| Date of Review |
December 2006 |
| Manufacturer |
SDV |
| Subject |
T-62 Medium Tank Model 1962 |
| Scale |
1/87 |
| Kit Number |
87030 |
| Primary Media |
54 parts in olive green styrene |
| Pros |
Clean, all styrene kit of this vehicle;
closer to scale than older US made plastic T-62 kits; will
eventually cover other versions of the T-62 |
| Cons |
Some of the same problems as other
T-62 kits carried over to this model; turret is wrong for
a Model 1962 |
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
Approx $11.42 |
By now many modelers know the story of the T-62: Marshal
of the Soviet Union Chuykov blew his top when he heard that
the British Centurion was going to mount a 105mm gun, thus
larger than the 100mm one in the T-54 and T-55 tanks, and demanded
that Soviet industry get a bigger gun out into the field at
once. The solution from the Ural Railway Wagon Construction
Factory at Nizhniy Tagil was to stretch a T-55 hull, modify
the experimental 100mm D-54 gun to a 115mm smoothbore, and
put the two items together with a new turret. The result, Object
166, was accepted for service as the T-62 tank at the end of 1961.
Later, during the production run of the T-62 tank, it was
also produced in Czechoslovakia and North Korea. There are
three basic versions; the Model 1962, with a smooth turret
and no AA machine gun and a T-55 style engine deck and radiator
installation; the Model 1967, with the same turret and a new
engine and radiator deck; and the Model 1970, which added a
ring mount and DshK machine gun for the loader. Just over 20,000
T-62 tanks were built between 1962 and 1989.
SDV has now created a new kit of the T-62, which is more accurate
in terms of scale with the old Armortec/Petner Panzers/Boley
kit. It is based, as was the real one, on the late model T-55
chassis produced by SDV and uses many of the parts from those
kits.
The model assembles in the same way as the T-55s – hull
pan, fenders and upper hull sides, tracks and separate outer
wheels. To this are added a turret decking with bulged sides,
an engine deck, and a radiator deck based on the specific model
of tank. The rest of the parts are the usual details – lights,
fuel and oil tanks, ZIP (spare parts) bins, and the like.
The turret has the same shape problems as all other plastic
T-62 kits, namely a straight front edge with no roll-under
as seen on actual cast T-62 turrets. Due to the thin moldings,
this may be hard to correct but with some careful filing and
painting the general shape can be modified to more accurately
represent the T-62's turret.
However, the kit comes with the hatch for the Model 1970 and
not the Model 1962. To accurately replicate the Model 1962
the hatch will have to be sanded off and a new hatch, slightly
domed, scratchbuilt for it with front-mounted hinges.
The directions are in Czech and with some German, as is a
small historical booklet about the use of the T-62 during the "Prague
Summer" of 1968 and the Soviet invasion in August of that
year. Photos of T-62s and Czech citizens are included in the
booklet, but alas, as it is not in English it loses something
in the translation!
Seven finishing options and a nice set of decals by MPD are
provided with the kit: Soviet Army, Czech Invasion August 1968;
Soviet occupying forces in Czechoslovakia, 1972; Egyptian Army,
1973; Syrian Army, Lebanon 1982; Iraqi Army, 1991; Northern
Alliance, Afghanistan, 2001; and Soviet-built T-62 in Czech
service, 1999. Markings for specific vehicles are included,
with those of the Iraqis being recognizable as tank 33B, 3rd
Regiment, 6th Armored Brigade, 3rd "Saladin" Armored
Division, 1991. (Note that this tank will have to have a yellow
bore evacuator with a white band in the center.) Also included
are extra markings for East Germany.
Overall, while not quite spot on for a Model 1962, this kit
is better in most respects to both the Armortec and even the
1/35 scale Tamiya kits, and is a good choice for wargamers
and good start for small-scale modelers to make an accurate
T-62.
Thanks to Jan Podubecky for the review sample.
Sources:
Stevens International, 706 N. White Horse Pike, P.O. Box 126,
Magnolia, NY 08049; phone (856) 435-1555 fax (856) 627- 6274;
e-mail: info@stevenshobby.com;
Fidelis Models, PO Box 1021, Poway, CA 92074; e-mail fidelismodels@cox.net;
Howard Hookham, 11 Belle Vue Terrace, Blackwood Hall, Luddendenfoot,
Halifax HX2 6HG, Yorkshire, Great Britain; e-mail futureplanes2000@yahoo.com.
Direct from SDV at their e-store: http://www.sdvmodel.cz
The Czech Koruna converts to US dollars at a rate of Kr 21
= US $1.
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