Has anyone taken a close look at this model? From a modeling friend I heard that it is inaccurate. He wrote that it looks like the 3D model from Turbosquid (a site selling primarily models for computer games) and that what most of the details are wrong."
...and I've heard the very same criticism. Appears to be a straight down-load from the game site. Like the scaling errors of the 21cm Mörser, Takom has missed again.
Just Google for Takom Big Bertha and you will find all the images you need.
I cannot comment on dimensional accuracy, I haven't seen the kit yet, but what I can say is that the barrel is completely wrong. This barrel seems to be the barrel of the 2 pre-production guns (the 2 guns with the wooden spoked wheels that were available when the war broke out), whereas the carriage is of the production models (guns 3-12).
Hi Arie - long time no hear! All I've seen so far are a box lid illustration (painted) and what appear to me to be views of a 3D CGI model, not a physical model. Now, it may be that that is the CGI model they're using to make the masters. Or not. But that is why I'm waiting to see photos of what is indisputably a physical model.
I take your point about the barrel, but to be fair to them it may be that they've based their kit on the large scale model at the Paris army museum, which has a prototype style gun barrel on a later style carriage. If they have based their kit on that model I'd be very happy because it's probably the nearest thing we'll ever get to a real gun as (so I'm given to understand) the model was made by Krupp.
My suspicions are based on Takom's 21cm offering, which clearly came from here: /www.turbosquid.com/ (my view only; 3D people often recognize one another's work.)
The Takom model repeats all the 3D artist's mistakes, and there are some irreparable in that 21cm model.
You will note this game site model maker also lists the 42cm Big Bertha (dead ringer for the Takom offering), and another weapon or two. I'm predicting Takom will also release the Skoda 30,5cm M11 down the road; incorporating the errors clearly visible on the 3D drawing.
Again, these are my personal suspicions. I've seen the rave reviews for the 21cm model; not a single criticism voiced. And that's fine for the modeler who's not stressed by detail inaccuracy or dimensional errors. I'll say no more.
There are several 3D models of the Big Bertha on Turbosquid, most are very crude and bear little resemblance to Takom's images. The most sophisticated is the one by Alex Kontz:
If you mean this one, then I must disagree. The more I look at the images Takom has released, the more I think they've used the Paris Army Museum model as their source. On the attached image I've displayed the Takom picture, two images from Kontz's Turbosquid page and a photo of the Paris model.
'A' is the distance between the front two frames of the lower recoil cylinders (or recuperators). That distance is relatively long on the Kontz model but is short on both the Takom and Paris models (and in photos of the real guns).
'B' is the end caps of all four cylinders - on the Kontz model they are hemispherical domes, on the Takom and Paris models they are shallow cones.
The Kontz model shows a late type barrel (with an extra reinforcing ring), the Takom and Paris models show the early type barrel.
Examining those images from Takom a bit more, I would say it's very likely the Takom carriage is based on Alex Kontz's TurboSquid model, in that the platform at the front and the (incorrect) vertical angle of the stabilising legs at the front are dead ringers for Kontz's model. However, the angle of the legs should be easily correctable, and overall Kontz's carriage always looked pretty accurate anyway, certainly in terms of overall proportions. The Takom cradle and barrel depart considerably from Kontz, as detailed in my previous post, and to my eyes at least appear to be based on the Paris Museum model, so on the whole I am very happy with the images Takom have released so far. If the actual kit reflects them closely, it should be a damned fine one. Remember, there are no surviving guns, no surviving plans, and the Paris Museum model is the nearest we have to an actual Bertha. If Takom have had access to it and measured it up and used it as a basis, as I suspect they have, I see little to complain about.