Showing posts with label Bolt Action. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bolt Action. Show all posts

Wednesday, 19 March 2025

From FrederickC: Early WW2 German Kradschützen and one more Circle of Paradise [The Wise] (285 Points)

Talk about sliding in under the wire. This morning I managed to finish off my last submission for this year's AHPC - two squads of German Kradschützen for a total of 28 men on 24 motorcycles or in sidecars for Bolt Action.

Kradschützen, vorwärts!

These are all 3D prints using STL files purchased from MyMiniFactory of German motorcycle troops either as single bikes or bikes with sidecars. Of the various sources for 3D prints I have seen, I thought these did an excellent job of rendering the Mauser Kar98k rifles and the M35 helmets. Where they fall down a bit is in depicting the standard German ammo pouches, which look more like the German Army flashlight. A few figures even had them positioned where the flashlight was often hung from the Y-straps. There was also in figure that had pouches for MP40 magazines (yeah!) but was still equipped with a rifle (boo!). Also the motorbikes don't quite look like either a BMW or a
Zündapp, primarily in the position of the muffler.

All the bikes were mounted on popsicle sticks using PVA glue. They were then primed with Vallejo German Panzer Grey Surface Primer using an airbrush. Painting was done primarily using Vallejo acrylics (Army Painter colours indicated by AP) as follows: faces and hands - Flat Flesh; jackets - German Fieldgrey; trousers - AP Uniform Grey; canteen covers - Flat Earth; gas mask canister - Luftwaffe Camo Green; helmets - Charcoal Grey; belts, jackboots, ammo pouches, and bike tires - Black; rifle stocks - Beige Brown; rifle slings - Mahogany Brown; metal weapons parts - German Grey; motorbikes - German Panzer Grey; motorbike seats, and goggle straps - AP Leather Brown. When all was done, the figures got a coat of Army Painter Strong Tone Quick Shade. Once the Quick Shade was dry, the bikes were mounted on bases that are either Warlord Games cavalry bases, or larger ones cut from old plastic restaurant gift cards.







The final figure for my final entry is an old school West End Games Star Wars figure of Obi Wan Kenobi to represent the Circle of Paradise - The Wise. This figure has been sitting primed black in a box with other Sci Fi/Star Wars minis along with Luke, Darth Vader and the Imperial officer I did for an early submission. He was painted with Vallejo acrylics (Flat Flesh, Dark Sand, Chocolate Brown, Stone Grey, White) followed by Citadel Reikland Fleshshade on the face and hands, Army Painter Mid Brown Wash on the robes and cloak, and Army Painter Blue Tone on a white base for the light saber. 

 Who’s the more foolish? The fool or the fool who follows him?”

             - Obi-Wan Kenobi

 

An elegant weapon for a more civilized age.”

Mos Eisley spaceport. You will never find a more wretched hive of scum and villainy.”

The points being claimed are as follows:

29 x 28mm foot figures @ 5 points = 145 points

24 x 28mm 'mounts' (motorcycle or sidecar) @ 5 points = 120

1 x Circle of Paradise - The Wise = 20 points

Thanks for stopping by. See you at the afterparty.

 

Sylvain: Especially for me, because I have an acute interest in the period, it's always a pleasure to read your posts about early WW2. I like your precise observations on the accuracy of the models. And I also enjoy the final result, a neat little formation of bikes that will buzz around some helpless French or British (or Dutch, or Belgian, or Norwegian). And Obi Wan is just like the mythic character we all love. Excellent last (?) post!

 

 

 

 

Saturday, 15 March 2025

From FrederickC: More Polish 10th Motorized Brigade and a Circle of Paradise [The Inconstant] (195 Points)

There is less than a week to go now, so this may be my final submission, or possibly my penultimate, if I put my nose to the grindstone. This week I present some more troops for my 10th Polish Motorized Brigade, also known as 'The Black Brigade'. 

