So these pictures were taken as a photo op to showcase this gun?
Camouflage man.... camouflage gun.... not much to see there.
I’m guessing that’s why they went with Grey Poupon..... contrast.
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Not really a modeler, I have a Pinzgauer. Mine is ex Swiss military, and they used a very specific RAL color. Completely different from the RAL Olive that Austrian mil Pinz's used. Which is in itself completely different from the RAL olive that the Germans used on unimogs and kubbles.
And of course everyone wants to use the fairly available FS 595 Olives, and some of them are close but none of them match.
So I have paint chips and an assortment of spray cans in the fs595 olives that I've done test sprays with to figure out what to do on mine.
I also fool with military radios, PRC 104, PRC 77, sem35, VIC-1 intercom, etc. Which in one case I had to repaint accurately.
For what it's worth I settled on the USMC Olive for my Pinzgauer, though I've not painted it. The fs 595 paints are available here much less expensively than getting the right RAL olive paint mixed or purchased.
I'm not looking for military accuracy my truck is highly modified, and I like the USMC green.
BTW, RAL8000 was a standard euro vehicle option. (Unimogs) At that time Austria tended towards very Brown looking Olive, and Germany was a little bit in that direction though their camo patterns had more of a forest green element.
The yellow that cerakote calls ral8000 (I think it's really dunkelgelb 7028 "double gold") was a very common European construction vehicle color a while back. Tractors, roadwork, etc.
In fact's not that far from what used to be some of the standard construction vehicle colors in the US. Which is why I smirk a bit when I see military guns painted in what to me looks like construction high visibility yellow.
It's not unheard of to have mustard as a color and a camo pattern. But it's a bit odd to have a yellow to mustard solid.
WW2 Germany did use dunkelgelb as a base coat during one period for Africa vehicles, But the field units were expected to cover one-third of the vehicle with a different color, typically one of their grays or browns.
They changed camo patterns and colors a couple dozen times through the war. Most of it was attempts at standardization offset by difficulty in getting materials and also the very wide range of terrains that they were unwisely fighting in.
At one point they just shipped vehicles in primer and the field units were expected to camo it per local needs. Then they got clever and realized that they had three different colors of red to Brown primer and started mixing them or using pattern spraying.
So anyone who says "well the Germans did paint their vehicles solid yellow during world war 2" is right, sort of. They would equally be right saying they painted them solid gray, or solid Brown as they did that as well during different periods. Grey more than anything... If I had to pick one color that most represents world war II German vehicles it would be their Gray.
Dunkelgelb actually means, "dark yellow". And was the standard German tank camouflage base color from February 1943. So some iconic German tanks were never painted Dunkelgrau.
Bovington Tank Museum's Tiger 131 is painted in RAL8000 (Grünbraun) and RAL7008 (Graugrün) - the former being the color H&K uses on most of their long guns and the latter being the color H&K uses as the frame color for their "FDE" VP9.
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As Slater mentioned it is RAL8000. Aka baby poop yellow/brown.
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Some nuances... The german flag is described as red/black/gold. Yet the "gold" is really a yellow (ral 1021) that is pretty close to the colors I mentioned some of the cerokote "ral 8000" guns looked like.
So its apparently pretty common in german common usage to refer to darker yellows as gold. They do have a color for metallic gold... "Gold".
Post german classes in school, most of my german comes from Austrian and Swiss guys talking mil and civvy vehicles. Thats where I've heard it as double gold.
As to german armor colors, it was way more complicated than that. From memory the solid dunkelgelb was not a very long period. Also, also much strident objection about many german tanks in museums being mispainted... its because there were so many variations in both tank revisions, mfg camo, and unit camo, etc. You think our clone guys are whacko???
There is much conjecture as to why dunkelgelb... Most speculation is that it was holdover from pre-war... Most tractors and similar were dunkelgelb. And for africa, maybe not a horrendous base coat choice.
Most common folks would describe real RAL 8000 as a brown. Not the mustardy yellow some are floating. Here's an online example, just remember not all monitors are accurate: https://www.myperfectcolor.com/paint...wn-paint<br />
See a real RAL 8000 vehicle live and you would call it brown. (Bunch of unimogs and overlanders in RAL 8000)
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