The
philosophy behind my Steam Powered Armoured Wagons was to build a fleet of cheap
28mm scale armour for use with the All Quiet on the Martian Front rules and in
the occasional VSF game so they were built to war game quality. Originally I
was going to build one as a template and then make resin ones but scratch
building each from styrene was cheaper and gave me much greater flexibility in
the design. The Steam Powered Landship on the other hand even though made out
of leftovers from the SPAWs project is what I consider built to model standard (I’ll
probably enter it in the local model fair in October). It was planned to be a
one off I now know it will be the first of two as I have decided to build a a rival for
this one, I'm am hoping to see some dreadnought type pounding matches between them!
As
with all my scratch building projects I drew up plans as this always saves me time,
I am known to deviate from these but working from them makes life much easier. This vehicle
took me only eight days from the cutting the first styrene panel to finishing
the painting and assembling (I never count weathering in the build time) and I
would say anyone could build something like this!
Here’s
the plans I worked from:
This
is the hull sides being assembled note I scored the panel lines where applicable before gluing that way I could lay them flat:
Then add
some braces to give it strength and maintain width along the whole length of the
sides:
Here’s
a 28mm figure and one of the original SPAW’s to see the size:
Next
the conning tower was made, rivets are sewing pins, port holes are washers and the mast is
fashioned from a wooden skewer, the cross member is held in place with glue and
a metal pin made from a paper clip. A coal chute was added from sytrene:
Then
I made two funnels (smokestacks) from odd bits out of my spare parts box and
made a milliput gun barrel which I then cast copies of. The turrets were
drilled out to accommodate them and had some rivets added for ‘looks’:
Now
the fun began and over a hundred sewing pin rivets were added to the hull for effect. A boarding hatch was added to one side. Four casemates were made from plastic tube and styrene sheeting, the MGs for these are a piece of plastic tube acting as the cooling jacket with a metal rod (from a coat hanger) pushed through it for a barrel and the sight is he end of a sewing pin. Some towing points and hooks for a tow chain were added to the end plates. The side lights are odd Lego bits:
Here’s
all the parts ready for painting, I often paint in sections and assemble as is
makes spraying easier:
Painting
was with Humbrol enamels:
Here
it is with some figures after a flag, some rigging and a bit of coal was added
to the rear chute:
Now
off to the drawing board to get a second steam Powered Landship designed!
What a fantastic build - You've done yourself proud there mate!
ReplyDeleteMy only constructive comment is that it would pop even more with a little bit of weathering
Hey Paul thanks!
ReplyDeleteThis will get some subtle weathering, a pin wash and some ‘dusting’ but waiting to finish the second one I will build as I’ll do both at the same time
Looking forward to Steam Landship No2, Hopefully something majestically Britannic to restore the balance of power.
ReplyDeleteTop marks for casting your own gun barrels, now thats ingenuity of the highest order.
Great stuff! It recalls the glory days of Major General Rederring's landships.
ReplyDeleteThat was indeed a sad loss from the Blogosphere. You can still an archived version of the page, but I would love to see some new content there.
Deletehttps://web.archive.org/web/20071228014907/http://www.zeitcom.com/majgen/index.html
Fantastic CD great piece of kit.
ReplyDeleteCheers
Stu
Cheers chaps, thanks for the comments!
ReplyDeleteWill be rolling the two landships out for a rules test this arvo...
Tally Ho!