10th Polish Motorized Brigade
 

Ten of the figures are from a box of Warlord Games Polish Infantry Squad in Greatcoats that I bought last July at Historicon. After I got back home I decided I would rather have a fourth squad of Black Brigade motorized troops and did a bit of conversion work, carving away the gas mask bag and replacing it with a German style canister, and swapping out the heads that came with Polish helmets for spare German ones. The M35 helmet doesn't have quite the same profile as the M16 helmet, so I added 'ventilation horns' characteristic of the earlier helmet. 

The remaining 24 figures are 3D prints using an STL from MyMiniFactory of Polish motorcycle troops wearing the black leather coats that gave the formation the nickname of 'The Black Brigade'. I am generally pleased with the look of the prints, but again there are a few niggling errors - the bayonet looks more like a belt knife, being rather small and mounted too high, the profile of the helmet is off at the back, rising much like a Soviet helmet, and two of the figures have 'carrying straps to nowhere', running over the shoulder, but with nothing suspended from them like a haversack or gas mask canister.

All the figures were mounted on 25mm round bases, and some fine sand was added using PVA glue. They were then primed with Vallejo Black Surface Primer using an airbrush. Painting was done using Vallejo acrylics as follows: faces and hands - Flat Flesh; greatcoats and trousers - Green Brown; haversacks and equipment straps - Green Grey; gas mask canister - Luftwaffe Camo Green; helmets - Brown Violet; belts and ammo pouches - Flat Earth; rifle stocks - Beige Brown; rifle slings - Mahogany Brown; leather coats and metal weapons parts - German Grey; jackboots - Black, bayonets - Gungrey. When all was done, the figures got a coat of Army Painter Strong Tone Quick Shade. 

 

Polish motorized infantry squad (front)

Polish motorized infantry squad (side)

Polish motorized infantry squad (back)

Closeup of conversion work (gas mask canister)

Closeup of conversion work (ventilation horns added to helmet)

Polish motorcycle infantry Squad 1 (front)

Polish motorcycle infantry Squad 1 (back)

Polish motorcycle infantry Squad 2 (front)

Polish motorcycle infantry Squad 2 (side)

Since I got the dismounted motorcycle troops printed, I acquired another STL from the same designer for motorcycles with sidecars and the field car similar to what I painted up last year, but I haven't got them printed yet. A project for AHPC XVI?

The last figure for this post is an officer that came from the box of Wargames Atlantic French Infantry that I painted at the beginning of the challenge. Rather than paint him in Horizon Blue, I have done him in colours appropriate for May 1940. I am going to apply him to what will be my only Circle of Paradise of the Divine Comedy - The Inconstant - which is described in the theme guide as 'something which may try its best but often falls a bit short'. The French army in May 1940 had more men than the Germans, and more tanks, with better armour and firepower than most German tanks, yet when push came to shove, it crumbled in the face of 'Blitzkrieg'. The troops at the ground level fought hard, but the leadership at higher command seemed to be lacking. 

French Officer - May 1940 (front)
 

French Officer - May 1940 (back)

The points being claimed are as follows:

35 x 28mm foot figures @ 5 points = 175 points

1 x Circle of Paradise - The Inconstant = 20 points

 Thanks for stopping by. 

Sylvain: Another greatly educational and entertaining post from you, Frederick. Your production for this Challenge was stunning, again, and I am very curious to see the picture of your wrap up, next week. I hope I will be able to see you across the table this year. I plan on going to Brandon in May, and maybe you will be there. It was an honor and a privilege to be your minion this year.


Saturday, 8 March 2025

From FrederickC: Reinforcements for the 4th Indian Division and the 8th Circle of Hell [Fraud] (315 points)

During last year's painting challenge I painted up several units of the 4th Indian Division in North Africa. However I felt that they needed some additional troops. For this week's submission I  have added another six-man section of the 4th Battalion, 16th Punjab Regiment, two Sikh Vickers machine gun teams, two Sikh 3" mortar teams, two Sikh two-man forward observer teams, and four Indian Pattern wheeled armoured carriers, each with a three-man crew inside. The final figure is a bit of a conundrum - an Italian NCO lost somewhere in the desert.

