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Editors
Note:
The following book review has been borrowed from the
"Missing - Lynx" armor
modeling web site. For those of you not familiar with this site, please visit them at
www.missing-lynx.com
The top armor modelers in the world contribute
to this great site on a regular basis.
Packing a
106 page punch this latest in the series of books form the Nuts
and Bolts team is a real winner. Obviously published in mind of
Tamiya’s recent release, the N&B team knows that this little gem
of kit is hard to
resist and that many modelers have more than one sitting on
their shelves awaiting the right references. Well, the wait is over
and the reference has arrived.
The book begins with 24 pages of developmental history, combat history
and unit allocations. The way in which the unit allocations are
dealt with is excellent. Each unit which has been identified with fielding the Marder III has
been giving both a paragraph detailing the
unit’s actions as well as a table showing all the units and the quantities allocated. Very
handy.
The next 21 pages are, in my opinion, the best part of the book. Photo
after photos showing the Marder III in action on all fronts, most of which have not been
published before. There is some spectacular stuff
here, including photos showing all 3 types of travel locks. There
is enough variety in these photos to model a dozen Marders in
different schemes: gray, desert brown, winter whitewash, gray with
dark yellow overspray, plain dark yellow, dark yellow with one secondary
colour and dark yellow with 2 secondary colours. Fantastic!
This is followed by 2 pages of 1/35 scale 5 view drawings plus 2 drawings
showing details with the gun removed. The "centerfold" is 4 pages of colour plates
showing 8 different Marders. The
final section, as per usual in any Nuts and Bolts book, is 58 pages
of detail photos of the Aberdeen and Saumur Marder IIIs as well
as detail photos of the towed 76.2cm AT gun (there are 2 pages of
1/35 drawings of this ordnance also). The variety and scope of these
images make them essential to anyone wishing to superdetail a
Marder III and are exactly what we have come to expect form the N&B
team.
Speaking of
superdetail, the inside front and rear covers of the book features
colour photos of Brian Well’s unpainted Marder III which features
scratchbuilt detailing beyond what most sane people would attempt
(this model was also featured in Military Modeling a few years
back).
Overall, an
exceptional book and essential to any considering building Tamiya’s
great kit.
Very highly
recommended.
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