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Cheguei do evento, foi show, o nível dos modelos foi formidável, o pessoal mostrou como se faz bem feito ! 

Teve o sorteio de um kit Eduard Profipack para quem doou leite em pó para caridade. Eu não levei o prêmio 

Teve a premiação temática, que não participei, e a premiação ordinária, onde entrei com dois kits. Não levei nenhuma medalhinha 

Teve o sorteio de brindes e eu ganhei um kit que estava querendo muito !!! Ano que vem ele estará sobre uma das mesas, junto com um aviãozinho também 

Valeu APRJ, abraços a todos os amigos e ano que vem estamos de volta 

Last edited by Rogerio77
Carlos Chagas posted:

Você ganhou aquele caminhão canadense que me mostrou, Roger?

Eu queria mesmo o de gasolina, mas chegaram primeiro. Aí fiquei na dúvida entre a versão de carga dele e o Otter, acabei escolhendo o segundo 

 

 Não pude ir esse ano, mas mandei um kit para prestigiar o evento, que por sinal estava de alto nível, como sempre, o motivo foi o nascimento do meu netinho que antecipou sua chegada em uma semana Mas está tudo bem, graças a Deus.

Assef posted:
jbboscon posted:

A temática será Países Ibéricos (Portugal e Espanha).

João Bosco 

Opa! Valeu! restringe minha área(WWII), então vou esperar 2018!

Ah qual é coxa branca ? Traz uns Panzer 1, BT-5, T-26 e BA-6 da Civil Espanhola e vem prestigiar 

 

Sergio Lisboa posted:

No meu caso vou começar a procurar no estoque as figuras dos conquistadores espanhóis e navegantes portugueses, vamos ver o que vai sair...

É isso aí, o pessoal do naval pode começar a montar aquelas Santa Maria, Pinta e Nina que estão guardadas a tempos no armário. 

 

Rodrigo Calcaterra posted:
Marcelo Costa posted:

Ou seja, seriam quais quer tipos de premiações, inclusive secundárias, 1°, 2° ou 3° lugares?

 

correto

Então houve uma falha da organização do evento, pois esse modelo do Hood em 1/350 foi premiado em 2013 quando a temática foi Inglaterra.

Marcelo Costa posted:
Rodrigo Calcaterra posted:
Marcelo Costa posted:

Ou seja, seriam quais quer tipos de premiações, inclusive secundárias, 1°, 2° ou 3° lugares?

 

correto

Então houve uma falha da organização do evento, pois esse modelo do Hood em 1/350 foi premiado em 2013 quando a temática foi Inglaterra.

Este foi o modelo premiado em 2013

Este o deste ano

não me parece que tenha havido alguma falha.

Augusto posted:
Marcelo Costa posted:
Rodrigo Calcaterra posted:
Marcelo Costa posted:

Ou seja, seriam quais quer tipos de premiações, inclusive secundárias, 1°, 2° ou 3° lugares?

 

correto

Então houve uma falha da organização do evento, pois esse modelo do Hood em 1/350 foi premiado em 2013 quando a temática foi Inglaterra.

Este foi o modelo premiado em 2013

Este o deste ano

não me parece que tenha havido alguma falha.

Augusto,

Mais uma vez um equivoco! Em 2013 haviam 2 modelos de Hood 1/350 expostos o 1° desta postagem foi montagem minha, o 2° é de outro modelista cujo não há necessidade de citar o nome, ou seja o 2° modelo foi exposto em 2013 e 2016 com mérito de premiações. Na ocasião o Prince Of Wales em 2° plano também foi exposto em 2013. Estou questionando o fato, porque como mencionado no regulamento e dito aqui, modelos premiados anteriormente não podem participar na modalidade concurso e serem premiados. " Vai que a onda pega".

Last edited by Marcelo Costa

Marcelo, o premio temático de 2016 foi para um  modelo não premiado na temática de 2013, onde esta o equivoco? A premiação temática é uma categoria diferente da premiação ordinária, assim receber premio em uma não impede de se participar em outros anos na outra.

Se houve também premiação ordinária para este modelo já premiado na categoria ordinária em anos anteriores, então houve sim um erro do pessoal que fez o julgamento.

 

 

PORTUGUESE TANKS & AFVs

About 3,000 armoured vehicles 1935-2016.

Models

Origins

The Portuguese Army is one of the oldest in Europe, dating back from the 12th Century. The Navy would remain strongly independent until the 20th century, some common exercises being held under political coordination. Colonial Forces were also independent of the territorial Army. Various ministries were merged eventually in the 1930s, and during ww2 the need to defend the Forças Coloniais necessitated to place all available forces under the single Ministério da Guerra. On the world diplomatic scene, the oldest and most useful alliance was born from the Anglo-Portuguese Treaty of 1373.

