Armor/AFV: 48th Scale
1/48 scale discussion group hosted by Rob Gronovius
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Tamiya discontinuing several 1/48 kits
Biggles2
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Posted: Tuesday, July 03, 2012 - 03:15 AM UTC
I agree that 1/48 is a more convenient size to work in. However after being spoiled with the quality of the likes of Dragon, AFV, Tasca, Bronco, et al, a lot of Tamiya 1/48 falls short, especially the toy-like quality of the Bren carrier. Too much AM and PE is neccessary to 'normalize' the quality. I think that's the turn off for Tamiya 1/48. Rainbow/AFV, and Bronco have the right idea, and have quality equal to the larger scale, but too little - too late. The absence of quality styrene figures in 1/48 also discourages diorama building. It's too bad because great results have been achieved in 1/48.
Littorio
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Posted: Sunday, July 08, 2012 - 05:32 AM UTC
This is a sad post as I've just taken the plunge and picked up the Humvee for use with a helicopter, the kit looks really good so I did some digging and found loads of conversions and AM for this kit. I also thought I would pick up a Tiger II or 2 and down size my 1/35 Dragon stash.
Hey I was one of those who said they would never build 1/48 armour.
GregCloseCombat
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Posted: Sunday, July 08, 2012 - 09:40 AM UTC
There's tons of those first kits out there, so there should not be shortages any time soon. Japan has a nuclear reactor back and running so maybe that will help their economy again. I can't believe Tamiya didn't do the Abrams or a few others to give the modern subjects a chance to get established. You have to go to resin for most of it I guess from Gaso.line (quarter-kit.com)
system
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Posted: Monday, July 09, 2012 - 04:18 AM UTC
The lack of modern is the main reason I didn't jump into 1/48. I like the scale, and anything that Big T makes is worth looking at. I bought both Humvees as soon as they came out then waited for Tamiya to do an M1A1 ot T-55. And waited, and waited... Then went back to 1/35.
didiumus
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Posted: Monday, July 09, 2012 - 08:33 AM UTC
Panic post without any actual data to back it up. Many of the kits in 1/35 are discontinued also, like their excellent 1/35 Hetzer. They will be back when Tamiya wants to run them again. As to 1/48 not catching on, this just doesn't pass muster. Why would Tamiya keep tooling up new kits if they don't sell? Why would Bronco and other new companies be getting into the scale if they don't sell? This isn't my opinion, the Staghound, Jagdtiger, JS-2, Matilda, Panzer Mk II, and many other kits provide evidence to the contrary.

Scott Gentry
GregCloseCombat
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Posted: Monday, July 09, 2012 - 01:50 PM UTC
and Airfix is still due to release their Modern vehicles this year?
28juni14
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Posted: Tuesday, July 24, 2012 - 03:40 PM UTC
Hello Scott! Unfortunately, we may have seen the last effort at 1/48 from Bronco. They are just one of many manufacturers who have tried and failed in the 1/48 market.
Bronco now joins Italeri, AFV Club, HobbyBoss, ICM, and SkyBow in that sad list.
Thankfully, Tamiya soldiers on with us. In fact we may expect another release from them by year's end.
firstcircle
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Posted: Wednesday, July 25, 2012 - 12:16 AM UTC

Quoted Text

and Airfix is still due to release their Modern vehicles this year?



According to their website they are still due for release in 2012... you can subscribe for a notification of when they get into stock. They do sometimes seem to trail for a long time up front however.

Try this page.
didiumus
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Posted: Monday, July 30, 2012 - 08:00 AM UTC
Cheers Emil- AFV Club bought Skybow, so they are really the same company. Are you sure Italeri and Bronco are done making 1/48 armor kits? I would love to know as I would like to pick some of their stuff up if this is true...

In the meantime, Tamiya can keep releases coming out, sounds great. Their recent releases are great. If they were to do an Abrams and Bradley for the modern guys, they would do well, and I would still love to see some US half tracks, an M-18 and M-24, and some Japanese armor.

Best regards,

Scott Gentry
28juni14
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Posted: Wednesday, August 01, 2012 - 11:58 AM UTC
It's Rumor, but from multible reliable sources. Bronco for disappointing sales of those Staghounds, and Italeri because their Staghound was bested by Bronco before it could be released. Italeri may reenter the game but not anytime soon.

Only Tamiya stands with us; another release by year's end is likely I hear.
TheModeller
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Posted: Thursday, August 02, 2012 - 09:21 AM UTC

Quoted Text

It's Rumor, but from multible reliable sources. Bronco for disappointing sales of those Staghounds...



