About Me

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No Fixed Abode, Home Counties, United Kingdom
I’m a 60-year-old Aspergic gardening CAD-Monkey. Sardonic, cynical and with the political leanings of a social reformer, I’m also a toy and model figure collector, particularly interested in the history of plastics and plastic toys. Other interests are history, current affairs, modern art, and architecture, gardening and natural history. I love plain chocolate, fireworks and trees, but I don’t hug them, I do hug kittens. I hate ignorance, when it can be avoided, so I hate the 'educational' establishment and pity the millions they’ve failed with teaching-to-test and rote 'learning' and I hate the short-sighted stupidity of the entire ruling/industrial elite, with their planet destroying fascism and added “buy-one-get-one-free”. Likewise, I also have no time for fools and little time for the false crap we're all supposed to pretend we haven't noticed, or the games we're supposed to play. I will 'bite the hand that feeds', to remind it why it feeds.
Showing posts with label AFV; AA/Flak. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AFV; AA/Flak. Show all posts

Thursday, December 12, 2024

F is for Follow-up - Noreda and Injectaplastic

I mentioned in a comment the other day that I try to avoid 'khaki' subjects in December, and that's true, especially the more war'y stuff, but the odd bit gets through, and these ready-made AFV's are a perennial favourite of mine, with two purchases in recent months, both European brands.
 
I think this is the Injectaplastic Jeep, with a gun that's new to the collection, the owner has added waterslide transfers which some of you may recognise from plastic kits (Airfix and Esci - I think?), and which completes the line-up with their Munga and Kubelwagen, both seen here passim. It's darker green than my existing sample of these, though.

This was in the same purchase and is the Noreda one, which I seem to already have, but the trouble with show-purchases is that you are pressed for time, and have to make split-decisions on whether or not to buy something, based on what you can remember having, what you think you may have, and/or what you've seen and/or posted from elsewhere!

A comparison shot with the Triang Minic tin-plate in clean state, but missing it's key, hopefully I'll have one in the spare key zone! All a similar kid's handful size, and two of them needing a comparison shot on the Airfix Jeep page!
 
Also with the two jeeps and gun, came this truck with yet another take on that 1950/60's staple, the twin AA 'pom-pom' gun, now euphemistically referred to as a 'technical'! Again this seems to be Injectaplastic, from the wheels, and is new to the existing sample, but needs paint-removal, before I take better shots.
 
Then I picked these up last Saturday, from Tony Herrington, long time 'plastic warrior' who was stalled-out at the London Toy Solder Show, these are the Noreda truck we've seen before with canvas tilt and GS trailer, but now, also, as a tanker version, with tanker trailer and an additional 'goulash cannon' field kitchen.
 
The kitchen, while simplified for production in one shot as a pocket-money toy, follows the basic design very well, we had similar trailers on field exercises in the 1980's, four hot-plate/bain-maries over an oven and grill with the chimney long-enough to take the gas fumes (wood smoke or burnt oil in earlier times) away from the faces of the troops operating the equipment, or queuing-up for 'range-stew' - baked-beans, tinned potatoes and tinned mixed-vegetables cubed, with cheap sausages, diced in a thick gravy!

Thursday, October 5, 2023

T is for Two - Euro-Armour

To go with their largish '54mm' Airfix resembling 54mm combat infantry, technically US troops, but aimed at a NATO , or Bundeswher recogniseing fan-base, Jean Hoefler produced a Leopard Tank, and to utilise the chassis tool, a nice conversion to this beast . . .

. . . the Flugabwehrkanonenpanzer Gepard (Cheetah), an all-weather-capable day-and-night, self-propelled anti-aircraft gun (SPAAG) currently doing sterling-service in Ukraine, bringing down Russian tactical missiles and their 'indestructible' hypersonic bollocks, as well as drones, large and small!

Seen-elsewhere shot, you can see it goes well with pretty-much any large-scale toy soldiers you throw at it with Crescent, Cherilea and a couple of Reisler, used here as scale/size compatibility guides.
 
While this is - I'm pretty sure - a Bonux premium from France, next-door, but it's unmarked, the ex-Manurba-Tallon stuff they carried is marked with the soap-powder's name, but it seems the more unique items weren't. Fictional but fun!

Friday, April 1, 2022

B is for Breaking News - Toy Fair Latest!

Latest announcement on the toy 'wire' is a range of topical kits from Revell . . .

The first in the series is reportedly going to be followed by a Belarus-1522 dragging a T-80BVM MBT with damaged 'cope cage', an Agromash-180TK towing a 9K33 Osa/SA-8 'Gecko' and a Western John Deer pulling a BTR-82A IFV, all common-enough sights around Ukraine these days.

Thursday, August 5, 2021

A is for Ackerman

I bought the first two of these four sets (both contract manufactured by Pioneer) from the same shop at different times, when passing, but they had both spent some time in direct sunlight so suffer bleaching on the faces, I've tried to adjust the colour in Picasa but with limited success! The card backs, however, are true colour.

