| Date of Review |
October 2006 |
| Manufacturer |
DML |
| Subject |
Eastern Front Tank Hunters Gen2 |
| Scale |
1/35 |
| Kit Number |
6279 |
| Primary Media |
285 parts (261 in grey styrene, 25 etched
brass) |
| Pros |
Nice, clean antitank gunners can be used
singly in other groups; Panzerschrek a nice little model unto
itself; two extra heads very useful; can be used in any theater |
| Cons |
Single gunners in different styles of uniforms
hard to use together |
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$14.98 |
There were two classes of German soldiers unlikely to see a POW "cage" during
WWII: snipers, who General Omar Bradley implicitly stated he saw
no reason to capture; and antitank gunners using close combat weapons.
Quite often, and as recounted in numerous Allied after-action reports
and memoirs, a German lying in wait would pop an M4 tank or other
armored vehicle with a Panzerfaust rocket-propelled grenade, and
then, having destroyed the tank and probably killed one or more
of the crewmembers, would then throw the empty launcher away and
surrender to the next vehicle in line. The normal procedure was
then to have the bow gunner cut him in half.
The Soviets were no less kind to them, and if the unfortunate
gunner missed, the Soviet response was usually to mash the poor
soul with the tracks of the tank.
DML has now produced a kit of four dedicated antitank gunners,
two with Panzerfaust launchers and one Panzerschrek team with one
gunner and one loader. Each figure follows the now standard DML "Gen2" standard
of at least 17 parts per figure (torso halves, leg halves, boots,
hands, arms, head and face, collar, and four coat skirt sections)
as well as some additional bits to "mix and match."
The most interesting thing here is that the Panzerschrek gunner
comes with two heads and two sets of hands. One is normal and shows
him either in "training" mode with no protective gear
and the other shows the Panzerschrek gunner ready for action. Due
to the fact that the Germans either did not have dynamic enough
propellants or fast burn times, the rocket motor did not follow
modern procedures and burn out before it ever left the tube; instead,
it burned for some distance after leaving the muzzle, which could
fry the eyebrows and other bits off the face of the unfortunate
operator. As a result, the operator wore a gas mask and mittens
to protect his exposed parts when firing. This is accurately represented
by the figure.
The Panzerschrek itself is a gem, coming with a "Slide Molded" open
bore and many nice details; the weapon consists of five parts and
also comes with an ammo crate and four rounds, plus an etched brass
sling. While the directions show the "pigtails" for
attaching the firing assembly to the launcher's electrical circuit
(firing is by a piezoelectric device initiated by squeezing the
trigger, much like a hand-powered flashlight) they do not seem
to be in the kit, but some fuse wire should suffice.
The other two are the very nice Panzerfaust 60 (I think) launchers
with choice of carry or launch positions for their firing stud
and sight assemblies, as well as a crate for the launchers. Rifles
are provided for each man so they can be shown with the weapon
or with their rifles.
The details are the now boiler-plate GA and GB sprues with all
of the normal German kit and equipment on them. Etched brass or
styrene belt buckles and shoulder straps are included as well.
A small decal sheet is included for the two crates and the antitank
weapons. No helmet decals are provided. As usual for the Gen2 sets,
artwork is provided from Ron Volstad.
Overall this is a nice set and the advantage is one of the figures
or the Panzerschrek team may be used to spark up a diorama with
other figures.
Sprue Breakout:
A 36 (2 figures)
B 47 (2 figures)
WA 18x2 (2 x Kar 98)
WE 14 (Panzerschrek and accessories)
WE 8 (2 x Panzerfaust 60)
GA 64 (mess kits, canteens, entrenching tools, bayonets)
GB 56 (magazine pouches, holsters, bread bags)
MA 25 Etched brass
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