Churchill Mk. VI (semi-quickie)

In July this year, I bought an AFV Club Churchill Mk. VI:

Somebody on Scalemates put it up for sale for 5 (yes, five) euros plus postage, and to my surprise, nobody had bought it by the time I noticed it. On inquiring about it, the seller said it was assembled and complete, but not painted. Hey, for a fiver, I’m in :slight_smile:

When I got it home from the shop where I had to pick up the parcel, I found the model like this:

Essentially straight from the box other than replacement resin exhaust pipes with etched covers, which was a nice surprise. It was built well enough, no sloppy mistakes or other glaring problems, so I put it aside for a few months before actually getting round to it. By mid-September, I felt like tackling the corrections that this kit needs. You see, AFV Club made a rather obvious mistake with the turret ring: the real Churchill Mk. VI is almost indistinguishable from a Mk. IV unless you really know what to look for. One external difference is that it has a wider turret ring than the Mk. IV, because an extra armoured collar was added around it. AFV Club did add that, but also made the turret ring taller at the same time, which it shouldn’t be. Here is the turret as the previous owner assembled it per the kit instructions, together with the leftover Mk. IV turret base that also comes in the kit:

Basically, it should have the thicker turret ring as on the left but with the height of the part on the right. Fortunately, the model had been assembled with less cement than I would have used myself, allowing me to take the turret to pieces with relatively little effort:

Once that was done, I modified the Mk. IV lower part:

That is, I removed the bumps at the rear and filled the resulting holes, then added a wider turret ring made by laminating two lengths of 0.5 mm by 1 mm plastic strip around a former of approximately the right diameter. (Using two strips rather than one of the full thickness has two advantages: a rectangular strip is easier to bend than a square one, and by glueing them together around the former, they will hold the shape much better without the need for heat-forming.) Once dry, I also brushed some thinned putty around the strip to blend it into the rest of the turret.

While I had the turret apart, I also did a small conversion that nobody will spot unless they really know their Churchills :slight_smile:


The hole in the front has a cut-off upper corner in the kit, but I squared it off. The one with the fillet in the corner is correct for the Mk. VI, while the square hole is a feature of the Mk. V, which had a 95 mm howitzer instead of a 75 mm gun. However, there are photos of Churchills with 75 mm guns and a square hole, suggesting that some Mk. V turrets were used to build Mk. VI tanks. (The reason for the square hole is that the gunner’s telescope is higher up in the mantlet on the Mk. V, so the fillet would interfere with it. A Mk. VI with a square hole suffers no drawbacks from that, other than a slightly greater vulnerability to enemy fire, of course, which is why it should have the fillet in the first place.)

BTW, I also purchased a set of AFV Club Churchill tracks for this model, as I didn’t want to use the soft plastic ones it comes with. They just don’t sit right on a Churchill with its long-pitch links. You only need 50 links per side, though, not 70-something as the instructions tell you — well, if you leave the track covers on, anyway. Nearly the whole upper run is out of sight, so I don’t see the point in adding it :slight_smile:

And from there, the model languished until yesterday … I had already decided I wanted spare track armour on it, because this features very heavily on British (and Canadian) tanks from late 1944 until the end of the war. Digging through some of my spares boxes, I came up with a good, representative assortment of Sherman and Churchill tracks for hull and turret:



I had kind of wanted some Panther or Tiger tracks on the turret, but as I don’t have any, I had to put more Churchill and Sherman links on instead :slight_smile: The Churchill tracks are all from AFV Club, while most of the grey Sherman ones are from Dragon that someone gave me this summer — and just building these couple made me glad I never bought a Dragon Sherman kit that comes with them … Awful things to make. Other Sherman tracks on the model are from Tamiya, Asuka and Panda Plastics. I didn’t try to replicate a tank from a photo, but arranged the tracks to look much like they do in photos of different tanks.

The white stuff in the last photo is coarse, textured, acrylic gel from an art supply store, applied with a spatula and a stiff brush to look like mud. It will dry semi-transparent, and probably shrink a little so I may have to add a second coat once it dries (it’s still very wet in the photo).

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Construction is done, I think:

I added a figure from Bronco (still loose) in the commander’s hatch and put some stowage on the back, mainly boxes from Panzer Art and jerrycans from Bronco, with a Resicast mess tin and some other small items. Oh yeah, and a tow cable over the left mudguard.

