i think the track was so elaborate because they wanted it to be able to actually work since the rollers were functional too, would be interesting to see them in action but i understand wanting to take the short way out, that looked like a lot of tedious work. Great video like always :)
Don't know if you see comments from older videos... but . I'm getting ready to build my Maus so I enjoy seeing your build. I Learn a lot from your experience. I've watched this video many times. Thanks.
If you are interested in doing a 1/35 Maos and want to skip the nightmare assembly I would recommend the Cyberhobby kit. It is very straight forward and looks exactly like the Takom kit.
What happened to building tanks being easy, back in the day....almost have the same amount of parts like the real things nowadays! 😉😄 Another excellent video Andy! 👍👌👏
Saw the Maus in Kubinka last year, it was standing next to a huge Mörser Karl Gerät. At that time the old museum was emptied out, the tanks were removed to a new museum a couple kilometers away (Patriot Park). If you have the posibility to go there you should do so, it's an amazing place with a huge collection of tanks.
gasdorfic muncher the hammer and sickle was placed on by the Germans to confuse the Americans and British so that they thought it was Russian, evidently it didn’t work.
davie maclean the utter rarity of the maus tracks with all of the remaining ones in a museum from russia, I’d say he’ll have to spend quite a shiny penny. Unless he steals one like a minnesotan does to any business
I'm seriously considering building this kit. So thanks for the guide. I've been building models for 20 years and I needed a little advice on how to build the beast.
I know you built your tank without the full run of tracks but just wanted to throw this out there. It is possible to feed the tracks through whith the hull complete. It just takes a little jiggling but it will feed through over the return rollers. Also for removing the track links. The easiest way i found to remove them without them breaking. Snip out all the center conection points first. Then snip the ends loose. This relieved the stress enough to avoid breaking them. Keep glue handy as some could still break. Hopee this helps anyone out there watching this.
Great work Andy. This will be one of my favorite builds since I was able to drop by the store to see you in the process of building the hull and tracks.
I had exactly the same problem with the track links with the Dragon Maus i made, had to be so careful cutting it off the sprue, i broke a lot but thankfully had loads to spare, made into a really nice model in the end even for an older model kit!
Got this kit a week ago, cutting track parts was the nightmare. Seriously, the join points on those fragile connectors should be reworked. I broke 6 of them, Thankfully there are 10 spare parts for each type of track pieces (you need 55x3 ans x2 that for second side and there are 3 panels with 40 pieces each, so you can take some practice before start clipping the things out). Everything is GLORIOUS! THe metal plate, the instructions, the quality. Even making tracks took me aroung 2,5 hours for both sides.
Holy cow! I cannot believe all the parts just for the track, let alone for the wheel assembly. Bless your patience on that build. My wife and I were watching this vid last night, and we just couldn't believe the parts for those section. Is that the norm for 1:35 scale models...tons of parts...just because? I do 1:48 stuff and they have a lot of parts, but nowhere near what a 1:35 kit has. Crazy...looking forward to your next vid.
I know this is an old comment but this is definitely not the norm. This is pretty extreme. I would buy tamiya models they have pretty simple tracks and bogies but with the same level of detail
No one likes any tracks on any model I had a Russian tank with the tracks and it wasn't just a one connected track. So everytime you put it on it breaks off
Thanks, great video. Suggestion: When you need to loosen something glued in place like a side panel, glacis plate or similar things, just run some of the Tamiya cement over the seam and it will soften up enough that you can pull it apart without much problem.
So I’m thinking of taking on a Maus. So as usual I check TH-cam videos. Although I seen almost all of yours I had to check others. Ha! The other builder’s videos are great. BUT, nothing compares to Andy’s. I think I’ll skip the Takom and go for Trumpeter. Thanks. As usual you are the best!!
This has to be one of your best videos. I don't usually watch more than the assembly BUT you had my attention for the entire thing !!! I'd have to say that after seeing this video, THIS KIT pretty well succeeds at completely taking the fun out of model building. I definitely agree with you about to much that you will never see again once it's closed up. I understand the track issue and I would have thought that it would be length and link with the complex assembly for the ends and just rap around like you did just by turning your drive sprocket. Once again a great video !
I chuckled at the fact that the store's empty aside from Andy (check the surveillance video). I imagine he had the kids gawking at the boxes hide under the shelves while filming the intro.