Bronco only have themselves to blame for poor sales or the Staghounds, why on earth they didn't release the Mk.I first beggars belief, or at least all 3 at the same time.

I didn't want the Mk.III at all, no service history worth a damn, the AA left me cold too, I've got three Mk.Is and would happily buy more such subjects from them. Any of thier 1/35th British/Commonwealth kits would be popular in 1/48th!

For all the flak thrown at them from some quarters I don't think Tamiya have done badly by us 1/48th fans, at least they are still knocking out new kits.
Plasticbattle
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Posted: Thursday, August 02, 2012 - 12:54 PM UTC

Quoted Text

1. Tamiya regularly cycle tooling in and out of production.
Despite what some people might think they don't have a limitless supply of injection moulding machines to mount tooling onto in order to pinch off copies of every kit they've ever produced for all eternity.
Dies are taken off and stored, repaired, re-worked, rested to allow other kits to be produced, they'll come back into production when the suits at Tamiya deem it necessary, its the way they've always worked, its the way every injection kit manufacturer works.


Exactly my thoughts as well. This happens all the time with all companies .... removing and replacing tooling. But they dont announce it. So why have Tamiya announced this now?
If Tamiya keep producing these particular kits they´ll only flood the market and prices will reduce. This way they create extra demand on these lines now, ensure panic buying of their kits and most importantly ... keep the price up.
Does anybody honestly think if there is a demand for some of those kits on the list, they won´t dust down the tooling a run out more?
TheModeller
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Posted: Thursday, August 02, 2012 - 09:08 PM UTC
They haven't announced it, some of the kits listed on Tamiya USA started showing up as 'discontinued' and the fuss began after that!

But its the Internet so rumour and gossip spread fast!
28juni14
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Posted: Sunday, August 05, 2012 - 09:19 AM UTC
Les, I found your response to the bashing 35er most in-heartening. Quite forceful and to the point.

On a personal note, are you related to a late friend of mine, John Piper ?
TheModeller
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Posted: Monday, August 06, 2012 - 04:38 AM UTC

Quoted Text

Les, I found your response to the bashing 35er most in-heartening. Quite forceful and to the point.



Thanks, I've never had a problem in saying what I think, the remark about 1/48th being a 'distraction' was just unnecessary, if you aren't interested in 1/48th then why bother posting anything at all. Its not as if any of the big manufacturers have stopped making 1/35th kits! They get something new almost every day it seems! I used to think such comments were driven by greed, nowadays I've decided they're just ignorant of what the smaller scale has to offer and too blinkered to try it for themselves.


Quoted Text

On a personal note, are you related to a late friend of mine, John Piper ?



No sorry, not that I know of.
GastonMarty
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Posted: Sunday, August 19, 2012 - 05:22 PM UTC

Quoted Text

[ Granted, it's an earlier, and slightly different version of the vehicle, but the detail on the Tamiya kit is worlds away from what Bandai was doing back then.



I wonder when we will stop assuming an individual kit means anything? The following Bandais are still comparable in every way to the better current Tamiyas, and that reflects rather worse on Tamiya in 2006 than it does on Bandai in the 1970s:


Austin K5 truck (resin wheels available)
M30 ammo carrier (with Tamiya tracks)
M12 Gun motor carriage (with Tamiya tracks)
Daimler Mk I
Flak 18
BMW motorcycle
Kubelwagen (way better than Tamiya's when spruced up with Tamiya parts like wheels, steering wheel etc)
8 Rad Sdkfz 232 armored car (nose slope wrong and like a Puma however)
155 Long Tom (recoils arms too short)
Sdkfz 7
Many Sherman variations are still quite good (with Tamiya tracks)

Strangely enough, the Bandais will still fetch high prices, while I tried to get rid of some of my Tamiyas for $5 each and found no takers among ten modellers present... Hmmm...


Quoted Text

1. Tamiya regularly cycle tooling in and out of production.

Despite what some people might think they don't have a limitless supply of injection moulding machines to mount tooling onto in order to pinch off copies of every kit they've ever produced for all eternity.

Dies are taken off and stored, repaired, re-worked, rested to allow other kits to be produced, they'll come back into production when the suits at Tamiya deem it necessary, its the way they've always worked, its the way every injection kit manufacturer works.

2. If the market wasn't there for 1/48th armour I really doubt they'd have invested all that money in tooling up the recent JS-2 and the soon-to-be-released Matilda not to mention the Pz.II and Jagdtiger kits a little while back!

