Welcome to fentens papermodels!
Product type | Papermodel |
---|---|
Manufacturer | HMV - Hamburger Modellbaubogen Verlag |
Designer | Peter Brandt |
Scale | 1/250 |
Sheet format | DIN A4 |
Sheets | 34 |
Parts | 2097 (including optional parts: 3184) |
Skill level | very difficult |
Size of the model | (LxWxH): 720x160x270 mm |
Instructions | English, Pictures, German |
This model certainly is a milestone in history of paper modelling. Already in the first edition S.M.S. Baden convinced with a level of detail that was so far almost unknown for a capital ship of the Imperial German Navy. Now the third edition is on the market and a lot of little improvements have been added by the author. And the model builder has now the choice to build either a waterline or a full hull model, too.
More than 1,000 parts are so called alternative parts. These parts can be built but it is not necessary. As the original our model has the mounts for torpedo nets. These were on the ship when she was commissioned but removed during her first visit of a shipyard after commissioning. S.M.S. Baden never had torpedo nets on board.
Product type | Papermodel |
---|---|
Manufacturer | HMV - Hamburger Modellbaubogen Verlag |
Designer | Peter Brandt |
Scale | 1/250 |
Sheet format | DIN A4 |
Sheets | 34 |
Parts | 2097 (including optional parts: 3184) |
Skill level | very difficult |
Size of the model | (LxWxH): 720x160x270 mm |
Instructions | English, Pictures, German |
This model certainly is a milestone in history of paper modelling. Already in the first edition S.M.S. Baden convinced with a level of detail that was so far almost unknown for a capital ship of the Imperial German Navy. Now the third edition is on the market and a lot of little improvements have been added by the author. And the model builder has now the choice to build either a waterline or a full hull model, too.
More than 1,000 parts are so called alternative parts. These parts can be built but it is not necessary. As the original our model has the mounts for torpedo nets. These were on the ship when she was commissioned but removed during her first visit of a shipyard after commissioning. S.M.S. Baden never had torpedo nets on board.