
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