New Pz III Book - the definitive source at last
Posted: Wed Jul 01, 2009 11:20 am
For those who attended Tankfest at Bovington at the weekend, there was good weather, Mark and Gill in great form, the Pz III and Tiger running (in 1:6 and 1:1 scale) and ...... the long awaited Panzer Tracts volume on the late Pz III variants (J,L,M & N).
If you haven't seen a Panzer Tracts, they are a slim 80 odd pages packed with the fruits of decades of research in primary sources by Jenz and Doyle. They have documented all the changes of build standard for the various Ausfuerungen and Hillary Doyle has provided definitive drawings in 1:35th and 1:10 scales. At last, there is a reliable source from which to confirm details and sizes, particularly if you aren't fortunate to have access to the real thing.
They describe a somewhat chaotic method of introducing modifications in production, which means that you really have to look at specific vehicles to establish the build standard if you want accuracy as there was little commonality within each variant.
I've found answers to a whole stack of issues such as when Bosch headlights appeared, why was the scalloping on the lower hull brackets discontinued (to simplify production, moving from a welded to a bolted frame) etc.
The publication is described here:
http://www.panzertracts.com/
and the advertising blurb goes like this:
Thomas L. Jentz
Now for the first time the defining features of each Ausfuehrung of the Pz.Kpfw.III have been correctly identified and when significant modifications were introduced correctly sorted out. This has been made possible by over 39 years of research in private and public archives, chassis number analysis, and the assistance of friends sharing rare photos of Pz.Kpfw.III with legible chassis numbers. Hundreds of hours were spent precisely measuring surviving Pz.Kpfw.III Ausf.J, L, M, and N components and over two thousand hours were spent in creating detailed as-built drawings. The authors have selected the unique approach of using 1/10th scale drawings to illustrate the smallest details, while six view (including right side and belly) 1/35th scale drawings are still used for the complete Pz.Kpfw.III. 80pp Over 120 scale drawings and 72 photos
Highly recommended.
Regards
Stephen
If you haven't seen a Panzer Tracts, they are a slim 80 odd pages packed with the fruits of decades of research in primary sources by Jenz and Doyle. They have documented all the changes of build standard for the various Ausfuerungen and Hillary Doyle has provided definitive drawings in 1:35th and 1:10 scales. At last, there is a reliable source from which to confirm details and sizes, particularly if you aren't fortunate to have access to the real thing.
They describe a somewhat chaotic method of introducing modifications in production, which means that you really have to look at specific vehicles to establish the build standard if you want accuracy as there was little commonality within each variant.
I've found answers to a whole stack of issues such as when Bosch headlights appeared, why was the scalloping on the lower hull brackets discontinued (to simplify production, moving from a welded to a bolted frame) etc.
The publication is described here:
http://www.panzertracts.com/
and the advertising blurb goes like this:
Thomas L. Jentz
Now for the first time the defining features of each Ausfuehrung of the Pz.Kpfw.III have been correctly identified and when significant modifications were introduced correctly sorted out. This has been made possible by over 39 years of research in private and public archives, chassis number analysis, and the assistance of friends sharing rare photos of Pz.Kpfw.III with legible chassis numbers. Hundreds of hours were spent precisely measuring surviving Pz.Kpfw.III Ausf.J, L, M, and N components and over two thousand hours were spent in creating detailed as-built drawings. The authors have selected the unique approach of using 1/10th scale drawings to illustrate the smallest details, while six view (including right side and belly) 1/35th scale drawings are still used for the complete Pz.Kpfw.III. 80pp Over 120 scale drawings and 72 photos
Highly recommended.
Regards
Stephen