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CV3/35 Kit

Bronco Models 1/35 Italian CV3/35 Lanciafiamme Tankette Kit First Look

By Michael Benolkin

Date of Review March 2009 Manufacturer Bronco Models
Subject Italian CV3/35 Lanciafiamme Tankette Scale 1/35
Kit Number 35008 Primary Media Styrene/PE
Pros Nicely detailed kit Cons
Skill Level Intermediate MSRP (USD) $69.98

First Look

CV3/35
CV3/35
CV3/35
CV3/35
CV3/35
CV3/35
CV3/35

The Italian CV3/35 and L3/35 series were developed from the four Carden Loyd Mark VI tankettes imported from England at the end of the 1920s. These indigenous tankettes were designed and built by Fiat and the Ansaldo Company with over 2000 examples built. These vehicles didn't vary much in appearance, each varying in armor thickness and later marks were bolted together rather than riveted.

The vehicle was armed with a pair of 8mm machine guns and powered by a water-cooled Fiat 43 horsepower engine. These two-man tankettes had a maximum speed of 26 mph/42 kph and a range of 78 miles/125 km.

These tankettes were used by Italy, Brazil, Bulgaria, China, Croatia, Hungary, Nationalist Spain, and more. In peacetime operations, these tankettes were useful for developing armored tactics and made for mobile armored machine gun nests, but in combat, the tankettes were not very effective. In the Italian forces, these tankettes were sent into every theater of operations, but due to their poor showing, they were usually abandoned where they broke down and were phased out of Italian service by 1940.

Bronco Models has tooled up a third version of this Italian tankette for an interesting addition to your armor line-up. Molded in desert sand styrene, the kit is presented on six parts trees and one small clear sprue containing the headlight lenses. A small fret of photo-etch rounds out the kit.

If this kit had been produced elsewhere, chances are that you'd have been given the simple 2-3 sprue hull and suspension kit with reasonable exterior detail. This is one of Bronco's AMS kits, which means that the interior of this tank is quite nicely rendered.

Construction begins with the hull interior and the driver's station and gunner seating are installed on the floor, with what appears to be the fuel tank serving as the rear of the driver's seat. No smoking please.

Next comes the transmission and Bronco did a nice job detailing up this gem. The kit captures the shift linkages, the axles, and drive shaft from the rear-mounted engine.

The Fiat engine is next and once again, the detailing is nicely done from the individual spark plugs to the really interesting radiator that comes with the plumbing to/from the engine. The engine mounts to the floor at the rear of the tankette and is partitioned off by a firewall.

An additional partition is added aft of the engine for the mixer pump for the flame thrower. The main gun is replaced with the flame thrower and Bronco has captured this detailing nicely.

With the interior details installed on the floor, the armored sides, front and rear of the lower hull come together and complete basic lower hull. The unique suspension system, rollers, return rollers, and drive sprockets are fitted to the exterior of the lower hull along with some of the pioneering tools.

The track is an interesting variation. Remember the ESCI armor kits with the track molded into sections - longer sections for the flat runs and short sections to wrap around sprockets and return rollers? This is the approach used by Bronco for this kit's track and as small as this track really is, it would have been difficult to render either as 'rubber band' track or individual track links.

As you would expect, the upper hull has separately molded and positionable crew and engine access hatches.

Finally, the trailer is assembled and rigged to follow the tankette as this is the storage tank for the flame thrower's combustible fluid. A rubber hose is also provided to connect the trailer with the pumping system at the rear of the main hull.

Markings are provided for two Italian Army flame thrower CV3/35 examples:

  • 32nd Tank Regiment, Libya, 1940-41
  • Army exercise, Rome, 1937

This is an interesting variant that Bronco Models has produced and will make for a nice addition to your scale motor pool.

This kit is highly recommended!

My sincere thanks to Stevens International for this review sample!