Thursday, 26 May 2022

Room on top

Things have been pretty busy here chez moi, what with the cheese shifting and the giddy social whirl my wife insists on including me in. Nonetheless further progress has been made on my 1926 General Strike project so I thought I’d share a few more piccies of the things that have recently passed across the painting desk. All items shown are Pendraken 10mm - apart from the plane which is Wings of Glory 1:144th scale.

First up is this little fella:

A London bus pressed into service as an improvised troop transport. The advertising signs (which I think help tremendously) come from the Sankey Scenics N gauge railway range.

The same bus from the other side. Old Calabar is a dog food product in case you were wondering. Oh, you weren’t wondering. Okay. The Scottish infantry section seem very annoyed they’ve just missed their bus. Never mind lads there’ll be another along in a minute!

A British Whippet tank of WW1 vintage which remains in service up until the mid 20´s due to defence spending review cutbacks. Britain had declared it would not be involved in any war for at least 10 years and consequently declined to do much in the way of research and development. It boasts several machine guns but only one of them could be fired at any one time.

An Airco DH4 bomber. Introduced in 1917 and Intended to be replaced by the up engined DH9 the DH4 continued to serve as an Army cooperation aircraft until 1930 in some theatres! This one sports a red fuselage band and the designation B1 indicating it is the 1st aircraft in the Birmingham Corporation Air Defence Force.

A Seabrook armoured lorry. Originally used by Royal Navy land units this armoured heavyweight had a very poor cross country performance but fielded a useful 47mm (3pdr) gun. I suspect this one will be supporting my mutinous matelots.

You can stick yer ruddy King Tigers where the sun don’t shine mate! Seriously, who the hell doesn’t love a little Renault FT17. A contemporary of the Whippet (see above) it was exported all around the world and featured a number of different turret styles and armaments. In 1926 Chinese warlord Zhang Zoulin ordered 15 war surplus FT17’s for his Manchurian army. In my counterfactual history one of the ships carrying 3 tanks and 2,000 Lebel rifles is forced to divert into Liverpool due to mechanical failure. Striking dockworkers quickly seized the ship and its cargo and soon added them to the Workers Defence Force arsenal. Later named Faith, Hope and Charity, Faith is shown here after the application of its WDF red ID turret band.

An Earnhardt armoured car. Produced and used by Germany this one was captured by the Italians during WW1. When pressed, Benito Mussolini sent this one as a token of his support for the British Fascists in 1926. Named Carlotta (she’s a whole lotta car!) she’s shown here painted with the OMS / Fascist white turret band.

A motorbike / sidecar combination plus mounted troopers. I intend to use these for recon work and improving a forces overall command and control. I’ve kept them deliberately non faction specific.

And finally. Who’d have thought that these Ohio based rockers would have been so into WW1 British light tanks that they’d name a song after one?!

Take it away boys.

20 comments:

  1. A whole lotta car. 😆 I'm going to steal that one.
    By the way, wasn't the Khazi of Calabar in Carry On Up the Khyber?

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    1. Yeah you can have that one matey. Close but no cigar on the Carry On reference I’m afraid - it was spelt with a K.

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  2. Excellent work, the figures and vehicles look splendid.

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  3. Hello old chap,

    My, my you have been busy! I love your selection of vehicles (and the back story) and it is all shaping up very nicely indeed. I will have a little list for you over the weekend….(he says, enigmatically….)

    All the best and Carry on up the workers!

    DC

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    1. Hey DC how’re you doing? Glad you liked the toys, there’s stranger stuff on the way I’m pleased to say. Yeah that list would be welcome… while I’ve still got a few quid. Lol.

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  4. Cracking work there old chap, with the bus being rather splendid. I too love my Ft-17's, either in my AVBCW games or even early WWII where any victory by them is to be more than applauded. Keep up the good work.

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  5. Thanks Steve, I think the bus was the thing that dragged me into this whole AVBCW thing in the first place. Glad to hear your an FT17 fan too. This one might even kill something worthwhile with its 37mm spud gun!

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  6. Excellent work JBM! Love the bus and I can just imagine the awkward silences when both the Workers and the Fascists catch the same one on their way to Wednesday night training.

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    1. He he, what a brilliant thought Ben. Ignore each other on the bus to training, beat the crap out of each other after training, then get back on the same bus to go home!

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    2. It's funny, I remember going to a house party in North London in the early 1980s and there were national front skinheads, British movement skinheads, revolutionary communists party members and socialist workers, I kind of expected it all to kick off but there was a kind of unspoken truce and the only arguments were between the two groups on the left and the two on the right, I remember the phrase " call me a Marxist Leninist revisionist if you dare!" Very judean peoples liberation front!
      Best Iain

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    3. Brilliant... « Feckin splitters! »

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  7. The bus certainly steals the show JBM but all are wonderful little models. I can see what attracted you to this project.

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    1. Hi Lee, pretty much everything I’ve been painting is green or brown in one shade or another. It was a nice change to break out the red paint for a bit!

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  8. Splendid looking bus, FT tank and armour and of course the wonderful backstory for them all, very entertaining!
    Best Iain

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  9. Splendid new toys JBM…
    I do like the bus…maybe you could do a taxi as well…

    All the best. Aly

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    1. I’m still finding stuff on Pendrakens website matey so you never know. Just found an Austin and a Lanchester Armoured car in the middle east section of all places. Naturally I ordered some. It’s an old truism - but I believe it still holds that a man can never have too many armoured cars. Lol.

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  10. Good grief - back in circa 1980 I would never have believed you could draw any link, no matter how tenuous, between Devo and wargaming - very well done JBM!

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  11. Yeah, it was a bit out there even for me. Both « whip it » and « swords of a thousand men » by Tenpole Tudor always make me laugh…which is no mean feat I can tell you.

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