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Book Review
Sturmpanzer A7V
Sturmpanzer A7V, First of the Panzers ISBN 978=3-936519-11-2
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by: Tom Cromwell [ BARKINGDIGGER ]

Introduction

For the first book in their new World War One series the folks at Tankograd asked Rainer Strasheim and Max Hundleby to write the definitive volume on the A7V, and I for one am delighted! Both authors are well known for their work on this, Germany’s first foray into tank production, and in this book they take the opportunity to update and correct information that has come to light since the first major tranche of A7V publications started to arrive in the late 1980s.

As background to the subject, readers should know that Germany only produced and fielded one model of tank (the A7V) in only one official version, and even then made only 20 of them. And yet they managed to use two different manufacturers for the armoured hulls at the same time, and then broke down the order into two production lots that somehow incorporated changes, so the amount of detail variation is astounding. This has led to confusion in earlier publications.

Contents

The book is 104 pages long, containing a mix of English text (no German translation here, curiously) and illustrations in 16 chapters. There are 134 photos (124 in monochrome, plus another 10 colour shots of replicas and the sole museum example), 12 unscaled detail drawings, and two suites of 1:35 scale drawings that cover all four sides and roof of the two main body variants.

Chapter headings are:
01. The Birth of the Tank
02. A7V – Variations of the Armoured Hulls
03. Abteilung 1 – the Combat Veterans
04. Abteilung 2 – the Tank Busters
05. Abteilung 3 – the Poor Relation
06. A7V Deployments and Engagements
07. A7V Tank – Technology and Combat
08. Technical Data
09. A7V – Individual Data Sheets
10. A7V Scale Drawings
11. The A7V Überlandwagen Tracked Lorry
12. The A7V in Freikorps Service
13. The Trench Digger
14. A7V Crew Uniforms
15. Preserved A7Vs, Dummies, and Replicas
16. The A7V in Contemporary Newspapers

The scale and scope of these headings gives some idea of how thorough this book is – it took me ages to say anything more coherent than “Wow!” as I turned the pages. The history is extremely thorough as befits the track records of the authors, and the only fault here is that they don’t have the room to delve into tangential subjects like the development of British tanks or the use of captured tanks in anything but a cursory manner.

The photos themselves are extremely well reproduced (within the limits of the original image quality) and are placed at a mix of one, two, or three to a page. Many of them are posed “crew” shots, as is to be expected of WWI. All of the photo captions attempt to place the image in context of date, location, unit, and vehicle, but there are still a few where these remain “unknown” – not unexpected considering the archives have had to survive 90 years, a post-war revolution, and another World War to reach us today.

The data sheets for each tank not only list the basics of body style etc, but also known in-service modifications and name changes so even the most AMS-afflicted modeller can create a truly authentic model of a particular tank at a particular time in their very short service careers. The interior detail shots will help fill the space inside my cavernous 1:35 scale Tauro kit. And the section on uniforms should come in handy for sculpting crew figures.

The colour pictures are limited to the preserved tank “Mephisto” in Brisbane, the recent replica in Munster, and Bob Grundy’s replica that appeared at the Tank Museum’s open day last year. This leads to the only real gap in the book, because although the authors talk about various camouflage patterns they make no attempt to present us with reconstruction drawings.

Conclusion

This is a must-have reference for anyone interested in tanks of the Great War, especially those of us with Tauro kits to build. It easily outreaches much of what I have seen published before, especially Schneider & Strasheim’s earlier Schiffer book of 1990. As a single point of reference on the subject it is more than worth the 25 Euros asked.
SUMMARY
Highs: Definitive research info, excellent photos and captions.
Lows: No camouflage illustrations.
Verdict: A must-have book.
Percentage Rating
98%
  Scale: Other
  Mfg. ID: 1001
  Suggested Retail: 25 Euros
  PUBLISHED: Apr 11, 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

I contacted Squadron.com earlier today (4/16/10) to ask about this book since tankograd listed them as the US distributor. I copied the exchange below. Spoke to our president here as I just found out he is personally reviewing orders for Tankograd and he said we will probably have this in 3-5 weeks. Our item # for this will be TP01001. Regards, Jeff Melton Customer Service Manager SQUADRON MAIL ORDER ( Ofc: (972) 245-3504 ext. 1034 ( Toll Free: (877)-414-0434 Ê Fax: (972) 242-3775 * [email protected] From: Jim Hand [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Friday, April 16, 2010 9:53 AM To: Jeff Melton Subject: RE: NEW TANKOGRAD RELEASE Thanks Jeff. It's already listed for sale on their site and a review is currently on Armorama about it. The latter is where I learned of it and the Tankograd website was where I learned that Squadron is their US distributor. - Jim -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- From: Jeff Melton [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Friday, April 16, 2010 8:44 AM To: Jim Hand Subject: RE: NEW TANKOGRAD RELEASE Thanks for checking with us…unfortunately it’s not on the radar screen yet and the buyers didn’t have any info on this. Please check back with us frequently. Best regards, Jeff Melton Customer Service Manager SQUADRON MAIL ORDER ( Ofc: (972) 245-3504 ext. 1034 ( Toll Free: (877)-414-0434 Ê Fax: (972) 242-3775 * [email protected] From: Jim Hand [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Friday, April 16, 2010 5:25 AM To: Jeff Melton Subject: NEW TANKOGRAD RELEASE Hi. I just read tankograd had published a book on the WWI German A7V tank. When do you think you will get any stock on this title as I'm itching to get my hands on one. Any info would be appreciated! - Jim Hand Jim Hand
APR 17, 2010 - 02:06 AM
Jim, I should have mentioned in my review that I ordered my copy direct from Tankograd. They have a very odd order service, since they don't take card payments online. Instead, you fill your "basket" and then print out the order form, which has spaces for your card details. You fill them out and drop it in the post to Germany. Tankograd didn't acknoledge my order despite asking for my email address - the books just arrived a couple weeks after I sent the order. Good luck! Tom
APR 18, 2010 - 06:57 AM
APR 19, 2010 - 06:42 AM
   
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