6x6 AFV; 6x6 Truck; Ackerman; Ackerman Group Plc.; Ackerman Mini Sets; Boxed Sets; City Team; Diecast Jeep; Half Track; Helicopter Toy; Hero Die Cast; Hero Motor; Hummers; Jeeps; King Tiger; M1 Abrams; Made in China; Made in Hong Kong; Pioneer Die-Casts; Pioneer Hong Kong; Rack Toy Month; Rack Toys; Realtoy; RTM; Schwerer Wehrmachtschlepper; Sherman Tank Model; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; SWS; Tiger Tank;
The first is the nicer play-value wise, if you consider three simplified sandbag walls an improvement over none! And you'll recognise the 'airport fire tender' VAB with twin foam-generators and 6x6 truck from the big overview I did on these back in RTM 2017, which was when it became clear how many of these cheapie die-casts are out of Pioneer's factory/ies.


6x6 AFV; 6x6 Truck; Ackerman; Ackerman Group Plc.; Ackerman Mini Sets; Boxed Sets; City Team; Diecast Jeep; Half Track; Helicopter Toy; Hero Die Cast; Hero Motor; Hummers; Jeeps; King Tiger; M1 Abrams; Made in China; Made in Hong Kong; Pioneer Die-Casts; Pioneer Hong Kong; Rack Toy Month; Rack Toys; Realtoy; RTM; Schwerer Wehrmachtschlepper; Sherman Tank Model; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; SWS; Tiger Tank;
Again we've seen various paint-schemes on the Hummer and like the previous set this is branded to Ackerman Group here in the UK (previously seen importing Supreme output) but will have been other brands or brand marks (phantom brands) elsewhere, such as Realtoy - all three of these models are to be seen in their sets.

6x6 AFV; 6x6 Truck; Ackerman; Ackerman Group Plc.; Ackerman Mini Sets; Boxed Sets; City Team; Diecast Jeep; Half Track; Helicopter Toy; Hero Die Cast; Hero Motor; Hummers; Jeeps; King Tiger; M1 Abrams; Made in China; Made in Hong Kong; Pioneer Die-Casts; Pioneer Hong Kong; Rack Toy Month; Rack Toys; Realtoy; RTM; Schwerer Wehrmachtschlepper; Sherman Tank Model; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; SWS; Tiger Tank;
A few more shots, again (thinking back over past musings on this subject) the little walls are a useful clue (like the street furniture) as to who was being supplied by Pioneer and who was ripping them off!

The 6x6 truck has a less common short tilt, no troop-carrier this one; cargo-carrying in inclement weather! The Hummer's markings have it looking a bit Chinese . . . have they copied it? Oh yes! The Dongfeng EQ2050!

6x6 AFV; 6x6 Truck; Ackerman; Ackerman Group Plc.; Ackerman Mini Sets; Boxed Sets; City Team; Diecast Jeep; Half Track; Helicopter Toy; Hero Die Cast; Hero Motor; Hummers; Jeeps; King Tiger; M1 Abrams; Made in China; Made in Hong Kong; Pioneer Die-Casts; Pioneer Hong Kong; Rack Toy Month; Rack Toys; Realtoy; RTM; Schwerer Wehrmachtschlepper; Sherman Tank Model; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; SWS; Tiger Tank;
Another set which I shot as one before breaking them down into the thematic tubs this stuff goes to now and probably from a minor maker rather than Pioneer; one of their copyists! King Tiger has banana-barrel; a line you probably never thought you'd read here or anywhere else!

6x6 AFV; 6x6 Truck; Ackerman; Ackerman Group Plc.; Ackerman Mini Sets; Boxed Sets; City Team; Diecast Jeep; Half Track; Helicopter Toy; Hero Die Cast; Hero Motor; Hummers; Jeeps; King Tiger; M1 Abrams; Made in China; Made in Hong Kong; Pioneer Die-Casts; Pioneer Hong Kong; Rack Toy Month; Rack Toys; Realtoy; RTM; Schwerer Wehrmachtschlepper; Sherman Tank Model; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; SWS; Tiger Tank;
Again, these came 'clean' from a charity shop in the last year or two and are clearly painted to type and belong together, actually quite nice; scale's not so shot-to bits, as it often is with these 'matchox' scaled sets, coming-in at around 1:90th? But an interesting choice of subjects which include a Sherman Firefly (or even an Israeli 'Super-Sherman?), late war German SWS (Schwerer Wehrmachtschlepper - Heavy Military Tractor) 3.7cm 'flak-wagon' and an American M20 scout-car.

Monday, November 18, 2019

T is for Two - Rolling Russian Rockets

We have actually seen one of these before but it's worth a second visit to compare it to one of my favourite pieces of Soviet-era Russian die-cast, and having now got a brand for the one making a return, it makes sense.

Тульский Патронный; Эра г.Севастополь; военная техника; Anti-Aircraft Missile; Era; Free Rocket Over Ground; FROG; Frog Missile; Gaskin; Rocket Launcher; Rocket Launchers; Russian AFV's; Russian Toys; SAM I AAM; Self-Propelled Missiles; Self-Propelled Rocket; Sevastapol; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet Era Toys; Soviet Plastic Toys; Soviet Tula Cart. Plant; SPAAG; T Is For Two; T54/55; Tula Cart. Plant; Tula Cartridge Plant;
Seen before, this is the same company that made the tank transporter, the little forward-control truck with tin-plate tilt and the airborne ZSU self-propelled gun, now believed to be the Tula Cartridge Plant, and all from a series known as 'Military Equipment', which included a handful of solid-cast figures. Vehicle is one of the early FROG (Free Rocket, Over Ground) launchers, tactical battlefield nuclear-missiles akin to the US Honest John or French Pluton.

