Month: June 2026

  • Hobby update – June 2026

    2026 continues with its relatively gentle pace, hobby-wise. Since my last update I have had two tabletop games and a board game. I have started my next painting project.

    Games

    At the end of May I played a game with my Beckenham friends. This was a company level game set in Vietnam, with Australians taking on the NVA. I took charge of the NVA but underestimated the firepower available to the opposition, and got generally creamed. No pictures I’m afraid.

    The next game was at the club, where I hosted another game of Général d’Armée 2, with a scenario for Mockern, part of the battle of Leipzig. Hugh took the French while Rod took the Prussians. The scenario was based on the GDA scenario book, but it was a little flawed (as a game, not necessarily historically). The main objective in a largely featureless table was the village of Mockern, in one corner. All the action focused on this corner. Borrowing from the Steven Shann scenario (Let’s Fight Leipzig!), I tried to counter this with a secondary objective in the other corner of the field. The players mostly ignored this, committing a brigade each who largely watched each other.

    View of the start of the Mockern game
    Another angle got the start.
    The situation at lunch
    At the close. The French have retaken the village after losing it.

    The game turned into a slugging match. We completed 10 of the 20 turns the scenario specified. The French were clinging on, though were greatly weakened. But so were the Prussians and we called it for the French. This had taken some six hours of playing time, including lunch. Both players enjoyed the game, which had plenty of drama. But doing a complete GDA2 scenario in one club session looks an impossibility. More players with strong game management might do the trick, I suppose.

    Finally on the gaming side the Beckenham gang played Kingmaker on one of the red heat warning days. It was a fun game though ending in a stalemate (we weren’t using all the KM2 rules, which might have avoided this) – we sweltered, but not as much as we would if we’d played upstairs in the wargames room. Fortunately the car’s air conditioning was up to the 38.5 Celsius it said was the outside temperature.

    Command & discipline

    At our next Beckenham game, I will host my new Napoleonic rules, Command & Discipline, which are hex-based. I’d like to do another solo playtest first, but they are actually ready. I haven’t decided on a scenario, but that will depend on how many players I am catering for. This will be interesting. It is in the same space as GDA2, but should be much faster and simpler.

    One issue though is that I want a new hex mat with hexes aligned to the long edges. Last time I reported that Deep Cut did mats with hexes printed – but on further investigation this applies only to neopreen mats. I want a cloth mat, both for texture and so that it can be draped over formers to make relief. I see that some gamers have been able to get fleeces printed cheaply on Temu, using photo files. Doubtless this could include hexes. I would need to create a file though – and probably it would take more than one go to get right. I haven’t learned the art of creating terrain maps online – and that would be a whole new skill.

    My next plan is draw hexes on one of my old green felt mats, possibly after painting them to be a bit more interesting.

    Projects

    I have now broken cover on the modelling project that I had to keep under wraps – an RAF 1/72 Wessex based in Hong Kong, as flown by my friend – the subject on my previous post here. No wargaming dimension!

    I have now started my next batch of 10mm Austrians. This is a bit daunting. I have based the figures – 30 bases of 10 line infantry, 8 of 5 jagers, four of 3 cavalry, 12 generals (1 to 4 figures per base), 6 artillery pieces and three limbers – and given them a coat of primer (gesso mixed with a bit of raw umber. I will take these in four chunks, and I’ve made a start on the first. Feels like I’ve taken on a lot!

    The first batch of 1866 Austrans. Two brigades of infantry plus two regiments of Uhlans.
    And the rest primed and waiting

    One lesser bit of work has been on river sections; my bits of painted cardboard really needed an upgrade! I noticed some rather nice pieces of cut MDF on the Pendraken website, and bought some of these with both 30mm and 25mm width. I have cut them so that I can use the curves with my new hex system, plus to get some variation in the length of the straight bits. I have now painted them. I have decided not to add banks, as is the usual custom – but to add these separately if appropriate. I used oil paints, as these dry more slowly, so it is easier to blend different colours in. I used Payne’s Grey, a bit of Oxide Yellow and white to get the effect I wanted. I go for a darker and murkier appearance than most people. I then applied three layers of gloss varnish – Liquitex gloss medium. This didn’t quit get the watery finish I’d been hoping for, but will have to do!

    The finished river pieces
    A closer look.

    The month ahead

    More holidays, house guests and heatwaves and gardening in the month ahead, which will doubtless slow progress on those Austrians. I should get my first proper game of Command & Discipline, but alas the club meeting does not fall on a good day, so I’ll miss that again.

  • RAF Wessex 28 Squadron XT678 Hotel

    The port side of the model. I later repainted the bar at the bottom centre to metallic grey.

    In my regular updates I have referred to a secret modelling project. Now is the reveal. It is this 1/72 model of an RAF Wessex helicopter. It was a present to a friend who is having a significant birthday this year – hence the secrecy. He has now received it – so the secrecy is not longer required.

    My friend is Gordon Evans, who served in the RAF, rising to Group Captain. The model is of a machine from 28 Squadron, which operated in Hong Kong, with which he was associated. His first tour was in 1980 (I think), when he was a fresh young officer. His logbook does refer to this aircraft, amongst others, though he wasn’t a pilot at this stage. He returned to 28 Squadron in 1990, as officer in command. This was one of two machines he regularly flew then, and the one with which he was mostly closely associated (his name was on it – though I didn’t reproduce this!). It may have been the one in which he flew Princess Diana during a royal visit. Indeed he was presented with this memento, made from a piece of the aircraft’s skin:

    The idea for doing this model came last year when Airfix released their Wessex kit. One of the three featured schemes was for one of 28 Squadron’s machines. It was actually one that had crashed in its early days, but lived an after life at Sek Kong for fire safety training.

