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Book Review
Modern German Flakpanzers
Flugabwehrpanzer der Bundeswehr (modern German AA Tanks), Tankograd no.5021
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by: Tom Cromwell [ BARKINGDIGGER ]

Introduction

World War II demonstrated that air power was the ultimate enemy of ground-based forces. When the post-war German government was allowed to form an army in 1956 it had to incorporate some form of anti-aircraft vehicles to accompany its armoured units, and started by adopting surplus American hardware. Once Germany began designing its own tanks, a new AA tank was inevitable – this was the Gepard, based on the new Leopard chassis. More recently the Germans have developed missile-based anti-aircraft vehicles based on the Marder armoured personnel carrier hull, named Roland.

This book covers the history and specifications of four main vehicles in use since 1956 – the US M16A1 halftrack, the US M42 Duster AA tank, the Gepard, and the Roland.

Contents

The book is 64 pages long in A4 (8.5 x 11.5” or 210x297mm) format on thick glossy paper, and is divided into chapters for each vehicle, along with a one-page general introduction. The text is in German and English in the usual Tankograd manner.

Each chapter starts with a text section outlining the development of the vehicle, its technical specifications, and then its use in Bundeswehr service. These are then followed by a selection of sharply reproduced photographs at two or three to a page. Each photo has a useful caption.

The M16A1 chapter is very brief (3 pages, 6 photos) and the images are monochrome. This reflects their short service carrier from 1956 to 1958.

The M42 chapter is much more substantial at 14 pages and 31 photos (plus one in the introduction and another at the end of the book), but only two are in colour. Most of the shots are of vehicles on manoeuvres, but there are a few transport and motor pool shots too.

The Gepard chapter splits into two sections, since it covers the Gepard 1A1 and the upgraded 1A2. This chapter is 27 pages long, with 3 pages of text, 75 photos (mostly in colour), and a set of 1:35 scale plan & elevation drawings. Best of all, there are complete photo walk-arounds of the 1A1 and 1A2 versions! This chapter is truly a boon to the modeller with the old Tamiya kit.

The final chapter on the Roland is 16 pages long, with 43 mostly colour images including a walk-around photo section. Detail is very good, and should help anyone brave enough to attempt a conversion of a currently available Marder kit.

There is a single page of comparative data for the M42, Gepard, and Roland at the back.

One of the strengths of this book is the wealth of information hidden in the captions. I looked at the Gepard images for a project, and noted that the tracking radar on the front of the turret looked different in most of the photos compared to the Tamiya kit, and thought I might have to do some scratch building. However, a note in one of the captions mentions that the dish in that picture had been rotated to the rear (tucked into a recess in the turret front) for transport, and I suddenly realised it was just the back of the antenna mount that I was seeing! Until then I did not realise the tracking radar even rotated at all…

Conclusion

Over all this is a superb reference on the three tracked AA vehicles, and certainly offers lots of modelling possibilities. If there is a weakness (aside from wanting scale plans of the rest of the vehicles) it would be the lack of information about markings. These are plainly visible in many of the photos, but it would have been handy to have some sort of primer on the markings.

This is a must-have reference for anyone wanting to accurately model the M42, Gepard, or Roland in Bundeswehr service. Well worth the price I paid for it!
SUMMARY
Highs: Lots of great photos, 1:35 scale plans of the Gepard!
Lows: Not much info on markings, could use plans of the M42 and Roland.
Verdict: A must-have for modellers of Bundeswehr AA tanks!
Percentage Rating
90%
  Scale: Other
  Mfg. ID: 5021
  Suggested Retail: 14.95 Euro
  PUBLISHED: Jun 12, 2010
  NATIONALITY: Germany
NETWORK-WIDE AVERAGE RATINGS
  THIS REVIEWER: 84.20%
  MAKER/PUBLISHER: 90.19%

About Tom Cromwell (barkingdigger)
FROM: ENGLAND - EAST ANGLIA, UNITED KINGDOM

A Yank living overseas on a long-term basis, I've been building tanks since the early '70s. I relish the challenges of older kits (remember when Tamiya was "new"?...) because I love to scratch-build.

Copyright ©2021 text by Tom Cromwell [ BARKINGDIGGER ]. All rights reserved.



Comments

This one looks to be a big plus mark for Tankograd. Thank you for the review.
JUN 12, 2010 - 09:06 AM
Darren, It was my pleasure! I have to say I'm impressed with the Tankograd books I've seen so far. I thought the dual-language text was a wasteful gimmick at first, but it certainly doesn't reduce the usefulness of the information. And it is improving my grasp of technical German... Tom
JUN 12, 2010 - 09:34 AM
Great book, got mine some while ago, the good info is that one can use the Tamiya GEPARD model for correct resemblance. Despite having to stretch the lower hull etc., the rear with the big "Biber-style" storage doors was in service, Germany having utilized the original prototype/testbed hulls for some of the series vehicles. Also the ROLAND/Marder would be a kit I would certainly build, I know the one being offered by Elite-Models but sadly their quality isn‘t up to date. Good review! Cheers Christopher
JUN 13, 2010 - 01:01 AM
   
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