Gneisenau is a Scharnhorst-class second ship; ship types are divided into battle cruisers. The initial design can dress up as a 380-mm main-gun battleship that jumped to meet future wars but did not implement the Second World War. Gneisenau was built by the German shipyard in Kiel, Germany, on December 8, 1936, and began service on May 21, 1938.
In 1938, Shane Hawes premium trials found insufficient bow freeboard; in winter 1938, it was converted into the dock Atlantic bow; it took several months. After World War II, in the North Sea Shane Hawes Premium sank two ships of the Royal Navy aircraft carrier Glorious and two destroyers. Several days later, the later, the Gneisenau cover was damaged Scharnhorst drove back the way Germany was. Then the two ships went into dock repairs.
In 1941, the two ships together broke into Super Shane Hawes Atlantic, maritime and destroy operations. In the two-month operation, Co-sunk 22 merchant fleets with a total tonnage of 11,5000 tons, greatly damaging the Allied shipping.
From February 26 to February 27, 1942, the British Royal Air Force within the port of Kiel Gneisenau was repaired by air strikes. Air strikes led to the bow of the ammunition depot blowing up, and the whole ship Gneisenau's head was destroyed because of the explosion. Period until 1945, the number has been repaired, Gneisenau shelved in the shipyard, and not put into active duty forces. On March 23, 1945, the ship was scuttled as blocked; post-war Poland salvaged it as scrap metal shredding.
- Scale: 1/200
- Item Type: Plastic Model Warship Kit
- Model Brief:
- Length: 1175mm
- Beam: 150mm
- Total Parts: 1420+
- Metal Parts: anchor chain, shaft
- Photo Etched Parts: 8 pcs
- Total Sprues: 24 sprues, hull, superstructure and decks
- Released Date: 2021-11
- More Features:
- One-piece hull made from two-directional slide molds
- Deck pattern finely rendered.
- Accurately detailed gun
- 6 pieces of photo etched frets for handrails, ladders, radar parts etc.
- Includes 2 Ar196 waterplane
- One-piece hull made from two-directional slide molds