The instructions are clearer than Andy suggests. They do tell you how many track links to make (55 per side), they do show you to put pin E1 in before adding wheel W8/E2, which partly blocks access, as Andy found out. The instructions also show that the suspension arm assemblies and the track are added before the side skirts are glued into place. This is not an easy assembly, it is best done in one go, and after the parts are all painted, except for where the glue will go. This is not quite as hard as it sounds, as the assembly T11/T4/T5/T6 is a press fit into the sponson, and can be sprayed along with the sponson in one go. The suspension arm assemblies can then be completed and painted, glued in place, the painted/weathered track added and the pre-painted side skirts glued on in the careful manner demonstrated by Andy. The instructions (which are not flawed!) also clearly show that one side should be have the side skirt added, then the top plate (D1), rear plate (S6) and front plate (U1) should be added. This eliminates the problem of the lugs on parts S6 and U1 referred to by Andy. So, complete one side (wheels, tracks, side skirt), then add top, front, back, then complete the other side wheels, tracks, and, finally side skirt, and you will have no problems. Andy's suggestion that all the little auxiliary parts on the top plate "are going together fine" is not quite correct, he fails to mention that parts U2 and U3 have locating pins on the bottom, but there are no corresponding locating holes in the top plate, so the pins will have to be removed, and care taken to put U2 and U3 in their correct places by reference to drawings or photos. It should also be noted that, on part S6 (the hull back plate), there are two rectangular weld seams, which were only on the prototype, and were where extra weight was welded to compensate for the lighter "fake turret". They will need to be filled if you are building the V2 version as shown in the video.
Hi Andy love your channel and all your videos. This one inspired me to get the Takom Maus. I do not want to criticise your work as you are a far superior and experienced builder and painter than I .I did notice though the instructions do let you know each side takes 55 of each of the 3 parts of track, leaving you 10 spare ones if you break any.Also I think the instructions say to put on one side panel then the top panels before you put the other side panel on... At least that's the way I interpreted them, it wasn't very clear and easy to miss the order of steps.Again love all your work, and inspired me to build models again, and I now use all your techniques on my builds.
You are right I noticed that after I looked over the instructions again, The first time I looked at them I thought that was a color call out and not the amount needed. My dumb mistake. Thanks for watching
All I can say is WOW. To imagine they seriously considered such a beast. I so love your camo technique I'm inspired to try myself. Could you do the M103 by Dragon next?
Im doing the Vespid 1/72 version and must say its an awesome kit..pe and alumimium guns..icluded.saying that the guns supplied plastic ones are as good as metal ones as they are one piece and hollow ends..also notched underside for the brace that fits them....tracks also good one piece for bottoms top...and smaller parts for the curved areas,one piece and two pice so not so fiddly...recommend vespid one if you want a 1/72...its detail as good as this Takom one in 1/35,suprised Takom haven given the kit clear parts for the visors,periscopes
Interesting I just built the Vespid 1/72 Maur ver 2. It appears to mirror this kit, but there are only 9 parts to each boggie. As you point out no need to do top track run. Came with photo etch and metal barrals as well. It looks like Vespid just scaled down the Takom 1/35 kit!
instructions show all track pieces x55. that's exactly what it takes to go around the suspension. there's tons of extra pieces if you break them cutting out.
I'm currently building this kit, so tedious and time consuming putting the bogies together and you wont see most of it! I haven't started the tracks yet, I'm really looking forward to them..........
I built the Imperial Dragon Maus. The construction was so much simpler, even though some details were off. I think the Dragon one is better personally because the tracks were a breeze compared to this (they were length and link)
Hi Andy. First of all, thanks for another great video. But wow, you are a patient man! That is one kit that has very little to show for all the work that goes into it. A totally over-engineered take on the suspension and tracks that has me wondering what Takom were thinking when they designed this kit.
Hi Andy, You have out done yourself in the construction of the Maus, the suspension would have given me a 'mental attack', well done and what's next? Les
The reality of the Maus is that, it looked on paper, but it was a nightmare to construct for the production plant (which is why only 2 prototypes were built) and a logistical nightmare for the crew to operate the heaviest and the slowest tank (8 mph) in the second world war. Other that that...Takom should've used metal screws to hold each suspension arms together than those tiny plastic pins you were having difficulty putting into place and a metal barrel. And btw, I looked into the Fruilmodel site, they have the metal tracks in stock, but then I noticed "440 links" that's way more than the metal track links on the four 1/16 RC Tiger Is I have.
