Reviewed by
Cookie Sewell
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Prior to the Second World War every country building armor soon figured out
that light vehicles have to, by default, carry only light guns if they will be
carried high and have to rotate in all directions to provide firepower, Heavier
weapons would upset the center of gravity, throw off the balance of the weapon,
or worst of all, flip the vehicle over if fired. As a result, few vehicles were
"overgunned" by design. (Overgunning causes the vehicle to literally leap
backwards when fired, causing all sorts of mayhem to the crew and innards of the
vehicle; the last bad case of it was the US M551 Sheridan, which would literally
pull its first three road wheel sets off the ground if fired with an HE
projectile.)
The solution was to mount a big gun low in the vehicle and eliminate the turret,
placing the gun in either an open barbette mounting or a casemate. The Germans
chose both routes during the war, but as the war progressed decided on the
latter for their antitank guns as it provided better protection for the crew.
The Sturmgeschuetz III and IV series were used frequently as antitank weapons,
primarily as the later models carried the very effective PaK 40 L/48 antitank
gun and could deal with almost all Allied tanks. But the StuG weapons were not
heavily armored, and the solution was a dedicated antitank gun with heavier (and
ballistically shaped) armor protection on the more flexible Panzer IV chassis.
The result was the Jadgpanzer IV series of antitank guns, and this version, the
Jagdpanzer IV O-serie, was the first pre-production series of the vehicle. While
the concept was successful and the vehicle was ordered into production (and some
804 being completed) only a handful of the O-series were produced before the
design was changed. The main difference was that the O-serie had a rounded
casemate section formed by bending, which was both more expensive and not as
ballistically resistant. The result was a change to a steeply angled three-part
section with a simpler design.
DML has now produced a kit of the A-O model as part of their "Imperial" series,
which has been reserved for short-run kits of low-production vehicles over the
years. This kit is derived from their older Jagdpanzer IV/70 kits, but has two
brand-new sprues and one modified sprue as well as " mix and match" from the DML
Panzer III and IV kits. The model uses all of DML's latest "Slide Molding"
technique on these sprues, as well as borrow a trick from Academy and include
casting numbers molded onto the sprue runners for diehard detail fans. (These
have to be removed with a scalpel or single-edged razor blade, as a point of
warning.) The kit also includes two MG 42 machine guns with positionable loading
gates so that the breeches may be shown in the open position.
In general it follows the normal DML parts breakdown with 240 single-link track
shoes and four sprues of road wheels and bogie assemblies. The other parts
provide some options (e.g styrene or turned aluminum barrel) or a lot better
detailing (I seem to recall when German jacks consisted of one skinny part in a
kit; this one has a jack of six parts and looks like it could lift a bogie set.)
While most modelers are learning to live with single-link track (by default) the
brass "Schurzen" armor shields on this kit will be either a love'em or hate'em
arrangement. Each shield requires the attachment of four mounting straps (brass)
and a set of bolt heads (brass) per side. Out of 82 parts the directions show
you using 80 (I suppose they provide two extra bolt heads for the
heavy-breathers among us...breathe wrong and these suckers will fly off into
oblivion before you can mount them.)
Painting schemes and markings are included for two vehicles: an operational
vehicle with the Panzer Lehr Division in the wan three-color scheme used in late
1944 (light tan, light green and light brown) and one in overall Panzerbraun at
the training school with a title slug to that effect (Schulungsfahrzeug).
Overall this is an interesting vehicle due to the unique shape of its casemate,
and one to complete some collections.
Highly Recommended.
Thanks to Freddie Leung from Dragon for the review sample
Review Copyright © 2005 by Cookie
Sewell
Page Created 03 April, 2005
Last updated 02 April, 2005
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