1/35 M1917A4 155mm Howitzer, WIP, 12/5/11, Complete

Fire Mission

Introduction

The M1917A4 155mm howitzer was first adopted by the US Army from the French Schneider company in 1917. The original weapon had hard spooked wheels and was used by the US in World War I.

After WWI the weapon received numerous upgrades including pneumatic tires, air brake system, and new shield to name a few. The M1917A4 was in service at the start of WWII and was phased out as the newer M1A1 155mm became available in 1942. The weapon saw service with numerous countries during both World Wars and then was moved out of service in most countries thru the late 1940s.

Photo Courtesy of Prime Portal

The kit

The kit is a newly released full resin kit from Commander Models. I worked with them on the research and evaluated some test pieces. The kit as you will see it assembled here is from the final parts after development of the kit. This kit is currently released by Commander Models.

The Build

This is a relatively simple kit with about 30 or so parts. The instructions are simple with 6 steps.

After separating the parts from their mold blocks, they were cleaned of any flash, a few minor air bubble holes were filled and parts were washed to remove any mold release compound

The first steps are to assemble the lower carriage. This includes the assembly to the main carriage part of the front axels, the air brake tank, shield support bar, rear spade, tool box cover (center of the carriage), elevation gear box and rear displacement bar.

All the parts fit well, I left off the elevation and traversing hand wheels to facilitate painting.

The next steps are the construction of the upper carriage and barrel. The upper carriage has the attachment of the elevation gears. The barrel assembly and breech were kept separate again to facilitate painting. There was a minor mold seam in the barrel which required some minor sanding.

Here is the test fit of the lower and upper carriages.

The shield like the lower carriage is nicely molded including all the rivets. The pre-production shield I had did not include the rivets on the backside. I placed those rivets using Archer rivet decals. The hole in the shield to allow the sighting of the panoramic telescope has a door. I used some leftover PE to ass the door and hinge over the hole. Also assembled onto the shield is the sight storage box to the left of the shield sight opening

Prior to final assembly, all the parts were primed using Vallejo OD primer. I just purchased a jar of this primer and have to admit it works great. This paint flows well out of the jar right to the airbrush even using a .020 needle. It covers well and gives a good base color for US or Allied painting.

After the primer coat was applied, I assembled the hand wheels onto the lower carriage. The lower carriage was then painted with Poly Scale OD. The tires were painted with a 50/50 mix of Tamiya NATO and Flat black and then the hubs and drums were also painted with the PS OD using a circle template.

I added PE rifling to the barrel from the parts box and followed the same painting as above. The elevation gear teeth, rails for the recoil and the breech block were then painted with Alclad Steel.

Inside the tube was painted Flat Black followed by Alclad Steel on the rifling

Shown here is the test fit of the painted upper and lower carriages.

Before final assembly, I will add the air lines for the brakes and then final assemble the model. The spade is in the travel position and does not lend itself to the emplaced position, based on its molding. I will display the model as if it is in the process of being emplaced so it is correct as assembled.

That’s it for now. As always all comments are welcome

Rounds Complete!!

Looks like a pretty nice kit, Mike. Good job on the build as well. It looks pretty sharp.

Mmmmmm…that’s purrrrrrty, Mike! [:D[

Gino - Thanks for the peek, it is a nice quick build.

Rich - Thanks for stopping in

Rounds Complete!!

I knew you had to be up to something…it was waaaay too quiet around here for a while. Nice work as usual Mike! [B]

Quiet…well, we both have been absent from our normal build logs here in Armor. RL has been a real PITA these past few months. With that said…I am looking forward to winter, being inside, holiday vacation and some serious bench time.

This build kinda dropped in just as I was starting something else. It was fun change working with the vendor as he developed this kit.

Thanks for the peek…I’m always here in my bunker!!

Rounds Complete!!

Congrats on your research , it made for a fine looking model . Was wondering what would be the typical vehicle for towing this weapon circa WW II ? Looks like it would look great in a dio either being towed or emplaced with the tow vehicle and crew . [Y]

Leave it to you to find the obscure artillery kits… Outstanding work so far…

JMHO, but that’s about the ugliest piece I ever saw…

Shell - Thanks for the peek. As far as towing, the weapon was fairly heavy, almost 4 tons. It would have been a 5 ton or better vehicle.

Hans - You know me…strange and obtuse.

As far as ugly… and did I tell you it is French too …I know, no political comments. I think that was one of the reasons it was sent to the scrap heap… too ugly Thanks for the peek, always good to see you observing!

Rounds Complete!!

4 tons ? Had no idea it would be that heavy . [Y]

Yep…besides it’s limited range (~11,000 yds) it could only traverse about 3 degress left or right. Further traverse required the crew to lift and re-emplace the weapon. At about 4 ton you could see what a nightmare that would be.

Rounds Complete!!

Hiya Mike

Nice piece of artillery [t$t]…what I like best about it is the fact you were personally involved.Kudos

tread[H]

Now I call that different sure nuff and lookin good too.[Y]

Knock him out John

Tony lee

Tread - Always a pleasure to have you drop in. As I said earlier, the fun of this build was helping with the kit design/review. It is a pleasure to work with Jon from Commander.

Tony - You know me…I try to expand the minds of the forum members!!

Thanks again guys

Rounds Complete!!

Mike,

Looks great, unique subject too; I can’t say that I’ve ever seen that gun before. 4 tons for that brute, I hope they had a crew of 10+ to heave it around.

You had mentioned Commander Models and that prompted me to check out their site. The M103 caught my eye, a little pricey though, but interesting. Any idea how hard that one is to build? I’m working only my second resin my kit right now.

Thanks for look’n in on my 48A0 build too, gonna try and get to paint this weekend & hopefully post some more progress.

Gary

Gary - Thanks for the peek. Usaully a weapon of that size would have a crew of at least 9.

As for Commander Models, his thing is unique kits. No, he is not the cheapest. Then again I just saw a resin M800 series 5 ton for $300…now that is pricy. As far as building resin kits, I enjoy them. A dremel is good to have. The M103 itself cannot be all that bad. The Commander kits I have are well thought out. The only thing you need to add to his kits are the tracks.

As far as looking at your build…anytime for a brother!! I will be thinking of you and the 187th this weekend…I will be at a reunion of the 5/5. Ahhh…Glory Days!

Rounds Complete!!

Looks good MIke. Was wondering what had happened to ya. Glad it wasn’t a snow laden tree branch bashing you on the bean.

Neat accessory those Archer decals. I just used their casting numbers on the Char and they are real nice. The rivets looks great.

Knew it had to be French just looking like it does… Brrrrrr…

Obtuse… Heh… I’d have better luck drinking one a’ th’ Romanian Women’s Olympic Weight-lifting Team purdy a’for that piece looked good… Slappin’ US tires & wheels on the gun carriage was puttin’ $500 boots on a five-franc who… err, Piece…[:P]

Looking real good! Please count me in… you are going to make many of us happy since you are building a partially WWII subject. [:D] Good to have you back…