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Ian Foulkes
60 articles

Unfinished Business – Finishing Off the Belgian Leopard

September 17, 2021 · in Armor · · 14 · 2.4K
This article is part of a series:
  1. 1/35th Leopard Line Up
  2. Leopard 1A5 Bundeswehr
  3. Weathering, the Belgian Leopard Conversion Continues
  4. Leopard AS1 Aus Cam Update
  5. Leopard AS 1 Olive Drab Lusterless Update
  6. Dutch Leopard 1
  7. Australian Leopard AS1 Dozer
  8. Danish Leopard 1A5DK
  9. Takom 1/35 Canadian C2 Leopard Mexas
  10. Australian Trials Leopard Tank
  11. Australian Leopard AS1 with drivers and engine compartments.
  12. Leopard AS1 Engine, Engine Bay and Drivers Compartment Latest Progress
  13. Unfinished Business – Finishing Off the Belgian Leopard
  14. Trying New Techniques On Tamiya Leopard A3/A4
  15. Revell Leopard 1 A1A4 Weathering And Camnet
  16. Leopard 1 A1A1 With Peddinghaus Turret
  17. 1/35 Camouflage Nets
  18. Camnet Construction continued...
  19. Schutzenpanzer Marder 1
  20. Meng C2 Mexas with Dozer Progress
  21. Meng Leopard C2 more progress

A few days ago I was sorting through my stuff and came across a few items of etch and . I then realised that they were from my Leopard . To my horror there was still quite a lot to be done, which I had not realised. So here is the progress on finishing off the Belgian Leopard. Still some more brass and other items to affix and paint. The great part about photographing the progress is that it has shown me that I need to reposition the hooks on the mud flaps.

Reader reactions:
6  Awesome

29 additional images. Click to enlarge.


14 responses

  1. That’s a great tank model Ian.
    Nothing like a Leopard screaming through mud in the forest. The suspension was incredible to see taking up the irregularities of the the track chosen.With the sound of the engine to add to it.
    Awesome memories of that at Leopoldsburg training camp in Limburg Belgium.

  2. Great build. But why are there padlocks on the external storage bins?

    • Thanks Jim. The locks are there because squaddies are squaddies the world over and will nick anything that is not nailed down, as well as a few things that are! From one of my postings...

      1 attached image. Click to enlarge.

  3. Looking really great with all thesr details added, Ian!
    Super job indeed!

  4. Great details added, Ian @ianfoulk96
    The ruler next to the locks clearly shows how small those are.

  5. Love to see a BE Leo. Soo sad they were sold, we no longer have an MBT in the arsenal 🙁

    • Thank you Michel. It is my belief that when a country loses a capability then it is more expensive to regain and retrain to replace that capability than it was to maintain it in the first place. We're facing similar situations over here! We are cursed with being run by accountants who know the cost of everything, but the value of nothing!

      • So True. In my time Belgian defence was just under 60 thousand. Now under 17 thousand. At the eve of WW1 around 200.000.
        We just bought the F-35 but will limit flying as that costs too much to operate !

        • I was on exercise Lion-Heart 84 (Spear point 84). We deployed 140,000 soldiers for that one exercise. That's twice as many as the current armed forces. The bottom line is that aircraft can fly over a piece of ground, Navies cut sea lines of communications, but to win the battle/war needs "boots on the ground" to defeat an enemy

  6. VERY nice attention to detail, Ian! @ianfoulk96

    I will say this however. Those padlocks that you used look great & very convincing.
    As a former M48A5, M60A1 & A3, M1, M1IP, M1A1, and finally M1A1 Heavy Armor tanks I'll tell you that in the field (as shown by your use of mud) they would be gone & kept by the TC (Tank Commander) or the loader! They're WAY too much bother to use get into the hull tool compartments for the tools needed for regular maintenance - which is (basically) any time the tank stops moving for more than a few minutes.

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