Author Topic: RetroKit  (Read 4352 times)

Offline Jeffry Fontaine

  • Unaffiliated Independent Subversive...and the last person to go for a trip on a Mexicana dH Comet 4
  • Global Moderator
  • His stash is able to be seen from space...
RetroKit
« on: June 18, 2012, 08:42:35 PM »
RetrokiT produces a variety of resin subjects. 

One that caught my eye was the resin 1/35th scale M75 Armored Personnel Carrier kit that is now available. 

(Image source: RetrokiT FaceBook page)

RetroKit 1/35th scale M75 APC kit

RetroKit web page: http://www.retrokitonline.com/
« Last Edit: June 18, 2012, 08:46:34 PM by Jeffry Fontaine »
"Every day we hear about new studies 'revealing' what should have been obvious to sentient beings for generations; 'Research shows wolverines don't like to be teased" -- Jonah Goldberg

Offline GTX_Admin

  • Evil Administrator bent on taking over the Universe!
  • Administrator - Yep, I'm the one to blame for this place.
  • Whiffing Demi-God!
    • Beyond the Sprues
Re: RetroKit
« Reply #1 on: June 19, 2012, 02:21:59 AM »
I must admit that I had never heard of the M75 - thanks Jeff.
All hail the God of Frustration!!!

You can't outrun Death forever.
But you can make the Bastard work for it.

Offline raafif

  • Is formally accused of doing nasty things to DC-3s...and officially our first whiffing zombie
  • Whiffing Insane
Re: RetroKit
« Reply #2 on: June 19, 2012, 05:32:01 AM »
M-75 saw very limited service in the US but was exported to Sth Vietnam , etc.  Greece was a big user & modifier of this beast as was some US Police forces ....

Offline Weaver

  • Skyhawk stealer and violator of Panthers, with designs on a Cougar and a Tiger too
  • Chaos Engineer & Evangelistic Agnostic
Re: RetroKit
« Reply #3 on: June 19, 2012, 07:51:36 AM »
Didn't Belgium buy most of the US Army ones?

The old APC I always liked was the M-59, with two engines in the sponsons, leaving the whole centre hull free. The real thing was underpowered, but I like the concept.
"I have described nothing but what I saw myself, or learned from others" - Thucydides

"I've jazzed mine up a bit" - Spike Milligan

"I'm a general specialist," - Harry Purvis in Tales from the White Hart by Arthur C. Clarke

Twitter: @hws5mp
Minds.com: @HaroldWeaverSmith

Offline Jeffry Fontaine

  • Unaffiliated Independent Subversive...and the last person to go for a trip on a Mexicana dH Comet 4
  • Global Moderator
  • His stash is able to be seen from space...
Re: RetroKit
« Reply #4 on: June 19, 2012, 09:52:10 AM »
M-75 saw very limited service in the US but was exported to Sth Vietnam , etc.  Greece was a big user & modifier of this beast as was some US Police forces ....


M75 in service with the Republic of South Vietnam is news to me.  Nothing I have in my reference library (the Hunnicutt books) shows that the M75 was in service with the Vietnamese.  By the time the festivities really picked up the M113 was the vehicle of choice for mechanized infantry as the M59 was being phased out and the M75 had been long gone by that time.


From Wikipedia - M75 armored personnel carrier
Quote
The M75 is a American armored personnel carrier that was produced between December 1952 and February 1954, and saw service in the Korean War. It was replaced in U.S. service by the smaller, cheaper, amphibious M59. The M75s were given as military aid to Belgium where they were used until the early 1980s. 1,729 M75s were built before production was halted.


Google search results for M75 Armored Personnel Carrier

Google image search results for M75 Armored Personnel Carrier
"Every day we hear about new studies 'revealing' what should have been obvious to sentient beings for generations; 'Research shows wolverines don't like to be teased" -- Jonah Goldberg

Offline Logan Hartke

  • High priest in the black arts of profiling...
  • Rivet-counting whiffer
Re: RetroKit
« Reply #5 on: June 20, 2012, 02:54:40 PM »
This was always one of my favorite uses of the M75.  Universal Studios in Orlando.



Cheers,

Logan

Offline apophenia

  • Perversely enjoys removing backgrounds.
  • Patterns? What patterns?
Re: RetroKit
« Reply #6 on: June 22, 2012, 06:03:27 AM »
Didn't Belgium buy most of the US Army ones?


They did as part of the Mutual Defense Assistance Act -- 600 odd veh transferred from the US Army in 1961-'62 with almost 100 lasting in Belgian service into the early '90s.

http://www.primeportal.net/apc/gert_burkert-opitz/m75_be/
"It happens sometimes. People just explode. Natural causes." - Agent Rogersz