| Date of Review |
March 2006 |
| Manufacturer |
Academy |
| Subject |
M2A2 Bradley OIF |
| Scale |
1/35 |
| Kit Number |
13205 |
| Primary Media |
387 parts (369 in yellow sand styrene,
16 in sand vinyl, 2 in dark silver grey vinyl) |
| Pros |
Nicely done new kit, makes use of "slide
molding" for some parts; many parts up to date and current
with ongoing Bradley modifications; correct current 25mm gun
barrel |
| Cons |
Tracks not correct for late-model M2A2
ODS versions; no stowage provided; some details a bit soft |
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$38.00 |
Background
When the Soviets came up with the concept in the early 1960s of
the "boyevaya mashina pekhoty" or infantry fighting
vehicle, they had a low, compact machine armed with a 73mm grenade
launcher, a 7.62mm machine gun, an ATGM launcher, and carrying
a crew of two and nine infantrymen in a package weighing about
13 tons. The US Army took a long time to respond, and when they
did the vehicle debuted to a lot of ridicule and suspicion. The
new vehicle, dubbed the Bradley, came as either the M2 infantry
fighting vehicle or the M3 cavalry fighting vehicle, the difference
being the size of the crew and internal layout. But it was now
the same size and weight as a WWII Sherman tank, and looked bloated
compared to the Soviets' sleek BMP.
Negative publicity did not help (as smarmily portrayed in the
HBO "history" of the Bradley) but the press – as
usual – did not grasp the function of the Bradley and derided
it for not offering the protection of a tank. Nevertheless, the
Army persevered and in 1990 began taking the developed Bradley
to war in the Persian Gulf. Overall it did well, suffering more
casualties from fratricide than Iraqi units. It then spent 12 years
in peacekeeping duties before an updated version went into Iraq
in March 2003. Serving there still, the Bradley has now taken some
losses from massive roadside bombs, but overall it has proven itself
and remains popular with US mechanized infantry troops.
There are five major versions of the BFV (Bradley Family of Vehicles,
which now also adds the M4 artillery forward observation post and
M7 Linebacker light antiaircraft variant to the original two vehicles)
which FMC – the builder, numbers as follows:
A0 series – basic vehicle with four firing ports mounting
lightweight M16 rifles, 25mm "Bushmaster" cannon, twin
TOW launcher, integrated gunner's sight, and either a crew of 5
(M3 CFV) or 9 (M2 BFV); 2,300 built May 1981 - April 1986
A1 series – firing ports blocked up, TOW upgraded to fire
TOW II, GPFU, new fire suppression system, new internal stowage;
1,371 built May 1986 - April 1988
A2 series – new 600 HP engine, 30mm cannon protection ("plate" armor
and skirts), spall liners, modified ammunition stowage, provision
to mount reactive armor; 3,107 new build vehicles from May 1988
to February 1995; also rebuilds of A0 series vehicles
A2 ODS series – Operation Desert Storm Lessons Learned
improvements, to include eyesafe laser rangefinder, GPS, provision
for missile countermeasures, enhanced driver's viewer, internal
stowage changes, twin facing bench seats in BFV, and provisions
to mount the BCIS IFF system
A3 series – improved sights, commander's independent viewer
on right side of turret, situational awareness tactical display,
new armor and NBC protection, and embedded diagnostics
The so-called A2 "Operation Iraqi Freedom" variant is
mostly the A2 ODS series with the addition of a few factory items,
such as now mounting the reactive armor tiles, and many local or
unit ones such as the thermal identification panels, extra stowage
bins, etc.
From a modeler's standpoint in 1/35 scale, in 1985 Tamiya released
a great model of the M2A0 Bradley with a partial interior. They
followed it with an M3A0 CFV but as this did not have an interior
it was not as nice a kit. Academy first released their own M2 and
M3 models in 1987, but they were basically clones of the 1985 Tamiya
kits.
In 1991 Tamiya jumped on the Desert Storm bandwagon and hastily
reworked their M2 Bradley into an M2A2, and their M1 into an M1A1.
