redleg wrote: ↑Fri Aug 20, 2021 8:35 am
I can't get this weird vision out of my mind: remember the TV show Emergency - where the rescue squad would roll up and the paramedics would get out and open up the big cabinets on the side of the truck? They would grab whatever boxes they needed depending on the nature of the call - radio box, drug box, maybe the oxygen or the splint box.
Don't remember that show. Maybe it didn't make it to the UK or I forgot it or <insert reason>
That said, what you described reminded me of Gerry Anderson's Thunderbirds where Thunderbird 2 would change pods depending on the situation. Did something similar happen with the Eagles of Space 1999? (I can't quire remember)
Well I'm picturing a camo truck rolling up to somebody's house for a wargame and you jump out. "We're playing North Africa today - grab the Infantry Box and 3rd Regiment. Don't forget the 88s! and the air support case!"
That might work if I had a 'normal' amount of 88s for a wargames army. I think I've got around 54 towed 88s of various types. And then there's the SP ones.
Air assets are kept in an old lead type cabinet that I keep at the club. Photos next time I'm there!
The armies are usually kept at the club too. The reason I've a few at home is that:
a) I'm sprucing them up. For example the left of these two US M4A3 BHQs is being given a wash, drybrush etc. and will end up looking like the one on the right.
<EDIT>
I forgot that I'd already done the M4A3 BHQ, here they are again, they've swapped sides though and have new boxes. The spruced up one is missing a couple of jeeps.
b) Having a lot of the boxes out at once can be difficult when packing away as sometimes people aren't too sure which box something should go in. In order to help, I'm marking up the boxes with the same marking scheme as the models have. Here's a couple of regiments of ISU-152s as an example.
