Monday 22 April 2019

Paint table Sunday

The Easter edition of paint table Sunday was very productive. Not only did the trench prototype get finished but also some AFVs and the Sarrisa Precision 220 loco was completed.

First up is the Urban Construct's Churchill ARK bridging tank. The casting was a bit messy and required a lot of cleaning up with files. The ramps are printed and thus have the line patina common to printed parts. Overall a decent model that reflects the prototype. I heavily weathered this  model to reflect the rather disposable and abused nature of this bit of kit with other AFVs crossing over it. Still need to add transfers to this model. This model will join my ever growing Royal Engineer echelon for my WW2 late war British Army and will add some flavor to gap crossing scenarios.




Next up was Rosa Miniatures A30 Challenger. This was my first fully printed tank; needless to say I am very intrigued by the technology. The barrel is a bit chunky as are a few other parts and the hull has the usual print lines which are difficult to remove. A bit of effort saw the turret cleaned of these lines and barrel reduced a little. The model scales okay against the Warlord Cromwell. This kit is cheaper than plastic or resin and fills the gap in the range of the big makers. Stowage by Tamiya. The A30 Challenger tank was a variant of the Cromwell tank, which had a lengthened hull and a larger turret to house the 17 Pdr anti tank gun. They were usually deployed within Cromwell Troops, with three Cromwells and one Challenger tank. Later on they were replaced with Sherman VC Fireflys or Comet tanks. Surprisingly even with the taller turret it is still slightly lower than a Sherman.



The last item was Sarrisa Precision's 220 locomotive finished in wartime austerity black and heavily weathered due to wartime neglect. Buffers were converted from map pins, charcoal added to the tender to simulate coal and a vacuum pipe added to the front made from wrapped wire. This loco shall be used on tables representing WW1, WW2 and even the RCW. A fiddly MDF kit, well designed and worth the build.




Sunday 21 April 2019

Trench terrain

Managed to get a terrain project nearly finished! This was a prototype trench section, I intend to do more to fit the length of a six foot table. Using principles from my favorite terrain building book, the now sadly out of print How to build wargames terrain by GW, I attempted to use bits of domestic waste for the build.




The starting point was hard board packing from a furniture box. I then used polystyrene packing glued to that base to form a rough outline of the trench. These were then cut back at a slight angle. Sections of corrugated sheet Slaters plastikard were glued in to form the revetment. Plastikard angle sections were then glued on top to restrain the sheets. The polystyrene was then covered in polyfilla. The front facing side of the trench had Renedra sandbags glued in to form a parapet. Using card robbed from a cornflakes packet, I cut them it into thin strips and glued it into the bottom of the trench to simulate duck boards. The model was then coated in sand gravel mix and PVA to fix it. Painted and inked in acrylic paints.

Very happy how the trench turned out, this can be used for WW1, WW2 and possibly Cold War Warsaw Pact trenches. Now to build five more sections and some gun pits!




Sunday 14 April 2019

28mm Sarissa Precision Railways

Taking advantage of a railway special offer last year,  I had bought Sarissa's 220 Mixed Traffic Locomotive and Signal Box packs.

The Signal box was a joy to build and looks a great reflection of the prototype. The 220 engine was a beast to assemble, but again looks magnificent. More work on sanding the boiler flush and sourcing some buffers and vac pipe before painting.
Considering a generic black freight/ mixed traffic livery with plenty of weathering to reflect wartime austerity conditions.

So now I own two armoured trains, this loco and some lineside equipment. Just need to base the track and build some embankments and the railway project is complete...  apart from a British WW2 armoured train for Bolt Action.




Sunday 7 April 2019

Bolt Action Game

My first real game in ages, 2000pts. I opted for a late war British armoured unit, my opponant a late war Waffen SS list.  Needless to say I was rusty and got trounced thanks to 'Mr Naughty' a Tiger Tank.  Great fun though.



 The dining room table repurposed using the new Killing Fields teddy bear fur mat.

 The line of advance for the British. Somwhere lies a PAK40...
 Burning Cromwells
 Lots of burning British tanks. German forces having pushed hard over the table.
 More burning Cromwells...
 17pdr armed Achilles taking a shot
 Sexton strikes a Panzer Mk IV
 The infantry engage with the Panzer Mk IV
The Sherman Firefly strikes a hit on the Tiger amid a field of knocked out tanks

Saturday 6 April 2019

Salute 2019

Once again the annual pilgrimage was made to E16 at the Excel Centre. This year I met up with some wargamers from Romford and had a chilled walk around the exhibition.

Some of the stand out demo games photos are presented below. Dave Thomas was regretfully absent which meant the metal Perry Miniatures line was not available as well as Wargames Foundry not carrying their sizable Napoleonic line either, that said their stand is massive and good to see them continuing on the show circuit. Thankfully there were other traders in abundance too. Another good year from the South London Warlords.

The mandatory stash photo!

Notable purchases: Gangs of Rome, Bread & Circuses, Sarrisa precision's Ornate Trelis, Osprey Publishing's Rebels and Patriots, Urban Constructs Churchill Ark tank,Rubicons 20mm Okerlion cannons, TT Games Venice MDF buildings and Empress Miniatures late war Britiah infantry packs.


 Gringo 40s Gulf of Tonkin table

Friends of General Haig, Lutzen
 The Battle of Ligny
 WW2 Far East
 The Longbow Society, Hundred Years War
 To the Strongest, Romans vs Celts