I just bought this same model, Dragon Feb. 18, 1983 per the box art, that was in an estate sale (bought by the local Phil’s Hobby Shop). I’ll have to see about getting the photo etched grill parts. I couldn’t tell from your model, or color pictures off the internet, if the road wheels were solid steel or had rubber treads. Maybe you could reply. Great build, thanks.
On a reality side of things, whenever I see the things that were built in this era, I think about the men that built them. Tom Brokaw called them the Greatest Generation, and I think he was right. All of these things were built by hand, without the benefit of CNC machinery, and I'm amazed at the skills of the people that built them, regardless of whether they were on the Axis or the Allied side.
Andy, could you please make your intro bumper music the same volume as your introductory narration. You nearly blow out my ear drums with the volume of your bumper music!
YIKES! Intro scared the crap out of me. I have a hearing issue which makes it difficult to understand the spoken word, I forgot to put subtitles on, so just raised the volume and then the into kicked in.
Way to go Andy!!! As for me I have the dragon, with fruil tracks, but I would do it all in sub assembly's, but I completely understand your approach. I salute you for your work nicely finished , great video. I am insane for punishment I will get a takom and di the whole track runs and modify the return rollers , so it will work. But again i am not criticizing you, your work and videos are fun!!! Keep it up. Now i want to go out and buy one!!! Lol Cheers Andy thank you !!!! Well done!!!!
i think the track was so elaborate because they wanted it to be able to actually work since the rollers were functional too, would be interesting to see them in action but i understand wanting to take the short way out, that looked like a lot of tedious work.
Great video like always :)
Jesus Christ, I'm watching this in 01:30 AM everyone is asleep and the intro just decimated my heart.
Don't know if you see comments from older videos... but . I'm getting ready to build my Maus so I enjoy seeing your build. I Learn a lot from your experience. I've watched this video many times. Thanks.
If you are interested in doing a 1/35 Maos and want to skip the nightmare assembly I would recommend the Cyberhobby kit. It is very straight forward and looks exactly like the Takom kit.
Thanks for the info, I did not want to die building the tracks
But there are some inaccuracies in the cyberhobby/dragon kit
*Maus
I love these videos, they go into so much more depth and detail than I could dream of, mainly because Im so inexperienced! Great build!
What happened to building tanks being easy, back in the day....almost have the same amount of parts like the real things nowadays! 😉😄
Another excellent video Andy! 👍👌👏
And we die of track buildinggg
I know right? I have a model Patton which is molded like one from the '60s, and it is so much easier to build
Saw the Maus in Kubinka last year, it was standing next to a huge Mörser Karl Gerät. At that time the old museum was emptied out, the tanks were removed to a new museum a couple kilometers away (Patriot Park).
If you have the posibility to go there you should do so, it's an amazing place with a huge collection of tanks.
I would love to see it some day
have you done the Russian captured camo verson with the hammer and sickle
gasdorfic muncher the hammer and sickle was placed on by the Germans to confuse the Americans and British so that they thought it was Russian, evidently it didn’t work.
The time you actually WANT one-piece tracks...
for this build Yes
Do you have any plans to get hold of a real section of Maus track for your up coming work out videos? ;-)
Ha....
davie maclean the utter rarity of the maus tracks with all of the remaining ones in a museum from russia, I’d say he’ll have to spend quite a shiny penny. Unless he steals one like a minnesotan does to any business
I’ve built several of these because I didn’t want to disassemble the tank to rebuild the tank
I build this kit when i was kid,the kit absolutely perfect and the tracks are lovely,it’s easy for me to build.
Turned out great! What a massive kit.
Damn you takom. Those tracks look like a nightmare. Why.
Doing these things as a hobby myself, I can agree that this is true.
The tracks - all four of them - on Dragon’s T28 are far worse. Rubber Band tracks with separate guide horns.
@@allencruce78 do you mean the T 95 Superheavy tank or the soviet T 28 tank
@@Eule153 the T28/T95 one
The intro is still too loud
That's the best part :^)
Andy is conducting a psy op on his viewers, he'll crank it up to where it'll become a jumpscare in the future
It almost burst my eardrums though
fixer10091994 you know you can change your volume right ?
