| Date of Review |
May 2007 |
| Manufacturer |
Miniart |
| Subject |
Soviet Tank Crew at Work |
| Scale |
1/35 |
| Kit Number |
35017 |
| Primary Media |
37 parts in grey styrene |
| Pros |
Nice, modern set of figures in casual poses "doing
something" around a tank |
| Cons |
"Not German" |
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$9.00 |
For too many years the wealth of figures and figure sets produced
have been too closely focused on only WWII German subjects, which
has been very frustrating to the rest of the armor and figure community.
When the stray American, Russian or (heaven forbid!) Commonwealth
set came out, modelers would fall on it like a pack of hungry piranhas
no matter how good – or bad – it was.
Happily many of the newer manufacturers have seen this and now
the Chinese and Eastern European ones are filling the void,
and with good, high quality figures too. Miniart has begun with
a pretty good track record on figures, and now Soviet WWII modelers
have been able to get some decent figures to compliment the growing
number of WWII Soviet armored vehicles offered.
This set provides five Soviet tankers performing maintenance.
Three of the figures are posed as it operating a bore brush for
the main armament (which was usually carried in sections inside
the longest of the stowage bins – "ZIP" in Russian
for spares, tools and accessories – on the fenders of nearly
all combat vehicles. One bareheaded figure is posing with a rag
in hand and the commander is standing in a relaxed position with
his hands set to drape over an open hatch.
The one thing that I have noticed about the new Miniart figures
is that their facial sculpting yields to no one. The five heads
in this set are the equal of many of the after-market resin ones
offered and can be shown to have individual expressions and even
ethnicity – one tanker hear looks to be a Tadzhik (central
Asian) with a shaven head and it shows. The same goes for the other
four.
Anyone with a good set of tank blueprints may want to have the
man with the rag working on cleaning out the tank's air cleaners,
which needed constant maintenance with a good cleaning by the crew
every 3-4 hours (until 1951 when UVZ finally created a working
design that solved that problem.)
Finishing is provided similar to DML boxing with an assembly diagram
and color directions on the back of the box. Interior directions
provide a handy sketch of where the parts for each figure are located
on the sprue.
Overall, this is a great set and one that any diorama modeler
would be able to find good use for with a T-34 or IS tank or other
1943 and later armored vehicle.
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