$ 48.00
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It was not uncommon to use the enemy’s own weapons against them. Near the end of the war with supplies getting low, the Wehrmacht repurposed anything they could get their hands on and in German hands, captured M1 carbines became Selbstladekarabiner 455(a) – the “a” standing for Amerika. This GI has got his mitts on a Panzerfaust, one of the most successful anti-tank weapons of the war. Compared to the U.S. bazooka it made a larger hole and produced a massive killing effect from spalling (burns and shrapnel) inside the tank’s crew compartment. After the D-Day landings the number of British tanks taken out by Panzerfaust rose to 34%, and in the urban combat of the Eastern Front, about 70% of tanks destroyed were hit by Panzerfaust.
1/30 Scale
Matte Finish
Single Figure in Box
$ 48.00
Federal Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer, 1876 George Armstrong Custer was a United States Army officer and cavalry commander in the American Civil War and the American Indian Wars. Following...
$ 56.00
NEW! IN STOCK! "A Gentleman Listens", Gentleman Standing with Chair, 1770-85 This gentleman wears the most recent fashion of the last quarter of the 18th century, including a fine hat cocked...
Sold Out - $ 275.00
Four WAAF personnel and a male RAF sergeant stand alongside a large wooden heptagonal table on which is displayed a sectional map of southeast England and part of northern France and Belgium.Each of the...
$ 47.00
Another important member of many HUEY flight crews were the "Door Gunners", and most 'HUEYS' had two door gunners. They would fly approximately four to five missions weekly with much of their work...