The
Jagdpanther doesn't really need an introduction and Zvezda agrees
as nothing of the sort is given in the instructions.
1.
Contents
As this
is my second encounter with a "snap fit" Zvezda armor kit,
I wanted to start building it as quickly as possible. So, I started
with a quick peek inside the (side-opening) box allowing me to start
removing parts from the sprues.
The main sprues. Parts are crisp and, in general, well detailed. The
back rows of the interleaved suspension are pre-assembled promising
a speedy and well-aligned assembly.
Detail
of the upper hull.
The
lower hull. It is immediately clear that the suspension arms are individual
pieces that will allow some customization.
Single
length hard plastic tracks with more than acceptable detail.
The
decal sheet with individual numbers that can be mixed and matched
as required. Everything seems to be in perfect register.
2.
Instructions
The
instructions promise a speedy assembly. The marking option is for
a generic vehicle on the Western or Eastern front.
This is how the finished article should look like.
It doesn't look half bad an no gaps are immediately visible..
3.
Construction
Before
starting the discussion about the different assembly steps, a word
of caution is in order. This is my second Zvezda armor kit and I am
still discovering the properties of the plastic that Zvezda uses.
First of all, it is much softer than the styrene I am used to, most
likely to allow the parts to flex when "snapping them together"
or bend the tracks. This means, however, that rough handling will
easily deform parts (as I discovered on the drive sprockets), or melt
the plastic when you apply glue (as I discovered on the idler). For
those who are wondering, I feel that a bit of glue is still required
to get the best results. I also have the impression that the plastic
becomes somewhat brittle after painting, which I discovered on the
tracks. In no way is this a complaint about the quality of the kit,
it is just something that a modeler who is new to these kits needs
to be careful with.
3.1
Suspension
3.1.1.
What the instructions tell you to do
After
having built the Zvezda King Tiger
previously, I was a bit apprehensive about the tracks, but the
engineering approach in this kit is much better than in the King
Tiger. First of all, the suspension is extremely well detailed,
with separate suspension arms, bump stops, etc. It's actually
a shame to hide all this behind the roadwheels.
The idler and drive sprocket halves also have pegs to help them stay
aligned, although some care and a bit of glue are still welcome.
What is obvious this time is that the building sequence is entirely
logical compared to the King Tiger. No locating pegs that cannot
be accessed when they need to be (according to the instructions)
or hull parts that are getting in the way.
3.1.2.
What I did
Dry fitting showed that the locating holes and pegs didn't line
up when the tracks were closed, so I used two of them to fix the
tracks in place while working with them and removed the other
ones. Compared to the King Tiger the tracks are spot on in length
and can be closed easily.
I am a big fan of single length hard plastic tracks that can be
bent around the suspension. Still, I made things a little easier
for me by pre-bending the tracks before wrapping them around the
suspension. The trick is to make them supple enough to work with,
but not to the point that they break.
I noticed that the teeth of the drive sprocket were too big too
fit into the tracks, and even after thinning them down, they still
didn't want to co-operate. I sanded down the mating surface of
the drive sprockets to make them narrower and it did help, but
not enough. In the end, I removed the teeth where the drive sprocket
meets the tracks. I only did this after I had glued the sprockets
to the hull. It would be much easier to do that before installing
them.
The axle of the idler is a notably weak part and I ended up breaking
both of them. Installing a metal rod solved that problem and as
it is slightly off-center with respect to the center of the idler
it allowed me to play with the position of the idler and get a
(near) perfect tension on the tracks. Note that I decided to glue
the tracks to the wheels to make them conform better. (Note
that the plastic in this kit is very soft, so you will
get a good joint or a ruined part depending on your thrift. I
learned this the hard way as at one point I ended up with an idler
that turned into mush and had to be sculpted back into shape affresco.)
3.1.3.
What I (probably) should have done
The
biggest mistake I made was that I didn't follow the instructions
enough. (Quite the opposite as what happened with the Tiger Ausf.B.)