3. I think the real reason 1/48th armour isn't 'taking off' is that so many people keep saying '1/48th armour isn't taking off'



1. This point is valid, but made less certain by the presence of the die-cast metal hulls which are a possible barrier to in-house production runs.

Given the rather obvious poor sales, of which the evidence is overwhelming, the re-tooling of lower hulls in plastic seems pretty remote wishful thinking.

I would also add that many of the metal lower hulls subjects are not of the same quality standard as the later plastic hulls subjects, and so the lesson that quality pays in 1/48th, learned by Tamiya a bit late, probably means the earlier subjects are that much less urgent to repop.

2.Since early 2007 and their excellent Crusader, all we've had from them in 1:48th, as far as armored fighting vehicles go, was;

-A Marder
-A Jagdtiger
-A Pz II

So 3 in 6 years, with a 3-4 year hiatus in there...

You may want to include here the Sdkfz 251 that was a really poor and redundant release, quite embarrassingly inferior to the AFV Club...

So that was about 3 AFVs in six years...

Even if you include a few poorly executed softskins, the fact remains that 70-80% of all the CURRENT Tamiya subject chassis all came out that same banner year of 2006 six years ago: Throwing in a few kits since, significantly which happen to be mostly downscaled from preceding 1/35th releases, is hardly a sign of catching fire given the rising number of failed competitors...

3. Give me a break.


Quoted Text

I agree that 1/48 is a more convenient size to work in. However after being spoiled with the quality of the likes of Dragon, AFV, Tasca, Bronco, et al, a lot of Tamiya 1/48 falls short, especially the toy-like quality of the Bren carrier. Too much AM and PE is neccessary to 'normalize' the quality. I think that's the turn off for Tamiya 1/48. Rainbow/AFV, and Bronco have the right idea, and have quality equal to the larger scale, but too little - too late. The absence of quality styrene figures in 1/48 also discourages diorama building. It's too bad because great results have been achieved in 1/48.



Right on, on every point.


Quoted Text

Panic post without any actual data to back it up. Many of the kits in 1/35 are discontinued also, like their excellent 1/35 Hetzer. They will be back when Tamiya wants to run them again. As to 1/48 not catching on, this just doesn't pass muster. Why would Tamiya keep tooling up new kits if they don't sell? Why would Bronco and other new companies be getting into the scale if they don't sell? This isn't my opinion, the Staghound, Jagdtiger, JS-2, Matilda, Panzer Mk II, and many other kits provide evidence to the contrary.

Scott Gentry



3 armor kits in six years after a single year (2006) where 20 kits came out is pretty hard evidence...

Also a collection of failed smaller competitors, that all had much better quality in execution, speaks rather loudly of the at least semi-failed nature of the attempt to revive the scale...

If Tamiya had only bothered with moulded-on zimmerit, closed sponsoons, open handles and a few included photo-etch parts and grilles, it could have turned out much better...

Better than nothing is not a high standard to judge an endeavor: For the large effort expended the impact has been comparatively very, if not extremely, minimal... There is no such thing as an "entry" scale anymore. Only quality matters, and the failed competitors all proved they understood this better than the one player that mattered...

Gaston




retiredyank
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Posted: Sunday, August 19, 2012 - 05:50 PM UTC
From what I've seen, it looks like Tamiya will be doing 1/48 Soviet kits.
TheModeller
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Posted: Sunday, August 19, 2012 - 10:54 PM UTC

Quoted Text


1. This point is valid, but made less certain by the presence of the die-cast metal hulls which are a possible barrier to in-house production runs.

Given the rather obvious poor sales, of which the evidence is overwhelming, the re-tooling of lower hulls in plastic seems pretty remote wishful thinking.



Really Gaston? Tamiya have been making die-cast parts for thier R/C ranges for years, they are no strangers to the concept. If they can make die-cast gearbox components for R/C to required tolerances what makes you think they can't pinch-off a few box-like hull tubs?

Oh I know why you think that, you don't think Tamiya can do anything right, now I remember.


Quoted Text


I would also add that many of the metal lower hulls subjects are not of the same quality standard as the later plastic hulls subjects, and so the lesson that quality pays in 1/48th, learned by Tamiya a bit late, probably means the earlier subjects are that much less urgent to repop.



Yeah, amazing isn't it, newer kits, produced with more modern tooling and techniques, are better detailed than what they were doing 5 or so years ago... Mercy me, that must be something to do with this 'progress' thing they keep talking about.

