Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Messages - Klingsor

Pages: 1 [2] 3
16
General Discussion / Re: MBS Monthly Poll #12
« on: May 02, 2017, 11:11:28 am »
Pre-dreadnoughts. No aircraft or submarines to complicate things and no worrying about having the weather gauge or not so the sweet spot between the age of sail and the Great War.
It was a tossup between this and the slightly earlier ACW, the two rather blur together for me, being a time of constant change with tactics tending to run behind technical changes trying to catch up with them with things settling down a bit at the end of the period.
Also who cannot love those crazy looking French ships with the massively exaggerated tumblehome.

17
General Discussion / Re: Salute 2017
« on: April 27, 2017, 04:38:36 pm »
I forgot to mention the Drowned World game that is now currently in Kickstarter. It is a skirmish wargame but the world is rather a wet one, with flooded ruins, the demo tables had lovely overgrown ruined buildings. It reminds me, probably incorrectly, of Cadillacs and Dinosaurs. It does make me think about model boats for a post apocalyptic world which is probably a bad thing. I suppose the easy way to do it would be to buy some models and convert them rather than starting from scratch.

18
General Discussion / Re: Salute 2017
« on: April 27, 2017, 04:31:57 pm »
Basically yes, a shopping trip with added awesome new toys to see. It is all fine as long as I don't think about it too much!

19
General Discussion / Salute 2017
« on: April 26, 2017, 09:43:57 am »
Once again we got up an ungodly hour (0400) to get the flight for Salute and once again we forgot something important, like last year it was sandwiches, my brother left his in the fridge, but that was pretty much the only thing to go wrong all day. The journey to Belfast City airport was quick and uneventful as was the flight to London, though we did seem to spend a lot of time literally flying in circles waiting for a landing slot. More sandwiches and drinks were purchased at a rather handy M & S in Heathrow airport and we topped up our Oyster cards as I had a ‘note to self’ on mine from last year telling me to do so and boarded the tube train. A few changes later and we arrived at the Excel Centre at around 1005, the other end to one we normally use. London was already warm so we were most amused to see Londoners bundled up in coats as if it was cold.

Inside the Excel Centre we were checked in very efficiently and received our goodie bags and joined the very, very queue to get in. The queue moved along smartly and soon we were in the hall itself. The first several hours were largely spent shopping, none of which was naval related except for a bag of widgets from Hawk Wargaming and some very nice resin small craft from Games of War, a longboat and two jolly boats.

After lunch, the pineapple chunks from M & S were particularly welcome being both sweet and wet, we did more shopping then started to slow down and look at the games on display. It is still amazing how much I missed. Anvil Industry had a cyberpunked up Landrover Defender that we saw as we started round and that I never noticed again and they are no small vehicle. Looking at other peoples pictures from the show also reveals things I did not see.

There were not that many naval games which is normal. In no particular order the things that might be of interest were:

Fort Mosquito 1654. To steal their own description “A staged battle between Swedish and Dutch colonial forces set in mid-17th century Delaware, involving native tribes, attempting to wrestle control of the river and the important fur trade”. 28mm scale with a nice fort and a very nice ship with small craft and canoes as well.

Several X-Wing games, one of which had a very large and crowded table with a lot of the larger ships. A small game showed the Imperial base from the end of Rogue One with a fighter battle going on above on a clear acrylic sheet, very pretty.

Some odd naval game with what looked like scratch built warships and a carrier that while impressive were quite cartoon like. I am not entirely sure what scale this was, maybe 20mm but the ships seemed to have bits from various different scales.

Spartan had a big game of Fleet Command and another of Halo Wars.

White Dragon Miniatures had some of their Shattered Void space fighter miniatures on display. Very nice miniatures extremely well painted. I believe they go on general release later this year.

Dark Ops had a rather nice looking laser cut MDF sailing ship. I had been suspicious of this sort of thing but it looked very nice and was very cheap for something so big. They also had some other smaller sailing craft and a rather decent model of the USS Monitor.

GZG were there as usual but I managed to pull myself away without buying anything, promising myself an order with them later on in the year that would not need carried home.

We left early around 1600 to avoid any difficulties with flights and took the tube to Paddington Station and caught the Heathrow Express which was very crowded, we were lucky to get seats but was comfortable and very quick. We were flagging by the time we got back to Heathrow and I think I slept through much of the flight home then back in the car to Larne, picking up a Chinese for tea, then home, food and the traditional piling all the goodies on the table to be photographed then off to bed.

It was a very good show, we both enjoyed ourselves enormously. I think the lighting was better than before as well which helped everyone. Looking at other peoples’ pictures there were several other naval games that I missed completely but that is normal.

Salute is usually largely a shopping trip for us and this year was no exception though unusually I had placed to pre-orders to collect at the show and deliberately ignored several companies I wanted to buy from in favour of a leisurely mail order later on. As a result of this I spent less than usual and did not have quite as much to carry home as before though both of us had well filled back packs and a shopping bag as well.

The next day we discovered a ticked for a free Kaiser Rushforth backpack, but not to worry, we can still use this and I need to order some figure cases from the anyway.

One thing I am now resolved to buy is a watery gaming mat so I might soon be soliciting advice from the group about them though I was impressed by the ones made by Deep Cut Studio. I can make boards for such a thing easily enough and have done so in the past but a mat is so much more convenient to store and use.

20
General Discussion / Re: What are you reading?
« on: April 08, 2017, 02:28:12 pm »
It is a very good series with good and frighteningly plausible world building for his future Earth.
It is obvious why space fighters get so much love but I am rather ambivalent about them myself.