Portugal in WW2

Under the authoritarian regime of Salazar, March 17, 1939 saw the conclusion of a non-agression pact with Franco’s Spain whereas in April, Portugal refused to join the anti-komintern pact (Germany, Italy, Spain). Later on in 1940-42, both the Axis and allies had views on the the Madeira and particularly the Azores to better control the Atlantic. Three operations were planned by the Germans and one allied (Operation Alacrity).

On the colonial side, Portuguese Timor was provisionally seized and occupied by Australian and Dutch troops, fearing for a Japanese Invasion, which indeed took place in February 19, 1942 with 20,000 men. The capital, Dili was first occupied, then the rest of the colony which was only returned to Portugal with the surrender in September 1945.

Starting in july 1942, Portuguese JU-52 cargo trimotors did performed missions for the Axis. At the same time, Salazar was still favourable to help the British government and did as a good will gesture helped evacuate and relocate 2,500 evacuees from Gibraltar to Madeira. In 1942 Lajes Field on the Azores was used as an allied air base, flying Gloster Gladiator fighters for extended patrols, while reconnaissance missions and meteorological flights were also performed. A 1939 Military agreement with UK was not enforced until 1943 when the Portuguese Armed Forces were seriously beefed-up by the British Government. At the end of 1943 additional bases were leased to the RAF, troops and equipments were deployed at the occasion of Operation Alactrity in order to close the Mid-Atlantic gap. It should be noticed also that Portugal and in particular Lisbon was a refuge for several thousands to one million Jews and in general populations fleeing the Occupation throughout Europe.

So what were the armoured fighting vehicles in service with the Portuguese Army in ww2? Apparently Carden-Loyd tankettes, and Vickers 6-ton tanks in the 1930s, and from late 1943, Dingo scout cars and Humber ACs, and with Lend-lease, M3 and M5 half-tracks, M4 Shermans, M3 Stuarts, M8 Greyhounds, even Canadian Grizzly tanks (militaryfactory.com).

The Cold War

In 1950, the National Defense Minister and the Armed Forces Chief of the General Staff are both created (CEMGFA). The modern Forças Armadas were therefore created at that time. Under the Ministro da Defesa Nacional was created a Secretariado-Geral da Defesa Nacional or SGDN alongside the CEMGFA, and the SGDN was renamed Armed Forces General Staff in 1974. Still independent the Marinha and Exército air forces are merged in 1952 (Força Aérea). And in In 1953, the National Republican Guard became the Military Police. Two other PMs were created for the air force and navy.


Portuguese M5 Stuart in Angola, 1967.

The Colonial Wars (1961-1974)

The Guerra do Ultramar (overseas wars) would take a major part of the coldwar Portuguese Army occupation and triggered modernization and organizational changes. These took 13 years of protracted asymetrical warfare in the Portuguese African provinces. As part of a more generic east-west checkerboard play, decisive ideological struggle often saw NATO-aligned Portuguese forces dealing with communist-backed movements. The latter were amalgamated under the CONCP umbrella, but the Portuguese had some local help from pro US groups.

But the first blow was given by.. Indian troops, in fact reclaiming parts of their territory still held by Portugal. Faced by overwhelmingly superior forces, the Goa, Daman, Diu and the Angidiva island garrisons quickly surrendered. After that, attention focused back to Africa through the Angola (1961-1974), Portuguese Guinea (1963-1974) and Mozambique (1964-1974) wars.

The bulk of these forces were organized into light infantry companies of caçadores better tailored for the task of counter-insurgency and deployed in grids (quadrícula). More rarely they were backed by larger regimental-level battlegroups (agrupamentos) for major operations. These included artillery, genie, and armoured components among others. Special Forces were also raised, called Special Caçadores companies with selected personal, later sometimes called “commandos”. It should be noted that one of these units, organically well-equipped and fully autonomous gained fame in Angola, called the “dragons”.

Despite the odds of having well-backed opponents by the Warsaw pact and to manage three fronts one a distant theater from the metropolis was quite an achievement, until the war was put to an end after the Carnation Revolution military coup of 25 April 1974 in Lisbon. Subsequently all former African Portuguese colonies became independent.


