| Date of Review |
January 2005 |
| Manufacturer |
Zvezda |
| Subject |
BTR-80A |
| Scale |
1/35 |
| Kit Number |
3560 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
N/A |
| Pros |
As nice as the DML BTR-80! |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$29.98 |
Background
The Soviet Union recognized the diversity of the terrain that
they may be forced to move over and fight. While the main battle
tanks remained tracked, the armored personnel carriers and
reconnaissance scouts came in tracked and wheeled versions,
both of which retained amphibious river crossing capabilities.
The BMP, BMD and later MT-LB series of combat vehicles represented
the low-stanced tracked versions while the BTR series covered
the wheeled vehicle family.
The BTR-152 was the first in the mainstream of wheeled armored
personnel carriers and was little more than an updated halftrack
body on a wheeled chassis. The BTR-50 series reverted back
to fully tracked mobility, which was abandoned for eight wheels
in the BTR-60. This eight-wheeled design would remain as the
vehicle was updated with improved armor and drive train through
the BTR-70 and BTR-80 series of production runs.
The BTR-60/70/80 series had a common small turret with the
14.5mm KPVT heavy machine gun and coaxial 7.62mm PKT machine
gun. The BTR-80 turret was modified to allow
gun elevations up to 70 degrees for mountain fighting (lessons
learned from Afghanistan). The BTR-80A retains the PKT coaxial
machine gun, though the KPVT is replaced with a 30mm long-barreled
main gun, bringing its firepower up to contemporary standards
for IFV armament. In addition, a new night sight provides visibility
out to 900 meters at night. (Thanks to Iwailo
Tzenow for clarifying the BTR-80A armament.)
The Kit
Zvedza has re-released their 'standard' BTR-80 kit (number
3558) with the new turret and details that make up this interesting
new variant of the tried and true BTR. Molded in olive green
styrene, the kit comes on six parts trees and also includes
eight black rubber tires. There is some interesting design
similarity of the kit to the now out-of-production DML BTR-80
kit, including the steerable front wheels.
The model has positionable hatches, but no interior is included.
The best defense against the dreaded IPMS judges is to position
all of the hatches closed as the crew uses periscopes to fight
the vehicle under fire.
The guns on the new turret are movable as is the turret. Assembly
is very straightforward on this kit and the only caution given,
as with the DML kit, is that that the there are a number of
grab irons, steps and other parts that make the assembled model
a bit fragile. Caution will be needed when transporting the
kit anywhere (as I've learned with my own DML BTR-80).
Markings are included for three examples, vehicles 122, 133
and 521. Vehicle 122 is an overall green BTR-80A whilst the
other two sport a two-color camouflage of dark and pale green.
Conclusions
Zvezda has released an interesting BTR-80 with
this big gun variant. Helicopter pilots won't want to meet
this vehicle on the battlefield with its big honking sniper
cannon. You can find this kit at your local hobby retailer
or directly from
Squadron Mail Order (www.squadron.com).
For a look at this kit built-up, check out the build
review here on Cybermodeler Online!
My sincere thanks to Squadron
Mail Order for this review sample!
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