I had decided to install as little of the roadwheels as possible
before installing the tracks to have better acces to the latter.
That decision came to bite me afterwards as fitting parts C13
and C14 (the outer half of the inner roadwheels) will then become
impossible without partially removing the tracks again. But hey,
that's what we reviewers do: we suck at building a new kit so
you don't have to.
Adding these roadwheels also revealed that the fit of the inner
roadwheels between the track teeth is uncomfortably tight (to
the point of bending the teeth outward). This is partially because
of the late installation of the wheels and because of the difficulty
with which the wheels go over the axles. I believe the easiest
solution here would be to
- glue the inner roadwheels (C13, C37, C14, C36) together first,
perhaps sanding them down a little in between to reduce the overall
thickness;
- install all the axles to the roadwheels as tightly as possible;
- glue the roadwheels-cum-axles to the hull.
Thinning down the idlers in the same way as I did for the sprockets
(just a little) will also make it easier to work with them.
At
one time I had thought that it might have been better to do the
right track differently from the instructions so that it closes
on top (like the left track) where the joint would be partially
hidden by the Schürzen. In the end, the joint is so good
that it just doesn't matter.
In
all, while I had some difficulty with the tracks, it was much
more enjoyable than with the King Tiger and if I had to do it
over again, with my newly acquired experience, I am sure it would
almost be the proverbial walk in the park.
3.2
The rest of the kit
The
remainder of the assembly is a breeze, apart from the rear hull
plate. In step 9, all major components of the hull come together
in one step, and whatever building sequence one choses, it appears
that one part will always interfere with another, unless some part
is put into place with a stern hand.
Further minor remarks:
- The
gun can be assembled in a way that allows it to move in both azimut
as in elevation.
- There
is a small insert that provides a very rudimentary engine compartment
when looking through the grilles in the engine deck.
- I
drilled out the exhausts (parts C57 and C58) and engraved a depression
between the exhaust tubes and the metal guards.
- The
gun barrel was drilled out.
- The
interleaved armor on the tip of the nose is only presented partially
(on the lower edge). I engraved it on the upper part.
- An
antenna was added to the right rear of the fighting compartment.
- The
opening for the vision block in the driver's periscope was deepened.
- Too
late in the construction sequence I discovered that there was
a seam around the ball mount that should'n have been there.
- The
left rear split hatch on top of the fighting compartment is put
into a small square depression, which shouldn't be there and is
very hard to fix, unless the modeler cuts out the whole area and
glues it back in place flush with the rest of the roof.
- Early
in the construction I had decided to replace the towing cable
with scratchbuilt items, using twisted strands of copper wire
and spare towing eyes from a Dragon Panther (or Jagdpanther) kit.
This made me lower my guard, as I assumed that two small holes
on the edges of the engine deck were there to accept pegs of the
original kit-supllied towing cables. I wasn't wrong about that,
but I didn't notice that these pegs weren't on the eyes, but on
the cables themselves. This meant that I took measurement for
my hand-made cables based on these pegs, assuming that the small
holes would, in the end, be covered by the thickness of the towing
eyes. All the while I was wondering what the two rectangular pegs
at the extreme rear of the engine deck were doing there, as I
didn't find them on any plans or pictures of the real thing.
Only when I was almost ready to add the towing cables to the (now
almost finished) kit, did I take a closer look at the instructions
and noticed that those pegs on the engine deck were there to hold
the eyes of the towing cables. Conclusion: my towing cables were
too short. As I didn't fancy making new ones, I decided to put
the vehicle in a diorama where the crew is waiting for the vehicle
to be towed away. This would allow me to attach the cables to
the towing points on the hull at one end and have them lay on
the ground at the other. I also meant that I had to fill in the
holes on the engine deck, after the kit had been completely painted,
which turned out to be a challenge. Luckily, armor kits allow
the modeler to add scratches and other weathering where needed.
Incidentally, having the kit end up in a diorama, also gave me
the possibility to hide the right rear idler (i.e. the one that
had earlier turned into mush).
