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US M10 "Duckbill" Tank Destroyer - "Corsair II," 612th Tank Destroyer Battalion, 1st Armored Division, Italy, 1944 (1:72 Scale)
US M10 "Duckbill" Tank Destroyer - 'Corsair II,' 612th Tank Destroyer Battalion, 1st Armored Division, Italy, 1944

Hobby Master US M10 "Duckbill" Tank Destroyer - 'Corsair II,' 612th Tank Destroyer Battalion, 1st Armored Division, Italy, 1944


 
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Product Code: HG3413

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Hobby Master HG3413 US M10 "Duckbill" Tank Destroyer - "Corsair II," 612th Tank Destroyer Battalion, 1st Armored Division, Italy, 1944 (1:72 Scale) "Seek, strike and destroy."
- Motto of the Tank Destroyer Command during World War II

The M10 were, numerically, the most important US tank destroyer of World War II. In its combat debut in the North African campaign, the M10 was successful as its M7 3-inch gun could penetrate most German tanks then in service at long range. The heavy chassis did not conform to the tank destroyer doctrine of employing very light, high-speed vehicles, thus it began to be supplemented by the 76 mm Gun Motor Carriage M18 early in 1944. Later in the Battle of Normandy the M10's gun proved to be ineffective against the frontal armor of the numerous German Panther tanks encountered and by the fall of 1944 the improved 90 mm Gun Motor Carriage M36 was beginning to replace it, though it remained in service until the end of the war. In the Pacific, US Army M10s were used for traditional infantry-support missions and were unpopular due to their open topped turrets. The Japanese tactic of very close-in infantry attacks against US AFVs made the M10 much more vulnerable than a fully-enclosed tank.

Approximately 54 M10s were supplied to the USSR though their usage in Red Army service is largely unrecorded. The M10 also equipped units of the Free French Army; one M10 named "Sirocco", crewed by a regiment composed of French sailors, famously knocked out a German Panther tank on the Place de la Concorde in Paris. British M10s were designated 3 in SP, Wolverine and saw action in Italy and France, including some re-armed with the much more effective 17-pounder guns which gained the designation 17 pdr SP. Achilles.

The M10 had an open-topped turret that left it vulnerable to artillery and mortar fire and infantry assault especially in urban combat and forest areas, where a simple hand grenade could be tossed inside. By the end of the war its armor was too thin to provide protection from the new German tanks and anti-tank guns. The other main disadvantage of the M10 was its very slow turret traverse, the M10 did not have powered traverse and so the crew had to hand-crank the turret to traverse it, taking approximately two minutes to traverse 360 degrees. US tank destroyers fired much more HE than anti-tank ammunition, indicating that they were employed much like the tanks they were supposed to support.

Pictured here is a 1:72 scale replica of a US M10 "Duckbill" tank destroyer that served with the 612th Tank Destroyer Battalion, 1st Armored Division, then deployed to Italy during 1944. Sold Out!

Dimensions:
Length: 4-inches
Width: 1-1/2-inches

Release Date: August 2011

Historical Account: "Old Ironsides" - After the fall of Sicily, the 1st Armored Division, which was part of the US Fifth Army, invaded mainland Italy. It took part in the attack on the infamous Winter Line in November 1943. It then flanked the Axis armies in the landings at Anzio, and participated in the liberation of Rome on June 4th, 1944. The division continued in combat to the Po Valley until the German forces in Italy surrendered on May 2nd, 1945. In June, the Division moved to Germany as part of the occupation forces.

Features
  • Plastic construction
  • Elevating gun
  • Rotating turret
  • Static treads
  • Realistic paint scheme and insignia
  • Fully detailed crew compartment
  • Comes with display base

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Combat Vehicles > Hobby Master > Hobby Master Diecast Military Vehicles (1:72 Scale) > World War II Era Military Vehicles > M10 Tank Destroyers
Combat Command Center > WWII: War on the Mediterranean Front > Italy: The Advance on Rome (Sept. 1943 - June 1944)