Well my US Army cavalry platoon (WW2) is done and pictures are being taken. Again they are not too crap...
Three jeeps, Battlefront Models, they are their winter Jeeps. The Road is paper, despite what some people says I think that paper terrain is very effective for relatively flat features like roads. I did not like those on a huge plinth that sometime appears on blogs or fora, especially if they have just the the road surface and nothing else.
Tuesday, 21 November 2017
Something... unplanned!
Good evening Ladies and Gentlemen,
again some update from the Forward HQ. First something that I was not even supposed to do. I had some old QRF M48 tanks painted (twice I am afraid...) at least a decade ago sitting around and unused. I was thinking to get rid of them via gift or donation or even LAF forum sales... then I got struck by the idea to try to do something new. I had some stuff that could be thrown together in a small Jordanian force (I hate when people says 'army') for 1967 and 73 and decided to give it a try.
For once the pictures are even good! I know the model itself is not perfect, but it looks the part and the new camo works, at least for me, quite well. It has now been joined by two other friends (making an M48 tank platoon and an armoured infantry platoon for the 70s (with US helmets and M16, themselves recycled PP Vietnam US Infantry).
Saturday, 11 November 2017
US Army reinforced platoon
Well,
Another
long absence from the net… or at least my blog. And in the interval, I have
slaved myself painting… and taking my usual bad pictures (almost crappy I would
say, I need to improve, not even a good camera will save me).
But let’s
post something just to keep my projects moving. 28mm today, and… I completed a project. US
Army late 1944 early 1945. It is done. No more stuff to paint at home! Yes it
sounds incredible (and I am thinking maybe I can buy something new, obviously…).
But everything I bought is not built and painted.
It is the result of several years of works, in two countries! It is also a combination of different manufacturers. The first figures are original Bolt Action bought straight from Paul Hicks in person, at Dadi.com more than 10 years ago... supplemented by Artizan Designs, Empress (sculpted again by the talented Paul Hicks), and some more recent BA miniatures from Warlord (the 57mm ATG). Vehicles are Hobby Boss, original Bolt Action, current Bolt Action and Rubicon. Some of them have already appeared in the blog but lets go to see the details.
The core of the Force is a full strength infantry platoon, with Platoon Command, 3 squads, and some supports.
Platoon Command with Bazooka team. |
Again the infantry |
Static antitank support in the form of a Warlord 57mm ATG (US license built british 6pdr). The crew is in winter uniform. The sculpts are not exceptional, but they work.
The platoon is also suppoerted by a MMG squad (yes the .30 cal was designated LMG but it was in the weight class of MMG and it was belt fed).
You can also see the leftover after years of cllecting... start of a 2nd platoon? arrrghhh.... |
you can also see General Patton (original BA) inspecting the platoon while standing in a M3A1 HT and an additional Bazooka team and a sniper team. |
Then we move to the 'heavy metal'
Oh well end of post! I hope you like it.
Labels:
28mm,
Empress Miniatures,
Rubicon,
US Army,
Warlord,
World War Two
Friday, 13 October 2017
Samokhodnaya Ustanovka
First of all a trio of Zvezda ISU-152. I needed some big HE
stuff just in case my soviet troops encountered pillboxes (and whatnot, maybe
even tanks…). They are plastic, they are cheap, and you could build them either
as ISU-122 or ISU-152. I think I will grab another trio soonish to have the 122
mm guns, just in case.
Now I like them but there are some caveats. The sides are
quite flat compared to their direct competitors (Battlefront), this is due to
the different moulding process and sprue configuration. On the other hand because
the rear plat of the casemate is a separate piece it does have good detail. The
really weak point are the tracks, not so much the wheels (quite nice) but the
tracks themselves. They are just softly sculpted with a generic ‘impressionistic’
representation. They also miss commander and hmg. Said that they cost much less. Said that the
vehicle is also well represented. It is up to you. I am happy with 3£ per tank.
Now let’s stay in the land of Comrade Josif for the ISU’s
(Iosif Stalin Samokhodnaya Ustanovka) little cousins, the SU (Samokhodnaya
Ustanovka) -100/-85. Why -100 or -85?
Well because this trio is a mix of old and new. There is a new Zvezda SU-100,
and two old, resin, BF Su-100 or Su-85M. I was 100% sure they were 100, but the
gun is shorter, but this could be a product of old BF castings (ladies and
gentlemen I bought these two before getting my MA… more than 10 years ago…).
There are also small errors in the hatches on the casemate, and they look
smallish as the BF model of the first generations (I think one of them was even
a sandy coloured resin… not even a gray one!) but the round TC ‘sponson’ (It is
not a cupola) gave them as Su-100 hulls, so they could be -100 or -85M.