A last word on Jagdpanther towing cables: from the photographs
that I studied it seems that there was no standard way to fit
them, and many vehicles appear to have driven around happily without
them.
- A
PE mesh was added to a part of the engine deck. As there is no
dedicated set for the Zvezda kit (yet), I used the Hauler set
for the Hät kit, which fitted perfectly on the forward rectangular
ventilation grilles and the round ones, but not on the rear ones
(which are the Jagdpanther Ausf. G1 type, while the Hauler parts
are for the G2). I left the rear ones mesh-less. If a set is ever
released for the Zvezda kit, it can still be added later.
The
Hauler set
Dry fitting the Hauler set
3.3
Camouflage and markings
The
vehicle was painted in an imaginary 3-color camouflage scheme and
marked using a subset of the kit decals.
3.4
Conclusion
This
kit is based on Zvezda's Panther Ausf.D and the engineering choices
of the lower hull thus predate that of the King Tiger. Surprisingly,
the choices made on the Panther make more sense. While the suspension
is extremely well detailed, it does not help to make the suspension
any sturdier or the construction any easier, but overall, the kit
goes together very easily.
Basecoat,
before blending the colors and adding weathering.
At
this point a bit more weathering should be done, especially on the
lower hull. I will only do that when the diorama is finished, to
be able to make the kit blend in better. The towing cables will
then also be added.
4.
Accuracy
4.1.
Features
(Based
mostly on [1] and, to a lesser extent [2].)
Jagdpanthers were produced between October 1943 and March (April
?) 1945. Worthy of note is that all the Jagdpanthers produced in
1944 were sent to the Western or Italian front.
Most people are probably unaware that there were two different models
of Jagdpanthers: the Ausf.G1 and the Ausf.G2. The latter is mainly
distinguishable by a slightly longer rear deck and a slightly shorter
and steeper rear plate on the fighting compartment, although this
is barely noticeable when seen from most angles.
Apart from this distinguishing feature, modifications during production
were numerous (in bold those found on the kit):
- October
1943
- The
first Jagdpanthers had the same engine deck as the
Panther Ausf. A but with narrower air intake louvres
directly behind the superstructure and larger ones at the
rear.
-
The antenna base on the engine deck (of the Panther) was bolted
over as the antenna was fitted on the superstructure. Later
this antenna base was no longer present at all.
- Smaller
600 mm idler wheel.
- Zimmerit.
- January
1944
- Introduction
of the Nahverteidigungswaffe
- February
1944
- Introduction
of rain guard over driver's periscope
- [2]
mentions that the antenna was only now moved from the engine
deck to the fighting compartment
- March
1944
- Fittings
for rangefinder installed in front of loader's hatch
- April
1944
- Hole
for telescoping air tube on engine deck no longer cut in armor
plate.
- Two
part gun tube gradually introduced
- May
1944
- Tow
coupling fitted, jack moved as a consequence
- June
1944:
-
All vehicles fitted with Nahverteidigungswaffe (the kit has
it plated over)
- One
driver's visor blanked over and rain guard
modified
- Smaller
muzzle brake gradually phased in
- Larger
idler wheel (665mm) with double-ribbed spokes gradually phased
in; only fully in March 1945.
- Larger
mantlet with external bolts phased in
- Pilzen
fitted on roof (also retrofit)
- July
1944:
- Rain
guard over driver's visor dropped
- Thicker
roof armor (difficult to tell)
- Extra
cooling pipes for exhaust
- Panther
Ausf.G type rear stowage bins
- August
1944
- September
1944
- October
1944
- Rear
stowage bins with vertical stiffeners instead of "X"
possible, but rare
- Heat
guards around exhaust
- Higher
left engine cooling fan housing with pie shaped segments
- Mantlet
with thicker lip
- Removal
of additional exhaust pipes by MIAG
- November
1944
- Fume
extractor moved forward on roof on a small number
of vehicles
- Bore
brush tube moved to the rear edge of the engine deck
- December
1944
- Only
one opening for driver's periscope
- Field
modification consisting of covers for the louvres on the rear
deck.
