Esercito Italiano – Artillery – Anti-Aircraft Artillery
Esercito Italiano
Anti-Aircraft Artillery
Carro Armato Contraereo M.15-42
Anti-Aircraft Tank
1/200
1/100
1/72
1/56
£2.50
£4.50
£8.00
£14.00
WWII-IT-SPAAG01
The Carro Armato Contraereo M.15-42 was an Italian self-propelled anti-aircraft vehicle, developed from the M.15/42 medium tank. It featured a fully rotating turret armed with four 20mm Breda M1935 cannons. Intended to provide mobile air defence, it saw limited production and limited success.
Breda 20-65 Modello 1935
Light Anti-Aircraft Gun - Deployed
1/200
1/100
1/72
1/56
£2.20
£3.50
£6.50
£11.00
WWII-IT-AA01
The Breda 20/65 was a compact autocannon marrying 20×138B punch with elegant mechanics: recoil-operated, clip-fed, and maddeningly precise. Light enough to manhandle, lethal enough to scythe, it exemplified pragmatic engineering with a Latin flourish under harsh campaign conditions.
Cannone Antiaereo da 90-53 Mod.41C
Heavy Anti-Aircraft Gun - Level Barrel
1/200
1/100
1/72
1/56
£2.50
£4.50
£8.00
£14.00
WWII-IT-AA02
Italy’s 90-53 Mod.41C was a long-barrelled, high-velocity heavyweight, firing 90mm shells with unnerving precision. Designed for hunting bombers, it combined robust construction, excellent ballistics, and stability that quietly hinted it could menace armour too when doctrine allowed.
Cannone Antiaereo da 90-53 Mod.41C
Heavy Anti-Aircraft Gun - Raised Barrel
1/200
1/100
1/72
1/56
£2.50
£4.50
£8.00
£14.00
WWII-IT-AA03
In practice the 90-53 blurred categories, serving as anti-aircraft sentinel and improvised tank killer, its muzzle velocity making Allied armour deeply uncomfortable. Heavy, deliberate, and unapologetically manual, it rewarded disciplined crews with reach, accuracy, and authority.