Тульский Патронный; Эра г.Севастополь; военная техника; Anti-Aircraft Missile; Era; Free Rocket Over Ground; FROG; Frog Missile; Gaskin; Rocket Launcher; Rocket Launchers; Russian AFV's; Russian Toys; SAM I AAM; Self-Propelled Missiles; Self-Propelled Rocket; Sevastapol; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet Era Toys; Soviet Plastic Toys; Soviet Tula Cart. Plant; SPAAG; T Is For Two; T54/55; Tula Cart. Plant; Tula Cartridge Plant;
But Era, in Sevastopol made this; I'm not sure but I think the NATO reporting name for this might have been Guild? It's two SAM-I's (think Hawk!) mounted on the same chassis as the previous beast (old T54/55 hulls), and is a most odd arrangement, with the vehicle manufactured to contemporary Corgi, Dinky or Matchbox 'Super King' standards with continuous rubber-band tracks, revolving wheels on through-axles etc . . .

. . . while the weapon platform is a really rather crude stamping, with no attempt at modelling the travelling/launching cradles/mechanism and with two even cruder aluminium castings for the rockets.

But I love it; it is an incredibly tangible toy, you really want to handle it. While there is no elevation, there is something really satisfying about the way the two rockets follow each-other round! The rockets also make a good handle to push the thing across the floor, it's hard to explain, but if you've got one, you'll probably know what I mean?

Тульский Патронный; Эра г.Севастополь; военная техника; Anti-Aircraft Missile; Era; Free Rocket Over Ground; FROG; Frog Missile; Gaskin; Rocket Launcher; Rocket Launchers; Russian AFV's; Russian Toys; SAM I AAM; Self-Propelled Missiles; Self-Propelled Rocket; Sevastapol; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet Era Toys; Soviet Plastic Toys; Soviet Tula Cart. Plant; SPAAG; T Is For Two; T54/55; Tula Cart. Plant; Tula Cartridge Plant;
Comparing the two, you can see how the Cartridge Plant's is made the same way they made their bullets and shells, Heavy-castings riveted together with a set of carpet wheels, while Era's is a more complicated piece, but they still go together well, as they may have in real life -  it being 31-years since my last Soviet-studies courses - I can't remember, but a FROG batterys (or regiments) would have needed some high-altitude air-defence, tagging-along?

The FROGs were replaced by SCUD, and  Guild was replaced by Guideline? All-in-all; a long time ago now!

Тульский Патронный; Эра г.Севастополь; военная техника; Anti-Aircraft Missile; Era; Free Rocket Over Ground; FROG; Frog Missile; Gaskin; Rocket Launcher; Rocket Launchers; Russian AFV's; Russian Toys; SAM I AAM; Self-Propelled Missiles; Self-Propelled Rocket; Sevastapol; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Soviet Era Toys; Soviet Plastic Toys; Soviet Tula Cart. Plant; SPAAG; T Is For Two; T54/55; Tula Cart. Plant; Tula Cartridge Plant;
The Era mark on the base, in Tula they didn't mark the Military Equipment vehicles; only the packaging! Both are around the 1:48/50th scales of the similar Western toys, think Corgi's Gepard Spaag or Dinky's Leopard I MBT.

Monday, April 15, 2019

T is for Toy Fair 2019 Reports - Amerang - Solido

Slowly getting through the London Toy Fair reports, and still with Amerang, another offering from who (whom, which?) was a rather interesting development, if now getting a bit boring . . . having previously be issued as partworks under various brands in the former Soviet Bloc & Europe (and Australasia - I think?) as well as being 'cleared' through The Works a few years ago!

Clearly not cleared thoroughly enough . . .

'Wirblewind'; 88mm Flak Gun; Altaya; Amerang; AMX; Artillery Gun; Artillery Tractor; AVF Models; Cromwell Tank; Die Cast AFV's; Eaglemoss; Flak-panzer IV; Half Track; Helicopter Toy; Heuy Helicopter; Huey UH1B; Hugh's Aircraft Corporation; Kennsington Olympia Toy Fair; Korean War; Krupp Protz; London Toy Fair 2019; Matchbox Toys; Model AFV's; Model Aircraft; Panther Coelian; Panzer Anhanger; Patton Tank; Sd.Kfz. 7; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Solido; The Works; TK Maxx; Toy Fair 2019; Tractor; Trailer Tractor; Universal Group; Universal Matchbox; Utility Helicopter; Vietnam War; War Master; Whirlwind Panzer;
. . . as they are now appearing under Solido's banner, shipped-in to the UK by Amerang, good news if you like AFV's, excellent news is you're building war-gaming armies and feel you don't have the prerequisite modelling skills?