Paint soon, I hope …

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How suitable! I started 2024 with a Churchill, so a bit like my story and my Mk.VII, allthough that was a gift.
Ended up in wintercamo, “around Geilenkirchen '45”.

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Your build looks great.

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Thanks — though it’s mostly the other guy’s build, I just put the pieces back together and added a few more :slight_smile:

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Yesterday afternoon, I put a coat of grey primer over the whole model:

This with cheap primer from Action (a Dutch chain of stores that sells everything for cheap), because somebody on the TWENOT forums mentioned a while ago that it’s pretty good primer, so I bought two cans (grey and white) and this is the first model I’ve painted since. I don’t normally put primer over entire plastic models, but this one has a metal barrel and etched parts and some resin over the whole thing, so a coat of primer didn’t seem like a bad idea. Also because for the base colour, I wanted to use Mr. Paint lacquer:

This is their SCC 15 (British olive drab), and I’m also not a fan of this type of paint, but this is airbrush-ready and cooperates a lot better than the Mr. Hobby one that you have to thin yourself. In any case, I had about two-thirds of a bottle of it left, so I might as well use it :wink: The tracks have been sprayed Tamiya Medium Grey.

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First, I sprayed little patches of Mig IDF Green into the centres of all of the panels to break the monotony, then I put a wash of Army Painter Soft Tone (this is a translucent brown paint), thinned about 1:1 with water, over everything. When that had dried, I drybrushed the whole model with Humbrol HD1 Aircraft Grey Green, from a very old tin.

Not visible in the picture is that I applied more mud after I had put on the base colour, with the same acrylic gel as before, because I felt the tank wasn’t dirty enough yet.

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Very nice looking Churchill Jakko

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That looks spectacular.

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Thanks, but it looks more spectacular in the picture than in the flesh — “thanks” to the camera software in my iPad, which “enhances” things far too much for my liking. I’ve toned it down as best I could, but it still exaggerates the look of the actual model :frowning:

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By now I’ve mostly painted the track armour and the stowage, but not finished them yet, added the markings (but the star on the turret roof needs some touching up), and almost finished the figure for the commander:

The star was an interesting problem: it has to go over the ventilator, which is rather tricky. I found a suitable star in my spare decals box and then used my oversize punch-and-die set to make an 8 mm hole in it before soaking it off the backing sheet:

Of course, I had first measured out where this hole had to go. Happily, I managed to put it in the right place on the first try :slight_smile: The star split into two pieces as I got it off the backing paper, but they’ve lined up well enough. You can make out the seam in the photo, but it’s much less obvious on the actual model. When it dries, it will probably be even less so, and else some dirt will fix it :slight_smile:

Then I applied the cut-out bit, too:

Both with plenty of Micro Sol to soften them (which was still wet when I took these photos), but I suspect I may have to apply it a few more times to get the parts to settle down completely. You can also see in the last photo that the cut-out part got damaged, so it needs to be touched up with paint later.

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Someone pointed out to me elsewhere that the Churchill spare tracks would not have been as deep brown. I had been wondering about that myself, so the comment made me repaint them. I went over the deep red-brown with a medium grey, but not quite into all the deepest recesses so a little of the brown comes through there, and then added unthinned Army Painter Soft Tone over that to give a slightly brown sheen and a light rust effect:

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The Churchill is now dirty:

This by means of an overall wash of Tamiya Flat Earth, but that does mean part of the shadow effect of the previous wash has been lost. I think I may need to redo that over the dirt, but I’ll hgave to test it out first so I don’t screw it up.

The patches of mud have been painted with a dark brown-grey that I mixed by eye, then added a dark wash over. It needs to be drybrushed for highlights, because right now it’s more of a dark blob than anything else.

I also painted the parts where bare metal shows (the running surfaces of the roadwheels and the teeth on the idler wheels) with Humbrol Polished Steel. Unfortunately, both tins I have of that are very far gone — as in the paint being almost unusable, not that they’ve run out entirely — so I really need to find some more.

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The Churchill is now finished.






Over the past few days, I also painted a streetcorner base by DioDump — only two years after I bought it at a model show :slight_smile:

Since I completed both just today, why not combine them?


That is to say, the tank is loose, and will remain so :slight_smile: The base is intended for taking pictures, as a display base for model shows (in as far as I attend those), and similar.

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:+1:
Ken

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Lovely work there!

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Outstanding work Jakko. That’s a beautiful tank.

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Thank you, guys!

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