SISU! BT-42 Assault Gun Platoon for Flames of War Mid-to-Late War Finnish Forces in 15mm/1:100 (Battlefront Miniatures FI010 with TigerAce1945 Printed Turrets)

BT-42 Assault Gun Platoon for Flames of War Mid-to-Late War Finnish Forces in 15mm/1:100 (Battlefront Miniatures FI010 with TigerAce1945 Printed Turrets)

Another one of those posts with way-too-long titles today! We’ve returned to my Finns with some of what was supposed to be Battlefront models, except that two of the three kits I purchased had warped resin turrets. I got onto Battlefront’s customer service and they said they’d get right onto it… when they next have some stock arrive… in a couple of months. So those have still not arrived, and I decided I didn’t want to wait until an indeterminite time in the future to paint and finish the models. So I found a BT-42 STL turret model by a sculptor called TigerAce1945.

BT-42 Assault Gun Platoon for Flames of War Mid-to-Late War Finnish Forces in 15mm/1:100 (Battlefront Miniatures FI010 with TigerAce1945 Printed Turrets)

I did also print three more complete BT-42s as well. In fact, the turret STL also came with a hull STL in the archive file, so my first plan was to simply print a trio before later deciding to print the replacement turrets that you see here. While looking up images of BT-42s I was taken with the look of the Feldgrau models, so I decided to paint these three in the nice looking field grey (though mine have turned out a lot less clean, and more weathered and mucky) and to paint the fully printed ones with their slightly less detailed hulls in a camo scheme that would distract from the less detailed models. They’re still WIP at the moment, but hopefully we’ll see them completed soon!

BT-42 Assault Gun Platoon for Flames of War Mid-to-Late War Finnish Forces in 15mm/1:100 (Battlefront Miniatures FI010 with TigerAce1945 Printed Turrets)

Thanks to John from justneedsvarnish I’ve got the Ps.numbers for these assault guns (Ps.511.), so I’ve gone for 1, 2 and 3 and added number decals in a similar style to the hakaristi decals on the turrets, but with all of that on the rear glacis I didn’t feel up to trying to freehand another trio of tiny little hakaristi on the rear – and my stockpile of decals is limited and the Axis Allies Decal Set supply isn’t great for top-ups (and they ain’t cheap, either!) – so I need to be tight when it comes to top-hull/turret, front and rear decal use on most of these.

BT-42 Assault Gun Platoon for Flames of War Mid-to-Late War Finnish Forces in 15mm/1:100 (Battlefront Miniatures FI010 with TigerAce1945 Printed Turrets)

As per usual, I added some stowage to individualise both vehicles with some plastic spare parts from other kits – jerry cans, crates – as well as some milliput bags and bedrolls. As for the delay between posts, I wanted to get some vehicles finished before posting terrain – so I could have painted ones (and in the case of 15mm, recently-painted ones) for the size comparison pics. But I had to wait for the decals on these to come from NZ, as well as the decal set with some key bits for the next models in line as well…

These three little assault guns are also more fodder for Dave Stone’s Season of Scenery ’25. I know I’m speaking for the whole blog community that we have here when I say that we’re hoping to hear from Dave soon that he’s on the mend.

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!