I like the Zvezda much more. One particular thing is that
the casemate plates were separate pieces so they have more detail. If you want
to read more on the whys of this, there was an article on the Flame of War
website months ago on the problems linked to plastic injection and the loss of
detail on the sides, but it boils down to the fact that for plastic injection
you use a hard two pieces mould. Being hard it means you cannot have detail in
area that you cannot remove (or you get a fancy slide mould…).
Okay for today this is all. Enjoy the terrible rattling of
the steel tracks of the proletariat!
Thursday, 27 July 2017
Zvezda King Tiger
Okay, I was hiding again... despite constantly painting (painting tanks is a good way to fight back job induced stress... much better than going postal! And you can always dream to run over those pesky individual that pretend to be colleagues with a tank...). Painting tanks is also better than binge miniature shopping, at least as long you have plenty of reserves...
now talking of tanks... last time I hopped in the far north at Partizan I grabbed some cheap (3£) Zvezda King tigers... you know those 'snap together' kits. Well after few minutes of snapping together:
I think, in my not so humble opinion, this is a good representation of the beast. Detail is not just quite good, it is excellent. Yes the cover over the gunner vision block is a bit too big and solid, but it is an acceptable compromise. I got two of them (and then procured another two later one, after I decided they were good and I wanted a full platoon... yes something about binge tank shopping...).
Then of course black primer and vallejo colours in hand I started to leave my own mark on the beast...
I opted for a late war plain three tone camouflage. Nothing too complicated. I think the result is quite good... but of course will I post pictures of a tank I am not satisfied with? Oh, by the way the main gun elevates and the turret rotates... quite a clever kit!
Monday, 29 May 2017
going to Burma, part 1...
Well 28mm and World War Two seems to be the gut du jour at the Forward HQ. At Salute I got a small squad box of Warlord Games Merrill Marauders

They are metal figures with separate heads. I will be straight forward, I do not like separate head too much, especially in metal. They are a pain in the literal ass... but in this the case the heads were reasonably well fitting and thy certainly add variation and customization to the figures. Sculpting was nice, I am on the camp who likes Warlord sculpts and does not find them bad as some people say. Again I will be blunt as my usual and I will say that the usual criticism is unwarranted. Introduction and sterile polemics aside here is the result...
The Marauder, the 5037th Composite Unit, or Galahad Force, were an US offshoot of Orde Wingate first Chindit foray. Ignoring the shortcoming of the whole concept the US military seized on the idea of a deep attack force of highly trained infantry supported by the air to spearhead General Stillwell's reopening of the Burma road. The Galahad force, composed of skilled combat veterans, some coming from the Americal and 25th Division and their ordeal on Guadalcanal, undergone special training in India and was employed as the tip of Stillwell's CAI (Chinese Army in India, or X Force) assault toward the Chinese border across Northern Burma. It was under the command of the energetic, but frail, Brigadier General Frank Merrill. He led the unit with distinction but also suffered several heart attacks in the process. Even worse while the units was effective for a while the same shortcoming of the Chindits' concept emerged and in the end the unit self destructed due to illness, exhaustion and supply shortages. It was replaced by the Mars unit, similar in concept, with a core of retained troopers from the 5037th, but also used as a part of a more conventional supply system. Is also worth to note that while the 5037th got a lot of publicity during and after the war, the Chinese troops performed well, in the end winning their part of the campaign, but never receiving proper recognition, possibly because they were Nationalist Chinese...
If you want to see how this bias is enduring still, have a look at the historical introduction of the rules of the upcoming Nemesis game on the 1944 campaign in Burma, the KMT/GMD is the subject of baseless and gratuitous slander and Chiang is insulted with, again, no basis. I preordered the game and the game itself is excellent and gives a good treatment of the Chinese troops, but the designer's comments seem lifted straight from the weak work of Barbara Tuchman on Stillwell (an agiography of a man who had plenty of faults). Say what you want about Chiang, but saying he was not interested in fighting the Japanese is idiocy. Especially if at the same time you think Stilwell had not faults...
Anyway I will discuss the campaign in another occasion today it is just a miniature parade, of something I bought and paint in around one month (!?!).
Not the best of picture, but you can see the variety of the figures. One of the peculiarity of the unit was the freedom of equipment. Thus more automatic weapons than usual US Army squads, but also more or less lack of standard equipment. Some soldiers wear cut down HBT, some full HBT with rolled sleeves, and some Indian manufactured wolly pully. Webbing is reduced to the essential, ammunition pouches and water bottles. Non essential equipment was supposed to be carried by mules.