Non-issue Gaston, the older kits were produced to older requirements when they just started making 1/48th, lo, the newer kits are more detailed... Wow!

Did you work that out yet Sherlock?


Quoted Text


So 3 in 6 years, with a 3-4 year hiatus in there...

'snipped for brevity'

So that was about 3 AFVs in six years...



Umm, dozens more subjects than we had to choose from during the 30-odd year hiatus after Bandai walked away from the scale, it'll do for me.


Quoted Text


3. Give me a break.



Self-fulfilling prophecy oh mighty Butcher-of-Quebec, prove me wrong, with some actual sales statistics or shut up.


Quoted Text


3 armor kits in six years after a single year (2006) where 20 kits came out is pretty hard evidence...

Also a collection of failed smaller competitors, that all had much better quality in execution, speaks rather loudly of the at least semi-failed nature of the attempt to revive the scale...



Tell you what, I'll give you a break if you'd give it a bloody rest with your constant, repetitive ladying and whining.


Quoted Text


If Tamiya had only bothered with moulded-on zimmerit, closed sponsoons, open handles and a few included photo-etch parts and grilles, it could have turned out much better...



Aye, and if my granny had wheels she'd be a wagon! Coulda, woulda, shoulda Gaston, it isn't like that, we work with what we have, if thats a problem for you then maybe something like philately might be a good alternative.


Quoted Text


Better than nothing is not a high standard to judge an endeavor: For the large effort expended the impact has been comparatively very, if not extremely, minimal... There is no such thing as an "entry" scale anymore. Only quality matters, and the failed competitors all proved they understood this better than the one player that mattered...



And all have failed very visibly... I reckon you've got it backwards pal, quality doesn't matter anything like as much as you think, quantity, variety and availability are whats important in the modern market, we enthusiasts (well you) can piss and whine about quality all we (you) like, the simple fact is that several-hundred part, mixed media armoured cars kits are not what sells to the masses, simple and easy to build sells to the masses.
retiredyank
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Posted: Sunday, August 19, 2012 - 11:29 PM UTC

Quoted Text


Quoted Text


1. This point is valid, but made less certain by the presence of the die-cast metal hulls which are a possible barrier to in-house production runs.

Given the rather obvious poor sales, of which the evidence is overwhelming, the re-tooling of lower hulls in plastic seems pretty remote wishful thinking.



Really Gaston? Tamiya have been making die-cast parts for thier R/C ranges for years, they are no strangers to the concept. If they can make die-cast gearbox components for R/C to required tolerances what makes you think they can't pinch-off a few box-like hull tubs?

Oh I know why you think that, you don't think Tamiya can do anything right, now I remember.


Quoted Text


I would also add that many of the metal lower hulls subjects are not of the same quality standard as the later plastic hulls subjects, and so the lesson that quality pays in 1/48th, learned by Tamiya a bit late, probably means the earlier subjects are that much less urgent to repop.



Yeah, amazing isn't it, newer kits, produced with more modern tooling and techniques, are better detailed than what they were doing 5 or so years ago... Mercy me, that must be something to do with this 'progress' thing they keep talking about.

Non-issue Gaston, the older kits were produced to older requirements when they just started making 1/48th, lo, the newer kits are more detailed... Wow!

Did you work that out yet Sherlock?


Quoted Text


So 3 in 6 years, with a 3-4 year hiatus in there...

'snipped for brevity'

So that was about 3 AFVs in six years...



Umm, dozens more subjects than we had to choose from during the 30-odd year hiatus after Bandai walked away from the scale, it'll do for me.


Quoted Text


3. Give me a break.



Self-fulfilling prophecy oh mighty Butcher-of-Quebec, prove me wrong, with some actual sales statistics or shut up.


Quoted Text


3 armor kits in six years after a single year (2006) where 20 kits came out is pretty hard evidence...

Also a collection of failed smaller competitors, that all had much better quality in execution, speaks rather loudly of the at least semi-failed nature of the attempt to revive the scale...



Tell you what, I'll give you a break if you'd give it a bloody rest with your constant, repetitive ladying and whining.


Quoted Text


If Tamiya had only bothered with moulded-on zimmerit, closed sponsoons, open handles and a few included photo-etch parts and grilles, it could have turned out much better...



Aye, and if my granny had wheels she'd be a wagon! Coulda, woulda, shoulda Gaston, it isn't like that, we work with what we have, if thats a problem for you then maybe something like philately might be a good alternative.


