WWII Ground Vehicle Set
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Stock Number and Description | Academy 1/72 Scale WWII Ground Vehicle Set - 6 (Kit No. 13408) M3 Half Track & 1/4 ton Amphibian Vehicle |
Scale: | 1/72 |
Media and Contents: | 96 parts in olive green styrene |
Price: | price US $20 |
Review Type: | First Look |
Advantages: | Nicely done "slide molded" components for "cab" and tracks, GPA at least as good as 1/35 scale one, Harley WLA a plus |
Disadvantages: | No clear parts for windshields, decals not quite right |
Recommendation: | Highly recommended for "Small Scalers" or aircraft modelers looking for diorama items |
FirstLook
This is the sixth in Academy's series of World War II ground
vehicles and provides three US items in one go: an M3A1 halftrack, a
Ford GPA (or "Seep" in some circles) and a Harley-Davidson WLA 45
motorcycle.
The halftrack comprises 66 parts of the kit and is a great
improvement on the old Airfix 1/72 and Hasegawa 1/72 kits, using
"slide molding" to come up with a one-piece "cab" assembly (hood,
doors and supporting structure) as well as a nicely done set of
running gear. The tracks consist of a track run with the rear road
wheels, idlers and drivers molded in place and separate front
components, which are well done in this scale.
The chassis has the front springs and idler adjustment springs and
mounts as separate parts with the rear drive axle part of the
chassis and the front axle and drive shaft separate. As it is a
later model M3A1 only the "combat" lights are provided and not the
"automotive" headlights.
The "cab" section offers optional radiator louvers (open or closed)
as well as side windows and windshield cover; the doors are fixed.
Oddly enough no clear material is provided for the windshield
itself. While the model offers a choice of either bumper roller or
winch, no drive shaft is provided for the winch, and one must come
from either spares or microrod.
The body comes with a separate rear door, mine racks less mines, and
twin luggage racks for the rear; no braces are provided for the
latter but can be made from stretched sprue without difficulty. Seat
backs are separate and leave stowage space behind them. An M49 ring
mount with .50 caliber M2HB and a pair of .30 caliber Brownings are
also provided for complete armament.
The GPA comprises 24 parts and is very nicely done, with a number of
very tiny detail parts to dress it up. The hull comes in three main
parts - lower hull tub, front deck, and interior/rear deck. Stub
axles are "slide molded" to the lower tub along with spring detail
and only the differentials and drive shafts need to be installed to
complete the chassis detail.
Again, no clear material is provided for the windshield.
The WLA 45 consists of six parts: frame and rear wheel, front wheel
with "springer" fork and headlight, handlebars with springs, two
"crash" bars and a center stand. The spokes are as delicate as can
be expected with plastic molding, and are commendable for their
fineness.
The finishing instructions are basically "paint olive drab" which is
correct, but the decals seem to once again miss the mark. Academy
should realize by now that when you have an American unit the
"number-dash-letter" is just that – e.g. 6-I for 6th Infantry
(Battalion here) and 27-I for 27th Infantry (Battalion). They
present them as "6-1" and "27-1" which is wrong. Also, the 1st
Armored Division did have the 6th Armored Infantry Battalion which
is correct; but the other on the decal sheet is credited to the 5th
Armored Division which is wrong as it should be the 9th Armored
Division. Markings as given in the directions are accurate as far as
they go.
Overall, this is a nice "gap filler" for small-scale armor fans and
will also lend itself to dioramas, e.g. US forces taking over German
airfields etc.
Highly Recommended.
A 40 Halftrack chassis and running
gear
B 32 Halftrack details, Harley WLA
C 24 Ford GPA
Thanks to
Bob Lewen of MRC for the review sample.
Text by Cookie Sewell
Page Created 24 August, 2006
Page Last Updated
10 February, 2007