| Date of Review |
April 2007 |
| Manufacturer |
Preiser |
| Subject |
Pilots, Ground Crew, U.S. Army Air Force 1942-45 |
| Scale |
1/48 |
| Kit Number |
67003 |
| Primary Media |
30 parts in white styrene |
| Pros |
Nice selection of poses and figures permits
use in a wide variety of situations and with a large number
of vehicles; may also be used in Korea |
| Cons |
1/48 about the limit of good execution
by Prieser |
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$13-15 |
I have liked Prieser's figures for many years, first finding them
in both 1/87 (HO scale) and 1/72 scale, and now they have blossomed
out to cover all major modeling scales from Z gauge (1/220) up
to LGB gauge (1/22.5). But their secret to this is simply coming
with one good master and them using a pantograph to enlarge or
reduce the size of the mold. But what makes a stunning figure in
HO or 1/72 starts to wane as it gets bigger. 1/48 (US O gauge,
as European O Gauge is 1/43) is about the limit of good resolution
and detail in their figures before it starts to look "soft" and
descend toward loss of definition.
That being said, this set of 12 figures in uniform is an excellent
addition to both aircraft and armor dioramas or vehicles in 1/48
scale. The set includes the following figures: three mechanics,
one with a tool chest; six pilots in various stages of dress and
uniforms, from khakis ("suntans"), dress uniforms ("pinks
and greens"), bomber jacket with garrison cap, garrison cap with
vest and parachute, and full up flight suit with helmet and all
kit worn; one Military Police solider with bloused pants, helmet
and dress uniform; and two women, one WAAF in dress uniform and
a WASP pilot in flight gear.
Three extra heads are included, so with the ones given (either
garrison caps or service caps) and one in a pith helmet just about
any combination can be modeled. Since other than flight gear most
WWII uniforms were indistinguishable from each other, these figures
can for the most part be used as either USAAF or US Army personnel.
Also, most of the figures can be used for Korea and the early
1950s as well, as the uniforms of the early USAF were cut to the
same patterns as the Army ones, and only the colors changed.
Overall this is a nice little set with a lot of flexibility and
promise, and should be popular with both aircraft and armor modelers.
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