Advantages: nice new kit of legendary field gun; crew
figures well done and compliment weapon
Disadvantages: parts are fragile and will need care removing them from the sprues
Rating: Highly Recommended
Recommendation: for all Soviet fans and "Redlegs" in general
By 1930 the Soviets had standardized on a number of calibers of artillery: 76.2mm
for regimental and divisional weapons, 107mm for divisional guns, 122mm for divisional
howitzers and corps guns, 152mm for corps howitzers and army level guns, and 203mm for
army level howitzers. Selecting a standard set of ballistics, most of the guns were
designed around those ballistics.
For most of the 1930s they tried to find a good combination of features for the
divisional 76.2mm gun. Weapons like the long-ranged F-22 were good but too heavy and
unwieldy for rapid maneuver. Finally, the legendary V. G. Grabin found the right
combination in his Model 1939 USV gun, but it still had some drawbacks, mostly with its
carriage, as it weighed in at 1,560 kilograms. In May 1941 Grabin put forth a new version,
which corrected many of the problems of the Model 1939; it was 440 kilograms lighter,
lower, and now had a muzzle brake. On 22 July 1941 the gun was submitted for approval,
which took another seven months, but it was accepted for service on 10 February 1942. Some
1,000 guns were already in service, so it was considered "troop tested."
Offical numbers indicate around 49,000 were built during the war years as ZIS-3
division guns with others built for SP weapons or replacements. The famous F-34 and ZIS-5
76.2mm tank guns were ballistically nearly identical to the ZIS-3 and all three guns used
the same ammunition. Performance of the ZIS-3 with armor-piercing ammunition was such that
many tank destroyer battalions were equipped with the gun for antitank use. In fact during
the introduction of the Tiger I into German service near Leningrad, the first two Tigers
lost in combat fell into a trap baited by a T-60 light tank and were destroyed by
broadside fire at point-blank range from a battery of ZIS-3 guns.
In the mid 1970s Italeri came out with a very nice kit of the ZIS-3 that included
a crew of three with the kit. Inexpensive and of pretty high quality for the time it
remained popular and is still in their catalogue. But by now the kit does show its age,
and thus the prospect of a totally new kit from Miniart has been eagerly awaited.
The kit appears to live up to hopes, with the gun coming on two busy sprues and
another one providing a five man crew. The kit appears to use a lot of the concepts either
copied from or provided by DML, as the kit's boxing, directions, parts breakdown, and
figure set all follow the DML concepts.
The gun comes with its wheels and tires split out with a separate hub and five
sections to form the tire - two sidewalls and three inner ribs to give the tires tread
pattern. (If you don't like them, they are standard GAZ-AA wheels and those found with any
of the Eastern Express armored cars or Toko GAZ trucks should replace them.) Construction
is pretty straightforward beginning with the trails and then the axle, carriage cradle
("l'yulka" in Russian) and locking levers,wheels, barrel and recoil cylinders,
muzzle brake, gun shield, ammo crates, breech, and on to final assembly and then the crew.
While the directions are similar to DML's the latter should pay attention as the Miniart
layout and graphics are much clearer and present things in a much less cluttered and more
understandable format.
Parts are fragile and some of the smaller pieces were broken on the sprues, but
due to internal bagging all parts were still present so no long-term harm was done.
The crew is excellent and is of the standard figure breakdown format with six
main parts per figure head, torso, legs and arms. The crew consists of a commander,
gunner, loader and two "other numbers" bringing up ammunition for the gun. Each
figure has a helmet, canteen, personal weapon (a TT pistol, two PPSh submachine guns, and
two Moisin carbines) and are fitted with the uniforms from 1943-1945. The commander and
gun crew are kneeling and the other two are crouching.
The kit comes with two ammo chests and a total of 10 complete 76.2mm rounds and
three casings four of the rounds are the late war "arrow" shells,
however. (Also in the kit but unflagged are four 57mm rounds and three casings for the
57mm ZIS-2 gun which uses the same carriage.)
Two finishing schemes for the ZIS-3 are included, as are some photos of ZIS-3
guns in action for reference. The ones here are pretty much being used in antitank mode,
so the modeler may take that as a reference point. Colors are flagged for Tamiya, Revell,
Humbrol and Model Master paints.
Note that the crew itself is available separately as Miniart Kit No. 35031 for
about US$9 so you can use it for any of the other Soviet era artillery pieces on the
market as well.
Overall this is a very nicely done kit and a bargain as it provides a five man
crew for the same basic price levels of some kits with just the guns.