| Date of Review |
April 2007 |
| Manufacturer |
Trumpeter |
| Subject |
Pz.Kpfw.IV Ausf.F Fahrgestell |
| Scale |
1/35 |
| Kit Number |
0363 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene, Photo-Etch, Turned Aluminum |
| Clear Media |
N/A |
| Pros |
Awesome details, very little left for the
aftermarket community that doesn't already come in the box |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Intermediate |
| MSRP (USD) |
$64.95 |
Background
The Germans wasted few resources during World War II. When a weapons
system became obsolete, they would find other ways it could still
serve the fatherland. One such example was what to do with out-of-date
Panzer IV Ausf.F tanks? In a number of cases, the turret and
turret ring were removed and the chassis was transformed into
a munitions carrier. Not just any munitions either, the load-bearing
suspension of the Panzer IV made it ideal to haul 600mm mortar
rounds between a railhead/supply point, and a Karl Mörser battery
that was sending warm greetings to Russians under siege.
Each round weighed approximately 2 tons, and the Panzer IV munitions
carrier could accommodate up to four rounds. Transfer of the rounds
from the carrier to the Mörser was accomplished with a 3-ton
crane mounted to the forward portion of the carrier's hull.
The Kit
Welcome to Trumpeter's next installment in their new 'Expert
Series' - the Pz.Kpfw.IV Ausf.F Fahrgestell. In English, this
is the Panzer IV Model F version chassis. These Panzer IV
tanks were produced and employed during the early stages of World
War II while the Germans were still pressing their Blitzkrieg on
the continent. These were soon replaced with later models produced
in larger numbers and packing superior firepower. When a number
of these were stripped and pressed to support the Karl Mörser
as ammo supply vehicles, they became Munitionsschlepper für
Karlgerät.
When Trumpeter announced this new series of kits, I had a difficult
time imagining how they would make these kits more detailed without
making them difficult to build. I think they did a very good job
here.
Molded in light gray styrene, the kit consists of 674 parts and
is presented on 15 parts trees (duplicate trees not shown) plus
five frets of photo-etched details. In addition, the kit
features two turned aluminum 600mm mortar rounds.
So where are many of these parts? 204 are individual track links
(102 per side) should you opt to use these links, though the kit
also provides vinyl tracks for those adverse to using the links.
Since there is no turret in this version of the vehicle, with
the exception of the covered ammo pallet mounted atop the rear
of the hull, the nicely detailed 3-ton crane, and eight complete
styrene 600mm rounds, the rest of the parts are strictly hull and
suspension. If they have this much work completed for a Panzer
IV Ausf.F chassis, chances are pretty good that there is a tank
variant or two in our future as well.
Look at the photo-etched parts included in this set. There is
very little left for the aftermarket world to address that doesn't
already come in this box.
Aside from the extensive photo-etched details, the styrene layout
and assembly steps look very straightforward. In the hands of an
experienced modeler, this should be a pleasant build.
Conclusion
While this is a bit more expensive than a DML kit, you're not
going to find this much photo-etch in the DML box, and by the time
you've picked up the equivalent detail sets to provide similar
detailing as this kit provides, you've probably spent more money.
If you already have one of those Karl Mörser kits stashed
away in your collection, you'll need one or more of these parked
along side your big gun to keep it fed. It is still hard to get
your head around the fact that this tank only carried 3-4 rounds
per trip!
Definitely recommended!
My sincere thanks to Stevens
International for this review sample!
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