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Kit
Review: Dragon Models Limited 1/35 Scale ¡¥39-¡¥45 Series Kit No. 6220;
2 cm FlaK 38 Auf Pz.Kpfw. I Ausf. A; , 584 parts (534 parts in grey
styrene, 31 etched brass, 16 clear styrene, 3 preformed etched brass);
estimated price US$34-38
Advantages: beautifully done new chassis of Pzkw. I Ausf. A, 2 cm Flak
38 a very nice kit in its own right
Disadvantages: I cannot find any record of more than one or two prototypes
of such a vehicle being built; box art sheer speculation
Rating: Recommended
Recommendation: for German Armor Fans
"Sometimes you eat the bear, sometimes the bear eats you"
is an old hunting maxim, and it works in modeling. Most of the time
kits are produced of well-known and documented vehicles which may or
may not be close to accurate, and both reviewers and modelers will usually
note where they fail. But from time to time vehicle kits are produced
of "one-offs" or very limited production vehicles which left
no trace of their existence anywhere, and as such are very hard to document
and therefore assess for accuracy. This unfortunately is just such a
kit.
Most of the common sources which document the developmental and combat
histories fo the diminutive Panzerkampfwagen I series tanks focused
on the command models, the Panzerjaeger version with the Czech 4.7 cm
gun, or the close support variant with the sIG 33 15 cm howitzer. But
so far I can not find any "hard" information on this vehicle
as to whether it actually "saw metal" as the Russians say,
or how many, or if the kit is accurate or not. Since 818 Ausf. As were
built, and only about 60 other conversions were firmly registered, it
is possible, but it is odd that so little information is available on
this vehicle. (Even the one German reference book I have ¡V translated
and sold in the US by Schiffer ¡V has only a few stock shots of As and
the entire lyrics to the "Panzerlied!")
Taking that as a starting point, the reference materials for this kit
were supplied by Ed Kusiak. What is provided inside the box is a totally
new kit of a Pzkw. I Ausf. A chassis, which only shares the 192 track
links and the clear styrene sprues with the earlier "B" kits.
The rest of the kit's sprues are totally new, and provide for a new
suspension (A), new fenders and details (B), an interior (G), engine
deck (D),lower hull (E), and casemate base (H).
This variant appears to be based on one of the training variants with
a cowling (provided as a pre-bent etched brass component), seats and
a base for mounting the complete 2 cm Flak 38 gun (Kit 6288) and then
using the Sd.Anh. 51 carrier base as an ammunition trailer, which was
done with other conversions such as that on the Demag 1 ton halftrack.
Seats and other fittings for the gun crew are provided as well.
The kit is beautifully engineered with "slide molding" used
on many of the parts and etched bras provided where it will be the most
useful, such as the "catch" baskets for expended 2 cm rounds,
muffler shields, and the aforementioned thin cowling for the driver.
(I would be highly surprised now if DML does not release a "combat"
tank version of the Pzkw. I Ausf. A with turret, or even a gun tractor
or the sIG 33 variants.) The correct four road wheels with large idler
are provided, as well as many very nice touches on the kit.
Four schemes are provided for finishing: one unidentified unit, Eastern
Front 1942; and three vehicles from Flak Abt. 614 on the Eastern Front
in 1941-42, all in different schemes (one white, one grey and one grey
with black patches.
There have been a number of comments lately about DML's box art, but
here it borders on the fantasy. One of these guns is shown rolling down
a road next to a shot-down Il-2 being followed by what appears to be
the command vehicle for a V-2 unit on the Sd.Kfz. 7 8-ton halftrack
chassis!
Overall, while this is a beautifully engineered kit it leaves something
to wonder about the relatively speculative approach to these vehicles,
and it is hoped Mr. Kusiak had really good information for this beastie
as it surfaces nowhere else. Still, it is a shame such energies could
not have been put to better use by DML on what would have been something
more widely popular.
Thanks to Freddie Leung for the review sample.
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Cookie Sewell
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