This week, I present a couple of armoured vehicles for my Winter War Soviets, both finished with a rough, field-applied whitewash over the standard Soviet green. This was very much a leap of faith for me. After assembly, I got the models fully painted, decaled, and weathered to the point where they looked “done”… and then deliberately smeared white paint all over them like a vandal.
There are plenty of established whitewash techniques out there, but I ended up bodging together my own. I mixed white acrylic paint, distilled water, and airbrush flow improver in roughly equal parts. The flow improver is the unsung hero here: it reduces surface tension and stops the paint from pooling or beading. What you get is a milky glaze that needs two or three coats, depending on how heavy you want the finish. I hand-brushed it panel by panel, deliberately avoiding raised edges and high-wear areas like hatches and crew access points. The aim was that hurried, uneven, already-wearing-off look you see in historical photos.
The BA-10 armoured car was developed in 1938 and produced until 1941, making it the most numerous Soviet heavy armoured car of the pre-war period, with over 3,300 built. This is the earlier BA-10 variant, descended from the BA-3 and BA-6, using the GAZ-AAA chassis and sporting improved armour up to 15mm on the front and turret. It was meant to be replaced by the BA-11 in 1941, which would have had a diesel engine and a more advanced armour layout, but the war rather rudely intervened. The BA-10 soldiered on in Red Army service until 1945, and a number were captured and pressed into Finnish service during the Winter War (at least 24 that are known of).
The T-26light infantry tank needs little introduction. Developed from the British Vickers 6-Ton, it became one of the most prolific tank designs of the interwar years. More than 11,000 were built across an eye-watering 50-plus variants, including flamethrowers, engineering vehicles, self-propelled guns, artillery tractors, and armoured carriers. Early versions had twin turrets with machine guns in each, but this is the 1939 single-turret model with the 45mm main gun, a coaxial machine gun, and an additional rear turret MG. By 1939, its armour was already starting to look thin against modern anti-tank weapons, but sheer numbers kept it relevant and deadly through the Winter War. Once again, captured vehicles were hastily repainted and used by the Finns to defend their homeland right through to the end of WWII.
Both models are from Rubicon, and they were a pleasure to build. The BA-10 can be assembled with or without the over-tire tracks, while the T-26 kit gives you enough parts to build one of several variants on the same chassis. The instructions for each kit are very clear, but as with any plastic kit, patience is the key to success. I enjoyed making these so much that I have now bought a couple of GAZ-AA trucks from Rubicon to carry my infantry in. Gotta give Ray’s Finns something to shoot at during his Motti attacks after all.
Scoring: 2x28mm Vehicles @ 20pts each = 40 points
From DaveD . Ooh nice lead in for the first challenger post of the day . Lee grabs the winter theme and runs with it . Speed and firepower just what you need to chase of the odd pesky Finn with a can opener. Great work on these two Lee . I share the angst of finishing a paint job , then adding another over the top. So wrong yet so very right for these two . I am making this an extra 4pts for the extra work and cracking outcome. 44 pts it is .
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That really does look the business Lee - thanks for the tutorial as well
ReplyDeleteReally lovely work on these. I always love to see winter tables and figures. Probably a road i'll never go down, so I get pleasure in seeing other people's efforts. Top stuff.
ReplyDeleteExcellent work! And thanks for sharing your process on the white wash.
ReplyDeleteGreat work on the whitewash, both vehicles look like they'd be right at home in the snow.
ReplyDeleteLove these Lee - you have smashed the look of the whitewash perfectly. These will look fantastic on the table.
ReplyDeleteGreat "snowscape" painting - really enjoyed reading the post!
ReplyDeleteLovely work on these Lee, the extra effort on the snow camouflage has really paid off.
ReplyDeleteGreat brushwork Lee, really has a wintery feel to it!
ReplyDeleteLove both of them and the whitewash turned out pretty darn well
ReplyDeleteFabulous work, Lee.
ReplyDeleteA very successful experiment, Lee. The effect is excellent, good job!
ReplyDeleteVery fine work Lee the whitewash came out great!
ReplyDeleteFantastic work on the winter camouflage.
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