    Another of the 28 squadron machines in action over Sek Kong – a picture on display in Gordon’s house (alas with a reflection from the display glass). You can see the immaculate condition in which these machines were kept.

    There were a number of challenges to overcome. First were the white “conspicuity” stripes – the only context that I’m aware that word has been used, though the spell-checker has passed it. These were introduced for the Hong Kong Wessexes after a near miss, I believe – I think during Gordon’s first tour. Then, of course I had to source decals for the XT678 serial on the tail, and the large H ID letters. Also the “Royal Air Force” lettering on the side were in white at this time – not the black in the Airfix decal set.

    I could find no photos of Hotel – though there were useful shots of other machines in the squadron. One ambitious modeller on Britmodeller (“hendie”) did make a very impressive model of it in 1/48, and this was a useful source. Amongst his many posts I didn’t find why he picked this machine (depicted at 1982/83); apparently he was part of the maintenance crew at RAF Sek Kong.

    I opted for a bog standard build, with the main door open, and the side cockpit windows open too – so that some of the interior would be visible. Assembly was generally straightforward, though I did have to putty some cracks. The hairiest bit were the main wheels, for which the struts were not firmly set on the model – and getting them in the right position and matching on both sides was tricky (I don’t think I got this 100% correct…). As usual I mixed my own paints from artists pigments, tweaked with a bit of acrylic ink. I decided to paint with a brush rather than airbrush. That was a mistake. Another mistake was to prime in olive drab (I had some Vallejo primer in that colour) rather than white. The conspicuity stripes required several coats and the surface ended up distinctly on the rough side. I painted these before the camouflage colours, and then masked – having learned before about how hard pale on dark can be. The primer was bad enough. Elsewhere the surface was less than smooth too. You can get away with using a brush (and I have on other models), but the paint has to be pretty thin – which often means more than one coat.

    The serial numbers and Royal Air Force were in 8in (or 20cm?) lettering. I found a decal sheet in my 1970s leftovers designed for Fleet Air Arm planes (I can’t remember for which project) and was able to use these, cutting out individual letters/numbers, except for the “Royal”, which came from a “Royal Navy”. The good news was that the large H’s closely matched WW2 Luftwaffe lettering, used underwing on some bombers, etc. I had one of these left over from one of my 1970s models, and a couple more from a Letraset sheet that I used then for one of my last projects – a Ju88 night fighter. Alas the Letraset letters disintegrated – but I was able to find a decal sheet on eBay. In principle I could have made my own decals for these and the serial numbers (which were also black – white lettering can’t be home printed) – and I even found close enough matches in my font collection and created a Word document for them. Alas my current home printer just wasn’t up to it.

    Starboard side

    The rest of the decals came from the kit, mostly from the 28 squadron set, but some from the others, which seemed to fit the later-dated model better. For my earlier 1/72 aircraft models, designed for use on the wargames table, I haven’t bothered with the tiny lettering and markings that modern models are now provided with. I used them this time, which was fiddly, and I did lose one – but it certainly enhanced the look of the model for display purposes.

    As for finishing, there was no need for weathering – as the 28 squadron machines were kept in immaculate condition. I still patinated the finished model with oil paint and some linseed oil – placing small dots of white and brown pain on the model and brushing it out. The effect is so subtle as to be just about invisible, but it gave the whole model a slight sheen, and perhaps helped integrate the decals. One thing I didn’t do was use a wash to bring out the panel lines. This is de rigeur for modern modellers, but photos don’t show much in the way of visible panel lines – some of which were lost anyway when I fileded down the putty used to fill cracks.

    Once the model was finished I started to think about how I was going to present it. I decided to buy a display case – the model fitted one of the standard sizes very neatly. But I quickly realised that I would need to construct a base that portrayed the tarmac at Sek Kong. I could get a general idea of this from photos. There was a large painted circle to mark the reach of the main rotor blades, and smaller one to mark the main wheels. The tarmac (or concrete) came in slabs separated by lines of bitumen (?).

    Making the base proved harder than I expected. My first attempt was gluing sandpaper “slabs” to a foam board base. The sandpaper at first didn’t adhere properly, and when it did, the foam board warped. Instead I cut the base from some spare hardboard, and glued cardboard slabs (from the backing of paper pads) to it. This wasn’t 100% flat, but near enough. I primed it with gesso mixed with a bit of plaster, and then painted in with the usual acrylics (student grade this time). An attempt to paint the yellow circles and lines using masking tape, didn’t really work, so these had to touched up by hand.

    Alas I don’t have a good picture of the finished result. While I was out (wargaming) my wife tied a lovely light blue bow around the display case, before I had taken any pictures. Gordon isn’t taking this off until the big day arrives. This is the best I could do – I will try again when I next visit – but he lives in Devon and I am in Sussex.

    You can barely see it for the reflections, but the base is there!

    There are not a few imperfections with the model, but Gordon was very pleased with it!