In order to destroy the forts of the French Maginot line in 1934 the
German High Command, OKH, contracted Krupp AG to design a gun which
would be up to the task. The resulting weapon would have to have the
capability of penetrating up to 7 meters of reinforced concrete or a
1 meter thickness steel armor plate. The resulting design was a
weapon with with a 30 meter long barrel which would fire an 80cm
steel shell weighing in at 7.1 tonnes up to 37 Kilometers.
Although ordered in 1934, work was not actually commenced until
1936, with the first gun, Christened "Schwere Gustav", or Heavy
Gustav, after Alfred Krupps father, not completed until 1941 after
delays due to construction difficulties. A second gun was ordered
and built which was christened "Dora" after the senior engineers
wife.
While both guns were deployed, the Schwere Gustav was actualy to
fire only 48 shots between June 5 and 17 1942 during the siege of
Sevastopol and did quit a lot of damage. By then it's barrel was
worn out, having previously fired 250 shots during testing. It was
next engagement was to be Leningrad, where it was set up and fully
operational when the attack was canceled and it never fired a shot.
The Dora was moved to Stalingrad around mid august 1942 and was
operational september 13, however, under the threat of an
encirclement by Soviet forces, it was quickly withdrawn.
Neither Gun survives.
The
HobbyBoss 1/72 scale 80cm K(E) Railway Gun is a kit which is
comprised of 1767 pieces, some individual, with the rest on 33
sprues, 3 small sheets photo etch, string, several metal squares for
ballast which fit into the gun breech, and an extensive decal sheet.
(The sprue diagram shows just how many parts this kit has. Doing
detail with this many bits would be pretty useless. Ed)
This kit is very well packaged with some of the individual
larger pieces being separately wrapped while some of the smaller
individual pieces are in the same bag. All the individual pieces are
contained in five boxes, one of which contains the decals and photo
etch.
All the sprues are individually wrapped with the sprues
containing finer pieces, and there are a lot of fine pieces, also
wrapped in a foam. Of the boxes, one is narrow with a removable top,
3 open at the side, but the box that contains the parts for the rail
bed is a square shallow top opening box which is large enough to
hold things as the are being built in sub assemblies, which is
nice.
The instructions are well printed in a 44 page 7 1/2"x10 1/4"
booklet and consist of 40 steps which are broken down into several
drawings. These appear to be very well laid out with it being very
clearly pointed out where things are supposed to go. The one problem
I can see some people having with the instructions is that due to
the size of the booklet, and the great detail with which things are
drawn, some of the drawings are bit cluttered making it difficult to
see what's what.
Also
included is a larger sheet printed on glossy paper with color
callouts and decaling instructions. The decaling instructions are
also in the main instruction booklet, which does not include
painting instructions. This won't be a problem though, as the model
it self is all one color with only a few items easily seen on the
guide being different.
The overall molding appears to be quit crisp with no flash or sink
marks. Any ejector pin marks are in areas that won't be seen on the
built model, with the smaller pieces having the little nibs attached
for the pins, which is nice to see. Overall the quality of the
moldings and the amount of detail seems to meet with today's
standards.
I've only test fit the parts that the gun
barrel slips into, so I can't attest to the over fit. Once I cleaned
up the matting surfaces, it appears that there will be a minimal
amount of clean up on the seam, and little, if any filler required.
I've included a model of Academy's Opel T stoff tanker to give a
comparison of size
This is one of those subjects that I never for a moment thought
would be produced by a main stream manufacturer in this scale. So
when it was announced that HobbyBoss was working on one I was quit
ecstatic and determined to pic one upright away. Overall given what
I've seen of the kit so far in the box, relative to the cost I would
say it's good value for the money and I'm quit pleased with my
purchase.
Review, of course, courtesy of me and my wallet.
|