ARM: Review - DML 1/35 scale British 8th Army Infantry El Alamein 1942

Kit Review: Dragon Models Limited 1/35 Scale '39-'45 Series Kit Np.

6390; British 8th Army Infantry El Alamein 1942; 61 parts in grey styrene; price about US$10

Advantages: nice newly molded figures of "Desert Rats" will be appreciated; very nicely done "original style" figures

Disadvantages: Commonwealth troops yet to rate "Gen2" weapons and kit

Rating: Highly Recommended

Recommendation: for all Commonwealth desert warfare fans

It seems to be all too rare that DML turns its attention to something other than WWII German subjects when it comes to their excellent line of figures, and therefore it is always an occasion when something not wearing swastikas pops up in the "new items" list. This is the first set of Commonwealth figures in some time, and with the advent of new WWII African campaign related vehicles (alas, not from DML) they will be well appreciated.

The set provides four figures in standard short sleeve/short pants desert attire: an officer with a Webley pistol and a whistle, a kneeling figure with a Thompson and 50-round drum. an advancing infantryman with an SMLE and bayonet, and a crouching Bren gunner. Each figure is composed of the "standard" DML breakdown (head, torso, arms and legs) and has several items of kit - canteen, backpack, ammo pouches, "tin hats" and holsters for those authorized them.

The only surprising item is that so far the British do not rate the "Gen2" treatment for their weapons as the German figures have received. The weapons in this set are from the much older British Commonwealth Troops, NW Europe 1944 set (No. 6055) - two SMLE, a Sten gun and a Bren with two options for its bipod (closed or open). A new Thompson (parts 10 and 11) and an older model of the SMLE with flush muzzle, bayonet and scabbard (parts 14-16) are included but the latter is not indicated in the directions, even though it is what the figure on the box art and directions is clearly holding, but not what is indicated (part 1 off the 6055 sprue). Go figure. There is also another pouch (part 12) and an odd item (part 13) on the sprue which likewise are not called out. I am no longer surprised when DML makes errors on its major kit directions where more than a thousand parts are involved, but in this case with but 61 in the box it is hard to fathom.

Box art is not bad but it is not credited; however, from the style it was not done by Ron Volstad but one of the other DML artists.

Overall, any new set of British figures is welcome, and even more when new British desert oriented vehicles are becoming available such as the forthcoming M3 Grant from Academy. (I do wish that, given some of the disappointment in the uneven quality of recent Academy efforts DML had done one up to match these figures though.)

Thanks to Freddie Leung for the review sample.

Cookie Sewell

Reply to
AMPSOne
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Many thanks for the reviews. Indispensable to be able to Google "Cookie Sewell review" + [subject of interest].

WmB

Reply to
WmB

The scary thing is when I Google it and come up with 4500+ hits!!!

Cookie Sewell

Reply to
AMPSOne

so cookie, what was your very first kit review? How long ago?

Craig

Reply to
crw59

..

Probably something Calvinesque when five and I could not get a Lindberg F-94C together, so had feeling it must be a bad kit and not a bad modeler...

Cookie Sewell

Reply to
AMPSOne

My childhood F-94 model had a very odd end. I wanted it to sit correctly on its nose gear, so I put a lead sinker in the nose radome with a lot of cement, then immediately glued it to the model. This worked fine for around a day, then, with no way for the glue to dry because it was sealed inside the model (which had a solid bulkhead behind the radome), it dissolved the nose radome from the inside.

Pat

Reply to
Pat Flannery

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