Showing posts with label British destroyer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label British destroyer. Show all posts

Sunday, 13 August 2017

Rapid Fire! 20mm D-Day 1944 - Omaha Beach (part 10): British Hunt Class Destroyer

 
 
 
 
After building the 1/125th scale USN Destroyer from Lindberg I still was feeling that something was missing, that an intrusion happened and that I had to purge myself. It was not 20mm, the true wargaming size, the one with whom we were fed, taught and in one word (or two...), brought upon! Sorry to place tears in your eyes but I just had to say it!
 
Looking again to the juicy picture on p.32 of RF! D-day campaign guide I could only admire the great work that Richard Marsh made on the conversion of  the Revell Flower Corvette into a Destroyer. With my usual arrogance I thought 'I can do that' and so I bought another model of the Flower Corvette this time for conversion.
 
There were 13 Destroyers supporting the landings at Omaha beach, 3 of them British. This, and the idea of using a Hunt Class Destroyer in other scenarios, namely British D-Day landings, made me start the work.
 
 
Of course a Corvette could never become a Destroyer (a corvette is 60 meter long and the Hunt destroyer is 90 meter) but using the usual compression idea and Richard's example I had a go at it. Again large quantities of Evergreen Plasticard was used.
 
 
The main focus was the guns obviously for the fire support they could give. The QF 4 inch MkXVI guns were scratch built and the original figures adapted as gunners.
 
 
The control room, tower, funnel, Oerlikon AA's and many other had some parts from the original Corvette or were entirely used, something I did all along the conversion as a time saving measure. The big structures had to be made from the beginning as they are completely different.
  
 
The QF 2 pdr were also scratch built and figures from other sets like the Airfix LCM were adapted to the new task.
 
 
Another view of the big guns and a new castle for them.
 
 
These kind of conversions are for me the most gratifying aspect of our hobby as we keep in the end something that, in spite of its many mistakes, is unique.
 
 
From the following pictures you can see the transformation the Flower had.
 
 
 Lots of carving, cutting and breaking was necessary.
 
 
The stern had its outer wall completely taken out making the Destroyer thinner than the Corvette as you can see in the top Picture.
 
 
 
This picture gives the illusion that the Corvette is much bigger than the Destroyer. That is only so slightly because of the non-existant walls in the Destroyer's stern and also I cut the Hunt lower from bow to stern giving that illusion. Also the original Corvette  has plenty more details looking bigger that way: due to compression if you place all details the Destroyer had you would end up with a Destroyer looking like another Corvette!
 
 
Next: WN 64 and WN 65, now for sure.
 

Tuesday, 15 May 2012

Rapid Fire! 1/100th scale British Destroyer E Class, Normandy Landings 1944

This is a british destroyer I made sometime ago. It´s done in 1/100 th scale just because its almost one meter long in this scale and in 1/72nd scale it would be 1,5 meters long  so I would have no place to place it behind glass.



Besides, these sort of large vessels if made in 1/72nd scale can´t do properly what they are intended to in the wargaming table, at least for me, that is to support a landing and shelling the coast line. With 1,5 meters (1/72nd scale) this one would look like stucked in the beach and always too close.


 To make this scratchbuilt piece I used a small 1/600 kit of the same vessel I had hanging around, built it, and used it just for scale increase.


 Then many internet photos were consulted for the detail and painting. Yes, there are two lighters for the funnels.


 Many Evergreen plastic tubing and flat  parts were used in the construction. The bigger parts are balsa wood and that includes the base.




The turrets can turn 360 degrees with the help of Evergreen wonders.



 There are some 30 Skytrex  15mm WWII British Infantry converted to sailors scattered all over.



The one chosen had to belong to a class still operating in the 1944 landings. There were not many E class destroyers by then, but I had to keep track with the 1/600 th scale destroyer I was following as a mock-up.