An additional 75 Russian tanks are only part of the order! |
The Soviet Tank Force has made it to the painting table |
A wargaming and modelling blog focussing on smaller scale models (1/300th and smaller). Covering mainly Ancients, ECW, ACW, World War One air combat and Cold War gone hot gaming, with the occasional forays into re-enactment and what passes for my real life! Warning. Comes with added dog posts.
An additional 75 Russian tanks are only part of the order! |
The Soviet Tank Force has made it to the painting table |
1. The Table. East is at the Top. |
3. Initial NATO positions on Hill 1 |
4. The Soviet's initial set up |
5. The first shots from long range find their mark. Scratch four T-62 Platoons |
6. Soviet Infantry and Tanks on Hill 1 while tanks burn all around. |
6. Russian infantry deploy into defensive positions in town |
End game. Soviet Infantry hold the town The east is littered with burning armour. |
A BTR-70 showing the final choice of green used |
Eventually I have settled on an undercoat of white with a slightly thinned Vallejo Medium Olive Green over that. By thinning it the high spots on the castings show some of the white through so kind of pre-highlighting occurs. I then hit the casting with a coat of satin varnish and firstly ink wash with good old GW Agrax Earthshade then dry brush with Vallejo Bonewhite to which I have added a little olive Green to create a very light green highlight. It's not exactly the Soviet colour scheme but it is close I'm happy with the results although the KGB political officer may order me to repaint in a more socialist shade at some point. Oh and in case JBM pops around I didn't paint in the red stars or the turret numbers although I did do the tracks in German grey front and rear!
A T-62 complete with commander manning the Turret MG |
So Ivan now has a Company of T-62s at 1:1 ratio and a company of BTR-70s and dismounted infantry will follow very shortly. For rules like FFOT3 where a single model represents a platoon that is the core of a Motor Rifle Battalion. An order of T-64s and BMP 1s will give the start of a Tank Battalion from a tank regiment and I probably will not be able to resist some T-72s and T-80s. Then it's onto support arms. I have decided that artillery will be an 'off board' asset but some anti tank and anti aircraft vehicles plus close air support will be modelled as on board assets so I need to decide what I want to use for those items.
The assembled ranks of Soviet Armour |
Lastly the astute observers will have noticed that the opening paragraphs of a couple of earlier posts have formatted as centre aligned. It seems to be something to do with placing an image and centre aligning it and I couldn't for the life of me seem to make it go back to what I actually wanted. The same thing happened with this post but I solved the issue. Highlighting the affected paragraphs and using the clear formatting icon seems to break the link to the image formatting and hey presto everything is back as I want it. I can't claim any credit for this solution as I followed the age old primate methodology of pushing all the buttons until one did something. Fortunately there were no big red ones marked do not push!
In between painting the O8 1/600th tanks and actually doing the work that I get paid for I have just read the 1987 Book 'Team Yankee' which (I assume) was the inspiration for the game system of the same name. The last World War Three story I read was The Third World War by General Sir John Hackett. Team Yankee is a much easier read.
The story focusses on a re-enforced M1 Abrams Tank Company based in the Central Sector and follows their involvement in the initial defence and ultimate counter offensive. The book ends with the Soviets having captured most of Northern Germany and parts of Holland but struggling to stay resupplied. At this point I realised that the story is set in the same world as Hackett's tale as the Soviets drop a single nuclear weapon on Birmingham and are then subjected to a return equivalent counter strike on Minsk. This leads to a change of regime in Moscow and a cease fire. Exactly as happens in Hackett's version of WW3. I double checked this against Wikipedia and the article there comes to the same conclusion this is the same war from a different perspective.
It's not a heavy read and focusses on small unit combat which from a wargamer's perspective is a sweet spot for on table action. American forces are no more than battalion level with assets from Brigade in support while the Warsaw Pact forces are Battalion to Regiment sized. The only thing which seemed odd was the lack of T-80s in the Soviet forces the most modern tanks described are T-72s but that may reflect the lack of clear information on Russian Tank Forces when the book was being written.
Reading it has given me some further insight into Soviet tactics (or lack of them at times) and spurred me on with my painting of the Russian troops sat on the painting table. Its worth a read for an insight into how a serving US officer thought the Soviet forces would be handled.
Like the other Oddzial Osmy castings these are flash free and beautifully crisp. It really is remarkable what the sculptor has achieved in a 1/600th scale casting. I'm using these to depict a tank company in a Motorised Rifle Regiment which consisted of three platoons of 4 tanks each plus one HQ tank, I'm leaving out the soft skin truck for the admin crew as these normally stayed at battalion HQ during an attack.
This means that I have a British Tank Squadron with Chieftain Mk5 (14 tanks) paired with a mechanised Infantry Company mounted in FV432s to mix and match and a the same for the Soviets but with T-62s and BTR-70s. That should give me the basics to try the free version of FFOT3 rules out. I have already painted and based the Chieftains and one Platoon of infantry for the British so its on to the Soviets next.
It is noticeable that the T-62 is a smaller tank than the Chieftain even at 3mm size. Painting should be easy enough as early 80's Russian kit was mainly in plain green. I just need to get the right shade sorted out as I'm not totally convinced by the shade I trialled on the first BTR-70. Not to worry though as I will come up with something.
BTR-70 this is not the green I'm looking for, but it can pass |
After yesterday's horrible basing mess, I thought to try a different approach so I over painted the horrid green with a more muted tone and added some of my bock paving sand and flock from my 6mm basing supplies. It's not in the least realistic but it does work a lot better than the olive green.
I'm not ashamed of the basing now! |
I hate the basing but the tanks came out OK. |