On display was a selection of WWII AFV's and aircraft, along with a nice Korean War Patton I and Vietnam-era Huey 'Slick'. The full range (as seen before) has more modern-era stuff in the line-up, but then the aircraft are from a previously different/separate part work series (currently still running in the UK I believe (forthcoming post - if I ever find time!)), so I'm guessing Solido have chosen the more popular subjects from both ranges to maximise sales and minimise further 'clearance'!

Basically - some manufacturer in China has developed exquisite ranges of AFV's and aircraft in a constant 1:72nd scale, with fine plastic detailing on die-cast bodies - which rival the best Corgi has to offer, and they are selling them (as contract-manufacture) to anyone who wants them, and about six brands/publishers, so far, have taken-up that opportunity. Except . . . of cource . . . it's at least two factories; as we saw here.

Consequently they are not rare, and those eBay bottom feeders who bulk-purchased at 2 or 3-quid from The Works and them put them on the feebleBay for 6, 8, or 10-smackers-a-pop, should be taken outside and shot for the black-marketeers they are! [Not so 'far left' now, am I James? Seems I can be as right wing as you and your Mosque floor-plan researching, gun-loving bred'rin!]

'Wirblewind'; 88mm Flak Gun; Altaya; Amerang; AMX; Artillery Gun; Artillery Tractor; AVF Models; Cromwell Tank; Die Cast AFV's; Eaglemoss; Flak-panzer IV; Half Track; Helicopter Toy; Heuy Helicopter; Huey UH1B; Hugh's Aircraft Corporation; Kennsington Olympia Toy Fair; Korean War; Krupp Protz; London Toy Fair 2019; Matchbox Toys; Model AFV's; Model Aircraft; Panther Coelian; Panzer Anhanger; Patton Tank; Sd.Kfz. 7; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Solido; The Works; TK Maxx; Toy Fair 2019; Tractor; Trailer Tractor; Universal Group; Universal Matchbox; Utility Helicopter; Vietnam War; War Master; Whirlwind Panzer;
Panther 'Coelian', an experimental vehicle which saw little or no service, hence the unpainted, surface-rusted turret. Like Flak-panzer IV 'Kugelblitzen', 'Maus'es' (mice? Misen? Misen to picen!) and E100's, there are X10-many more in war games armies than ever left the factories it's all a bit silly, really! Wouldn't stop me buying one though - ah, yes; the hypocrisy of the pink monkeys!

'Wirblewind'; 88mm Flak Gun; Altaya; Amerang; AMX; Artillery Gun; Artillery Tractor; AVF Models; Cromwell Tank; Die Cast AFV's; Eaglemoss; Flak-panzer IV; Half Track; Helicopter Toy; Heuy Helicopter; Huey UH1B; Hugh's Aircraft Corporation; Kennsington Olympia Toy Fair; Korean War; Krupp Protz; London Toy Fair 2019; Matchbox Toys; Model AFV's; Model Aircraft; Panther Coelian; Panzer Anhanger; Patton Tank; Sd.Kfz. 7; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Solido; The Works; TK Maxx; Toy Fair 2019; Tractor; Trailer Tractor; Universal Group; Universal Matchbox; Utility Helicopter; Vietnam War; War Master; Whirlwind Panzer;
Safer ground with a Patton tank - painted by Dr. No's henchmen it seems! Didn't save the Gloster's did it . . . fussa-russa!

But a nice model of a machine which - where previously issued in this size - has always been highly inaccurate, whether Japanese pull-back or clockwork's imported by Riko or the Airfix 'readymade' which couldn't decide if it was an M '46, '47 or '48 or what it's turret should look like (despite trying two designs!) in the 1960's or later Hong Kong stuff based on Blue Box's effort copied by Rado, et al in the 1970/80's . . . hell - they still turn-up; horrible little squat-lumps of wasted polyethylene!

'Wirblewind'; 88mm Flak Gun; Altaya; Amerang; AMX; Artillery Gun; Artillery Tractor; AVF Models; Cromwell Tank; Die Cast AFV's; Eaglemoss; Flak-panzer IV; Half Track; Helicopter Toy; Heuy Helicopter; Huey UH1B; Hugh's Aircraft Corporation; Kennsington Olympia Toy Fair; Korean War; Krupp Protz; London Toy Fair 2019; Matchbox Toys; Model AFV's; Model Aircraft; Panther Coelian; Panzer Anhanger; Patton Tank; Sd.Kfz. 7; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Solido; The Works; TK Maxx; Toy Fair 2019; Tractor; Trailer Tractor; Universal Group; Universal Matchbox; Utility Helicopter; Vietnam War; War Master; Whirlwind Panzer;
Lovely! What can you say, better that Airfix, Hasegawa or Fujimi, that's for sure, and the fact that the anhanger (trailer) tractor behind has a different camouflage and no tilt, while the gun-tractor has a full tilt (apparently in two parts), suggests multiple purchases could be cross pollinated to quickly produce a fleet of (6?) different-looking vehicles.

