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Book Review
11
M113 in Bundeswehr part4
The M113 Armoured Personnel Carrier and its Variants in Service with the Modern German Army part4
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by: Olivier Carneau [ BISON126 ]

introduction

Written by Clemens Niesner and Peter Blume this volume, originally titled "M113 in der Bundeswehr Teil 4", is the fourth and the last of the series dealing with all the German variants of the US made M113.

the book

As usual the text and photographs’ captions are in both German and English. This volume mainly deals with Artillery variants not covered in the third volume and with a number of prototypes.
This volume is divided into six chapters following an introduction which is common to the various volumes of the series. Each chapter covers a different variant with its historical background followed by numerous pictures with some close-ups.

chapter 1 Lance Surface-to-Surface Artillery Rocket System

The Lance rocket artillery system entered service with the Bundeswehr in 1976. The system consisted of two vehicles, M667 transport and loader vehicle and the M752 launcher vehicle. Both vehicles are covered in this chapter with 16 pictures (7 being black and white). Amongst the most interesting pictures 4 are top views for each variant.

chapter 2 M113 120mm Mortar Carrier and M113 Mortar Fire Control Vehicle

Introduced in 1970, the mortar carrier was originally a M113 APC converted in Germany by Rheinstahl-Henschel and fittedwith a 120mm Tampella mortar. The fire control vehicle belongs to the mortar system and has been upgraded along with the mortar carrier. A small quantity of these vehicles is still in service with no visible replacement so far. This chapter gives 30 pictures of which seven are black and white. There are three photographs of the inside of the mortar carrier and only one of the fire control vehicle taken from afar.

chapter 3 Skorpion Vehicle-Based Scatterable Mine-Laying System

This vehicle is not an artillery variant but an engineer one and mounts the Skorpion mine laying system. Based on the M548 chassis, it started entering service with engineers units in 1986. This chapter features 18 photographs and a five-view scale drawing.

chapter 4 M113-based Prototypes

Here are presented a number of prototypes, each illustrated with either a single or a couple of photographs. Among the prototypes, one can notice a Milan ATGW carrier and some turreted variants mounting weapons ranging from the usual M2HB MG to a 25mm automatic cannon. This chapter only has 13 pictures.

chapter 5 The Future of the M113

This chapter covers the foreseeable future of the German M113 vehicles. No longer meeting the protection requirements against the new threats faced in the theatres of operation, the German M113 are progressively being phased out and offered on the international market. Simultaneously an increased protection package is also offered. Eleven photographs show various variants in service with different armies like the Danish and Polish armies.

chapter 6 M113 The End of an Era?

The authors clearly state the M113 now belongs to the Bundeswehr history even if for still a number of years some will remain in service with the German army. Others have already started a new operational life within foreign countries’ armed forces.

conclusion

This fourth volume in the German M113 series concludes a comprehensive research work by the authors. As with the other volumes in the series, the number of photographs is sufficient to have a good idea of each vehicle and will please the history-minded reader. But again, the lack of detail photographs will leave the modeller slightly frustrated.
SUMMARY
Highs: Another great volume in the Tankograd German M113 series.A good complement to the third volume dedicated to artillery variants.
Lows: Not enough close-up photographs for a modeller.
Verdict: A great book for those interested in the Bundeswehr armor history or simply in the M113 history. Despite the frustrating lack of detail photographs for a modeller, it is recommended.
Percentage Rating
80%
  Scale: 1:1
  Mfg. ID: 5035
  Suggested Retail: 14.90 euros
  PUBLISHED: Jan 23, 2012
  NATIONALITY: Germany
NETWORK-WIDE AVERAGE RATINGS
  THIS REVIEWER: 82.86%
  MAKER/PUBLISHER: 90.19%

About Olivier Carneau (bison126)
FROM: CORREZE, FRANCE

I have been in the hobby for years and I'm still learning. As a modeler, I only build 1/35 modern military vehicles, mainly armored ones. I also run a website where I share a lot of walkarounds. Just click on my banner to pay a visit to it.

Copyright ©2021 text by Olivier Carneau [ BISON126 ]. All rights reserved.



Comments

Thanks for publishing the review Rob.
JAN 22, 2012 - 06:54 PM
   
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