- Flammentöter
exhausts (also as retrofit)
- January
1945 (?)
- Ausf.
G2:
- Longer
engine deck with Panther Ausf.G features;
-
steeper rear of fighting compartment;
- same
overall length as G1;
- twin
cooling pipes no longer needed.
- End
of production run:
- squared
bases for exhausts
- small
return roller replaced by skid
- cast
drive sprocket cover
Note
that
- s.Pz.Jg.Abt.654
installed extra stowage boxes on the rear of the fighting compartment
and moved the bore brush tube to the rear edge of the engine deck
in the spring of 1944. Most other tools were also moved to the
engine deck or rear of the fighting compartment.
- s.Pz.Jg.Abt.564
often modified their vehicles by repositioning the shovel and
fire extinguisher to the right rear of the fighting compartment
[2].
- Later
vehicles often lacked the Schürzen.
- A
few vehicles were assembled from parts under supervision of the
British after the war [2].
- MNH
produced vehicles had Panther track guards with a cut-out for
the shovel, allowing the showel to be installed horizontally on
the side of the superstructure (and which is the cause of the
infamous "half shovel" in the Dragon kits). MIAG vehicles
didn't have this feature and thus the shovel needed to be installed
at an angle [2]. Based on this, this kit represents a vehicle
from MNH.
What
would this mean ?
- The
kit represents an Ausf.G1
- The
latest feature is either the single driver's periscope (12/44),
or if we believe the other one is just plated over, then it is
the fume extractor (11/44).
- Assuming
this is a November 1944 vehicle (or later), like the vehicles
at Aberdeen Proving Grounds or at Kubinka, then
- The
vehicle would most likely have the reinforced mantlet, although
the early bolted one is still possible
- It
would need to have the raised cooling fan on the engine deck
(10/44)
- It
could have the larger idler
I have
no idea if vehicles without the raised cooling fan were still produced
in November 1944, but my general impression is that this kit is
consistent in its features.
4.2.
Details and dimensions
- The
number of bolts on the roadwheels is accurate.
- The
sprocket has the correct number (17) of teeth.
- The
rear convoy light is missing
- Most
other details also seem accurate.
A table with the dimensions can be found in the
Jagdpanther
comparison article. In general, the kit doesn't scale out too
badly except for
- the drive sprocket that is closer to 1/80;
- the
height at the rear of the fighting compartment, that is closer
to 1/65. Surprisingly, the rear plate of the fighting compartment
is actually too low (1/76), while the height of the engine side
plate in the area of the spare tracks is closer to a whopping
1/58. Fortunately this is partially hidden by the Schürzen.
The
overall look of the kit isn't that bad, until one really starts
to focus on the height of the fighting compartment, but even then
it's not that obvious. Surprisingly, all Jagdpanther
kits are overscale here.
Also worthy of note is that compared to other Jagdpanther
kits, the Zvezda offering is actually (one of) the best when
it comes to the accuracy of the dimensions.
4.3.
Markings
The
suggested markings in this kit are very generic, with just some
black numbers, outlined in white, and some Balkenkreuze. The instructions
also just mention "Western or Eastern Front", clearly
indicating that Zvezda did not have any particular vehicle in mind.
Researching the accuracy of the markings is thus an exercice in
futility.
Conclusion
While
the suspension is perhaps a bit over-engineered, the kit goes together
very well (which is the whole point of Zvezda's concept), is well
detailed and generally accurate.
It's a kit that I would recommend without reservation.
References:
[1] Panzer
Tracts No.9-3 "Jagdpanther". T.L. Jentz & H.L. Doyle,
2005
[2] Jagdpanther.
Ł. Gładysiak, A. Rejmak & K. Mucha. Kagero Photosniper
3D N° 8, 2013
Review
sample received from Zvezda through IPMS/Belgium.
Zvezda
kits can be purchased from
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