Quoted Text


Better than nothing is not a high standard to judge an endeavor: For the large effort expended the impact has been comparatively very, if not extremely, minimal... There is no such thing as an "entry" scale anymore. Only quality matters, and the failed competitors all proved they understood this better than the one player that mattered...



And all have failed very visibly... I reckon you've got it backwards pal, quality doesn't matter anything like as much as you think, quantity, variety and availability are whats important in the modern market, we enthusiasts (well you) can piss and whine about quality all we (you) like, the simple fact is that several-hundred part, mixed media armoured cars kits are not what sells to the masses, simple and easy to build sells to the masses.


Not meaning to step on any toes, but I actually prefer the more complicated kits. I would prefer to have the 390+, oob, mixed media kit and add another couple of hundred pe pieces to it. I agree that Tamiya makes very nice, basic kits. It is my go to for when I need a break from the 500 piece kits. I'll buy quality over simplicity any day of the week. I believe the simple fact is that 1:48 has not come into its own, because it was introduced to two factions (1:72&1:35) that were/are set in their ways. Realizing this, I can understand why Tamiya is discontinuing some of its 1:48 armor. However, I also believe that this is being blown way out of proportion. As kits get older, manufacturers discontinue production in order to market their new kits. I'm sure there will be a re-release or updated version of the kits Tamiya is discontinuing.
TheModeller
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Posted: Monday, August 20, 2012 - 12:14 AM UTC

Quoted Text

Not meaning to step on any toes, but I actually prefer the more complicated kits. I would prefer to have the 390+, oob, mixed media kit and add another couple of hundred pe pieces to it.



Don't get me wrong, so would I, but we're enthusiasts, we're not the average joe-public out on a Saturday afternoon shopping trip looking for a quick-to-build kit on his LHS shelves.

I don't know about the US but Broncos kits don't turn up on the shelves of my branch of the UKs high-street hobby chain, they don't carry them, if you want Bronco you have to hunt around or buy mail order.

You don't sell kits to the masses by hiding them away in specialist retailers and online hobby stores, they have to be on the shelves, like the milk and bacon and OJ...

Which is really not the point, one of the big 'selling' points of 1/48th armour is that its quick to build and finish, ready to move on to the next kit. 300-part+ kits aren't quick to build no matter who makes them, the more detail added, the more work required, which is the direction 1/35th is going, and more than enough 1/48th modellers already point to 700-part tank kits and say its not what they want to be building...


Quoted Text


However, I also believe that this is being blown way out of proportion. As kits get older, manufacturers discontinue production in order to market their new kits. I'm sure there will be a re-release or updated version of the kits Tamiya is discontinuing.



Agreed, tooling gets cycled around once production runs are finished to make room for new tools, somehow people seem to have got it into their heads that these few discontinued kits will never be seen again... A pretty far-fetched delusion if you ask me!
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Posted: Monday, August 20, 2012 - 12:41 AM UTC
Having built a number of 35th armor kits over the years, but as primarily a 48th scale airplane modeler, the Tamiya kits were what drew me back to armor modeling. I'm not overly concerned that they're discontinuing some kits. As has been said ad nauseum here, they frequently discontinue kits and bring them back at a later date.

I've currently got two building, the M10 (as an M36B2) and an early M4 Sherman. Both kits have metal hulls, which of course, makes interiors difficult, but honestly, I like the feel of the kit and with some modeling skills I can get around that.

What I don't understand is the complaining about how little detail is in the Tamiya kits. Isn't the shape correct? Looks like the Sherman measures out correctly to me. It sits pretty well next to my Bandai kits (which have less detail in most cases, not knocking them, but they do). So, if there isn't enough detail, ADD SOME. Isn't that what we do as modelers?

retiredyank
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Posted: Monday, August 20, 2012 - 01:10 AM UTC
Actually, it is quite common to buy kits online in the US. Local hobby shops are struggling, due to the economic situation. They are charging more due to the international crisis to stay afloat. From my experience, it is much easier to allow for shipping and buy online. You will usually save a few dollars and be able to get exactly what you want. The only kits I get from my local hobby shop are the ones my dad buys for me.
TheModeller
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Posted: Monday, August 20, 2012 - 01:38 AM UTC

Quoted Text

What I don't understand is the complaining about how little detail is in the Tamiya kits. Isn't the shape correct? Looks like the Sherman measures out correctly to me. It sits pretty well next to my Bandai kits (which have less detail in most cases, not knocking them, but they do). So, if there isn't enough detail, ADD SOME. Isn't that what we do as modelers?



