More Soviet infantry were completed this week, specifically 32 Siberian Veterans from the Warlord Games boxed set of the same name. The set consists of four identical sprues of multipose miniatures, enough to build 32 soldiers, plus two metal figures. (I diverted two of the plastic figures, and some of the Mosin-Nagant rifles to my Winter Soviets to beef up the numbers.) You also get a selection of metal heads and arms to add further variety to the figures, such as captured weapons, bandaged heads or hands, Eastern facial features, etc.
These were all painted in my usual style, starting with a black primer. All the basic colours were painted using Vallejo acrylics, followed by a coat of Army Painter Strong Tone Quickshade. The end result is a platoon of three 9 man sections each with two submachine guns, a mix of Mosin-Nagant rifles and carbines, a DP-28 light machine gun team, one Tokarev semi-automatic rifle, plus some hand grenades, Molotov cocktails, and a captured Panzerfaust, all led by an officer with a pistol. Add to that a sniper team, a soldier dragging a Maxim machine gun, and a Commissar with a speaking trumpet.
Siberian Veterans defending the approaches to Moscow |
Captured MP40, Molotov cocktail, and bandaged heads |
Bandaged hands and captured Panzerfaust |
More bandaged heads and hands |
Machine-gunner pulling a Maxim and an officer with a pistol |
Sniper team with scoped Moisin-Nagant rifle |
"The man with the rifle shoots, the man without the rifle follows...." |
Next we have a Soviet BA-10 heavy armoured car which is a 1/48 model by Uni-Model, another Ukrainian company stocked by my local hobby store. Like the Ace Model kits that I built earlier, these are very detailed and contain a lot of parts that I probably could have left out given that I am building something for the wargames table. The parts lack locating pins and holes to correctly align them, and the diagrams didn't always give a good representation of exactly where things were to be positioned. (One diagram actually had all the part numbers printed backwards. 😱) I also found the plastic to be a bit fragile, and a few pieces broke when trying to carefully cut them from the sprue. In the end I left off the optional tracks from the rear wheels and some of the tiny etched brass parts, and replaced the headlights and the steps outside the side doors with something more robust than provided by the model kit.
Despite all the trials and tribulations, I eventually got it all together. It was primed black using an airbrush and then painted Russian green using acrylic paint. Highlights and decals were applied, and then the entire vehicle was given a wash of AK Interactive Dust. (In case anyone is wondering what 'А. Невский' means, it is for Alexander Nevsky, a medieval military leader who defeated the Teutonic Knights in 1242.)
The headlights were made from round push pins filed flat on one side |
А. Невский on the side, just above the rear wheels |
The plastic piece to support the step on the side was replaced with florist wire |
The points being claimed are as follows:
1 x 28mm vehicles @ 20 points each = 20 points
30 x 28mm foot figures @ 5 points each = 150 points
(I am counting the four prone figures as two)
A tough bunch of Siberian veterans Frederick. I like the movement on the fellow pulling the Maxim, although that can't have been easy over anything but smooth ground. I was amused by the trials and tribulations you went through with the BA-10, but it is a fine end result that you achieved.
Excellent mass production Frederick. Love that armoured car!
ReplyDeleteGreat looking siberian veterans and armoured car,it looks ace!
ReplyDeleteBest Iain
Nice Sovs, Frederick! :)
ReplyDeleteNice cars and horde of Soviets.
ReplyDeleteSplendid work Frederick
ReplyDeleteThat BA-10 is terrific, Frederick. Well done in preserving through its assembly.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing the challenges you encountered. Reading how others resolve issues like this is so helpful! Your end result is terrific and you’d never know that you ran into any difficulties!
ReplyDeleteEtched brass? Sounds like a trial to assemble!
ReplyDeleteCracking Figures
ReplyDeleteWonderfully iconic Russians, love megaphone comrade!
ReplyDeleteCheers, MikeP
Very very nice!
ReplyDelete