| Date of Review |
April 2007 |
| Manufacturer |
Skif |
| Subject |
T-80UDK |
| Scale |
1/35 |
| Kit Number |
0226 |
| Primary Media |
307 parts (292 parts in medium green styrene,
14 in black vinyl, 1 length of steel wire) |
| Pros |
Relatively accurate dimensional model of
a very early T-80UD; can be built into a good model with additional
details |
| Cons |
Soft details, kit based on prototypes or
pre-production validation lot vehicles |
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$36.00 (OOP) |
The T-80 has been around for some time – if the Soviet sources
now released by the Russians are correct, the first tanks went
into service in 1978. The current service models, the T-80B, T-80BV
and T-80U, are still one of the main elements of the reported 12,000
serviceable tanks in the Russian Army. The T-80UD tanks, which
were designed and built by the A. A. Morozov" Kharkov Design
Bureau for Machinery Construction and the "Malyshev" Factory,
were a method by which the Ukrainian factory combined its opposed
piston engines with the Leningrad-designed and Omsk-built T-80U
chassis. Only about 200 of them were built, serving with the "parade" divisions
in the Moscow area, and most famously were shown in October 1993
during the standoff between Boris Yeltsin and the Russian Parliament.
The tanks were seen to come wheeling up, take up positions, and
after about two hours began to fire on the building. The first
round fired went into the office of Ruslan Khasbulatov, getting
his attention (he was out in the hall with his compatriot Aleksandr
Rutskoy at the time) and firing on the building for about an hour
until the MVD Internal Troops stormed the White House.
Since then it has been reported that all of the T-80UDs, under
the usual situation of "not invented here" (e.g. built
in either Omsk or Nizhniy Tagil in Russia) were shipped back to
Ukraine in the mid 1990s. The tank remains under production there
with a new, welded turret and Ukrainian improvements as the T-84.
SKIF has a notorious reputation with modelers for hit or miss
with its kits, with the "hits" being weak and the "misses" being
awful. As such, when SKIF came out with this kit, rumored to be
a reboxing of a smaller company's kit which was rated badly, I
gave it a pass. This year at AMPS 2007 Baseline Hobbies was clearing
out their stock at quite reasonable prices (this kit was $10) so
I picked one up. If you build Russian armor as I do, "parts
is parts."
Surprisingly, this kit is really not that bad. Overall it is reasonably
accurate in its primary dimensions, and the road wheels – while
a bit crude – are the proper size and shape. The tracks,
while flimsy and made of some sort of soft vinyl, are the correct
size and correct pattern (unlike SKIF's truly horrible T-64 vinyl
tracks, which could not figure out if they wanted to be T-64 or
T-80 track!) The turret on this kit is correct in shape and size
(where it also beats out their T-64 series kits) and as a result
it seems better than at first glance.
Those are the kit's high points. But first and foremost while
it is a "K" or commander's model, and comes with the
11 meter radio antenna mast, nowhere in the directions does it
say that antenna is only used when the tank is in a fixed position
and that it needs two sets of guy wires or lines to hold it in
place!
The engine deck is correct, but only for one of the prototypes
or pre-production validation (ustavleniye) series tanks. Production
T-80UDs had an engine deck nearly identical to that on the T-64B.
While the tank comes with a complete reactive armor suite, unfortunately
SKIF molded the early model tanks with 4S20 "Kontakt-1" first
generation reactive armor "bricks". Nearly all of the
production model T-80UDs were fitted with 4S22 "Kontakt-5" second
generation reactive armor modules, which are like those found in
the DML T-80 Model 1989 – the T-80UD. The two are completely
different in appearance.
Given all that, the model DOES provide for the basis to build
a good model of a T-80UD – but it needs help. By combining
this kit's basics with the engine deck, rear plate components,
details and "Kontakt-5" reactive armor suite from the
DML T-80 SMT Model 1989 (T-80UD) and new tracks from a company
like Miniarm or Fruil a relatively decent model can be built. Built
from the box, it will lack something and look a bit toy-like around
the edges.
Finishing directions are provided for a Soviet/Russian three color
paint scheme (sand, olive drab and black) but the only markings
are for two generic tanks and one Ukrainian tank.
Overall this model is not as bad as I would have thought, but
it needs help to become a good example of the T-80 family. At least
it says something about the poor representation T-80 has had among
modelers in that this is the best of four kits of T-80s of which
I know.
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