There are a number of distinctions between Unimax, the former makers of the Forces of Valor line and Waltersons, its new caretakers. While both companies cared about quality, consistency and dedication to their craft, its becoming increasingly clear that Waltersons wants to demonstrate its depth of knowledge and keen interest in the subject matter by offering a range of product that will truly sit well with today’s collector. Take, for instance, their 88mm FLaK gun, which first came out earlier this year and will now be reintroduced in just a few short months. The first model reflected a gun used by the Deutsches Afrika Korps at the Battle of El Alamein in late 1942. As such, it comes with the original 8.8cm FLaK Rohr 18 gun barrel, as well other gear designed for the first batch of 88s.
For the uninformed, the Flak 18’s carriage allowed it to fire in an emergency when still on its wheels and without its outriggers, but with a very limited traverse and elevation. For normal emplacement, one single-axle bogie was detached from the front outrigger and one from the rear, side outriggers were then hinged from the vertical position to the ground; the total time to set up was estimated at two and a half minutes. Both modes of operation made the gun much more suitable for fast-moving operations, the basic concept of the Blitzkrieg. The weight of the gun meant that only large vehicles could move it, the Sd. Kfz. 7 half-track becoming a common prime mover.
Targeting indicators were attached from the central controller to each of the four guns of a battery, allowing for coordinated fire. Indeed, with the automatic loading system, the gun layers’ job was to keep the gun barrel trained on the target area based on the signals from the controller. The loaders would keep the weapon fed with live ammunition which would fire immediately upon insertion — all while the gun layer aimed the weapon according to the data.
Rather than repaint the gun, as Unimax chose to do, to portray an 88mm gun employed at the Battle of Stalingrad, Waltersons decided to go one step further and instead model the improved 8.8cm FLaK Rohr 36 gun barrel, which had a two-piece barrel for easier replacement of worn liners. Flak 36s were often fitted with an armored shield that provided limited protection for the gunners. These shields could be retro-fitted on older Flak 18s as well.
There’s a better than average chance that the third gun in the series, the FLaK 37, will also be modeled at some point in time, thereby covering all three different versions, and hopefully appeasing collectors and historians alike. Will the average layperson be able to distinguish one gun from another? Apart from the paint schemes probably not, but Waltersons thought it important enough to avoid making some of the same mistakes the former owners of the series tended to make when addressing the evolution of the gun and its employment throughout the war in differing theaters of operation.