Tuesday 24 May 2022

Kit Build/Review: 1/72 Ho-229, Pt 1

Wow! My first model build in absolutely aeons. And this is actually already old news. As I did this several months ago now. Just didn’t get round to posting it. 

One might’ve thought with Covid and lockdowns and all that that I might be doing more mini-military stuff. But the opposite has been the case. What came to pass instead was mostly either home DIY type stuff, or pure ‘r’n’r’. And then work, as things slowly returned to normal . It’s all been kind of weird, frankly!

Most of my more recent if infrequent posts have been book reviews, but even the reading has tailed off somewhat. And I really do want to get back into building models and painting and basing wargaming armies. 

I ‘recently’ made a pilgrimage - I actually forget when this happened now - to a newly opened model shop in Hinckley, Leicestershire. It was a pretty major disappointment, to be honest. 1/72 WWII is my thing, and land warfare more than planes. The shop, MCC, had an incredibly small selection of 1/72. And what little WWII stuff they had I have already bought/built. 

But I didn’t want the nigh on four hours travelling, esp’ with the hyper-inflated cost of the fuel, to be a total waste. So I wound up buying some PM 1/72 aeroplane kits. PM are Turkish. I’m not sure I’ve seen, never mind built, a PM kit afore? They’re cheap, and rather basic! 

Like many interested in WWII from a military history buff type perspective, I find the Horten brothers’ jet projects utterly fascinating. So it was great - having wanted to buy but not feeling I could afford the super/detailed Houkai-Morai kit (see this post!) - to find two PM variants I could afford. 

I was a bit confused initially, by the misnomer of the packaging, which names these airframes Gotha Go-229. It’s a bit anoraky, but the proper designation is Horten Ho-229. Gotha we’re simply a firm with a bigger manufacturing capacity than the cottage industry of the Hortens and their crew. 

Anyway, I’ve been building this model. And, as mentioned above. It’s super basic! I was tempted to leave it as is. But after looking into it, I realised that this particular kit, a V7 variant, is a type that was never even actually built; a two-seater trainer.  

As I looked into it, and thought about getting some reference material - Valiant Wings do what looks to be an excellent title on it (I reckon I’ll get that!) - I decided I had to detail the cockpit interior. I’ll do one or two other very minor things as well, such as holes on the ‘nose cones’ of the rocket, and possibly turbine fans or slats, or whatever they are…

Not sure if I’ll do the landing gear up or down!? But one of the chief attractions of these flying machines is their sleek looks. So whichever I choose, I’m looking forward to doing the painting and decals, etc. 

A pretty minimal kit!

The decals.

Getting started.

As you can see, super basic!

As these pics attest, this is a very basic kit. Hence deciding to jazz up the cockpit interior.  

The instructions.

I’ll leave this post here for now. As a ‘part one’ of a little series. I’ve already done enough to do a ‘part two’ post. And then the build stalled! Partly due to other stuff taking over, partly due to a bout of illness. 

Monday 23 May 2022

Book Review: Pz IV, Normandy Campaign Summer 1944, Dennis Oliver (Tank Craft 35)





Yet another excellent entry into Dennis Oliver’s growing library of works for the Tank Craft series in WWII German armour.


This time it’s that workhorse, the Pz IV, all too often overshadowed by it’s more glam’ brothers, the Panthers and Tigers. Specifically we have here the Pz IV, Normandy ‘44. Which, as Oliver enlightens us, mostly means the ausf. H. 


Interestingly, the Tank Craft series did previously publish a title on the Pz IV, covering the whole 1939-45 conflict. I haven’t seen that title. But it gets a few pretty critical reviews online. 


However, back to this more specialist offering. As usual with Oliver we get a comprehensive and thorough treatment: starting with a brief intro, we get the familiar maps and timelines. Then we get the unit histories, followed by the colour profiles - 10 pages with 20 profiles plus lots of other little pics/details - and model showcase. then info on models and after market stuff, wrapping up with Technical Details and Modifications. 

The unit composition diagrams are given, in a slightly different manner from other Oliver books, right at the end, after two pages of tables detailing the production and allocation of these AFVs. 


I’m always somewhat dumbfounded by the degree of detail Oliver goes into. It’s all a bit much for my ageing noggin to really take in. But I do find it fascinating. 


So far Panzers III and IV are very under represented un the Tank Craft series, compared to the Panthers and Tigers. So not only is this a great addition to this series, but I hope it’s the first in a series that redresses that imbalance! 


Great stuff!

Book Review: Panther, Eastern Front Summer 1943, Dennis Oliver (Tank Craft 34)



I’m extremely lucky, inasmuch as I’ve got this as a free review copy. I mention this mainly because if I had to buy all these books, their sheer quantity would most likely exclude me from being able to do so.


This is, as Oliver himself says, the fifth title on Panther tanks in the ever-growing Tank Craft series. For me, in Dennis Oliver, P&S have found a very capable and impressive contributor. He’s very thorough, and systematic, which gives his titles a kind of consistency lacking in some of the books in these series by other authors/experts. 


Anyway, to the particular book in hand. After a brief Introduction to his subject, Oliver presents the overall situation, in a chapter titled The Eastern Front 1943, via a map and a four page timeline style synopsis. 


Then there’s a larger chunk devoted to the units, 12 in all, issued with Panthers, on the Ostfront. As well as giving concise unit histories for the period this section includes a two-page diagram giving a visual representation of Panzer Abteilungs 51 and 52. 


Then we have the colour-profiles, aka Camouflage and Markings, and a selection of beautifully built models, in 

the Model Showcase section. 24 Panthers are profiled in the Camouflage and Markings section, 16 in full side views, and eight via turret only views. There are three 1/35 and one 1/48 models in the Showcase chapter (I always want to see a 1/72, example, as that’s my favoured scale!). These are the two most colourful and visually beguiling chapters.


Modelling Products gives a pretty thorough overview of many of the available kits and a good deal of after-market stuff (inevitably not all, as there’s a huge amount of stuff out there!). 


Technical Details returns to the AFV itself, and devotes a decent chunk of the book - 15 heavily illustrated pages; roughly quarter of the 64 page title - to all the nuts and bolts type stuff. And then there’s a single page devoted to Product Contact Details. 


Throughout the book contemporary black and photos are liberally deployed - I counted roughly 45-ish - illustrating the subject. These range from crisp full page images to some small and rather poor quality pictures. 


This is another excellent and impressively thorough addition by Oliver to what is a very useful series for the WWIII German armour buff.