OK So my plans for the MK1 Male Tank are on the site... so who's going to be the first to correct the Airfix model? or something bigger!?! :)
Sorry about the lack of plans for the Tail wheel and the Female Sponsons... may need someone to get the measurement of the sponsons for me at some point.
I will get my excuse in first, in that I am having a breather and going back to doing a bit of sculpting. At the moment it's a Fairy clutching a broken heart... I know far to soppy! I can't always be blood n steel! :)
hi Ive just joined teh site and am looking for some information on mk1 tanks as i am starting to build a scale radio controlled model .
i was looking at 1/16 th scale and am looking to see where i can get a plan layout of the tank from and detailed pictures so i can be as accurate as possible
Hi davem, welcome aboard. If you click on the link above, in the original post, you'll find the thread in which MK1 Nut posted her excellent Mk1 plans, with instructions on how to scale them to the size you want. As you may have gathered from the posts above, the tail wheel assembly is still pending, but I'm sure you'll be impressed by Helen's plans.
Well I'm sure I've heard of a Gaza tank called Otazel, and I know virtually zilch about Gaza tanks. Actually I wouldn't mind knowing where the nutty (pun intended) names came from? What on earth is Ole-Luk-Oie (if that's how it's spelled)? Bizarre name for a tank, at first thought.
-- Edited by TinCanTadpole on Friday 30th of March 2012 11:28:44 PM
It's just occurred to me, since I was wondering about the strange names of Gaza tanks, that Otazel probably means "hot as hell". Would seem appropriate, given the climate as well as the onboard temperatures.
Update: an old thread confirms that there was a tank named Otazel, and has a photo believed to be said tank disabled on a beach.
"Nutty" is a play on the name of the commander of the EEF tank detachment, Maj. Norman Nutt. "Ole-Luk-Oie" was the pen-name of Ernest Swinton, and derives from a Scandinavian folk tale.
Thanks Rhomboid. Do you know if my hunch is correct about Otazel, or where Kia-Ora came from? That one always makes me think of the juice drink that was popular when I was a kid.
I'm not certain about the origin of "Otazel", but your suggestion seems to be probable. The origin of "Kia-Ora" came up in a thread on the Great War Forum a few years ago. I seem to recall that it is a Maori phrase which has become a drinking toast in NZ.
The photo below, labelled "OTAZEL" also turned up on the GWF. I've wondered if this might have been the tanks crew, photographed during training in the UK. One of the cap badges looks like it may be a MGC badge to my eye, but this was disputed by badge experts on the Forum.
"Kia Ora" is a greeting in Maori equivalent to "Hi".
Another possibility is KiaOra sauce - I think they may still have KiaOra tomato sauce in New Zealand but I have a recollection that there were hot sauces similar to Worchester sauce marketed as well under that brand. So KiaOra may be "hot stuff" to those that knew the sauce.
Regards,
Charlie
-- Edited by CharlieC on Sunday 1st of April 2012 01:44:27 PM
-- Edited by CharlieC on Sunday 1st of April 2012 01:44:57 PM
The suggestion of otazel meaning hot as hell certain has credence bearing in mind other Tank names - 'Gofasta' (Go faster) 'Golikell' (Go like 'ell/hell)
The suggestion of otazel meaning hot as hell certain has credence bearing in mind other Tank names - 'Gofasta' (Go faster) 'Golikell' (Go like 'ell/hell)
Yes, I had those Whippets, Golikell at least, in mind.
Kia Ora hot sauce? Possible, definitely; I suppose it depends exactly where the stuff was sold (if outside NZ) and where the crew members came from - or had lived.
I've never heard of Otazell before, I thought it was the name of a late war armoured car. Is it a Palestine Mk 1?
It occurs that perhaps there might be a connection between the two - an idea that would need some scrutiny to evaluate.
I don't yet know enough about the Gaza tank exploits to know how many crews survived, but since some tank crews, at least in France, were transferred to ACs late in the war, is it possible that at least some of the crew of tank Otazel (one 'l') became AC crewmen around 1918, naming their car Otazell (two 'l's)?
That's great Lincoln T, thanks. I must look at that "on the beach" thread again to see if the hole in otazel's track frame corresponds with what looks like a mine explosion which blew the right track off on a beach somewhere.
The 2nd Lt Carr referred to died on 19 April '17 - that was the date of the second battle of Gaza, wasn't it?
Maj. Nutt, in an appendix to the E Co. war diary for Nov. 1917, made the following comment regarding a damaged tank, presumably Otazel:
"The 8th which had to be abandoned behind SHEIKH HASSAN, had an explosive charge fired under one track by the enemy. The forward armoured plates are badly shattered and distorted. The crank case is smashed and the crank shaft bent & the vibration damper broken. The Tank is being dismantled and we will attempt to tow her home, where in default of armoured plates she might be repaired sufficiently to be utilized as a supply or instruction Tank."
Lt. Carr died of burns sustained when HMLS Nutty was hit by a shell and caught fire at Tank Redoubt during the the 2nd Battle of Gaza. He was captured when the redoubt was retaken, and died shortly thereafter in a Turkish military hospital.