7.5 cm PaK 40
Late Type w/Fallschirmjaeger
Anzio 1944
Dragon/DML, 1/35
S
u m m a r y
|
Stock Number,
Media/Contents, Description and Price |
Dragon Models Limited 1/35 Scale Kit
No. 6250; 7.5 cm PaK 40 Late Type w/Fallschirmjaeger Anzio 1944; 305
parts (291 in grey stryene, 5 etched brass, 4 in black vinyl, 4 turned
brass, 1 turned aluminum); price estimated at $21-24 |
Scale: |
1/35 |
Review Type: |
First Look |
Advantages: |
State-of-the-art kit of this popular
AT gun, many build options |
Disadvantages: |
Gun shields not in brass (see text);
no crew weapons included; comments about length of trails (see text) |
Recommendation: |
Highly Recommended for all late war WWII
German fans |
Reviewed by
Cookie Sewell
HyperScale is proudly sponsored by Squadron.com
Dragon has now released a "late model" version of their fine PaK 40 kit, the
main difference being the recommendation to use different parts on the sprues
and a completely new crew set of six Fallschirmjaeger figures (two sprues of
three identical figures). It retains all of the carded extras from the first kit
(optional etched brass detail parts, four turned brass rounds, a turned aluminum
or plastic barrel, and four vinyl tires, either new or "chewed up.") The kit
provides for options in regard to three different styles of wheels and three
different styles of muzzle brakes (each formed of a casting and a face, with the
casting being hollow molded.) Also, the modeler has optional positions for
shields, trails, suspension arms, breech block, and gun servicing panels. The
gun is fixed, however, so traverse must be set during assembly.
The gun shield is interesting, because unlike recent AFV Club efforts the shield
is composed of two injection molded styrene sections with a brass gun mask (MA1)
between them. The edges are "feathered" to a knife edge, so the modeler winds up
with a shield that looks think but is actually quite sturdy and easy to attach.
The kit provides six figures in three poses that are new and unique to this kit,
so if nothing else figure fans will want it for that reason. They represent
figures with long sleeves and trousers under their well-known paratroop smock
and come with plentiful accessories, but again no small arms are provided.
There are a number of additional items, such as four turned brass AP rounds,
four styrene HE rounds, two ammo crates and a number of shipping tubes and three
expended cases. The decals are primarily for these parts and provide the
necessary stencils in both black and white. Since guns rarely bear any markings
other than stray "serviced on" decals, there are none included. Finishing
options for a total of six weapons are provided, including one that is
Panzerbraun with "polka-dot" white snow camouflage that will test the painter's
eye.
Right after this kit and its competitor from AFV Club came out, there was a
slight flap on many websites that the DML kit's trails were something around
12mm too long. This caused a number of snarls, and then other posts came out
that indicated that they were correct and that there had been a change in the
design, but DML's plans and measurements were correct. I do not have precise
enough (only an old set by Hilary Doyle) but they seem accurate with about 1.5mm
to me based on simple measurements (e.g. about 52mm or 2 inches in scale). (I do
note that the gates on the molds have been filled in and new gates added, so the
originals may have been off and the new ones are corrected.)
Overall this is a beauty of a kit and should prove popular with anyone having an
idea for a diorama or put a 3-ton halftrack to good use.
Highly Recommended.
Thanks to Freddie Leung of DML for the review sample.
Review Copyright © 2005 by Cookie
Sewell
Page Created 03 April, 2005
Last updated 02 April, 2005
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