First of all, an apology: this post was written months ago and it simply slipped my mind that I had not posted it! Life has been both busy and fraught and even on the brightest side I have been more concerned with building models than blogging about them. Nevertheless, this blog is alive and well and here are two posts on the same day to make up for the long silence! So, without further ado:
We usually think of detail, and detail accuracy, as being
rather the holy grail of the hobby. How faithful has a manufacturer been to the
original subject? Have the fine details been captured? How well? Surely a kit
that captures details others have missed must be a good one, and when there are
many of them, it must be the preferred starting point.
That was my perhaps naïve outlook when I started Trumpeter’s
old (2000 or so) kit of the M1A1HA tank. I used Vodnik’s site to compare the
major brands and how well they had captured the fine details, and in almost
every instance Trumpeter was well ahead, featuring a wealth of small details
that I have in the past scratchbuilt onto Tamiya M1s to “complete the picture.”
Some of them are details I have never attempted, such as the sides of the lower
hull with their intricate bolt detail and what appear to be laminations of
plate. The Trumpeter offering featured many moulded-in items the others do not,
and the lower price was an added incentive.
The fact is, the lower price should also have been a
warning, because this was perhaps the least friendly armour kit I’ve built in a
while. I can safely say it fought me at every step, there are elements that
were never going to line up, and for all its vaunted details, there were
elements which were missed or improperly represented, so if accuracy was the
goal there was still building to do on top of the battle royal that was the
price of the details to start with.
Many would say this it is a good thing to be challenged, and
I would agree. Certainly the construction sequence was different from what I’m
used to, necessitated by the skirt armour being moulded in with the upper hull.
This meant that the running gear and lower hull must be completed before the
upper hull is mated, and this gave rise to the interesting process of,
essentially, laying on the main paint scheme before the model was finished.
When the top hull was snugged down over the lower and fixed in place, I simply
touched up the camouflage scheme with a few spots through the airbrush and
called it good. I make that process sound simple, but there was a great deal of
filing and fiddling, of cutting with a razor saw and other adjustments to get
the hull to join at all.
The proof of the model is in the viewing, I guess, and it
sure looks like an Abrams. All that fancy detail behind the running gear is
invisible, of course, and I still had to scratch a detail or two, and only
realised after I was done that I’d missed one or two others that would have
been easy to add at the right time. The doors of the main sight don’t fit, the
lifting lugs on the rear hull should have been replaced with wire, the bustle
rack and turret racks overall were warped and were a pain to get even as
straight as they are… The rack outer face is sloping inward, which was not
apparent until the tact board and stowage boxes were attached. I used these
same parts on another model long ago and they behaved much better that time.
The decals, while quite glossy, were very thin and reacted
well to Microscale chemistry, snugging down to the surface without complaint,
and as such were one of the few elements of this kit that worked as intended.
The non-slip texture moulded in is also excellent, but that’s about it for the
compliments. The running gear is secured with central caps which did not fit
the shafts they were meant to go over, neither in length nor width. I filed the
axle stubs to get them into place but nothing would ever get them to sit down
that extra couple of millimetres to where they actually looked like the real
thing. As a matter of fact, almost no pin was ever the right size to enter a
socket anywhere on this kit, including the main sockets that joined the hull,
so it was always a matter of modifying and filing. It fought me to the bitter
end, with the radio masts and tow cables, to the extent that I really did not
care by then whether the details I was mounting were correct or not, so long as
they were finished.
Trumpeter have come a long way since this kit, which was in
their “middle era” of engineering. Today their new-tool products are world
class, and their Hobby Boss subsidiary is right up there with Tamegawa in terms
of crispness of moulding and accuracy of assembly. It all had to start
somewhere, and this M1, while dated in its approach, was far from their first
product even so. I look forward to a retool at some point, or even an M1
showing up in their 1:16th scale armour series, which would be
majorly impressive.
This particular outing was an education in many ways, and I
would have to say that I’m happy enough with the result. Tamiya Acrylics, Mig
pigments, scratchbuilt radio masts and a steady hand on the decals, and she
looks good in the line up with the others. Heck, for $7 direct from China,
perhaps I really shouldn’t complain!
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