Both had a number of errors, and like all Tamiya kits, were released
at much higher prices than their base kits. Tamiya's solution on
the M2A2 kit was to simply replace one sprue with a new one of
46 parts to provide the plate armor and applique panels for the
vehicle. Some were not correct, and others, like the skirts, overly
simplified. (The skirts on all A2 and beyond BFV consist of two
thin plates of armor with a standoff distance of about 12-15mm
between them, and the kit provides them as a single slab of styrene.
Later, in late 2004 Tamiya added another sprue to their M2A2 kit
to produce an M2A2 ODS vehicle as used in Operation Iraqi Freedom.
This appears to be the same detailing sprue provided with their "M113A2
ODS" model, which is also not that vehicle but an M113 kit
with a lot of stick-on parts. But whereas the 1985 release had
been around US $20, now the retail price was US $50 and this kit
did not come with an interior as the first one did. (The interior
changed with the first M2A2 and Tamiya didn't see fit to rework
their molds.)
Academy has now reworked their 1987 clone kit to provide a new
model of the M2A2 "Operation Iraqi Freedom" Bradley.
First off, as noted above, it is an M2A2 ODS without all of the
ODS add-ons such as the missile countermeasures device. It changes
out sprues as well and adds a total of 151 new parts (20 of which
are nuts and bolts and bolt heads). This kit is also about twice
what the 1987 "clone" sold for, but it is vastly improved.
Academy has now joined DML and Trumpeter in the use of "slide
molding" and the new hull and one of the new sprues show it
being used. The complete upper hull is a single molding with the
side plates and skirts in place; alas, the skirts as with all of
the previous A2 efforts are still monolithic. Detail on the upper
hull molding is better than the regular Tamiya M2A2 kit's and all
of the lift holds/tie-downs on the lower side of the skirts are
provided as separate parts (Tamiya's are molded onto the skirts.)
Neither kit comes with the "non-skid" surfaces found
on the outside of the vehicle, especially on the uparmored engine
access hatch. Academy provides that as a separate part with separate
applique armor, but Tamiya simply smoothed over the glacis and
provides everything as one big stick-on part. Both kits provide
the A2's new light clusters, but the Tamiya ones have crisper details.
Also, Academy includes the flexible rubber screens (originally
designed to fair into the reactive armor tiles) on both sides of
the hull, and Tamiya does not. Also, the Academy kit does not have
the engine servicing platform provided with all Bradleys since
the wave breaker was removed after A1 production ceased. (The Tamiya
kit has one that is stowed on the left side of the hull roof parallel
to the ground and even with the turret.)
The kits' lower hulls are nearly identical but have their differences.
Tamiya provided the improved M2A2/A3 series tracks with rectangular
pads, whereas Academy still provides the original track pads with
V shaped chevrons. Wheels and running gear are unchanged from the
first versions of the kits (1985 and 1987 respectively.)
The turrets are virtually identical, but the Academy kit comes
with a hollow muzzle brake and fluted barrel that match the latest
versions of Bushmasters on A2 series and A3 series vehicles whereas
Tamiya still has the original barrel from the M2A0 series vehicle.
Both vehicles do include the GPS antenna at the right rear of
the hull. But neither one offers any of the unit designed bins
for storage seen on most of the M2A2 ODS vehicles used in March
and April 2003,which is a shame. Also, the Academy kit comes with
NO external stowage of items like sleeping mats, duffel bags, cots,
rations, etc. seen in action and provided with the Tamiya kit.
(The box art also shows a somewhat sterile BFV.) The model does
come with a spare set of road wheels, a spare driver ring, and
the thermal identification panels for mounting.
Once again, alas, Academy misses out on the decals, which appear
to have been based on distant side shots of vehicles in Iraq and
do not include bumper or unit set storage codes like those seen
frequently during OIF. Two vehicles have partial decal sets provided.
Overall this is a nice effort but a bit disappointing. For making
an accurate M2A2 ODS it's a bit better place to start than the
Tamiya kit, as it costs about 25% less, but it will need new tracks
and decals at a minimum to make an accurate model.
Thanks to MRC/Academy for the review sample.
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