SISU! Landsverk L-62 Anti II for Flames of War Mid-to-Late War Finnish Forces in 15mm/1:100 (Battlefront Miniatures FI160)

The indomitable Finns return again today with a follow-up to my previous post. This time we have a pair of Landsverk Swedish Anti-Aircraft vehicles in Finnish service. These are the Battlefront models, made from that combination of a resin hull and turret with metal tracks, gun and crew heads. Both were painted in Finnish tri-colour camoflague, using the variant that features sand rather than grey.

My subsequent Finns will be painted in a combination of plain Russian Green for some of the captured vehicles, as well as Finnish tri-colour. Not sure if I’ll use both the sand and grey versions yet. The Landsverks were kept in Finnish service right up intil 1966, though the hakaristi was, rather unsurprisingly replaced with the newer Finnish Roundel post-WWII

I have again gotten the Ps. numbers “wrong” in the case of these Landsverks (though I’m not sure what the correct number is for these), and so I figure there’s about a 50/50 chance I go back and try to fix them with teeny tiny freehand or just leave them be to work on other models instead.

Again, I added some stowage to individualise both vehicles with some plastic spare parts from other kits – jerry cans, spare road wheels, crates – as well as some milliput bags and bedrolls.

With some luck, I’ll get some more Finns painted during June (we’re going through May’s models right now) and this little force can grow a bit!

SISU! BA-10 for Flames of War Mid-to-Late War Finnish Forces in 15mm/1:100 (Zvezda Models)

SISU! Finnish Zvezda 15mm 1/100 BA-10 Mid-to-Late War for Flames of War

I’ve got a lot of my boxed FoW stuff in shelves next to the stairs, so I see them quite a lot as I move around the house. This was the case with these Zvezda model kits that I kept seeing every time I went up and/or down the stairs, and so the other day I decided to just get rid of these in the most productive way – by assembling and painting them.

Despite being a Soviet-produced vehicle, captured BA-10 were used in relatively significant numbers in the Finnish forces during the Winter War and Continuation War, so it seems a historically appropriate use of my Zvezda kits that I picked up during my major FoW aquisition days during the days of The Pandemic. They’re simple assemblies, (though two of the headlights pinged off the painting desk and through a dimensional portal, never to be seen again – so replaced with sprue). I also added some very simple stowage with milliput and some space tiny plastic crates and jerry cans. Being captured vehicles, I also left them painted in a plain Russian Green rather than applying finnish 3-colour camo.

SISU! Finnish Zvezda 15mm 1/100 BA-10 Mid-to-Late War for Flames of War

Finnish vehicles had registration numbers, following the pattern “Ps” and then several numbers designating the vehicle type and then the individual vehicle number. I wasn’t as aware of how the system worked at the time I painted these as I am now (these should be Ps.27-xx), but given the size of these models it was more of a case of giving an impresson of the Ps. numbers, and then using some larger number decals for “in-game” unit numbers so we know the “command” vehicle. I may or may not go back and try to “fix” the Ps. numbers on these three.

SISU! Finnish Zvezda 15mm 1/100 BA-10 Mid-to-Late War for Flames of War

You might have noticed the symbol on the sides of the turrets and the rear of the hulls. Yes, it’s a swastika, but no, it’s also not a swastika. It’s actually a hakaristi, and just as many people are aware that the swastika is an ancient symbol of luck in many Asian and Eastern buddist cultures, it also has a long history of use without any association with nazis or fascism in European cultures – being in use by the Finns since 1918, some time before that Austrian guy came to prominence in Germany. For a more detailed background of it’s use in the Finnish military, click here or watch the linked video down below.

SISU! Finnish Zvezda 15mm 1/100 BA-10 Mid-to-Late War for Flames of War

I have to admit, trying to hand-paint tiny two-colour hakaristi on the back of tiny armoured cars wasn’t on my Bingo card for the year, but I’ve always had an affection for the Finns, so I’m good with it being their time now. In theory, these cars should have six of them each – one on each side of the hulls as well as one on each side of the turrets – and I simply don’t have anywhere near enough decals for those numbers, so I decided to freehand the larger ones on the rear of their hulls. They’re a little rough, and also an excellent example of why I prefer to use decals for insignia that should be consistent across multiple models.