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Armor In Box Reviews

Meng M4A3E2 In Box Review

I’ve never built any American armor before and I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t a bit apprehensive about the subject. As somebody who feels at home building two and three tone german armor, making a olive drab Sherman would be a first for me. Building a E8 or a E2 has been on my “to-do” list for some time now and picked up Meng’s offering to take the plunge. My first impressions of the kit were quite favorable as it’s clear that the kit is very well built and detailed. With this great detail however came a cost, as I was able to get Meng’s kit for around $90 CAD.

Kit Features: 18/20

Meng doesn’t shy away with providing the modeller with a lot of extra goodies. A metal barrel, photoetched parts, single link tracks (as well as rubber ones). Beside these initial accessories, the kit also includes a lot of other small things that really help it’s score in this sense. A long barrel 76mm gun (without the muzzle break) is included along with photoetched numbering for the turret. The kit offers some stowage options in the form of spare road wheels, fuel cans, and ammo boxes. The kit however looses points in that no extra figures are provided and must be bought from a different manufacturer. When compared to Miniart’s Jeep previously reviewed, Meng’s Sherman misses out on a point here.

Quality of Molding: 49/50

Simply put, this E2 is the kit with the most detail I’ve ever seen. The detail in the molding of the hull and turret can be easily seen and the way Meng has finished the cast texture and weld seams is truly next level. The texture is extenuated by the serial numbers on the hull and turret. There is very little (if none) flash found on the parts requiring no cleanup besides the sprue leftovers. Detail can even be found on places not easily seen such as the bottom of the hull. The kit only looses points due to the fact that some people might find the detail overdone as in person the different surfaces are very obvious, photos don’t really do this kit justice.

Instructions: 18/20

The kit instructions are very well put together and even offer a little reading material in the preface about “Cobra King” the tank in the box art. They are well thought out and are straightforward as to what they ask the modeller to do. Additionally, the kit is very clear in when the modeller has a choice between various options such as the .50cal mounting options. The instructions indicate which parts are to be added by color coding effectively. Speaking of color, the instructions are printed in full color with five different views of the several finishing options found in the kit. Each finishing option gets it’s own page in the booklet. The instructions only lose points due to construction material.

Miscellaneous: 7/10

While the kit does come with a healthy 5 marking options the $90 CAD price cannot be ignored as at this price point many marking options are to be expected. The decals are nicely printed as well. Furthermore, the kit includes a jig for constructing the single link tracks which should make the process less labor intensive.

Total: 92/100

A very fair score for this kit, modest photoeched parts, no figures, and a hefty price tag balance out the insane detail found in this kit. Top tier kit for a top tier price.

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In Box Reviews

In Box Review Methodology

In reviewing kits I’ve ranked them out of 100 total points split into four different categories: Kit Features (out of 20), Quality of Molding (out of 50), Instructions (out of 20), Miscellaneous (out of 10). My inbox reviews aren’t meant to address things such as fit but rather what people can expect after opening up the box.

Kit Features

The “Kit Features” section is meant to address anything the kit includes that wasn’t required to reproduce the subject. Inclusion of Photoetched parts, single link tracks, or nice touches the manufacturer added to benefit the modeler.

Quality of Molding

How well detailed the model is, the most important part of the In Box Review. In addition to detail, this section is meant to address any manufacturing defects as well such as flash or damaged parts.

Instructions

The overall quality of the instructions. How clear they are overall as well as construction material, format, colour v.s non-colour, type of marking profile images included.

Miscellaneous

Any other things not included in the other sections, typically includes the decal quality and the amount of markings included.

Any number over 50 percent of the select score means a net positive effect on the overall build while any score under 50 percent of the total score means a net negative effect on the quality of the kit.

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Armor In Box Reviews

Miniart Bantam 40 BRC In Box Review

For my first project back I wanted to start off with a small kit to ease back into the model building world. In typical Miniart style the 1/35th scale kit is very well detailed with a healthy amount of photoetched considering the subject. The kit also comes with a number of different figures and equipment that are very well modeled, as usual. The instructions are nicely printed and in colour. It comes with three finishing options that all allow the modeller to make a different finish. I’ll probably finish the model with the third option as I’d like to get more experience painting fine camouflages.

Kit Features: 19/20

For what is essentially just a Jeep, the kit comes with a lot. There’s a separate sprue for a MG and comes with five figures making it easy to setup a nice looking diorama. Additionally the Phototeched is well protected with plastic carrier film and a card pouch. I’d take a lot of effort to damage the fret.

Quality of Molding: 40/50

Overall the detail is top notch, really outstanding quality here. The molding only looses points due to a strange texture on some of the larger parts and a broken front grill, part protection could have been a bit better here. the molding further looses points for flash that can be found in several places, requiring cleanup. In short, high detail, some cleaning required.

Instructions: 16/20

The instructions are printed on nice semi-gloss paper and in color with detailed visuals. the instructions are somewhat bare-bone and don’t offer any contextual information about the subject. They also loose some points for not clearly defining which parts are being added to the build.

Miscellaneous: 6/10

The kit comes with three different marking options and retailed for around $30 CAD.

Total: 81/100

Great first impression, would recommend.