'Wirblewind'; 88mm Flak Gun; Altaya; Amerang; AMX; Artillery Gun; Artillery Tractor; AVF Models; Cromwell Tank; Die Cast AFV's; Eaglemoss; Flak-panzer IV; Half Track; Helicopter Toy; Heuy Helicopter; Huey UH1B; Hugh's Aircraft Corporation; Kennsington Olympia Toy Fair; Korean War; Krupp Protz; London Toy Fair 2019; Matchbox Toys; Model AFV's; Model Aircraft; Panther Coelian; Panzer Anhanger; Patton Tank; Sd.Kfz. 7; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Solido; The Works; TK Maxx; Toy Fair 2019; Tractor; Trailer Tractor; Universal Group; Universal Matchbox; Utility Helicopter; Vietnam War; War Master; Whirlwind Panzer;
Hugh's Aircraft Corporation Utility Helicopter 1 . . . B! I think this is actually painted-up as a South Vietnamese airframe of the type thrown into the sea in large numbers at the end, as US Aircraft Carriers and amphibious assault ship's decks filled with the fleeing regime's hardware? Loving the tiger-stripes!

In the background is an AMX, is it painted for Chad or South Africa or somewhere like that? And if you're thinking it has limited use on the war game's table, I can assure you the 3rd Fantasian Motor Rifle Division had a heavy reconnaissance regiment requiring 9 of them on the table!

'Wirblewind'; 88mm Flak Gun; Altaya; Amerang; AMX; Artillery Gun; Artillery Tractor; AVF Models; Cromwell Tank; Die Cast AFV's; Eaglemoss; Flak-panzer IV; Half Track; Helicopter Toy; Heuy Helicopter; Huey UH1B; Hugh's Aircraft Corporation; Kennsington Olympia Toy Fair; Korean War; Krupp Protz; London Toy Fair 2019; Matchbox Toys; Model AFV's; Model Aircraft; Panther Coelian; Panzer Anhanger; Patton Tank; Sd.Kfz. 7; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Solido; The Works; TK Maxx; Toy Fair 2019; Tractor; Trailer Tractor; Universal Group; Universal Matchbox; Utility Helicopter; Vietnam War; War Master; Whirlwind Panzer;
A couple more in the box, I NEED a Protz! I think the Flak-panzer IV 'Wirblewind' is the same model Matchbox branded about 15 years ago, which would make them the first to carry these models (albeit as a small and hard to find range), long before Altaya (or was it Eaglemoss?!) et al, and further suggest that at least one of the contract manufacturer's may be (or have been) part of the Universal Group?

War Master from Solido via Amerang, ex-everybodyelse! Get 'em when you see 'em or you'll be paying double on evilBay in a few years time! Or - as they aren't that cheap anyway - wait and see if they are churned through The Works or TKMaxx in a year or two - somewhere in the Far East, there's a warehouse the size of an aircraft-hanger (or two); full of 'em!!

Sunday, September 16, 2018

A is for Archive Material

I had a fancy a while ago (26-years ago according to the drawing) to send some stuff to the readers hints page of a modelling magazine, and knocked this up as a first attempt! Needless to say I never sent it - application is not an aspergics' strong point, we're good at ideas, not so good at applying them!

AFV Kits; Ammo Boxes; Blue-prints; Esci Flakpanzer Wirbelwind; Esci KV Heavy Tank; Esci KVI; Esci Whirlwind Quad AA; Flak 38-4; German Half Track; Hasegawa SdKfz 7 Quadruple Falk Cannon; Hugh Walter's Modelling; Hugh Walter's Tips; Model Kits; Model Tanks; Modelling Ammunition Boxes; Modelling Guide; Modelling Hints; Modelling Tips; Plans; Reinforcing Tank Wheels; Russian KV Tank; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;
I drew it on blue graph paper as blue used to be lost in the reproduction process for plans and drawings, although; why I thought a modelling magazine would have thermal blue-print equipment is anyone's guess, but as technology has - in any event - moved-on somewhat, it's now stuck with the hundreds of blue lines being read digitally, although I'm pleased to see most of the Tippex (another near-dead tech'!) seems to have faded-out in the scanning, so you win some - you lose some!

Also it's not so much a conversion or modelling-tip, as a graphic explanation of a bodge! It used to wind me up, just putting the tracks on a new kit was often enough to snap the drive-sprocket or idler-wheel (or both!) cleeean-orrff! So I got to the point where I was doing this with new kits as I constructed them from the box. I don't know if it was my imagination, but I seem to recall Airfix was the worst offender, with Esci a close second!

For the replacement axle in part 4 I used sections of plastic tooth-pick, it was stronger than Evergreen or similar polystyrene strips/'polyrods' Also; see, I used to use the term 'sprue' for runners!

AFV Kits; Ammo Boxes; Blue-prints; Esci Flakpanzer Wirbelwind; Esci KV Heavy Tank; Esci KVI; Esci Whirlwind Quad AA; Flak 38-4; German Half Track; Hasegawa SdKfz 7 Quadruple Falk Cannon; Hugh Walter's Modelling; Hugh Walter's Tips; Model Kits; Model Tanks; Modelling Ammunition Boxes; Modelling Guide; Modelling Hints; Modelling Tips; Plans; Reinforcing Tank Wheels; Russian KV Tank; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;
This Russian KV 'Heavy' from Esci (a nice, neat, clean little kit) needed the rod-trick on the rear sprockets (and I should have done the front at the same time!) but because it was done before the deck went on for the last time, you'd never know it.

