Passion for Precision

Showing posts with label Biber. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Biber. Show all posts

Sunday, March 4, 2012

2012 INCOMING - ITALERI CELEBRATES 50 YEARS OF KITMAKING



Leading kit company from Italy:
Italeri is making a birthday party of its half-century anniversary this year, by releasing all sorts of gear, such as a coffee table book, calendar, cap, t-shirt and commemorative 1:72 scale Fiat G.55 fighter plane kit. Where room permits, retail outlets may display the book-G.55 duo in point of sale displays like the one above. All this comes on top of an already packed monthly release schedule.



Plastic not pasta
Italeri was founded in 1962 by Giuliano Malservisi and Gian Pietro Parmeggiani. They were long-time aircraft and military vehicle enthusiasts, and reckoned they could do better than the stuff available in Italy at that time. They called the new company ‘Italstamp’, with the first scale model kit - a 1:72 scale Fiat G.55 Centauro - released under the brand name ‘Aliplast’. 


Shorter name
Aliplast soon changed to the more poetic title ‘Italaerei’, a name that lasted a decade, until it was modified to create the shorter and punchier Italeri we know today. These days, the company is located close to the city of Bologna (a place much enjoyed by this writer for its stomach-stretching range of top restaurants and droolsome gelateria) and turns out thousand of kits each week. Italeri tries to put its own spin on subject matter, and reasonably enough, has modelled a wide range of Italian hardware. Italeri also owns other brands, including Protar and Supermodel.


Hunchback of the air
On that Italian note, World War II aircraft range from the tiny biplane Fiat CR.42 to the Savoia-Marchetti SM.79 Sparviero (Sparrowhawk) also known ‘Il Gobbo’ (Hunchback) for the shape of its upper fuselage. There’s an excellent review of this underrated kit over at the Modeling Madness website - link below this article. Armoured fighting vehicles are another strong suite, with WW II hardware featuring strongly. 


Plenty of metal parts included in the 1:35 scale Panzer tank (above), while the Chevrolet gun-hauler to the same scale (below) looks good.


Motor torpedo boats
But where Italeri has cleaned up and made a market its own is with the quite superlative 1:35 scale motor torpedo boat range. These big kits include the US PT boat, German Schnellboot, British Vosper MTB, and Italian MAS. Smaller vessels to the same scale include the Italian Barchino and Maiale, plus the German Biber. Accessories such as the 1:35 scale modular dockside section (below) provide useful backup for dioramas. 




Trucks and trucking
Last but not least, modern trucks and trailers are a major Italeri theme - the showier the better! The Scania R620 (above) is to 1:24 scale, and is another 50th anniversary item, with sides covered in suitable markings. At this scale, the Scania is a biggie - when fully assembled, the 14-wheeler stretches some 720 mm (28.3 in) long.


Wargamers are catered for with Napoleonic War 1:72 military sets.


Into the future
Eurozone financial problems aside, it looks like Italeri is set to see through another half-century of success. Short of a giant meteor strike or global meltdown spoiling the party, we fully expect to see Italeri kits still being produced in the year 2062. Whether we’ll buy them in boxes like today is another matter of course - we’d put our money on 3D printing at home from a downloaded set of computer instructions. But that’s a future article to watch out for!

Heaps of Italeri kits here.

Modeling Madness SM.79 review here.

Friday, September 24, 2010

UNDERSEA ATTACKER - THE GERMAN BIBER MIDGET SUB FROM ITALERI





SMN report
Italeri’s latest 1:35 scale nautical kit is the neatly produced Biber (‘Beaver’) one-man midget submarine from World War II. To this big military-model standard scale, even the Biber works out to a fair size in model form, in this case some 186 mm (7.3 in) long. It comes with two well-sculpted figures, as well as decals for three different subs, and a small etched-metal fret with super-detail parts.

Biber on view at the Imperial War Museum
There are quite a few Bibers on display in military museums across Europe - the one pictured above is on view in the UK’s Imperial War Museum, London. It’s a place well worth visiting, and if you build the Italeri Biber kit, seeing the real thing complete with its quota of lumps, bumps, scrapes, dings and dents, will allow you to add those extra details to take the Italeri sub from smooth-but-a-bit-dull ‘stock’ to knocked-about-and-real ‘superb’.

Biber armament
In service, the Biber could carry two 530 mm (21 in) torpedos or a pair of mines, but the tiny U-boat was introduced late in the war and never became a big threat to its primary target, Allied coastal shipping. It had a limited range of some 185 km (115 miles) and could manage a speed of less than 10 km/h (6.2 mph) underwater. Over 300 Bibers were built, but they met with little success in combat operations, and most were damaged or sunk by Allied forces.

One-man Biber operations
Spare a thought for the man at the Biber’s controls - military operations generally lasted for one or two days, and the pilot-operator had to stay on combat-alert throughout the mission. To help do this, he refuelled on a diet of caffeine-boosted chocolate, or downed tablets of D-IX, a cocaine-based drug brewed up by Nazi scientists to keep him wide-eyed and awake. Apparently, earlier tests with D-IX on full-pack carrying troops had resulted in non-stop marches for anything up to 90 km (55 miles) before total collapse.

SMN note - A couple of the pictures look somewhat squashed, which is a software issue... we'll see what can be done. Meantime, if you click on any pic, the usual enlargement will show it undistorted.

Visit IWM London here.

See the Biber here.

View other Italeri military kits here.

The pictures show, top to bottom:
1  Italeri kit box.
2  Cleanly-pressed injection parts.
3  Italeri supplies details for three different subs.
4  Accurately printed decal sheet.
5  Biber mini-sub in the Imperial War Museum, London.
IWM picture courtesy Conny Liegl.