breslau
Sergeant
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2009
- Messages
- 791
I've always thought it sacrilegious to re-paint K&C but I was lucky to get one of the damaged Flak '41 guns and wanted it in Afrika Korps colours so I thought - make it so.
The Flak '41 was not the most mobile of guns and was generally deployed in fixed positions. In late 1942, 44 of the guns were sent to Tunisa with about half making it.
The gun shield and carriage were air-brushed in a range of greys; sealed; covered in water-soluble hairspray and over-painted in sand yellow. Once dried, some of the hair-spray was washed-off with water to reveal the grey underneath. The gunner was removed - he was just pegged to the seat (other than some missing paint he’s undamaged). The seat was originally broken-off but it's again fixed on the gun. The end of the barrel was hollowed-out with a drill and blackened to make it look like it's been fired. Painted the dials, control wheels, seats and added the "kill" rings. A flat varnish then took away any uneven shine.
I now have an Afrika Korps Flak '41 to go in a fixed position but no gun crew. Some pictures:




The Flak '41 was not the most mobile of guns and was generally deployed in fixed positions. In late 1942, 44 of the guns were sent to Tunisa with about half making it.
The gun shield and carriage were air-brushed in a range of greys; sealed; covered in water-soluble hairspray and over-painted in sand yellow. Once dried, some of the hair-spray was washed-off with water to reveal the grey underneath. The gunner was removed - he was just pegged to the seat (other than some missing paint he’s undamaged). The seat was originally broken-off but it's again fixed on the gun. The end of the barrel was hollowed-out with a drill and blackened to make it look like it's been fired. Painted the dials, control wheels, seats and added the "kill" rings. A flat varnish then took away any uneven shine.
I now have an Afrika Korps Flak '41 to go in a fixed position but no gun crew. Some pictures:




