Here are some images of Tamiya's 1/35 scale M4 Sherman Medium Tank.
From Wikipedia"
The M4 Sherman, officially the Medium Tank, M4, was the primary battle tank used by the United States and the other Western Allies
in World War II, and proved to be a reliable and highly mobile
workhorse, despite being outmatched by heavier German tanks late in the
war. Thousands were distributed to the Allies, including the British Commonwealth and the Soviet Union, in the lend-lease program. The M4 was the second most produced tank of the World War II era, after the Soviet T-34,
and its role in its parent nation's victory was comparable to that of
the T-34. The tank took its name from the American Civil War General William Tecumseh Sherman.
The M4 Sherman evolved from the M3 Medium Tank (a.k.a. Grant and Lee), which had an unusual side-sponson
mounted 75 mm gun. It retained much of the previous mechanical design,
but added the first American main 75 mm gun mounted on a fully
traversing turret, with a gyrostabilizer enabling the crew to fire with reasonable accuracy while the tank was on the move.
The designers stressed mechanical reliability, ease of production and
maintenance, durability, standardization of parts and ammunition in a
limited number of variants, and moderate size and weight. These factors
made the M4 superior in some regards to the earlier German light and medium tanks
of 1939–41. The M4 went on to be produced in very large numbers. It
formed the backbone of most offensives by the Western Allies, starting
in late 1942.
When the M4 tank arrived in North Africa in 1942, it was clearly superior to both the German Panzer III medium tank, with its 50 mm gun, and the older versions of the Panzer IV
armed with the short barreled 75 mm gun. For this reason, the US Army
believed the M4 would be adequate to win the war, and no pressure was
exerted for further tank development. Logistical and transport
restrictions (roads, ports, bridges, etc.) also would complicate the
introduction of a more capable, but heavier tank.
Independent tank destroyer (TD) battalions, including the M36 tank destroyer
using vehicles built on the M4 hull and chassis, but with open-topped
turrets and more lethal, high-velocity guns, also entered widespread use
among American army corps. By 1944, the M4 Sherman and the TD units
proved to be outmatched by the 45 ton Panther tank, and wholly inadequate against the 56 ton Tiger I and later 70 ton Tiger II heavy tanks, suffering high casualties against their heavier armor and more powerful 88 mm L/56 and L/71 cannons. Mobility, mechanical reliability and sheer numbers, supported by growing superiority in supporting fighter-bombers and artillery, helped offset these disadvantages strategically.
The relative ease of production allowed huge numbers of the M4 to be
produced, and significant investment in tank recovery and repair units
paid off with more disabled vehicles being repaired and returned to
service. These factors combined to give the Americans numerical
superiority in most battles, and allowed many infantry divisions their
own M4 and TD assets. By 1944 a typical U.S. infantry division had as
semi-permanently attached units an M4 Sherman battalion, a TD battalion,
or both. By this stage of the war, German panzer divisions
were rarely at full strength, and some U.S. infantry divisions had more
fully tracked armored fighting vehicles than the depleted German panzer
divisions did, providing a great advantage for the Americans.
The Americans also started to introduce the M4A3E8 variant, with
horizontal volute spring suspension and an improved high-velocity 76 mm
gun previously used only by TDs.
Production of the M4 Sherman was favored by the commander of the
armored ground forces, albeit controversially, over the heavier M26 Pershing, which resulted in the latter being deployed too late to play any significant role in the war. In the Pacific Theater,
the M4 was used chiefly against Japanese infantry and fortifications;
in its rare encounters with much lighter Japanese tanks with weaker
armor and guns, the Sherman's superiority was overwhelming. Almost
50,000 vehicles were produced, and its chassis also served as the basis
for numerous other armored vehicles such as tank destroyers, tank retrievers, and self-propelled artillery.
The Sherman would finally give way to post-war tanks developed from
the M26. Various original and updated versions of the Sherman, with
improved weapons and other equipment, would continue to see combat
effectively in many later conflicts, including the Korean War, Arab-Israeli Wars, and the Indo-Pakistani War of 1965 (where it was used by both sides) into the late 20th century.
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