Lol yep :D
Since I've watched probably all of Andy's videos, I know for sure, where the intro starts, so I just press "Mute" on my keyboard right on time :)
I'm seriously considering building this kit. So thanks for the guide. I've been building models for 20 years and I needed a little advice on how to build the beast.
Great job Andy, I loved the build through on the suspension and the final paint scheme. I agree with you that it looks great finished and weathered.
I know you built your tank without the full run of tracks but just wanted to throw this out there. It is possible to feed the tracks through whith the hull complete. It just takes a little jiggling but it will feed through over the return rollers. Also for removing the track links. The easiest way i found to remove them without them breaking. Snip out all the center conection points first. Then snip the ends loose. This relieved the stress enough to avoid breaking them. Keep glue handy as some could still break. Hopee this helps anyone out there watching this.
Great work Andy. This will be one of my favorite builds since I was able to drop by the store to see you in the process of building the hull and tracks.
I had exactly the same problem with the track links with the Dragon Maus i made, had to be so careful cutting it off the sprue, i broke a lot but thankfully had loads to spare, made into a really nice model in the end even for an older model kit!
This is one tank I love to build. The tank that they wanted to build with multiple turrets and was HUGE, wondered if that was ever made as a kit?
Got this kit a week ago, cutting track parts was the nightmare. Seriously, the join points on those fragile connectors should be reworked. I broke 6 of them, Thankfully there are 10 spare parts for each type of track pieces (you need 55x3 ans x2 that for second side and there are 3 panels with 40 pieces each, so you can take some practice before start clipping the things out). Everything is GLORIOUS! THe metal plate, the instructions, the quality. Even making tracks took me aroung 2,5 hours for both sides.
A True model if you finish it and not crying you did a good job!
Woke up my whole house with that blast of music.
264 parts for the bogies alone! Eeek.
Holy cow! I cannot believe all the parts just for the track, let alone for the wheel assembly. Bless your patience on that build. My wife and I were watching this vid last night, and we just couldn't believe the parts for those section. Is that the norm for 1:35 scale models...tons of parts...just because? I do 1:48 stuff and they have a lot of parts, but nowhere near what a 1:35 kit has. Crazy...looking forward to your next vid.
I know this is an old comment but this is definitely not the norm. This is pretty extreme. I would buy tamiya models they have pretty simple tracks and bogies but with the same level of detail
I just started on this model yesterday! thank you for putting the video up!
another great video of this ' what if ' series of German tanks . very interesting and full of great tips . excellent work Andy 👍
When i saw the tracks:
*_no thanks_*
Btw i bought one of the maus models yesterday and my dad had to do the tracks for me
If ur starting then it’s fine my dad did most of my Stuka junker model
No one likes any tracks on any model I had a Russian tank with the tracks and it wasn't just a one connected track. So everytime you put it on it breaks off
@@alekzandarhalligan315 i love tracks if they fit together
Thanks, great video. Suggestion: When you need to loosen something glued in place like a side panel, glacis plate or similar things, just run some of the Tamiya cement over the seam and it will soften up enough that you can pull it apart without much problem.
I love the E 100 with the Maus turret. Ist wunderbarr.
You have the patience of a saint!
So I’m thinking of taking on a Maus. So as usual I check TH-cam videos. Although I seen almost all of yours I had to check others. Ha! The other builder’s videos are great. BUT, nothing compares to Andy’s. I think I’ll skip the Takom and go for Trumpeter. Thanks. As usual you are the best!!
Wow, this thing is huge. Those tracks looked like a nightmare.
This has to be one of your best videos. I don't usually watch more than the assembly BUT you had my attention for the entire thing !!! I'd have to say that after seeing this video, THIS KIT pretty well succeeds at completely taking the fun out of model building. I definitely agree with you about to much that you will never see again once it's closed up. I understand the track issue and I would have thought that it would be length and link with the complex assembly for the ends and just rap around like you did just by turning your drive sprocket. Once again a great video !
I chuckled at the fact that the store's empty aside from Andy (check the surveillance video). I imagine he had the kids gawking at the boxes hide under the shelves while filming the intro.
Nice work Andy. Interesting kit!
