New WWI Releases Previewed At The Chicago Show. (1 Viewer)

Sierra

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For those of you lucky enough to attend the Chicago Show, which was a ton of fun, you will have seen two future releases from John's WWI Collection that he sent to Paul and myself. The reaction to these was terrific and thank you to all that placed advance orders. We hope these will be available in late October / November but the dates may change. Final pricing has not yet been set, so please wait until the official release.

BRITISH GUN CARRIER, MARK I, SUPPLY TANK VERSION

GWB-08 THE GREAT WAR,1914-1918 BRITISH GUN CARRIER, MARK I, SUPPLY TANK, 1st Gun-Carrier Company, Tank Corps, 6th August 1918

The British Gun Carrier, Supply Tank, will be sold as GWB-08, but will come in 2 boxes.
Both versions were previewed at the recent Chicago Toy Soldier Show, and will be released over the next few months.
Prices will be announced on release.

During 1916 it became clear that in case of a breakthrough, the very purpose of the first tank, the Mark I, artillery would have great trouble following the advancing troops. Any successful offensive would therefore be in danger of stalling immediately. To solve this problem Major Gregg, an engineer working for the main tank producing company Metropolitan, Carriage, Wagon and Finance, proposed to build special mechanised artillery, using parts of the Mark I. The production of a prototype was approved on 5 June 1916; the actual design began in July. The first prototype was ready to participate in the Tank Trials Day at Oldbury on 3 March 1917. An order of fifty vehicles was given to Kitson & Co. in Leeds. Deliveries to the army started in June and ended in July.

The vehicle bore little resemblance to the Mark I. The tracks weren't tall but low, almost flat. At the back a rectangular superstructure covered the Daimler 105 hp engine together with the transmission of the Mark I, the latter now in a reversed position. Sharing it were the vehicle commander, a mechanic and two gearsmen. The original double tail wheel of the Mark I, intended to aid steering and attached to the rear of the vehicle, was retained. The front was an open area with either a 60-pounder (5-inch) field gun or a 6-inch howitzer.

For transporting the gun only the wheels had to be removed from the gun carriage - these were attached to the side of the carrier until needed again. In theory, the field gun could be fired from the vehicle; in reality only the howitzer could be so used. Alternatively the guns could be unloaded through a pivoting cradle assisted by two winding drums driven by the engine. Above the front of the track frame at each side was an armoured cab for the driver on the left and the brakesman on the right. In the prototype these driving positions were directly in front of the superstructure; moving them forward improved visibility, but made communication very difficult - a problem as, in the Mark I, four men (including the gearsmen) had to cooperate to steer the tank.

In July 1917 two Gun Carrier Companies were formed of 24 vehicles each. Probably none of them ever fired a shot in anger. As breakthroughs never materialised the vehicles were ultimately only used as supply tanks. It was calculated a single tank had the same carrying capacity as 291 human porters.


COMPLETE SUPPLY TANK, WITH SUPPLIES

GWB-008.jpg

PICTURE WITH TANK RIDERS, TANK CREW, AND EXTRA SUPPLIES.
The extra supplies, tank crew etc, were not previewed in Chicago, so we have lots to look forward to.

GWB-008_1.jpg

BRITISH GUN CARRIER, MARK I, WITH 6-INCH HOWITZER

GWB-10 THE GREAT WAR,1914-1918 BRITISH GUN CARRIER, MARK I, WITH 6-INCH HOWITZER, 1st Gun-Carrier Company, Tank Corps, 6th August 1918
The British Gun Carrier, With 6-inch Howitzer, will be sold as GWB-10, but will come in 2 boxes.
The Gun Carrier Mark I was the first piece of self-propelled artillery ever to be produced.

GWB-010.jpg

GWB-010_1.jpg

Hope you enjoyed this preview of the upcoming releases.

Mike
Sierra Toy Soldier Company
 
BRILLIANT !!!!!!!!!!!!!!

WW1 Artillery... and Self Propelled....

This will make a great set of vehicles and guns, and looking at the figures, I can see them being useful as gunners on a gun platform unloading the ammo in preparation to lay down covering fire for an infantry advance.

