This kit was priced at $52. It is very nice and has many, many parts. It is almost museum-level quality, and has very nice molding. However, this model, with the accompanying decals are inaccurate. All three decal choices are for M4s with the older M3 (center-mounted top rollers and no skids). Plus, all had the three piece transmission nose, not the solid piece. The spotlight would have been inaccurate for my particular model, but the instructions don’t really cover its installation, but still depict it in the drawings. The suspension is gimmicky and overly-delicate. Each complete track consists of 237 total parts, and they are difficult to handle and keep intact. Nice metal gun barrel with rifling. The light guards are offered in plastic, photoetched or 3D printed. Photoetched were my best option. The 3D printed ones are difficult to cut out. There was constant fit issues, and strange stubs placed in places that would make parts improperly fit and mate up properly. There were parts call outs that didn’t match the parts, and several instances of parts that were used, but no instructions about actual installation (searchlight, parallel bar guard on the top of turret, the .50 gun mount, wrong manlet, wrong engine deck). I guess an upside is that I am becoming an amateur M4 Sherman expert. This is not for a beginner, and I have to admit that I put this model to the side several times – out of frustration. Too complicated and too expensive – especially with all the mistakes and errors in historical accuracy and overall accuracy. Sure enough, I went to the Internet and bolt counters are having a fieldday with this kit. I think it is a wonderful start, but I will not indulge until Borders has worked out all the kinks.