The section of Punjabis are from an 8th Army multipart sprue by Warlord Games. All the Sikhs and the armoured carriers are 3D prints using STL files from MyMiniFactory. Some of those figures were also multipart. While I liked the general animation and sculpting of the 3D prints, the designer got a number of the small details wrong such as buckles were there shouldn't be any, and missing buckles where they should be. Also the Bren guns are a little stubby, and the 'Lee-Enfields' look more like a Mauser than the SMLE used in North Africa. These complaints are just my OCD for historical accuracy kicking in, but most people probably won't notice when the figures are deployed on the tabletop. 

All the single figures were assembled and mounted on 25mm bases, and some fine sand was added using PVA glue. In the case of the support weapons and their crews, and the crews of the carriers, they were glued onto a popsicle stick with a small dab of PVA glue to give me something to handle while priming and painting. In the case of the carriers, only the wheels were separate pieces, and these were glued on after painting, but before any washes were applied.

All the figures and vehicle were primed with Vallejo Desert Tan Surface Primer using an airbrush, expect the wheels which were primed with Vallejo Black Surface Primer. This made painting the tires so much easier than trying to do it with a paintbrush. The soldiers' uniforms were left the base colour of Desert Tan. I then painted the rest primarily with Vallejo acrylics as follows: faces, arms and legs - Cork Brown; webbing - Iraqi Sand; canteen covers and ground sheets - US Field Drab; rifle stocks - Beige Brown; boots, beards, bayonet scabbards, and metal weapons parts - German Grey; socks - Khaki; gas mask bag - Tan Yellow; turbans - Dark Sand; machine gun water jackets and tripods - Camo Olive Green; mortar tubes - Tan Yellow, bayonets - Gungrey. Once completed, everything got the ol' "Army Painter Strong Tone Quick Shade" treatment. When that was dry, the support weapons and crews were glued to their bases using Super Glue. Here's the final result.

Reinforcements for the 4th Indian Division
 
Section of the 4th Battalion, 16th Punjab Regiment

Vickers machine gun teams (front)

Vickers machine gun teams (back)

3" mortar teams (front)

3" mortar teams (back)

Forward Observer teams

One of the more interesting items in this submission are the four Armoured Carrier, Wheeled, Indian Pattern (ACV-IP), known also as the Indian Pattern Carrier or other similar names. It was an armoured car produced in India during the Second World War based on the Canadian Military Pattern truck chassis. It was typically armed with a Boys anti-tank rifle and a Bren light machine gun. Those produced by Tata Locomotives were called "Tatanagars" after the location of the works. A total of 4,655 were produced, and used by Indian units in the Far East and Mediterranean and Middle East theatres, typically in the divisional reconnaissance regiments. My friend who did the printing for me only produced five storage bins for the back of the vehicles, so I filled in the space on three of them with various tarps and fuel cans I had in my bits box. I also had to do some trimming off the back corner of the seats of the driver and anti-tank gunner in order to get them into their slot inside the vehicle without breaking something. These were painted using the Caunter camouflage scheme similar to the vehicles I did last year. The Vallejo colours used, going from lightest to darkest, are Ivory, Stone Grey, and German Field Grey. The vehicles then got a wash consisting of a mixture of 3 parts Citadel Seraphim Sepia, 3 parts Citadel Agrax Earthshade, and 4 parts water. When that was dry, they got a liberal application of Vallejo Wash FX Desert Dust.

IWM photo of an Indian Pattern carrier with Caunter camo dated April 1942



 
The last figure in this submission is one I was gifted by fellow Fawcett Avenue Conscript, DallasE. It is an old Battle Honours mini he acquired two decades ago from either Bartertown or eBay with the purchase of a mixed bag of what was advertised as British 8th Army and German DAK, of which an Italian NCO is neither. You would have to be well into your cups in order to mistake one for either of the other two. If you buy North Africa Brits or Germans, you don't expect to get Italians. A bit of fraud being perpetrated by the seller, if you ask me. So, I am going to claim this figure for the 8th Circle of Hell - Fraud - as it is clearly 'something claimed to be something it is not'. When I got him, he was still shiny metal. He has now been 'redeemed', and will join my North Africa Italians from last year's challenge.