I do hope that the gun also comes as a field piece with wheels, and by the look of it, I'm sure it will :)

Going on the description it says that its set at the commencement of the Battle of Amiens in August 1918, which was the last big push of WW1 when a huge bombardment preceded the combined armoured, air and infantry attach that routed the German Army, hat was the Blackest Day for them.

Well Done John,

now lets see the guns get rolling out and the 'hot and sweaty' gunners serving those 'fire breathing monsters'

John
 
I'm with Obee here in hoping the gun comes with separate wheels so the gun can displayed as a field piece (please). The whole set is just the ticket, with all the figures and ect...just brilliant.:salute:::salute::
Wayne.
 
Oh Lord this is superb!{eek3} Great work John, really top stuff. The vehicle and figures look so good.

It's on now isn't it guys, JJ, FL, Britains, all announcing more WW1 items. What is a collector to do?!

Rob
 
Oh Lord this is superb!{eek3} Great work John, really top stuff. The vehicle and figures look so good.

It's on now isn't it guys, JJ, FL, Britains, all announcing more WW1 items. What is a collector to do?!

Rob
Simple answer: Avoid the rush and file bankruptcy now. I also plan to move, change my name and become a recluse (more than I am now) with only UPS, FedEx, and USPS knowing my location so they can deliver all the boxes to the "WW1 nut in the cave". -- Al
 
I never saw one of those equipped with the howitzer before, that is wild.

Walt
 
How good would a dio be with one version with gun and one without?

I still have not got my Sop Camel yet either{eek3}

Rob
 
How good would a dio be with one version with gun and one without?

I still have not got my Sop Camel yet either{eek3}

Rob
I'm afraid I am completely lost now. JJD's releases in WW1 continue to reach new heights of excellence and I will now be expanding into the armor with this new release and the French tank coming soon. I am heavily into the air war aspect but this new armor trend is just too good to pass by. Rob, I just the other day ordered the Barker Camel, at long last, as it was the last JJD plane I needed to complete my JJD WW1 plane collection. I very much look forward to receiving it to join my other 2 Camels and thus complete my Canadian Camel trio.
I don't know if it is possible, but maybe John will do some of the big guns of WW1, as they can't be too much harder or more complicated than the excellent armor he is turning out. Nothing says WW1 like a big gun going 'boom!'. -- Al
 
Superb releases. I've never seen these machines before, very unique. ^&cool WWI although not an era I've collected (other than a few classic warbirds) it is an era I'm slowly warming up too especially seeing these amazing AFV's JJD is putting out.
 
I'm afraid I am completely lost now. JJD's releases in WW1 continue to reach new heights of excellence and I will now be expanding into the armor with this new release and the French tank coming soon. I am heavily into the air war aspect but this new armor trend is just too good to pass by. Rob, I just the other day ordered the Barker Camel, at long last, as it was the last JJD plane I needed to complete my JJD WW1 plane collection. I very much look forward to receiving it to join my other 2 Camels and thus complete my Canadian Camel trio.
I don't know if it is possible, but maybe John will do some of the big guns of WW1, as they can't be too much harder or more complicated than the excellent armor he is turning out. Nothing says WW1 like a big gun going 'boom!'. -- Al

Al I just got to think multi front here. It looks like JJ will be my Air force and now my Tank regiment, both these are sublime releases from JJ. I will have a Brit Trench populated by the Britains regt and a German Trench populated by the FL German regiment. If JJ make artillery , well that would be the mud covered cherry on the WW1 Cake top!

Sooooooo much to buy in the next four years Al. And we haven't even reached day one of year one yet!{eek3}

Rob
 
Here is the real thing;

large.jpg

© IWM (Q 70322)
 
On the photo of the supply carrier being unloaded there are two Britsh infantry figures in full kit and steel helmets sitting on the top of the vehicle. They look somewhat out of place compared with the other soldiers unloading the supplies. Perhaps these are the first of a "infantry figure action" range to go with the superb vehicle models.
 
This is really great news. It has been a long time coming for WW1 AFV's and JJD is going from strength to strength.

It would be nice to see a Mk 1 with steering tail wheels and grenade screens. A Mk IV and a Mk V.

A big plus would be an early British tank crew at rest or getting ready for the battle wearing leather helmets and splatter face masks.

So please Mr. Jenkins if you read this, you would make this collector very happy!

Keep up the excellent work.

Cheers,

Mark
 

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