| Date of Review |
August 2006 |
| Manufacturer |
DML |
| Subject |
German 1st Cavalry Division Russia 1941 - Gen2 |
| Scale |
1/35 |
| Kit Number |
6216 |
| Primary Media |
294 parts (211 in grey styrene, 83 in etched brass) |
| Pros |
Gen2 "magic" worked on both horses and riders, very nicely rendered animals |
| Cons |
All horse furniture is etched brass and may prove difficult for intermediate level modelers or below to install |
| Skill Level |
Intermediate |
| MSRP (USD) |
$14.98 |
Over 40 years ago a small French company, who began making premiums
for insertion into cans of ground coffee, branched out into Napoleonic
figures in the odd scale of 1/30. They prospered and to this day
Historex of France is considered one of the premiere companies
in the world making styrene kits of Napoleonic era figures and
related wagons and artillery.
When it came to making horses, Historex created one of the most
enduring systems to create a model horse going. They molded the
horse itself in seven parts: two sides, head and neck, ears, fetlock,
mane and tail; six initial horses were created, based on twelve
body halves and six head/hair sprues. By creating a number of different
combinations of parts, an infinite variety of horse positions could
be modeled. Later, more were added to create a wider variety, including
giving the horse modeler a option on the gender of the animal.
Others tried, such as Airfix in 1/32 and ESCI, Zvezda and DML
in 1/35 but most other horses were rather inflexible and static.
Now DML has used their "Gen2" system on horses in this
new kit, and the results are the first ones to approach Historex.
DML provides two horses and riders in this kit. Each horse consists
of ten separate parts: sides, face, ears, mane, tail and separate
hooves with horseshoes in place. The horses are well detail with
even vein detail modeled and two faces are provided for each one
to change the horse's personality as well. The hair is somewhat
static, but most Historex modelers understand the concept of pyrograveur
styling using a hot pin to "fluff" up the hair and create
a more natural look from styrene. This is done by using a heated
straight pin to separate strands of plastic to form "hair" and
add both body and depth to it, so when painted and drybrushed it
looks more like natural hair.
The horses each come with a blanket molded on their backs, as
well as a pack saddle and riding saddle that fits on top of it.
The horses are also provided with bedrolls, packs and other kit
as needed.
However, all horse furniture is etched brass, which is somewhat
tricky to use in such circumstances and the first step for all
flexible items (e.g. cinches, reins, leads, bridles, etc.) is to
anneal them over an open flame to make them easier to manipulate.
The hardware (bits, horseshoes) is also etched brass as well, so
you may wish to remove them from the fret before annealing.
The figures are typical of the DML Gen2 series. Each rider comes
in 19 parts: torso (2), legs (2), boots (2), hands (2), head (2),
collar, shoulder straps (2) and coat skirt (4). However, this kit
offers no option hands or faces/heads for different poses.
The kit has the now-standard German kit sprues GA and GB with
all of the normal German infantry kit (canteens, ponchos, mess
kits, bread bags, gas mask canisters, bayonets, helmets, etc.)
as well as one weapons sprue WA with two Kar 98K rifles with separate
bolts and ammo clips.
Cover art is by Ron Volstad as are the painting instructions,
which are as usual very well done. But in this case it would have
helped if DML had provided more than a single page flyer with a
finished rider and only foolscap outlines of how the bridle and
reins assemble.
Overall this is another great effort by DML but once again one
where the directions do not provide a way to get the most out of
the model for first-time figure modelers or those not experienced
in either doing horses or working with etched brass.
Thanks to Freddie Leung of DML for the review sample.
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