New chapter in my Panther saga.
Lets continue with my pile of metal...


As on a real Panther Ausf G looked like this:

And who me and Mr Dremel turned out to become like this:

Well not that close to the real thing but back then they had to do.
Then Tim made a good looking set in resin equipped with rubber pads and then Steve Winstone made them in brass with spring working absorbers:

Very nice! So I got me a set.

What an improvement from the kit ones, me like!

Thanks again Steve for making them.
After some time feeling them in without bolting them in place I spotted some areas that with a minimum of work

Steve Norris has already described how to reduce the thickness of the central part to get a better clearance for the tracks and I did the same.

The real thing had 5x2 steel discs so I removed 1x2, this also meant the spring had to be cut a bit and the pit for the internal thick guide disk had to be made deeper.
With the bumper plates a bit shorter the bump stops can now be bolted to the hull side in a lower position and now get an ever better clearance to the track links.
Some chemical metal was added to the mid section sides to rounding up the edge.
Rounding up all edges in general and made the water drain slits a bit deeper.
All of this done with Mr Dremel and the set of four took me 3 evenings and a weekend to make, well worth it I must say.
This is how they turned out with new cast surface applied and painted TS-3:


Very pleased with them and now I have items I could only dream about when I tried to customize the kit ones back then and all of this thanks to Steve (and Tim).
Casting brass parts myself I will never get the skill or equipment to make therefore guys like Steve in my eyes is such an asset to our hobby.
One thing…you guys making a very late Ausf G please note that in late spring 1945 the rear pair of both the internal rear shock absorbers and the external rear pair bumper stops was deleted (among a bunch of other items) due to speeding up production cutting corners and cost, so you only need the in front pair for your Panther if you go for historical accuracy.
As always, thanks for looking.
Kent