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Blast from the past

Posted: Fri Oct 26, 2007 7:58 am
by Gort
I was going through some of my old issues of Wargamer's Digest and came across these :

Image

Image

This is what got me hooked on Micro-armour. What got you started?

regards

Steve

Posted: Fri Oct 26, 2007 8:18 am
by CA-68
I was stumbling around the internet looking for a model of the USS Quincy (CA71) for a friend who's father served on it during WWII, and came across GHQs website. I had played battletech before, and liked miniatures and gaming, and have been a customer since (about 2 years)
The incredible detail in the tiny castings blows my mind, being able to game with the little models is icing on the cake for me. Its a way to build a great collection of models and take up only a small amount of space, a major concern in my small apartment.

Posted: Fri Oct 26, 2007 8:48 am
by Cpl_Blakeman
What is the time frame for that printed ad btw?

I have really just started though I have played other miniatures games. I like real equipment better than the sci fi stuff and micro armor fits the bill.

Posted: Fri Oct 26, 2007 9:06 am
by Gort
I scanned those from a couple of 1977 issues.

regards

Steve

Posted: Fri Oct 26, 2007 4:39 pm
by ferret701
Gort --

I'm readying an article on my website on "vintage GHQ" (I planned to finish it 6 months ago, but was delayed, and am now close to done). Would it be ok if I used those images on the site? Obviously, I would credit you.

Thanks,

Pat Callahan
www.microarmormayhem.com

Posted: Fri Oct 26, 2007 5:38 pm
by Gort
Pat

Go ahead and use the images if you want, but there's no need to credit me. The ads are GHQs' not mine.

regards

Steve

Posted: Fri Oct 26, 2007 7:00 pm
by ferret701
Thanks, Gort. I hope to have something up in the next few days. I have shots of a half dozen very old GHQ moderns, plus scans of The Vivandiere (a 1970s GHQ mag/catalog) and the 1978 GHQ catalog.

Pat Callahan

Posted: Sat Oct 27, 2007 9:41 am
by Ritter
For me it was the add in the last pages of ASL rulebook - probably around 1987 (edit - has it REALLY been that long?!!), I thought no frickin way...those are so cool!
Image
Image

Once I saw GHQs minis up close, I new that my plastic modelmaking days were numbered!


Troy

Posted: Sun Oct 28, 2007 4:51 am
by Mk 1
For me it was the confluence of two events. I'm afraid I became a convert ust a wee bit before Ritter's revelation. Like, maybe 15 years or so..?

1) I got the Avalon Hill board wargame PanzerBlitz for my 13th birthday. Gosh how I wanted that game. Had seen it in the store, read the back cover ("Russian tank commanders slam shut the hatches on their dreaded T-34s ... and there -- topping the rise! ... a glint of dawn reflecting off of the muzzle of the first German tank ... PanzerBlitz is about to begin!" Oooh MY :P ). Showed it to my mother, made sure she knew that I wanted exactly that game, had to have it. So for my birthday, there is was. Oooh yes! Then I opened it up, and that great big box with all those cool words and images on it had nothing but little cardboard squares inside? Are you kidding me?!! :x

2) I was at my local hobby shop, which had a fantastic choice of models and Rocco Mini-Tanks, and which I had patronized almost every Saturday of my life for years already, and I was looking at a 1/35th Tamiya JagdPanther, and the guy behind the counter saw what I was looking at and said "Good choice. 88mm gun, and 'A' frontal armor. The JagdTiger is even better -- it's got a 122mm gun". And I said "Uh, it was a 128mm gun, and what do you mean by 'A' armor?" And he started telling me about WRG's Armor and Infantry rules, and wargaming with micro-armor, and recommended me to another hobby shop across town that carried them (the local shop didn't).

So I went to that other shop, and saw those little tanks, and started buying them like mad! Not for micro-armor wargaming, but because they were just PERFECT to replace the little cardboard squares in my PanzerBlitz game! Oooh sweet! I still have the T-34s and T-34-85s that I bought at that time -- no tread pattering, no boxes or gas tanks, came in a clear hard-plastic snap-shut box with red foam to mark it as a Red Army tank (Germans came with gray foam, Americans with green foam).

Of course I eventually did get the WRG Armor and Infantry rules (first edition, 1972 printing). And PanzerBlitz has been in the closet ever since.

Posted: Sun Oct 28, 2007 9:30 am
by jb
My intro to Micro armour was even before that. I remember seeing them in the Alnavco catalog. That was- I beleive in 1968. I do remember viewing the MkIIIs,IVs,and the stug III. I had that catalog for years. I just couldn't aford those little tanks though-they cost $1.35 for a pack of 5 ,that was alot of money then...

Posted: Tue Oct 30, 2007 9:24 am
by kiasutha
Pat:
Do you know how many issues of "Vivandiere" were published?
I still have the first four, but life got in the way of gaming about that time...
Were there any more?
And talk about Alnavco & $1.35 micro...Man that was a long time ago.
Anyone remember when they went to the $1.95-2.20-2.45 scheme? I should, but...
Thanks,
Jim
ferret701 wrote:Thanks, Gort. I hope to have something up in the next few days. I have shots of a half dozen very old GHQ moderns, plus scans of The Vivandiere (a 1970s GHQ mag/catalog) and the 1978 GHQ catalog.

Pat Callahan

Posted: Tue Oct 30, 2007 7:53 pm
by ferret701
I've only ever seen the first issue...

... any chance I can talk you into scanning them?

Pat

Which Soviet Tank Model is that?

Posted: Wed Nov 07, 2007 2:56 pm
by wkurniawan
Hi guys,
can someone tell me which tank model is that Soviet tank featured in the flyer (1st post)?
I have browsed throuhg the entire Warsaw Pact Tank catalog but couldnt find anything like it.

Thanks!
Willies

Blast from the Past

Posted: Wed Nov 07, 2007 4:53 pm
by Bruce Morris
Looks like the early version of GHQ's T-54. I still have a few left.

Bruce