Show us yer stuff!
Moderators: dnichols, GHQ, Mk 1
-
- E5
- Posts: 2207
- Joined: Sun Apr 17, 2005 5:45 am
Show Us Your Stuff
Great looking stuff there, Mk1! I plan to go back and add some crew figures to the Marder IIs I completed last year.
As I mentioned, I have a good number of U.S. tank destroyers as well as some British tank destroyers. When I get around to painting these I will be adding crews.
The standing guy with the Binoculars which comes with the U.S. seated infantry is a great vehicle commander.
Pete
As I mentioned, I have a good number of U.S. tank destroyers as well as some British tank destroyers. When I get around to painting these I will be adding crews.
The standing guy with the Binoculars which comes with the U.S. seated infantry is a great vehicle commander.
Pete
-
- E5
- Posts: 2383
- Joined: Fri Dec 24, 2004 3:21 am
- Location: Silicon Valley, CA
Re: Show Us Your Stuff
Thanks for the kind words, Pete.
TD branch had never planned for TDs to be used as tanks (to engage infantry or other soft targets), and so had only provided for an AT gun and an AAMG for self-protection. But commanders in combat zones had different ideas about leaving such useful assets idle while waiting for an enemy armored breakthrough that only really happened twice in the whole war (in US Army AOs).
I did add a significant quantity of baggage and crates to the TDs. I described it a bit in the posting of the M10 and M36 TD pics two pages back int his thread.
Most of the soft kit / baggage was casts I bought from a UK vendor. There are a few crates that I kit-bashed up myself on one M10's hull side and another's turret side. The M36s came with crates cast onto the sides of the hulls, so I didn't add any crates to those models, just soft kit on the turrets.
-Mark
It may well be that the figures came from the US seated infantry packs. Once they go into the extras bin the sourcing becomes harder to track. I did give some thought to putting the .30cal MG gunners from the seated infantry packs into a couple of my TDs. It was reasonably common by late war for TD crews to weld a pivot-mount for an M1919 to the front of their turret roofs, as it was not possible to train the .50cal to the front without getting out of the turret and standing on the rear hull deck, and the TDs had no co-ax or hull MGs to fire over the forward arch.pmskaar wrote: The standing guy with the Binoculars which comes with the U.S. seated infantry is a great vehicle commander.
TD branch had never planned for TDs to be used as tanks (to engage infantry or other soft targets), and so had only provided for an AT gun and an AAMG for self-protection. But commanders in combat zones had different ideas about leaving such useful assets idle while waiting for an enemy armored breakthrough that only really happened twice in the whole war (in US Army AOs).
Also thank you for the kind words, redleg.redleg wrote: is the baggage on the outside of the TD something you added?
I did add a significant quantity of baggage and crates to the TDs. I described it a bit in the posting of the M10 and M36 TD pics two pages back int his thread.
Most of the soft kit / baggage was casts I bought from a UK vendor. There are a few crates that I kit-bashed up myself on one M10's hull side and another's turret side. The M36s came with crates cast onto the sides of the hulls, so I didn't add any crates to those models, just soft kit on the turrets.
-Mark
-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
-
- E5
- Posts: 833
- Joined: Wed Jun 19, 2013 2:57 am
- Location: SW USA
Hi Mark,
Great pics. I love the color, spot on! I have difficulty getting that shade.
Love the crewman in the vehicles, it really adds to the realism.
Hopefully, this project can get you jump started into more projects! Lol
Always thought the M8 was an interesting vehicle. Totally being honest, no, I didn’t believe you! Lol Who would honestly deprive themselves of painting crew members and/or infantry? Lol
Great job. Patiently waiting for more pics. lol
Great pics. I love the color, spot on! I have difficulty getting that shade.
Love the crewman in the vehicles, it really adds to the realism.
Hopefully, this project can get you jump started into more projects! Lol
Always thought the M8 was an interesting vehicle. Totally being honest, no, I didn’t believe you! Lol Who would honestly deprive themselves of painting crew members and/or infantry? Lol
Great job. Patiently waiting for more pics. lol
-
- E5
- Posts: 3475
- Joined: Thu Oct 08, 2015 3:44 am
-
- E5
- Posts: 7316
- Joined: Wed Dec 15, 2004 11:22 pm
- Location: Jacksonville, FL
These pictures from 2016 or before.
Hummv w/drone launch trailer


Counter-battery radar

Sgt. York on Abrams hull in 3-tone NATO, the way it should be.

Panther mine-roller vehicles, 2-man crew or remote controlled.

]
Command/control/communication Stryker

Abrams with mine-rollers

FMTVs, custom built flat-bed

Mk.23 with Kit-bash canvas cover
One Mk.23 has 4 axles.



Hummv w/drone launch trailer


Counter-battery radar

Sgt. York on Abrams hull in 3-tone NATO, the way it should be.

Panther mine-roller vehicles, 2-man crew or remote controlled.

]
Command/control/communication Stryker

Abrams with mine-rollers

FMTVs, custom built flat-bed

Mk.23 with Kit-bash canvas cover
One Mk.23 has 4 axles.



Last edited by chrisswim on Sun Jun 21, 2020 8:29 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Chris
-
- E5
- Posts: 7316
- Joined: Wed Dec 15, 2004 11:22 pm
- Location: Jacksonville, FL
-
- E5
- Posts: 833
- Joined: Wed Jun 19, 2013 2:57 am
- Location: SW USA
-
- E5
- Posts: 2383
- Joined: Fri Dec 24, 2004 3:21 am
- Location: Silicon Valley, CA
In my gaming experience, minefields are usually just marked with a paper chit on the table or some such. Mien Panzer even comes with cut-out counters you can use (as your paper chits) to mark the location of your minefields.
Having seen marked and wired minefields used in several game AARs of games in larger scales I felt … shall I say … left out.
So I have created a few marked minefields for my gaming terrain.

They were pretty easy to make. I cut out 1 inch by 2 inch (approximately) rectangles of sheet styrene, put some fence posts around the perimeter, put a bit of acrylic gel with earth-tone paint on top, flocked 'em, and ran a thread around the fenceposts.

I did two of the bases with diagonal edges, to provide some level of flexibility. They might go alongside other terrain (like rivers or hills), or they might be put together into a network of fields that provide "access" for infantry patrols to go out, but channel any attack coming in to make it vulnerable to bunching up and flanking / grazing fire.
A simple and quick project, but something I've never had before.
-Mark
Having seen marked and wired minefields used in several game AARs of games in larger scales I felt … shall I say … left out.
So I have created a few marked minefields for my gaming terrain.

They were pretty easy to make. I cut out 1 inch by 2 inch (approximately) rectangles of sheet styrene, put some fence posts around the perimeter, put a bit of acrylic gel with earth-tone paint on top, flocked 'em, and ran a thread around the fenceposts.

I did two of the bases with diagonal edges, to provide some level of flexibility. They might go alongside other terrain (like rivers or hills), or they might be put together into a network of fields that provide "access" for infantry patrols to go out, but channel any attack coming in to make it vulnerable to bunching up and flanking / grazing fire.
A simple and quick project, but something I've never had before.
-Mark
-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