Tamiya 1/48 Panzer II
From the kit instructions: “In the mid 1930s, the German
military pushed the production of tanks. The Panzer I, designed as a training
tank, did not have adequate performance so a light tank was needed to fill the
gap until the Panzer III could be introduced. Therefore, the German Ordnance
Department issued a request for a new training tank that could be used for
combat. In the end, MAN was chosen in 1934 to
produce the
Panzer II, a compact 4.8cm long, 2.2m wide design with a three man crew. The 8.9
ton tank featured a 2cm Kwk 30 L/55 cannon and 7.92mm machine gun in the turret,
15mm armor protection for turret and hull front, leaf spring suspension, and a
140hp Maybach HL 62 TRM engine matched with a ZF SSG46 transmission, which gave
in a 40km/h top speed. The Ausf. A was produced from 1937, followed by the Ausf.
B and C, which were difficult to distinguish from each other visually. About
1,100 Panzer II tanks were produced by April 1940, and due to delays with the
Panzer III, they were immediately issued as the Panzer divisions’ main tank for
the invasion of Poland in September 1939. Based on lessons learned on the
battlefields of Poland and, in May 1940, France, improvements such as extra
armor and a turret cupola were added, and the Panzer II went on to serve in
North Africa and Russia in frontline liaison and reconnaissance duties until the
end of 1943. Afterwards, they were used to police occupied territories and the
chassis was also adapted for use as the basis for various self-propelled gun
designs.”
It
is hard to imagine that the feared “Blitzkrieg” type of armored warfare
originally had this diminutive tank at its spearhead. Good tactics, radio
communication, and the overwhelming air superiority of the Luftwaffe contributed
greatly to its early success in the face of superior French armor.
Tamiya’s
1/48th Panzerkampfwagen II is kit No. 70 in their Military Miniatures
series. The instructions are well printed and easy to follow. The engineering of
the Panzer II is superb, resulting in beautiful detail without difficult
construction or an excessive parts count. The kit is crisply molded in dark gray
plastic and there is almost no flash on the kit parts. Compared with other kits
in Tamiya’s 1/48th scale armor line, this one is delicate. There are
many petite parts that are easily lost or broken. One commander figure is
included. The molding of the figure is very good. The kit decals are thin, in
register, and provide markings for three Panzer IIs - all wearing Panzer Gray
and serving during the battle of France. There are metal chassis weights and
nice link and length tracks with the longer portions pre-formed, minimizing
assembly time.
I started by
carefully reviewing the kit instructions. Using them as a loose reference, I
built the kit in three major sub-assemblies: the chassis, the upper hull, and
the turret. I also left the tracks off until after painting for easier
weathering. The excellent fit of the parts, minimal cleanup and excellent
engineering really made for a rewarding and painless build. However, many small
parts required extra care during clean up and assembly. I broke several of the
track links while cutting them from the sprue and had to repair them prior to
assembly. After about five hours of building, I had the three main components
(chassis, upper hull and turret) ready for paint.
All of the kit markings were for Panzer Gray tanks. I went with the
first of the kit markings - option “A”, a Panzer II with the 6th
Panzer Division, France, 1940. First, everything was airbrushed PolyScale
acrylic RLM66 thinned with Future. Thinning with Future helped the paints
spray better and the satin finish was better suited to washes/filters. The
tracks were brush-painted dark gray next. They were dry-brushed with Testors
oil-based silver prior to weathering.
Next
came weathering. I started the weathering process by applying a thin, black,
soapy water filter/wash. I went section by section, using a Q-tip to remove some
of the wash and to streak it unevenly. I then dry-brushed some thinned RLM66 to
accent detail and further vary tone. Once the tracks were installed, the tracks
and chassis were strategically dry brushed with several layers of differing
shades of brown and tan paint to approximate dusty, muddy European conditions in
which these tanks operated. Good pictures of actual Panzer IIs proved invaluable
during the weathering process.
The
upper hull was glued to the chassis and the turret was then added prior to
decaling. I brush-painted several coats of Future in the areas where decals were
to be applied. After letting the Future dry overnight, I applied the kit decals.
They were very thin and went into position nicely. Once the decals were in place
they settled down with no silvering and responded well to an application of
MicroSol.
I added the commander figure at
this time. I then air-brushed Poly Scale Flat Clear mixed with a few drops of
Hazel Tan over the entire tank. I used pastels to further dirty the Panzer II.
Finally, I added thickened brown paint scraped from the lids of my paint
containers with a toothpick to depict mud on the tracks & fenders. I added a
stretched sprue antenna and final detailing was then completed.
From start
to finish, Tamiya’s Panzer II took me less than 15 hours over the course of a
week! Construction of the Panzer II was enjoyable and relaxing with no
insurmountable trouble spots. Tamiya’s smart engineering, terrific fit,
beautiful moldings and nice decals, resulted in a great looking finished
product. Weathering a monotone paint scheme was a fun challenge. I really
enjoyed Tamiya’s 1/48th scale Panzer II. The finished tank is small and due to
the delicate nature of this kit I would recommend it to modelers with some
experience. Highly recommended!
Jonathan Prestidge
April 2014If you would like your product reviewed fairly and fairly quickly, please
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