Modelling the US Army M4 (75mm) Sherman Medium Tank
By (Author) Steven J. Zaloga
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Osprey Publishing
7th November 2006
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Hobbies
Land forces and warfare
623.747520228
Paperback
80
Width 184mm, Height 248mm, Spine 8mm
284g
The Sherman was the most widely used Allied tank of World War II and was built in larger numbers than all German tanks combined. There was also a huge number of variants, powered by different engines, and manufactured with different types of hulls and turrets. This book presents an expert guide to modelling the 75mm gun versions used by the US Army in the ETO, in 1/35 and 1/48 scale. The projects featured include an early M4A1 from Operation Husky (July 1943), an intermediate M4 during Operation Cobra (August 1944), an M4 mine-roller in the Ardennes (January 1945), and a M4A3 during Operation Grenade (February 1945).
"In my opinion, having reviewed a good number of Osprey's Modelling series, in the 'bang for the buck' category, it definitely comes top of any list. This new book by Steven Zaloga, gets even more mileage out of an already popular modelling subject by writing a book which will have valuable applications no matter where your subject interest lies." --Jim Rae, Armorama (October 2006)
"All of the articles are superbly written and include not only a goodly number of in-work images, but many pages of the completed model. I'm sure that if one was so inclined any of these could be duplicated with just care in construction. Another fine addition to the Osprey Modelling series and one you [can] be sure will offer good value." --Scott Van Aken, modelingmadness.com
Steve Zaloga has written numerous book on tank development and military history including many on US Army armored vehicles and tank units of World War II. He has been modeling for many years, and has won numerous prizes at IPMS, AMPS, and other hobby conventions. He has written extensively on armor modeling including previous books in this series, as well as many articles in IPMS Journal, FineScale Modeler, Flight Plan and other magazines. He writes regularly for Military Modelling magazine and has also served as a moderator on the popular armor modeling website, Missing Lynx.