| Date of Review |
October 2007 |
| Manufacturer |
DML |
| Subject |
Afrika Korps Panzergrenadier El Alamein 1942 |
| Scale |
1/35 |
| Kit Number |
6389 |
| Primary Media |
76 parts in grey styrene |
| Pros |
New release of figures will help out
German desert fans |
| Cons |
Why no "Gen2" weapons sets? |
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$8.95 |
DML still seems to have a large supply of "original series" figures
in stock and keeps releasing them from time to time to keep
us on our toes. This new set provides four figures in combat
poses which should be appreciated by desert warfare fans.
The four figures consist of a two-man machine gun team based
around an MG-34, one man loading a Kar 98K rifle in the kneeling
position, and an officer directing them from a crouch. The
weapons are mostly separate (the MG34 is an older model less
the "slide molded" details and hollow bore, and the
rest of them – a Kar 98K, a Gewehr 43, an MP40, an MP44,
a Panzerfaust 60 and an MG42 with accessories – are from
kit No. 6003) and no brass is provided for straps or detailing.
I say mostly because the officer comes with a Luger molded
in place; at least with small arms like pistols this makes
better sense as it looks to be held for use rather than "stuck
on" as too many do when modelers try to fit them to the
hands of figures.
The figures are all basic DML types of six basic parts (head,
torso, arms and legs) with molded in place coat skirts. These
figures are wearing the desert canvas uniform with long trousers
and long sleeves. Two helmets have camouflage covers, two do
not and one set of sand goggles is provided for the officer.
Two of the figures (the officer and the rifleman) have defensive
grenades ("potato mashers") stuck in their belts,
which are provided as separate parts.
The machine gunner is operating the weapon from the prone
position and the assistant is feeding ammo from a box. The
positions look far more natural than some but preclude "digging
in" as the gunner is completely prone.
Artwork is by another of DML's artists and the directions
are the photographic rendering type and not the excellent artwork
of Ron Volstad. They consist of "paint this color here" flags
and tags on a miniature version of the box art.
Overall, this is a good idea and as many modelers tend to
suffer from overkill with the full "Gen2" sets a
reversion to the "old school" is a good idea every
now and again. But the "Gen2" weapons are better,
and having the rifleman with his bolt open as in "Gen2" style
would have made a bit more sense.
Thanks to Freddie Leung for the review sample.
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