I notice it's lost an MG in the move, there is quite a bit of damage in the kit cabinet, one of the guys helping me tipped it on its back (because he'd seen the danger of the drawers falling out) and all the whitemetal and resin kits rather crushed the plastic ones as they shot back! I have a few nights gluing in my immediate future!

AFV Kits; Ammo Boxes; Blue-prints; Esci Flakpanzer Wirbelwind; Esci KV Heavy Tank; Esci KVI; Esci Whirlwind Quad AA; Flak 38-4; German Half Track; Hasegawa SdKfz 7 Quadruple Falk Cannon; Hugh Walter's Modelling; Hugh Walter's Tips; Model Kits; Model Tanks; Modelling Ammunition Boxes; Modelling Guide; Modelling Hints; Modelling Tips; Plans; Reinforcing Tank Wheels; Russian KV Tank; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;
I also did this to explain the way I made the spare magazines for my quadruple flak, another project which hasn't progressed beyond the state it was in when I shoved it on the Blog! But I do now have two of those Frozen sleighs to add to the final diorama - if I ever go back to it?

Just use a set of dividers to score-out a circular strip, but before you cut through the two outer rings do some shallower ones inside them, which will pick-up paint and look like the reinforcing stampings on the originals. To fit them into the kits magazine-slots you have to remove the two shaded areas.

If they are going in the racks at the base of the gun, paint the top ends brass (for ready ammo'), if they are being littered about on the ground paint one end black (for an 'empty' shadow).

AFV Kits; Ammo Boxes; Blue-prints; Esci Flakpanzer Wirbelwind; Esci KV Heavy Tank; Esci KVI; Esci Whirlwind Quad AA; Flak 38-4; German Half Track; Hasegawa SdKfz 7 Quadruple Falk Cannon; Hugh Walter's Modelling; Hugh Walter's Tips; Model Kits; Model Tanks; Modelling Ammunition Boxes; Modelling Guide; Modelling Hints; Modelling Tips; Plans; Reinforcing Tank Wheels; Russian KV Tank; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com;
On the left are seen the commercial magazines on an Esci Flakpanzer kit, on the right homemade ones on an AHM (Hasegawa) half-track, they are not brilliant, I wasn't doing any measuring, it was all rather 'by eye', but you get the idea!

Sunday, June 17, 2018

T is for Two - 'Army Men' Artillery Appliances

In the pile of 'Army Men' vehicles from Peter Evans, was two artillery pieces, one of which was problematical in that (or 'a') uniquely Hong Kong/China fashion, I fixed the problem, taking a few shots as I did so, so that's the core of the post, but I've stuck the other on the end for the hell of it.

Vaguely showing its heritage in a hundred copies of the old Dinky 25lb'er and similar, but simplified to the point of futuristic/air-droppable howitzer . . . of a sort! The maximum elevation is shown - great for firing off a castle-wall, but bugger-all use on a battlefield, even against crumbly, modern, stick-weapon army men!

A quick inspection revealed that two flat plates coming forward of the trunions was the core of the problem; fouling the shield, it was only 'right' or comfortable, if pointing at the grass in front of it! Indecently - from the clear 'CHINA' mark in that sqiudged sans-serif, it appears to be from some of the larger bagged sets with the same figures as those Halsall/HTI sets we've looked at.

A bit of surgical engineering and bob's-your-uncle; all that was needed was to cut off those two flat ears of plastic. But one wonders how the hell it ever got out of the factory, I know it's a cheap rack-toy and I know I've made the same point in the past, but the tool costs the same, a trail-fit at some point, ten minutes with a burr or welding-rod,  or a combination of the both could have prevented it? Weird!

Fixed, it's still not pretty, but a bit of paint and it'll do for lawn war-gaming?

This was in the same lot, and it's an odd one, because it looks like the New Ray piece, but is pretty-poor quality, now, I'm only going on memories of catalogue images, and catalogues which have been in storage for over six years, but I thought the finish/build-quality of the New Ray models was better than this which is quite naff, really!

But then maybe I'm being unkind, its main problem is the flashy mould-lines right round the middle of the gun and the floor-tray of the mounting/trailer, the real naffness is the lack of detail to the underside, but then that's hidden from view. The 'chrome-plated, mag-alloys' (which I'm sure the New Ray one desn't have) don't help, but they are a problem with a lot of cheap toy vehicles.

I will check it with the New Ray's in time, but thought I'd chuck it up here as a box-ticker! And again; a bit of paint and you've a nice piece for cold war-ear smaller armies - Argentine commandos used similar units.

Sunday, February 4, 2018

T is for Toy Fair '18 Reports - Solido

These are both in the Amerang catalogue as imported, limited editions of a thousand, and a complete departure for Solido, to whom they are credited. Whether that's a thousand units worldwide, or a thousand in/for the UK I don't know, but I suspect the former?

D-Day Cromwell, weathered nicely.

Quadruple 38mm Anti-aircraft AFV
Pz.Kfw. IV Flack-Panzer Whirlwind, with rather leery paint!