21
General Discussion / Re: MBS Podcast Episode 17
« on: April 08, 2017, 02:24:36 pm »
No love for The Hunt for Red October?
Battleship is on tonight so I might give it another chance. I do have a soft spot for Under Siege though.
The Cruel Sea is still very good despite it's age (1953). There are quite a few old, mostly black and white, British wartime dramas such as Sink the Bismarck and The Battle of the River Plate that I would rather like too see again to see if they are any good, when I was young they used to be shown regularly but now with a couple of orders of magnitude more channels they seem to have vanished from the airwaves.
My fair is a retired marine engineer (just) old enough that his first ship had triple expansion engines so any maritime film tends to get an entertaining criticism from him including Titanic.

22
Historical Naval Games / Re: ACW – Which Rules & Miniatures?
« on: March 13, 2017, 05:12:16 am »
Thank you for some very good and helpful suggestions.
I knew of Thoroughbred by name but nothing more so I have just had a quick look at their website and their miniatures are lovely looking, nice and crisp and not at all badly priced.
The Ironclads boardgame, that I have heard of, very well thought of and long out of print.
Hammerin' Iron. I bought these a year or two back at Salute, this time I must try and remember to get a good look at the models. I do fear they might be a bit big even if they do not turn out to be as ‘soft’ looking as the photographs suggest.
In my experience anything by David Manley is well worth a look.

Got to go, there is an automatic restart on this machine kicking off imminently.

23
Firestorm Armada / Re: Vrtsion 1.0 rulebook
« on: March 13, 2017, 04:52:46 am »
The earliest PDF I can find is dated January 2013 and has a blue background to the ship on the cover. Is it any use?

24
Historical Naval Games / ACW – Which Rules & Miniatures?
« on: March 10, 2017, 11:11:47 am »
I rather fancy a go at the naval, specifically the brown water side, of the American Civil War. Are there any particular rules and miniatures the list would recommend? There are three British manufacturers that I am aware of:

Peter Pig seems to have a decently sized range of ships for both sides in 1/600th scale but they do not look fantastic in the pictures.

Tumbling Dice have a fair few miniatures in 1/2400 scale but they are rather small though keenly priced because of that. I did buy a few but find it hard to get enthused about them.

Langton Miniatures range is 1/1200th scale and looks to have by some considerable margin the best looking models. A bit more expensive but still the most tempting.

Any suggestions chaps? I would prefer a British supplier for the miniatures to reduce postage costs. This is less important with the rules of course.

25
General Discussion / Re: MBS Podcast Episode 16
« on: March 08, 2017, 04:43:31 am »
Another good episode.
I am not a huge fan of Star Trek after the terrible disappointment that was first episode of The Next Generation but you make Star Trek Ascendancy sound very good indeed – except when you mentioned Q which rather put me off.

26
Modeling Q&A / Re: Stripping resin
« on: March 06, 2017, 05:35:48 am »
It depends on what sort of paint it is. I do think you need to test it first whatever you use.

Acrylics should be easy. Resin should be resistant to water based solutions such as Dettol and Simply Green and household ammonia is supposed to strip acrylic paint.

For enamels I have seen resin dunked in cellulose thinners overnight with no apparent ill effects but I would not want to do this on anything nice without testing it first.

Deluxe Materials and others do paint strippers that are supposed to be model friendly so these might be worth a look.

27
Roll Call / Re: Hello from Northern Ireland
« on: February 24, 2017, 10:37:01 am »
I can blame the podcast for my buying Dystopian Wars miniatures - conveniently forgetting that the first purchase happened before I found the podcast.

28
General Discussion / Re: What are you reading?
« on: February 24, 2017, 10:34:50 am »
I think so. Really now the only books I buy in print are non-fiction so I wouldn't have noticed. It saves me a lot of shelf space.

29
Modeling Q&A / Re: Cold weather spray priming
« on: February 23, 2017, 08:57:45 am »
I usually do anything involving aerosol cans in the garage, ideally with the door open. The big point is that it is out of wind which just snatches your paint away.
I will usually warm the cans first, in hot but not overly hot water whatever time of year it is.

30
Modeling Q&A / Re: Glues...
« on: February 23, 2017, 08:54:01 am »
While PVA is the god of glues you should use specific glues for each material. The fun bit comes when you are trying to attach disparate materials.

Plastic, the normal model kit sort of stuff. Solvent cements as they melt and weld the plastic together. Thin for most jobs, the old fashioned tube sort for big jobs. I have used Humbrol for years but the move to safety bottles has me foxed so I decant it into the old style bottles but recently I got hold of the Tamiya extra thin and it is nice and is not in a safety bottle. There are various different makes and not all are the same chemically as some are for different sorts of plastics such as ABS.

Resin and metal. Superglue or epoxy for big jobs, quite likely with pinning as well. Superglue loves resin but needs flat mating surfaces for best results and has little sheer resistance. I like the thick gel sort of superglue for most things but I am pretty rubbish with any of it.

Wood, MDF, card, anything absorbent. PVA. Buy the best you can get, the cheaper sorts have more filler and a needle nose bottle is great for fine work such as laser cut MDF kits.
You can soak superglue into absorbent materials which turns them hard but it reacts badly with cellulose to produce irritant and I believe toxic fumes.

Soft plastics, such as aquarium plants for Deep Wars. A hot glue gun and lash it on but try to avoid melting the plastic.

Pages: 1 [2] 3