Kit Review: cyber-hobby.com 1/35 Scale Kit 01 (Dragon Models Limited
Master Grade Models No. 6286) ; Sd.Kfz. 181 Pz.Kpfw. VI Ausf. E Tiger I
Initial Production 1. Kompanie s.Pz.Abt. 501 DAK 3-in-1 Kit; 950 parts
(494 in grey styrene, 223 etched brass, 180 "Magic Track" links, 18
turned brass, 11 clear styrene, 8 metal pins, 8 metal clevises, 4 bent
wire, 1 turned aluminum,1 length twisted steel cable, 1 length of woven
nylon sleeve, 1 spring); price unknown
Advantages: targeted production permits building a specific unit's
vehicles; limited production kit provides wealth of options for
construction means and methods
Disadvantages: limited production kit may have limited availability
Rating: Highly Recommended
Recommendation: for all Tiger fans
F I R S T L O O K
I recently found a web site for Universal Models Limited of Hong Kong.
It is quite interesting, as it gives out a great deal of history and
explains a great deal. Founded as a hobby shop in Hong Kong in 1974, it
moved on to become a wholesaler and exporter (Hobby World Ltd.) and it
also opened subsidiary companies in the US and Canada. In 1987, UML
took the step of forming its own satellite model production company -
Dragon Models Limited. Business boomed, and with the coming handover of
Hong Kong to China in 1997 a satellite model production company,
Shanghai Dragon, was launched in 1994. Now, in 2005, they are adding
cyber-hobby.com to market limited production versions of DML products.
The first of these in 1/35 scale is a Tunisian Tiger I (the same
version as the Ordnance Museum's Tiger I here in Aberdeen, as so well
covered in the book "Tiger Without a Home" and which is under
renovation in the UK right now) with suitable optional parts to make
any of three different tanks from sPzABt 501.
Most of the parts are a combination from three previous kits - Tiger
I Early No. 6252), Tiger I Late (No. 6253), and Tiger (Porsche) (No.
6210) kits. Some new bits have been added, but overall this is a
mix-and-match kit that provides all of the specific bits in one box
with a new main set of etched brass (MA fret).
While the kit has many of the same parts from the previous three Tiger
kits, there are a number of new details. The sides of the hull are new
and a specific plastic cable array (or your choice of styrene heads and
steel wire cable) are provided for making the Tiger match a 501st tank.
New rear fenders are provided, along with one set of styrene and three
etched brass sets for the front fenders. The model also has a new
glacis plate and various bins to match the Tigers fielded by the 501st.
Many other original kit parts have also been "tweaked" to match
501st tanks. The "Feifel" air filter system is provided with either
styrene tubes or styrene head and tails to use with a woven nylon tube
option. Mounts are also provided so that you can model the tank with
missing road wheels or - with an after-market purchase - with
"shipping" tracks and not its "combat" tracks.
The "combat" tracks are provided as "Magic Track" links, which
snap together for assembly and come pre-trimmed.
Details abound. For example, the bow gun consists of seven parts for
the gun and mount and another seven for the ball mounting on the upper
glacis panel. The driver's viewer operates (slides up and down) and
as with the previous "Late" kit there is a rudimentary interior
provided in the way of fuel tanks, torsion bars, and engine radiator
fans. Where the three tanks covered differ there are callouts on the
directions for what details are used or not used or what has to be
changed to match.
DML originated the concept of optional parts, and the kit provides for
many of them in either styrene or brass (or other materials as
appropriate). Two different barrel options are provided (styrene or
turned aluminum) as well as various optional parts such as smoke
grenade launchers, exhaust shrouds, tow clevises, and the kit also
includes 24 rounds of 8.8 cm ammunition, two ammo cases, three Jerry
cans, and a bucket. Finally, four locks are included for the stowage
bins, consisting of a styrene body and etched brass hasp.
The finishing options are for three tanks: Number 112 (the Aberdeen
tank), Number 141 and Number 142. The Aberdeen tank is in what appears
to be Afrika Korps Braun (the directions call for "middle stone")
and the other two are in Panzergrau.
Overall, this is another lovely kit, and at least by having a
subsidiary company create low-rate limited production kits for them DML
will not clog up their inventory with what may not be the most widely
appealing kits. According to the flyer in the kit, the next four
"cyber-model.com" releases are: ch.c 02 (DML No. 6293) - Sd.Kfz.
251/23 Ausf. D with 2 cm turret; ch.c 03 (DML No. 6294) Pzkw. IV Ausf.
E - Eastern Front; ch.c 04 (DML No. 6295) T-34/76 STZ; and 05 (DML No.
6296) Sd.Kfz. 234 with 2 cm turret.
Thanks to Freddie Leung of DML for the review sample.
Cookie Sewell
AMPSOne@aol.com - 14 Oct 2005 20:19 GMT
Oops -- that should be cyber-hobby.com, not cyber-model.com. Mea culpa.
Cookie Sewell
Gerald Owens - 14 Oct 2005 23:47 GMT
> Kit Review: cyber-hobby.com 1/35 Scale Kit 01 (Dragon Models Limited
> Master Grade Models No. 6286) ; Sd.Kfz. 181 Pz.Kpfw. VI Ausf. E Tiger I
[quoted text clipped - 92 lines]
>
> Cookie Sewell
Gerald Owens - 14 Oct 2005 23:52 GMT
Thanks for the review, Cookie! Looking forward to this one, but I gotta
wonder about Dragon's marketing strategy. Seems to me that based on
customer interest, the DAK 501st Battalion Tiger should have been the
standard kit and initial production 502nd Battalion "Leningrad" vehicle
should have been the limited production kit.
Gerald Owens
> Kit Review: cyber-hobby.com 1/35 Scale Kit 01 (Dragon Models Limited
> Master Grade Models No. 6286) ; Sd.Kfz. 181 Pz.Kpfw. VI Ausf. E Tiger I
[quoted text clipped - 92 lines]
>
> Cookie Sewell
Dave Williams - 15 Oct 2005 01:32 GMT
> Thanks for the review, Cookie! Looking forward to this one, but I gotta
> wonder about Dragon's marketing strategy. Seems to me that based on
> customer interest, the DAK 501st Battalion Tiger should have been the
> standard kit and initial production 502nd Battalion "Leningrad" vehicle
> should have been the limited production kit.
> Gerald Owens
Fully agree, but this may actually be their marketing strategy. This way
they can sell a more wanted kit through their direct marketing arms at full
retail price, instead of having to offer the discounts to distributors and
shops through the normal suply chain. Probably not that many people would
have bought the Initial Tiger, if it were only offered at full retail.
Dave