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The M1931 (B-4) is a rather old weapon developed in 1931 and adopted for service in 1934. It may be found in the heavy artillery brigade at front level. The B-4M was replaced by the 203-mm self-propelled gun Ml975, which is mounted on a tracked chassis. The 203-mm howitzer M1931 (B-4) has a relatively short tube, only 25 calibers long. It fires bag-type, variable-charge, separate-loading ammunition. Early models were mounted on a full-track (but not self-propelled) carriage in firing position and for short moves. For longer moves, the tube was removed and transported on a separate four-wheeled tube transporter. The B-4 used a box trail and was towed by the AT-T tracked artillery tractor. The M1931 fires a 98.8-kg HE round to a maximum range of 18,025 meters. The M1931 has a very limited traverse of 8 degrees and a slow rate of fire of 0.5 rd/min (some reports indicate 1 rd/min). The Kit
There is a twelve-page fully-illustrated instruction booklet, painting/marking color plate, ten sprues of light grey styrene, one sprue of photo-etch (PE), two parts of black vinyl, string and one sheet of decals. Initial review of the styrene sprues show crisp detail most notably the scale rivets and wood grain surfaces. There is no visible flash or sink marks. Injection pins marks appear to be on the inside (hidden side) of parts. The individual track links are nicely done even though they are basic in design. The main gun barrel is in two halves while the accompanying shells are molded as one part. Vinyl rims for the towing carriage are simple but well molded with no flash. The seven PE parts include tread plate and barrel rifling which should enhance the level of detail. The two white decals are thin but basic with only a slogan in Russian whose translation is undocumented.
The only things I imagine missing in this kit are the shell transporter and some propellant bags.
Using the painting/marking sheet and box art should be helpful when finishing your B-4 Howitzer. The paint color references are for Mr. Hobby for the most part calling for Russian green as the main color. With the exterior detailing (i.e., rivets) this model should be dry-brushed to enhance its display value.
Conclusion This is truly a unique model of a pre-World War II Soviet weapons system and Trumpeter did a fine job of recreating it in 1/35 scale. I hope they do this in 1/72 scale like some of their other kits. I highly recommend this offering which would make a welcomed addition to your scale artillery collection. I would like to thank Stevens International for the review kit. References |
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this story!
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