An Italian NCO in North Africa passed off as part of the 8th Army or DAK

'Ciampolo the Barrator Tormented by the Devils - Fraud' by William Blake



The points being claimed are as follows:
 
35 x 28mm foot figure @ 5 points =  175 points
 
4 x 28mm crew served weapons @ 10 points = 40 points 

4 x 28mm vehicles @ 20 points = 80 points

1 x Circle of Hell - Fraud = 20 points 
 
Thanks for stopping by. 


Sylvain: I know I will repeat myself, but your descriptions are top notch. It shows your love for the subject you are painting and it makes your whole posting even more interesting. Your vehicles especially, got my attention with the perfectly lined up camouflage pattern. Another remarkable submission!

Tuesday, 4 March 2025

Roll green Tide- DavidB( 360 points)

I only had a few days off of work and with the passing of of my stepfather and my mothers hospitalization, I have been burning the candle at both ends in tending to issues and their home and animals. Looking at the delightful chaos on my desk, I was surprisingly able to maintain focus for a few days and mainly kept to a limited palette of olive drabs, browns and blacks mostly Vallejo paints.
Every model that follows is a 3D print from Windham Graves and sourced from his profile on thingiverse. His files are for both FDM and Resin prints. I wish I had a resin printer as he also has files for wine bottles and wine crates among other things. I liked rather much the rabbit hole of all the most splendid and unusual and very odd trucks and machines from WW2 and the cold war. A bonus is all the models print on the build plate like a more magical summon of old airfix model kits. I was able to just fill my wet palette with paint and blast through a small foothill of models. I still hate painting vicks and these still need final weathering, but I need some decals from adepticon first.This has also reduced some, not all, of the haphazard stacking on the desk and cabinets.

Up first is my favorite armored car ever. Some people want the luxurious Rolls Royce of any era and the most discriminating wish for the ever classic Silver Ghost. I have always wanted the olive drab machine with the turret and pickup bed! Now I have two from the inter to early war era and the upgraded one with the extra wide tires to slice through sand and mud. 



I was looking for another scheme to paint as there was a lot of olive vicks on the paint desk. I found the blue grey scheme i thought was a desert camouflage, but was a dazzle pattern from late WW1 and interwar period. with speed and agility, this is quite a respectful scout vick but had no anti armour munitions. It did have a decent production, but the British built far more AC than this with better multirole abilities. Now this one is as rare as the silver ghost....until I print more.

The humble matador is the British prime mover and has a lot of torque for a 4x4 truck. I like the matador far more than the bren carrier and do have a few more printed models with cover and like this one without. 

These are still on the road today, although more as this one in a repaint and hauling salvage or working on farms. 

WW2 shifted the world into industry and forced skilled British carpenters into other trades. There was enough skilled carpenters to make the cargo boxes for these trucks and the mosquito! I should have painted the box green, but I had more fun painting natural wood and painting another color than olive drab.

The British motor pool for now.
The Stuart is my favorite tank of all time because of GI Combat comic books and the haunted tank. The Renault f17 is a close second. although it is a small tankette with a two man crew, The French made it, I am certain, thinking of glorious cavalry charges. There are pictures of crew smiling around their machines coated in soot and mud with toothy grins on their faces. Although a horse can run faster, from a grunts perspective it would be exhilarating to jump ditches and splash through pastures and fields with this little machine.

This little machine could easily rip through small European towns and follow narrow goat paths in the wilds. 

without looking, it seems its top speed was something like 15MPH which isn't too quick, but its engine was also pushing an armored machine and is still quite fast for the technology of the time and what renault could do. More surprising is this tank served in militaries up to this century although I am sure that those machines had better guns and engines.