The instructions are clearer than Andy suggests. They do tell you how many track links to make (55 per side), they do show you to put pin E1 in before adding wheel W8/E2, which partly blocks access, as Andy found out. The instructions also show that the suspension arm assemblies and the track are added before the side skirts are glued into place. This is not an easy assembly, it is best done in one go, and after the parts are all painted, except for where the glue will go. This is not quite as hard as it sounds, as the assembly T11/T4/T5/T6 is a press fit into the sponson, and can be sprayed along with the sponson in one go. The suspension arm assemblies can then be completed and painted, glued in place, the painted/weathered track added and the pre-painted side skirts glued on in the careful manner demonstrated by Andy. The instructions (which are not flawed!) also clearly show that one side should be have the side skirt added, then the top plate (D1), rear plate (S6) and front plate (U1) should be added. This eliminates the problem of the lugs on parts S6 and U1 referred to by Andy. So, complete one side (wheels, tracks, side skirt), then add top, front, back, then complete the other side wheels, tracks, and, finally side skirt, and you will have no problems. Andy's suggestion that all the little auxiliary parts on the top plate "are going together fine" is not quite correct, he fails to mention that parts U2 and U3 have locating pins on the bottom, but there are no corresponding locating holes in the top plate, so the pins will have to be removed, and care taken to put U2 and U3 in their correct places by reference to drawings or photos. It should also be noted that, on part S6 (the hull back plate), there are two rectangular weld seams, which were only on the prototype, and were where extra weight was welded to compensate for the lighter "fake turret". They will need to be filled if you are building the V2 version as shown in the video.
Ron Anstis the weld seams on the back were for flamethrowers, not weights
Gonna enjoy this one! Love your channel, I think the videos have the highest quality of all armor model building content out there!
Just found your channel. Awesome work!
Makes me want to start building all the kits I continue to buy but never time to build.
Hi Andy love your channel and all your videos. This one inspired me to get the Takom Maus. I do not want to criticise your work as you are a far superior and experienced builder and painter than I .I did notice though the instructions do let you know each side takes 55 of each of the 3 parts of track, leaving you 10 spare ones if you break any.Also I think the instructions say to put on one side panel then the top panels before you put the other side panel on... At least that's the way I interpreted them, it wasn't very clear and easy to miss the order of steps.Again love all your work, and inspired me to build models again, and I now use all your techniques on my builds.
You are right I noticed that after I looked over the instructions again, The first time I looked at them I thought that was a color call out and not the amount needed. My dumb mistake. Thanks for watching
Great video Andy.
God damn that intro music was so much louder than initial speech I nearly blew my eardrums out
All I can say is WOW. To imagine they seriously considered such a beast. I so love your camo technique I'm inspired to try myself. Could you do the M103 by Dragon next?
Im doing the Vespid 1/72 version and must say its an awesome kit..pe and alumimium guns..icluded.saying that the guns supplied plastic ones are as good as metal ones as they are one piece and hollow ends..also notched underside for the brace that fits them....tracks also good one piece for bottoms top...and smaller parts for the curved areas,one piece and two pice so not so fiddly...recommend vespid one if you want a 1/72...its detail as good as this Takom one in 1/35,suprised Takom haven given the kit clear parts for the visors,periscopes
that F-35 in the background at the beginning caught my eye, i also see there is a meng 1/32 F-35.... might just have to find some reviews soon
Tous les montages sont très bien réalisés....Félicitations ...
the german word Maus is pronounced exacly like the english word, not an elongated "U", so just Maus, not mauuus
does it matter? everyone have different pronunciation when its not their native language.
I hear people pronounce it mous, maus, most, mouuus, etc. So it really does not matter.
Who cares
@@badboybootz8 Apparently you, if you took the time to complain about him making a correction
...moose??
Nice Tank Maus 👍
Super Cool.
That thing is a BEAST!
Hi, Andy nice build and painting as always
The treads look like the hardest part
Great vid andy I have just bought this model kit going to start building it soon so this was a great help
another excellent video Andy
World's most beloved throwaway tank
Very cool build
Interesting I just built the Vespid 1/72 Maur ver 2. It appears to mirror this kit, but there are only 9 parts to each boggie. As you point out no need to do top track run. Came with photo etch and metal barrals as well. It looks like Vespid just scaled down the Takom 1/35 kit!
I hope you had fun with all of those tracks 😉
Very nice kit
trats a big and bery nice model! keep up the great work!!!
Building the trumpeter's Maus is even crazier with 1500+ pieces.
