I'm working on my cargo HEMTTs and cargo HUMVEEs and would like to make them look like they're actually carrying cargo. Any ideas? I thought about making crates from self-hardening clay but that might be a bit tricky at this small scale. Another idea was to cut balsa strips into small intervals.
Thanks!
Tim
Cargo for Trucks
Moderators: dnichols, GHQ, Mk 1
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Tim ---
I've used balsa wood as well as other materials. In this picture, the load on the truck in the background I found the in the close out bin of a train store.

This Z scale model from Preiser is currently on sale on Ebay.
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?Vi ... otohosting
http://www.modelrailstuff.com/
On this website, go to 'Details', then to 'Pallets of Accessories' to find quite a number of models that might work for you.
There are many sources of train accessories. Hope this helps, and good hunting.
Bill
http://www.freewebs.com/gupiao/
I've used balsa wood as well as other materials. In this picture, the load on the truck in the background I found the in the close out bin of a train store.
This Z scale model from Preiser is currently on sale on Ebay.
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?Vi ... otohosting
http://www.modelrailstuff.com/
On this website, go to 'Details', then to 'Pallets of Accessories' to find quite a number of models that might work for you.
There are many sources of train accessories. Hope this helps, and good hunting.
Bill
http://www.freewebs.com/gupiao/
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- E5
- Posts: 2383
- Joined: Fri Dec 24, 2004 3:21 am
- Location: Silicon Valley, CA
I have experimented with several techniques for putting cargo in truck beds. I have settled to two primary approaches -- one for barrels, one for crates.
My approach to both does not produce the level of results that we've seen from Troy's work, but the techniques are simple and fast.
I really like to have some trucks with barrels. I make them from the sprues that come in the GHQ individual infantry packs. Just cut up the sprue with a razor, paint it gun-metal, do a little rust washing and light gray dry brushing, and you have barrels.
Most forward troop POL supplying is not done with tanker trucks. It's done with barrels. I often insert some supply requirements into victory points in my scenarios -- ie: you get 2 points for every tank that gets off the end of the board, but only IF you have the POL to support them. You must have 1 barrel of POL per two tanks to get the points.

Here is a Soviet early WW2 POL caravan. There is a medium ZiS truck with nine, a light GAZ truck with six, and a horse-drawn wagon with four barrels.

This posed picture shows many of my civilian vehicles. If you look on the road coming in from the lower right, there is a truck carrying barrels. The truck is a modern Soviet GAZ-66. In this case the barrels are stacked horizontally, rather than standing vertically. I have placed barrels in the backs of several kinds of trucks, including HEMMTs.
With the larger trucks, I often mix the barrles in with crates as well. For crates I just use cut cardboard. Get some modestly thick cardboard, and then slice it to two or three sizes. One longer and flatter, the rest closer to square. I like the simplicity, and the look that the cardboard takes -- no two cuts are actually identical, and when painted, it seems each piece absorbes a different amount of paint. So every crate comes up a slightly different size and color.

I don't seem to have any pics of my crated trucks handy. But there are some crates in this scratch-built artillery emplacement. You can see them in alcoves off of the back of the connecting trench.
One last technique I have used to get a little variety in my trucks, is to grind down the canvas on a select few of the covered truck-backs. This makes them look like an open-backed truck, with a modest load that has been tarped. If you look again to the pickture of the civilian vehicles, there is a GAZ light truck with a "tarped" load coming in from the upper right, next to the van with the white roof.
Just some ideas. Your mileage may vary.
My approach to both does not produce the level of results that we've seen from Troy's work, but the techniques are simple and fast.
I really like to have some trucks with barrels. I make them from the sprues that come in the GHQ individual infantry packs. Just cut up the sprue with a razor, paint it gun-metal, do a little rust washing and light gray dry brushing, and you have barrels.
Most forward troop POL supplying is not done with tanker trucks. It's done with barrels. I often insert some supply requirements into victory points in my scenarios -- ie: you get 2 points for every tank that gets off the end of the board, but only IF you have the POL to support them. You must have 1 barrel of POL per two tanks to get the points.

Here is a Soviet early WW2 POL caravan. There is a medium ZiS truck with nine, a light GAZ truck with six, and a horse-drawn wagon with four barrels.

This posed picture shows many of my civilian vehicles. If you look on the road coming in from the lower right, there is a truck carrying barrels. The truck is a modern Soviet GAZ-66. In this case the barrels are stacked horizontally, rather than standing vertically. I have placed barrels in the backs of several kinds of trucks, including HEMMTs.
With the larger trucks, I often mix the barrles in with crates as well. For crates I just use cut cardboard. Get some modestly thick cardboard, and then slice it to two or three sizes. One longer and flatter, the rest closer to square. I like the simplicity, and the look that the cardboard takes -- no two cuts are actually identical, and when painted, it seems each piece absorbes a different amount of paint. So every crate comes up a slightly different size and color.

I don't seem to have any pics of my crated trucks handy. But there are some crates in this scratch-built artillery emplacement. You can see them in alcoves off of the back of the connecting trench.
One last technique I have used to get a little variety in my trucks, is to grind down the canvas on a select few of the covered truck-backs. This makes them look like an open-backed truck, with a modest load that has been tarped. If you look again to the pickture of the civilian vehicles, there is a GAZ light truck with a "tarped" load coming in from the upper right, next to the van with the white roof.
Just some ideas. Your mileage may vary.
-Mark 1
Difficile est, saturam non scribere.
"It is hard NOT to write satire." - Decimus Iunius Juvenalis, 1st Century AD
Difficile est, saturam non scribere.
"It is hard NOT to write satire." - Decimus Iunius Juvenalis, 1st Century AD