Description
This is an injection-plastic military vehicle model kit.
A tank destroyer with a 20-pounder gun to counter Soviet heavy tanks
The FV4101 Charioteer is a tank destroyer developed by the UK.
In the early 1950s, the British Army conceived a plan to mount a new lightweight turret equipped with an Ordnance QF 20-pounder gun on the chassis of an existing tank in order to provide additional firepower to the Royal Armoured Corps' troops.
Based on this concept, a provisional new vehicle was developed that mounted a new turret equipped with a 20-pounder gun on the chassis of a Cromwell without the hull machine gun, and was completed in 1952 and given the model number FV4101.
A total of 442 vehicles were converted from Cromwells, of which 189 were sold overseas.
As production and deployment of the Centurion was on track, contrary to the original plan, it was deployed and used only by the British Volunteer Forces, the British reserve force, from 1953.
The period of use by the Volunteer Defence Forces was short, and in 1956 they were withdrawn from the deployed units and sold to foreign countries one after another, being equipped and used in Austria, Finland, Jordan and Lebanon.
There are four types of Charioteer, Mk.6/7/7w/8, based on the type of Cromwell cruiser tank on which it was based, and two subtypes, Model A/B, based on whether or not the 20-pounder gun had a smoke extractor.
Plastic kit released by IBG, Poland
Model.A barrel without a smoke extractor