Kubelwagen Ambulance
|
Stock Number and Description | cyber-hobby.com (Dragon Models Limited) 1/35 Scale ‘39-‘45 Series Kit No. 6336; Kubelwagen Ambulance w/German Medical Team |
Scale: | 1/35 |
Media and Contents: | 207 parts (185 parts in grey styrene, 14 etched brass, 8 clear styrene) |
Price: | price estimated at US $19.00. Will be available online from Mission Models |
Review Type: | First Look |
Advantages: | Combines two kits in one box with extra details; stretcher is beautifully done |
Disadvantages: | Figures are older DML efforts and much stiffer than current releases |
Recommendation: | Highly Recommended for German "Kubel" fans and diorama buffs |
FirstLook
It took me a while to get the DML/cyber-hobby.com relationship
sorted, as we know from historical releases that DML also has
released (in original or modified form) kits from Gunze Sangyo
(Japan) and Alan (Russia) under its own label, as well as the
"Shanghai Dragon" lower priced re-releases. Now comes a new company
– Bego – of which I am totally unawares.
No matter. This kit combines the new Bego VW Typ 82 "Kuebelwagen"
kit (which oddly enough DragonUSA claims to sell as Kit PLA001 for
US $37.95!) with parts of DML "Imperial" Kit No. 9055 (VW Ambulance,
released in 1999) and DML figure set 6074 (German Medical Troops
with two medics, one ambulatory patient and one stretcher case). The
9055 kit provides a doctor in medical apron and a nurse in skirt and
apron; the other has one medic carrying a casualty with head wound,
and one medic kneeling next to the stretcher. The doctor and nurse
are rather static figures. Oddly enough, the kneeling medic was not
"mentioned in despatches" as he was left off the direction sheet!
(He is "blued out" but it seems odd that they would not at least
provide the modeler with the option to use him!)
The VW kit is not bad, as it has plenty of nicely redone details
including very petite footboards inside the passenger compartment.
It includes a basic engine, choice of tops, and a crew of two. As it
is an ambulance, a bench is provided for the right side of the
passenger compartment vice the front right seat, but the directions
never bother to show how the stretcher is to be mounted on the VW.
(The only place suggesting how this works is on the side of the
box.)
Etched brass is provided for details like the door handles, wipers,
rear view mirror, and some of the sheet metal fittings on the body.
The model has a generic decal sheet from Cartograf with the usual
Red Cross markings, blank license plates, and number jungles to fill
them in. In a cutesy move to get around EU restrictions, the "SS"
runes are provided on the sheet in two sections, which the modeler
must join together on the decal to get the proper markings. The only
suggested color scheme is Panzerbraun with small green and red-brown
splotches.
Overall this seems to be a nice kit – especially if you have built a
number of VWs in the past – but the directions really are of little
use in doing much more than sticking parts together; it could have
at LEAST come with a color painting sheet for the figures. This is a
shame, as it is a nice kit let down by indifferent directions.
Sprue Breakdown:
A 23 VW body parts (Bego)
B 45 VW top parts and seat details (Bego)
C 15 VW details (Bego)
D 4 VW floorboards (Bego)_
E 23 VW wheels and two figures (Bego)_
E 6 Stretcher and details
G 8 clear styrene (Bego)
H 29 VW rear end and two figures (9055)
40 Four casualties (6074)
MA 14 etched brass
Thanks to
Freddie Leung for the review sample.