They look a bit like both the small range Matchbox imported back in the 1990's and some of the part-work sets issued in recent years, just given new paint, but they aren't clear shots and with moulds for the Italian set of 'up-market' die-casts (Armour Collection?) from the 80's kicking-around and others out there, they could be from anywhere or entirely new sculpts.

Get 'em before they're gone - if they happen, this is a Toy Fair report, not a retail buy!

Solido, via Amerang - 1:72nd scale.

Friday, November 10, 2017

P is for Project to Perfectly-Polish Pusser's Pom-Pom

I have nothing in the queue after this, it's not that I haven't got tons in Picasa, not that I haven't got lots lying around and loads of stuff was emailed to me in the last fortnight, it's just that I've been a bit lackadaisical or tardy in processing anything!

I'm sure I'll sort something out today (in the real world) for publishing tomorrow in Blog-world (it's still Monday in the real world!) there's those Moose moshling-things somewhere, but I'm not sure I've got Internet tomorrow either, so when Thursday's will publish - time wise - is anyone's guess, in the meantime I've been working on this for a while and it's satisfying to 'put it to bed'.

There are several stories here; what it is, where it came from and how I cleaned it up!

The story my mother tells is that it was presented to my Grandfather sometime in or just after WWII, by one of his ships' company's, and has always been referred to as 'the Pom-Pom gun', it was supposedly made in the on-board engineering workshop, probably on commission from the junior officers.

Now I'm sure all the bits of the story are reasonably accurate, but as a whole I have problems with it, and I'm sure those of you with equally far-fetched or legendary family myths and tales will forgive the cynicism of the grand-kid, questioning the previous two generations; it is in any event an interesting thing, and my cynicism will be seen as more justifiable as we move down the post.

Now, Mum won't mind me pointing out that she's not as young as she used to be, and the 'Pom-Pom' had become a bit lost and forgotten among the acquired chattels of 80-years on this Earth, I decided to sort it out, but in secret, which involved smuggling it away, doing a 'phase' and smuggling it back, only to repeat the exercise the next time the opportunity presented itself!

Some of the shots in the above pair of collages were taken about a year ago, but the shoot as a whole wasn't a success, so I took some more a while later and mixed them together. We'll look at the cleaning first, and then study the object and look again at its mythology.

1st phase was to just give it a clean, get the real crud and surface build-up off it, which I did with those sealed-packet, treated cleaning cloths, having previously noticed how they will polish-up slightly tarnished silver; I was hoping the result would be better than it was.

Having said that, had I polished harder, for longer, I'm sure it would have removed more, but sometimes it's easier to give up on a bad job and get the big-guns out!

I turned to silver-dip, silver-polishing wad and that old favorite and garage-door saver - Jenolite. Like Clear floor-cleaner, Jenolite was illegal in the army, but we all had some - of both!

Actually that's not quite true, a lot of blokes would persevere with elbow-grease, especially if only a rifleman, but with a GPMG; I was a fan of Jenolite for getting the carbon off the gas parts, when I was carrying an SLR I cheated by having a spare gas-plug and return rod in the lining of my Bergen, which would be snuck out at End-Ex, so I could hand my gatt in quick and bugger-off, cleaning it's actual gas parts later in my room and slipping them back in next time I signed the weapon out!

As to Clear - having mentioned it - we used to use it to put a quick shine on bulled-boots, however if it then rained on the parade (not a euphemism - real water from the sky), all those who had used Clear would get found out as their boots took-on the inky petrol blue-purple sheen of ground-beetles!

Some close-ups, pre deep-clean; the steel, being a decent engineer's grade steel, cut from blocks, hadn't rusted too badly, but there was a surface crust and two slightly poor bits, while the elevating mechanism had collected a thinker layer of crud due to its being oiled in the past and collecting household dust on the quite for years.

The whole had also suffered from a few years sited next to the gas cooker, where its guard duties included a fine layer of cooking oils. Indeed - it wasn't easy to work out what was rust and what was cooking-polymer 'glue'!

Phase 3 Polishing (phase 2 was the silver dip, which I didn't photograph)  - once the silver-polishing wad comes out it all starts to get a bit messy, this is the deck-mounting plate, which was soldered to the base of the plinth, but from which it has become parted at some point in the last 35 years?

Still - that much mess and you know it's doing the trick!

Shrapnel-shield fully polished, both its little brass bolts had also been silver-plated on the ends and not only did they clean-up in the dip, but it cleaned the worst of the black oxidation off the threads too; bargain!

Jenolite applied at phase 4 and for a few minutes (about 20) it actually looks worse as it lifts the lumps of rust and oil off, and they all go black or bright orange, with the pinky-mauve of the Jenolite it all starts to look like an odd pudding, maybe an alien pudding, maybe more imagination is required, if you haven't got the imagination, you're probably on some hick-town, ten-member forum telling them I "is......different? Shall we say"! Robot's pudding!

The steel parts were polished (phase 6) after a wash with shampoo and a toothbrush - phase 5.

Polishing was done with fine steel wool wound round ear-bud/Q-Tips, and is an equally messy job and the very fine steel wool tends to disintegrate to powder as you go, but a powder than can work into your fingers, like swarf if you're not careful, because it is swarf.

