| Date of Review |
June 2009 |
| Manufacturer |
AFV Club |
| Subject |
T-34/76 Model 1942 Factory No. 112 - Special Edition |
| Scale |
1/35 |
| Kit Number |
35S51 |
| Primary Media |
474 parts (431 in grey styrene, 20
in black styrene, 12 clear styrene, 10 steel springs, 2
black vinyl tracks, 1 black nylon string, 1 turned brass
barrel, 1 etched brass) |
| Pros |
Complete interior with clear styrene
parts to show it off; neatly done details with very nicely
broken down parts |
| Cons |
Minor glitches in design and features
(see text) |
| Skill Level |
Experienced |
| MSRP (USD) |
$50 |
Most diehard T-34 tans now know the story of how Factory No.
112 – “Krasnoye Sormovo” – got started
in the T-34 business in 1941. The second factory after the
Stalingrad Tractor Factory to take up production, they began
with knocked-down T-34 kits from Kharkov and began working
on their own slightly modified design from that. Later, as
they got into production, they modified the design of the Model
1941 tank to make it easier to produce, “notching” the
front of the hull and glacis plate to fit together and adding
handrails for “tankovyy desant” infantry everywhere
that they could. 161 were built there in 1941 and by the time
that “Krasnoye Sormovo” changed over to the product-improved
Model 1942 – in 1943 – they had built more than
3,000 of this type.
DML released a kit of the early Factory No. 112 tank under
the aegis of its cyber-hobby.com affiliate, and it was a nice
kit in its own right. Now AFV Club has released their long-awaited
kit, and it is a very lovely piece of work with a couple of
twists: first, it has a complete interior from bow to stern
with most of the major pieces provided; secondly, in this version
of the kit (the base kit is AF35143) it comes with six clear
parts to show off all of that interior detail. While aircraft
modelers have had that since the “Phantom Mustang” of
the early 1960s, this year marks the first time such features
are offered to armor modelers (Trumpeter also has a 1/16 scale
Tiger II with the same option.)
AFV Club has played it smart with some of their favorite features
(which have not always been modelers’ favorites!) by
using smart choices for a change. For example, the kit comes
with 20 separate black tires for the road wheels; but unlike
Academy, they have made theirs in styrene so there is no problem
in cleaning them up, fitting them to the model or painting
them. But like the Churchill kit before it, it comes with actual
steel springs for the Christie suspension units; these seem
much weaker and should be easier to install without 20 or more
fingers. If installed carefully the complete suspension works.
Detailing starts with the floor and moves forward. Separate
details abound in the control (drivers’) compartment
and include rodding for the foot pedals. Ammo racks are provided
with only half a shell; however, since this cements to the
ammo rack trays for single rounds, it is a smart way to ensure
you can paint the round AND the rack with a minimum of grief.
Seats are neatly done with separate thigh pads and even machine
gun racks look the part.
The V-2 engine is complete, but is one of the few areas in
the model where AFV Club made a mistake. Somebody put the original
1940-early 1941 air cleaner (sort of like that from an older
American car with a carburetor) on top of the engine (parts
A31/A32) but then includes the later “cyclone” type
air cleaners behind the transmission firewall. The latter are
unfortunately necessary as the exhaust pipes attach to them
on the way to the exhaust outlets in the rear of the hull.
They also connect to nothing, so this will be tedious to fix.
The transmission comes with the odd “ribbon brakes” in
place on each final drive/lateral clutch assembly (A43-A46)
and the fan is a four-piece marvel of the moldmaker’s
craft. Note that the main clutch is in the center of the fan.
The radiators each consist of three parts and fit as required
next to the engine.
While the model comes with only the original pressed disk
steel wheel with “notched” tires, there are three
different options for the idlers and drivers (1940, 1941, 1942
and beyond). The kit suggests using B33/B37 for the idler and
B9/B13 for the driver, but if you have good references you
could probably use the B31/B35 and B15/B16 ones as well.
The tracks are a bit thin and floppy, so most modelers may
want to use an after-market set for this kit. I am not sure
if AFV Club will offer single-link tracks although based on
their past kits it seems a logical assumption.
The upper hull, stern plate, turret halves, roof and turret
ventilator are all molded in clear styrene. This is slightly
marred by ejection pin marks on the inside of the rear fenders,
the stern plate and the turret roof; removing them will take
careful sanding, buffing and a touch-up with Future or Johnson’s
Klear.
All radiator louvers - intake and exhaust – are positionable,
but the rear deck is solid so if you wish to display it you
will have to leave the covers (D53, D54, D5) loose. There is
a single etched grille for D5 which is a good choice. The kit
comes with spare track but seems to have lost one of the “toothed” links
in the process; the links bolt to the ends of the fender with
one “flat” link on the bottom and one “toothed” link
tooth up above it. The kit has two “flats” on the
right and a single “toothed” on the left. Possible,
but an odd choice.
The turret is nicely done and comes with a very complete F-34
gun breech and coaxial DT machine gun back end. There are details
everywhere you look, but the clear plastic turret will cause
some problems when completed due to attaching the parts to
the inside. (Note that AFV Club has a promotional DVD which
provides a number of shots of their finished version of the
kit with nicely weathered green paint on all non-clear parts,
showing what the inside looks like when assembled. It is an
interesting effect!)
Four finishing options come with the kit, three in 4BO green
and one white: two from the 1st Tank Brigade, Polish 1st Army,
Pomoroze 1941 (white 122 and white 238); 45th Tank Regiment “For
Soviet Estonia”, Eastern Front 1943'; Unknown Unit, whitewash
camouflage (Triangle red 6), spring 1943.
Design of this kit is credited to “Team Niitakayama”.
Overall this is a super effort and other than the silly twin
air cleaner option problem is a winner. From the parts breakdown
AFV Club appears to have more T-34s planned for the future
as well.
Thanks to Miin Herng Tsueng for the review sample.
Sprue Layout:
- A 75 Engine, transmission, radiators
- B 76x2 Suspension, drivers, idlers
- C 84 Hull and control compartment interior details
- D 76 Hull and turret interior details, engine deck
- E 43 Turret details, rear lower hull plate
- F 5 Model 1941 Turret (clear styrene)
- G 10x2 Wheel centers
- H 6 Clear Styrene
- I 5x4 Tires
- J - Decals, black nylon string
- L 2 Black vinyl tracks
- M 1 Lower hull pan
- N 1 Upper hull (clear styrene)
- O 1 Etched metal
- S 10 Steel springs
- U 1 Turned brass barrel
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