Skip to product information
1/35 Tamiya German Tank Destroyer Elefant 35325 - MPM Hobbies
1/35 Tamiya German Tank Destroyer Elefant 35325 - MPM Hobbies
1/35 Tamiya German Tank Destroyer Elefant 35325 - MPM Hobbies
1/35 Tamiya German Tank Destroyer Elefant 35325 - MPM Hobbies
1/35 Tamiya German Tank Destroyer Elefant 35325 - MPM Hobbies
1/35 Tamiya German Tank Destroyer Elefant 35325 - MPM Hobbies
1/35 Tamiya German Tank Destroyer Elefant 35325 - MPM Hobbies

1/35 Tamiya German Tank Destroyer Elefant 35325

$69.36 $89.00
Free CONUS Economy Shipping on All Orders $100.00 or More
*This item is In-House available from our physical inventory or is an item we plan to keep stocked. The amount available for sale is shown below as "Availability". Our goal is to ship within 2 working days for orders consisting only of In-House items. Please read our "Shipping Policy" for details on mixed orders i.e. In-House items and those we must order from the distributor.*
SKU: TAM/35325IH
Availability: 1 in stock
Try Lay-Buy at checkout. Minimum of 20% down and maximum 6 months "Lay Away" plan. Your product will be shipped after balance is paid. Pre-orders will ship after balance is paid in full and product becomes available. Select "PUT IT ON LAY-BUY' at checkout and spread out those payments. Terms and restrictions apply.
In 1941, Porsche created a prototype tank which incorporated radical features including a gasoline-electric hybrid powertrain. In 1943, the tank was transformed into the Ferdinand tank destroyer armed with an 8.8cm PaK 43 L/71 gun housed in a large box-shaped superstructure and 90 units were produced. During the Battle of Kursk, they demonstrated superior anti-armor capability to knock out T-34 and KV-1 tanks at long range, but their slow speed and unreliability resulted in many being immobilized by mechanical troubles. In 1944, 50 surviving Ferdinands were given modifications, including the addition of a machine gun, a commander's cupola, and were re-designated with the name Elefant. The Elefant saw combat on the Italian and Russian fronts, and some fought until the very end of WWII during the Battle of Berlin.