A few issues have been bandied around regarding some of the kits, mostly intangible errors in some of the German armour but as I don't build Nazi rubbish it doesn't concern me!

A certain individual asserts that some of the Bandai and Hobby-boss kits are more accurate, I suppose that OK if all you want to make are a limited few 30 year-old kits or KV-1s and 2s. Assuming you can get your hands on 30 year-old Bandai kits at a price you want to pay!

But as you say, we are modellers, if something is a bit off, or the detail isn't what we want we should be able to make our own minds up about what to do about it, add some detail if we want, correct problems if we can be bothered, yes I'd much prefer Tamiya produced finely detailed little baubles laden with etch and metal barrels and individual crewmens eyeballs... But who in the hell could afford them or have the patience to build them?

Tamiya produce middle-of-the-road solid basic kits, no silly bells or whistles, ease of assembly is the mantra of Tamiya, you can buy one, make it OOB, slap on some paint and stick it on the shelf, or you can buy one, buy some etch, some resin, find some decals and use the basic kit as a canvas to go all out on a super-detailed show-stopper that takes 6 or 12 months to finish!

Frankly, I don't see anything wrong with that at all!
BigSmitty
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Posted: Monday, August 20, 2012 - 01:39 AM UTC
As a campaign vet of both 1/48 Campaigns, I'll say that I'm a model enthusiast and will buy and build what suits me, whether it's 1/35, 1/48 or 1/72 based on the subject matter. But when dealing with a 100+ piece Verlinden resin vignette that is over 15 years old, it's good to take a break with something fun and basic like a 1/48 armor kit from Tamiya or AFV Club. I have limited space to display my kits, and as such, the 1/48 kits allow a good mix of detail and space saving.

Besides, having a kit with 1000+ pieces (including all that aftermarket P/E that everyone seems to be on the "must have" list) that never gets built or becomes the inevitable "shelf queen" isn't really worth much, is it?

Scouteyes
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Posted: Monday, August 20, 2012 - 02:24 AM UTC

Quoted Text

Panic post without any actual data to back it up. Many of the kits in 1/35 are discontinued also, like their excellent 1/35 Hetzer. They will be back when Tamiya wants to run them again. As to 1/48 not catching on, this just doesn't pass muster. Why would Tamiya keep tooling up new kits if they don't sell? Why would Bronco and other new companies be getting into the scale if they don't sell? This isn't my opinion, the Staghound, Jagdtiger, JS-2, Matilda, Panzer Mk II, and many other kits provide evidence to the contrary.



Um..no.
This was the main text of my original, quite panic-free post. "Is this a sign that the line is not doing well, or just a temporary thing? In the past,Tamiya has halted production on some kits, only to bring them back years later. WWII Soviet Armor comes to mind...In the late 80s, it was hard to find, then it was everywhere."

The "hard data" about the kits being discontinued is on the Tamiya web-site. They offer no reasons, and I drew no conclusions.Nor did I panic. I started the post because I wanted input, hopefully informed input, not panic.

I'm not seeing the panic, especially in the "it was hard to find, then it was everywhere." part.I have seen this before, other posts confirm this, which mention cycling molds, prouction, etc.

This was my first reply to the thread: "Not selling well, I can understand, but one of the kits,the German Aircraft Power Supply Unit w/Luftwaffe Crew, is perfect for the primary 1/48 market, which is aircraft. I find it hard to believe that a set with so many great features wasn't selling well. There clearly is a demand for 1/48 ground subjects. I know many like me who, for years, searched out and hoarded the old Bandai kits, because what else was out there? Hopefully, it's just a temporary thing, and the kits will be re-released at a later date, if enough people scream about them. Tamiya has done this before, and I don't think they would have gone through the very expensive process of making these kits, without having done proper market research."

Still not seeing the panic.

Even if they did stop all production for 30 years like Bandai, there would probably be 1000s of these kits floating around out there in the resale market,and there would still be aftermarket companies for them. Then Tamiya would probably make some more. Tamiya still makes that incredibly awful 1/35 German Infantry set from 1969. Who buys it, especially after they released the 1/35 German Infantry French Campaign set, which is basically an update and an apology for that awful early offering? After all these posts, I think the most reasonable answer is that they simply cycled those kits out of production until a later date. No panic here, I just wanted to know what everyone was thinking. For those panickers, the sky is not falling, and you can take your helmets off. Thanks all