Panhard EBR-75 of the Dragoes de Angola

AFVs operating in the cold war

One of the earliest light tank in service were surplus M24 Chaffee. US-supplied tank later were of the M47 Patton, M48 Patton and eventually M60 type (still in service for the latter), Daimler Ferret, Alvis Saladin, Panhard EBR and AMLs and the generic APC Mercedes-Benz Unimog. In the 1960s other vehicles were procured like the M151 Mutt jeep, CGC M706 -which influenced the only national AC at that time, the Bravia Chaimite- and miscellaneous vehicles derived from the M113 (and the M113 too), like the M163 SPAAG, M730 Chapparal SPAAML, M901 ITV, but also the M88 Hercules ARV, and M109 SPG.


Portuguese M47 Patton. Apparently Portugal was the first NATO country, after the United States, to receive this tank.

2004 reforms

Until the 1990s, conscription was the rule. Their numbers were gradually reduced, until it was formally abolished in 2004. Nowadays, the Portuguese Army is fairly small but very proficient and professional with 5667 career personnel and 10 444 volunteers as of 2014. It was completely refurbished with less models, but more modern and quite capable AFVs, including some built locally like the Pandur. See the right column for a detailed review of actual Portuguese AFVs.

Portuguese-Pandur-II_Trident_Juncture_15
Pandur II (2007). Locally-produced under licence 8×8 APC. (188 in service)

The Portuguese Ground Forces in operations

Mostly peace-keeping operations like Resolute Support Mission in Afghanistan, UNAMA in Afghanistan, KFOR in Kosovo, MINUSMA in Mali, Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve in Iraq, EUTM-Somalia in Uganda, EUMAM RCA in the Central African Republic. By force, the Portuguese Army is also put to contribution through the the Community of Portuguese Language Countries, for training ground forces of various countries (CTM missions) like Angola, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, São Tomé and Príncipe, and Timor-Leste.

Links/sources

The Guerra Ultramar
The Portuguese Army (wikipedia)

Portuguese modern Army

Portuguese-Leopard2A6_Exercise_TRIDENT_JUNCTURE

Leopard 2A6

37 are in service – 28 in 2 combat squadrons, 3 in the Command and Services Squadron

Portuguese_M60A3-TTS

M60A3 TTS

96 “Carro de combate 51 ton 105 mm m/92” of which 14 are in 1st combat squadron and the others in reserve.

Pandur-II_Exercise_TRIDENT_JUNCTURE

Pandur II

188 in service made under license in Portugal by Fabrequipa. Called m/07.

Cadillac_Gage_V-150_do_Exercito_portugues

CGC V-150

Commando M706, called m/89. Only 15 remains in service.

HMMVW

(Portuguese Air Force Hummer and Condor) 37 Auto TG 1,25 ton 3 4×4 mF/00 HMMWV in service.

A Portuguese Chaimite V200 Armored Personnel Carrier [APC) outfitted with a 50 caliber machine gun engages a large rectangular target some two kilometers down range during Iberian Resolve, a combined live-fire exercise conducted on Western Bosnia's Glamoc live-fire range. Working in concert with the Portuguese ground forces, a pair of U.S. Army OH-58D Kiowa Warrior light attack helicopters provide reconnaissance and light fire capability, June 2, 2002. The objective of Iberian Resolve is to integrate Multinational Division OPRES Ground forces from the Portuguese 2nd Armored Division and OPRES Air Forces from the U.S. Army's 1-25 Aviation into a combined live fire exercise. (U.S. Air Force photo by Master Sgt. Scott Wagers) (Released)

Bravia Chaimite

Chaimite V200 APC, 80 in service (out of 800+)as of today.

Portuguese-M113_Exercise_TRIDENT_JUNCTURE

M113

M113 APC, still 227 in service.

Portuguese-M901-TOW

M901

M901 Tank Destroyer (4 in service)

Augusto posted:

 Gostei muito desse carro.

 

Portuguese-Pandur-II_Trident_Juncture_15
Pandur II (2007). Locally-produced under licence 8×8 APC. (188 in service)

Vc tem certeza de que esse M60 é português?

Portuguese_M60A3-TTS

M60A3 TTS

96 “Carro de combate 51 ton 105 mm m/92” of which 14 are in 1st combat squadron and the others in reserve.

 


 

Eu perguntei porque todas as fotos que encontrei dos M60 de Portugal, possuem um numeral nas laterais da torre além das marcações de táticas e de esquadrão e os lançadores de fumigeno são no padrão normal do M60 e não esse alinhado como é nos Leopard.

Assef posted:
Faisca posted:

Tem o VBL da  Tiger Models.

Usado pelos portugueses no Afeganistão.

Qual?

Lembre-se que Portugal e Espanha são os prêmios especiais, o concurso é como outro qualquer e você pode inscrever o que quiser, o que não é como outro qualquer é o nosso sorteio, e é claro nossa simpatia. 

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