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The German Army was very conservative when it came to technical
innovations, and remained hesitant to the phenomenon of motor
vehicles for quite a long time. So when the war broke out in 1914
only a very few military passenger cars were in use. The
mobilisation made larger numbers of impressed civilian types
available at short notice. Taking the vast number of different
German automobile manufacturers of 1914 into account, the variety of
types was enormous: among the ex-civilian cars makes that could be
seen on the fronts, sporting a hasty Feldgrau coating, were
Adler, Oryx, Bergmann-Métallurgique, Wanderer, NAG, Ley, Lloyd,
Beckmann, Protos, Dixi, Benz, Mercedes and Opel. (Only few of these
kept up production all through the the war, among them Mercedes.)
One of these originally civil car
impressed into military service by the German Army was the famous
Mercedes 1913 37/95.
In its day, this car was regarded as the most
powerful production automobile in the world. (The 37/95 indicated
the engine output with the second number indicating the actual
horsepower and the 37 indicated the horsepower for taxation purposes
in Germany.) It had a powerful engine with two blocks of
two-cylinders each with three overhead valves per cylinder, and a
displacement of 9.6 liter, which made it possible to develop 95
horsepower. The fuel came by a single Mercedes-designed sliding
piston carburetor. A four-speed gearbox, with a gate change shifter
mount on the outside of the body, delivered the engine's power to
the dual chain-driven rear axle. The car's estimated top speed was
roughly 110 km/h.
It was used as a staff car by
both the German and Turkish Armies.
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The kit comes
packed in a ziplock bag with header typical of Reviresco. The kit is done in
white metal, and consists of 19 parts. The moulding is fine, showing
only small amounts of flash.
There is no plan, but
as the kit is not too complex, you should be able to do it without any
problems. (The kit contains assembly instructions in text, though.) It
should fall together easily:
one evenings job, really. The accuracy is pretty good, as far as I can
see. It fills a gap in any WW1 collection: kits of light-weight staff
cars are few.
You can get this kit directly from Revirescos
own site.
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