Brother you are a fantastic teacher :)
With this video you helped me a lot. Thank you
instructions show all track pieces x55. that's exactly what it takes to go around the suspension. there's tons of extra pieces if you break them cutting out.
great build
massive guy :) surely not the best one to start with as a beginner. thx for sharing
I'm currently building this kit, so tedious and time consuming putting the bogies together and you wont see most of it! I haven't started the tracks yet, I'm really looking forward to them..........
I built the Imperial Dragon Maus. The construction was so much simpler, even though some details were off. I think the Dragon one is better personally because the tracks were a breeze compared to this (they were length and link)
Hi Andy. First of all, thanks for another great video. But wow, you are a patient man! That is one kit that has very little to show for all the work that goes into it. A totally over-engineered take on the suspension and tracks that has me wondering what Takom were thinking when they designed this kit.
Excelent build!
19:09 Nice
Great video sir.
Awesome stuff!
Hi Andy,
You have out done yourself in the construction of the Maus, the suspension would have given me a 'mental attack', well done and what's next?
Les
Would be great to see building of Takom's T29/T30/T34
Thanks you!You even don't imagine how difficult find model maus 1/35 in Russia
Your construction hints on the MAUS are very useful, thanks Andy. It looks like you need three hands or plenty of patience. tracks???
Damn that nice detail though !
Wow MAUS is very nice german tank!!
Well done Andy 👍🇳🇿
The reality of the Maus is that, it looked on paper, but it was a nightmare to construct for the production plant (which is why only 2 prototypes were built) and a logistical nightmare for the crew to operate the heaviest and the slowest tank (8 mph) in the second world war.
Other that that...Takom should've used metal screws to hold each suspension arms together than those tiny plastic pins you were having difficulty putting into place and a metal barrel.
And btw, I looked into the Fruilmodel site, they have the metal tracks in stock, but then I noticed "440 links" that's way more than the metal track links on the four 1/16 RC Tiger Is I have.
Классная работа! NICE!!!В ближайшем будущем планирую покупку этой модели))Good job!))
This kit will simply scare me away
With tracks like those, no wonder the Germans only built 2. If they'd built a 3rd that would have been the trackless version! Terrific build as usual.
Yeah never mind the 200mm on armour on the tank they would have ran out of tracks first
I just bought this same model, Dragon Feb. 18, 1983 per the box art, that was in an estate sale (bought by the local Phil’s Hobby Shop). I’ll have to see about getting the photo etched grill parts. I couldn’t tell from your model, or color pictures off the internet, if the road wheels were solid steel or had rubber treads. Maybe you could reply. Great build, thanks.
ANDY! THE VOL ON YOUR INTRO !!!!
I have neighbours Please!
The instructions are correct, they say to glue JUST ONE of the mantlets in, if you do so the Front fits
Nice great job!!
just got my kit. very impressive to physically see an hold it. im not looking forward to those tracks lol
Nice build, nice paintjob! how always :) I love your videos :D
On a reality side of things, whenever I see the things that were built in this era, I think about the men that built them. Tom Brokaw called them the Greatest Generation, and I think he was right. All of these things were built by hand, without the benefit of CNC machinery, and I'm amazed at the skills of the people that built them, regardless of whether they were on the Axis or the Allied side.
7: 30, put the pin in FIRST, THEN install the track rollers. More room.
Andy, could you please make your intro bumper music the same volume as your introductory narration. You nearly blow out my ear drums with the volume of your bumper music!
I’d recommend getting a small Filipino boy to do the tracks and bogies
It gonna be pain in the ass to build this
Honestly forgot I was subscribed to this channel.
Theres the iron maiden. There's water boarding.
And then theres setting up the Takom Maus' track links.
Haramasch Abrasir oh god it was fucking awful took me about 5 hours to do that shit
Good model
FINALLY the Maus tank!!
When I first saw this kit I wanted one. Not so much now.
i find these links are the best
YIKES! Intro scared the crap out of me. I have a hearing issue which makes it difficult to understand the spoken word, I forgot to put subtitles on, so just raised the volume and then the into kicked in.
Way to go Andy!!!
As for me I have the dragon, with fruil tracks, but I would do it all in sub assembly's, but I completely understand your approach. I salute you for your work nicely finished , great video.
I am insane for punishment I will get a takom and di the whole track runs and modify the return rollers , so it will work.
But again i am not criticizing you, your work and videos are fun!!!
Keep it up.
Now i want to go out and buy one!!!
Lol
Cheers Andy thank you !!!!
Well done!!!!