Three-quarter views, the heat-signal on the barrel in the right-hand shot is just the flash reflecting off the shield, the whole gun came-up a nice gun-metal, steel-grey.

So - back to the family story; The British had two Pom-Pom's the 2lbr which looks like a naval gun and definitely isn't this, and the 1lbr Vickers-Maxim, which to be fair doesn't look much like this either! The Americans used the Maxim-Nordenfeldt (see below), which looks nothing like this (but quite like the Vickers-Maxim's) but did have a similar mounting.

In point of fact, this looks exactly like a bog-standard Vickers .303 heavy machine-gun, as used by the Army from WWI until the 1950's/into the 1960's. The twin-handles, thumb-button trigger, cocking leaver, all tie-in, however there was also the less known Vickers .5-inch, sometimes known as (and used as-) a Pom-Pom, which is a scale-up - visually - although in Naval service usually fitted with long flash eliminator - but that weapon was an inter-war model, which could be significant to this model's story.

However, the pedestal and shield are similar to those used on some Pom-Pom mountings. So, what we seem to have here is more of a field-modification utilising an MG, rather than an actual Pom-Pom per-se.

Gunner (not seaman) Smith on the USS Vixen with his
Maxim-Nordenfelt QF 1-pounder Pom-Pom MG - 1898

Yet there are a couple of question-marks over this, one being the shoulder-rest, which is the sort of thing you do find fitted to fixed-mount 1lbr Pom-Poms as seen above, these weapons were all scaled-up, big beasts and you needed to get your shoulder 'behind it' to move it.

The other being the position of the shelf for the ammunition, which on Gunner Smith's is low and to the right, below the [beautifully polished] brass feed-gates and wooden roller, while on the model it's at the back of the pedestal, near the top but under the gun; not practical at all.

So the first possibility is that Granddad's model is meant to represent the 1lbr Vickers-Maxim Pom-Pom, but that the modeller used a handy .303 or .5" to model from? This is not terribly likely, as servicemen tend to 'know their stuff'.

Although you could then suggest that a civilian metal-smith in India may have made that mistake, but, by the time Granddad was head of the Indian Navy, these mounts were long-gone and forgotten; in all their guises, replaced by quad .5", twin and octoplett 1lbr Pom-Poms and 20mm Oerlikons, so that's almost less likely than the previous explanation.

Re. the USS Vixen shot, note the raked-profile of a three mast clipper (or schooner?) on the horizon, and the bloody great Dreadnaught or pocket-battle-cruiser type (I've said it before - I don't know my ships!) just in shot to the right, also; is that tin can bottom right the ammo-box? The wooden box seems to contain a very small steam-engine!!

The relevant links are here;

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QF_2_pounder_naval_gun

But, you see; Granddad was seconded from the Merchant Navy into the Royal Navy in WWI where he served off-shore at the Dardanelles (Gallipoli) as a nineteen/twenty-year-old, transferring into the Indian Navy later; in 1929.

I suspect this is a model of a local modification, fitted to the various landing and stores barges, hospital ships, troopers and fleet-protection vessels in use in that theatre? There was no dedicated amphibious force then, no specialist vessels; it was all done on a wing and a prayer, with both naval and merchant ships using their attendant boats and tenders as ad-hoc 'landing craft'.

I don't know much about the nascent Turkish (or 'Ottoman') Air Force either, but I'm sure there were also experienced German aircraft/pilots in the area too (if only - training Turks), and AA cover would have been required by the fleet of ships serving the disastrous misadventure of young Mr. Churchill?

I know a bit more now! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ottoman_Aviation_Squadrons

A .303 Vickers machine-gun would have had a number 2, feeding the twisty canvas belt, leaving the shelf - as modelled - for the water-can used to cool the army version of this weapon? Which would leave the shoulder-piece probably just missing a piece of leather or wood, modelling the original padding at shoulder height?

That Granddad may have served-on, with a/his original merchant vessel equipped with such a deck-gun, before being elevated to warships, would therefore make sense of this model and that while it probably was made in local workshops and presented to him by his comrades for some reason (usually upon leaving, but it's too nice a piece, not the usual plaque, ashtray, desk-lighter, tankard or whatever, so maybe he did something noteworthy, at least in the eyes of his fellow crew?), it was in - or just after - the First World War, not as Mum (who was still very young) thinks - the Second World War?

It's all conjecture, no answers here, but with Wikipedia and the Vickers sites not helping, or only helping to reinforce the question marks I had over it, I think it's a more reasonable scenario.

Equally, it could be that the Indian navy had such local modification later, being less well funded than the parent Navy? I can't find any evidence of that though, they got modern ships like Achilles - with Granddad at the helm!

Therefore; all I need to complete it, is a piece of heavy string, finely-sewn into a piece of chamois and stained-down (with boot-polish), glued to the shoulder piece as padding, which would make more sense for a 'mere' .303 Vickers, than the heavy vertical plate Gunner Smith is snuggled-up-to above?

Hopefully I might inherit it one day, but I might have to fight my brother for it as we both used to get it of the mantlepiec and play with it as kids - Action Man looked 'well sorted' - sat behind it!