7mm Austin Tilly

Ian G

Western Thunderer
Managed to pick myself up a 1:48 Tamiya kit of the Ausin Tilly at Kettering, so between my recent time of painting I took it out of the box, a dream kit to put together as every thing fits with out to much cleaning, soft plastic to cut through is always good.
The body minus the front mudgards is a complete casting, the chassis has a few bits to glue on maily the springs and the exhaust.
AT 1.jpg

Wheels/seats/gear stick/bumpers fitted
AT 2.jpg

Body and chassis test fit.
AT 3.jpg

Back rests for the seats cut and folded down, the joint has been glued with model filler,to rescribe the planked floor, so i can have the Tilly with or without canvas cover.

AT 4.jpg

The canvas cover is from the clear plastic sprue in 2 parts with a furled or closed back, mine will be furled.

AT 5.jpg
AT 6.jpg

The colour scheme or usage has not been decided yet, not sure to keep it military or 50's builder/painter.

Ian G
 

Colin M

Western Thunderer
Ian, I noticed on both your model and the 1:1 pics, that one headlight has an eyebrow, and one not? I'm interested to learn why if you happen to know the answer?

Colin
 

Ian G

Western Thunderer
I believe its to do with the days of WW2 and the blackout less of a target at night.

Ian G
 

Ian G

Western Thunderer
A light dusting of Halfords primer has covered the Tilly tonight, managed to get my shed to 28 degrees C in a couple of hours.

Ian G
 

Osgood

Western Thunderer
How did they get those night lights pass the regulations in previous years?

Take the blackout cover off :). The British / Canadian vehicles tended to have one headlight set up for blackout, as in the Tilly is set up here. All U.S. military vehicles (like that jeep) had two normal headlights plus an additional headlight with cover. I must try the blackout light on the GMC truck one evening - doggy co-driver pic opportunity (sorry for the hijack Ian):

Convoy4.jpg
 

Dog Star

Western Thunderer
All U.S. military vehicles (like that jeep) had two normal headlights plus an additional headlight with cover.
Damn, looks like I need to find a blackout light... I now know why there is a hole in the wing of the WC51! Funny how co-incidences come around.... this Dodge was manufactured in 1941-3 period and demobbed sometime later in France. The original French paperwork shows that the vehicle was first registered on the day that I was born :cool: .

regards, Barking in the garage.
 

Osgood

Western Thunderer
Aha. I did wonder whether to combine my interests and set Debenham in the WW2 era - there were several U.S. airbases not far away. Trouble is the station yard would be a bit jammed up with trucks........
 

Ian G

Western Thunderer
only the primer was from a rattle can, a big learning curve for me using acrilics.

Ian G
 
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