Obsolete Artillery is better than no artillery -- Cannone da 149/35

In WW1, the Italians found themselves short of heavy artillery and were forced to rely upon some very old weapons. The Cannone da 149/35 was already obsolete when it was introduced in 1900. It lacked a recoil system and instead relied upon wooden ramps and a heavy box under the trail to handle the recoil. This forced the gun to be re-laid after each round making it very manpower intense and giving it a painfully slow rate of fire. However inadequate and obsolete, it was better than nothing. It was used throughout WW1 and the barrels continued to soldier on into WW2.

Vargas Scale Models recently released a resin 3D printed kit of this obscure artillery piece. The kit is nice. It is well printed in grey resin with minimal to no striations. The detail is good and there were no fit issues. The kit includes lots of ammo, ammo boxes, and gun tools to make a small diorama or vignette.

I was able to remove the parts from the supports, clean them up and assemble the kit in a single 5-hour build session. I use a Godhand resin nipper for removing the 3D supports. The kit was clean and well cured so no additional washing or curing was necessary. I assembled the kit using black “tire” CA from Bob Smith Industries (BSI), part number IC-2000. This is my go-to adhesive for resin kits now. It has better shear strength than the thin or medium CA’s and has just the right cure time to allow proper positioning. The fit was good, and no putty was used. I built the kit straight from the box.

I wanted to build this as an old, much used, but well-maintained weapon. I started by taking my Dremel tool with a small bur and added lots of gouges to the wooden ramps and trail box. Everything was primed with Mr. Surfacer 1500 black and remaining striations and imperfections were sanded out. I airbrushed the ramps and boxes with Vallejo 70.834 Natural Wood followed by an application of Raw Umber oil paint. After a couple of hours in the model dryer, the excess raw umber was wiped off with a cotton swab to leave and wood grain appearance. I applied a thin coat of hairspray followed by a coat of XF-74 JGSDF OD. About half of this was then scrubbed off with a water dampened brush. Once dry, I sealed in this layer with Alclad Aqua Gloss and applied another layer of hairspray. I airbrushed a light, uneven coat of XF-73 JGSDF Dark Green and immediately scrubbed about half of that off with a water dampened brush.

The gun itself got a similar three-color hairspray treatment. I started with XF-65 Field Grey followed by hairspray and a light coat of LifeColor UA-213 Grigio Verde Charo for the base color. About a third of this was scrubbed off with a damp brush. This was then sealed with Alclad Aqua Gloss before applying hairspray and a light uneven coat of XF-76 IJN Gray Green. About half of this was then scrubbed off with a soft damp brush. It is a lot of steps and a lot of work, but this is the only technique I’ve found that yields that old, uneven beat-up look. After a dot filter of various Winsor and Newton oils, I did the detail painting before sealing it up with a final coat of Aqua Gloss.

I used the VMS Smart Chipping paint for the first time on this kit. I applied it with a sponge held in a cross lock tweezer then cleaned it up with a water dampened brush – sweet! I think I have a new go-to solution of chipping. I pin washed the details with AK Streaking Grime and cleaned it up with a make-up sponge and an old soft brush dampened with mineral spirits. I applied a bit of AK Track Wash along the metal edges and feathered with the damp brush. After a flat coat of Model Master Flat Lacquer, I lightly dry brushed the details with W&N Yellow Ochre and rubbed the metal edges with an HB pencil and some Uschi Chrome pigments. I applied a slurry of AK various pigments and mineral spirits to the wheel shoes and scrubbed most of that off after an hour in the model dryer.


All total, I put in 36 hours on this old beast - 5 hours to build and 31 to paint and weather. I’m happy with the kit and the results. I love that Vargas is doing these obscure subjects and hope that he keeps cranking them out.


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Good looking build. :+1:

You make those kits look easy.

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Looks great Rick!

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i think these Syrians were pushing the envelope of that statement though
syria-truck-mounted-cannon-732812

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Very interesting piece both as history and a model. The patina you have managed to achieve both on the gun and the position ramps is fantastic- exactly how you’d imagine such an old gun to look when in use.

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Matching tractor (Pavesi P4 Mod. 30)

Greece 1940/1941

H.P.

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Exceptional build…well done indeed! :+1:

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Excellent job Rick. It would be great to have some ww1 Italian artillery crew to go with it.

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Thank you, gentlemen!

@Karl187 Getting that patina is a time-consuming process; but I think that I finally have the formula down. It does take a bit of experimentation to get the right mix of colors.

@Frenchy That is an ugly prime mover. Now if someone did a kit of that…

@metalhead85 Yes. WW1 Italian arty figures in 1:35 are kind of scarce. An then there is my figure painting skill, or lack there of…

Back to the bench!

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Nice!

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Plus Model kit #449

https://www.super-hobby.fr/products/Gun-tractor-Pavesi-P4-100-model-30A.html

Review : https://archive.armorama.com/review/12111/

H.P.

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Thanks @Frenchy ! Wow! That Pavesi is one complicated design and 50 years before the gama-goat. It looks like a very nice, but complicated resin kit. Do I really want to do that???

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Yes you want to do that - and share it with all of us here so that we may feel your pain vicariously.

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If he does it his first pain is going to be in his wallet!

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The Plus Models Pavesi is an expensive kit; but, considering the parts count and that it is cast resin it is not out of line. There is a lot of labor in producing these small volume kits of obscure subjects.

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Agreed- so it’s sounding like there is one in you future. Hoorah ! Can’t wait to follow the build
log .

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Wow Rick you really got caught in Frenchy’s tractor-beam there :grin: But the evidence shows you’d do an equally excellent job on it, and unlike the above unfeeling bounders I’ll try to keep a lid on my schadenfreude :expressionless:

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Well, I looked over the instructions for the Pavesi, both the line drawings and the step-by-step photos. I’ve determined that you guys are just cruel! It looks like a great kit; but 212 cast resin parts and lots of piano wire rods and PE in a small vehicle is daunting. I like a challenge but…

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Yes we are but it’s just tough love. I must admit I’d think the same about the challenge…but hey you’re a much better modelmaker! I’m sure I speak for the others when I say we think you owe it to your adoring fans to take it on. Surely you wouldn’t want folks to think you walked away from a few bits of wire & brass?

© 2024 Dioramartin Motivational, Coercive & Extortion Enterprises Inc. :grinning:

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Tim that post deserves two likes.

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