Another particular of the unit was the abundance of floppy hats.

They are metal figures with separate heads. I will be straight forward, I do not like separate head too much, especially in metal. They are a pain in the literal ass... but in this the case the heads were reasonably well fitting and thy certainly add variation and customization to the figures. Sculpting was nice, I am on the camp who likes Warlord sculpts and does not find them bad as some people say. Again I will be blunt as my usual and I will say that the usual criticism is unwarranted. Introduction and sterile polemics aside here is the result...
The Marauder, the 5037th Composite Unit, or Galahad Force, were an US offshoot of Orde Wingate first Chindit foray. Ignoring the shortcoming of the whole concept the US military seized on the idea of a deep attack force of highly trained infantry supported by the air to spearhead General Stillwell's reopening of the Burma road. The Galahad force, composed of skilled combat veterans, some coming from the Americal and 25th Division and their ordeal on Guadalcanal, undergone special training in India and was employed as the tip of Stillwell's CAI (Chinese Army in India, or X Force) assault toward the Chinese border across Northern Burma. It was under the command of the energetic, but frail, Brigadier General Frank Merrill. He led the unit with distinction but also suffered several heart attacks in the process. Even worse while the units was effective for a while the same shortcoming of the Chindits' concept emerged and in the end the unit self destructed due to illness, exhaustion and supply shortages. It was replaced by the Mars unit, similar in concept, with a core of retained troopers from the 5037th, but also used as a part of a more conventional supply system. Is also worth to note that while the 5037th got a lot of publicity during and after the war, the Chinese troops performed well, in the end winning their part of the campaign, but never receiving proper recognition, possibly because they were Nationalist Chinese...
If you want to see how this bias is enduring still, have a look at the historical introduction of the rules of the upcoming Nemesis game on the 1944 campaign in Burma, the KMT/GMD is the subject of baseless and gratuitous slander and Chiang is insulted with, again, no basis. I preordered the game and the game itself is excellent and gives a good treatment of the Chinese troops, but the designer's comments seem lifted straight from the weak work of Barbara Tuchman on Stillwell (an agiography of a man who had plenty of faults). Say what you want about Chiang, but saying he was not interested in fighting the Japanese is idiocy. Especially if at the same time you think Stilwell had not faults...
Anyway I will discuss the campaign in another occasion today it is just a miniature parade, of something I bought and paint in around one month (!?!).
Not the best of picture, but you can see the variety of the figures. One of the peculiarity of the unit was the freedom of equipment. Thus more automatic weapons than usual US Army squads, but also more or less lack of standard equipment. Some soldiers wear cut down HBT, some full HBT with rolled sleeves, and some Indian manufactured wolly pully. Webbing is reduced to the essential, ammunition pouches and water bottles. Non essential equipment was supposed to be carried by mules.
Another particular of the unit was the abundance of floppy hats.
Sunday, 28 May 2017
More Armor...
Ladies and Gentlemen,
It is a good model, with zimmerit modelled on. The TC figure is quite nice in my
opinion (I know warlord often get bad rep). Simple, clean, and fun build. The
only ‘negative’ element was the gun. Well moulded but the joint is too loose. I
had to glue it in position otherwise it was depressing too much giving the
impression of a knocked out tank.
Tidbit: do you know why knocked out tanks
have their guns depressed? Because their hydraulic fluid, the one used in the
recoil system has burned or spilled, and there is not pressure to keep the
equilibrators working, so the barrel, usually not fixed at its balance point,
just drop off.
Anyway
just enjoy another 1:56 model!
This
time I have gone for a general wash after the basic camouflage colours had been
applied, IMHO it worked, it was especially effective in the wheels and to
define the zimmerit.
After
the Tiger we have another group of tanks in 1:56 painted the same holiday.
Japanese ones this time. Two of them are Warlord resin models and one is a Company
B.
I had the Company B for years while the Warlords were bought in 2013. That
holiday I finally received my Trenchworx Thanks in Manchuria models. I built
them but I decided to start painting from the backlog first… and I also took
the opportunity to retouch the older Ha-Go. Anyway the Type 97 ShinHoto is
Warlord, as one of the Type 95. I am
again very satisfied of the work. I will say that the Warlord resin model were
slightly better than the Company B (and yes I plan to procure one platoon box
of the new plastic Chi-Ha too). Yet everyone painted well. I think I am more
happy with the Warlord because I got better and the colours are also more
accurate.
Warlord Type 97 leading, Company B Type 95 in the middle. |
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