| Date of Review |
January 2006 |
| Manufacturer |
DML |
| Subject |
German Mine Detectors Gen2 |
| Scale |
1/35 |
| Kit Number |
6280 |
| Primary Media |
271 parts (254 in grey styrene, 17 etched brass) |
| Pros |
Finally the engineers get some respect; nicely done mine detection kit |
| Cons |
None noted other than tiny parts |
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$12.50 |
There is one of the many corollaries to "Murphy's Law" that
if you are moving well cross country then you are probably in a
mine field. Mines are dangerous obstacles to both the attacker
and defender, and to this day cause many more casualties both during
and after a war than most people would think. To that end, all
nations have concentrated on mine clearing using the best technology
that they can produce.
The Germans were no different, and tales of the British and Soviets
being particularly generous and lethal with the use of mines are
common. As a result, the engineers (German Pioneren) had to clear
minefields to provide for free movement and access routes.
DML has now provided a kit of such personnel, with two mine detector
operators and two soldiers using more common if primitive means.
Not only does the kit come with the mine detection equipment, it
also comes with four different types of Soviet mines (TDM, T-IV,
PZM and Model 1938) for them to have discovered the right way (not
much sense of making a kit if they found them the wrong way!)
I am no expert on German engineer equipment, but the systems provide
appear to be the Model 1939 Mine Detector Rod, an Aachen 40 Mine
Detecting Coil, the Wien (Vienna) Model 1941 Mine Detector, and
the old fashioned bayonet in the ground.
The Mine Detector Rod operator has the assembled rod with probe
and is operating in textbook fashion, sticking into the ground
in front of him. The system is supposed to let him know what he
has struck by the fact that it is an aluminum tube and the sound
resonates. ]
The Aachen 40 is a coil on a long rod, familiar to most people
who have seen similar US ones in operation, with the operator using
an electronics backpack (receiver and batteries) and providing
an aural signal via headsets.
The Wien 41 is a detector shaped like a sausage on the end of
a sectional pole, with an electronics pack worn by the operator
and providing an audible signal via headsets.
All four figures come with the complete pantheon of DML's standard
kit for German figures – GA and GB accessory sprues, and
one WA weapons sprue with two Kar 98K rifles and ammunition. The
figures and mine detection equipment come on two separate sprues.
They also come with a set of brass belt buckles, epaulets, and
awards.
As is most common with DML figures, the box art is by Ron Volstad
and a great help to painting up the figures.
Overall this set will look great with the DML engineer halftrack
(number 6223) and compliment it greatly.
Thanks to Freddie Leung of DML for the review sample.
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