They were used by many nations and quite a few ended up serving the Axis powers as well. I can equip these three with the standard machine gun, or upgrade to command turret and small field gun...very small field gun.
Now the Green Tide is rolling. Five halftracks to begin the green Tsunami. Tulane University in Louisiana started the Roll Tide as their school mascot is the green Tsunami. Tsunami is a suitable word to describe the flood of industry and logistics that prove the Axis powers could not prevail. British and French forces held out long enough for America to arrive. American military was not large for the start of the war, but as industry and training began in earnest, those soldiers went abroad in vicks as fresh as themselves. Good designs got upgrades and were shared with allies. Logistics works a whole lot better if only parts for a few models of trucks and tanks are needed. likewise fuel and ammunition. Most forget that the Germans invaded France and Belgium with splashy, impressive machines, yet the bulk of troops and supplies were moved by horse, cart, wagon, and even bicycles. I have loads of files for the Axis forces, but the sheer multitude of trucks and armor from many nations made their logistical chain an unwieldy nightmare.

These are going to be a rifle platoon rides for an Old Ironsides mechanized infantry unit.
to shepherd the convoy they have a half track with anti air flak and twin 50 cal.

I was using them to do an on the fly test for olive drab, so the paint does vary among them. It does show the difference in paint from batches of paint and wear in the war though!
a Diamond T deuce and a half with a jeep representing the platoons HQ. 

I will print more Diamond T and even jeeps, but I do plan a few vick purchases to find some crew hence the jeep is a covered file as no crew is currently in my collection.

I will also print up more of both for terrain and other purposes. After WW2 a lot of the old military trucks were used to revitalize industry and replace horses on farms. I will reprint many of the trucks and use them as civilian vicks in other games

People do wonder why halftracks are no longer around. the M4 is perfect for moving a squad of men around, but is small for cargo capacity and complicated in repair and maintenance. The Matador' which is my mental picture everytime I hear the word Lorry, is powerful, maneuverable but very compact and top heavy. Although a beast, it was easily mired in mud and snow especially in convoys.  the 6x6 Diamond T  was powerful, fast, and if mired in mud, the morass would also stop infantry in waist deep muddy molasses. It's only limits were the small roads in European towns. The Red Ball highway was dominated by these trucks.
Now my favorite tank the M3 and M5 Stuart. These will be the scout arm of my Old Ironsides force. I already have a warlord games Stuart painted in an earlier AHPC  as the haunted tank. these match totally fine with that model. I added stowage on the tanks mainly for visual interest and cover some of the limitations on FDM printing...the stowage is from a lot of different 3D files I used to fill my stowage bit box.

such a tiny little tank and it did quickly excel in recon units replacing AC use in the US military.
I do have the deerhound and greyhound AC files, but although printed I haven't assembled them yet.

The M5 has improved engines and stowage internal than the M3
A squadron of Shermans with a bog standard, a firefly, then an easy 8 variants making the troop.

I spent the most time building and painting these tanks the last two days.

I will make more and perhaps spend a little more time in placement of the stowage and improvised armor on the hulls. 

So this is the start of my Old Ironsides and friends. I wanted to get them done before adepticon and where I will acquire troops to play WW2 games. I have seen Bolt Action tournaments there and they do not hate on the 3D prints and are more interested in force lists, sportsmanship, and painting. This is a lot of vicks( I still hate painting them) but now I just need infantry and a few other bits to make a force. A lot cheaper than GW stuff too. I am going to focus from Kasserine Pass to the Italian Campaign. This will let me collect not only the Old Ironsides, but also add the French Foreign legion, Devils Brigade, Thunderbirds, but also Italian and German troops. Although the rule of cool means several illustrious units will be added  even if they fought in other theatres.
for now though I can buy several packs of infantry without regret and a few WW2 rulesets!
18 allied tanks and trucks for 360 points


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Sorry to hear about your family woes David- I trust things look up soon
- Paul