| Date of Review |
February 2005 |
| Manufacturer |
PST |
| Subject |
SA-10 Grumble 'Dumb' TEL |
| Scale |
1/72 |
| Kit Number |
72055 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Nicely detailed missile cannisters
and prime mover |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$29.50 |
Background
The former Soviet Union was a master at developing air defense
systems. From the days of Vietnam where US airmen first encountered
the SA-2, through the days of the SA-6 and the Israeli Air
Force, these systems exacted a heavy toll in aircraft and crew
until tactics and technology could be developed to counter
them.
When the US Army started developing the SAM-D air defense
system, the Soviet Union began the development of a similar
capability that was later NATO-designated as SA-10 Grumble.
In fact, the SA-10 was fielded well before the troubled SAM-D
program would emerge as the Patriot system.
The SA-10 has been around for a while now though the system
hasn't been encountered in combat (yet). A number of SA-10s
have been exported around the world and Russian developers
have improved the performance of the system to the stage that
the latest update was redesignated as SA-20.
According to several sources online, SA-10 air defense system
(referred to in Russia as the S-300PMU) system is comprised
of an acquisition radar code-named 'Clam Shell', a tracking/guidance
radar code-named 'Flap Lid', two types of transporter/erector/launchers
(TELs) that carry four canisterized SA-10 missiles each, plus
a number of support vehicles. Initially, the system was trailer
mounted, similar to the Patriot. However, after several cycles
of improvement of the SA-10 system, the decision was to make
each of the prime components of the S-300 PMU self-propelled
(mounted on a vehicle chassis). This mobile version was designated
as SA-10B.
The prime mover for the radar and TELS is based upon the MAZ-7910
8x8 chassis. There are two types of TEL are used with the SA-10B
system: a 'smart' TEL with an control booth located between
the MAZ's crew cab and the missile canisters; and a 'dumb'
TEL that is identical to the smart TEL in configuration except
for the control booth. The TELs move their missiles with the
canisters stowed in the horizontal position, then launch the
missile(s) with the canisters elevated to the vertical.
The SA-10 was first operational around 1980 and has been rumored
to be exported in China and several other countries. This is
the same system that has been in the news with possible export
sales to Iran and Syria.
The Kit
Who would have thought we'd see a modern Russian air defense
system in kit form? The first and only instance (until now)
was the Airfix 1/72 SA-2 Guideline that has long since been
out of production. Trumpeter has recently released the SA-2
and has announced an SA-6, both in 1/35 scale, but by now these
are both old systems. Zvezda has announced a 2S6 which combines
a air defense gun platform with the short-range SA-19 missiles,
but that has yet to be released. Not to forget DML's SA-9 and
ZSU-23-4 kits in 1/35 which are nice representations of
older tactical air defense systems.
Here is PST from Belarus (a former member of the Soviet Republic)
with the SA-10! Not the early trailer-mounted versions, but
the current MAZ-7910 version! What's more, this is the first
kit of the self-propelled TEL.
This kit represents the 'dumb' TEL (no electronics shelter
behind the MAZ crew cab). For those of you who track the article
(izdelie) numbers, this kit represents the 5P85D. It is based
on the MAZ-7910 chassis, which is has been nicely represented
with its eight-wheel-drive power train. The crew compartment
is nicely represented with tandem crew seats.
On the deck behind the cab and engine is a deck with some
electronics support units and a spare tire mount.
The four missile cannisters are mounted behind this deck and
are hinged to be raised and lowered after assembly. For some
unknown reason, PST provided missiles for each of the four
cannisters, though these are not visible (nor needed) after
assembly. The bottom image to the right shows one of the four
included sprue trees with the cannister halves, end caps, and
a complete missile (duplicate trees not shown).
While there are no markings provided (nor needed) for this
kit, and the instructions indicate a matt green overall color,
check out some of the photos of this system online. You might
want to use the two-green and brown camouflage to add some
interest to this already great kit!
Conclusions
I hope PST won't stop here with the SA-10. For those of us
who are interested in air defense systems and have been frustrated
by the lack of decent kits, this is a great start! Check out
the SA-10 'Flap Lid' radar and Smart
TEL kits also reviewed here.
You can find this kit at your local hobby retailer or directly
from Squadron Mail Order
(www.squadron.com).
My sincere thanks to Squadron
Mail Order for this review sample!
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